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Sulfisomidine
Clinical data
Routes of
administration
Oral
ATC code
Pharmacokinetic data
MetabolismMinor acetylation
Excretion Renal, 85%
Identifiers
  • 4-amino-N-(2,6-dimethylpyrimidin-4-yl)
    benzenesulfonamide
CAS Number
PubChem CID
ChemSpider
UNII
KEGG
ChEBI
ChEMBL
CompTox Dashboard ( EPA)
ECHA InfoCard 100.007.460 Edit this at Wikidata
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC12H14N4O2S
Molar mass278.33 g·mol−1
3D model ( JSmol)
  • O=S(=O)(Nc1nc(nc(c1)C)C)c2ccc(N)cc2
  • InChI=1S/C12H14N4O2S/c1-8-7-12(15-9(2)14-8)16-19(17,18)11-5-3-10(13)4-6-11/h3-7H,13H2,1-2H3,(H,14,15,16) checkY
  • Key:YZMCKZRAOLZXAZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
 ☒NcheckY  (what is this?)   (verify)

Sulfisomidine ( INN), also known as sulphasomidine ( BAN until 2003), [1] sulfamethin and sulfaisodimidine, is a sulfonamide antibacterial. It is closely related to sulfadimidine.

References

  1. ^ "Changing substance names from BANs to rINNs" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2005-08-27.{{ cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link) (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.