Diphenhydramine kinetics following intravenous, oral, and sublingual dimenhydrinate administration
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biopharmaceutics & Drug Disposition
- Vol. 11 (3) , 185-189
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bdd.2510110302
Abstract
Eight healthy volunteers received 50 mg of dimenhydrinate, a theoclate salt of diphenhydramine, orally, sublingually, and intravenously on three separate occasions in random sequence. Plasma diphenhydramine concentrations during 12 h after each dose were measured by gas‐liquid chromatography with nitrogen‐phosphorous detection. Mean peak plasma concentrations after sublingual administration were slightly lower than after oral dosage (38·3 vs 47·8 ng ml−1), and the time of peak concentration was similar (2·6 vs 2·3 h after dose). These differences did not reach statistical significance. The mean total area under the plasma concentration‐time curve (AUC) for sublingual administration was slightly but not significantly smaller than after oral dosage (221 vs 270 h ng ml−1). Systemic availability of diphenhydramine after sublingual dimenhydrinate, measured by the ratio of oral AUC to intravenous AUC, was slightly less than after oral dimenhydrinate (0·58 vs 0·69, NS), and both were significantly less than 1·0. Thus sublingual and oral administration of dimenhydrinate result in comparable, but incomplete, systemic availability of diphenhydramine.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Doxylamine and Diphenhydramine Pharmacokinetics in Women on Low-Dose Estrogen Oral ContraceptivesThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1989
- Sublingual Captopril in Hypertensive Attacks in Patients on HemodialysisNephron, 1988
- A simplex procedure for fitting nonlinear pharmacokinetic modelsComputers in Biology and Medicine, 1987
- Comparison of Sublingual and Oral Prazepam in Normal SubjectsNeuropsychobiology, 1987
- Pharmacokinetics of Diphenhydramine and a Demethylated Metabolite Following Intravenous And Oral AdministrationThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1986
- BUCCAL MORPHINE—A NEW ROUTE FOR ANALGESIA?The Lancet, 1985
- Plasma Levels of lormetazepam after Sublingual and Oral Administration of 1 MG to HumansDrug Development and Industrial Pharmacy, 1984
- Pharmacokinetic Comparison of Sublingual Lorazepam with Intravenous, Intramuscular, and Oral LorazepamJournal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1982
- Antimotion Sickness and Antiemetic DrugsDrugs, 1979