Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2154366 Nuclear Medicine and Biology 2008 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

IntroductionThere are several instances when it is desirable to control brain concentration of pharmaceuticals, e.g., to modulate the concentration of anesthetic agents to different desired levels fitting to different needs during the course of surgery. This has so far only been possible using indirect estimates of drug concentration such as assuming constant relation between tissue and blood including extrapolations from animals.MethodsA system for controlling target tissue concentration (UIPump) was used to regulate whole-brain concentrations of a central benzodiazepine receptor antagonist at therapeutic levels with input from brain kinetics as determined with PET. The system was tested by using pharmacological doses of flumazenil mixed with tracer amounts of [11C]flumazenil. Flumazenil was used as a model compound for anesthesia. An infusion scheme to produce three different steady-state levels in sequence was designed based on kinetic curves obtained after bolus injection. The subjects (Sprague-Dawley rats, n=6) were monitored in a microPET scanner during the whole experiment to verify resulting brain kinetic curves.ResultsA steady-state brain concentration was rapidly achieved corresponding to a whole-brain concentration of 118±6 ng/ml. As the infusion rate decreased to lower the exposure by a factor of 2, the brain concentration decreased to 56±4 ng/ml. A third increased steady-state level of anesthesia corresponding to a whole-brain concentration of 107±7 ng/ml was rapidly achieved.ConclusionThe experimental setup with computerized pump infusion and PET supervision enables accurate setting of target tissue drug concentration.

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