This study aimed to investigate the impact of diabetes treated or not with insulin in the enantioselective pharmacokinetics of tramadol (trans-T) and its phase 1 metabolites O-desmethyltramadol (M1) and N-desmethyltramadol (M2). The CYP2D inhibitor quinidine was used to simulate the poor metabolizer phenotype. Male Wistar rats were divided into groups: control, quinidine (80-mg/kg quinidine intraperitoneally 4 h before trans-T), diabetic (45-mg/kg STZ i.v.), diabetes + insulin (2 IU/day insulin for 12 days), diabetes + quinidine and diabetes + insulin + quinidine. All animals (n = 6, per sampling time) received 20-mg/kg trans-T orally. The kinetic disposition of trans-T is enantioselective in control with higher AUC of (+)-trans-T than for its antipode. Quinidine reduced AUC ratios (+)-M1/(+)-trans-T and (-)-M1/(-)-trans-T compared to Control. Diabetes increased plasma concentrations of (+)-trans-T, (-)-trans-T, (+)-M1, (-)-M1 and (+)-M2 compared to control, but without changing AUC ratios M1/trans-T or M2/trans-T. Insulin reverted the effect of diabetes only for (-)-trans-T. The simulated diabetes in CYP2D poor metabolizers showed reduced metabolic ratios for M1 enantiomers. In conclusion, diabetes resulted in higher plasma concentrations of the active (+)-trans-T, (-)-trans-T and (+)-M1, suggesting down-regulation of CYP3A and OCT1. The glycemic control of diabetes by insulin reduces partially the impact of diabetes on trans-T pharmacokinetics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2018.11.032DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

enantioselective pharmacokinetics
8
diabetes
8
diabetes treated
8
treated insulin
8
impact diabetes
8
auc ratios
8
compared control
8
control diabetes
8
plasma concentrations
8
+-trans-t --trans-t
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!