Forshell G P, Siwers B, Tuck J R
Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1976 Feb 6;9(4):291-8. doi: 10.1007/BF00561663.
The pharmacokinetics of lofepramine, an imipramine analogue, have been studied by administering single oral doses to volunteers, determination of plasma levels of lofepramine and desemthylimipramine after ten days of oral administration to patients, and by relating plasma levels to the effect on uptake of noradrenaline by isolated rats irides and brain slices of plasma samples collected during treatment. The results indicate that lofepramine undergoes pronounced first pass elimination and that desmethylimipramine is a major metabolite of it. During steady-state conditions the plasma level of lofepramine fluctuates considerably between doses. A linear relation was found between inhibition of neuronal uptake of noradrenaline and the plasma concentration of desmethylimipramine. No effect was seen on the uptake of 5-hydroxytryptamine in brain slices incubated in patients' plasma which suggests that neither lofepramine nor its metabolites formed in vivo in man affect neuronal uptake is this amine. Lofepramine belongs to the group of tricyclic antidepressants which preferentially inhibit noradrenaline uptake.