Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9191171 | Epilepsy Research | 2005 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Because CA-I and CA-II are highly concentrated in erythrocytes, a large portion of TPM in whole blood is bound and serves as a depot. This contributes to the lower oral clearance (CL/F), apparent volume of distribution (Vss/F) and longer half-life (t1/2) that TPM has in blood compared to the CL/F, Vss/F and t1/2, estimated from plasma data. The difference between TPM blood and plasma pharmacokinetics was more profound at low doses (â¤100 mg/day).
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Authors
Richard P. Shank, Dennis R. Doose, Anthony J. Streeter, Meir Bialer,