ALCapshaw2
Well-known member
I'm confused...
and I think I'm beginning to see some contradictions in our "rules of thumb" about how coumadin acts in our bodies.
We have "Fast Metabolizers" who typically take High Doses of Coumadin / Warfarin (say over 50 mg/week). When they SKIP a Dose, their INR is reported to "Drop like a Rock".
We have "Slow Metabolizers" who typically take Low Doses of Coumadin / Warfarin (say 21 to 28 mg/week which is 3 or 4 mg/day). When they SKIP a Dose, their INR is reported to drop more slowly, maybe about half as fast as for Fast Metabolizers.
One of our "Rules of Thumb" is that it takes 3 or 4 days for Warfarin to be fully metabolized. Wouldn't this number vary between Slow Metabolizers and Fast Metabolizers?
There seems to be some confusion about HOW / How Fast Coumadin is Metabolized over those "4 days". Is it LINEAR, i.e. 25% on day 1, 50% by day 2, 75% by day 3, and 100% by day 4?
OR, is it 0% on day 1, 0% on day 2, 0% on day 3, and 100% by day 4 as some seem to imply? I have a Hard Time accepting this theory.
NOTE that by the theory of Linear Metabolization, the concept of using Loading Doses to bring INR up Faster would seem to be supported, acknowledging that there is the then the issue of OVERSHOOTING to deal with a few days later.
Is there a model that can be applied generally to all patients (i.e. does everyone metabolized linearly, or in some defined non-linear manner)?
IF metabolization is NON-Linear, is there a Single (mathematically defined) Model for this pattern or is it different for everybody?
I've pretty well accepted the notion that there is a variation in SPEED of metabolization between patients.
'AL Capshaw'
and I think I'm beginning to see some contradictions in our "rules of thumb" about how coumadin acts in our bodies.
We have "Fast Metabolizers" who typically take High Doses of Coumadin / Warfarin (say over 50 mg/week). When they SKIP a Dose, their INR is reported to "Drop like a Rock".
We have "Slow Metabolizers" who typically take Low Doses of Coumadin / Warfarin (say 21 to 28 mg/week which is 3 or 4 mg/day). When they SKIP a Dose, their INR is reported to drop more slowly, maybe about half as fast as for Fast Metabolizers.
One of our "Rules of Thumb" is that it takes 3 or 4 days for Warfarin to be fully metabolized. Wouldn't this number vary between Slow Metabolizers and Fast Metabolizers?
There seems to be some confusion about HOW / How Fast Coumadin is Metabolized over those "4 days". Is it LINEAR, i.e. 25% on day 1, 50% by day 2, 75% by day 3, and 100% by day 4?
OR, is it 0% on day 1, 0% on day 2, 0% on day 3, and 100% by day 4 as some seem to imply? I have a Hard Time accepting this theory.
NOTE that by the theory of Linear Metabolization, the concept of using Loading Doses to bring INR up Faster would seem to be supported, acknowledging that there is the then the issue of OVERSHOOTING to deal with a few days later.
Is there a model that can be applied generally to all patients (i.e. does everyone metabolized linearly, or in some defined non-linear manner)?
IF metabolization is NON-Linear, is there a Single (mathematically defined) Model for this pattern or is it different for everybody?
I've pretty well accepted the notion that there is a variation in SPEED of metabolization between patients.
'AL Capshaw'