- Acetorphine
drugbox
IUPAC_name = 4,5α-epoxy-7α-(1-hydroxy-1-methylbutyl)-6-methoxy -17-methyl-6,14-endo-ethenomorphinan-3-yl acetate
PubChem = 62795
C = 27 | H = 35 | N = 1 | O = 5
molecular_weight = 453.57 g/mol
CAS_number = 25333-77-1
legal_status = Schedule IIAcetorphine is a potent
analgesic drug (painkiller), several thousand times stronger thanmorphine by weight. It is a derivative of the more well-known opioidetorphine , which is used as a very potentveterinary painkiller andanesthetic medication, primarily for the sedation of large animals such as elephants, giraffes and rhinos.Acetorphine was developed in 1966 by the Reckitt research group that developed etorphine. Acetorphine was developed for the same purpose as etorphine itself, namely as a strong tranquillizer for use in immobilizing large animals in veterinary medicine. However despite showing some advantages over etorphine (for instance producing less toxic side effects in giraffes), acetorphine was never widely adopted for veterinary use, and etorphine (along with other tranquillizers such as
carfentanil andazaperone ) remains the drug of choice in this application.Acetorphine is a Schedule I controlled substance in the United States. Its DEA Administrative Controlled Substances Control Number is 9319 and the one salt in use, acetorphine hydrochloride, has a freebase conversion ratio of 0.93
References
[http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/bulletin/bulletin_1968-01-01_2_page009.html UN Office on Drugs and Crime. Bulletin on Narcotics 1968, page 51-52]
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