Search results for "Aminocaproates"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Effects of zinc acexamate on blood flow and prostanoid levels in the gastric mucosa of the rat

1989

The effects of the new antiulcer compound zinc acexamate on blood flow and prostanoid levels in the gastric mucosa have been studied. Zinc acexamate (30 and 300 mg/kg) dose-dependently prevents the reduction induced by the perfusion of noradrenaline (3.5 micrograms/kg.min, 30 min) in gastric mucosal blood flow, as measured by 3H-aniline clearance. Zinc acexamate pretreatment also increases the levels of prostaglandin E2 in the gastric mucosa of the rat, both under control conditions and after infusion with noradrenaline. The levels of thromboxane A2 and prostacyclin were not modified by zinc acexamate. These results confirm the importance of microcirculation in pathogenesis and the idea tha…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyMetabolic Clearance RateClinical BiochemistryProstacyclinBiologyMicrocirculationNorepinephrinechemistry.chemical_compoundThromboxane A2Internal medicinemedicineGastric mucosaAnimalsProstaglandin E2Chromatography High Pressure LiquidAminocaproatesStomachProstanoidRats Inbred StrainsCell BiologyAnti-Ulcer AgentsRatsEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryGastric MucosaRegional Blood FlowAminocaproic AcidProstaglandinsPerfusionmedicine.drugProstaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids
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Kinetics of the intestinal uptake of zinc acexamate in normal and zinc-depleted rats.

1990

Abstract The uptake of zinc as acexamic acid salt in the small intestine of the anaesthetized rat was shown to be a two-phase process in normal animals. The first phase is rapid mucosal binding which satisfies the Freundlich isotherm equation and which involves about 30 per cent of the initially perfused zinc. The second phase was characterized as an apparent absorption step which obeys Michaelis-Menten and first-order combined kinetics, with the following parameters: Vm = 6.51 mg h−1; Km = 2.96 mg; ka = 0.306 h−1. In largely non-saturated conditions, an apparent global rate constant of about 2.50 h−1 was calculated. No significant interference due to endogenous zinc excretion into the smal…

Absorption (pharmacology)MaleKineticsPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementZincExcretionReaction rate constantPharmacokineticsIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsFreundlich equationIntestinal MucosaPharmacologyAminocaproatesSpectrophotometry AtomicRats Inbred StrainsSmall intestineRatsPerfusionZincmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrychemistryIntestinal AbsorptionAminocaproic AcidBiophysicsThe Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology
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Zinc acexamate inhibits gastric acid and pepsinogen secretion in the rat.

1990

Abstract Pretreatment with zinc acexamate (25–100 mg kg−1 i.p.) inhibited acid and pepsinogen secretion in the pylorus-ligated rat. Zinc acexamate (5–50 mg kg−1 p.o.) also inhibited the increases in acid secretion induced by carbachol (10 μg kg−1) and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (200 mg kg−1) in the perfused stomach of the anaesthetized rat. A delayed antisecretory effect was observed with this drug on histamine induced responses. High concentrations of zinc acexamate (10−5-10−2 M) did not modify the in-vitro activity of pepsin. Administration of zinc acexamate resulted in an increase in the presence of pepsinogen at the mucosal level. A morphological examination of the gastric mucosa confirmed an ac…

medicine.medical_specialtyCarbacholPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementZincGastric Acidchemistry.chemical_compoundPepsinInternal medicinemedicineGastric mucosaAnimalsAnesthesiaPylorusPharmacologyAminocaproatesbiologyPepsinogensChemistryStomachRatsGastric chief cellPerfusionmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyGastric MucosaAminocaproic Acidbiology.proteinGastric acidHistaminemedicine.drugThe Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology
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