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Sigma Nutrition Radio

#564: Is Protein's Appetite-Suppressing Power Overstated?

Sigma Nutrition Radio

Danny Lennon

Nutrition, Health & Fitness

4.8633 Ratings

🗓️ 27 May 2025

⏱️ 71 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we take a deep dive into the commonly held belief that protein is the most satiating macronutrient. It's an idea that shows up frequently in both clinical guidance and popular nutrition discourse: if you want to feel fuller, eat more protein. But how robust is that claim when you drill into the details of the evidence?

To explore this, Alan and Danny examine the complex interplay between protein intake, satiety, and energy intake. We look at both historical and recent literature, including work from Kevin Hall's group, that raises important questions about how much of protein's supposed appetite-suppressing effect is due to the protein itself versus other influential variables—such as eating rate, food texture, and energy density.

This is an important topic, not just for academic curiosity, but for its practical implications. If our assumptions about protein and satiety are oversimplified or overstated, that has knock-on effects for how we design diets aimed at appetite regulation, weight management, or obesity prevention.

So whether you're a researcher, a clinician, or simply someone interested in understanding the mechanisms behind how we eat, this episode aims to provide clarity on where the science currently stands—and where it might be leading.

Timestamps

  • [03:18] The impact of protein on satiety
  • [04:49] Historical context of protein and satiety
  • [07:30] Mechanisms of protein-induced satiety
  • [16:31] Research methods and measurements
  • [21:39] Studies on protein and satiety
  • [27:51] Analyzing specific studies
  • [35:51] Understanding high protein meals and their effects
  • [37:31] Acute vs. chronic effects of high protein intake
  • [45:59] Other meal characteristics
  • [53:21] Real-world implications of protein intake
  • [01:01:19] Summarizing the impact of protein on satiety

Related Resources

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to another episode of Sigma Nutrition Radio.

0:17.6

This is episode 564 of the podcast.

0:22.9

My name is Danny Lennon and with me is Dr. Alan Flanagan Alan how are you doing I'm very well I'm I don't know if admiring is the

0:28.0

right word but amused amazed bizarrely frustrated by the fallout from the keto CT trial so it's

0:35.9

been a car crash in slow motion to watch play out subsequent to publication.

0:41.8

Indeed.

0:42.4

And I'm sure many people listening will have seen some of that fallout, or at least the

0:46.2

initial publication and commentary of that CETO CTA study.

0:51.5

If not, then actually one of the episodes we recorded a while back with

0:56.2

our friend Dr. Gary McGowan, in hindsight, has become even more relevant to this discussion.

1:01.8

And many of the problems that have played out were foreseen in that particular episode

1:08.1

relating their science communication and has been proven to be even

1:12.7

more accurate in light of the release of that study. So for people listening, if you haven't

1:17.3

listened to that episode yet, that's episode 541. I suggest you go check it out. But yeah,

1:22.8

it's certainly been interesting as both a case study of what not to do in terms of actually a study publication,

1:29.9

but also in terms of the communication of it afterwards.

1:32.6

I would also echo the referral back to the episode we did with Dr. McGowan, because you don't

1:39.5

necessarily like being proved right, so to speak, when that's at the expense of the integrity of science

1:48.6

and the scientific process. And unfortunately, that's really the case with this group of authors.

1:54.5

But I think there are some points that we make, because we've been tracking their work for a

1:59.1

couple of years, that very much proved

2:02.5

to be the case with them. And it just so happens that leopards don't really change their spots,

...

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