Abstract
This study investigated the feasibility of using concurrent iv administration of antipyrine (15 mg/kg body weight) and bromosulphophthalein (BSP; 25 mg/kg) in the rat. Antipyrine is used as an index of hepatic drug metabolism and BSP is used to assess hepatic blood flow. Plasma concentrations of BSP were described using biexponential phases, while antipyrine plasma concentrations were monoexponential. No significant difference was observed between antipyrine pharmacokinetic parameters in concurrent BSP rats when compared with controls. There was also no significant difference between BSP pharmacokinetic parameters in concurrent antipyrine rats when compared with controls, except in the alpha-value (P < 0.05). This indicates that BSP distribution may be affected by concurrent antipyrine administration. Therefore, simultaneous administration of both substrates is not acceptable to study hepatic blood flow. Another iv combination dose (25 mg BSP/kg body weight, followed by 15 mg antipyrine/kg 0.5 hr later) and a dose of 15 mg antipyrine/kg body weight only was administered to rats pretreated with phenobarbital (90 mg/kg body weight) for 6 days. Pharmacokinetic parameters of BSP, beta, k21, k23 and plasma clearance, in the pretreated rats were significantly different from non-pretreated rats. No significant difference was observed in the pharmacokinetic parameters of antipyrine between the combination dose and antipyrine dose in the phenobarbital-pretreated rats. The half-lives of antipyrine in both pretreated groups decreased approximately by 70%, while the clearance increased four times compared with controls. The volume of distribution in these animals did not change as a result of phenobarbital pretreatment. This suggests that a 25 mg BSP/kg body weight dose followed by 15 mg antipyrine/kg 0.5 hr later may be a feasible approach to study liver blood flow, as well as hepatic efficiency in rats.