Clin Pharmacol Ther
January 1991
The influence of cimetidine on the absorption and disposition of moclobemide was examined in eight healthy male subjects. A single 100 mg intravenous and 100 mg oral dose of moclobemide was administered before and after 2 weeks of cimetidine administration (200 mg five times a day). The data on intravenous administration indicated that cimetidine produced a statistically significant alteration in the following disposition parameters (mean values for control versus cimetidine): systemic clearance, 46.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA single intravenous and oral dose of moclobemide (Ro 11-1163) was administered to 13 subjects with varying degrees of renal impairment (creatinine clearances ranging from 0 to 40 mL/min). The resulting disposition and absorption parameters of moclobemide were more variable than but, with the exception of mean absorption time, were not significantly different from values obtained in another study conducted in 12 normal healthy subjects. There were no relationships between any of the disposition parameters and renal function as measured by creatinine clearance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1. Six lactating white women, aged 24-36 years, received a single oral dose of 300 mg moclobemide, between 09.00 h and 11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychiatr Scand Suppl
January 1991
A number of pharmacokinetics studies in which patients had been phenotyped and poor metabolizers for moclobemide found were analysed retrospectively. There were 27 subjects in all, aged between 19 and 75 years, and 5 of these were classified as poor debrisoquine metabolizers. Although there was a wide variability in the pharmacokinetic parameters observed, no consistent relationship was found between these and debrisoquine phenotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychiatr Scand Suppl
January 1991
Three different studies were conducted to assess the pharmacokinetics of moclobemide in subjects with conditions complicating dose determination. The first examined the absorption and disposition of moclobemide in an elderly population and compared these with results obtained in a group of normal young subjects. No significant differences were found between the groups in the intravenous (i.
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