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Title: Furazolidone disposition after intravascular and oral dosing in the channel catfish. Author: Plakas SM, el Said KR, Stehly GR. Journal: Xenobiotica; 1994 Nov; 24(11):1095-105. PubMed ID: 7701851. Abstract: 1. The pharmacokinetics, tissue distribution and excretion of the nitrofuran drug furazolidone have been examined in the channel catfish. [14C]Furazolidone was administered by intravascular or oral routes in a single dosage of 1 mg/kg body weight. 2. A two-compartment pharmacokinetic model best described parent furazolidone concentrations in the plasma after intravascular dosing. Elimination of parent compound was extremely rapid, with a terminal half-life of 0.27h and total body clearance of 1901 ml/h/kg. 3. After oral dosing, furazolidone concentrations in the plasma were highest at 1 h and were below the limit of determination (< 20 ng/ml) at 5 h. The oral bioavailability of parent furazolidone administered in solution was 58%, compared with 28% in a feed mixture. 4. Concentrations of furazolidone and its metabolites were highest in the excretory tissues and lowest in the muscle after oral dosing. Parent furazolidone comprised 10% of the total 14C in the muscle at 8 h and was not detectable (< 1 ng/g) at 24 h; total 14C concentrations declined from 274 to 59 ng furazolidone equiv./g between 8 and 168 h. Non-extractable (bound) residues comprised 18% of total 14C in muscle at 8 h and 33% at 168h. 5. Renal excretion was the primary route of elimination of 14C residues and accounted for nearly 55% of the oral dose.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]