A compartmental model of hepatic disposition kinetics: 1. Model development and application to linear kinetics


Autoria(s): Anissimov, YG; Roberts, MS
Contribuinte(s)

Thomas Ludden

Malcolm Rowland

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

The conventional convection-dispersion model is widely used to interrelate hepatic availability (F) and clearance (Cl) with the morphology and physiology of the liver and to predict effects such as changes in liver blood flow on F and Cl. The extension of this model to include nonlinear kinetics and zonal heterogeneity of the liver is not straightforward and requires numerical solution of partial differential equation, which is not available in standard nonlinear regression analysis software. In this paper, we describe an alternative compartmental model representation of hepatic disposition (including elimination). The model allows the use of standard software for data analysis and accurately describes the outflow concentration-time profile for a vascular marker after bolus injection into the liver. In an evaluation of a number of different compartmental models, the most accurate model required eight vascular compartments, two of them with back mixing. In addition, the model includes two adjacent secondary vascular compartments to describe the tail section of the concentration-time profile for a reference marker. The model has the added flexibility of being easy to modify to model various enzyme distributions and nonlinear elimination. Model predictions of F, MTT, CV2, and concentration-time profile as well as parameter estimates for experimental data of an eliminated solute (palmitate) are comparable to those for the extended convection-dispersion model.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:62240

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers

Palavras-Chave #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Compartmental Model #Dispersion Model #Hepatic Elimination #Inverse Gaussian Distribution #Secondary Vascular Compartment #Hepatic Disposition #Perfused Rat-liver #Multiple-indicator Dilution #Convection-dispersion Model #Organ Distribution Kinetics #Interconnected-tubes Model #Transit-time #Local Pharmacokinetics #Boundary-conditions #Salicylic-acid #Elimination #C1 #320501 Pharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmacy #730118 Organs, diseases and abnormal conditions not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article