Gastric and Intestinal Absorption of Oxprenolol in Humans

Abstract
The gastrointestinal absorption of the beta blocker oxprenolol was investigated in four healthy subjects by an intubation technique. Oxprenolol was introduced into the stomach, dissolved in a homogenized meal containing the marker 14C‐polyethylene glycol (PEG) 4000. Unlabeled PEG 4000 was perfused during the whole experiment into the duodenum at the ampulla of Vater. Samples of luminal contents were collected at regular intervals over four hours in the stomach, at the angle of Treitz, and 30 cm below this point. Blood was also collected. Oxprenolol was not absorbed in the stomach. About 80% of the drug emptied from the stomach was absorbed in the duodenum, and 80% of that released from the duodenum was absorbed in a 30‐cm segment of the jejunum. The amounts absorbed in these two intestinal segments were directly proportional to the amounts delivered. The areas under the plasma concentration‐time curves were not related to the amounts absorbed. A single dose of oxprenolol taken with an homogenized meal did not modify the gastric emptying and secretory response.

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