Literature DB >> 10565856

Modifications of blood volume alter the disposition of markers of blood volume, extracellular fluid, and total body water.

T C Krejcie1, T K Henthorn, W B Gentry, C U Niemann, C Enders-Klein, C A Shanks, M J Avram.   

Abstract

Recirculatory pharmacokinetic models for indocyanine green (ICG), inulin, and antipyrine describe intravascular mixing and tissue distribution after i.v. administration. These models characterized physiologic marker disposition in four awake, splenectomized dogs while they were normovolemic, volume loaded (15% of estimated blood volume added as a starch solution), and mildly and moderately hypovolemic (15 and 30% of estimated blood volume removed). ICG-determined blood volumes increased 20% during volume loading and decreased 9 and 22% during mild and moderate hypovolemia. Dye (ICG) dilution cardiac output (CO) increased 31% during volume loading and decreased 27 and 38% during mild and moderate hypovolemia. ICG-defined central and fast peripheral intravascular circuits accommodated blood volume alterations and the fast peripheral circuit accommodated blood flow changes. Inulin-defined extracellular fluid volume contracted 14 and 21% during hypovolemia. Early inulin disposition changes reflected those of ICG. The ICG and inulin elimination clearances were unaffected by altered blood volume. Neither antipyrine-defined total body water volume nor antipyrine elimination clearance changed with altered blood volume. The fraction of CO not involved in drug distribution had a significant effect on the area under the antipyrine concentration-versus-time relationships (AUC) in the first minutes after drug administration. Hypovolemia increased the fraction of CO represented by nondistributive blood flow and increased the antipyrine AUC up to 60% because nondistributive blood flow did not change, despite decreased CO. Volume loading resulted in a smaller (less than 20%) antipyrine AUC decrease despite increased fast tissue distributive flow because nondistributive flow also increased with increased CO.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10565856

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther        ISSN: 0022-3565            Impact factor:   4.030


  2 in total

1.  Residence time dispersion as a general measure of drug distribution kinetics: estimation and physiological interpretation.

Authors:  Michael Weiss
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2007-05-18       Impact factor: 4.200

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Authors:  K Sandy Pang; Michael Weiss; Panos Macheras
Journal:  AAPS J       Date:  2007-06-29       Impact factor: 4.009

  2 in total

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