Trional

Chemical compound
  • none
Legal statusLegal status Identifiers
  • 2,2-bis(ethylsulfonyl)butane
CAS Number
  • 76-20-0 ☒N
PubChem CID
  • 6433
ChemSpider
  • 6193 checkY
UNII
  • 217727W28W
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
  • DTXSID7046411 Edit this at Wikidata
ECHA InfoCard100.000.858 Edit this at WikidataChemical and physical dataFormulaC8H18O4S2Molar mass242.35 g·mol−13D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
  • CCC(C)(S(=O)(=O)CC)S(=O)(=O)CC
InChI
  • InChI=1S/C8H18O4S2/c1-5-8(4,13(9,10)6-2)14(11,12)7-3/h5-7H2,1-4H3 checkY
  • Key:LKACJLUUJRMGFK-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
 ☒NcheckY (what is this?)  (verify)

Trional (Methylsulfonal) is a sedative-hypnotic[1] and anesthetic drug with GABAergic actions[citation needed]. It has similar effects to sulfonal, except it is faster acting.[2]

History

Trional was prepared and introduced by Eugen Baumann and Alfred Kast in 1888.[3]

Cultural references

Appeared in Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, And Then There Were None, and other novels such as John Bude's The Lake District Murder as a sleep-inducing sedative; and in In Search of Lost Time (Sodom and Gomorrah) by Marcel Proust as a hypnotic. Sax Rohmer also references trional in his novel Dope.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Trional". Merck's 1907 Index. New York: Merck & Co. 1907. p. 448.
  2. ^ Sajous CE (1896). "General Therapeutics". Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences. 5. Philadelphia: F. A. Davis: A-156.
  3. ^ Drinkwater H (1924). Fifty years of medical progress, 1873-1922. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 40.
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See also: Receptor/signaling modulators • GABA receptor modulators • GABA metabolism/transport modulators


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