Compared to Superman we're beginners ...
I've been on warfarin for almost 4 years and did miss one dose in that time
I think that's about my average too ... perhaps its one every two years, but I'm not concerned with that. I'm more interested in being in range most of the time. This is one of the core strengths of warfarin: half life.
A single dose of warfarin will remain in ones system for something like this time:
so because we then load up every day with more we get something like this sort of accumulation
(modelled on a 10mg dose and a 48 hour half life, which is about median)
Because of the accumulation in our bodies of the stuff being 12 hours or so out (or even missing a dose entirely) won't drop much and equally won't take long to return from what is a trivial deviation.
So lets model this ...
Initially we see that accumulation of warfarin in our systems, then lets look at the results from three strategies
- Do nothing: I miss a dose and we can see that accumulation falls, then returns in a few days
- Take next day ...
- Split the remainder across the following days ...
each of these takes the same amount of time to wash out. Note I didn't bother with the "take it as soon as you see it" because that's typically going to be less than 24 hours and is harder to model and will have even less effect.
Note this is the simple theoretical model of accumulation (
one compartment model) and may or may not reflect the INR outcome. Remember that INR is not directly acted on by warfarin, (not least) because warfarin act only on your Vitamin K recycling, its an indirect drug. INR is also influenced by what else goes in our mouth (alcohol, Vitamin K ...) so my view is don't overly fret it.
This is also a good time to remind people why you don't sit on the bottom of your range, and that you should aim for the target (not the lower limit)
(
NB the above is said for @GreenGiant91 and general reading, not for you cos I know your well across this)