Etamivan (Standard)
Based on 1 Customer Validation
Etamivan (Ethamivan; N,N-Diethylvanillamide) (Standard) is the analytical standard of Etamivan (HY-B1096). This product is intended for research and analytical applications. Etamivan is an orally active respiratory stimulant. Ethamivan regulates breathing patterns by directly stimulating the medullary respiratory center, prioritizing increased breathing depth rather than frequency. Etamivan can be used in the research of barbiturate overdose and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
For research use only. We do not sell to patients.
- Purity: 98.62%
- CAS No.: 304-84-7
- Formula: C12H17NO3
- Molecular Weight:223.27
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Storage:
Please store the product under the recommended conditions in the Certificate of Analysis.
Product Information
The compound is the grade of analytical standard, which is the reference standard supplied assay. It is commonly used in qualitative, quantitative and methodological research experiments in HPLC, GC and MS.
Chemical Information
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CAS No. 304-84-7
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Appearance Solid
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Molecular Weight 223.27
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Formula C12H17NO3
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Color White to off-white
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SMILES
O=C(N(CC)CC)C1=CC=C(O)C(OC)=C1
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Synonyms
Ethamivan (Standard); N,N-Diethylvanillamide (Standard)
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Shipping
Room temperature in continental US; may vary elsewhere.
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Storage
Please store the product under the recommended conditions in the Certificate of Analysis.
Purity & Documentation
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SDS (479 KB)
- English - EN (479 KB)
- Français - FR (479 KB)
- Deutsch - DE (479 KB)
- Norwegian - NO (479 KB)
- Español - ES (479 KB)
- Swedish - SV (479 KB)
- Italian - IT (479 KB)
- Korean - KR (479 KB)
- Portuguese - PT (479 KB)
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Handling Instructions (2659 KB)
References
[1]. Shimomura S, et al. Oral administration of the respiratory stimulant ethamivan in patients with pulmonary insufficiency. Am Rev Respir Dis. 1967;95(4):576-583. [Content Brief]
[2]. WHEELDON PJ, et al. The use of ethamivan in the treatment of barbiturate poisoning. Can Med Assoc J. 1963;89(1):20-22. [Content Brief]
Calculators
Concentration (start) × Volume (start) = Concentration (final) × Volume (final)