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1.
1. Absorption, distribution, excretion and metabolism of (-)N-[alpha-phenyl-beta-(p-tolyl)ethyl][14C]linoleamide (14C-PTLA) were studied in rats and dogs. Faecal excretion of PTLA was studied in dogs and men by g.l.c. 2. 14C-PTLA (10 mg/kg) given orally to rats resulted in urinary and faecal excretion of radioactivity of 2 and 93%, respectively, by male rats and 8 and 87% by female rats in 48 h. Faecal excretion of PTLA in men was similar to that in rats. 3. Distribution of radioactivity in rats and dogs after oral administration of 14C-PTLA showed that a major part of the dose was not absorbed. 4. N-[alpha-phenyl-beta-(p-tolyl)ethyl]glutaric acid monoamide were detected in the urine of rats dosed orally with 14C-PTLA.  相似文献   

2.
The excretion and metabolism of [3H]tipredane, a novel glucocorticoid, has been studied in mice, rats, marmosets, rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys, and humans. After oral administration, [3H]tipredane was rapidly absorbed, metabolized, and excreted into urine and feces. In mice and male rats, radioactivity was excreted primarily into feces or bile, whereas in female rats, monkeys, and humans, excretion was mainly via the renal route. Some sex differences in the proportions excreted into urine and feces were noted in rodents, with females eliminating relatively more radioactivity in urine. Tipredane was shown to be extensively metabolized, but the routes were highly species-dependent and, in the rat, they were sex-dependent. Unchanged tipredane was not detected in any urine, bile, or blood extracts. Urinary and blood extract profiles indicated that there were between 10 and 30 metabolites in rats and mice, the majority of which constituted < 2% of the dose. In these species, the major pathways involved loss of the thioethyl moiety, S-oxidation of the thiomethyl group, and saturation of the adjacent saturated C16-17 bond. Hydroxylation of the steroid B-ring was seen in the 7 alpha-position in mice and female rats, and in the 6 beta-position in male rats. Metabolism of tipredane in rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys and humans was similar, but less extensive and different to that seen in rodents. The major products, the 6 beta-hydroxylated sulfoxide and sulfone metabolites of tipredane, accounted for 21-36% of the dose in human and monkey urine, and were also major components in blood. In contrast to mice and rats, S-oxidation and an unsaturated C16-17 bond were evident in primates. Metabolism of tipredane was rapid and complex, with significant species differences, although the disposition in rhesus and cynomolgus monkeys seemed to be similar to humans.  相似文献   

3.
Adult rats of both sexes were given a single oral dose of [14C] patulin and were sacrificed at various time intervals from 4 hr to 7 days following administration of the mycotoxin. Two groups of rats were employed; the treated group had been exposed to daily oral doses of unlabeled patulin (dissolved in pH 5.0 citrate buffer) in utero and for 41-66 wk after weaning, while the controls were given the buffer only throughout gestation and for 38-81 wk after weaning. Approximately 49% of the administered 14C radioactivity was recovered from feces and 36% from urine within 7 days after dosing. Most of the excretion of labeled material occurred within the first 24 hr. All of the 14C activity detected in the urine samples was either metabolites and/or conjugates of the original [14C]patulin. About 1-2% of the total radioactivity was recovered as 14CO2 from expired air. Carbon-14 radioactivity in various tissues and organs was determined throughout the 7 day period; the most significant retention site was the red blood cells.  相似文献   

4.
In this study the disposition of 1,2-[14C]dibromoethane (1, 2-[14C]DBE) was investigated in male Wistar rats. 1,2-DBE is a cytotoxic and carcinogenic compound that has been used as an additive in leaded gasoline and as a fumigant. 1,2-[14C]DBE was administered orally or iv. Radioactivity was recovered (mostly within 48 hr after administration) in urine (75-82% of the dose), feces (3.2-4% of the dose), and expired air (0.53-7.2% of the dose). One hundred-sixty-eight hours after administration of 1,2-[14C]DBE, most of the radioactivity in tissues was found in the liver, lungs, and kidneys (<1% of the dose) and the red blood cells (0.3% of the dose). Identified urinary metabolites were S-(2-hydroxyethyl)mercapturic acid, thiodiacetic acid, and thiodiacetic acid sulfoxide, together accounting for, on average, 78% of the total amount of radioactivity in urine. In addition to S-(2-hydroxyethyl)mercapturic acid, thiodiacetic acid, and thiodiacetic acid sulfoxide, several compounds were anticipated as potential urinary metabolites of 1,2-DBE, i.e. S-(carboxymethyl)mercapturic acid, S-(2-hydroxyethyl)thioacetic acid, S-(2-hydroxyethyl)thiopyruvic acid, S-(carboxymethyl)thiopyruvic acid, S-(2-hydroxyethyl)thiolactic acid, and S-(carboxymethyl)thiolactic acid. All of the postulated urinary metabolites were synthesized and searched for in urine samples. None of these metabolites could be detected in urine, however. The data obtained in the present study might be useful for risk assessment and biomonitoring studies of 1,2-DBE and will also be used to further validate a physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for 1, 2-DBE in rats and humans that was recently developed.  相似文献   

5.
The heterocyclic aromatic amines, 2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (PhIP) and 2-amino-3,4,8-trimethylimidazo[4,5-f]quinoxaline (4,8-DiMeIQx) are formed during frying of meat. PhIP and 4,8-DiMeIQx have, after metabolic activation, been shown to form adducts with DNA at the C8 of guanine both in vitro and in vivo. In order to investigate possible urinary biomarkers for estimation of the genotoxic dose of PhIP and 4,8-DiMeIQx, [3H]PhIP-dG, [3H]PhIP-DNA and [14C]4,8-DiMeIQx-DNA were injected i.p. to rats and the excretion of radioactivity in urine and faeces were measured. For all three [3H]PhIP-dG, [3H]PhIP-DNA and [14C]4,8-DiMeIQx-DNA 15-20% of the dose were excreted in the urine and 80-85% of the dose were excreted in the faeces. Urinary excretion showed maximum to 24 h (90%) with a rapid decline, 10% to 48 h and 0% to 72 h. Faecal excretion also showed maximum to 24 h (60%) with a slower decline, 30% to 48 h and 10% to 72 h. HPLC analysis of samples of urine and extracts from faeces, from rats dosed with [3H]PhIP-dG, showed that approximately 90% of the radioactivity co-eluted with PhIP-dG, indicating that PhIP-dG is excreted unmetabolized. HPLC analysis of samples of urine and extracts from faeces, from rats dosed with [3H]PhIP-DNA, showed that approximately 85% of the radioactivity co-eluted with PhIP-dG, indicating that PhIP-DNA adducts is mainly excreted as nucleoside adducts. Approximately 5% of the radioactivity excreted in the urine co-eluted with PhIP-G, indicating loss of deoxyribose. HPLC analysis of samples of urine and extracts from faeces, from rats dosed with [14C]4,8-DiMeIQx-DNA, showed that approximately 90% of the radioactivity co-eluted with 4,8-DiMeIQx-dG, indicating that 4,8-DiMeIQx-DNA adducts is mainly excreted as nucleoside adducts. Man is able to eliminate compounds of a higher mol. wt in the urine than the rat, the percentage of PhIP-dG and 4,8-DiMeIQx eliminated in the urine of man would therefore be expected to be higher than in the rat. Measurement of urinary nucleoside adducts of PhIP and 4,8-DiMeIQx could therefore provide a basis for the development of a biomonitoring strategy for the genotoxic dose of these food derived HAA.  相似文献   

6.
The antimycobacterial drug rifabutin is extensively metabolized in humans and laboratory animals. About 40% of the dose is excreted in urine as unchanged drug, and lipophilic (extractable with 1-chlorobutane) and polar metabolites. Polar metabolites accounted for 59.1 +/- 2.5% and 88.8 +/- 4.4% of radioactivity in urine collected over 96 hr after intravenous administration of 25 and 1 mg/kg of [14C]rifabutin to Sprague-Dawley rats, respectively. After 48 hr, all urinary radioactivity consisted of polar metabolites. The most abundant polar metabolite, identified by electrospray ionization-MS, collision-induced dissociation-MS, and comparison of HPLC retention times with the synthetic standard, was N-isobutyl-4-hydroxy-piperidine. Lipophilic metabolites accounted for <20% of urinary radioactivity. Major lipophilic metabolites, 25-O-deacetyl-rifabutin, 27-O-demethyl-rifabutin, 31-hydroxy-rifabutin, 32-hydroxy-rifabutin, and 20-hydroxy-rifabutin were isolated from both human and rat urine by HPLC and identified by electrospray ionization-MS, collision-induced dissociation-MS, and NMR spectrometry. In addition, two metabolites formed by the oxidation of the N-isobutyl-piperidyl group of rifabutin were found in the urine of rats, but not humans.  相似文献   

7.
1. The metabolism of (+/-)-p-hydroxy[14C]amphetamine has been studied in the rat, guinea-pig and man. 2. Most of the administered 14C was excreted in the urine within the first 24 h (64-92%), and was present mainly as free and conjugated p-hydroxy[14C]-amphetamine. In the female rat and female guinea-pig the conjugate was a glucuronide, but in man, who received a much smaller dose, the conjugate was a sulphate ester. A sex difference in conjugation was found in the rat, the female partly conjugating the drug but not the male. 3. Small quantities (1-6% of dose) of p-hydroxynorephedrine, a putative false neurotransmitter, were found in the urine of the three species. 4. Some oxidative degradation of the side chain of p-hydroxyamphetamine occurred in rat and guinea-pig since small amounts of p-hydroxybenzoic acid (1-3%) were detected in the urine.  相似文献   

8.
Hexachlorobutadiene (HCBD) is nephrotoxic in rats causing damage to the proximal tubules. Renal toxicity is presumed to be due to bioactivation by glutathione S-conjugate formation and further processing by the enzymes of the mercapturic acid pathway to reactive intermediates. Recent studies revealed major sex-dependent differences in the pattern of urinary metabolites and gave evidence for the excretion of unmetabolized HCBD in the urine of male, but not female, rats. The objective of this study was to investigate the basis for the excretion of unchanged HCBD in the urine. We administered [14C]-HCBD (200 mg/kg bw, po) to male and female Sprague-Dawley (SD) and NCI Black-Reiter rats (NBR), an alpha 2u-globulin-deficient strain. No major differences in the disposition and in the rates of excretion of [14C]-derived radioactivity were observed between animals of both strains. Previously observed sex-specific differences in the formation of urinary metabolites in Wistar rats were now confirmed in SD rats and were also found in NBR rats. In contrast to male SD rats, however, NBR rats did not excrete unmetabolized HCBD with urine. [14C]-HCBD (10% of total urinary metabolites) was only present in the urine of male SD rats. Anion-exchange HPLC showed radioactivity associated with the alpha 2u-globulin fraction in urine and renal cytosol of male SD rats; the radioactive compound was identified as HCBD bound to the protein. The results indicate that the male-specific urinary excretion of HCBD is associated with its binding to alpha 2u-globulin. Light microscopic examination revealed the formation of hyaline droplets indicative of the accumulation of alpha 2u-globulin in the kidney of male SD rats after staining with Lee's methylene blue basic fuchsin. H&E staining additionally confirmed the finding of more pronounced necrotic changes in renal tubules of male SD rats than in females as previously described for Wistar rats. Binding of HCBD to alpha 2u-globulin may contribute to the pronounced nephrotoxicity in male rats.  相似文献   

9.
1,4-Phenylenebis(methylene)selenocyanate (p-XSC) inhibits chemically induced tumors in several laboratory animal models. To understand its mode of action, we synthesized p-[14C]XSC, examined its excretion pattern in female CD rats and also the nature of its metabolites. p-[14C]XSC was synthesized from alpha,alpha-dibromo-p-[ring-14C]xylene in 80% yield. The excretion profile of p-[14C]XSC (15.8 mg/kg body wt, 200 microCi/rat, oral administration, in 1 ml corn oil) in vivo was monitored by measuring radioactivity and selenium content. On the basis of radioactivity, approximately 20% of the dose was excreted in the urine and 68% in the feces over 3 days. The cumulative percentages of the dose excreted over 7 days were 24% in urine and 75% in feces, similar to excretion rates of selenium. According to selenium measurement, <1% of the dose was detected in exhaled air; radioactivity was not detected. Only 15% of the dose was extractable from the feces with EtOAc and was identified as tetraselenocyclophane (TSC). Most of the radioactivity remained tightly bound to the feces. Approximately 10% of this bound material converted to TSC on reduction with NaBH4. Organic soluble metabolites in urine did not exceed 2% of the dose; sulfate (9 % of urinary metabolites) and glucuronic acid (19.5% of urinary metabolites) conjugates were observed but their structural identification is still underway. Co-chromatography with a synthetic standard led to the detection of terephthalic acid (1,4-benzenedicarboxylic acid) as a minor metabolite. The major urinary conjugates contained selenium. Despite the low levels of selenium in the exhaled air, the reductive metabolism of p-XSC to H2Se cannot be ruled out. Identification of TSC in vivo indicates that a selenol may be a key intermediate responsible for the chemopreventive action of p-XSC.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclohexene oxide (CHO) is a monomer intermediate used in the synthesis of pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and perfumes. Although CHO has a variety of industrial uses where direct human exposure is possible, very little is known about its fate in the body. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to determine the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of cyclohexene oxide after oral, intravenous, and dermal exposure in male Fischer 344 rats and female B6C3F, mice. After intravenous administration of [14C]CHO (50 mg/kg), CHO was rapidly distributed, metabolized, and excreted into the urine. Plasma concentrations of CHO rapidly declined and were below the limit of detection within 60 min. Average (+/- SD) values for terminal disposition half-life, apparent volume of distribution at steady-state, and systemic body clearance were: 19.3 +/- 1.6 min; 0.44 +/- 0.08 liter/kg; and 31.3 +/- 0.5 ml/kg * min, respectively. After oral administration of [14C]CHO (10 and 100 mg/kg), it was found that 14C-equivalents were rapidly excreted in the urine of both species. At 48 hr, the majority of the dose (73-93%) was recovered in urine, whereas fecal elimination accounted for only 2-5% of the dose. At no time after oral administration was parent CHO detected in the blood. However, its primary metabolite cyclohexane-1,2-diol was present for different lengths of time depending on the dose. Four metabolites were detected and identified in mouse urine by MS: cyclohexane-1,2-diol; cyclohexane-1,2-diol-O-glucuronide; N-acetyl-S-(2-hydroxycyclohexyl)-L-cysteine; and cyclohexane-1,2-diol-O-sulfate. The sulfate conjugate was not present in rat urine. Topical application of [14C]CHO (60 mg/kg) provided poor absorption in both species. The majority of 14C-equivalents applied dermally were recovered from the charcoal skin trap (approximately 90% of the dose). Only 4% of the dose was absorbed, and the major route of elimination was via the urine. To evaluate the toxicity of CHO, animals were given daily doses of CHO orally and topically for 28 days. No statistically significant changes in final body weights or relative organ weights were noted in rats or mice treated orally with CHO up to 100 mg/kg or up to 60 mg/kg when given topically. Very few lesions were found at necropsy, and none were considered compound related. In conclusion, regardless of route, CHO is rapidly eliminated and excreted into the urine. Furthermore, after either oral or dermal administration, it is unlikely that CHO reaches the systemic circulation intact due to its rapid metabolism, and is therefore unable to cause toxicity in the whole animal under the test conditions used in this study.  相似文献   

11.
The disposition of L-694,458, a potent monocyclic beta-lactam inhibitor of human leukocyte elastase, was studied in male Sprague-Dawley rats and rhesus monkeys. After iv dosing, L-694,458 exhibited similar pharmacokinetic parameters in rats and rhesus monkeys. The mean values for its plasma clearance, terminal half-life, and volume of distribution at steady state were 27 ml/min/kg, 1.8 hr, and 4.0 liters/kg in rats and 34 ml/min/kg, 2.3 hr, and 5 liters/kg in rhesus monkeys. The bioavailability of a 10 mg/kg oral dose was higher in rats (65%) than in rhesus monkeys (39%). In both species, concentrations of L-694,458 in plasma increased more than proportionally when the oral dose was increased from 10 mg/kg to 40 mg/kg. In monkeys a protracted plasma concentration-time profile was observed at 40 mg/kg, characterized by a delayed T(max) (8-24 hr) and a long terminal half-life (6 hr). [3H]L-694,458 was well absorbed after oral dosing to rats at 10 mg/kg, as indicated by the high recovery of radioactivity in bile (83%) and urine (6%) of bile duct-cannulated rats. Only approximately 5% or less of the radioactivity in bile, urine, and feces was a result of intact L-694,458, indicating that the compound was being eliminated by metabolism, followed by excretion of the metabolites in feces, via bile. Demethylenation of the methylenedioxyphenyl group resulting in the catechol was the primary metabolic pathway in human and rhesus monkey liver microsomes. In rat liver microsomes, the major metabolite was the N-oxide of the methyl-substituted piperazine nitrogen. In rats dosed iv and orally with [3H]L-694,458, concentrations of radioactivity were highest in the lung (the primary target tissue), adrenals, and liver. L-694,458 was unstable in rat blood and plasma, degrading via a pathway believed to be catalyzed by B-esterases and to involve cleavage of the beta-lactam ring and loss of the methylpiperazine phenoxy group. In vitro studies indicated that in human liver, L-694,458 was metabolized by CYP3A and 2C isozymes, and in both monkey and human liver microsomes the compound acted as an inhibitor of testosterone 6beta-hydroxylation.  相似文献   

12.
The metabolism of toborinone, (+/-)-6-[3-(3,4-dimethoxybenzylamino)-2-hydroxypropoxy]-2(1H)-quin - olinone, a novel inotropic agent, was studied in rats and dogs after intravenous administration. Chemical structures of the 13 metabolites were characterized by direct-probe FAB/MS and field desorption/MS, LC/FAB/MS, and various NMR measurements. After intravenous dosing of 10 mg/kg [14C]toborinone, fecal and urinary recoveries of the 14C dose were approximately 70% and 26-30%, respectively, in both rats and dogs. The predominant component of radioactivity was the unchanged toborinone in every biological specimen in rats and dogs. Although unchanged toborinone was predominantly observed, toborinone underwent extensive conjugations with glucuronic acid, sulfate, and glutathione, either directly or following phase I reaction. Metabolites resulting from oxidative N-C cleavage were minor both in number and in quantity in every biological specimen in rats and dogs. In rats, toborinone underwent O-demethylation to form M-7 and successive phase it reaction to yield the glucuronide M-1 and the sulfoconjugate M-2, and deconjugation to yield M-7, which was a primary metabolite accounted for 35.67% of the radioactivity excreted in the feces by 48 hr. Conjugates M-1 and M-2 were the major metabolites in rat plasma. In dogs, toborinone was metabolized via mercapturic acid pathway to yield the primary metabolites, cysteine conjugates M-10 and M-11 that accounted for 19.10% and 6.70% of the radioactivity excreted in the feces by 48 hr and that were detected species specifically in dogs. The glutathione conjugate M-13, which was isolated from in vitro incubations using dog liver, led us to consider a possible mercapturic acid pathway from the parent compound to M-10. Metabolites in dog plasma and those in urine in both rats and dogs were minor in quantity. The metabolic pathways of toborinone in rats and dogs are proposed herein.  相似文献   

13.
Urinary metabolites and the pharmacokinetics of radioactivity derived from 14C-metronidazole (14C-MTZ) were determined after intravenous (iv) or intravaginal (ivg) administration of 10 mg/kg to adult rats. Following iv or ivg administration, the disappearance of 14C from blood followed the kinetics of a two-compartment open-system model. The blood half-lives of 14C during the beta-phase were 10.9 +/- 1.6 and 13.6 +/- 4.2 hr, after iv and ivg administration, respectively. After ivg application, the MTZ-derived radioactivity was detected in tail blood at 5 min, peaked at 1 hr, declined rapidly to 6 hr and more slowly thereafter. The vaginal absorption half-life of 14C-MTZ was 0.28 +/- 0.09 hr. About 12% of the administered dose remained in the vagina after 1 hr and 1.5% after 24 hr. At 24 hr, the tissue distribution and concentration of 14C were similar in iv and ivg dosed rats, the highest 14C concentration being present in the kidneys and lowest in the fat. The percentages of the dose excreted in 24 hr in the urine and feces were 58 and 15 after iv administration, compared to 37 and 40 after the ivg route, respectively. Unchanged 14C-MTZ and five of its metabolites were detected in the urine irrespective of the route of administration. The results show that metronidazole is rapidly absorbed through the vaginal mucosa of the rat and the metabolism and excretion of this chemotherapeutic agent are influenced by the route of administration.  相似文献   

14.
1. The biotransformation of a single i.p. dose of [14C]2-chloroaniline (1.0 mmol/kg, approximately 60 microCi/rat) was investigated in the urine and faeces of the male Fischer 344 rat. 2. During 24 h, 53.1% of the administered radioactivity was eliminated into the urine, while < 1% of the radioactivity appeared in the faeces. 3. The major biotransformation pathways were para-hydroxylation and sulphate conjugation. 4-Amino-3-chlorophenyl sulphate was the major urinary metabolite comprising 31.6% of total urinary radioactivity. The para-hydroxylated metabolite, 4-amino-3-chlorophenol (10.8%), and its O-glucuronide conjugate (3.7%) were also urinary metabolites. The formation of direct conjugates of 2-chloroaniline, the N-sulphate and N-glucuronide, was significant with as much as 18.6 and 8.6%, respectively, of these metabolites excreted in the urine. The parent compound, 2-chloroaniline, accounted for 16.9% of urinary radioactivity. 4. N-Acetylated products were minor metabolites present in urine as 2-chloro-4-hydroxyacetanilide and its sulphate or glucuronide conjugate. Neither 2-chloroacetanilide nor its oxidation products, 2-chloroglycolanilide and 2-chlorooxanilic acid, were urinary metabolites.  相似文献   

15.
1. An oral dose of the coronary vasodilator 4-(3,4,5-trimethoxy[14C]cinnamoyl)-1-(N-pyrrolidinocarbonylmethyl)piperazine was well absorbed and more than 60% of the dose was excreted within 24 h. In 5 days, rats, dogs, and man excreted in the urine and faeces respectively 36.7% and 58.3%, 33.4% and 68.6%, and 61.3% and 38.1% dose. Faecal radioactivity was probably excreted via the bile. 2. Plasma concentrations of radioactivity reached a maximum within about 1 h in all three species and declined fairly rapidly (t0.5 less than 3 h). For several hours, more than 50% of the plasma radioactivity was due to unchanged drug. After correction for dose and body weight (normalization), peak plasma concentrations of unchanged drug in man, rat and dog were in the approximate ratio 100 :30:1. 3. Similar metabolites were excreted by the three species, but the relative proportions differed. Rats and man excreted 17.2% and 15.9% respectively as unchanged drug in the urine whereas dogs excreted only 3.6%. Rat bile and urine contained 4.3% and 9.8% dose respectively as glucuronides of the mono-O-demethylated compounds and dog and human urine contained 9.0% and 2.6% respectively of these metabolites. The corresponding pyrrolidone accounted for 2.5%, 5.5% and 5.1% respectively in rat, dog and human urine. Complete O-demethylation also occurred since 4-(3,4,5-trihydroxycinnamoyl)-1-(N-pyrrolidinocarbonylmethyl)piperazine was present in rat faeces (22.1% dose).  相似文献   

16.
Avitriptan is a new 5-HT1-like agonist with abortive antimigraine properties. The study was conducted to characterize the pharmacokinetics, absolute bioavailability, and disposition of avitriptan after intravenous (iv) and oral administrations of [14C]avitriptan in rats and oral administration of [14C]avitriptan in humans. The doses used were 20 mg/kg iv and oral in the rat, 10 mg iv in humans, and 50 mg oral in humans. The drug was rapidly absorbed after oral administration, with peak plasma concentrations occurring at 0.5 hr postdose. Absolute bioavailability was 19.3% in rats and 17.2% in humans. Renal excretion was a minor route of elimination in both species, with the majority of the dose being excreted in the feces. After a single oral dose, urinary excretion accounted for 10% of the administered dose in rats and 18% of the administered dose in humans, with the remainder excreted in the feces. Extensive biliary excretion was observed in rats. Avitriptan was extensively metabolized after oral administration, with the unchanged drug accounting for 32% and 22% of the total radioactivity in plasma in rats and humans, respectively. Plasma terminal elimination half-life was approximately 1 hr in rats and approximately 5 hr in humans. The drug was extensively distributed in rat tissues, with a tendency to accumulate in the pigmented tissues of the eye.  相似文献   

17.
The metabolism of 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (3PBA) in the form of triacylglycerol conjugates was compared with that of non-esterified 3PBA. Three radiolabeled triacylglycerols (rac-1-(3-phenoxy-[ring-14C]-benzoyl)-2,3-dipalmitoylglycerol (1(3PBA)DPG), sn-2-(3-phenoxy-[ring-14C]benzoyl)-1,3-dipalmitoylglycerol (2(3PBA)DPG) and the "natural" tri-[1-14C]oleoylglycerol) were incorporated into rat VLDL. Nonesterified 3PBA was prepared in rat serum albumin solution. Each preparation was administered i.v. to rats and serial blood samples were taken during the subsequent 6 hr. Urine and faeces were collected and tissue residues determined at 6 hr and 48 hr after administration. Biphasic elimination of 3PBA was observed with half-lives of 18 min and 2 hr. The triacylglycerols showed a rapid first phase and a longer second phase half-life: trioleoylglycerol 26 hr, 1(3PBA)DPG 7.6 hr and 2(3PBA)DPG 17.3 hr. The majority (63-76%) of 3PBA (whether esterified or not) was eliminated within 24 hr in urine, which contained similar profiles of metabolites. The triacylglycerols gave rise to higher tissue residues than did non-esterified 3PBA, particularly in adipose tissue which alone was not significantly depleted of radioactivity between 6 and 48 hr. The results accord with the rapid association of the VLDL-(3PBA)DPG complexes with lipoprotein lipase of the capillary epithelium, followed by hydrolysis to 3PBA, metabolism and elimination but with a proportion being redistributed into adipose tissue, re-esterified and then eliminated relatively slowly.  相似文献   

18.
2,4-Pentanedione (2,4-PD; CAS No. 123-54-6), an industrial chemical, was investigated for its comparative pharmacokinetics in male Fischer 344 rats by a single intravenous (i.v.) injection of (4.3, 43, 148.5, and 430 mg/kg), or a 6-hr nose-only inhalation exposure (400 ppm) to 14C-2,4-PD. For the i.v. route, the plasma concentration of 14C-2,4-PD-derived radioactivity declined in a biexponential fashion. The overall form of the 14C plasma concentration-time curves and derived pharmacokinetic parameters indicated that dose-linear kinetics occurred in the i.v. dose range 4.3-148.5 mg/kg, but not with 430 mg/kg. Metabolism of 2,4-PD was quite rapid as the concentration of unmetabolized 2,4-PD declined steadily to undetectable after 8 hr. 14C-2,4-PD derived radioactivity was eliminated mainly as 14CO2 and in urine. For the 4.3, 43 and 148.5 mg/kg doses 14CO2 elimination was relatively constant (36.8, 38.8 and 42.3% in 48 hr samples respectively) and greater than urinary excretion (17.9, 14.3 and 29.6%; 48 hr specimens). At 430 mg/kg i.v. there was a reversal of the excretion pattern, with urine 14C excretion (54.7%) becoming greater than that for 14CO2 (27.3%). Excretion in expired volatiles and feces was small. Radiochromatograms of urine showed free 2,4-PD in the 12 hr sample, together with 7 other metabolites. Free 2,4-PD and 6 of the metabolites decreased or were not detectable in a 24 or 48 hr urine sample, but one peak (retention 7.9 min) increased progressively to become the major fraction (97%). Nose-only exposure to 400 ppm 14C-2, 4-PD produced a mean decrease in breathing rate of 20.1%, which was constant and sustained throughout exposure, due to a lengthening of the expiratory phase of the respiratory cycle. 14C-2,4-PD was rapidly absorbed during the first 3 hr of exposure, then began to plateau, but did not reach a steady state. Postexposure elimination of 14C from plasma followed a biexponential form with a t1/2 for the terminal disposition phase of 30.72 hr. Plasma unmetabolized 2,4-PD was present throughout the whole of the exposure phase, but was significantly less than total 14C. Postexposure, plasma unmetabolized 2,4-PD declined rapidly to undetectable concentrations by 12 hr. Radiolabel excretion was approximately equivalent in urine (37.6%) and expired 14CO2 (36.3%). Urine radiochromatograms showed a minor 2,4-PD contaminant (0.6-5.9% over 48 hr), along with 7 other peaks probably representing metabolites. As with the 148.5 mg/kg i.v. dose, the major metabolite peak was at 7.8 min retention, increasing from 41.1% (12 hr) to 62.8% (48 hr). Immediately postexposure, radioactivity was present in all tissues examined, but on a concentration basis (microgram equiv/g) there was no preferential accumulation of 14C in any tissue or organ. On a total organ basis, highest contents were in liver and kidney, presumably related to the metabolism and excretion of 2,4-PD. By 48 hr postexposure, concentrations had decreased in all tissues except fat, presumably due to the lipophilicity of 14C residues. The profile of the plasma-time radioactivity curves, and the presence of residual radioactivity in tissues at 48 hr postexposure, suggests that a cumulative process could occur with frequent repeated exposures.  相似文献   

19.
The absorption, concentrations in plasma, metabolism and excretion of ramatroban ((+)-(3R)-3-(4-fluorophenylsulfonamido)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-9- carbazolepropanoic acid, CAS 116649-85-5, BAY u 3405) have been studied following a single intravenous, oral, or intraduodenal administration of 14C-labeled or nonlabeled compound to rats and dogs (dose range: 1-10 mg.kg-1). After intraduodenal administration of [14C]ramatroban, enteral absorption of radioactivity was rapid and almost complete both in bile duct-cannulated male rats (83%) and female dogs (95%). The oral bioavailability of ramatroban was complete in the dog but amounted to about 50% in the rat due to presystemic elimination. A marked food effect on the rate but not on the extent of absorption was observed in rats. The elimination of the parent compound from plasma occurred rapidly with total clearance of 1.2 l.h-1.kg-1 in male rats and 0.7 l.h-1.kg-1 in dogs. After oral administration to male rats AUC increased dose-proportionally between 1 and 10 mg.kg-1, whereas in Cmax an over-proportional increase was observed. Excretion of total radioactivity was fast and occurred predominantly via the biliary/fecal route in both species. The residues were low, 144 h after dosing less than 0.2% of the radioactivity remained in the body of rats. A considerable sex difference was found in rats following oral administration of ramatroban. In females a 3-fold higher AUC and a 1.7-fold longer half-life of unchanged compound, as well as 3-fold higher renal excretion of total radioactivity was observed. A marked species difference exists in the metabolism of ramatroban. In dogs the drug was almost exclusively metabolized via conjugation with glucuronic acid, whereas in rats oxidative phase I metabolism and glucuronidation were equally important. As a consequence enterohepatic circulation was much more pronounced in dogs (77%) than in rats (17% of the initial dose).  相似文献   

20.
The pharmacokinetics, metabolism, protein binding, red blood cell (RBC) binding, stability in vitro, and acute and anorectic toxicity of artelinic acid (ARTL) were investigated in various animal species and human blood samples. Absorption and distribution following 10 mg/kg intramuscular or oral administration in dogs and rats were very rapid with t1/2 0.12-0.54; there were also a high AUC (11,262 ng/h/mL) and Vss (9.5 L/kg), low CL (15 mL/min/kg) and long elimination time (t1/2 = 2.6 h), compared with rat data. Oral bioavailability of ARTL was 79.7% in dogs and 30.1% in rats. The conversion of ARTL to dihydroartemisinin (DART) in dogs (0.1-0.5% of total dose) after 3 routes of administration (intravenous, intramuscular and oral) was 10-fold lower than that in rats. In rats dosed with [14C]ARTL, unchanged ARTL accounted for less than 13% of the total radioactivity after all 3 administration routes, suggesting that ARTL was extensively biotransformed. The half-lives of total radioactivity (21-49 h) in urine were much longer than that of unchanged ARTL in plasma (1.4-3.7 h), indicating that some long-lasting metabolites of ARTL were formed in rats. The mass balance data showed that 77-83% of total radioactivity was recovered in urine and faeces. High binding capacity (79-95%) and low binding affinity (1.1-9.3 x 10-7 M) of ARTL were measured in rat, rabbit, dog, monkey and human plasma. The RBC/plasma ratios of [14C]ARTL were 0.35 and 0.44 for dog and human plasma, respectively. ARTL was much more stable than artesunic acid (ARTS) in rat and dog plasma, and both ARTL and ARTS were more stable in dog plasma than in rat plasma in vitro. The 50% lethal dose (LD50) of ARTL in rats was about 535 mg/kg. Multiple intramuscular dosing for 7 d of 50 mg/kg/d of ARTL caused mild anorectic toxicity compared to ARTS in rats. In contrast to 4 other artemisinin derivatives, ARTL seems to be a good antimalarial candidate as it has the highest plasma concentration, the highest binding capacities in RBC, the highest oral bioavailability, the longest elimination half-life, the lowest metabolism rate and the lowest toxicity at equivalent dose levels.  相似文献   

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