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Effects of acute creatine supplementation on iron homeostasis and uric acid-based antioxidant capacity of plasma after wingate testKeywords: Creatine, Iron homeostasis, Antioxidant, Plasma, Wingate, Anaerobic exercise, Oxidative stress, Uric acid Abstract: Maximum anaerobic power was improved by acute creatine supplementation (10.5?%), but it was accompanied by a 2.4-fold increase in pro-oxidant free iron ions in the plasma. However, potential iron-driven oxidative insult was adequately counterbalanced by proportional increases in antioxidant ferric-reducing activity in plasma (FRAP), leading to unaltered lipid peroxidation levels. Interestingly, the FRAP index, found to be highly dependent on uric acid levels in the placebo group, also had an additional contribution from other circulating metabolites in creatine-fed subjects.Our data suggest that acute creatine supplementation improved the anaerobic performance of athletes and limited short-term oxidative insults, since creatine-induced iron overload was efficiently circumvented by acquired FRAP capacity attributed to: overproduction of uric acid in energy-depleted muscles (as an end-product of purine metabolism and a powerful iron chelating agent) and inherent antioxidant activity of creatine.
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