Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1225158> ?p ?o }
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- Q1225158 subject Q5920511.
- Q1225158 subject Q6442932.
- Q1225158 subject Q7139608.
- Q1225158 subject Q8645495.
- Q1225158 subject Q8729038.
- Q1225158 subject Q9056368.
- Q1225158 abstract "Dihydroetorphine was developed by K. W. Bentley at McFarlan-Smith in the 1960s and is a potent opioid analgesic, which is used mainly in China. It is a derivative of the more well-known opioid etorphine, which is used as a very potent veterinary painkiller and anesthetic medication, primarily for the sedation of large animals such as elephants, giraffes and rhinos.Dihydroetorphine is a semi-synthetic opioid, used mainly as a strong painkiller for humans. It is several thousand times stronger than morphine (between 1000x and 12000x more potent depending what method is used for comparison), although it is poorly absorbed when taken orally. Sublingual forms of dihydroetorphine are used in China at doses ranging from 20 to 40µg repeated every 3-4 hours, and are reported to cause strong analgesia and relatively mild side effects compared to other opioids, although all the usual opioid side effects such as dizziness, sedation, nausea, constipation, and respiratory depression can occur. Transdermal patches of dihydroetorphine have also been developed.Dihydroetorphine is considered to be somewhat less addictive than many other opioids, and is also sometimes used in China as a substitute maintenance drug for opioid addicts, in a similar way to how the related drug buprenorphine is used in western nations. It is presumably controlled as an "ester, ether, salt ..." of etorphine in the United States under the Controlled Substances Act 1970 and/or its pieces of the morphine carbon skeleton put it under the "morphine rule" thereof and/or the 1986 analogues act; it does not have its own ACSCN. Regulation elsewhere may vary but would likely be similar to that for other strong opioid agonists.".
- Q1225158 atcPrefix "none".
- Q1225158 casNumber "14357-76-7".
- Q1225158 drugbank "DB01450".
- Q1225158 fdaUniiCode "QQX8S479YV".
- Q1225158 iupacName "(5R,6R,7R,9R,13S,14R)-7-[(R)-2-Hydroxypentan-2-yl]-6-methoxy-17-methyl-4,5-epoxy-6,14-ethanomorphinan-3-ol".
- Q1225158 pubchem "107765".
- Q1225158 thumbnail Dihydroetorphine2DCSD.svg?width=300.
- Q1225158 wikiPageExternalLink 1308_12.htm.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q10916362.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q1641494.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q1645498.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q173235.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q178436.
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- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q21017119.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q273499.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q407721.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q416827.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q427523.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q4990531.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q574801.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q5920511.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q6442932.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q7139608.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q7632070.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q7833952.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q784720.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q81225.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q8645495.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q8729038.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q898317.
- Q1225158 wikiPageWikiLink Q9056368.
- Q1225158 atcPrefix "none".
- Q1225158 casNumber "14357".
- Q1225158 drugbank "DB01450".
- Q1225158 iupacName "-7".
- Q1225158 pubchem "107765".
- Q1225158 unii "QQX8S479YV".
- Q1225158 type ChemicalSubstance.
- Q1225158 type Drug.
- Q1225158 type ChemicalObject.
- Q1225158 type Thing.
- Q1225158 type Q8386.
- Q1225158 comment "Dihydroetorphine was developed by K. W. Bentley at McFarlan-Smith in the 1960s and is a potent opioid analgesic, which is used mainly in China. It is a derivative of the more well-known opioid etorphine, which is used as a very potent veterinary painkiller and anesthetic medication, primarily for the sedation of large animals such as elephants, giraffes and rhinos.Dihydroetorphine is a semi-synthetic opioid, used mainly as a strong painkiller for humans.".
- Q1225158 label "Dihydroetorphine".
- Q1225158 depiction Dihydroetorphine2DCSD.svg.