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    Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1993;44(1):73-8.

    Kinetics of thiamin and thiamin phosphate esters in human blood, plasma and urine after 50 mg intravenously or orally.

    Tallaksen CM, Sande A, Bøhmer T, Bell H, Karlsen J.

    Medical Department, Aker University Hospital, Norway.

    The concentrations of thiamin and thiamin monophosphate and diphosphate in plasma and whole blood samples were assessed in six healthy subjects for 12 h and in urine for 24 h following an IV and PO bolus dose of 50 mg thiamin HCl. Unphosphorylated thiamin increased rapidly in plasma after IV administration and then decreased to its initial value within 12 h in all but one subject; the half-life was 96 min. Thiamin mono and -diphosphate increased moderately (56%), and decreased slowly; the half-life of diphosphate was 664 min. Within 24 h, 53% of the administered dose was recovered in the urine, indicating a restricted distribution. After oral administration, the peak thiamin concentration in plasma was reached after 53 min and the concentration then had increased to 179% of its initial value. The elimination half-life was 154 min, and only 2.5% of the given dose was recovered in the urine. The relative bioavailability of thiamin was 5.3%. A moderate amount of the administered thiamin was stored in blood. Other body tissues must play an important part, therefore, in the distribution of thiamin.

    PMID: 8436160 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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    • Thiamine

      Thiamine is a vitamin used by the body to break down sugars in the diet. The medication helps correct nerve and heart problems that occur when a person's diet does not contain enough thiamine.