The dose-dependent pharmacokinetics and the efficacy of MK-401 (4-amino-6-trichloroethenyl-1,3-benzenedisulfonamide) against old and young-mature infections of Fasciola hepatica were studied in experimentally infected rats. Fractionation of the host's blood after administration of 14C-MK-401 (0.77-15.8 mg/kg) showed that MK-401 was bound predominately to erythrocytes at doses below 4 mg/kg and at higher doses was distributed equally between the red cells and the plasma. Maximum amounts of MK-401 in the blood occurred 2 to 4 hr postadministration and were a hyperbolic function of dose, increasing almost linearly with dose up to 6 mg/kg and then beginning to saturate. Drug uptake by F. hepatica occurred at all doses and increased in direct proportion to the blood level. A single oral dose of MK-401 at 5 mg/kg was found to be highly effective (89%) against older infections (39-44 wk) but was virtually ineffective (1.5%) against younger flukes (9-16 wk). After administration of 14C-MK-401 at 5 mg/kg, drug concentrations in the blood and flukes of rats harboring older infections were significantly higher than those in the blood and flukes of rats with younger infections. Virtually identical differences in the blood level of MK-401 were observed in young and in old, noninfected rats after administration of 14C-MK-401 at 5 mg/kg. The increased efficacy of MK-401 against older infections of F. hepatica in the rat may be related to the age of the host rather than the parasite.
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