Chlormerodrin

Chlormerodrin

Chlormerodrin

Chemical compound


Chlormerodrin is a mercurial diuretic commercially traded from 1952[1] until 1974[2] that was once used to treat patients with heart failure,[3] but is no longer in widespread use.[4] The radiolabelled form (197Hg & 203Hg) had also been used for medical imaging of the kidney and brain[5][6] and the 197Hg form was even considered a contender for 99mTc by some physicians,[7] but was ultimately discontinued by the FDA in 1989.[8]

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References

  1. Sittig M (1988). Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Encyclopedia. Westwood: Noyes Publications.
  2. Crout JR (1974). "Fixed combination prescription drugs: FDA policy". Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 14 (5–6): 249–254. doi:10.1002/j.1552-4604.1974.tb02309.x. PMID 4829517. S2CID 5830209.
  3. "Chlormerodrin". PubChem. U.S. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 2021-09-23.
  4. Sodee DB, Di Stefano B (September 1965). "The Clinical Value of Today's Radioisotope Scanning". The Ohio State Medical Journal. 61: 819–22. PMID 14340215.
  5. Yamamoto YL, Feindel W, Zanelli J (September 1964). "Comparative study of radioactive chlormerodrin (Neohydrin) tagged with mercury 197 and mercury 203 for brain scanning". Neurology. 14 (9): 815–820. doi:10.1212/wnl.14.9.815. PMID 14215595. S2CID 43526449.
  6. Sodee DB (December 1968). "Comparison of 99mTc-pertechnetate and 197Hg-chlormerodrin for brain scanning". Journal of Nuclear Medicine. 9 (12): 645. PMID 5729215.
  7. FDA, Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations, US Department Of Health And Human Service, 1989.



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