The effects of dietary creatine supplements on the contractile properties of rat soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles

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Abstract

Daily creatine supplements (0.258 g kg-1) were administered to adult male Wistar rats (n=7) in the drinking water. Age matched rats (n=6) acted as controls. After 5-6 days, contractile properties were examined in soleus and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle strips in vitro at 30°C. In soleus muscles, creatine supplements decreased the half-relaxation time of the isometric twitch from 53.6±4.3 ms in control muscles to 48.4±5.5 ms but had no effect on twitch or tetanic tension or on twitch contraction time. In EDL muscles twitch tension, tetanic tension, twitch contraction and half-relaxation times were all unaffected by creatine supplements. Creatine supplements increased the fatigue resistance of the soleus muscles but had no effect on that of the EDL muscles. After a 5 min low-frequency fatigue test, tension (expressed as a percentage of initial tension) was 56±3% in control soleus muscles, whereas that in the creatine-supplemented muscles was 78±6% (P<0.01). In the EDL muscles, the corresponding values were 40±2% and 41±9%, respectively. The force potentiation which occurred in the EDL muscles during the initial 20-30 s of the fatigue test was 170±10% of initial tension in the control muscles 24 s after the initial stimulus train but was reduced (P<0.01) to 130±20% in the creatine-supplemented muscles. In conclusion, soleus muscle endurance was increased by creatine supplements. EDL endurance was unaffected but force potentiation during repetitive stimulation was decreased.

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McGuire, M., Bradford, A., & MacDermott, M. (2001). The effects of dietary creatine supplements on the contractile properties of rat soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles. Experimental Physiology, 86(2), 185–190. https://doi.org/10.1113/eph8602131

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