1982
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.1982.tb04954.x
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The binding of prednisolone in human serum and to recrystallized human albumin in vitro.

Abstract: 1 Prednisolone binding in human serum and to recrystallized human serum albumin was measured by continuous ultrafiltration. 2 At serum concentrations of prednisolone up to 0.6 micron, 95.0% was bound but at higher concentrations the binding became non‐linear falling to 80.5% at 1.8 microns. At even higher concentrations binding in serum became linear again and paralleled the binding to albumin which was linear throughout the entire range of prednisolone concentrations. 3 A binding model was proposed which incl… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…This phenomenon is related to saturation of the high affinity-low capacity binding to transcortin, while the binding to albumin shows low affinity and high capacity and appears to be largely concentration independent (Lewis et al, 1971;Wagner et al, 1981;Steele et al, 1982). The mechanism responsible for the marked impairment of prednisolone binding capacity in the acute phase of the nephrotic syndrome remains to be established.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This phenomenon is related to saturation of the high affinity-low capacity binding to transcortin, while the binding to albumin shows low affinity and high capacity and appears to be largely concentration independent (Lewis et al, 1971;Wagner et al, 1981;Steele et al, 1982). The mechanism responsible for the marked impairment of prednisolone binding capacity in the acute phase of the nephrotic syndrome remains to be established.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our finding of a significant negative correlation between albumin concentration and free prednisolone fraction during acute disease does not prove a cause-effect relationship. Transcortin, for example, has been considered in some studies as a more important determinant of changes in prednisolone binding (Frey & Frey, 1982b;Steele et al, 1982) and is known to decrease in nephrotic patients in a parallel fashion with the fall in plasma albumin (Frey & Frey, 1982a). The possible role of endogenous binding inhibitors should also be considered.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their median age was 10 years (range [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16] and their median plasma albumin concentration was 23 g/l (range: 16-33 g/l) (table 1). Prednisolone was given as an intravenous bolus injection of prednisolone phosphate (Codelsol; Merk, Sharpe and Dohme) 30-64 mg (median: 60 mg).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fraction bound is not constant and decreases in a nonlinear fashion with increasing concentrations: at low concentrations protein binding appears to be quite high (80%-90%), but declines at higher prednisolone levels to 60%-70%. [33], [44], [49], [50], [52] For plasma concentrations of up to 400 ng/mL an approximate linear function of fraction bound can be assumed, which switches over to a constant (lower) relation above 600 ng/mL, [44] reflecting the saturable binding of prednisolone to transcortin. Binding of prednisolone to plasma protein is independent of the route of administration.…”
Section: Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%