• N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | thegreenhand

N-Ethyl benzodiazepines?

so nostalgic

Greenlighter
Joined
Dec 16, 2013
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Does anybody know how N-Ethyl benzos would differ from their N-Methyl or desmethyl counterparts?

More specifically something like NEthyl Nitrazepam vs N-Methyl Nitrazepam or Nitrazepam?
 
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Never seen one, I think there is one even sold with a trifluoro or fluoroethyl group, don’t remember the name, have to look it up on wiki.
 
Well, halazepam has a 1,1,1-trifluoroethyl amide moiety which is not quite the same.

In short, even by the 1960s, N-methyl was identified to produce the highest activity in 3 ring benzodiazepines. There are a number of benzodiazepines with different N-methyl groups but in all cases this is to adjust the ADME and that the nor compounds are the active.

I mean, you can go for even larger substitutions that actually INCREASE affinity but reduce agonism i.e. high-affinity, low-efficacy.

The Stenbach group really did interrogate the QSAR of 3-ring benzodiazepines, the Cook group did the same with 4-ring derivatives and their are papers on the QSAR of the bioisosters that use a different aromatic. The information IS out there and AFAIK IS free.
 
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