Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: PLASMA LYTE 56 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PLASMA LYTE A IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: PLASMA LYTE 56 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus PLASMA LYTE A IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
PLASMA-LYTE 56 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs PLASMA-LYTE A IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
PLASMA-LYTE 56 is an isotonic crystalloid solution that provides electrolytes and water to maintain or restore intravascular volume and electrolyte balance. It expands extracellular fluid volume and improves circulation by increasing plasma volume. The solution's electrolyte composition mimics plasma, helping to correct electrolyte deficits and acid-base disturbances.
Maintenance and restoration of fluid and electrolyte balance; provides isotonic crystalloid solution with sodium, potassium, magnesium, chloride, and acetate/bicarbonate precursors to buffer acidity.
Intravenous infusion; dose depends on fluid and electrolyte needs; typical adult rate: 100-200 mL/hour.
Intravenous infusion; adult dose is based on electrolyte and fluid requirements, typically 500-1000 mL/hour initially, then adjusted; maximum rate 30 mL/kg/hour.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable as a fixed value; infused electrolytes distribute and are eliminated according to individual ion kinetics (e.g., sodium t½ ~30 min, chloride t½ ~1–2 h) with rapid redistribution.
Not applicable as a single half-life; electrolytes have distribution and elimination phases governed by body stores and renal function. For water, elimination half-life is ~2-4 hours in euvolemic individuals with normal GFR. Clinically, infused volume distributes within ~30 minutes and is renally cleared over several hours.
Primarily renal; >90% of infused electrolytes are excreted unchanged in urine; fecal elimination negligible (<5%).
Electrolytes and water are primarily excreted renally: sodium (90-95% filtered, reabsorbed), chloride (follows sodium), potassium (80-90% renal, 10% fecal), magnesium (30-50% reabsorbed, remainder excreted), acetate (metabolized to bicarbonate, ultimately renal). Fluid volume is regulated by renal mechanisms (ADH, aldosterone). Essentially 100% of administered volume and electrolytes are eliminated via kidneys under normal physiology.
Category C
Category C
Intravenous Electrolyte Solution
Intravenous Electrolyte Solution