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Metabolism and elimination of benzocaine by rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss

35

Citations

22

References

1991

Year

Abstract

1. Branchial and urinary elimination of benzocaine residues was evaluated in adult rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, given a single dorsal aortic dose of 14C-benzocaine hydrochloride. 2. Branchial elimination of benzocaine residues was rapid and accounted for 59.2% of the dose during the first 3 h after dosing. Renal elimination of radioactivity was considerably slower; the kidney excreted 2.7% dose within 3 h and 9.0% within 24 h. Gallbladder bile contained 2.0% dose 24 h after injection. 3. Of the radioactivity in radiochromatograms from water taken 3 min after injection, 87.3% was benzocaine and 12.7% was N-acetylated benzocaine. After 60 min, 32.7% was benzocaine and 67.3% was N-acetylated benzocaine. 4. Of the radioactivity in radiochromatograms from urine taken 1 h after dosing, 7.6% was para-aminobenzoic acid, 59.7% was N-acetylated para-aminobenzoic acid, 19.5% was benzocaine, and 8.0% was N-acetylated benzocaine. The proportion of the radioactivity in urine changed with time so that by 20 h, 1.0% was para-aminobenzoic acid and 96.6% was N-acetylated para-aminobenzoic acid. 5. Benzocaine and a more hydrophobic metabolite, N-acetylated benzocaine, were eliminated primarily through the gills; renal and biliary pathways were less significant elimination routes for benzocaine residues.

References

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