Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · Jun 7
Purdue Study Finds 2 Oz-Eq Animal Proteins Deliver More EAAs Than Plant Foods
Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · Jun 7

Purdue Study Finds 2 Oz-Eq Animal Proteins Deliver More EAAs Than Plant Foods

2 articles · Updated · SciTechDaily · Jun 7

Summary

  • Two randomized crossover trials in 55 adults found meals with 2 oz-eq of pork or eggs produced higher essential amino acid bioavailability than equal ounce-equivalent servings of black beans or almonds.
  • Blood samples taken over 300 minutes showed lean pork delivered the most EAAs, ahead of eggs, while black beans and almonds did not differ; responses were similar in young and older adults.
  • The findings challenge the Dietary Guidelines' ounce-equivalent system, under which 1 oz-eq can mean 1 ounce of meat, 1 egg, 0.25 cups of beans, or 0.5 ounces of nuts despite large differences in protein quality.
  • Researchers said the study measured amino acid availability, not actual muscle growth or strength, while a 2025 review found animal protein had only a small overall muscle-mass advantage and soy often performed comparably.

Insights

With experts divided, do new US dietary guidelines prioritize protein bioavailability over long-term health outcomes?
If animal protein builds more muscle, why are plant-based diets consistently linked to longer, healthier lives?
Beyond diet, is resistance training the true key to muscle health for everyone, regardless of protein source?