Two-stage penetration of a single oral dose of sulphadimethoxine into skin blister fluid
β Scribed by A. Nowak; A. Klimowicz
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 411 KB
- Volume
- 39
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0031-6970
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The time-dependent concentration curves of sulphadimethoxine in plasma and cantharidin-induced skin blister fluid have been evaluated following a single oral dose of 1 g. In contrast to other drugs, sulphadimethoxine exhibited two-stage penetration into the blister fluid, the second peak concentration being higher than the first. The maximum plasma concentration of 94.1 mg.l-1 was observed after 4 h, and in skin blister fluid the first peak of 25.6 mg.l-1 was found after 7 h, and the second of 58.0 mg.l-1 occurred after 30 h. The penetration of sulphadimethoxine into skin blister fluid, defined as the ratio of the AUC there to that in plasma was 0.748. The results suggest that sulphadimethoxine penetrates into skin blister fluid to a great extent from plasma and achieves concentrations exceeding the MIC for susceptible pathogens, but it requires a relatively long time to do so.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Penetration of pefloxacin into the uroepithelium was studied in 20 patients (10 men and 10 women) receiving a single oral dose of 800 mg. Samples of serum, urine, and uroepithelium were taken 1.8 h (mean) after the dose. Pefloxacin and its active metabolite, norfloxacin, were assayed by liquid chrom