Creatine Monohydrate vs. HCL - MJ Fitness

Creatine Monohydrate vs. HCL

Out of all the different variations, modifications and types of creatine coming out nowadays, two types remain the most universally loved, studied and used. Creatine Monohydrate and Creatine Hydrochloride (HCL). At around the same cost per serve is there much difference between the two? What are the differences if any? Let’s jump in.

Creatine Monohydrate

Monohydrate is a naturally occurring compound found in small amounts in foods like red meat and fish, and is also synthesised in the body from amino acids. Supplementing this version increases the availability of phosphocreatine in muscles, helping regenerate ATP. ATP being the primary energy source during high-intensity, short-duration activities. Basically, creatine helps you with explosivity and power. There’s also been a rise in the effectiveness of consistent creatine supplementation on brain and cognitive health too.

For all its positives, monohydrate can come with some side effects. It can cause bloating and excessive water retention in some, for those with digestive issues this is where HCL shines.

Creatine Hydrochloride (HCL)

Creatine Hydrochloride (HCL) is a form of creatine where the molecule is bound with hydrochloric acid to enhance its solubility and absorption in the body. Like its monohydrate counterpart, it’s used to support high-intensity training plus all the same benefits to cognitive function. HCL is synthetically produced and not found naturally in food, so the only way to supplement HCL, is to take the supplement on its own. It lacks most of the side effects that standard monohydrate brings, minimal bloating and low water retention, it also mixes better in liquid due to its solubility.

HCL does lack the extensive research portfolio that monohydrate has, so its long-term effects may prove to be different to monohydrate. But with an almost identical structure, it’s most likely similar.

So... What Should I Take?

Regardless of whether you take monohydrate or HCL, if you’re doing it regularly then you’re doing it right. There’s not really at this point one type that trumps the other in terms of muscular output, it really does come down to personal preference. Monohydrate is the gold standard, is cheap and effective, but can cause digestive problems in some. HCL provides the same benefits, but tends to be a touch more expensive on average, with little to no side effects.

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