The Intestinal and Biliary Metabolites of Ibuprofen in the Rat with Experimental Hyperglycemia.
Hawsar Othman MohammedAttila AlmásiSzilárd MolnárPál PerjesiPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Hyperglycemia is reported to be associated with oxidative stress. It can result in changes in the activities of drug-metabolizing enzymes and membrane-integrated transporters, which can modify the fate of drugs and other xenobiotics; furthermore, it can result in the formation of non-enzyme catalyzed oxidative metabolites. The present work aimed to investigate how experimental hyperglycemia affects the intestinal and biliary appearance of the oxidative and Phase II metabolites of ibuprofen in rats. In vivo studies were performed by luminal perfusion of 250 μM racemic ibuprofen solution in control and streptozotocin-treated (hyperglycemic) rats. Analysis of the collected intestinal perfusate and bile samples was performed by HPLC-UV and HPLC-MS. No oxidative metabolites could be detected in the perfusate samples. The biliary appearance of ibuprofen, 2-hydroxyibuprofen, ibuprofen glucuronide, hydroxylated ibuprofen glucuronide, and ibuprofen taurate was depressed in the hyperglycemic animals. However, no specific non-enzymatic (hydroxyl radical initiated) hydroxylation product could be detected. Instead, the depression of biliary excretion of ibuprofen and ibuprofen metabolites turned out to be the indicative marker of hyperglycemia. The observed changes impact the pharmacokinetics of drugs administered in hyperglycemic individuals.
Keyphrases
- ms ms
- postoperative pain
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- phase ii
- clinical trial
- mass spectrometry
- open label
- type diabetes
- dna damage
- magnetic resonance imaging
- depressive symptoms
- high fat diet
- computed tomography
- hydrogen peroxide
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- nitric oxide
- contrast enhanced
- adverse drug
- solid state
- solid phase extraction
- sleep quality
- placebo controlled