Pentisomide, 2-(2-diisopropylaminoethyl)-4-methyl-2-(pyridyl)- pentanamide, is a novel antiarrhythmic agent structurally related to disopyramide. Using a glass bead arrhythmic model, the authors studied the antiarrhythmic effect of pentisomide in dogs by monitoring the plasma concentrations. When pentisomide was infused at 1 mg/kg/min for 20 min, the ventricular tachycardia was significantly reduced at 5 min after starting the infusion; the arrhythmias were reduced to less than 5% at the end of the 20 min infusion. The plasma-free concentration of pentisomide was about 3 micrograms/ml at 5 min; it increased to about 10 micrograms/ml at the end of 20 min infusion. With 0.3 mg/kg/min infusion, the arrhythmias were reduced to about 60% but were not significant at 20 min of infusion. The plasma-free concentration of pentisomide did not reach 3 micrograms/ml until 20 min of infusion. The 3 micrograms/ml plasma-free concentration for pentisomide seems to be a critical concentration in inducing a significant antiarrhythmic effect. Pentisomide dose-dependently inhibited ischaemia-reperfusion arrhythmia at doses of 30 microM and higher concentrations in vitro. In conclusion, pentisomide inhibits arrhythmias dependent with the plasma concentration or with the concentration of the external solution. The critical plasma-free concentration for inhibition of arrhythmias was 3 micrograms/ml (not equal to 10 microM) and the in vitro effect also had a similar concentration. Therefore, the in vivo and in vitro antiarrhythmic concentrations were well correlated.
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Drugs Exp Clin Res
January 1996
Pharmaceutical Research Centre, Meiji Seika Kaisha Ltd., Yokohama, Japan.
Fundam Clin Pharmacol
April 1995
Service de Pharmacologie Clinique, EA DRED 525, CHU Pellegrin & Université de Bordeaux 2, France.
The pharmacokinetics of penticainide, a class Ic antiarrhythmic drug, was studied in 16 healthy adults (eight males and eight females) after a single 300-mg oral dose in fasting conditions and with a standard meal. Penticainide concentrations in plasma and urine were measured by hplc. The pharmacokinetic parameters of penticainide including Cmax, tmax, AUC and t1/2 were not significantly altered in the presence of food.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cardiovasc Pharmacol
May 1992
Department of Pharmacology, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan.
The interactions of the class I antiarrhythmic agents, disopyramide, pirmenol, and pentisomide with peripheral muscarinic receptors were investigated by binding assay with [3H]N-methylscopolamine ([3H]NMS) as a ligand. All the agents inhibited the specific [3H]NMS binding to membrane preparations obtained from guinea pig submandibular gland (SG) and urinary bladder (UB) smooth muscle. The competition curves of these agents for [3H]NMS binding to SG membranes were monophasic, indicating competition with [3H]NMS at a single site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cardiovasc Pharmacol
January 1992
Department of Pharmacology, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Japan.
Voltage-dependent modification of Vmax (the maximum upstroke velocity of the action potential) recovery from use-dependent block (UDB) by pirmenol was examined and compared with those observed with other Class I drugs using standard microelectrode techniques. A partial depolarization of the resting membrane by increasing extracellular potassium concentration ([K+]o) from 4 to 8 mM potentiated UDB at 2 Hz stimulation by any of the following drugs: pirmenol (10 microM), disopyramide (20 microM), pentisomide (50 microM), quinidine (20 microM), mexiletine (30 microM), and flecainide (5 microM). The recovery time constants from UDB of quinidine and mexiletine were prolonged and that of flecainide was unchanged in 8 mM [K+]o.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHokkaido Igaku Zasshi
September 1991
Department of Pharmacology, Hokkaido University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan.
The interactions of the antiarrhythmic agents, disopyramide (D) and its congeners, pirmenol (Pr) and pentisomide (Pt), with peripheral muscarinic receptors (m-AchR) were investigated using binding and functional assays. D, Pr and Pt inhibited the specific binding of [3H]-N-methyl scopolamine ([3H]-NMS) to membrane fractions prepared from guinea pig left atria (LA), submandibular glands (SG) and urinary bladders (UB) in a concentration-dependent manner. Computer-assisted analysis showed that the displacement curves with D obtained from LA and UB were shallow and best fitted by a two-site model, whereas D interacted with a single class of binding sites in SG.
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