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© 1996 Oxford University Press

research-article

Effect of Bile Duct Ligation and Unilateral Nephrectomy on Brain Concentration and Convulsant Potential of the Quinolone Antibacterial Agent Levofloxacin in Rats

KAZUMI AKAHANE, SATOSHI OHKAWARA, MAMORU NOMURA and MICHIYUKI KATO

Drug Safety Research Center, Developmental Research Laboratories, Daiichi Pharmaceuticl Co., Ltd. 1-16-13 Kitakasai, Edogawa, Tokyo 134, Japan

Received May 2, 1995; accepted August 17, 1995

To mimic the excretion route of the quinolone antibacterial agent levofloxacin (LVFX) in humans, we produced an excretion-limited (EL) model in male Sprague–Dawley rats by bile duct ligation and unilateral nephrectomy. We then examined the relationship between brain levels of LVFX and its convulsant effects in control and EL animals. Serum concentrations of LVFX in EL animals (EL + LVFX) were 2.38- and 1.59-fold and brain concentrations were 1.33- and 1.19-fold those of the controls (control + LVFX) at 30 min after a single intravenous injection of 10 and 100 mg/kg LVFX, respectively. Furthermore EL animals became more susceptible to the convulsant effect of LVFX with a 1.28-fold decrease in convulsion-inducing dose. In combination with oral pretreatment with 400 mg/kg 4-biphenylacetic acid (BPAA), convulsion-inducing doses in the control (control + LVFX + BPAA) and EL (EL + LVFX + BPAA) groups were markedly decreased by 2.25 and 9 times that of the control + LVFX group. EL operation and BPAA pretreatment slowed the elimination of LVFX in the serum and brain 4 hr later in the following order: EL + LVFX + BPAA, control + LVFX + BPAA, EL + LVFX, and control + LVFX groups. This order reflects that for the convulsion-inducing doses. These results suggest that EL rats may be a useful model for humans and that the convulsant effect of LVFX with or without BPAA arises not only from the attainment of maximum brain concentration but also from delayed disappearance from the brain.


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