{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "As someone who got COVID March last year, still experiences heart palpitations, and is often fatigued now - should I try the...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/718995785557196800/", "html": "<div class=\"question\"><strong>Anonymous</strong> asked: <p>As someone who got COVID March last year, still experiences heart palpitations, and is often fatigued now - should I try the creatine thing you're doing? If it doesn't work, I could just stop, right? </p><p>Are there side effects I should watch out for? </p></div>\n<p>There is one specific symptom it is useful for: difficulties in processing blood sugar into ATP energy, where it helps by replacing with energy derived from breaking down stored fat. Over my (9 now, I think) cases I&rsquo;ve encountered other fatigue symptoms, including one that was really an iron deficiency and one I suspect was &ldquo;post-exertional malaise&rdquo;, the creatine did nothing for them.</p><p>Creatine is pretty safe though, your body makes some naturally all the time, if you took a bucketload on the reg it might gratuitously let you burn too much fat doing exercise and then starve in a famine.</p><p>I would say it&rsquo;s worth trying once \u2013 take say 4 scoops, it&rsquo;ll take effect within 20 minutes, if that clears it up yay, take it every day and it&rsquo;ll burn fat to keep you on until the symptom clears, if it makes you feel a bit better but not totally try some more until you find your level, if that&rsquo;s not it sorry but maybe suggest it to other people with fatigue.</p>"}