Levomoramide
Chemical compound
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Levomoramide is the inactive isomer of the opioid analgesic dextromoramide, invented by the chemist Paul Janssen in 1956. Unlike dextromoramide, which is a potent analgesic with high abuse potential, levomoramide is virtually without activity.[2][3]
ATC code
- none
Legal status
- AU: S8 (Controlled drug)
- BR: Class A1 (Narcotic drugs)[1]
- CA: Schedule I
- DE: Anlage II (Authorized trade only, not prescriptible)
- US: Schedule I
- UN: Narcotic Schedule I
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| ECHA InfoCard | 100.024.658 |
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| Formula | C25H32N2O2 |
| Molar mass | 392.543 g·mol−1 |
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"Resolution reveals that the analgetic activity in this case resides almost entirely in the (+) isomer."[4]
"In the α-CH3 series, one of the optical isomers of each enantiomorphic pair is about twice as active as the racemic mixture; the other isomer is devoid of significant analgesic activity."[5]
However, despite being inactive, levomoramide is scheduled by UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.