The VerdictHIGH CONVICTION

If your kidneys are healthy, high protein doesn't damage them — and creatinine, the lab marker most people watch, doesn't actually measure kidney function very well in muscular adults.

At your next routine bloodwork, ask the doctor for a cystatin C alongside creatinine, and a urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR). That's a real kidney panel.

  1. Creatinine on a kidney panel is mostly a muscle signal. Big muscles, recent steak, and recent training all push it up without your kidneys doing anything wrong.
  2. The "high protein damages kidneys" warning is a CKD-patient finding misapplied to healthy adults. Protein restriction is for established kidney disease, not for everyone.
  3. Ask for cystatin C plus a urine UACR. UACR catches early kidney trouble years before creatinine ever drifts.
SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Kidney health — high protein, creatinine, hydration

Why "high protein damages your kidneys" is mostly wrong, and why creatinine doesn't actually measure your kidneys.

Conviction: HIGH
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At your next routine bloodwork, ask the doctor for a cystatin C alongside creatinine, and a urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR). That's a real kidney panel.

Creatinine alone misreads muscular and athletic adults. Cystatin C is muscle-independent, and UACR catches early kidney trouble years before any eGFR drift shows up.

Takes one phone call to your doctor or one extra checkbox on a private bloods order.

High protein doesn't damage healthy kidneys, and creatinine mostly measures your muscles, not your filtration.

Think of your kidney panel like checking the oil light on a car by counting how much exhaust comes out the tailpipe. Creatinine is exhaust — it comes from muscles burning through their fuel. Bigger engine, more exhaust. The actual oil light is a different sensor (cystatin C), and an even earlier warning (albumin in the urine) is a leak you'd catch with a paper towel under the engine before any light flickers.

  1. What the data actually showsCreatinine on a kidney panel is mostly a muscle signal. Big muscles, recent steak, recent training, and creatine supplements all push it up without your kidneys doing anything wrong.
  2. The myth that won't die"High protein damages kidneys" is a CKD-patient finding misapplied to healthy adults — protein restriction belongs in established kidney disease, not in your gym bag.
  3. Start hereAsk for cystatin C plus a urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio at your next bloods. UACR catches early kidney trouble years before creatinine ever drifts.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

The Practical Takeaway

Practical kidney health protocol illustration

Conviction

Verdict graphic — high conviction

HIGH overall — across the load-bearing claims (high-protein safety in healthy kidneys, creatinine as a flawed muscular-adult marker, UACR as the earliest CKD signal, hydration target as urine output, NSAID-AKI dose-dependence and triple whammy, visceral adiposity as the dominant CKD driver).

What would change my mind on the high-protein safety claim

A long-duration (≥3 years), N≥500 RCT in healthy resistance-trained adults randomized to protein 0.8 vs 2.0 vs 2.5 g per kg per day, with cystatin C eGFR + UACR + iohexol clearance at baseline and annual, showing >5 mL/min/1.73 m² true GFR loss in the higher-protein arms, would shift the safety verdict from HIGH to MODERATE.

What would change my mind on the hydration urine-output anchor

A direct head-to-head RCT in stone formers comparing strict urine-output-anchored hydration (≥2 L per day) vs ad libitum thirst-based intake, with stone recurrence as primary endpoint at 5 years, showing no advantage to the urine-output target, would shift the hydration verdict toward "drink to thirst is sufficient even in stone formers."

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