Researchers examined data from 49 previously published studies with
a total of 1,863 people who did muscle-building workouts like
weightlifting. Participants who boosted their protein intake -
whether from foods or from supplements like bars, powders and shakes
- added more lean muscle mass and got stronger muscles than
exercisers who didn’t add extra protein to their diets.
However, increasing daily protein consumption beyond more than 1.6
grams for every kilogram (2.2 pounds) of body weight didn’t appear
to have any added benefit.
“Performing resistance exercise is an effective way to maintain or
increase lean muscle mass,” said lead study author Robert Morton of
McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.
“Protein supplementation is sufficient and necessary to augment
increases in muscle mass and strength during periods of resistance
training,” Morton said by email.
Added protein didn’t help older adults as much as younger people,
however.
Also, the benefits of extra protein were more pronounced for newer
exercisers than for people with lots of previous experience with
resistance training.
All of the studies included in the research review had healthy
adults performing resistance exercises at least twice a week. For
each study, participants were randomly selected to stick to their
usual diets or add extra protein.
Across all these studies, people adding protein to their diets
consumed an extra 4 grams to 106 grams daily. Overall, the most
common source of added protein was whey protein supplements,
followed by supplement blends.
Ten studies gave people added protein with milk, and another seven
examined adding protein with whole foods like beef and yogurt.
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One limitation of the study is that researchers didn’t have enough
data on older adults to determine how much added protein might help
these individuals build lean muscle mass, which typically declines
with age. Researchers also didn’t look at what happens when dieters
get added protein.
“It has been difficult to cultivate one simple message, quantifying
how much protein, what types of protein and whether messages should
differ among different populations of people,” said Kelsey Mangano,
a nutrition researcher at the University of Massachusetts in Lowell
who wasn’t involved in the study.
Still, the findings offer fresh insight into the amount of protein
some people might add to their diets to get additional benefits from
muscle-building workouts, Mangano said by email.
The results might not apply to people who don’t do resistance
training at least twice a week, said Dr. Mingyang Song of
Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Adding protein also isn’t risk-free, Song said by email. It can lead
to digestive problems and damage the kidneys, and there’s also some
concern that it may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease.
“It may result in an imbalanced diet,” Song said. “Thus, a healthy,
whole-food based diet should be consumed.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2uijHt7 British Journal of Sports Medicine,
online July 11, 2017.
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