Introduction
Taurine is an amino sulfonic acid that was once dismissed as non-essential because the body synthesizes it. Decades of research later, it is clear that dietary taurine matters — especially for cardiovascular health, muscle function, and central nervous system stability.
How It Works
Taurine stabilizes cell membranes, regulates calcium flux in muscles, and acts as a nervous system modulator. In the heart, it supports contractile function and prevents arrhythmias. In skeletal muscle, it aids calcium handling during contraction — meaning it may improve force output and reduce cramping.
The Evidence
A 2012 meta-analysis by Qaradakhi et al. found that taurine supplementation significantly reduced systolic blood pressure in hypertensive patients. For athletes, a review in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition showed taurine improved time-to-exhaustion in endurance trials, though the effect on maximal strength was small.
Energy Drinks: Marketing Meets Reality
Taurine became famous because Red Bull added it. The irony: energy drinks contain taurine plus caffeine plus sugar, creating a cardiovascular stress cocktail. Isolated taurine is very different. It is calming, not stimulating.
Dosage & Safety
500–2,000 mg daily. Taurine is extremely safe; studies have used up to 6 g/day without adverse effects. It is naturally abundant in meat, fish, and shellfish.
Verdict
B+ — a cheap, safe, broadly beneficial amino acid. Best for cardiovascular support and endurance athletes. Ignore the energy-drink marketing; taurine is not a stimulant.
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