Probably not a shocker to some who have been following Beta Alanine research in resistance trained populations. In this study, 19 resistance-trained men (age: 27.3 ± 5.5 years; height: 178 ± 10 cm; body mass: 83.4 ± 9.7 kg; training experience: 5.9 ± 3.9 years) were assigned to either placebo, or Beta Alanine given 4x a day at 1.6g in each serving (6.4g overall). The Beta Alanine used was CarnoSyn, aka the “good stuff”. Placebo was just maltodextrin.
Training wise, the protocol was a 4x/week split. 3 sets per exercise performed to a 12 rep max. 60 seconds of rest between sets and 120 seconds between exercises.
Long story short, both the placebo group and supplementation group “induced significant strength and morphological responses. However, the addition of beta-alanine supplementation did not enhance these adaptive outcomes.”
What I like about this study is the dosage used. Some have theorized that the typical Beta Alanine dosage of 3.2g just may not be enough. This study used 6.4g. This of course doesn’t mean that maybe an even higher dosage wouldn’t find some benefit, but I think this study helps us see that Beta Alanine at typical dosages may not be of much use for the typical lifter. An argument could probably be made for something like cycling/running near max for 1-2 mins, but I don’t see a great argument for the typical gym goer doing a bodybuilding style workout.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Training wise, the protocol was a 4x/week split. 3 sets per exercise performed to a 12 rep max. 60 seconds of rest between sets and 120 seconds between exercises.
Long story short, both the placebo group and supplementation group “induced significant strength and morphological responses. However, the addition of beta-alanine supplementation did not enhance these adaptive outcomes.”
What I like about this study is the dosage used. Some have theorized that the typical Beta Alanine dosage of 3.2g just may not be enough. This study used 6.4g. This of course doesn’t mean that maybe an even higher dosage wouldn’t find some benefit, but I think this study helps us see that Beta Alanine at typical dosages may not be of much use for the typical lifter. An argument could probably be made for something like cycling/running near max for 1-2 mins, but I don’t see a great argument for the typical gym goer doing a bodybuilding style workout.

Does beta-alanine supplementation enhance adaptations to resistance training? A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study
The aim of the present study was to assess the effects of beta-alanine supplementation on muscle strength and thickness. Nineteen resistance-trained men (age: 27.3 ± 5.5 years; height: 178 ± 10 cm; body mass: 83.4 ± 9.7 kg; training ...