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Vol. 30, Issue 5, 586-594, May 2002
Department of Pharmaceutics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
Minnesota
The influence of enzyme localization and blood flow on intestinal
elimination was evaluated in rats. Phenol was administered vascularly
(~1400 and 2500 µg) and luminally (intrajejunal bolus doses of
~100 and 1000 µg) to the recirculating in situ perfused intestine. The portal effluent and the reservoir were sampled. The intestinal extraction ratios for phenol at the low and high vascular doses were (mean ± S.D., n = 3)
0.09 ± 0.02 and 0.11 ± 0.01, respectively. The perfusion
flow rate was also varied from 5 to 12 ml/min at a vascular dose of
~2500 µg of phenol. The organ clearance at the lowest flow rate
significantly exceeded those at the higher flow rates. The presence of
a diffusional barrier at the mucosa-serosa interface was suggested. The
calculated mean diffusional clearance of phenol was 1.11 ml/min.
Sulfation was the predominant metabolic pathway after vascular
administration of phenol. After luminal dosing, the intestinal
intrinsic clearances of phenol at the low and high doses were 7.29 ± 1.39 (n = 4) and 3.55 ± 1.16 ml/min
(n = 3), respectively, indicating saturation at the
higher dose. Moreover, there was a decrease in the area under the curve
ratio (metabolite/phenol) at the high luminal dose. Luminal
administration, in general, produced greater glucuronidation. These
data and STELLA simulations suggest that enzyme localization at both
the cellular and tissue levels has a significant influence on
intestinal metabolism.
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