September 12, 2013
I was back at the gym again today, 3 days in a row, I did my weight routine today along with some cardio, yesterday was just a cardio day. My weight seems to be staying the same. I think I will look at my meals and see if I can tweak things just a little bit.
I came across this article on a friends website, she is a Nutritionist in Australia. Its about increasing protein during weight loss.
Consuming twice the recommended daily allowance of protein while
adhering to a diet and exercise plan prevents the loss of muscle loss
and promotes fat loss, scientists from the US Army Research Institute of
Environmental Medicine have found.
However, the research, which was published in the September 2013
issue of The FASEB Journal, showed that tripling the recommended daily
intake of protein failed to provide additional benefits.
Study method
Researchers assigned 39 young men and women controlled diets for 31
days. The diets provided protein at three different levels: the US RDA,
twice the US RDA and three times the US RDA.
Participants were given adequate total calories to maintain constant
body weight for the first 10 days to allow their metabolism to adapt to
the dietary protein level, and then for the following three weeks,
weight loss was induced by restricting the total calories and increasing
daily exercise sufficiently to elicit an average two-pound weight loss
per week. Body composition and measurements of muscle protein metabolism
were performed at the end of both the stable weight maintenance and
weight loss phases of the study.
The study participants lost body weight during the weight loss phase
of the research, regardless of their protein intake. Researchers found
the proportion of weight loss due to restriction in fat-free mass was
lower and the loss of fat mass was higher in those receiving twice the
RDA and three times the RDA compared with those who were eating the RDA.
The anabolic muscle response to a protein-rich meal during the weight
loss phase was not different from the stable weight phase for both
participants eating twice the protein RDA and three times the RDA.
Participants eating the protein RDA, however, exhibited muscle loss
during the weight loss phase. The researchers said these results, in
which there were no difference between muscle loss for those eating
twice and three times the RDA, showed that there were limits to the
protective effect of extra protein.
“This study essentially confirms what body builders have shown us for
a long time – a high protein diet helps prevent muscle loss when trying
to lose fat,” said Gerald Weissmann, MD, Editor-in-Chief of The FASEB
Journal. “Although eating a well balanced diet is still necessary for
health and weight maintenance, upping one’s protein intake when dieting
might be a useful tool in the short term,” he said.
Researchers said they hoped the findings would be part of any
discussion by the Institute of Medicine for the updated Dietary
Reference Intakes on protein.
“We believe that the recommended daily allowance (RDA) for protein
should be based on a level to optimise health, as well as prevent
deficiencies, and our data demonstrate a potential inadequacy in the
current RDA for sparing muscle mass during weight loss, which may affect
a significant portion of the population,” said Stefan M. Pasiakos, Ph.
D, a researcher involved in the work from the Military Nutrition
Division at the US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine.
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