2011-04-13

Burinex

Bumetanide

Bumetanide
Systematic (IUPAC) name
3-butylamino-4-phenoxy-5-sulfamoyl-benzoic acid
Identifiers
CAS number 28395-03-1
ATC code C03CA02
PubChem CID 2471
DrugBank APRD00294
ChemSpider 2377
UNII 0Y2S3XUQ5H
ChEMBL CHEMBL1072
Chemical data
Formula C17H20N2O5S
Mol. mass 364.417 g/mol
SMILES eMolecules & PubChem
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability almost complete (~80%)
Protein binding 97%
Metabolism hepatic
Half-life ~0.8 hours
Excretion renal
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat. B3(AU) C(US)
Legal status Prescription Only (S4) (AU) POM (UK) -only (US)
Routes oral
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Bumetanide (trade names Bumex or Burinex) is a loop diuretic of the sulfamyl category to treat heart failure. It is often used in people in whom high doses of furosemide are ineffective. It is marketed by Hoffmann-La Roche. The main difference between the two substances is in bioavailability and pharmacodynamic potency. Furosemide is incompletely absorbed in the intestine (60%), and there is substantial inter- and intraindividual differences in bioavailability (range 10-90%). Bumetanide is almost completely absorbed (80%), and the absorption is not altered when it is taken with food. It is said to be a more predictable diuretic, meaning that the predictable absorption is reflected in a more predictable effect.

Bumetanide is 40 times more potent than furosemide (for patients with normal renal function).

In the brain, bumetanide blocks the NKCC1 cation-chloride co-transporter, and thus decreases internal chloride concentration in neurons. In turn, this concentration change makes the action of GABA more hyperpolarizing, which may be useful for treatment of neonatal seizures, that quite often are not responsive to traditional GABA-targeted treatment, such as barbiturates. Bumetanide is therefore currently under evaluation as a prospective antiepileptic drug.

Abuse

On October 24, 2008, ESPN reported a number of NFL players were being suspended under the steroid policy as a result of taking bumetanide. The drug is often used for weight loss, but also to mask other drugs or steroids by helping to dilute the contents of the user's urine, yielding a lower concentration of filtered substances which may then go undetected.

Bumetanide was an undisclosed active ingredient in the over the counter weight loss supplement . StarCaps was pulled off the market after the presence of the undisclosed ingredient was discovered by the Food and Drug Administration.

References

External links






Retrieved from : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumetanide