My
Thoughts About the Benefits of Protein Supplements Vs. Protein
Foods
Are protein supplements
really better than protein foods? Before attempting to answer
this question, I should first preface it by mentioning that I
do not sell supplements, nor am I associated with any
supplement company, so you’re getting an honest and unbiased
opinion. Don't get me wrong; I am not anti-supplement by any
means. It would simply be more accurate to say that I am
"pro-food." There are a lot of good supplements on the market,
and I've used many of them, including a multi vitamin, creatine
and essential fatty acid (EFA) supplements such as Flaxseed
oil. Protein powders and meal replacements can also be
indispensable if you don't have time to eat every three hours.
However, protein supplements are not the master
key to your success, real protein foods is!
Did you ever notice how
articles about protein in certain bodybuilding
magazines are seldom objective? Instead, they all seem to be
slanted towards hyping some "revolutionary" new product. Did
you ever wonder why? In my opinion, most articles on protein
supplements are nothing more than thinly disguised
advertisements (some very thinly). Sometimes they give you a
very persuasive-sounding argument, replete with dozens of
references from scientific studies (mostly done on rodents, of
course). They even give you an 800 number at the end of the
article to order. (How convenient!).jpg)
When protein manufacturers
throw around fancy words like cross flow microfiltration,
oligopeptides, ion-exchange, protein efficiency ratio,
biological value, nitrogen retention and glycomacropeptides, it
sure sounds convincing, especially when scores of scientific
references are cited. But don't forget that the supplement
industry is big business and most magazines are the supplement
industry. Lyle McDonald, author of "The Ketogenic Diet," hit
the nail on the head when he wrote "Unfortunately, the
obsession that bodybuilders have with protein has made them
susceptible to all kinds of marketing hype. Like most aspects
of bodybuilding (and the supplement industry in general), the
issue of protein is driven more by marketing hype than
physiological reality and marketing types know how to push a
bodybuilder’s button when it comes to protein "
Many nutrition "experts"
(read: people who sell supplements), state that there are
distinct advantages of protein supplements (powders and amino
acid tablets) over whole protein foods. For example, they argue
that whey, a by-product of the cheese-making process, is a
higher quality protein than most whole food sources. There are
many different methods of determining protein quality,
including biological value (BV), protein efficiency ratio
(PER), Net Protein Utilization (NPU), chemical score, and
protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS). If
you have ever seen advertisements for protein powders and
supplements, you have undoubtedly heard of one or more of these
measures of protein quality.
BV is one of the most
commonly used and is arguably, the best measure of a protein's
quality. BV is based on how much of the protein consumed is
actually absorbed and utilized by the body. The higher the
amount of protein (nitrogen) that is actually retained, the
greater the BV. If a protein has a BV of 100, it means that all
of the protein absorbed has been utilized with none lost. Whole
eggs score the highest of all foods with a BV of 100, while
beans have a BV of only 49.
Protein quality is certainly
an important issue, but it is one that has been enormously
overstated and even distorted for marketing purposes. Whey
protein is truly an excellent protein with a biological value
at or near 100. Many advertisements list whey as having a BV
between 104 and 157, but if you look in any nutrition textbook
it will tell you that it is impossible to have a BV over 100.
In "Advanced Nutrition and Human Metabolism," BV is defined as
"a measure of nitrogen retained for growth and/or maintenance
that is expressed as a percentage of nitrogen
absorbed."
When a protein supplement is
listed as having a BV over 100, the company has intentionally
manipulated the number for marketing purposes or
unintentionally confused BV with another method of rating
protein quality. Certain whey proponents claim that whey is
"superior to whole egg" so the percentage sign on BV had to be
dropped and the scale extended beyond 100. It was noted by
bodybuilding writer Jerry Branium in IRONMAN magazine that in a
study where the BV of whey was reported to be 157, the author
confused BV with chemical score. Chemical score is a comparison
of the amino acid pattern in an ideal reference protein to a
test protein and therefore the number can exceed 100. 157 was
actually the chemical score and not the BV.
Most bodybuilders and
strength athletes already consume more than enough protein (an
understatement if there ever was one), so the importance of BV
to these athletes who are already consuming copious amounts of
protein has been overplayed. Even though whey has a higher BV
than chicken breast, fish or milk protein, if the total
quantity of protein you consume is sufficient, then it is not
likely that substituting whey for food proteins will result in
any additional muscle growth.
Whether you choose a whole
protein food or a protein supplement isn’t as important as some
would like you to believe. For the purposes of developing
muscle, the only guidelines for protein that you must follow
are: (1) consume a source of complete protein with every meal,
(2) eat at frequent intervals approximately three hours apart
(about six times per day) and (3) consume a minimum of .8 grams
to 1 gram per pound of body weight. There are times when it
would be beneficial to consume more than one gram per pound of
body weight, but that will have to be the subject of another
article.
Because whey protein does
have a high BV, it probably offers the most benefits when you
are dieting on very low calories. When your energy intake and
correspondingly, your protein intake, are reduced, whey protein
could help you get greater utilzation of the smaller amount of
protein that you are taking in. In other words, choosing
proteins of the highest quality is more of an issue when you
are dieting than when you are focusing on mass gains when total
calories and protein are being consumed in abundant amounts.
Whey protein also provides a way to get high quality protein
without the fat, which is also important when
dieting.
It has been suggested that
whey may have other advantages besides high protein quality,
although they are frequently overstated. These benefits include
enhanced immunity, increased antioxidant activity and quick
absorption. Several studies in "Clinical and Investigative
Science" by Dr. Gerard Bounous of Montreal have shown that whey
protein provides anti carcinogenic properties, protection from
infections, and other enhanced immune responses. Whey protein
was also been shown to raise levels of Glutathione, an
important antioxidant that can offer protection from free
radical oxidative damage. While such findings are very
promising, all these studies, which are frequently quoted in
whey protein advertisements, were performed on mice, so it is
unclear how well the results extrapolate to humans.
Another acknowledged benefit
of whey protein is its fast absorption rate. Although there
isn’t any evidence that protein supplements digest more
efficiently than whole foods (as is often claimed), they are
definitely digested faster. This is most important after a
training session when the rates of protein synthesis and
glycogen re-synthesis are increased. This is the reason it is
often recommended that a liquid meal containing protein and a
high glycemic carbohydrate be consumed immediately post-workout
and that whey is the ideal protein for this purpose. Even in
considering post-workout nutrition, there is still little proof
that a liquid protein-carb complex will actually produce better
muscular growth than whole foods, as long as complete whole
food protein foods and complex carbohydrates are consumed
immediately after the training session and every three waking
hours for a period of 24 hours thereafter.
Speaking of protein
absorption rates, the discussion of fast acting versus slow
acting proteins seems to be the latest hot topic these days in
bodybuilding circles. The interest was sparked by studies in
1997 and 1998 that examined the differences between the
absorption rates of whey versus casein. The researchers
concluded that whey was a fast acting protein and was
considered to be more "anabolic" while casein was slower acting
and was considered to be more "anti-catabolic. " It was further
hypothesized that consuming a combination of these two types of
proteins could lead to greater muscle growth. These findings
have prompted the supplement companies to market an entirely
new category of protein supplements; casein and whey mixes. The
problem with drawing such conclusions so quickly is that these
studies looked at the speed of whey and casein absorption in
subjects who had fasted for 10 hours before being fed the
protein. Any suppositions drawn from this information are
probably irrelevant if you are eating mixed whole food meals
every three hours. Obviously, more research is
needed.
This recent fascination with
various rates of protein absorption could be compared to the
interest in the glycemic index. The glycemic index is a scale
that measures the rate at which the body converts various
carbohydrate foods into blood glucose. The higher the glycemic
index, the faster the food is converted to glucose and the
larger the insulin response. Therefore it is said that high
glycemic foods should be avoided in favor of low glycemic index
foods. The error in relying solely on the glycemic index as
your only criteria for choosing carbohydrates is that the index
is based on consuming a carbohydrate food by itself in a fasted
state.
When carbohydrates are
consumed in mixed meals that contain protein and a little fat,
the glycemic index loses some of its significance because the
protein and fat slow the absorption of the carbohydrate. That’s
why the glycemic index is really much ado about nothing and the
same could probably be said for the casein and whey argument.
It's just the latest in a long string of new angles that
supplement companies use to promote their protein: free-form vs
peptides, concentrate vs isolate, ion exchange vs
microfiltration, soy vs whey, casein and whey mix vs pure whey
and so on. Every year, you can count on some new twist on the
protein story to appear. Certainly there are going to be
advances in nutrition science, but all too often these "new
discoveries" amount to nothing more than marketing
hype.
What about amino acid pills?
Amino acids pills are simply predigested protein. Proponents of
amino acid supplementation claim that because the amino's are
predigested, the body will absorb them better, leading to
greater improvements in strength and muscle mass. It sounds
logical, but this is a gross underestimation of the body's
capacities and actually the reverse is true: The human
digestive system was designed to efficiently process whole
foods; it was not designed to digest pills and powders all day
long. Amino's are absorbed more rapidly in the intestine when
they are in the more complex di and tri-peptide
molecules.
Your body gets better use of
the aminos as protein foods are broken down and the amino's are
absorbed at just the right rate for your body's needs. In
"Exercise Physiology; Energy Nutrition and Human Performance,"
authors Katch and McArdle state that "Amino acid
supplementation in any form has not been shown by adequate
experimental design and methodology to increase muscle mass or
significantly improve muscular strength, power, or
endurance."
Furthermore, consuming
predigested protein when you are seeking fat loss is not
necessarily advantageous because it shortchanges you of the
thermic effects of real food. Whole foods have a major
advantage over protein supplements; they stimulate the
metabolism more. This is known as the "thermic effect of food."
Protein has the highest thermic effect of any food. Including a
whole protein food with every meal can speed up your metabolic
rate as much as 30% because of the energy necessary to digest,
process, and absorb it. This means that out of 100 calories of
a protein food such as chicken breast, the net amount of
calories left over after processing it is 70. In this respect,
the fact that protein foods digest slower than amino acid
tablets is actually an advantage.
A final argument against
amino acid supplements is the cost. Amino's are simply not cost
effective. If you don’t believe it, pick up a bottle and do the
math yourself. One popular brand of "free form and peptide
bonded amino acids" contains 150 1000mg. tablets per bottle and
costs $19.95. 1000 mg. of amino acids equals 1 gram of protein,
so the entire bottle contains 150 grams of protein. $19.95
divided by 150 grams is 13.3 cents per gram. Let's compare that
to chicken breast. I can buy chicken breast from my local
supermarket for $2.99 a pound. According to Corinne Netzer’s
"Complete Book of Food Counts," there are 8.8 grams of protein
in each ounce of chicken, so one pound of chicken (16 oz) has
about 140 grams of protein. $2.99 divided by 140 grams equals
2.1 cents per gram. The amino acids cost more than six times
what the chicken breast does! I don’t know about you, but I’ll
stick with the chicken breast.
The biggest advantage of
protein supplements is not that they can build more muscle than
chicken or egg whites or any other whole food protein, the
biggest advantage is convenience. It is easier to drink a
protein shake than it is to buy, prepare, cook and eat poultry,
fish or egg whites. Consuming small, frequent meals is the
optimal way to eat, regardless of whether your goal is fat loss
or muscle gain. To keep your body constantly in positive
nitrogen balance, you must consume a complete protein every
three hours. For many people, eating this often is nearly
impossible. That's when a high quality protein supplement is
the most helpful.
Aside from convenience, the
truth about protein supplements is that they offer few
advantages over protein foods. There is no scientific evidence
that you can't meet all of your protein needs for muscle growth
through food. As long as you eat every three hours and you eat
a complete protein such as eggs, lean meat or lowfat dairy
products with every meal, it is not necessary to consume any
protein supplements to get outstanding results. Whey protein
does have some interesting and useful properties and
supplementing with a couple scoops each day is not a bad idea,
especially if you are on a low calorie diet for fat loss or when you're using a
post workout shake instead of a meal. Aside from that, focus on
real food and don’t believe the hype.
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Muscle
References
1) Groff, James, et al,
Advanced Nutrition and Human Metabolism, West Publishing
company, 1995.
2) Fruhbeck, Gema. Slow and
fast dietary proteins. Nature, 391: 843-844
3) Boirie, Y. et al. Slow and
fast dietary proteins differently modulate postprandial protein
accretion. Proc National Acad Sci, 94: 14930-14935,
1997
4) Lemon, Peter, Protein and
Exercise: update, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise,
Vol 19, No. 5, S179 - S190, 1987
5) Carraro, F., et at, Effect
of exercise and recovery on muscle protein synthesis in human
subjects. Amer Journal of physiology, 259: E470,
1990
6) Lemon, Peter, Is increased
dietary protein necessary or beneficial for individuals with a
physically active lifestyle? Nutrition reviews, 54:S 169-175,
1996
7)Bounous, G., et al, The
immunoenhancing property of dietary whey protein concentrate.
Clinical and Investigational Medicine, 11: 271-278.
1988.
8) Sadler, R., The benefits
of dietary whey protein concentrate on the immune response and
health. S Afr. J Dairy Sci, 24: No 24, 1992
9) Bounous, G., Dietary whey
protein inhibits the development of dimethylhydrazine-induced
malignancy. Clinical and Investigational Medicine, 12: 213-217,
1988
10) Bounous, G., et al, The
biological activity of undenatured dietary whey protein; role
of glutathione. Clinical and Investigational Medicine, 14: 4,
296-309, 1991
11) Netzer, Corinne. The
Complete Book of Food Counts. Dell Publishing, 1997
12) Katch, Katch &
McArdle, Exercise Physiology; Energy, Nutrition and Human
Performance, Wiliams and Wilkins, 1996.
About the Author:
Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural
bodybuilder, an NSCA-certified personal trainer (CPT),
certified strength & conditioning specialist (CSCS),
and author of the #1 best-selling e-book, "Burn the Fat,
Feed the Muscle.” Tom has written hundreds of articles and
been featured in IRONMAN, Australian IRONMAN, Natural
Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Exercise for Men and
Men’s Exercise, as well as on dozens of websites
worldwide. For information on Tom's Fat Loss program,
visit: Burn the Fat Feed the Muscle
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