- Cetraxate
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Cetraxate Systematic (IUPAC) name 3-[4-[4-(aminomethyl)cyclohexanecarbonyl]oxyphenyl]propanoic acid Clinical data AHFS/Drugs.com International Drug Names Pregnancy cat. ? Legal status ℞ Prescription only Routes Oral Identifiers CAS number 34675-84-8 ATC code None PubChem CID 2680 ChemSpider 2579 UNII 5VPA8CPF0N KEGG D07663 ChEMBL CHEMBL502896 Chemical data Formula C17H23NO4 Mol. mass 305.36 g/mol SMILES eMolecules & PubChem Cetraxate (INN) is an oral gastrointestinal medication which has a cytoprotective effect.[1]
References
- ^ Kurebayashi Y, Ikeda T, Osada Y (January 1988). "Cytoprotective action of cetraxate against HCl.ethanol-induced gastric lesion in rats". Jpn. J. Pharmacol. 46 (1): 17–25. doi:10.1254/jjp.46.17. PMID 3367546. http://joi.jlc.jst.go.jp/JST.Journalarchive/jphs1951/46.17?from=PubMed.
Drugs for acid related disorders: Drugs for peptic ulcer and GERD/GORD (A02B) H2 antagonists ("-tidine") Cimetidine • Famotidine • Lafutidine • Loxtidine • Niperotidine • Nizatidine • Ranitidine • RoxatidineProstaglandins (E)/analogues ("-prost-") Proton-pump inhibitors ("-prazole") Other Acetoxolone • Alginic acid • Carbenoxolone • Cetraxate • Gefarnate • Pirenzepine • Proglumide • Sucralfate • Sulglicotide • Teprenone • Troxipide • Zolimidine • Rebamipide •This drug article relating to the gastrointestinal system is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.