Vitamin B1 analogue

Vitamin B1 analogues are analogues of vitamin B1, thiamine. They typically have improved bioavailability relative to thiamine itself, and are used to treat conditions caused by vitamin B1 deficiency. These conditions include beriberi, Korsakoff's syndrome, Wernicke's encephalopathy and diabetic neuropathy.

List of vitamin B1 analogues

Vitamin B1 analogues include:[1]

gollark: I *might*, although I probably wouldn't want to continue living literally forever even when the universe has no more harvestable energy (assuming this happens).
gollark: But I don't really want to live for just 80 years or whatever it is.
gollark: I mean, full immortality i.e. you literally can never die might be apioforms.
gollark: Sometimes we construct arbitrarily recursive subuniverses and extract all possible energy from them.
gollark: This is HIGHLY renewable.

See also

References

  1. Martindale W (1993). The Extra Pharmacopoeia. Pharmaceutical Press. p. 1053. ISBN 978-0-85369-300-0.
  2. Yadav UC, Kalariya NM, Srivastava SK, Ramana KV (May 2010). "Protective role of benfotiamine, a fat-soluble vitamin B1 analogue, in lipopolysaccharide-induced cytotoxic signals in murine macrophages". Free Radical Biology & Medicine. 48 (10): 1423–34. doi:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2010.02.031. PMC 2856750. PMID 20219672.
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