69 research outputs found

    Human physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for ACE inhibitors: ramipril and ramiprilat

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    BACKGROUND: The angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have complicated and poorly characterized pharmacokinetics. There are two binding sites per ACE (high affinity "C", lower affinity "N") that have sub-nanomolar affinities and dissociation rates of hours. Most inhibitors are given orally in a prodrug form that is systemically converted to the active form. This paper describes the first human physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model of this drug class. METHODS: The model was applied to the experimental data of van Griensven et. al for the pharmacokinetics of ramiprilat and its prodrug ramipril. It describes the time course of the inhibition of the N and C ACE sites in plasma and the different tissues. The model includes: 1) two independent ACE binding sites; 2) non-equilibrium time dependent binding; 3) liver and kidney ramipril intracellular uptake, conversion to ramiprilat and extrusion from the cell; 4) intestinal ramipril absorption. The experimental in vitro ramiprilat/ACE binding kinetics at 4°C and 300 mM NaCl were assumed for most of the PBPK calculations. The model was incorporated into the freely distributed PBPK program PKQuest. RESULTS: The PBPK model provides an accurate description of the individual variation of the plasma ramipril and ramiprilat and the ramiprilat renal clearance following IV ramiprilat and IV and oral ramipril. Summary of model features: Less than 2% of total body ACE is in plasma; 35% of the oral dose is absorbed; 75% of the ramipril metabolism is hepatic and 25% of this is converted to systemic ramiprilat; 100% of renal ramipril metabolism is converted to systemic ramiprilat. The inhibition was long lasting, with 80% of the C site and 33% of the N site inhibited 24 hours following a 2.5 mg oral ramipril dose. The plasma ACE inhibition determined by the standard assay is significantly less than the true in vivo inhibition because of assay dilution. CONCLUSION: If the in vitro plasma binding kinetics of the ACE inhibitor for the two binding sites are known, a unique PBPK model description of the Griensven et. al. experimental data can be obtained

    Drug Treatment of Hypertension: Focus on Vascular Health

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    Interstitial insulin concentrations determine glucose uptake rates but not insulin resistance in lean and obese men.

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    Insulin action and obesity are both correlated with the density of muscle capillary supply in humans. Since the altered muscle anatomy in the obese might affect interstitial insulin concentrations and reduce insulin action, we have cannulated peripheral lymphatic vessels in lean and obese males, and compared peripheral lymph insulin concentrations with whole body glucose uptake during a euglycemic, hyperinsulinemic clamp. Lymph insulin concentrations in the lower limb averaged only 34% of arterial insulin concentrations during 150 min of insulin infusion. Obese subjects had the highest arterial (P < or = 0.0001) and lymph insulin (P < 0.005) concentrations, but the lowest glucose uptake rates (P < 0.002). In contrast to the initial steep rise then plateau of arterial insulins, both lymph insulin and whole body glucose uptake rates rose slowly and did not consistently reach a plateau. In each individual, the glucose uptake closely correlated with peripheral lymphatic insulin concentrations (mean r2 = 0.95). The coupling between glucose uptake and lymph insulin (glucose uptake/pmol insulin) was much steeper in lean subjects than in the obese (P < or = 0.0001). These results indicate that even if insulin diffusion into tissues is rate limiting for insulin action, a tissue defect rather than an insulin diffusion defect causes insulin resistance in obese subjects
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