The media is at it, again, doing their best to vilify the
dietary-supplement
industry and eventually force stricter and stricter government
regulation.
They won't be happy until all that's left on the shelves is
Flintstones
Complete.
This time, the evil culprit is creatine.
ABC just did a piece on 13 high school football players who were
admitted
to the hospital for compartment syndrome, a condition where
swelling
muscles are compressed by the fascia, begin to deteriorate, and emit
toxins into the blood.
"Doctors are investigating whether muscle-building supplements like
creatine, common among high school athletes, helped lead to this,"
the
report stated. It ended with a warning to parents about the
"possible
dangers" of unregulated supplements. "Compartment syndrome is often
linked
to creatine," the accompanying text on the ABC News website said.
Ah, you can just hear the lamentations of the uninformed now, can't
you?
"Creatine is a dangerous, steroid-like supplement! Remember when it
killed those three wrestlers back in '97?"
The real story? The wrestlers were trying to drop weight, as much
12
pounds in a single day. They were on creatine, but they also wrapped
themselves in trash bags or wore rubber suits and exercised until
collapsing...
in saunas... while restricting fluid intake... and taking diuretics.
Their deaths were tragic, but not surprising given those
circumstances.
The final ruling by the FDA? Creatine was not a factor in these
deaths.
The newspapers, including the New York Times, retracted
their
alarmist stories, but the damage had been done. Creatine was,
forever
after, "dangerous" in the minds of the lay public and the media. As
Winston
Churchill once said, a lie gets halfway around the world before the
truth
has a chance to get its pants on.
And now it's happening again. And once again, they have the facts
dead
wrong.
The Facts
1. First off, according to ABC's own story, "...the
players who were
stricken with the symptoms said they hadn't taken any supplements."
That
didn't stop ABC from making the allegation and showing the same
stock
footage of creatine it used in 1997. One newspaper report did
ominously
say that some of the athletes
"admitted" to drinking protein shakes. (Luckily, no one's kidneys
imploded.)
2. The players, under the direction of new coach,
Jeff Kearin, were involved in "immersion camp" — a period of
intense practice
where athletes stay overnight at the school. Some of the training
involved
exercising in a 115 degree wrestling room. (Sound familiar?) Water
bottles
were not made readily available, but athletes reportedly "had
access" to
water.
3. Creatine isn't "often linked" with compartment
syndrome. Here's the full story: There were a couple of papers
published
years ago by a researcher named Pottinger that made the
association.
These papers were criticized due to methodological concerns, and
Pottingger
ended up leaving the university, reportedly due to these worries.
However, The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) picked up
on
these questionable studies and made them part of their
recommendations.
Follow-up papers out of UCONN found:
"A high dose of CrM supplementation during exercise periods of
increased
thermal stress showed a mild to moderate trend toward increased ACP
measures
in dehydrated males. However, our results do not support the
American
College of Sports Medicine's recommendation, because no
associated
symptoms of anterior compartment syndrome were seen. The
differences
were minimal, and the increased pressures readily equalized after
intermittent
exercise."
In other words, one guy thought creatine might have something to do
with compartment syndrome. He was wrong and this turned out not to
be
the case according to follow-up papers. But like the wrestlers who
"died
of creatine" the misinformation was released and word spread.
Richard Kreider, PhD, who has researched creatine since 1993,
comments:
"Isn't it interesting how people always speculate that a supplement
is the problem when they miss the obvious: overtraining in hot and
humid
environments? Train kids in a 115 degree room so they dehydrate
during
an 'immersion camp' where they no doubt were training excessively
(raising
CK levels) all day long for several days leading to more
dehydration,
and the problem is creatine?
"Many studies have been done (since the early 1990's) that show
creatine
does not cause dehydration. If anything, creatine promotes
hyperhydration
— whole body fluid retention — leading to less thermogregulatory
stress
during intense exercise in the heat.
"It would be nice if coaches (and the media) didn't blame their
poor and potentially dangerous coaching and training methods on a
supplement
like creatine that research has own to be safe and effective in a
number
of populations for years."
Final Thoughts
Creatine has been used extensively by athletes since the early
1990's
and Olympic athletes since the 1960's. After years of being studied
(creatine
is in fact the most studied sports supplement in history), are we to
believe that it suddenly has an adverse side effect, and that this
side
effect mysteriously manifested at the same time in 13 high
school
footballers who happened to be practicing together?
The superintendent of the school, Maryalice Russell, said she
didn't
believe the problems were caused by the type of workouts the players
were doing during the immersion camp. Of course she didn't. That
might
lead to accusations of staff incompetence. There could be lawsuits.
Better to point the finger at a supplement, even if it has never
been
shown to cause this effect, even if the players say they weren't
even
taking it.
Chris Shugert- T- Nation
Submitted by DMorgan on Sun, 08/29/2010 - 1:16pm.