Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMINOSYN HBC 7 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 4 25 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 25 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMINOSYN HBC 7 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 4 25 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 25 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
AMINOSYN-HBC 7% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs TRAVASOL 4.25% SULFITE FREE W/ ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 25% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Provides essential and nonessential amino acids to support protein synthesis and nitrogen balance in patients with metabolic stress or hepatic encephalopathy.
Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) solution providing essential amino acids, electrolytes, and dextrose. Dextrose supplies calories to spare protein catabolism; amino acids support protein synthesis; electrolytes maintain acid-base and fluid balance.
1-2 L/day intravenously (equivalent to 70-140 g amino acids/day) for adults; infuse at no more than 0.1 g/kg/h.
Intravenous administration of 1.5-2.5 L/day in divided doses, adjusted based on metabolic needs, fluid status, and electrolytes. Typical rate: 100-200 mL/hour via central line.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life of infused amino acids is approximately 0.5-1 hour for free amino acids, but varies by individual amino acid. Clinical context: rapid clearance in critically ill patients due to increased metabolic demand.
Not applicable as a single entity; components have various half-lives. Glucose has a plasma half-life of approximately 1.5-2 hours. Amino acids have variable half-lives (minutes to hours). Clinical context: continuous infusion maintains steady state.
Renal: 100% of infused amino acids are metabolized or excreted renally as urea and other nitrogenous waste products. No biliary or fecal elimination.
Amino acids and dextrose are metabolized; excess nitrogen is excreted as urea via renal route (approximately 90% of nitrogen output). Electrolytes are excreted renally. Biliary/fecal elimination is minimal (<5%).
Category C
Category C
Parenteral Nutrition Solution
Parenteral Nutrition Solution