Cinchophen
Cinchophen (trade names Atophan, Quinophan, and Phenaquin) is an analgesic drug that was introduced in 1910 and frequently used to treat gout. This drug is still used, in combination with Prednisolone, by veterinarians to treat arthritis in animals. It can be prepared starting from anilin, benzaldehyde and pyruvic acid in absolute ethanol. Use of this drug in humans ceased in the 1930s due to the discovery that cinchophen can cause serious liver damage. There is some evidence that it stimulates C-Fos.
primaryTopic
Cinchophen
Cinchophen (trade names Atophan, Quinophan, and Phenaquin) is an analgesic drug that was introduced in 1910 and frequently used to treat gout. This drug is still used, in combination with Prednisolone, by veterinarians to treat arthritis in animals. It can be prepared starting from anilin, benzaldehyde and pyruvic acid in absolute ethanol. Use of this drug in humans ceased in the 1930s due to the discovery that cinchophen can cause serious liver damage. There is some evidence that it stimulates C-Fos.
has abstract
Cinchophen (trade names Atopha ...... ence that it stimulates C-Fos.
@en
سينكوفين Cinchophen (الأسماء ا ...... لأدلة على أنه يحفز C-فوس C-Fos
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ATC prefix
ATC suffix
CAS number
FDA UNII code
39Y533Z02M
IUPAC name
2-phenylquinoline-4-carboxylic acid
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PubChem
thumbnail
Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
728,440,852
ChEMBL
ChemSpiderID
molecular weight
2.49264e+2
smiles
O=Cc1c3ccccc3ncc2ccccc2
StdInChIKey
YTRMTPPVNRALON-UHFFFAOYSA-N
verifiedrevid
437,167,665
hypernym
comment
Cinchophen (trade names Atopha ...... ence that it stimulates C-Fos.
@en
سينكوفين Cinchophen (الأسماء ا ...... لأدلة على أنه يحفز C-فوس C-Fos
@ar
label
Cinchophen
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سينكوفين
@ar