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These 4 Types of Tea Will Boost Your Hydration, Performance, and Muscle Recovery—So Get Brewing!
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One Surprising Side Effect of Intermittent Fasting, New Study Says
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Don t Blame Creatine for Hair Loss David McGlynn
If you don’t take creatine yourself, you probably know someone who does. The sports supplement rocketed to popularity after the 1992 Olympics, when British track star Linford Christie testified that it had helped him train for his gold-medal-winning 100-meter dash. Nearly 30 later, it’s still one of the most popular and most studied training supplements on the market. According to exercise physiologist Jose Antonio, PhD, of Nova Southeastern University, “Creatine’s been the subject of more than 500 scientific studies. No other food or dietary supplement has as much supportive data.”
Yet creatine remains a perpetual target for rumors and misconceptions. Among the most powerful: That creatine causes hair loss. Research remains ongoing, but “the current body of evidence does not indicate that creatine causes hair loss or baldness,” says Dr. Antonio.
Diego Cervo / EyeEmGetty Images
If you don’t take creatine yourself, you probably know someone who does. The sports supplement rocketed to popularity after the 1992 Olympics, when British track star Linford Christie testified that it had helped him train for his gold-medal-winning 100-meter dash. Nearly 30 later, it’s still one of the most popular and most studied training supplements on the market. According to exercise physiologist Jose Antonio, PhD, of Nova Southeastern University, “Creatine’s been the subject of more than 500 scientific studies. No other food or dietary supplement has as much supportive data.”
Yet creatine remains a perpetual target for rumors and misconceptions. Among the most powerful: That creatine causes hair loss. Research remains ongoing, but “the current body of evidence does not indicate that creatine causes hair loss or baldness,” says Dr. Antonio.