Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Timed Ingestion of 3x21g of Whey Protein Exercise Sheds 14 Abdominal Fat in Overweight Subjects Within 4 Months
![]() |
Minimal effort, minimal results - While you can lose weight by just adding whey protein to your diet, your success will more than double, when youre willing to work (out) for it four times a week! |
You can learn more about protein intake at the SuppVersity

Protein Timing DOES Matter!

5x More Than the FDA Allows!

Protein requ. of athletes
High EAA protein for fat loss
Fast vs. slow protein

Less Fat, More Muscle!
![]() |
Table 1: Overview of the exercise program in the PRT and the PRISE group (Arciero. 2014) |
- upper-body resistance exercise (UB) for the chest, shoulders, biceps, triceps, and back,
- lower-body resistance exercise (LB) for the quadriceps, hamstrings, calves, and abdomen,
- sprint interval training, and endurance training (type C) like walking, jogging, running, cycling, swimming, elliptical, rowing, rollerblading, cross-country skiing, etc. and
- supervised stretching, yoga and pilates workouts (in the PRISE group, only, where the four types of exercise were cycled on a weekly basis, such that participants performed each of the four exercises, 1 day/wk for a total of four exercise sessions/wk)
All that without dietary intervention!? It sounds hard to believe that simply adding whey protein to the diet of 79 overweight / obese subjects would have such a profound impact on their body composition, but the scientists did in fact prescribe nothing else than the timed ingestion of 23g of whey protein (1) within 1 h of waking in the morning, (2) mid-afternoon or within 30 min following an exercise session and (3) withing 2 h of going to bed at night (total protein intake ended up at ~1.3-1.5g per kg body weight). Otherwise, all participants were instructed to consume their habitual diet ad libitum throughout the 16-wk intervention.
In the introduction I did yet already hint at the fact that the addition of 252kcal/day from the whey protein did not increase the subjects overall dietary intake (~2,000kcal/day). Against that background its obvious that the provision of extra whey protein induced voluntary changes in the macronutrient composition of the diet that reached statistical significance for protein (+6%, +9% and +6% in the protein, protein + resistance training and PRISE group, respectively). For fat and carbohydrates the dietary changes were too different from subject to subject (meaning some reduced fat, others carbs) to reach statistical significance - which obviously does not mean that they were not reduced!
During all sessions, the subjects use medicine balls, physioballs, rubber tubes, and bands, which were incorporated into a dynamic warm-up, footwork and agility drills, resistance and power movements, and core and body weight exercises (e.g., lunges, squats, and jumping rope).![]() |
Only the increase in protein was stat. sign. across all groups (Arciero. 2014) |
![]() |
Figure 1: Relative changes in body mass, fat mass (subcutanous, visceral and in the abdominal region) and waist circumference over the course of the 4 months study (Arciero. 2014). |
![]() |
I must say that the changes in lean mass are disappointing. Maybe a focus on higher intensity resistance training would have helped build the usually relatively muscled (from carrying an obese body) legs of the overweight / obese participants. |
Needless to say, though, that completely turning your diet upside down and making exercise an integral part of your everyday life are more promising strategies to lose weight and stave it off than any of the interventions in the study at hand | Comment on Facebook!
- Arciero, Paul J., et al. "Timed-daily Ingestion of Whey Protein and Exercise Training Reduces Visceral Adipose Tissue Mass and Improves Insulin Resistance: The PRISE Study." Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md.: 1985) (2014).