Literature DB >> 9456297

Excretion and metabolism of the antihypertensive agent, RWJ-26240 (McN-5691) in dogs.

W N Wu1, J A Masucci, G W Caldwell, J R Carson.   

Abstract

The excretion and metabolism of a 2-ethynylbenzenealkanamine analog, antihypertensive RWJ-26240 (McN-5691), in beagle dogs was investigated. Recoveries of total radioactivity in urine and feces in the 7 days after oral administration of 14C-RWJ-26240 (6 mg/kg dose) were 2.8% and 96.8% of the radioactive dose, respectively. Representative plasma, urine, and fecal samples were pooled and purified for metabolite profiling, isolation, and identification. Unchanged RWJ-26240 (<19% of the dose) plus 12 metabolites were isolated and identified from these samples using chromatography (TLC, HPLC), spectroscopy (NMR, MS), and derivatization techniques. Unchanged RWJ-26240 plus identified metabolites accounted for >75% of the sample radioactivity in plasma and feces. The formation of RWJ-26240 metabolites can be depicted by the following proposed pathways: 1) N-demethylation, 2) O-demethylation, 3) phenyl hydroxylation, and 4) N-dealkylation. The first three pathways appeared to be quantitatively important steps which led to the production of four major metabolites (each >5% of the sample radioactivity). RWJ-26240 was extensively metabolized in the dog, and fecal excretion was the major route of elimination of RWJ-26240 and its metabolites.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9456297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos        ISSN: 0090-9556            Impact factor:   3.922


  1 in total

1.  Synthesis of homoveratric acid-imprinted polymers and their evaluation as selective separation materials.

Authors:  Mariusz Dana; Piotr Luliński; Dorota Maciejewska
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2011-05-05       Impact factor: 4.411

  1 in total

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