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  1. #1
    tonight is offline Junior Member
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    Protein Absorption

    In terms of daily caloric intake we know that 1g protein = 4 calories. But as most everyone here is aware of, not all proteins are equally absorbed by the body. Consider this: Two hypothetical lifters at the same weight/experience/etc. both consume 300g of protein a day. Lifter #1 derives 100% of his protein from soy sources while lifter #2 derives 100% of his protein from egg sources. The lifter who's getting all his protein from soy products can't possibly have the same protein utilization as the lifter who gets his protein from eggs. If you do the math, lifter #1 (all soy) winds up absorbing only 148g of the 300g of protein consumed whereas lifter #2 (all eggs) winds up absorbing 264g of the 300g of protein consumed during the course of the day.

    I've come up with a few questions for discussion:
    1) When counting your daily protein grams to make sure you're getting a sufficient amount, for accuracy's sake, wouldn't it be necessary to multiply the net amount of protein in each food by their absorption percentage (refer to chart below)?
    2) For supplements like whey isolate, & L-glutamine wouldn't the percentage absorbed be around 99% or so (so long as these aren't combined with other proteins being consumed simultaneously)?
    3) How can you find out the maximum amount of protein you can absorb in one meal? I know this increases directly after a workout & with the use of juice, but is there some rough formula based on, say, bodyweight?


    (the chart below is fairly common - FYI I pulled it off http://www.columbu.com/nutrition/protein.html )

    The protein utilization rate of some common foods follows.

    Food NPU (net protein utilization)
    Eggs 88%
    Fish 78%
    Dairy products 76%
    Meat 68%
    Soybeans 48%
    Natural brown rice 40%
    Red beans 39%
    Coconut 38%
    Nuts 35%
    White beans 33%
    Maize 25%
    Whole wheat bread 21%
    White bread 20%
    Last edited by tonight; 06-12-2004 at 12:25 AM.

  2. #2
    tonight is offline Junior Member
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    anybody?

  3. #3
    Elliot's Avatar
    Elliot is offline Anabolic Member
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    yeah ever checked out the arnold book? it has a chart regarding protein absorbtion.. i think the number for soy is a bit to high or relates to women..

  4. #4
    tonight is offline Junior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by Elliot
    yeah ever checked out the arnold book? it has a chart regarding protein absorbtion.. i think the number for soy is a bit to high or relates to women..
    Yeah, I'm not sure on the exact percentages are (the chart above is a guideline) but what I'm asking is whether or not it would be better to count your daily protein totals using these percentages because it seems that if you don't the totals would be off by like 50-100g in some cases and this can be a big deal.

  5. #5
    DEVLDOG's Avatar
    DEVLDOG is offline Retired VET
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    thats why you can never eat to much protien

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