The heart is often described as a metabolic omnivore since it readily utilizes all energy substrates as fuel and easily flexes between different compositions of energy substrates depending on energy demand and substrate availability (
Figure 1). In the healthy, postabsorptive heart, fatty acids account for around 70% of cardiac energy consumption [
19,
20], whereas glucose and ketone bodies have been estimated to deliver less than 10% of the total energy demand [
21]. Even this modest contribution from glucose and ketone bodies may be an overestimation, as evidenced by a recent elegant metabolomics’ study, in which glucose uptake was barely measurable and was estimated to account for less than 1% of total energy demand [
22]. The remaining myocardial energy need is derived from oxidation of lactate and branched-chain amino acids [
21,
23]. Glucose, fatty acids, ketone bodies, and branched-chain amino acids are, thus, all sources of acetyl-CoA feeding into the Krebs cycle [
14] ultimately generating ATP. Therefore, oxidation of a given substrate primarily occurs in proportion to the delivery of the substrate into the cardiomyocyte at the expense of other substrates [
20]. In the postprandial state, carbohydrate consumption stimulates insulin secretion, resulting in increased myocardial glucose oxidation at the expense of fatty acid oxidation. This is mediated through (1) an increased glucose delivery through insulin-mediated glucose uptake in the cardiomyocyte, and (2) insulin-mediated inhibition of adipose tissue lipolysis with reduced fatty acid release and, therefore, also less fatty acid delivery to the heart. This was demonstrated in an elegant study by Ferrannini et al. [
24], who used cardiac vein and arterial catherization during a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp to demonstrate that hyperinsulinemia dramatically increases myocardial uptake and utilization of glucose, lactate, and pyruvate. By contrast, myocardial extraction of circulating fatty acids, glycerol, and 3-OHB was almost completely absent. Interestingly, the shift from fat to carbohydrate metabolism did not change cardiac oxygen consumption, heart rate, blood flow, or cardiac pressure and work parameters. This flexibility ensures a constant supply of cardiac fuel even during rapidly changing hormonal and metabolic conditions. However, the study by Ferrannini et al. did not explore whether glucose is preferentially oxidized during conditions of ample supply of both carbohydrate and lipid fuel sources, including ketone bodies.