All children considered GH deficient on clinical grounds had low peak GH concentrations on provocation tests, while 8/10 had low values of urinary GH excretion. All short normal children with normal peak GH concentrations (n = 36) on provocation tests and 11/12 children with low peak GH concentrations had urinary GH excretion within the normal range. There was therefore a significant difference in the classification of 'normal' GH secretion in the two tests. If the clinical diagnosis was used as the standard by which GH tests were judged, the predictive value of a positive urinary GH test in the diagnosis of GH deficiency was 89% compared with 45% for GH provocation tests.
Plasma and urine concentrations of 2-(3-chloro-4[3-pyrrolinyl]phenyl) propionic acid, pirprofen, a new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory compound, are described for normal male volunteers receiving one or more doses of the drug. Orally administered pirprofen is rapidly and almost completely absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract, resulting in maximum plasma levels in 1 to 2 hr. Mean peak levels are 23 microng/ml after an oral pirprofen dose of 200 mg; lower doses given proportionally lower levels. Administration 1 hr after a meal slightly delays the peak plasma level, but the extent of absorption is not affected significantly. Administration of pirprofen, 150 mg, 4 times daily, or 200 mg, 3 times daily, results in nearly identical plasma levels at steady-state. Pirprofen has an apparent elimination half-life of about 7 hr. The results obtained from a 200-mg pirprofen-14C dose indicate that excretion of the drug occurs primarily by the renal route in the form of metabolites and is essentially complete within 24 hr. In urine, less than 5% of the administered dose is accounted for as unchanged drug.
When 14C-labeled endothall was administered orally to rats, over 90% of the radioactivity was recovered in the feces. The remainder of the radioactivity was recovered from the urine and as expired C02. Virtually complete recovery of the administered dose was obtained within 48 hours. The radio-
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