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Like the structural steel of buildings and the metal meshwork in concrete, proteins provide the
framework for every cell of the body. Just as workers at a construction site need a steady supply
of building materials, tissues undergoing repair and those that are growing need a steady supply
of protein to build and rebuild organs, muscles, antibodies, hormones, and enzymes - every kind
of cell in the body. At eight months or eighty years, bodies need protein.
Protein is a reasonably worry-free food. Unlike fat or sugar, it's nearly impossible to overdose
on proteins, especially in children's diets. And for most Americans, getting enough protein is not
a problem. Also, unlike with fats and carbs, there's no such food as an unhealthy protein.
Like the first two members of the nutrition big 3, fats and carbohydrates, proteins have their own
language. Here are some nutritional terms you should know:
Protein comes from the Greek word protos, meaning "first." These nutrients are the basic
elements of living cells, of first importance. Like carbohydrates and fats, proteins contain
carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but they contain one more element that sets them apart from
the other two - nitrogen.
Amino acids are the molecules that make up the proteins. There are 20 different amino acids
in the human body, but there are many possible combinations of these amino acids. think of
it this way. Amino acids are like letters, and proteins are like words. There are many ways
to put letters together to make words, and each word has a different function, a different
place in the language. The protein you eat is broken down into individual amino acids in the
digestive system, and then different cells take the ones they need and recombine these amino
acids into the proteins that make up your body. Picture a Scrabble board full of words. Then
imagine the tiles getting dumped, mixed up, and reassembled into new words.
Essential and non-essential describe the two kinds of amino acids. Of the 20 amino acids in
the human protein "alphabet," thirteen are non-essential amino acids, meaning your body
can make them; you don't have to eat them. Nine are essential amino acids, meaning your
body can't make them; It's essential that you get them from foods.
COMPLETE AND INCOMPLETE PROTEINS
Getting the right kinds of protein is similar to shopping for clothes. Some clothing comes in
complete sets. The jacket is sold with the skirt or pants and together they make a complete outfit.
With other clothing you mix and match: jeans from one rack, a shirt from another, maybe a
sweater from a different store across town. Proteins, too, come in complete sets or as incomplete
parts that work together. A complete protein contains all nine of the essential amino acids; a
protein missing one or more of these is an incomplete protein. Naturally, foods that come from
species closest to humans (i.e., animal foods) contain complete proteins, since animal tissues
have an amino acid composition similar to our own. Both grains and legumes contain significant
amounts of protein, but these proteins do not contain all of the essential amino acids. Except for
soybeans, plant proteins do not contain all the essential amino acids, so they are called
incomplete proteins.
Another way to evaluate proteins is to consider the biological value (BV) of a protein, meaning
not only how rich it is in essential amino acids, but also how well it can be digested by the
intestines. Animal proteins are around 95 percent digestible and plant proteins range between 80
and 90 percent digestible.
Complimenting and combining proteins. While it may seem that animal proteins are better
nutritionally, the differences in quality between animal and plant proteins are more theoretical
interest than practical significance. People can grow just as well on plant proteins. (Plant-protein
eaters may even be healthier, since they avoid the fat that comes with animal protein.) One plant
food can supply the amino acids missing in another. Proteins from different kinds of plants
complement each other and, in fact, many common and traditional foods are based on
complementary proteins.
Don't be misled into thinking that you must eat meat twice a day or even once a day to get the
protein you need. Even though plant proteins are not complete proteins, you can make up for
what any one food lacks by eating a wide variety of plant and dairy foods. A hefty salad with a
sprinkling of parmesan cheese and a topping of sunflower seeds is a healthy protein lunch.
The amount of protein you need depends primarily on the size of your body and how fast it is
growing, and to a lesser extent on your gender and how much you exercise. Babies need more
protein per pound than moms, moms more than grandmothers, and dads more than moms. As a
general guide, this is the amount of protein that the average person needs at various ages:
AGE
PROTEIN PER POUND
DAILY PROTEIN NEEDS
Birth - 6 months
1 gm.
13 gms.
6 months - 1 year
.75 gm.
14 gms.
1 - 6 years
.6 gms.
16-24 gms.
7 - 15 years
.5 gms.
28-50 gms.
Adults
.36 gms.
50-60 gms.
GROWTH SPURTS
Growing children need more "grow" foods (i.e., proteins). During the first two
months of life, fifty percent of the protein in a baby's diet is used for growth and the
other fifty percent is used for continued maintenance of the tissues. By three years of
age, only eleven percent of dietary protein is used for growth. During the periodic
growth spurts of infancy, childhood, and adolescence, you may need to perk up the
proteins in your child's diet anywhere from five to fifteen grams more a day.
Animal proteins are better tailored to meet the needs of infants and growing children
than are plant proteins, which is why nature provides human milk for babies. The
complete proteins in breastmilk are more suited to a growing infant's needs than plant
protein, which is found in some formulas. Even babies in vegan families get an
animal-based food if they are breastfed.
Notes:
These amounts are average recommended dietary allowances (RDA's). Practically speaking,
most people eat different amounts of protein each day.
Vegans (eating plant proteins only) should add 25 percent to these values. Because the body
metabolizes animal protein easier than plant protein, eating more plant protein makes up for
this difference.
Pregnant and lactating women add 15-25 grams a day.
During growth spurts in infancy, childhood, and adolescents, add 5 to 15 grams.
During periods of increased tissue repair (illness, injury, or strenuous athletic training), add
10 to 20 grams.
Male adolescents and adults usually need 10 to 20 grams more protein daily than females.
As a rough and very general guide, if you shoot for a gram of protein per pound per day for
infants and children, 3/4 of a gram for adolescents, and 1/2 gram per pound per day for adults,
you're in the right nutritional ballpark, and getting even more than the RDA for protein.
JUST HOW MUCH PROTEIN DO YOU REALLY NEED?
The usual figures that are thrown around concerning protein needs are "15 to 20
percent of total daily calories." For most individuals this is much too high. The
average infant, child, and adult can get all the protein they need without having daily
calories from protein exceed 10 percent of their total calories. For example, if you eat
an average of 2,000 calories a day, about 200 calories of this should be protein.
Protein contains four calories per gram, so this would be about 50 grams of protein
(200 divided by four calories/gram equals 50 grams). Most children and adults get at
least ten percent of their total daily calories as protein without even trying. In times of
increased protein needs (such as pregnancy, lactation, adolescent growth spurts, or
high endurance exercise), this figure may increase to 15 percent.
You'll be surprised how easy it is for your child to get enough protein. If she is at an average
weight for 3-year-olds, around 30 pounds, she needs an average of sixteen grams of protein. She
can get this amount from any one of the following:
8-ounces of yogurt in a cup of cereal
a tunafish sandwich using two ounces of tuna
1/2 cup cottage cheese and a piece of toast
a peanutbutter sandwich using two slices of whole wheat bread and 2 tablespoons of peanut
butter, plus 1/2 cupmilk
two scrambled eggs with cheese
a 2-ounce hamburger on a whole wheat bun
1 cup chili con carne with beans, plus 1/2 cup milk
Perhaps the fairest and most practical way of rating protein foods is to look at the amount of
protein in relation to the total calories in a food. The following chart will show you how to get
enough protein without overdosing on fat.
Protein Food
Grams of Protein
per serving
Percentage of calories
as protein
Fish, tuna (4 oz)
25-30
83%
Egg white (1)
3.5
82%
Cottage cheese, nonfat (1/2 c.)
15
75%
Poultry, breast, no skin (4 oz)
25
75%
Kidney beans (1/2 cup)
7
60%
Tofu, firm (3 oz)
13
45%
Yogurt, plain nonfat (1 cup)
12
40%
Beef, lean (4 oz)
30
40%
Egg, whole (1)
6
33%
Milk, 1% (8 ounces)
8
32%
Peanut butter (2 tbsp.)
8
17%
Cereal (1 cup) with 1/2 c. milk
6-8
17%
Nuts or sunflower seeds (oz.)
7
16%
Pasta (1 cup)
7
15%
Whole wheat bread (1 slice)
3
15%
THE MOST POWERFUL PROTEINS
Some proteins are more powerful than others. What makes one protein more powerful than
another is not only whether it contains all the essential amino acids, but how many different
amino acids it contains. That's why nutritional scientists use the Protein-Energy Ratio (PER) and
Biological Value (BV) ratings of proteins, which measure how well the body utilizes amino acids
in a protein. Here's how the main proteins rate (from highest to lowest) by how well they are
utilized in the body.
Whey protein (the lactalbumin extract from dairy proteins found in protein supplements; also
the predominant protein in human milk)
Too much protein is not a problem, unless you really overdose, which would mean eating twice
the amount your body needs for a long time. When your body has more protein than necessary, it
simply disassembles the excess protein, uses the amino acids it needs, and discards the leftover
nitrogen through the kidneys. The body can't store protein the way it stores energy in fat tissues.
Sometimes when someone eats too much protein over a long time, the body will either break
down the protein and use it as an energy source or deposit it as fat. You virtually never have to
worry about children getting too much protein; in fact, parents usually worry about picky eaters
not getting enough protein. Excess protein is not usually a worry for adults either, unless they
are suffering from kidney disease.
Be careful with these. It is generally unwise to use a high protein
diet to lose weight. The protein overdose sends the kidneys into overtime. As the kidneys work
to eliminate the excess protein, they also dump a lot of water out of your system. On the
bathroom scale, this looks like a dramatic weight loss, but it is not a real weight loss. (What you
really want to lose is fat.) If you lose too much water weight too fast you could harm your
health. It is generally wise to consume extra amounts of water if eating extra protein. High
protein diets are potentially harmful for people with kidney or liver insufficiency. Before trying
this type of diet, be sure to consult your doctor and a registered dietitian.
The reason that high protein diets "work" is the same reason that other weight loss diets work:
they are lower in calories. High protein diets substitute fish and vegetable protein for meat and
dairy protein, and this reduces the amount of fat in the diet. Basically, high protein diets are
weight loss gimmicks. Promoting proteins and bad-mouthing carbs are just ways to get attention.
There is little research to show that this approach works or, more importantly, is safe. Use
common sense. Any diet in which you eat fewer calories than you burn will result in loss of body
fat, regardless of whether the diet contains primarily fat, carbohydrates, or proteins. Your
grandmother could have told you this without even writing a bestseller. Eat a balanced diet and
don't eat more calories than you burn. That's the secret of weight control.
Just eating more muscle will not make you gain muscle. But, if
you're trying to build your muscles through exercise, you may need more protein. How much
depends upon how hard you're working out. An average person working out to stay healthy, but
not on a vigorous exercise and weight-training program, will need around 1/2 gram of protein per
pound per day. Studies have shown that athletes undergoing vigorous exercise for two hours per
day need double that amount of protein, around a gram of protein per pound per day. Serious
weight-lifters may need to even go up to a gram and a half of protein per pound per day. For
most teens and adults on vigorous exercise programs, increasing their daily protein by one-third
(roughly 16 to 20 grams of meat or fish) is sufficient.
No, it used to be believed that for two incomplete plant proteins to complement each other and
give the body all the essential amino acids, they had to be eaten at the same meal. Being a
vegetarian seemed complicated, even risky. Now we know that this is not only nutritionally
incorrect, it is an insult to the wisdom of the body. When you eat a protein, your body
disassembles it into amino acids and then reassembles these amino acids into the types of
proteins needed by different cells. New studies show that incomplete proteins (plant proteins)
eaten as much as 24 hours apart, combine in the body to provide all the essential amino acids.
So, you could eat grains at breakfast and legumes at dinner, and the body will still be able to mix
them all together and make what it needs. As long as you eat a variety of protein foods from a
variety of sources, you don't have to constantly worry whether they are "complete" or
"incomplete" proteins. Your body will do the thinking for you.
AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers
of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.