Pharmacokinetics of intravenous and oral L-arginine in normal volunteers

O Tangphao, M Grossmann, S Chalon, B B Hoffman, T F Blaschke, O Tangphao, M Grossmann, S Chalon, B B Hoffman, T F Blaschke

Abstract

Aims: Recent studies in patients with cardiovascular diseases suggest potential for the use of orally administered L-arginine, the precursor of nitric oxide, as a therapeutic agent. This crossover study was designed to examine the pharmacokinetics of single i.v. and oral doses of L-arginine in healthy volunteers (n = 10).

Methods: A preliminary control study (n = 12) was performed to assess the variation in plasma L-arginine concentrations when ingesting a normal diet. The observed variation was taken into account when interpreting the pharmacokinetic data obtained after exogenous administration.

Results: The mean baseline plasma concentration of L-arginine in the control study was 15.1+/-2.6 microg ml(-1). After intravenous administration (30 g over 30 min), the plasma concentration reached 1390+/-596 microg ml(-1). The disappearance of l-arginine appeared biphasic, with an initial rapid disappearance due to concentration-dependent renal clearance followed by a slower fall in plasma concentrations due to nonrenal elimination. The peak concentration after oral administration (10 g) was 50.0+/-13.4 microg ml(-1), occurring 1 h after administration. Renal elimination was not observed after oral administration of this dose. The absolute bioavailability of a single oral 10 g dose of L-arginine is approximately 20%.

Conclusions: This study provides basic knowledge of L-arginine pharmacokinetics in healthy humans. Intravenous and oral administrations show at minimum a biphasic pattern. Further studies will assess whether a similar profile is observed when the drug is administered to patients.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Average plasma concentrations of l-arginine in 12 subjects who did not receive l-arginine (control study) but ingested a normal hospital diet.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Plasma concentrations of l-arginine in a representative subject after receiving 10 g l-arginine orally (circles) or 30 g by intravenous infusion over 30 min (squares).

Source: PubMed

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