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103-90-2 molecular structure
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N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide

ChemBase ID: 201
Molecular Formular: C8H9NO2
Molecular Mass: 151.16256
Monoisotopic Mass: 151.06332853
SMILES and InChIs

SMILES:
Oc1ccc(NC(=O)C)cc1
Canonical SMILES:
CC(=O)Nc1ccc(cc1)O
InChI:
InChI=1S/C8H9NO2/c1-6(10)9-7-2-4-8(11)5-3-7/h2-5,11H,1H3,(H,9,10)
InChIKey:
RZVAJINKPMORJF-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Cite this record

CBID:201 http://www.chembase.cn/molecule-201.html

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NAMES AND DATABASE IDS

NAMES AND DATABASE IDS

Names Database IDs
IUPAC name
N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide
IUPAC Traditional name
acetaminophen
Brand Name
Febrolin
Fendon
Feverall
Fevor
Finimal
Gelocatil
Genapap
Genebs
Hedex
Homoolan
Hy-Phen
Injectapap
Janupap
Korum
Lestemp
Liquagesic
Liquiprin
Lonarid
Lyteca
Momentum
Multin
NAPA
Napafen
Napap
Naprinol
Nealgyl
Nebs
Neopap
Neotrend
Nobedon
Norco
Oraphen-PD
Ortensan
Pacemo
Painex
Paldesic
Panadol
Panaleve
Panasorb
Panets
Panex
Panofen
Papa-Deine
Paracet
Parapan
Paraspen
Parelan
Parmol
Pasolind
Pasolind N
Pedric
Phenaphen
Phenaphen Caplets
Phendon
Phrenilin
Phrenilin Forte
Prompt
Propacet 100
Proval #3
Pyrinazine
Redutemp
Rivalgyl
Robigesic
Rounox
SK-Apap
Salzone
Sedapap
Servigesic
Snaplets-FR
St. Joseph Fever Reducer
Suppap
Synalgos-Dc-A
Tabalgin
Talacen
Tapanol
Tapar
Tavist Allergy/Sinus/Headache
Temlo
Tempanal
Tempra
Tencon
Tibinide
Tibizide
Tisin
Tisiodrazida
Tizide
Tralgon
Triaprin
Tussapap
Tycolet
Tylenol
Ultracet
Valadol
Valgesic
Valorin
Valorin Extra
Wygesic
Algotropyl
Allay
Alpiny
Alpinyl
Alvedon
Amadil
Aminofen
Anacin
Anacin-3
Anaflon
Anapap
Anelix
Anhiba
Apacet
Apadon
Apamid
Apamide
Atasol
Banesin
Bayer Select
Bickie-mol
Bucet
Butapap
Calpol
Captin
Cetadol
Clixodyne
Co-Gesic
Conacetol
Dafalgan
Dapa
Dapa X-S
Darvocet
Datril
Dimindol
Dirox
Disprol
Dolene AP-65
Doliprane
Dolprone
Drixoral Plus
Dularin
Dymadon
Dypap
Elixodyne
Enelfa
Eneril
Eu-Med
Excedrin
Exdol
Febridol
Febrilix
Febrinol
Febro-Gesic
Abenol
Abensanil
Acamol
Accu-Tap
Acephen
Aceta Elixir
Aceta Tablets
Acetagesic
Acetalgin
Actamin
Actimol
Tylenol (USA), Anacin Aspirin Free (USA), Apra (USA), Crocin (India), Feverall (USA), Genapap (USA), Panadol (UK), Panamax (Australia), Panodil (Denmark)
Synonyms
N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide
4'-Hydroxyacetanilide
Paracetanol
APAP
Acetaminofen
Paracetamolo
Paracetamol
Acetaminophen
Tylenol
4-Acetamidophenol
N-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)acetamide
Acetaminophen
Paracetamol
4’-Hydroxyacetanilide
Acamol
Acenol
Paracetamole
Parageniol
Paralen
Paramol
Paraspen
Valadol
Valgesic
Vermidon
4′-Hydroxyacetanilide
4-Acetamidophenol
N-Acetyl-4-aminophenol
Acetaminophen
4-Acetamidophenol
4-乙酰氨基苯酚
4-乙酰胺基苯酚
N-乙酰对氨基酚
N-(4-羟基苯基)乙酰胺
扑热息痛
醋氨酚
醋氨酚
对乙酰氨基苯酚
CAS Number
103-90-2
EC Number
203-157-5
MDL Number
MFCD00002328
Beilstein Number
2208089
Merck Index
1447
PubChem SID
24890930
24890717
160963664
46506142
24891173
24891200
PubChem CID
1983
CHEBI ID
46195
ATC CODE
N02BE01
CHEMBL
112
Chemspider ID
1906
DrugBank ID
DB00316
KEGG ID
D00217
Unique Ingredient Identifier
362O9ITL9D
Wikipedia Title
Paracetamol
Medline Plus
a681004

CALCULATED PROPERTIES

CALCULATED PROPERTIES

JChem ALOGPS 2.1
Acid pKa 9.464366  H Acceptors
H Donor LogD (pH = 5.5) 0.907344 
LogD (pH = 7.4) 0.9036841  Log P 0.90739083 
Molar Refractivity 42.9019 cm3 Polarizability 15.815965 Å3
Polar Surface Area 49.33 Å2 Rotatable Bonds
Lipinski's Rule of Five true 
Log P 0.51  LOG S -1.56 
Solubility (Water) 4.15e+00 g/l 

PROPERTIES

PROPERTIES

Physical Property Safety Information Pharmacology Properties Product Information Bioassay(PubChem)
Solubility
12.78 mg/mL (20°C) in water expand Show data source
14 mg/mL (very slightly soluble in cold water; considerably more soluble in hot water) expand Show data source
Dimethyl Sulfoxide expand Show data source
DMSO expand Show data source
DMSO: soluble5 M expand Show data source
ethanol: soluble0.5 M, clear, colorless expand Show data source
ethanol: soluble50 mg/mL expand Show data source
H2O: very slightly soluble expand Show data source
Methanol expand Show data source
Apperance
powder expand Show data source
White Solid expand Show data source
Melting Point
168-171°C expand Show data source
168-172 °C expand Show data source
168-172 °C(lit.) expand Show data source
168-172°C expand Show data source
168-172°C expand Show data source
169°C (336.2°F) expand Show data source
Density
1.263 g/cm3 expand Show data source
1.293 expand Show data source
Hydrophobicity(logP)
0.4 expand Show data source
Storage Condition
-20°C expand Show data source
-20°C Freezer expand Show data source
Storage Warning
Harmful/Irritant/Light Sensitive expand Show data source
RTECS
AE4200000 expand Show data source
European Hazard Symbols
X expand Show data source
Harmful Harmful (Xn) expand Show data source
MSDS Link
Download expand Show data source
Download expand Show data source
Download expand Show data source
Download expand Show data source
German water hazard class
1 expand Show data source
Risk Statements
22-36/37/38 expand Show data source
22-52/53 expand Show data source
Safety Statements
26-36 expand Show data source
36-61 expand Show data source
TSCA Listed
expand Show data source
GHS Pictograms
GHS06 expand Show data source
GHS07 expand Show data source
GHS Signal Word
Warning expand Show data source
GHS Hazard statements
H301-H402-H412 expand Show data source
H302-H315-H319-H335 expand Show data source
GHS Precautionary statements
P261-P305 + P351 + P338 expand Show data source
P273-P264-P301+P310-P321-P405-P501A expand Show data source
Personal Protective Equipment
dust mask type N95 (US), Eyeshields, Gloves expand Show data source
Storage Temperature
room temp expand Show data source
Admin Routes
Oral, rectal, intravenous expand Show data source
Bioavailability
~100% expand Show data source
Excretion
Renal expand Show data source
Half Life
1–4 h expand Show data source
Metabolism
90 to 95% Hepatic expand Show data source
Legal Status
GSL (UK) expand Show data source
OTC (US) expand Show data source
unscheduled (Australia) expand Show data source
Pregnancy Category
A (Australia) expand Show data source
B (US) expand Show data source
safe expand Show data source
US Licence
Acetaminophen expand Show data source
Purity
≥98.0% (HPLC) expand Show data source
≥99.0% expand Show data source
98% expand Show data source
98.0-101.0% expand Show data source
Grade
analytical standard expand Show data source
purum expand Show data source
Salt Data
Free Base expand Show data source
Certificate of Analysis
Download expand Show data source
Packaging
vial of 1 g expand Show data source
Suitability
meets USP testing specifications expand Show data source
Ignition Residue
≤0.1% expand Show data source
≤0.5% expand Show data source
Impurities
≤0.0005% Phosphorus (P) expand Show data source
≤0.1% Insoluble matter expand Show data source
Cation Traces
Al: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
Ca: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
Cu: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
Fe: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
K: ≤0.005% expand Show data source
Mg: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
Na: ≤0.005% expand Show data source
NH4+: ≤0.05% expand Show data source
Pb: ≤0.001% expand Show data source
Zn: ≤0.0005% expand Show data source
Antion Traces
chloride (Cl-): ≤0.05% expand Show data source
sulfate (SO42-): ≤0.05% expand Show data source
Quality Level
PREMIUM expand Show data source
Pharmacopeia Traceability
traceable to BP 371 expand Show data source
traceable to PhEur P030000 expand Show data source
traceable to USP 1003009 expand Show data source
Linear Formula
CH3CONHC6H4OH expand Show data source

DETAILS

DETAILS

DrugBank DrugBank Selleck Chemicals Selleck Chemicals Wikipedia Wikipedia Sigma Aldrich Sigma Aldrich TRC TRC
DrugBank - DB00316 external link
Item Information
Drug Groups approved
Description Acetaminophen, also known as paracetamol, is commonly used for its analgesic and antipyretic effects. Its therapeutic effects are similar to salicylates, but it lacks anti-inflammatory, antiplatelet, and gastric ulcerative effects.
Indication For temporary relief of fever and minor aches and pains.
Pharmacology Acetaminophen (USAN) or Paracetamol (INN) is a widely used analgesic and antipyretic drug that is used for the relief of fever, headaches, and other minor aches and pains. It is a major ingredient in numerous cold and flu medications and many prescription analgesics. It is extremely safe in standard doses, but because of its wide availability, deliberate or accidental overdoses are not uncommon. Acetaminophen, unlike other common analgesics such as aspirin and ibuprofen, has no anti-inflammatory properties or effects on platelet function, and it is not a member of the class of drugs known as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDs. At therapeutic doses acetaminophen does not irritate the lining of the stomach nor affect blood coagulation, kidney function, or the fetal ductus arteriosus (as NSAIDs can). Like NSAIDs and unlike opioid analgesics, acetaminophen does not cause euphoria or alter mood in any way. Acetaminophen and NSAIDs have the benefit of being completely free of problems with addiction, dependence, tolerance and withdrawal. Acetaminophen is used on its own or in combination with pseudoephedrine, dextromethorphan, chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine, doxylamine, codeine, hydrocodone, or oxycodone.
Toxicity Oral, mouse: LD50 = 338 mg/kg; Oral, rat: LD50 = 1944 mg/kg. Acetaminophen is metabolized primarily in the liver, where most of it is converted to inactive compounds by conjugation with glucuronic acid and, to a lesser extent, sulfuric acid. Conjugates are then excreted by the kidneys. Only a small portion is excreted in unchanged in urine or oxidized via the hepatic cytochrome P450 enzyme system (CYP2E1). Metabolism via CYP2E1 produces a toxic metabolite, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine (NAPQI). The toxic effects of acetaminophen are due to NAPQI, not acetaminophen itself nor any of the major metabolites. At therapeutic doses, NAPQI reacts with the sulfhydryl group of glutathione to produce a non-toxic conjugate that is excreted by the kidneys. High doses of acetaminophen may cause glutathione depletion, accumulation of NAPQI and hepatic necrosis. The maximum daily dose of acetaminophen is 4 g. Liver failure has been observed at doses as low as 6 g per day. As such, the maximum daily and single dose of acetaminophen is currently being reviewed in some countries. N-acetyl-cysteine, a precursor of glutathione, may be administered in the event of acetaminophen toxicity.
Affected Organisms
Humans and other mammals
Biotransformation Approximately 90 to 95% of a dose is conjugated in the liver with glucuronic acid and sulfuric acid. A small percentage of acetaminophen is oxidized by CYP2E1 to form N-acetyl-p-benzo-quinone imine (NAPQI), a toxic metabolite which is then conjugated to glutathione and excreted renally. Accumulation of NAPQI may occur if primary metabolic pathways are saturated.
Absorption Rapid and almost complete
Half Life 1 to 4 hours
Protein Binding 25%
Elimination Approximately 80% of acetaminophen is excreted in the urine after conjugation and about 3% is excreted unchanged.
References
Kis B, Snipes JA, Busija DW: Acetaminophen and the cyclooxygenase-3 puzzle: sorting out facts, fictions, and uncertainties. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2005 Oct;315(1):1-7. Epub 2005 May 6. [Pubmed]
Aronoff DM, Oates JA, Boutaud O: New insights into the mechanism of action of acetaminophen: Its clinical pharmacologic characteristics reflect its inhibition of the two prostaglandin H2 synthases. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2006 Jan;79(1):9-19. [Pubmed]
Bertolini A, Ferrari A, Ottani A, Guerzoni S, Tacchi R, Leone S: Paracetamol: new vistas of an old drug. CNS Drug Rev. 2006 Fall-Winter;12(3-4):250-75. [Pubmed]
Graham GG, Scott KF: Mechanism of action of paracetamol. Am J Ther. 2005 Jan-Feb;12(1):46-55. [Pubmed]
Ohki S, Ogino N, Yamamoto S, Hayaishi O: Prostaglandin hydroperoxidase, an integral part of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase from bovine vesicular gland microsomes. J Biol Chem. 1979 Feb 10;254(3):829-36. [Pubmed]
Bertolini A, Ferrari A, Ottani A, Guerzoni S, Tacchi R, Leone S: Paracetamol: new vistas of an old drug. CNS Drug Rev. 2006 Fall-Winter;12(3-4):250-75. [Pubmed]
Chandrasekharan NV, Dai H, Roos KL, Evanson NK, Tomsik J, Elton TS, Simmons DL: COX-3, a cyclooxygenase-1 variant inhibited by acetaminophen and other analgesic/antipyretic drugs: cloning, structure, and expression. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Oct 15;99(21):13926-31. Epub 2002 Sep 19. [Pubmed]
External Links
Wikipedia
RxList
Drugs.com
Selleck Chemicals - S1634 external link
Related research area: Inflammation
Sigma Aldrich - A7302 external link
Application
Analgesic.
Packaging
1 kg in poly bottle
100, 250 g in poly bottle
5 g in glass bottle
Sigma Aldrich - 00370 external link
Application
Analgesic.
Sigma Aldrich - 75338 external link
Application
Analgesic.
Sigma Aldrich - A7085 external link
Application
镇痛剂。
Sigma Aldrich - A5000 external link
Application
镇痛剂。
Sigma Aldrich - A3035 external link
Application
镇痛剂。
包装
棕色螺纹盖样品瓶包装
Toronto Research Chemicals - A161220 external link
Analgesic; antipyretic.

REFERENCES

REFERENCES

From Suppliers Google Scholar IconGoogle Scholar PubMed iconPubMed Google Books IconGoogle Books
  • • Graham GG, Scott KF: Mechanism of action of paracetamol. Am J Ther. 2005 Jan-Feb;12(1):46-55. Pubmed
  • • Kis B, Snipes JA, Busija DW: Acetaminophen and the cyclooxygenase-3 puzzle: sorting out facts, fictions, and uncertainties. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2005 Oct;315(1):1-7. Epub 2005 May 6. Pubmed
  • • Aronoff DM, Oates JA, Boutaud O: New insights into the mechanism of action of acetaminophen: Its clinical pharmacologic characteristics reflect its inhibition of the two prostaglandin H2 synthases. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2006 Jan;79(1):9-19. Pubmed
  • • Bertolini A, Ferrari A, Ottani A, Guerzoni S, Tacchi R, Leone S: Paracetamol: new vistas of an old drug. CNS Drug Rev. 2006 Fall-Winter;12(3-4):250-75. Pubmed
  • • Ohki S, Ogino N, Yamamoto S, Hayaishi O: Prostaglandin hydroperoxidase, an integral part of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase from bovine vesicular gland microsomes. J Biol Chem. 1979 Feb 10;254(3):829-36. Pubmed
  • • Bertolini A, Ferrari A, Ottani A, Guerzoni S, Tacchi R, Leone S: Paracetamol: new vistas of an old drug. CNS Drug Rev. 2006 Fall-Winter;12(3-4):250-75. Pubmed
  • • Chandrasekharan NV, Dai H, Roos KL, Evanson NK, Tomsik J, Elton TS, Simmons DL: COX-3, a cyclooxygenase-1 variant inhibited by acetaminophen and other analgesic/antipyretic drugs: cloning, structure, and expression. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Oct 15;99(21):13926-31. Epub 2002 Sep 19. Pubmed
  • • Ishida T et al. J Psychopharmacol. 2007 Sep;21(7)
  • • Fairbrother, J.E., et al.: Anal. Profiles Drug Subs., 3, 1 (1974)
  • • Hinson, J.A., et al.: Rev. Biochem. Toxicol., 2, 103 (1974)
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PATENTS

PATENTS

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INTERNET

INTERNET

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