This study compared the cardiovascular and renal effects of long-term telmisartan (3 and 10 mg/kg/day)and lisinopril (10 mg/kg/day) in an animal model combining hypertension and diabetes mellitus. It was a parallel-group study of diabetic, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), treated with control or active treatment for eight months. A non-diabetic SHR control group was run in parallel. Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin (45 mg/kg i.v.) in SHRs aged 9-10 weeks. Animals were treated with telmisartan (3 or 10mg/kg/day), lisinopril (10 mg/kg/day) or vehicle. Plasma glucose levels, blood pressure (BP), and urinary protein and albumin excretion were measured monthly. Telmisartan treatment significantly reduced BP of diabetic SHRs in a dose-dependent manner (p<0.05, low-dose, n= 18; p<0.01, high-dose, n=15). The BP reduction in the lisinopril group was similar to that in the telmisartan 10 mg/kg/day group. Compared with non-diabetic SHRs, untreated diabetic SHRs developed severe proteinuria and albuminuria over the experimental period (p<0.01). In diabetic SHRs, proteinuria and albuminuria were dose-dependently and significantly attenuated by treatment with telmisartan (p<0.01 with the higher dose) and lisinopril (p<0.01). Compared with the untreated diabetic SHRs, cardiac hypertrophy was significantly reduced after treatment with both doses of telmisartan and with lisinopril. Telmisartan, 10 mg/kg/day, but not lisinopril, significantly attenuated the diabetes-induced increase in glomerular volume. In conclusion, telmisartan, 10 mg/kg/day, is at least as beneficial as lisinopril, 10 mg/kg/day, in lowering BP, reducing cardiac hypertrophy and attenuating renal excretion of protein and albumin in this model.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are commonly used by topical application in management of joint pain and inflammation. Little is known, however, about their pharmacokinetics, especially in the synovial compartment versus the plasma compartment, following topical administration. Ketoprofen, a NSAID, was delivered by a single topical application (KETUM 2.5% gel) on the rabbit knee-joint region of one hind limb. Concentrations of ketoprofen were measured in plasma, synovial fluid, joint capsule and synovial fat tissue at 2, 4, 6 and 12 hours after application. Whatever the time period after application, ketoprofen concentrations in synovial fluid were much higher than in plasma. The time-course of the decrease in ketoprofen plasma concentrations was more rapid than that in synovial fluid. Similarly, concentrations in joint capsule were higher than those found in synovial fat tissue. Finally, while ketoprofen concentrations decreased rapidly in plasma and in synovial fat tissue, concentrations in joint capsule and particularly in synovial fluid were more sustained. The increase in residence time of ketoprofen in synovial fluid could be in favour of its efficiency in the management of joint pain and inflammation.
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