procainamide
0 sources
procainamide
Summary
procainamide is a type of chemical entity[1]. procainamide has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- procainamide's instance of is recorded as type of chemical entity[3].
- procainamide's canonical SMILES is recorded as CCN(CC)CCNC(=O)C1=CC=C(C=C1)N[4].
- procainamide's chemical formula is recorded as C₁₃H₂₁N₃O[5].
- procainamide is a type of chemical compound[6].
- procainamide is used for medication[7].
- procainamide's Commons category is recorded as Procainamide[8].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as amiodarone[9].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as anagrelide[10].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as arsenic trioxide[11].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as astemizole[12].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as azithromycin[13].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as bepridil[14].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as chloroquine[15].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as chlorpromazine[16].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as cisapride[17].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as (RS)-citalopram[18].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as clarithromycin[19].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as cocaine[20].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as disopyramide[21].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as dofetilide[22].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as domperidone[23].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as dronedarone[24].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as droperidol[25].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as erythromycin[26].
- procainamide's significant drug interaction is recorded as escitalopram[27].
Why It Matters
procainamide has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] procainamide is known by 16 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]