The pharmacokinetics of the anti-inflammatory drug benzydamine were determined after intravenous infusion of 5 mg to six healthy male subjects. Benzydamine was characterized as a drug of relatively low systemic clearance (ca. 160 ml min-1) but high volume of distribution (ca. 1101); the apparent terminal half-life in plasma was ca. 8 h. Benzydamine was well absorbed after oral administration, as indicated by a mean systemic availability of 87 per cent. However, absorption of the drug was low (less than 10 per cent of the dose) after its use by male subjects as a mouthwash, or after its application to female subjects as dermal cream and vaginal douche preparations. The data suggest that benzydamine is generally not well absorbed through the skin and non-specialized mucosae, thereby limiting unrequired systemic exposure to this drug when it is used by these routes.
The pharmacokinetics of lonidamine has been studied in cancer patients after single and chronic oral administrations. After single administration the plasma kinetics are highly variable, while the dose eliminated in the urine is over 70% in all subjects. This suggests an active but interindividually variable first-pass effect. After repeated administrations, both the residual plasma concentration before administration () and that obtained after drug intake () have been studied. The values range from 4.5 to 25 µg/ml and values from 0.4 to 7 µg/ml. In patients where a therapeutic response was noted, a mean value of 2.98 Hg/ml for C^?n was measured. In patients unresponsive to drug therapy the mean was 1.5 µg/ml.
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