Search results for "Absorption"

showing 10 items of 2701 documents

Ruthenium red staining of polyanion containing structures in sections from epoxy-resin embedded tissues

1984

Summary Staining by ruthenium red (0.5 mg/ml in borate buffer at pH = 9.2) has been used for light and electron microscopic visualization of polyanion containing structures in sections from glutaraldehyde-fixed, epoxy-embedded tissues. This staining technique can be applied in a simple and rapid way, showing the reactive cell components with suitable resolution and contrast. Preliminary spectrophotometric studies show the correspondence in absorption characteristics of the dye which is bound to polyanions in situ or in vitro .

MaleIn situRuthenium redHistologyStaining techniqueRutheniumSalivary GlandsMicechemistry.chemical_compoundTongueBone MarrowTestisAnimalsIntestine LargeGlycosaminoglycansStaining and LabelingEpoxy ResinsUterusResolution (electron density)Cell BiologyGeneral MedicineEpoxyRuthenium RedRatsStainingMicroscopy ElectronBiochemistrychemistrySpectrophotometryBORATE BUFFERvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumDrosophilaFemaleAbsorption (chemistry)Nuclear chemistryActa Histochemica
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Ion Pairing with Bile Salts Modulates Intestinal Permeability and Contributes to Food–Drug Interaction of BCS Class III Compound Trospium Chloride

2013

In the current study the involvement of ion pair formation between bile salts and trospium chloride (TC), a positively charged Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS) class III substance, showing a decrease in bioavailability upon coadministration with food (negative food effect) was investigated. Isothermal titration calorimetry provided evidence of a reaction between TC and bile acids. An effect of ion pair formation on the apparent partition coefficient (APC) was examined using (3)H-trospium. The addition of bovine bile and bile extract porcine led to a significant increase of the APC. In vitro permeability studies of trospium were performed across Caco-2-monolayers and excised seg…

MaleMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyNortropanesPharmaceutical ScienceBenzilatesBile Acids and SaltsFood-Drug InteractionsGlycochenodeoxycholic AcidDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansRats WistarTaurodeoxycholic AcidChromatographyUssing chamberTrospium chlorideChemistryIsothermal titration calorimetryPermeationDrug interactionRatsBioavailabilityIntestinal AbsorptionCaco-2Permeability (electromagnetism)Molecular MedicineCattleCaco-2 Cellsmedicine.drugMolecular Pharmaceutics
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Glucose/galactose malabsorption caused by a defect in the Na+/glucose cotransporter.

1991

Glucose/galactose malabsorption (GGM) is an autosomal recessive disease manifesting within the first weeks of life and characterized by a selective failure to absorb dietary glucose and galactose from the intestine. The consequent severe diarrhoea and dehydration are usually fatal unless these sugars are eliminated from the diet. Intestinal biopsies of GGM patients have revealed a specific defect in Na(+)-dependent absorption of glucose in the brush border. Normal glucose absorption is mediated by the Na+/glucose cotransporter in the brush border membrane of the intestinal epithelium. Cellular influx is driven by the transmembrane Na+ electrochemical potential gradient; thereafter the sugar…

MaleModels MolecularBrush borderMonosaccharide Transport ProteinsProtein ConformationMolecular Sequence DataCarbohydrate metabolismPolymerase Chain Reactionchemistry.chemical_compoundMalabsorption SyndromesReference ValuesmedicineHumansMultidisciplinarySLC5A1biologyBase SequenceGlucose transporterGalactoseDNACarbohydratemedicine.diseaseMolecular biologyAntisense Elements (Genetics)GlucosechemistryBiochemistryGlucose-galactose malabsorptionGalactoseChild PreschoolMutationbiology.proteinFemaleCotransporterOligonucleotide ProbesNature
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Near fatal percutaneous paraquat poisoning

1983

A fatal paraquat poisoning can occur when relatively large areas of skin are contaminated with a concentrated solution of paraquat (Gramoxone). A paraquat absorption takes place of the same magnitude as that with an equal dose per os. In the presence of mechanical or chemical lesion of the skin the percutaneous paraquat absorption is distinctly enhanced.

MaleParaquatinorganic chemicalsTime FactorsPercutaneousAccident preventionSkin AbsorptionPoison controlAbsorption (skin)LesionNecrosischemistry.chemical_compoundParaquatDrug DiscoveryAnimalsHumansMedicineheterocyclic compoundsGenetics (clinical)Skinintegumentary systembusiness.industryRats Inbred StrainsGeneral MedicinePARAQUAT POISONINGRatschemistryAccidents HomeChild PreschoolAnesthesiaMolecular MedicineDermal toxicityFemalemedicine.symptombusinessKlinische Wochenschrift
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Simultaneous controlled iontophoretic delivery of pramipexole and rasagiline in vitro and in vivo: Transdermal polypharmacy to treat Parkinson's dise…

2018

[EN] Effective treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD) involves administration of therapeutic agents with complementary mechanisms of action in order to replenish, sustain or substitute endogenous dopamine. The objective of this study was to investigate anodal co-iontophoresis of pramipexole (PRAM; dopamine agonist) and rasagiline (RAS; MAO-B inhibitor) in vitro and in vivo. Passive permeation of PRAM and RAS (20 mM each) across porcine skin after 6 h was 15.7 +/- 1.9 and 16.0 +/- 2.9 mu g/cm(2), respectively. Co-iontophoresis at 0.15, 0.3 and 0.5 mA/cm(2) resulted in statistically significant increases in delivery of PRAM and RAS; at 0.5 mA/cm(2), cumulative permeation of PRAM and RAS was 61…

MaleParkinson's diseaseSwineChemistry PharmaceuticalSkin AbsorptionPharmaceutical SciencePharmacologyAdministration Cutaneous030226 pharmacology & pharmacyDopamine agonistPermeability03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinePramipexolePharmacokineticsIn vivomedicineAnimalsHumansBenzothiazolesMAO-B inhibitorRats WistarTransdermalSkinRasagilinePramipexoleIontophoresisDopamine agonistPatient complianceParkinson DiseaseGeneral MedicineIontophoresismedicine.diseaseRatschemistryIndansPolypharmacyElectroosmosisTransdermal030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiotechnologymedicine.drugEuropean journal of pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics : official journal of Arbeitsgemeinschaft fur Pharmazeutische Verfahrenstechnik e.V
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Growth charts of Down syndrome in Sicily: evaluation of 382 children 0-14 years of age.

2005

We present the results of a study performed on a Sicilian population of children with Down syndrome (DS) 0–14 years of age, observed between 1977 and 1988. Data from the present report concern 382 subjects with nonmosaic 21 trisomy, including 239 males (62.6%) and 143 females (37.4%). We excluded all DS children observed in the same period with associated pathology (congenital heart defects, gastrointestinal malformations, malabsorption, hypothyroidism, and thalassemia). Overall, 1,464 measurements were performed of length or height, weight, and head circumference. Means and standard deviation (SD) were calculated for all of these parameters. Our data confirm a trend toward a progressive im…

MalePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyDown syndromeMalabsorptionAdolescentThalassemiaPopulationAneuploidyGrowthBiologymedicineHumanseducationChildSicilyGenetics (clinical)Geneticseducation.field_of_studyInfant NewbornInfantmedicine.diseaseBody HeightEl NiñoChild PreschoolFemaleDown SyndromeTrisomyGastrointestinal malformationsAmerican journal of medical genetics. Supplement
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Steatocrit test: Normal range and physiological variations in infants

1990

In order to define the normal values of steatocrit during the first 3 months of life and the normal correlation between fecal fat content and steatocrit values, 60 full-term healthy unweaned infants (30 bottle-fed, 15 breast-fed, and 15 mixed-fed) were studied. The steatocrit micromethod was performed in these babies at 7, 14, 21, 28, 45, and 90 days after birth. Steatorrhea often occurs during the first month and then decreases, as shown by the fall in the steatocrit curve from 7th to 28th day in our subjects; at 45 days, few babies have steatorrhea. The 90th percentile profile of steatocrit values shows a value of 25% at the first week of life and a value of 13% at the fourth week. After …

MalePercentileFat contentPhysiologyNormal valuesFat absorptionFatsFecesReference ValuesAnimalsHumansMedicineNormal rangebusiness.industryFeces analysisInfant NewbornGastroenterologyInfantDietRatsSteatorrheaCeliac DiseaseReference valuesPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalemedicine.symptombusiness
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The effects of three absorption-modifying critical excipients on the in vivo intestinal absorption of six model compounds in rats and dogs.

2018

Pharmaceutical excipients that may affect gastrointestinal (GI) drug absorption are called critical pharmaceutical excipients, or absorption-modifying excipients (AMEs) if they act by altering the integrity of the intestinal epithelial cell membrane. Some of these excipients increase intestinal permeability, and subsequently the absorption and bioavailability of the drug. This could have implications for both the assessment of bioequivalence and the efficacy of the absorption-enhancing drug delivery system. The absorption-enhancing effects of AMEs with different mechanisms (chitosan, sodium caprate, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)) have previously been evaluated in the rat single-pass intestin…

MalePharmaceutical ScienceExcipientBiological Availability02 engineering and technologyBioequivalencePharmacology030226 pharmacology & pharmacyIntestinal absorptionPermeabilityExcipients03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDogsIn vivomedicineAnimalsPharmaceutical sciencesIntestinal MucosaChitosanIntestinal permeabilityChemistrySodium Dodecyl Sulfate021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologymedicine.diseaseBioavailabilityRatsIntestinesIntestinal AbsorptionPharmaceutical PreparationsDrug delivery0210 nano-technologyDecanoic Acidsmedicine.drugInternational journal of pharmaceutics
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Non-linear Intestinal Absorption Kinetics of Cefadroxil in the Rat

1989

Abstract Absorption of Cefadroxil in a selective intestinal absorption area (the proximal third of the small intestine) of the anaesthetized rat, at seven initial perfusion concentrations, ranging from 0·01 to 10·0 mg mL−1, is shown to be a non-linear transport mechanism. With the aid of computer-fitting procedures based on differential and integrated forms of Michaelis-Menten equation, Vm and Km values of 36·7–37·3 mg h−1 and 12·0–13·0 mg, respectively, were found. The statistical parameters were better than those obtained both for first-order and for combined Michaelis-Menten and first-order kinetics. There is no evidence for substantial passive diffusion processes. The results reported h…

MalePharmacologyAbsorption (pharmacology)ChromatographyChemistryDiffusionKineticsCefadroxilPharmaceutical ScienceRats Inbred StrainsIntestinal absorptionSmall intestineRatsPerfusionmedicine.anatomical_structureIntestinal AbsorptionPharmacokineticsBiochemistryIntestine SmallCefadroxilmedicineAnimalsPerfusionmedicine.drugJournal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology
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Use of nonlinear mixed effect modeling for the intestinal absorption data: application to ritonavir in the rat.

2005

The aim of this study is to investigate in situ the mechanisms involved in the gastrointestinal absorption of ritonavir in the rat, as an animal model for preclinical studies of anti-HIV agents in vivo. Four ritonavir solutions (40, 27, 13 and 7 microM) in the presence of 1% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) were perfused in the small intestine of anaesthetised rats. Effects of DMSO on the intestinal permeability were investigated using solutions containing antipyrine 1.33 mM and ritonavir 7 microM with and without 1% of DMSO. Antipyrine and ritonavir transport was not modified in the presence of 1% of DMSO. The population pharmacokinetic parameters of the ritonavir intestinal transport were obtaine…

MalePopulationPharmaceutical ScienceAbsorption (skin)PharmacologyIntestinal absorptionPharmacokineticsimmune system diseasesIn vivoIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsHumansDimethyl SulfoxideRats Wistareducationeducation.field_of_studyIntestinal permeabilityRitonavirChemistryvirus diseasesGeneral MedicineHIV Protease Inhibitorsmedicine.diseaseSmall intestineRatsPerfusionmedicine.anatomical_structureIntestinal AbsorptionNonlinear DynamicsSolubilityModels AnimalRitonavirBiotechnologymedicine.drugEuropean journal of pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics : official journal of Arbeitsgemeinschaft fur Pharmazeutische Verfahrenstechnik e.V
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