OutHouse
Lifer
Originally posted by: SnapIT
Originally posted by: schdaddy
Originally posted by: Skoorb
It's very common for weight lifters to have that much and common for many of them to have a hell of a lot more. In reality I have probably 150 a day. Although it's true what you said about too much being bad that doesn't necessitate that 150 is bad, or even that 200 is bad.Originally posted by: schdaddy
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Not really. How easy is it for you to get 175 grams of protein a day with a high biological value? Pretty damn hard.Hmm? Aparently you are rather ignorant towards vegetarianism.
175 grams!!!
you are rather:
A) freaky big as hell
B) wasting your time eating that much protein in a day trying to get freaky big as hell
plus too much protein makes it hard on your kidneys to remove all that nitrogen from your system
i don't question pro-lifters taking in much more protein daily than the avg person, but that doesn't mean the avg weightlifter has to double or triple their protein intake
i'm just saying, since your body can't store protein that most of your intake is just getting pissed away (and there is the possiblity of too much)
Ah, but the real question is, does a higher protein intake promote anabolism? If the higher intake can shift the catabolic state it will be worth it even though most of it will be converted and stored (as fat) or pushed out of your system...
Of all the amino acids some are used more than others, meaning that with a higher quality source you need less protein, so reasonably, to achieve the same results and only eating veggie food will be HARD... (as the protein from vegetable sources such as beans and lenses does not have the preferred AA profile)
So eating high amounts of good quality proteins is a good idea for weight lifters, i keep my intake at 250-350...
Amino Acids (AA) are the building blocks for protein. Protein is a polypeptide meaning it has 100 or more amino acids. There are over 300 AA that occur in nature but only 20 of them occour in proteins. There are only 9 AA that are essential for us humans. Essential means that our bodies does not make them so we HAVE to get them from our diet. Phonyalanime, Valine, Typtophan, Tyrosine, Isoleucine, Methionine, Histidine, Leucine and Lysine.
There are 3 catagories of proteins.
1. Nutritionally complete = they are complete becasue the contain all essential AA in Sufficant amounts
2. Nutritionally incomplete = they do not have ALL essential AA's
3. Complimentary proteins = Foods combined to give full compliment of essential AA's IE Red beans and Rice.