Ocular pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of phenylephrine and phenylephrine oxazolidine in rabbit eyes.
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Abstract
The aqueous humor concentration of phenylephrine and its corresponding mydriatic response were measured over time in New Zealand albino rabbit eyes following a 10-microliters topical instillation of a phenylephrine HCl viscous solution (10%) or a phenylephrine oxazolidine (prodrug) suspension in sesame oil (1 and 10%). The bioavailability of a 1% prodrug suspension in the rabbit eye (AUC of aqueous humor concentration vs time) was 30% lower than that of a 10% phenylephrine solution (P less than 0.1) with the exception that the peak time occurred 34 min earlier with the prodrug. A 10% prodrug suspension increased the aqueous humor bioavailability approximately eightfold but improved the mydriatic activity (AUC of mydriasis vs time) only fourfold. The pharmacokinetic parameters, apparent absorption, and elimination rate constants, of phenylephrine and the prodrug were determined from aqueous humor concentration-time and mydriasis-time profiles. The study showed that the kinetic parameters of phenylephrine estimated from its mydriasis profile do not accurately reflect the kinetics of drug distribution in the iris. These parameters also varied with the instillation of phenylephrine solution or prodrug suspensions. A mydriatic tolerance of the pupil response was apparent after the topical instillation of phenylephrine solution. The mydriatic tolerance may be due to the decrease in receptor number in the iris dilator muscle.