Beta-Alanine
Beta-alanine is a non-essential amino acid and the rate-limiting precursor to carnosine, a dipeptide (beta-alanine + histidine) concentrated in skeletal muscle. Carnosine acts as an intramuscular pH buffer, absorbing hydrogen ions generated during high-intensity glycolytic exercise. Beta-alanine supplementation elevates muscle carnosine by 40-80% over 4-8 weeks, consistently improving performance in exercise bouts lasting 1-4 minutes. Over 40 clinical studies support its efficacy.
Evidence
Moderate evidence
Safety
Unknown safety profile
Clinical Status
No formal phase listed
Research Sync
Feb 19, 2026
Dosing
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Pharmacology
Evidence Score
Scores estimated from study counts. Exact breakdown computed after research sync.
Plain-English Snapshot
Beta-Alanine is currently categorized as a supplement compound.
Evidence is moderate (74/100): promising signal from 394 indexed studies, but context and population still matter.
Safety scoring is incomplete. Start conservatively and monitor carefully.
Core mechanism
Rate-limiting carnosine precursor; muscle carnosine buffers intramuscular H+ ions during high-intensity glycolytic activity
Practical Context
Strongest current signals
- Level A: Carnosine/histidine-containing dipeptide supplementation improves depression and quality of life: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
- Level A: Beta-Alanine for Improving Exercise Capacity, Muscle Strength, and Functional Performance of Older Adults: A Systematic Review.
- Level A: Effect of carnosine or beta-alanine supplementation therapy for prediabetes or type 2 diabetes mellitus: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.