
Hermetica Superfood Encyclopedia
Legacy index-continuity record: the score and narrative are provisional and must not be represented as validated or human-approved.
Review flags: AWAITING_SEMANTIC_VALIDATION
Creatine nitrate combines creatine monohydrate with nitrate groups to enhance both ATP regeneration and nitric oxide production. This dual mechanism increases muscle strength while improving blood flow and nutrient delivery to working muscles.

Reported Benefits (Provisional)
Origin & History

Creatine nitrate is a form of creatine bonded with nitrate, enhancing its solubility and absorption. It is synthesized in a lab setting.
Research Narrative (Provisional)
While not as extensively studied as creatine monohydrate, initial research suggests benefits in performance and nitric oxide production.
Preparation & Dosage
Dosage guidance is withheld because the publication gate has not recorded adequate support for this profile.
Nutritional Profile
Creatine Nitrate (No3-T) is a synthetic compound formed by bonding creatine with a nitrate (NO3⁻) molecule, yielding approximately 67% creatine and 33% nitrate by molecular weight. It is not a whole food and thus lacks traditional macronutrients (fats, carbohydrates, fiber) or significant vitamin/mineral content. Key bioactive compounds: Creatine moiety (~670 mg per 1 g dose) — serves as a phosphocreatine precursor, replenishing ATP in skeletal muscle; bioavailability is high (nearly complete intestinal absorption, comparable to creatine monohydrate, though some studies suggest marginally enhanced solubility in water, ~10x more soluble than creatine monohydrate, potentially improving gastrointestinal tolerance). Nitrate moiety (~330 mg per 1 g dose) — converted endogenously via the nitrate-nitrite-nitric oxide (NO) pathway; oral nitrate is reduced to nitrite by commensal bacteria on the tongue, then further reduced to NO in acidic/hypoxic environments. Typical supplemental doses range from 1–2 g providing ~670–1340 mg creatine and ~330–660 mg nitrate. For context, 330 mg nitrate is roughly equivalent to the nitrate content in ~100–150 g of beetroot. No significant protein content per se, though creatine contains nitrogen (amino acid derivative of arginine, glycine, and methionine). Caloric contribution is negligible (<5 kcal per serving). Contains no essential vitamins, minerals, or dietary fiber. Bioavailability note: the nitrate component relies on the enterosalivary circulation and oral microbiome for conversion to nitrite; use of antibacterial mouthwash can reduce NO production by up to 90%. Creatine uptake into muscle is insulin-sensitive, so co-ingestion with carbohydrates or protein may enhance muscular creatine loading. No significant lipid-soluble compounds are present.
Reported Mechanism (Provisional)
Creatine nitrate functions through two pathways: the creatine component increases phosphocreatine stores for rapid ATP regeneration via the creatine kinase enzyme system. The nitrate portion is reduced to nitric oxide through the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, activating guanylyl cyclase to produce cGMP, which triggers vasodilation and improved blood flow.
Clinical Narrative (Provisional)
Limited clinical research exists specifically on creatine nitrate compared to creatine monohydrate. Small preliminary studies suggest 3-6g daily may improve power output by 8-12% and reduce fatigue during high-intensity exercise. Most evidence extrapolates from separate creatine and nitrate research, with creatine showing consistent benefits across 500+ studies and nitrate demonstrating 4-8% endurance improvements in multiple trials.
Also Known As
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