These 6 Signs Will Tell You if Your Protein Intake Is Insufficient

These 6 Signs Will Tell You if Your Protein Intake Is Insufficient
Presented by Spartan Training®

Protein plays a role in maintaining and building lean muscle mass, repairing muscle tissue, maintaining fluid balance, regulating hormones and energy, and maintaining immune strength. Significant sources of protein include meat, plants, dairy, beans, legumes, and grains, but depending on your eating habits, you may be getting too much protein (or not enough).

But with the increase of plant-based meal plans, intermittent fasting, and nutrient-poor processed food intake, many people may not be getting enough high-quality or complete protein to sustain their life and training. If you're not getting enough daily protein, here are six signs that will make it obvious. 

6 Signs You're Not Getting Enough Protein

1. Your Portions Are too Small

This seems obvious, but just because you’re eating healthy food doesn’t mean you’re eating enough of it. Here’s a quick way to check your portion size without the hassle of a food scale. Ask yourself: Is my protein portion roughly the size of the palm of my hand?

Related: These 50 High-Protein Foods Will Help You Hit Your Macros

Why the palm of your hand? Your hands are the perfect way to judge the appropriate size of protein for you, as hand size is proportional to the size of the individual. By using your palm as a guide, you can feel confident that your protein portion is appropriate for you.

2. You Eat Less Than Three Square Meals a Day

A skipped meal here or there is no big deal. But daily missed opportunities due to poor planning, a busy schedule, or too frequent intermittent fasting may not be the best idea. Consider this day:

Breakfast protein: two hard-boiled eggs (12 grams) 

Snack: an ounce of almonds (6 grams)

Lunch protein: three ounces of chicken on your salad (28 grams)

Dinner protein: three ounces of salmon with veggies (22 grams)

Imagine you miss just one of those primary meals. Granted, there will be small amounts of protein in your veggies, fats, and grains, but you can see how quickly your primary sources add up. (Bonus: if you’re not a morning person, we’ve got your easy breakfast ideas covered.)

3. You're Not Reaching Your Goals

Protein plays a couple of roles in your strength routine. During the workout, it helps provide the energy needed to give it your all. After, it helps to rebuild and repair torn muscle. If your overall daily protein intake is below your needs, these two factors could be what’s stopping you from reaching your full potential. Get the biggest bang for your buck by getting in the right protein at the right time.

Related: How Much Protein Do You Really Need to Build Muscle?

4. You're Always Hungry

Protein is the nice middle man of the macro world, breaking down more slowly than carbohydrates and slightly faster than fats. If you finish your meal and find yourself hungry within an hour or two, you may have been missing that vital protein portion that helped slow the rate of digestion. If this sounds familiar, try adding a quick protein, like a hard-boiled egg, to your next snack.

5. You've Recently Changed Your Meal Plan

If you’ve recently changed to a nutritional approach that eliminates or minimizes meat intake (vegan, vegetarian, or plant-based) and haven’t taken the time to educate yourself on alternative protein sources, you may not be fulfilling your needs. When most people make the swap, carbohydrates take center stage. A plant-based lifestyle can be great, but knowing how to maintain adequate protein intake mustn’t be overlooked.

Easy Plant-Based Proteins to Try

Half cup lentils, cooked: nine grams

Half cup kidney beans, cooked: eight grams 

Half cup quinoa, cooked: four grams

One ounce chia seeds: five grams

Six ounces greek yogurt: 18 grams

Related: 6 Ways to Stay Nourished as a Vegan (Plus 3 Things to Not Worry About)

6. You're Losing Weight

When most people want to lost "weight," what they're really striving for is fat loss, not lean muscle loss. Losing weight at a fast pace (two pounds or more per week in someone actively seeking weight loss) could indicate that part of that weight loss is lean muscle. This can happen in these situations:

  1. You aren’t taking in enough overall calories to support energy needs, causing your body to break down lean muscle to make up for that energy deficit.
  2. You aren’t working to maintain lean muscle. Our body naturally begins to lose about 1% of lean muscle mass around age 30. Not actively working to maintain that strength can result in lean muscle mass loss.

Double whammy: lean muscle is our calorie burner, so the more you lose, the less energy your body needs, making it harder to maintain ideal body weight.

Just How Much Protein Do You Need?

Specific needs are individualized and vary based on gender, age, and activity. General guidelines are:

General population: 0.8–1 gram per kilogram of body weight per day

Recreational athletes: 1 gram per kilogram per day

Endurance athletes: 1.2–1.4 grams per kilogram per day

Ultra endurance athletes: 1.2–2 grams per kilogram per day

Strength athletes: 1.5–2 grams per kilogram per day

The right nutrition starts with education, so know your needs and make adjustments. But do it Spartan style: Eat real food. Keep it simple.

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