A comparative study of altered plasma concentration of quinidine in rats with glycerol- and cisplatin-induced acute renal failure (ARF) was conducted with quinidine used as a positively charged and liver-metabolized therapeutic compound. Although apparent total body clearance of quinidine decreased to 68 and 48% of the normal value in glycerol- and cisplatin-induced ARF rats, respectively, its distribution decreased only in glycerol-induced ARF rats. The plasma unbound fraction of quinidine decreased in glycerol-induced ARF rats, which was not observed in cisplatin-induced ARF rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeritoneal dialysis of a highly protein-bound compound, tolbutamide, was examined in rats to clarify whether the efficacy of the peritoneal dialysis of such compounds increases proportionally as their unbound fractions increase. As expected, it was shown that the tolbutamide concentration of the peritoneal dialysate rose as the unbound fraction of tolbutamide increased. However, the efficacy of peritoneal dialysis of tolbutamide was proportionally elevated only when the unbound fraction was slightly increased by sulfamethoxazole treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe frequency of decreased renal function was compared between patients treated with brand and generic products of vancomycin injection (VCM) in a retrospective manner based on the clinical examination records archived in Okayama University Hospital. A total of 122 patients were found to have been solely treated with vancomycin injection for MRSA infection, and their examination records were analyzed. The renal function of those patients was evaluated based on the serum creatinine concentration (SCr), and patients whose SCr was maximally elevated above the defined upper limit of the normal range (1.
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