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Endocrinology, Vol 114, 786-793, Copyright © 1984 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Methimazole pharmacology in the rat: studies using a newly developed radioimmunoassay for methimazole

DS Cooper, JD Kieffer, V Saxe, H Mover, F Maloof and EC Ridgway

Methimazole [1-methyl-2-mercaptoimidazole (MMI)] was given to normal male rats in their drinking water in concentrations ranging from 0.0001- 0.05% for either 1 week or 1 month. Serum MMI levels in the rats ranged from 0.008-19.6 micrograms/ml, and were similar after 1 week and 1 month of treatment. Serum MMI was linearly related to the MMI concentration in the drinking water (r = 0.98, P less than 0.001). In contrast, intrathyroid MMI content plateaued with increasing MMI concentrations in the water, and was linearly related to the logarithm of the MMI concentration. At the highest MMI concentration (0.05%), thyroid MMI contents were similar in the 1-week and 1-month groups (approximately 1 X 10(-4) M). Surprisingly, at lower MMI concentrations, thyroid MMI content was significantly higher in the 1- week group than the 1-month group. Thyroid function was inhibited by MMI with similar depression of serum T4 or T3 after 1 week or 1 month of MMI treatment. Although the MMI concentration for 50% suppression of thyroid PBI was 0.003% in both groups, thyroid MMI content at this MMI concentration was 97 microM after 1 week but only 15 microM after 1 month. The continued thyroid-inhibiting activity of MMI at 1 month, despite a striking decrease in thyroid MMI content, may relate to intrathyroid iodide depletion, which was more severe after 1 month (thyroid 127I = 40 microM) than after 1 week (thyroid 127I = 140 microM) or in controls (470 microM). Rats were given 0.05% MMI for either 1 week or 1 month, and the drug was then withdrawn. In the 1- week group, serum MMI disappeared biexponentially, with a rapidly declining phase (t1/2 = 3.2 h) and a second, slower disappearance phase (t1/2 = 47.7 h). Similar findings were noted after 1 month of treatment. The disappearance of thyroid MMI was also biexponential after 1 week, but this variable could not be evaluated after 1 month because thyroid MMI fell rapidly to undetectable levels. There was a highly significant correlation in the 1-week group between the disappearance of MMI from the thyroid and the recovery of thyroid function as assessed by thyroid PBI (r = 0.81, P less than 0.01). Despite the very rapid disappearance of MMI from the thyroid after 1 month of treatment, the recovery time of thyroid PBI was significantly longer than after 1 week of treatment (2.1 days vs. 1.4 days for 50% recovery, P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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