Journal article

Risk of adverse outcomes in females taking oral creatine monohydrate: A systematic review and meta-analysis

DL de Guingand, KR Palmer, RJ Snow, ML Davies-Tuck, SJ Ellery

Nutrients | MDPI | Published : 2020

Open access

Abstract

Creatine Monohydrate (CrM) is a dietary supplement routinely used as an ergogenic aid for sport and training, and as a potential therapeutic aid to augment different disease processes. Despite its increased use in recent years, studies reporting potential adverse outcomes of CrM have been mostly derived from male or mixed sex populations. A systematic search was conducted, which included female participants on CrM, where adverse outcomes were reported, with meta-analysis performed where appropriate. Six hundred and fifty-six studies were identified where creatine supplementation was the primary intervention; fifty-eight were female only studies (9%). Twenty-nine studies monitored for adverse..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

No direct funding was sought or obtained for this review; however, this work was supported by the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program to Hudson Institute of Medical Research, and the Andrea Logan Memorial Trust. During these studies SJE was supported by NHMRC Early Career Research Fellowship, KRP by a Monash University Health Practitioner Research Fellowship, and MDT was supported by a NHMRC CRE Stillbirth Fellowship. This review was registered at www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/as CRD42018105999.