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Creatine for the Brain

Most people think of creatine as a muscle supplement. But your brain uses the same ATP-phosphocreatine energy system as your muscles — and it's a hungry organ, consuming roughly 20% of your resting metabolic rate.

When your brain is under stress — fatigue, sleep deprivation, high cognitive load — it needs more energy than normal. That's where creatine earns its second reputation: as a cognitive enhancer backed by randomized controlled trials.

Sleep Deprivation and High-Dose Creatine (2024)

A landmark study from RWTH Aachen University gave sleep-deprived participants a single high dose of creatine (roughly 0.35 g/kg of body weight — about 25 grams for a 75 kg adult) and tested them on cognitive performance while scanning their brains.[1]

The creatine group outperformed placebo on memory, reaction time, and problem-solving tasks. Brain scans showed measurable changes in high-energy phosphate compounds, suggesting the creatine was getting into neurons and being used for energy — something researchers previously thought happened only minimally.

The takeaway: under extreme stress, the brain's usual barriers to creatine uptake loosen, and a larger dose produces measurable cognitive improvements.

Systematic Review of 16 RCTs (2024)

A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis pooled data from 16 randomized controlled trials examining creatine supplementation's effect on cognition in adults.[2] Across hundreds of participants, the review found:

  • Significant improvements in memory performance
  • Improved processing speed
  • The most consistent effects in adults under cognitive or physical stress

This wasn't a single outlier study — it was a systematic look at the whole body of evidence.

Meta-Analysis in Healthy Adults (2018)

An earlier meta-analysis from 2018 focused specifically on healthy adults.[3] Even in well-rested, healthy populations, creatine supplementation improved short-term memory and performance on intelligence-related tasks.

The effect was smaller in well-rested groups than in stressed ones, which aligns with the mechanism. If your brain's phosphocreatine system is already well-fed, extra creatine has less room to help. If you're depleted, the effect is more dramatic.

What This Means in Practice

  • Daily maintenance dose (5 g/day) supports baseline cognitive function
  • Higher doses before demanding cognitive situations — presentations, exams, deadlines, nights of poor sleep — may offer additional benefit based on the sleep-deprivation research
  • Older adults appear to gain the most cognitive benefit, likely because age-related declines reduce baseline brain energy reserves

References

  1. Gordji-Nejad, A., Matusch, A., Kleedörfer, S., et al. (2024). Single dose creatine improves cognitive performance and induces changes in cerebral high energy phosphates during sleep deprivation. Scientific Reports, 14(1), 4937.
  2. Liu, K., et al. (2024). The effects of creatine supplementation on cognitive function in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Nutrition, 11, 1424972.
  3. Avgerinos, K.I., et al. (2018). Effects of creatine supplementation on cognitive function of healthy individuals: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Experimental Gerontology, 108, 166–173.

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