Abstract
The protein binding of racemic warfarin was determined in serum from 57 normal adults (27 men and 30 women). The free fraction of warfarin (total concentration, 0.8 mug/ml) ranged from 0.0050 to 0.0186 and was log-normally distributed. The frequency distribution differs from that in rats in which the serum free fraction values of warfarin are trimodally distributed. The protein binding of phenytoin was determined in serum from 39 of the subjects. The free fraction of phenytoin (total concentration, 15 mug/ml) ranged from 0.111 to 0.155 and was unimodally distributed. There was no apparent correlation between the extent of protein binding of warfarin and phenytoin in individual serum samples. The pronounced intersubject variation in serum free fraction of warfarin observed in consistent with our previous finding that serum protein binding is an important determinant of interindividual differences in the total clearance of warfarin in man. On the other hand, the relatively narrow distribution of free phenytoin fraction values suggests that differences in serum protein binding of phenytoin are not an important cause of the prounounced interindividual differences in the total clearance of phenytoin by subjects with normal renal function.
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