Generally excessive protein levels are not due to diet.
Excessive protein in a horse's diet can result in kidney damage or outright destruction resulting in death. If the excess is mild, the protein is usually successfully excreted in the urine.
Restricting dietary salt and protein will help to control the excess of albumin in urine. Certain foods to include in your diet would be flaxseed, whole grains, whole fruits and vegetables.
Excess protein in the diet can stress the digestive system, liver, and kidneys, and also contribute to the development of osteoporosis, or weakness of the bones due to calcium loss--a condition afflicting many seniors
You are feeding Cancer cells. Your diet should only consist of 10 percent of plant protein each day. To avoid growing cancer cells.
Typically excess protein is caused by lupus' effect on the kidneys; excess urine protein doesn't cause lupus.
If individuals consume protein in excess of the amount needed, the extra protein will not be stored as protein. It will convert to fat and stored as fat.
You shouldn't drink them unless you like them, and it doesn't matter how old you are. -- Right. Anyone with a normal, developed digestive system (aka, not breastfeeding infants) can safely consume a protein shake. There's no reason to though. A normal diet will provide more than enough protein, even for body building. Excess protein is just exess calories. Under a diet which may make protein consumption difficult, such as a vegan diet, a soy protein shake may be of benefit in reaching one's daily protein needs.
Yes. Excess everything in your diet gets turned to fat. The body uses a carb called glucose to power everything. All carbs are eventually broken down into glucose like molecules (except cellulose). If you aren't getting enough carbs in your diet then your liver starts making glucose from protein by a process called gluconeogensis. The excess glucose produced will then be turned into fat. Long term high protein low carb diets will deprive your body of the nutrients it needs by converting all the nutrients into glucose.
WebMD evaluates a protein diet called Protein Power here: http://www.webmd.com/diet/protein-power-what-it-is They describe the overall scope of the diet and give some sample meals, as well as discussing the science supporting the diet.
Meats do contain protein and many individuals select meats on their protein diet. However, you can still be a vegetarian and select a protein diet. Eggs are rich in proteins and are an excellent selection for those on a protein diet.
It gets digested by your stomach. Then your body absorbs its nutrients then it will pass into your intestine and then will be gotten rid of by going to the toilet.