In order to evaluate rectal administration of salbutamol (SB), five healthy volunteers were dosed orally and rectally with racemic SB (0.1 mg/kg) solution. Compared with the oral SB, the rectal SB gave significantly higher serum SB concentration immediately after dosing but slightly lower levels in the elimination phase. The Cmax following rectal administration was 17.9 ng/ml (17.0 ng/ml for oral administration), the tmax 0.67 h (1.5 h for oral administration) and the AUC 98.2 ng/ml/h (100 ng/ml/h for oral administration). Heart rate also rose more rapidly to a maximum of 70% above baseline values after rectal dosing. The rate continued to be twice larger than after oral dosing for up to 5 h. The concentration versus response curves indicated that rectal SB was more effective than oral SB at increasing heart rate at the same SB concentration in serum. A plausible explanation for this phenomenon might be a difference in the stereo-selective first-pass metabolism of the two enantiomers. Therefore, the rectal dose of SB administered as a suppository for prophylactic treatment of asthma should be lower than that used orally.
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