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Barbell Medicine Podcast

Is Creatine Causing Your Shin Pain? + Splitting Training, Endometriosis for Lifters | Direct Line · May 2026

Barbell Medicine Podcast

Barbell Medicine

Health & Fitness

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 19 May 2026

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is the free preview of the May 2026 Direct Line, our monthly AMA for Barbell Medicine Plus subscribers. Three reader questions answered in full.

We open with a mid-30s woman with bilateral shin pain and exertional foot numbness who started creatine a month ago and is asking whether the supplement is the cause. We walk through the compartment syndrome literature, the 2025 case report being passed around online and misinterpreted, what creatine actually does to total body water (and what it doesn’t), the four compartment pressure studies that exist, the Waterman 2013 demographic data on who actually gets chronic exertional compartment syndrome, and the workup we would actually run if this person walked into clinic.

Next, whether splitting your resistance training across the day affects strength and hypertrophy. We cover BBM’s general heuristic on frequency as a distribution tool for training load, the Schoenfeld meta-analyses on frequency (2016 and 2019), the wrinkle on cardiorespiratory fitness and exercise snacks, and where we go off the reservation compared to a strict evidence-based read.

We close with endometriosis for the lifter, including the seven-year average diagnostic delay, the 2022 ESHRE guideline shift away from required laparoscopy, what the menstrual cycle and performance literature actually says (McNulty 2020), why the anti-inflammatory diet narrative is mostly noise, the iron and protein levers that matter, post-operative return-to-lifting timelines, the meet-timing question, and Austin’s clinical case walk on supplement stacks and GLP-1 anti-inflammatory effects. A dedicated full episode on endometriosis is coming this summer.

The full unabridged Direct Line covers ten more questions, including where the GLP-1 strength trials actually are, why DEXA misleads on muscle mass loss, how we arrived at the Vital 5 weightings, the salt sermon for strongman, running shoes for casual runners, hernias and crunches in older lifters, the Bristol Stool Chart, Austin on coaching his residents, and a fresh reading list. Full episode on BBM Plus.

Timestamps:

Question 1 · Creatine and shin pain01:2713:21

Question 2 · Splitting your workout across the day13:2120:29

Question 3 · Endometriosis for the lifter20:29

What we cover:

The clinical workup for chronic exertional compartment syndrome and why creatine is rarely the culprit. The Schoenfeld frequency literature and why training load matters more than the day it’s distributed across. Endometriosis basics including diagnostic delay, prevalence, and the 2022 ESHRE guideline change. Why most endometriosis “diets” don’t have evidence behind them, and which nutrition levers actually matter (iron, protein, energy availability). Post-operative return to training, meet-timing options, supplement stacks, and the role of GLP-1 receptor agonists in chronic anti-inflammatory effects.

Resources:

Subscribe to BBM Plus for the full unabridged Direct Line: https://barbellmedicine.supercast.com/


Barbell Medicine coaching and templates: https://www.barbellmedicine.com/


Signal book pre-order: https://www.barbellmedicine.com/shop/learning/signal/


Waterman B.R. et al. 2013. Risk factors for chronic exertional compartment syndrome in a physically active military population. Am J Sports Med 41(11):2545-2552.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24036570/


Powers M.E. et al. 2003. Creatine supplementation increases total body water without altering fluid distribution. J Athl Train 38(1):44-50.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12937471/


Antonio J. et al. 2021. Common questions and misconceptions about creatine supplementation (ISSN position). J Int Soc Sports Nutr 18(1):13.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33557850/


Bruneau A. et al. 2025. Creatine supplementation associated with chronic exertional compartment syndrome: case report. [TO ADD: PMID once indexed]


Schoenfeld B.J. et al. 2016. Effects of resistance training frequency on measures of muscle hypertrophy: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Sports Med 46(11):1689-1697.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27102172/


Schoenfeld B.J. et al. 2019. How many times per week should a muscle be trained to maximize hypertrophy? J Sports Sci 37(11):1286-1295.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30558493/


ESHRE Endometriosis Guideline Development Group. 2022. ESHRE guideline: endometriosis. Hum Reprod Open 2022(2):hoac009.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35350465/


McNulty K.L. et al. 2020. The effects of menstrual cycle phase on exercise performance in eumenorrheic women: systematic review and meta-analysis. Sports Med 50(10):1813-1827.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32661839/



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Austin and I wrote a book, and it's called Signal what testosterone levels are telling you about your

0:05.0

health, and it is available for pre-order right now with copies shipping in June. Here's why we wrote it.

0:10.0

The testosterone conversation right now is a mess. About a quarter of testosterone prescriptions

0:14.3

in the United States are started without any lab work, and over half of men who meet criteria

0:18.2

for low testosterone see their levels normalized on their own

0:21.1

without any treatment. And at the same time, nearly 40% of men who are 40 and older who have low

0:27.1

testosterone, only about one in 10 of them are actually getting treatment. So some men are getting

0:31.7

medicated for problems that they don't have, while other men who would genuinely benefit from

0:35.3

treatment, or at least an evaluation, well, they're not getting it. And everyone is trying to make decisions about testosterone, whether it's lifestyle, medication, or otherwise, without a clear framework for what testosterone even does. Signal is the book that we wrote to sort all of that out. It covers the physiology of testosterone from the ground up, how levels trend to cross the lifespan, and what has been driving them down at the population level over the last 50 years, with a surprising increase in the last decade.

0:58.7

We get into what testosterone actually does to exercise outcomes and what exercise does to testosterone

1:03.6

because those are two different questions that get conflated constantly.

1:07.3

There's a full section on female hormonal physiology rather than treating it as a footnote.

1:11.6

We cover how to interpret labs when the testing itself is unreliable, lifestyle measures that can

1:15.8

move the needle before medication enters the conversation in a detailed chapter on TRT for the

1:20.2

people where it is appropriate. This is the book we wished existed when we started out.

1:24.7

Right now you can pre-order the hardcover, the Kindle version, or bundle both together. And there's a pre-order special right now where you can add the Barbou Medicine testosterone course taught by Dr. Austin Brockie with a significant discount. The course is normally $124.99 and you can get it for $49 if you pre-order before June 17th, which also happens to be my birthday. It's a little birthday present me and help support what we do here at Barbohmedicine. Head over to barbellmedicine.com and pre-order Signal today. That's barbell medicine.com. Look for Signal in the shop. Welcome back to the Barbell Medicine podcast. I'm Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum. This is the direct line, our monthly Ask Us Anything for our Barbell Medicine plus subscribers.

2:02.1

And what you're hearing right now is the free preview.

2:04.5

Three questions from this month's episode.

2:06.9

First up, a mid-30s woman with bilateral shin pain wants to know if her creatine is causing it.

2:12.5

We walk through the compartment syndrome literature, the case report that's getting passed around online and mostly misinterpreted, and what we would actually do if we saw this person in clinic.

2:21.7

Then we cover whether splitting your resistance training sessions across the day changes anything

2:25.5

for strength and hypertrophy outcomes, and we close with endometriosis for the lifter,

...

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