Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: COLYTE versus PEG 3350 AND ELECTROLYTES.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: COLYTE versus PEG 3350 AND ELECTROLYTES.
COLYTE vs PEG 3350 AND ELECTROLYTES
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Colyte is a polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based osmotic laxative that induces diarrhea by retaining water in the gastrointestinal tract via osmotic forces, thereby cleansing the colon.
PEG 3350 is an osmotic laxative that retains water in the bowel lumen via hydrogen bonding, increasing fecal water content and stimulating peristalsis. Electrolytes (sodium sulfate, potassium chloride, sodium bicarbonate, magnesium sulfate) prevent significant fluid and electrolyte shifts by maintaining isotonicity.
4 L oral solution administered as a single dose at a rate of 240 mL every 10 minutes until complete.
4 liters orally of the reconstituted solution administered as a single dose at 240 mL every 10 minutes or 1 to 1.5 L/hour until rectal effluent is clear. Alternatively, 240 mL every 10 minutes until 4 L consumed.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable; systemic absorption is negligible (<0.06%), so a terminal elimination half-life is clinically irrelevant. The gastrointestinal transit time for the solution is approximately 1-3 hours.
Not applicable; PEG 3350 undergoes minimal systemic absorption (<0.2%), thus no meaningful terminal half-life. Systemic half-life of absorbed fraction is <2 hours.
COLYTE (polyethylene glycol 3350 and electrolytes) is minimally absorbed; <0.1% of the dose is excreted renally. The majority is eliminated unchanged in feces via the gastrointestinal tract, with fecal excretion accounting for >99%.
Primarily fecal (96–98%) as unabsorbed PEG 3350; electrolytes absorbed are excreted renally (sodium, potassium) and via feces (biliary excretion negligible).
Category C
Category C
Osmotic Laxative
Osmotic Laxative