The first-dose pharmacokinetics of pentamidine were studied in patients with AIDS. Pentamidine isethionate (4 mg/kg) was administered intramuscularly or intravenously to two groups of six patients each. Serial plasma and urine concentrations were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography, which is accurate and precise (sensitivity limits, 2.29 ng/ml in plasma and 229 ng/ml in urine). The mean peak concentrations in plasma after intramuscular and intravenous administration were 209 ng/ml and 612 ng/ml, respectively. Plasma concentrations, which declined biexponentially, were detectable throughout the 24-hr dosing interval and fell to less than 25 ng/ml after 8 hr. The mean plasma clearance, elimination half-life, apparent volume of distribution, and apparent volume at steady state for intramuscularly treated patients were 305 liters/hr, 9.36 hr, 924 liters, and 2,724 liters, respectively; these parameters for intravenously treated patients were 248 liters/hr, 6.40 hr, 140 liters, and 821 liters, respectively. Renal clearance of pentamidine was 5.0% of the plasma clearance for intramuscularly treated patients and 2.5% for intravenously treated patients. We found significant differences in the pharmacokinetic parameters between intramuscularly and intravenously treated patients.
Bites and contact abrasions from sea lions and harbor seals are reported infrequently in open-water swimmers and typically involve the lower extremities. Because of the risk of Mycoplasma infection, treatment with a tetracycline is recommended in pinniped bites with signs of infection or serious trauma. Attempting to touch or pet sea lions or seals is inadvisable and prohibited by the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Swimmers should leave the water as soon as possible after a bite or encounter.
The pharmacokinetics of multiple-dose administration of cefonicid to patients with normal and impaired renal function were studied by using high-performance liquid chromatography to measure serial serum and urine concentrations. Eighteen patients received an initial dose of 15 mg/kg intravenously over 12 min plus two or three subsequent modified doses at intervals of 24 to 72 h, depending upon the degree of renal impairment. Six patients chronically requiring hemodialysis and 12 nondialysis subjects (creatinine clearance, 10 to 80 ml/min per 1.73 m2) were studied. The concentrations of cefonicid in serum after the initial dose were best described by an open two-compartment model. The elimination half-life of cefonicid ranged between 5.5 and 84.9 h. Mean peak and trough concentrations in serum for all patients were 178.2 + 29.3 ,ug/ml (plus or minus standard deviation) and 39.0 + 17.5 uLg/ml, respectively. Trough concentrations were higher in patients requiring hemodialysis than in nondialysis subjects, but the difference was clinically insignificant. The renal clearance/plasma clearance ratio of cefonicid was linearly related to creatinine clearance and decreased with impaired renal function. Therefore, nonrenal mechanisms of elimination become more important as renal function declines. Since cefonicid concentrations were within the therapeutic range for nearly all dosing intervals, we conclude that the guidelines used for dosage reduction and interval prolongation in this study result in therapeutically adequate concentrations in serum and, at the same time, result in no significant drug accumulation.
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