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Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise

Exogenous ketone esters have demonstrated the capacity to increase oxygen availability during acute hypoxic exposure leading to the potential application of their use to mitigate performance declines at high altitudes. Voluntary hypoventilation (VH) with exercise reliably reduces oxygen availability...

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Autores principales: Prins, Philip J., Buxton, Jeffrey D., McClure, Tyler S., D’Agostino, Dominic P., Ault, Dana L., Welton, Gary L., Jones, Dalton W., Atwell, Adam D., Slack, Macey A., Slack, Marah L., Williams, Chloe E., Blanchflower, Morgan E., Kannel, Kristia K., Faulkner, Madison N., Szmaciasz, Hannah L., Croll, Stephanie M., Stanforth, Lindsey M., Harris, Tim D., Gwaltney, Holton C., Koutnik, Andrew P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8711099/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34966291
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.780755
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author Prins, Philip J.
Buxton, Jeffrey D.
McClure, Tyler S.
D’Agostino, Dominic P.
Ault, Dana L.
Welton, Gary L.
Jones, Dalton W.
Atwell, Adam D.
Slack, Macey A.
Slack, Marah L.
Williams, Chloe E.
Blanchflower, Morgan E.
Kannel, Kristia K.
Faulkner, Madison N.
Szmaciasz, Hannah L.
Croll, Stephanie M.
Stanforth, Lindsey M.
Harris, Tim D.
Gwaltney, Holton C.
Koutnik, Andrew P.
author_facet Prins, Philip J.
Buxton, Jeffrey D.
McClure, Tyler S.
D’Agostino, Dominic P.
Ault, Dana L.
Welton, Gary L.
Jones, Dalton W.
Atwell, Adam D.
Slack, Macey A.
Slack, Marah L.
Williams, Chloe E.
Blanchflower, Morgan E.
Kannel, Kristia K.
Faulkner, Madison N.
Szmaciasz, Hannah L.
Croll, Stephanie M.
Stanforth, Lindsey M.
Harris, Tim D.
Gwaltney, Holton C.
Koutnik, Andrew P.
author_sort Prins, Philip J.
collection PubMed
description Exogenous ketone esters have demonstrated the capacity to increase oxygen availability during acute hypoxic exposure leading to the potential application of their use to mitigate performance declines at high altitudes. Voluntary hypoventilation (VH) with exercise reliably reduces oxygen availability and increases carbon dioxide retention without alterations to ambient pressure or gas content. Utilizing a double-blind randomized crossover design, fifteen recreational male distance runners performed submaximal exercise (4 × 5 min; 70% VO(2) Max) with VH. An exogenous ketone ester (KME; 573 mg⋅kg(–1)) or iso-caloric flavor matched placebo (PLA) was consumed prior to exercise. Metabolites, blood gases, expired air, heart rate, oxygen saturation, cognition, and perception metrics were collected throughout. KME rapidly elevated R-β-hydroxybutyrate and reduced blood glucose without altering lactate production. KME lowered pH, bicarbonate, and total carbon dioxide. VH with exercise significantly reduced blood (SpO(2)) and muscle (SmO(2)) oxygenation and increased cognitive mean reaction time and respiratory rate regardless of condition. KME administration significantly elevated respiratory exchange ratio (RER) at rest and throughout recovery from VH, compared to PLA. Blood carbon dioxide (PCO(2)) retention increased in the PLA condition while decreasing in the KME condition, leading to a significantly lower PCO(2) value immediately post VH exercise (IPE; p = 0.031) and at recovery (p = 0.001), independent of respiratory rate. The KME’s ability to rapidly alter metabolism, acid/base balance, CO(2) retention, and respiratory exchange rate independent of respiratory rate changes at rest, during, and/or following VH exercise protocol illustrates a rapid countermeasure to CO(2) retention in concert with systemic metabolic changes.
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spelling pubmed-87110992021-12-28 Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise Prins, Philip J. Buxton, Jeffrey D. McClure, Tyler S. D’Agostino, Dominic P. Ault, Dana L. Welton, Gary L. Jones, Dalton W. Atwell, Adam D. Slack, Macey A. Slack, Marah L. Williams, Chloe E. Blanchflower, Morgan E. Kannel, Kristia K. Faulkner, Madison N. Szmaciasz, Hannah L. Croll, Stephanie M. Stanforth, Lindsey M. Harris, Tim D. Gwaltney, Holton C. Koutnik, Andrew P. Front Physiol Physiology Exogenous ketone esters have demonstrated the capacity to increase oxygen availability during acute hypoxic exposure leading to the potential application of their use to mitigate performance declines at high altitudes. Voluntary hypoventilation (VH) with exercise reliably reduces oxygen availability and increases carbon dioxide retention without alterations to ambient pressure or gas content. Utilizing a double-blind randomized crossover design, fifteen recreational male distance runners performed submaximal exercise (4 × 5 min; 70% VO(2) Max) with VH. An exogenous ketone ester (KME; 573 mg⋅kg(–1)) or iso-caloric flavor matched placebo (PLA) was consumed prior to exercise. Metabolites, blood gases, expired air, heart rate, oxygen saturation, cognition, and perception metrics were collected throughout. KME rapidly elevated R-β-hydroxybutyrate and reduced blood glucose without altering lactate production. KME lowered pH, bicarbonate, and total carbon dioxide. VH with exercise significantly reduced blood (SpO(2)) and muscle (SmO(2)) oxygenation and increased cognitive mean reaction time and respiratory rate regardless of condition. KME administration significantly elevated respiratory exchange ratio (RER) at rest and throughout recovery from VH, compared to PLA. Blood carbon dioxide (PCO(2)) retention increased in the PLA condition while decreasing in the KME condition, leading to a significantly lower PCO(2) value immediately post VH exercise (IPE; p = 0.031) and at recovery (p = 0.001), independent of respiratory rate. The KME’s ability to rapidly alter metabolism, acid/base balance, CO(2) retention, and respiratory exchange rate independent of respiratory rate changes at rest, during, and/or following VH exercise protocol illustrates a rapid countermeasure to CO(2) retention in concert with systemic metabolic changes. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8711099/ /pubmed/34966291 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.780755 Text en Copyright © 2021 Prins, Buxton, McClure, D’Agostino, Ault, Welton, Jones, Atwell, Slack, Slack, Williams, Blanchflower, Kannel, Faulkner, Szmaciasz, Croll, Stanforth, Harris, Gwaltney and Koutnik. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Prins, Philip J.
Buxton, Jeffrey D.
McClure, Tyler S.
D’Agostino, Dominic P.
Ault, Dana L.
Welton, Gary L.
Jones, Dalton W.
Atwell, Adam D.
Slack, Macey A.
Slack, Marah L.
Williams, Chloe E.
Blanchflower, Morgan E.
Kannel, Kristia K.
Faulkner, Madison N.
Szmaciasz, Hannah L.
Croll, Stephanie M.
Stanforth, Lindsey M.
Harris, Tim D.
Gwaltney, Holton C.
Koutnik, Andrew P.
Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title_full Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title_fullStr Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title_full_unstemmed Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title_short Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO(2) Retention Protocol During Exercise
title_sort ketone bodies impact on hypoxic co(2) retention protocol during exercise
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8711099/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34966291
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2021.780755
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