THE EVALUATION OF RADIOLABELED ARTESUNATE ON TISSUE DISTRIBUTION IN RATS AND PROTEIN BINDING IN HUMANS

Male Blood Cells Artesunate Artemisinins Rats 3. Good health Rats, Sprague-Dawley 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Injections, Intravenous Animals Autoradiography Humans Drug Interactions Tissue Distribution Sesquiterpenes Half-Life Protein Binding
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2006.75.817 Publication Date: 2018-09-01T06:22:34Z
ABSTRACT
The present study reports the tissue distribution, pharmacokinetics, mass balance, and elimination of [14C] artesunate (AS) following single intravenous administration in rats. Protein binding was performed with rat and human plasma. Radioactivity and drug levels in blood, plasma, tissues, urine, and feces up to 192 hours were collected and measured. The mean terminal half-life of plasma (76 h) and blood (105 h) radioactivity was prolonged compared with that of unchanged AS (0.43 h) and dihydroartemisinin (0.75 h), an active metabolite of AS. Drug was widely distributed after 1 hour in select tissues. After 24 hours, the radioactivity rapidly declined in all tissues except spleen until 96 hours. Only 1% of total radioactivity was detected in brain tissue. AS revealed a higher binding capacity with human and rat plasma proteins (73–81%). The radioactivity in whole blood was higher (two to fourfold) than that in plasma throughout the period of the treatment, suggesting that AS binding to RBCs may relate to its powerful antimalarial activity.
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