Abstract
ABSTRACT
Dihydrobunolol is an ocular metabolite equipotent to levobunolol. In order to understand the formation and distribution of dihydrobunolol after an ophthalmic dose of levobunolol, studies
After a topical dose of 0.5% levobunolol hydrochloride to rabbit eyes, rapid absorption of levobunolol and facile formation of dihydrobunolol were noted. The drug concentration in the eye drop (~17 mM) was much higher than Km and would saturate the epithelial reductase system in the cornea during drug absorption. The total concentrations of levobunolol and dihydrobunolol in ocular tissues were in the micromolar range throughout the experimental period. Dihydrobunolol, after distribution equilibrium, was the major drug-derived species in the cornea, aqueous humor, and iris-ciliary body.
The study results indicated pH-dependent and capacity-limited formation of dihydrobunolol in the cornea. Buffering capacity and the drug concentration in the ophthalmic dose are important formulation strategies because they may affect the rate and the extent of dihydrobunolol formation in the epithelial cell layers of the cornea.
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