Butaclamol
Chemical compound
- none
- (3S,4aS,13bS)-3-(2-Methyl-2-propanyl)-2,3,4,4a,8,9,13b,14-octahydro-1H-benzo[6,7]cyclohepta[1,2,3-de]pyrido[2,1-a]isoquinolin-3-ol
- 36504-93-5
- 37459
- 62
- 34364
- A7A2802VNL
- CHEBI:73298 Y
- ChEMBL479587 Y
- DTXSID701317857 DTXSID5048429, DTXSID701317857
- Interactive image
- CC(C)(C)C1(CCN2CC3C4=CC=CC=C4CCC5=C3C(=CC=C5)C2C1)O
Butaclamol (AY-23,028) is a type of antipsychotic which was never marketed.[1] Sold as the hydrochloride salt for use in research, the compound acts as a dopamine receptor antagonist.[2]
Chemistry
pKa = 7.15 (uncorrected for ionic strength)[3]
References
- ^ Buckingham J (1985). Dictionary of organic compounds - Google Books. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-412-54090-5.
- ^ Hall DA, Strange PG (June 1997). "Evidence that antipsychotic drugs are inverse agonists at D2 dopamine receptors". British Journal of Pharmacology. 121 (4): 731–6. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0701196. PMC 1564749. PMID 9208141.
- ^ Chrzanowski FA, McGrogan BA, Maryanoff BE (March 1985). "The pKa of butaclamol and the mode of butaclamol binding to central dopamine receptors". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 28 (3): 399–400. doi:10.1021/jm00381a022. PMID 2579238.
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Antipsychotics (N05A)
- Butyrophenones: Benperidol
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- Droperidol
- Haloperidol#
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- Pipamperone
- Spiperone
- Timiperone
- Trifluperidol
- Phenothiazines: Acepromazine
- Acetophenazine
- Butaperazine
- Carphenazine (carfenazine)‡
- Chlorpromazine
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- Thioproperazine
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- Others/unknown: Azacyclonol
- #WHO-EM
- ‡Withdrawn from market
- Clinical trials:
- †Phase III
- §Never to phase III
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