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Vitamin A

Catalog No. DB00162 Name DrugBank
CAS Number 68-26-8 Website http://www.ualberta.ca/
M. F. C20H30O Telephone (780) 492-3111
M. W. 286.4516 Fax (780) 492-1071
Purity Email david.wishart@ualberta.ca
Storage Chembase ID: 48

SYNONYMS

IUPAC name
(2E,4E,6E,8E)-3,7-dimethyl-9-(2,6,6-trimethylcyclohex-1-en-1-yl)nona-2,4,6,8-tetraen-1-ol
IUPAC Traditional name
vitamin A
Brand Name
Apexol
Anatola
M.V.I.-12
M.V.I. Pediatric
Agiolan
Alcovit A
Apostavit
Axerol
Del-VI-A
Mvc Plus
Retrovitamin A
Super A
Testavol
A-Sol
Acon
Alphalin
Aoral
Aquasynth
Avitol
Axerophthol
Biosterol
Cylasphere
Dohyfral A
Epiteliol
Myvpack
Nio-A-Let
Ophthalamin
Plivit A
Ro-a-vit
Sehkraft A
Vi-Alpha
Vi-a
Vio-A
A-Mulsal
A-Vi-Pel
A-Vitan
Afaxin
Agoncal
Alphasterol
Anatola A
Anti-Infective vitamin
Aquasol A Parenteral
Avibon
Avita
Bentavit A
Disatabs Tabs
Dofsol
Hi-A-Vita
Homagenets Aoral
Homagenets aorl
Lard Factor
M.V.C. 9+3
Oleovitamin A
Prepalin
Testavol S
Thalasphere
Vaflol
Vafol
Veroftal
Vi-Dom-A
Vitavel A
Vitpex
Vogan-Neu
Zineb
Zineb 80
Zinosan N
alin
asterol
tROL
Antixerophthalmic vitamin
Aquasol A
Atars
Atav
Chocola A
Solu-A
Vogan
Vogan-nu
Synonyms
all-trans-Vitamin A1
[11,12-3H]-Retinol
All-trans-Retinyl alcohol
trans-Retinol
Vitamin A Palmitate
Vitamin A Solubilized
Vitamin A1
all-trans-retinol
all-trans-Vitamin A
All-trans-Vitamin A alcohol
beta-Retinol
Retin-11,12-t2-ol (9CI)
Retinol
trans-Vitamin A alcohol
Vitamin A (Feed)
Vitamin A alcohol
Vitamin A1 alcohol
Vitamin A cryst

DATABASE IDS

PubChem SID 46508191
PubChem CID 445354
CAS Number 68-26-8

PROPERTIES

Hydrophobicity(logP) 4.1
Solubility 0.671 mg/L

DETAILS

Description (English)
Item Information
Drug Groups approved; nutraceutical
Description Retinol and derivatives of retinol that play an essential role in metabolic functioning of the retina, the growth of and differentiation of epithelial tissue, the growth of bone, reproduction, and the immune response. Dietary vitamin A is derived from a variety of carotenoids found in plants. It is enriched in the liver, egg yolks, and the fat component of dairy products. [PubChem]
Indication For the treatment of vitamin A deficiency.
Pharmacology Vitamin A is effective for the treatment of Vitamin A deficiency. Vitamin A refers to a group of fat-soluble substances that are structurally related to and possess the biological activity of the parent substance of the group called all-trans retinol or retinol. Vitamin A plays vital roles in vision, epithelial differentiation, growth, reproduction, pattern formation during embryogenesis, bone development, hematopoiesis and brain development. It is also important for the maintenance of the proper functioning of the immune system.
Toxicity Acute toxicity (single ingestion of 7 500 RE or 25 000 IU per kg or more): Signs and symptoms may be delayed for 8 to 24 hours and include: increased intracranial pressure, headache, irritability, drowsiness, dizziness, lethargy, vomiting, diarrhea, bulging of fontanels in infants, diplopia, papilledema. Peeling of skin around mouth may be observed from 1 to several days after ingestion and may spread to the rest of the body.
Chronic, excessive ingestion (1 200 RE or 4 000 IU/kg daily for 6 to 15 months) may produce symptoms of pseudotumor cerebri, anorexia, weakness, arthralgias, bone pain, bone demineralization, dry skin, cracked lips, brittle nails, hair loss, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, hypoplastic anemia, leukopenia, optic neuropathy, and blindness. Increased plasma concentrations of vitamin A occur but do not necessarily correlate with toxicity.
Affected Organisms
Humans and other mammals
Biotransformation Hepatic. Retinol is conjugated with glucuronic acid; the B-glucuronide undergoes enterohepatic circulation and oxidation to retinol and retinoic acid. Retinoic acid undergoes decarboxylation and conjugation with glucuronic acid.
Absorption Readily absorbed from the normal gastrointestinal tract
Half Life 1.9 hours
Protein Binding <5% of circulating vitamin A is bound to lipoproteins in blood in normal condition, but may be up to 65% when hepatic stores are saturated because of excessive intake. When released from liver, vitamin A is bound to retinol-binding protein (RBP). Most vitamin A circulates in the form of retinol bound to RBP.
References
Roncone DP: Xerophthalmia secondary to alcohol-induced malnutrition. Optometry. 2006 Mar;77(3):124-33. [Pubmed]
External Links
Wikipedia
RxList
PDRhealth
Drugs.com

REFERENCES

  • Roncone DP: Xerophthalmia secondary to alcohol-induced malnutrition. Optometry. 2006 Mar;77(3):124-33. Pubmed