38 results on '"Dan W. Rurak"'
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2. Postnatal outcomes in lambs exposed antenatally and acutely postnatally to fluoxetine
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Timothy W. Chow, Tuan-Anh T. Nguyen, Wayne Riggs, and Dan W. Rurak
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Fluoxetine ,Brain development ,business.industry ,Physiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Blood pressure ,In utero ,030225 pediatrics ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Heart rate ,Gestation ,Heart rate variability ,Arterial blood ,Medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Approximately 1/3 of newborns exposed antenatally to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) exhibit poor neonatal adaptation. Although several potential mechanisms have been proposed, the actual mechanism has not been elucidated. We investigated outcomes in neonatal lambs exposed prenatally or postnatally to fluoxetine (FX). Daily FX injections (50 mg) were given intravenously (i.v.) to five pregnant ewes via implanted catheters beginning at 131–132 days gestation (term = 147 days) for 2 weeks. In another group, lambs with implanted vascular catheters had sterile water (n = 9) or FX (1 mg/kg, n = 12) injected i.v. on ~postnatal day (PND) 4. Prenatal FX-exposed lambs (n = 7) were hyperactive during PND 4 to 14 and their heart rate variability (HRV) was significantly lower than in control lambs (n = 7) on PND 2. In contrast, arterial pressure, heart rate, electrocardiogram, arterial blood gases, pH, glucose, lactate, cortisol, and sleep–activity cycles were not altered following postnatal FX injection. This abnormal postnatal hyperactivity with antenatal FX exposure may reflect increased maturity in terms of locomotory activity. The results suggest that altered brain development may be involved in the poor neonatal adaptation in human infants exposed to FX in utero.
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- 2019
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3. Hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis function in 3-month old infants with prenatal selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant exposure
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Tim F. Oberlander, Ruth E. Grunau, Shaila Misri, Dan W. Rurak, Linda C. Mayes, Joanne Weinberg, Michael Papsdorf, and Wayne Riggs
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Adult ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hydrocortisone ,Offspring ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Saliva ,Serotonin Uptake Inhibitors ,Neurotransmitter ,Depression ,Infant ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Antidepressive Agents ,Pregnancy Complications ,Affect ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Antidepressant ,Female ,Serotonin ,Reuptake inhibitor ,Psychology ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,Stress, Psychological ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Prenatal exposure to stress and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) alter hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) stress reactivity in offspring, however, the effects of combined exposure to HPA activity in human infants is unknown.To examine HPA basal levels and stress responsiveness in 3-month olds with prenatal exposure to SSRIs.Salivary cortisol levels in infants of SSRI treated mothers (n=31, mean exposure 230.2+/-72.2 days) were compared with non-SSRI exposed (n=45) infants in response to a challenge (infant-controlled habituation task) and under basal conditions in the late afternoon/early evening. Mode of feeding, to account for possible postnatal drug exposure via breast milk, as well as measures of pre and postnatal maternal mood, were included as covariates.Lower post-stress cortisol levels were observed in non-SSRI exposed/non-breastfed infants compared with non-SSRI exposed infants who were breastfed at 3 months of age. Stress reactivity patterns among SSRI exposed infants did not differ with mode of feeding. The cortisol reactivity slope (CRS) was significantly lower among non-SSRI exposed non-breastfed infants compared with non-SSRI exposed breastfed infants. Early evening basal cortisol levels were lower in SSRI exposed infants than in non-SSRI exposed infants, controlling for maternal mood and mode of feeding. Postnatal SSRI exposure (infant SSRI drug levels) via breast milk was not associated with stress or basal cortisol levels. Total cortisol, reflected by the AUC measure, did not differ significantly between exposure groups.Prenatal SSRI exposure altered HPA stress response patterns and reduced early evening basal cortisol levels. Stress challenge HPA response differences only became apparent when the moderating effect of method of feeding was accounted for. These findings suggest an early "programming" effect of antenatal maternal mood, prenatal SSRI exposure and postnatal maternal care giving on the HPA system.
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- 2008
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4. Dose-Dependent Effects of Meloxicam Administration on Cyclooxygenase-1 and Cyclooxygenase-2 Protein Expression in Intrauterine Tissues and Fetal Tissues of a Sheep Model of Preterm Labor
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John R. G. Challis, Valeria E. Rac, Catherine A. Scott, Stephen J. Lye, Charlene Small, Dan W. Rurak, and S. Lee Adamson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Thiazines ,Prostaglandin ,Meloxicam ,Uterine Contraction ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Obstetric Labor, Premature ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Placenta ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors ,neoplasms ,Fetus ,Sheep ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Amnion ,biology ,business.industry ,Uterus ,Myometrium ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,Disease Models, Animal ,Thiazoles ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Cyclooxygenase 2 ,Tocolytic ,Cyclooxygenase 1 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Cyclooxygenase ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Meloxicam (MEL), a cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 inhibitor, decreases prostaglandin production and blocks preterm labor in sheep. The objective of this study is to investigate MEL dosage regimens on COX-1, COX-2, and prostaglandin dehydrogenase (PGDH) expression in ovine intrauterine and fetal tissues. Animals in preterm labor received maternal infusions of saline or MEL at maintained high or graded doses (study 1) or acute graded doses (study 2). MEL blocked preterm labor. In study 1, MEL decreased COX-2 expression in the endometrium, myometrium, and amnion but not placenta or fetal tissues. In study 2, COX-2 expression was unchanged. COX-1/PGDH expression was unaffected. While MEL is an effective tocolytic, reductions in COX-2 protein occurred only with maintained MEL exposure. MEL effects are tissue specific and do not affect COX-1 or PGDH expression. Maternal MEL does not affect fetal COX expression in the sheep, possibly contributing to its lack of fetal side effects.
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- 2007
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5. A PHARMACOKINETIC STUDY OF DIPHENHYDRAMINE TRANSPORT ACROSS THE BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER IN ADULT SHEEP: POTENTIAL INVOLVEMENT OF A CARRIER-MEDIATED MECHANISM
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Nancy Gruber, Sam C. S. Au-Yeung, Dan W. Rurak, and K. Wayne Riggs
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Microdialysis ,Biological Transport, Active ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Propranolol ,Pharmacology ,Blood–brain barrier ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Pharmacokinetics ,Internal medicine ,Extracellular fluid ,medicine ,Animals ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Sheep ,Chemistry ,Antagonist ,Half-life ,Extracellular Fluid ,Diphenhydramine ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Histamine H1 Antagonists ,Female ,Half-Life ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the disposition of diphenhydramine (DPHM) across the ovine blood-brain barrier (BBB). In six adult sheep, we characterized the central nervous system (CNS) pharmacokinetics of DPHM in brain extracellular fluid (ECF) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) using microdialysis in two experiments. In the first experiment, DPHM was administered via a five-step i.v. infusion (1.5, 5.5, 9.5, 13.5, and 17.5 microg/kg/min; 7 h per step). Average steady-state CNS/total plasma concentration ratios (i.e., [CNS]/[total plasma]) for steps 1 to 5 ranged from 0.4 to 0.5. However, average steady-state [CNS]/[free plasma] ratios ranged from 2 to 3, suggesting active transport of DPHM into the CNS. Plasma protein binding averaged 86.1 +/- 2.3% (mean +/- S.D.) and was not altered with increasing drug dose. Plasma, CSF, and ECF demonstrated biexponential pharmacokinetics with terminal elimination half-lives (t1/2beta) of 10.8 +/- 5.4, 3.6 +/- 1.0, and 5.3 +/- 4.2 h, respectively. The bulk flow of CSF and transport-mediated efflux of DPHM may explain the observed higher CNS clearances. In the second experiment, DPHM was coadministered with propranolol (PRN) to examine its effect on blood-brain CSF and blood-brain ECF DPHM relationships. Plasma total DPHM concentration decreased by 12.8 +/- 6.3% during PRN, whereas ECF and CSF concentrations increased (88.1 +/- 45.4 and 91.6 +/- 34.3%, respectively). This increase may be due to the inhibitory effect of PRN on a transporter-mediated efflux mechanism for DPHM brain elimination.
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- 2006
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6. Stereoselective disposition of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine during pregnancy and breast-feeding
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Tim F. Oberlander, Ruth E. Grunau, K. Wayne Riggs, Colleen Fitzgerald, Shaila Misri, John Kim, Dan W. Rurak, and Nancy Kent
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Adult ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Breast milk ,Pregnancy ,Fluoxetine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Prospective Studies ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Pharmacology ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Milk, Human ,business.industry ,Postpartum Period ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant exposure ,Stereoisomerism ,Fetal Blood ,medicine.disease ,Pregnancy Complications ,Breast Feeding ,Endocrinology ,Cord blood ,Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation ,Gestation ,Female ,business ,Breast feeding ,Postpartum period ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aims To compare the disposition of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enanantiomers in the mother, foetus and infant. Methods Blood from pregnant women taking fluoxetine (n = 9), during pregnancy was sampled in the third trimester and at delivery (maternal and cord venous blood), and from the infants 48 h after delivery. The subset of these women who were breastfeeding, plus additional subjects recruited in the postpartum period, were studied further, and maternal and infant blood, and breast milk was sampled between 6 days and 11 months (n = 23). Drug and metabolite concentrations were measured using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry or liquid chromatography, tandem mass spectrometry. Results There was a high correlation between maternal and foetal (cord blood) fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers (r2−0.9), the mean foetal/maternal ratios (95% confidence intervals) being 0.91 (0.61, 1.02) and 1.04 (0.93, 1.05), for fluoxetine and norfluoxetine, respectively. In 2 day old infants exposed to the drug in utero, the fluoxetine and norfluoxetine plasma concentrations were the same as in cord blood at delivery. Over the next 2 months, the plasma concentrations in the infants fell progressively. Stereoselective disposition of both the drug and metabolite in the mother, foetus, infant and breast milk was observed. The S : R ratios in the foetus and newborn (∼3) were significantly higher than in the serum (∼2) or breast milk (∼1.9) of the mothers, resulting in greater exposure of the foetus and infants to the biologically active enantiomers, particularly S-norfluoxetine. Conclusions Foetal and infant exposure to fluoxetine and norfluoxetine is enhanced by their stereoselective disposition in the mother, foetus, breast milk and infant. Increased exposure may also result from decreased metabolism of the drug in the foetus and neonate.
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- 2006
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7. Maternal Fluoxetine Infusion Does Not Alter Fetal Endocrine and Biophysical Circadian Rhythms in Pregnant Sheep
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Nancy Gruber, Dan W. Rurak, Janna L. Morrison, Isabella Caroline McMillen, David J. Kennaway, Caly Chien, and Riggs Kw
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Blood Pressure ,Biology ,Serotonergic ,Melatonin ,Electrocardiography ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Pregnancy ,Fluoxetine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Circadian rhythm ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Fetus ,Sheep ,Respiration ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Prolactin ,Circadian Rhythm ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Injections, Intravenous ,Pregnancy, Animal ,Female ,Serotonin ,Reuptake inhibitor ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Depression during pregnancy is frequently treated with the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), fluoxetine (FX), commonly known as Prozac (Eli Lilly & Co, Indianapolis, IN). FX potentiates serotoninergic neurotransmission and serotonin has been implicated in the regulation of circadian rhythms. We have therefore investigated the effect of chronic administration of FX on maternal and fetal circadian rhythms in sheep. Following an initial bolus dose of 70 mg FX, an 8-day continuous infusion of FX (n = 11, 98.5 μg/kg • d) was performed. Controls (n = 13) were treated with sterile water vehicle only. Maternal and fetal plasma melatonin and prolactin concentrations were determined every 3 hours for 24 hours and then every 6 hours for 24 hours beginning on the fourth day of infusion. FX treatment did not alter either the basal or circadian rhythms of either maternal or fetal plasma melatonin and prolactin concentrations. Fetal cardiovascular and behavioral state parameters were measured continuously. While the incidence of low-voltage (LV) electrocortical (ECOG) activity was significantly reduced in fetuses in the FX group, there was no effect of FX on the diurnal rhythms in fetal arterial pressure, heart rate, breathing movements, or behavioral state. These results show that maternal FX treatment does not result in significant alterations in maternal and fetal hormonal and behavioral circadian rhythms.
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- 2005
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8. Pain Reactivity in 2-Month-Old Infants After Prenatal and Postnatal Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor Medication Exposure
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Wayne Riggs, Michael Papsdorf, Dan W. Rurak, Colleen Fitzgerald, Tim F. Oberlander, and Ruth E. Grunau
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Adult ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Pain ,Physiology ,Bayley Scales of Infant Development ,Child Development ,Heart Rate ,Pregnancy ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Pain Measurement ,Depressive Disorder ,Sertraline ,Fluoxetine ,business.industry ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Paroxetine ,Pregnancy Complications ,Maternal Exposure ,Case-Control Studies ,Anesthesia ,Infant Behavior ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Reuptake inhibitor ,business ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective. In this prospective study, we examined biobehavioral responses to acute procedural pain at 2 months of age in infants with prenatal and postnatal selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) medication exposure. Based on previous findings showing reduced pain responses in newborns after prenatal exposure, we hypothesized that altered pain reactivity would also be found at 2 months of age.Methods. Facial action (Neonatal Facial Coding System) and cardiac autonomic reactivity derived from the respiratory activity and heart rate variability (HRV) responses to a painful event (heel-lance) were compared between 3 groups of infants: (1) infants with prenatal SSRI exposure alone (n = 11; fluoxetine, n = 2; paroxetine, n = 9); (2) infants with prenatal and postnatal SSRI (via breast milk) exposure (total n = 30; fluoxetine, n = 6; paroxetine, n = 20; sertraline, n = 4); and (3) control infants (n = 22; nonexposed) during baseline, lance, and recovery periods. Measures of maternal mood and drug levels were also obtained, and Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II were administered at ages 2 and 8 months.Results. Facial action increased in all groups immediately after the lance but was significantly lower in the pSE group during the lance period. HR among infants in the pSE and ppSE groups was significantly lower during recovery. Using measures of HRV and the transfer relationship between heart rate and respiration, exposed infants had a greater return of parasympathetic cardiac modulation in the recovery period, whereas a sustained sympathetic response continued in control infants. Although postnatal exposure via breast milk was extremely low when infant drug levels could be detected in ppSE infants, changes in HR and HRV from lance to recovery were greater compared among infants with levels too low to be quantified. Neither maternal mood nor the presence of clonazepam influenced pain responses.Conclusions. Blunted facial-action responses were observed among infants with prenatal SSRI exposure alone, whereas both prenatal and postnatal exposure was associated with reduced parasympathetic withdrawal and increased parasympathetic cardiac modulation during recovery after an acute noxious event. These findings are consistent with patterns of pain reactivity observed in the newborn period in the same cohort. Given that postnatal exposure via breast milk was extremely low and altered biobehavioral pain reactivity was not associated with levels of maternal reports of depression, these data suggest possible sustained neurobehavioral outcomes beyond the newborn period. This is the first study of pain reactivity in infants with prenatal and postnatal SSRI exposure, and our findings were limited by the lack of a depressed nonmedicated control group, small sample size, and understanding of infant behaviors associated with pain reactivity that could have also have been influenced by prenatal SSRI exposure. The developmental and clinical implications of our findings remain unclear, and the mechanisms that may have altered 5-hydroxytryptamine-mediated pain modulation in infants after SSRI exposure remain to be studied. Treating maternal depression with antidepressants during and after pregnancy and promoting breastfeeding in this setting should remain a key goal for all clinicians. Additional study is needed to understand the long-term effects of prenatal and early postnatal SSRI exposure.
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- 2005
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9. Pharmacologic Factors Associated With Transient Neonatal Symptoms Following Prenatal Psychotropic Medication Exposure
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Wayne Riggs, Shaila Misri, Tim F. Oberlander, Dan W. Rurak, Colleen Fitzgerald, and Xanthoula Kostaras
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Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pregnancy Trimester, Third ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Clonazepam ,Cohort Studies ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Drug Interactions ,Prospective Studies ,Neurologic Examination ,Depressive Disorder ,Fluoxetine ,Sertraline ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Pregnancy Outcome ,medicine.disease ,Anxiety Disorders ,Paroxetine ,Discontinuation ,Pregnancy Complications ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Anti-Anxiety Agents ,Pregnancy Trimester, Second ,Anesthesia ,Inactivation, Metabolic ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,business ,Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants (SSRIs) and benzodiazepines are frequently used to treat maternal depression and anxiety disorders during pregnancy. Recent reports suggest that prenatal SSRI exposure is associated with a neonatal discontinuation syndrome. It remains unclear whether these symptoms are directly related to SSRI exposure alone or are due to concurrent pharmacologic factors. Also, this study explores relationships between neonatal outcomes and medication levels during pregnancy, at delivery, and in the newborn period. Method: This study sought to compare newborn behavior following second and third trimester exposure to either single-agent SSRIs (group 1) or SSRIs combined with clonazepam (group 2). A prospective cohort of mothers and their infants (N = 46) who had received SSRI medication alone or in combination with clonazepam were studied from June 1996 through June 2000 and compared with a nonexposed control group (N = 23). Infants were assessed in the newborn period for signs suggestive of a discontinuation syndrome. Maternal drug levels were measured during the pregnancy and at delivery. Infant drug levels from cord blood and at day 2 of life were also obtained. Results: Overall, 30% of the exposed infants (groups 1 and 2, N = 14) showed symptoms of transient poor neonatal adaptation compared with 9% (N = 2) of control infants. In group 1, 25% had symptoms (fluoxetine N = 3; paroxetine N = 3; sertraline N = 1) and in group 2. 39% of infants had symptoms (paroxetine with clonazepam, N = 7). Symptoms were typically mild respiratory distress and, less commonly, hypotonia. Symptoms were self limited and not associated with other neonatal conditions. When paroxetine was combined with clonazepam, infants with symptoms had significantly elevated paroxetine levels when compared with similarly exposed infants without symptoms (p
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- 2004
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10. Clearance and disposition of indometacin in chronically instrumented fetal lambs following a 3-day continuous intravenous infusion
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Martin P.R. Walker, András Szeitz, Harvey Wong, Eddie Kwan, K. Wayne Riggs, Rajesh Krishna, and Dan W. Rurak
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Amniotic fluid ,Metabolic Clearance Rate ,Placenta ,Indomethacin ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Urine ,Fetus ,Indometacin ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Fetal membrane ,Internal medicine ,Blood plasma ,medicine ,Animals ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Pharmacology ,Sheep ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Chemistry ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animals, Newborn ,Female ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Indometacin is used in pregnancy for the treatment of premature labour, but there are limited data on the disposition of the drug in the fetus. In order to elucidate fetal indometacin pharmacokinetics at plasma levels and duration comparable with those occurring with use of the drug for tocolysis in humans, indometacin was administered at doses of 1.9 (low dose, LD; n = 5) or 7.5 (high dose, HD; n = 9) μg min−1 to steady state over a 3-day period in chronically instrumented fetal lambs. Indometacin concentrations in biological fluid samples were analysed by a sensitive capillary gas chromatography-electron capture detection method. The mean steady-state fetal arterial plasma indometacin concentrations were 68.6 ± 16.5 ng mL−1 in the LD infusion and 230.3 ± 28.8 ng mL−1 in the HD infusion. Indometacin concentrations in amniotic fluid were ∼10% of those in fetal plasma, and below assay detection limits in tracheal fluid. Total body clearance (TBC) in the LD and HD infusions were not different and the overall mean was 11.3 ± 1.2 mL min−1 kg−1. In the 11 experiments where paired fetal arterial and umbilical venous samples were collected, the extraction of indometacin across the placenta averaged only 5.2 ± 1.1%, indicating low placental permeability to the drug in sheep. However, fetal placental clearance (CLpl) of indometacin (10.0 ± 2.5 mL min−1 kg−1, n = 10) averaged 115.1± 41.2% of TBC in these animals and the calculated value for fetal non-placental clearance (0.6 ± 2.8 mL min−1 kg−1) was not significantly different from zero. Fetal renal clearance of intact indometacin (3.8 ± 1.1 μL min−1 kg−1; n = 12) was also very low. However, treatment of fetal urine with glucuronidase indicated the presence of glucuronide conjugates and these comprised 69.9 ± 8.2% of the total drug concentration (i.e. intact + conjugated) in urine. Thus, the fetal lamb appears to be able to glucuronidate indometacin, but the contribution of this and other non-placental routes to overall fetal elimination of the drug appear minimal. CLpl of the drug is also low owing to the physicochemical properties of indometacin (high polarity) and the permeability characteristics of the sheep placenta.
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- 2002
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11. Prolonged Prenatal Psychotropic Medication Exposure Alters Neonatal Acute Pain Response
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Tim F. Oberlander, Dan W. Rurak, Ruth E. Grunau, Shaila Misri, Ann-Louise Ellwood, Colleen Fitzgerald, and Kenneth Wayne Riggs
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pain ,Clonazepam ,Heart Rate ,Pregnancy ,Phenylketonurias ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,GABA Modulators ,Pain Measurement ,Sertraline ,Fluoxetine ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Infant, Newborn ,Paroxetine ,Facial Expression ,Autonomic nervous system ,Endocrinology ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Serotonin ,business ,Reuptake inhibitor ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and benzodiazepines are frequently used to treat maternal depression during pregnancy, however the effect of increased serotonin (5HT) and gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) agonists in the fetal human brain remains unknown. 5HT and GABA are active during fetal neurologic growth and play early roles in pain modulation, therefore, if prolonged prenatal exposure alters neurodevelopment this may become evident in altered neonatal pain responses. To examine biologic and behavioral effects of prenatal exposure, neonatal responses to acute pain (phenylketonuria heel lance) in infants with prolonged prenatal exposure were examined. Facial action (Neonatal Facial Coding System) and cardiac autonomic reactivity derived from the relationship between respiratory activity and short term variations of heart rate (HRV) were compared between 22 infants with SSRI exposure (SE) [fluoxetine (n = 7), paroxetine (n = 11), sertraline (n = 4)]; 16 infants exposed to SSRIs and clonazepam (SE+) [paroxetine (n = 14), fluoxetine (n = 2)]; and 23 nonexposed infants during baseline, lance, and recovery periods of a heel lance. Length of maternal SSRI use did not vary significantly between exposure groups-[mean (range)] SE:SE+ 183 (31-281):141 (54-282) d (p > 0.05). Infants exposed to SE and SE+ displayed significantly less facial activity to heel lance than control infants. Mean HR increased with lance, but was significantly lower in SE infants during recovery. Using measures of HRV and the transfer relationship between heart rate and respiration, SSRI infants had a greater return of parasympathetic cardiac modulation in the recovery period, whereas a sustained sympathetic response continued in the control group. Prolonged prenatal SSRI exposure appears to be associated with reduced behavioral pain responses and increased parasympathetic cardiac modulation in recovery following an acute neonatal noxious event. Possible 5HT-mediated pain inhibition, pharmacologic factors and the developmental course remain to be studied.
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- 2002
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12. Altered Fetal Pituitary-Adrenal Function in the Ovine Fetus Treated with RU486 and Meloxicam, an Inhibitor of Prostaglandin Synthase-II1
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Alan D. Bocking, Stephen J. Lye, K.J. McKeown, Mhoyra Fraser, C. Small, K.W. Riggs, John R. G. Challis, Dan W. Rurak, and L. Adamson
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fetus ,Prostaglandin ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Adrenocorticotropic hormone ,Mifepristone ,Biology ,Meloxicam ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Fetal circulation ,Reproductive Medicine ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Tocolytic ,medicine ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Glucocorticoid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Term and preterm labor are associated with increased fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activation and synthesis of prostaglandins (PGs) generated through the increased expression of prostaglandin H synthase-II (PGHS-II) in the placenta. Inhibition of PGHS-II has been advocated as a means of producing uterine tocolysis, but the effects of such treatment on fetal endocrine functions have not been thoroughly examined. Because PGE 2 is known to activate the fetal HPA axis, we hypothesized that administration of meloxicam, a PGHS-II inhibitor, to sheep in induced labor would suppress fetal HPA function. Chronically catheterized pregnant ewes were treated with RU486, a progesterone receptor antagonist, to produce active labor, and then treated with either high-maintenance-dose meloxicam, graded-maintenance-dose meloxicam, or a saline infusion. Maternal uterine contraction frequency increased 24 h after the RU486 injection and the animals were in active labor by 48 6 4 h. RU486 injection led to increased concentrations of PGE 2, ACTH, and cortisol in the fetal circulation, and increased concentrations of 13,14 dihydro 15-ketoprostaglandin F2a (PGFM) in the maternal circulation. Uterine activity was inhibited within 12 h of beginning meloxicam infusion at both infusion regimes. During meloxicam infusion there were significant decreases in fetal plasma PGE 2, ACTH, and cortisol concentrations, and PGFM concentrations in maternal plasma. In control animals, frequency of uterine contractions, maternal plasma PGFM, fetal plasma PGE 2, ACTH, and cortisol concentrations increased after RU486 administration, and continued to rise during saline infusion until delivery occurred. We conclude that RU486-provoked labor in sheep is associated with activation of fetal HPA function, and that this is attenuated during meloxicam treatment to a level considered compatible with pregnancy maintenance. ACTH, cortisol, parturition
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- 2000
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13. Pharmacokinetics and renal excretion of diphenhydramine and its metabolites, diphenylmethoxyacetic acid and diphenhydramine‐N‐oxide, in developing lambs
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Kumar S, K. Wayne Riggs, Harvey Wong, and Dan W. Rurak
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Reabsorption ,Metabolite ,Diphenhydramine ,Renal function ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Excretion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Bolus (medicine) ,chemistry ,Pharmacokinetics ,Internal medicine ,Renal physiology ,medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The developmental disposition of diphenhydramine (DPHM) and its metabolites, diphenylmethoxyacetic acid (DPMA) and DPHM-N-oxide (DPHMNO), was investigated in postnatal lambs. Lambs received a DPHM intravenous (iv) bolus 15 days (Group A; n = 5) or 2 months (Group B; n = 6) after birth. Total body clearance of DPHM in postnatal lambs (Group A = 138.7 +/- 80.5 mL/min/kg; Group B = 165.7 +/- 51.3 mL/min/kg) was similar to the nonplacental clearance values (i.e., the component of fetal total body clearance that is not due to elimination via the placenta) estimated for fetal lamb (116.3 +/- 49. 6 mL/min/kg), and significantly greater than estimates in adult sheep (38.5 +/- 12.3 mL/min/kg). In addition, Group A DPHM renal clearance (CL(r), >1.80 +/- 1.24 mL/min/kg) was similar to that of the fetus (2.06 +/- 0.24 mL/min/kg), and significantly greater than that for Group B (0.26 +/- 0.17 mL/min/kg) and the adult (0.012 +/- 0.005 mL/min/kg). In contrast, similar to the fetal situation, postnatal DPMA CL(r) (Group A = 0.02 +/- 0.02 mL/min/kg; Group B = 0.05 +/- 0.01 mL/min/kg) was significantly less than adult values (0. 53 +/- 0.19 mL/min/kg). Because DPMA is not sequentially metabolized in sheep, the lower CL(r) in postnatal lambs results in longer apparent elimination half-lives of this metabolite (Group A = 90.4 +/- 32.2 h; Group B = 13.13 +/- 11.0 h) compared with that in the adult (2.9 +/- 1.6 h). No age-related difference in DPHMNO CL(R) was observed. Alterations in the CL(r) of DPHM and DPMA are likely related to differences in the rate of development of mechanisms (i.e. , tubular secretion and reabsorption and glomerular filtration rate) involved in the urinary drug excretion of organic acids and bases.
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- 2000
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14. Simultaneous determination of diphenhydramine, its N ‐oxide metabolite and their deuterium‐labeled analogues in ovine plasma and urine using liquid chromatography/electrospray tandem mass spectrometry
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Kumar S, Dan W. Rurak, and K. Wayne Riggs
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Electrospray ,Analyte ,Chromatography ,Metabolite ,Selected reaction monitoring ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Orphenadrine ,medicine ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Spectroscopy ,Drug metabolism ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Our studies on drug disposition in chronically instrumented pregnant sheep involve simultaneous administration of the antihistamine diphenhydramine (DPHM), its deuterated analogue ([2H10]DPHM) and their metabolites to the mother or the fetus via various routes. Such studies require sensitive and selective mass spectrometric methods for quantitation of these labeled and unlabeled compounds in order to assess comparative maternal and fetal drug metabolism. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a liquid chromatographic/tandem mass spectrometric (LC/MS/MS) method for the simultaneous quantitation of DPHM, its N-oxide metabolite and their deuterium-labeled analogues in ovine plasma and urine. Samples spiked with the analytes and the internal standard, orphenadrine, were processed using liquid-liquid extraction. The extract was chromatographed on a propylamino LC column and MS/MS detection was performed in the positive ion electrospray mode using multiple reaction monitoring. The linear concentration ranges of the calibration curves for the N-oxides and the parent amines were 0.4-100.0 and 0.2-250.0 ng ml-1, respectively. In validation tests, the assay exhibited acceptable variability (< or = 15% at analyte concentrations below 2.0 ng ml-1 and < 10% at all other concentrations) and bias (< 15% at all concentrations), and the analytes were stable under a variety of sample handling conditions. Using this method, the labeled and unlabeled N-oxide metabolite was identified in fetal plasma after DPHM and [2H10]DPHM administration. This method will be used further to examine the comparative metabolism of diphenhydramine to its N-oxide metabolite in the mother and the fetus.
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- 1998
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15. Determination of valproic acid and its metabolites using gas chromatography with mass-selective detection: application to serum and urine samples from sheep
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K W Riggs, Jiaojiao Zheng, Dan W. Rurak, S. K. Panesar, J. D. Gordon, Frank S. Abbott, and Dienchen Yu
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Valproic Acid ,Sheep ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Improved method ,General Chemistry ,Metabolism ,Urine ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Anticonvulsant ,Pharmacokinetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Female ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Gas chromatography ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,medicine.drug - Abstract
An improved method for the quantitative determination of valproic acid (VPA) and sixteen of its metabolites has been developed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with selected-ion monitoring. The method is applicable to serum or urine and all metabolites are measured in a single chromatographic run of 29.5 min. Ions selected for quantitative purposes were the characteristic [M-57]+ ions of the tert.-butyldimethylsilyl (tBDMS) derivatives. The method utilizes heptadeuterated VPA as well as six heptadeuterated metabolites as internal standards [i.e. 2-[2H7]propyl-2-pentenoic acid (2-ene[2H7]VPA), 2-[2H7]propyl-4-pentenoic acid (4-ene[2H7]VPA), 2-[2H7]propyl-3-oxopentanoic acid (3-keto[2H7]VPA), 2-[2H7]propyl-4-oxopentanoic acid (4-keto[2H7]VPA), 2-[2H7]propyl-3-hydroxypentanoic acid (3-OH[2H7]VPA), 2-[2H7]propyl-5-hydroxypentanoic acid (5-OH[2H7]VPA)]. The method demonstrates very good accuracy and precision over a large range of concentrations for VPA and all metabolites measured in both human and sheep biological fluids. The assay was applied to the analysis of VPA and metabolites in serum and urine samples collected from three non-pregnant ewes following intravenous bolus administration of a mixture of VPA and [13C4]VPA. Sheep were observed to produce measurable quantities of the majority of metabolites found in humans, with the notable exception of the di-unsaturated compounds (i.e. 2,3'-diene VPA and 2,4-diene VPA). The pharmacokinetics and metabolism of VPA and [13C4]VPA appear to be equivalent in the sheep model. The elimination half-life of VPA and [13C4]VPA in the ewe were estimated to be approximately 3.5 +/- 0.4 and 3.2 +/- 0.4 h, respectively.
- Published
- 1995
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16. Fetal and Maternal Placental and Nonplacental Clearances of Metoclopramide in Chronically Instrumented Pregnant Sheep
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B. McErlane, S.M. Taylor, K. Wayne Riggs, Dan W. Rurak, James E. Axelson, and Graham H. McMorland
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Metoclopramide ,Metabolic Clearance Rate ,Placenta ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Loading dose ,Catheterization ,Fetus ,Bolus (medicine) ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Sheep ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Injections, Intravenous ,embryonic structures ,Gestation ,Female ,business ,Blood Gas Monitoring, Transcutaneous ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The placental and nonplacental clearances of metoclopramide were studied in nine chronically instrumented, near-term pregnant sheep using a two-compartment open model. Metoclopramide was administered to the ewe and fetus on separate occasions as an initial iv bolus loading dose followed by a constant-rate infusion, with steady-state maternal and fetal plasma concentrations being obtained by 45 min. Following the maternal infusions, metoclopramide reached average steady-state concentrations of 50.0 +/- 20.2 ng/mL in the ewe and 27.1 +/- 8.6 ng/mL in the fetus, with a mean fetal-to-maternal concentration ratio of 0.57 +/- 0.14. The ability of the fetus to eliminate metoclopramide by nonplacental routes appears to be responsible for this ratio being less than unity, rather than differential protein binding and ion-trapping effects. Mean steady-state concentrations were 13.8 +/- 4.5 and 253.7 +/- 92.1 ng/mL in the ewe and fetus, respectively, after fetal drug administration. Metoclopramide was bound significantly less to fetal (39.5 +/- 8.9%) than to maternal (49.5 +/- 7.9%) plasma proteins, with values similar to that reported for humans (approximately 40%). Clearance of metoclopramide across the placenta from the fetus to the ewe (6.2 +/- 2.4 L/h/kg) was significantly greater than that in the reverse direction (4.3 +/- 1.3 L/h/kg) and accounted for approximately 80% of total fetal drug elimination. This may be explained by the higher percentage of fetal cardiac output to the placenta and the flow-limited transfer of this compound.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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- 1990
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17. Pharmacokinetics of Diphenhydramine after Dose Ranging in Nonpregnant Ewes
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Dan W. Rurak, Eddie Kwan, James E. Axelson, and S.D. Yoo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Diphenhydramine hydrochloride ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Pharmacology ,Pharmacokinetics ,In vivo ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Volume of distribution ,Sheep ,Chemistry ,Diphenhydramine ,Half-life ,Blood Proteins ,Carbon Dioxide ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Blood proteins ,Oxygen ,Endocrinology ,Free fraction ,Injections, Intravenous ,Female ,Half-Life ,Protein Binding ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Studies were conducted to characterize the pharmacokinetics of diphenhydramine in nonpregnant ewes after iv administration of 25-, 50-, 100-, and 200-mg doses of diphenhydramine hydrochloride on a crossover basis. Plasma drug concentration versus time data exhibited multiexponential characteristics. The initial distribution half-life increased from 5 to 9 min and the elimination half-life from 34 to 68 min as the dose was increased. There was also an increase in the volume of distribution (from 3 to 6 L/kg) with increasing dose. The elimination half-life and the volume of distribution after a 200-mg dose were significantly greater than after a 25-mg dose. There was, however, a linear increase in AUC0 infinity as dose was increased. The average total body clearance (approximately 5 L/h/kg) remained unchanged regardless of dose. The free fraction of diphenhydramine determined by equilibrium dialysis averaged 0.229 +/- 0.080, and the extent of drug binding to plasma protein was independent of the drug concentrations encountered (30-780 ng/mL) in the nonpregnant sheep in vivo. Concentration-independent binding of the drug was also confirmed by in vitro binding studies over the drug concentration range 10-2000 ng/mL. Therefore, it appears that changes in the volume of distribution are likely to be a result of changes in tissue uptake or binding of the drug as a function of dose.
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- 1990
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18. The use of microdialysis for the study of drug kinetics: central nervous system pharmacokinetics of diphenhydramine in fetal, newborn, and adult sheep
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K. Wayne Riggs, Dan W. Rurak, Nancy Gruber, and Sam C.S. Au-Yeung
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Central Nervous System ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Microdialysis ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Fetus ,Pharmacokinetics ,In vivo ,Internal medicine ,Extracellular fluid ,medicine ,Animals ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Cerebrospinal Fluid ,Pharmacology ,Sheep ,Chemistry ,Diphenhydramine ,Age Factors ,Extracellular Fluid ,Blood Proteins ,Blood proteins ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,Area Under Curve ,Histamine H1 Antagonists ,Female ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The central nervous system (CNS) pharmacokinetics of the H(1) receptor antagonist diphenhydramine (DPHM) were studied in 100- and 120-day-old fetuses, 10- and 30-day-old newborn lambs, and adult sheep using in vivo microdialysis. DPHM was administered i.v. at five infusion rates, with each step lasting 7 h. In all ages, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and extracellular fluid (ECF) concentrations were very similar to each other, which suggests that DPHM between these two compartments is transferred by passive diffusion. In addition, the brain-to-plasma concentration ratios were >or=3 in all age groups, suggesting the existence of a transport process for DPHM into the brain. Both brain and plasma DPHM concentrations increased in a linear fashion over the dose range studied. However, the ECF/unbound plasma and CSF/unbound plasma DPHM concentration ratios were significantly higher in the fetus and lambs (approximately 5 to 6) than in the adult (approximately 3). The factors f(CSF) and f(ECF), the ratios of DPHM areas under the curves (AUCs) in CSF and ECF to the plasma DPHM AUC, respectively, decreased with age, indicating that DPHM is more efficiently removed from the brain with increasing age. The extent of plasma protein binding of the drug increased with age. This study provides evidence for a transporter-mediated mechanism for the influx of DPHM into the brain and also for an efflux transporter for the drug, whose activity increases with age. Moreover, the higher brain DPHM levels in the fetus and lamb compared with the adult may explain the greater CNS effects of the drug at these ages.
- Published
- 2007
19. Meloxicam effectively inhibits preterm labor uterine contractions in a chronically catheterized pregnant sheep model: impact on fetal blood flow and fetal-maternal physiologic parameters
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S. Lee Adamson, John R. G. Challis, Catherine A. Scott, Charlene Small, Stephen J. Lye, Valeria E. Rac, and Dan W. Rurak
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Tocolytic agent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Thiazines ,Hemodynamics ,Urine ,Kidney ,Meloxicam ,Random Allocation ,Uterine Contraction ,Fetus ,Obstetric Labor, Premature ,Pregnancy ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Animals ,Labor, Induced ,Saline ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Electromyography ,Abortifacient Agents, Steroidal ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Osmolar Concentration ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,medicine.disease ,Intestines ,Mifepristone ,Thiazoles ,Blood pressure ,Tocolytic Agents ,Regional Blood Flow ,Anesthesia ,Models, Animal ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective Preterm birth occurs in 5% to 10% of all pregnancies and is associated with considerable neonatal mortality and morbidity. Effective and safe drugs to prevent preterm labor are not currently available. We have hypothesized that the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug meloxicam, a more selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor will successfully inhibit labor but avoid the complications associated with inhibition of cyclooxygenase-1. Study design Preterm labor was induced in chronically catheterized sheep by RU486 administration. Animals were then randomized to receive maternal infusions of saline (n = 5) or meloxicam (n = 4) for 48 hours or until delivery when the animals were killed and tissues and blood samples collected. Results Maternal infusion of meloxicam inhibited uterine contractions, increasing contraction duration, and attenuating frequency and amplitude. Saline-treated animals progressed to delivery. Administration of meloxicam was not associated with any change in fetal or maternal blood gas status, osmolality, arterial pressure, heart rate, or fetal blood flows. Conclusion Meloxicam may represent a potentially safe and effective tocolytic agent.
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- 2005
20. Fluoxetine during pregnancy: impact on fetal development
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Dan W. Rurak, K. Wayne Riggs, Janna L. Morrison, Morrison, Janna Leigh, Riggs, K, and Rurak, Danny
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,Offspring ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Reproductive technology ,Biology ,Fetal Development ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Fluoxetine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Fetus ,Sheep ,Depression ,medicine.disease ,Circadian Rhythm ,Pregnancy Complications ,Disease Models, Animal ,Teratogens ,Reproductive Medicine ,In utero ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Antidepressant ,Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,Developmental Biology ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Women are at greatest risk of suffering from depression during the childbearing years and thus may either become pregnant while taking an antidepressant or may require a prescription for one during pregnancy. The antidepressant fluoxetine (FX) is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), which increases serotonin neurotransmission. Serotonin is involved in the regulation of a variety of physiological systems, including the sleep–wake cycle, circadian rhythms and the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis. Each of these systems also plays an important role in fetal development. Compared with other antidepressant drugs, the SSRIs, such as FX, have fewer side effects. Because of this, they are now frequently prescribed, especially during pregnancy. Clinical studies suggest poor neonatal outcome after exposure to FX in utero. Recent studies in the sheep fetus describe the physiological effects of in utero exposure to FX with an 8 day infusion during late gestation in the sheep. This is a useful model for determining the effects of FX on fetal physiology. The fetus can be studied for weeks in its normal intrauterine environment with serial sampling of blood, thus permitting detailed studies of drug disposition in both mother and fetus combined with monitoring of fetal behavioural state and cardiovascular function. Fluoxetine causes an acute increase in plasma serotonin levels, leading to a transient reduction in uterine blood flow. This, in turn, reduces the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the fetus, thereby presenting a mechanism for reducing growth and/or eliciting preterm delivery. Moreover, because FX crosses the placenta, the fetus is exposed directly to FX, as well as to the effects of the drug on the mother. Fluoxetine increases high-voltage/non-rapid eye movement behavioural state in the fetus after both acute and chronic exposure and, thus, may interfere with normal fetal neurodevelopment. Fluoxetine also alters hypothalamic function in the adult and increases the magnitude of the prepartum rise in fetal cortisol concentrations in sheep. Fetal FX exposure does not alter fetal circadian rhythms in melatonin or prolactin. Studies of the effects of FX exposure on fetal development in the sheep are important in defining possible physiological mechanisms that explain human clinical studies of birth outcomes after FX exposure. To date, there have been insufficient longer-term follow-up studies in any precocial species of offspring exposed to SSRIs in utero. Thus, further investigation of the long-term consequences of in utero exposure to FX and other SSRIs, as well as the mechanisms involved, are required for a complete understanding of the impact of these agents on development. This should involve studies in both humans and appropriate animal models.
- Published
- 2005
21. Effects of acute moderate hypoxemia on kinetics of metoclopramide and its metabolites in chronically instrumented sheep
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Dan W. Rurak, K. Wayne Riggs, and John Kim
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Metoclopramide ,Metabolic Clearance Rate ,Urine ,Hypoxemia ,Pharmacokinetics ,Internal medicine ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoxia ,Sheep ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Endocrinology ,Renal physiology ,Anesthesia ,Concomitant ,Acute Disease ,Urine osmolality ,Molecular Medicine ,Arterial blood ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Hypoxemia is known to induce various physiological changes which can result in alteration in drug pharmacokinetics. To examine the effect of acute moderate hypoxemia on metoclopramide (MCP) pharmacokinetics, a continuous 14-hour infusion of MCP during a normoxemic, hypoxemic and subsequent normoxemic period was conducted in eight adult sheep. Arterial blood and urine samples were collected to examine the effects on the pharmacokinetics of MCP and its deethylated metabolites. MCP and its mono- and di-deethylated metabolites were quantitated using a GC/MS method. Steady-state concentrations of MCP were achieved in each of the three periods. During hypoxemia, MCP plasma steady-state concentration increased significantly from 50.72 +/- 1.06 to 63.62 +/- 1.79 ng/mL, and later decreased to 55.83 +/- 1.15 ng/mL during the post-hypoxemic recovery period. Total body clearance (CL(TB)) of MCP was significantly decreased from 274.2 +/- 48.0 L/h to 205.40 +/- 28.2 L/h during hypoxemia, and later restored to 245.8 +/- 44.2 L/h during the post-hypoxemic period. Plasma mono-deethylated MCP concentration (32.78 +/- 1.73 ng/mL) also increased, compared to the control group (21.20 +/- 1.39 ng/mL), during hypoxemia and subsequent normoxemic period. Renal excretion of MCP and its metabolites was also decreased during hypoxemia, while urine flow was increased with a concomitant decrease in urine osmolality. Thus, the results indicate that acute moderate hypoxemia affects MCP pharmacokinetics.
- Published
- 2002
22. Fetal behavioural state changes following maternal fluoxetine infusion in sheep
- Author
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Wayne Riggs, Janna L. Morrison, Nancy Gruber, Dan W. Rurak, Caly Chien, Morrison, Janna Leigh, Chien, C, Gruber, N, Rurak, D, and Riggs, K
- Subjects
Eye Movements ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Uterus ,Rapid eye movement sleep ,Bolus (medicine) ,Fetus ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Pregnancy ,Fluoxetine ,medicine ,Animals ,Sheep ,Behavior, Animal ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Carbon Dioxide ,medicine.disease ,Oxygen ,Electrooculography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation ,Female ,Serotonin ,business ,Sleep ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Clinical depression is diagnosed in 5-15% of women during pregnancy, increasing the risk of negative outcomes. Fluoxetine (FX), a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, is prescribed during pregnancy. In adults, FX alters sleep patterns with single doses decreasing total sleep time and rapid eye movement sleep. The effects of FX on sleep in the fetus are unknown. However, 5-hydroxytryptophan, the precursor of serotonin, has been reported to prolong high-voltage (HV) electrocortical (ECoG) activity and increase the incidence of fetal breathing movements (FBM) in the sheep fetus. We hypothesize that FX exposure will decrease the incidence of LV ECoG in the fetus. Twenty-one pregnant sheep were surgically prepared for chronic study of blood gases, ECoG activity, eye movements and FBM. After 3 days of recovery, ewes received a 70-mg bolus i.v. infusion of FX or sterile water followed by continuous infusion at a rate of 0.036 mg/min for 8 days. The incidence of low-voltage (LV) ECoG decreased from 54+/-4% on the preinfusion day to 45+/-5% on infusion day 1 in the FX group and remained decreased throughout the infusion period. In addition, the incidence of both eye movements and FBM was decreased on infusion day 1 compared to preinfusion day in the FX group. HV ECoG increased from 39+/-3% on preinfusion day to 68+/-14% on FX infusion day 1 and remained elevated throughout the infusion period. These data show that maternal FX administration alters fetal behavioural state.
- Published
- 2001
23. Ontogenesis of phase I hepatic drug metabolic enzymes in sheep
- Author
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Dan W. Rurak, Wayne Riggs, Geoff Hammond, Manoja Pretheeban, and Stelvio M. Bandiera
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Reproductive technology ,Biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Fetus ,Endocrinology ,Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System ,Rapid amplification of cDNA ends ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,CYP2A6 ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sheep ,Age Factors ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Cytochrome P450 ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Enzyme ,Animals, Newborn ,Liver ,Reproductive Medicine ,chemistry ,Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Metabolic Detoxication, Phase I ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Glucocorticoid ,Developmental Biology ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes are important for the metabolism of many drugs. While there is information on their identity and ontogeny in humans and rodents, similar data in sheep are lacking. In the present study, cDNA sequences of several CYP enzymes (CYP2A6, CYP2C19, CYP2D6) were cloned by rapid amplification of cDNA ends. In adult, newborn and fetal sheep the mRNA and protein levels of these CYPs and the regulatory factor, hepatic nuclear factor 4α (HNF4α) were determined in liver samples using real-time PCR and western blotting. The effect of antenatal glucocorticoid on these enzymes was also studied by i.v. infusion of cortisol (0.45 mg h–1; 80 h) to another group of fetuses. The mRNA and protein levels of the CYPs and HNF4α were low or absent in the fetus, followed by increasing levels in the newborn and adult. Fetal cortisol administration significantly increased the mRNA and protein levels of CYP2D6. Moreover, the correlation observed between the CYP and HNF4α mRNA levels suggests a possible regulatory role for this transcription factor. The findings suggest that fetal and newborn lambs have a low ability to metabolise drugs that are substrates of these enzymes, and that this ability increases with advancing postnatal age, similar to the situation in humans.
- Published
- 2012
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24. Simultaneous analysis of diphenhydramine and a stable isotope analog (2H10)diphenhydramine using capillary gas chromatography with mass selective detection in biological fluids from chronically instrumented pregnant ewes
- Author
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G R Tonn, Frank S. Abbott, A E Mutlib, James E. Axelson, and Dan W. Rurak
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Chromatography ,Amniotic fluid ,Chromatography, Gas ,Sheep ,Stable isotope ratio ,Chemistry ,Diphenhydramine ,Mass spectrometry ,Amniotic Fluid ,Fetal Blood ,Biochemistry ,Capillary gas chromatography ,Body Fluids ,Trachea ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Biological fluids ,Molecular Medicine ,Animals ,Female ,Gas chromatography ,Spectroscopy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This report describes both the synthesis of a stable isotope analog of the H1 receptor antagonist diphenhydramine (DPHM), and the simultaneous quantitation of DPHM and a deuterated stable isotope analog of DPHM, viz. (2H10)DPHM in biological fluids from the chronically instrumented pregnant ewe. (2H10)DPHM was synthesized and purified, and both its structure and purity were verified. Biological samples were prepared for analysis using liquid-liquid extraction prior to capillary gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The method employed electron impact ionization with selective ion monitoring of ions with m/z 165 for DPHM and m/z 173 for (2H10)DPHM. The minimal quantifiable concentration of DPHM and (2H10)DPHM from a 1.0 ml sample was 2.0 ng ml-1 in fetal and maternal plasma, fetal tracheal fluid and amniotic fluid. The method was validated from 2.0 ng ml-1 to 200.0 ng ml-1 for both DPHM and (2H10)DPHM in plasma, fetal tracheal fluid and amniotic fluid. Differences in the disposition between DPHM and (2H10)DPHM were not apparent during a control experiment in which both labeled and unlabeled DPHM were administered to a chronically instrumented fetal lamb. This method provides the required sensitivity and selectivity for the simultaneous quantitation of unlabeled and labeled DPHM during pharmacokinetic experiments conducted in near-term pregnant sheep.
- Published
- 1993
25. Sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic method for direct separation of labetalol stereoisomers in biological fluids using an alpha 1-acid glycoprotein stationary phase
- Author
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Frank S. Abbott, Ahmad Doroudian, James E. Axelson, Dan W. Rurak, and Krishnaswamy Yeleswaram
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Chromatography ,Sheep ,Chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Stereoisomerism ,General Chemistry ,Orosomucoid ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Pharmacokinetics ,Phase (matter) ,medicine ,Animals ,Female ,Labetalol ,cardiovascular diseases ,Quantitative analysis (chemistry) ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A chiral high-performance liquid chromatographic assay for the separation of the four stereoisomers of labetalol, an antihypertensive, in biological fluids has been developed. Baseline separation of the isomers was achieved using an alpha 1-acid glycoprotein stationary phase. No interference from endogenous substances was observed following extraction from various biological fluids obtained from pregnant (ewe and fetus) and non-pregnant sheep. The concentration of the individual isomers of labetalol was determined by first measuring the total concentration of racemic labetalol obtained from an achiral assay followed by reassay of each sample by the chiral method after which, by using the estimate of the percentage of each individual isomer, the individual concentration of each of the four isomers was determined. The mobile phase was 0.02 M phosphate buffer containing 0.015 M tetrabutylammonium phosphate. The pH of the mobile phase was adjusted to 7.10. The detector was set at an excitation wavelength of 230 nm and emission wavelength of 400 nm to monitor the nascent fluorescence intensity of the isomers of labetalol. The limit of detection of the individual isomers was 0.15 ng (0.6 ng of injected racemic labetalol). The assay was linear over the range 0.6-15.0 ng of labetalol (injected) with the intra- and inter-day mean coefficients of variation being less than 9.0 and 6.0%, respectively. Application of the assay in the study of pharmacokinetics of the stereoisomers of labetalol in sheep following administration of racemic labetalol has been demonstrated.
- Published
- 1993
26. Transplacental and nonplacental clearances of diphenhydramine in the chronically instrumented pregnant sheep
- Author
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Sandy M. Taylor, S.D. Yoo, Dan W. Rurak, and James E. Axelson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Placenta ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Fetus ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Diphenhydramine ,Transplacental ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Free fraction ,Gestation ,Pregnancy, Animal ,Female ,business ,Dialysis ,medicine.drug ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Pharmacokinetic studies of the histamine H1-receptor antagonist diphenhydramine were conducted in eight chronically instrumented pregnant sheep at 126-138 days of gestation. Diphenhydramine was administered by simultaneous intravenous bolus injection and infusion to steady state given 48 h apart, to the ewe and the fetus on separate occasions. Average steady-state drug concentration in plasma after maternal infusion was 212.1 +/- 67.8 ng/mL in the mother and 36.3 +/- 14.4 ng/mL in the fetus, resulting in a fetal-to-maternal concentration ratio of 0.19 +/- 0.10. Following fetal infusions, maternal and fetal steady-state drug concentrations were 31.1 +/- 11.6 and 447.6 +/- 185.2 ng/mL, respectively. The free fraction of diphenhydramine determined in the fetus (0.277 +/- 0.087) was significantly greater than that in the mother (0.141 +/- 0.079). Transplacental and nonplacental clearances were calculated at steady state according to a general two-compartment open model, with drug elimination occurring from both compartments. The total fetal clearance (472.7 +/- 215.7 mL/min) was relatively small compared with the total maternal clearance (3426.1 +/- 905.8 mL/min). The transplacental clearance from fetus to mother (264.4 +/- 138.7 mL/min) was approximately threefold higher than that from mother to fetus (82.4 +/- 40.5 mL/min). Maternal nonplacental clearance (3343.8 +/- 890.7 mL/min) accounted for 97.8 +/- 1.1% of the maternal total clearance, whereas fetal nonplacental clearance (208.4 +/- 80.4 mL/min) accounted for 45.1 +/- 4.7% of the fetal total clearance. It is concluded that in the fetus both the transplacental and nonplacental pathways are important for drug elimination.
- Published
- 1993
27. Sensitive microbore high-performance liquid chromatographic assay for labetalol in the biological fluids of pregnant sheep
- Author
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Dan W. Rurak, Krishnaswamy Yeleswaram, and James E. Axelson
- Subjects
Amniotic fluid ,Chromatography ,Sheep ,Calibration curve ,Ethyl acetate ,General Chemistry ,Amniotic Fluid ,Fetal Blood ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Fluorescence spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fetus ,chemistry ,Pregnancy ,Injections, Intravenous ,medicine ,Animals ,Trace analysis ,Female ,Labetalol ,Phosphoric acid ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A rapid and sensitive microbore high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) assay is reported for the quantitation of labetalol, an anti-hypertensive agent, in small volumes (250 microliters) of biological fluids (viz., maternal plasma, fetal plasma, amniotic fluid and fetal tracheal fluid) obtained from the chronically instrumented pregnant sheep. Labetalol was extracted from the samples using ethyl acetate and then partitioned into dilute phosphoric acid. Chromatography was performed on a microbore HPLC system using a 2.1 mm I.D. C18 column and detection was accomplished by a low-dispersion fluorescence detector designed for trace analysis. The drug was well separated from endogenous substances in all biological fluids sampled. The calibration curves were linear for all fluids over the range of study with mean coefficients of variation consistently below 5%. Quantitation was possible down to approximately 30 pg of labetalol injected (approximately 1.6 ng/ml in plasma using 250 microliters).
- Published
- 1991
28. Determination of ritodrine in biological fluids of the pregnant sheep by fused-silica capillary gas chromatography using electron-capture detection
- Author
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M R Wright, M P van der Weyde, Graham H. McMorland, Dan W. Rurak, Frank S. Abbott, James E. Axelson, S.M. Taylor, and K W Riggs
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Amniotic fluid ,Chromatography, Gas ,Sheep ,Capillary action ,Electron capture ,Chemistry ,Coefficient of variation ,General Chemistry ,Amniotic Fluid ,Trachea ,Electron capture detector ,Fetus ,Pregnancy ,Ritodrine ,medicine ,Biological fluids ,Animals ,Female ,Gas chromatography ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A sensitive and selective gas chromatographic assay method employing splitless injection, fused-silica capillary columns and electron-capture detection is reported for the quantitation of the tocolytic drug, ritodrine, in a variety of biological fluids obtained from the pregnant ewe and fetus. This method has improved sensitivity and selectivity over previously published assay procedures. A 25 m x 0.31 mm I.D., cross-linked 5% phenylmethylsilicone, fused-silica capillary column was employed for all analyses. Linearity of response was observed over the range 2.5-75 ng of ritodrine base per 0.05-0.5 ml of biological fluid, representing approximately 1-75 pg at the detector. The coefficient of variation was less than 10% over the range 2.5-75 ng of added ritodrine. The minimum quantifiable amount is approximately 2.5 ng from a 0.5-ml biological fluid sample. Applicability of this method to biological fluids, obtained from ovine subjects, is demonstrated by the analysis of samples obtained during the course of ritodrine placental transfer studies.
- Published
- 1991
29. Effect of haemodialysis on metoclopramide kinetics in patients with severe renal failure
- Author
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R. C. Ongley, Wright, John D. E. Price, Dan W. Rurak, Graham H. McMorland, B. McErlane, Y K Tam, and James E. Axelson
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Metoclopramide ,Metabolic Clearance Rate ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,Pharmacokinetics ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Dialysis ,Kidney transplantation ,Uremia ,Pharmacology ,Volume of distribution ,Kidney ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Hemodialysis ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The kinetics of metoclopramide and the effects of haemodialysis on metoclopramide kinetics were examined in eight uraemic subjects 1 h and 24 h prior to the onset of dialysis. In spite of the relatively minor contribution of renal clearance to total body clearance in normals, metoclopramide kinetics were substantially altered in uraemia. The total body clearance was decreased by 2-4 fold, terminal elimination half-life proportionately increased, while the volume of distribution appeared to be unaffected compared with that previously demonstrated in normal healthy subjects. Haemodialysis does not appear to be effective in removing metoclopramide from the body and metoclopramide clearance subsequent to dialysis is unaltered. The kinetic parameters in the uraemic subjects are not significantly different between drug administrations 1 or 24 h prior to the time of onset of haemodialysis. Following kidney transplantation, in one subject, there appeared to be a rapid return to apparently normal kinetics from the uraemic state.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Metoclopramide Pharmacokinetics in Pregnant and Nonpregnant Sheep
- Author
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Graham H. McMorland, Dan W. Rurak, Nancy Gruber, James E. Axelson, B. McErlane, and K. Wayne Riggs
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Metoclopramide ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Gestational Age ,pCO2 ,Fetus ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Blood plasma ,medicine ,Animals ,Volume of distribution ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,Injections, Intravenous ,Pregnancy, Animal ,Gestation ,Female ,Blood Gas Analysis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The pharmacokinetics of metoclopramide was studied in chronically instrumented pregnant and nonpregnant sheep. Metoclopramide was administered to the ewe by intravenous bolus injections (on a crossover basis) of 10, 20, and 40 mg, with an additional 80‐mg dose to the nonpregnant animals. Transfer of the drug to the fetus was rapid with significant concentrations in fetal plasma 1 min after maternal dosing. The ratio of fetal‐to‐maternal area under the plasma concentration–time curves averaged 0.74, indicating significant fetal exposure to the drug. Maternal metoclopramide administration resulted in minimal fetal effects, with no change in arterial pressure, heart rate, or arterial pH or Pco2, and only a small (∼ 1.8 mm Hg) transient decline in Po2. Plasma concentrations in maternal and fetal plasma in most animals were best described by a biexponential equation with rapid distribution and elimination phases. The terminal elimination half‐lives in maternal and fetal plasma averaged 71.3 and 86.8 min, respectively, with fetal half‐life being significantly longer. The number of fetuses present had no consistent effects on either maternal or fetal pharmacokinetic parameters. Total body clearance and volume of distribution averaged 3.5 L/h/kg and 5.8 L/kg, respectively, in the pregnant ewe, and 4.5 L/h/kg and 6.9 L/kg, respectively, in the nonpregnant animals. The terminal elimination half-life in the nonpregnant ewes averaged 67.5 min. Pharmacokinetic parameters were compared in the pregnant and nonpregnant ewes at the 10-, 20-, and 40-mg doses, and no significant differences were observed in the distribution or elimination rate constants, elimination half-life, or volume of distribution. Total body clearance in the nonpregnant animals, however, was 22% higher than that calculated in the pregnant animals. Metoclopramide was observed to follow linear or dose-independent kinetics in both the pregnant and nonpregnant ewe over the 4–8-fold dose range studied.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Determination of diphenhydramine in biological fluids by capillary gas chromatography using nitrogen—phosphorus detection
- Author
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S.D. Yoo, Dan W. Rurak, and James E. Axelson
- Subjects
Standard curve ,Chromatography ,Capillary column ,Pharmacokinetics ,Chemistry ,Capillary action ,Diphenhydramine ,medicine ,Orphenadrine ,General Chemistry ,Gas chromatography ,Nitrogen phosphorus ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A nitrogen—phosphorus detection—gas chromatographie method, which provides improved sensitivity and selectivity for diphenhydramine, is reported. A 25 m x 0.31 mm cross-linked, 5% phenylmethyl silicone-coated fused-silica capillary column (film thickness 0.52 μm) was used for all analyses. The splitless capillary injection mode was employed with a 2-μl sample being introduced by an automatic liquid sampler. Standard curves, using orphenadrine as an internal standard, were linear in the range 2–320 ng of diphenhydramine per 0.5 ml of sheep plasma. This represents an amount of diphenhydramine from ca. 40 pg to 6.4 ng at the detector. Chromatographic separation of diphenhydramine and orphenadrine was excellent, with no interference from endogenous plasma constituents. Applicability of the method was demonstrated by a placental transfer study in a chronically instrumented pregnant sheep following a 100 mg intravenous injection of diphenhydramine to the ewe.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Electron-capture determination of metoclopramdie in biological fluids using fused silica capillary columns
- Author
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James E. Axelson, J. D. E. Price, B. McErlane, R. Ongley, Dan W. Rurak, D.A. Hasman, Graham H. McMorland, M. Bylsma-Howell, and K W Riggs
- Subjects
Electron capture detector ,Chromatography ,Metoclopramide ,Electron capture ,Chemistry ,medicine ,Biological fluids ,General Chemistry ,Gas chromatography ,Selectivity ,Transport studies ,Fused silica capillary ,medicine.drug - Abstract
An electron-capture gas—liquid chromatographic assay for metoclopramide using cross-linked fused silica capillary columns which provids improved selectivity and sensitivity is reported. A 25 m × 0.31 mm fused silica capillary column was used for all analyses. Linearity was observed in the range of 4–40 ng of metoclopramide base per 0.25–0.5 ml of plasma. This represents from ca. 0.9–9.0 pg at the detector employing a split ratio of 30:1 and an injection volume of 2 μl. Applicability of the method is demostrated by the analysis of human and sheep plasma (maternal, fetal and neonatal) from metoclopramide placental transfer studies.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol and adrenal blood flow during sustained hypoxemia in fetal sheep
- Author
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Dan W. Rurak, B.S. Richardson, Mary E. Wlodek, J.E. Patrick, and J.R.G. Challis
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Hydrocortisone ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Adrenocorticotropic hormone ,Peptide hormone ,Hypoxemia ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Adrenal Glands ,Blood plasma ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoxia ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Metabolic acidosis ,Hypoxia (medical) ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Fetal Diseases ,Endocrinology ,Regional Blood Flow ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Glucocorticoid ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We examineo the effect of sustained hypoxemia with progressive acidemia on pituitary-adrenal endocrine function (adrenocorticotropic hormone, cortisol) and on adrenal blood flow in fetal sheep. Hypoxemia was induced by the maternal sheep breathing a gas mixture containing 9% oxygen, with 3% carbon dioxide added. Induced hypoxemia resulted in a progressive fetal metabolic acidosis but with little change in maternal pH. During induced hypoxemia there was little change in maternal plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone or cortisol level. Fetal adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol increased to peak values within 2.8 hours of induced hypoxia but by 7.2 hours had begun to fall to values that were not significantly different from those at 1.4 hours. Fetal adrenal blood flow (microsphere technique) also increased significantly and remained elevated throughout the duration (7.2 hours) of hypoxemia. The maximum fetal adrenal blood flow achieved during hypoxemia was significantly correlated with the basal (prehypoxemia) flow to the adrenals. We conclude that the changes in fetal adrenocorticotropic hormone, cortisol, and adrenal blood fiow seen in short-term hypoxemia are reproduced during sustained hypoxemia with acidemia. Furthermore, the noted rise in the fetal adrenocorticotropic hormone level may be an important factor contributing to the increase in adrenal blood flow during hypoxemia.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Linearity of metoclopramide kinetics at doses of 5-20 mg
- Author
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M R Wright, Dan W. Rurak, R. C. Ongley, B. McErlane, Y K Tam, James E. Axelson, John D. E. Price, and Graham H. McMorland
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Metoclopramide ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Kinetics ,Biological Availability ,Urine ,Dosage form ,Bioavailability ,Pharmacokinetics ,Oral administration ,Humans ,Medicine ,Antiemetic ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,Research Article ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The disposition of metoclopramide was studied on a four-way crossover basis in six healthy non-smoking volunteers. The linearity of kinetic parameters and absolute bioavailability of metoclopramide were examined. In contrast to previous reports, metoclopramide obeyed linear kinetics over oral doses ranging from 5 to 20 mg. The absolute bioavailability of metoclopramide was 0.76 +/- 0.38 (mean +/- s.d.) from the oral dosage forms examined in this study.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Placental Transfer of Diphenhydramine in Chronically Instrumented Pregnant Sheep
- Author
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James E. Axelson, Dan W. Rurak, S.M. Taylor, and S.D. Yoo
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Placenta ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Gestational Age ,Histamine H1 receptor ,Fetus ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Volume of distribution ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Diphenhydramine ,Total body ,medicine.disease ,Oxygen ,Kinetics ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy, Animal ,Gestation ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To study the placental transfer and pharmacokinetics of the H1 receptor blocker, diphenhydramine [2-(diphenylmethoxy)-N,N-dimethylethylamine], 100 mg of the drug was administered to four pregnant sheep (122-129 d gestation) by intravenous injection through catheters chronically implanted in the ewe and fetus. Rapid placental transfer occurred, with peak fetal plasma concentrations occurring within 5 min after injection. The fetal-maternal ratio of the area under the plasma concentration versus time curves averaged 0.85, indicating significant fetal exposure to the drug. The average apparent terminal elimination half-life in the ewe (52 min) was not significantly different from that obtained in the fetus (46 min). The maternal total body clearance was 3.6 L X h-1 X kg-1, and the volume of distribution at steady state was 3.2 L/kg. In summary, this study demonstrates rapid and extensive placental transfer of diphenhydramine after maternal drug administration. Since placental permeability to lipid-soluble compounds does not differ greatly in different species, it is likely that a similar situation exists in humans.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Drug accumulation in lung fluid of the fetal lamb after maternal or fetal administration
- Author
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K. Wayne Riggs, B. McErlane, James E. Axelson, Dan W. Rurak, S.D. Yoo, S.M. Taylor, and Graham H. McMorland
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Amniotic fluid ,Metoclopramide ,medicine.drug_class ,Excretion ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Antiemetic ,Animals ,Lung ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Fetus ,Sheep ,business.industry ,Diphenhydramine ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,respiratory system ,Body Fluids ,Trachea ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The pharmacokinetic characteristics of the antiemetic drug metoclopramide and the antihistamine diphenhydramine have been determined in a chronically catheterized pregnant sheep preparation. Metoclopramide and diphenhydramine were administered by separate maternal and fetal intravenous infusions to a steady state as well as by maternal intravenous bolus dosing. Drug concentrations in the maternal and fetal plasma and the amniotic and tracheal fluids were measured by means of capillary gas-liquid chromatographic assay techniques. Both metoclopramide and diphenhydramine were excreted into tracheal fluid in substantial quantities. Tracheal metoclopramide concentrations were found to exceed fetal plasma levels by about fifteenfold while diphenhydramine attained maximal excretion in tracheal fluid of about five times that seen in fetal plasma. Drug levels were observed to accumulate slowly in amniotic fluid and eventually to exceed tracheal concentrations. The markedly elevated concentrations of these drugs in fetal lung fluid suggests that the fetal lung may be an important route of drug distribution, elimination, and excretion. (Am J Obstet Gynecol 1987;157:1286-91.)
- Published
- 1987
37. Oxygen consumption in fetal lambs after maternal administration of sodium pentobarbital
- Author
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S.M. Taylor and Dan W. Rurak
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pentobarbital ,Cerebral metabolic rate ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Sodium pentobarbital ,Blood Pressure ,Oxygen ,Fetus ,Oxygen Consumption ,Fetal breathing movements ,Heart Rate ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Medicine ,Animals ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Skeletal muscle ,Carbon Dioxide ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Toxicity ,Gestation ,Female ,Rabbits ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To determine whether anesthesia lowers fetal oxygen consumption, sodium pentobarbital (10 mg/kg) was given intravenously to seven chronically instrumented pregnant ewes (123 to 144 days' gestation). Oxygen consumption fell by 23% in association with a rise in fetal vascular Po 2 . Fetal breathing movements were abolished for 50.5 minutes, while the number of fetal heart rate accelerations fell by 80% in the first 30 minutes after pentobarbital injection. It is concluded that anesthesia reduces fetal oxygen consumption, probably by abolishing skeletal muscle activity, and perhaps also by reducing cerebral metabolic rate.
- Published
- 1986
38. Placental transport of metoclopramide: assessment of maternal and neonatal effects
- Author
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Graham H. McMorland, M. Bylsma-Howell, K W Riggs, B. McErlane, James E. Axelson, R. Ongley, Dan W. Rurak, and J. D. E. Price
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Metoclopramide ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anesthesia, General ,Placebo ,Pneumonia, Aspiration ,Double blind study ,Double-Blind Method ,Pregnancy ,Anesthesiology ,Medicine ,Anesthesia, Obstetrical ,Humans ,General anaesthesia ,Saline ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Neurologic Examination ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Cesarean Section ,Infant, Newborn ,General Medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Plasma concentration ,Apgar Score ,Female ,Caesarian section ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Twenty-three patients undergoing general anaesthesia for Caesarian section for healthy term pregnancies were entered into a double blind study using metoclopramide (MCP) and a normal saline placebo. Of these patients, eight received intravenous metoclopramide, 12 a normal saline placebo and three were lost to clinical follow-up. The maternal gastric volumes were measured and maternal and foetal MCP plasma concentrations were determined by gas-liquid chromatography. The Neurological and Adaptive Capacity Score tests of Amiel, Barrier and Schnider (NACS) were used to attempt evaluation of neonatal responses to MCP. Maternal gastric volume was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) in the treated patients. There were no marked differences in Apgar scores, cardiovascular parameters or neurobehavioural scores between the treated and untreated groups of neonates. At no time were the foetal metoclopramide plasma concentrations observed to exceed maternal values.
- Published
- 1983
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