Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLINIMIX E 5 35 SULFITE FREE W ELECT IN DEXTROSE 35 W CALCIUM IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 2 75 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 10 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CLINIMIX E 5 35 SULFITE FREE W ELECT IN DEXTROSE 35 W CALCIUM IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 2 75 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 10 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
CLINIMIX E 5/35 SULFITE FREE W/ ELECT IN DEXTROSE 35% W/ CALCIUM IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs TRAVASOL 2.75% SULFITE FREE W/ ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 10% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Electrolyte and amino acid supplementation to maintain or restore fluid balance, provide calories from dextrose, and supply essential amino acids for protein synthesis; calcium and other electrolytes support physiological functions.
Travasol 2.75% with electrolytes in dextrose 10% is a parenteral nutrition solution. Amino acids provide substrate for protein synthesis, dextrose supplies calories, and electrolytes maintain acid-base balance and osmotic equilibrium.
Intravenous infusion at a rate determined by clinical condition and metabolic requirements. Typical adult initial rate: 100 mL/hr, adjusted based on glucose tolerance and fluid status.
Intravenous infusion. Dosage depends on caloric and nitrogen requirements, generally 1-3 L per day in adults providing 4.25 g amino acids and 100 g dextrose per liter.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable as a single entity; amino acids have half-lives ranging from minutes to hours depending on individual amino acid metabolism. Dextrose has a half-life of about 1-2 hours in fasting state, but this formulation is for continuous infusion, so elimination is constant.
Not applicable as a single entity; components have variable half-lives. Dextrose has elimination half-life of ~2-4 hours; amino acids have variable half-lives based on individual metabolic rates.
Renal excretion of amino acids and dextrose metabolites; no significant biliary or fecal elimination. Unused amino acids are deaminated and excreted as urea in urine (approximately 80-90% of nitrogen load). Electrolytes are excreted renally.
Renal (primarily as unchanged drug and metabolites). Biliary/fecal excretion is negligible (<5%).
Category C
Category C
Parenteral Nutrition Solution
Parenteral Nutrition Solution