U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Divider Arrow National Institutes of Health Divider Arrow NCATS

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Showing 161 - 170 of 421 results

Status:
Other

Class (Stereo):
CHEMICAL (ACHIRAL)

Status:
US Approved Allergenic Extract (1941)
First marketed in 1921

Class (Stereo):
CHEMICAL (ACHIRAL)


Phenol is an industrially important organic compound, produced on a large scale and used as a precursor to many materials and useful compounds. Phenol and its vapors are corrosive to the eyes, the skin, and the respiratory tract. The corrosive effect on skin and mucous membranes is due to a protein-degenerating effect. In medicine, phenol is used as an antiseptic and disinfectant. Phenol is also used as an oral analgesic or anesthetic in products such as Chloraseptic to treat sore throat pain, sore mouth, pain associated with canker sores and minor mouth irritation. Additionally, phenol and its related compounds are used in surgical ingrown toenail treatment, a process termed phenolization.
Status:
US Previously Marketed
Source:
My-B-Den by Bischoff (Dome)
(1949)
Source URL:
First approved in 1949
Source:
My-B-Den by Bischoff (Dome)
Source URL:

Class (Stereo):
CHEMICAL (ABSOLUTE)



Adenosine monophosphate (AMP) is a nucleotide, consisting of a phosphate group, the sugar ribose, and the nucleobase adenine. AMP is an activator of several enzymes in the tissues. In the glycolytic pathway, the enzyme phosphofructokinase is inhibited by ATP but the inhibition is reversed by AMP, the deciding factor for the reaction being the ratio between ATP and AMP. In medicine, AMP is used mainly as an alternative to adenosine for treatment of ischemia and as a tool compound to measure hyperresponsiveness of airways.
Status:
Possibly Marketed Outside US

Class (Stereo):
CHEMICAL (ACHIRAL)

Conditions:

There has been little to no interest in the biological and/or pharmacological application of lauryl phosphate.
Glucose-6-phosphate belongs to the class of organic compounds known as monosaccharide phosphates. It lies at the start of two major metabolic pathways: glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway. It is a glucose-6-phosphatase substrate. Hexokinase is inhibited by its product, glucose 6-phosphate. The non-enzymatic glycation of myosin by glucose 6-phosphate is probably the primary cause for the observed loss of the ATPase activity of myosin.

Showing 161 - 170 of 421 results