Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ISOLYTE P IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PLASMA LYTE 148 AND DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ISOLYTE P IN DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PLASMA LYTE 148 AND DEXTROSE 5 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
ISOLYTE P IN DEXTROSE 5% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs PLASMA-LYTE 148 AND DEXTROSE 5% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
ISOLYTE P in Dextrose 5% provides electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium, chloride, acetate, phosphate) and dextrose to maintain fluid and electrolyte balance, restore intravascular volume, and supply calories. Dextrose is metabolized to carbon dioxide and water, providing energy. Acetate acts as an alkalinizing agent, metabolized to bicarbonate in the liver.
Plasma-Lyte 148 and Dextrose 5% is an intravenous solution that provides maintenance fluid, electrolytes, and calories. Dextrose provides energy and prevents ketosis. Plasma-Lyte 148 contains electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, chloride, acetate, gluconate) to replace losses and maintain acid-base balance.
Intravenous infusion; dose determined by fluid, electrolyte, and caloric requirements. Typical adult rate: 100-200 mL/hr; maximum infusion rate 10 mL/min.
IV infusion at a rate of 10-20 mL/kg/hour, not to exceed 100 mL/hour in adults without cardiac or renal compromise; adjust based on fluid status and serum electrolytes.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable as a combination product. Dextrose: 1-2 hours (metabolic clearance). Electrolytes: distribution half-life ~15-30 minutes, elimination depends on renal function; in normal renal function, complete clearance within 2-4 hours.
Not applicable as it is a balanced electrolyte solution with dextrose. Components distribute and are eliminated rapidly; dextrose half-life ~15-30 minutes in normoglycemia.
Renal: 100% (electrolytes and dextrose metabolites, primarily water and CO2). No biliary or fecal elimination of significant amount.
Components are excreted renally. Dextrose is metabolized; electrolytes are eliminated via kidneys (sodium, chloride, acetate, gluconate, magnesium, potassium). No biliary or fecal elimination.
Category C
Category C
Intravenous Electrolyte Solution
Intravenous Electrolyte Solution