1. Academic Validation
  2. The disposition and metabolism of the synthetic prostaglandin fluprostenol (ICI 81,008) in the horse

The disposition and metabolism of the synthetic prostaglandin fluprostenol (ICI 81,008) in the horse

  • Xenobiotica. 1980 Sep;10(9):715-23. doi: 10.3109/00498258009108378.
D I Chapman M S Moss P W Tomlinson M P Harrison P J Simmons
Abstract

1. Following single intramuscular doses of [14C]fluprostenol (0.5--2.4 micrograms/kg) to three female horses and to three gelded male horses, radioactivity was present in the plasma within 5 min; peak concn. (0.32--1.30 ng/ml fluprostenol equiv.) occurred 5 to 90 min after injection. Radioactivity was still present in the plasma of the females after three days. About 88% of fluprostenol is bound to plasma proteins. 2. Radioactivity was present in the parotid saliva of the gelded male horses within 10 min. Peak concn. (45--91 pg/ml fluprostenol equiv.) occurred from 5 min to 1 h after injection. Saliva : plasma concn. ratios varied inversely with saliva flow rate and limiting ratios were 0.33 and 0.41 for the combined results of two experiments on each of two male horses; the calculated value is 0.46 Chromatography indicated that the majority of plasma and saliva radioactivity was [14C]fluprostenol. 3. Excretion of radioactivity in the urine was rapid and virtually complete 12 h after dosing. The total radioactivity excreted in urine by the female horses was 45% of the dose (96 h) and by the gelded male horses 53% (30 h). About 30% of the radioactivity present in the urines was unchanged fluprostenol. 4. Faecal excretion, which was substantially complete after 2 days, accounted for 32% of the radioactivity administered to the female horses. 5. Tissue conc. of radioactivity in the female horses at four days were below the limits of detection (90 pg/g), but 0.2--0.9% of the dose was detected at the site of injection.

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