Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: M V I 12 ADULT versus MULTRYS.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: M V I 12 ADULT versus MULTRYS.
M.V.I.-12 ADULT vs MULTRYS
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
M.V.I.-12 Adult is a multivitamin combination that supplies essential vitamins (A, D, E, C, B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B12, folic acid, biotin) to maintain normal metabolic functions, act as cofactors in enzymatic reactions, and support cellular respiration, antioxidant defense, and erythropoiesis.
MULTRYS is a multivitamin preparation for intravenous infusion; its components serve as coenzymes or cofactors in various metabolic pathways, including energy production, red blood cell formation, and antioxidant defense.
10 mL (one vial) added to 500 mL of IV fluid, infused over 8-24 hours once daily.
10 mL (one vial) intravenously three times per week, not to exceed 10 mL per dose.
None Documented
None Documented
Variable by component: e.g., thiamine 9-18 days (tissue stores), vitamin C 10-20 days (depletion), vitamin A 50-100 days (liver stores). Clinical context: half-lives reflect slow depletion; daily dosing maintains plasma levels.
Not applicable as a single entity; values vary by component. For example: thiamine 10-20 minutes (plasma), riboflavin 1-2 hours, vitamin B6 2-3 weeks (tissue stores), vitamin C 16 days (10-20 days for depletion), biotin 1-2 days, folic acid 3-4 hours (plasma), vitamin B12 4-5 days (plasma), zinc 2-3 days (plasma), copper 12-24 hours, selenium 11-20 days, chromium 0.5-1 day, manganese 5-10 days.
Renal: water-soluble vitamins (B-complex, C) excreted in urine; fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) undergo biliary/fecal excretion. Specific percentages vary per component; e.g., vitamin C ~50% renal, thiamine ~30-70% renal as metabolites.
Renal elimination of individual vitamins and trace elements varies; no intact drug is excreted, as MULTRYS is a mixture. Approximate ranges: thiamine 50% unchanged in urine, riboflavin 60-70% as metabolites in urine, vitamin B6 70-80% as 4-pyridoxic acid in urine, vitamin C 50% unchanged in urine, biotin 50% unchanged in urine, folic acid mainly as metabolites in urine, vitamin B12 via bile (50-60%) and urine (10-30%). Trace elements: zinc primarily fecal (90%), copper primarily fecal (80-90%), selenium primarily urine (50-60%), chromium primarily urine (80%), manganese primarily fecal (95-97%).
Category C
Category C
Multivitamin
Multivitamin/Mineral Supplement