| Literature DB >> 32140471 |
Bernard Cuenoud1, Mickaël Hartweg2, Jean-Philippe Godin3, Etienne Croteau4, Mathieu Maltais5,6, Christian-Alexandre Castellano6, André C Carpentier5,7,8, Stephen C Cunnane5,6,8.
Abstract
There is growing interest in the metabolism of ketones owing to their reported benefits in neurological and more recently in cardiovascular and renal diseases. As an alternative to a very high fat ketogenic diet, ketones precursors for oral intake are being developed to achieve ketosis without the need for dietary carbohydrate restriction. Here we report that an oral D-beta-hydroxybutyrate (D-BHB) supplement is rapidly absorbed and metabolized in humans and increases blood ketones to millimolar levels. At the same dose, D-BHB is significantly more ketogenic and provides fewer calories than a racemic mixture of BHB or medium chain triglyceride. In a whole body ketone positron emission tomography pilot study, we observed that after D-BHB consumption, the ketone tracer 11C-acetoacetate is rapidly metabolized, mostly by the heart and the kidneys. Beyond brain energy rescue, this opens additional opportunities for therapeutic exploration of D-BHB supplements as a "super fuel" in cardiac and chronic kidney diseases.Entities:
Keywords: acetoacetate; beta-hydroxybutyrate; energy metabolism; ketones; medium chain triglyceride; nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; positron emission tomography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32140471 PMCID: PMC7042179 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2020.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Exogenous production of blood ketones by three ketone precursors–MCT, KE, and D-BHB.
Figure 2Blood ketone kinetics following gram-matched oral doses of D-BHB, D+L-BHB, and MCT in 15 fasted participants at rest. (A) Plasma ketone, (B) D-BHB, (C) AcAc, and (D) L-BHB levels over 4 h. Values are means + SEM.
Figure 3(A) Plasma ketone iAUC (μM*h) for D-BHB, D+L BHB and MCT, and (B) their respective ketone production per calorie consumed (iAUC/kcal).
Figure 4Whole body image after supplementation with two 15 g D-BHB doses, one at −75 min and the other at −30 min prior 11C-AcAc infusion (330 MBq). An 8 min scan (30 s per bed) was acquired 18 min post-injection of the radiotracer.
Figure 511C-AcAc organ distribution after D-BHB oral intake.
Figure 6Heart image: 15 min cardiac-gated acquisition (8 frames) obtained 50 min post-11C-AcAc injection. Left ventricle (LV), right ventricle (RV), horizontal long axis (HLA), vertical long axis (VLA) and short axis (SA) images.