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May 25, 2004
MDA RESEARCHERS FIND
CREATINE
HELPS IN DUCHENNE DYSTROPHY
Grip strength in the dominant hand and fat-free body mass (made
mostly of muscle) increased when children with
Duchenne
muscular dystrophy (DMD) took the dietary supplement
creatine at a dose of 0.1 grams per kilogram of body weight per
day for four months.
MDA grantee Mark Tarnopolsky, associate professor of
pediatrics and medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada, directed the study, in which 30 boys whose
average age was 10 years participated.
The findings are in today's issue of Neurology.
Fifteen of the trial participants were given creatine for
four months, followed by at least six weeks without treatment,
and were then switched to a placebo (inactive substance). The
other 15 started in a placebo group and were switched to
creatine. The researchers and participants were not aware of
which group was getting creatine until after the study was
completed.
Pulmonary function, activities of daily living, and the
ability to perform functional tasks such as climbing stairs or
cutting a piece of paper with scissors didn’t show improvement,
but a biochemical marker of bone degeneration was reduced.
“This study was only four months long, so perhaps longer
studies are needed to see if creatine has an effect on the
functional variables,” Tarnopolsky said.
Other studies of creatine in various neuromuscular disorders
have shown mixed results, although few have used a placebo group
for comparison, and many have included people with several
different diseases, making it hard to draw conclusions about any
particular disorder.
A 2003 Belgian study of creatine versus a placebo in 15 boys
with Duchenne or the closely related disorder
Becker muscular
dystrophy found that the creatine group had less joint
stiffness, better strength on one measure, better resistance to
fatigue and, in those still walking, improved bone density.
Tarnopolsky noted that his present study confirms and
strengthens the findings of previous studies that have been
carefully conducted. “In addition, the evidence from basic
science and animal studies are also supportive of a beneficial
effect for creatine,” he said.
Earlier this year, Tarnopolsky’s group showed that the
supplement was not helpful in
type 1 myotonic
dystrophy. “Tests showed that muscle from patients with
myotonic dystrophy did not take up creatine and this was the
likely reason for the lack of efficacy” he said.
MDA is a voluntary health agency working to defeat more than
40 neuromuscular diseases through programs of worldwide research,
comprehensive services, and far-reaching professional and public
health education.
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