The purpose of this study was to test whether believed versus actual acute creatine ingestion impacted resistance exercise performance. Fifteen men (21.9 ± 2.7 years old) completed four bouts of three sets each of squat and bench press to volitional fatigue at a 10RM load with 1-min between-sets rest interval. Thirty minutes prior to each exercise bout, they received the following treatments in a randomized order: 1) nothing (CON); 2) 0.3 g·kg−1 dextrose placebo (PLC); 3) 0.3 g·kg−1 dextrose, identified as creatine (Cr-False); 4) 0.3 g·kg 20 −1 creatine, identified as creatine (CrTrue). Between-treatments comparisons included the total repetitions completed and the rate of perceived exertion. Results revealed (p < 0.05) higher repetitions performed for all treatments versus CON for both squat and bench press. In the squat, more repetitions were performed with Cr-True (p < 0.001) and CrFalse (p < 0.001) than with either CON or PLC. Bayes Factor analyses revealed strong (PLC to Cr-True BF = 19.1) and very strong (PLC to CrFalse BF = 45.3) posterior probability favouring positive effects for both “creatine” conditions over PLC for the squat. In conclusion, in acute measures, belief versus ingestion of creatine yields similar exercise performance.
CITATION STYLE
Aguiar, M. S., Pereira, R., Koch, A. J., & Machado, M. (2024). Psychological effect of acute creatine pre-workout supplementation induces performance improvement in resistance exercise. Research in Sports Medicine, 32(1), 174–185. https://doi.org/10.1080/15438627.2022.2090253
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