A series of 2-alkyl-3-hydroxy-4-pyrone oxovanadium(IV) compounds has been synthesized, characterized, and tested for bioactivity as potential insulin-enhancing agents. The vanadyl complexes, bis(maltolato)oxovanadium(IV), BMOV, bis(ethylmaltolato)oxovanadium(IV), BEOV, and bis(isopropylmaltolato)oxovanadium(IV), BIOV, were compared against vanadyl sulfate for glucose-lowering ability, when administered i.p. to STZ-diabetic rats, at a one-time dose of 0.1 mmol kg(-1)body weight. Blood levels of vanadium were determined at regular intervals, to 72 h, following i.p. injection. All complexes tested exceeded vanadyl sulfate in glucose-lowering ability; this effect was not correlated, however, with blood vanadium levels. Analysis of the pharmacokinetics of the disappearance of [ethyl-1-(14)C]BEOV after an oral gavage dose (50 mg kg(-1), 0.144 mmol kg(-1), in a 10 mL kg(-1) volume of 1% CMC solution) indicated clearly that metal ion-ligand dissociation took place relatively soon after oral ingestion of the complex. Half-lives of fast phase uptake and slow phase disappearance for (14)C and V were calculated from a two-compartment model for whole blood, plasma, liver, kidney, bone, small intestine, and lung, ranging from 17 min ( t(1/2)alpha for (14)C, liver) to 30 days ( t(1/2)beta for V, bone). Curves of disappearance of plasma and whole blood (14)C and V diverged dramatically within the first hour after administration of the vanadium complex.