## Abstract The bioavailability of quinidine sulfate after oral administration of a commercial sustainedβrelease quinidine tablet was compared with that of oral quinidine sulfate solution in 18 normal subjects. Three hundred milligrammes of each product was administered to each subject in standard
Comparative bioavailability of four commercial quinidine sulfate tablets
β Scribed by Jeffrey D. Strum; John L. Colaizzi; James M. Jaffe; Perry C. Martineau; Rolland I. Poust
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 500 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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β¦ Synopsis
A comparative bioavailability study was performed using four commercially available, chemically equivalent brands of quinidine sulfate tablets. Two 200-mg tablets were administered to 11 different subjects following a completely randomized crossover design. Serum levels, urinary excretion data, and derived pharmacokinetic parameters were compared statistically. There were no statistical differences in the extent of quinidine absorption from the four brands of tablets as evidenced by the cumulative urinary excretion values and the areas under the serum level-time curves. Significant differences in the mean serum levels at 0.5 and 1 hr and differences in the peak times and absorption rate constants indicate that there was a difference in the absorption rate between Treatments A and D and C and D. A significant difference in the peak times also was noted for Treatments B and C. When mean disintegration times for the four tablet formulations were compared with their values for ka, tmax and mean serum levels at 0.5 and 1 hr, rank-order correlations were observed. A considerable degree of variability in quinidine elimination was noted, with half-life values ranging from 2.71 to 8.12 hr (mean half-life of 5.36 hr).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The relative bioavailability of hydrocortisone was determined from four different 20-mg tablet formulations and one suspension in 15 healthy male volunteers; results were compared with in vitro dissolution rates. Plasma levels of hydrocortisone were determined by a liquid chromatography method devel