Disposition of etofibrate, clofibric and nicotinic acid esters, and their products in dogs |
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Authors: | E R Garrett P Altmayer |
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Abstract: | Etofibrate, the ethylene glycol diester of clofibric and nicotinic acids, on intravenous infusion into dogs, has a terminal half-life of 2 min. The intermediate half-esters, the nicotinate and the clofibrate, have respective terminal half-lives of 4.6 and 1.7 min and appear fleetingly when etofibrate is administered. In contrast to the 42-h terminal half-life of clofibric acid, the other final transformation product, nicotinic acid, shows saturable or dose-dependent pharmacokinetics in dogs that conform to the Michaelis-Menten equation with a terminal half-life of 4.4 min at low concentrations (less than 6.9 microM/kg). Three distinct metabolites of nicotinic acid can be identified and assayed chromatographically in the urine. The partition properties were similar to nicotinic acid. Nicotinic acid is excreted 30% unchanged into urine with a renal clearance of 70 mL/min in 27-kg dogs. |
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