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4-Hydroxy-3-[2'-(ethylamino)ethanolmethyl]acetanilide is a chemical with a specific purpose. Lookchem provides you with multiple data and supplier information of this chemical.

166184-54-9

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166184-54-9 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 166184-54-9 includes 9 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 6 digits, 1,6,6,1,8 and 4 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 5 and 4 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 166184-54:
(8*1)+(7*6)+(6*6)+(5*1)+(4*8)+(3*4)+(2*5)+(1*4)=149
149 % 10 = 9
So 166184-54-9 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

166184-54-9Downstream Products

166184-54-9Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Role of hepatic metabolism in the bioactivition and detoxication of amodiaquine

Jewell,Maggs,Harrison,O'Neill,Ruscoe,Park

, p. 199 - 217 (1995)

1. The hepatic metabolism of the antimalarial drug amodiaquine was investigated in order to gain further insight into the postulated metabolic causation of the hepatotoxicity, which restricts the use of the drug. After intraportal (i.p.) administration (54 μmol/kg) to the anaesthetized rat, the drug was excreted in bile (23 ± 3% dose over 5 h; mean ± SD, n = 6) primarily as thioether conjugates. 2. After i.p. administration, 20% of the dose was excreted into urine over 24h as parent compound and products of N-dealkylation and oxidative deamination. Desethylamodiaquine accumulated in liver, but was not a substrate for bioactivation as measured by biliary elimination of a glutathione adduct. 3. Prior administration of ketoconazole, an inhibitor of P450, reduced biliary excretion by 50% and effected a corresponding decrease in the amount of drug irreversibly bound to liver proteins. This indicated a role for P450 in the bioactivation of amodiaquine to a reactive metabolite that conjugates with glutathione and protein. 4. De-ethylation and irreversible binding were observed in vitro using male rat liver. microsomes, and were again inhibited by ketoconazole. However, no such binding was observed with human (six individuals) hepatic microsomes despite extensive turnover of amodiaquine to desethylamodiaquine. 5. Amodiaquine quinoneimine underwent rapid reduction in the presence of either human or rat liver microsomes. Therefore in vitro studies may underestimate the bioactivation of amodiaquine in vivo. These data indicate that the extent of protein adduct formation in the liver will depend on the relative rates of oxidation of amodiaquine and reduction of its quinoneimine. This in turn may be a predisposing factor in the idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity associated with amodiaquine. 6. Substitution of a fluorine for the phenolic hydroxyl group in amodiaquine blocked bioactivation of the drug in vivo. Insertion of an N-hydroxyethyl function enabled partial clearance of amodiaquine and its deshydroxyfluoro analogue via O-glucuronidation and altered the balance between phase I oxidation and direct phase II conjugation of amodiaquine.

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