Anti-AgingMuscle

Carnosine

Also known as: L-Carnosine, beta-alanyl-L-histidine

A dipeptide concentrated in muscle and brain, studied for buffering exercise fatigue, anti-glycation, and antioxidant effects — though muscle levels are usually raised through its precursor, beta-alanine.

6 cited sources Status: see guide No dosing advice How we research & review →

Quick facts

Class
Dipeptide (beta-alanyl-L-histidine)
Found in
Skeletal muscle, brain, and heart
Studied for
Exercise buffering, anti-glycation, antioxidant effects
Key note
Muscle carnosine is typically raised via beta-alanine, not oral carnosine
Approval
Sold as a supplement; not an FDA-approved drug
Precursor
Beta-alanine (rate-limiting)
Common effect
Beta-alanine paresthesia (harmless tingling)
Educational summary only — not medical advice. Carnosine is not an approved medicine for general use. Evidence is limited and does not establish human safety or efficacy.

Key takeaways

  • Carnosine is a dipeptide (beta-alanyl-L-histidine) concentrated in muscle and brain.
  • Its best-supported role is buffering muscle acidity during high-intensity exercise.
  • Muscle carnosine is most reliably raised through its precursor beta-alanine, not oral carnosine.
  • It also has anti-glycation and antioxidant properties of interest in aging.
  • A supplement, not an FDA-approved drug.

Overview

Carnosine is a dipeptide formed from beta-alanine and the amino acid histidine. It occurs naturally in high concentrations in skeletal muscle and the brain, where it serves several protective roles.[1][3]

It is best known in sports nutrition — though, importantly, muscle carnosine is most reliably increased not by taking carnosine itself but by supplementing its rate-limiting precursor, beta-alanine.

How it works

  • Intracellular pH buffer. During high-intensity exercise, carnosine helps buffer the acid (hydrogen ions) that builds up in muscle, which may delay fatigue.[3][5]
  • Anti-glycation. Carnosine can bind reactive carbonyl compounds, limiting the formation of advanced glycation end-products linked to aging.[5]
  • Antioxidant & metal chelation. It scavenges reactive species and binds metal ions involved in oxidative damage.

Research & benefits

Exercise performance

The most robust evidence is indirect: beta-alanine supplementation reliably raises muscle carnosine, and systematic reviews and meta-analyses report modest improvements in high-intensity exercise capacity.[2][4] Oral carnosine itself is largely broken down during digestion, which is why beta-alanine is the preferred route.[1]

Aging & other roles

Carnosine's anti-glycation and antioxidant properties have generated interest in aging and neurological health, but human clinical evidence for these uses is more limited than the exercise data.[5]

Safety & status

Carnosine and beta-alanine are widely used and generally well tolerated. The most common, harmless effect of beta-alanine is paresthesia — a temporary tingling sensation — which can be reduced with divided doses. Carnosine is sold as a dietary supplement and is not an FDA-approved drug.

Frequently asked questions

Should I take carnosine or beta-alanine?

Muscle carnosine is most reliably increased by supplementing beta-alanine, its rate-limiting precursor, because oral carnosine is largely broken down in digestion. Beta-alanine is the more common, evidence-backed route for raising muscle carnosine.

Does carnosine improve exercise performance?

Indirectly — beta-alanine supplementation raises muscle carnosine, and meta-analyses report modest improvements in high-intensity exercise capacity. The effects are real but modest and depend on the activity.

Why does beta-alanine cause tingling?

The tingling (paresthesia) is a common, harmless effect of beta-alanine and can be reduced by splitting the dose across the day. It is not dangerous.

References

Each source links to its original record — peer-reviewed studies, regulator pages, or reference texts, labelled by type. We summarize findings neutrally; a citation is a reference, not an endorsement, and not a claim that its authors reviewed this page.

  1. Cesak O, Vostalova J, Vidlar A, et al. Carnosine and Beta-Alanine Supplementation in Human Medicine: Narrative Review and Critical Assessment. Nutrients. 2023. Peer-reviewed study
  2. Rezende NS, Swinton P, de Oliveira LF, et al. The Muscle Carnosine Response to Beta-Alanine Supplementation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Front Physiol. 2020. Peer-reviewed study
  3. Artioli GG, Sale C, Jones RL. Carnosine in health and disease. Eur J Sport Sci. 2019. Peer-reviewed study
  4. Culbertson JY, Kreider RB, Greenwood M, et al. Effects of beta-alanine on muscle carnosine and exercise performance: a review of the current literature. Nutrients. 2010. Peer-reviewed study
  5. Matthews JJ, Artioli GG, Turner MD, et al. The Physiological Roles of Carnosine and Beta-Alanine in Exercising Human Skeletal Muscle. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2019. Peer-reviewed study
  6. Boldyrev AA, Aldini G, Derave W. Physiology and pathophysiology of carnosine. Physiol Rev. 2013. Peer-reviewed study

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