The aim of this study was to determine the effect of aging upon liver volume and apparent liver blood flow in healthy man. Sixty-five subjects between 24 and 91 years of age were recruited. Liver volume was quantitated by a gray scale B ultrasound scan method. Apparent liver blood flow was determined from the plasma clearance of indocyanine green, based on an assumption of no change in hepatic extraction of the dye with age. A significant negative correlation was observed between age and both liver volume and apparent liver blood flow (p less than 0.001), whether expressed in absolute terms or per unit body weight. Similarly, a significant negative correlation was observed between apparent liver blood flow per unit volume of liver (liver perfusion) and age (p less than 0.005). The reduction in liver volume, apparent liver blood flow and perfusion may at least partly account for the decline in the clearance of many drugs undergoing liver metabolism which has been noted to occur with aging in man.
Since all physicians are likely to provide care for this group of vulnerable patients, understanding the concept of frailty may help to optimise medication prescribing for older people. The incorporation of frailty measures into future clinical studies of drug effects and pharmacokinetics is important if we are to improve medication use and guide drug doses for fit and frail older people.
Aging in humans is associated with marked declines in the disposition of numerous drugs and other xenobiotics that require hepatic biotransformation before elimination. Considerable pharmacokinetic evidence in humans, coupled with data on in vitro liver microsomal monooxygenase functions generated in inbred male rodent models, has implicated impaired liver phase I drug metabolism (i.e., diminished efficacy of microsomal monooxygenases) in reduced drug clearance in the elderly. This study (1) assessed the in vitro activities and amounts of liver microsomal monooxygenases as a function of donor age and gender in healthy humans and (2) provides the most extensive and comprehensive data to date demonstrating the absence of significant age- and gender-dependent differences in the activities and contents of human liver monooxygenases.
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