Alpha1-acid glycoprotein and albumin in human serum bupivacaine binding

Abstract
Bupivacaine [a local anesthetic with toxic effects] protein binding was studied with the use of human serum, isolated human serum albumin and isolated .alpha.1-acid glycoprotein. The effect of lactic acid on bupivacaine binding was also studied Bupivacaine protein binding in serum is best characterized by a model described by 2 classes of binding sites and that in .alpha.1-acid glycoprotein or albumin is best characterized by a model described by one class of binding sites for each protein. Albumin binding closely correlated with the data obtained for the low-affinity, high-capacity binding site in serum, while .alpha.1-acid glycoprotein data closely correlated with the data obtained for the high-affinity, low-capacity site in serum. A reduction in pH resulted in a significant reduction in the affinity for the high-affinity, low-capacity site in serum. No other binding parameters were affected. These data were in excellent agreement with results of the isolated protein studies. Acidosis evidently results in significant increases in free bupivacaine concentrations only at relatively low total bupivacaine concentrations (< 7 .mu.g/ml) and distribution characteristics for bupivacaine are essentially unchanged over a wide concentration range.