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50-48-6 molecular structure
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dimethyl(3-{tricyclo[9.4.0.03,8]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene}propyl)amine

ChemBase ID: 206
Molecular Formular: C20H23N
Molecular Mass: 277.40332
Monoisotopic Mass: 277.18304974
SMILES and InChIs

SMILES:
N(CC/C=C/1\c2c(CCc3c1cccc3)cccc2)(C)C
Canonical SMILES:
CN(CC/C=C/1\c2ccccc2CCc2c1cccc2)C
InChI:
InChI=1S/C20H23N/c1-21(2)15-7-12-20-18-10-5-3-8-16(18)13-14-17-9-4-6-11-19(17)20/h3-6,8-12H,7,13-15H2,1-2H3
InChIKey:
KRMDCWKBEZIMAB-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Cite this record

CBID:206 http://www.chembase.cn/molecule-206.html

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NAMES AND DATABASE IDS

NAMES AND DATABASE IDS

Names Database IDs
IUPAC name
dimethyl(3-{tricyclo[9.4.0.03,8]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene}propyl)amine
dimethyl({3-[(2Z)-tricyclo[9.4.0.0^{3,8}]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene]propyl})amine
dimethyl({3-[(2E)-tricyclo[9.4.0.0^{3,8}]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene]propyl})amine
IUPAC Traditional name
amitriptyline
dimethyl({3-[(2Z)-tricyclo[9.4.0.0^{3,8}]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene]propyl})amine
dimethyl({3-[(2E)-tricyclo[9.4.0.0^{3,8}]pentadeca-1(11),3(8),4,6,12,14-hexaen-2-ylidene]propyl})amine
Brand Name
Tryptomer, Triplent(Talent India)
Adepress
Adepril
Amitid
Amitril
Damilan
Damilen
dAmitriptyline
Elanil
Elavil
Endep
Flavyl
Hexathane
Horizon
Lantron
Laroxil
Laroxyl
Lentizol
Proheptadiene
Redomex
Saroten
Sarotex
Seroten
Sylvemid
Triptanol
Triptilin
Triptisol
Tryptanol
Tryptizol
Synonyms
Amitriptyline Hydrochloride
Amitriptyline HCL
Amitriprolidine
Amitriptylin
Amitryptiline
Amitryptyline
Amytriptiline
Amitriptyline
3-(10,11-Dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d][7]annulen-5-ylidene)-N,N-dimethyl-1-propanamine
CAS Number
50-48-6
MDL Number
MFCD00412072
PubChem SID
46508798
160963669
PubChem CID
2160
CHEBI ID
2666
ATC CODE
N06AA09
CHEMBL
629
Chemspider ID
2075
DrugBank ID
DB00321
IUPHAR ligand ID
200
KEGG ID
D07448
Unique Ingredient Identifier
1806D8D52K
Wikipedia Title
Amitriptyline
Medline Plus
a682388

DATA SOURCES

DATA SOURCES

All Sources Commercial Sources Non-commercial Sources
Data Source Data ID Price
Matrix Scientific
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CALCULATED PROPERTIES

CALCULATED PROPERTIES

JChem ALOGPS 2.1
H Acceptors H Donor
LogD (pH = 5.5) 1.3778014  LogD (pH = 7.4) 2.477238 
Log P 4.809535  Molar Refractivity 101.5072 cm3
Polarizability 35.254482 Å3 Polar Surface Area 3.24 Å2
Rotatable Bonds Lipinski's Rule of Five true 
Log P 5.1  LOG S -4.79 
Solubility (Water) 4.50e-03 g/l 

PROPERTIES

PROPERTIES

Physical Property Safety Information Pharmacology Properties Bioassay(PubChem)
Solubility
9.7 mg/mL expand Show data source
Hydrophobicity(logP)
4.9 expand Show data source
Storage Warning
IRRITANT expand Show data source
MSDS Link
Download expand Show data source
TSCA Listed
false expand Show data source
Admin Routes
Oral expand Show data source
Bioavailability
30–60% due to first pass metabolism expand Show data source
Excretion
Renal expand Show data source
Half Life
10–50 hours, with an average of 15 hours expand Show data source
Metabolism
Hepatic
CYP2C19, CYP1A2, CYP2D6
expand Show data source
Protein Bound
> 90% expand Show data source
Legal Status
Rx-only expand Show data source
Pregnancy Category
D (US) expand Show data source

DETAILS

DETAILS

DrugBank DrugBank Wikipedia Wikipedia
DrugBank - DB00321 external link
Item Information
Drug Groups approved
Description Amitriptyline hydrochloride is a dibenzocycloheptene-derivative tricyclic antidepressant (TCA). TCAs are structurally similar to phenothiazines. They contain a tricyclic ring system with an alkyl amine substituent on the central ring. In non-depressed individuals, amitriptyline does not affect mood or arousal, but may cause sedation. In depressed individuals, amitriptyline exerts a positive effect on mood. TCAs are potent inhibitors of serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake. Tertiary amine TCAs, such as amitriptyline, are more potent inhibitors of serotonin reuptake than secondary amine TCAs, such as nortriptyline. TCAs also down-regulate cerebral cortical β-adrenergic receptors and sensitize post-synaptic serotonergic receptors with chronic use. The antidepressant effects of TCAs are thought to be due to an overall increase in serotonergic neurotransmission. TCAs also block histamine-H1 receptors, α1-adrenergic receptors and muscarinic receptors, which accounts for their sedative, hypotensive and anticholinergic effects (e.g. blurred vision, dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention), respectively. See toxicity section below for a complete listing of side effects. Amitriptyline may be used to treat depression, chronic pain (unlabeled use), irritable bowel syndrome (unlabeled use), diabetic neuropathy (unlabeled use), post-traumatic stress disorder (unlabeled use), and for migraine prophylaxis (unlabeled use).
Indication For the treatment of depression, chronic pain, irritable bowel syndrome, sleep disorders, diabetic neuropathy, agitation and insomnia, and migraine prophylaxis.
Pharmacology Amitriptyline, a tertiary amine tricyclic antidepressant, is structurally related to both the skeletal muscle relaxant cyclobenzaprine and the thioxanthene antipsychotics such as thiothixene. It is extremely sedating, and thus improvement of sleep patterns can be the first benefit of treatment. Amitriptyline exhibits strong anticholinergic activity, cardiovascular effects including orthostatic hypotension, changes in heart rhythm and conduction, and a lowering of the seizure threshold. As with other antidepressants, several weeks of therapy may be required in order to realize the full clinical benefit of amitriptyline. Although not a labelled indication, amitriptyline is widely used in the management of chronic nonmalignant pain (e.g., post-herpetic neuralgia, fibromyalgia).
Toxicity LD50=350 mg/kg (in mice). Symptoms of overdose include abnormally low blood pressure, confusion, convulsions, dilated pupils and other eye problems, disturbed concentration, drowsiness, hallucinations, impaired heart function, rapid or irregular heartbeat, reduced body temperature, stupor, and unresponsiveness or coma.
Side effects include: sedation, hypotension, blurred vision, dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention, postural hypotension, tachycardia, hypertension, ECG changes, heart failure, impaired memory and delirium, and precipitation of hypomanic or manic episodes in bipolar depression.
Withdrawal symptoms include gastrointestinal disturbances, anxiety, and insomnia.
Affected Organisms
Humans and other mammals
Biotransformation Exclusively hepatic, with first pass effect. Amitriptyline is demethylated in the liver to its primary active metabolite, nortriptyline.
Absorption Rapidly and well absorbed following oral administration (bioavailability is 30-60% due to first pass metabolism). Peak plasma concentrations occur 2-12 hours following oral or intramuscular administration.
Half Life 10 to 50 hours, with an average of 15 hours
Protein Binding Very highly protein bound (90% or more) in plasma and tissues
Elimination Virtually the entire dose is excreted as glucuronide or sulfate conjugate of metabolites, with little unchanged drug appearing in the urine. 25-50% of a single orally administered dose is excreted in urine as inactive metabolites within 24 hours. Small amounts are excreted in feces via biliary elimination.
References
Otaka M, Jin M, Odashima M, Matsuhashi T, Wada I, Horikawa Y, Komatsu K, Ohba R, Oyake J, Hatakeyama N, Watanabe S: New strategy of therapy for functional dyspepsia using famotidine, mosapride and amitriptyline. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2005 Jun;21 Suppl 2:42-6. [Pubmed]
External Links
Wikipedia
RxList
Drugs.com

REFERENCES

REFERENCES

From Suppliers Google Scholar IconGoogle Scholar PubMed iconPubMed Google Books IconGoogle Books
  • • Otaka M, Jin M, Odashima M, Matsuhashi T, Wada I, Horikawa Y, Komatsu K, Ohba R, Oyake J, Hatakeyama N, Watanabe S: New strategy of therapy for functional dyspepsia using famotidine, mosapride and amitriptyline. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2005 Jun;21 Suppl 2:42-6. Pubmed
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