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Vol. 30, Issue 6, 676-683, June 2002
Laboratory of Computational Biology and Risk Analysis, National
Institute of Environmental Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North
Carolina
A biologically based mathematical model was created to characterize
time and dose-dependent relationships between exposure to nitrite and
induction of methemoglobinemia. The model includes mass action
equations for processes known to occur: oral absorption of nitrite,
elimination from the plasma, partitioning between plasma and
erythrocytes, binding of nitrite to hemoglobin and methemoglobin, and
the free radical chain reaction for hemoglobin oxidation. The model
also includes Michaelis-Menten kinetics for methemoglobin
reductase-catalyzed regeneration of hemoglobin. Body weight-scaled rate
constants for absorption (ka) and
elimination (ke), the effective
erythrocyte/plasma partition coefficient (P), and the
apparent Km for methemoglobin reductase were
the only parameters estimated by formal optimization to reproduce the
observed time course data. Time courses of plasma nitrite
concentrations and blood levels of hemoglobin and methemoglobin in male
and female rats that had received single intravenous or oral doses of
sodium nitrite were measured. Peak plasma levels of nitrite were
achieved in both sexes approximately 30 min after oral exposure, and
peak methemoglobin levels were achieved after 100 min. The model
predicts that 10% of the hemoglobin is oxidized to the ferric form
after oral doses of 15.9 mg/kg in male rats and 11.0 mg/kg in female rats and after intravenous doses of 8.9 and 7.1 mg/kg in male and
female rats, respectively. The t1/2 for
recovery from methemoglobinemia was 60 to 120 min depending on dose and
route of administration. A sensitivity analysis of the model was
performed to identify to which parameters the predictions of the model
were most sensitive and guide attempts to simplify the model.
Replacement of the Vmax of methemoglobin
reductase with a value representative of humans predicted a 10%
methemoglobinemia following an intravenous dose of 5.8 mg/kg, in close
agreement with an observed value of 5.7 mg/kg for humans.
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