Chiral drugs (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Chemical compounds that come as mirror-image pairs are referred to by chemists as chiral or handed molecules. Each twin is called an enantiomer. Drugs that exhibit handedness are referred to as chiral drugs. Chiral drugs that are equimolar (1:1) mixture of enantiomers are called racemic drugs and these are obviously devoid of optical rotation. The most commonly encountered stereogenic unit, that confers chirality to drug molecules are stereogenic center. Stereogenic center can be due to the presence of tetrahedral tetra coordinate atoms (C,N,P) and pyramidal tricoordinate atoms (N,S). The word chiral describes the three-dimensional architecture of the molecule and does not reveal the stereochemical composition. Hence "chiral drug" does not say whether the drug is racemic (racemic drug), si

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract Chemical compounds that come as mirror-image pairs are referred to by chemists as chiral or handed molecules. Each twin is called an enantiomer. Drugs that exhibit handedness are referred to as chiral drugs. Chiral drugs that are equimolar (1:1) mixture of enantiomers are called racemic drugs and these are obviously devoid of optical rotation. The most commonly encountered stereogenic unit, that confers chirality to drug molecules are stereogenic center. Stereogenic center can be due to the presence of tetrahedral tetra coordinate atoms (C,N,P) and pyramidal tricoordinate atoms (N,S). The word chiral describes the three-dimensional architecture of the molecule and does not reveal the stereochemical composition. Hence "chiral drug" does not say whether the drug is racemic (racemic drug), single enantiomer (chiral specific drug) or some other combination of stereoisomers. To resolve this issue Joseph Gal introduced a new term called unichiral. Unichiral indicates that the stereochemical composition of a chiral drug is homogenous consisting of a single enantiomer. Many medicinal agents important to life are combinations of mirror-image twins. Despite the close resemblance of such twins, the differences in their biological properties can be profound. In other words, the component enantiomers of a racemic chiral drug may differ wildly in their pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic profile. The tragedy of thalidomide illustrates the potential for extreme consequences resulting from the administration of a racemate drug that exhibits multiple effects attributable to individual enantiomers. With the advancements in chiral technology and the increased awareness about three-dimensional consequences of drug action and disposition emerged specialized field "chiral pharmacology". Simultaneously the chirality nomenclature system also evolved. A brief overview of chirality history and terminology/descriptors is given below. A detailed chirality timeline is not the focus of this article. (en)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Louis_Pasteur,_foto_av_Paul_Nadar,_Crisco_edit.jpg?width=300
dbo:wikiPageID 67686153 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 41775 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1119060377 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Promethazine dbr:Propranolol dbr:Enantiomer dbr:Enantiopure_drug dbr:Joseph_Achille_Le_Bel dbr:Penicillamine dbr:Racemic_mixture dbr:Salbutamol dbr:Stereochemistry dbr:Enantiomeric_excess dbr:Levobupivacaine dbr:Levocetirizine dbr:Levofloxacin dbr:Levosalbutamol dbr:Levothyroxine dbr:Louis_Pasteur dbr:Chiral_inversion dbr:Chiral_switch dbr:Chirality_(chemistry) dbr:Chirality_timeline dbr:Combination_drug dbc:Enantiopure_drugs dbr:William_Thomson,_1st_Baron_Kelvin dbr:Esketamine dbr:Esomeprazole dbr:File:Louis_Pasteur,_foto_av_Paul_Nadar,_Crisco_edit.jpg dbr:International_Union_of_Pure_and_Applied_Chemistry dbr:Jacobus_Henricus_van_'t_Hoff dbr:Jean-Baptiste_Biot dbr:Thalidomide dbc:Stereochemistry dbr:Chiral_analysis dbc:Chirality dbr:Dexketoprofen dbr:Ibuprofen dbr:Indacrinone dbr:Eudysmic_ratio dbr:Levodopa dbr:Propoxyphene dbr:S-Amlodipine dbr:Racemate dbr:File:Cahn-Ingold-Prelog_convention.png dbr:File:Dopa_enantiomers.png dbr:File:Easson-Stedman_Model.png dbr:File:Ethambutol_enantiomers.png dbr:File:Ketamine_enantiomers.png dbr:File:Penicillamine_enantiomers.png dbr:File:Thalidomide_enantiomers.png
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Reflist dbt:Short_description dbt:TOC_left
dcterms:subject dbc:Enantiopure_drugs dbc:Stereochemistry dbc:Chirality
rdfs:comment Chemical compounds that come as mirror-image pairs are referred to by chemists as chiral or handed molecules. Each twin is called an enantiomer. Drugs that exhibit handedness are referred to as chiral drugs. Chiral drugs that are equimolar (1:1) mixture of enantiomers are called racemic drugs and these are obviously devoid of optical rotation. The most commonly encountered stereogenic unit, that confers chirality to drug molecules are stereogenic center. Stereogenic center can be due to the presence of tetrahedral tetra coordinate atoms (C,N,P) and pyramidal tricoordinate atoms (N,S). The word chiral describes the three-dimensional architecture of the molecule and does not reveal the stereochemical composition. Hence "chiral drug" does not say whether the drug is racemic (racemic drug), si (en)
rdfs:label Chiral drugs (en)
owl:sameAs wikidata:Chiral drugs https://global.dbpedia.org/id/FwDv7
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Chiral_drugs?oldid=1119060377&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Penicillamine_enantiomers.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Louis_Pasteur,_foto_av_Paul_Nadar,_Crisco_edit.jpg wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Cahn-Ingold-Prelog_convention.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Dopa_enantiomers.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Easson-Stedman_Model.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Ethambutol_enantiomers.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Ketamine_enantiomers.png wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Thalidomide_enantiomers.png
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Chiral_drugs
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Chiral_drug dbr:Racemic_drug
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Enantiopure_drug dbr:Levofloxacin dbr:Chiral_inversion dbr:Chiral_switch dbr:Chirality dbr:Chirality_timeline dbr:Ethambutol dbr:Fenoprofen dbr:Chiral_analysis dbr:Indacrinone dbr:Chiral_drug dbr:Racemic_drug
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Chiral_drugs