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Optimal protein for building and maintaining muscle

How to opitmise your protein intake to build and maintain muscle

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Maintaining strength as we age is associated with health span and reduced death from all causes. In this respect, muscle can be seen as the organ of longevity.

Nutrition to increase your muscle is more refined than simply eating more food or randomly increasing the protein in your diet.

First – here are the basic components for building muscle:

  • Resistance exercise – you can’t build muscle without putting decent stress on the muscle. Resistance exercise or weight training must be consistent and regular.
  • Optimal nutrition
    • Top of the list is optimal protein intake – both daily and per meal
    • Next is adequate calories, enough to give you sufficient energy, both carbohydrates and fat for training
    • A slight calorie excess helps you build muscle and helps recovery
  • Sleep and adequate recovery between sessions

This post focuses on optimising your protein intake

The basics: Protein, carbohydrate, and fat

Of the 3 macronutrients protein, more accurately amino acids are required for building muscle. Carbohydrates and fats need to be eaten in adequate amounts for fuel depending on your energy needs. Too much and you’ll store the excess as fat. Too little and you will compromise training, recovery, and muscle protein synthesis.

Protein comes mainly from animals. Plant proteins also exist but are a small percentage of most plants. A protein is composed of long chains of amino acids, digestion breaks them down into single amino acids, these single protein molecules pass through our gut cells and then into circulation where they are transported into cells in the body. Amino acids are then reassembled to rebuild and repair your muscles, build your immune system, and your enzymes, in fact, every cell in your body including those on your bones.

The Importance of Protein

Your body requires a regular daily supply of protein (amino acids) to rebuild and repair cells, muscle, immune system, blood, bones, organs, to make enzymes, neurotransmitters, and hormones. Our body has limited storage for protein so we must have a regular supply from the diet. Without adequate protein you will lose muscle tissue and your immune system will run down.

Muscle – the largest organ in your body, is made from protein

Muscle is the organ of longevity. The more muscle and the stronger that muscle, the healthier and more functional you will be as you age. Muscle is the organ that burns carbohydrates and fat. If we lose muscle when we lose weight, we are more likely to yo-yo diet as the engine – the fuel-burning organ is reduced.

How much protein do you need to build muscle?

The amount of protein needed to maintain or grow your muscle is a minimum of 1.2 grams per kg body weight a day. A more ideal amount is 1.6 grams per kg bodyweight a day. More than this gives you a small advantage, however, this is a good place to start. Note that it is twice the RDA. The RDA is the amount needed to prevent deficiency, not the optimal amount to grow new muscle.

Take your weight and multiply it by 1.6 – 2.2

Eg. if you weigh 80kg, x 1.6 = 128 grams, or x 2.2 = 176.

That is the grams (net grams of protein) you need per day to reach your goal. Then we need to divide this fairly equally between the meals you are going to eat: 3 – 5 meals is optimal. The optimal amount per meal is at least 30 grams ideally 40 – 50grams

What is the optimal amount of protein to eat at each meal?

Now that we have the amount per day we need to eat that in an optimal way to trigger a process called muscle protein synthesis. Muscle protein synthesis (MPS) is what makes us build new muscle at the fastest possible rate. Scientists have found we need a specific amino acid (one of 20 found in protein) called leucine, and it is not until leucine reaches a certain amount in one meal that MPS is triggered. The amount of leucine required is 2.5 – 3 grams in one sitting. How do we get this amount of leucine? By eating 30 grams of net protein.

What does 30 grams of protein look like?

If we take a piece of meat – the example below is 130 grams of uncooked chicken – it contains not only protein but also water and fat. The amount of actual protein left if all the fat and water are removed is net protein.

Here are some examples of the amount of each food it would take to get 30 grams net. If you need a larger amount per meal, for example 45 grams – multiply the amount at left by 1.5.

The graphic above shows the amount of each food you need to eat to get protein to hit 30 grams net.

Note that some protein has a lot of added calories in the form of fat – e.g. dairy and fatty meat and nuts, others as carbohydrates, e.g. legumes. For this reason, they are not the best sources of protein.

To gain muscle you must also exercise in the right way

Weight-resistant exercise is required to grow muscle. Use a strength-building programme in order to use the protein you eat to build bigger and stronger muscles.

To sum up:

  • Work out how much protein you need per day. 1.6 x your body weight in Kg
  • Divided that into 4-5.
  • Choose a protein that you like and make the meal with added carbohydrates and fats as you wish – the focus should be on whole less processed food.
  • One or two of your meals (snacks) might be a smoothie or protein shake.
  • Eat 3-5 meals, 4 – 5 hours apart.
  • A casein protein shake as your last meal before sleep will keep your amino acid intake higher overnight.

 

2 COMMENTS

  1. Julianne, thanks for a GREAT article on Optimal protein for building and maintaining muscle. Maybe in the near future you can update this article with a bar chart, like the one you created for “Food Required to Get 30g Protein”, showing the amounts of plant and animal foods needed to get about 2 1/2g or 3g of Leucine in a serving size, including plant Protein (isolate) powders, since very large portions of most plant foods are needed to provide enough leucine per meal. Many thanks!

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