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. TITLE=Ketone Bodies Impact on Hypoxic CO2 Retention Protocol During Exercise JOURNAL=Frontiers in Physiology VOLUME=12 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/physiology/articles/10.3389/fphys.2021.780755 DOI=10.3389/fphys.2021.780755 ISSN=1664-042X ABSTRACT=
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% VO2 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