Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Mukogawa Women's University, 11–68 Koshien Kyuban-cho, Nishinomiya, Hyogo 663
2. Department of Pharmacy, the Hospital of Hyogo College of Medicine, 1–1 Mukogawa-cho, Nishinomiya, Hyogo 663, Japan
Abstract
Abstract
Drug elimination from the body after intravenous administration of acyclovir (20 mg kg−1) was delayed in 1-week-old rats but the pharmacokinetic data for 2–5-week-old rats were the same as those for 8-week-old rats. The areas under the plasma concentration-time curves at 0–∞ h (AUC) after oral administration of acyclovir (20 mg kg−1) decreased with increasing age. The absolute bioavailabilities for 1-, 2·5-, 3- and 8-week-old rats were 77·59, 51·52, 14·61 and 7·30%, respectively. The gastrointestinal absorption of poorly absorbed acyclovir was good for rats younger than 2·5 weeks but dropped abruptly between 2·5 and 3 weeks of age. The intestinal membrane permeability of acyclovir was studied using the everted sac method. The rate of transfer of an initial concentration of 10 μm acyclovir from the mucosal to the serosal side was constant until 60 min in rats of different ages while the rate in 2–5-week-old rats was significantly greater than that in 3-, 4- and 8-week-old rats. Abrupt in-vivo and in-vitro changes were observed in the experimental results between 2·5- and 3-week-old rats; this period coincided with the weaning period of the rat. The membrane transport mechanism of acyclovir in 2·5- and 8-week-old rats was also studied. Cumulative transferred amounts of acyclovir were linear (r = 0·99) over the range 5 μm–1 min and dose-independent. The influence of metabolic inhibitors (sodium azide, 2,4-dinitrophenol, ouabain), purine and pyrimidine analogues (2-deoxyguanosine, guanine, adenine, uridine) and temperature on the permeation of acyclovir was studied. The permeation of acyclovir was inhibited only by 2-deoxyguanosine and guanine in 2·5-week-old rats. These results suggest that throughout the maturation period, the gastrointestinal absorption mechanism of acyclovir is predominantly via passive diffusion with little or no active or facilitated transport. The abrupt change that occurs during the weaning period is attributable not to facilitated transport but to a change in the factors regarding passive transport.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology
Cited by
20 articles.
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