Last week, I wrote about creatine and briefly touched on its cognitive benefits—the ways it might support memory, focus and mental endurance. But what I’ve uncovered since goes further than what I mentioned. After just seven days of use, the change in my body was striking. The soreness I’d been carrying for weeks felt dramatically lighter—if I had to put it into numbers, it was as if the weight of it had dropped by about 80%. That isn’t a clinical measurement, just the way my body registered the difference. The aches were still there, but they had shifted in character, no longer sharp or concerning, just the kind of sweet soreness I expect from training hard. Instead of raising alarms in my mind, making me wonder if something deeper was wrong, it felt like the natural aftermath of good work. At the same time, a close friend shared insights into creatine’s cognitive impact, and as I dug deeper into the studies, it became clear the science reaches well beyond what I had first described.

Most people know creatine as a gym supplement, but its true role is as an energy stabilizer. Every cell in the body runs on ATP, short for adenosine triphosphate, which is like the universal battery that powers movement, thought, and recovery. When stress is high, whether from lack of sleep, heavy workloads, or age, ATP demand can outpace supply. That’s where creatine comes in. It stores and donates phosphate groups that regenerate ATP on the spot, giving the brain and muscles a reliable backup supply when energy runs low.

Human trials confirm that this translates into performance. In a six-week, double-blind study, young vegetarians who took 5 grams of creatine daily showed improvements in working memory and reasoning skills compared to the placebo group (Rae et al., 2003). Vegetarians are an ideal group to study because their baseline creatine levels are naturally lower, as dietary creatine primarily comes from meat and fish. Another experiment tested creatine under stress: sleep-deprived adults were given approximately 0.35 g/kg, equivalent to roughly 25 grams for a 70-kg person. Within hours, their memory and reaction speed improved, fatigue went down, and brain scans using magnetic resonance spectroscopy, an imaging tool that measures cellular chemistry, showed energy stores rebounding (McMorris et al., 2007).

Systematic reviews pooling dozens of randomized trials confirm the pattern. The strongest and most consistent benefits are in memory, with smaller gains in attention and processing speed. A review published in Experimental Gerontology concluded that creatine helps most when the brain is under stress or when baseline levels are low (Avgerinos et al., 2018). This explains why not everyone feels sharper on creatine: it’s not a universal enhancer, but it makes a measurable difference when energy is taxed.

The reach goes even further. An eight-week randomized trial found that women with major depression improved more quickly when creatine was added to standard SSRI medication (Lyoo et al., 2012). In children recovering from traumatic brain injury, higher weight-based dosing reduced headaches, fatigue and dizziness over months compared to controls (Sakellaris et al., 2006). These findings suggest that creatine’s stabilizing effect on energy metabolism may extend into psychiatry and neurology.

The brain, however, is harder to saturate than muscle. Muscles absorb creatine quickly, but the blood-brain barrier limits how much can cross at one time. A spectroscopy study showed that brain creatine levels do rise after supplementation, although higher or longer dosing may be required to achieve a significant increase (Dechent et al., 1999). This is why some trials rely on short bursts of 20–25 grams in a single day, while others use a week-long loading phase of 20 grams per day before dropping to a 3–5 grams per day maintenance dose. Even lower doses, like the 5 g/day vegetarian trial, can work—it just takes more time.

All of this aligns with my own story of soreness. Creatine’s ability to help muscles recover is well-documented. A meta-analysis found that supplementation reduced blood markers of muscle damage, such as creatine kinase, and improved recovery of strength after intense training (Cooke et al., 2009). Another review concluded that creatine consistently reduces delayed-onset muscle soreness, or DOMS—the deep muscle ache that follows hard workouts (Rawson & Volek, 2003). What I experienced was exactly this shift: not the complete absence of soreness, but the replacement of a worrying ache with the normal, almost welcome soreness that signals growth, not injury.

The benefits seem to be strongest in people starting from a lower baseline: vegetarians, vegans, older adults with slowing metabolism, those who are sleep-deprived, and anyone under heavy cognitive strain. For them, improvements in memory and reaction time are consistently sharper. At the cellular level, the explanation is simple. Creatine and its stored form, phosphocreatine, act like a rechargeable battery pack for ATP, resupplying energy exactly where and when demand spikes. Brain imaging studies in sleep-deprived people show that without creatine, energy stores dip and acidity rises. With creatine, those changes are blunted, and performance rebounds.

So how should it be used? For acute, high-demand days, research suggests consuming approximately 0.3–0.35 g/kg—roughly 20–25 grams for most adults—split into smaller doses to avoid stomach upset, ideally timed a few hours before the most demanding mental load or after a night of poor sleep. For long-term support, a week-long load of approximately 20 g/day can be followed by a maintenance dose of 3–5 g/day. People who are plant-based or consistently under cognitive stress are the most likely to feel a lift.

A week into my own experiment, I’ve seen both sides—faster recovery in the body and sharper clarity about what creatine can mean for the brain. Last week, I introduced the idea that creatine belongs beyond the gym. This week, with new studies, a friend’s insights, and my own lived experience, that case is stronger. Creatine isn’t just fueling muscles in the gym, it’s quietly powering the brain, too, helping both body and mind recover in ways we’re only beginning to understand.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Everyone should consult a qualified health professional before starting any supplement, especially at higher doses.

Kaba Abdul-Fattaah is a dynamic independent documentary filmmaker and photographer. A world traveler, he has traversed the globe capturing not only music and film giants, but incredible footage of some of the most incredible humanitarians and freedom fighters of our time. Kaba's work passionately explores and celebrates the richness of the Black community, showcasing its depth and beauty through compelling visual narratives. He is a native of Brooklyn and currently resides in Harlem.

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