Abstract
The brain levels of diazepam and its metabolites after a single iv injection of diazepam were measured over a 2-hr time period in young (3-4-month-old), mature (12-15-month-old), and senescent (29-31-month-old) male Fischer 344 rats. The areas under the brain level time curves were used as an index of exposure. Senescent rats were exposed to significantly more diazepam, N-desmethyldiazepam, and oxydiazepam between 0 and 120 min after an injection of 180 micrograms/kg of diazepam than the young or mature animals. The unbound plasma level failed to adequately account for the age-related increase in brain exposure to diazepam. Mechanisms other than the unbound diazepam in plasma are probably involved in eliciting the age-associated increase in brain levels of diazepam and its metabolites.
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