This study tested whether taking whey protein together with collagen peptides would provide greater benefits for muscle and bone health compared to whey protein alone, collagen alone, or a placebo. Forty healthy, resistance-trained men aged 18-35 years were randomly assigned to one of four groups: (1) whey protein plus collagen (30 g + 10 g/day), (2) whey protein only (30 g/day), (3) collagen only (10 g/day), or (4) placebo (maltodextrin). All participants followed a supervised resistance training program (3 times per week) for 8 weeks. The primary outcome was muscle mass, measured with bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). Secondary outcomes included bone mineral density (DXA scans), maximal strength (1RM squat and bench press), and blood markers of bone turnover (P1NP and CTX-I). Results showed that the whey + collagen group achieved the largest improvements in muscle growth, lumbar spine bone mineral density, strength, and favorable changes in bone turnover markers compared to all other groups. No serious side effects were reported, and supplement adherence was very high. These findings suggest that combining whey protein and collagen may be a practical strategy to support muscle and bone adaptation in resistance-trained men.
This was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial evaluating the combined effects of whey protein and collagen supplementation on muscle mass, bone mineral density (BMD), muscular strength, and bone turnover markers in resistance-trained men. Forty healthy male participants (18-35 years, with ≥1 year of resistance training experience) were recruited and randomized into four parallel groups (n=10 per group): Whey Protein + Collagen (30 g WP + 10 g collagen/day) Whey Protein only (30 g/day) Collagen only (10 g/day) Placebo (10 g maltodextrin/day, isocaloric) All supplements were provided in identical single-dose sachets to ensure blinding. Participants consumed one dose upon waking and one post-exercise (or same time on rest days). A standardized, supervised hypertrophy-oriented resistance training program (3 sessions/week for 8 weeks) was applied to all groups. Primary outcome: Muscle mass (lean body mass, assessed with BIA at baseline and 8 weeks). Secondary outcomes: Lumbar spine and femoral neck BMD (DXA), maximal squat and bench press strength (1RM), and serum biomarkers of bone turnover (P1NP and CTX-I). The trial was approved by the Islamic Azad University IRB (Protocol No: IAU.Ilk.C.162911421.2024). All participants gave written informed consent. Compliance with supplementation was \>90% and training adherence was \>95%. No adverse events were reported.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
40
Participants consumed 30 g/day whey protein isolate (Optimum Nutrition) combined with 10 g/day type I \& III collagen peptides (Vital Proteins). Supplements were provided as single-dose sachets, identical in appearance, and taken twice daily (morning and post-exercise or same time on rest days) for 8 weeks.
Participants consumed 30 g/day whey protein isolate (Optimum Nutrition), in identical sachets, taken twice daily for 8 weeks.
Participants consumed 10 g/day type I \& III collagen peptides (Vital Proteins), in identical sachets, taken twice daily for 8 weeks.
Participants consumed 10 g/day maltodextrin powder (isocaloric to protein supplements), packaged identically, taken twice daily for 8 weeks.
University of Health Sciences
Ankara, Etlik, Turkey (Türkiye)
Change in Muscle Mass (kg, lean body mass by BIA)
Muscle mass was assessed using bioelectrical impedance analysis (InBody 770). Measurements were conducted under standardized conditions (≥8 h fasted, no exercise or caffeine for ≥12 h, urine specific gravity \<1.020). Values reported as lean body mass (kg). Primary analysis compared changes between Whey + Collagen, Whey only, Collagen only, and Placebo groups after 8 weeks of supplementation combined with resistance training.
Time frame: Baseline (week 0) to 8 weeks post-intervention
Change in Lumbar Spine Bone Mineral Density (BMD)
BMD measured at lumbar spine (L1-L4) using DXA (Hologic Discovery A). Scans performed by trained technician with daily calibration.
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
Change in Femoral Neck Bone Mineral Density (BMD)
BMD measured at femoral neck using DXA, reported in g/cm².
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
Change in Squat Strength (1RM)
Maximal squat strength (kg) assessed via 1-repetition maximum (1RM) testing under standardized protocol, supervised by certified trainers.
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
Change in Bench Press Strength (1RM)
Maximal bench press strength (kg) assessed via standardized 1RM testing, supervised by certified trainers.
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
Change in Procollagen Type I N-Terminal Propeptide (P1NP)
Serum P1NP, a marker of bone formation, measured via ELISA. Blood collected after overnight fast (7:00-9:00 AM), samples stored at -80°C.
Time frame: Baseline to 8 weeks
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