Therapeutic Monitoring of Chlorpromazine II
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Therapeutic Drug Monitoring
- Vol. 7 (4) , 472-477
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007691-198512000-00020
Abstract
Pooled whole blood from healthy volunteers was spiked with pure, synthetic chlorpromazine, chlorpromazine sulfoxide, or chlorpromazine N-oxide and then made alkaline with either sodium hydroxide or sodium carbonate. The addition of alkali causes lysis of red cells, the contents of which spill into the plasma. The lysed samples were allowed to stand at room temperature for various timed intervals before extraction with organic solvents and analysis by high performance liquid chromatography. It was found that a portion (10-14%) of the chlorpromazine spike was oxidised to chlorpromazine sulfoxide, whether the blood was made alkaline with sodium hydroxide or sodium carbonate. Chlorpromazine N-oxide added to whole blood was entirely destroyed in the presence of alkali. The chlorpromazine N-oxide was rapidly reduced to chlorpromazine, a portion of which subsequently underwent oxidation to chlorpromazine sulfoxide. We have found that chlorpromazine N-oxide resides almost entirely in the plasma with only a small portion (< 4%) distributed into the red cells. Hence, it is essential that red cells and plasma be separated before analysis. Chlorpromazine and chlorpromazine N-oxide can then be extracted from plasma by a method that does not lead to reduction of chlorpromazine N-oxide. Alkaline extraction methods must be avoided in the analysis of chlorpromazine in the red cell fraction.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- RBC and plasma levels of haloperidol and clinical response in schizophreniaAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
- N-OXIDE REDUCTION BY HEMOGLOBIN, CYTOCHROME-C AND FERROUS-IONS1980
- PHENOTHIAZINE LEVELS IN PLASMA AND RED-BLOOD-CELLS - THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO CLINICAL IMPROVEMENT IN SCHIZOPHRENIA1980
- Biotransformation of nitrosobenzene in the red cell and the role of glutathioneXenobiotica, 1980
- Relationship of butaperazine blood levels to plasma prolactin in chronic schizophrenic patientsPsychopharmacology, 1979
- Rapid sulfoxidation of chlorpromazine by human blood: Inhibition by an endogenous plasma protein factorLife Sciences, 1979