Abstract
Recent experiments suggest that propranolol taken orally with a carbohydrate-rich meal increases its apparent bioavailability by reducing first-pass metabolism. It has been postulated that this increase in bioavailability may be secondary to a transient increase in hepatic blood flow (QH). To examine this hypothesis, we examined the effect of one of the carbohydrate meals (potato) tested in other propranolol studies on QH by measuring blood clearance (ClB) of indocyanine green (ICG). Ten minutes after eating 200 gm cooked potato, mean ICG blood clearance (ClB) in six subjects rose by 12% (range -13% to +41%). There also was a 10% mean increase (range -13% to +23%) in ICG ClB 60 min after the meal. It was then postulated that a larger carbohydrate meal might induce a more consistent and substantial increase in ICG ClB; therefore, five of the subjects were restudied after 400 gm potato. The increase in ICG ClB was of the order of that after 200 gm. Changes in QH of this magnitude would be expected to make a negligible contribution to the mean 50% increase in propranolol bioavailability reported by several investigators. It thus appears that factors other than change in QH play a dominant role in the reduced first-pass metabolism of propranolol after a meal rich in carbohydrates.
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