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Pharmacokinectic properties of theophylline given intravenously and orally to ruminating calves.
1989
Langston V.C. | Koritz G.D. | Davis L.E. | Neff Davis C.
The disposition of theophylline in healthy ruminating calves was best described by a first-order 2-compartment open pharamacokinetic model. The drug had a mean elimination half-life of 6.4 hours and a mean distribution half-life of 22 minutes. Total body clearance averaged 91 ml/kg/h. The mean values for the pharmacokinetic volume of the central compartment, pharmacokinetic volume of distribution during the terminal phase, and volume of distribution at steady state were 0.502, 0.870, and 0.815 L/kg, respectively. Theophylline was readily absorbed after oral administration to the ruminating calf, with a mean fraction of 0.93 absorbed. The plasma concentrations after oral dosing peaked in approximately 5 to 6 hours, with a mean absorption half-life of 3.7 hours. A flip-flop model (rate constant of input is much smaller than the rate constant of output) of drug absorption was not found because the elimination process roughly paralleled that of the study concerning IV administration. In a multiple-dose trial that used a dosage regimen based on single-dose pharmacokinetic values, clinically normal calves responded as predicted. However, diseased calves had higher than expected plasma concentrations after being given multiple oral doses of theophylline at 28 mg/kg once daily. Overt signs of toxicosis were not seen, but this aspect of the drug was not formally investigated. Theophylline can be used as an ancillary therapeutic agent to treat bovine respiratory disease, but not without risk. The suggested oral dose of theophylline at 28 mg/kg of body weight once daily should be tailored to each case. Twice daily oral dosing at 20 mg/kg should reduce the plasma peak:trough ratio and provide plasma concentrations more cnsistently within the human therapeutic range of 10 to 20 micrograms/ml. Even then, therapeutic drug monitoring should be done.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Theophylline and dyphylline pharmacokinetics in the horse.
1985
Ayres J.W. | Pearson E.G. | Riebold T.W. | Chang S.F.