1. Effects of changing liver blood flow by exercise and food on kinetics and dynamics of saruplase.
- Author
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van Griensven JM, Burggraaf KJ, Gerloff J, Günzler WA, Beier H, Kroon R, Huisman LG, Schoemaker RC, Kluft K, and Cohen AF
- Subjects
- Adult, Enzyme Precursors pharmacokinetics, Fibrinolytic Agents pharmacokinetics, Humans, Liver diagnostic imaging, Male, Recombinant Proteins pharmacokinetics, Recombinant Proteins pharmacology, Reference Values, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Pulsed, Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator pharmacokinetics, Enzyme Precursors pharmacology, Exercise physiology, Fibrinolytic Agents pharmacology, Food, Liver Circulation physiology, Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator pharmacology
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the influence of changes in liver blood flow on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of single-chain unglycosylated urokinase-type plasminogen activator., Methods: This open, randomized, crossover trial was carried out in the clinical research unit. Infusions of 37.5 mg saruplase and 90 mg indocyanine green were administered over 150 minutes to 10 healthy male volunteers. After 60 minutes the subjects consumed a standardized meal to increase liver blood flow or performed an exercise test (20 minutes) to decrease liver blood flow. Indocyanine green concentrations, total urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) antigen, two-chain u-PA activity, fibrinogen, total degradation products, alpha 2-antiplasmin, and factor XII-dependent fibrinolytic activity were measured. Blood flow was measured after food intake in a portal vein branch with Doppler echography., Results: The weighted average indocyanine green concentration after exercise was increased by 29% compared with baseline (steady-state concentration) values (95% confidence intervals [CI]: +6%, +56%). After food, the concentration was 27% lower compared with baseline values (95% CI: -35%, -19%), and portal vein flow was increased by a maximum of 103% (95% CI: +71%, +136%). Average maximal concentrations of u-PA antigen after exercise were increased by 130 ng/ml compared with baseline concentrations (95% CI: +65, +195 ng/ml) and, unexpectedly, 156 ng/ml higher after food (95% CI: +59, +253 ng/ml). Although not significant, an increase in average u-PA antigen concentration compared with baseline values was detected after both exercise (7%) and food (13%). This tendency toward a larger effect after food compared with the effect after exercise was reflected by minor changes in the pharmacodynamics., Conclusions: u-PA plasma concentrations were increased by reduced liver blood flow induced by exercise. Food intake produced an unexpected increase in u-PA concentrations despite increases in liver blood flow.
- Published
- 1995
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