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4/16/2015 Understanding Optimal Levels of Protein and Carbohydrate To Prevent Obesity, Sarcopenia, and Metabolic Syndrome By Mary Donkersloot, RD Nutritionist, Private Practice Beverly Hills, CA Disclosures • Consultant to: Egg Nutrition Center ALDI Supermarkets New Evidence Suggests an Alternative Hypothesis: • Refined carbohydrates stimulate insulin, which promotes inflammation, obesity, and CVD. • Replacing refined carbohydrates with protein promotes a more favorable metabolic response. • Cholesterol less the issue • Focus on healthy fats 1 4/16/2015 Increasing Protein Intake • Could: – Assist obese with weight loss – Help decrease incidence type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome – Play a role in attenuating bone loss and muscle loss with age Increase quality of life & decrease health care costs RDA Risk of Inadequacy Risk of Adverse Affects acceptable intake Protein: 0.8 g/kg 2.5 g/kg Who has higher protein need? 2 4/16/2015 The Protein Myth Assumption in dietary guidance: Adults eat more protein than they need Truth: adults eat more protein than the minimum needed to prevent deficiency. Truth: meeting minimum protein needs does not meet optimal health needs. Wolfe RR, Miller SL, The recommended dietary allowance of protein: a misunderstood concept. JAMA. 2008 Jun 25;299(24):2891-3 How Much Protein? • Goal: 60-90 grams per day • Goal: 15-30 grams per meal • It takes 20 grams of protein to fully stimulate muscles • Less than 15 grams of protein contains too little leucine 9 Essential Amino Acids Histidine Phenylalanine Threonine Lysine Methionine Tryptophan Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine: • Research is suggesting that leucine is the one of most important amino acids for muscle building BECAUSE it is the dietary signal to trigger protein synthesis." 3 4/16/2015 Signaling Pathway –Muscle Synthesis insulin “anabolic drive” leucine mTOR protein synthesis Leucine “Requirements” vs “Needs” Requirements • Essential amino acid for substrate needs – RDA for leucine = <3g/day Needs • Leucine signal requires .5 to 3.0 g of dietary leucine per meal Or about 8 g/day ~30g of protein/meal 4 4/16/2015 Getting Breakfast Right Egg & meat breakfast Prot Carbs Fat kcals 2 eggs 14 0 10 140 Veggie Burger 11 10 15 125 1/3 avocado 0 6 10 100 Berries 3/4 cup 0 10 0 40 Kefir 1% (1/2 cup) 7 10 1 80 total = 32 34 26 485 5 4/16/2015 Getting Breakfast Right Protein Shake Prot Carbs Fat kcals Greek yogurt (1 cup) 20 4 0 100 whey powder 16 3 2 100 berries (3/4 cup) 0 10 0 40 total = 36 27 3 280 Low-Carb, High Protein Diets • In short-term studies (6 months), low-carb diets are more effective in weight loss than low-fat diets • Low- carb diets increase HDL, and decrease TG, but may increase LDL • Long-term effects of low-carb diets on health outcomes depends on types of fat and protein. 6 4/16/2015 Ad Libitum High Protein Diet Led to Greater Weight Loss N = 65 Controls Hi CHO (58/12/30, CHO/PRO/FAT) HI PRO (45/25/30, CHO/PRO/FAT) Skov et al., Int J Obesity 1999;23:528-536 7 4/16/2015 Nutrients in Plant Protein Foods Beans Black beans (86 g) Chickpeas (82 g) Great northern beans (88.5 g) Kidney beans (88.5 g) Lentils (99 g) Pinto beans (85.5 g) Nuts (1 ounce serving) Almonds Peanuts Pistachios Walnut Soy Soybeans (1/2 cup cooked) Tofu (1/2 cup) Protein g Iron mg Zinc mg Calcium Potassium Magnesium Folate mg mg mg μg 7.6 7.5 7.4 7.7 8.9 7.7 1.8 2.4 1.9 2.0 3.3 1.8 0.96 1.2 0.78 0.9 1.3 0.8 23 40 60 31 19 40 305 239 346 358 365 373 60 39 44 37 35 43 128 141 90 115 179 147 6.0 8.0 5.8 4.3 1.1 0.4 1.1 0.8 0.9 0.9 0.6 0.9 75 17 30 28 200 206 291 125 76 50 34 45 14 34 14 28 14.3 10 4.4 1.4 1.0 1.0 88 130 443 186 74 127 47 19 Usual U.S. Intake of Protein and Food Sources > 2 years of age Food Group Serving Protein (g) Plant Based Protein: 1.6 cups 3.2 Grains Vegetables 6.4 oz 12.8 Nuts/seeds/soy 0.5 oz 3 TOTAL: 19 Animal Protein: Milk/dairy 1.5 cups 12 Meat 2.5 oz 17.5 Poultry 1.2 oz 8.4 Eggs 0.4 oz 2.8 Fish/seafood 0.5 oz TOTAL: U.S. average protein intake 63.2 g daily: 30% plant 70% animal 3.5 44.2 http://www.cnpp.usda.gov/dietary‐guidelines‐2010 8 4/16/2015 Carbohydrates • Are really only needed for a fuel source. • The need for carbohydrates is directly related to the amount of fuel you burn in muscles. • This is your carbohydrate tolerance. 9 4/16/2015 Carbohydrate RDA Food and Nutrition Board set an RDA for carbohydrates at a daily intake of 130 grams in 2002. Food Plan – 130 Grams Carb • 5 servings of vegetables • 2 servings of fruit • 3 small servings of lentils, beans, high fiber bread, brown rice or high fiber cereal Protein:Carb 1:1 • Young competitive athlete 1:4 • Sedentary adult 1:1 • Weight loss 1:1 or 1:2 10 4/16/2015 My Plate: Low-Glycemic Eating Vegetables Protein Legumes & Whole Grains 11 4/16/2015 Conclusions • Decreasing carbs and increasing lean protein or unsat fat has beneficial effects on weight control, CVD, and diabetes risk factors. • Some individuals will benefit from higher protein intakes distributed throughout the day. • “Protein package” is important: plant based protein sources have other beneficial nutrients and bioactive compounds. • Choose a variety of protein food which include seafood– lean meat, poultry, eggs, beans and peas, soy products, and unsalted nuts and seeds. Mary Donkersloot, RD Nutritionist Private Practice 462 North Linden Drive, Ste. 445 310-275-9241 [email protected] What We Eat In America, NHANES 20112012 Males and Females, > 20 years of Age Calories Energy 2191 Protein 16% Carbohydrate Fat Protein ≈ 88 g/day 49% 33% SFA 11% MUFA 12% PUFA 8% Alcohol 3% http://www.ars.usda.gov/SP2UserFiles/Place/80400530/pdf/1112/Table_5_EIN_GEN_11.pdf 12 4/16/2015 Those who consumed ≈17% to 21% (Q4) vs 8% of calories from added sugar had a 38% higher risk of CVD mortality. Lines show adjusted HRs from Cox models. Midvalue of quintile 1 (7.4%) was the reference standard. The model was adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, educational attainment, smoking status, alcohol consumption, physical activity level, family history of CVD, antihypertensive medication use, Healthy Eating Index score, BMI, systolic blood pressure, total serum cholesterol, and total calories. Solid line indicates point estimates; dashed lines indicate 95% CIs. Yang et al. JAMA Intern Med. Published online February 3, 2014. Strategies for Increasing Dietary Protein/Plant Protein Substitute plant protein for animal protein foods Replace CHO (especially refined) with protein/plant protein foods Replace fat (preferably SFA) with protein/plant protein foods Summary • By decreasing CHO and increasing lean protein OR unsaturated fat – CVD risk factors are improved • A diet higher in CHO can be improved by replacing some of the CHO calories with protein or unsaturated fat 13 4/16/2015 OmniHeart Trial Design 161 patients age >30 years; systolic blood pressure 120‐159 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure 80‐99 mmHg 45% female, mean age 53.6 years, 930 patients screened Randomized. Crossover. Controlled Feeding – 6 Weeks. Standard DASH Diet carbohydrates (58%) protein (15%) fat (27%) Protein Modified DASH Diet carbohydrates (48%) *protein (25%) fat (27%) Unsaturated Fat Modified DASH Diet carbohydrates (48%) protein (15%) fat (37%) MUFA (21%), PUFA (10%) SFA (6%) *125 g protein on 2000kcal Appel et al. JAMA 2005;294:2455‐2464. 14