Friday, 28 August 2015

drugs - Is there any difference between Meprobamate and Equanil?


My textbook mentions Meprobamate and Equanil separately, under Anxiolytic drugs and even provides two (not-so) different structures to back their claim.


enter image description here


However, Wikipedia would beg to differ:



Meprobamate — marketed as Miltown by Wallace Laboratories and Equanil by Wyeth...



Which would naturally imply, that Meprobamate and Equanil are...the same thing. ಠ_ಠ


A quick search with Google Images got me this:



enter image description here


Now this particular textbook I use has, over the years, gained notoriety among several generations of us students as the Mater Omnium Errorum. So in all likelihood, my textbook's the one that's wrong here.


But since I'm not a Pharmacologist, I'd appreciate it if someone could verify if Meprobamate and Equanil are the exact, same, chemical.


I tried Google, but that endeavor wasn't particularly helpful.



Answer



Pharmaceuticals with meprobamate as the active compound are marketed by different companies under different names.


Meprobamate is the International Nonproprietary Name (INN) for the drug.


Whether two pharmeceuticals with the same active components acutally have the same kinetics does depend on additional factors, such as the type of the filler.


No comments:

Post a Comment

readings - Appending 内 to a company name is read ない or うち?

For example, if I say マイクロソフト内のパートナーシップは強いです, is the 内 here read as うち or ない? Answer 「内」 in the form: 「Proper Noun + 内」 is always read 「ない...