Abstract

Six male patients withhistologically characterised, decompensated liver disease who had not previously received spironolactone, were given orally Aldactone 7 mg/kg with 3H-spironolactone 100muCi. The kinetics of the drug were studied in plasma and urine for 6 days. Then, Aldactone 7 mg/kg was given daily for 12 consecutive days, and the pharmacokinetics of a single dose of 3H-spironolactone were re-examined. The kinetics of total radioactivity, as well as of fluorigenic metabolites in plasma, after the first single dose of spironolactone did not differ in patients and normal test subjects; similar percentages of the dose given were excreted within 6 days in urine from patients (47.47 +- 4.88%) and from controls (53.68 +- 2.04%). The kinetics of CH2CI2/H2O distribution coefficients of labelled material in plasma and urine, as well as TLC analysis of the CH2CI2 soluble fraction, revealed no significant differences from controls. After treatment for 12 days with spironolactone, 4 out of 6 patients showed marked acceleration in the rate of elimination of radioactivity from plasma and a corresponding increase in excretion of labelled compounds in urine. Analysis of the excretion products in urine revealed proportionally increased excretion and no evidence of selective induction of a single degradation step. In contrast, delayed elimination was observed in the 2 other patients after 12 days' treatment. However, this was due to dehydration and oliguria caused by over-treatment with the diuretic.

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