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Vol. 302, Issue 2, 594-600, August 2002
Department of Anesthesiology, Feinberg School of Medicine,
Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois
Studies of factors affecting the initial disposition of drugs
with a rapid onset of effect following i.v. administration have used
antipyrine as a surrogate for lipophilic drugs because it lacks
cardiovascular effects. The present study tested the assumption that
antipyrine is a useful surrogate for the flow-dependent tissue distribution of the lipophilic drug thiopental by comparing the recirculatory pharmacokinetic models of antipyrine and thiopental disposition after concomitant administration to five dogs anesthetized with 1.5% halothane. The pharmacokinetics of indocyanine green, a marker of the intravascular behavior of antipyrine and thiopental, and antipyrine in these dogs was nearly identical to that described previously in dogs anesthetized with 1.5% halothane but not given thiopental. The total volume of distribution of the highly lipophilic drug thiopental was more than 60% larger than that of antipyrine, 53 versus 33 liters, respectively. Nonetheless, the initial distribution kinetics of the two drugs, including the pulmonary tissue volume and
the volume of the nondistributive pathway as well as the clearance to
it, were nearly identical. As a result, the fraction of cardiac output
involved in distribution of the two drugs to peripheral tissues was
similarly identical, although the distribution of cardiac output
between clearance to the rapidly equilibrating tissues and clearance to
the slowly equilibrating tissues differed slightly. This study
validates the assumption that antipyrine is a useful surrogate for
lipophilic drugs in pharmacokinetic studies in which physiologic
stability is desirable to meet the assumption of system stationarity.
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