| Literature DB >> 24299050 |
Brad Jon Schoenfeld1, Alan Albert Aragon, James W Krieger.
Abstract
Protein timing is a popular dietary strategy designed to optimize the adaptive response to exercise. The strategy involves consuming protein in and around a training session in an effort to facilitate muscular repair and remodeling, and thereby enhance post-exercise strength- and hypertrophy-related adaptations. Despite the apparent biological plausibility of the strategy, however, the effectiveness of protein timing in chronic training studies has been decidedly mixed. The purpose of this paper therefore was to conduct a multi-level meta-regression of randomized controlled trials to determine whether protein timing is a viable strategy for enhancing post-exercise muscular adaptations. The strength analysis comprised 478 subjects and 96 ESs, nested within 41 treatment or control groups and 20 studies. The hypertrophy analysis comprised 525 subjects and 132 ESs, nested with 47 treatment or control groups and 23 studies. A simple pooled analysis of protein timing without controlling for covariates showed a small to moderate effect on muscle hypertrophy with no significant effect found on muscle strength. In the full meta-regression model controlling for all covariates, however, no significant differences were found between treatment and control for strength or hypertrophy. The reduced model was not significantly different from the full model for either strength or hypertrophy. With respect to hypertrophy, total protein intake was the strongest predictor of ES magnitude. These results refute the commonly held belief that the timing of protein intake in and around a training session is critical to muscular adaptations and indicate that consuming adequate protein in combination with resistance exercise is the key factor for maximizing muscle protein accretion.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24299050 PMCID: PMC3879660 DOI: 10.1186/1550-2783-10-53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Summary of studies meeting inclusion criteria
| Antonio et al., [ | 19 untrained young women | 18.3 g EAA or an equal dose of cellullose placebo taken (collectively) 20 minutes pre and post-exercise | No | DXA | Periodized progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 6 wks | Total weight lifted at the 12 RM intensity did not significantly change in either group | No significant body composition changes occurred in either group |
| Goddard et al., [ | 17 untrained older men (60–80 y) | 12 g of essential amino acids and 72 g (total) of fructose and dextrose consumed immediately after exercise | No | Computed tomography (CT). | Progressive resistance training consisting of knee extensions preformed 3 days/wk for 12 wks | Training produced a significant increase in 1RM strength and measures of maximal torque, no differences between groups | No significant differences in muscle CSA increase between groups |
| Rankin et al., [ | 13 untrained young men | Chocolate milk (providing a protein dose of 0.21 g/kg) or a CHO-electrolyte beverage (Gatorade) immediately after exercise | No | Dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and multiple upper & lower body circumference measurements | Periodized progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 10 wks | 1 RM strength increased in all exercises, with no significant difference between groups | No significant differences in fat reduction, mean mass gain, or circumference changes between groups |
| Andersen et al., [ | 22 untrained young men | 25 g protein (combination of whey, casein, egg white, and glutamine) or 25 g maltodextrin immediately before and after exercise | No | Muscle biopsy | Periodized progressive resistance training consisting of lower body exercises performed 3 days/wk for 14 wks | Squat jump height increased only in the protein group, whereas countermovement jump height and peak torque during slow isokinetic muscle contraction increased similarly in both groups. | The protein group showed hypertrophy of type I & II muscle fibers, whereas no significant change occurred in the CHO group |
| Bird et al., [ | 32 untrained young men | 6 g EAA or 6% CHO solution + 6 g EAA or placebo during exercise | No | DXA and muscle biopsy | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 2 days/wk for 12 wks | Training caused a significant increase in 1RM in the leg press similarly in both treatment groups compared to placebo, isokinetic strength increased in all groups, with no differences between groups | CHO + EAA showed greater gains in fat-free mass compared to placebo, fat mass decreased in all groups without any significant difference between groups |
| Coburn et al., [ | 33 untrained young men | 20 g whey + 6.2 g leucine or 26.2 g maltodextrin 30 minutes prior to and immediately after exercise | No | Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) | Progressive resistance training consisting of knee extensions performed 3 days/wk for 8 wks | Significantly greater 1 RM strength increase in the trained limb in the protein group compared to placebo | No significant body composition changes occurred in any of the groups, CSA increases did not differ between the protein and placebo groups |
| Candow, Burke, et al., [ | 27 untrained young men & women | Whey (1.2 g/kg) + sucrose (0.3 g/kg) or placebo (1.2 g/kg maltodextrin + 0.3 g/kg sucrose) | No | DXA | Progressive, periodized resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 4 days/wk for 6 wks | 1 RM strength increases in the squat and bench press were significantly greater in the protein groups than placebo | Lean mass increase was significantly greater in the protein groups than placebo |
| Candow, Chilibeck, et al., [ | 29 untrained older men | Multi-ingredient supplement containing a protein dose of 0.3 g/kg immediately before exercise and a CHO-based placebo immediately after, or the reverse order of the latter, or placebo before & after exercise | No | Air-displacement plethysmography, ultrasound | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 12 wks | 1 RM strength increases in the leg press & bench press occurred in all groups, no significant differences between groups | Lean mass and muscle thickness increased in all groups, no significant difference between groups |
| Cribb and Hayes, [ | 23 young recreational male bodybuilders | 1 g/kg of a supplement containing 40 g whey isolate, 43 g glucose, and 7 g creatine monohydrate consumed either immediately before and after exercise or in the early morning and late evening | Yes | DXA and muscle biopsy | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 10 wks | Immediate pre-post supplementation caused greater increases in 1-RM in 2 out of 3 exercises | Significant increases in lean body mass and muscle CSA of type II fibers in immediate vs. delayed supplementation |
| Hartman et al., [ | 56 untrained young men | 17.5 g protein within milk or a soy beverage, or CHO control immediately after exercise and again 1 hr after exercise | No | DXA and muscle biopsy | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 5 days/wk for 12 wks | All groups experienced 1RM strength gains, but no between-group differences were seen | Type II muscle fiber area increased in all groups, but with greater increases in the milk group than in the soy and control groups, fat-free mass increased to a greater extent in the milk group compared to the soy & control groups |
| Hoffman et al., [ | 21 well-trained young men | 42 g protein within a multi-ingredient supplement or a CHO placebo taken once in the morning and again after training | No | DXA | Progressive, periodized resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 4 days/wk for 12 wks | 1 RM bench press strength (but not squat strength) significantly increased in the protein group, while no measures of strength increased in the placebo group | No significant between-group or absolute changes in body composition occurred |
| Willoughby et al., [ | 19 untrained young men | 20 g whey-dominant protein or 20 g dextrose consumed 1 hour before and after exercise | No | Hydrostatic weighing, muscle biopsy, surface measurements | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercise for all major muscle groups performed 4 days/wk for 10 wks | Protein supplementation caused greater increases in relative strength (maximal strength corrected for bodyweight) in bench press & leg press | Significant increase in total body mass, fat-free mass, and thigh mass with protein vs. carb supplementation |
| Eliot et al., [ | 42 untrained older men | 35 g whey protein + CHO-electrolyte solution, or whey/CHO + 5 g creatine, or creatine-only, or CHO placebo | No | DXA and bioelectrical impedance | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercise for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 14 wks | Not measured | No significant effects of any of the whey and/or creatine treatments were seen beyond body composition changes caused by training alone |
| Mielke et al., [ | 39 untrained young men | 20 g whey protein + 6.2 g of leucine or 20 g maltodextrin 30 minutes before and immediately after exercise | No | Hydrodensitometry, | Dynamic constant external resistance (DCER) bilateral leg extension and bench press exercises were performed 3 days/wk for 8 wks. | 1 RM strength increased significantly in both groups without any between-group differences | No significant training-induced changes in body composition in either group, |
| Verdijk et al., [ | 28 untrained elderly men | 10 g casein hydrolysate or placebo consumed immediately before and after exercise | No | DXA, CT, and muscle biopsy | Progressive resistance training consisting leg press and knee extension performed 3 days/wk for 12 wks | 1 RM leg press & leg extension strength increased, with no significant difference between groups | No significant differences in muscle CSA increase between groups |
| Hoffman et al., [ | 33 well-trained young men | Supplement containing 42 g protein (milk/collagen blend) and 2 g carbohydrate consumed either immediately before and after exercise or in the early morning and late evening | Yes | DXA | Progressive resistance training consisting exercises for the major muscle groups peformed 4 days/wk for 10 wks. | 1 RM & 5 RM bench press & squat strength increased, with no significant difference between groups | No significant differences in total body mass or lean body mass between groups. |
| Hulmi et al., [ | 31 untrained young men | 15 g whey isolate or placebo consumed immediately before and after exercise | No | MRI, muscle biopsy | Progressive, periodized total body resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups trained performed 2 days/wk for 21 wks | Strength increased similarly in the protein & placebo group, but only the protein group increased isometric leg extension strength vs the control group | Significant increase in CSA of the vastus lateralis but not of the other quadriceps muscles in the protein group vs placebo |
| Josse et al., [ | 20 untrained young women | 18 g protein within milk or an isocaloric maltodextrin placebo immediately after exercise and again 1 hr later | No | DXA | Progressive, periodized resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 5 days/wk for 12 wks | 1 RM strength increased similarly in both groups, but milk significantly outperformed placebo in the bench press | Lean mass increased in both groups but to a significantly greater degree in the milk group, fat mass decreased in the milk group only |
| Walker et al., [ | 30 moderately trained men and women | 19.7 g of whey protein and 6.2 g leucine or isocaloric CHO placebo 30–45 minutes before exercising and the second packet 30–45 minutes after exercising. | No | DXA | Bodyweight-based exercises and running at least 3 days/wk, externally loaded training not specified | 1 RM bench press strength increased significantly in the protein group only | Total mass, fat-free mass, and lean body mass increased significantly in the protein group only |
| Vieillevoye et al., [ | 29 untrained young men | 15 g EAA + 15 g saccharose. or 30 g saccharose consumed with breakfast and immediately after exercise | No | Ultrasonography, 3-site skinfold assessment with calipers, 3-site circumference measurements | Progressive, periodized resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 2 days/wk for 12 wks | Maximal strength significantly increased in both groups, with no between-group diffrerence | Muscle mass significantly increased in both groups with no differences between groups, muscle thickness of the gastrocnemius medialis significantly increased in the EAA group only |
| Wycherly et al., [ | 34 untrained, older men & women w/type 2 diabetes | 21 g protein, 0.7 g fat, 29.6 g carbohydrate consumed either immediately prior to, or at least 2 h following exercise | Yes | DXA, waist circumference | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 3 days/wk for 16 wks | Not measured | Fat mass, fat-free mass, and waist circumference decreased with no significant differences between groups |
| Erskine et al., [ | 33 untrained young men | 20 g whey protein or placebo consumed immediately before and after exercise | No | MRI | 4-6 sets of elbow flexion performed 3 days/wk for 12 weeks | No significant differences in maximal isometric voluntary force or 1 RM strength between groups | No significant differences in muscle CSA between groups |
| Weisgarber et al., [ | 17 untrained young men and women | Whey protein dosed at 0.3 g/kg or isocaloric CHO immediately before, during, and after exercise | No | DXA and ultrasound | Progressive resistance training consisting of exercises for all major muscle groups performed 4 days/wk for 8 wks | 1 RM strength in the chest press increased in both groups without any between-group difference | Significant increases in muscle mass were seen without any difference between groups |
Figure 1Impact of protein timing on strength by study.
Figure 2Impact of protein timing on hypertrophy by study.
Figure 3Impact of protein timing on hypertrophy by study, adjusted for total protein intake.