Bifonol

Bifonol Uses, Dosage, Side Effects, Food Interaction and all others data.

Bifonol is an azole antifungal drug.

Bifonol is a type of antifungal medicine known as an imidazole. It kills fungi and yeasts by interfering with their cell membranes.

Trade Name Bifonol
Generic Bifonazole
Bifonazole Other Names Bifonazol, Bifonazole, Bifonazolum
Type
Formula C22H18N2
Weight Average: 310.3917
Monoisotopic: 310.146998586
Groups Approved, Investigational
Therapeutic Class
Manufacturer
Available Country
Last Updated: September 19, 2023 at 7:00 am
Bifonol
Bifonol

Uses

Bifonol is an azole antifungal drug used to treat fungal skin infections, such as dermatomycosis.

Used for the treatment of various topical fungal infections, including athlete's foot (tinea pedis).

Bifonol is also used to associated treatment for these conditions: Dermatomycoses, Fungal infection of nail, Infections, Fungal, Infections, Fungal of the Skin Folds

How Bifonol works

Bifonol works by inhibiting the production of a substance called ergosterol, which is an essential component of fungal cell membranes.It acts to destabilize the fungal cyctochrome p450 51 enzyme (also known as Lanosterol 14-alpha demethylase). This is vital in the cell membrance structure of the fungus. Its inhibition leads to cell lysis. The disruption in production of ergosterol disrupts the cell membrane and causes holes to appear. The cell membranes of fungi are vital for their survival. They keep unwanted substances from entering the cells and stop the contents of the cells from leaking out. As bifonazole causes holes to appear in the cell membranes, essential constituents of the fungal cells can leak out. This kills the fungi.

Elimination Route

Very low absorption following topical administration (0.6% of an applied dose). In cases of skin lesions absorption is increased (2.5%).

Half Life

1-2 hours

Innovators Monograph

You find simplified version here Bifonol

*** Taking medicines without doctor's advice can cause long-term problems.
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