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Vol. 295, Issue 2, 836-843, November 2000
Hacettepe University, Faculty of Pharmacy, Ankara, Turkey (S.S.);
School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of
Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom (M.R.)
Diazepam, a drug of high intrinsic clearance, was studied in the in
situ rat liver dually perfused with Krebs-bicarbonate buffer containing
human serum albumin (HSA; 0-1%) and unlabeled diazepam (1 mg/l) under
constant hepatic arterial (3 ml/min) and portal venous (PV; 12 ml/min) flow rates. Events after a unit impulse (using
[14C]diazepam) and at steady state (using unlabeled
diazepam) were evaluated. In the absence of HSA the fractional effluent
recovery (F) after hepatic arterial infusion (0.046 ± 0.013) was
about twice that after PV infusion (0.019 ± 0.006). With HSA
present, regardless of input route, F increased as unbound diazepam
fraction in perfusate decreased (e.g., for PV, F = 0.58 ± 0.05 and 0.69 ± 0.02 for unbound diazepam fraction values of
0.18 ± 0.01 and 0.037 ± 0.01 at 0.25% and 1% HSA). The
effluent [14C]diazepam profile was also dependent upon
HSA. On decreasing HSA from 1 to 0.25% the early sharp peak (at 12-20
s) was replaced by a flatter unimodal profile with a later peak (at
60-80 s). Comparison of estimated effective permeability-surface area
product to perfusate flow ratios (4.4 for 1% HSA and 21 for 0.25%
HSA) indicated a shift from a perfusion rate-limited uptake with 0.25% HSA to one intermediate between permeability and perfusion at 1% HSA.
Recognizing that orally absorbed drug enters the liver only via PV and
i.v. drug via both vascular routes, this study emphasizes the
difference in hepatic extraction of compounds depending on route of
input, and the role that alteration in perfusate binding has on hepatic
drug disposition.
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S. Sahin and M. Rowland Application of the Dispersion Model to Describe Disposition Kinetics of Markers in the Dual Perfused Rat Liver Drug Metab. Dispos., July 1, 2007; 35(7): 1119 - 1125. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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