- The metabolism of thioacetanilide in the rat.
The metabolism of thioacetanilide in the rat.
The metabolism and acute toxicity of thioacetanilide was studied in the rat. Following intragastric dosage (100 mg/kg), over 90% dose was excreted in urine, predominantly as conjugated metabolites: less than 7% was recovered in the faeces, consisting of unchanged thioacetanilide. N-Acetyl-4-aminophenol sulphate was the major urinary metabolite, with smaller amounts of conjugated 4-hydroxythioacetanilide and unmetabolized thioacetanilide. Biliary excretion amounted to only 3.4% and was N-acetyl-4-aminophenol glucuronide. Although desulphuration was a major metabolic pathway in the rat, no hepatic toxicity (shown by serum enzymes, plasma bilirubin, hepatic glutathione and cytochrome P-450 levels) occurred up to doses of 500 mg/kg. Combination of rapid 4-hydroxylation, absence of sulphoxide formation, and the structural tautomerism exhibited by thioacetanilide may be, in part, responsible for these findings.