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May 11

Vegan Strength-Training: Don’t Believe These 5 Common Myths – VegNews

Thanks to the tidal wave of progress in the plant-based space, the eye roll-inducing Where do you get your protein? question has finally started to recede from the publics mind. However, there are still plenty of skeptics out thereeven with the impressive rise of the vegan pro athlete (Lewis Hamilton, Alex Morgan, Kyrie Irving, were cheering for you!). As a certified personal trainer and longtime vegan, I am setting the record straight.

Strength training, also known as resistance training, is a form of exercise focused on strengthening the muscles. During strength training, the muscles work against force to further build strength. This typically involves weighted exercise machines, resistance bands, and free weights, but if you have limited access to workout equipment, body weight strength training is another option (think push ups, planks, squats, lunges, and more).

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Aside from strengthening muscle, resistance training can also help manage chronic pain, aid weight loss, increase bone density (and therefore reduce the risk of osteoporosis), improve posture, and can sometimes help improve quality of sleep.

Here are five of the most common strength-training myths the nay-sayers bring upbusted!

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For sedentary people, this is likely accurate. But if you strength-train, youll need to pay attention to your protein intake. If youre inactive, you need 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day. For a 150-pound person, this works out to 54 grams of protein per day. Thats tofu scramble for breakfast, a black bean burrito for lunch, and dry-roasted edamame as a snack. Youve hit your protein goal even before having dinner!

If you strength-train regularly, youll need more protein. Most recommendations for vegan strength athletes range between 1.8 and 2.7 grams of protein per kilo of bodyweight per day. If youre a 150-pound strength athlete, youll need between 122 and 184 grams of protein per day. A days worth of protein for this athlete may include a tofu scramble with seitan strips for breakfast; a smoothie made with hemp hearts, chia and flax seeds, and protein powder for a snack; a lunch of edamame pasta with tomato sauce and veggie ground round, and a black bean burrito for dinner.

Hitting your daily protein goal is definitely attainable as a strength athleteit just takes a bit more thought when it comes to mealtime.

Tyler Nix/Unsplash

Sometimes, athletes who go vegan will lose weight unintentionally. Whole, plant-based foods are very nutrient-dense, but theyre typically not as calorie-dense as most animal products (which is good news if your goal is to lose weight!).

If youre very active, keep in mind that youll likely need to eat a larger volume of food as a vegan to get the same number of calories. Plant foods also tend to be more filling than animal-based foods (hello, fiber!), which can make it difficult to judge your caloric intake based on fullness alone.

If youre concerned about losing weight, it may help to keep track of your calories for the first week or two of your transition. This way, you can know for sure if youre hitting your mark or if youre at a deficit.

Kelly Sikkema/Unsplash

Plant-based protein powder can provide a convenient muscle-building boost, but its not a good idea to rely on it as your main protein source. The key to a healthy diet is a varied diet, and only by eating a variety of foods can you obtain the wide range of amino acidsthe building blocks of proteinyou need to thrive. The good news is that all plant foods contain amino acids; theyre just present in different proportions.

For example, pumpkin seeds and seaweed are high in leucine (required for muscle-growth), oats are high in tryptophan (vital to a healthy nervous system), and sunflower seeds are high in methionine (necessary for building cartilage). A protein-shake-and-veggies diet is not going to provide you with enough amino acid variety, so make sure you eat a range of different protein sources. Try to get the bulk of your protein from foods like tempeh, tofu, seitan, black and kidney beans, nutritional yeast, nuts, and seeds. If you need to top off your protein, one or two shakes a day is fine.

Laurynas Mereckas/Unsplash

I know I just suggested not relying on supplements to obtain your daily protein, but hear me out. When it comes to a select few micronutrients, supplementation may be necessary. Theres only one non-negotiable supplement all vegans should take, whether theyre athletes or not: B12. This vitamin is required to make new red blood cells and keep your neurological system functioning effectively, and deficiencies result in serious consequences including nerve damage and cognitive impairment.

Non-vegans get B12 from animal products, but only because those animals themselves were supplemented with B12. In centuries past, humans used to obtain B12 from eating soil particles on our food. Times have changed, so take your B12 supplement! Other supplements to consider if youre a vegan strength athlete are vitamin D and creatine.

Most of uswhether were vegan or notdont get enough vitamin D. Both vitamin D and weight-bearing exercise are essential for healthy bones, so if youre a strength athlete, youre already halfway there. If you dont get 20 minutes of direct sun exposure every day, consider a supplement. Finally, while our bodies make their own creatine, we vegans dont get any from our diets. So while you wont be deficient if you dont supplement, taking creatine can improve your short-duration, high-intensity athletic performancesuch as sprinting or lifting weights.

John Arano/Unsplash

If youre getting the protein you need from a variety of plant-based sources (and youre kicking butt with your training, of course), youll crush your muscle and strength gain goals just as well as any non-vegan.

And there is research to back this up. In April 2023, one study found that mycoprotein, which is made from fungi, is just as effective as animal protein at supporting muscle during resistance training. The study was split into two phases. In the first, 16 healthy adults ate either an exclusively vegan diet, with meat from mycoprotein brand Quorn, or an omnivorous diet.

In the second phase, 22 healthy adults endured a high-volume progressive resistance training program for 10 weeks. Again, some followed a vegan diet, others followed an omnivorous diet. The results showed that those eating the omnivorous diet gained 2.6 kg of whole-body lean mass, while those following a vegan diet gained 3.1 kg. Both groups increased the size of their thigh muscles by the same amount.

We now have a strong body of evidence, perhaps more than is available for any other alternative protein source, to show that mycoprotein is an effective protein food to support muscle maintenance and growth, said lead researcher Alistair Monteyne.

And from a personal standpoint as a plant-based trainer, I know I was able to sweep the floor at my gyms pull-up and chin-up competitionsbeating all the omnivore trainers, including the men. So, can we say #VeganStrong?

Vegan since 2003, Karina Inkster, MA, PTS, is a health and fitness coach, author of three books, and host of the No-B.S. Vegan podcast.

Read more:
Vegan Strength-Training: Don't Believe These 5 Common Myths - VegNews

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