Hi!
I've not written anything on the forum before, so I guess I have to introduce myself. I'm studying chemistry at the university (surprise,
surprise) and found a patent covering alkylsulphonamides . http://www.freepatentsonline.com/5705506.html
Could anyone tell me if it's a substance of interest I? The part "5HT1 receptor agonist" sounds fun to me, but I don't really know
more... please enlighten me! Sandmeyer - 30-10-2005 at 06:12
Alkylsulfonamide group is present at position 5 in sumatriptan as well, hence the compounds disclosed in the patent are probably some sort of
anti-migraine drugs.Nicodem - 30-10-2005 at 07:16
Actually that patent is about a preparation of sumatriptan freebase for rectal use as an antimigraine medicine. Precursor, you will have to be more specific on what exactly you want to know about sumatriptan, its rectal use
and what is so fun about "5HT1 receptor agonist" if you want anybody to answer you. Does the phrase “cerebral vasoconstriction” sound
fun as well to you?
By the way, welcome.precursor - 6-11-2005 at 16:06
It sounds fun because if I remeber correct then another known substance 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine also is an 5HT1-agonist?
Forget about it if I just got things wrong here..stygian - 6-11-2005 at 16:36
5HT1 receptors are 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptors. People who do serotonergic drugs (MDMA, meth, and others) consider them fun.
Serotonin receptors control vasodilation (cause of headaches) among other things.
[Edited on 7-11-2005 by stygian]Sandmeyer - 6-11-2005 at 17:02
There seems to be some missunderstanding, 5HT1-receptors are not "fun". See this paper, Hallucinogens - Nichols DE; Pharmacology &
Therapeutics 101 (2004) 131� 181, 2004; 101:131-181 http://rapidshare.de/files/7290366/Hallucinogens.pdf.html
It sounds fun because if I remeber correct then another known substance 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine also is an 5HT1-agonist?
No it is not. N-methyl-3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine has no appreciable affinity to 5-HT1A receptors. It’s affinity to other serotonin receptors is
also quite low. It is a good monoamine releaser though, hwever quite unselective since it releases all monoamines in CNS (serotonin, dopamine,
noradrenalin).
Quote:
People who do serotonergic drugs (MDMA, meth, and others) consider them fun.
“Meth” is not a serotonergic drug. It is mainly a dopamine/noradrenalin releaser thus causing the increase of these monoamines in the synaptic
clefts of neurons bearing dopamine or noradrenalin as neurotransmitters.
However, nothing of this has much in common with sumatriptan.precursor - 7-11-2005 at 11:39
Sorry, then I got things wrong about receptors. I feel a bit more educated now. Thanks.