Shepherd A M, Ludden T M, McNay J L, Lin M S
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1980 Dec;28(6):804-11. doi: 10.1038/clpt.1980.238.
In reports on hydralazine kinetics plasma hydralazine levels have been measured with nonspecific assay techniques. The techniques used also include acid-labile hydralazine metabolites and therefore markedly overestimate hydralazine levels. We have developed specific, sensitive assay methods for the measurement of hydralazine and its major plasma metabolite, hydralazine pyruvic acid hydrazone (HPH). By these methods, we determined hydralazine and HPH kinetics after single and repeated oral doses of hydralazine in eight hypertensive patients. Hydralazine bioavailability in the fast acetylator group (9.5% single dose, 6.6% repeated doses) and in the slow acetylator group (31.3% single dose, 39.3% repeated doses) was phenotype dependent. Peak plasma levels were lower than those reported with nonspecific assays: 0.32 microM for the single dose and 0.14 microM for repeated doses in the fast acetylator group and 1.03 microM for the single dose and 0.96 microM repeated doses in the slow acetylator group. There was no alteration in kinetics and no cumulation in plasma on repeated administration. HPH plasma levels were proportional to those of hydralazine in both acetylator groups and were 2.5 to 4 times as high as those of hydralazine. Elimination half-lifes were phenotype independent, ranging from 4 to 6 hr. HPH cumulated in the rapid but not in the slow acetylator group after repeated doses of hydralazine.