RESUMO
Spinal epidural hematomas (SEH) are rare, and cases with a spontaneous etiology are even more infrequent. Management of spontaneous SEH varies, with surgical or conservative approaches determined by the severity of deficits and symptom resolution. Adverse prognostic factors may include thoracic segment location, anticoagulation use, severe neurologic deficits at admission, sphincter dysfunction, and rapid progression. We report a patient with a sudden onset of bilateral lower limb weakness and reduced urinary output. Magnetic resonance imaging was conducted and indicated an epidural hematoma extending from T11 to L4. Surgical decompression and hematoma extraction were performed successfully resulting in the complete resolution of symptoms. This case underscores the importance of considering spontaneous SEH in patients lacking conventional risk factors, such as a history of trauma, when presenting with symptoms of bilateral lower limb weakness and decreased urine output. Depending on the severity of symptoms and the occurrence of spontaneous and rapid improvement, the patient may benefit from surgical intervention, which ameliorated the patient's symptoms in this case.
RESUMO
Oral nintedanib is marketed for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), Systemic Sclerosis-Associated Interstitial Lung Disease and Chronic Fibrosing Interstitial Lung Diseases with a Progressive Phenotype. While effective at slowing fibrosis progression, as an oral medicine nintedanib has limitations. To reduce side effects and maximize efficacy, nintedanib was reformulated as a solution for nebulization and inhaled administration. To predict effectiveness treating IPF, inhalation was used as a tool to dissect the pharmacokinetic components required for nintedanib pulmonary anti-fibrotic activity. Following oral administration, nintedanib extensively partitioned into tissue and exhibited flip-flop pharmacokinetics, whereby resulting lung Cmax and AUC were substantially higher than plasma. By comparison, inhaled nintedanib was capable of delivering an oral-equivalent lung Cmax with lower local and systemic AUC. Using a multi-challenge bleomycin rat model, this distinct inhaled pharmacokinetic profile was dose responsive (0.05, 0.25 and 0.375 mg/kg), delivering oral-superior pulmonary anti-fibrotic activity with an equivalent delivered lung Cmax (QD inhaled 0.375 mg/kg versus BID oral 60 mg/kg). Possibly assisting this improvement, the infrequent high inhaled dose also improved bleomycin-challenged animal weight gain to levels equivalent to sham. By comparison, BID oral weight gain was substantially less than controls, suggesting a negative health impact on oral administered animals combating fibrosis. Both oral and inhaled administration exhibited anti-inflammatory activity, with oral achieving significance. In summary, inhalation (short-duration nintedanib lung Cmax without high local or systemic AUC) was well-tolerated and was effective reducing bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis.
Assuntos
Fibrose Pulmonar Idiopática , Animais , Bleomicina , Indóis , Pulmão , RatosRESUMO
Oral nintedanib is marketed for the treatment of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). While effective slowing fibrosis progression, as an oral medicine nintedanib is limited. To reduce side effects and maximize efficacy, nintedanib was reformulated as a solution for nebulization and inhaled administration. To predict effectiveness treating IPF, the nintedanib pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic relationship was dissected. Pharmacokinetic analysis indicated oral-delivered nintedanib plasma exposure and lung tissue partitioning were not dose-proportional and resulting lung levels were substantially higher than blood. Although initial-oral absorbed nintedanib efficiently partitioned into the lung, only a quickly eliminated fraction appeared available to epithelial lining fluid (ELF). Because IPF disease appears to initiate and progress near the epithelial surface, this observation suggests short duration nintedanib exposure (oral portion efficiently partitioned to ELF) is sufficient for IPF efficacy. To test this hypothesis, exposure duration required for nintedanib activity was explored. In vitro, IPF-cellular matrix (IPF-CM) increased primary normal human fibroblast (nHLF) aggregate size and reduced nHLF cell count. IPF-CM also increased nHLF ACTA2 and COL1A expression. Whether short duration (inhalation pharmacokinetic mimic) or continuous exposure (oral pharmacokinetic mimic), nintedanib (1-100 nM) reversed these effects. In vivo, intubated silica produced a strong pulmonary fibrotic response. Once-daily (QD) 0.021, 0.21 and 2.1 mg/kg intranasal (IN; short duration inhaled exposure) and twice-daily (BID) 30 mg/kg oral (PO; long duration oral exposure) showed that at equivalent-delivered lung exposure, QD short duration inhaled nintedanib (0.21 mg/kg IN vs. 30 mg/kg PO) exhibited equivalent-to-superior activity as BID oral (reduced silica-induced elastance, alpha-smooth muscle actin, interleukin-1 beta (IL-1ß) and soluble collagen). Comparatively, the increased inhaled lung dose (2.1 mg/kg IN vs. 30 mg/kg PO) exhibited increased effect by further reducing silica-induced elastance, IL-1ß and soluble collagen. Neither oral nor inhaled nintedanib reduced silica-induced parenchymal collagen. Both QD inhaled and BID oral nintedanib reduced silica-induced bronchoalveolar lavage fluid macrophage and neutrophil counts with oral achieving significance. In summary, pharmacokinetic elements important for nintedanib activity can be delivered using infrequent, small inhaled doses to achieve oral equivalent-to-superior pulmonary activity.
Assuntos
Fibrose Pulmonar Idiopática , Fibroblastos , Humanos , Indóis , PulmãoRESUMO
PURPOSE: Inhaled delivery of pirfenidone to the lungs of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis holds promise to eliminate oral-observed side effects while enhancing efficacy. This study aimed to comprehensively describe the pulmonary pharmacokinetics of inhaled aerosol pirfenidone in healthy adult sheep. METHODS: Pirfenidone concentrations were evaluated in plasma, lung-derived lymph and epithelial lining fluid (ELF) with data subjected to non-compartmental pharmacokinetic analysis. RESULTS: Compartmental pharmacokinetic evaluation indicated that a 49 mg lung-deposited dose delivered an ELF Cmax of 62 ± 23 mg/L, and plasma Cmax of 3.1 ± 1.7 mg/L. Further analysis revealed that plasma pirfenidone reached Tmax faster and at higher concentrations than in lymph. These results suggested inhaled pirfenidone was cleared from the alveolar interstitium via blood faster than the drug could equilibrate between the lung interstitial fluid and lung lymphatics. However, the data also suggested that a 'reservoir' of pirfenidone feeds into lung lymph at later time points (after it has largely been cleared from plasma), prolonging lung lymphatic exposure. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates inhaled pirfenidone efficiently deposits in ELF and is cleared from the lungs by initial absorption into plasma, followed by later equilibrium with lung interstitial and lymph fluid.
Assuntos
Anti-Inflamatórios não Esteroides/farmacocinética , Pulmão/metabolismo , Piridonas/farmacocinética , Administração por Inalação , Animais , Anti-Inflamatórios não Esteroides/administração & dosagem , Feminino , Fibrose Pulmonar Idiopática/tratamento farmacológico , Fibrose Pulmonar Idiopática/metabolismo , Linfa/metabolismo , Piridonas/administração & dosagem , OvinosRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Glycopyrrolate administered by a novel, investigational eFlow® Closed System (CS) nebulizer (eFlow CS) is being evaluated for the maintenance treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The eFlow CS is a hand-held, vibrating membrane nebulizer optimized to deliver 1 mL of glycopyrrolate solution into the lung in <3 minutes. Clinical studies have shown improvements in lung function of subjects treated with nebulized glycopyrrolate. METHODS: The aerosol performance of the eFlow CS nebulizer was characterized by delivered dose, aerodynamic droplet size distribution and nebulization time. Simulated use nebulizer performance over 60 days was assessed by volume median diameter (VMD), nebulized amount, and nebulization time. Nebulization outputs were assayed to ensure adequate delivery of glycopyrrolate with an acceptable impurity profile. Aerosol condensates were analyzed for glycopyrrolate concentration and impurities by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography and compared with non-nebulized samples. RESULTS: The mean mass median aerodynamic diameter, geometric standard deviation, and fine particle fraction were 3.7 µm, 1.7, and 72%, respectively, and independent of formulation strength (25 and 50 µg/mL). Delivered dose was 88% of the nominal dose for both formulation strengths. The mean delivered dose, assessed by breathing simulation, was 56.8% for 25 µg/mL and 62.6% for 50 µg/mL. Nebulization times were 1-2.5 minutes with no apparent increasing trend with use over a 60-day period. The nebulized amount showed no significant changes, whereas the VMD showed a slight, but not pharmaceutically relevant, increase (0.1-0.2 µm) after 60-day simulated use. Glycopyrrolate concentration and impurity levels of nebulized samples were statistically similar to those of non-nebulized samples. CONCLUSION: The eFlow CS generates glycopyrrolate aerosols with high delivered dose, short treatment time, and small droplet size with narrow size distribution suitable for central and peripheral airway deposition. The unit dose vial mitigates medication misuse and ensures dose uniformity. Results support the use of glycopyrrolate/eFlow CS for the treatment of COPD.