Pharmaceutical Raw Materials Azithromy-Cin for Bacterial Infections 83905-01-5
Product Description
Basic info:
Azithromy-cin
CAS: 83905-01-5
MF:C38H72N2O12
MW:748.99
Melting Point:113-115º C
Appearance: White powder
Purity:99.5%
Grade:Pharmaceutical Grade & Veterinary Grade
Storage:Closed, shading preservation
Delivery time: Within 18 hours upon receipt of payment
Delivery:EMS, DHL, TNT, FedEx, UPS
Usage:Antibiotics used for a variety of sensitive bacterial infections, such as respiratory infection; Skin and soft tissue infection.
Product Introduction:
1.Azithromy-cin (trade names Zithromax, Azyth, Sumamed) is an antibiotic useful for the treatment of bacterial infections. It is an azalide, a subclass of macrolide antibiotic. It is derived from erythromycin, with a methyl-substituted nitrogen atom incorporated into the lactone ring, thus making the lactone ring 15-membered. Azithromy-cin is somewhat more potent against certain bacterial species than erythromycin, but its widespread popularity arises primarily from its slow elimination from the body, which allows many infections to be treated with 3-5 days of once-daily administration, compared to 3-4 times a day for up to two weeks for erythromycin.
2.Azithromy-cin inhibits the growth of bacteria by interfering with their protein synthesis. It binds to the 50S subunit of the bacterial ribosome, and thus inhibits translation of MRNA. This mechanism of action is typical of macrolide antibiotics. This antibiotic is widely used alone or in combination with other drugs to treat otitis media, pharyngitis, community-acquired respiratory infections (including pneumonia), gastrointestinal infections (such as those caused by eating contaminated food), and gonorrhea. It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, a list of the most important medications needed in a basic health system.
Avail:
1.Azithromy-cin is used to treat many different infections, including:
Acute bacterial exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease due to H. Influenzae, M. Catarrhalis, or S. Pneumoniae.
2.Acute bacterial sinusitis due to H. Influenzae, M. Catarrhalis, or S. Pneumoniae Community-acquired pneumonia' due to C. Pneumoniae, H. Influenzae, M. Pneumoniae, or S. Pneumoniae. Acute otitis media caused by H. Influenzae, M. Catarrhalis or S.
3.Pneumoniae Pharyngitis or tonsillitis caused by S. Pyogenes as an alternative to first-line therapy in individuals who cannot use first-line therapy. Uncomplicated skin and skin structure infections due to S. Aureus, S. Pyogenes, or S. Agalactiae Urethritis and cervicitis due to C. Trachomatis or N. Gonorrhoeae Genital ulcer disease (chancroid) in men due to H. Ducreyi.