budesonide
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budesonide
Summary
budesonide is a group of stereoisomers[1]. budesonide ranks in the top 5% of group_of_stereoisomers entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (637 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- budesonide is credited with the discovery of Ralph Brattsand[3].
- budesonide is credited with the discovery of Arne Thalén[4].
- budesonide's instance of is recorded as group of stereoisomers[5].
- budesonide's chemical structure is recorded as Budesonide.png[6].
- budesonide's physically interacts with is recorded as Nuclear receptor subfamily 3 group C member 1[7].
- budesonide's CAS Registry Number is recorded as 51333-22-3[8].
- budesonide's EC number is recorded as 257-139-7[9].
- budesonide's canonical SMILES is recorded as CCCC1OC2CC3C4CCC5=CC(=O)C=CC5(C4C(CC3(C2(O1)C(=O)CO)C)O)C[10].
- budesonide's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/C25H34O6/c1-4-5-21-30-20-11-17-16-7-6-14-10-15(27)8-9-23(14,2)22(16)18(28)12-24(17,3)25(20,31-21)19(29)13-26/h8-10,16-18,20-22,26,28H,4-7,11-13H2,1-3H3/t16-,17-,18-,20+,21?,22+,23-,24-,25+/m0/s1[11].
- budesonide's InChIKey is recorded as VOVIALXJUBGFJZ-KWVAZRHASA-N[12].
- budesonide's ATC code is recorded as A07EA06[13].
- budesonide's ATC code is recorded as R03BA02[14].
- budesonide's ATC code is recorded as D07AC09[15].
- budesonide's ATC code is recorded as R01AD05[16].
- budesonide's chemical formula is recorded as C₂₅H₃₄O₆[17].
- budesonide's subclass of is recorded as LSM-1835[18].
- budesonide's has use is recorded as medication[19].
- budesonide's Commons category is recorded as Budesonide[20].
- budesonide's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D019819[21].
- budesonide's ChEMBL ID is recorded as CHEMBL1370[22].
- budesonide's Guide to Pharmacology Ligand ID is recorded as 7434[23].
- budesonide's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04nd8v[24].
- budesonide's UNII is recorded as Q3OKS62Q6X[25].
- budesonide's ChemSpider ID is recorded as 4444479[26].
- budesonide's PubChem CID is recorded as 5281004[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Ralph Brattsand[3], b. 1933[28], of Sweden[29] and Arne Thalén[4], a scientist[30], b. 1930[31], of Sweden[32].
Why It Matters
budesonide ranks in the top 5% of group_of_stereoisomers entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (637 views/month).[2] budesonide has Wikipedia articles in 23 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33] budesonide is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[34]