Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: TRAVASOL 4 25 IN DEXTROSE 20 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 4 25 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 15 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: TRAVASOL 4 25 IN DEXTROSE 20 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER versus TRAVASOL 4 25 SULFITE FREE W ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 15 IN PLASTIC CONTAINER.
TRAVASOL 4.25% IN DEXTROSE 20% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER vs TRAVASOL 4.25% SULFITE FREE W/ ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 15% IN PLASTIC CONTAINER
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Travasol 4.25% in Dextrose 20% is a parenteral nutrition solution providing amino acids and carbohydrates. Amino acids serve as substrates for protein synthesis, while dextrose supplies calories to prevent catabolism and promote anabolism. The solution corrects nitrogen balance and provides energy.
TRAVASOL 4.25% SULFITE FREE W/ ELECTROLYTES IN DEXTROSE 15% is a parenteral nutrition solution providing amino acids, dextrose, and electrolytes. The amino acids serve as substrates for protein synthesis; dextrose supplies caloric energy; electrolytes maintain acid-base balance and osmotic equilibrium.
Intravenous administration via central line. Typical adult dose: 500-1000 mL/day of TRAVASOL 4.25% in dextrose 20% (providing 4.25 g amino acids and 20 g dextrose per 100 mL) as part of total parenteral nutrition. Infusion rate: not to exceed 0.8 g/kg/h of amino acids. Individualize based on metabolic needs.
Intravenous infusion: 1-2 L/day as total parenteral nutrition; typical rate 100-125 mL/hour based on caloric and nitrogen needs.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable; components are endogenous nutrients. Dextrose half-life <15 min in normal renal function; amino acids have variable half-lives (minutes) due to rapid metabolism and incorporation. Clinical context: continuous infusion maintains steady state.
Not applicable as a single agent; components have varying half-lives: dextrose ~2 h (glucose), amino acids ~1-3 h (plasma clearance), electrolytes proportional to renal function
Renal excretion; amino acids are reabsorbed or metabolized, excess nitrogen excreted as urea (renal). Dextrose is metabolized to CO2 and water. No significant biliary/fecal elimination.
Renal: 100% (primarily as free water and electrolytes; dextrose is metabolized; amino acids are deaminated and urea is excreted renally)
Category C
Category C
Parenteral Nutrition Solution
Parenteral Nutrition Solution