Library

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of clinical pharmacology 17 (1980), S. 59-69 
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: mefruside ; metabolite kinetics ; human pharmacokinetics ; urine concentration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Single oral doses of mefruside 25 or 50 mg were administered to eight healthy human subjects and plasma, red blood cells and urine were assayed for up to 50 h. In four of the subjects, the concentrations of two active metabolites of mefruside, 5-oxomefruside (mefruside-lactone) and its hydroxy carboxylic acid analogue, were also measured. Mefruside was rapidly absorbed into plasma, with a mean half-life of 0.5 h. A 4-fold interindividual difference in elimination half-life was observed, ranging from 2.9–12.5 h. The decay was biphasic in five of the eight subjects. In the other three, who had the shortest t1/2 values, initial distribution was not visible as a separate phase, so monophasic decay resulted. The variation in t1/2 was reflected in large differences in total plasma clearance between subjects (22.5–129 l/h). The total volume of distribution ranged from 314–518 l. Mefruside distributed instantaneously between plasma and red cells. The concentration in red cells was about 30 times higher than in plasma, and the terminal decay was parallel to that in plasma. The urinary excretion rate of mefruside also paralleled the plasma concentration curve. A mean total of 0.49% (±0.30%, SD) of the dose was excreted as the unchanged compound in urine over infinite time. Measurable concentrations of 5-oxomefruside were observed in the red cell fraction in the first samples, i. e., at 0.5 h. The carboxylic acid metabolite reached red blood cell concentrations about 10 times lower than those of 5-oxo-mefruside. The plasma concentrations of these metabolites were too low to be measured, but high concentrations were found in urine. Total urinary excretion of the lactone metabolite over infinite time ranged from 12.0–14.5% of dose (mean ± SD, 13.1±1.1%), and that of the open acid metabolite was 34.6–54.2% of dose (mean ± SD, 46.2±9.6%). A further 5–15% of the dose was recovered from urine after enzymatic hydrolysis as a conjugate of the open acid metabolite. The urinary excretion rate of the two main metabolites became maximal between 5–10 h after administration of mefruside, and the subsequent decrease showed much less intersubject variation in t1/2 than that observed for the parent compound. A mean t1/2 of 11.9 (±1.7 h, SD) was measured for the lactone, and a mean t1/2 of 10.5 h (±1.6 h, SD) for the acid metabolite. Approximately the same t1/2 resulted from red cell measurements. It was concluded that the urinary excretion profile of both metabolites corresponded very well to the known duration of clinical action of mefruside, so that the metabolites instead of the parent drug must be considered as the actual therapeutic principle in man.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: chlorthalidone ; pharmacokinetics ; oral and i.v. doses ; bioavailability
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Seven normal human volunteers each received a constant-rate infusion of chlorthalidone for 2 h, and the same (commonly 50 mg) single oral dose on separate occasions. The concentration of unchanged chlorthalidone was analyzed over a 100 to 220 h period in plasma, red blood cells, urine and faeces after both dosage forms. A three compartment model was required to describe the intravenous plasma concentrations in five of the subjects. A two compartment model sufficed to account for the decay of the oral plasma concentrations in all seven subjects. The mean plasma t1/2 after i.v. dosing was 36.5 h (±10.5 SD), and the mean plasma t1/2 after oral doses was 44.1 h (±9.6 SD). The mean red blood cell concentration t1/2 after i.v. doses was 46.4 h (±9.9 SD), and the mean red blood cell t1/2 after the oral doses was 52.7 h (±9.0 SD). The shorter i.v. half-live was not equally manifest in all subjects, being mainly apparent in three of them. In all cases the urinary excretion rate plots were parallel to the plasma concentration curves. As the faster decay after i.v. administration was not accompanied by increased renal clearance, the difference must have been due to non-renal mechanism. The mean total of 65.4 (±8.6 SD) % of the intravenous dose was excreted in urine over infinite time, whereas the mean total excretion after the oral dose was 43.8 (±8.5 SD) %. Faecal excretion ranged from 1.3–8.5% of dose in the i.v. study to 17.5–31.2% of dose in the oral study. The sum of the amounts present in urine plus faeces pointed strongly to an important metabolic route of elimination of chlorthalidone. Bioavailability estimates (F) from three sets of data were — a mean F of 0.61 from plasma concentrations, 0.67 from urinary excretion measurements and 0.72 from the erythrocyte concentrations. Simulations with a non-linear model indicated lesser validity of the estimate from erythrocyte concentrations. It was concluded that the average of plasma and urine data, F=0.64, yielded the best estimate of the oral availability of chlorthalidone 50 mg in man.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-739X
    Keywords: Drug interactions ; Glucuronates ; Indomethacin ; Metabolites ; Pharmacokinetics ; Probenecid
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Indomethacin is metabolized in humans byO-demethylation, and by acyl glucuronidation to the l-O-glucuronide. Indomethacin, its metabolite, and their conjugates can be measured directly by gradient high-pressure liquid chromatographic analysis without enzymic deglucuronidation. The pharrnacokinetic profile of indomethacin and some preliminary pharmacokinetic parameters of indomethacin obtained from one human volunteer are given. In plasma only the parent drug indomethacin is present, while in urine the acyl and ether glucuronides are present in high concentrations. This confirms other reports that indomethacin andO-desmethylindomethacin may be glucuronidated in the kidney. Probenecid is a known substrate for renal glucuronidation. If indomethacin is glucuronidated in the human kidney like probenecid, then this glucuronidation might be reduced or inhibited under probenecid co-medication. This pilot experiment shows that probenecid reduced the acyl glucuronidation of indomethacin by 50% and completely inhibited the formation ofO-desmethylindomethacin acyl and ether glucuronide.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...