Eating more protein but not seeing muscle growth? Find your real target
More protein does not automatically mean more muscle. Your real protein target depends on body weight, training load, and your goal.
Tibialis anterior strain needs a staged plan that matches tissue healing, pain behavior, and progressive rehab loading in the foot.
Category: Muscle Injury
Body region: Foot
Common in: Sprinting, Gym training, Field sports, Foot, Muscle
Goals: Reduce irritability in Tibialis anterior strain, Protect tissue quality and appetite, Build the next rehab step safely
Nutrition focus: Higher protein, Vitamin C, Structured hydration, No alcohol around the early healing phase
Meal examples: Greek yogurt, oats, and berries / Chicken or tofu with rice and vegetables / Salmon or lentils with potatoes and greens
Goals: Reduce irritability in Tibialis anterior strain, Protect tissue quality and appetite, Build the next rehab step safely
Nutrition focus: Higher protein, Vitamin C, Structured hydration, No alcohol around the early healing phase
Meal examples: Greek yogurt, oats, and berries / Chicken or tofu with rice and vegetables / Salmon or lentils with potatoes and greens
Goals: Progress loading tolerance for Tibialis anterior strain, Restore movement confidence and function, Prepare for return to work, sport, or daily activity
Nutrition focus: Higher protein, Vitamin C, Structured hydration, No alcohol around the early healing phase
Meal examples: Greek yogurt, oats, and berries / Chicken or tofu with rice and vegetables / Salmon or lentils with potatoes and greens
More protein does not automatically mean more muscle. Your real protein target depends on body weight, training load, and your goal.
One result can be helpful, but the real clinical value often appears when you track change over time.
Supplements are not the foundation. Energy intake, protein distribution, hydration, and recovery habits usually matter first.