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Clinical Trial
. 1998 Apr;19(4):617-22.
doi: 10.1053/euhj.1997.0767.

The effect of dietary creatine supplementation on skeletal muscle metabolism in congestive heart failure

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

The effect of dietary creatine supplementation on skeletal muscle metabolism in congestive heart failure

R Andrews et al. Eur Heart J. 1998 Apr.

Abstract

Aims: To assess the effects of dietary creatine supplementation on skeletal muscle metabolism and endurance in patients with chronic heart failure.

Methods: A forearm model of muscle metabolism was used, with a cannula inserted retrogradely into an antecubital vein of the dominant forearm. Maximum voluntary contraction was measured using handgrip dynanometry. Subjects performed handgrip exercise, 5 s contraction followed by 5 s rest for 5 min at 25%, 50%, and 75% of maximum voluntary contraction or until exhaustion. Blood was taken at rest and 0 and 2 min after exercise for measurement of lactate and ammonia. After 30 min the procedure was repeated with fixed workloads of 7 kg, 14 kg and 21 kg. Patients were assigned to creatine 20 g daily or matching placebo for 5 days and returned after 6 days for repeat study.

Results: Contractions (median (25th, 75th interquartiles)) until exhaustion at 75% of maximum voluntary contraction increased after creatine treatment (8 (6, 14) vs 14 (8, 17), P = 0.025) with no significant placebo effect. Ammonia per contraction at 75% maximum voluntary contraction (11.6 mumol/l/contraction (8.3, 15.7) vs 8.9 mumol/l/contraction (5.9, 10.8), P = 0.037) and lactate per contraction at 75% maximum voluntary contraction (0.32 mmol/l/contraction (0.28, 0.61) vs 0.27 mmol/l/contraction (0.19, 0.49), P = 0.07) fell after creatine but not after placebo.

Conclusions: Creatine supplementation in chronic heart failure augments skeletal muscle endurance and attenuates the abnormal skeletal muscle metabolic response to exercise.

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