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B-006

Supelco

Butalbital solution

1.0 mg/mL in methanol, ampule of 1 mL, certified reference material, Cerilliant®

Synonym(s):

5-Allyl-5-isobutylbarbituric acid

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About This Item

Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
C11H16N2O3
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
224.26
MDL number:
UNSPSC Code:
41116107
PubChem Substance ID:
NACRES:
NA.24

grade

certified reference material

Quality Level

form

liquid

feature

SNAP-N-SPIKE®, SNAP-N-SHOOT®

packaging

ampule of 1 mL

manufacturer/tradename

Cerilliant®

drug control

Narcotic Licence Schedule B (Switzerland); psicótropo (Spain); Decreto Lei 15/93: Tabela IIC (Portugal)

concentration

1.0 mg/mL in methanol

technique(s)

gas chromatography (GC): suitable
liquid chromatography (LC): suitable

application(s)

forensics and toxicology

format

single component solution

storage temp.

2-8°C

SMILES string

CC(C)CC1(CC=C)C(=O)NC(=O)NC1=O

InChI

1S/C11H16N2O3/c1-4-5-11(6-7(2)3)8(14)12-10(16)13-9(11)15/h4,7H,1,5-6H2,2-3H3,(H2,12,13,14,15,16)

InChI key

UZVHFVZFNXBMQJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N

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General description

Butalbital is a barbiturate often combined with other medications such as acetaminophen or aspirin for the treatment of pain or codeine for headaches. Trade names of several butalbital combinations include Axocet®, Bucet, and Bupap® with acetaminophen and Axotal with aspirin. This certified reference solution is suitable for GC/MS or LC/MS applications in forensic analysis, clinical toxicology or urine drug testing.

Legal Information

Axocet is a registered trademark of Fougera Pharmaceuticals Inc.
Bupap is a registered trademark of ECR Pharmaceuticals Co., Inc.
CERILLIANT is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany
Snap-N-Shoot is a registered trademark of Cerilliant Corporation
Snap-N-Spike is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

Signal Word

Danger

Hazard Classifications

Acute Tox. 3 Dermal - Acute Tox. 3 Inhalation - Acute Tox. 3 Oral - Flam. Liq. 2 - STOT SE 1

Storage Class Code

3 - Flammable liquids

WGK

WGK 1

Flash Point(F)

49.5 °F - closed cup

Flash Point(C)

9.7 °C - closed cup


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William B Young et al.
Current pain and headache reports, 6(2), 151-155 (2002-03-02)
In the United States analgesic-overuse headache is often caused by butalbital-containing analgesics. These agents can cause physical and psychological dependency, and dangerous withdrawal syndromes. Butalbital-containing analgesics have already been banned in several European countries. They are proven effective in tension-type
W T Chang et al.
Journal of analytical toxicology, 25(8), 659-669 (2002-01-05)
As a part of our study on the use of isotopic analogues as the internal standard (IS) for the quantitation of drug analytes, this article reports on the performance characteristics of 2H5-butalbital and 13C4-butalbital with particular focus on (1) determining
Richard G Wenzel et al.
Pharmacotherapy, 22(8), 1029-1035 (2002-08-14)
To evaluate the role of butalbital-containing products in the management of migraine. Qualitative systematic search using MEDLINE (January 1966-November 2001), review of the United States Headache Consortium's evidence-based guidelines for migraine treatment, and review of other pertinent literature. Over 28
Seymour Solomon
Current pain and headache reports, 6(2), 147-150 (2002-03-02)
Butalbital compounds are of proven efficacy in the treatment of tension headache. Decades of experience have established their value in the treatment of other mild-to-moderate headaches. Untold numbers of people rely on these medications as their drug of choice or
Stewart J Tepper et al.
Cleveland Clinic journal of medicine, 77(4), 236-242 (2010-04-03)
When patients who have frequent, disabling migraines take medications to relieve their symptoms, they run the risk that the attacks will increase in frequency to daily or near-daily as a rebound effect comes into play. This pattern, called medication overuse

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