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1.
Salbutamol-3H, labelled on the β-carbon atom, was rapidly absorbed from the gastro-intestinal tract of rat, rabbit, dog and man. 60–90%, depending upon the species studied, of the administered radioactivity was recovered in the 24 hr urine. 70–90% of the radioactivity present in the dog urine was due to unchanged salbutamol-3H, whereas 90% in the rabbit and 40% in the rat urine was due to salbutamol-3H o-phenylglucuronide. The latter has been isolated and shown to be neither a β-stimulant nor a β-blocker. The rat conjugated salbutamol-3H in the liver, and excreted the glucuronide via the bile. 0–48 hr rat faeces contained 25–40% of the label. Analysis of the tissues from the rat and dog indicated that the drug was completely cleared from the body. Salbutamol-3H inhaled by dogs and humans as an aerosol was slowly adsorbed from the lung, and excreted via the urine.  相似文献   

2.
Studies of the metabolic disposition of (S)-2-(3-tert-butylamino-2-hydroxypropoxy)-3-[14C]cyanopyridine (I) have been performed in humans, dogs, and spontaneously hypertensive rats. After an iv injection of I (5 mg/kg), a substantial fraction of the radioactivity was excreted in the feces of rats (32%) and dogs (31%). After oral administration of I (5 mg/kg) the urinary recoveries of radioactivity for rat and dog were 19% and 53%, respectively, and represented a minimum value for absorption because of biliary excretion of radioactivity. In man, bililary excretion of I appeared to be of minor significance because four male subjects, after receiving 6 mg of I p.o., excreted 76% and 9% of the dose of radioactivity in the urine and feces, respectively. Unchanged I represented 58% of the radioactivity excreted in human urine. The half-life for renal elimination of I was determined to be 4.0 +/- 0.9 /hr. In contrast, unchanged I represented 7% and 1% of excreted radioactivity in rat and dog urine, respectively. A metabolite of I common to man, dog, and rat was identified as 5-hydroxy-I, which represented approximately 5% of the excreted radioactivity in all species. Minor metabolites of I in which the pyridine nucleus had undergone additional hydroxylation were present in dog urine along with an oxyacetic acid metabolite, also bearing a hydroxylated pyridine nucleus.  相似文献   

3.
The metabolic fate of 14C-bromperidol after po administration was studied in rat, dog, and man. When 14C-bromperidol was given to female Wistar rats, 23-29% of the dose was excreted in the urine and 38-45% in the feces over a 7-day period. In dogs, 39-74% of the administered dose was excreted in the urine and 26-43% in the feces over the same period. In both rats and dogs, bromperidol was extensively metabolized; most of the urinary radioactivity associated with metabolites arose from cleavage of the bromperidol molecule via oxidative N-dealkylation. After administration of 14C-bromperidol to human volunteers, 28-50% of the dose was eliminated in the urine while 18-46% was eliminated in the feces over a 13-day period. Although bromperidol appeared to be extensively metabolized in man, the major portion of the urinary radioactivity (70-75%) was associated with the O-glucuronide conjugate of intact drug. Thus, oxidative N-dealkylation does not appear to be the major urinary metabolic pathway of the drug in man.  相似文献   

4.
Ten milligrams [14C]NTA in gelatin capsules was given (po) to 8 male subjects. Blood samples were taken, and samples of urine and feces were collected. In addition, expired CO2 was collected in 4 of the subjects. NTA is poorly absorbed since approximately 12% of the dose appeared in the urine. The compound is rapidly excreted in the urine since 87% of the absorbed dose was excreted within the first 24 hr post dosing. The blood concentration peak occurred 1–2 hr after dosing. Reverse isotope dilution and thin-layer chromatography showed the urinary radioactivity to be unchanged NTA, and therefore no biotransformation had occurred. These results closely resemble the rat and dog metabolic data except that rats and dogs absorb 4 times more NTA than humans. The metabolic similarities among rats, dogs and humans lends some confidence to the extrapolation of the results derived from rat and dog toxicity tests for the purpose of estimating human safety.  相似文献   

5.
The excretion and metabolism of (+/-) [6-(3,4-dihydro-3-oxo-1,4[2H]-benzoxazine-yl)-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-5-methylpyridazin-3-one] (bemoradan; RWJ-22867) have been investigated in male Long-Evans rats and female beagle dogs. Radiolabeled [14C] bemoradan was administered to rats as a singkle 1 mg/kg suspension dose while the dogs received 0.1 mg/kg suspension dose. Plasma (0-24 h; rat and dog), urine (0-72 h; rat and dog) and fecal (0-72 h; rat and dog) samples were collected and analyzed. The terminal half-life of the total radioactivity for rats from plasma was estimate to be 4.3 +/- 0.1 h while for dogs it was 7.5 +/- 1.3 h. Recoveries of total radioactivity in urine and feces for rats were 49.1 +/- 2.4% and 51.1 +/- 4.9% of th dose, respectively. Recoveries of total radioactivity in urine and feces for dogs were 56.2 +/- 12.0% and 42.7 V 9.9% of the dose, respectively. Bemoradan and a total of nine metabolites were isolated and tentatively identified in rat and dog plasma, urine, and fecal extracts. Unchanged bemoradan accounted for approimately < 2% of the dose in rat urine and 20% in rat feces. Unchanged bemoradan accounted for approximately 5% of the dose in urine and 16% in feces in dog. Six proposed pathways were used to describe the metabolites found in rats and dogs: pyridazinyl oxidations, methyl hydroxylation, hydration, N-oxidation, dehydration and phase II conjugations.  相似文献   

6.
1. After administration of [phthalidyl-14]talampicillin (Talpen® to rat. dog and man, radioactivity was excreted mainly in the urine (90%, 86% and 98% in rat, dog and man respectively).

2. After administration of [ampicillin-14C]talampicillin, radioactivity was excreted in the urine of rats and dogs to a lesser extent (35% in both species) and only a small proportion of the dose was excreted in the bile (6% in rats, less than 0·1% in dogs).

3. The pattern of radiometaboletes was very similar in extracts of the urines of rat, dog and man dosed orally with [phthalidyl-14C]talampicillin. The major metabolite was 2-hydroxymethylbenzoic acid.

4. Unchanged talampicillin was present in the hepatic portal vein blood of dog and thus reached the liver, whereas in rat, no parent compound could be detected in portal vein blood. This result may help to explain differences in toxicity of the compound in rat and dog.

5. Studies in vitro showed that the intestinal wall is an important site of hydrolysis of talampicillin in rat and dog.  相似文献   

7.
The metabolic disposition of etodolac (etodolic acid) was studied after oral and intravenous administration of the 14C-labeled or unlabeled drug to rats and dogs, and after oral administration of the drug to man. In all species, peak serum drug levels were attained within 2 hr after dosing. In rats and dogs, virtually all of the oral dose was absorbed; etodolac represented 95% of the serum radioactivity in rats and 75% in dogs. Serum levels in all species were generally dose-related. The elimination portion of the serum drug concentration/time curves was characterized by several peaks, which in rats were shown to be due to enterohepatic circulation. Tissue distribution studies in rats showed that radioactivity localized primarily in blood vessels, connective tissue, and highly vascularized organs (liver, heart, lung, and kidney) and that the rate of elimination of radioactivity from tissues was similar to that found in the serum. The apparent elimination half-life of etodolac averaged 17 hr in rats, 10 hr in dogs, and 7 hr in man. Etodolac was extensively bound to serum proteins. Liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 levels were unaltered in rats given etodolac daily for 1 week. The primary route of excretion in rats and dogs was via the bile into the feces. Preliminary biotransformation studies in dogs showed the presence of the glucuronide conjugate of etodolac in bile, but not in the urine. Glucuronide conjugates were not seen in the rat. Four hydroxylated metabolites in rat bile were tentatively identified. It was concluded that, in rats and dogs, etodolac is well absorbed, is subject to extensive enterohepatic circulation, undergoes partial biotransformation, and is excreted primarily into the feces.U  相似文献   

8.
The biological disposition of 14C-labeled N-(1,3,6,7-hexahydro-11bH-benzo(a)quinolizin-2-yl) propionalide hydrochloride (1), an experimental hypertensive agent was studied in the rat and dog. Both species received a single po dose of [14C]I, 31.6 mg/kg to rats and 6 mg/kg to dogs. The compound was well absorbed by both species. The maximum plasma level of undifferentiated 14C in the dog was nearly equal to that in rat plasma, despite the fivefold dose difference. Plasma 14C levels in the dog were more persistent: biological half-fife estimates (α phase) were 5.9 and 1 hr for the dog and rat, respectively. In the rat the highest tissue 14C concentrations were found in liver and the lowest were found in brain. In both rats and dogs, more than 80% of the administered radioactivity was recovered from feces and urine within 96 hr, mostly within the first 24 hr. The 96-hr urinary: fecal excretion ratios of 14C were 35:65 in both species. Metabolic end products of [14C/3H]I (50 mg/kg, rat and 30 mg/kg, dog) were the same in both species. It was noted that quantitatively the rat excreted two to three times as much glucuronic acid-conjugated material as the dog.  相似文献   

9.
The absorption, excretion and metabolism of N-(2, 6-dichlorophenyl)-beta-[[(1-methylcyclohexyl)methoxylmethyl]-N-(phenylmethyl)-1-pyrrolidineethanamine (RWJ-26899; McN-6497) has been investigated in male and female CR Wistar rats and beagle dogs. Radiolabeled [14C] RWJ-26899 was administered to rats as a single 24 mg/kg suspension dose while the dogs received 15 mg/kg capsules. Plasma (0-36 h; rat and 0-48 h; dog), urine (0-192 h; rat and dog) and fecal (0-192 h; rat and dog) samples were collected and analyzed. There were no significant gender differences observed in the data. The terminal half-life of the total radioactivity for rats from plasma was estimated to be 7.7 +/- 0.6 h while for dogs it was 22.9 +/- 4.4 h. Recoveries of total radioactivity in urine and feces for rats were 8.7 +/- 2.9% and 88.3 +/- 10.4% of the dose, respectively. Recoveries of total radioactivity in urine and feces for dogs were 4.1 +/- 1.4% and 90.0 +/- 4.7% of the dose, respectively. RWJ-26899 and a total of nine metabolites were isolated and tentatively identified in rat urine, and fecal extracts. Unchanged RWJ-26899 accounted for approximately 1% of the dose in rat urine and 8% in rat feces. RWJ-26899 and a total of four metabolites were isolated and identified in dog urine, and fecal extracts. Unchanged RWJ-26899 accounted for approximately 1% of the dose in urine and 63% in feces in dog. Five proposed pathways were used to describe the metabolites found in rats: N-oxidation, oxidative N-debenzylation, pyrrolidinyl ring hydroxylation, phenyl hydroxylation and methyl or cyclohexyl hydroxylation. Two biotransformation pathways in dogs are proposed: N-oxidation and methyl or cyclohexyl ring hydroxylation.  相似文献   

10.
1. An oral dose of the coronary dilator 4-(3,4,5-trimethoxycinnamoyl)-1- (N-isopropylcarbamoylmethyl)-piperazine was readily absorbed and more than 75% of the dose was excreted within 24 h by the rat, dog and man. In 4 days, rat, dog and man excreted in the urine and faeces respectively 32.5 and 62.3%, 43.9 and 49.1%, and 57.8 and 43.3%. Faecal radioactivity was mainly excreted via the bile.

2. Plasma concentrations of radioactivity reached a maximum within 1 h in rats and dogs and within 2 h in man. For several h, more than 50% of the radioactivity circulating in the plasma of rats and more than 80% in man was due to unchanged drug.

3. Sequential whole-body autoradiography of the rat indicated that much of the radioactivity was distributed in the liver, kidneys and gastrointestinal tract and that there was significant uptake into the heart and lungs.

4. Although similar metabolites were excreted by the rat, dog and man, the relative proportions differed. 11.7, 2.3 and 28.8% respectively of the unchanged drug were excreted in the urine and 13.1, 19.5 and 10.4% respectively of the principal metabolite a glucuronide whose exact structure was not determined. Other metabolites included 4-(3,4,5-trimethoxycinnamoyl)-1-carbamoylmethyl piperazine and N-(3,4,5-trimethoxycinnamoyl)-piperazine.  相似文献   

11.
The metabolism of SQ 11,290-14C (4-[3-(7-chloro-5,11-dihydrodibenz[b,e]-[1,4]-oxazepin-5-yl)propyl]-α,β-14C2-1-piperazineethanol, dihydrochloride) was studied in mice, rats, guinea pigs, hamsters, New Zealand White or Dutch rabbits, monkeys and man after po administration. The excretion of SQ 11,290-14C, its metabolites, or both, was chiefly in the feces (with the exception of hamsters and man). Rats and rabbits of either strain excreted 2–5% of the dose—mice and hamsters excreted 20–42%—as 14CO2. Hamsters appeared to excrete radioactivity in a quantitative manner most similar to that observed in man, but the metabolites found in the urine and feces of these 2 species were not similar. The disposition of SQ 11,290-14C in albino and pigmented rabbits cannot be distinguished on the basis of the excretion of radioactivity, but different metabolites appear to be excreted in the urine. No unchanged SQ 11,290-14C was detected in the excreta of humans. One percent of the dose or less was present as unchanged SQ 11,290-14C in the urine of any animal species. In the feces, an average of 2–6% of the dose was excreted by animal species as unchanged SQ 11,290-14C. Whereas albino rabbits excreted in the feces only 3.6% of the dose as unchanged drug, Dutch rabbits excreted about 16.7% of the dose as unchanged drug. In those human subjects excreting large amounts of radioactivity as 14CO2, cleavage or degradation of the side chain, or both, rather than hydroxylation of the ring system as had been found previously in dogs, appeared to be a major metabolic pathway.  相似文献   

12.
1.?Following oral administration of [14C]TAK-438, the radioactivity was rapidly absorbed in rats and dogs. The apparent absorption of the radioactivity was high in both species.

2.?After oral administration of [14C]TAK-438 to rats, the radioactivity in most tissues reached the maximum at 1-hour post-dose. By 168-hour post-dose, the concentrations of the radioactivity were at very low levels in nearly all the tissues. In addition, TAK-438F was the major component in the stomach, whereas TAK-438F was the minor component in the plasma and other tissues. High accumulation of TAK-438F in the stomach was observed after oral and intravenous administration.

3.?TAK-438F was a minor component in the plasma and excreta in both species. Its oxidative metabolite (M-I) and the glucuronide of a secondary metabolite formed by non-oxidative metabolism of M-I (M-II-G) were the major components in the rat and dog plasma, respectively. The glucuronide of M-I (M-I-G) and M-II-G were the major components in the rat bile and dog urine, respectively, and most components in feces were other unidentified metabolites.

4.?The administered radioactive dose was almost completely recovered. The major route of excretion of the drug-derived radioactivity was via the feces in rats and urine in dogs.  相似文献   

13.
1. The excretion and metabolism of enciprazine, an anxiolytic drug, was examined in rat, dog and man.

2. In rats and dogs that received 14C-enciprazine dihydrochloride orally and by i.v. injection, the drug was well absorbed. Radioactivity was excreted predominantly in the faeces of rats, equally in urine and faeces of dogs, and to a major extent in human urine.

3. Metabolic profiles, which were evaluated in urine and in rat bile, were similar following oral and i.v. dosing to rats and dogs.

4. Unchanged drug was not detected in rat, dog or human excreta. Glucuronide conjugates of 4-hydroxyenciprazine, m-desmethylenciprazine, p-desmethylenciprazine and enciprazine were detected in the excreta of all three species. A glycol metabolite was present only in rat bile and human urine. A metabolite desmethylated in the phenyl ring of the phenylpiperazine moiety also appeared to be present only in human urine.

5. Structural confirmation of the major metabolites in human urine and rat bile was accomplished by?h.p.l.c.-mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

14.
1. The metabolism of [14C]captopril-L-cysteine was studied in spontaneously hypertensive rats and pure-bred beagles after a single i.v. dose (4?mg/kg).

2. During the first 24?h, concn. of total radioactivity in blood were similar in both species.

3. Captopril was found in small amounts in the blood of both species. In rats, captopril, bound covalently but reversibly to plasma proteins (CP-PR), was the major component in blood (70%), whereas captopril-L-cysteine was a minor component (23%) of the total radioactivity. In dog blood, CP-PR constituted a smaller fraction (45%) of the total radioactivity than in the rat and captopril-L-cysteine was the major component (53%).

4. In 72?h, 89–91% of the dose was excreted in the urine of rats and dogs. Captopril-L-cysteine accounted for 7% (rat) and 68% (dog) of the radioactivity in urine; captopril accounted for 75% (rat) and 7% (dog). Other metabolites were present in the urine of both species.

5. The greater net conversion of captopril-L-cysteine to CP-PR and to captopril in rats helps explain why captopril-L-cysteine is excreted in urine as a major metabolite of captopril in dogs but only a minor one in rats.  相似文献   

15.
Wy-13,876, 3-(p-chlorophenyl)-2,3-dihydro-3-hydroxythiazolo[3,2a]benzimidazole-2-acetic acid, causes enlargement of the thyroids of rats and dogs. Radioactivity was accumulated in the thyroids, but not in other tissues of dogs given the 14C-labeled drug. Uptake of 14C by the thyroid of the rat was time dependent; there was little or no accumulation until 8 hr after drug administration. Biotransformation of Wy-13,876 is extensive. Two metabolites, benzimidazolethiol and benzimidazole, account for most of the radioactivity in the thyroid but almost no unchanged drug was detected. The two metabolites were also detected in liver, plasma, and urine, however, they represented little of the drug-related substances. Recovery of radiolabel in theexcreta of rats given [14C]Wy-13,876 was 79 ± 7.9% ± SD and was about evenly divided between feces and urine. Radioactivity, primarily benzimidazolethiol and benzimidazole, also accumulated in the thyroids of rats given labeled benzimidazolethiol. Chronic treatment with either the thiol metabolite or the parent compound reduced the plasma concentration of thyroid hormone and caused enlargement of the thyroid. Thus, the biotransformation of Wy-13,876 to benzimidazolethiol followed by accumulation of this metabolite in the thyroid initiates a sequence of events which begins with the inhibition of thyroid hormone synthesis. Reduced concentrations of circulating thyroid hormones stimulate the release of TSH which in turn increases thyroid activity leading to the hyperplasia and enlargement. Treatment of rats with l-thyroxine prior to administration of [14C]Wy-13,876 partially prevented the accumulation of radioactivity by the thyroid. Wy-18,251, an analog of Wy-13,876, was not metabolized to benzimidazolethiol and was not thyrotoxic.  相似文献   

16.
Rats, rabbits, and dogs were given single iv or single and multiple oral doses of felbamate ranging from 1.6-1000 mg/kg. Absorption of oral drug was complete in all species. The mean Cmax increased with dose from 13.9 to 185.9 micrograms/ml in rats, from 19.1 to 161.9 micrograms/ml in rabbits, and from 12.6 to 168.4 micrograms/ml in dogs. The tmax also increased with dose from 1-8 hr in rats, 8-24 hr in rabbits, and 3-7 hr in dogs. The plasma elimination half-life for the drug increased with dose from 2-16.7 hr in rats, 7.2-17.8 hr in rabbits, and 4.1-4.5 hr in dogs. A proportional increase in Cmax with dose was observed in all species up to 300-400 mg/kg doses. A biexponential equation fitted the drug plasma concentration vs. time data well. For multiple oral doses of 50 mg/kg or less, projected and observed steady-state concentrations agreed well. Animals dosed with [14C]felbamate eliminated most of the radioactivity in urine (58-87.7%), less in feces (7-23.7%), with considerable amounts in the bile. In rats, radioactivity was readily distributed into tissues and crossed the placenta and blood-brain barrier, but no accumulation in any tissue was observed. The volume of distribution was 131, 54, and 72% of body weight for rats, rabbits, and dogs, respectively. Binding of drug to rat, rabbit, and dog plasma proteins ranged from 22.4-35.9%. The overall plasma clearance of the drug for rats, rabbits, and dogs was 327, 52, and 108 ml.h-1.kg-1, respectively. Renal clearance of unchanged drug accounted for an estimated 20-35% and hepatic clearance due to metabolism for 65-80% of the overall clearance.  相似文献   

17.
The disposition of the carcinogen 3,3′-dichlorobenzidine (DCB) was studied in the male rat following oral administration. [14C]DCB was well absorbed by the rat with the maximum plasma radioactivity levels being found within 8 hr after dosing. The radioactivity was well distributed in the tissues 24 hr after administration with the highest levels found in the liver, followed by kidney, lung, and spleen. Repeated administration (six doses) of [14C]DCB to animals did not result in a substantial accumulation of 14C in the tissues. The elimination of radioactivity from the plasma, liver, kidney, and lung was biphasic showing an initial rapid decline (half-lives 1.68, 5.78, 7.14, and 3.85 hr, respectively) followed by a slower disappearance phase (half-lives 33.0, 77.0, 138.6, and 43.3 hr, respectively). Approximately half of the total 14C in the liver and kidney was covalently bound to cellular macromolecules 72 hr after dosing. [14C]DCB-derived radioactivity was extensively excreted by rats, mainly via the feces. Approximately 23–33% of the administered dose was recovered in the urine and 58–72% in the feces of rats within 96 hr. More than 65% of the administered 14C was eliminated in the bile of bile duct-cannulated rats within 24 hr after dosing. The radioactivity excreted in the urine and bile was primarily in the form of free (urine 71.2%, bile 25.5%) and conjugated (urine 19.6%, bile 57.9%) metabolites of DCB. Thus DCB is readily absorbed following oral administration, and then metabolized and excreted mainly via the feces.  相似文献   

18.
The metabolism and excretion of a potent and selective substance P receptor antagonist, CP-122,721, have been studied in beagle dogs following oral administration of a single 5?mg?kg?1 dose of [14C]CP-122,721. Total recovery of the administered dose was on average 89% for male dogs and 95% for female dogs. Approximately 94% of the radioactivity recovered in urine and feces was excreted in the first 72?h. Male bile duct-cannulated dogs excreted a mean of ~56% of the dose in bile, ~11% in feces, and ~25% in urine. The sum of radioactivity in bile and urine indicates >80% of the [14C]CP-122,721-derived radioactivity was absorbed by the gastrointestinal tract. CP-122,721 was extensively metabolized in dogs, and only a small amount of parent CP-122,721 was excreted as unchanged drug. There were no significant gender-related quantitative/qualitative differences in the excretion of metabolites in urine or feces. The major metabolic pathways of CP-122,721 were O-demethylation, aromatic hydroxylation, and indirect glucuronidation. The minor metabolic pathways included: Aliphatic oxidation at the piperidine moiety, O-dealkylation of the trifluoromethoxy group, and N-dealkylation with subsequent sulfation and/or oxidative deamination. In addition, the novel cleaved product 5-trifluoromethoxy salicylic acid (TFMSA) was identified in plasma. These results suggest that dog is the most relevant animal species in which the metabolism of CP-122,721 can be studied for extrapolating the results to humans.  相似文献   

19.
Isoxicam a new nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agent was radiolabeled with 14C at the 3-position of the benzothiazine nucleus. It was well absorbed following peroral administration to man, monkey, dog, and rat, reaching peak plasma concentrations in 4-8 hr. Over 90% of the plasma radioactivity was due to unchanged drug. Plasma elimination half-lives were 22-45 hr in man and 49-53 hr in dogs and 20-35 hr in rats and monkeys. Isoxicam was distributed to most tissues in rats, but the tissue-plasma ratio did not exceed unity, indicating a small volume of distribution. It was extensively metabolized with only a few per cent of the dose appearing as unchanged drug in the urine. The principal urinary metabolite in man was formed by hydroxylation of the methyl group on the isoxozole ring and accounted for 30-35% of an isoxicam dose. In the rat, oxoacetic acid, the major urinary metabolite, was formed by opening of the benzothiazine ring followed by hydrolytic cleavage of the C-3 to N-2 bond. In addition to the hydroxymethyl and oxoacetic acid, two unknown metabolites, accounting for only a small percentage of dose, were detected in the urine of all four species. Urinary excretion of 14C activity accounted for about 60% of a dose in man and rats, 31% in monkeys, and 17% in dogs. These results indicate that there is only a quantitative rather than a qualitative species difference in the metabolic disposition of isoxicam.  相似文献   

20.
A study of the disposition and metabolism of premazepam, 3,7-dihydro-5-phenyl-6,7-dimethyl-pyrrole[3,4-e][1,4]diazepin-2-(1 H) -one, a new anti-anxiety agent, was carried out in rats and dogs given the 14C-labeled compound iv and po. In both species, after oral administration, both total radioactivity and the unchanged drug are rapidly absorbed and peak plasma levels are reached within 0.5-1 hr in rats and 2 hr in dogs. Unchanged premazepam is cleared faster in rats than in dogs, with half-lives about 1.7 and 2.7 hr, respectively. Following oral dosage, two-thirds of the dose is eliminated in urine. From the urine of the two species, eight metabolites and unchanged premazepam were identified. N-7-Desmethyl premazepam (l) is the major metabolite in rat urine (18% of the dose) but is not present in dog urine, while 6-hydroxymethyl premazepam is the most abundant metabolite in dog urine (25% of the dose) but is absent in rat urine. Metabolites III and IV from rat and dog urine are stable derivatives of the intermediate formed by the cleavage of the imine bond of the diazepine ring. A successive hydrolysis of the amidic bond of the same intermediate originates metabolites V-VIII, which are quantitatively minor ones.  相似文献   

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