A new methodology for comparative bioavailability testing is described in which each drug formulation is compared with a stable isotope-labeled variant of the drug that is consumed orally in solution at the same time the tested formulation is ingested. The methodology is used to determine the comparative bioavailabilities of two commercially available brands of imipramine hydrochloride. The power of the new methodology to detect differences between drug formulations, when, in fact, such differences exist, is shown to be superior to that of conventional bioavailability tests.
Ethylene-producing strains of Penicillium cyclopium and P. crustosum were isolated from soil. These isolates produced ethylene on a variety of carbon growth substrates including phenolic acids. The quantities of ethylene produced on the various substrates varied, and the substrate-ethylene production pattern for P. cyclopium strains differed significantly from that ofP. crustosum strains.
A quantitative method is reported for the determination of imipramine in plasma samples in the low nanogram and subnanogram range. The sensitivity and precision of the technique, which involves high pressure liquid chromatography and direct probe field ionization mass spectrometry, are approximately an order of magnitude greater than are offered by gas chromatography mass spectrometry with selected ion monitoring using deuterated or other types of internal standards. [2H6]Imipramine, labeled in the ethylene bridge and in the aromatic rings, serves as the isotopic diluent. The method has been used for the determination of the comparative bioavailabilities of two different commercial preparations of imipramine. In these tests, subjects ingested a 25 mg tablet of one or the other drug preparation together with a solution containing an equivalent amount of imipramine deuterated in the ethylene bridge ([2H2]imipramine). The latter served as an internal check for intrasubject variability in absorption of the imipramine tablets. Typical results from one of the subjects are presented.
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