Version 2.78

Descriptions

In chemistry, acetone (also known as propanone, dimethyl ketone, 2-propanone, propan-2-one and -ketopropane) is the simplest representative of the ketones. Acetone is a colorless mobile flammable liquid with melting point at ˆ'95.4°C and boiling point at 56.53°C. It has a relative density of 0.819 (at 0°C). It is readily soluble in water, ethanol, ether, etc., and itself serves as an important solvent. The most familiar household use of acetone is as the active ingredient in nail polish remover. Acetone is also used to make plastic, fibers, drugs, and other chemicals. Copyright Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ for details. Source: Wikipedia, Acetone (Wikipedia)

A colorless liquid used as a solvent and an antiseptic. It is one of the ketone bodies produced during ketoacidosis. Source: National Library of Medicine, MeSH 2006

Acetone (also known as propanone, dimethyl ketone, 2-propanone, propan-2-one or β-Ketopropane) the simplest ketone, is a colorless, mobile, flammable liquid with melting point at 95.4°C and boiling point at 56.53°C. An important solvent, it has a relative density of 0.819 (at 0°C) and is readily soluble in water, ethanol, ether, etc. The most familiar household use of acetone is as the active ingredient in nail polish remover. Acetone is also used to make plastic, fibers, drugs, and other chemicals. Small amounts of acetone are produced in the body via decarboxylation of ketone bodies. Certain dietary patterns, including prolonged fasting and high-fat low-carbohydrate dieting, or health conditions such as diabetes, can produce ketosis, thus forming acetone in body tissue. Ketones can be evaluated due to toxicological causes such as ingestion of isopropanol leading to acetone production. Acetone is not currently regarded as a carcinogen and is generally recognized to have low acute and chronic toxicity if ingested or inhaled, however at very high vapor concentrations acetone is irritating and may depress the central nervous system. [Wikipedia: Acetone] Copyright Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ for details. Source: Wikipedia, Acetone

Basic Part Properties

Part Display Name
Acetone
Part Type
Component (Describes the core component or analyte measured)
Created On
2000-05-04
Construct for LOINC Short Name
Acetone

LOINC Terminology Service (API) using HL7® FHIR® Get Info

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Language Variants Get Info

Tag Language Translation
zh-CN Chinese (China) 丙酮
fr-CA French (Canada) Acétone
et-EE Estonian (Estonia) Atsetoon
es-ES Spanish (Spain) Acetona
it-IT Italian (Italy) Acetone
tr-TR Turkish (Turkey) Aseton
ru-RU Russian (Russian Federation) Ацетон
nl-NL Dutch (Netherlands) aceton
fr-BE French (Belgium) Acétone