Abstract

The disappearance of 74As from blood and plasma of rats and its excretion into bile was measured for 2 hr after the iv administration of 0.01, 0.46, 1.0, 2.1, and 4.6 mg/kg of arsenic given as the trichloride. Arsenic disappearance from plasma was biphasic; the half-life during the late phase was greater than 2 hr. Even though the arsenic was injected iv, the concentration in the blood increased through the first 2 hr. Arsenic was rapidly excreted into the bile, reaching its highest rate of excretion 6 min after administration, after which it rapidly decreased. This rapid decrease in excretion is due to redistribution of arsenic from the liver to the blood. Arsenic enters bile against an apparent bile/plasma concentration gradient of 630, 8 min after 1 mg/kg of arsenic. At this time the liver/plasma gradient is 17 and the liver/bile gradient is 37. Twenty-five percent of the arsenic administered to bile duct-cannulated rats is excreted into the bile within 2 hr. However, less than 10% of the administered dose is excreted into the feces of intact rats over a 7-day period. In the rabbit and dog, arsenic is excreted into the bile at a much slower rate. These data demonstrate that arsenic is excreted into the bile, and this occurs against a large bile/plasma concentration gradient in rats, suggesting excretion by an active transport mechanism. However, the overall importance of bile as a route of elimination for arsenic is minimized due to enterohepatic circulation and species variations in its biliary excretion rate.

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