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For parents with teenage sons taking supplements for athletics.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:49 am
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:49 am
My son is 14, 8th grade wrestler who's asking about taking creatine.
Does anyone have experience with their kid on it, do the benefits outweigh the risk? What kind of outcome did he have while taking it?
Kid is already in great shape with a high stamina level. He's been wrestling for 4 years now.
Thanks. I've looked at studies, and most I've seen are pretty vague. Unfortunately, I just don't know much about supplements.
Does anyone have experience with their kid on it, do the benefits outweigh the risk? What kind of outcome did he have while taking it?
Kid is already in great shape with a high stamina level. He's been wrestling for 4 years now.
Thanks. I've looked at studies, and most I've seen are pretty vague. Unfortunately, I just don't know much about supplements.
This post was edited on 11/2/23 at 8:24 am
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:50 am to Hangover Haven
I would default to “no” with supplements while the kid is still growing
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:50 am to Hangover Haven
Go HGH or go home.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:51 am to Hangover Haven
Honestly he’s too young for steroids like creatine and preworkout. And especially stay away from protein unless he wants a visit from the norwood reaper at 16
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:51 am to Hangover Haven
I took it in high school and most of the other football players were on it. It helps a lot but do need to be careful about drinking alcohol on it. Which of course a lot of us were doing that in high school probably wasn’t that great for us.
Need to drink a ton of water while on it as well. 14 would be too young imo to take creatine and honestly I’d hold off till after high school
Need to drink a ton of water while on it as well. 14 would be too young imo to take creatine and honestly I’d hold off till after high school
This post was edited on 11/2/23 at 7:53 am
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:51 am to Hangover Haven
nothing more than protein powder
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:52 am to Hangover Haven
Creatine is pretty harmless.
Edit: drink TONS of water.
Edit: drink TONS of water.
This post was edited on 11/2/23 at 7:53 am
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:52 am to el Gaucho
quote:
Honestly he’s too young for steroids like creatine and preworkout. And especially stay away from protein unless he wants a visit from the norwood reaper at 16
Would you recommend a multivitamin like meth or cocaine instead? You seem like an expert
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:52 am to Fusaichi Pegasus
quote:
nothing more than protein powder
Ok groomer
Sad how you republicans think it’s ok to give kids hormones
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:53 am to CaptainsWafer
quote:
Go HGH or go home.
He's going through puberty now and becoming a smart arse to me and my wife. I don't need her taking him out early..
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:54 am to Hangover Haven
Branched-chain amino acids along with Creatine monohydrate will be OK but I would definitely keep it simple, his body is already producing HGH like crazy
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:56 am to Hangover Haven
quote:Only do it AFTER you take out a substantial life insurance policy on your son. In other words, don't do it.
For parents with teenage sons taking supplements for athletics.
My son is 14, 8th grade wrestler who's asking about taking creatine.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:57 am to Hangover Haven
There is no harm in taking a creatine monohydrate powder daily. You dont need anything fancy just mix in the powder with a drink. It was created actually for elderly people to take as they lose muscle with age. It was given to alot of folks in nursing homes was the original purpose it was developed.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:58 am to Hangover Haven
Creatine is one of the safest supplements on the market. There are plenty of legitimate research papers proving such. There are also plenty of scientists that go through these papers on youtube to help people better understand. Pretty hard reading through these doctoral papers who use a thesaurus like its going out of style.
Here is a short excerpt from Andrew Huberman...who is one of the more popular guys on YT. He's a neuroscientist/ophthalmologist out of Stanford.
Everybody took creatine in highschool. I still take creatine today at 33. Never a problem. It's known for having plenty of side benefits...brain focus, skin fortification against UV rays...but I still just use it for lifting.
Here is a short excerpt from Andrew Huberman...who is one of the more popular guys on YT. He's a neuroscientist/ophthalmologist out of Stanford.
Everybody took creatine in highschool. I still take creatine today at 33. Never a problem. It's known for having plenty of side benefits...brain focus, skin fortification against UV rays...but I still just use it for lifting.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:58 am to Hangover Haven
Creatine has had a ton of studies done on it and it shows to help in several other areas besides just a muscle growth. I would do some research and definitely ask your doctor for sure but I do know that nursing homes are giving them to elderly patients now to help with cognitive function as well.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:58 am to Hangover Haven
I worked in a lab my entire career. During that time I've had lab on every type of patient. I've seen Creatinine levels as high as 19 on dialysis patients. Normal around 1.0. Had a 25 year old ER patient come in and I couldn't get his creatinine to "read". Diluted it several different ways and finally ended up with a 32 for an answer. I didn't believe it was correct and continued to try to find what was causing the "interference". I took so long the ER doc came to the lab. I told him what was going on and he said the guy had ate half a can of creatine and he believed the 32 result. Guy had essentially dissolved his kidney.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:58 am to el Gaucho
quote:Precisely the reason you should not come to the OT regarding your child’s health. Consider contacting a credentialed sports nutritionists for this type of advice.
too young for steroids like creatine and preworkou
Posted on 11/2/23 at 7:59 am to Hangover Haven
Creatine does cause water retention, which could bump him up in weight class. I'd just stick to protein at his age.
Posted on 11/2/23 at 8:00 am to Hangover Haven
When he has a heart attack at 17, make sure you blame the vax instead of the supplements
Posted on 11/2/23 at 8:01 am to Hangover Haven
Too young for that. I woud definitely wait. Also talk to his Dr about it
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