Sedation for Endoscopy |
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Authors: | KR BALSON,DJ MORGAN&dagger ,BH RICHMOND&dagger ,ME McALINDON,SL ELLIOTT,ND YEOMANS |
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Affiliation: | *University of Melbourne Department of Medicine, Western Hospital;†Victorian College of Pharmacy, Monash University (Parkville Campus), Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
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Abstract: | Abstract In order to examine the investigators' clinical suspicion that Vietnamese patients were more sensitive to the sedative effects of midazolam than were Caucasians, the pharmacokinetics of a single, weight-adjusted intravenous dose of midazolam (0.05 mg/kg) were compared in a group of healthy Caucasian and Vietnamese male volunteers. The Vietnamese group ( n =8) had a significantly lower height, lean body mass and mean weight (59.8±5.5 vs 72.1±8.1 kg, respectively) compared with the Caucasian group ( n =8). No significant differences were found between the Vietnamese and Caucasian groups with regard to distribution half-life of midazolam (8.38±13.1 vs 1.49±0.63 min, respectively), elimination half-life (2.49±1.80 vs 1.48±0.66 h, respectively), clearance (4.93±1.31 vs 5.90±2.12 mL/min per kg, respectively), steady state volume of distribution (0.863±0.497 vs 0.530±0.132 L/kg, respectively) or percentage of unbound drug in plasma (4.89±0.74 vs 4.11±1.08, respectively). This suggests that dosage of midazolam in Vietnamese should be based on total body-weight. Two Vietnamese subjects who were brothers had marked elevation of distribution half-life and initial volume of distribution and lesser elevations in elimination half-life and volume of distribution at steady state. This suggests that the known subgroup of subjects who demonstrate dyshomogeneity in midazolam volume of distribution may be genetically determined. |
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Keywords: | Caucasian midazolam pharmacokinetics Vietnamese |
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