Disposition of naproxen, naproxen acyl glucuronide and its rearrangement isomers in the isolated perfused rat liver


Autoria(s): Lo, A; Addison, RS; Hooper, WD; Dickinson, RG
Contribuinte(s)

G G Gibson

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

1. An isolated perfused rat liver (IPRL) preparation was used to investigate separately the disposition of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) naproxen (NAP), its reactive acyl glucuronide metabolite (NAG) and a mixture of NAG rearrangement isomers (isoNAG), each at 30 mug NAP equivalents ml(-1) perfusate (n = 4 each group). 2. Following administration to the IPRL, NAP was eliminated slowly in a log-linear manner with an apparent elimination half-life (t(1/2)) of 13.4 +/-4.4 h. No metabolites were detected in perfusate, while NAG was the only metabolite present in bile in measurable amounts (3.9 +/-0.8%, of the dose). Following their administration to the IPRL, both NAG and isoNAG were rapidly hydrolysed (t(1/2) in perfusate=57 +/-3 and 75 +/- 14min respectively). NAG also rearranged to isoNAG in the perfusate. Both NAG and isoNAG were excreted intact in bile (24.6 and 14.8% of the NAG and isoNAG doses, respectively). 3. Covalent NAP-protein adducts in the liver increased as the dose changed from NAP to NAG to isoNAG (0.20 to 0.34 to 0.48% of the doses, respectively). Similarly, formation of covalent NAP-protein adducts in perfusate were greater in isoNAG-dosed perfusions. The comparative results Suggest that isoNAG is a better substrate for adduct formation with liver proteins than NAG.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:59298

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Taylor & Francis Ltd

Palavras-Chave #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Toxicology #Tandem Mass-spectrometry #Covalent Binding #Serum-albumin #Human-plasma #Reactivity #Diflunisal #Pharmacokinetics #Identification #Metabolism #Mechanism #C1 #320504 Toxicology (incl. Clinical Toxicology) #730199 Clinical health not specific to particular organs, diseases and conditions
Tipo

Journal Article