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Dear Mom and Dad
A Letter To Parents Concerned About Their Teenager’s
Protein Intake
By Dr. John M Berardi, Ph.D.
First published at www.t-mag.com, Sep 5 2003.
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Almost all long-term weightlifters have gone through it. In an effort
to be proactive about our health, we go to the doctor for a routine
check-up or to delve a little deeper into what’s going on physiologically
and wham! The doc tells us that our kidneys are about to explode! And
then, after the shocking news about our main filtration system, the
doc lets us know that we may have had a heart attack! That’s right,
according to our doc, our high protein diets are about to kill us.
What in the wide, wide, world of amino acids is going on? After all,
many of the well-educated and progressive sports nutritionists have
been recommending higher protein diets for years. And since researchers
have demonstrated repeatedly that higher protein diets help maintain
a positive nitrogen status in weight trainers and athletes, high protein
diets can’t be all that bad, can they?
Well, doctors often think so. And let’s not make the mistake
of thinking that these doctors are "idiots" or lost in the
dark ages of medical practice, probably blood letting to release the
evil humors. It’s not that simple. The truth of the matter is
this: Weight training and higher protein diets do impact certain blood
markers of health function, but it’s my contention that in weight
trainers, these markers aren't nearly as alarming as many general practitioners
think.
Therefore, without further ado, I’d like to present a letter
that all doctors and parents should read before taking an alarmist approach
to a patient or teenage weightlifter’s blood work. This letter
is inspired by the countless emails I’ve received over the last
few years from frantic patients who have been told that their health
is being jeopardized by their high protein diets when it’s most
certainly not!
For the adults in the audience, you certainly have the power and discretion
to make your own choices with respect to your health. Unfortunately,
many of the emails I get are from teens whose parents control the protein
purse strings. For them, it’s not a matter of choice. Therefore,
this letter is written in order that their parents are better able to
understand the facts and make an informed decision.
Dear Mom and Dad,
I appreciate that you're taking an interest in your child’s
health. The fact that you're questioning the assumptions inherent in
the weight lifting community is commendable and hopefully will instill
in your child the ability to question established norms and to verify
the veracity of the claims issued by the self-proclaimed bodybuilding
"gurus." After all, blindly following—without proper
discretion—what all the other "meatheads" are doing
can definitely lead to problems.
In addition, I thank you for your objectivity in seeking out the truth
(or the information that comes as close to the truth as we can currently
get). It’s difficult to remain objective in today’s society
where we are easily influenced by the moods and alarmist nature of our
current media machine.
With respect to your concerns, no doubt brought on by the concern
of a well-intentioned physician or by the results of clinical assessment
(i.e. blood work), I’d like to address the relevant issues below.
ISSUE #1 — Many physicians believe that high
protein diets cause kidney dysfunction
RESPONSE #1 — This is FALSE according to everything
science now knows to be true. This presumption states that if you take
a healthy person and put them on a high protein diet, the protein will
somehow negatively influence the kidney, damaging it and causing renal
disease. To this end, there is absolutely no data in healthy adults
suggesting that a high protein intake causes the onset of renal (kidney)
dysfunction. There aren’t even any correlational studies showing
this effect in healthy people.
Any studies that show a correlation between renal (kidney) dysfunction
and protein intake are in those with some type of diagnosed, pre-existing
renal (kidney) disease like diabetic nephropathy, glomerular lesions,
etc. Even research into protein restriction for renal patients can be
controversial. (Shils, Modern Nutr in Health & Dis, 1999).
Besides, you’ll likely recognize a serious pre-existing kidney
condition; the signs and symptoms will clue you in long before you happen
upon it with a routine blood test (especially if there's a noted family
history of diabetes mellitus and hypertension).
Since an exhaustive search of the published literature will likely
not yield a single study showing that the amount of protein in the diet
causes, or is correlated with, the onset of renal dysfunction in otherwise
healthy individuals, the fact that this notion prevails is puzzling
to say the least!
But even if a doctor were to find an obscure reference that might suggest
a relationship between a high-protein diet and kidney disease, there
are numerous studies showing otherwise. Here are a few of them:
a) Ann Intern Med 2003 Mar 18;138(6):460-7
The impact of protein intake on renal function decline in women with
normal renal function or mild renal insufficiency.
Knight EL, Stampfer MJ, Hankinson SE, Spiegelman D, Curhan GC.
b) Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab 2000 Mar;10(1):28-38
Do regular high protein diets have potential health risks on kidney
function in athletes?
Poortmans JR, Dellalieux O.
c) Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 1999 Nov;23(11):1170-7
Changes in renal function during weight loss induced by high vs low-protein
low-fat diets in overweight subjects.
Skov AR, Toubro S, Bulow J, Krabbe K, Parving HH, Astrup A.
d) Eur J Clin Nutr 1996 Nov;50(11):734-40
Effect of chronic dietary protein intake on the renal function in healthy
subjects.
Brandle E, Sieberth HG, Hautmann RE.
e) Am J Kidney Dis 2003 Mar;41(3):580-7
Association of dietary protein intake and microalbuminuria in healthy
adults: Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. "Dietary
protein intake was not associated with microalbuminuria in normotensive
or nondiabetic persons."
If you’re interested, these studies can be accessed at www.pubmed.com.
ISSUE #2 — Many physicians believe that because
high protein diets can worsen the condition of those who already suffer
from kidney dysfunction, it only stands to reason that this should be
true in healthy people.
RESPONSE #2 — This is also FALSE! Much of the
speculation about kidney dysfunction associated with high protein diets
comes from early nutritional studies in renal patients (patients who
already have kidney disease).
In these individuals, when high protein diets are given as part of
total parenteral nutrition—or tube feedings—these diets
exacerbated their renal (kidney) problems. From these data, some physicians
and nutritionists began to speculate (sometimes erroneously) that increased
protein in the diet could be harmful to even those with healthy kidneys.
While there are hundreds of studies showing that high protein diets
are bad for kidney patients, I believe that a "leap" from
clinical patients to healthy patients isn't warranted. It’s this
leap that has been the cause of the persistent but slowly dying (sorry
for the word selection) idea that high protein diets could harm the
kidneys.
Again, there's no evidence whatsoever that high protein diets will
harm the kidneys of a healthy weightlifter. This is about as ridiculous
as someone suggesting that because eating certain types of fiber can
worsen the GI symptoms of someone with irritable bowel syndrome, fiber
must cause irritable bowl syndrome in otherwise healthy people.
ISSUE #3 — Kidneys DO change to adapt to high
protein diets.
RESPONSE #3 — Some studies in healthy individuals
do show an alteration of kidney function with very high protein diets.
However, it's important to note that these changes are not reported
as negative or "adverse." Instead, they seem to be structural
adaptations to increased filtration (something the kidneys are doing
all the time anyway).
If the kidney didn’t respond this way, most clinicians would
think something was wrong. Just like in weight training, tissues adapt
to the demands put on them. Therefore, just because the kidneys have
to "work" harder, doesn’t mean that this is a negative
thing. After all, what happens when muscles work harder? Well, they
adapt to the demands and become bigger, stronger, or more efficient.
Therefore, the adaptation that kidneys undergo is reasonable and appropriate.
But don’t take my word for it, check out this study (again at
www.pubmed.com):
Eur J Clin Nutr 1996 Nov;50(11):734-40
Effect of chronic dietary protein intake on the renal function in healthy
subjects.
Brandle E, Sieberth HG, Hautmann RE.
ISSUE #4 — What about the increased creatinine
and BUN indicated by the blood test?
RESPONSE #4 — For starters, how about a quick
discussion of the two markers?
Creatinine is commonly known as a waste product of muscle or protein
metabolism. To this end, its level is a reflection of the body's muscle
mass or the amount of protein in the diet. Low levels are sometimes
seen in kidney damage, protein starvation, liver disease, or pregnancy.
Elevated levels are sometimes seen in kidney disease due to the fact
that a damaged kidney will not remove creatinine from the body as it
should. Also, elevated levels are seen with the use of some drugs that
could impair kidney filtration. Finally, elevated levels could also
be seen with muscle degeneration, a high protein diet, or creatine supplementation.
With respect to creatinine measurements, it’s important to note
that the amount of creatinine in the blood is regulated by the amount
being produced (from protein degradation—muscle or dietary) vs.
the amount that’s being removed (by the kidney). Therefore, although
creatinine in the blood COULD be a marker of a damaged kidney’s
inability to filter creatinine out of the body at a normal rate, it
COULD ALSO be a marker of rapid protein degradation (via muscle damage
from weight training or from a high protein intake).
Think of the blood as a sink. If you turn on the faucet at a low rate,
the amount of water going into the sink and the amount leaving the sink
should balance each other out, leading to a predictable amount of water
in the sink at any moment. However, if you partially plug the drain,
you’ll get more water accumulating in the sink at the same faucet
flow rate. This is similar to kidney dysfunction (thinking of the water
as creatinine). However, alternatively, if the drain remains unplugged
but you crank up the faucet flow rate, you’ll get more water in
the sink due to the higher flow. This is similar to a high protein diet.
Since weightlifters are continually breaking down muscle protein (this
is a good thing), even in the absence of a high protein diet, blood
creatinine concentrations tend to be elevated. Furthermore, add in a
higher protein diet and creatinine concentrations in the blood will
rise. Finally, since creatinine is also a breakdown product of creatine,
if a weightlifter is taking creatine supplements (which most do), blood
creatinine concentrations will also be high. What all of this means
is that the faucet is turned up in weightlifters, not that the drain
is plugged.
To address the other relevant measure, the nitrogen component of urea,
blood urea nitrogen (BUN), is the end product of protein metabolism
and its concentration is also influenced by the rate of excretion (as
is creatinine). Excessive protein intake, kidney damage, certain drugs,
low fluid intake, intestinal bleeding, exercise, or heart failure can
cause increases in BUN. Decreased levels may be due to a poor diet,
malabsorption, liver damage, or low nitrogen intake. Excess BUN is even
more closely correlated with protein intake than is creatinine. The
same argument above applies here.
So, as you can see, since both creatinine and BUN are correlated with
both high protein metabolism AND kidney function, I’m not suggesting
that it’s unreasonable that doctors are worried about the kidneys
of your son or daughter. But it’s important for you and your doctor
to realize that the increases in BUN and creatinine seen in healthy
weightlifters who eat higher protein diets aren’t necessarily
a function of kidney health but are much more closely correlated with
their diet and training.
ISSUE #5 — Since BUN and creatinines are non-specific
measures, what should we have tested, just to be on the safe side?
RESPONSE #5 — According to physician and sports
nutrition expert Dr. Eric Serrano, two additional measures are important
to tease out the differences between the effects of training and nutrition
and the effects of kidney dysfunction. The first is the BUN to creatinine
ratio. Dr. Serrano suggests that values up to the low 30’s are
okay but anything higher might be indicative of problems. The second
is a urinary protein test. This test is a better measure of kidney function
than most others.
Considering that most comprehensive kidney function tests include
the following measures (A/G Ratio, Albumin, BUN, Calcium, Cholesterol,
Creatinine, Globulin, LDH, Phosphorous, Protein - Total, Uric Acid)
as well as urinary analysis, it seems irresponsible to make suggestions
about protein intake after a simple blood chemistry analysis measuring
BUN and creatinine.
ISSUE #6 — What about the increased levels of
Creatine Kinase (CK)?
RESPONSE #6 — While this misdiagnosis isn’t
as common as the aforementioned ones, many doctors erroneously speculate
that elevations in a muscle damage marker, CK, is indicative of a recent
myocardial infarction (heart attack)! How could this be?
Creatine Kinase is a cytosolic enzyme (it floats around in the fluid
portion of cells) involved in muscle metabolism. Since creatine kinase
is present in all muscle tissues (including skeletal muscle and cardiac
muscle), the excessive appearance of creatine kinase in the blood is
indicative of some type of muscle damage (again, either skeletal or
cardiac). Countless studies have shown large rises in blood concentrations
of creatine kinase with heart muscle damage (via heart attack) and even
large rises in creatine kinase with normal, training-induced muscle
damage (this damage is critical to the growth and adaptation process).
Interestingly, a high protein diet has been repeatedly demonstrated
to increase resting creatine kinase and post-exercise creatine kinase
concentrations without any additional damage (in a number of different
species, including humans).
Furthermore, while the standard clinical creatine kinase assay doesn’t
distinguish between skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle creatine kinase
isoforms, there are muscle specific tests that can be done. Therefore,
if a doc is worried about elevated creatine kinase, he or she should
order a creatine kinase isoform test. This will determine whether the
creatine kinase was released from skeletal or cardiac muscle.
In the end, if a doc is sitting in front of a high protein eatin’
weight trainer with lots of muscle mass (skeletal muscle creatine kinase
release, as you might imagine, is closely related to total muscle mass)
and sees an elevated creatine kinase score, the last thing on his or
her mind should be "heart attack." Here’s a reference
to check out:
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1999 Mar;31(3):414-20
Effects of dietary protein on enzyme activity following exercise-induced
muscle injury.
Hayward R, Ferrington DA, Kochanowski LA, Miller LM, Jaworsky GM, Schneider
CM
I’ll end my argument here. I hope that I've been able to assist
in your search for the facts about protein intake and renal function.
However, I feel that I'd be remiss if I were to leave out the other
side of the coin — an article that I've written that highlights
the myriad of benefits
associated with high protein intakes.
Sincerely,
John M. Berardi
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