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SAR of Barbiturates

The document discusses structure-activity relationships of barbiturates. It outlines properties important for barbiturates to act as hypnotics including acidity, lipid solubility, the sum of carbon atoms in substituents, branching, and other structural factors that impact potency and duration of action.

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Vikash Kumar
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
929 views10 pages

SAR of Barbiturates

The document discusses structure-activity relationships of barbiturates. It outlines properties important for barbiturates to act as hypnotics including acidity, lipid solubility, the sum of carbon atoms in substituents, branching, and other structural factors that impact potency and duration of action.

Uploaded by

Vikash Kumar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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B.

Pharm 4th Sem


Medicinal Chemistry-I
Unit-4

SAR of
Barbiturates

By: BHUPENDRA KUMAR YADAV


Associate Professor
A good hypnotic barbituric acid derivative must have the following properties:

1. The acidity value within certain limits to give proper ratio of ionized (dissociated)
and unionized forms, which is important to cross blood brain barrier (BBB). It takes
approximately 40%–60% dissociation to enable a barbiturate to cross BBB and exert
effects on CNS. Determination of the pKa can thus be predictive of the CNS activity.

2. Lipid water solubility (partition coefficient) should be in certain limits.


•The sum of the carbon atoms of both the substituents at c-5 should be between 6 and 10, in order to
attain optimal hypnotic activity. This sum is also an index of the duration of action.
•Within the same series, the branched chain has greatest lipid solubility and hypnotic activity, but
has shorter duration of action.
•Branched cyclic or unsaturated chains at C-5 position, generally, reduce the duration of action, due
to increased ease of metabolic conversion to more polar inactive metabolite.
•The greater the branching, more potent will be the drug.
Examples:
•Within the series, the unsaturated analogues (i.e. alkyl, alkenyl, and cycloalkenyl) may result in
greater potency than the saturated analogues, with the same number of carbon atoms.
•Alicyclic or aromatic substituted analogues are more potent than analogues of aliphatic
substitutions with the same number of carbon atoms.
•Introduction of a halogen atom into the C-5 substituents increase potency.
•Introduction of a polar substituents (OH, NH2, COOH, CO, RNH, and SO3H) into the aromatic
group at C-5 results in decreased lipid solubility and potency.
•Alkylation at 1 or 3 position may result in compounds having shorter onset and duration of
action since N-methyl group reduces acidity value. Eg:- Methohexital

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