| Literature DB >> 30477556 |
Carl Ekstrand1, Carina Ingvast-Larsson2, Ulf Bondesson3,4, Mikael Hedeland3,4, Lena Olsén2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cetirizine is an antihistamine used in dogs, but plasma concentrations in relation to effect after oral administration are not well studied. This study investigated cetirizine exposure and the plasma cetirizine concentration-antihistamine response relation in the dog following oral administration of cetirizine.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-inflammatory; Efficacy; Pharmacodynamics; Pharmacokinetics; Potency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30477556 PMCID: PMC6258303 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-018-0431-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1a The one-compartment model used to describe the plasma concentration–time course of cetirizine after oral administration (Eq. 1). b The pharmacodynamic model where the plasma exposure function served to ‘drive’ the drug mechanism function acting on histamine-induced wheal formation in Eq. 4
Fig. 2Median (range) observed (symbols) and median predicted (lines) plasma cetirizine concentrations in Beagle dogs over time after oral administration of cetirizine (4 mg/kg followed by 2 mg/kg once daily (n = 4) for an additional 2 days (upper plot, a) or 4 mg/kg once daily (n = 4) for 3 days (lower plot, b)
Fig. 3Histamine-induced wheal diameter over time relative to pre-medication values in eight dogs receiving either control treatment (upper plot, a) or treatment with cetirizine (lower plot, b) per os. * denotes statistically significant (P < 0.004, the Šisák-corrected P-value for repeated measurements) smaller diameter after treatment with cetirizine compared with the control treatment
Fig. 4Median (range) observed (symbols) and median predicted (lines) histamine induced wheal-diameters over time after oral treatment with cetirizine (blue circles, blue dashed line) or control treatment (red circles, red solid line) in a cross-over study including eight dogs