Abo El Sooud K
Pharmacology Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt.
J Vet Med A Physiol Pathol Clin Med. 2003 May;50(4):196-200. doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0442.2003.00530.x.
The pharmacokinetics of gentamicin was studied in lambs, calves and foals, respectively after single intravenous (i.v.) injections of 5 mg kg(-1) body weight. The plasma concentration-time curves of gentamicin sulphate were best fitted to follow a two-compartment open model in calves and foals and a three-compartment open model in lambs. Gentamicin showed high plasma level at 5 min post-injection. Then its concentration decreased gradually until its minimum detectable level at 10 and 12 h post-injection in foals and calves, respectively, was reached. In contrast, the plasma concentrations were much higher in lambs and persisted up to 48 h from the onset of injection. Values of pharmacokinetic parameters for gentamicin sulphate in different animals after i.v. injections were calculated. Pharmacokinetic data in lambs demonstrated a triphasic decline in plasma gentamicin concentration with slow terminal elimination phase (washout phase) with (t(1/2y)) of 7.7 h. Gentamicin showed a small volume of distribution Vd(ss) (80.3 ml kg(-1)) in lambs indicating that the drug is slightly distributed in extra-vascular tissues. The overall rate of total body clearance ClB in lambs was (0.46 ml kg(-1)) slower than in calves (1.5 ml kg(-1)) and foals (2.7 ml kg(-1)). In vitro protein binding per cent of gentamicin sulphate in plasma were 16.80, 11.03 and 7.98% in lambs, calves and foals. The results of this study emphasize the importance of determining the pharmacokinetics of gentamicin in each species of young animals separately.