Cetylpyridinium chloride

Agent Name
Cetylpyridinium chloride
CAS Number
123-03-5
Formula
C21-H38-N.Cl
Major Category
Nitrogen Compounds
Cetylpyridinium chloride formula graphical representation
Synonyms
1-Cetylpyridinium chloride; 1-Hexadecylpyridinium chloride; 1-Palmitylpyridinium chloride; Acetoquat CPC; Aktivex; Ammonyx CPC; Biosept; Ceeprin chloride; Ceepryn chloride; Cepacol; Cepacol chloride; Ceprim; Cetamium; Cetilpiridinio cloruro [DCIT]; Cetyl pyridinium chloride; Cetylpyridini chloridum; Cetylpyridinii chloridum [INN-Latin]; Chlorure de cetylpyridinium [INN-French]; Cloruro de cetilpiridinio [INN-Spanish]; Dobendan; Fixanol C; Hexadecylpyridinium chloride; Intexsan CPC; Medilave; Merocet; N-Cetylpyridinium chloride; N-Hexadecylpyridinium chloride; Pristacin; Pyrisept; Quaternario CPC; Swabettes Hoechst; Tserigel; [ChemIDplus]
Category
Quaternary Amines
Description
White solid; [HSDB]
Sources/Uses
Used as a preservative/antibacterial agent in cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, cough lozenges, mouthwashes, deodorants, and antiseptics; [HSDB] Quarternary ammonium compounds are used as algaecides/slimicides (swimming pools, industrial water reservoirs, and farm ponds), antiseptics for cleaning wounds, antistatic agents for textiles, softeners for paper products, and pigment dispersers; [IPCS-PIMs]
Comments
Irritating to the skin and eyes; [HSDB] Allergic contact dermatitis is infrequently documented for quaternary ammonium compounds; [Marks, p. 266] Quaternary ammonium compounds have curare-like properties when concentrated solutions are ingested; Affected patients may have methemoglobinemia and hemolysis and die within 1-3 hours; Elevated liver function tests were reported; Concentrated solutions can cause burns; No data on carcinogenicity or teratogenicity; [IPCS-PIMs] See "Benzalkonium chloride."
Biomedical References

Exposure Assessment

Lethal Concentration
LC50 (rat) = 90 mg/m3/4h

Adverse Effects

Skin Sensitizer
Yes
Methemoglobinemia
MetHgb is secondary toxic effect
Neurotoxin
Other CNS neurotoxin
Hepatotoxin
Hepatoxic (a) from occupational exposure (secondary effect) or (b) in animal studies or in humans after ingestion
Dermatotoxin
Skin burns

Diseases, Processes, and Activities Linked to This Agent

Diseases

Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent:

Processes

Industrial Processes with risk of exposure: