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Title: Disposition kinetics of ketamine in the domestic cat. Author: Baggot JD, Blake JW. Journal: Arch Int Pharmacodyn Ther; 1976 Mar; 220(1):115-24. PubMed ID: 952572. Abstract: The disposition kinetics and systemic availability of ketamine, a dissociative anaesthetic agent, was studied in normal domestic cats. A similar dose (25 mg/kg) of ketamine hydrochloride was administered by the i.v. and i.m. routes; drug concentrations in plasma were measured by a gas-liquid chromatographic procedure. A rapid distribution phase (t1/2 (alpha) = 3 min) was followed by a slower first-order elimination phase. The half-life of the drug (66.9 +/- 24.1 min) was independent of the route of parenteral administration. Absorption from i.m. site of administration was rapid, with peak plasma level at 10 min, and ca. 92 per cent of the dose was available systemically. Extent of plasma protein binding, measured in vitro at 5 and 20 mug/ml by equilibrium dialysis technique, was 53 per cent and independent of ketamine concentration. Simulated plasma and tissue level curves, which were generated by an analogue computer programmed with the individual rate constants of the two-compartment open model, showed that 10 and 15 per cent of the dose were present in the central and peripheral compartments, respectively, at 90 min after i.v. administration of the drug. Peak tissue level of 42 per cent of the dose was reached at 12 to 15 min. Parenteral administration of ketamine, at the dosage rate studied, quickly produced an immobilizing effect of variable duration (0.75 to 1.75 hr) in normal cats.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]