Dextrothyroxine
Chemical compound
- C10AX01 (WHO)
- Discontinued
- (2R)-2-amino-3-[4-(4-hydroxy-3,5-diiodophenoxy)-3,5-diiodophenyl]propanoic acid
- 51-49-0
- 8730
- DB00509
- 8402
- 4W9K63FION
- CHEBI:30659
- ChEMBL559
- DTXSID60199000
- Interactive image
- O=C(O)[C@H](N)Cc2cc(I)c(Oc1cc(I)c(O)c(I)c1)c(I)c2
InChI
- InChI=1S/C15H11I4NO4/c16-8-4-7(5-9(17)13(8)21)24-14-10(18)1-6(2-11(14)19)3-12(20)15(22)23/h1-2,4-5,12,21H,3,20H2,(H,22,23)/t12-/m1/s1
- Key:XUIIKFGFIJCVMT-GFCCVEGCSA-N
Dextrothyroxine (trade name Choloxin) is a dextrorotary isomer of thyroxine.[1] It saw research as a cholesterol-lowering drug[2] but was pulled due to cardiac side-effects. It increases hepatic lipase which in turn improves utilization of triglycerides and decreases levels of lipoprotein(a) in blood serum.[3]
See also
References
- ^ "Dextrothyroxine (Code C61719)". NCI Thesaurus. National Cancer Institute. 2011-11-14. Retrieved 2020-01-28.
- ^ Bantle JP, Hunninghake DB, Frantz ID, Kuba K, Mariash CN, Oppenheimer JH (September 1984). "Comparison of effectiveness of thyrotropin-suppressive doses of D- and L-thyroxine in treatment of hypercholesterolemia". The American Journal of Medicine. 77 (3): 475–81. doi:10.1016/0002-9343(84)90107-4. PMID 6475988.
- ^ Bommer C, Werle E, Walter-Sack I, Keller C, Gehlen F, Wanner C, et al. (January 1998). "D-thyroxine reduces lipoprotein(a) serum concentration in dialysis patients". Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 9 (1): 90–6. doi:10.1681/ASN.V9190. PMID 9440092.
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Cholesterol absorption inhibitors, NPC1L1 | |
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Bile acid sequestrants/resins (LDL) |
Statins (HMG-CoA reductase, LDL) | |
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Niacin and derivatives (HDL and LDL) | |
MTTP inhibitors (VLDL) | |
ATP citrate lyase inhibitors (LDL) | |
Thyromimetics (VLDL) |
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PPAR agonists (LDL) |
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CETP inhibitors (HDL) | |||||
PCSK9 inhibitors (LDL) | |||||
ANGPTL3 inhibitors (LDL/HDL) |
- #WHO-EM
- ‡Withdrawn from market
- Clinical trials:
- †Phase III
- §Never to phase III
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