Arterial and venous blood sampling in pharmacokinetic studies : azosemide in rabbits

1994 
The pharmacokinetics of azosemide were evaluated simultaneously using both arterial and venous plasma data in six rabbits after a rapid 5 s intravenous bolus dosing. Initial arterial to venous ratios at 5 s after injection were the highest with values of 81.1, 67.3, 58.7, 530, 2660, and 10.5 for rabbits 1-6, respectively. Both curves decayed, paralleling each other at the terminal phase, with the venous levels higher than the arterial levels by 15.3, 31.9, 34.1, 40.7, 30.5, and 16.5% for rabbits 1-6, respectively. An exponential term with a negative coefficient was used to account for the short and steep rising phase of venous plasma levels after injection. Detailed analysis showed significant differences in various pharmacokinetic parameters, such as initial volume of distribution, apparent volume of distribution at steady state, and mean residence time based on arterial or venous data. A plot of 1/Q (urine flow rate) versus 1/CLR (renal clearance) of azosemide yielded a straight line in six rabbits, indicating that the CLR of azosemide is urine flow dependent in rabbits.
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