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

Pharmacokinetics of thymoxamine in rabbits after ophthalmic and intravenous administration.

The pharmacokinetics of thymoxamine hydrochloride were studied in rabbits by the assessment of its ocular and systemic absorption after instillation of thymoxamine hydrochloride 0.5% eye drops. Plasma levels were compared with those observed after i.v. bolus administration of thymoxamine hydrochloride at 2.5 mg/kg. Deacetylthymoxamine is the main metabolite of thymoxamine, generated by esterase hydrolysis. It was evaluated, as an indication of the parent drug, in aqueous humor and plasma by an HPLC method with fluorescence detection (detection limit = 5 ng/ml). Thymoxamine was found to permeate the cornea and to be hydrolysed very quickly, showing very good absorption with a maximum aqueous humor concentration of deacetylthymoxamine of 2329 ng/ml 15 min after eye drop instillation. The study of the systemic absorption of thymoxamine allowed the exclusion of the possibility of systemic side effects following ocular treatment. In fact, considering the detection limit of the method, the plasma levels of deacetylthymoxamine are certainly more than 100-times lower than those observed with intravenous treatment.[1]

References

  1. Pharmacokinetics of thymoxamine in rabbits after ophthalmic and intravenous administration. Aldana, I., González-Peñas, E., Fos, D., Bruseghini, L., Esteras, A., Ceppi Monti, N., Gianesello, V. European journal of drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics. (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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