Anodyne

Lidocaine
Lidocaine
Molecular structure via molpic based on CDK
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Conformer structure via JSmol
Physical properties
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234.34 g/mol [1]
AppearanceNeedles from benzene or alcohol [1]
OdorCharacteristic odor [1]
Melting point68 °C [1]
Boiling point159-160 °C at 2.00E+00 mm Hg [1]
DecompositionWhen heated to decomposition it emits toxic fumes of /nitrogen oxides/. [1]
Solubility>35.2 [ug/mL] (The mean of the results at pH 7.4) [1]
2.3 [1]
Structural Identifiers
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C14H22N2[1]
2-(diethylamino)-N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)acetamide [1]
CCN(CC)CC(=O)NC1=C(C=CC=C1C)C [1]
InChI=1S/C14H22N2O/c1-5-16(6-2)10-13(17)15-14-11(3)8-7-9-12(14)4/h7-9H,5-6,10H2,1-4H3,(H,15,17) [1]
InChIKeyNNJVILVZKWQKPM-UHFFFAOYSA-N [1]

Lidocaine

Lidocaine (also known as Lignocaine, 2-(Diethylamino)-N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)acetamide, Xylocaine, Lidoderm, Duncaine, Esracaine, Xylestesin, Alphacaine, Cappicaine or Gravocain)

Chemistry

Salts []

Lidocaine is typically found in the form of its tosylate, hydrochloride, carbonate, bicarbonate, iminodiacetic acid, maleate and sulfate salts.

 []

Lidocaine is a achiral mixture

See also []