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1.
The metabolism of 2-(N-propyl-N-2-thienylethylamino)-5-hydroxytetralin (N-0437) was investigated in conscious monkeys after subsequent i.v., oral, and ocular administration. The administration of the drug caused some physiological effects, such as bradycardia and sedation of the monkeys. During a collection period of 120 hr, on average 83% was recovered after iv administration and 90% after p.o. dosing. After i.v. administration, 44% was excreted in the bile, as compared to 38% in the urine and about 1% in the feces. After oral administration, bile is the major excretion route, accounting for about 60% of the dose, as compared to 25% in the urine and about 5% in the feces. After ocular administration, on average 62% was recovered after 7 hr, excreted in bile and urine in about equal amounts. All percentages given above reflect the total amount of radioactivity recovered, thus comprising the unchanged drug plus various metabolites. After all three dosing routes, N-0437 was metabolized almost completely prior to elimination. Direct glucuronidation of the phenolic group proved to be the major metabolic pathway of N-0437, comprising about 44% of the dose after i.v. and ocular administration and 72% after oral dosing. Hydroxylation of N-0437 at the position ortho to the phenolic group present yielded a catechol intermediate, which was excreted as a glucuronide and accounted for about 10% of the dose. In the monkey, a clear regioselective preference towards glucuronidation at the 6-position was observed. Besides the glucuronide, the sulfoconjugate of N-0437 was a major metabolite after i.v. and ocular administration, accounting for about 15% of the dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The absorption, metabolism, and excretion of [14C]aprepitant, a potent and selective human substance P receptor antagonist for the treatment of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, was evaluated in rats and dogs. Aprepitant was metabolized extensively and no parent drug was detected in the urine of either species. The elimination of drug-related radioactivity, after i.v. or p.o. administration of [14C]aprepitant, was mainly via biliary excretion in rats and by way of both biliary and urinary excretion in dogs. Aprepitant was the major component in the plasma at the early time points (up to 8 h), and plasma metabolite profiles of aprepitant were qualitatively similar in rats and dogs. Several oxidative metabolites of aprepitant, derived from N-dealkylation, oxidation, and opening of the morpholine ring, were detected in the plasma. Glucuronidation represented an important pathway in the metabolism and excretion of aprepitant in rats and dogs. An acid-labile glucuronide of [14C]aprepitant accounted for approximately 18% of the oral dose in rat bile. The instability of this glucuronide, coupled with its presence in bile but absence in feces, suggested the potential for enterohepatic circulation of aprepitant via this conjugate. In dogs, the glucuronide of [14C]aprepitant, together with four glucuronides derived from phase I metabolites, were present as major metabolites in the bile, accounting collectively for approximately 14% of the radioactive dose over a 4- to 24-h period after i.v. dosing. Two very polar carboxylic acids, namely, 4-fluoro-alpha-hydroxybenzeneacetic acid and 4-fluoro-alpha-oxobenzeneacetic acid, were the predominant drug-related entities in rat and dog urine.  相似文献   

3.
1. The metabolic profiles of nilvadipine in the urine and bile of male and female rats were studied after i.v. dosing with 1 mg/kg of the 14C-labelled compound. 2. Excretion rates of the dosed radioactivity in male and female rats, respectively, in the first 48 h were 84.1% and 59.1% in bile, 12.0% and 36.9% in urine, and 2.5% and 3.6% in faeces. 3. Comparison of biliary and urinary excretion for each radioactive metabolite after dosing with 14C-nilvadipine, showed marked sex-related differences in the excretion routes of several metabolites. In male rats, metabolite M3, having a free 3-carboxyl group on the pyridine ring, was not excreted in urine, but in female rats urinary excretion of M3 accounted for 4.7% of the dose. One reason for the lower urinary excretion of radioactivity by males than by females was that the main metabolite, M3, was not excreted in the urine of the male rats. 4. To clarify the sex difference in the route of excretion of M3, this metabolite (M3) was given i.v. to rats. No excretion of the metabolite was observed in urine of male rats within 24 h but, in marked contrast, 41.5% of the dose was excreted in urine of females in the same period.  相似文献   

4.
Metabolism and excretion of atorvastatin in rats and dogs.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Atorvastatin (AT) is a second-generation potent inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, clinically approved for lowering plasma cholesterol. Using a mixture of [D(5)/D(0)] AT and/or [(14)C]AT, the metabolic fate and excretion of AT were examined in rats and dogs following single and multiple oral doses. Limited biliary recycling was examined in one dog after a single dose of AT. AT-derived metabolites in bile samples were identified by metabolite screening of the [D(5)/D(0)] AT molecular clusters using tandem mass spectrometry. Bile was a major route of [(14)C] drug-derived excretion, accounting for 73 and 33% of the oral dose in the rat and dog, respectively. The remaining radioactivity was recovered in the feces; only trace amounts were excreted in urine. Radioactive components identified in rat and dog bile were the para- and ortho-hydroxy metabolites, a glucuronide conjugate of ortho-hydroxy AT, and unchanged AT. Two minor radioactive components were identified as beta-oxidation products of AT with one confirmed as a beta-oxidized AT derivative. The reappearance of AT and major metabolites in bile from a dog administered a sample of its previously excreted bile indicated biliary recycling is an important component in AT metabolism. Multiple dose administration in rats did not alter biliary metabolic profiles. Rat and dog plasma profiles after multiple dose administration were similar and showed no additional metabolites not found in bile. Examination of rat and dog bile and plasma indicates that AT primarily undergoes oxidative metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
1. The metabolic profiles of nilvadipine in the urine and bile of male and female rats were studied after i.v. dosing with 1?mg/kg of the 14C-labelled compound.

2. Excretion rates of the dosed radioactivity in male and female rats, respectively, in the first 48?h were 8.41% and 59.1% in bile, 12.0% and 36.9% in urine, and 2.5% and 3.6% in faeces.

3. Comparison of biliary and urinary excretion for each radioactive metabolite after dosing with 14C-nilvadipine, showed marked sex-related differences in the excretion routes of several metabolites. In male rats, metabolite M3, having a free 3-carboxyl group on the pyridine ring, was not excreted in urine, but in female rats urinary excretion of M3 accounted for 4.7% of the dose. One reason for the lower urinary excretion of radioactivity by males than by females was that the main metabolite, M3, was not excreted in the urine of the male rats.

4. To clarify the sex difference in the route of excretion of M3, this metabolite (M3) was given i.v. to rats. No excretion of the metabolite was observed in urine of male rats within 24?h but, in marked contrast, 41.5% of the dose was excreted in urine of females in the same period.  相似文献   

6.
1. The in vivo metabolic pathways of 2-(N-propyl-N-2-thienylethylamino)-5-hydroxytetralin (I) in rats have been established, using in vitro metabolism as a complementary technique. 2. All identified metabolites were conjugates. Glucuronidation at the phenolic group yields the major metabolite, accounting for 50% (i.v.) or 65% (oral) of the dose. The corresponding sulphate conjugate of I is virtually absent (less than 0.2% dose). 3. Hydroxylation of I, at the ortho position to the phenolic hydroxy group, yields 6-hydroxy-I (II), accounting for about 13% (i.v.) or 9% (oral) dose. This catechol is excreted, as a glucuronide, almost exclusively into the bile. Both the 5- and the 6-glucuronide of II were detected in about equal amounts. 4. Metabolism of I in vitro showed that under oxidative conditions, depropylation of I occurred. Conjugation of 3H-I in the presence of UDPGA or PAPS, was successful in yielding the glucuronide and sulphate conjugates.  相似文献   

7.
The metabolism and disposition of 14C-labeled muraglitazar (Pargluva), a novel dual alpha/gamma peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor activator, was investigated in eight healthy male subjects with and without bile collection (groups 1 and 2) after a single 20-mg oral dose. Bile samples were collected for 3 to 8 h after dosing from group 2 subjects in addition to the urine and feces collection. In plasma, the parent compound was the major component, and circulating metabolites, including several glucuronide conjugates, were minor components at all time points. The exposure to parent drug (Cmax and area under the plasma concentration versus time curve) in subjects with bile collection was generally lower than that in subjects without bile collection. The major portion of the radioactive dose was recovered in feces (91% for group 1 and 51% for group 2). In addition, 40% of the dose was recovered in the bile from group 2 subjects. In this 3- to 8-h bile, the glucuronide of muraglitazar (M13, 15% of dose) and the glucuronides of its oxidative metabolites (M17a,b,c, M18a,b,c, and M20, together, 16% of dose) accounted for approximately 80% of the biliary radioactivity; muraglitazar and its O-demethylated metabolite (M15) each accounted for approximately 4% of the dose. In contrast, fecal samples only contained muraglitazar and its oxidative metabolites, suggesting hydrolysis of biliary glucuronides in the intestine before fecal excretion. Thus, the subjects with and without bile collection showed different metabolic profiles of muraglitazar after oral administration, and glucuronidation was not observed as a major pathway of metabolic clearance from subjects with the conventional urine and fecal collection, but was found as a major elimination pathway from subjects with bile collection.  相似文献   

8.
1. Disposition of phenol red was examined in channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) after oral or intravascular (i.v.) dosing at 10 mg/kg body weight. 2. Phenol red was not detectable in plasma, urine, or bile after oral administration. 3. After i.v. dosing, plasma concentrations of phenol red were best described by a two-compartment pharmacokinetic model with distribution and elimination half-lives of 2.3 and 21 min, respectively. The apparent volume of distribution at steady state (Vss) was 225 ml/kg and total body clearance (Clb) was 658 ml/h per kg. Plasma protein binding was 19%. 4. Biliary excretion was the primary route of elimination of phenol red; in 24 h, 55% of the i.v. dose was excreted in bile compared with 24% in urine. No metabolites were detected in these fluids. 5. The use of anaesthesia during dosing had no effect on the quantitative excretion of phenol red by renal or biliary routes.  相似文献   

9.
1. Z-7760 (S(-)-N-[N-2-phenylethyl)-6-hexylamino]-N-propyl-5,6-dihydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-2-naphthylamine dihydrobromide) is a potent dopamine D-1 and D-2 agonist synthesized during a search for agents to treat heart failure. Reported is the fate of the drug in rat. 2. 3H-Z-7760 was administered p.o. and i.v. to male Sprague-Dawley rats (0.4 mg and 400 microCi/kg in 0.1% ascorbic acid) and venous blood samples collected at intervals up to 48 h. Comparison of the AUC for total 3H showed that 37% of an oral dose of Z-7760 was absorbed. The percentage plasma 3H present as the parent compound fell from 82% 30 min after i.v. dosing to 12% after 24 h. After oral dosing, the fraction of plasma 3H present as unchanged Z-7760 was < 5% and this was essentially unaltered throughout the study. The long terminal elimination phase evident from 6 h was notable after both routes of administration. 3. The bile duct-cannulated rat was given 3H-Z-7760 p.o. (0.4 mg and 40 microCi/kg) and bile was collected for up to 22 h. Biliary excretion accounted for 30% of the dose. No parent compound was detected in the bile. 4. In further studies, other rats were dosed p.o. or i.v. with 3H-Z-7760 (0.4 mg and 400 microCi/kg) and urine and faeces were collected daily for 3 days. The major route of excretion was the faeces with 94-97% 3H recovered after oral and 70-73% after i.v. dosing. A further 4-7% was recovered in the urine after oral and 12-13% after i.v. dosing. 5. After oral administration of Z-7760 (100 mg/kg, 40 microCi/kg) to rats, the major metabolites in the urine were identified as the 5-O-methyl and glucuronic acid conjugates of Z-7760 by LC and MS. The glucuronide was only seen in urine after oral administration but 5-O-methyl-Z-7760 was present in urine and faeces after both routes of administration. 6. The low bioavailability of Z-7760 is the consequence of its poor absorption from the gastrointestinal tract as well as extensive first-pass metabolism that further reduces systemic blood concentrations after oral administration.  相似文献   

10.
Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion studies were conducted in rats and dogs with rofecoxib (VIOXX, MK-0966), a potent and highly selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). In rats, the nonexponential decay during the terminal phase (4- to 10-h time interval) of rofecoxib plasma concentration versus time curves after i.v. or oral administration of [(14)C]rofecoxib precluded accurate determinations of half-life, AUC(0-infinity) (area under the plasma concentration versus time curve extrapolated to infinity), and hence, bioavailability. After i.v. administration of [(14)C]rofecoxib to dogs, plasma clearance, volume of distribution at steady state, and elimination half-life values of rofecoxib were 3.6 ml/min/kg, 1.0 l/kg, and 2.6 h, respectively. Oral absorption (5 mg/kg) was rapid in both species with C(max) occurring by 0.5 h (rats) and 1.5 h (dogs). Bioavailability in dogs was 26%. Systemic exposure increased with increasing dosage in rats and dogs after i.v. (1, 2, and 4 mg/kg), or oral (2, 5, and 10 mg/kg) administration, except in rats where no additional increase was observed between the 5 and 10 mg/kg doses. Radioactivity distributed rapidly to tissues, with the highest concentrations of the i.v. dose observed in most tissues by 5 min and by 30 min in liver, skin, fat, prostate, and bladder. Excretion occurred primarily by the biliary route in rats and dogs, except after i.v. administration of [(14)C]rofecoxib to dogs, where excretion was divided between biliary and renal routes. Metabolism of rofecoxib was extensive. 5-Hydroxyrofecoxib-O-beta-D-glucuronide was the major metabolite excreted by rats in urine and bile. 5-Hydroxyrofecoxib, rofecoxib-3',4'-dihydrodiol, and 4'-hydroxyrofecoxib sulfate were less abundant, whereas cis- and trans-3,4-dihydro-rofecoxib were minor. Major metabolites in dog were 5-hydroxyrofecoxib-O-beta-D-glucuronide (urine), trans-3, 4-dihydro-rofecoxib (urine), and 5-hydroxyrofecoxib (bile).  相似文献   

11.
Muraglitazar (Pargluva; Bristol-Myers Squibb), a dual alpha/gamma peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor activator, is under development for treatment of type 2 diabetes. This study describes the biotransformation profile of carbon-14-labeled muraglitazar in plasma, urine, feces, and bile samples from male CD-1 mice [intact and bile duct cannulation (BDC)] after single oral doses of 1 and 40 mg/kg. The major drug-related component circulating in mouse plasma was the parent compound for up to 4 h postdose. Similar to excretion profiles of muraglitazar in humans, monkeys, and rats, urinary excretion was the minor and fecal excretion via the biliary route was the major elimination pathway for muraglitazar in mice. The parent compound was a minor component in urine, bile, and feces, indicating that muraglitazar was extensively metabolized in mice. Major biotransformation pathways of muraglitazar in mice included taurine conjugate formation, acyl glucuronidation, hydroxylation, and O-dealkylation. In addition to those metabolites previously identified in humans, monkeys, and rats (M1-M21), several unique metabolites identified in mice included taurine conjugates (M24, M25, M26a,b,c, and M31), oxazole-ring-opened metabolites (M27 and M28), glutathione conjugates (M29a,b and M30), a dihydroxylated metabolite (M32), hydroxylated metabolites (M33 and M35), and a dehydrogenated metabolite (M34). The taurine conjugate of muraglitazar, M24, was a major metabolite in mice, accounting for 12 to 15% of the total dose in BDC mice or 7 to 12% of the total dose in intact mice. None of these taurine and glutathione conjugates were found in the bile samples of humans, monkeys, or rats.  相似文献   

12.
This study compares the biliary and urinary metabolic profiles of 1,2-diethyl-3-hydroxypyridin-4-one (CP94), an orally active iron chelator, in the normal rat. Surprisingly, CP94 was found to form two phase II metabolites, the 3-O- and 4-O-glucuronides. These glucuronides accounted for 38 and 28% of the administered CP94 dose, in bile and urine, respectively. Unchanged CP94 accounted for 5% of the CP94 dose in both bile and urine. The 2-(1'-hydroxy) metabolite of CP94 was found to be the dominant metabolite in urine. In addition, an unstable metabolite was detected in the bile although its structure remains unknown at the present stage. The excretion of iron in bile, after administration of CP94, was found to parallel the biliary elimination of CP94 together with its hydroxylated derivatives, indicating the importance of metabolites in iron excretion.  相似文献   

13.
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a weak xenoestrogen mass-produced with potential human exposure. The disposition of bisphenol A in male Fischer-344 (F344) rats dosed orally (100 or 0.10 mg/kg) or intravenously (0.10 mg/kg) was determined. Smaller amounts of the dose appeared in the urine. The main excretion route was feces in rats irrespective of dose and administration route. The biliary excretion during 6 h was 58-66% after iv dosing and 45-50% after oral dosing at 0.10 mg 14C-BPA/kg. Toxicokinetic parameters obtained from 14C-BPA-derived radioactivity in blood were the terminal elimination half-life, t1/2beta = 39.5 h, and total body clearance, CLtot = 0.52 l/h/kg after iv dosing of 0.10 mg 14C-BPA/kg to male rats. The blood concentration reached its maximum of 5.5 ng-eq/ml at 0.38 h after oral dose. AUC(0-6 h), AUC(0-48 h), and AUCinf of 14C-BPA-derived radioactivity, were 34, 118, and 192 ng-eqh/ml for the iv dose and 18, 102, and 185 ng-eqh/ml for the oral dose, respectively. The oral bioavailability of F(0-6 h), F(0-48 h), and Finf were 0.54, 0.86, and 0.97, respectively. The 14C-BPA-derived radioactivity was strongly bound to plasma protein (free fraction, fu = 0.046) and preferentially distributed to the plasma with a blood/plasma ratio of 0.67. From the bile of male rats orally dosed at 100 mg/kg, we have isolated and characterized BPA glucuronide (BPA-gluc) by ESI/MS, 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. HPLC analysis showed that BPA-gluc was the predominant metabolite in bile and urine. Unchanged BPA was mostly detected in feces. These results suggest that BPA is mainly metabolized to BPA-gluc and excreted into feces through the bile and subject to enterohepatic circulation in rats irrespective of dose and administration route.  相似文献   

14.
The absorption, excretion, and metabolism of the endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan was investigated in healthy male subjects by administration of 14C-labeled compound. Four subjects received a single oral dose of 500 mg of bosentan (3.7 MBq), and four other subjects received a single i.v. dose of 250 mg of bosentan (3.7 MBq). Radioactivity and concentrations of bosentan and its metabolites were measured in plasma, urine, and feces samples. More than 97% of drug-related material was recovered on average within 3.5 days after oral dosing and within 5 days after i.v. dosing. More than 90% of radioactivity was found in feces after both oral and i.v. dosing. Most of the radioactivity in urine and feces represented bosentan and three metabolites. Ro 48-5033, the major metabolite in plasma, urine, and feces, is the result of hydroxylation at the t-butyl group of bosentan. The two other metabolites Ro 47-8634 and Ro 64-1056 represent minor metabolite species. Ro 47-8634 is the product of O-demethylation of the phenolic methyl ester, and Ro 64-1056 is generated by both demethylation and hydroxylation. The radioactivity in plasma could almost entirely be attributed to bosentan and the two metabolites Ro 48-5033 and Ro 47-8634, whereby both metabolites exhibited much lower plasma levels than bosentan. Hepatic metabolism followed by biliary excretion of the metabolites apparently represents the major pathway of elimination for bosentan in humans.  相似文献   

15.
1. Z-7760 (S(?)-N-[N-2-phenylethyl)-6-hexylamino]-N-propyl-5,6-dihydroxy- 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-2-naphthylamine dihydrobromide) is a potent dopamine D-1 and D-2 agonist synthesized during a search for agents to treat heart failure. Reported is the fate of the drug in rat. 2. 3H-Z-7760 was administered p.o. and i.v. to male Sprague-Dawley rats (0.4 mg and 400 μCi/kg in 0.1% ascorbic acid) and venous blood samples collected at intervals up to 48 h. Comparison of the AUC for total 3H showed that 37% of an oral dose of Z-7760 was absorbed. The percentage plasma 3H present as the parent compound fell from 82% 30 min after i.v. dosing to 12% after 24 h. After oral dosing, the fraction of plasma 3H present as unchanged Z-7760 was < 5% and this was essentially unaltered throughout the study. The long terminal elimination phase evident from 6 h was notable after both routes of administration. 3. The bile duct-cannulated rat was given 3H-Z-7760 p.o. (0.4?mg and 40 μCi/kg) and bile was collected for up to 22 h. Biliary excretion accounted for 30% of the dose. No parent compound was detected in the bile. 4. In further studies, other rats were dosed p.o. or i.v. with 3H-Z-7760 (0.4?mg and 400 μCi/kg) and urine and faeces were collected daily for 3 days. The major route of excretion was the faeces with 94-97% 3H recovered after oral and 70-73% after i.v. dosing. A further 4-7% was recovered in the urine after oral and 12-13% after i.v. dosing. 5. After oral administration of Z-7760 (100?mg/kg, 40 μCi/kg) to rats, the major metabolites in the urine were identified as the 5-O-methyl and glucuronic acid conjugates of Z-7760 by LC and MS. The glucuronide was only seen in urine after oral administration but 5-O-methyl-Z-7760 was present in urine and faeces after both routes of administration. 6. The low bioavailability of Z-7760 is the consequence of its poor absorption from the gastrointestinal tract as well as extensive first-pass metabolism that further reduces systemic blood concentrations after oral administration.  相似文献   

16.
The pharmacokinetics of epinastine (EPN), an anti-allergic agent, was investigated in rats. The plasma concentration-time profile of EPN after intravenous (i.v.) administration was triexponential. After oral administration of EPN (7.5 and 20 mg/kg), the drug was rapidly absorbed, and Cmax was reached 2 h after dosing. A minor secondary peak was observed in EPN plasma concentration-time profiles at both doses. The bioavailability of EPN after oral dosing was 41 and 40%. The kinetic parameters (T 1/2, AUC and MRT) for unlabeled EPN were much smaller than those for 14C-EPN, which has already been reported. The total biliary excretion of EPN at a 7.5 mg/kg dose was 15.5% of the dose, but the percentage of conjugates in bile was extremely low and about 11% of the total biliary excretion. The increase in the plasma concentration in bile duct-linked rats after oral administration of EPN (20 mg/kg) was not observed, indicating that a secondary increase in drug concentration based on enterohepatic circulation was ruled out. When the gastrointestinal (GI)-transit of phenol red (PR) after oral administration of EPN (20 mg/kg) was estimated, the GI-transit of PR was significantly delayed, and at 3-4 h after dosing half of the PR dose reached the jejunum. The remaining EPN in the small intestine after oral administration (7.5 mg/kg) reached peak levels 2 h after dosing, but then partly increased again at 4 h. As a result, it was clarified that the double peaks observed after oral doses are mainly due to the delayed absorption of a part of EPN, based on the reduction in gastric motility caused by the drug.  相似文献   

17.
The disposition of a novel 5HT-1a agonist, LY228729, was studied in rats after oral administration and in monkeys after both i.v. and oral administration of a radiolabeled drug. Plasma concentrations of LY228729 declined with a half-life of 2.3 and 1.5 hr in monkeys after oral dosing and i.v. administration, respectively, and 1.9 hr in rats dosed orally. Peak plasma concentrations of the N-despropyl metabolite were greater than the parent drug following oral administration in both rats and monkeys and declined with a half-life of 3.2-3.5 hr. Plasma levels of total radioactivity rapidly exceeded that of the parent drug in both species. Radioactivity was eliminated more slowly, with terminal half-lives of 39.4 hr in the monkey and 48.6 hr in the rat. The parent drug and its despropyl metabolite accounted for only a small percentage of the total radioactivity in the plasma. Following i.v. and oral administration, radioactivity was eliminated predominantly in the urine of monkeys, but was distributed evenly between the urine and feces of rats. Parent drug and the N-despropyl metabolite were the major products in rat urine. In the monkey, the major metabolite was an uncharacterized polar compound.  相似文献   

18.
1. Peak radioactivity in the blood was reached at 30 min after i.p. and 1 h after oral dosing of [14C]triazolam to rats. In dogs, peak blood level was observed at 30 min after oral dosing. 2. Daily dosing of triazolam to male rats for 21 days caused a gradual increase in blood level, with peak at 1 h after dosing. 3. The rate of binding of triazolam plus its metabolites to plasma protein of rats was about 30% at 15 min and 6 h. 4. In rats, the majority of the activity of the intra-intestinally administered [14C]triazolam was found in the small intestines in 6 h. 5. About 58% of the oral dose and 77% of the i.p. dose were recovered in the bile of rats in 48 h after dosing. When the bile from one rat was introduced into the duodenum of a second rat, approximately 37% was recovered in the bile of the second animal in 24 h. 6. In male rats, high radioactivity was seen in the liver, kidneys, adrenals and heart, and low in the CNS. By 96 h after dosing, radioactivity in the liver, blood and kidneys was very low, and was undetectable in other tissues and organs. Radioactivity levels in tissues after daily dosing for 7, 14 and 21 days did not differ appreciably from single administration. 7. In monkeys, activity was high in the liver, kidneys and skin following oral administration and low in the CNS. 8. After oral administration of [14C]triazolam to pregnant rats, the activity in the uterus and placenta was higher than that in the maternal blood. The activity in the foetus was low. 9. In rats given [14C]triazolam orally or i.p., 85% and 12% of the oral dose, and 82% and 14% of the i.p. dose were recovered in the faeces and urine, respectively, in 96 h. The rate of cumulative faecal and urinary excretion after repeated dosing was similar to the single dosing with 80% and 14% of the activity recovered, respectively, in faeces and urine in 6 days. In dogs, 50% of the oral dose was found in the faeces and 40% in the urine. 10. Radioactivity in the milk of rats was maximal at 4 h after oral dosing. It declined to 34% of the peak level 48 h later.  相似文献   

19.
1. The (13S)-dihydro derivative of idarubicin, (13S)-idarubicinol, is the major urinary metabolite of idarubicin in humans. Idarubicinol epimers were quantified by h.p.l.c. in urine from rats, mice, rabbits, dogs and man after i.v. administration of idarubicin, and in man after oral dosing. The (13R)- and (13S)-epimers of idarubicinol were determined in rat bile. 2. After i.v. injection of idarubicin. (13R)-idarubicinol was not detectable in mice and rabbit urine and no more than 0.5% of the dose was present in the urine of other species. In man, the proportion of (13R)-idarubicinol in total idarubicinol was similar after i.v. (4.1%) and oral (3.8-5.0%) administration of idarubicin; the same applies to rat bile and urine. 3. Reduction of idarubicin in vivo is dependent upon ketone reductases, and proceeds more stereoselectively than that of most ketones giving rise to the (13S)-epimer almost exclusively. The high stereospecificity in idarubicin reduction might result from chiral induction due to the presence of asymmetric centres near to the carbonyl group in idarubicin.  相似文献   

20.
1. The (13S)-dihydro derivative of idarubicin, (13S)-idarubicinol, is the major urinary metabolite of idarubicin in humans. Idarubicinol epimers were quantified by h.p. 1.c. in urine from rats, mice, rabbits, dogs and man after i.v. administration of idarubicin, and in man after oral dosing. The (13R)- and (13S)-epimers of idarubicinol were determined in rat bile.

2. After i.v. injection of idarubicin. (13R)-idarubicinol was not detectable in mice and rabbit urine and no more than 0.5% of the dose was present in the urine of other species. In man, the proportion of (13R)-idarubicinol in total idarubicinol was similar after i.v. (4.1%) and oral (3.8–5.0%) administration of idarubicin; the same applies to rat bile and urine.

3. Reduction of idarubicin in vivo is dependent upon ketone reductases, and proceeds more stereoselectively than that of most ketones giving rise to the (13S)-epimer almost exclusively. The high stereospecificity in idarubicin reduction might result from chiral induction due to the presence of asymmetric centres near to the carbonyl group in idarubicin.  相似文献   

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