Toxicokinetics of cinnamaldehyde in F344 rats.
מילות מפתח
תַקצִיר
The toxicokinetic profile of cinnamaldehyde (CNMA) was investigated in Fischer 344 rats. CNMA was found to be unstable in blood. After iv administration, a large fraction of CNMA was immediately oxidized to cinnamic acid. The biological half-life of CNMA after iv administration was found to be 1.7 hr. After administration by gavage of CNMA at 250 or 500 mg/kg body weight using corn oil as vehicle, the maximum blood concentrations of CNMA were in the order of 1 microgram/ml. These low blood concentrations were maintained over a 24-hr period after a dose of 500 mg/kg, which is relatively long considering the short (1.7 hr) biological half-life of CNMA. The estimated oral bioavailability of CNMA was less than 20% for both the 250 and 500 mg/kg doses. No CNMA was present in blood at any time in rats dosed with 50 mg CNMA/kg body weight. Only a small amount of the administered CNMA was excreted in rat urine as free cinnamic acid or beta-glucuronide-conjugated cinnamic acid. The majority of CNMA administered orally was excreted in urine as hippuric acid within 24 hr. The maximum excretion rate occurred at 8 hr after gavage. Hippuric acid recovered in 50-hr urine samples was found to be directly proportional to the oral dose of CNMA.