Abstract

A study was conducted to monitor the elimination of dimetridazole (DMZ) and its major metabolite 2-hydroxymethyl-1-methyl-5-nitroimidazole (HMMNI) in swine plasma and tissue, using a liquid chromatographic method with electrochemical detector sensitive to 0.5 ppb. The study consisted of 2 experiments. In the preliminary experiment, one young female piglet was fed medicated ration containing 125 ppm dimetridazole (DMZ) for 2 weeks, followed by a withdrawal period using regular ration for 5 days. Another, control, piglet was given regular diet throughout. Plasma concentrations of DMZ and its most important residue, HMMNI, were measured daily at 2 h after the morning feeding and, on days 8 and 15, several times during the day. The 2 h concentrations after 3 days loading ranged from 47 to 77 ppb for DMZ and 424 to 1081 ppb for HMMNI. A daily cycle in the plasma levels was seen for both substances. Upon withdrawal of medication, elimination of drug and metabolite was biexponential with a terminal half-life of 6.7 h. In the second experiment, 5 piglets were medicated as above and slaughtered 2, 6, 12, 25, and 49 h after withdrawal of the medication; the concentration of DMZ and HMMNI was measured in plasma, muscle, kidney, and liver. DMZ in the plasma amounted to 22 and 1.8 ppb at 2 and 6 h, while HMMNI declined from 535 ppb at 2 h to 0.75 ppb at 25 h. Most values for both substances found in muscle were close to those in the plasma; in kidney they amounted to 9-17% of the plasma levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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