Cetamolol

Cetamolol is a beta adrenergic antagonist, more specifically a β1-adrenergic blocker.[1]

Cetamolol
Names
IUPAC name
2-[2-[3-(tert-Butylamino)-2-hydroxypropoxy]phenoxy]-N-methylacetamide
Identifiers
3D model (JSmol)
ChEMBL
ChemSpider
KEGG
UNII
Properties
C16H26N2O4
Molar mass 310.394 g·mol−1
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Infobox references

Synthesis

Cetamolol synthesis:[2][3]
gollark: There is also no version history at all, or oversight.
gollark: When I work on potatOS, I deploy at any time and all computers update within 5 minutes or so. There's no testing so if I make a mistake which breaks it badly enough that it stops updating I have to fix it very fast. It's called "extreme programming".
gollark: "I was going to delete this user, but I forgot, and I'm actually on holiday tomorrow, so I'll do it next month."
gollark: "We'd like to delete this user, but our policy says that we can't deploy except on Fridays, and we have to run this one line of SQL to delete them through our change request process. We should be done by next year."
gollark: "We're working on it, but unfortunately all the documentation is written in uwu gamer language, so we have no idea how our service works, sorry!"

References

  1. Klausner, MA; Irwin, C; Mullane, JF; Shand, DG; Leese, PT; Arnold, JD; Wollberg, W; Wagner, NB; Wagner, GS (1988). "Effect of cetamolol on epinephrine-induced hypokalemia". Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 28 (8): 751–6. doi:10.1002/j.1552-4604.1988.tb03210.x. PMID 2905711.
  2. HL Tucker, DE 2453324 (1975) via Chem. Abstr., 83:96,993p
  3. BE 767781; D. J. Lecount, C. J. Squire, U.S. Patent 4,059,622 (1971, 1977 both to ICI).


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