Furethidine

Chemical compound From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Furethidine[2][3][4] is a 4-phenylpiperidine derivative that is related to the clinically used opioid analgesic drug pethidine (meperidine),[5] but with around 25x higher potency.[6] According to another source, Furethidine is 500/30 = 16.7 x the potency of pethidine (table VII).[7][8]

Other namesethyl 4-phenyl-1-(2-tetrahydrofurfuryloxyethyl)piperidine-4-carboxylate
ATC code
  • none
Legal status
Quick facts Clinical data, Other names ...
Furethidine
Clinical data
Other namesethyl 4-phenyl-1-(2-tetrahydrofurfuryloxyethyl)piperidine-4-carboxylate
ATC code
  • none
Legal status
Legal status
Identifiers
  • ethyl 1-[2-(oxolan-2-ylmethoxy)ethyl]-4-phenylpiperidine-4-carboxylate
CAS Number
PubChem CID
DrugBank
ChemSpider
UNII
KEGG
ChEMBL
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
ECHA InfoCard100.017.451 Edit this at Wikidata
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC21H31NO4
Molar mass361.482 g·mol−1
3D model (JSmol)
  • O=C(OCC)C3(c1ccccc1)CCN(CCOCC2OCCC2)CC3
  • InChI=1S/C21H31NO4/c1-2-25-20(23)21(18-7-4-3-5-8-18)10-12-22(13-11-21)14-16-24-17-19-9-6-15-26-19/h3-5,7-8,19H,2,6,9-17H2,1H3 checkY
  • Key:NNCOZXNZFLUYGG-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
  (verify)
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Furethidine is not currently used in medicine and is a Class A/Schedule I drug which is controlled under UN drug conventions. It has similar effects to other opioid derivatives, such as analgesia, sedation, nausea and respiratory depression.[9] In the United States it is a Schedule I Narcotic controlled substance with the ACSCN of 9626.[10]

References

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