The effect of creatine ingestion on urinary creatinine concentration – does supplementation mask a heavy dilution?

2021 
A high volume of fluid can strongly reduce a drug's concentration in urine. Therefore, to detect diluted samples the concentration of creatinine in urine is determined during testing drugs of abuse. If the concentration is below 20 mg creatinine/dL urine, the urine sample is usually rejected for drug testing. It should be examined whether creatine or creatinine ingestion can mask urine dilution by increasing the creatinine concentration. A total of 18 subjects drank 1.3 L of water and 0.2 L of orange juice on each of the three testing days: 1. without creatine, 2. with 20 g of creatine, 3. with 20 g of creatine following incubation for four days in orange juice at room temperature; an acidic environment should promote conversion of creatine to creatinine. The lowest creatinine concentrations in urine were observed on average two hours after fluid intake. At that time, ingestion of fluid without creatine, with creatine, and with creatine (ine)-orange juice mixture resulted in mean values of 11.6, 22.5, and 28.3 mg creatinine/dL urine, respectively. It can be concluded that ingestion of creatine or creatinine can increase the concentration of creatinine in urine and thus mask dilution of a sample. The conversion of creatine in orange juice further increases availability of creatinine as it is obvious from urine creatinine concentration. Therefore, creatine ingestion during drug testing will give rise to negative results due to matrix adulteration. In a case of suspected creatine supplementation, the creatine content of the sample should be determined in addition to creatinine.
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