GPNi® is an ISSN partner and shares selected educational highlights from ISSN Conferences. This article is based on the ISSN 2025 talk, “Pistachios and Peak Performance: Unlocking Nutritional Benefits for Athletes,” presented by registered dietitians Catherine Sebastian, MS, RD and Emily Zorn, MS, RD.
If you’re trying to hit high protein targets for training, it can feel like the default answer is “just eat more meat.” But that’s not always realistic (or preferred). The more useful question is: Can you meet your protein needs with a mix of sources without losing performance? This ISSN session highlighted how plant protein options, including pistachios, can play a practical role in an athlete’s plan.
Key takeaways
ISSN’s protein position stand suggests protein intake of 1.4-2.0 g/kg/day is sufficient for most exercising people, with higher intakes sometimes used in resistance-trained individuals.
A practical per-meal target is leucine around 700-3000 mg, alongside a balanced essential amino acid (EAA) profile.
Evidence syntheses suggest plant-based diets do not compromise strength/power performance overall, and may support aerobic performance in some contexts.
Pistachios show PDCAAS values reported around ~83-94% (highest for dry-roasted in the cited study), supporting “good source of protein” claims in the US/Canada.

About the speakers (ISSN)

Catherine Sebastian, MS, RD
Communications leader and Registered Dietitian; leads Nutrition Communications at The Wonderful Company; experienced in translating complex science for public and industry audiences.

Emily Zorn, MS, RD
Associate Manager of Nutrition Communications at The Wonderful Company; MS + Dietetic Internship (Ohio State) with a focus in sports nutrition; experience with collegiate and professional athletes; co-host of “RDs vs BS Podcast.”
Protein targets: the “how much” and the “per-meal” lens
The ISSN position stand states that 1.4-2.0 g/kg/day is sufficient for most exercising individuals, with emerging evidence for higher intakes (e.g., >3.0 g/kg/day) in some resistance-trained contexts. For meal planning, ISSN also notes that acute doses should strive for ~700-3000 mg leucine alongside a balanced EAA profile.
Why this matters in real life: when appetite is limited (travel, heavy training blocks, diet fatigue), variety and convenience can be the difference between what’s “recommended” and what you can actually execute.
Do plant-based diets hurt performance?
A 2024 systematic review/meta-analysis reported:
- a moderate positive effect on aerobic performance,
- and no effect on strength/power performance overall.
For resistance training specifically, a controlled comparison in young men found that a high-protein, exclusively plant-based diet (with supplemental soy) was not different from a protein-matched mixed diet (with supplemental whey) for muscle mass and strength gains over 12 weeks. Another high-protein trial reported comparable daily myofibrillar protein synthesis and hypertrophy outcomes between vegan and omnivorous high-protein diets.
Bottom line: when total protein and quality are managed, plant-forward patterns can support high-level training.

Why pistachios got attention at ISSN 2025
The talk framed pistachios as a convenient tool for athletes highlighting protein quality and leucine content, plus minerals/electrolytes that can matter in training contexts.
What the published protein-quality data shows
An open-access paper in Journal of Food Composition and Analysis evaluated pistachios using established in vivo assays and reported:
PDCAAS values ranging 83-94% (highest for dry-roasted),
PER values not significantly different from casein,
Conclusion: supports “good source of protein” labeling in the US and Canada.
Critical thinking note (important for credibility): PDCAAS/PER testing in this study used rodent bioassays (described by the authors). This is common in protein-quality research, but it’s still worth keeping method limits in mind when interpreting results.
How to use pistachios in a high-protein plan (omnivore or vegetarian)
1) Build meals around a “complete protein anchor”
Omnivore example: yogurt + fruit + pistachios
Vegetarian example: soy foods + grains + pistachios
Mixed: whey shake + pistachios as a portable add-on
2) Use pistachios to fight “protein boredom”
High-protein diets can fail because they’re monotonous. Rotating sources improves adherence and micronutrient diversity.
3) Portability wins
Single-serve packs work between sessions, during travel, or when you can’t access a full meal.
GPNi® Reminder
Athletes often have high protein needs, but meeting them doesn’t necessarily mean eating large amounts of meat. What matters most is total intake, distribution across the day, and leucine content. From a protein-quality perspective, pistachios can be considered a relatively high-quality plant protein option not just a snack nut and whether it’s pistachios or chicken breast, no single food solves everything. A varied, well-balanced dietary pattern still matters.
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References
Sá AGA, Franczyk A, Neufeld J, House JD. In vivo protein quality of pistachios (Pistacia vera L.). J Food Compost Anal. 2024. doi:10.1016/j.jfca.2024.106351
Damasceno Y, Leitão C, de Oliveira G, et al. Plant-based diets benefit aerobic performance and do not compromise strength/power performance: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Nutr. 2024;131(5):829-840. doi:10.1017/S0007114523002258
Jäger R, Kerksick CM, Campbell BI, et al. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Protein and exercise. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017;14:20. doi:10.1186/s12970-017-0177-8
International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN). ISSN Conference Program 2025: “Pistachios and Peak Performance: Unlocking the Nutritional Edge for Athletes”. 2025.
Disclosure: Educational summary from an ISSN Conference shared via GPNi® as an ISSN partner.