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HomeProduct name listThiabendazole

Thiabendazole

Synonym(s):2-(4-Thiazolyl)benzimidazole;Thiabendazole

  • CAS NO.:148-79-8
  • Empirical Formula: C10H7N3S
  • Molecular Weight: 201.25
  • MDL number: MFCD00005587
  • EINECS: 205-725-8
  • SAFETY DATA SHEET (SDS)
  • Update Date: 2024-12-18 14:07:02
Thiabendazole Structural

What is Thiabendazole?

Absorption

Rapidly absorbed and peak plasma concentration is reached within 1 to 2 hours after the oral administration of a suspension. Some systemic absorption may occur from topical preparations applied to the skin.

Toxicity

Overdosage may be associated with transient disturbances of vision and psychic alterations. The oral LD 50 is 3.6 g/kg, 3.1 g/kg and 3.8 g/kg in the mouse, rat, and rabbit respectively.

Description

Thiabendazole is also a broad-spectrum systemic fungicide against many fungal pathogens, although this compound was originally introduced as an anthelminthic (25).

Description

Thiabendazole is a broad-spectrum anthelmintic that is active against a variety of helminths. In sheep, thiabendazole (50 mg/kg) kills greater than 95% of adult worms from ten genera, including Trichostrongylus, Cooperia, Nematodirus, Ostertagia, Haemonchus, Oesophagostomum, Bunostomum, Strongyloides, Chabertia, and Trichuris. It also inhibits production of eggs and disrupts larval development. Thiabendazole inhibits fumarate reductase in helminths, which inhibits succinate formation, and therefore energy production through the citric acid cycle. It also inhibits methionine aminopeptidase in E. coli (Ki = 40 nM; IC50 = 47.2 nM). Formulations containing thiabendazole have been used in the control of parasitic infections in livestock.

Chemical properties

Light yellow powder

Originator

Mintezol,MSD,US,1967

The Uses of Thiabendazole

Thiabendazole is widely used as a post-harvest systemic fungicide on citrus and bananas. It is active against fruit rots in bananas, citrus, apples and pears; bulb and corm rots in ornamentals; storage rots in sweet potato and potato and is also used to control Dutch elm disease. It is the original benzimidazole anthelmintic for both human and animal health usages.

The Uses of Thiabendazole

A drug used in the treatment of helminthiases

The Uses of Thiabendazole

anticoagulant, rodenticide

The Uses of Thiabendazole

Systemic fungicide used for diseases of fruits and vegetables and for control of Dutch elm disease.

What are the applications of Application

Thiabendazole is a benzimidazole compound that acts as a fungicide and also against nematodes in Strongyloidiasis

Background

2-Substituted benzimidazole first introduced in 1962. It is active against a variety of nematodes and is the drug of choice for strongyloidiasis. It has CNS side effects and hepatototoxic potential. (From Smith and Reynard, Textbook of Pharmacology, 1992, p919)

Indications

For the treatment of strongyloidiasis (threadworm), cutaneous larva migrans (creeping eruption), visceral larva migrans, and trichinosis.

Definition

ChEBI: A member of the class of benzimidazoles carrying a 1,3-thiazol-4-yl substituent at position 2. A mainly post-harvest fungicide used to control a wide range of diseases including Aspergillus, Botrytis, Cladosporium and Fusarium.

Indications

Thiabendazole is used against nematodes and nematode larvae: Enterobius, Ascaris, Strongyloides, Necator, Trichinella, Ancylostoma, Capillaria, Dracunculus, and Trichostrongylus. It is also effective against intestinal flukes.

Manufacturing Process

6.5 grams of thiazole-4-carboxylic acid is stirred with 5.9 grams of thionyl chloride in 20 ml xylene for 10 hours at room temperature to form 4-thiazolyl acid chloride. 1.3 grams of 4-thiazolyl acid chloride and 1.3 grams of onitroaniline are then stirred together in 3.5 ml of pyridine at room temperature for about 12 hours. At the end of this time, the mixture is quenched in ice water and the solid nitroanilide recovered by filtration and washed with dilute sodium carbonate solution. The solid is suspended in 15 ml of glacial acetic acid, and 8 ml of 6 N hydrochloric acid added to the suspension. 6 grams of zinc dust is added in small portions to the acetic mixture. After the zinc addition is complete, and the reaction is essentially finished (by visual observation), the reaction mixture is filtered and the filtrate neutralized with concentrated ammonium hydroxide to precipitate 2-(4'- thiazolyl)-benzimidazole. The product is purified by recrystallization from ethyl acetate, according to US Patent 3,274,207.

Therapeutic Function

Anthelmintic

Synthesis Reference(s)

The Journal of Organic Chemistry, 30, p. 259, 1965 DOI: 10.1021/jo01012a061

General Description

White or cream-colored odorless, tasteless powder. Sublimes above 590°F. Fluoresces in acidic solution. Formulated as a dust, flowable powder or wettable powder for use as a systemic fungicide and anthelmintic.

Air & Water Reactions

Insoluble in water.

Reactivity Profile

Thiabendazole is incompatible with a number of pesticides, including copper-containing fungicides, and with highly alkaline materials. Thiabendazole is a chelating agent, binding many metals including iron, but not calcium

Fire Hazard

Flash point data for Thiabendazole are not available; however, Thiabendazole is probably combustible.

Agricultural Uses

Fungicide: Thiabendazole is a fungicide used to control blight, mold, stain and rot that are found on fruit and vegetables; Dutch elm disease; and diseases found in food storage and other diseases. It is also used to treat roundworms and similar conditions in livestock and humans. Registered for use in EU countries. A U.S. EPA restricted use Pesticide (RUP). U.S. Maximum Allowable Residue Levels for Thiabendazole and its metabolite benzimidazole (free and conjugated) in or on the following food commodities:[40CFR 180.242(a) (1)]: apple, wet pomace 12.0 ppm; Avocado (There are no U.S. registrations on the indicated commodity) 10.0 ppm; banana, post harvest 3.0 ppm; bean, dry, seed 0.1 ppm; beet, sugar, dried pulp 3.5 ppm; beet, sugar, roots 0.25 ppm; beet, sugar, tops 10.0 ppm; cantaloupe (There are no U.S. registrations on the indicated commodity) 15.0 ppm; carrot, roots, postharvest 10.0 ppm; citrus, oil 15.0 ppm; fruit, citrus, group 10, postharvest 10.0 ppm; fruit, pome, group 11, postharvest 5.0 ppm; mango 10.0 ppm; mushroom 40.0 ppm; papaya, postharvest 5.0 ppm; potato, postharvest 10.0 ppm; soybean 0.1 ppm; strawberry (There are no U.S. registrations on the indicated commodity) 5.0 ppm; sweet potato (postharvest to sweet potato intended only for use as seed) 0.05 ppm; wheat, grain 1.0 ppm; wheat, straw 1.0 ppm. [40CFR 180.242(a)(2)]: cattle, meat 0.1 ppm; cattle, meat byproducts 0.4 ppm; goat, meat byproducts 0.4 ppm; Hog, meat byproducts 0.3 ppm; horse, meat byproducts 0.4 ppm; milk 0.1 ppm; sheep, meat byproducts 0.4 ppm. [40CFR 180.2010]: Use/Limits: As a seed treatment for dry pea (including field pea, pigeon pea, chickpea or lentil), using a maximum application rate of 0.075 pounds of active ingredient per 100 pounds of seed. Vines or hay grown from treated seed may not be fed to livestock.

Pharmaceutical Applications

Thiabendazole; a thiazolyl benzimidazole available for oral administration. It is active against most common intestinal nematodes. As a result of its larvicidal and ovicidal activity, it is effective in strongyloidiasis, trichinosis, visceral larva migrans and cutaneous larva migrans.
It is well absorbed from the small intestine. Peak plasma levels are reached about 1–2 h after a single oral dose of the suspension. It is extensively metabolized in the liver to the 5-hydroxy derivative, which is inactive. Most of the drug is excreted within 24 h. About 90% is excreted in the urine, chiefly as glucuronide or sulfate conjugates; the remainder is passed in the feces.
A wide range of unpleasant side effects occur, including nausea and other gastrointestinal upsets, fever and neurological effects. It has been largely replaced by the less toxic benzimidazole carbamates. Although active against Ascaris lumbricoides, E. vermicularis and hookworms, it should not be used as primary therapy for these infections.

Trade name

AGROSOL? AGROSOL?T, (with thiram); APL-LUSTER? ARBOTECT? BOVIZOLE? BRODEX? CHEM-TEK? CITRUS LUSTR? DECCO SALT NO.19? E-Z-EX? EPROFIL? EQUIVET TZ? EQUIZOLE? FRESHGARD? FUNGICIDE 4 T? GRANOX? IRGAGUARD? LOMBRISTOP? MERTEC? MERTECT 160? METASOL TK-100? MINTEZOL? MINZOLUM? MK-360? MYCOZOL? NEMAPAN? NSC 525040? OMNIZOLE? POLIVAL? RIVAL? (captan + PCNB + thiabendazole); RPH? RTU-VITAVAX-EXTRA? STA-FRESH? TBZ 6? TECTO? TECTO RPH? TECTO 10P? TECTO 40 F? TESTO? THIABEN? THIABENDAZOLUM? THIABENZAZOLE? THIABENZOLE? THIBENZOL? THIBENZOLE? THIBENZOLE 200? THIBENZOLE ATT? TIABENDAZOLE? TOBAZ? TOP FORM WORMER? VITAVAX?Thiabendazole Chemical class: Benzimidazole

Contact allergens

This fungicide and vermifuge agent is widely used in agriculture (for example, forcitrus fruits), and in medical and veterinary practice as an anthelmintic drug.

Mechanism of action

Thiabendazole is an antihelmintic drug with a broad spectrum of action. Although the details of its mechanism of action are not conclusively known, it seems likely that its action is mediated by the inhibition of a specific enzyme of helminthes—fumarate reductase. Thiabendazole is active with respect to most nematode infections, including Angyostrongylus cantonesis, Strongyloides stercoralis, Trichinella spiralis, Toxocara canis, Toxocara cati, Ancylostoma caninum, A. braziliense, A. duodenale, Dracunculus medinesis, Capillaria philippinesis, as well as for treating Acaris cantonesis and Shistosoma stercoralis. Synonyms of this drug are mintezol, minzolum, and others.

Pharmacokinetics

Thiabendazole is a fungicide and parasiticide. Thiabendazole is also a chelating agent, which means that it is used medicinally to bind metals in cases of metal poisoning, such as lead poisoning, mercury poisoning or antimony poisoning. Thiabendazole is vermicidal and/or vermifugal against Ascaris lumbricoides ("common roundworm"), Strongyloides stercoralis (threadworm), Necator americanus, Ancylostoma duodenale (hookworm), Trichuris trichiura (whipworm), Ancylostoma braziliense (dog and cat hookworm), Toxocara canis, Toxocara cati (ascarids), and Enterobius vermicularis (pinworm). Thiabendazole also suppresses egg and/or larval production and may inhibit the subsequent development of those eggs or larvae which are passed in the feces.

Clinical Use

2-(4-Thiazolyl)benzimidazole (Mintezol) occurs as a whitecrystalline substance that is only slightly soluble in waterbut is soluble in strong mineral acids. Thiabendazole is abasic compound with a pKa of 4.7 that forms complexeswith metal ions.
Thiabendazole inhibits the helminth-specific enzymefumarate reductase. It is not known whether metal ionsare involved or if the inhibition of the enzyme is related tothiabendazole’s anthelmintic effect. Benzimidazole anthelminticdrugs such as thiabendazole and mebendazolealso arrest nematode cell division in metaphase by interferingwith microtubule assembly. They exhibit a highaffinity for tubulin, the precursor protein for microtubulesynthesis.
Thiabendazole has broad-spectrum anthelmintic activity.It is used to treat enterobiasis, strongyloidiasis (threadworminfection), ascariasis, uncinariasis (hookworm infection), andtrichuriasis (whipworm infection). It has also been used torelieve symptoms associated with cutaneous larva migrans(creeping eruption) and the invasive phase of trichinosis. Inaddition to its use in human medicine, thiabendazole iswidely used in veterinary practice to control intestinalhelminths in livestock.

Side Effects

Frequent adverse reactions are dizziness, anorexia, vomiting, and epigastric distress. Diarrhea, fever, headache, skin rashes, hallucinations, and olfactory disturbances occur occasionally. Tinnitus, hypotension, and syncope are rare complications.

Safety Profile

Moderately toxic by ingestion. An experimental teratogen. A questionable carcinogen. Experimental reproductive effects. Mutation data reported. When heated to decomposition it emits toxic fumes of SOX and NOX. See also SULFIDES.

Synthesis

Thiabendazole, 2-(4-thiazolyl)benzimidazole (38.1.9), is also made in the same manner?aheterocyclization which occurs upon reacting o-phenylendiamine with 1,3-thiazol-4-carboxylic acid.

Synthesis_148-79-8

Veterinary Drugs and Treatments

Thiabendazole has been used for the removal of the following parasites in dogs: ascarids (Toxocara canis, T. leonina), Strongyloides stercoralis, and Filaroides. It has been used systemically as an anti-fungal agent in the treatment of nasal aspergillosis and penicillinosis. Topical and otic use of thiabendazole for the treatment of various fungi is also commonly employed.
Thiabendazole is indicated (labeled) for the removal of the following parasites in cattle: Haemonchus spp., Ostertagia spp., Trichostrongylus spp., Nematodirus spp., Cooperia spp. and Oesophagostomum radiatum.
Thiabendazole is indicated (labeled) for the removal of the following parasites in sheep and goats: Haemonchus spp., Ostertagia spp., Trichostrongylus spp., Nematodirus spp., Cooperia spp., Chabertia spp., Bunostomum spp. and Oesophagostomum spp.
Thiabendazole is indicated (labeled) for the removal of the following parasites in horses: Strongylus spp., craterstomum spp., Oesphagodontus spp., Posteriostomum spp., Cyathostomum spp., Cylicocylus spp., Cylicostephanus spp., Oxyuris spp., and Parasacaris spp.
Thiabendazole is indicated (labeled) for the removal or prevention of the following parasites in swine: large roundworms (Ascaris suum) (prevention), and in baby pigs infested with Strongyloides ransomi.
Although not approved, thiabendazole has been used in pet birds and llamas. See the Dosage section for more information.
In many geographic areas, significant thiabendazole resistance problems have developed and, for many parasites, other anthelmintics would be a better choice for treatment.
When used topically, thiabendazole has antidermatophytic properties.

Environmental Fate

Thiabendazole does not hydrolyze readily, nor it is metabolized in soil under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. While it photodecomposes in minutes in aqueous solutions, photodecomposition of thiabendazole in soil did not cause more than 40% reduction. Thiabendazole is also only slightly water soluble, and does not migrate in soil. Thus, it is unlikely to contaminate groundwater. If released into the atmosphere, it exists primarily in the particulate phase. In the vapor phase, it will degrade in the atmosphere by reacting with photochemically produced hydroxyl radicals with an estimated half-life of 6 h.

Metabolic pathway

The primary photolytic degradation of thiabendazole involves the cleavage of the thiazole-benzimidazole ring linkage. In animals, thiabendazole is extensively oxidised in bluegill sunfish, hens, goats, sheep, cattle, mice, rats and humans, followed by conjugation. When foliarly applied to plants, degradation to benzimidazole and its conjugates occurred. Benzimidazole formed in plants is mainly due to photolytic action. The primary degradation/metabolic pathways of thiabendazole in water, soil, plants and animals are depicted in Scheme 1.

Metabolism

Hepatic. Metabolized almost completely to the 5-hydroxy form which appears in the urine as glucuronide or sulfate conjugates.

Degradation

Thiabendazole (1) is quite stable in aqueous suspension and in acidic media, and it is stable to heat (PM).
Opening and/or the cleavage of the thiazole-benzimidazole ring linkage appeared to be the primary photolytic degradation pathway. Thiabendazole was photolysed to (benzimidazol-2-yl)carboxamide (2) and benzimidazole (3) under natural sunlight exposure on sugar beet leaf surfaces or on glass plates (Jacob et al., 1975). Thiabendazole was also photolysed in aqueous solution when exposed to a Pyrex glass filtered high pressure mercury lamp (≥290 nm). In addition to 2 and 3, photoproducts included degradates 4-8 (Murthy et al., 1996). Compound 2 was proposed to result from hydrolysis of (benzimidazol-2-yl)nitrile (7). The rate constant for photolysis was not affected sigruficantly by the presence of either fulvic or humic acids, indicating that indirect photolysis does not play a large role in the degradation of thiabendazole.

Properties of Thiabendazole

Melting point: 298-301°C
Boiling point: 446.0±37.0 °C(Predicted)
Density  1.2271 (rough estimate)
vapor pressure  Negligible at room temperature
refractive index  1.5500 (estimate)
storage temp.  Sealed in dry,Room Temperature
solubility  Soluble in methanol and dimethyl sulfoxide.
form  powder
pka pKa 4.7 (Uncertain)
color  light yellow
Water Solubility  0.005 g/100 mL
Merck  14,9289
BRN  611403
CAS DataBase Reference 148-79-8(CAS DataBase Reference)
NIST Chemistry Reference Thiabendazole(148-79-8)
EPA Substance Registry System Thiabendazole (148-79-8)

Safety information for Thiabendazole

Signal word Warning
Pictogram(s)
ghs
Environment
GHS09
GHS Hazard Statements H410:Hazardous to the aquatic environment, long-term hazard
Precautionary Statement Codes P273:Avoid release to the environment.
P501:Dispose of contents/container to..…

Computed Descriptors for Thiabendazole

InChIKey WJCNZQLZVWNLKY-UHFFFAOYSA-N

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