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Comparison of Berberine Bioavailability between Oral and Rectal Administrations in Rats

Nobuhiro Mori, Keisuke Oda, Hideki Takakura, Yusuke Tanaka, Tomoharu Yokooji, Teruo Murakami

2023Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The oral bioavailability of berberine is quite low due to extensive first-pass metabolism. To increase the bioavailability of berberine (BBR), the efficacy of rectal administration that can avoid intestinal and hepatic first-pass metabolism partly was evaluated using BBR sulfate in rats. BBR sulfate was administered intravenously (1 mg/kg as BBR), orally (10 mg/kg as BBR) and rectally (1, 3, or 10 mg/kg as BBR) using Witepsol® H15 suppository base to evaluate bioavailability in rats. Concentrations of BBR in plasma were determined by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). When BBR sulfate was administered orally, the average oral bioavailability was 0.26%. When BBR sulfate was administered rectally, the average bioavailabilities were 17.0% at 1 mg/kg, 24.3% at 3 mg/kg, and 12.3% at 10 mg/kg as BBR, respectively. Thus, rectal administration of BBR sulfate greatly increased the bioavailability of BBR as compared with oral administration, which would also increase the pharmacological activities of BBR in vivo.

Topics & Concepts

BioavailabilitySuppositoryBerberineChemistryOral administrationPharmacologyRectal administrationPharmacokineticsChromatographyMedicineBerberine and alkaloids researchPlant-based Medicinal ResearchAlkaloids: synthesis and pharmacology
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