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PHARMACOKINETIC STUDIES OF TRIBESTAN
N. Dikova, V. Ognyanova
Chemical Pharmaceutical Research Institute
Sofia, Bulgaria
Tribestan is a natural product of plant origin.
It has been extracted from the above-the-ground
part of Tribulus terrestris L., containing mainly
steroid glycosides (saponins) .of furostanol type
with predominating quantity of protodioscine [1,
3, 11, 12, 13]. Tribestan has been standardized
on the basis of furostanol saponins (not less then
45%) [1]. Its administration to humans and animals
improves the sexual libido and stimulates spermatogenesis
[2].
The objective of the present work is to study
the pharmacokinetic behavior of Tribestan substance
in experimental animals.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The pharmacokinetic characterization of Tribestan
was performed with respect to the unchanged protodioscine,
the predominant component of the product.
Experiments were carried out on 265 male Wistar
albino rats with body weight from 160 to 270g, depending
on the requirements of the experiment, to determine
the plasma concentrations and excretion of the preparation.
The protodioscine plasma concentrations were
determined in a group of 50 rats (160-180 g), treated
intravenously with a single dose of Tribestan substance,
and a second group of 100 rats treated intravenously
with a dose of 200 mg/kg. Citrate blood was withdrawn
after decapitation of the experimental animals 2,
4, 10, 20, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120 and 180 minutes after
the treatment.
For the determination of protodioscine excretion
in the bile, 60 rats (230-270 g) were treated with
a single intravenous dose of 50 and 200 mg/kg, and
30 rats (230-270 g) were treated orally with a single
dose of the same quantities of Tribestan substance.
The rats were narcotized by intraperitoneal administration
of 40-mg/kg chloralose, 100% urethane and their
biliary ducts were cannulated. Bile was dynamically
followed up until the 6th hour, 6-9 h, and 9-20
h after a single intake.
For the determination of protodioscine excretion
with the urine, 25 rats (160-180 g) were treated
intravenously and orally with Tribestan in doses
of 50 and 200 mg/kg. The rats were left in metabolic
cages for separate collection of urine and feces.
Urine was collected for 24 h.
All experimental animals were treated after 16-hour
fasting - the control animals were kept under identical
conditions.
Tribestan was administered as 5 to 20% aqueous
solutions, and all doses used were recalculated
as 100% pure substance.
The determination of unchanged protodioscine
in the plasma, bile and urine was performed by thin-layer
chromatography, and the quantitative determinations
were performed in comparison with certain protodioscine
concentrations.
Plasma was processed as follows: 10 ml methyl
alcohol was added to 1 ml from it. After stirring,
it was left for 10 minutes and then centrifuged.
The solution was evaporated to dry over a vacuum
evaporator and the dry residue, dissolved in 0.4
ml methanol, was streaked upon the chromatographic
plate.
Bile and urine were applied without previous
treatment (native) in proper quantities (0.02 to
0.06 ml).
Thin-layer chromatography was applied on carrier
Kieselgel LG and mobile phase n-butanol; acetic
acid; water (4:1:2:2), when protodioscine gave only
one spot with Rf = 0.50 [4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]. Ehrlich's
reagent was used as developer. Detectable minimum
1 mkg per sample in concentration range from 1 to
20 mkg and the reproductivity of the method was
about 70%.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The results of the determination of the plasma
concentrations of protodioscine, after intravenous
administration of both Tribestan doses, are illustrated
in Fig.1 (Diagram 1).
The curves, representing the change of protodioscine
concentrations in time, have a marked steep course
during the first ten minutes after the treatment.
The profile of the concentration curves indicates
that protodioscine is rapidly eliminated from the
plasma and by 180 min its concentration in negligible.
After oral administration of Tribestan, no measurable
concentrations of protodioscine were found.
The experiments for studies of Tribestan excretion
reveal that about 12 and 14 % of the component is
excreted in the bile within 24 hours, and in the
urine - about 6 to 7% protodioscine, compared to
the doses of 50 and 200 mg/kg respectively, administered
as a single intravenously. After oral administration
of Tribestan in the same doses, a smaller quantity
of protodioscine was excreted in the bile of rats
within 24 hours - from 2 to 4% depending on the
dose. No measurable concentrations of unchanged
protodioscine were established in 24-hour urine
and feces of rats,
Tribestan-treated with oral doses of 50 and 200
mg/kg.
The experimental data obtained indicate that
the hepatic route is the route of choice for Tribestan
excretion as unchanged protodioscine. It can be
assumed that protodioscine, being the predominating
part of the active component of the product, participates
in the enterohepatic cycle of rats. This hypothesis
is based on experimental data from Tribestan excretion
as unchanged protodioscine after intravenous and
oral administration, as well as on the chemical
similarity of the product studied with some already
known pharmaceuticals, whose participation in the
enterohepatic cycle in experimental animals has
been confirmed [5, 6].
The rapid elimination of protodioscine from the
plasma, as well as low percentages of unchanged
protodioscine excreted versus the administered dose,
support the opinion that protodioscine undergoes
intestinal biotransformation in the body. Actually,
the presence of other chromatographic spots, different
from that of unchanged protodioscine, have been
identified during thin-layer chromatographic determination
of the samples of urine and bile (according to Rf
values). The problem of Tribestan biotransformation
needs further research work.
REFERENCES
1. Tomova M., Gyulemetova R., Zarkova S. Patent
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S., Pangarova T., Simona M. Steroid saponins in
Tribulus terrestris L. with action stimulating sexual
function. Report at the First International Conference
of Chemistry and Biotechnology of Bioactive Natural
products. Varna, Bulgaria, September 21-26, 1986
(in Bulgarian).
3. Tomova M., Panova D. Steroid sapogenins. Isolation
of diosgenin from Tribulus terrestris L. Farmazia,
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11. Tomova M., Botscheva D., Zaikin W., Wulfson
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der Saponine. Planta medica, 3, 274, 1964.

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