Protein Intake Study
What do you guys think about this?
~1.3 g/kg protein just as effective for muscle and strength gains as ~1.7 g/kg, new study finds
A new study compared 64 trainees consuming either a higher-protein diet including meat (non-vegetarians) or a lower-protein lacto-ovo vegetarian diet. Protein intake ranged from 1.5-1.8 g/kg per day in the meat eaters (~0.8 g/lb) compared to 1.2-1.4 g/kg per day in the lacto-ovos (~0.6 g/lb). Energy intake didn't significantly differ between groups.
After their 12-week training programs, there were no significant differences between the groups for muscle growth (quad muscle thickness and DXA lean body mass), strength development (1RM leg extension and isometric peak torque) or fat loss. The training program involved 8-12 sets of quad training per week, so that shouldn't have been a limiting factor.
What do you guys think about this?
~1.3 g/kg protein just as effective for muscle and strength gains as ~1.7 g/kg, new study finds
A new study compared 64 trainees consuming either a higher-protein diet including meat (non-vegetarians) or a lower-protein lacto-ovo vegetarian diet. Protein intake ranged from 1.5-1.8 g/kg per day in the meat eaters (~0.8 g/lb) compared to 1.2-1.4 g/kg per day in the lacto-ovos (~0.6 g/lb). Energy intake didn't significantly differ between groups.
After their 12-week training programs, there were no significant differences between the groups for muscle growth (quad muscle thickness and DXA lean body mass), strength development (1RM leg extension and isometric peak torque) or fat loss. The training program involved 8-12 sets of quad training per week, so that shouldn't have been a limiting factor.