| Literature DB >> 21489321 |
Hayden White1, Balasubramanian Venkatesh.
Abstract
Although much feared by clinicians, the ability to produce ketones has allowed humans to withstand prolonged periods of starvation. At such times, ketones can supply up to 50% of basal energy requirements. More interesting, however, is the fact that ketones can provide as much as 70% of the brain's energy needs, more efficiently than glucose. Studies suggest that during times of acute brain injury, cerebral uptake of ketones increases significantly. Researchers have thus attempted to attenuate the effects of cerebral injury by administering ketones exogenously. Hypertonic saline is commonly utilized for management of intracranial hypertension following cerebral injury. A solution containing both hypertonic saline and ketones may prove ideal for managing the dual problems of refractory intracranial hypertension and low cerebral energy levels. The purpose of the present review is to explore the physiology of ketone body utilization by the brain in health and in a variety of neurological conditions, and to discuss the potential for ketone supplementation as a therapeutic option in traumatic brain injury.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21489321 PMCID: PMC3219306 DOI: 10.1186/cc10020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Figure 1Potential neuroprotective mechanisms of ketones. Ketones (1) require only three enzymatic steps to enter the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, (2) reduce the NAD couple, (3) decrease free radical formation, (4) increase production of ATP, (5) increase mitochondrial uncoupling, (6) increase glutathione peroxidase activity, and (7) inhibit pyruvate entry into the TCA cycle. CoA, coenzyme A; GSH, reduced glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; NAD+, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; NADH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrogenase; NADP, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; NADPH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate hydrogenase; OHB, hydroxybutyrate; PPP, pentose phosphate pathway; UCP, uncoupling protein. Reprinted with permission from [43].
Animal and basic science studies on effects of ketone administration on brain injury
| Mechanism of injury | Reference | Ketone source | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glutamate-induced injury | Massieu and colleagues [ | i.v. | AcAc infusion for 14 days in adult rodent model prior to and during glutamate-induced injury | Decreased neuronal damage, decreased lesion volume and increased cellular ATP levels |
| Noh and colleagues [ | p.o. | 21-day-old mice fed ketogenic diet prior to kianic-induced neuronal damage | Preservation of neurons in hippocampus by inhibiting caspase-3-mediated apoptosis | |
| Mejia-Toiber and colleagues [ | BHB applied before glutamate-induced neurotoxicity | BHB reduces injury and lipoperoxidation | ||
| Maalouf and colleagues [ | Addition of BHB to | Reduction in free radical formation and enhanced mitochondrial respiration | ||
| Cerebral hypoxia | Puchowicz and colleagues [ | p.o. | Rats fed ketogenic diet 3 weeks prior to hypoxic injury | Decreased cerebral lactate and increased tolerance of hypoxia |
| Masuda and colleagues [ | Rat neurons exposed to hypoxia following treatment with BHB | Decreased cell death and number of apoptotic cells with maintenance of mitochondrial membrane | ||
| Cerebral ischemia | Suzuki and colleagues [ | i.v. | Rats infused with BHB 3 to 6 hours after bilateral carotid artery occlusion | Decreased cerebral edema and sodium content and increased ATP levels |
| Suzuki and colleagues [ | i.v. | BHB infusions following occlusion of the middle cerebral artery | 50% reduction in cerebral infarct volume | |
| Marie and colleagues [ | Fasted | Adult rats fasted for 24 hours before four-vessel occlusion | Decreased mortality, post-traumatic seizures and brain lactate | |
| Go and colleagues [ | Fasted | Starvation-induced ketosis followed by carotid occlusion | Fasting protected rats from brain infarction | |
| Traumatic brain injury | Prins and colleagues [ | i.v. | BHB infusion following TBI in adult rats | Increase in serum BHB and cerebral BHB and improved cortical ATP levels |
| Prins and colleagues [ | p.o. | Rats with TBI fed ketogenic diet | 50% reduction in cortical contusion volume | |
| Biros and Nordness [ | p.o. | Rats of differing ages fed ketogenic diet following TBI | Younger rats demonstrated larger reduction in contusion volume | |
| Hu and colleagues [ | p.o. | Rats fed ketogenic diet prior to TBI | Reduced brain edema and cellular apoptosis in rats fed ketone diet |
AcAc, acetoacetate; BHB, β-hydroxybutyrate; In vivo, in vivo experiment; i.v., intravenous; p.o., per orally; TBI, traumatic brain injury.
Human studies investigating effects of exogenous ketone administration
| Pathophysiological endpoint | Reference | Study | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metabolic effects | Owen and colleagues [ | Effect of ketones on insulin and free fatty acid release. Sodium AcAc given as i.v. infusion 1 mmol/kg over 2 hours to 12 normal adults after overnight fast | AcAc levels 4.74 mmol/l after 30 minutes. Utilization of ketones increased with rising blood concentrations to a maximum of 13 g/24 hours. Glucose remained normal |
| Miles and colleagues [ | Evaluation of protein-sparing effects of i.v. infusion of NaBHB in six healthy adults | Ketone levels reached 2.33 mmol/l. No protein sparing, significant alkalosis | |
| Hiraide and colleagues [ | Twenty patients following severe trauma: 11 patients received i.v. 20% solution NaBHB at 25 μmol/kg/minute for 3 hours, and nine patients received sodium lactate | Ketone levels reached 1.5 mmol/l. Alanine release decreased in ketone group, suggesting a suppression of post-traumatic protein catabolism. Significant increase in sodium and pH | |
| Dashti and colleagues [ | 64 healthy obese adults with and without diabetes fed ketogenic diet for 56 weeks | Body mass index, glucose, total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol decreased significantly whereas high-density lipoprotein increased | |
| Central nervous system effects | Pan and colleagues [ | Six healthy adults infused with NaBHB at a bolus rate of 80 μmol/kg/minute, then 20 μmol/kg/minute for 75 minutes. BHB brain levels measured by MRI | BHB blood levels reached 2.12 mmol/l. BHB brain levels increased to 0.24 mmol/l. Levels lower then noted in fasted individuals suggesting differences in brain transport of ketones in fasted state |
| Pan and colleagues [ | Five healthy adults. Ketones measured in brain using MRI in nonfasted state and after 2 and 3 days of fast | Plasma and brain BHB levels correlated well, with brain BHB ranging from 0.05 mmol/l in nonfasted state to 0.98 mmol/l after 3 days of fasting | |
| Blomqvist and colleagues [ | Six healthy and six diabetic patients received infusion of BHB at 3 to 6 mg/kg/minute for 60 minutes followed by bolus of B-[11C]HB. PET scan was performed | Utilization rate of ketones increase proportionally with plasma concentrations. Rate-limiting step for ketone body utilization is transport into the brain | |
| Hasselbalch and colleagues [ | Permeability of blood-brain barrier to BHB was assessed following a 3.5-day fast | Increase cerebral ketone influx during starvation determined by amount of ketone present in blood | |
| Ritter and colleagues [ | Twenty head-injured patients assigned to conventional or ketogenic diet for 2 weeks | Group receiving a ketogenic diet demonstrated improved glucose control with higher ketone levels. Cerebral lactate was similar | |
| Smith and colleagues [ | NaBHB i.v. solution known as KTX 0101 for neuroprotection post CABG. Details of study protocol not available | Phase Ia study not published | |
| Hasselbalch and colleagues [ | Eight healthy adults received i.v. infusion of NaBHB at 4 to 5 mg/kg/minute for 3 hours. Cerebral blood flow measured using Kety-Schmidt technique | Increased cerebral uptake of ketones was counterbalanced by reduction in glucose metabolism. Cerebral metabolic rate was unchanged, but cerebral blood flow increased | |
| Reger and colleagues [ | Twenty adults with Alzheimer's disease were randomized to receive a MCT diet or placebo on two occasions | On cognitive testing, MCT treatment facilitated performance for ε4-negative but not ε4-positive subjects. Also greater improvement with MCT treatment relative to placebo |
AcAc, acetoacetate; B-[11C]HB, R-β-[1-11C]hydroxybutyrate; BHB, β-hydroxybutyrate; CABG, coronary artery bypass graft; i.v., intravenous; MCT, medium chain triglycerides; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NaBHB, sodium β-hydroxybutyrate; PET, positron emission tomography.