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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Disposition of [14C]aztreonam in rats, dogs, and monkeys.

[14C]aztreonam was administered as single 25-mg/kg doses to dogs (intravenously and subcutaneously) and monkeys (intramuscularly and intravenously) and as single 50-mg/kg doses (intramuscularly and intravenously) to rats. In rats and dogs, radioactive moieties were excreted primarily in urine; in monkeys, they were excreted about equally in urine and feces. Unchanged aztreonam accounted for 77 to 86% of the radioactivity excreted in the urine of rats, dogs, and monkeys; SQ 26,992, the metabolite resulting from hydrolysis of the monobactam ring, accounted for 10 to 15%; and minor, unidentified metabolites accounted for the remainder. In rats with cannulated bile ducts, about 15% of an intramuscular dose was excreted in bile in 24 h; the bile contained a greater percentage of metabolites than that found in urine. In dogs, the apparent elimination half-life of aztreonam in serum was 0.7 h after intravenous administration. Aztreonam and SQ 26,992 accounted for most of the radioactivity in the sera of dogs and monkeys. Serum protein binding of aztreonam and its metabolites ranged from 28 to 35% in dogs and from 49 to 59% in monkeys. In the three species studied, aztreonam was most extensively metabolized in monkeys; SQ 26,992 and other minor metabolites from monkey urine were tested and found to be devoid of any significant antimicrobial activity.[1]

References

  1. Disposition of [14C]aztreonam in rats, dogs, and monkeys. Kripalani, K.J., Singhvi, S.M., Weinstein, S.H., Everett, D.W., Bathala, M.S., Dean, A.V., Ita, C.E., Lawrence, L., Meeker, F.S., Shaw, J.M. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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