- Source: 8-Chlorotheophylline
8-Chlorotheophylline, also known as 1,3-dimethyl-8-chloroxanthine, is a stimulant drug of the xanthine chemical class, with physiological effects similar to caffeine. Its main use is in combination (salt) with diphenhydramine in the antiemetic dimenhydrinate (Dramamine). Diphenhydramine reduces nausea but causes drowsiness, and the stimulant properties of 8-Chlorotheophylline help reduce that side effect.
Despite being classified as a xanthine stimulant, 8-chlorotheophylline can generally not produce any locomotor activity above control in mice and does not appear to cross the blood-brain barrier well.
The 8-chloro modification is not selected for pharmacological properties; instead, it was to raise the acidity of the xanthine amine group enough to form a co-salt with diphenhydramine.
The drug is also sold in combination with promethazine, again as a salt.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 8-Chlorotheophylline
- Dimenhydrinate
- List of polysubstance combinations
- Cilostazol
- Xanthine
- Caffeine
- Propolis
- Guanosine monophosphate
- DMPX
- Cytosine