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Glucuronidation of Amitriptyline in Man<i>in Vivo</i>

23

Citations

11

References

1989

Year

Abstract

The urinary excretion of amitriptyline (AT) as N-glucuronide was studied in healthy volunteers after single oral doses of AT and in patients on continuous treatment with AT. In the volunteers, 8 +/- 3% of a 25 mg dose of AT was recovered in urine as glucuronide during 108 hr. No difference between slow and rapid debrisoquine hydroxylators with respect to the excretion of AT glucuronide was seen. 0.08 to 1.68% of the given AT dose was recovered in urine in unchanged form. The excretion of unchanged AT correlated with the debrisoquine metabolic ratio (rs = 0.61; p less than 0.01). In 5 patients on continuous treatment with AT (125-150 mg/day), 8 +/- 5% of the daily dose was recovered in 24-hr urine as AT glucuronide. The present study shows that direct glucuronidation is a minor metabolic pathway of AT in man in vivo both after single low doses and during continuous treatment with therapeutic doses.

References

YearCitations

1977

155

1988

132

1973

87

1986

81

1980

56

1983

51

1972

49

1982

38

1987

28

1988

21

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