Lessons in Longevity | Vol. 76
What Creatine Actually Does for an Aging Brain (and Body)
Most of what gets written about creatine still treats it like a gym supplement. Useful if you are trying to put on muscle, irrelevant if you are not. The peer-reviewed research has been moving in a different direction for a while, and the people who probably stand to benefit most from it are not the ones in the squat rack. They are the parents and grandparents in our community who want to keep their brains sharp, their bones intact, and their bodies capable for as long as possible.
This is not an argument for any single supplement as a fix. It is a look at what the published science says creatine can reasonably contribute to the aging body and mind, and where it fits inside the larger system of training, nutrition, and recovery that actually drives long-term health.
No supplement, including creatine, will outwork a sedentary lifestyle, poor sleep, or inadequate protein. The right question is not whether to take it. It is what role it plays inside everything else you are doing.
What Creatine Is and What It Does
Creatine is a compound your body produces naturally and stores primarily in muscle, with smaller amounts in the brain. It works by recycling adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the cellular fuel your body uses for short, high-effort tasks. When ATP runs low, creatine donates a phosphate group to regenerate it. The faster you can do this, the longer cells can sustain demanding work before fatigue sets in.
For decades the focus was on muscle. Faster ATP regeneration meant more reps, more sprint capacity, more strength gains over time. That part is settled science. What has emerged more recently is that the same energy-buffering role matters for the brain, especially when the brain is under metabolic stress.
The Brain Connection
The most rigorous summary of creatine and cognitive function to date is a 2018 meta-analysis by Avgerinos and colleagues in Experimental Gerontology. Pooling six randomized controlled trials, they reported measurable improvements in short-term memory and reasoning in supplemented adults, with the strongest effects in older participants and those facing physiological stress. Effects in healthy, well-rested young adults were smaller and less consistent.
A 2023 study published in Scientific Reports by Sandkühler and colleagues took the question further. They tested a single high dose of creatine in sleep-deprived participants and found measurable improvements in cognitive performance and brain energy markers within several hours. That finding lines up with the broader pattern: creatine appears to do its most visible work when the brain is dealing with an energy shortfall, whether that comes from poor sleep, age-related changes, or sustained mental load.
A 2021 review by Roschel and colleagues in Nutrients reached a similar conclusion. The most consistent benefits show up in working memory, executive function, and sustained attention, particularly in older adults and stressed populations. There is also a small but interesting body of work on creatine and mood, including a 2019 review by Kious and Renshaw in Biomolecules looking at creatine as an adjunct in depression, with mechanistic plausibility around brain energy metabolism though larger trials are still needed.
None of this makes creatine a stimulant or a cognitive enhancer in the colloquial sense. It does not make a rested brain noticeably sharper. What it appears to do is help maintain stable cognitive performance when the brain is operating under load.
Beyond the Brain: Bones and Muscle in Midlife
The same energy and cellular hydration mechanisms that help muscle recover also matter for the slow-loss problems most adults face after 50. Sarcopenia, the gradual loss of muscle and strength with age, accelerates noticeably in midlife. Bone mineral density declines on a similar curve, particularly in postmenopausal women.
Forbes, Candow, and colleagues have published extensively on creatine in older adults, including a 2022 review in Nutrients. Their consistent finding: creatine combined with resistance training produces greater gains in lean mass and strength than resistance training alone in adults over 50. The supplement does not replace the training. It improves the return on the training you are already doing.
For bone density specifically, work led by Chilibeck and colleagues at the University of Saskatchewan has suggested that creatine paired with structured resistance training may help protect bone mineral density in postmenopausal women. Without the strength training stimulus, the bone effect largely disappears. This is the pattern that runs through the whole creatine literature: it is a multiplier on what you are already doing, not a stand-alone intervention.
Smith-Ryan and colleagues have specifically called out the underrepresentation of women in older creatine studies, and a 2021 review of theirs in Nutrients examined the case for creatine across the female lifespan, including potential roles in mood, sleep, and brain health alongside the established muscle and bone effects.
Dosing and the Saturation Timeline
The dose used in the vast majority of human research is 3 to 5 grams of creatine monohydrate per day. The International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand, last updated in 2017 and reaffirmed in subsequent literature, supports this dose for long-term daily use in healthy adults.
Loading phases (20 grams a day for five to seven days) saturate muscle stores faster but are not necessary if you are willing to take the daily dose for several weeks. The bigger and less appreciated point is that the brain saturates more slowly than muscle. The blood-brain barrier regulates creatine transport tightly, which is one reason short trials sometimes fail to show cognitive effects that longer-duration studies do.
This is part of why creatine is best thought of as a long-horizon habit, not a daily mood-shifter. You take it consistently, and the benefits show up downstream, in the body composition trends on your DEXA scan, in how your training holds up week over week, in how you handle a few short nights of sleep.
Where Creatine Fits Inside Real Longevity Work
This is the part that gets lost in the social media coverage. Creatine is not the lever that decides whether you age well. The biggest determinants are still the unglamorous ones: how much muscle you carry into your 60s, how strong you are, how mobile you are, how well you sleep, how stable your blood sugar is, and how connected you remain to people and purpose.
A reasonable supplement protocol can support all of that. It cannot replace any of it.
At APEX, our longevity work for adults in midlife and beyond is built on a system of inputs that compound on each other. Supplementation is one piece, and probably the smallest piece, of what we work on with our members.
The order matters. We assess people first because there is no point recommending a strength program without understanding what they can currently do safely. We track DEXA over time because the most important data points for someone over 50 are not the scale, they are lean mass and bone density. We pair training with nutrition because muscle growth requires both stimulus and protein. We use strength-based physical therapy with Jordan, our PT, when there are old injuries in the way of the training itself.
Supplementation comes last because it has the smallest effect size of any of these levers. A creatine routine cannot fix a person who is not training, not eating enough protein, and not sleeping. A creatine routine inside a complete system can, modestly but measurably, raise the ceiling on what the rest of that system delivers.
A Reasonable Foundation Stack
For adults working on long-term health, four supplements come up consistently in the peer-reviewed literature with the strongest evidence base. These are also the ones we see used most often by our members, and they are part of what Thorne carries through our practitioner partnership.
Foundation Four
APEX is a Thorne practitioner partner, which means our members and patients can access the same NSF Certified for Sport supplements used by professional teams and the Mayo Clinic at practitioner pricing. We've written more about why Thorne stands out among supplement brands if you want the deeper case. If you are looking for a vetted starting point, you can access our Thorne partner page here. If you are not buying through us, the principles still apply: third-party tested, NSF or USP certified, and clinically meaningful doses.
The Bottom Line
Creatine is one of the most-studied supplements in human research, and the evidence keeps moving in the same direction: useful for muscle, useful for bone density when paired with strength training, useful for cognitive function in older adults and under stress, and likely useful as a low-risk addition for adults who are doing the harder work of building a healthy life.
It is not a brain enhancer. It is not a youth pill. It is a small, low-cost, well-validated piece of a much larger picture. For the people in our community who are 50 or 60 or 70 and want another decade of doing the things they love with the people they love, that is exactly what it should be. One small piece of a serious longevity practice.
Build the Rest of the System
Start with a Longevity Performance Assessment or get your first DEXA scan with our team in Tigard.
Start at APEX Book a DEXAFurther Reading
How to Live a Healthy Lifestyle → Why Thorne Stands Out Among Supplement Brands → DEXA Scan for Body Composition → DEXA Scan for Bone Density → Strength-Based Physical Therapy in Tigard → Why Nutrition Coaching Works →Previous Blogs
Thorne Advanced Pre-Workout | Tigard Performance Fuel
Introducing Thorne Advanced Pre-Workout: Elevated Performance, Bold New Flavor Introducing Thorne Advanced Pre-Workout: an evolution of Pre-Workout Elite. Delivering the same performance boost, now with a bold new flavor profile. Maximize your reps.Maximize your laps.Maximize your holds.Maximize your miles. If you train with intention, your fueling should match your effort. What Makes Thorne Advanced Pre-Workout
Why Human Coaching Still Wins in a Growing World of AI | Strength Training Tigard Oregon
Why Human Coaching Still Matters in the Age of AI Fitness Artificial intelligence is becoming a bigger part of the fitness world. Wearables now provide detailed training metrics. Apps can generate personalized workout plans. Platforms are experimenting with AI coaching that adjusts workouts automatically based on performance. Technology can absolutely improve access to fitness guidance.
AI Food Tracking vs Real Nutrition Habits | Tigard Nutrition Coach
AI Food Tracking Apps Won’t Fix Your Diet. Here’s Why. Artificial intelligence is moving quickly into the nutrition space. Recently, MyFitnessPal announced it is acquiring the rapidly growing food tracking app Cal AI, a camera-based tracking platform designed to make logging meals as easy as taking a photo. “My Fitness Pal is buying fast-growing Cal