Creatine monohydrate supplementation strategies on body composition and water distribution in female recreational athletes
Isaac H. Avon, Kyle S. Levers, Natalia Wasilcyzk, Eden Glick, Eleanor U. Flacke, Anneliese Silverman, Payton Lynch, Alex Rainey, Henry Ball, Ashleigh Sorokin, Andrew M. Stranieri, Yichen Jin, Todd H. Miller

TL;DR
This study found that creatine monohydrate loading in female athletes slightly reduced extracellular water, but no major changes in body composition occurred.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into creatine monohydrate effects on water distribution in female athletes.
Findings
Creatine monohydrate loading reduced extracellular water to total body water ratio.
No significant changes in body composition metrics were observed.
Loading strategy showed greater intracellular water retention compared to maintenance.
Abstract
Creatine monohydrate (CrM) supplementation has been reported to increase cellular water retention (WR) and alter body composition (BC) in anaerobically-training cohorts, but research in female athletes is limited. The study purpose was to examine the impact of two CrM supplementation strategies on BC and WR in female recreational athletes. Eleven female recreational athletes (Mean ± SD: 19.90 ± 1.51yrs, 163.88 ± 7.05 cm, 64.83 ± 9.43kg, 29.55 ± 6.03 %BF) participated in three testing sessions across the 14-day supplementation timeframe: 0-day (0D), 7-day (7D), and 14-day (14D). Participating subjects met standards prior to admittance. Subjects were randomly assigned to three supplement groups in a double-blind manner: loading (CF-L, 20g CrM + 15g Maltodextrin), maintenance (CF-M, 5g CrM+30g Maltodextrin), and placebo (PLA, 35g Maltodextrin). Subjects ingested the supplement 1x/d before…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle metabolism and nutrition · Body Composition Measurement Techniques · Diet and metabolism studies
