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Chloramine-T ,Cloramina T
Tosylchloramide is an antiseptic/disinfectant,
often used as the sodium salt tosylchloramide
sodium. It is available under the brand name
Disifin.
Iodoform
Formaldehyde, Glutaraldehyde
Acid salicilic
Faringosept
Derivati de acridina
Sulfonamide drugs were the first antimicrobial drugs, and paved the way for
the antibiotic revolution in medicine. The first sulfonamide was trade named
Prontosil, which is a prodrug
Sulfonamidochrysoidine (KI-730), first synthesized by Bayer chemists Josef
Klarer and Fritz Mietzsch, was tested and found effective against some
important bacterial infections in mice by Gerhard Domagk, who
subsequently received the 1939 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Prontosil was the
result of five years of research and testing involving thousands of
compounds related to azo dyes.
Sulfanilamida
Jacques and Thrse Trefouel and their team at the French Pasteur
Institute found in 1936 that prontosil is metabolized to sulfanilamide
(para-aminophenylsulfonamide), a much simpler, colorless
molecule, redefining Prontosil as a prodrug. Prontylin became the
first oral version of sulfanilamide by Bayer.
Its synthesis had been first reported by Paul Gelmo, a chemistry
student working at the University of Vienna in his 1909 thesis, but he
had not realized its medical potential.
Intermediate-acting sulfonamide
Biseptol (400-50)
Sulfatiazol
Sulfametoxazol
Trimetoprim
Antibiotice beta-lactamice
Penicillin, the first natural
antibiotic discovered by
Alexander Fleming in
1928.
In 1999, Time Magazine
named Fleming one of
the 100 Most Important
People of the 20th
Century for his discovery
of penicillin
Efitard
Moldamin
Ampicilina
Oxacilina
Cefalosporine
an antiinflammatory medication
.
Aspirin was first isolated
by Felix Hoffmann, a chemist
with the German
company Bayer in 1897.[1][2]
(RS)-2-(4-(2-methylpropyl)phenyl)-propanoic acid
2-{1-[(4-chlorophenyl)carbonyl]-5-methoxy-2-methyl-1H-indol-3-yl}acetic
acid