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Xenobiotica
the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
Volume 19, 1989 - Issue 12
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Original Article

The pharmacokinetics of pirtenidine in the rat and dog

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Pages 1349-1354 | Received 24 Nov 1988, Accepted 13 May 1989, Published online: 30 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

1. Pharmacokinetic studies on the topical antimicrobial agent, pirtenidine, have been conducted in male Sprague-Dawley rats and beagle dogs, using a validated h.p.l.c. method with u.v. detection to measure the drug in plasma.

2. Following a single i.v. bolus dose to the rat (equivalent to 1.35 mg base/kg) or dog (equivalent to 0.23 mg base/kg), the drug was extensively distributed with an apparent volume of distribution of 8.61/kg in rat and 3.31/kg in dog. Clearance was high (rat 2.71/h/kg; dog 1.51/h/kg) which resulted in a short terminal half-life in both species (2.2 and 1.5 h respectively).

3. Following a single oral dose to rats (equivalent to 4.5 mg base/kg) plasma pirtenidine concentrations were generally below the minimum quantifiable level of the analytical method (1 ng/ml). A maximum possible bioavailability of 0.3% was estimated.

4. After administering the same oral dose to dogs plasma concentrations rose slowly (t1/2abs=1.2 h) to a peak (49.7 ng/ml) at 5.0 h post-dose. The terminal elimination half-life was 2.1 h. The absolute bioavailability was 10%.

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