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Maximize Your Protein Intake: Unique Uses for Protein Powder

Maximize Your Protein Intake: Unique Uses for Protein Powder

Can protein powder be used in different ways to effectively support nutrition goals for individuals who aim to build muscle, maintain weight, or acquire more protein in their diet?

Maximize Your Protein Intake: Unique Uses for Protein Powder

Different Ways To Use Protein Powder

Protein powder is a quick and easy way to get protein before or after a workout. Add a scoop to a shaker bottle, mix with water, and you’re ready. However, having the same shake daily can become boring. Finding different ways to use protein powder can be a welcome change in workout nutrition habits. It is versatile, making it a great addition to smoothies, baked goods, oatmeal, yogurt, and more.

Health Benefits

How to Use

Learning different ways to use protein powder can help create an exciting and diversified menu, from meals to snacks. Individuals can use conventional or organic powder. Here are a few ideas:

Oatmeal

  • Adding protein powder to overnight oats or stovetop oatmeal is a great way to increase protein content.
  • Protein powder mixes well with oats and milk.

Baked Goods

  • Protein powder goes well with many baked goods.
  • Another way to use protein powder is to add it to brownie, muffin, cupcake, or cookie recipes.

Yogurt

  • Combine with yogurt and fruit for a nutrient and calorie-dense breakfast or snack to fuel the body.
  • It’s also a great post-workout snack.

Coffee

  • Adding protein powder to coffee makes it easy to increase daily protein intake.
  • Stir with a spoon, like adding powdered cream, or blend or froth hot coffee with protein powder to make it like a cappuccino.

Pancakes

  • Adding to a batch of pancakes is a great way to use protein powder.

How much protein powder per day?

Consuming one to two scoops (between 25 to 50 grams) daily is generally safe, which is what most recipes call for. Following the recommended dosage on the product label is highly recommended. The Recommended Dietary Allowance of protein for a healthy adult, regardless of age, is 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight per day. (Wu G. 2016)

How long after a workout should protein powder be taken?

Whether running or lifting weights, consuming protein within the anabolic window approximately 30 minutes to two hours after a workout enhances muscle recovery, repair, and growth. (Aragon A. A., & Schoenfeld, B. J. 2013) Daily protein intake is recommended for improved performance, muscle growth, and optimal recovery. (Cintineo H. P. et al., 2018) Muscle building is 25 percent higher when protein intake is evenly spaced throughout the day. (Mamerow M. M. et al., 2014

Protein Shake Side Effects

Consuming the recommended amount of one to two scoops daily is generally safe and doesn’t have side effects. However, exceeding recommended daily intake can cause unwanted side effects that include:

  • Bloating
  • Flatulence
  • Increased bowel movements
  • Acne
  • Nausea
  • Thirst
  • Fatigue
  • Headache
  • Lack or loss of appetite

Studies have found that excess whey protein supplementation is associated with increased aggression, acne, and disturbance of the gut microbiota. (Vasconcelos Q. D. J. S. et al., 2021)

For individuals who want to get more out of their pre- or post-workout supplements, choose high-quality organic protein powders that contain all essential amino acids and wholesome ingredients with no fillers or additives. Consult a healthcare provider if considering supplementing with protein powder or looking to increase protein intake along with a registered dietitian to help determine how much protein is needed based on personal needs, activity, and fitness levels and goals.

Injury Medical Chiropractic and Functional Medicine Clinic

Chiropractic care aims to help individuals improve movement with less pain due to condition, after injury, or surgery. Injury Medical Chiropractic and Functional Medicine Clinic works with primary healthcare providers and specialists to build optimal health and wellness solutions. We focus on what works for you to relieve pain, restore function, prevent injury, and help mitigate issues through adjustments that help the body realign itself. They can also work with other medical professionals to integrate a treatment plan to resolve musculoskeletal problems.


Benefits of a Healthy Diet and Chiropractic Care


References

Cintineo, H. P., Arent, M. A., Antonio, J., & Arent, S. M. (2018). Effects of Protein Supplementation on Performance and Recovery in Resistance and Endurance Training. Frontiers in nutrition, 5, 83. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00083

Gorissen, S. H. M., Crombag, J. J. R., Senden, J. M. G., Waterval, W. A. H., Bierau, J., Verdijk, L. B., & van Loon, L. J. C. (2018). Protein content and amino acid composition of commercially available plant-based protein isolates. Amino acids, 50(12), 1685–1695. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-018-2640-5

Batsis, J. A., Petersen, C. L., Cook, S. B., Al-Nimr, R. I., Driesse, T., Pidgeon, D., & Fielding, R. (2021). Impact of whey protein supplementation in a weight-loss intervention in rural dwelling adults: A feasibility study. Clinical nutrition ESPEN, 45, 426–432. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clnesp.2021.07.006

West, D. W. D., Abou Sawan, S., Mazzulla, M., Williamson, E., & Moore, D. R. (2017). Whey Protein Supplementation Enhances Whole Body Protein Metabolism and Performance Recovery after Resistance Exercise: A Double-Blind Crossover Study. Nutrients, 9(7), 735. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070735

Fekete, Á. A., Giromini, C., Chatzidiakou, Y., Givens, D. I., & Lovegrove, J. A. (2018). Whey protein lowers systolic blood pressure and Ca-caseinate reduces serum TAG after a high-fat meal in mildly hypertensive adults. Scientific reports, 8(1), 5026. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-23333-2

Ha, D. J., Kim, J., Kim, S., Go, G. W., & Whang, K. Y. (2021). Dietary Whey Protein Supplementation Increases Immunoglobulin G Production by Affecting Helper T Cell Populations after Antigen Exposure. Foods (Basel, Switzerland), 10(1), 194. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010194

Wu G. (2016). Dietary protein intake and human health. Food & function, 7(3), 1251–1265. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5fo01530h

Aragon, A. A., & Schoenfeld, B. J. (2013). Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 10(1), 5. https://doi.org/10.1186/1550-2783-10-5

Mamerow, M. M., Mettler, J. A., English, K. L., Casperson, S. L., Arentson-Lantz, E., Sheffield-Moore, M., Layman, D. K., & Paddon-Jones, D. (2014). Dietary protein distribution positively influences 24-h muscle protein synthesis in healthy adults. The Journal of nutrition, 144(6), 876–880. https://doi.org/10.3945/jn.113.185280

Vasconcelos, Q. D. J. S., Bachur, T. P. R., & Aragão, G. F. (2021). Whey protein supplementation and its potentially adverse effects on health: a systematic review. Applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism = Physiologie appliquee, nutrition et metabolisme, 46(1), 27–33. https://doi.org/10.1139/apnm-2020-0370

Working With A Nutritionist: Chiropractic Functional Back Clinic

Working With A Nutritionist: Chiropractic Functional Back Clinic

Nutritionists are medical professionals in food and nutrition and work one-on-one to develop an optimal nutrition plan for their body type, age, and health conditions. They explain the right foods to eat, how different foods impact the body, and what foods to avoid. Individuals can benefit from working with a nutritionist to help achieve a healthier lifestyle through education and healthy choices.Chiropractic Functional Medicine Team: Working With A Nutritionist

Working With A Nutritionist

Nutritionists work with individuals to enhance their knowledge about general nutrition, food, and health. Their focus is on food behavior, which includes developing and implementing meal plans to improve the individual’s or family’s nutrition. Nutritionists work in:

  • Clinical settings – hospitals, nursing homes, long-term care facilities, fitness and health, and chiropractic clinics.
  • Government – local health departments.
  • School districts –  regarding school nutrition standards.
  • Private business – independent work in combination with other medical professionals.
  • Research – with various health and/or sports organizations.

Benefits

Working with a nutritionist will determine what factors are challenging an individual’s eating habits and triggers and find ways to overcome those barriers. Benefits include:

  • Nutrition plans are based on nutritional needs, current health, and lifestyle.
  • Nutrition plans cut down on grocery bills.
  • Shopping with a specific list cuts down on the extra foods being purchased.
  • Proper nutrition can help manage chronic diseases like diabetes and heart disease, combined with a primary care doctor or specialist treatment.
  • Nutritionists can help individuals dealing with food allergies or who have been diagnosed could require a diet change.
  • Nutritionists can help motivate when struggling to maintain a healthy lifestyle.

Responsibilities and Daily Activities

Nutritionists help individuals reach various goals, like weight loss, healthier eating habits, and stress management, and can be responsible for the following:

  • Evaluating health needs.
  • Screening for nutritional risk.
  • Discussing nutrition and eating habits.
  • Providing educational resources.
  • Developing personalized nutrition plans.
  • Talking about nutritional issues with individual families.
  • Discussing nutrition plans with primary doctors and other healthcare teams.
  • Equipping individuals with food behavior modification tools.
  • Adjusting plans as needed.
  • Monitoring progress.
  • Treating conditions and disease management through nutrition.

Functional Nutrition


References

Carrard, Isabelle et al. “Un outil pour évaluer les comportements alimentaires: ESSCA” [A tool for assessing eating behaviors: ESSCA]. Revue medicale suisse vol. 12,511 (2016): 591-6.

Golan, M, and A Weizman. “Reliability and validity of the Family Eating and Activity Habits Questionnaire.” European journal of clinical nutrition vol. 52,10 (1998): 771-7. doi:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1600647

Greenwood, Jessica L J, et al. “Healthy eating vital sign: a new assessment tool for eating behaviors.” ISRN obesity vol. 2012 734682. 22 Jul. 2012, doi:10.5402/2012/734682

Kelley, Claire P et al. “Behavioral Modification for the Management of Obesity.” Primary care vol. 43,1 (2016): 159-75, x. doi:10.1016/j.pop.2015.10.004

Make Any Recipe A Clean Recipe

Make Any Recipe A Clean Recipe

El Paso, TX. Chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez discusses clean eating.

When it comes to eating clean, it�s often much easier than you think. Plus,�you rarely�have to alter the essence of your favorite dishes to achieve a cleaner plate. The key to turning them�into �a �clean� dish is to start from the root�the ingredients.

To build a cleaner plate, it first starts in the market where you choose your produce, whole grains, dairy, proteins, and other items. Look for ingredient lists that are short and contain no preservatives, artificial colorings, added sugars, and other processed ingredients.

Make sure you balance your plate by filling at least half with fruits and veggies, choosing whole grains for a fourth of your plate, and lean, clean meat for the remaining fourth.

To Convert A Recipe To Clean Recipe Look At The Ingredients & Substitute

Here are your basic substitutions:

  • Sugar >�organic maple syrup / organic honey
  • Baked goods > white whole-wheat flour / whole-wheat flour / almond flour / coconut flour
  • Grains > unprocessed, dry quinoa / farro / brown rice / oats / homemade whole-wheat bread (or whole-wheat bread from a local baker / �7 Sprouted Grains Bread)
  • Dairy > organic, unprocessed cheeses, milk, Greek yogurt
  • Protein > Choose leaner meat, and limit meat portions such as pork and red meat to 3 ounces and chicken to 4.5 ounces per day. Seafood and plant-based proteins are encouraged. Look for meat that is grass-fed and raised without antibiotics or hormones.
  • Condiments, dressings and salsas >�Make your own, and nix the added sugars and excess salt.

Targeting Obesity

Get Creative With Fruits & Veggies:

Here�s an example of a recipe we�ve converted to clean,�Chicken Kebabs and Nectarine Salsa.

While this recipe is almost completely clean, the marinade calls for brown sugar. For a cleaner sugar, replace 1� teaspoons of maple syrup for the 1 tablespoon of brown sugar.

 

Call Today!

More from Cooking Light:

Clean Eating Weeknight Meal Planner

A Month of Clean Eating

What Is a “Processed” Food?

How to Eat Clean in 6 Simple Steps

 

Microwaving Your Tea Boosts Its Antioxidants, But How Does It Taste?

Microwaving Your Tea Boosts Its Antioxidants, But How Does It Taste?

On the left: regular green tea. On the right: microwave boosted. Not that you can tell from the picture.

It�s been a rough news week, and it�s only Wednesday. Fortunately, though, today�s raging controversy is about tea. Is it okay to microwave it? Is it better to microwave it? Australian research says yes, while tea aficionados worldwide recoil in horror.

�The claim, broadcast on ABC Radio Sydney, is that you can extract slightly more antioxidants (specifically catechins) if you pop the tea in the microwave while it�s steeping. Quan Vuong and his team at the University of Newcastle in Australia have been comparing different ways of steeping green tea, and in a 2012 paper they describe a method that gets you more of the good stuff than your typical method, but is still practical to do at home. The news article gets the procedure a little mixed up, but here is what the scientific paper describes:
  1. Boil water, and pour it over your tea bag. Steep at least 30 seconds.
  2. Put the cup (with teabag) into the microwave for one minute at half power, or whatever power setting will get you 500 watts.
  3. When you remove the tea bag, dunk it up and down ten times and then squeeze it out.

The idea is to help people get the health benefits of green tea, without having to guzzle five or more cups a day. Regular brewing can extract 62 percent of the tea leaves� catechins and 76 percent of the caffeine. The microwave boost gets you up to 80 and 92 percent. That�s not a huge difference, but hey, it�s something.

So how does it taste? I brewed two cups of plain green tea, letting one steep for three minutes and doing the microwave protocol, which took about three minutes anyway. I dunked and squeezed both tea bags as I removed them.

They tasted almost identical, although I could detect a little more of a bitter and astringent taste in the one that had been microwaved. Vuong and crew write in their paper that tea brewed this way can be a little stronger, so you may want to use a flavored green tea instead of a plain one, to cover up any tastes you don�t like.

One problem: I don�t love green tea. And a lot of the British outlets reporting on this study are probably with me on that. Black tea is probably what they�re thinking of. So I brewed some more tea for science, this time a mango-chili flavored black tea. Again, they were similar but the microwaved tea was slightly more bitter and astringent. It also had more of the chili flavoring, which was nice.

If you are fussy about how you prepare your black tea, you probably know that steeping it too long can make it bitter. Flavor-wise, this technique is just a quicker way to steep it too long. That said, it�s not bad. If you�re already the kind of person who steeps a teabag for more than five minutes, or who might even use the same teabag more than once (which my favorite fancy caf� actually recommends, so spare me the �how dare you�), you�ll like this just fine.

Healthy Breakfast Tips for Children

Healthy Breakfast Tips for Children

Healthy Breakfast Tips for�Children

The foods children eat are essential towards them having the necessary amount of energy they need throughout the day. With a recorded decrease in children�s ability to concentrate, many parents are searching for natural solutions, without relying on medications, to help their kids. A child�s diet is fundamental for their growth and taking careful consideration as a parent of the types of food�

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