Abstract

A technique is described to obtain renal interstitial fluid (RIF) from rabbits after implantation of diffusion chambers with permeable membranes of 0.45 mu porosity in both kidneys. Pharmacokinetic studies were conducted two to three weeks after implantation. No difference in gentamicin concentrations, as measured microbiologically, was seen between RIF withdrawn from the left and right kidney chambers at the same points in time. Simultaneous drug concentrations were determined in RIF and serum of rabbits after oral administration of ampicillin or nalidixic acid and after intramuscular injection of gentamicin. Ampicillin concentrations in RIF peaked at two hours with about one fourth of the peak concentration measured in serum at one hour. These curves crossed at 3.45 hours. In RIF, the maximum concentration of gentamicin found at two hours was again approximately one fourth of the serum peak level determined at half an hour. The gentamicin curves crossed at 3.15 hours. No levels of nalidixic acid could be detected microbiologically in serum and RIF. In collected urine, however, concentrations of this drug could be measured for several sampling periods. Our results show that this diffusion chamber technique can be useful in the pharmacokinetic examination of drugs, also with respect to their distribution in the kidneys.

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