ISSN:
1432-1041
Keywords:
Key words Mizolastine
;
H1-receptor antagonist; antihistamine
;
skin suction-blister fluid
;
histamine-induced wheal and flare
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Chemistry and Pharmacology
,
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract Objective:To investigate plasma and skin suction-blister-fluid pharmacokinetics of oral mizolastine in order to determine whether the drug concentration in the fluid of suction-induced skin blisters could better predict the antihistamine activity than the plasma concentration. Setting: Department of Internal Medicine, Université Paris 6. Subjects: Ten healthy male volunteers. Methods: The volunteers (mean age 26.8 years, mean weight 75.8 kg) received a single 10-mg oral dose of mizolastine at 1000 hours. The pharmacokinetic study included 11 plasma and 9 blister fluid samples and blister epidermal-roof specimens. Mizolastine was assayed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Each volunteer also received nine intradermal injections of 5 μg histamine. Antihistamine activity was assessed as the post-treatment percentages of changes in the histamine-induced relative wheal and flare areas versus baseline. Results: Mizolastine mean Cmax (SD) and median tmax were, respectively, 380 ng ⋅ ml−1and 0.8 h in plasma, and 21.8 ng ⋅ ml−1 and 10 h in blister fluid. Mizolastine could not be quantified in the epidermis. The maximal histamine-induced relative flare inhibition was 72.5% and was attained at the median time of 3 h post-dosing and therefore was delayed by 2.2 h with respect to the plasma tmax. Mean relative wheal inhibition, although lower, showed the same time profile. A direct relationship could not be found between drug concentrations in blister fluid and antihistamine activity. Simulated concentrations in the peripheral compartment better explain the maximum inhibition effect on flare, observed 3 h post-dosing, with a flatter hysteresis loop obtained when plotting relative flare inhibition versus plasma or blister-fluid drug concentrations. Conclusion: The mizolastine concentrations in the skin suction-blister fluid were not predictive of the antihistamine activity.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s002280050117
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