The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-3329
Print ISSN : 0040-8727
ISSN-L : 0040-8727
Influence of Food on the Clinical Effect of Angiotensin I Converting Enzyme Inhibitor (SQ 14, 225)
YOICHI IZUMIMASANOBU HONDAMICHINOBU HATANOYUKINORI KAWAHARA
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1983 Volume 139 Issue 3 Pages 279-286

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Abstract
IZUMI, Y., HONDA, M., HATANO, M. and KAWAHARA, Y. Influence of Food on the Clinical Effect of Angiotensin I Converting Enzyme Inhibitor (SQ 14, 225). Tohoku J. exp. Med., 1983, 139 (3), 279-286 -In order to clarify the influence of food on the clinical effect of angiotensin I converting enzyme inhibitor (SQ 14, 225, captopril), 25mg of the drug was administered to patients with hypertension using in a two-way crossover study design. In the first study (study I), each subject received the drug 30min after breakfast, and changes in blood pressure (BP), blood concentration of captopril (BCC), plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone (PA) and plasma angiotensin I converting enzyme activity (ACE-A) were determined for 3 hr. BP was recorded for 6 hr. Four days after study I, the same subjects received the drug 2hr after breakfast, and each parameter was again determined (study II), similarly to study I. No significant difference in the hypotensive responses to captopril was observed between both studies during 6hr of observation. Maximum hypotensive effects were found within 90min of the treatments in study I and study II, and BP returned almost to baseline levels at 6 hr in both studies. Maximum BCC levels were found 60 and 90min after the drug administration in studies I and II, respectively, and these approximated to half of each maximum level at 180min. There were no statistically significant differences in the biological half-life (T1/2), maximum concentration (C max), maximum concentration time (T max), and area under the blood concentration curve [AUC]03 between both studies. The peak in PRA occurred at 60 and 90min after the administration of the drug in studies I and II, respectively. In study I, a slightly greater reduction of PA levels was found, but there was no significant difference in the magnitude of the reduction between both studies. The present results indicate that food did not exert any significant influence on the clinical effect of captopril.
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