Literature DB >> 458581

Pharmacokinetics of morphine and its surrogates. III: Morphine and morphine 3-monoglucuronide pharmacokinetics in the dog as a function of dose.

E R Garrett, A J Jackson.   

Abstract

The pharmacokinetics of morphine and its derived metabolite, morphine 3-monoglucuronide, were studied in normal and bile-cannulated dogs. High doses (7.2-7.7 mg/kg iv) caused renal and biliary shutdowns and time lags in urinary drug and metabolite excretion and in biliary secretion of the hepatically formed conjugate. Intermediate doses (0.41-0.47 mg/kg iv) inhibited urine flow but not renal clearance. Low doses (0.019-0.07 mg/kg iv) had no apparent effect. Dose-related effects on the total, metabolic, and biliary clearances imply saturable enzymes and/or dose-inhibited hepatic flows, accounting for the major elimination half-lives of 83 +/- 8 and 37 +/- 13 min at the high and low doses, respectively. The slow terminal phase in plasma morphine and metabolite elimination and urinary accumulation is due apparently to the enterohepatic metabolite recirculation after biliary excretion, gastrointestinal hydrolysis, and hepatic first-pass reconjugation. Bile-cannulated dogs showed no fecal drug and no slow terminal plasma and urine elimination phases. Intravenous morphine 3-monoglucuronide was eliminated only renally and showed neither biliary excretion nor prolonged hepatically formed glucuronide elimination. Hepatic morphine clearances at normal therapeutic doses parallel hepatic blood flow and explain the lack of oral morphine bioavailability by anticipating complete first-pass liver metabolism. Renal morphine and morphine conjugate clearances were 85 (+/- 9 SEM) and 41 (+/- 4 SEM) ml/min, respectively, indicating glomerular filtration for the latter and glomerular filtration plus tubular secretion for the former. Urinary morphine and morphine conjugate excretion accounted for approximately to 83% of the dose. Biliary secretion accounted for 11-14% of the dose. Morphine showed dose-independent plasma protein binding of 36 (+/- 1 SEM) % and a red cell-plasma water partition coefficient of 1.11 +/- 0.04 SD. New equations were developed to model the discontinuous morphine and morphine metabolite pharmacokinetics.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 458581     DOI: 10.1002/jps.2600680627

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pharm Sci        ISSN: 0022-3549            Impact factor:   3.534


  10 in total

Review 1.  Enterohepatic circulation of opioid drugs. Is it clinically relevant in the treatment of cancer patients?

Authors:  G W Hanks; P J Wand
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  1989-08       Impact factor: 6.447

2.  Controlled release morphine sulphate tablets--a study in normal volunteers.

Authors:  S T Leslie; A Rhodes; F M Black
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3.  The influence of renal function on the renal clearance of morphine and its glucuronide metabolites in intensive-care patients.

Authors:  R W Milne; R L Nation; A A Somogyi; F Bochner; W M Griggs
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4.  Evaluation of first pass effect and biliary excretion of diperdipine in the dog.

Authors:  P O Greiner; S Weber; J Angignard; B Berbey
Journal:  Eur J Drug Metab Pharmacokinet       Date:  1990 Jul-Sep       Impact factor: 2.441

5.  Mechanistic basis of altered morphine disposition in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.

Authors:  Anika L Dzierlenga; John D Clarke; Tiffanie L Hargraves; Garrett R Ainslie; Todd W Vanderah; Mary F Paine; Nathan J Cherrington
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6.  Enterohepatic circulation in rat and dog of 14C-0-[3-(4-less than 2-methoxyphenyl greater than-1-piperazinyl)-2-hydroxypropyl]-3-methoxy-benzaldoxim dihydrochloride and it's demethylated metabolite.

Authors:  H Paul; A Illing; E S House
Journal:  Eur J Drug Metab Pharmacokinet       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 2.441

7.  Pharmacokinetic modelling of morphine, morphine-3-glucuronide and morphine-6-glucuronide in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid of neurosurgical patients after short-term infusion of morphine.

Authors:  Ingolf Meineke; Stefan Freudenthaler; Ute Hofmann; Elke Schaeffeler; Gerd Mikus; Matthias Schwab; Hilmar W Prange; Christoph H Gleiter; J Brockmöller
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Review 8.  Drug management of pain in cancer patients.

Authors:  C B Tuttle
Journal:  Can Med Assoc J       Date:  1985-01-15       Impact factor: 8.262

9.  Rectal administration of nicomorphine in patients improves biological availability of morphine and its glucuronide conjugates.

Authors:  P M Koopman-Kimenai; T B Vree; L H Booij; R Dirksen
Journal:  Pharm World Sci       Date:  1994-12-02

10.  Influence of Morbid Obesity on the Pharmacokinetics of Morphine, Morphine-3-Glucuronide, and Morphine-6-Glucuronide.

Authors:  Sjoerd de Hoogd; Pyry A J Välitalo; Albert Dahan; Simone van Kralingen; Michael M W Coughtrie; Eric P A van Dongen; Bert van Ramshorst; Catherijne A J Knibbe
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 6.447

  10 in total

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