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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Leading Creatine Researcher Cannot Find Anyone Who Shouldn't Take Supplement

Diary of a CEO · Creatine Expert: Creatine Is The Secret To Weight Loss · June 15, 2026
Leading Creatine Researcher Cannot Find Anyone Who Shouldn't Take Supplement
Diary of a CEO
Diary of a CEO
Creatine Expert: Creatine Is The Secret To Weight Loss
"I've published over 120 papers just on creatine alone. We've done at least 30 to 40 studies in our lab, and I can't find anybody that can't or shouldn't take creatine."
Dr. Candow stated that across decades of research involving over 1,000 subjects assessed in his lab alone, he has found no population that should avoid creatine at recommended doses. This includes children, pregnant women (preliminary evidence), and elderly populations, dramatically expanding who should consider supplementation.

About this episode

Steven Bartlett sits down with Dr. Darren Candow, one of the world's leading creatine researchers who has published over 120 papers on the supplement, for a comprehensive discussion on creatine's benefits far beyond muscle building. Dr. Candow, a professor of kinesiology who has assessed over 1,000 subjects in his lab, reveals that creatine's most promising applications may lie in brain health, mental performance under stress, and healthy aging rather than athletic performance alone. The conversation begins by systematically debunking five major myths about creatine—kidney damage, water retention, gender specificity, hair loss, and muscle cramps—before diving into dosing protocols that vary dramatically based on use case. While 5 grams daily suffices for muscle maintenance, Dr. Candow explains that metabolically stressed brains from sleep deprivation, jet lag, or intense cognitive demand may require 20 to 30 grams daily to see benefits, citing German studies where such doses offset 21 hours of sleep deprivation. He presents compelling evidence that creatine doubled remission rates in women with major depression when combined with antidepressants, and that young athletes taking it slept an hour longer on training days. The discussion covers bone health in postmenopausal women, emerging Alzheimer's research showing 11% increases in brain creatine levels, potential prophylactic use for concussion in contact sports, and why vegans and vegetarians respond best to supplementation. Dr. Candow emphasizes weight training as the single most important exercise modality for longevity, describing it as superior to cardio for maintaining the musculoskeletal system while delivering similar cardiovascular benefits. He reveals his personal stack—10 grams of creatine daily as a baseline, escalating to 25 grams when traveling across time zones—and explains why CreaPure monohydrate with third-party NSF certification is the only form worth taking. The episode concludes with Dr. Candow admitting that despite decades of research, scientists still don't know the optimal individualized dose for most people, and that fear of death drives his passion for longevity research.

Key takeaways

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