Arbutamine

CHEMBL1201251 Phase 4 Aprobado Small molecule
Half-Life
Bioavailability
Protein Binding
Molecular Weight
317.4 g/mol
LogP
0.9
Phase
4

A synthetic catecholamine that acts as a cardiac stress agent, increasing heart rate and workload to help doctors evaluate coronary artery disease using imaging studies. It is administered intravenously in controlled clinical settings.

Peso molecular

317,4000 g/mol

LogP

0,90

TPSA

93,00 Ų

Regla de cinco de Lipinski

Cumple

Pharmacokinetics (PK)

Pharmacodynamics (PD)

Estructura 2D

SVG PNG

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SMILES

Oc1ccc(CCCCNC[C@H](O)c2ccc(O)c(O)c2)cc1

InChI

InChI=1S/C18H23NO4/c20-15-7-4-13(5-8-15)3-1-2-10-19-12-18(23)14-6-9-16(21)17(22)11-14/h4-9,11,18-23H,1-3,10,12H2/t18-/m0/s1

Molecular Formula

C18H23NO4

HBD / HBA

5 / 5

Enlaces Rotables

8

Átomos Pesados

23

No targets recorded

Target interaction data is not yet available for this drug.

No interactions recorded

Drug interaction data is not yet available for this compound.

No side effects recorded

Side effect data is not yet available for this drug.

Preguntas frecuentes

A synthetic catecholamine that acts as a cardiac stress agent, increasing heart rate and workload to help doctors evaluate coronary artery disease using imaging studies. It is administered intravenously in controlled clinical settings.

Yes, Arbutamine is an approved drug. It has reached clinical phase 4. It is classified as a Small molecule.

{# References & Data Sources section for drug detail pages. Renders standard pharmacological database links plus the drug's data_sources field. #}

References & Data Sources

  • ChEMBL — European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI). CHEMBL1201251. Open-access bioactivity database.
  • PubChem — National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). CID 60789. Chemical information database.

Data aggregated from publicly available pharmacological databases. Last updated 2026-03-04.

Aviso médico

This content is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making medication decisions.

Data sources: ChEMBL, PubChem, DailyMed.