Citrulline Malate
Citrulline malate combines L-citrulline (an amino acid) with malate (a Krebs cycle intermediate) in a 2:1 ratio. L-citrulline raises plasma arginine levels more effectively than supplemental arginine itself due to superior GI absorption and bypass of hepatic first-pass metabolism. This boosts nitric oxide (NO) production, causing vasodilation, improved blood flow, and the characteristic exercise pump. Malate independently supports mitochondrial ATP production. Together they reduce fatigue, improve multi-set training volume, and accelerate ammonia clearance.
Evidence
Strong evidence
Safety
Unknown safety profile
Clinical Status
No formal phase listed
Last Sync
Feb 19, 2026
Last Reviewed
Not reviewed yet
Dosing
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Pharmacology
Evidence Score
Scores estimated from study counts. Exact breakdown computed after research sync.
Plain-English Snapshot
Citrulline Malate is currently categorized as a supplement compound.
Evidence is strong (76/100) with a relatively mature body of research (264 indexed studies).
Safety scoring is incomplete. Start conservatively and monitor carefully.
Core mechanism
L-citrulline converts to arginine → NO via NOS → vasodilation; malate fuels Krebs cycle ATP synthesis and accelerates ammonia clearance
Practical Context
Strongest current signals
- Level B: The Antioxidant Power of Bergamot Polyphenolic Fraction Gold Potentiates the Effects of L-Citrulline in Athlete Performance and Vasodilation in a Pilot Study.
- Level B: Acute effects of combined supplementation of L-arginine and citrulline malate on aerobic, anaerobic, and CrossFit exercise performance.
- Level B: Changes in resistance training performance, rating of perceived exertion, and blood biomarkers after six weeks of supplementation with L-citrulline vs. L-citrulline DL-malate in resistance-trained men: a double-blind placebo-controlled trial.