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Vol. 288, Issue 3, 912-918, March 1999
Developmental Research Laboratories, Shionogi & Co., Ltd.,
Toyonaka, Osaka, Japan
The permeability surface area (PS) product, an index of permeability of
the blood-brain barrier (BBB), was measured by using the in situ
perfusion method. In the cerebral circulation, the fraction of drug
that permeates into the brain through the BBB is not only the unbound
fraction but also the fraction dissociated from the protein in the
perfusate. The sum of these two fractions, the apparent exchangeable
fraction, was estimated by fitting the parameters of the BBB
permeability under the condition of varying BSA concentrations in the
perfusate. The unbound fraction of drugs in a buffer containing 0.5 mM
BSA was measured by using the ultrafiltration method in vitro, and the
apparent exchangeable fraction was measured in vivo by using the
intracarotid artery injection method. The apparent exchange fraction
was 100% for S-8510, 96.5% for diazepam, 90.9% for caffeine, 38.3%
for S-312-d, 33.1% for propranolol, and 6.68% for (+)-S-145 Na, and
each of these was higher than the corresponding unbound fraction in
vitro in all drugs. The apparent exchangeable fractions, for example,
were 8 times higher for diazepam and 38 times for S-312-d than the
unbound fractions in vitro. The apparent exchangeable fraction of drugs
was also estimated from the parameters obtained with the perfusion
method. Because drugs can be infused for an arbitrary length of time in the perfusion method, substances with low permeability can be measured.
The apparent exchangeable fractions obtained with this method were
almost the same as those obtained with the intracarotid artery
injection method.
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