Talk:Gallocatechol

Latest comment: 9 years ago by 69.72.92.176 in topic a couple problems

gallocatechol vs epigallocatechin? edit

The page listed at gallocatechol is shown as a redirect from epigallocatechin. Ideally, this should be the other way round, because the chemical shown is the epi- form (gallocatechin would have opposite stereocenters). Epigallocatechin is the more common name. As you are an admin, please move these pages appropriately. MatthewEHarbowy 14:44, 2 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

"Gallocatechol" is listed as the first name at PubChem and MeSH, but this may be a situation where people in different fields use different names for the same molecule. I'd recommend that you ask at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Chemistry, and cross-post at Talk:Gallocatechol. --Arcadian 16:57, 2 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
look at the relative number of citations for gallocatechol, gallocatechin, and epigallocatechin, for example, in geometrically increasing order in say, references for each in Google Scholar. There may indeed be different uses in different fields, but it would seem in terms of relative significance, the word "epigallocatechin" is in more common use, particularly since references to its gallate ester are legion. It may be "proper" to list it as such in MeSH, but for an encyclopedia the term "epigallocatechin" seems far more appropriate. I will crosspost to Talk:Gallocatechol. MatthewEHarbowy 23:12, 3 September 2007 (UTC)Reply
The problems of disambiguation still remains. Looking at the Sigma-Aldrich page. http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/ProductDetail.do?D7=0&N5=SEARCH_CONCAT_PNO&N4=G6657%7CSIGMA&N25=0&QS=ON&F=SPEC the structure currently displayed is not either enantiomer of gallocatechol, but may be epi-gallocatechol. I'm not sure what this article is supposed to be about: gallocatechol the molecule, or as a class of compound. --The chemistds (talk) 18:22, 12 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Inconsistent articles edit

This article and its printable version are CONTRADICTORY!

        69.72.27.53 (talk) 08:32, 17 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

a couple problems edit

Shouldn't that be GC rather than EGC in the first sentence? It seems that "two epimers" should be "two enantiomers". 69.72.92.176 (talk) 02:06, 18 September 2014 (UTC)Reply