moxonidine
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moxonidine
Summary
moxonidine is a type of chemical entity[1]. moxonidine has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- moxonidine's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- moxonidine's canonical SMILES is recorded as CC1=NC(=C(C(=N1)Cl)NC2=NCCN2)OC[4].
- moxonidine's chemical formula is recorded as C₉H₁₂ClN₅O[5].
- moxonidine is a type of heterocyclic compound[6].
- moxonidine is used for medication[7].
- moxonidine's Commons category is recorded as Moxonidine[8].
- moxonidine comprises nitrogen[9].
- moxonidine comprises oxygen[10].
- moxonidine comprises carbon[11].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as (RS)-metoprolol[12].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as nadolol[13].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as atenolol[14].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as nebivolol[15].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as acebutolol[16].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as betaxolol[17].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as bisoprolol[18].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as pindolol[19].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as carvedilol[20].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as propranolol[21].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as sotalol[22].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as labetalol[23].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as levobunolol[24].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as (RS)-metoprolol[25].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as nadolol[26].
- moxonidine's significant drug interaction is recorded as atenolol[27].
Why It Matters
moxonidine has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] moxonidine is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]