Sulfisomidine
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| Systematic (IUPAC) name | |
|---|---|
|
4-amino-N-(2,6-dimethylpyrimidin-4-yl) benzenesulfonamide | |
| Clinical data | |
| Routes of administration | Oral |
| Pharmacokinetic data | |
| Metabolism | Minor acetylation |
| Excretion | Renal, 85% |
| Identifiers | |
| CAS Number |
515-64-0 |
| ATC code | J01EB01 (WHO) |
| PubChem | CID 5343 |
| ChemSpider |
5150 |
| UNII |
W03L3ODK6E |
| KEGG |
D01526 |
| ChEBI |
CHEBI:32166 |
| ChEMBL |
CHEMBL485696 |
| Chemical data | |
| Formula | C12H14N4O2S |
| Molar mass | 278.331 g/mol |
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Sulfisomidine (INN), also known as sulphasomidine (BAN until 2003),[1] sulfamethin and sulfaisodimidine, is a sulfonamide antibacterial. It is closely related to sulfadimidine.
References
- ↑ Changing substance names from BANs to rINNs. PDF (34.5 KiB). United Kingdom Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (December 12, 2003). Retrieved on 2007-08-26 through Archive.org.
External links
- Melander A, Bitzén PO, Olsson S (1982). "Therapeutic equivalence of sulfaisodimidine 2 g twice daily and 1 g four times daily in lower urinary tract infections". Acta medica Scandinavica 211 (5): 361–4. doi:10.1111/j.0954-6820.1982.tb01962.x. PMID 7051761.
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