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224596 
Journal Article 
Pharmacokinetics of acrylamide after oral administration in male rats 
Kadry, AM; Friedman, MA; Abdel-Rahman, MS 
1999 
Yes 
Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology
ISSN: 1382-6689
EISSN: 1872-7077 
127-133 
Acrylamide (AMD) is a commonly used industrial chemical. However, it produces a dying back type of peripheral neuropathy in animals and man. This study was performed to investigate the pharmacokinetics of AMD after oral administration at 50 mg/g ([1-14C]AMD) in male Sprague-Dawley rats. Absorption from the gastrointestinal tract was rapid and radioactivity was detected in blood 5 min post-administration. The peak plasma concentration occurred 38 min after administration and was equivalent to 47 μg/ml. The elimination pattern for plasma was fitted to a one-compartment model with 6 h half-life. However, in the blood the elimination pattern was fitted to a two-compartment model with 7.93 and 374 h for distribution and elimination phases, respectively. Tissue concentrations of radioactivity determined at 28 and 144 h post-administration differed substantially. After 28 h the highest activity was in the gastric content, followed by stomach, lung, bone marrow and skin, while after 144 h the order of total radioactivity was lung>bone marrow>esophagus. The activities in the rest of the organs in both experiments were very low. The excretion study revealed that the kidney is the major route of elimination and the majority of radioactivity in urine was excreted during the first 12 h. The feces contained approximately 10% of the administered dose after 144 h. This study indicated that AMD is rapidly absorbed from the rat's gastrointestinal tract, distributed and eliminated from the body. AMD bound but did not accumulate in the erythrocytes or the neural tissues. 
pharmacokinetics; toxicokinetics; acrylamide; Bioavailability; Plasma; Tissues