Body fluid and endometrial concentrations of ketoconazole in mares after intravenous injection or repeated gavage.

After single oral administration of ketoconazole (30 mg/kg bodyweight [bwt]) in 50 ml of corn syrup to a healthy mare, the drug was not detected in serum. Ketoconazole in 0.2 N HC1 was administered intragastrically to six healthy adult horses in five consecutive doses of 30 mg/kg bwt at 12 h intervals. Ketoconazole concentrations were measured in serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), urine and endometrium. Mean peak serum ketoconazole concentration was 3.76 micrograms/ml at 1.5 to 2 h after intragastric administration. Mean peak synovial concentration was 0.87 micrograms/ml 3 h after the fifth dose. Similarly, mean peritoneal concentration peaked 3 h after the fifth dose at 1.62 micrograms/ml. Mean endometrial concentrations peaked at 2.73 micrograms/ml 2 h after the fifth dose. Ketoconazole was detected in the CSF of only one of the six mares at a concentration of 0.28 micrograms/ml 3 h after the fifth dose. The highest measured concentration of ketoconazole in urine was 6.15 micrograms/ml 2 h after the fifth dose. A single intravenous injection of ketoconazole (10 mg/kg bwt) was given to one of the six mares; the overall elimination rate constant was estimated at 0.22/h and bioavailability after oral administration was 23 per cent.

[1]  M. Campbell-Thompson,et al.  Effect of ranitidine on gastric acid secretion in young male horses. , 1987, American journal of veterinary research.

[2]  E. Johnson,et al.  Influence of food on the pharmacokinetics of ketoconazole , 1984, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[3]  K. Olsen,et al.  Pharmacology of ketoconazole suspension in infants and children , 1983, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[4]  R. Pyle,et al.  Ketoconazole treatment of osseous blastomycosis in a dog. , 1981, Veterinary medicine, small animal clinician : VM, SAC.

[5]  J. Graybill,et al.  Sensitive bioassay for ketoconazole in serum and cerebrospinal fluid , 1981, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[6]  S. Stover,et al.  Oxytetracycline hydrochloride in the horse: serum, synovial, peritoneal and urine concentrations after single dose intravenous administration. , 1981, Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics.

[7]  V. Schuermans,et al.  An evaluation of two years of clinical experience with ketoconazole. , 1980, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[8]  J. Hanifin,et al.  Oral therapy with ketoconazole for dermatophyte infections unresponsive to griseofulvin. , 1980, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[9]  W. Donovan,et al.  Treatment of coccidioidomycosis with ketoconazole: clinical and laboratory studies of 18 patients. , 1980, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[10]  M. De Brabander,et al.  The activity of ketoconazole in mixed cultures of leukocytes and Candida albicans. , 1980, Sabouraudia.

[11]  B. Dupont,et al.  Chronic mucocutaneous candidosis and other superficial and systemic mycoses successfully treated with ketoconazole. , 1980, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[12]  M. De Brabander,et al.  Promotion of pseudomycelium formation of Candida albicans in culture: a morphological study of the effects of miconazole and ketoconazole. , 1979, Postgraduate medical journal.