Salt Alec N
Is a professor of Otolaryngology at the Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Mo.
Volta Rev. 2005;105(3):277-298.
The inner ear is exposed to aminoglycosides or other drugs either intentionally or as a side effect of clinical treatments directed at other regions of the body. An understanding of the effects of drugs on the inner ear requires knowledge of the pharmacokinetics of the drug once it reaches the cochlear fluids, specifically how much of it reaches different parts of the ear and how long it stays there before disappearing. Accumulating data show that drug distribution in the inner ear is complex, especially for drugs applied locally to the ear's round window membrane. Locally applied drugs do not disperse rapidly, but instead spread very slowly through the fluid spaces by diffusion so that substantial differences in drug concentration occur in different regions of the ear. In some cases, the drug may leak from the inner ear to the blood as fast as it diffuses, meaning it may never become uniformly distributed even when applied for a long period. In recent years, experimental pharmacokinetic studies have become increasingly quantitative, permitting the results to be interpreted with computer models. Simulations of the drug distribution in animals have been used as a basis to predict the likely drug distribution in the larger, human inner ear. Such studies allow clinical drug delivery protocols to be optimized to minimize inadvertent hearing loss and to deliver therapeutic levels of the drug more effectively.
内耳会有意无意地接触到氨基糖苷类药物或其他药物,后者可能是针对身体其他部位进行临床治疗时产生的副作用。要了解药物对内耳的影响,就需要知道药物进入耳蜗液后的药代动力学情况,具体而言,就是有多少药物到达耳朵的不同部位,以及在消失之前会在那里停留多长时间。越来越多的数据表明,内耳中的药物分布很复杂,尤其是对于局部应用于耳圆窗膜的药物。局部应用的药物不会迅速扩散,而是通过扩散在液体空间中非常缓慢地传播,因此耳朵不同区域的药物浓度会出现很大差异。在某些情况下,药物从内耳泄漏到血液中的速度与扩散速度一样快,这意味着即使长时间应用,药物也可能永远无法均匀分布。近年来,实验性药代动力学研究越来越定量,其结果可以通过计算机模型进行解释。动物体内药物分布的模拟已被用作预测更大的人类内耳中可能的药物分布的基础。此类研究有助于优化临床给药方案,以尽量减少意外听力损失,并更有效地输送治疗剂量的药物。