Abstract: | Metoclopramide has previously been shown to inhibit the ketosis of starvation in rats and humans. The effect of D2-dopaminergic blockade on post-exercise ketosis was, therefore, studied in 6 carbohydrate-starved non-athletic persons who had just completed a 9-km walk in mountainous terrain. There were nine control subjects who went on the walk, but who did not ingest metoclopramide. Metoclopramide (0.15 mg·kg−1 body mass) caused a highly significant rise in the plasma prolactin concentration, but did not influence blood concentrations of 3-hydroxybutyrate, free fatty acid, glucose, insulin or glucagon. Unlike ketosis in starvation, therefore, neither prolactin, nor the D2-dopaminergic system play a part in the genesis of post-exercise ketosis. |