Neonatal hepatic propranolol elimination: Studies in the isolated perfused neonatal sheep liver
โ Scribed by Paul J. Gow; Saard Treepongkaruna; Hany Ghabrial; Arthur Shulkes; Richard A. Smallwood; Denis J. Morgan; Michael S. Ching
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 209 KB
- Volume
- 89
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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โฆ Synopsis
Using the isolated perfused neonatal sheep liver model, we examined the disposition of propranolol (n โซืกโฌ 8, age 0.25-10 days) and compared our findings with our previous study from the perfused near-term fetal sheep liver (Ring JA, et al. 1995. Drug Metab Dispos 23:190-196). Within 45 min of dosage, perfusate propranolol levels had fallen by three orders of magnitude to be less than the limit of detection. Perfusate disappearance curves were monoexponential in six experiments and biexponential in two experiments. The mean shunt-corrected hepatic extraction ratio was 0.92 ยฑ 0.09, much greater than that seen in the fetal sheep liver (0.26 ยฑ 0.13, P < 0.0001) but still less than values in the adult sheep (0.97). At the conclusion of the perfusion, 4-hydroxypropranolol was the major metabolite present and 5-hydroxypropranolol and Ndesisopropylpropranolol were minor metabolites. We conclude that the isolated perfused neonatal sheep liver is a useful model with which to study the maturation of neonatal hepatic drug oxidation. Our study shows that propranolol is rapidly eliminated by the neonatal liver to form several metabolites at rates far greater than in the fetal liver, but rates of elimination have not yet reached that reported in the adult sheep liver.
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The eects on liver function and hepatic lidocaine elimination using 20% Intralipid 1 as a source of non-protein calories (30%) in parenteral nutrition were studied using an isolated rat liver perfusion procedure. Rats were randomly assigned to one of the three treatment groups: PNL group (n = 6), co