Can You Eat Too Much Protein?

Ever been accused of consuming too much protein ?..

If you have, you’ve probably also been told that your kidneys are going to explode. I hear stuff like this all the time, but in reality, there is no scientific data to back that up.

So how did this myth get started ? Perhaps it is because eating more protein WILL increase the amount of work your kidneys have to do to. Blood markers like creatinine (NOT creatine) and GFR (glomerular filtration rate) may go up, signaling that your kidneys are working harder. However, this does NOT mean there’s any indication of damage.

Protein and Kidneys: The Science

From Phillips, SM 2014: “An examination of the statements made by both the Institute of Medicine in setting the protein RDA in North America, as well as the World Health Organization’s report on protein intakes, indicates there is no evidence linking a higher protein diet to renal disease.”

According to two top agencies, the risk of damage to the kidneys in healthy subjects appears to be slim. “Prolonged intake of a large amount of protein has been associated with potential dangers, such as bone mineral loss and kidney damage. In otherwise healthy individuals, there is little evidence that high protein intake is dangerous. However, kidney damage may be an issue for individuals with already existing kidney dysfunction.”

So far, it appears that having your kidneys do more work is not a bad thing in itself. When you go to the gym to do an arm workout, your biceps do more work and as a result they bigger (hypertrophy). Could the same thing happen with your kidneys?

Researchers in 2015 found that increasing protein did require the kidneys to do more work. However, it did not do any damage to them (no increase in microalbuminuria, which indicates damage). Your kidneys, like your biceps, will get bigger with more work, but that growth is not from any damage. They were just adapting to the stress placed on them.

So, the current data just doesn’t support the assertion that protein is dangerous. But what if you’re a hard training lifter and you consume a metric ton of protein?

Show Me The Studies

If you’re a bodybuilder or athlete, you don’t do things normal people do, thus the standard pencil necks used in most studies don’t apply. But these do…

One of first studies on protein was from Poortmans JR and Dellalieux O. in 2000 who suggested that excess protein is hazardous to the kidneys. This study investigated bodybuilders and other well-trained athletes with high and medium protein intake.

So what did they find? Well, while those who ate a high protein diet did have higher plasma concentrations of uric acid and calcium, the bodybuilders had normal renal clearances of creatinine and urea (waste products). Scientists concluded that protein intake under 2.8 g/kg did NOT impair renal function in well-trained athletes.

Another study was done by Brandle and colleagues in 1996. While the study wasn’t perfect, it was the first to look at the effects of protein on kidney function. They found no correlation between albumin excretion rate (urinary albumin arguably being a damage variable) and gross protein intake (as assessed by nitrogen excretion rate).

What About Body Comp and Fat Gain?

In a recent study done by Dr. Jose Antonio and colleagues (2016), they took it to the extreme by looking at heavy benching dudes consuming lots and lots of protein.

They did what’s called a “randomized crossover design” on resistance-trained male subjects. The dudes lifted and ate copious protein. The average bench press at baseline was 126.4 kg, which is 278 pounds for those who think the metric system was invented just to torture you.

For eight weeks, participants scarfed down a high protein diet at over 3 grams per kilogram, per day – which for a 220 pound person (100 kg) is 300 grams of protein per day. They coupled it with a periodized heavy resistance training program. During the other 8 week period they consumed their normal, lower protein diet.

The results? Even though the high protein group was eating more calories in the form of protein, there were no significant changes in body composition – they didn’t get fat despite the increased calories. Nor did they see changes in markers of health in either group (blood lipids, glucose, renal, kidney function etc.).

Despite consuming massive amounts of protein, their kidneys did not launch an attack to exit their low back due to the high protein intake. To further back up their point, researchers did a subanalysis on two subjects who ate the most protein in the study. They didn’t find any renal (kidney) issues despite these two subjects consuming 483-724% over the RDA for protein.

Need More Proof?

You could argue that this data is still short term. Most lifters are eating high protein for years to decades. What about 6 months into their high protein eating plan? What happens to their kidneys then? Dr. Jose Antonio again in 2016 published a one year study. Yep, one year. In terms of scientific research, that’s a freaking eternity.

They took fourteen healthy resistance-trained men who’d been training an average of almost nine years for a randomized crossover design study. They had them consume their normal diet altered with a high protein version (>3 g/kg/d) so that on average, each subject was on each version for 6 months.

They found that, for those who consumed a high protein diet (about 2.5-3.3 g/kg/d) for one year, there were no harmful effects on measures of blood lipids as well as liver and kidney function.

And despite the increase in total calories during the high protein phase, subjects did not gain fat. Yep, tons of protein for a year in high-level trainers with free living humans. It doesn’t get much better than that for scientific data.

Protein Power

Out of all the things you could do to improve your health, performance, and body composition, worrying about too much protein is WAY down on the list. In fact, if you’re going to worry about protein at all, it might make more sense to worry about not getting enough.

Most people I work with do much better by increasing their protein intake. Now obviously this doesn’t give you free reign to consume 400+ grams of protein every day for years on end to prove some lab coat nerd wrong. At some point it would be bad. Too much is too much. After all, even too much water can kill you too.

But the data that protein is harmful to your kidneys is just NOT there. Sit back, relax, have a Protein shake, and your kidneys will be just fine.

What do you guys think about this ? Feel free to comment here or head over to the TeamTNA forum to post a new thread, or comment down below.

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6 Comments:
October 1, 2018

NO ISSUES for me. I have done all meat carnivore diet for over 1 year I just need extra vitamin sup to add essential mins to it.

August 19, 2019

Good to hear my bro !.. In all honesty it comes down to whatever you are able to adhere to over the long term. I have done keto before and had some great results, but i cant see myself living that way forever. I also noticed the crazy rebound effect afterwards which is typical after doing keto type diets.

August 13, 2020

I take protein powders and eat a low carb med protein diet. I had my blood levels checked and my doctor freaked out cuz my creatine levels were a bit high. I tried to explain that this is normal for bodybuilders on mostly protein diets. He is old and i dont think he knows about diets.

October 26, 2020

You are probably referring to your “creatinine” levels… and an elevation in people that are training is perfectly normal due to the frequent muscle damage / breakdown during workouts.

August 14, 2020

I definitely can hurt your kidneys if you have a problem

January 8, 2021

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