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Effect of age on intestinal absorption of riboflavin in humans

โœ Scribed by William J. Jusko; Gerhard Levy; Sumner J. Yaffe


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1970
Tongue
English
Weight
447 KB
Volume
59
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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โœฆ Synopsis


I J The development of gastrointestinal absorption function in humans was studied using riboflavin, a vitamin which is absorbed by a site-specific (proximal small intestine) and saturable transport process. Oral doses of 150 mg./m.z body surface area of riboflavin-5'-phosphate were administered in solution to subjects ranging in age from 0.25 to 40 years. The urinary recovery of the vitamin increased significantly (from 6 to 12% of the dose) over this age range. The ratio of maximum excretion rate to dose and the time of occurrence of the maximum excretion rate were independent of age. The kinetics of riboflavin elimination also did not show any appreciable change with age. These observations suggest that, in the age range studied, younger subjects retain the vitamin at intestinal absorption sites for a shorter period of time than do older subjects. This appears to be due to decreased intestinal transit rate with increasing age. Prompt release of drugs from pharmaceutical dosage forms seems therefore even more important in children than in adults in order to assure adequate absorption.

Keyphrases IJ Riboflavin absorption-intestinal 0 Age effectriboflavin intestinal absorption 0 Kinetic equations-urinary excretion parameters relationship, gastrointestinal absorption 0 Elimination half-life, riboflavin-age effect


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