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Pamine bromide Brand names, Pamine bromide Analogs

Pamine bromide Brand Names Mixture

  • Biosol-M-Aquadrops liq (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin sulfate)
  • Neomix-pamine Scour Bolus (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin sulfate)
  • Neomix-pamine Solution (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin sulfate)
  • Neosol M Aquadrops (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin)
  • Scour solution (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin)
  • Scour solution coop (methscopolamine bromide + neomycin)

Pamine bromide Chemical_Formula

C18H24NO4.Br

Pamine bromide RX_link

http://www.rxlist.com/cgi/pharmclips2.cgi?keyword=%20Methscopolamine

Pamine bromide fda sheet

Pamine_bromide FDA

Pamine bromide msds (material safety sheet)

Pamine bromide Synthesis Reference

No information avaliable

Pamine bromide Molecular Weight

397.089 g/mol

Pamine bromide Melting Point

225 oC

Pamine bromide H2O Solubility

Freely soluble

Pamine bromide State

Solid

Pamine bromide LogP

-2.58

Pamine bromide Dosage Forms

Tablet (2.5mg, 5mg)

Pamine bromide Indication

Used as adjunctive therapy for the treatment of peptic ulcer. Also used to treat nausea and vomiting due to motion sickness.

Pamine bromide Pharmacology

Methscopolamine bromide is a muscarinic antagonist structurally similar to the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and acts by blocking the muscarinic acetylcholine receptors and is thus classified as an anticholinergic. Methscopolamine bromide has many uses including the prevention of motion sickness. It is not clear how methscopolamine bromide prevents nausea and vomiting due to motion sickness. The vestibular part of the ear is very important for balance. When a person becomes disoriented due to motion, the vestibule sends a signal through nerves to the vomiting center in the brain, and vomiting occurs. Acetylcholine is a chemical that nerves use to transmit messages to each other. It is believe that methscopolamine bromide prevents communication between the nerves of the vestibule and the vomiting center in the brain by blocking the action of acetylcholine. Methscopolamine bromide also may work directly on the vomiting center. Methscopolamine bromide must be taken before the onset of motion sickness to be effective.

Pamine bromide Absorption

Poorly and unreliably absorbed, total absorption is 10-25%.

Pamine bromide side effects and Toxicity

Symptoms of a methscopolamine bromide overdose include headache, nausea, vomiting, dry mouth, difficulty swallowing, blurred vision, dilated pupils, hot, dry skin, dizziness; drowsiness, confusion, anxiety, seizures, weak pulse, and an irregular heartbeat. In addition, a curare-like action may occur, i.e., neuromuscular blockade leading to muscular weakness and possible paralysis.

Pamine bromide Patient Information

No information avaliable

Pamine bromide Organisms Affected

Humans and other mammals