1. A specific and sensitive gas chromatographic assay is described for the measurement of d-fenfluramine and its de-ethylated metabolite, d-norfenfluramine, in biological fluids, together with some data on its application to the oral pharmacokinetics of the drug. 2. The analytical method developed has advantages over the previously described methods since it uses nitrogen specific detection and, when applied routinely, enables smaller sample volumes to be used (typically 1 ml of plasma) with a shorter chromatography time and an improved sensitivity (minimum quantifiable level of 2.5 ng ml-1). 3. Peak plasma concentrations of 22 and 24 ng ml-1 of intact drug were reached at 4 h after an oral dose of 14C-d-fenfluramine hydrochloride (30 mg) given to two volunteers as part of a metabolism and disposition study. Subsequently, concentrations of intact drug declined monoexponentially with a half-life of approximately 13 h. Peak concentrations of 10 and 8 ng ml-1 of the metabolite, d-norfenfluramine, were reached after 4 and 6 h and were maintained as a plateau for a further 4-6 h. Assessment of the half-life of the metabolite could not be made because of lack of data on the terminal portion of the curves. 4. The urinary excretion of d-fenfluramine (6.0 and 10.6% of the dose) and d-norfenfluramine (5.8 and 8.8% of the dose) was low, indicating extensive metabolism of the parent drug.
We performed a double-blind, crossover, add-on study of the antitussive agent dextromethorphan (DM 120 mg/d) as therapy for seizures on 9 patients suffering from severe complex partial seizures. DM had no significant influence on key laboratory values, nor on anticonvulsant drug levels. Side effects were negligible. Complex partial seizure frequency increased 25% during the DM arm of the study, although this increase was not clinically significant.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.