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Title: Pharmacokinetics of probenecid and the effect of oral probenecid administration on the pharmacokinetics of cefazolin in mares. Author: Donecker JM, Sams RA, Ashcraft SM. Journal: Am J Vet Res; 1986 Jan; 47(1):89-95. PubMed ID: 3946913. Abstract: The pharmacokinetics and bioavailability of probenecid given IV and orally at the dosage level of 10 mg/kg of body weight to mares were investigated. Probenecid given IV was characterized by a rapid disposition phase with a mean half-life of 14.0 minutes and a subsequent slower elimination phase with a mean half-life of 87.8 minutes in 5 of 6 mares. In the remaining mare, a rapid disposition phase was not observed, and the half-life of the elimination phase was slower (172 minutes). The mean residence time of probenecid averaged 116 minutes for all 6 mares and 89.2 minutes for the 5 mares with biphasic disposition. The total plasma clearance of probenecid averaged 1.18 +/- 0.49 ml/min/kg, whereas renal clearance accounted for 42.6 +/- 9.3% of the total clearance. The steady-state volume of distribution of probenecid averaged 116 +/- 28.2 ml/kg. Plasma protein binding of probenecid was extensive, with 99.9% of the drug bound at plasma probenecid concentrations of 10 micrograms/ml. The maximum plasma probenecid concentration after 10 mg/kg orally averaged nearly 30 micrograms/ml. The half-life of probenecid after oral administration was approximately 120 minutes. Oral bioavailability was good with greater than 90% of the dose absorbed. The effect of probenecid on tubular secretion of organic anions was evaluated by determining the pharmacokinetics of IV cefazolin (11 mg/kg) administered alone and 15 minutes after probenecid (10 mg/kg orally). Treatment with probenecid did not affect pharmacokinetic values of cefazolin. This failure of probenecid to alter the pharmacokinetics of cefazolin may be caused by insufficient plasma probenecid concentrations after the oral dose.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]