THE DISPENSATORY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. GEORGE B. WOOD, M.D., PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL 80CIETY; PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS OP PHILADELPHIA; EMERITUS PROFESSOR OP THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OP MEDICINE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, ETC. ETC., BY AND FRANKLIN BACHE, M.D., LATE PROFESS'. :R OP CHEMISTRY IN JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE OF PHILADELPHIA; LATE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS OF PHILADELPHIA; LATE PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, ETC. ETC. TWELFTH EDITION, CAREFULLY REVISED. P p HIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT AND CO. 1869. Entered, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1865, By George B. Wood, M.D., In the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States in and tor the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. The objects of a Dispensatory are to present an account of medicinal sub- stances in the state in which they are brought into the shops, and to teach the modes in which they are prepared for use. The importance of these objects, and the general value and even necessity of a work of this nature, will not be disputed. It may, however, be a question, how far the wants of the medical and pharmaceutical community in this country are supplied by the Dispensatories already in circulation; and whether such a deficiency exists as to justify the offer of a new one to the public attention. The great merits of the works severally entitled “The Edinburgh New Dispensatory” and “ The London Dispensatory,” the former edited by the late Andrew Duncan, M.D., the latter by Anthony Todd Thomson, M.D., are well known wherever the English language is spoken. Founded, as they both are, upon the excellent basis laid by Lewis, they are nevertheless entitled, from the great addition of valuable materials, and the distinctive character exhibited in the arrangement of these materials, to be considered as origi- nal works; while the style in which they have been executed speaks strongly in favour of the skill and industry of their authors. But they were calculated especially for the sphere of Great Britain, and are too deficient in all that relates exclusively to this country, to admit of being received as standards here. In the history of our commerce in drugs, and of the nature, growth, and collection of our indigenous medical plants; in the chemical operations of our extensive laboratories; and in the modes of preparing, dispensing, and applying medicines, which have gradually grown into use among us; there is much that is peculiar, a knowledge of which is not to be gained from foreign books, and is yet necessary to the char- acter of an accomplished American pharmaceutist. We have, moreover, a Preface to the First Edition. National Pharmacopoeia, which requires an explanatory commentary, in order that its precepts may be fully appreciated, and advantageously put into practice. On these accounts it is desirable that there should be a Dis- pensatory of the United States, which, while it embraces whatever is useful in European pharmacy, may accurately represent the art as it exists in this country, and give instruction adapted to our peculiar wants. It appears due to our national character that such a work should he in good faith an American work, newly prepared in all its parts, and not a mere edition of one of the European Dispensatories, with here and there additions and alterations, which, though they may be useful in themselves, cannot be made to harmonize with the other materials so as to give to the whole an appearance of unity, and certainly would not justify the assumption of a new national title for the book. Whether, in the Dispensatories which have been published in the United States, these requisites have been satisfac- torily fulfilled, it rests with the public to determine. That valuable trea- tises on Materia Medica and Pharmacy have been issued in this country, no candid person, acquainted with our medical literature, will be disposed to deny. In offering a new work to the medical and pharmaceutical pro- fessions, the authors do not wish to be considered as undervaluing the labours of their predecessors. They simply conceive that the field has not been so fully occupied as to exclude all competition. The pharmacy of con- tinental Europe is ground which has been almost untouched; and much information in relation to the natural history, commerce, and management of our own drugs, has lain ungathered in the possession of individuals, or scattered in separate treatises and periodicals not generally known and read. Since the publication of the last edition of our National Pharma- copoeia, no general explanation of its processes has appeared, though re- quired in justice both to that work and to the public. The hope of being able to supply these deficiencies may, perhaps, be considered a sufficient justification for the present undertaking. The Pharmacopoeia of the United States has been adopted as the basis of this Dispensatory. It is followed both in its general division of medi- cines, and in its alphabetical arrangement of them under each division. Precedence is, in every instance, given to the names which it recognises, while the explanations by which it fixes the signification of these names are inserted in immediate connection with the titles to which they severally belong. Every article which it designates is more or less fully described; and all its processes, after being literally copied, are commented on and explained wherever comment and explanation appeared necessary. No- thing, in fine, has been omitted, which, in the estimation of the authors, could serve to illustrate its meaning, or promote the ends which it was in* Preface to the First Edition. tended to subserve. This course of proceeding appeared to be due to the national character of the Pharmacopoeia, and to the important object oi establishing, as far as possible, throughout the United States, uniformity, both in the nomenclature and preparation of medicines. In one particular, convenience required that the plan of the Pharmacopoeia should be de- parted from. The medicines belonging to the department of Materia Medica, instead of being arranged in two divisions, corresponding with the Primary and Secondary Catalogues of that work, have been treated of indiscriminately in alphabetical succession; and the place which they respectively hold in the Pharmacopoeia is indicated by the employment of the term Secondary, in connection with the name of each of the medicines included in the latter catalogue. But, though precedence has thus been given to the Pharmacopoeia of the United States, those of Great Britain have not been neglected. The nomenclature adopted by the different British Colleges, and their formulas for the preparation of medicines, have been so extensively followed through- out the United States, that a work intended to represent the present state of pharmacy in this country would be imperfect without them; and the fact that the writings of British physicians and surgeons, in which their own officinal terms and preparations are exclusively employed and referred to, have an extensive circulation among us, renders some commentary necessary in order to prevent serious mistakes. The Pharmacopoeias of London, Edinburgh, and Dublin have, therefore, been incorporated, in all their essential parts, into the present work. Their officinal titles are uni- formly given, always in subordination to those of the United States Pharma- copoeia, when they express the same object; but in chief, when, as often happens, no corresponding medicine or preparation is recognised by our national standard. In the latter case, if different names are applied by different British Colleges to the same object, that one is generally pre- ferred which is most in accordance with our own system of nomenclature, and the others are given as synonymes. The medicines directed by the British Colleges are all described, and their processes either copied at length, or so far explained as to be intelligible in all essential particulars. Besides the medicinal substances recognised as officinal by the Pharma- copoeias alluded to, some others have been described, which, either from the lingering remains of former reputation, from recent reports in their favour, or from their important relation to medicines in general use, ap- pear to have claims upon the attention of the physician and apothecary. Opportunity has, moreover, been taken to introduce incidentally brief accounts of substances used in other countries or in former times, and occasionally noticed in medical books; and, that the reader may be able to Preface to the First Edition. refei to them when desirous of information, their names have been placed with those of the standard remedies in the Index. In the description of each medicine, if derived immediately from the animal, vegetable, or mineral kingdom, the attention of the authors has been directed to its natural history, the place of its growth or production, the method of collecting and preparing it for market, its commercial his- tory, the state in which it reaches us, its sensible properties, its chemical composition and relations, the changes which it undergoes by time and exposure, its accidental or fraudulent adulterations, its medical properties and application, its economical uses, and the pharmaceutical treatment to which it is subjected. If a chemical preparation, the mode and principles of its manufacture are indicated in addition to the other particulars. If a poison, and likely to be accidentally taken, or purposely employed as such, its peculiar toxicological effects, together with the mode of counter- acting them, are indicated; and the best means of detecting its presence by reagents are explained. The authors have followed the example of Dr. A. T. Thomson, in giving botanical descriptions of the plants from which the medicines treated of are derived. In relation to all indigenous medicinal plants, and those naturalized or cultivated in this country, the advantages of such descrip- tions are obvious. The physician may often be placed in situations, in which it may be highly important that he should be able to recognise the vegetable which yields a particular medicine; and the apothecary is con- stantly liable to imposition from the collectors of herbs, unless possessed of the means of distinguishing, by infallible marks, the various products presented to him. A knowledge of foreign medicinal plants, though of less importance, will be found useful in various ways, independently of the gratification afforded by the indulgence of a liberal curiosity in relation to objects so closely connected with our daily pursuits. The introduction of these botanical notices into a Dispensatory appears to be peculiarly ap- nropriate; as they are to be considered rather as objects for occasional reference than for regular study or continuous perusal, and therefore coincide with the general design of the work, which is to collect into a convenient form for consultation all that is practically important in rela- tion to medicines. The authors have endeavoured to preserve a due pro- portion between the minuteness of the descriptions, and their value as means of information to the student; and, in pursuance of this plan, have generally dwelt more at length upon our native plants than upon those of foreign growth; but, in all instances in which they have deemed a botanical description necessary, they have taken care to include in it the essentia] scientific character of the genus and species, with a reference to the posi> Preface to the First Edition. ti of the plant in the artificial and natural systems of classification; so that a person acquainted with the elements of botany may be able to re- cognise it when it comes under his observation. In preparing the Dispensatory, the authors have consulted, in addition to many of the older works of authority, the greater number of the treatises and dissertations which have recently appeared upon the various subjects connected with Pharmacy, and especially those of the French writers, who stand at present at the head of this department of medical science. They have also endeavoured to collect such detached facts, scattered through the various scientific, medical, and pharmaceutical journals, as they con- ceive to be important in themselves, and applicable to the subjects under consideration; and have had frequent recourse to the reports of travellers in relation to the natural and commercial history of foreign drugs. The occasional references in the body of the work will indicate the sources from which they have most largely drawn, and the authorities upon which they have most relied. In relation to our own commerce in drugs, and to the operations of our chemical laboratories, they are indebted for informa- tion chiefly to the kindness of gentlemen engaged in these branches of business, who have always evinced, in answering their numerous inquiries, a promptitude and politeness which merit their warm thanks, and which they are pleased to have this opportunity of acknowledging.* It has not been deemed necessary to follow the example of the British Dispensatories, by inserting into the work a treatise upon Chemistry, under the name of Elements of Pharmacy. Such a treatise must necessarily be very meagre and imperfect; and, as systems of chemistry are in the hands of every physician and apothecary, would uselessly occupy the place of valuable matter of less easy access. The authors may, perhaps, be permitted to observe, in relation to them- selves, that they have expended much time and labour in the preparation of the work; have sought diligently for facts from every readily accessible source; have endeavoured, by a comparison of authorities, and a close scrutiny of evidence, to ascertain the truth whenever practicable; and have exerted themselves to the extent of their abilities to render the Dispensa- tory worthy of public approbation, both for the quality and quantity of its contents, and the general accuracy of its statements. They are con- * The authors deem it proper to state that they are peculiarly indebted for assistance to Mr. Daniel B. Smith, president of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, to whom, besides much important information in relation to the various branches of the apothe- cary’s business, they owe the prefatory remarks on Pharmacy which are placed at tht commencement of the second part of the work, and the several articles, in the Materia Medica, upon Leeches, Carbonate of Magnesia, and Sulphate of Magnesia. Preface to the First Edition. scious, nevertheless, that, in so great a multiplicity of details, numerous errors and deficiencies may exist, and that the faults of undue brevity in some cases, and prolixity in others, may not have been entirely avoided; but they venture to hope that a candid public ■will make all due allowances; and they take the liberty to invite, from all those who may feel interested in the diffusion of sound pharmaceutical knowledge, the communication of friendly suggestions or criticisms in relation to the objects and execution of the work. Philadelphia, January, 1833. PREFACE TO THE TWELFTH EDITION. In the foregoing preface to the first edition of this work, sufficient has been said of its objects, the plan upon which it was written, and the sources whence the materials composing it were originally derived. A modification of its arrange- inent was made in the second edition, by the introduction of an Appendix, con- taining an account of drugs not recognised by the American or British Pharma- copoeias, yet possessing some interest from their former or existing relations to Medicine and Pharmacy. This Appendix was so much enlarged by the numerous additions made to it in successive editions, that the authors at length deemed it worthy of being considered as a third part of the Dispensatory; and, in the edition immediately preceding the present, this change was carried into effect, so that the work as then arranged, and as it now continues, consists of three divisions, the first treating exclusively of the medicines included in the Materia Medica catalogues of the Pharmacopoeias, the second of the Preparations, and the third of substances not strictly officinal. An Appendix, however, is still retained, in which are introduced various tables, and other subjects of interest or use to the apothecary and physician, for which a place could not conveni- ently be found in the body of the work. A precision has thus been given to the arrangement of the Dispensatory which was at first wanting. In the several successive editions, it has been the aim of the authors to keep pace with the progress of Materia Medica and Pharmacy, making changes cor- responding with those of the officinal codes acknowledged by them as authori- tative, and introducing more or less in detail all the new facts, views, and pro- cesses, as they came to public notice. In the ninth edition, that, namely, of 1851, it was necessary to make a thorough revision of the whole work, and in a con- siderable degree to rearrange the materials, in consequence of the then recent appearance of new and greatly altered editions of our national Pharmacopoeia, and of those of the London and Dublin Colleges. On this occasion, attention was called to a new division of weights adopted by the Dublin College, which, though the same in terms as those in general use, differed from them materially in value, and, therefore, required much caution, on the part of the authors, to guard against serious mistakes. Happily, these Dublin weights have been aban- doned in the existing British Pharmacopoeia, and one great source of incon- venience, if not of error, has been removed. The British Council, in the revision of the former London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Pharmacopoeias, resulting in their consolidation into one work, which, under the name of the British Pharmaco- poeia, is hereafter to serve as a standard for the whole empire, have retained the Imperial gallon and its subdivisions, differing more or less in value from the similar denominations of the wine measure used in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. They have, moreover, adopted the avoirdupois pound and ounce, abandoning entirely the Troy pound and its divisions, which are still retained in our national standard. To secure the practical pharmaceutist from misapprehension and mistakes in fulfilling the directions of the officinal formulas, arising from this want of uniformity in the meaning of the terms employed, it has been deemed necessary, in this work, to make a special reference to the value, in U. S. denomi- Preface to the Twelfth Edition. nations, of the British measure or weight employed, in every formula in which entire accuracy is essential. In regard to the present edition of the Dispensatory, it is thought desirable lo enter into some detail. Few of our readers require to be informed of the de- cease of Dr. Bache, one of the authors of this work. This deplorable loss, by which long existing ties of friendship and joint labour have been broken, has thrown the whole responsibility of the revision upon the surviving author; and at a time, moreover, when circumstances called for an unusual exercise of judg- ment, and rendered necessary an extraordinary amount of labour in preparing a new edition. In the first place, an unprecedented length of interval has occurred between the present and immediately preceding revisions of the work; the eleventh and latest edition having been published in February, 1858, more than seven years ago. It is true that, in this interval, it has been necessary to reprint the work twice to meet the public demand; but no material change could be made; and, with the exception of some errors corrected, the book remained the same as before. This delay of the revision was caused by the unfinished state of the Pharmacopoeias, which were to constitute the basis of the new edition, as the old Pharmacopoeias had done of the preceding. It was known that the U. S. Pharmacopoeia was undergoing a thorough revision, with many and important changes; and it was equally notorious that the three British Pharmacopoeias were in the course of consolidation into one, which, it was supposed, would re- tain few features of the former works, and almost none unaltered. Under these circumstances, it would have been folly to undertake a new revision of the Dis- pensatory, which, when completed, would in a short time have had its whole foundation undermined, and in all probability been left as useless lumber upon the hands of the publishers. This long period allowed materials to accumulate beyond all precedent, and thus increased in proportion the necessary labour of revision. In the second place, the changes made both in our own and the British Phar- macopoeias rendered indispensable similar changes in the Dispensatory. One not familiar with the subject can scarcely appreciate the constant vigilance, the unceasing attention to the minutest details running through every part of the work, which were necessary to obviate confusion and prevent embarrassing mis- takes, in making the book conform to the present standards. Not only was it requisite to introduce all that was new, to alter positions in conformity with the changes in the standards, and to notice and discuss all modifications whether in substance or form; but there was a constantly recurring necessity to solve the various practical problems arising from the substitution of a single one for the vhree former British Pharmacopoeias, which were referred to, at greater or less • ength, in almost every page. Taking the above circumstances into consideration, and reflecting, in the third place, how greatly the field of labour has been extended for the surviving author by the decease of his colleague, the reader will understand that he has had a very heavy task upon his hands, and will not be disposed to censure him for a delay in the appearance of the present edition, which could have been shortened only at the expense of the usefulness and trustworthiness of the work itself. In- dependently of the attention given, ever since the publication of the preceding edition, to the collection of materials for the one to follow, he has, during the last six months, devoted his whole time and energy to the business of revision, at the sacrifice even of ordinary social enjoyments, in order that he might have nothing to regret in future from errors or deficiencies in a book, in which accu- racy is so important to the general good. It is, however, with pleasure that he acknowledges his indebtedness, for mate- rial assistance in the prosecution of the revision, to his friends, Mr. Wm. Procter, Preface to the Twelfth Edition. J im., Professor of Pharmacy in the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, and Dr. Robert Bridges, Professor of Chemistry in the same Institution. By the sugges- tion of new subjects for investigation and new points of inquiry, by a careful watchfulness to prevent or correct error, and by valuable information particu- larly connected with their special departments; though thereby rather increasing than diminishing the labours of the author, they have contributed no little to extend the usefulness, and secure the accuracy of the work. But with all these advantages it would be expecting too much from human fallibility to look for a faultless production. No one is more sensible than the author of possible errors and omissions; and he can only reiterate the invitation for friendly suggestion or criticism, given at the close of the original preface. Some idea may be formed of the amount of new matter added to the Dispen- satory in this revision, when it is understood that, notwithstanding the very con- siderable space gained by the consolidation of the three British Pharmacopoeias into one, and the consequent substitution, in many instances, of a single process and its necessary commentary for three, and notwithstanding the effort made to compress everything to be said into the fewest possible words, and to leave no part of the space unoccupied, it has nevertheless been found necessary to extend the limits of the work by more than one hundred pages. Among the more im- portant additions, independently of those made in conformity with the Pharma- copoeias, in the first and second parts of the Dispensatory, and the various new or modified pharmaceutical processes in the preface to the second part, or scattered here and there throughout that division, may be particularized the articles in the third part upon Anilin, Calabar Bean, Carbolic Acid, Coal Tar, Peroxide of Hydrogen, Petroleum, Propylamia, Sorghum, Thallium, the Upas, &c., with numerous brief notices of plants, especially the indigenous, in- tended to call attention to them rather as objects worthy of inquiry by the phy- sician, than from their known value. The reader who may be already in any degree familiar with the work will be struck with one change, for which he may probably not perceive, at first sight, sufficient necessity in all cases. Reference is here made to the transfer of various articles from one part of the Dispensatory to another, as for example the articles on coffee, gutta-percha, ignatia, leptandra, permanganate of potassa, &c., from the third into the first part, and origanum, sponge, tin, &c. from the first to the third. But all these and analogous changes have been made in accordance with the Pharmacopoeias adopted as the basis of the work, and will be explained when necessary in connection with the several articles themselves. On the whole, it may be said truly of this revision, that there has been no one, since the Dispensatory was originally published, which has been attended with so much labour, or in which so many modifications and additions have been introduced. Finally, it may be permitted to the surviving author to say that, considering his advanced age, it is hardly probable that he will live to see or at least par- ticipate in another revision, and, under these circumstances, to express his warm thanks to the members of the Medical and Pharmaceutical Professions, who have in so many ways evinced a kind regard for him personally, and a disposi- tion to judge favourably if not partially of his works. Philadelphia, March 14 bat, as the term is employed in this work, it has a more restricted sig- nification. The Pharmacopoeias of the United States and Great Britain very appropriately arrange medicines in two distinct divisions; one including all those which are furnished immediately by nature, or thrown into commerce by the manufacturer; the other, those which are prepared by the apothecary, and are the objects of officinal directions. The former are enumerated under the title of “Materia Medica;” the latter, under that of “Preparations,” or “Pre- parations and Compounds.” In Dispensatories, which may be considered as commentaries on the Pharmacopoeias, the same arrangement is usually fol- lowed ; and the authors of the present work adopt it the more willingly, as, independently of the weight of authority in its favour, it has the recommenda- tion of being the most convenient. By this plan, all the directions which relate to the practical operations of the apothecary are collected in one place, and are thus more easily referred to than if mixed indiscriminately with other matters, os they must be by any mode of arrangement which makes no distinction be- tween the original medicinal substances and their preparations. Under the head of Materia Medica, therefore, in this Dispensatory, we treat of medicines in the state only in which they are produced by nature, or come into the hands of the apothecary. Of these medicines, such as are recognised by our National Phar- macopoeia are most minutely described; but we consider also all that are in- cluded in the British officinal catalogue. Another point in which we accord with the Pharmacopoeias is the alpha- betical arrangement of the objects of the Materia Medica. As a Dispensatory is intended rather for reference than for regular perusal, it is important that >ts contents should be so disposed as to facilitate consultation. Medicines, in « work of this kind, are considered as independent objects, to be studied sepa- rately, and without any reference to community of source, or similarity of character. Their scientific classification belongs to works which treat of them Materia Mediea. PART I. rather in their relations than their essential properties; and different systems have been adopted, according to the set of relations towards which the mind of the author has been especially directed. Thus, the naturalist classifies them according to the affinities of the several objects in nature from which they are derived; the chemist, according to their composition ; the practitioner of medi- cine, according to their effects upon the system in a state of health and disease. But none of these classifications is without imperfections; and a simple alpha- betical arrangement is decidedly preferable, in every case in which the medicines are consfdered solely in their individual capacity. Yet, as it comes within the scope of this work to treat of their physiological and therapeutical effects, and as the terms by which these effects are expressed are also the titles of classes to which the medicines belong, it will not be amiss to present the reader with the outlines of a system of classification, by consulting which he will be enabled to ascertain the precise meaning we attach to the terms employed to designate the peculiar action of different medicinal substances. Remedies are divided into general and local; the former acting on the whole system, the latter on particular parts or organs. I. GENERAL REMEDIES include 1. Arterial Stimulants, sometimes called Incitants, which, while they raise the actions of the system above the standard of health, exhibit their influence chiefly upon the heart and arteries; 2. Narcotics, which especially affect the cerebral functions, and are either stimulant or sedative according as they increase or diminish action; 3. Anti- spasmodics, which, with a general stimulant power, exert a peculiar, influence over the nervous system, exhibited in the relaxation of spasm, the calming of nervous irritation, &c., without any special and decided tendency to the brain; 4. Tonics, which moderately and permanently exalt the energies of all parts of the frame, without necessarily producing any apparent increase of the healthy actions; and 5. Astringents, which have the property of producing contrac- tion in the living tissues with which they may come in contact. II. LOCAL REMEDIES may be divided into four sections: a. Those affecting the function of a part, namely, 1. Emetics, which act on the stomach, producing vomiting; 2. Cathartics, which act on the bowels, producing a purgative effect; 3. Diuretics, which act on the kidneys, producing an increased flow of urine; 4. Antilithics, which act on the same organs, preventing the formation of calculous matter; 5. Diaphoretics, which increase the cutaneous discharge; 6. Expectorants, which augment the secretion from the pulmonary mucous membrane, or promote the discharge of the secreted matter; V. Emmen- agogues, which excite the menstrual secretion; 8. Sialagogues, which in- crease the flow of saliva; and 9. Erriiines, which increase the discharge from the mucous membrane of the nostrils: h. Those affecting the organization of a part, including 1. Rubefacients, which produce redness and inflammation of the skin; 2. Epispastics or Vesicatories, which produce a serous discharge beneath the cuticle, forming a blister; and 3. Escharotics or Caustics, which destroy the life of the part upon which they act: c. Those operating by a me- chanical agency, consisting of 1. Demulcents, which lubricate the surface to which they are applied, and prevent the contact of irritating substances, or mingle with these and diminish their acrimony; 2. Emollients, which serve as vehicles for the application of warmth and moisture; and 3. Protectives, which operate by excluding the air: d. Those which act on extraneous matters contained within the organs, including 1. Anthelmintics, which destroy worms, or expel them from the bowels; and 2. Antacids, which neutralize acid, whether existing in the alimentary canal, or circulating with the blood. It is believed that all substances employed as medicines, with the exception of a very few which are so peculiar in their action as scarcely to admit of classifi- cation, may be distributed without violence among the above classes. Some part I Materia Medica. 3 substances, however, in addition to the properties of the classes to which they are severally attached, possess others in common, which give them practical value, and authorize their association in distinct groups, not recognised in the system of classification, but constantly referred to in medical language. Thus, we have Refrigerants, which, when internally administered, diminish animal temperature; Alteratives, which change, in some inexplicable and insensible manner, certain morbid actions or states of the system; and Carminatives, which, by promoting contraction in the muscular coat of the stomach and bowels, cause the expulsion of flatus. It is customary, moreover, to attach dis- tinct names to groups of remedies, with reference to certain effects which are incident to the properties that serve to arrange them in some more compre- hensive class. Thus, Narcotics frequently promote sleep, relieve pain, and produce insensibility, and, in relation to these properties, are called Soporifics, Anodynes, and Anaesthetics; and various medicines, which, by diversified modes of action, serve to remove chronic inflammation and enlargements of the glands or viscera, are called Deobstruents. These terms are occasionally em- ployed in the following pages, and are here explained, in order that the sense in which we use them may be .accurately understood. W. 4 Absinthium. PART I. ABSINTHIUM. U.S. The tops and leaves of Artemisia Absinthinm_ TJ .wksh-white; but frequently presents different shades of red, and is some- times of a deep-orange or brownish colour. It is bleached by exposure to the sun. In powder it is always white. It is inodorous, has a feeble, slightly sweetish taste, and when pure dissolves wholly in the mouth. The sp. gr. varies from T31 to 1 *48. Gum arabic consists essentially of a peculiar proxi- mate principle usually called gum, but for which the name of arabin has been adopted. In describing its chemical relations, therefore, we describe those of the principle alluded to. Water, either cold or hot, dissolves it, and forms a viscid solution called mucilage, which, when evaporated, yields the gum un- changed. (See Macilago Acacias.) It is insoluble in alcohol, ether, and the oils; and alcohol precipitates it from its aqueous solution. Diluted acids dis- solve it, but not more freely than water. The concentrated acids decompose it. Triturated with sulphuric acid at ordinary temperatures, it is converted into a product similar to the gummy substance resulting from the action of the same acid on linen rags and sawdust. Heated with concentrated sulphuric acid, it is decomposed with the evolution of carbon. The diluted acid, when boiled with it, gives rise to the formation of a saccharine substance. Strong nitric acid con- verts it into mucic acid, and at the same time produces oxalic and malic acids. It combines with several salifiable bases. With the alkalies and earths it forms soluble compounds. By the subacetate of lead it is precipitated from its solu- tion, in the form of a white insoluble compound of gum and protoxide of lead; and a delicate test of its presence in any liquid is thus afforded. It enters into combination with several salts. A solution of borax coagulates it. When added to a solution of silicate of potassa, it precipitates a compound of gum, potassa, and silica; while a compound of gum and potassa remains dissolved. Its solution yields a precipitate with nitrate of mercury, and forms a brown, semi-transparent jelly with a strong solution of sesquicliloride of iron. In solu- tion it unites with sugar; and the liquid, when evaporated, yields a transparent, solid substance, insusceptible of crystallization.* * Arabin or Pure Gum. Gummic Acid. Arabic Acid. At the time of the publication of the last edition of this work, experiments by Lowenthal, reported by Neubauer, had led to the supposition that arabin or pure gum, instead of being a distinct proximate principle, was really complex, consisting of an insoluble acid united with a small proportion of lime or other base, forming a soluble compound. Since that period, the subject of the gums gene- rally, and of gum arabic in particular, has received a new and interesting development through the researches of M. Fremy. The following are the conclusions to which these researches have led. 1. Pure gum or arabin consists of a substance soluble in water, having acid properties, and hence called aummic acid (arabic acid, Gmelin, Handbook xv. 193), combined with about 3 per cent, of lime, forming a soluKlelalt. In other words, the arabin of Guerin is gvm- mate of lime. Gummic acid may be obtained in a soluble state by decomposing gum arabic by means of oxalic acid, which separates the lime without modifying the condition of the acid. 2 Under the influence of concentrated sulphuric acid, applied in a peculiar manner, or of a heat of about 300° F. maintained for several hours, gummic acid undergoes a molecu- lar change, by which it is converted into an isomeric substance, also feebly acid, which M. Fremy calls metaaummic acid. and of which the distinctive property is that it swells up with water without dissolving, acting in this respect like cerasin and bassorin. 3. When this insoluble metagummic acid is exposed to the action of boiling water alone, it undergoes no change; but, if small quantities of a base, such as potassa, soda, ammonia, baryta, or lime are added, it is immediately dissolved, having been reconverted, under the influence of these bases, into gummic acid, which forms soluble salts with them; and the salt thus formed has all the characters of gum arabic. 4. Gum arabic itself, as ascertained by M. Gelis, undergoes the same change under the operation of a high temperature; being converted from a gummate into a metagummate of \ime, which swells up in cold water without dissolving, but by boiling water is rendered again soluble, being reconverted into gummate of lime. 5. According to M. Fremy, cp;asin is jaothing more than vietagummale of lime, being, a a h well known, changed by boiling with water into arabin, in other words, gummate of lime or gum arabic. * part I. Acacia. 11 Guta arabic undergoes no change by time, when kept in a dry place. Its aqueous solution, if strong, remains for a considerable time unaltered, but ulti- mately becomes sour, from the production of acetic acid. The tendency to be- come sour is increased by employing hot water to dissolve it. Mixed with chalk and cheese, at ordinary temperatures, it undergoes a fermentation, resulting ii the production of alcohol, without an antecedent formation of sugar. {Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., 2>e ser. xxxii. 261.) Between 300° and 400°, the gum softens, and may be drawn into threads. At a red heat it is decomposed, yield- ing, among other substances, a minute proportion of ammonia. When burnt, it leaves about 3 per cent, of ashes, consisting, according to Guerin, of carbonates of potassa and lime, a little phosphate of lime, chloride of potassium, oxide of iron, alumina, magnesia, and silica. The lime has been supposed to exist in the gum combined with an excess of malic acid, giving to its solution the property of reddening litmus paper. In consequence of the presence of lime, oxalate of ammonia occasions a precipitate with the solution. Besides pure gum, or arabin, gum arabic contains a very small proportion of an azotized body, which is thought to occasion a slight opalescence in its solution, several saline substances, and 16 to 1*1 per cent, of uncombined water. {Guerin.) Pure gum may be ob- tained by treating the compound of gum and protoxide of lead with sulphu- retted hydrogen. Its ultimate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; its generally admitted formula being C12HnOn. The properties above enumerated belong to gum arabic generally. There are, however, pharmaceutic varieties with differences which deserve notice. 1. Gum that is transparent and readily soluble. This constitutes by far the greater portion of the commercial varieties distinguished by the names of Tur- key and Senegal gum. It is characterized by its transparency, ready solubility, and the comparatively slight degree of thickness and viscidity of its solution. Under this head may be included the gomme blanche fendillee of Guibourt. It is distinguished by the whiteness and deficient transparency of the pieces, attri- butable to the minute cracks or fissures with which they abound, and which render them very brittle and easily pulverizable. This peculiar structure is generally ascribed to the influence of solar heat and light; but is conjectured by Hayne to arise from the exudation of the juice in the frothy state noticed by Ekrenberg. Though the unbroken pieces are somewhat opaque, each minute fragment is perfectly transparent and homogeneous. This variety, in conse- quence of its prompt and entire solubility, is usually preferred for medical use, and for most purposes in pharmacy. 2. Gum less transparent and less soluble. Guibourt has proposed for portions of this gum the name of gomme pelliculee, from the circumstance that the masses are always apparently covered, on some part of their surface, by a yellowish opaque pellicle. Other portions of it have a mammillary appearance on the surface. It is less transparent than the for- mer variety, is less freely and completely dissolved by water, and forms a more viscid solution. It melts with difficulty in the mouth, and adheres tenaciously to the teeth. It is found in all the commercial varieties of gum, but least in that from Egypt. Its peculiarities have been ascribed to variable proportions of bassorin associated with the soluble arabin. Between these two varieties of gum there are insensible gradations, so that it is not always easy to classify specimens. 6. Hence, M. Fremy supposes that, in plants, metagummic acid is first formed, which in the progress of vegetation is more or less completely changed into gummic acid, thus giving rise to different varieties of gum, distinguished by the greater or less proportion of the soluble to the insoluble ingredients. 7. Bass»rin, however, when boiled with water and an alkali, though rendered soluble, ia not, like cerasin, converted into gum arabic or arabin; the soluble gum which results being precipitated from its aqueous solution by neutral acetate of lead, which is not the case wi*h gum arabic. (Journ. de Pharrn. et de Chim., Fev. 1860, p. 81.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 12 Acacia. PART I. Impurities and Adulterations. In parcels of gum arabic there are some- times pieces of a dark colour, opaque, and incorporated with ligneous, earthy, or other impurities. The inferior are often mixed with or substituted for the better kinds, especially in powder; and portions of insoluble gum, bdellium, and other concrete juices of unknown origin, are found among the genuine. Flour or starch is sometimes fraudulently added to the powder, but is easily detected by the blue colour which it produces with tincture of iodine. In consequence of the impurities and difference in quality, gum arabic should generally be as- sorted for pharmaceutic use. A foreign substance sometimes adheres to its surface, giving it a bitter taste, from which it may be freed by washing in water.* Dextrin, broken into small fragments, has been mingled with parcels of gum. It may be known by yielding, in solution, a reddish-purple colour with solution of iodine. It does not, like gum, produce a yellowish or brownish jelly with solutions of the sesquisalts of iron. Medical Properties and Uses. This gum is used in medicine chiefly as a demulcent. By the viscidity of its solution, it serves to cover and sheathe in- flamed surfaces; and, by blending with and diluting irritating matters, blunts their acrimony. Hence, it is advantageously employed in catarrhal affections and irritation of the fauces, by being held in the mouth and allowed slowly to dissolve. Internally administered, it has been found useful in inflammations of the gastric and intestinal mucous membrane; and its employment has even been extended to similar affections of the lungs and urinary organs. Whether it is beneficial, in the latter cases, in any other manner than by the dilution resulting from its watery vehicle, is doubtful. By some it has been thought to possess a positively sedative influence over inflamed surfaces to which it may be applied in the state of solution. It is a good article of diet in cases of high febrile and inflammatory action, requiring a very rigid regimen. If not positively sedative, it is certainly not in the least irritating; while it is sufficiently nourish- ing to prevent the injurious action of the organs upon themselves. Its nutritive properties have been denied; but the fact of their existence rests on incontro- vertible evidence. The Moors and negroes live on it almost exclusively during the period of its collection and conveyance to market ; the Bushman Hotten- tots, in times of scarcity, support themselves upon it for days together; and we are told that the apes of South Africa are very fond of it. "Six ounces a day are said to be sufficient to sustain life for a time in a healthy adult. In many cases of disease, its solution may constitute, for a short period, the exclusive drink and food of the patient. . It is best prepared by dissolving an ounce of the gum in a pint of boiling water, and allowing the solution to cool. An ex- cellent demulcent, called gum-pectoral, is made by dissolving equal parts of gum arabic and sugar in water, and evaporating by means of a water-bath. It is held in the mouth, and allowed slowly to dissolve, f In pharmacy, gum arabic is extensively used for the suspension of insoluble substances in water, and for the formation, of pills and troches. * M. Picciotto proposes to purify coloured gum by dissolving it in six or eight parts of a strong and pure solution of sulphurous acid, heating the solution, treating it with car- bonate of baryta in excess, then filtering, and evaporating at a moderate heat. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., ix. 16.)—Note to the ninth edition. f Juiube paste. Marsh-mallow paste. Icreland mossjpaste. Under these names, preparations are sold in the shops which arcfe s s e n t i ally The um-pcctoral of the text, containing little or none of the substances which give them distinctive names. Prof. Procter has favoured us with the following formula, according to which they are made. Take of gum arabic 8 lbs., and of sugar 12 lbs. avoirdupois, the whites of two dozen eggs, and 5 pints of water. Heat together the gum and water, by means of steam, to 220°, stir till dissolved, strain forcibly, stir in the sugar quickly, and, when it is dissolved, add the white of eggs previously well beaten, stirring constantly, and at the same time remove from the fire. If made in real accordance with the name, decoction of marsh mallow or Iceland moss must be substituted for the water.—Note to the twelfth edition. jPAftT I. Acetum. 13 Off. Prep. Mistura Amygdala, U. S.; Mistura Cretae; Mistura Glycyrrhizae Composita, U. S.; Mistura Guaiaci, Br.; Mucilago Acaciae; Pulvis Amygdala- Compositus, Br.; Pulvis Tragacanthas Comp., Br.; Syrupus Acaciae, U. S. W. ACETUM. U.S., Br. Vinegar. Impure dilute Acetic Acid prepared by fermentation. U. S. Impure dilute Acetic Acid, prepared from French wines by acetous fermentation. Br. Vinaigre, Fr.; Essig, Germ.; Aceto, Ital.; Vinagre, Span. Vinegar is a sour liquid, the product of the acetous fermentation. Viewed chemically, it is a very dilute solution of acetic acid, containing certain foreign matters. The acetous fermentation may be induced in all liquors which have under- gone or are susceptible of the vinous fermentation. Thus sugar and water, saccharine vegetable juices, infusion of malt, cider, and wine may be converted into vinegar, if subjected to the action of a ferment, and exposed, with access of air, to a temperature between Y5° and 90°. During the acetous fermenta- tion, a microscopic vegetable growth has been noticed, which Pasteur has shown to be a cryptogam of the genus Microderma, and which appears to be essen- tial to the process. By the presence and influence of this plant, the germs of which exist in the atmosphere, alcohol sufficiently diluted with water is con- verted into acetic acid, as sugar in solution is, through the agency of an analo- gous growth, converted into alcohol. Vinegar is generally made by the German process, by which the time con- sumed in its formation is greatly abridged. A mixture is prepared of one part of alcohol of 80 per cent., four or six parts of water, and one-thousandth of honey or extract of malt, to act as a ferment. This mixture is allowed to trickle through a mass of beech shavings, previously steeped in vinegar, and contained in a deep oaken tub, called a vinegar generator. The tub is furnished, near the top, with a wooden diaphragm perforated with numerous small holes, which are loosely filled with packthread about six inches long, prevented from slip- ping through by a knot at one end. The alcoholic mixture, heated to between 15° and 83°, is placed on the diaphragm, and slowly percolates the beech shav- ings, whereby it becomes minutely divided. It is essential to the success of the process that a current of air should pass through the tub. In order to establish this current, eight equidistant holes are pierced near the bottom of the tub, forming a horizontal row, and four glass tubes are inserted vertically in the diaphragm, of sufficient length to project above and below it. The air enters by the holes below, and passes out by the tubes. The contact of the air with the minutely divided liquid rapidly promotes the acetification, which consists, essentially, in the oxidation of the alcohol. During the process the temperature rises to 100° or 104°, and remains nearly stationary while the process is going on favourably. The liquid is drawn off by a discharge pipe near the bottom, and must be passed three or four times through the tub, before the acetification is completed, which generally occupies from twenty-four to thirty-six hours. According to Wimmer, pieces of charcoal, about the size of a walnut, may be substituted for the beech shavings in the process, with the effect of expediting the acetification. The charcoal must be deprived of saline matter by dilute muriatic acid, and afterwards washed with water. M. Pasteur denies that the more rapid acetification, produced by enlarging the surface of contact with the atmosphere, by means of packthread, beech shavings, &c., is owing to the direct influence of the air, and ascribes it to the presence of microderms upon the sur- face of these substances. 14 Acetum. KaivT 1. In England vinegar is made from the infusion of malt by the German pro* cess, which is said to have originated with Mr. Ham, of Bristol, England, as early as 1822. The fermented wort is made to fall in a shower upon a mass of fagots of birch twigs, occupying the upper part of a large vat, and, after trickling down to the bottom, is pumped up repeatedly to the top, to be again allowed to fall, until the acetification is completed. This mode of oxidizing the alcohol in the fermented wort has the advantage of rendering insoluble certain glutinous and albuminous principles, which, if not removed, would cause a mud- diness in the vinegar, and make it liable to spoil. In the United States, vinegar is often prepared from cider. When it is made on a large scale, the cider is placed in barrels with their bung-holes open, which are exposed during the summer to the heat of the sun. The acetification is completed in the course of about two years. The progress of the fermentation, however, must be watched; and, as soon as perfect vinegar is formed, it should be racked off into clean barrels. W ithout this precaution, the acetous fermen- tation would run into the putrefactive, and the vinegar be spoiled. Cider vinegar contains no aldehyd. It contains malic acid, and therefore yields a precipitate with acetate of lead. The want of such a precipitate would indicate that the supposed cider vinegar is probably a manufactured substitute. Vinegar may be clarified, without impairing its aroma, by throwing about a tumblerful of boiling milk into from fifty to sixty gallons of the liquid, and stirring the mixture. This operation has the effect, at the same time, of render- ing red vinegar pale. The series of changes which occur during the acetous fermentation is called acetification. During its progress, there is a disengagement of heat; the liquor absorbs oxygen and becomes turbid ; and filaments form, which are observed to move in various directions, until, finally, upon the completion of the fermenta- tion, they are deposited in a mass of a pultaceous consistence. The liquor now becomes transparent, its alcohol has disappeared, and acetic acid has been formed in its place. How is this change of alcohol into acetic acid effected? Liebig supposes that it takes place in consequence of the formation of aldehyd, into which the alcohol is changed by the loss of a part of its hydrogen. The alcohol, consisting of four eqs. of carbon, six of hydrogen, and two of oxygen, loses two eqs. of hydrogen through the influence of the atmosphere, and be- comes aldehyd, composed of four eqs. of carbon, four of hydrogen, and two of oxygen. This, by the absorption of two eqs. of oxygen, becomes four eqs. of carbon, four of hydrogen, and four of oxygen; that is, hydrated acetic acid (C4H303,H0). Thus the conversion of alcohol into acetic acid consists in, first, the removal of two eqs. of hydrogen, and afterwards the addition of two eqs. of oxygen. Aldehyd is a colourless, very inflammable, ethereal liquid, having a pungent taste and smell. Its density is 0*79. It absorbs oxygen with avidity, and is thus converted into acetic acid, as just stated. Its property of absorb- ing oxygen gives it a reducing power, like that possessed by glucose. Hence, Trommer’s test for glucose may be applied to the detection of aldehyd. A few drops of solution of sulphate of copper is added to the solution suspected to con- tain aldehyd, and then a solution of potassa in excess. The liquid is next heated nearly to the boiling point, which will cause the precipitation of red suboxide of copper, if aldehyd be present. The name, aldehyd, alludes to its relation to alcohol, a/cohol dehydrogenated. Its aqueous solution is decomposed by caus- tic potassa, with formation of aldehyd resin. This is a soft, light-brown mass, which, heated to 212°, gives off a nauseous soapy smell. Properties. Vinegar, when good, is of an agreeable penetrating odour, and pleasant acid taste. According to Magnes Lahens, wine vinegar always con- tains a little aldehyd. The better sorts of vinegar have a grateful aroma, which is probably due to the presence of an ethereal substance, perhaps acetic ether. The colour of vinegar varies from pale yellow to deep red. When long kejt, part I. Acetum. 15 especially if exposed to the air, it becomes muddy and ropy, acquires an un- pleasant smell, putrefies, and loses its acidity. The essential ingredients of vinegar are acetic acid and water; but, besides these, it contains various other substances, derived from the particular vinous liquor from which it may have been prepared. Among these may be men- tioned, colouring matter, gum, starch, gluten, sugar, a little alcohol, and fre- quently malic and tartaric acids, with a minute proportion of alkaline and earthy salts. According to the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, vinegar should be devoid of lead and copper and of free sulphuric acid, as shown by its not being dis- coloured by sulphuretted hydrogen, and yielding no precipitate when boiled with a solution of chloride of calcium; and of such a strength that a fluidounce would require, for saturation, not less than thirty-five grains of crystallized bi- carbonate of potassa. After saturation it should be free from acrid taste, indi- cating the absence of acrid substances, the taste of which may have been con- cealed by that of the acetic acid. In the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, two kinds of vinegar were officinal, malt vinegar and wine vinegar, under the names of British vinegar and French vinegar. The British Pharmacopoeia recognises only vinegar prepared from French wines, and of a sp.gr. from 1'008 to P022. “Ammonia added a little in excess renders it slightly turbid and more or less purple. It is scarcely affected by chloride of barium or oxalate of ammonia, and not at all by sulphuretted hydrogen” (Br.); thus showing that it contains very little if any sulphuric acid or lime, and no injurious metallic impurity. Jllalt vinegar (Acetum Britannicum) has a yellowish-red colour, and a sp. gr. from 10T57J to 1-019. The strongest kind, called proof vinegar, contains from 4-6 to 5 per cent, of acetic acid. That of British manufacture usually contains sulphuric acid, which the manufacturer is allowed by law to add in a propor- tion not exceeding one part in a thousand. This addition was at one time thought necessary to preserve the vinegar; but it is now admitted that, if the vinegar be properly made, it does not require to be thus protected. Wine vinegar (Acetum Gallicum) is nearly one-sixth stronger than pure malt vinegar. It is of two sorts, the white and the red, according as it is prepared from white or red wine. White wirie vinegar is usually preferred, and that made at Orleans is the best. Bed wine vinegar may be deprived of its colour, and rendered limpid, by being passed throughAnimal charcoal. According to the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, wine vinegar may be distinguished from malt vinegar by the addition of ammonia in slight excess, which causes in the former “ a pur- plish muddiness, and slowly a purplish precipitate,” and in the latter, either no effect, or a dirty-brownish precipitate. Adulterations. The principal foreign substances which vinegar is liable to contain, are sulphuric and sulphurous acids, certain acrid substances, and cop- per and lead, derived from improper vessels used in its manufacture. Tin has been found in it after standing a short time in tin vessels. Muriatic and nitric acids are but rarely present. Chloride of calcium will detect free sulphuric acid, when boiled with the vinegar, without causing the least precipitate with the minute quantity of sulphates, almost always present in the liquid. (Boettger.) Chloride of barium is not a suitable test here; as it will cause a precipitate with these sulphates, when no free sulphuric acid is present. Sulphurous acid may be detected and estimated by first precipitating the sulphates and free sul- phuric acid by baryta-water, next acting on the vinegar with arsenic acid, which converts sulphurous into sulphuric acid, and finally precipitating the newly formed sulphuric acid by chloride of barium. From the sulphuric acid in the last precipitate, its equivalent of sulphurous acid is easily calculated. {Baroque.) Muriatic acid may be discovered by adding to a distilled portion of the sus- pected vinegar a solution of nitrate of silver, which will throw down a curdy 16 Acetum.—Achillea. PART I. white precipitate.. If nitric acid be present, an improbable impurity, it may be detected by producing a yellow colour, when the suspected vinegar is boiled with indigo. The acrid substances usually introduced into vinegar are red pep- per, long pepper, pellitory, grains of paradise, and mustard seed. These may be detected by evaporating the vinegar to an extract, which will have an acrid, biting taste, if any one of these substances be present. By far the most dan- gerous impurities in vinegar are copper and lead. The former may be detected by a brownish precipitate on the addition of ferrocyanide of potassium to the concentrated vinegar; the latter, by a blackish precipitate with sulphuretted hydrogen, and a yellow one with iodide of potassium. Pure vinegar is not discoloured by sulphuretted hydrogen. According to Chevallier, wine vinegar, which has been strengthened with acetic acid from wood, sometimes contains a minute proportion of arsenic. The deleterious metal is probably derived from arseniferous sulphuric acid, employed in preparing the acetic acid. Medical Properties. Vinegar acts as a refrigerant and diuretic. With this view it is added to diluent drinks in inflammatory fevers. It is sometimes used as a clyster, diluted with twice or thrice its bulk of water. It has been sup- posed to be a powerful antidote to the narcotic poisons, but this is a mistake. In the case of opium, the best authorities unite in considering it worse than useless; as it gives activity to the poison rather than neutralizes it. Externally it is employed as a fomentation in bruises and sprains. Diluted wTith water, it forms the best means of clearing the eye from small particles of lime. Its vapour is inhaled in certain states of sorethroat, and it is diffused through sick rooms under the impression that it destroys unwholesome effluvia, though, in fact, it has no other effect than to cover unpleasant smells. The dose is from one to four fluidrachms; as a clyster, the quantity used is one or two fluidounces. Off. Prep. Acetum Destillatum, U. S.; Tinctura Opii Acetata, U. S. B. ACHILLEA. U.S. Secondary. Yarrow. The herb and flowers of Achillea millefolium. TJ. S. Millefeuille, Fr.; Schafgarbe, Germ,.; Millefoglie, Ital.; Cientoenrama,'Yerba de San Juan, Span. Achillea. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua. — Nat. Ord. Compositae Seneci- onideas. De Cand. Gen. Gh. Receptacle chaffy. Calyx imbricate, ovate, unequal. Pappus none. Florets of the ray five to ten, roundish, dilated. Achillea Millefolium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 2208; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 36, t. 15. Milfoil or yarrow is a perennial herb, common to the old and new conti- nents, though supposed to have been introduced into this country from Europe. It abounds in old fields, along fences, and on the borders of woods and of culti- vated grounds, throughout the United States. It is from a foot to eighteen inches high, and is specifically distinguished by its doubly pinnate, dowmr, mi- nutely divided leaves, with linear, dentate, mucronate divisions, from which it derived the name of milfoil, by its furrowed stem and calyx, and by its dense corymb of whitish flowers, which appear throughout the summer, from June to September. The whole herb is medicinal. Properties. Both the flowers and leaves have an agreeable, though feeble aromatic odour, which continues after drying, and a bitterish, astringent, pun- gent taste. The aromatic properties are strongest in the flowers, the astringency in the leaves. The plant owes its virtues to a volatile oil, a bitter extractive, and tannin. It contains also a peculiar acid, denominated achilleic acid. The oil, which may be obtained separate by distillation with waterT'Eas a beautiful PART I. Achillea.—Acidum Aceticum. azure-blue colour, and the peculiar flavour of milfoil. The active principles are extracted both by water and alcohol. Medical Properties. The medical properties of the herb are those of a mild aromatic tonic and astringent. In former times it was much used as a vulne- rary, and was given internally for the suppression of hemorrhages, and of pro- fuse mucous discharges. It was employed also in intermittents, and as an anti- spasmodic in flatulent colic and nervous affections. It has recently been highly recommended by M. Richart, of Soissons, in low forms of exanthematous fevers with difficult eruption, in colic, painful menstruation, and infantile convulsions. He uses the infusion at once as a drink, an injection, and fomentation. (Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., xviii. 62.) Dr. B. II. Coates, of Philadelphia, has found it useful in hemorrhage ( Trans, of Philad. Col. of Phys. N. S. ii. 334); and Dr. R. Joly, of France, has used it very advantageously as an emmenagogue, and states that it is much employed popularly, in his neighbourhood, for the same purpose. (Bullet. Gen. de Therap., Mars, 1851.) He has also found it useful in the suppressed lochia. In some parts of Sweden it is said to be employed as a substitute for hops in the preparation of beer, which it is thought to render more intoxicating. It is most conveniently administered in the form of infusion, which may be made in the proportion of an ounce to the pint, and given in the dose of a wineglassful or more. The volatile oil has been given in the dose of twenty or thirty drops. W. ACIDUM ACETICUM. U. S., Br. Acetic Acid. Acetic acid of the sp. gr. 1-041, and containing 36 per cent, of monohydrated acetic acid. U. S. An acid liquid prepared from wood by destructive distilla- tion, and containing 28 per cent, of anhydrous Acetic Acid. The sp.gr. is 1-044. Br. ACIDUM ACETICUM GLACIALE. Br. Glacial Acetic Acid. Monohydrated Acetic Acid, H0,C4H303, of the sp.gr. 1-065, which is in- creased by adding to the acid 10 per cent, of water. Br. Exclusive of Acidum Aceticum Dilutum, which will be noticed in the second part of this work, two strengths of acetic acid are now officinal in the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias, assuming those acids to be identical which approach most nearly to equality in specific gravity. These are the Acidum Aceticum Olaciale, Br., of the sp. gr. P065, for the preparation of which the British Phar- macopoeia gives a formula, and the Acidum Aceticum, U. S., Br., of the sp. gr. 1 041 as directed by our officinal standard, and P044 by the British, which is placed in the Materia Medica Catalogue of both Pharmacopoeias. We shall consider these grades of acid separately, in the order of their strength. Acidum Aceticum Glaciale, sp. gr. 1-065. Br. The following is the process of the British Pharmacopoeia. “ Take of Acetate of Soda twenty ounces [avoirdupois] ; Sulphuric Acid eight Buidounces. Place the Acetate of Soda in a porcelain basin on a moderately warm sand bath, apply heat till it liquefies, and, continuing the heat, stir until the Salt becomes pulverulent; let the heat be now raised so as to produce fusion, and then instantly remove the salt from the fire. As soon as it has cooled break up the mass, and place it in a stoppered retort capable of holding tnree pints [Imperial measure], and connected with a Liebig’s condenser. Pour the Sulphuric Acid on the salt, quickly replace the stopper, and, when the dis- 18 Acidum Aceticum. PART 1. tillation of Acetic Ackl begins to slacken, continue it with the aid of heat until six fluidounces have passed over. Mix one fluidrachm of the acetic acid thus obtained with a fluidrachm of the solution of iodate of potash previously mixed with a little mucilage of starch ; and, if it gives rise to a blue colour, agitate the whole product of distillation with a quarter of an ounce of black oxide of man- ganese, perfectly dry, and in fine powder, and redistil.” Br. This process was intended to furnish an acid of the maximum strength, con- sisting of one eq. of dry acid and one of water. The acetate of lead, which was employed for this purpose by the Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges, has been superseded in the British Pharmacopoeia by the acetate of soda, which has the advantage, that by no chance can it impregnate the product with lead. This is first freed from water of crystallization by heat, and then decomposed. The agent of decomposition is sulphuric acid, which unites with the soda of the acetate to form sulphate of soda, and liberates the acetic acid, which combines with the water of the sulphuric acid, and, passing over in the state of vapour, condenses in the receiver. Sometimes a portion of sulphuric acid undergoes decomposition by reaction with the acetic acid, especially if the heat is too great, causing the production of sulphurous acid, which passes over with the acetic acid, and contaminates it. The presence of the smallest quantity of this impurity is detected by the test mentioned in the process; the sulphurous acid decomposing the iodate of potassa, and liberating iodine, which produces a blue colour with the starch. The last step of the process is to remove the sulphurous acid, should it be present, by converting it into sulphuric acid through the oxygen of the black oxide of manganese, and thus causing its retention in the retort. It is affirmed, however, by Prof. Redwood that the true monohydrated acetic acid cannot be produced by this process, nor by any other on a small scale, and that to obtain it recourse must be had to the manufacturer, who operates on large quantities of the material. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., March, 1864, p. 411.) It was, therefore, wise in the revisers of the U. S. Phar- macopoeia to place this officinal in the Materia Medica Catalogue, without a process. Acetic acid of maximum strength may likewise be obtained by distilling bin- acetate of potassa at a heat between 390° and 510°. One eq. of monohydrated acetic acid distils over, and neutral acetate of potassa is left. The binacetate may be formed by distilling the neutral acetate with an excess of watery acetic acid. In this process, the same acetate of potassa serves repeatedly for con- version into binacetate, and subsequent decomposition. Acidum Aceticum, U. S., Br. (sp.gr. 1041, U. S., D044 Br.). This is the acid resulting from the purification of the crude acetic acid, obtained by the destructive distillation of wood. It is the acid most useful to the apothecary, and which gives the first heading to this article. As this grade of acid has its source in the impure acetic acid, obtained by the destructive distillation of wood, it will be proper to premise some account of the crude acid, called crude pyro- ligneous acid. Wood, when charred, yields many volatile products, among which are an acid liquor, an empyreumatic oil, and tar containing creasote and some other proximate principles. When the carbonization is performed in close vessels, these products, which are lost in the ordinary process of charring, may be col- lected, and, at the same time, a large amount of charcoal is obtained. The carbonization of wood in close vessels, with a view to collect the con- densible products, was first put in practice by Mollerat in France. The appa- ratus employed at Choisy, near Paris, is thus described by Thenard. It con- sists of 1st, a furnace with a movable top; 2d, a strong sheet-iron cylinder, standing upright, sufficiently capacious to contain a cord of wood ar.d furnished with a sheet-iron cover; 3d, a sheet-iron tube, proceeding horizor tally trom the part I. Acidum Acezicum. 19 upper and lateral part of the cylinder to the distance of about a foot; 4th, a copper tube connected with the last, which is bent in such a manner as to plu uge successively to the bottom of two casks filled with water, and, after rising out, of the second, is bent back, and made to terminate in the furnace. At the bottom of each cask, the tube dilates into a ball, from the upper part of which another tube proceeds, which, passing water-tight through the cask, terminates above a v essel intended to receive the condensible products. The sheet-iron cylinder, being filled with wood, in the state of billets, or, as some prefer, in that of sawdust, and closed by luting on its cover with fire clay, is let down into the furnace by the help of a crane. The fire is then applied; and, when the process is completed, the cylinder is removed by the same means, to be replaced by another. During the carbonization, the volatile products are received by the tube; and those which are condensible, being an acid liquor and tar, are condensed by the water in the casks, and collect in the lower bends of the tubes, from which they run into the several recipients; while the incon- densible products, being inflammable gases, are discharged into the furnace, where, by their combustion, they assist in maintaining the heat. Eight hun- dred pounds of wood afford, on an average, thirty-five gallons of acid liquor, weighing about three hundred pounds. This is the crude pyroligneous acid, sometimes called pyroligneous vinegar. It is a dark-brown liquid, having a strong smoky smell, and consists of acetic acid diluted with more or less water, and holding in solution chiefly tar and empyreumatic oil, with pyroxylic spirit, and probably a small proportion of crea- sote. It is from this crude acid that the IT. S. and British acetic acid, corre- sponding to the acetic acid of commerce, is obtained. The purification is effected as follows. The acid is saturated with cream of lime, whereby acetate of lime is formed in solution, and a good deal of the tarry matter precipitated. The solu- tion of acetate of lime is then mixed with a concentrated solution of sulphate of soda, and, by double decomposition, acetate of soda is formed in solution, and of lime precipitated. The solution of acetate of soda is next subjected | to evaporation, during which further impurities that separate on the surface are skimmed off. The solution, being duly concentrated, is set aside to crystallize; and the impure salt thus obtained, after having been partially purified by solu- tion and recrystallization, is fused in an iron vessel, stirred until it dries, and, the heat being carefully raised, subjected to incipient carbonization, whereby remaining empyreumatic matters are carbonized, with little damage to the salt. The mass is then dissolved in water, and the solution, being strained and recrys- tallized, furnishes pure acetate of soda. (See Sodse Acetas.) Finally, this salt is distilled with from 84 to 35 per cent, of its weight of sulphuric acid, when it yields the acetic acid of commerce, the residue being sulphate of soda, which is reserved for decomposing fresh portions of acetate of lime. The acid has still an empyreumatic flavour, which is removed by filtering it through animal charcoal. Sometimes the acetate of lime is distilled with sulphuric acid directly, with- out having been previously converted into acetate of soda, by which mode of proceeding a step in the process is saved. But this decomposition is attended with many inconveniences, and the acetic acid obtained is apt to be contami- nated with sulphuric acid. The same step is saved, and without this risk, by distilling the acetate of lime with hydrochloric acid, as recommended by Christl; and, if the acid be not used in excess, the acetic acid obtained scarcely contains a trace of chlorine. The sp. gr. of the different acetic acids increases with their strength up to the density of 1-0135 (maximum), after which it decreases until it reaches F063, the density of the strongest acid (glacial acid). The following table, condensed from one given by Pereira on the authority of Mohr, exhibits the sp. gr. of acetic acid of different ‘rengths, including the officinal Acidum Aeeticum Dilutum. 20 Acidum Aceticum. PART I. Tim officinal and commercial acids are noted opposite to their several densities, and the corresponding number in the column on the left gives the percentage of monohydrated acid in each. Percent, of Acid. Specific Gravity. Percent, of Acid. Specific Gravity. 100 1-003 Acetic acid (glacial), Ed.* 36 1-047 Acetic acid, 77. S. 99 97 J -065 1-068 Glacial acetic acid, Br. 33 1-044 j Acetic acid of commerce, ( Dub., Br. 90 80 1-073 1-0735 Maximum density. 32 1-042 (Scotch acid of commerce \ (strongest). 70 1-070 31 1-041 Acetic acid, U. S. 1850. 60 1-067 30 1-040 59 1-066 Strong acetic acid, Dub. 25 1-034 Pyroligneous acid, Ed. 54 1-063 j Acid corresponding in 20 1-027 1 sp. gr. to tlie strongest. 10 1-015 52 1-062 6 1-008 Diluted acetic acid, Bond. 50 1-060 5 1-006 Diluted acetic acid, U.S., Br. 40 1-051 4 1-0055 39 1-050 f English acid of com- 3 1-004 Diluted acetic acid, U. S. 1850. \ merce. Up to the specific gravity 1 062, the density of acetic acid is a pretty accurate index of its strength; but, above that specific gravity, two acids of different strengths may coincide in density. Thus, by the table, it is seen that an acid weighing 1'063 may be either the strongest possible liquid acid, or an acid con- taining only 54 per cent, of such acid. The ambiguity may be removed by dilut- ing the acid with a portion of water, when, if the density be increased, the given specimen is the stronger acid of the two having the same density. Hence the test, in the British Pharmacopoeia, of adding 10 per cent, of water to their glacial acetic acid. The density of the English and Scotch acetic acid of com- merce is given on the authority of Dr. Christison. Properties of the Glacial Acid (Acidum Aceticum Glaciale, Br.). This acid, sometimes called radical'vinegar, is a colourless, volatile, inflammable liquid, possessing a corrosive tasteparid an acid, pungent, and refreshing smell. When cooled to nearly 32°, it is converted into colourless prismatic crystals. (Br.) Its sp. gr. is 1'063 (1*065, Br.). The anomaly of its having first an increasing and then a decreasing density, upon dilution with water, has been already noticed. It possesses the property of dissolving a number of substances, such as volatile oils, camphor, resins and gum-resins, fibrin, albumen, &c. As it attracts humid- ity from the atmosphere, it should be preserved in well-stopped bottles. Its combinations with salifiable bases are called acetates. “One fluidrachm of it requires for neutralization 97 measures of the volumetric solution ofsoda.v Br. (See Liquor Sodse.) It consists of one eq. of dry acid 51, and one of water 9=60. The dry acid has been isolated by C. Gerhardt, who finds it to be a limpid liquid, heavier than water, and having the constant boiling point of 279°. Its formula is C4II3Or Properties of the Acid of Commerce (Acidum Aceticum, U. S., Br.). This acid has similar properties to those of the glacial, but milder in degree. It is a colourless, volatile liquid, having a sharp taste and pungent smell. It unites in all proportions with water, and to a certain extent with alcohol. It is incom- patible with the alkalies and alkaline earths, both pure and carbonated, with metallic oxides, and with most substances acted on by other acids. It is wholly volatilized by heat, and yields no precipitate with chloride of barium or nitrate * Varies to 1-065. The abbreviations used in this table, Land., Ed., and Dub., hav« reference to the Pharmacopoeias of the several British Colleges, now no longer in us,; PART I. Acidum Aceticum. 21 of silver. Any fixed residue is impurity; and precipitates by the tests men tioned show the presence of sulphuric and muriatic acids. Sulphohydrate o) ammonia does not discolour it. Sometimes the acid is contaminated with cm pyreumatic oil arising from its mode of preparation. Much of this impurit) would betray itself to the senses of smell and taste. When too minute in pro- portion to be sensible, it may be detected, according to Mr. John Lightfoot, by neutralizing the acid with carbonate of potassa, and adding solution of per- manganate of potassa, when if the acid is pure the latter retains its pinky colour, but if in the slightest degree empyreumatic, the permanganate is de- colorized, and after standing a brown precipitate occurs. (Ghem. News, Nov. 30, 1861, p. 290.) If sulphuretted hydrogen produces a milkiness, sulphurous acid is present. When saturated with ammonia, the acid gives no precipitate with iodide or ferrocyanide of potassium, which proves the absence of lead and copper. If silver be digested in it, and ehlorohydrie acid afterwards added, no precipitate will be produced. The negative indication of this test shows the absence of nitric acid. Of the U. S. acid (sp. gr. 1-041) “ 100 grains saturate 60 grains of crystallized bicarbonate of potassa, and contain 36 grains of mono- hydrated acetic acid.” This corresponds exactly with the percentage given in the foregoing table. Of the British acid (sp. gr. 1-044) the strength in anhydrous acetic acid is 28 per cent., in the monohydrated acid, according to the table, is 33 per cent. The U. S. officinal is therefore somewhat stronger than the British. It is difficult to ascertain the strength of acetic acid by saturating it with the carbonated alkalies, when the operator depends upon test paper for ascertain- ing the point of neutralization. The difficulty is caused by the fact that the acetates of potassa and soda, though neutral in composition, are alkaline to test paper. Hence the liquid begins to be alkaline to test paper, while some free acid yet remains, but insufficient to overcome the alkaline reaction of the salt formed. It follows, therefore, that, by the use of test paper, the strength of the acetic acid will be underrated. The degree of inaccuracy, where test paper is used, is much diminished by saturating the acid with a solution of saccharate of lime, of a known strength, as proposed by Mr. C. G. Williams. (Pharm. Journ. & Trans., May, 1854, p. 594.) A still better way is to add to the acid a weighed excess of carbonate of baryta, and to calculate its strength by the amount of the carbonate decomposed, ascertained by deducting the undissolved from the total used. (Redwood.) Equally accurate results may be obtained by the use of carbonate of lime in a similar manner. (E. C. Nicholson and D. S. Price, Ghem. Gaz., Jan. 15, 1856.) Uses of Crude Pyroligneous Acid. This acid having been incidentally de- scribed as the source of the acetic acid of commerce, it may be proper in this place to notice its uses. It has been employed as an application to gangrene and ill-conditioned ulcers. It acts on the principle of an antiseptic and stimu- lant ; the former property being probably chiefly due to the presence of creasote. Several cases in which it was successfully employed are reported in a paper by Dr. T. Y. Simons, of Charleston, S. C. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., O. S., v. 310.) The crude acid is advantageously applied to the preservation of animal food. Mr. William Ramsey made some interesting experiments with it for that pur-- pose. Herrings and other fish, simply dipped in the acid and afterwards dried in the shade, were effectually preserved, and, when eaten, were found very agree- able to the taste. Herrings, slightly cured with salt by being sprinkled with it for six hours, then drained, next immersed in pyroligneous acid for a few seconds, and afterwards dried in the shade for two months, were found by Mr. Ramsey to be of fine quality and flavour. Fresh beef, dipped in the acid ir summer for the space of a minute, was perfectly sweet in the following spring, Professor Silliman states that one quart of the acid, added to the common Dickie for a barrel of hams, at the time they are laid down, will impart to them 22 Acidum Aceticum.—Acidum Arseniosum. PART 1- the smokof* flavour as perfectly as if they had undergone the ordinary process of smoking Medical Properties of Acetic Acid of Commerce (Acidum Aceticum, CJ. S., Br.). Acetic acid of about this strength acts as a stimulant, When diluted sufficiently, it is refrigerant, diaphoretic, and diuretic. Owing to its volatility and pungency, its vapour is frequently applied to the nostrils as an excitant in syncope, asphyxia, and headache. When employed in this manner, it is gen- erally added to a small portion of sulphate of potassa, so as to moisten the salt, and the mixture is put into small glass bottles with ground stoppers. Medical Properties of the Glacial Acid. This acid is only used externally, and acts as a rubefacient, vesicant, or caustic, according to the length of time it is applied. Its application requires caution. It is sometimes employed as a substitute for cantharides, when a speedy blister is desired; as, for example, in croup, sorethroat, and other cases of internal inflammation. It may be applied by means of blotting paper or cambric moistened with the acid. It is a good corrosive for destroying warts and corns, and is also a valuable remedy in scaldhead. Pharm. Lses of Acetic Acid. In the preparation of Digitalinum, Br.; San- toninum, U. S. Off- Prep, of Acetic Acid. Acidum Aceticum Dilutum; Extractum Col- chici Aceticum; Extract. Conii Fluidum, U. S.; Extract. Ergote Fluidum, U. S.; Extract. Ipecacuanha Fluidum, U.S.; Linimentum Cantharidis, Br.; Liniment. Terebinthinae Aceticum, Br.; Liquor Ammoniae Acetatis, Br.; Morphise Acetas, Oxymel, Br.; Plumbi Acetas, Br.; Potassse Acetas; Zinci Acetas, Br. Of'. Prep, of Glacial Acetic Acid. Mistura Creasoti, Br. B. ACIDUM ARSENIOSUM. Arsenious Acid. Sublimed arsenious acid in masses. U. S. As03. Br. Arsenicum album, Ed.; White arsenic; Acide arsenieux, Arsenic blanc, Fr.; Arsenichte Saure, Weisser Arsenik, Germ.; Arsenik, Dan., Swed., Polish; Acido arsenioso, Arsenico, Ilal.; Arsenico bianco, Span. Arsenious acid is prepared chiefly in Bohemia and Saxony, where it is pro- cured on a large scale, as a collateral product, during the smelting of cobalt ores, which are almost invariably accompanied by arsenic. These ores are roasted in reverberatory furnaces, with long horizontal flues. The arsenic is converted by combustion into arsenious acid, which rises in vapour, and con- denses on the sides of the flues. In this state it is impure, and requires a second sublimation, which is performed in cast-iron vessels, fitted with conical heads of the same material, having an opening at the summit. The vessels are placed over a furnace, and brought to a red heat, when a portion of the impure arsenious acid is thrown in through the opening, which is immediately stopped. This portion being sublimed, a second portion is introduced in a similar manner. Finally, the vessels are allowed to cool; and, upon removing the heads, the purified acid is found attached to them in vitreous layers, at first as transparent as glass, but gradually becoming, by contact with the air, opaque at their surface. These are broken into fragments of a convenient size, and thrown into commerce. The arsenious acid which reaches this country is gen- erally packed in casks, containing from two to five hundred pounds, and is shipped principally from the ports of Hamburg and Bremen. The British Pharmacopoeia directs the arsenious acid of commerce to be puri- fied in the following manner. “ Take of Arsenious Acid of Commerce one hun- dred grains. Introduce the acid into a thin porcelain capsule of a circular mI ape; and, having covered this as accurately as possible with a glass flask filled with PART I. Acidurn Arseniosum. 23 cold water, apply the heat of a gas lamp. Sublimed Arsenious Acid will be found adhering to the bottom of the flask. Should a larger quantity be required, the Commercial Acid should be sublimed, by the heat of a gas lamp or of burning charcoal, from a small Florence flask, the neck of which is passed into a second flask of larger size ; and the flask containing the commercial acid should be fur- nished with a hood of sheet-iron to counteract the cooling influence of the atmo- sphere.” Br. It is in this purified form that the British Council recognises the medicine under the name of Acidurn Arseniosum, in its Materia Medica list. The crude drug is merely mentioned in the Appendix of the Pharmacopoeia, as one of the articles used in preparing medicines, with the name of Arsenious Acid of Commerce, or White Arsenic. Properties. Arsenious acid is entirely volatilized by heat. As it occurs in commerce, it is in masses, with a vitreous fracture, and of a milk-white colour exteriorly, but, internally, often perfectly transparent. As first sublimed, the whole mass is transparent; but it gradually becomes white and opaque, the change proceeding progressively from the surface inwards. This change has not been well explained; but probably depends upon the absorption of moisture, causing a gradual passage of the acid from the amorphous to the crystalline state. (Pereira.) According to Guibourt, the sp.gr. of the transparent variety is 3-13, of the opaque 369. The experiments, however, of Dr. J. K. Mitchell and Mr. Durand make the density of the former variety from 3'208 to 3'333. As it occurs in the shops for medical use* it is often in the form of a white powder, almost as fine as flour. In this state it is sometimes adulterated with powdered lime or chalk, or sulphate or arsenite of lime, a fraud which is easily detected by exposing the powder to a heat sufficient to evaporate the arsenious acid, when these impurities will be left behind. In consequence of the liability of the acid to contain impurities when in powder, it is directed in the B. S. Pharmacopoeia to be kept in masses; so that the apothecary may powder it for himself as it is wanted. It has been erroneously stated to have an acrid taste. Dr. Christison asserts that it possesses hardly any taste; inasmuch as it produces merely a faint sweetish impression on the palate. In strong, hot solution, it has an austere taste, most nearly resembling that of sulphate of zinc. (Mitchell and Durand.) It has no smell, even in the state of vapour; but, when thrown on ignited char- coal, it emits a garlicky odour, in consequence of its deoxidation, and the vola- tilization of the reduced metal. Its point of sublimation, according to Berzelius, is at an incipient red heat; but, according to Mitchell and Durand, it is lower than that of metallic arsenic, being only 425° of Fahr. When slowly sublimed, it condenses in regular octohedral crystals, exhibiting a sparkling lustre. It con- sists of one eq. of arsenic 75, and three of oxygen 24= 99. “ One hundred grains of this acid, boiled with dilute muriatic acid, and then treated with hydrosulpliu- ric acid, yield a deposit of tersulphuret of arsenic, weighing 124 grains.” U. S. Arsenious acid is soluble in water. According to Bussy, at the temperature of 55° a pint of water dissolves 293 grains of the transparent variety, and only about 92 grains of the opaque. Thus the transparent acid, so far from being less, as heretofore supposed, is much more soluble than the opaque variety. The following particulars are given on the same authority. The transparent acid dissolves much more rapidly than the opaque. By prolonged ebullition with water, the opaque variety attains the same solubility as the transparent, and may be supposed to be converted into the latter. Thus, at the boiling tem- perature, a pint of water dissolves 807 grains of both varieties. The transparent variety, in cold saturated solution, gradually lessens in solubility, until it reaches the solubility of the opaque, no doubt in consequence of being changed into the latter. Pulverization lessens the solubility of the transparent variety, without affecting that of the opaque. The mixture of the two varieties of the acid in the same solution serves to explain the anomalies heretofore observed in its solu- 24 Acidurn Arseniosum. PART I. bility (Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1847.) In relation to some of these results, Bussy has been anticipated by Taylor. (See Lond. and Ed. Philos. Mag., Nov. 1837.) Though arsenious acid combines with salifiable bases, yet, when it is heated with muriate of ammonia, instead of evolution of muriatic acid gas, which might have been anticipated, we have an escape of ammonia; the materials re- acting so as to produce chloride of arsenic, water, and ammonia. (Y. de Luynes, Comptes Rendus, Juin 29, 1857, p. 1354.) Medical Properties. Internally, the action of the preparations of arsenic is alterative and febrifuge; externally, for the most part, violently irritant. They have been considered as peculiarly applicable to the treatment of diseases of a periodical character. At the commencement of their exhibition, the dose should be small, and afterwards gradually increased, the operation being carefully watched. When the specific effects of the medicine are produced, it must be immediately laid aside. These are, a general disposition to oedema, especially of the face and eyelids, a feeling of stiffness in these parts, itching of the skin, tenderness of the mouth, loss of appetite, and uneasiness and sickness of the stomach. The peculiar swelling produced is called oedema arsenicalis. Some- times salivation is produced, and occasionally the hair and nails fall off. The principal preparations now in use are the arsenious acid, the substance under consideration, the solution of arsenite of potassa, or Fowler's solution, and the solution of iodide of arsenic and mercury, or Donovan's solution. The arseni- ates of potassa and soda are also occasionally employed. M. Tschudi has given some strange accounts of the habitual use, by the pea- sants of Styria and the Tyrol, of arsenious acid as an invigorating remedy, which they are unable to relinquish without suffering. The air in the neighbourhood of Swansea, in South Wales, is impregnated with arsenical vapour, derived from the copper smelting works in that locality, and yet the workmen do not appear to suffer in health. {Wood's Therapeutics, ii. 308.) This negative statement is very different from that of M. Tschudi, who would lead us to believe that the habitual use of arsenic may be beneficial in ordinary health. Encouraged by the reports from Styria, M. Decaisne tried a course of arsenious acid in marsh cachexy, but with unfavourable results. Upon the whole, it is not improbable that the accounts received of the habitual use of arsenic by the peasants of Styria, though having a basis of truth, are greatly exaggerated. It is said that horse dealers sometimes fatten horses by giving them small doses of arsenic. If this statement be admitted as reliable, it may, perhaps, be explained upon the ground that arsenic, as would seem to result from the experiments of Schmidt and Sturswage upon animals, diminishes the amount of carbonic acid expired and of urea excreted, showing a diminished oxidation in the system, and conse- quently a diminished destruction of its constituents. (Philos. Mag., March, 1860.) Arsenious acid has been exhibited in a great variety of diseases, the principal of which are scirrhus and cancer, especially cancer of the lip; anomalous ulcers; various cutaneous diseases; intermittent fever; chorea; chronic rheumatism, particularly those forms of it attended with pains in the bones; diseases of the bones, especially nodes, and firm swellings with deformity of the small joints of the hands; frontal neuralgia; and different painful affections of the head, known under the names of hemicrania and periodical headache. In intermittent fever it is inferior only to Peruvian bark and its alkaloids, and probably no remedy surpasses or even equals it in that most obstinate affection of the joints fre- quently called rheumatic gout. Mr. Henry Hunt, of Dartmouth, England, found it useful in mitigatingAhe pain of ulcerated cancer of the uterus, and in menor- rhagia; also in irritable uterus, attended with pain and bearing down in the erect posture. He gave it in pill, in thq dose of the twentieth of a grain three times a day. In this dose the remedy seldom prociuces unpleasant feelings, and may be continued for three or four months, for which period it must sometimes PAItT I. Acidum Arseniosum. 25 be employed, in order to produce the desired effect on the uterus. In cutaneous affections, especially those of scaly character, as lepra and psoriasis, TTls an in valuable remedy. Dr. Pereira says that he has seen it used in a large number of cases of this kind without a single failure. It is thought highly of by some in the treatment of lupus, and of ill-looking sores of the face, lips, and tongue and sometimes effects a cure. Dr. Piquot, of Honfleur, employs it in apoplectic- congestion, in the belief that there is in that affection a great excess of red cor- puscles, and that arsenic has the effect of diminishing this constituent of tin- blood in a very decided manner. (Banking's Abstract, No. 31, p. 53, Am. ed.) Inhalation of the vapour of arsenious acid is said to have proved very beneficial in asthma, the arsenious acid being smoked in a cigarette, in the close of one quarter of a grain; but this application of the remedy would require great cau- tion. (Ibid., No. 35, p. 81.) Arsenic has also been found useful in intermittent mania, where quinia had proved useless. (Ibid., No. 25, p. 50.) Five cases of snake-bite, occurring in men, are said to have been successfully treated by Mr. Ireland, in the Island of St. Lucia, by grain doses of arsenious acid, in the form of Fowler’s solution, given every half hour, until the patient began to revive. The quantity of the solution to form this dose is two flui- draclims. The number of doses taken varied from six to eight, which always produced abundant vomiting and purging, results important to the success of the treatment. (Braithwaite, xxviii. 423 ) The external application of arsenic has been principally restricted to cancer, and anomalous and malignant ulcers, especially of the kind denominated noli me tang ere. Dupuytren uged with advantage a powder, composed of one part of arsenious acid and twenty-four parts of calomel, as a topical application to herpes exedens, and to the foul ulcers occurring in those who have undergone repeated courses of mercury. Arsenic is the chief ingredient in nearly all the empirical remedies for the cure of cancer by external application. Plunkeds caustic, a remedy of this kind of great celebrity, consisted of the Ranunculus acris and Ranunculus Flammula, each an ounce, bruised, and mixed with a drachm of arsenious acid, and five scruples of sulphur. The whole was beaten into a paste, formed into balls, and dried in the sun. When used, these balls were rubbed up with yolk of egg, and spread on pig’s bladder. The use of the vegetable matter is to destroy the cuticle; for, unless this is done, the arsenic will not act. Mr. Samuel Cooper thinks that this caustic was never of any permanent benefit in genuine cancer, but has effected cures in some examples of lupus, and malignant ulcers of the lips and roots of the nails. In onychi&jmahgna, Mr. Luke, of London, regards an ointment composed of two grains of arsenious acid and an ounce of sperma- ceti ointment as almost a specific. (Pereira, Mat. Med.) At Paris, an arsenical paste of the following composition is used as an ap- plication to malignant ulcers:—Red sulpliuret of mercury 10 parts; dragon’s blood 22 parts; arsenious acid 8 parts. It is applied, made up into a paste with saliva. The pain produced by this composition is very severe, and its applica- tion dangerous. The arsenical paste of Frere Gome has been applied advanta- geously by M. Biett to the ulcerated surfaces in yaws. The precaution was used of not applying it, at one time, over a surface larger than that of half a dollar. This paste is made by mixing with water a powder, consisting of ten grains of arsenious acid, two scruples of red sulphuret of mercury, and ten grains of pow- dered animal charcoal. The practice of sprinkling unmixed arsenious acid on ulcers is fraught with the greatest danger. Mr. S. Cooper characterizes it as a murderous practice. The acid may, however, be used either in solution, or re- duced by some mild ointment. A lotion may be formed of eight grains of arseni- cs acid and the same quantity of carbonate of potassa, dissolved in four fluid- ounces of distilled water; and a cerate, of half a drachm of arsenious acid and Acidum Arseniosum. PART I. six drachms of simple cerate. The cerate is sometimes formed of half this strength. The lotion is in effect a solution of arsenite of potassa. Febure's remedy for cancer consisted of ten grains of arsenious acid, dissolved in a pint of distilled water, to which were added an ounce of extract of conium, three fluidounces of solution of subacetate of lead, and a fluidrachm of tincture of opium. With this the cancer was washed every morning. Febure’s formula for internal exhibition was, arsenious acid two grains, rhubarb half an ounce, syrup of chicory q. s., distilled water a pint. Of this mixture, a tablespoonful, containing about the sixteenth of a grain of the acid, was given ever}r night and morning, with half a fluidrachm of the syrup of poppies. The dose was gradu- ally increased to six tablespoonfuls. Mr. Lloyd, of London, praises the effects of arsenical injections in cancer of the vagina and uterus. They act favourably by preventing rather than destroy- ing "the fetor, and by diminishing the sloughing and discharge. The strength of the solution employed was from two to eight grains of arsenious acid to the pint of water. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1854, p. 541.) The average dose of arsenious acid is the tenth of a grain, three times a day, given in the form of pill It is usually combined with opium, which enables the stomach to bear the medicine better. A convenient formula is to mix one grain of the acid with ten grains of sugar, and to beat the mixture thoroughly with crumb of bread, so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into ten pills. The Asiatic pills, so called, consist of arsenious acid and black pepper, in the pro- portion of 1 part of the former to 80 of the latter. A preparation much used on the continent of Europe is Boudin's solution. which is simply an aqueous solu- tion of arsenious acid with the addition of wine, and is made by boiling one gramme (15 4 grains) of the acid with one litre (2T pints) of distilled water till entirely dissolved, then cooling, filtering, adding enough distilled water to supply the loss, and finally mixing with one litre of white wine. Of this solu- tion a fluidounce contains about one-quarter of a grain of arsenious acid. Properties of Arsenious Acid as a Poison. Arsenious acid, in an overdose, administered internally, or applied externally, acts with very great energy, and generally destroys life in a short time; but, in some rare instances, no well- marked symptoms are developed until eight or nine hours after the ingestion of the poison. Dr. Edward Hartshorne relates a case of recovery, in which at least a drachm of arsenious acid had been swallowed, and where the symptoms of poisoning were delayed for sixteen hours. (Med. Examiner, Dec. 1855, p. 107.) The symptoms produced by the poison are an austere taste; fetid state of the mouth; frequent ptyalism; continual hawking; constriction of the pharynx and oesophagus; the sensation of the teeth being on edge; hiccough ; nausea; anxiety; frequent sinkings; burning pain at the praecordia; inflammation of the lips, tongue, palate, throat, bronchi, and oesophagus; irritable stomach, so as not to be able to support the blandest drinks; vomiting of matters, sometimes brown, at other times bloody; black, horribly fetid stools; small, frequent, con- centrated, and irregular pulse, but occasionally slow and unequal; palpitations; syncope; insatiable thirst; burning heat over the whole body, or a sensation of icy coldness; difficult respiration ; cold sweats; suppression of urine ; scanty, red, bloody, and sometimes albuminous urine; change in the countenance; a livid circle round the eyelids; swelling and itching of the body; livid spots over the surface, and occasionally a miliary eruption; prostration of strength; loss of feeling, especially in the feet and hands; delirium ; convulsions, often accom- panied with insupportable priapism; falling off of the hair, detachment of the cuticle, &c. In some cases there is inflammation with burning pain in the urino- genital organs. It is very rare to observe all these symptoms in the same indi- vidual. Sometimes, indeed, they are nearly all wanting, death taking place with- out any pain or prominent symptom. Occasionally the symptoms have a oei fes* PART i. Acidum Arseniosum. 27 resemblance to those of Asiatic cholera, in the stage of collapse. After death, the morbid appearances are various. In some instances, no vestige of lesion can be discovered. The appearances, however, in the generality of cases, are the following. The mouth, stomach, and intestines are inflamed; the stomach and duodenum exhibit spots resembling eschars, and perforations of all their coats: and the villous coat of the former is in a manner destroyed, and reduced to the consistence of a reddish-brown pulp. In cases of recovery, it has been a ques- tion how long it takes for the poison to be eliminated from the system. In a case, reported by Dr. D. Maclagan, in which about two drachms of the poison had been swallowed, and in which magnesia was used successfully as an antidote, arsenic was detected in the urine by Marsh’s test as late as the twentieth day. A milder grade of arsenical poisoning, yet sometimes serious in its conse- quences, has resulted in many instances from the inhalation of the air of apart- ments lined with green wall-paper, which owes its colour to arsenite of copper, and from which a fine poisonous dust sometimes escapes when the paper has not been well prepared. (See Chem. News, March 24,1860.) Death has also re- sulted, in more than one instance, from working in the manufacture of artificial leaves, which owe their green colour to the same poison. (Ibid,, Nov. 30, 1861.) In view of the numerous accidents and crimes caused by the use of arsenious acid, its sale should be regulated by law in all the States of the Union. In 1851, an act for this purpose was passed by the British Parliament. Dr. Christison divides the poisonous effects of arsenious acid into three orders of cases, according to the character and violence of the symptoms. In the first order, the poison produces symptoms of irritation and inflammation along the course of the alimentary canal, and commonly kills in from one to three days. In the second, the signs of inflammation are moderate, or even altogether want- ing, and death occurs in five or six hours, at a period too early for inflammation to be always fully developed. In the third order of cases, two stages occur; the first stage being characterized by inflammatory symptoms, as in the first order; the second, by symptoms referable to nervous irritation, such as imper- fect palsy of the arms or legs, epilepsy, tetanus, hysterical affections, mania, and coma. It is a general character of this poison to induce inflammation of the stomach in almost all instances, provided death does not take place imme- diately, whatever be the part to which it is applied. Thus the poison, when applied to a fresh wound, will give rise to the same morbid appearances in the stomach and intestines, as when it is swallowed. In some cases, observed by Drs. Mall and Bailie, the rectum was much inflamed, while the colon and small intestines escaped. The precise rank which should be assigned, in the scale of poisons, to arse- nious acid when applied externally, is still undetermined. One set of observers contend that its external application is not attended with great danger; while another party conceives that it acts as a virulent poison. Hunter, Sir Everard Home, Joeger, Brodie, Dr. Campbell of Edinburgh, Smith, and Orfila have all adduced experiments on the inferior animals, which prove that arsenious acid, inserted into a recent wound, causes death after a longer or shorter period. In- deed, some observations go to prove that its poisonous effects are developed by a smaller amount, applied in this way; than when taken into the stomach. Nor are there wanting many well-authenticated facts of its deleterious effects, exter- nally applied, on the human constitution. Roux has put on record the case of a young woman under his care, whose death was caused, after agonizing suf- ferings, by the application of an arsenical paste to a cancerous breast. Death has occurred from the application of an arsenical paste to a soft tumour of the Aemple; ee Acidum Nilroviuriaticum.) A trace of nitric acid ha? been detected in atmospheric air. It is said to be always present in the air in summer. (KletzinsJcy.) Tests. Nitric acid, when uncombined, is recognised by its dissolving copper with the production of red vapours, and by its forming nitre when saturated with potassa. When in the form of a nitrate, it is detected by its action on gold-leaf, after the addition of muriatic acid, in consequence of the evolution of chlorine; or it may be discovered, according to Dr. O’Shaughnessy, by heating the supposed nitrate in a test tube with a drop of sulphuric acid, and then add- ing a crystal of morphia. If nitric acid be present, it will be set free by the sulphuric acid, and reddened by the morphia. The same effect is produced by brucia; as also by commercial strychnia, on account of its containing brucia. To prevent all ambiguity, arising from the accidental presence of nitric acid in the sulphuric acid employed, the operator should satisfy himself, by a separate experiment, that the latter acid has no power to produce the characteristic colour with morphia. Another test for nitric acid is to add pure sulphuric acid to the concentrated liquid, suspected to contain it, together with a little con- centrated solution of the sulphate of protoxide of iron. The smallest trace of nitric acid affords, when the mixture is wanned, a pink-red colour; and, if it be present in considerable amount, the liquid becomes almost black. The most common impurities in nitric acid are sulphuric acid and chlorine; the former derived from the acid used in the process, the latter from common salt, which is not an unfrequent impurity in nitre. They may be detected by adding a few drops of the solution of chloride of barium and of nitrate of silver to separate portions of the nitric acid, diluted with three or four parts of dis- tilled water. If these reagents should produce a precipitate, the chloride will indicate sulphuric acid, and the nitrate, chlorine. These impurities may be separated by adding nitrate of silver in slight excess, which will precipitate them as sulphate and chloride of silver, and then distilling nearly to dryness in very clean vessels. The sulphuric acid may also be got rid of by distilling from a fresh portion of nitre. The chlorine may be separated, without the use of nitrate of silver, by distilling the commercial acid, and rejecting the first eighth or fourth which comes over, according to the quality of the acid, and reserving that which passes subsequently, which is absolutely pure. (Ch. Barreswil.) According to M. Lembert, the nitric acid of commerce sometimes contains iodine, probably derived from the native nitrate of soda, in which he found that element It may PART I. Acidum Nitricum. be detected by saturating the suspected acid with a carbonated alkali, pouring in a little clear solution of starch, and then adding a few drops of sulphuric acid. If iodine be present, the sulphuric acid will set it free, and the starch solution will become blue. Another test, proposed by Mr. Stein, is to introduce a stick of tin into the suspected acid, and, after red vapours have begun to escape, to withdraw the metal, and add a few drops of sulphuret of carbon, and agitate. If iodine be present, drops of sulphur will soon separate, coloured more or less deeply red according to the quantity of the impurity. These impurities, however, do not affect the medical properties of the acid. As a nitric acid below the standard strength is necessarily employed in many chemical and pharmaceutical operations, it often becomes important to know the proportion of dry acid, and of acid of the strength of 1 5, contained in an acid of any given specific gravity. The following table, drawn up from experi- ments by Dr. Ure, gives information on these points. Table showing the Quantity of Hydrated Nitric Acid (sp. gr. 1-5), and of Dry Nitric Acid, contained in 100 parts of the Acid at Different Densities. Sp.Gr. Ilyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp. Gr. Ilyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp.Gr. Ilyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp. Gr. Hyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. 1-500 100 79-700 1-4189 75 59-775 1-2947 50 39-850 1-1403 25 19 925 1-498 99 78-903 1-4147 74 58-978 1-2887 49 39 053 1-1345 24 19-128 1-4900 98 78-106 1-4107 73 58-181 1-2826 48 38-256 1-1286 23 18-331 1-4940 97 77-309 1-4065 72 57-384 1-2765 47 37-459 1-1227 22 17-534 1-4910 96 76-512 1-4023 71 56-587 1-2705 46 36-662 1-1168 21 16-737 1 4880 95 75-715 1-3978 70 55-790 1-2644 45 35-865 1-1109 20 15-940 1-4850 94 74-918 1-3945 69 54-993 1-2583 44 35-068 1-1051 19 15-143 1-4820 93 74-121 1-3882 68 54-196 1-2523 43 34-271 1-0993 18 14-346 1-4790 92 73-324 1-3833 67 53-399 1-2462 42 33 474 1-0935 17 13-549 1-4760 91 72-527 1-3783 66 52-602 1-2402 41 32-677 1 0878 16 12-752 1-4730 90 71-730 1-3732 65 51-805 1-2341 40 31-880 1-0821 15 11-955 1-4700 89 70-933 1-3681 64 51-068 1-2277 39 31--083 1-0764 14 11-158 1-4670 88 70-136 1-3630 63 50-211 1-2212 38 30-286 1-0708 13 10 361 1-4640 87 69-339 1-3579 62 49-414 1-2148 37 29-489 1-0651 12 9-564 1 4600 86 68-542 1-3529 61 48-617 1-2084 36 28-692 1-0595 11 8-767 1-4570 85 67-745 1 3477 60 47-820 1-2019 35 27-895 1-0540 10 7-970 1-4530 84 66-948 1-3427 59 47-023 1-1958 34 27-098 1-0485 9 7-173 1-4500 83 66155 1-3377 58 46-226 1-1895 33 26-301 1-0430 8 6-376 1-4460 82 65-354 1-3323 57 45-429 1-1833 32 25-504 1-0375 7 5-579 1-4424 81 64-557 1-3270 56 44 632 1-1770 31 24-707 1-0320 - 6 4-782 1-4383 80 63-760 1-3216 55 43-835 1-1709 30 23-910 1-0267 5 3-985 1-4340 79 62-963 1-3163 54 43-038 1-1648 29 23-113 1-0212 4 3-188 1-4306 78 62-166 1-3110 53 42-241 1-1587 28 22-316 1-0159 3 2-391 1-4269 77 61-369 1-3056 52 41-444 1-1526 27 21-519 1-0106 2 1-594 1-4228 76 60 572 1-3001 51 40-647 1-1465 26 20-722 1-0053 1 0-797 Composition. The composition of the officinal acid of the density 1-42 has already been given. It contains about 75 per cent, of nitric acid, of the sp. gr. 1'5. Anhydrous nitric acid consists of one eq. of nitrogen 14, and five eqs. of oxygen 40 = 54; or, in volumes, of one volume of nitrogen and two and a half volumes of oxygen, supposed to be condensed, to form nitric acid vapour, into one volume. In 1849, the interesting discovery was made by M. Deville, of Be- of the means of isolating anhydrous nitric acid. The method pursued was to pass perfectly dry chlorine over nitrate of silver. The anhydrous acid is in the form of colourless, brilliant, limpid crystals, which melt at 85° and boil at 113°. In contact with water, they form a colourless solution with evolution of heat, without the diseugagement of gas. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1849, p. 207.) 50 Acidum Nitricum. PART I. Mednal Properties. Nitric acid is tonic and antiseptic. Largely dilated with water, it forms a good acid drink in low forms of fever. It is.praised as an antiperiodic in intermittent fever by Dr. Geo. Mendenhall and Dr. E. T. Bailey, of Indiana, given in doses of from five to eight drops once in six hours, without regard to intermissions or exacerbations. (See Am. Journ. of the Med. Sci., Oct. 1854, p. 581.) According to Dr. Arnoldi, of Montreal, nitric acid, added to water so as to give it the acidity of lemon-juice, and sweetened, is an effica- cious remedy in hooping-cough; and his report of its value was confirmed by Dr. Geo. D. Gibbs, in his treatise on hooping-cough, published in London in 1854. The dose for a child one year old is a dessertspoonful every hour; for an adult, a tumblerful during the day. To save the teeth, the mouth should be washed after each dose. In syphilis, and in the chronic hepatitis of India, this acid was highly extolled by Dr. Scott, formerly of Bombay. It has occasionally excited ptyalism. It cannot be depended upon as a remedy in syphilis, but, in worn-oat constitutions, is often an excellent adjuvant, either to prepare the system for the use of mercury, or to lessen the effects of that metal on the economy. As nitric acid dissolves both uric acid and the phosphates, it was supposed to be appli- cable to those cases of gravel in which the uric acid and the phosphates are mixed ; but experience has not confirmed its efficacy in such cases. Neverthe- less, when the sabulous deposit depends upon certain states of disordered diges- tion, this acid may prove serviceable by restoring the tone of the stomach. The dose is from five to twenty minims in three fluidounces or more of water, given three or four times a day. The diluted acid is more convenient for pre- scribing. (See Acidum Nitricum Dilutum.) Externally, nitric acid has been used with advantage as a lotion to ulcers, of the strength of about twelve minims to the pint of water. This practice origi- nated with Sir Everard Home, and is particularly applicable to those ulcers which are superficial and not disposed to cicatrize. It is also useful in ulceration of the mouth and gums as a gargle, made by adding about sixty drops of the acid to a pint of water. In sloughing phagedsena, strong nitric acid is one of the best remedies, applied by means of a piece of lint tied round a small stick, or by the use of a glass brush. Sometimes a piece of lint is soaked with the strong acid, and pressed into the sore, being allowed to remain for several hours. In can- crum oris concentrated nitric acid, freely applied, is one of the best local remedies that can be employed for arresting the phagedenic ulceration, and disposing the sore to heal. The strong acid also has been found very useful as an escharotic, in the local treatment of hemorrhoids and of prolapsus ani, by Dr. W. Cooke, Mr. H. Lee, and Mr. H. Smith, of London. For information as to the mode of ap- plying the acid, the instruments employed, and the precautions to be observed, the reader is referred to Ranking's Abstract (Am. ed., No. 20, p. 143, and No. 23, p. 158). Nitric acid, in the state of vapour, is considered useful for destroying conta- gion, and hence has been employed for purifying jails, hospitals, ships, and other infected places. It is prepared for use by the extemporaneous decomposition of nitre by sulphuric acid. Half an ounce of powdered nitre is put into a saucer, which is placed in an earthen dish containing heated sand. On the nitre two drachms of sulphuric acid are then poured, and the nitric acid fumes are imme- diately disengaged. The quantities just indicated are considered sufficient for disinfecting a cubic space of ten feet. Fumigation in this manner was first in- troduced by an English physician, Dr. Carmichael Smyth, who received from the British Parliament, for its discovery, a reward of five thousand pounds. But nitric acid, as a disinfectant, is not comparable to chlorine; and, since the intro- duction of chlorinated lime and the solution of chlorinated soda as disinfecting agents, this gas has been brought into so manageable a form, that its use has entirely superseded that of nitric acid vapour. (See Calx Chlorim ta and Liquor Sodas Chlorinatae.) part I. Acidum Nitricum.—Acidum Phosphoricum Glaciate. 51 Properties as a Poison. Nitric acid, in its concentrated state, is one of the mineral poisons most frequently taken for the purpose of self-destruction, im- mediately after swallowing it, there are produced burning heat in the mouth* oesophagus, and stomach, acute pain, disengagement of gas, abundant eructa- tions, nausea, and hiccough. These effects are soon followed by repeated and excessive vomiting of matter having a peculiar odour and taste, tumefaction of the abdomen with exquisite tenderness, a feeling of coldness on the surface, hor- ripilations, icy coldness of the extremities, small depressed pulse, horrible anx- ieties, continual tossings and contortions, and extreme thirst. The breath becomes* extremely fetid, and the countenance exhibits a complete picture of suffering. The cases are almost always fatal. The best remedies are repeated doses of mag- nesia as an antidote, mucilaginous drinks in large quantities, olive or almond oil in very large doses, emollient fomentations, and clysters. Until magnesia can be obtained, an immediate resort to a solution of soap in large amount will be proper. Pharm. Uses. In the preparation of Acidum Hydrocyanicum Dilutum, U. S.; Acidum Phosphorieum Dilutum; Antimonii Oxidum, U. S.; Bismuthi Subcarbo- nas, U. S.; Cadmii Sulphas, U. S.; Ferri Chloridum, U. S.; Ferri Oxidum Mag- neticum, Br.; Hydrargyri Oxidum Rubrum; Liquor Ferri Perchloridi, Br.; Liquor Ferri Subsulphatis, U. S.; Liquor Ferri Tersulphatis, U. S.; Tinctura Ferri Chloridi, U. S.; Zinci Chloridum, U S. Off. Prep. Acidum Nitricum Dilutum; Acidum Nitro-hydrochloricum Dilu- tum, Br.; Acidum Nitromuriaticum, U. S.; Acidum Nitromuriaticum Dilutum, U. S.; Argenti Nitras; Bismuthi Subnitras, U. S.; Bismuthum Album, Br.; Liquor Ferri Nitratis, U. S.; Liquor Ferri Pernitratis, Br.; Liquor Hydrargju-i Nitratis, U. S.; Liquor Hydrargyri Nitratis Acidus, Br.; Spiritus ./Etheris Ni- trosi, U. S.; Unguentum Hydrargyri Nitratis. B. ACIDUM PHOSPHORICUM GLACIALE. U.& Glacial Phosphoric Acid. Phosphoric acid, in the anhydrous state, consists of one eq. of phosphorus and five eqs. of oxygen, P05, and can be obtained only by the direct union of its constituents, which takes place when phosphorus is burned in perfectly dry oxygen gas. Thus procured, it is in the form of a white amorphous powder, ex- tremely deliquescent, volatilizable at a red heat, and assuming, when it cools after fusion, a vitreous appearance. It has been shown by Prof. Graham that this acid is capable of assuming three isomeric conditions, each characterized by peculiar properties, and essentially distinguished by their relations to bases, water being considered as acting the part of a base. These are most con- veniently designated as monobasic, bibasic, and tribasic phosphoric acids, the first uniting with one eq. of base, the second with two eqs., and'the"third with three. Obtained in any other way than as above stated, they are always com- bined with water, the monobasic consisting of one eq. of acid and one of water, II0,P05, the bibasic of one of the former and two of the latter, 2H0,P05, the tribasic of one to three, 3H0,P05. When uniting with other bases than water, the same relation of equivalents is observed, the monobasic combining with only one eq., giving up its eq. of water, the bibasic with one or two eqs. accord- ing as it retains one or gives up both its eqs. of water, the tribasic with one, two, or three eqs., according to the number of eqs. of water it abandons; in other words, the eqs. of water being replaced by as many eqs. of base; so that the acid always has its characteristic complement of basic eqs., water being counted among them. Other names had been given to these acids before their peculiar character was developed ; the common and best known form of the acid being called simply phosphoric acid, which is the tribasic; another, from Acidum Phosphoricum Grlaciale. part I. heat being used in its production, pjjrophosvhoric, which is the bibasic; and the third metaphosphoric acid, which is monobasic. An aqueous solution of either of theTfiree heated so long as water escapes, yields the monobasic or metaphosphoric acid; and as, upon cooling, it becomes a transparent ice- like solid, it has received in this state the name of glacial phosphoric acid. Conversely, this monobasic acid is slowly transformed, in aqueous solution, and more rapidly if the solution is heated, into the bibasic and tribasic forms. Mr. Maisch has ascertained that nitric acid, added to the solution of the monobasic acid, with the aid of heat, causes the change from the monobasic to the tribasic form, or that of common phosphoric acid, without undergoing any observable change itself, and without the intermediate production of the bibasic. (Am. J. of Pharm., Sept. 1861, p. 387.) The three forms of acid are distinguishable by peculiar reactions. Thus, the jnoivuba.sic is characterized by coagulating albumen, and giving white gelatinous uncrystallizable precipitates with the-soluble salts of baryta, lime, and silver; the Dibasic does not coagulate albumen, and, though it causes a white precipi- tate with nitrate of silver, must first be neutralized; the tribasic does not co- agulate albumen, and until neutralized does not precipitate nitrate of silver; but after neutralization throws down a yellow precipitate of phosphate of silver. The two latter forms of the acid will be considered in the second part of this work under appropriate heads. Our attention will at present be confined to the monobasic acid, which is the glacial acid of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (jLACiaij Phosphoric Acid. U. S. Metaphosphoric Acid. Monobasic Phos- phoric AcicT ~Monohydrated Phosphoric Acid. Phosphate of Water. This is most advantageously obtained from calcined bones, by first treating them with sulphuric acid, which produces an insoluble sulphate and soluble superphosphate of lime; then dissolving out the latter salt, and saturating it with carbonate of ammonia, which generates phosphate of ammonia in solution; and, finally, ob- taining the phosphate of ammonia by evaporation to dryness, and then igniting it in a platinum crucible. The ammonia and all the water except one eq. for each eq. of the acid are driven off, and the glacial acid remains. Properties. Thus procured, glacial phosphoric acid is in the form of a white, transparent, fusible solid, inodorous and sour to the taste, slowly deliquescent, slowly soluble in water, and soluble also in alcohol. Its formula is H0,P05, and it contains 11*2 per cent, of water. As already stated, it is characterized by pro- ducing white gelatinous precipitates with albumen, and with the soluble salts of lime, baryta, and silver; and the precipitate produced with the chloride of barium is readily redissolved by an excess of the acid. This is the form of the acid which results when the anhydrous acid, produced by burning phosphorus in dry oxygen gas, is introduced into water. Impurities. Glacial phosphoric acid is seldom prepared in this country. That found in our shops is almost all imported, and chiefly from Germany. It is often more or less impure, containing most frequently, as shown by the experiments of Mr. Maisch, silica, and the phosphates of lime and magnesia, which are pre- cipitated from a neutralized solution of the acid by ammonia. In one instance 8 per cent, of these impurities was found; but in some others little or none. Mr. Maisch never found nitric or muriatic acid, and sulphuric acid rarely; and. though the presence of ammonia might be suspected from the source whence the acid is obtained, he did not detect it. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1860, p. 194.) In consequence of its deliquescence upon exposure to the air, a portion of the monobasic acid passes into the state of the tribasic. This is detected, if in con- siderable quantity, by giving a yellowish colour to the precipitate with nitrate of silver. The TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia directs that the acid, in aqueous solution, should yield no precipitate with sulphuretted hydrogen, showing the absence of metals ; should cause a white precipitate with chloride of barium soluble in an excess of PART I. Acidum Phosphoricum G-laciale.—Acidum Sulphuricum. acid; and, with an excess of ammonia, should cause only a slight turbidness, proving the almost total absence of earthy salts. Should the presence of arsenic be ascertained by the tests for that metal, it may be separated by boiling with muriatic acid, so as to convert the arsenic into its very volatile chloride, which would escape with the vapours of the muriatic acid. Medical Uses. Glacial phosphoric acid is seldom if ever used medicinally in reference to its influence on the system, though probably capable of producing all the effects for which the officinal diluted acid is employed. It was introduced into the Materia Medica of our Pharmacopoeia as affording a convenient method of preparing the medicinal acid. It may also be used in prescriptions with the insoluble phosphates to render them soluble in the liquors of the stomach, and thereby favour their entrance into the circulation. Thirty-eight and a half grains, dissolved in a fluidounce of water, form a solution about equal in strength to the officinal U. S. diluted acid. Off. Prep. Acidum Phosphoricum Dilutum, U. S. B. ACIDUM SULPHURICUM. U.S.,Br. jS’ulphuric Acid. 'Sulphuric acid, of the specific gravity 1843. U. S. Monohydrated Sulphuric Acid, 1I0,S03. Sp.gr. 1846. Br. Oil of vitriol, Vitriolic acid; Acide sulfurique, Ft.; Vitriolol, Sckwefelsanre, Germ.; Acido solforico, J'tal.; Acido sulfurico, Span. Sulphuric acid is placed in the Materia Medica list of the U. S. Pharmaco- poeia, as an article to be obtained from the wholesale manufacturer. Provision, however, is made that it shall be free from all odorous substances, and all me- tallic and other non-volatile impurities. The British Pharmacopoeia admits only the purified acid in its Materia Medica, giving a process for its preparation from the commercial acid, which is placed in the Appendix of that work, with the name of Sulphuric Acid of Commerce, or Oil of Vitriol, as one of the arti- cles employed in the preparation of medicines. Preparation. Sulphuric acid is obtained by burning sulphur, mixed with one- eighth of its weight of nitre, over a stratum of water contained in a chamber lined with sheet-lead. If the sulphur were burned by itself, the product would be sulphurous acid, which contains only two-thirds as much oxygen as sulphuric acid. The object of the nitre is to furnish, by its decomposition, the requisite additional quantity of oxygen. To understand the process, it is necessary to bear in mind that nitric acid contains five, sulphuric acid three, sulphurous acid two, nitric oxide two, nitrous acid three, and hyponitric acid four equivalents of oxygen, combined with one eq. of their several radicals. One eq. of sulphur decomposes one eq. of nitric acid of the nitre, and becomes one eq. of sulphuric acid, which combines with the potassa of the nitre to form sulphate of potassa. In the mean time, the nitric acid, by furnishing three eqs. of oxygen to form the sulphuric acid, is converted into one eq. of nitric oxide, which is evolved. This gas, by combining with two eqs. of the oxygen of the air, immediately be- jomes hyponitric acid vapour, which diffuses itself throughout the leaden cham- ber. While these changes are taking place, the remainder of the sulphur is un- dergoing combustion, and filling the chamber with sulphurous acid gas. One eq. of hyponitric acid vapour, and one eq. of sulphurous acid gas, being thus inter- mingled in the chamber, react on each other, by the aid of moisture, so as to form a crystalline compound, consisting of one eq. of sulphuric acid and one eq. of nitrous acid, united with a portion of water. This compound falls into the water of the chamber, and is instantly decomposed. The sulphuric acid dissolves in the water, and the nitrous acid, resolved, at the moment of its extrication, into 54 Acidum Sulphuricum. PART 1 hypoi Itric add and nitric oxide, escapes with effervescence. The hyponitric acid thus tet free, and that reproduced by the nitric oxide uniting with the oxygen of the air, again react with sulphurous acid and humidity, and give rise to a second portion of the crystalline compound, which undergoes the same changes as the first. Thus, the nitric oxide performs the part of a carrier of oxygen from the air of the chamber to the sulphurous acid, converting the latter into sulphu- ric acid. The residue of the combustion of the sulphur and nitre, consisting of sulphate of potassa, is sold to the alum makers. Preparation on the Large Scale. The leaden chambers vary in size, but are generally from thirty to thirty-two feet square, and from sixteen to twenty high. The floor is slightly inclined to facilitate the drawing off of the acid, and covered to the depth of several inches with water. There are several modes of burning the mixture of sulphur and nitre, and otherwise conducting the process. That pursued in France is as follows. Near one of the sides of the chamber, and about a foot from its bottom, a cast-iron tray is placed over a furnace, resting on the ground, its mouth opening externally, and its chimney having no com- munication with the chamber. On this tray the mixture is placed, being intro- duced by a square opening, which may be shut by means of a sliding door, and the lower side of which is level with the surface of the tray. The door being shut, the fire is gradually raised in the furnace, whereby the sulphur is inflamed, and the products already spoken of are generated. When the com- bustion is over, the door is opened, and the sulphate of potassa removed. A fresh portion of the mixture is then placed on the tray, and the air of the cham- ber is renewed by opening a door and valve situated at its opposite side. Next, the several openings are closed, and the fire is renewed. These operations are repeated, with fresh portions of the mixture, every three or four hours, until the water at the bottom of the chamber has the sp. gr. of about l-5. It is then drawn off and transferred to leaden boilers, where it is boiled down to the sp.gr. 1-T. At this density it begins to act on lead, and its further concentration must be conducted in large glass or platinum retorts, where it is evaporated as long as water distils over. This water is slightly acid, and is thrown back into the cham- ber. When the acid is fully concentrated, grayish-white vapours arise, which indicate the completion of the process. The acid is allowed to cool, and is then transferred to demijohns of green glass, called carboys, which, for greater secu- rity, are surrounded with straw or wicker-work, and packed in square boxes, enclosing all the carboy except the neck. As, in the manufacture of sulphuric acid, nitre is the most expensive mate- rial, many plans have been resorted to for obtaining the necessary hyponitric acid at a cheaper rate. One plan is to procure it by treating molasses or starch with common nitric acid. In this case, the manufacturer obtains oxalic acid as a collateral product, which serves to diminish the expense. Sometimes nitrate of soda is substituted for nitre. The advantages of the former salt are its greater cheapness, and its larger proportional amount of nitric acid. Another method, sometimes practised, consists in filling the leaden chamber with sulphurous acid by the combustion of sulphur, and afterwards admitting into it hyponitric acid and steam. The acid is generated from a mixture of sulphuric acid with nitre or nitrate of soda, placed in an iron pan over the burning sulphur in the su’phur furnace, where the draught conducts the hyponitric acid fumes into the chamber. As, under these circumstances, sulphurous and hyponitric acids and aqueous vapour are mingled in the chamber, all the conditions necessary for generating the crystalline compound, already alluded to, are present. Mr. Thomas Fell, of England, obtained a patent in Dec. 1852 for the use of ozonized air,* produced * Ozonized air is air having its oxygen in a peculiar state, which Sch'inbein, who first remarked it, attributed to the union with the oxygen of a peculiar form of siattr*, which he called ozone, from a Greek word signifying, to have a smell. It is now adttiiKed that part I. Acidum Sulphuricum. 55 either by electricity, or by the slow combustion of phosphorus, in order to eat.se the union of sulphurous acid with the requisite oxygen, in the leaden chambei, without the use of nitre. (Pharrn. Journ. and Trans., March, 1853.) The process for making sulphuric acid by the combustion of sulphur with nitre was first mentioned by Lemery, and afterwards put in practice by an Eng- lish physician, of the name of Ward. As practised by him, the combustion was conducted in very large glass vessels. About the year 1746, the great improve- ment of leaden chambers was introduced by Dr. Roebuck, of Birmingham, where the first apparatus of this kind was erected. In consequence of this improvement, the acid immediately fell to one-fourth of its former price. What is said above relates to the mode of preparing common sulphuric acid; but there is another kind, known on the continent of Europe by the name of the fuming sulphuric acid of Nordhausen, so called from its properties, and a place in Saxony where it nTtSCTgely manufactured. This acid is obtained by distilling dried sulphate of iron in large stoneware retorts, heated to redness, and connected with receivers of glass or stoneware. The acid distils over, and sesquioxide of iron is left in the form of colcothar or polishing rouge, a mate- rial employed for polishing metals, particularly gold and silver. According to A. Vogel, jun., a better polishing rouge for fine work is made by calcining oxalate of protoxide of iron. (Gkem. Gaz., Nov. I, 1854, p. 410.) Properties. Sulphuric acid (sulphate of water), commonly called oil of vitriol, is a dense, colourless, inodorous liquid, of an oleaginous appearance, and strongly corrosive. On living tissues it acts as a powerful caustic. In the liquid form, it contains water, which is essential to its existence in that form. When pure, and as highly concentrated as possible, as manufactured in leaden chambers, its sp. gr. is 1 845 (1 '8485, Ure), a fluidounce weighing a small fraction over 14 drachms. When of this sp. gr., it contains about 18 percent, of water. If its density exceed this, the presence of sulphate of lead, or other im irity may be inferred. The commercial acid is seldom of full strength. According to Mr. Phillips, it has generally the sp. gr. 1-8433, and contains 22 per cent, of water. The strong acid boils at 620°, and freezes at 15° below zero. When diluted, its boiling point is lowered. When of the sp. gr. 178, it deposits crystals of the bihydrated acid at about 28°, and hence it is hazardous for manufacturers to keep an acid of that strength in glass vessels in cold weather, as they are liable to burst. With salifiable bases it forms a numerous class of salts, called sulphates. It acts powerfully on organic bodies, whether vegetable or animal, depriving them of the elements of water, developing charcoal, and turning them black. A small piece of cork or wood, dropped into the acid, will on this prin- the state of oxygen referred to does not depend upon the presence of any form of matter, either simple or compound; and hence the term ozone should be abandoned, retaining only the term ozonization to express the means by which oxygen is brought into the new state. Oxygen maybe ozonized by electrical, chemical, and galvanic agency, and is always the same in the ozonized state, by whatever means generated. Thus, the oxygen in air may be ozonized by passing repeated electrical discharges through it, or by t.hesTovTcom- bustion of phosphorus in it, and the oxygen in water, by electrolysis. Even dry oxygen may be ozonized by the passage of repeated electrical sparks, a fact which proves that the change does not depend upon any foreign matter, simple or compound. Oxygen has never been fully ozonized ; as is shown by the delicate test of iodide of potassium, prepared with starch, which absorbs the ozonized oxygen only. Thus, the oxygen, obtained by electro- lysis, contains only part of its weight in the ozonized state. Ozonized oxygen has chemical properties different from those of ordinary oxygen. It is not absorbed by pure water. It has a peculiar smell like that produced by repeated discharges of electricity. Its oxidizing power is far greater than that of ordinary oxygen; and this forms its most marked cEaraSfensflc. By m'any'agencies it is deozonized, and brought to the condition uf ordinary oxygen. It is not known in what the ozonized state of oxygen essentially con- sists. Chemists recognise the general fact that the same element may exist in different physical and chemical states, and call these allotropic states. Accordingly, ozonized oxygen is an allotropic state of this element Acidum Sulphuricum. PART I. ciple render it of a dark colour. It absorbs water with avidity, and is used ag a desiccating agent. It has been ascertained by Professors W. B. and R. E. Rogers to be capable of absorbing 94 per cent, of carbonic acid gas, a fact having an important bearing on analytic operations. When diluted with dis- tilled water, it ought to remain limpid; and, when heated sufficiently in a pla- tinum spoon, the fixed residue should not exceed one part in 400 of the acid employed. When present in small quantity in solution, it is detected uner- ringly by chloride of barium, which causes a precipitate of sulphate of baryta. The most usual impurities in it are the sulphates of potassa and lead ; the former derived from the residue of the process, the latter from the leaden boilers in which the acid is concentrated. Occasionally nitre is added to render dark samples of acid colourless. This addition gives rise to the impurity of sulphate of potassa. These impurities often amount to 3 or 4 per cent. The commercial acid cannot be expected to be absolutely pure; but, when properly manufac- tured, it should not contain more than one-fourth of 1 per cent, of impurity. The fixed impurities are discoverable by evaporating a portion of the acid, when they will remain. If sulphate of lead be present, the acid will become turbid on dilution with an equal bulk of water. This impurity is not detected by sul- phuretted hydrogen, unless the sulphuric acid be saturated with an alkali. If only a scanty muddiness arises, the acid is of good commercial quality. Other impurities occur in the commercial sulphuric acid. Hyponitric acid is always present in greater or less amount. It may be detected by gently pouring a solution of green vitriol over the commercial acid in a tube, when the solution, at the line of contact, will acquire a deep-red colour, due to the sesquioxidation of the iron by the hyponitric acid. Another method is to pass into tincture of guaiac the gases proceeding from the suspected acid heated with iron filings. If hyponitric acid is present the tincture becomes blue. The commercial acid, how- ever, is not to be rejected, unless the test shows the presence of hyponitric acid in unusual quantity. Hyponitric acid is an injurious impurity when the sulphuric acid is employed in the manufacture of muriatic acid, which is decomposed by the hyponitric acid with evolution of chlorine. To remove this impurity it was recom- mended by Wackenroder, before distilling it, to heat the acid with a little sugar. This and the hyponitric acid mutually decompose each other, and the products are dissipated by heat. For the removal of the nitrogen acids generally, Dr. J. Lowe recommends the addition, to the heated sulphuric acid, of small portions of dry oxalic acid, so long as it exhibits a yellow tinge. The oxalic acid is de- composed into carbonic acid and oxide, the latter of which, in becoming carbonic acid, deoxidizes and destroys the nitrogen acids. A slight excess of oxalic acid produces no harm; as it is immediately decomposed. The British Pharmaco- poeia provides, in its process for the preparation of the pure acid, for getting rid of these acids by distillation with a little sulphate of ammonia. When sulphate of potassa is fraudulently introduced into the acid to increase its density, it may be detected by saturating the acid with ammonia, and heating to redness in acrucible; when sulphate of ammonia will be expelled, and the sulphate of potassa left. Arsenic is sometimes present in sulphuric acid. In consequence of the high price of Sicilian sulphur, some English manufacturers have employed iron pyrites for the purpose of furnishing the necessary sulphurous acid in the manufacture of oil of vitriol. As the pyrites usually contains arsenic, it happens that the sulphurous acid fumes are accompanied by this metal, and thus the sulphuric acid becomes contaminated. From 22 to 35 grains of arsenious acid have been found in 20 fluidounces of oil of vitriol, of English manufacture, by Dr. Gr. 0. Rees and Mr. Watson, and a still larger proportion by Mr. J. Cameron, of South Wales. To detect this impurity, the acid, previously diluted with five or six measures of dis- tilled water, must be examined by Marsh’s test. (See Acidum Arseniosum.) To separate the arsenious acid, Dr. J. Lowe recommends that the concentrated sul- PART I. Acidum Sulphur icum. phuric acid should be gently heated in a flat dish, in a place where the fumes may bp carried off, and then treated with small quantities of finely powdered chloride oi sodium, constantly stirred in with a glass rod. By the reaction between the arse- nious acid and disengaged muriatic acid, terchloride of arsenic is formed, which, being volatile, is separated by the heat. The heat is afterwards continued, to expel the excess of muriatic acid. This mode of purification introduces into the oil of vitriol a little sulphate of soda. Buchner proposes a similar process; instead of chloride of sodium, employing muriatic acid, or a stream of the acid gas. This plan does not introduce sulphate of soda into the acid; but is less convenient than that of Lowe, and, when the aqueous muriatic acid is used, tends to weaken the oil of vitriol by introducing water. Experience, however, has shown that neither plan can be entirely relied on. An excess of sulphuric acid is said to pre- vent the formation of the chloride of arsenic. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1860, p. 85 ) The sulphuric acid manufactured in the U. States, being usually made from Sicilian sulphur, seldom contains arsenic. Dupasquier states that tin is sometimes present in commercial sulphuric acid, derived from the solderings of the leaden chambers. It may be discovered by sulphuretted hydrogen, which precipitates sulphuret of tin, convertible by nitric acid into the white insoluble deutoxide of tin. Should the precipitate be the mixed sulphurets of arsenic and tin, the former would be converted by nitric acid into arsenic acid and dissolved, and the latter into insoluble deutoxide and left. As sulphuric acid is often under the standard strength, it becomes important to know how much hydrated sulphuric acid of the standard specific gravity and of dry acid is contained in an acid of any given density. The following table, drawn up by Dr. Ure, gives this information. Table of the Quantity of Hydrated Sulphuric Acid of Sp. Gr. 1-8485, and of Dry Acid, in 100 parts of Dilute Acid at Different Densities. Sp.Gr. Hyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp.Gr. Hyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp.Gr. Hyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. Sp.Gr. Hyd. Acid in 100. Dry Acid in 100. 1-8485 100 81-54 1-6520 75 61-15 1-3884 50 40-77 1-1792 25 20-38 1-8475 99 80-72 1-6415 74 60-34 1-3788 49 39-95 1-1706 24 19-57 1-8460 98 79-90 1-6321 73 59-52 1-3697 48 39-14 1-1626 23 18-75 1-8439 97 79-09 1-6204 72 58-71 1-3612 47 38-32 1-1549 22 17-94 1-8410 96 78-28 1-6090 71 57-89 1-3530 46 37-51 1-1480 21 17-12 1-8376 95 77-46 1-5975 70 57 08 1-3440 45 36-69 1-1410 20 16-31 1-8336 94 76-65 1-5868 69 56-26 1-3345 44 35-88 1-1330 19 15-49 1-8290 93 75-83 1-5760 68 55-45 1 -3255 43 35-06 1-1246 18 14-68 1-8238 92 75-02 1-5648 67 54-63 1-3165 42 34-25 1-1165 17 13-86 1-8179 91 74 20 1-5503 66 53-82 1-3080 41 33-43 1-1090 16 13-05 1-8115 90 73 39 1-5390 65 53-00 1-2999 40 32-61 1-1019 16 12-23 1-8043 89 72-57 1-5280 64 52-18 1-2913 39 31-80 1 -0953 14 11-41 1-7962 88 71-75 1-5170 63 51-37 1-2826 38 30-98 1-0887 13 10-60 1-7870 87 70 94 1-5066 62' 50-55 1-2740 37 30-17 1-0809 12 9-78 1-7774 86 70-12 1-4960 61 49-74 1-2654 36 29-35 1-0743 11 8-97 1-7673 85 69-31 1-4860 60 48-92 1-2572 35 28 54 1-0682 10 8-15 1-7570 84 68-49 1-4760 59 48-11 1-2490 34 27-72 1-0614 9 7-34 1-7465 83 67-68 1-4660 58 47-29 1 2409 33 23-91 1 0544 8 6-52 1-7360 82 66 86 1 -4560 57 46-48 1-2334 32 26-09 1-0477 7 5-71 1-7245 81 66-05 1-4460 56 45-66 1-2260 31 25-28 1 -0405 6 4-89 1-7120 80 65-23 1-4360 55 44-85 1-2184 30 24-46 1-0336 5 4-08 1 6993 79 64-42 1-4265 54 44-03 1-2108 29 23-65 1-0268 4 3-26 11-6870 78 63-60 1-4170 53 43-22 1 -2032 28 22-83 1-0206 3 2-446 1-6750 77 62-78 1-4073 52 42-40 1-1956 27 22-01 1-0140 2 1-63 11-6630 76 61-97 1-3977 51 41-58 1-1876 26 21-20 1-0074 1 0-8154 Acidum Sulphuricum. PART I, The only way to obtain pure sulphuric acid is by distillation. Owing to the high boiling point of this acid, the operation is rather precarious, in consequence of the danger of the fracture of the retort from the sudden concussions to which the boiling acid gives rise. Dr. Ure recommends that a retort of the capacity of from two to four quarts be used in distilling a pint of acid. This is connected, by means of a wide glass tube three or four feet long, with a receiver surrounded with cold water. All the vessels must be perfectly clean, and no luting employed. The retort is then gradually heated by a small furnace of charcoal, or, what is better, by means of a sand-bath, the retort being buried in the sand up to the neck. It is useful to put into the retort a few sharp-pointed pieces of glass, or slips of platinum foil, witli the view of diminishing the shocks produced by the acid vapour. The distilled product ought not to be collected until a dense gray- ish-white vapour is generated, the appearance of which is a sign that the pure concentrated acid is coming over. If this vapour should not immediately appear, it shows that the acid subjected to distillation is not of full strength; and the distilled product, until this point is attained, will be an acid water. In the dis- tillation of sulphuric acid, M. Lembertuses fragments of the mineral called quartz- ite, instead of pieces of glass or platinum foil. After a time the fragments get worn, and must be changed. The following process for purifying the acid is given in the British Pharma- copoeia. “Take of Sulphuric Acid of Commerce twelve jluidounces; Sulphate of Ammonia, in powder, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]. Having added the Sulphate of Ammonia to the Sulphuric Acid, introduce the mixture into a plain retort with a few slips of platinum foil, cover the upper part of the body of the retort with a sheet-iron hood, and distil over one-tenth of the acid into a flask. Remove this flask, and reject its contents; and, having applied a fresh flask, continue the distillation till only a fluidounce of liquid remains behind. Preserve the product in a stoppered bottle.” Br. Composition. The hydrated acid of the sp. gr. 1-845 (I-846, Br., 1-8485, Tire) consists of one eq. of dry acid 40, and one eq. of water 9 = 49. As the water acts the part of a base, the proper name of it is sulphate of water, its formula being H0,S03. The dry acid consists of one eq. of sulphur 16, and three eqs. of oxygen 24 = 40. The ordinary commercial acid (sp. gr. 1-8433) consists, according to Phillips, of one eq. of dry acid, and one and a quarter eqs. of water. The hydrated acid of Nordhauseu has a density as high as 1'89 or 1-9, and consists of two eqs. of dry acid, and one eq. of water (II0,2S03). This acid is particularly adapted to the purpose of dissolving indigo for dyeing the Saxon blue. When heated gently in a retort, connected with a dry and refrigerated receiver, dry or anhydrous sulphuric acid distils over, and the common monohydrated acid remains behind. In performing this operation, much difficulty from concussion is avoided, and the product of dry acid increased, by introducing a coil of platinum wire into the retort. The dry acid may also be obtained by the action of dry phosphoric acid on concentrated sulphuric acid, according to the method of Ch. Barreswil. The mixture must be made in a refrigerated retort, and afterwards distilled by a gen- tle heat into a refrigerated receiver. Anhydrous sulphuric acid under 64° is in the form of small colourless crystals, resembling asbestos. It"is tenacious, dif- ficult to cut, and may be moulded in the fingers like wax, without acting on them. Exposed to the air, it emits a thick opaque vapour of an acid smell. Above 64° it is a liquid, very nearly of the density 2. Medical Properties. Sulphuric acid is tonic, antiseptic, and refrigerant. In- ternally it is always administered in a dilute state. For its medical properties in this state, the reader is referred to the title, Acidum Sulphuricum Dilutum. Externally it is sometimes employed as a caustic; but, from its liquid form, it is very inconvenient for that purpose. A plan, however, has been proposed by Prof Simpson by which it becomes very manageable. This consists in mixing it with TART I. Acidum Sulphuricum.—Acidum Tartaricum. 59 dried and powdered sulphate of zinc sufficient to give it a pasty consistence. When mixed with saffron to the consistence of a ductile paste, Yelpeau found it to form a convenient caustic, not liable to spread or be absorbed, and producing an eschar which is promptly detached. It is used also as an ointment, mixed with lard, in the proportion of a drachm to an ounce, in swellings of the knee-joint and other affections. Charpie, corroded by it, is a good application to gangrene. Toxicological Properties. The symptoms of poisoning by this acid are the following: — Burning heat in the throat and stomach, extreme fetidness of the breath, nausea and excessive vomitings of black or reddish matter, excruciating pains in the bowels, difficulty of breathing, extreme anguish, a feeling of cold on the skin, great prostration, constant tossing, convulsions, and death. Sometimes there is no pain whatever in the stomach ; sensibility being apparently destroyed by the violence of the caustic action. The intellectual faculties remain unim- paired. Frequently the uvula, palate, tonsils, and other parts of the fauces are covered with black or white sloughs. The treatment consists in the administra- tion of large quantities of magnesia, or, if this be not at hand, of solution of soap. The safety of the patient depends upon the greatest promptitude in the applica- tion of the antidotes. After the poison has been neutralized, mucilaginous and other bland drinks must be taken freely. According to Dr. Geoghegan, the acid may be detected, after death, in the blood and the parenchymatous viscera, espe- cially the liver. It is found, not as a sulphate, but combined severally with the colouring matter and tissues. The holes burnt in linen by sulphuric acid, so long as the texture is undis- turbed, are distinguished from those produced by red-hot coals, by the paste- like characters of the edges of the former. (Masclika, of Prague.) Uses in the Arts. Sulphuric acid is more used in the arts than any other acid. It is employed to obtain many of the other acids; to extract soda from common salt; to make alum and sulphate of iron, when these salts command a good price, and the acid is cheap; to dissolve indigo ; to prepare skins for tanning; to pre- pare phosphorus, chlorinated lime, sulphate of magnesia, &c. The arts of bleach- ing and dyeing cause its principal consumption. Pharnx. Uses. In preparing Acidum Aceticum Glaciale, Br.; Acidum Citri- cum, Br.; Acidum Hydrochloricum, Br.; Acidum Hydrocyanicum Dilutum; Acidum Nitricum, Br.; Acidum Tartaricum, Br.; Acidum Yalerianicum, U.S.; Atlther; Argenti Cyauidum, U. S.; Chloroformum, Br.; Chloroformum Purifi- catum, U. S.; Collodium, U. S.; FerriOxidum Magneticum, Br.; Ferrum Redac- tum, Br.; Hydrargyri Chloridum Corrosivum, U. S.; Hydrargyri Chloridum Mite, U. S.; Hydrargyri Cyanidum, U. S.; Liquor Sodse Chloratae, Br.; Sodas Phos- phas; Sodae Yalerianas, U. S.; Spiritus iEtheris Nitrosi, Br.; Yeratria, U. S. Off-Prep. Acidum Sulphuricum Aromaticum; Acidum Sulphuricum Dilu- tum; Acidum Suiphurosum; Aluminae Sulphas, U. S.; Atropiae Sulphas, U. S.; Beberiae Sulphas, Br.; Cadmii Sulphas, U. S.; Ferri Sulphas; Ferri Sulphas Exsiccata, Br.; Ferri Sulphas Granulata, Br.; Hydrargyri Sulphas, Br.; Hy- drargyri Sulphas Flava, U. S.; Liquor Ferri Subsulphatis, U. S.; Liquor Ferri Tcrsulphatis, U. S.; Oleum JBthereum U. S.; Quiniae Sulphas, U. S.; Zinci Sul- phas, Br. B. ACIDUM TARTARICUM. US, Br. Tartaric Acid. “An Acid, 2HO,C8H4O10, obtained from the Acid Tartrate of Potash.” Br. Ackle tartrique, Fr.; Weinsteinsaure, Germ..; Acido tartarico, Ital., Span. Tartaric acid is placed, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, in the Materia Medica list, as an article to be purchased from the manufacturing chemist. In the Br. Acidum Tartamcum. PART I. Pharmacopoeia a process is given for its preparation. It is extracted from tar- lav, a peculiar substance which concretes on the inside of wine-casks, being deposited there during the fermentation of the wine. Tartar, when purified and reduced to powder, is the cream of tartar of the shops, and consists of two eqs. of tartaric acid united to omToTpotassa. (See Potassee Bitarlras.) The follow- ing is the British process. “Take of Acid Tartrate of Potash forty-five ounces [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Water a sufficiency ; Prepared Chalk twelve ounces and a /ia(/[avoird. ]; Chlo- ride of Calcium thirteen ounces and a half [avoird.]; Sulphuric Acid thirteen fiuidounces. Boil the Tartrate of Potash with two gallons [Imperial measure] of the Water, and add gradually the Chalk, constantly stirring. When the effer- vescence has ceased, add the Chloride of Calcium dissolved in two pints [Imp. meas.] of the Water. When the tartrate of lime has subsided pour off the liquid, and wash the tartrate with Distilled Water until it is rendered tasteless. Pour the Sulphuric Acid, first diluted with three pints [Imp. meas.] of the Water, on tl.e tartrate of lime, mix thoroughly, boil for half an hour with repeated stirring, and filter through calico. Evaporate the filtrate at a gentle heat until it ac- quires the sp.gr. of 121, allow it to cool, and then separate and reject the crystals of sulphate of lime which have formed. Again evaporate the clear liquor till a film forms on its surface, and allow it to cool and crystallize. Lastly purify the crystals by solution, filtration (if necessary), and recrystallization.” Br. Tartaric acid was first obtained in a separate state by Scheele in 1710. The process consists in saturating the excess of acid in bitartrate of potassa or cream or tartar with carbonate of lime, and decomposing the resulting insoluble tar- trate of lime by sulphuric acid, which precipitates in combination with the lime, and liberates' the tartaric acid. The equivalent quantities are one eq. of bitar- trate, and one of carbonate of lime. The process, when thus conducted, furnishes the second equivalent, or excess of acid only of the bitartrate. The other equi- valent may be procured, as in the British process, by decomposing the neutral tartrate of potassa, remaining in the solution after the precipitation of the tar- trate of lime, by chloride of calcium in excess. By double decomposition, chlo- ride of potassium will be formed in solution, and a second portion of tartrate of lime will precipitate, which may be decomposed by sulphuric acid together with the first portion. The process, when thus conducted, will, of course, furnish twice as much tartaric acid, as when the excess of acid only is saturated and set free. Preparation on the Large Scale. The process pursued on the large scale is different from that above given. The decompositions are effected in a wooden vessel, closed at the top, called a generator, of the capacity of about 2000 gal- lons, and furnished with an exit-pipe for carbonic acid, and with pipes, entering the sides of the generator, for the admission of steam and of cold water respec- tively. Into the generator, about one-fourth filled with water, 1500 pounds of washed chalk (carbonate of lime) are introduced, and the whole is heated by a jet of steam, and thoroughly mixed by an agitator, until a uniform mass is ob- tained. About two tons of tartar are now introduced by degrees, and thor- oughly mixed. The carbonate of lime is decomposed, the carbonic acid escapes by the exit-pipe, and the lime unites with the excess of tartaric acid to form tartrate of lime, which precipitates; while the neutral tartrate of potassa re- mains in solution. The next step is to decompose the tartrate of potassa, so as to convert its tartaric acid into tartrate of lime. This is effected by the addi- tion of sulphate of lime in the state of paste, which, by double decomposition, forms a fresh portion of tartrate of lime, while sulphate of potassa remains in solution. The solution of sulphate of potassa, when clear, is drawn off into suitable reservoirs, and the remaining tartrate of lime is washed with several charges of cold water,- the washings being preserved. The tartrate of lime, mixed with sufficient water is now decomposed by the requisite quantity ot PART I. Acidum Tartaricum. sulphuric acid, with the effect of forming sulphate of lime, and liberating the tartaric acid, which remains in solution. The whole is now run off into a wooden back, lined with lead, furnished with a perforated false bottom, and covered throughout with stout twilled flannel. Through this the solution of tartaric acid filters, and the filtered liquor passes through a pipe, leading from the bot- tom of the back, to suitable reservoirs. The sulphate of lime is then washed until it is tasteless, and the whole acid liquor is evaporated, in order to crystal- lize. The evaporation is effected in wooden vessels, lined with lead, by means of steam circulating in coils of lead-pipe, care being taken that the heat does not exceed 165°. The vacuum-pan is used with advantage in evaporating the acid solution; as it furnishes the means of concentration at a lower tempera- ture. When the acid liquor has attained the sp. gr. of about T5, it is drawn off into sheet-lead, cylindrical, crystallizing vessels, capable of holding 500 pounds of the solution. These crystallizers are placed in a warm situation, and, in the course of three or four days, a crop of crystals is produced in each, averaging 200 pounds. These crystals being somewhat coloured, are purified by redissolv- ing them in hot water. The solution is then digested with purified animal char- coal, filtered, again concentrated, and crystallized. The crystals, having been washed and drained, are finally dried on wooden trays, lined with thin sheet- lead, placed in a room heated by steam. The mother-liquors of the first crys- tallization are again concentrated, and the crystals obtained, purified by animal charcoal as before. When the residuary liquors are no longer crystallizable, they are saturated with chalk, and converted into tartrate of lime, to be added to the product of a new operation. In order to obtain fine crystals of tartaric acid, it is necessary to use a slight excess of sulphuric acid in decomposing the tartrate of lime. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Feb. 1851.) The merit of this process consists in the greater economy of sulphate of lime over chloride of calcium for decomposing the tartrate of potassa. Dr. Price, of England, has made some improvements in the above process, which are described, in detail, in the London Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions (Jan. 1854, p. 315). The main point in his improvements is to convert the crude tartar into tartrate of potassa and ammonia by means of ara- moniacal liquor, which gives a soluble double salt, comparatively free from organic colouring matter and other impurities, and, therefore, favourable for conversion into tartrate of lime by the usual methods. Mr. Pontifex, of Eng- land, has obtained a patent for an improvement in manufacturing tartaric acid, which consists in evaporating in vacuo. {Ibid., Feb. 1851, p. 439.) Liebig has succeeded in preparing tartaric acid artificially by the oxidation of sugar of milk, and other substances, by nitric acid; and the resulting pro- duct has been found to be identical in all respects, even in its influence on polarized light, with the acid derived from grapes. Properties. Tartaric acid is a white crystallized solid, in the form of irregu- lar six-sided prisms. Sometimes two opposite sides of the prism become very much enlarged, so as to cause the crystals to present the appearance of tables. As found in the shops, it is in the form of a fine white powder, prepared by pul- verizing the crystals. It is unalterable in the air, and possesses a strong acid taste, which becomes agreeable when the acid is sufficiently diluted with water. It is soluble in a little less than its weight of cold water, and in half its weight of boiling water. It is also soluble in alcohol. A weak solution undergoes spontaneous decomposition by keeping, becoming covered with a mouldy pelli- cle. In the form of crystals it always contains combined water, from which it cannot be separated without the substitution of a base. In uniting with bases, it has a remarkable tendency to form double salts, several of which constitute important medicines. It combines with several of the vegetable organic alka- lies, so as to form salts. It is distinguished from all other acids by forming a 62 Acidum Tartaricum. PAKT I. crystalline precipitate, consisting of bitartrate of potassa, when added to a neutral salt of that alkali. Its most usual impurity is sulphuric acid, which may be de- tected by the solution affording, with acetate of lead, a precipitate only partially soluble in nitric acid. When incinerated with red oxide of mercury, it leaves no residuum, or a mere trace. The British Pharmacopoeia directs that it should give no precipitate with solution of sulphate of lime, showing the absence of racemic and oxalic acids. Solution of oxalate of ammonia would detect lime, sometimes present in minute proportion, by causing a precipitate. Its solution should not be affected by sulphuretted hydrogen. “One hundred grains saturate 1335 grains of bicarbonate of potassa.” U.S. “Seventy-five grains dissolved in water require for saturation 100 measures of the volumetric solution of soda ” Br. Tartaric acid is incompatible with salifiable bases and their carbonates; with salts of potassa, with which it produces a crystalline precipitate of bitartrate; and with the salts of lime and lead, with which it also forms precipitates. It consists, when dry, of four eqs. of carbon 24, two of hydrogen 2, and five of oxygen 40 = 66; and, when crystallized, of one eq. of dry acid 66, and one of water 9 = 75. But, if we agree, with the chemists who regard it as bibasic, these numbers must be doubled, and its formula given, as in the British Pharmaco- poeia, C8II4O10, or, in its crystallized state, 2HO,C8H4O10. In this view, its ordi- nary salts, whether with one or two bases, consist of one eq. of acid and two of base; and in the acid or bitartrates, one eq. of base is replaced by one of water, as in the bitartrate of potassa or cream of tartar, the constitution of which would be expressed by the formula KO,HO + C8H4O10. -.jRacemic acid, otherwise called paratartaric or uric acid, is isomeric with tartaric acid. Tt exists, naturally, in small proportion, in the juice of grapes, growing in particular localities, and was obtained artificially, in 1853, by M. Pasteur. By combination with certain organic alkalies, M. Pasteur has re- solved racemic acid into two acids which form distinct salts with the alkali. The acids in these salts have the power of turning the plane of polarization of po- larized light in contrary directions, one to the right, the other to the left, which has caused them to be distinguished as dextro- and Isevo-tartaric acids. Ordi- nary tartaric acid is dextro-tartaric acid, which may be converted into racemic acid, by exposing it, in the form of tartrate of cinchonia, to a heat of 338° for several hours. At the same time, a portion of tartaric acid is formed, which has no action on polarized light, and which is, therefore, called inactive tartaric acid. This acid, like racemic acid, is resolvable into dextro- and Isevo-tartaric acids. Accordingly, we have four isomeric tartaric acids—dextro-tartaric acid (ordinary tartaric acid); Isevo-tartaric acid; racemic acid, consisting of dextro- and Isevo-tartaric acids; and inactive tartaric acid. Racemic acid differs from ordinary tartaric acid in being much less soluble in water, and in its want of ac- tion on polarized light. When crystallized it contains one eq. more of water than tartaric acid. The racemates differ from the tartrates in their crystalline form, and in their less solubility in water. Medical Properties. Tartaric acid, being cheaper than citric acid, forms, when dissolved in water and sweetened, a good substitute for lemonade. It is much used in medicine to form acid refrigerant drinks and effervescing draughts. It is also employed in making soda powders and Seidlitz powders, preparations now officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Pulveres Effervescentes and Pul- veres Effervescentes Aperientes, Part II.) Tartaric acid, dried by a gentle heat, and then mixed with bicarbonate of soda, in the proportion of thirty-five grains of the acid to forty of the bicarbonate, forms a good effervescing powder, the dose of which is a teaspoonful, stirred in a tumbler of water. The powder is generally directed to be kept in well-stopped vials; but Prof. Otto has shown that this direction tends to spoil rather than to preserve it, by preventing the evapora- tion of some water of crystallization which is set free by a commencing chemical PART I. Aconiti Folium.—Aconiti Radix. 63 reaction. A better plan is to keep the powder in ordinary boxes. On this subject see remarks by Mr. J. M. Maisch, published in the Proceedings of the Ameri- can Pharmaceutical Association (A. D. 1856, p. 52). The neutralizing power of tartaric acid is about the same as that of citric acid. Tartaric acid, in an over- dose, acts as a poison. After death, it may be detected in theTfloocTand liver, froin which it should be extracted by absolute alcohol, to avoid the error of mistaking the tartrates for it. Off. Prep. Ferri et Ammonise Tartras, TJ. S.; Pulveres Effervescentes, TJ. S f Pulveres Effervescentes Aperientes, U. S. B. ACONITI FOLIUM. U.S. Aconite Leaf. The Leaves of Aconitum Napellus. U. S. Off. Syn. ACONITUM. Aconitum Napellus. Monkshood. The fresh leaves and flowering tops, gathered when about one-third of the flowers are expanded. Br. ACONITI RADIX. U.S.,Br. The root of Aconitum Napellus. TJ. S. The root dried; collected in the winter or early spring before the leaves have appeared. Br. Aconit, Fr.; Eisenkut, Monchskappe, Germ.; Aconito Napello, Ital.; Aconito, Span. Aconitum. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Trigynia. — Nat. Ord. Ranuneulaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Petals five, the highest arched. Nectaries two, pe- duncled, recurved. Pods three or five. Willd. The plants belonging to this genus are herbaceous, with divided leaves, and violet or yellow flowers, disposed in spikes, racemes, or panicles. In the French Codex three species are recognised as officinal, A. Anthora. A. Cammarum, and A. Napellus. The TJ. S. and British Pharmacopoeias unite at present in ac- knowledging only A. Napellus. There has been much difference of opinion as to the plant originally employed by Storck. Formerly thought to be A. Napel- lus, it was afterwards generally believed to be A. neamonlanum of Willdenow, and by De Candolle was determined to be a variety of his A. paniculatum, de- signated as ,Storckianum. But, according to Geiger, A. neomontanuni is pos- sessed of little acrimony; and Dr. Christison states that A. paniculatum, raised at Edinburgh from seeds sent by De Candolle himself, was quite destitute of that property. Neither of these, therefore, could have been Storck’s plant, which is represented as extraordinarily acrid. It is, however, of little consequence which was used by Storck; as many of the species possess similar virtues, and one is frequently substituted for another in the shops. Those are probably the best which are most acrid. Among these certainly is A. Lycoctonum. Dr. Christison found A. Napellus, A. Sinense. A. Tauricum, A. uncinatum, and A. ferox to have intense acrimony; andTleiger states that he has found none equal, in this respect, to A. Napellus. This species is said to yield aconitia most largely. (Bepert. de Pharm.fNov. 1859.) A. uncinatum is the only species indigenous in this country. Most of the others are natives of the Alpine regions of Europe and Siberia. Those employed in medicine appear to be indiscriminately called by English writers wolfsbane or monkshood. The root of A. heterophyllum is said to be used as an antiperiodic in Upper India (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xvi. 312), and that of A. Japonicum as a local anaesthetic in China, as also for poisoning arrows {Ibid., Nov. 1861, p. 263). Aconite Root. 64 Aconiti Folium.—Aconiti Radix. PART I. Aconitum Napellus. Linn. Flor. Suec. ed. IT55, p. 168.—A. neuberaenseZ De Candolle, Jt'rodrvm. i. 62.—A. variabile neuberaense. Hayne, JJarstel. und Beschreib. &c., xii. 14. This isTa perennial herbaceous plant, with a spindle- shaped, tapering root, seldom exceeding at top the thickness of the finger, three or four inches or more in length, brownish externally, whitish and fleshy within, and sending forth numerous long, thick, fleshy fibres. When the plant is in full growth, there are usually two roots joined together, of which the older is dark • brown and supports the stem, while the younger is of a light yellowish-brown, and is destined to furnish the stem of the following year, the old root decaying. The stem is erect, round, smooth, leafy, usually simple, and from two to six or even eight feet high. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, divided almost to the base, from two to four inches in diameter, deep-green upon their upper surface, light-green beneath, somewhat rigid, and more or less smooth and shining on both sides. Those on the lower part of the stem have long footstalks and five or seven divisions; the upper, short footstalks and three or five divisions. The divisions are wedge form, with two or three lobes, which extend.nearly or quite to the middle. The lobes are cleft or toothed, and the lacinige or teeth are linear or linear-lanceolate and pointed. The flowers are of a dark violet-blue colour, large and beautiful, and are borne at the summit of the stem upon a thick, simple straight, erect, spike-like raceme, beneath which, in the cultivated plant, several smaller racemes arise from the axils of the upper leaves. Though without calyx, they have two small calycinal stipules, situated on the peduncle within a few lines of the flower. The petals are five, the upper helmet-shaped and beaked, nearly hemispherical, open or closed, the two lateral roundish and internally hairy, the two lower oblong-oval. They enclose two pediceled nectaries, of which the spur is capitate, and the lip bifid and revolute. The fruit consists of three, four, or five pod-like capsules. The plant is abundant in the mountain forests of France, Switzerland, and Germany. It is also cultivated in the gardens of Europe, and has been intro- duced into this country as an ornamental flower. All parts of it are acrid and poisonous. The leaves and root are used. The leaves should be collected when the flowers begin to appear, or shortly before. After the fruit has formed, they are less efficacious. The root is much more active than the leaves; and an extract from the latter is said to have only one-twentieth of the strength of one made from the former. It should be gathered in autumn or winter after the leaves have fallen, and is not perfect until the second year. It has been mistakenly substituted for horseradish root, as a condiment, with fatal effect; but the possibility of such an event has only to be known to be avoided. The seeds also are acrid. The wild plant is said to be more active than the cultivated. (Schroff.) Prof. Wm. Proc- ter has found the roots of the plant cultivated in this country richer in the active alkaline principle than the imported roots; having obtained as much as 0 85 per cent, from the former. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Association, A. I). 1860.) Properties. The fresh leaves have a faint narcotic odour, most sensible when they are rubbed. Their taste is at first bitterish and herbaceous, afterwards burning and acrid, with a feeling of numbness and tingling on the inside of the lips, tongue, and fauces, which is very durable, lasting sometimes many hours. When long chewed, they inflame the tongue. The dried leaves have a similar taste, but the acrid impression commences later. Their sensible properties and medicinal activity are impaired by long keeping. They should be of a green colour, and free from mustiness. The root has a feeble, earthy smell. Though sweetish at first, it has afterwards the same effect as the leaves upon the mouth and fauces. It shrinks much in drying, and becomes darker, but does not lose its acrimonjr. Those parcels, whether of leaves or roots, should always be re- jected which are destitute of this property. The analysis of aconite, though attempted by several chemists, has not been satisfactorily accomplished. Bucholz part 1. Aconiti Folium.—Aconiti Radix. obtained from the fresh herb of A. neomontanum, resin, wax, gum, albumen, ex tractive, lignin, malate and citrate of lime and other saline matters, besides 83'33 per cent, of water. During the bruising of the herb, he experienced headache, vertigo, &c., though water distilled from it produced no poisonous effect. It has been rendered probable by Geiger and Hesse, that there are two active prin- ciples in aconite; one easily destructible, upon which the acrimony depends, the other less acrid, alkaline, and capable of exerting a powerful narcotic influ- ence. For the latter the name of aronitin or aconitia has been proposed. Hesse obtained it from the dried leaves by a process similar to that employed in pro- curing atropia. (See Atropia, Part II.) The IT. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias give a process for its preparation. (See Aconitia, Part II.) Hubschmann has found in impure commercial aconitia a small proportion of another alkaloid which he names napellina * Messrs T. and H. Smith, of Edinburgh, have recently an- nounced the ctlscbvery of a new alkaloid in the root, which they propose to name aeonella, and which bears so close a resemblance to narcotina as to suggest the supposition that the two are identical. {Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Jan. 1864, p. 317.)f Peschier discovered a peculiar acid in aconite, which he called aconitic acid. The root contains also mannite and a fatty matter soluble in alcohol. Medical Properties and Uses. Aconite was well known to the ancients as a *_Navellina. To obtain this principle, Hubschmann treats the impure aconitia with the least quantity of ether necessary to dissolve the pure alkaloid, dissolves the residue in alco- hol, filters the solution, adds acetate of lead so long as it produces a precipitate, again filters, and, having separated the lead by sulphuretted hydrogen and subsequent filtration, evapo- rates the alcohol, adds an excess of carbonate of potassa, evaporates to dryness, treats the residue with alcohol, passes the solution through animal charcoal, and again evaporates to dryness. The resulting napellina is in the form of a white powder, of a bitter and after- wards burning taste, of decided alkaline properties, but slightly soluble in ether, and not, like aconitia, precipitated from its aqueous solution by ammonia. It contains nitrogen. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx. 399.)—Note to the twelfth edition. f Aeonella. The Messrs. Smith obtain this alkaloid in the following manner. The juice of the fresh root is evaporated to a soft extract, which is exhausted by officinal alcohol. The alcoholic liquid is treated with lime in the proportion of 1-5 per cent, of the root em- ployed. To the liquid, previously filtered, sulphuric acid is gradually added till a precipi- tate ceases to be produced. After filtration, the alcohol is distilled off, and the watery resi- due, after separation of a copious dark-green fatty matter, is again filtered. The liquid is now very acid; and it is through this acidity that it retains the aeonella; so that all that is required to separate the alkaloid is to neutralize the acid. For this purpose carbonate of soda is added, at first freely while there is brisk effervescence, but at last gradually, with constant stirring, till the liquid is nearly, but not quite neutralized, when it is to be set aside for a time. The aconitia, -which has hitherto accompanied the aeonella, remains in the solution provided it be not alkaline, while the latter alkaloid is deposited partially crystallized. After a day or two, it is to be removed, and may be purified by repeated solu- tion in hot alcohol, with the addition of animal charcoal. It is deposited from the alcoholic solution on cooling. Aeonella is thus obtained in snow-white tufts of acicular crystals, which are without taste, though bitter in solution, nearly insoluble in pure water, but very soluble in water acidulated by any acid, soluble in 300 parts of cold and 11-4 parts of boiling alcohol of 0-840, moderately soluble in ether, much more so in acetic ether, and remarkably so in chloroform. It is distinguished by an extraordinary facility of crystallization. It forms salts with the acids, of which only the muriate is crystallizable. It is precipitated from its acidulated solution by tincture of iodine. Tannic acid precipitates its oxalate but not its muriate. Its solution in acids, even in contact with an excess of the base, reddens litmus, though the alkaloid itself restores the blue of litmus paper feebly reddened by acids. It is not poisonous; the Messrs. Smith having given 15 grains to a cat without apparent incon- venience. In all these points it resembles narcotina, and its combining number was found virtually to be the same. Hence the Messrs. Smith, as stated in the text, are disposed to eonsider it identical with that alkaloid. An important practical consideration is that aeonella probably often constitutes an unin- tentional adulteration of aconitia, being precipitated along with it in its preparation. Hence In some degree may be accounted for the frequent relative weakness of the aconitia of the shops. [Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Jan. 1864, p. 317.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 66 Aconiti Folium.—Aconiti Radix. PART I. powerful poison, but was first employed as a medicine by Baron Storck, of Vi- enna, wiiose experiments with it were published in the year 1762. In moderate it has been said to excite the circulation, and to increase the perspiratory and urinary discharges; but these effects are doubtful, and certainly not constant. Schroff, however, states that it generally increases the secretion of urine. Ac- cording to Dr. Fleming, it is a powerful sedative to the nervous system, reducing also the force of the circulation. In moderate doses, it produces warmth in the stomach and sometimes nausea, general warmth of the body, numbness and tin- gling in the lips and fingers, muscular weakness, diminished force and frequency of the pulse, and diminished frequency of respiration. From larger doses all these effects are experienced in an increased degree. The stomach is more nau- seated; the numbness and tingling extend over the body; headache, vertigo, and dimness of vision occur; the patient complains occasionally of severe neuralgic pains; the pulse, respiration, and muscular strength are greatly reduced; and a state of general prostration may be induced, from which the patient may not quite recover in less than two or three days. The effects of remedial doses begin to be felt in twenty or thirty minutes, are at their height in an hour or two, and continue with little abatement from three to five hours. In poisonous doses, besides the characteristic tingling in the mouth and else- where, aconite occasions burning heat of the oesophagus and stomach, thirst, vio- lent nausea, vomiting, purging, severe gastric and intestinal spasms, headache, dimness of vision with contracted or expanded pupils, numbness or paralysis of the limbs, diminished sensibility in general, stiffness or spasm of the mus- cles, great prostration, pallid countenance, cold extremities, an extremely feeble pulse, and death in a few hours, sometimes preceded by delirium, stupor, or con- vulsions. All these effects are not experienced in every case; but there is no one of them which has not been recorded as having occurred in one or more instances. Dissection reveals inflammation of the stomach and bowels, and engorgement of the brain and lungs. Pereira states that, when dogs are opened immediately after death from aconite, no pulsations of the heart are visible. Life may usu- ally be saved by a timely and thorough evacuation of the stomach, and the use of stimulant remedies internally and externally; and it is wonderful how rapidly the patient passes from a state of imminent danger to perfect health. Experi- ments upon inferior animals appear to have demonstrated a physiological antag- onism between aconite and nux vomica, or of their two alkaloids respectively, of which advantage may be taken in treating the poisonous effects of these sub- stances. In a case of extreme poisoning from tincture of aconite in a child, the tincture of nux vomica was administered with the apparent effect of saving life. (Hanson, Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., Sept. 26, 1861.) But reliance should not be placed on this antidote to the exclusion of emetic and stimulant measures. Applied to the skin, aconite occasions heat and prickling or tingling, followed by numbness, and, if in contact with a wound, produces its peculiar constitutional effects. Applied to the eye, it causes contraction of the pupil. In relation to its mode of action, it appears to be locally irritant, and, at the same time, en- tering the system, to operate powerfully on the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves, directly diminishing their power, and thus producing, to a greater or less extent, paralysis both of sensation and motion. The heart also feels this paralyzing in- fluence, and hence proceeds the great depression of the pulse under the full action of the medicine. Aconite has been employed in rheumatism, neuralgia, gout, anginose and ca- tarrhal affections, scrofula, phthisis, metastatic abscess and other cases of puru- lent infection, secondary syphilis, carcinoma, certain cutaneous diseases, hooping- cough, amaurosis, deafness, paralysis, epilepsy, intermittent fever, dropsies, and hypertrophy of the heart. It has long enjoyed, in Germany, a high reputation as a remedy in rheumatism; and has recently come into great vogue elsewhere PART i. Aconiti Radix.—Adeps. 67 in the treatment of that disease, especially in its chronic land neuralgic forms By some practitioners it is considered as one of tne most effectual remedies in neuralgia, in which it is used both internally and as a local application. Dr Fleming considers it highly useful as an antiphlogistic remedy, and especially applicable to cases of active cerebral congestion or inflammation; while it i» contraindicated in the headache of anaemia, and in all cases attended with a torpid or paralytic condition of the muscular system. Cazenave has found it very useful in cutaneous eruptions with extreme sensibility of the skin; and it is said sometimes to check excessive sweating. It may be administered in powder, extract, or tincture. The dose of the powdered leaves is one or two grains, of the extract from half a grain to a grain, of the tincture of the leaves twenty or thirty drops, to be repeated twice or three times a day, and gradually increased till the effects of the medicine are experienced. The preparation now most employed is probably the strong tincture of the root, a process for which is given in the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, under the name of Tinctura Aconiti Radicis. Of this, from five to ten drops may be given three times'll day, antTgradually increased till its effects become obvious. It is very important to distinguish between the tincture of the leaves and the strong tincture of the root just referred to.* Few patients will bear at first more than ten minims of the latter. Aconite may be used externally in the form of the saturated tincture of the root, of ex- tract mixed with lard, of a plaster or liniment, or of aconilia. (See Extraction Aconiti, Extractum Aconiti Alcoholicum, and Aconitia.) The tincture may be applied by means of a soft piece of sponge, fastened to the end of a stick. Off. Prep, of the Leaves. Extractum Aconiti, Br.; Extractum Aconiti Alco- holicum, TJ. S.; Tinctura Aconiti Folii, TJ. S. Off. Prep, of the Root. Aconitia; Linimentum Aconiti, Br.; Tinctura Aco- niti, Br.; Tinctura Aconiti Radicis, TJ. S. W. ADEPS. TJ.S. Lard. The prepared fat of Sus Scrofa. Lard should be free from saline matter. Be- low the temperature of 90°, it has the consistence of a soft solid. U. S. Off. Syn. ADEPS PRJ3PARATUS. Hog’s fat, deprived of its membranes and purified by heat. Br. . Axungia. Lat.; Axonge, Graisse, Saindoux, Fr.; Schweineschmalz, Germ.; Grasso di porco, Lardo, Ital.; Manteca de puerco, Lardo, Span. Lard is the prepared fat of the hog. The Br. Pharmacopoeia gives a process for its preparation; but in this country it is purchased by the druggists already prepared. The adipose matter of the omentum and mesentery, and that around the kidneys, are usually employed; though the subcutaneous fat is said to afford lard of a firmer consistence. In the crude state it contains membranes and ves- sels, and is more or less contaminated-with blood, from all which it must be freed before it can be fit for use. For this purpose, the fat, having been deprived as far as possible by the hand of membranous matter, is cut into pieces, washed with water till the liquor ceases to be coloured, and then melted, usually with a small portion of water, in a copper or iron vessel, over a slow fire.t The heat * Physicians should be very careful, when prescribing, to designate by name which of these tinctures they intend, whether that of the root, or that of the leaves; as serious mis- takes may otherwise occur; and apothecaries should be scrupulous in putting up the pre- paration of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia when the tincture of the root is prescribed, and not that of Dr. Fleming, which is stronger than the officinal. (Note to the tenth edition.) f Prof. Procter recommends the following method of operating. After careful removal of the membranes and adhering flesh, the crude lard is to be cut into small pieces, malax- ated witb successive portions of cold water until this remains clear, and then heated moder- 68 Adeps. PART I. is continued till all the moisture is evaporated, which may be known by the transparency of the melted fat, and the absence of crepitation when a small por- tion of it is thrown into the fire. Care should be taken that the heat is not too great; as otherwise the lard might be partially decomposed, acquire a yellow colour, and become acrid. This may be guarded against by using a water-bath in melting the lard. The process is completed by straining the liquid through linen, and pouring it into suitable vessels, in which it concretes upon cooling. Lard may be rendered quite inodorous by melting it, when fresh, by means of a salt-water bath, adding a little alum or common salt, continuing the heat till a scum rises, which is to be skimmed off, and, after the lard has concreted, sepa- rating the saline matter by washing it thoroughly with water. For a particular account of the process, see the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxviii. 176). The following is the process of the British Pharmacopeia for preparing lard. "Take of the internal Fat of the abdomen of the Hog, perfectly fresh, fourteen pounds. Remove as much as possible of the membranes, cut the fat into small pieces, and liquefy it over a water bath at a boiling heat; strain through fine linen, again heat it on the water bath, stirring continually until it becomes clear, and entirely free from water. Keep it in a stone jar.” Br. Lard, as offered for sale, often contains common salt, which renders it unfit for pharmaceutic purposes. This may be detected, when the quantity is insuffi- cient to be sensible to the taste, by means of nitrate of silver, which will pro- duce a precipitate of chloride of silver with water in which the salted lard has been boiled, after cooling and filtration. To free it from this impurity, it may be melted with twice its weight of boiling water, the mixture well agitated and set aside to cool, and the fat then separated. American lard is said to be adul- terated, in England, with water, starch, and a small proportion of alum and quicklime, which render it whiter, but unfit for medical use. Considerable quan- tities of lard have been imported into France from the United States, adultera- ted with 25 per cent, of a jelly-like substance supposed to be extracted from Irish moss. This was separated by treating the lard with boiling water. {Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., Juin, 1855, p. 455.) Properties. Lard is white, inodorous, with little taste, of a soft consistence at ordinary temperatures, fusible at about 100° F., insoluble in water, partially soluble in alcohol, entirely so in ether and the volatile oils, dissolved and de- composed by the stronger acids, and converted into soap by reaction with the alkalies. When melted, it readily unites with wax and resins. According to Braconnot, it contains, in 100 parts, 62 of olein or the liquid principle of oils, and 38 of stearin or the concrete principle. But M. Le Canu ascertained that the stearin of Braconnot consists of two distinct substances, differing in fusi- bility and solubility. For the least fusible of these he retained the name of sjjeaxin, and to the other applied that of nvarqarin, from its resemblance to the principle of the same name in vegetable oils. Most fats and oils of animal ori- gin are composed of these ingredients, upon the relative proportion of which their consistence respectively depends. The liquid and concrete principles may be obtained separate by the action of boiling alcohol, which deposits the latter on cooling, and yields the former upon evaporation. Another method is to com- press fat, or oil congealed by cold, between the folds of bibulous paper. The olein is absorbed by the paper, and may be separated by compression under water; the stearin and margarin remain. Olein, stearin, and margarin are now generally considered as compounds re- spectively of oleic, stearic, and margaric acids with glycerin and water. For an ately, in a tinned vessel, until the melted fat becomes perfectly clear and anhydrous. Lastly, it. is to be strained into earthen pots, being occasionally stirred as it cools; ar.d the pots should be securely covered with waxed or varnished paper, and kept in a cool, iry nellar [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxv. 114.)—Note to the twelfth edition. Adeps.—Alcohol. 69 PART 1. account of these principles, see Olea FLra. Yery good candles are made out os the concrete constituents of lard; and the liquid principle or olein is extensivel) employed for burning in lamps, and other purposes in the arts. Vast quantities of it are prepared in Cincinnati, Ohio, and much is exported. In France it ia said to be largely used for adulterating olive oil. Exposed to the air, lard absorbs oxygen and becomes rancid. It should, therefore, be kept in well-closed vessels, or procured fresh when wanted for use. In the rancid state, it irritates the skin, and sometimes exercises an injurious reaction on substances mixed with it. Thus, the ointment of iodide of potassium, which is white when prepared with fresh lard, is said to be more or less yellow when the lard employed is rancid. Rancidity in lard and other fats is prevented by digesting them with benzoin, or poplar buds. (See Unguenta.) Medical Properties and Uses. Lard is emollient, and is occasionally em- ployed by itself in frictions, or in connection with poultices to preserve their soft consistence; but its chief use is in pharmacy as an ingredient of ointments and cerates. It is frequently added to laxative enemata. Off. Prep. Ceratum Adipis, U. S.; Unguentum Adipis, U. S.; Unguentum Simplex, Br. W. ALCOHOL. U.S. Alcohol. Spirit, of the specific gravity 0-835. U.S. Off. Syn. SPIRITUS RECTIFICATUS. Rectified Spirit. Alcohol, C4H60, HO, with 16 per cent, of water, of the sp.gr. 0-838. Br. spirit, Spirit of wine; Alcohol, Esprit de vin, Ft.; Rectificirter Weingeist, Germ.; Alcoole, Acquavite rettificata, JtaI7; Alcohol, Espiritu rectifieado de vino, Span. ALCOHOL DILUTUM. U.S. Diluted Alcohol. Alcohol mixed with an equal measure of Distilled Water. The specific gravity is 0 941. U. S. Off. Syn. SPIRITUS TENUIOR. Proof Spirit. Made by mixing five pints of Rectified Spirit with three pints of Distilled Water. Sp. gr. 0 920. Br. ALCOHOL FORTIUS. U.S. Stronger Alcohol. Spirit of the specific gravity 0-817. U. S. From the titles and definitions above given, which include all the form3 of alcohol recognised by the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, it will be perceived that there are three officinal strengths of Alcohol, those being considered the same which approach nearly in specific gravity, and are employed for similar purposes. Of these, two are common to both Pharmacopoeias; Alcohol, U. S. (sp. gr. 0 835), corresponding with Spiritus Rectificatus, Br. (sp. gr. 0 838), and Diluted Alcohol, U. S. (sp. gr. 0’941), corresponding with Spiritus Tenuior or Proof Spirit, Br. (sp. gr. 0’920). The third, Alcohol Fortius or Stronger Al- cohol (sp. gr. 0-817), is peculiar to our own officinal standard. As they are all placed in the Materia Medica Catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, they will all be considered here. Alcohol, in the chemical sense, is a peculiar liquid, generated for the most part in vegetable juices and infusions by a fermentation, called the vinous oi 70 Alcohol. PART I. alco'ioli: rlhe liquids which have undergone it are called vinous liquors, and are of va. tous kinds. Thus, the fermented juice of the grape is called wine ; of the apple, cider; and the fermented infusion of malt, beer. With regard to the nature of the liquids susceptible of the vinous fermenta- tion, however various they may be in other respects, one general character pre- vails; that, namely, of containing sugar in some form or other. It is found, further, that, after they have undergone the vinous fermentation, the sugar they contained has either wholly or in part disappeared; and it was long believed that the only new products are alcohol which remains in the liquid, and carbonic «cid which escapes during the process; and that these, when taken together, are equal in weight to the sugar lost. It was hence inferred that sugar is the subject-matter of the changes that occur during the vinous fermentation, and that it is resolved into alcohol and carbonic acid. More recently, however, it has been shown by M. Pasteur that, along with alcohol and carbonic acid, gly- cerin and succinic acid are also generated, and that the process is not so simple as at one time supposed. Sugar will not undergo the vinous fermentation by itself; but requires to be dissolved in water, subjected to the influence of a ferment, and kept at a certain temperature. Accordingly, sugar, water, the presence of a ferment, and the main- tenance of an adequate temperature may be deemed the prerequisites of the vinous fermentation. The water acts by giving fluidity, and the ferment and tem- perature by commencing and maintaining the chemical changes. The precise manner in which the ferment operates in causing the reaction has not been posi- tively determined; but the fermentative change seems to be intimately connected with the multiplication of a microscopic vegetable, in the form of diaphanous globules, contained in the ferment, and called torula cerevisiae. Pasteur has ren- dered it highly probable that the yeast plant lives and grows at the expense of the sugar, which is converted partly into the tissue of the plant, partly into alco- hol and those other products which have been proved to result from vinous fer- mentation. The proper temperature for conducting the vinous fermentation ranges from 60° to 90°. Certain vegetable infusions, as those of potatoes and rice, though consisting almost entirely of starch, are, nevertheless, capable of undergoing the vinous fermentation, and form seeming exceptions to the rule, that sugar is the only substance susceptible of this fermentation. The apparent exception is explained by the circumstance, that starch is susceptible of a spontaneous change which converts it into sugar. How this change takes place is not well known, but it is designated by some authors as the saccharine fermentation. Thus, Kirchoff proved that, if a mixture of gluten from flour, and starch from potatoes be put into hot water, the starch will be converted into sugar. When, therefore, starch is apparently converted into alcohol by fermentation, it is supposed that it passes through the intermediate state of sugar. According to Berthelot, mannite, glycerin, and similar substances may be made to ferment by contact, for several weeks, with chalk and cheese at 104°; and the change takes place without the production of sugar, provided chalk is present. M. Arnoult has succeeded in obtaining alcohol by fermenting sugar (glucose), formed by the action of sul- phmie acid on poplar wood sawdust, which yielded from TO to 80 per cent, of this kind of sugar. Alcohol, being the product of the vinous fermentation, necessarily exists in all vinous liquors, and may be obtained from them by distillation. Formerly it was supposed that these liquors did not contain alcohol, but were merely capa- ble of furnishing it, in consequence of a new arrangement of their ultimate con- stituents, the result of the heat applied. Brande, however, disproved this idea, by showing that alcohol may be obtained from all vinous liquois without the application of heat, and therefore must pre-exist in them. His mot) td of supa- PART I. Alcohol. 71 rating it consists in precipitating the acid and colouring matter from each vinous liquor by subacetate of lead, and removing the water by carbonate of potassa According to Gay-Lussac, litharge, in fine powder, is the best agent for preci- pitating the colouring matter. In vinous liquors, the alcohol is diluted with abundance of water, and asso- ciated with colouring matter, volatile oil, extractive, and various acids and salts. In purifying it, we take advantage of its volatility, which enables us to separate it by distillation, combined with some of the principles of the vinous liquor em- ployed, and more or less water. The distilled product of vinous liquors forms the different ardent spirits of commerce. When obtained from wine, it is called ■J^randy; from fermented molasses, rum; from cider, malted barley, or rye, vvlusky; from malted barley and rye-fneal with hops, and rectified from juniper berries, Holland gin; from malted barley, rye, or potatoes, and rectified from turpentine, common gin ; and from fermented rice, arrack. These spirits are of different strengths, flTat is, contain different proportions' of alcohol, and have various peculiarities by which they are distinguished by the taste. Their strength is accurately judged of by the specific gravity, which is always less in proportion as their concentration is greater. When they have the sp. gr. 0-920 (0-91984, Drinkwater), they are designated in commerce by the term proof spirit. If lighter than this, they are said to be above proof; if heavier, below proof; and the percentage of water, or of spirit of 0-825, necessary to be added to any sam- ple of spirit to bring it to the standard of proof spirit, indicates the number of degrees the given sample is above or below proof. Thus, if 100 volumes of a spirit require 10 volumes of water to reduce it to proof spirit, it is said to be “10 over proof.” On the other hand, if 100 volumes of a spirit require 10 volumes of spirit, of 0-825, to raise it to proof, the sample is said to be “ 10 under proof.” Proof spirit is still very far from being pure; being a dilute alcohol, contain- ing about half its weight of water, together with a peculiar oil and other foreign matters. It may be further purified and strengthened by redistillation, or recti- fication as it is called. Whisky is the spirit usually employed for this purpose ; and from every hundred gallons, between fifty-seven and fifty-eight may be ob- tained, of the average strength of rectified spirit (sp. gr. 0-835), corresponding with the Alcohol of. the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and very nearly with the Spiritus Rectificatus of the British. When this is once more cautiously distilled, it will be further purified from water, and the sp. gr. attaiued will be about 0‘825, which is the lightest spirit that can be obtained by ordinary distillation, and is the pure spirit of the British system of excise. It still, however, contains 11 per cent, of water. In the mean while, the spirit, by these repeated distillations, becomes more and more freed from the contaminating oil, called .grain oil ov fusel oil. (See Alcohol Amylicum.) We shall first consider the general properties of al- cohol, and afterwards the different officinal forms. Properties. Alcohol, using this term in a generic sense, is a colourless, trans- parent, volatile liquid, of a penetrating, agreeable odour, and burning taste. It should be free from foreign odour, which, when present, is owing to fusel oil. When free from water, it is called anhydrous or absolute alcohol. It is inflam- mable, and burns without smoke or residue, forming water and carbonic acid. Its flame is bluish when strong, but yellowish when weak. It combines in all propor- tions with water and ether; and, when diluted with distilled water, preserves its transparency. Its density varies with the proportion of water it contains. When of the sp.gr. 0-820, its boiling point is at 176°. Its value depends upon the quantity of absolute alcohol contained in it; and, as this is greater in proportion as the sp. gr. is less, it is found convenient to take the density of a sample in esti- mating its strength. This is done by instruments called hydrometers, which, when allowed to float in the spirit, sink deeper into it in proportion as it is lighter. Eacn hydrometer strength has a corresponding specific gravity; and, by refer- 72 Alcohol. PART I. ring to tables constructed for the purpose, the percentage of absolute alcohol is at once shown. Dr. W. II. Pile, maker of hydrometers, of this city, graduates instruments showing specific gravity at once, which are exceedingly convenient. The following table, constructed by Lowitz and improved by Thomson, gives the sp. gr. of different mixtures by weight of absolute alcohol and water. Table of the Specific Gravity of different Mixtures by Weight of Absolute Alcohol and Distilled Water, at the Temperature of 60°. 100 Parts. Sp. Gr. at 60°. 100 Parts. Sp. Gr. at 60°. 100 Parts. Sp. Gr at 60°. 100 Parts. Sp. Gr. at 60°. Ale. Wat. Ale. Wat. Ale. Wat. Ale. Wat. 100 0 •796* 76 24 •857 52 48 •912 28 72 •962 99 1 •798 75 25 •860 51 49 •915 27 73 •963 98 2 •801 74 26 •863 50 50 •917 26 74 •965 97 3 •804 73 27 •865 49 51 •9201T 25 75 •967 96 4 •807 72 28 •867 48 52 •922 24 76 •968 95 5 •809 71 29 •870 47 53 •924 23 77 •970 94 6 •812 70 30 •871 46 64 •926 22 78 •972 93 7 •815 69 31 •874 45 55 •928 21 79 •973 92 8 •817f 68 32 •875 44 56 •930 20 80 •974 91 9 •820 67 33 •879 43 57 •933 19 81 •975 90 10 •822 66 34 •880 42 58 •935 18 82 •977 89 11 •825J 65 35 •883 41 59 ■937 17 83 •978 88 12 •827 64 36 •886 40 60 •939 16 84 •979 87 13 •830 63 37 •889 39 61 •941ft 15 85 •981 86 14 •832 62 38 •891 38 62 •943 14 86 •982 85 15 •835§ 61 39 •893 37 63 •945 13 87 •984 84 16 •83811 60 40 •896 36 64 •947 12 88 •986 83 17 •840 59 41 •898 35 65 •949 11 89 •987 82 18 •843 58 42 •900 34 66 •951 10 90 •988 81 19 •846 57 43 •903 33 67 •953 9 91 •989 80 20 •848 56 44 •904 32 68 •955 8 92 •990 79 21 •851 55 45 •906 31 69 •957 7 93 •991 78 22 •853 54 46 •908 30 70 •958 6 94 •992 77 23 •855 53 47 •910 29 71 •960 II. von Baumhauer has inferred from his experiments that the results in the above table are not entirely correct. The inaccuracies, however, admitting the results of Baumhauer, are not so great as to be of much importance in a phar- maceutic point of view. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1860, p. 1.) Alcohol is capable of dissolving a great number of substances; as, for exam- ple, sulphur and phosphorus in small quantity, iodine and ammonia freely, and potassa, soda, and lithia in the caustic state, but not as carbonates. Among or- ganic substances, it is a solvent of the organic vegetable alkalies, urea, tannic acid, sugar, mannite, camphor, resins, balsams, volatile oils, and soap. It dis- solves the fixed oils sparingly, except castor oil, which is abundantly soluble. It acts on most acids, forming ethers with some, and effecting the solution of others. All deliquescent salts are soluble in alcohol, except carbonate of po- tassa ; while the efflorescent salts, and those either insoluble or sparingly soluble in water are mostly insoluble in it. It dissolves muriate of ammonia, and most of the chlorides that are readily soluble in water; also some nitrates, but none of the metallic sulphates. * Absolute Alcohol. f Alcohol Fortius. Stronger Alcohol, U. S. + Lightest spirit obtained by ordinary distillation. ft Alcohol Dilutum. I Alcohol, U. S. || Spiritus Rectificatus, Br. Spiritus Tenuior, Proof Spirit, Br. V S. PART I. Alcohol. 1. Absolute Alcohol. Anhydrous Alcohol. This, though formerly directed by the Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges, is not now officinal. By the term is implied pure alcohol, entirely free from water. In this state it cannot be obtained by ordinary distillation alone; the purest alcohol thus procured still containing 11 per cent, of water. To separate this it is customary to have recourse to sub- stances having a very strong affinity for water, sufficient not only to abstract it from the alcohol, but to retain it at a temperature at which alcohol will distil over. Soubeiran recommends the following as an easy method for obtaining it, free from water, abundantly and economically. 1st. Rectify alcohol, marking 8G° of the centesimal alcoholmeter of Gay-Lussac (rectified spirit), by distilling it from carbonate of potassa. This operation raises its strength to 94° or 95°. 2d. Raise this alcohol to 97°, by distilling it with fused chloride of calcium, or by digesting it with quicklime (from which it must be afterwards poured off), in the proportion of a pint of the alcohol to ounces of the chloride, or ounces of the lime. 3d. Distil the product of this bperation slowly with quick- lime, in the proportion of 3f ounces to the pint. The product will be absolute alcohol. The operation may be shortened to two steps, by distilling the alcohol of 94° or 95°, with an excess of quicklime ounces to the pint). In all cases, before decanting or distilling, the alcohol must be digested for two or three days with the lime, at a temperature between 95° and 100° F. Lime will not answer as a substance to be distilled from, unless it be in sufficient excess; for other- wise, towards the end of the distillation, the hydrate of lime formed will yield up its water to the alcohol, and weaken the distilled product. Properties. Absolute alcohol is a colourless, volatile liquid, of an agreeable odour and burning taste. It boils at 172°, and is not congealed by a cold of 166° below zero. Its sp.gr. is 0 7978 at 68°, according to Regnault; 0-79381 at 60°, according to Drinkwater. The sp. gr. of its vapour is 1-59. Its freedom from water may be ascertained by dropping into it a piece of anhydrous baryta, which will remain unchanged if the alcohol be free from water; but otherwise will fall to powder. Another method for determining the same point is to allow alcohol to stand for some time, in a stoppered bottle, on anhydrous sulphate of copper. If the alcohol be anhydrous, the salt will remain white; otherwise it will become blue. (Gasoria.) Absolute alcohol should be free from fusel oil. Absolute alcohol burns with a pale flame without residue, the products being carbonic acid and water. Its vapour, passed through a porcelain tube filled with pumice-stone and heated to redness, yields carbon, gaseous carbohydro- gens, aldehyd, naphthalin, benzin, phenic acid, and various other substances. (Berthelot.) It unites in all proportions with ether and water. Its union with water is attended by condensation and a rise of temperature. When 51 9 volumes of alcohol are mixed with 48 1 of water, corresponding with one eq. of the former to six of the latter, the decrease of volume is at the maximum, amounting to 3 4 per cent. Berthelot has announced the formation of alcohol synthetically, by uniting olefiant gas with water. In this discovery he was an- ticipated by the late Mr. Hennel, who published it in 1828. Composition. Absolute alcohol consists of four eqs. of carbon 24, six of hy- drogen 6, and two of oxygen 16 = 46; or, in volumes, of four volumes of the vapour of carbon, six of hydrogen, and one of oxygen, condensed into two volumes. Its empirical formula is, therefore, C4H602. Viewed as a hydrated oxide of ethyl, its formula is C4H5,0-bH0. It has been stated, at page 70, that during the vinous fermentation sugar dis- appears, and that the sole products had been supposed to be alcohol and car- bonic acid, which, taken together, were equal in weight to the sugar lost. Now, the comparative composition of the substances concerned supports the opinion •ffiat these are the sole derivatives of a portion of the sugar lost. Preparatory to the fermentation, the cane sugar is changed into grape sugar, or, according Alcohol. PART I. to Mitscherlich and Soubeiran, into uncrystallizahle sugar. These two sugars, dried at 212°, consist of C12H12012. Supposing one eq. of this fermentable sugar to be the subject-matter of the change, it will be found to have a composition which admits of its being broken up into two eqs. of alcohol and four of carbonic acid; for CI2H12012= 2(C4H6Oa) and 4(C02). But it does not follow that all the sugar has been converted into sugar and carbonic acid; and Pasteur, as be- fore stated, has shown that a portion lost has not been thus converted, but has been partly appropriated to the growth of the yeast plant of the ferment, and partly changed into glycerin and succinic acid. 2. Alcohol Fortius. U. S. Stronger Alcohol, sp. gr. 0-811. This was an offi- cinal of the Dublin College, which gave a formula for its preparation, and stated t its sp. gr. at 0-818. The Stronger Alcohol introduced into the Materia Medica of theU. S. Pharmacopoeia, at the late revision, though of the sp.gr. 0'817. and ' therefore a little stronger than the Dublin preparation, may for all practical pur- poses be considered as identical with it. To prepare it on a small scale, carbonate of potassa, previously ignited in a heated mortar, may be mixed with officinal alco- hol (sp. gr. 0'835) in a bottle, and shaken occasionally for about four hours; the mixture being, in the mean time, maintained at the temperature of about 100°. Upon resting, the liquid divides into two strata, the lower consisting of a watery solution of carbonate of potassa, the upper of the stronger alcohol, which is to be separated, and distilled so as to obtain the measure of about nine-tenths of the original alcohol employed. On a large scale, we are informed that alcohol of this strength is now pre- pared, in the U. States, very abundantly by simple distillation, by means of a modified distillatory apparatus. The modification consists in substituting, for a single refrigerated receiver, a series of receivers, kept at such temperatures that, in the first of them, the watery vapour shall condense with comparatively little of the alcoholic, which, as it passes through the successive recipients, is more and more deprived of water, until, when condensed in the last, it yields a spirit at least as strong as the officinal Stronger Alcohol of the sp.gr. 0 817. At the same time that the spirit is thus strengthened, it becomes, on the same principle, more and more freed from fusel oil, until at length almost wholly deprived of it. The properties of this form of spirit do not materially differ from those of officinal alcohol, except in its exemption from fusel oil. The test of the absence of this impurity, or of its presence in only very minute proportion, is that, when “treated with a few drops of solution of nitrate of silver, and exposed to a bright light, the alcohol either remains unchanged, or lets fall a very scanty dark pre- cipitate.” U. S. Stronger alcohol is used exclusively in the preparation of other officinals, as ether, purified chloroform, ethereal oil, spirit of nitrous ether, &c., for which purpose it was introduced into the Pharmacopoeia. 3. Alcohol. U. S. Spirit us Rectificatus. Br. Officinal Alcohol. Rectified Spirit. This is the form of spirit resulting from the ordinary distillation of ardent spirit, though not the strongest which can be obtained by a repetition of that process; having the sp. gr. 0'835, U. S., or 0-838, Br., while that of the strongest is 0-825. The British preparation contains 16, the U. S. only 15 per cent, of water. Officinal alcohol, though of standard strength, may still be impregnated with an essential oil, called fusel oil. This is usually removed by digesting the alcohol with charcoal. It may also be removed, as well as other impurities, by passing the impure spirit through a filtering bed, composed of sand, wood-charcoal, boiled wheat, and broken oyster-shells, arranged in layers, according to the method of Mr. W. Schaeffer. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., Nov. 1854, p. 536.) Another method, proposed by M. Breton, is to add a few drops of olive oil to the spirit in a bottle, which is then to be shaken, allowed to settle, and decanted. The olive oil dis- solves and retains the fusel oil. ( Chem. Gaz., April 15, 1859, p. 160.) Jt may be detected by adding a little of the solution of nitrate of silver to the s Doled and PART I. Alcohol. then exposing it to a bright light. If fusel oil be present, it will be converted into a black powder. Officinal alcohol will not withstand this test; as the best contains a little of the foreign oil. According to Mr. E. N. Kent, of New York, nitrate of silver will not detect fusel oil, but affords its indications by reacting with other organic substances. For detecting fusel oil Mr. Kent finds pure sulphuric acid the best test. To apply it he half fills a test tube with the spirit to be tested, and then fills it up very slowly with pure concentrated sulphuric acid. If the spirit be pure, it will remain colourless; otherwise it will become coloured, the tint being deeper in proportion to the amount of the impurity. (New York Journ. ofPharm., Aug. 1854.) The U. S. Pharmacopoeia directs that officinal alcohol, when diluted with 20 parts of distilled water, should have little or no foreign odour. The best alcohol, made in Philadelphia, is that manufactured by Z. Locke & Co., under Atwood’s patent process, in which manganic acid is used to destroy the fusel oil and other foreign substances. This alcohol withstands the tests of nitrate of silver and sulphuric acid remarkably well. 4. Alcohol Dilutum. U. S. Spiritus Tenuior. Br. Diluted Alcohol. Proof Spirit. The U. S. preparation, which is placed in the Materia Medica, consists of equal measures of officinal alcohol and water, and has the sp.gr. 0 941; the British, for which a process is given, is made by mixing five pints of Rectified Spirit with three pints of Distilled Water, and has the sp. gr. 0920. The latter is much the stronger of the two, containing only 51 per cent, of water, while the U. S. preparation contains 61 per cent. Considering the purpose to which it is chiefly applied, that of making tinctures, our officinal diluted alcohol is preferable to the British proof spirit, as it has enough alcohol bo_th for solvent effect and preservative influence, and the less there is, when these objects are answered, the better. Medical Properties, &c. Alcohol is a very powerful diffusible stimulant. It is the intoxicating ingredient in all spirituous liquors, including under this term wines, porter, ale, cider, and every other liquid which has undergone the vinous fermentation. In a diluted state, it excites the system, renders the pulse full, and gives additional energy to the muscles, and temporary exaltation to the mental faculties. It is found to lessen the amount of the excretions, from which fact some physiologists have inferred that it diminishes the disintegration of the tis- sues. But this is not likely ; since the effect of stimulation is to increase function in the tissues, and consequently to cause their waste. On this subject Dr. Wood holds the more probable opinion, that alcoholic liquors, besides furnishing some nutriment, act by promoting digestion and sanguification, thus causing a more thorough appropriation of food to nutrition; and that the saving, thus effected, more than counterbalances the waste of the tissues, implied by increased vital action. (See his Therapeutics, i. 664.) In some states of acute disease, characterized by excessive debility, alcohol is a valuable remedy. In chronic diseases, physicians should be cautious in pre- scribing liquids containing it, for fear of begetting intemperate habits. Exter- nally, alcohol is sometimes applied to produce cold by evaporation; but, when this is repressed, it acts as a stimulant. A mixture of equal parts of rectified spirit and white of egg forms an excellent application to excoriations from press- ure, in their early stage, occurring in protracted diseases. It is to be applied frequently by a fine brush or feather, and renewed as it dries, until an albumi- qous coating is formed over the excoriated surface. As an article of daily use, alcoholic liquors produce the most deplorable con- sequences. Besides the moral degradation which they cause, their habitual use gives rise to dyspepsia, hypochondriasis, visceral obstructions, dropsy, paralysis, and iiuc unfrequently mania. Effects as a Poison. When taken in large quantities, alcohol, in the various forms of ardent spirit, produces a true apoplectic state, and occasionally speedy 76 Alcohol. PART 1 death The face becomes livid or pale, the respiration stertorous, and the mouth frothy; and sense and feeling are more or less completely lost. Where the dan- ger is imminent, an emetic may be administered, or the stomach-pump used. The affusion of cold water is often useful. An enema of two tablespoonfuls of com- mon salt in a pint of warm water is said to dissipate rapidly the more serious symptoms. As a counter-poison, acetate of ammonia has been found to act with advantage. After death, abundant evidence is furnished of the absorption of the alcohol. By Dr. Percy it has been detected in the brain, by others in the ven- tricles. and by Dr. Wright in the urine. According to Dr. Ducheck, alcohol un- dergoes, in the system, continued combustion, producing intermediate products, amonp which is aldehyd, to the presence of which in the blood he attributes in- toxication. Mr. R. D. Thomson has proposed the following test for detecting alcohol in medico-legal investigations. Distil one-third of the suspected liquid, and to the distillate add a crystal or two of chromic acid, and stir. If the smallest quantity of alcohol be present, green oxide of chromium, and aldehyd percepti- ble to the smell, will be developed. Instead of chromic acid, a few grains of powdered bichromate of potassa, acted on by a few drops of sulphuric acid, may be ased. Dr. Ed. Strauch objects to this test as liable to some ambiguity, and proposes platinum-black as preferable. For a description of the mode in which he uses it, the reader is referred to the Chemical Gazette for Aug. 1, 1854. It is, however, very rarely that any of the forms of alcohol here described are used internally in their ordinary state; the various forms of ardent spirits and fermented liquors being preferred for this purpose, and these are described else- where. The purer forms of alcohol, whether strong or diluted, are employed almost exclusively in pharmacy; as in the preparation of medicines, such as ether, into the composition of which they enter; for the preservation of organic sub- stances; in the extraction of the active principles of vegetables, as in the tinc- tures ; for dissolving bodies soluble in alcohol much more readily than in water, or insoluble in the latter fluid; and for various other pharmaceutic purposes. Diluted alcohol is employed as an addition to the compound infusion of gen- tian, and to some of the distilled waters and preparations of vinegar, in order to preserve them from decomposition; as a menstruum for extracting the virtues of plants, preparatory to the formation of extracts and syrups; and in preparing many of the spirits, and a few of the medicated wines. But it is in forming the tinctures that diluted alcohol is chiefly used. Some of these are made with offi- cinal alcohol (rectified spirit), but the majority with diluted alcohol (proof spirit) as the menstruum. As the latter contains more than half its weight of water, it is well fitted for acting on those vegetables, the virtues of which are partly solu- ble in water and partly in alcohol. The apothecary, however, should never sub- stitute the commercial proof spirit for diluted alcohol, even though it may be of the same strength, on account of the impurities in the former; but, when it is recollected how variable the so-called proof spirits are in strength, the objection to their use in pharmacy becomes still stronger. Thus, according to Mr. Bronde, gin contains 51 6 percent, of alcohol of 0*825; and the percentage of the same alcohol is 53‘39 in brandy, 53 68 in rum, 53'90 in Irish whisky, and 54 32 in Scotch whisky. The alcohol on which these results are based already contains 11 per cent of water. Pharm. Uses. 1. Of Alcohol Fortius, U. S. In the preparation of Aloe Puri- ficata, U. SAtropim Sulphas, U. S.; Ceratum Extracti Cantharidis, U. S.: Chloroformum Purificatum, U. S.; Collodium, U. S.; Collodium cum Cantha- ride, U. S.; Iodidum Hydrargyri Yiride, U. S. 2. Of Alcohol, U. S., Spiritus Rectificaius, Br. In the preparation of Aconitia; Aqua Cataphoras, U. S.; Atro- pia; Berberise Sulphas, Br.; Cinchonia, U. S.; Extracta; Extracta Alcoholica, U. S.; Extracta Fluida, U. S.: Extracta Liquida, Br.; Fel Bovinum Purifica- tum, Br.; Ferri Sulphas Granulata, Br.; Hydrargyri Iodidum Yiride. Br.; Mor- PART I. Alcohol.—Alcohol Amylicum. 77 phia, U. S.; Quiniae Sulphas, U. S.; Resinae; Santoninum, Br.; Strychnia; Syrupus Aurantii Corticis, U. S.; Unguentum Aconitiae, Br.; Unguentum Atro- piae, Br.; Yeratria. 3. Of Alcohol Dilutum, U. S., Spiritus Tenuior or ProoJ Spirit, Br. In the preparation of Extracta; Extracta Alcoholica, XJ.S.; Ex tracta Fluida, U. S.; Santoninum, U. S.; Strychnia, U. S.; Syrupi; Unguentum lodi Compositum, Br. Off. Prep. 1. Of Alcohol Fortius, U. S. iEther, U. S.; Collodium, TJ. S.; Col- lodium cum Cautharide, U. S.; Oleum JEthereum, U. S.; Spiritus JEtheris Ni- trosi, U. S.; Spiritus, 17. S. 2. Of Alcohol, U. S., Spiritus Bectificatus, Br. Acidum Sulphuricum Aromaticum ; TEther, Br.; Chloroformum, Br.; Collodium, Br.; Infusum Gentianae Comp., U. S.; Liuimentum Aconiti, Br.; Liniment. Bel- ladonnae, Br.; Liniment. Camphor® Comp., Br.; Liniment. Iodi, Br.; Liniment. Saponis; Liquor Atropiae, Br.; Liquor Morphiae Hydrochloratis, Br.; Liquor Flumbi Subacetatis Dilutus, Br.; Liquor Strychniae, Br.; Oleoresina Zinziberis, U. S.; Succus Conii, Br.; Succus Scoparii,Br.; Succus Taraxaci,Br.; Spiritus; Syrupi, Br ; Tincturae. 3. Of Alcohol Dilutum, U. S., Spiritus Tenuior or Proof Spirit, Br. Infusum Gentianae Compositum, Br.; Spiritus; Syrupus Rhei Aromaticus, U. S.; Syrupus Scillse, Br.; Tincturae; Vinum Rhei, U. S. B. ALCOHOL AMYLICUM. U.S. “A peculiar alcohol, obtained by distillation from fermented grain or potatoes by continuing the process after the ordinary spirit has ceased to come over. Its sp. gr. is 0-818.” U. S. Fousel Oil. Br. Appendix. Syn. Hydrated Oxide of Amyl. Grain Oil. Potato Spirit Oil. This was an officinal of the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia, which directed it to be prepared in the following manner. “ Take of the light liquid, which may be obtained at any large distillery by continuing the distillation for some time after the pure spirit has been drawn off, any convenient quantity. Introduce it into a small still or retort connected with a condenser, and apply heat so as to cause distillation. As soon as the oil begins to come over unmixed with water, the receiver should be changed, and, the distillation being resumed and carried nearly to dryness, the desired product will be obtained. The liquid drawn over during the first part of the distillation will consist of an aqueous fluid, sur- mounted by a stratum of the Fusel Oil. This latter, though impregnated with a minute quantity of water, should be separated and preserved, as being suffi- ciently pure for use.” This oil is always present in the products of alcoholic fermentation. It is an ingredient in the ardeut spirit obtained from various grains, but is most abundant in that procured from fermented potatoes. In grain spirit it is present in the proportion of about one part in five hundred by measure. When grain or potato whisky is distilled for the purpose of obtaining alcohol, the pure spirit will con- tinue to come over for a certain time, after which, if the distillation be continued, a milky liquid will be obtained, which, upon standing, will be covered with a stratum of this peculiar oil. Subjected to distillation, the milky liquid will at first boil at a comparatively low temperature, and yield water and a little of the oil; but after a time the boiling point will rise to 269°, when the oil will come over pure. By changing the receiver when the oil begins to distil free from water, the oil is collected separate from the watery part. In relation to fusel oil, see a paper by Edward N. Kent, in the N. Y. Journ. of Pharm. (i. 257); and one by Dr. Charles M. Wetherill, copied into the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for Sept. 1858. Properties. Amylic alcohol is an oily, colourless liquid, of a strong, offensive odour, and acrid, burning taste. As usually prepared it has a pale-yellow colour. Amylic Alcohol. Fusel Oil. Alcohol Amylicum.—Aletris. PART 1 Its sp pr. is 0 818; that of its vapour 3'15. It boils at 269°, and congeals at 4° below zero, in the form of crystalline leaves. It is very sparingly soluble in water, but unites in all proportions with alcohol and ether. It dissolves iodine, sulphur, and phosphorus, and forms a good solvent for fats, resins, and camphor. When dropped upon paper it does not leave a greasy stain. It does not take fire like alcohol by the contact of flame, but requires to be heated to a tempera- ture of about 130° before it begins to burn. According to M. Pasteur, there are two amylic alcohols, chemically the same, but optically distinct. Amylic alcohol consists of ten eqs. of carbon 60, twelve of hydrogen 12, and two of oxygen 16 = 88. It is generally considered to be a hydrated oxide of the com- pound radical amyl (C10IIn); and on this view its formula will be C10HuO -J- HO. Heated with anhydrous phosphoric acid, it loses the elements of two eqs. of water, and forms a carbohydrogen, C10H10, homologous with ethylen, called amylen or valeren, which has been proposed as an anaesthetic. (See Amylen in Part III.) When subjected to oxidizing agents, it loses two eqs. of hydrogen and gains two of oxygen, and becomes C10H9O3-f HO, or amylic acid, which is identical with valerianic acid, the acid found in valerian. This acid bears the same relation to~amyIic~aTcdh6l that acetic acid does to ethylic alcohol, and for- mic acid to methylic alcohol. Amyl has been isolated by Dr. E. Frankland. It is a colourless pellucid liquid,"of the sp. gr. 0'7704. (Chem. Gaz., March 15, 1850.) Its hydruret (hydride), ClftH„H, has been discovered to be an energetic anaesthetic by Dr. Simpson, of Edinburgh. Crude fusel oil may be obtained from the alcohol distillers. Mr. Kent, of New York, found in it, as impurities, water, alcohol, acetic and amylic acids, oxide of iron, and an amyl compound, analogous to cenanthic ether. According to Messrs. T. and II. Smith, of Edinburgh, the crude oil is a mixture of propylic, butylic, and amylic alcohols, and of other alcohols much higher in the series. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., June, 1857, p. 606.) Fusel oil was made officinal by the Dublin College, in its Pharmacopoeia of 1850, as an artificial source of valerianic acid, to be used in forming valerianate of soda, from which, by double decomposition, three other valerianates, namely, those of iron, zinc, and quinia, were directed to be formed by the College. It was introduced into theU. S. Pharmacopoeia for a similar purpose. Amylic alcohol, as shown by experiments on inferior animals, is an active irritant poison. Off. Prep. Sodse Yalerianas, U.S. B. ALETRIS. US. Secondary. Star Grass. The root of Aletris farinosa. U. S. Aletris. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Liliacese. Gen. Ch. Corolla tubular, six-cleft, wrinkled, persistent. Stamens inserted into the base of the segments. Style triangular, separable into three. Capsule opening at the top, three-celled, many-seeded. Bigelow. Aletris farinosa. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 183; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 92. This is an indigenous perennial plant, the leaves of which spring immediately from the root, and spread on the ground in the form of a star. Hence have originated the popular names of star grass, blazing star, and mealy starwort, by which it is known in different parts of the country. The leaves are sessile, lanceolate, entire, pointed, very smooth, longitudinally veined, and of unequal size, the largest being about four inches in length. From the midst of them a flower-stem rises, one or two feet in height, nearly naked, with remote scales, which sometimes become leaves. It terminates in a slender scattered spite, the PART I. Aletris.—Allium. 79 flowers of which stand on very short pedicels, and have minute bractes at the base. The calyx is wanting. The corolla is tubular, oblong, divided at the sum- mit into six spreading segments, of a white colour, and, when old, of a mealy or rugose appearance on the outside. The plant is found in almost all parts of the United States, growing in fields and about the borders of woods, and flowering in June and July. Properties. The root, which is the officinal portion, is small, crooked, branched, blackish externally, brown within, and intensely bitter. The bitterness is ex- tracted by alcohol, and the tincture becomes turbid upon the addition of water. The decoction is moderately bitter; but much less so than the tincture. It affords no precipitate with the salts of iron. (Bigelow.) Medical Properties. In small doses the root appears to be simply tonic, am? may be employed advantageously for similar purposes with other bitters of the same class. When freely given, it is apt to occasion nausea. In very large doses, it is said to be cathartic and emetic, and to produce some narcotic effect. It has been employed, with asserted benefit, in colic, dropsy, and chronic rheumatism. The powder may be administered as a tonic in the dose of ten grains. W. ALLIUM. TJ.S. Garlic. The bulb of Allium sativum. U. S. Ail, Ft.; Knoblauch, Germ.; Aglio, Ital.: Ajo, Span. Allium. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Liliace®. Gen. Gh. Corolla six-parted, spreading. Spathe many-flowered. Umbel crowded. Capsule superior. Willd. This is a very extensive genus, including more than sixty species, most of which are European. Of the nine or ten indigenous in this country, none are officinal. Dr. Griffith states that the bulb of A. Canadense has been substituted for the cultivated garlic, and found equally efficient. (Me~ still to a certain degree retains. 3. Hepatic Aloes. Much confusion and uncertainty have prevailed in rela- tion to this kind of aloes. The name was originally applied to a product from the East Indies, of a reddish-brown or liver colour, which gave origin to the designation. From a supposed resemblance between this and the aloes from the West Indies, the name was very commonly applied also to the latter variety, and was even extended to portions of the drug collected in Spain and other parts of the South of Europe. But the West India aloes is decidedly different from any now brought from the East, and deserves the rank of a distinct variety, with the name of Barbadoes aloes. In this country, we seldom meet with aloes bearing the name of the hepatic, although much that is sold as Socotrine prob- ably deserves it. In the drug commerce of London, it is still recognised as a distinct variety. It is imported into England chiefly from Bombay; but, accord- ing to Ainslie, is not produced in Hindostan, being taken thither from Yemen in Arabia. It is probably obtained from the same plant or plants which yield the Socotrine, but prepared with less care, or by a different process.* In rela- tion to the Socotrine and hepatic aloes, we should probably not be far wrong in considering the former as embracing the finest, and the latter the inferior parcels of the same variety; and it is in fact stated that they sometimes come together, a large mass of the hepatic being crossed by a vein of the Socotrine. Hepatic aloes is reddish-brown, but darker and less glossy than the Socotrine. Its odour is somewhat like that of the Socotrine, but less agreeable; its taste nauseous, and intensely bitter. The fracture is not so smooth, nor the edges so sharp and transparent as in either of the first-mentioned varieties. It softens in the hand, and becomes adhesive. The powder is of a dull-yellow colour. 4. Barbadoes Aloes. This is the name by which the aloes produced in the West Indies is generally designated. The aloes plants are largely cultivated in the poorer soils of Jamaica and Barbadoes, especially of the latter island. The species from which most of the drug is procured is A. vulgaris; but A. Socotrina, A. purpurascens, and A. arborescens are also said to btTcultivated. The pro- cess employed appears to be somewhat different in different places, or at least as described by different authors. A fine kind was formerly prepared by the spon- taneous inspissation of the juice, placed in bladders or shallow vessels, and ex- posed to the sun. The common Barbadoes aloes, however, is now made, either by boiling the juice to a proper consistence, or by first forming a decoction of the leaves, chopped and suspended in water in nets or baskets, and then evaporating the decoction. In either case, when the liquor has attained such a consistence that it will harden on cooling, it is poured into calabashes and allowed to con- crete. It is imported into England in gourds weighing from 60 to 70 pounds, or even more. In consequence of the great demand for it in veterinary practice, it commands a high price in Great Britain. The colour of Barbadoes aloes is not uniform. Sometimes it is dark-brown or almost bla,ck, sometimes of a reddish-brown or liver colour, and again of some intermediate shade. It has usually a dull fracture, and is almost perfectly opaque, even at the edges, and in thin layers. It is also distinguishable by its odour, which is disagreeable and even nauseous. The powder is of a dull olive-yellow. According to Mr. Giles, it yields 80 per cent, of aqueous extract, and is even more active than the Socotrine. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1860, p. 301.) * Dr. Pereira inferred, we think somewhat prematurely, from his observations on the yuice of aloes before referred to, that the Socotrine is prepared by evaporation by artifi- cial heat, to which it owes its transparency; while the hepatic is opaque, because dried in the sun. If this were the case, Barbadoes aloes, which is wholly opaque, more so even than the hepatic, should have been dried in the sun, instead of being inspissated by heat, *s it really is.—Note to the tenth edition. 86 Aloe. PART I. Besides chose varieties of aloes, others are mentioned by authors. A very in- ferior to consist of the dregs of the juice which furnished tho better sorts, almost black, quite opaque, hard, of a rough fracture and very fetid odour, and full of various impurities, was formerly sold under the name of fetid, caballine, or horse aloes. It was used exclusively for horses; but, in consequence of the cheapness of better kinds, has been banished from veterinary practice, and is not now found in the market. Aloes has been imported from Muscat, and a considerable quantity came over in a vessel sent by the Sultan to the United States. Some of a similar origin has been called Mocha aloes in London; but it is nothing more than an inferior sort of hepatic. Several inferior kinds, pro- duced in different parts of Hindostan-, have been described by Pereira under the name of India, aloes; but they are not brought, unless accidentally, into the mar- kets of Europe or this country. General Properties. The odour of aloes is different in the different varieties. The taste is in all of them intensely bitter and very tenacious. The colour and other sensible properties have been sufficiently described. Several distinguished chemists have investigated the nature and composition of aloes. Braconnot found it to consist of a bitter principle, soluble in water, and in alcohol of 38° B., which he considered peculiar, and named resino-amer (resinous bitter); and of another substance, in smaller proportion, inodorous and nearly tasteless, very soluble in alcohol, and scarcely soluble in boiling water, which lie designated by the name of flea-coloured principle. These results were essentially confirmed by Tromms- dorff, Bouillon-Lagrange, and Yogel, who considered the former substance as extractive matter, and the latter as a kind of resin. Besides these principles, Trommsdorff discovered, in a variety of hepatic aloes, a proportion of insoluble matter which he considered as albumen; and Bouillon-Lagrange and Yogel found that the Socotrine also yielded, by distillation, a small quantity of volatile oil, which they could not obtain from the hepatic. The proportions of the ingredients were found to vary greatly in the different varieties of the drug; and the probability is, that scarcely any two specimens would afford precisely the same results. Bra- connot found about 13 per cent, of the bitter, and 26 of the flea-coloured prin- ciple. Trommsdorff obtained from Socotrine aloes about 15 parts of extractive and 25 of resin; and from the hepatic, 81’25 of extractive, 6-25 of resin, and 12'50 of albumen, in 100 parts. The former variety, according to Bouillon- Lagrange and Yogel, contains 68 per cent, of extractive and 32 of resin; the latter 52 of extractive, 42 of resin, and 6 of the albuminous matter of Tromms- dorff. We are not aware that any analysis has been published of the Cape aloes as a distinct variety. Berzelius considers the resin of Trommsdorff and others to belong to that form of matter which he calls apotheme (see Extracts), and which is nothing more than extractive, altered by the actiou of the air. It may be obtained separate by treating aloes with water, and digesting the undissolved portion with oxide of lead, which unites with the apotheme forming an insoluble compound, and leaves a portion of the unaltered extractive, which had adhered to it, dissolved in the water. The oxide of lead may be separated by nitric acid very much di- luted ; and the apotheme remains in the form of a brown powder, Insoluble in cold water, very slightly soluble in boiling water, to which it imparts a yellowish- brown colour, soluble in alcohol, ether, and alkaline solutions, and burning like tinder without flame, and without being melted. According to the same author, the bitter extractive, which constitutes the remainder of the aloes, may be ob- tained by treating the watery infusion with oxide of lead, to separate, a portion oi the apotheme which adheres to it, and evaporating the liquor. It is a yellowish, translucent, gum-like substance, fusible by a gentle heat, of a bitter taste, sclutle in ordinary alcohol, but insoluble in anhydrous alcohol, and in ether. A subsequent analysis of aloes by M. Edmond Robiquet yielded the followii g PART I. Aloe. 87 results. A portion of hyacinthine, transparent aloes, considered as genuine Soco- trine, was found to consist, in 100 parts, of 85 of aloetin, 2 of ulmate of potassa. 2 of sulphate of lime, 025 of gallic acid, 8 of albumen, and traces of carbonate of potassa, carbonate of lime, and phosphate of lime. To get pure aloetin, M Robiquet exhausted aloes in powder with cold water; concentrated the infusion ; added an excess of acetate of lead, which precipitated the gallate, ulmate, and albuminate of that metal; poured into the clear liquor solution of ammonia; separated the yellowish-orange coloured precipitate, consisting of oxide of lead combined with aloetin, washed it with boiling water, and then decomposed it by a current of sulphuretted hydrogen with the exclusion of atmospheric air. Sul- phuret of lead was deposited, and a colourless liquid floated above it, which, being decanted, and evaporated in vacuo, yielded aloetin in slightly yellowish scales. Thus procured, aloetin is uncrystallizable, very soluble in water and alcohol, but slightly soluble in ether, and quite insoluble in the fixed and volatile oils. It is entirely dissipated at a red heat. If exposed to the air during desiccation, it be- comes intemsely red, in consequence of the absorption of a minute proportion of oxygen, which, however, scarcely affects its properties in other respects. It pos- sesses in a high degree the bitter taste and purgative property of aloes, and might be used as a substitute; 8 parts of it representing 10 of Socotrine and 50 of Cape aloes. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., x. 173.) Aloin. The bitter substances noticed above, viz., the resino-amer of Brace n- not, the bitter extractive of Berzelius and others, and the aloetin of Robiquet, probably contain the active principle of aloes, but combined with impurities which render it insusceptible of crystallization. Messrs. T. and H. Smith, of Edinburgh, have succeeded in obtaining it quite pure and in crystals, and name it aloin. This has been examined by Mr. Stenhouse, and found, when quite free from water, to have a definite composition, represented by the formula C34H18QU. There can be no doubt that it is the active principle of aloes; as it has been found to operate invariably as a cathartic in the dose of one or two grains, and occasionally in that of half a grain. It is obtained most readily from Barbadoes aloes. The process consists of mixing this, previously powdered, with sand, exhausting it with cold water, evaporating the infusion in vacuo to the consistence of syrup, and allowing the residue to rest in a cool place. In two or three days the concentrated liquid becomes filled with a brownish-yellow granular mass of minute crystals, which is impure aloin. This is separated, by pressure between folds of bibulous paper, from a greenish-brown matter that contaminates it, and then repeatedly crys- tallized from hot water, the temperature of which should not exceed 150°, as aloin is rapidly oxidized at the boiling point. By dissolving it in hot alcohol, and allowing the solution to cool, it is obtained in the shape of minute needle- shaped crystals, arranged in a star-like form. These are pale-yellow, at first sweetish to the taste, but soon intensely bitter; combustible without residue; slightly soluble in cold water or alcohol, but readily dissolved by these liquids when moderately heated; soluble also readily in alkaline solutions, which are rendered of an orange-yellow colour, and become rapidly darker, especially when heated, in consequence of the oxidation of the aloin, and its conversion into resin. By the action of strong nitric acid it is converted into chrysammic acid. It is neither acid nor alkaline; but, with strong solution of subacetate of lead, is precipitated in combination with the oxide of that metal. (See Ed. Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., xii. 127, Feb. 1851, and Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xi. 458.) There can be no doubt that aloin exists also in Socotrine and Cape aloes; and the Messrs. Smith, though they at first failed in obtaining it from ■fliese varieties, have subsequently succeeded with the Socotrine.* * M Edmond It'/oiquet has recently again investigated the chemical constitution of fcloes, and come to the conclusion that the aloin of the Messrs. Smith, for which he retains Aloe. PART I. Aloes yields its active matter to cold water, and when good is almost wholly dissalTed by boiling water; but the inert portion, or apotheme of Berzelius, is deposited as the solution cools. It is also soluble in alcohol, rectified or diluted. Long boiling impairs its purgative properties by oxidizing the aloin, and ren- dering it insoluble. The alkalies, their carbonates, and soap alter in some measure its chemical nature, and render it of easier solution. It is inflammable, swelling up and decrepitating when it burns, and giving out a thick smoke which has the odour of the drug. Those substances only are incompatible with aloes which alter or precipitate the soluble matter; as the insoluble portion is without action upon the system. Among these is the infusion of galls, which we have found, probably through its tannic acid, to afford a copious precipitate with an aqueous solution of aloes. It is said that such a solution will keep a longtime, even for several months, with- out exhibiting mouldiness or putrescency, though it becomes ropy. Medical Properties and Uses. Aloes was known to the ancients. It is men- tioned in the works of Dioscorides and Celsus, the former of whom speaks of two kinds. The varieties are similar in their mode of action. They are all cathartic, operating very slowly but certainly, and having a peculiar affinity for the large intestines. Their action, moreover, appears to be directed rather to the muscu- lar coat than to the exhalant vessels; and the discharges which they produce are, therefore, seldom very thin or watery. In a full dose they quicken the cir- culation, and produce general warmth. When frequently repeated, they are apt to irritate the rectum, giving rise, in some instances, to hemorrhoids, and ag- gravating them when already existing. Aloes has also a decided tendency to the uterine system. Its emmenagogue effect, which is often very considerable, is generally attributed to a sympathetic extension of irritation from the rectum to the uterus; but we can see no reason why the medicine should not act specifi- cally upon this organ; and its influence in promoting menstruation is by no means confined to cases in which its action upon the neighbouring intestine is most conspicuous. A peculiarity in the action of this cathartic is, that an in- crease of the quantity administered, beyond the medium dose, is not attended by a corresponding increase of effect. Its tendency to irritate the rectum may bis name of aloetin, exists originally in the juice of aloes, and is retained in its crystal- lizable state, when the juice is allowed to concrete in the sun; that the juice thus con- creted is quite opaque, as in the case of Barbadoes aloes; that by exposure to a boiling temperature the aloin becomes amorphous, and gives to the concrete juice a vitreous or transparent character; and that consequently the Socotrine aloes, which, in this view of the subject, must have been obtained in the concrete state by boiling the juice, affords no crystallizable aloin. He also states that crystalline aloin or aloetin is wholly destitute of purgative properties, and acquires them only when, by the action of air and heat, it has become amorphous or uncrystallizable. (See Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., Avril, 1856, p. 241, and Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 543.) But these views are so contradictory to what is known of the mode of preparing com- mercial aloes, that they cannot be received unless amply confirmed by repeated experi- ment; and, indeed, have been refuted by the more recent experiments of Mr. T. B. Groves, who has obtained aloin largely from Socotrine aloes. In the process of the Messrs. Smith, cold water was used in the extraction of the principle. But aloin is feebly soluble in cold water, while readily so in the same liquid heated. Mr. Groves availed himself of this fact. He exhausted the aloes by means of boiling water, acidulated the decoction slightly with muriatic acid, separated the precipitated matter by filtration, evaporated the liquor to the consistence of syrup, and set it aside to crystallize. In a fortnight the liquid had become a mass of crystals, which were separated by draining and compression, and purified by repeated solution in boiling water, and crystallization. The pure aloin obtained amounted to 10 per cent, of the aloes used. [Pharm. Journ., xvi. 129.)—Note to the eleventh edition. A more recent view of the constitution of aloes, resulting from the experiments of M. Kosmann, an apothecary at Thann, in France, is that it belongs to the family of glucosides; consisting of two electronegative resins, having acid properties in different degrees, and a carbohydrogen, which is converted into glucose or grape sugar by the action either of acids, or strong alkalies. [Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1861, p. 177.)—Note to the iweljth edition. PART I. Aloe.—Althaea. 89 be obviated, in some measure, by combining with it soap or an alkaline carbon- ate; but it does not follow, as supposed by some, that this modification of its operation is the result of increased solubility; for aloes given in a liquid state produces the same effect as when taken in pill or powder, except that it acts somewhat more speedily. Besides, when externally applied to a blistered surface it operates exactly in the same manner as when internally administered, thus proving that its peculiarities are not dependent upon the particular form iu which it may be given, but on specific tendencies to particular parts. (Gerhard, N. Am. Med. and Surg. Journ., x. 155.) With its other powers, aloes combines the property of slightly stimulating the stomach. It is, therefore, in minute doses, an excellent remedy in habitual costiveuess attended with torpor of the digestive organs. It has been supposed to stimulate the hepatic secretion, and certainly acts sometimes very happily in jaundice, producing bilious stools even after calomel has failed. From its special direction to the rectum, it has been found peculiarly useful in the treatment of ascarides. In amenorrhoea it is per- haps more frequently employed than any other remedy, entering into almost all the numerous empirical preparations habitually resorted to by females in that complaint, and enjoying a no less favourable reputation in regular practice. It is frequently combined with more irritating cathartics, in order jto regulate their liability to excessive action. In amenorrhoea, it is said to be peculiarly effica- cious, when given, in the form of enema, about the period when the menses should appear. Aloes is contraindicated by hemorrhoids, and is unsuitable, unless modified by combination, to the treatment of inflammatory diseases. The medium dose is 10 grains; but as a laxative it will often operate in the quantity of 2 or 3 grains; and, when a decided impression is required, the dose may be augmented to 20 grains. In consequence of its excessively bitter and somewhat nauseous taste, it is most conveniently administered in pills.* Off. Prep. Aloe Purificata, XJ. S.; Enema Aloes, Br.; Extractum Aloes Bar- badensis, Br.; Ext. Aloes Socotrinas, Br.; Ext. Colocynth. Comp., U. S.; Pilulse Aloes, U.S.; Pil. Aloes Barbadensis, Br.; Pil. Aloes et Assafoetidae; Pil. Aloes et Mastiches, U. S.; Pil. Aloes et Myrrhas; Pil. Aloes Socotrinas, Br.; Pil. Cam- bogiae Comp., Br.; Pil. Colocynth. Comp., Br.; Pil. Colocyuthidis et Ilyoscyami, Br.; Pil. Rhei Comp.; Pulvis Aloes et Canellae, U.S.; Tinctura Aloes; Tinct. Aloes et Myrrhae, XJ. S.; Tinct. Benzoini Comp.; Yinum Aloes. W. ALTHiEA. U.S. Marshmallow. The root of Althaea officinalis. U. S. Guimauve, Fr.; Eibisch, Germ.; Altea, Ital.; Altea, Malvavisco, Span. Altelea. Sex. Syst. Monadelphia Polyandria. — Nat. Ord. Malvaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx double, the exterior six or nine-cleft. Capsules numerous, oue-seeded. Willd. Althaea officinalis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. HO; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 552, t. * Dr. Paris enumerates the following empirical preparations, containing aloes as a lead- ing ingredient:—Anderson’s pills, consisting of aloes, jalap, and oil of aniseed; Hooper’s pills, of aloes, myrrh, sulphate of iron, canella, and ivory-black; Dixon’s antibilious pills, of aloes, scammony, rhubarb, and tartarized antimony; Speediman’s pills, of aloes, myrrh, rhubarb, extract of chamomile, and essential oil of chamomile; Dinner pills, of aloes, mastich, red roses, and syrup of wormwood; Eotheroill’s pills, of aloes, scam- mony, colocynth, and oxide of antimony; Peter’s pills, of aloes, jalap, scammony, gam- boge, and calomel; and Radcliff’s Elixir, of aloes, cinnamon, zedoary, rhubarb, cochi- neal, syrup of buckthorn, and spirit and water as the solvent; to which may be added Lee’s Windham pills, consisting of gamboge, aloes, soap, and nitrate of potassa; and Lee’s New London pills, of aloes, scammony, gamboge, calomel, jalap, soap, and syrup of buckthorn 90 Althaea. PART I. l&S Marshmallow is an herbaceous perennial, with a perpendicular branching root, and erect woolly stems, from two to four feet or more in height, branched and leafy towards the summit. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, nearly cord- ate on the lower part of the stem, oblong-ovate and obscurely three lobed above, somewhat angular, irregularly serrate, pointed, and covered on both sides with a soft down. The flowers are terminal and axillary, with short peduncles, each bearing one, two, or three flowers. The corolla has five spreading, obcordate petals, of a pale-purplish colour. The fruit consists of numerous capsules united in a compact circular form, each containing a single seed. The plant grows throughout Europe, inhabiting salt marshes, the banks of rivers, and other moist places. It is found also in this country on the borders of salt marshes. In some parts of the Continent of Europe, it is largely cultivated for medical use. The whole plant abounds in mucilage. The flowers, leaves, and root are mucilagi- nous, and were formerly officinal; but the last only is employed to any consider- able extent in this country.* The roots should be collected in autumn from plants at least two years old. They are cylindrical, branched, as thick as the finger or thicker, from a foot to a foot and a half long, externally of a yellowish colour which becomes grayish by drying, within white and fleshy. They are usually prepared for the market by removing the epidermis. Our shops are supplied from Europe. Properties. Marshmallow root comes to us in pieces three or four inches or more in length, usually not so thick as the finger, generally round, but sometimes split, white externally and downy from the mode in which the epidermis is re- moved, light and easily broken with a short somewhat fibrous fracture, of a pecu- liar faint smell, and a mild, mucilaginous, sweetish taste. Those pieces are to be preferred which are plump and but slightly fibrous. The root contains a large proportion of mucilage, besides starch and saccharine matter, which it yields readily to boiling water. The mucilage, without the starch, is extracted by cold water, which thus becomes ropy. A principle was discovered in the root by M. Bacon, which he supposed to be peculiar to the marshmallow, but which has been ascertained to be identical with the asparagin of Robiquet. MM. Boutron- Charlard and Pelouze found it to belong to that class of organic principles, which are convertible by strong acids, and other agencies, into ammonia and peculiar acids, and which are designated by the termination amide. Thus asparagin, which in this view should be called axparamide, is converted into ammonia and aspar- mic, or, as it was formerly named, aspartic acid; and one eq. of the resulting' asparmate of ammonia corresponds with one eq. of asparamide and one of water. (Journ. de Pharm., xix. 208.) Asparagin, being now considered as a derivative from malate of ammonia, has received the name of mat amide, and asparmic acid is called, by a corresponding change, malamidic acid. (Gregory's Chemistry.) It is found in various other plants besides the marshmallow, as in the shoots of asparagus, in vetches grown in the dark, in all the varieties of the potato, and in the roots of the comfrey and liquorice plant. According to Professor Piria, asparagin has acid properties. It has no therapeutical value. Marshmallow is said to become somewhat acid by decoction. Those pieces should be rejected which are woody, discoloured, mouldy, of a sour or musty smell, or a sourish taste. The roots of other Malvaceae are sometimes substituted for that of marshmal- low, without disadvantage, as they possess similar properties. Such are those of Althaea rosea or hollyhock, and Malva Alcea. Medical Properties and Uses. The virtues of marshmallow are exclusively * The dark-purple flowers of one of the varieties of Althaea rosea have been proposed Dy Prof. Aiken, of the Univ. of Md., as a test for acids and alkalies. Slips of white ni»er- ing paper, immersed in a strong infusion of these flowers, acquire a permanent j.urplmh- blue colour, which is reddened by acids, and rendered bluish-green by alkalies.- -Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Althsea.—Alumen. those of a demulcent. The decoction of the root is much used in Europe in irri- tation and inflammation of the mucous membranes. The roots themselves, boiled and bruised, are sometimes employed as a poultice. The leaves and flowers are applied to similar uses. In France, the powdered root is much used in the pre- paration of pills and electuaries. Some prefer it to powdered liquorice root in the preparation of the mercurial pill. Off. Prep. Pilulae Ferri Iodidi, U. S. W. ALUMEN. U.S., Br. Alum. Sulphate of alumina and potassa. U. S. Sulphate of alumina and potash, Al/)3,3S03-fK0,S03+24H0. Br. Alun, Fr., Dan., Swed.; Alaun, Germ.; Allume, Ital.; Alumbre, Span. The officinal alum, is a double salt, consisting of tersulphate of alumina, united with sulphate of potassa. Alum is manufactured occasionally from earths which contain it ready formed, but most generally from minerals which, from the fact of their containing most or all of its constituents, are called alum ores. The principal alum ores are the alum stone, which is a native mixture of sulphate of alumina and sulphate of potassa, found in large quantities at Tolfa and Piombino in Italy; and cer- tain natural mixtures of bisulphuret of iron with alumina, silica, and bitumi- nous matter, called aluminous schist or alum-slate. At the Solfaterra, and other places in the kingdom of Naples, alum was for- merly extracted from earths which contain it ready formed. The ground being of volcanic origin, and having a temperature of about 104°, an efflorescence of pure alum is formed upon its surface. This was collected and lixiviated, and the solution made to crystallize by slow evaporation in leaden vessels sunk in the ground. The alum stone is manufactured into alum by calcination, and subsequent ex- posure to the air for three months; the mineral being frequently sprinkled with water, in order that it may be brought to the state of a soft mass. This is lixi- viated, and the solution obtained crystallized by evaporation. The alum stone may be considered as consisting of alum, united with a certain quantity of hydrate of alumina. The latter, by the calcination, loses its water, and becomes incapable of remaining united with the alum of the mineral, which is consequently set free. Alum of the greatest purity is obtained from this ore. Alum-slate, when compact, is first exposed to the air for a month. It is then stratified with wood, which is set on fire. The combustion which ensues is slow and protracted. The sulphur is in part converted into sulphuric acid, which unites with the alumina; and the sulphate of alumina thus formed generates a portion of alum with the potassa derived from the ashes of the wood. The iron, in the mean time, is almost wholly converted into sesquioxide, and thus becomes insoluble. The matter is lixiviated, and the solution crystallized into alum by evaporation. The mother-waters, containing sulphate of alumina, are then drawn eff, and made to yield a further portion of alum by the addition of sulphate of potassa or chloride of potassium; the latter being obtained usually from the soap boilers. When the alum-slate is easily disintegrated, it is not subjected to combustion, but merely placed in heaps, and occasionally sprinkled with water. The bisul- phuret of iron gradually absorbs oxygen, and passes into sulphate of the pro- toxide, wffiich effloresces on the surface of the heap. Part of the sulphuric acid formed unites with the alumina; so that, after the chemical changes are com- pleted, the heap contains both the sulphate of iron and the sulphate of alumina. 92 Alumen. PART I. At the end of about a year, the matter is lixiviated, and the solution of the two sulphates obtained is concentrated to the proper degree in leaden boilers. The sulphate of iron crystallizes, while the sulphate of alumina, being a deliquescent salt, remains in the mother-waters. These are drawn off, and treated with sul- phate of potassa in powder, heat being at the same time applied. The whole is then allowed to cool, that the alum may crystallize. The crystals are then sepa- rated from the solution, and purified by a second solution and crystallization. They are next treated with water, just sufficient to dissolve them at the boiling temperature; and the saturated solution is run into casks or tubs, so constructed as to be easily taken to pieces, and set up again. In the course of ten or fifteen days, the alum concretes into a crystalline mass, from which the mother-liquor is let off. The vessel is then taken to pieces, and the salt, having been broken up, is packed in barrels for sale. This process for forming the alum in large masses is called rocking. Alum is now largely manufactured by the direct combination of its consti- tuents. With this view, clays are selected as free from iron and carbonate of lime as possible, and calcined to sesquioxidize the iron, and render them more easily pulverizable; after which they are dissolved, by the assistance of heat, in weak sulphuric acid. Advantage has been found from mixing the clay, pre- viously to calcination, with powdered charcoal, coke, or other carbonaceous mat- ter, in the proportion of about one to six of the clay, and then applying heat by a reverberatory furnace till all the carbon is consumed. It is asserted that the alumina is thus rendered more soluble in the acid. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Dec. 1851, p. 328.) The sulphate of alumina, thus generated, is next crystallized into alum by the addition of sulphate of potassa in the usual manner. Alum is made in this way from the ashes of the Boghead cannel-coal, which occurs near Edinburgh. These ashes, which form the residue of the combustion of the coke derived from the coal used for making gas, contain a considerable quantity of alumina in a state readily soluble in acids. Alumina et Ammonite Sulphas. U. S. Sulphate of Alumina and Ammo- nia. Ammonia-alum. Besides the potassa-alum, which was formerly the only officinal variety of this salt, there are several others, in which the potassa is re- placed by some other base, as, for example, ammonia or soda. Of these, ammo- nia-alum, or the sulphate of alumina and ammonia, was introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia at its late revision, under the name at the head of this paragraph. It is made by adding sulphate of ammonia to the solution of sulphate of alumina. This kind of alum has come into very general use, owing to the rise in value of potassa, and to the comparative cheapness of ammonia, obtained in the process for ferrocyanide of potassium, or derived from the liquor of gas-works. Am- monia-alum is extensively manufactured by Powers & Weightman of this city. Scotch alunij made near Paisley, generally contains both potassa and ammonia. Ammonia-alum resembles potassa-alum so exactly that it cannot be distinguished by simple inspection; and in composition it is perfectly analogous to the potassa- salt. It may, however, be distinguished by subjecting it to a strong calcining heat, after which alumina will be the sole residue; or by rubbing it with potassa or lime and a little water, when the smell of ammonia will be perceived. Properties. Alum is a white, slightly efflorescent salt, crystallizing in regular octohedrons, and possessing an acid, sweetish, astringent taste. It dissolves in between fourteen and fifteen times its weight of cold, and three-fourths of its weight of boiling water. Its solution is precipitated by ammonia and potassa and their carbonates, which throw down a gelatinous subsulphate of alumina, of variable composition, dependent upon the proportion of the precipitant em- ployed. Alum is insoluble in alcohol and brandy. Its sp. gr. is 1*71. It reddens litmus, but changes the blue tinctures of the petals of plants to green. When heated a little above 212°, it undergoes the aqueous fusion ; and, if the heat be part I. Alumen. 93 continued, it loses its water, swells up, becomes a white, opaque, porous mass, nnd is converted into the officinal dried alum. (See Alumen Exsiccatum.) Ex- posed to a red heat, it gives off oxygen, together with sulphurous and anhydrous sulphuric acids; and the residue consists of alumina and sulphate of potassa. When calcined with finely divided charcoal, it forms a spontaneously inflamma- ble substance, called Homberg's pyrophorus, which consists of a mixture of sulphuret of potassium, alumina7and charcoal7 The characters of the salt, as stated in the British Pharmacopoeia, are that its solution gives with solution of potassa a white precipitate, soluble in an excess of the reagent, an immediate precipitate with chloride of barium, and a crystal- line precipitate very slowly with tartaric acid. Several varieties of alum are known in commerce. Roche alum, so called from its having come originally from Rocca, in Syria, is a sort which occurs in fragments about the size of an almond, and of a pale-rose colour, which is given to it, according to Pereira, by bole or rose-pink. Roman alum, which is the purest variety found in commerce, also occurs in small fragments, covered with a reddish-brown powder, resembling ochre, which is put on by the manu- facturers. It has been supposed that the powder contains iron ; but this is prob- ably a mistake. Roman alum crystallizes in cubes, from the fact that the crystals are deposited from a solution always containing an excess of alumina, which decomposes any iron salt that may be present. This crystalline form of alum is, therefore, an index of its freedom from iron. All the alums of commerce contain more or less sulphate of iron, varying from five to seven parts in the thousand. The iron is readily detected by adding to a solution of the suspected alum a few drops of the ferrocyanuret of potas- sium, which will cause a greenish-blue tint, if iron be present. It may be de- tected also by precipitating the alumina as a subsulphate with a solution of potassa, and afterwards adding the alkali in excess. This will redissolve the precipitate, with the exception of any iron, which will be left in the state of ses- quioxide. The proportion of iron usually present, though small, is an injurious impurity when the salt is used in dyeing. It may, however, be purified, either by dissolving it in the smallest quantity of boiling water, and stirring the solu- tion as it cools, or by repeated solutions and crystallizations. The British Phar- macopoeia requires that it should be entirely free from iron. Incompatibles. Alum is incompatible with the alkalies and their carbonates, lime and lime-water, magnesia and its carbonate, tartrate of potassa, and acetate of lead. Composition. Alum was regarded as a sulphate of alumina, until it was proved by Descroizilles, Yauquelin, and Chaptal to contain also sulphate of potassa, sulphate of ammonia, or both these salts. When its second base is potassa, it consists of one equivalent of tersulphate of alumina 171-4, one of sulphate of potassa 81-2, and twenty-four of water 216 = 474'6. In the ammonia-alum, the equivalent of sulphate of potassa is replaced by one of sulphate of oxide of ammonium, that is, sulphate of ammonia and water. Alumina is classed as an earth, and may be obtained by subjecting ammonia-alum to a strong calcining heat. It consists of two eqs. of a metal called aluminium 2*7 *4, and three of oxygen 24 = 51 4. It is, therefore, a sesquioxide. The existence of this metal was rendered probable by Sir II. Davy in 1808; but it was not fairly obtained until 1828, when Wohler procured it in an impure state, in globules of the size of a pin’s head, by the action of potassium on chloride of aluminium. In 1854 Devilie succeeded in obtaining the pure metal in ingots by decomposing the same chloride with sodium. Aluminium is silver-white, sonorous, unalterable in the air, and lighter than glass, having the sp.gr. 2-56 only. Its fusing point is some- what lower than that of silver. It is not attacked by sulphuric or nitric acid, nor tarnished by sulphuretted hydrogen. Its proper solvent is muriatic acid 94 Alumen. PART I. After silver, gold, and platinum, it is the least alterable of the metals. According to Mr. A. Monier, of Camden, N. J., who first obtained the metal in this country, it is not in the least oxidized by fusion with nitre, a property which affords a ready means of purifying it from other metals. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1857.) By reason of its valuable properties, it will be applied to many purposes in the arts, if obtainable in sufficient quantities, and at a moderate cost. Medical Properties, &c. Alum, in ordinary doses, is astringent and anti- spasmodic; in large doses, purgative and emetic. It is employed as an astring- ent in passive hemorrhages, colliquative sweats, diabetes, and chronic dysentery and diarrhoea ; also in gleet and leucorrhcea, in which diseases it is sometimes combined with cubebs. In connection with ice, it has been found effectual by Hr. de Ricci in a very bad case of haematemesis. (Dub. Quart. Journ. of Med. Sci., Aug. 1860.) It has been recommended in dilatation of the heart, and in aortic aneurism, and as an antispasraodic in hooping-cough. As a purgative, it has been employed in colica pictonum. This practice was introduced by Gra- shuis, a Dutch physician, in 1752, was imitated by Dr. Percival with great success, and has been revived in recent times with the happiest results. It allays nausea and vomiting, relieves flatulence, mitigates the pain, and opens the bowels with more certainty than any* other medicine. Sometimes it is advantageously con- joined with opium and camphor. It is also efficacious in nervous colic. Sir James Murray found it a useful remedy in the peculiar affection of the stomach, characterized by the frequent vomiting of a large quantity of glairy fluid. II e gave it in doses of ten or twelve grains three or four times a day, mixed with an equal quantity of cream of tartar to prevent constipation, and a little ginger to obviate flatulence. By Dr. C. D. Meigs alum has been strongly recommended, after an experience of more than twenty years, as an excellent emetic in pseudo- membranous croup. In these cases, it has the merit of acting with promptness and certainty, and without producing that extreme prostration which often follows the use of antimonials. ’His son, Dr. J. F. Meigs, has also borne testimony to its value in this disease. In a case in which an ounce of opium had been swal- lowed, Dr. C. D. Meigs found alum an efficient emetic. After 30 grains of sul- phate of zinc had been given without effect, half an ounce of alum was adminis- tered, followed by copious vomiting. Soon afterward, a second half ounce was given, with the same effect; and the result was that the patient recovered. In various anginose affections, alum is found highly useful, applied topically either in powder or solution. When the affection is attended with membranous exudation, its efficacy has been particularly insisted on by Bretonneau, applied in solution prepared with vinegar and honey for adults, and in powder, by in- sufflation, in the cases of children. When used in the latter way, a drachm of finely powdered alum may be placed in one end of a tube, and then blown by means of the breath into the throat of the child. Yelpeau, in 1835, extended the observations of Bretonneau, and has used alum successfully, not only in simple inflammatory sorethroat, but in those forms of angina dependent on small- pox, scarlatina, &c. In these cases the powdered alum may be applied several times a day to the fauces, by means of the index finger. In relaxation of the uvula, and in the beginning of sorethroat, a solution of alum is one of our best gargles. It forms also a useful astringent wash in mercurial sore-mouth. In the form of lozenge, made with sugar and tragacanth, and allowed slowly to dis- solve in the mouth, it is peculiarly applicable to chronic throat affections. In gleet and leucorrhcea the solution is an approved remedy, either alone or con- joined with sulphate of zinc. It is frequently applied as a styptic, in epistaxis, by means of a plug soaked in a saturated solution, and pressed up the nostril, and in menorrhagia, by the aid of a sponge soaked in a similar solution, and in- troduced into the vagina. It may be applied also by injection, both in these hemorrhages and in that from the rectum. In the latter stages of conjunctival PART i. Alumen.—Ammonia. 95 inflammation it is often useful, and in the purulent ophthalmia of infants is our most efficacious remedy. In these cases, it is usually applied in the form of cata- plasm, made by coagulating the whites of two eggs with a drachm of alum. The ordinary dose of alum is from ten to twenty grains, repeated every two or three hours, mixed with syrup or molasses. Sir James Murray objects to its administration in solution, and greatly prefers the form of an impalpable powder, mixed with molasses, as furnishing the means of presenting the remedy slowly to the surfaces intended to be acted upon. In hooping-cough the dose is from two to ten grains, according to the age of the child, repeated three times a day; in colica pictonum, from half a drachm to two drachms every three or four hours. In croup the dose, as an emetic, is a teaspoonful of the powder, mixed with honey, syrup, or molasses, and repeated every ten or fifteen minutes, until free vomiting is induced. An elegant mode of giving alum in solution is in the form of alum-whey, made by boiling two drachms of alum with a pint of milk, and then straining to separate the curd. The dose is a wineglassful, containing about fifteen grains of alum. As a collyrium, the solution is made of various strengths • as four, six, or eight grains to the fluidounce of water. A solution, containing from half an ounce to an ounce in a pint of water, and sweetened with honey, is a convenient gargle. Solutions for gleet, leucorrhoea, ulcers, &c., must vary in strength according to the state of the parts to which they are applied. Alum is sometimes used to adulterate bread, with the view to increase its whiteness, and to conceal the defects of the flour. Off. Prep, of Alum. Alumen Exsiccatum. Off. Prep, of Ammonia-alum. Aluminse Sulphas, U. S. B. AMMONIA. Ammonia. All the ammoniacal compounds owe their distinctive properties to the pre- sence of a peculiar gaseous substance, composed of nitrogen and hydrogen, called ammonia. This is most easily obtained by the action of lime on muriate of am- monia or sal ammoniac; when the lime unites with the muriatic acid, so as to form chloride of calcium and water, and expels the ammonia. It is transparent and colourless, like common air, but possesses an acrid taste, and exceedingly pungent smell. It has a powerful alkaline reaction, and, from this property and its gaseous nature, was called the volatile alkali by the earlier chemists. Its sp. gr. is 0-59. It is irrespirable, the glottis closing spasmodically when the attempt is made to breathe it. It consists of one eq. of nitrogen 14, and three of hydro- gen 3=11; or, in volumes, of one volume of nitrogen and three volumes of hydrogen, condensed into two. Its symbol is NII3. The salts of ammonia may be divided into hydracid salts and oxacid salts. Thus, when muriatic acid unites with ammonia, we have the hydracid salt called jinimonia, with the symbol NII3,HC1. But Berzelius supposed that, in the act of uniting, the hydrogen of the muriatic acid is transferred to the ele- ments of the ammonia, and that the compound thus formed, uniting with the chlorine, gives rise to a salt, represented by NH4C1. To this hypothetical com- pound (NHt) Berzelius gave the name of ammonium, and consequently to muriate of ammonia the appellation of chloride of ammonium. Applying the same view to the oxacid Serzelius conceived that they are compounds of oxide of ammonium (NH40) with their several acids. It is found that the true oxacid salts o7 ammonia always contain one eq. of water, which cannot be separated from them without destroying their identity; and it is supposed that the elements of this eq. of water, united with the elements of one eq. of ammonia, form oxide of ammonium. To apply Berzelius’s view to 96 Ammonia. part I. sulphate of ammonia, this salt is usually considered a monohydrated sulphate of ammonia (NH3,SO.t + HO); but he made it the sulphate of oxide of ammonium without water (NH40,S03). The atmosphere contains a minute proportion of ammonia, probably in the state of carbonate. Ozonized oxygen oxidizes the elements of ammonia, producing water and nitric acul, which latter, .by uniting with undecomposed ammonia, generates nitrate of ammonia. Ordinary oxygen, under the influence of platinum-black, or finely divided copper, likewise oxidizes the elements of ammonia, the nitrogen to the extent only of forming nitrous acid, with the result of producing nitrite of ammonia. (Schonbein, Chem. Gaz., March 1G, 1857.) Medical Properties. The compounds of ammonia are stimulant, antispasmo- dic, antacid, and alexipharmic. According to Dr. Ogier Ward, they possess the property of dissolving the protein principles of the blood ; and, while their pri - inary action is stimulant, their remote operation is sedative, resolvent, and at- tenuant, implying the power of carrying the products of inflammatibiT out of the system. Dr. Ward appears to be much influenced in his views by the alleged dis- covery, by Dr. Richardson, that the blood contains ammonia as a normal consti- tuent, and owes its fluidity to its presence. (See Am. Journ. of the Med. Sci. for April, 1857, from the London Lancet.) The following table contains a list of the principal officinal preparations of ammonia, with their synonymes. I. In Aqueous Solution. Aqua Ammoni® Fortior, U. S.; Ammoni® Liquor Fortior, Br.— Stronger Water of Ammonia. Stronger Solution of Ammonia. Linimentum Camphor® Compositum, Br. Aqua Ammoniae, U. S.; Liquor Ammoniae, Br.— Water of Ammonia. Solution of Ammonia. Hydrargyrum Amraoniatum, U. S., Br. — Ammoniated Mercury. White Precipitate. Linimentum Ammoniae, U. S., Br. —Liniment of Ammonia. Volatile Liniment. Linimentum Hydrargyri, Br. —Liniment of Mercury. II. In Spirituous Solution. Spiritus Ammoniae, XJ. S. — Spirit of Ammonia. Spiritus Ammoniae Aromaticus, U. S., Br.—Aromatic Spirit of Am- monia. Tiuctura Guaiaci Ammoniata, XJ. S., Br.—Ammoniated Tincture of Guaiac. Tinctura Valerian® Ammoniata, U. S., Br. — Ammoniated Tincture of Valerian. III. In Saline Combination. Alumin® et Ammoni® Sulphas, U. S. — Sulphate of Alumina and Am- monia. Ammoni® Benzoas, Br. — Benzoate of Ammonia. Ammoni® Carbonas, TJ. S., Br. — Carbonate of Ammonia. Mild Vola- tile Alkali. Cuprum Ammoniatum, TJ. S. — Ammoniated Copper. Liquor Ammoni® Acetatis, U.S., Br. — Solution of Acetate of Am- monia. Spirit of Mindererus. Ammoni® Murias, TJ. S.; Ammoni® Hydrochloras, Br. — Muriate of Ammonia. Hydrochlorate of Ammonia. Sal Ammoniac. Ammoni® Phosphas, Br. — Phosphate of Ammonia. Ammoni® Sulphas, TJ. S. — Sulphate of Ammonia. Ammoni® Valerianas, TJ. S.— Valerianate of Ammonia PART I. Aqua Ammonise Fortior. 97 Ferri et Ammoniae Citras, U. S., Br. — Citrate of Iron and Ammonia. Ferri et Ammoniae Sulphas, U. S. — Sulphate of Iron and Ammonia. Ferri et Ammoniae Tartras, U. S.— Tartrate of Iron and Ammonia. Hydrargyrum Ammoniatum, U. S., Br.—Ammoniated Mercury. B. AQUA AMMONLE FORTIOR. U.S. Stronger Water of Ammonia. An aqueous solution of ammonia of the specific gravity OffiOO, and containing 26 per cent, of the gas. U. S. Of. Sijn. LIQUOR AMMONLE FORTIOR. Strong Solution of Ammo- nia. Ammoniacal gas, KH3, dissolved in water, and constituting 32 5 per cent, 'of the solution. Br. This preparation is too strong for internal exhibition, but forms a convenient ammoniacal solution for reduction, with distilled water, to the strength of or- dinary officinal water of ammonia (Aqua Ammoniee), or for preparing strong rubefacient and vesicating lotions and liniments. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia includes this solution in the list of the Materia Medica; but in the British, the following formula is given for its preparation. “ Take of Hydrochlorate of Ammonia, in coarse powder, three pounds [avoir- dupois] ; Slaked Lime four pounds [avoird.]; Distilled Water thirty-two fluidounces. Mix the Lime with the Hydrochlorate, and introduce the mixture into an iron bottle, placed in a metal pot surrounded by sand. Connect the iron tube, which screws air-tight into the bottle, in the usual manner, by corks, glass tubes, and caoutchouc collars, with a Woulf’s bottle capable of holding a pint [Imperial measure]; connect this with a second WoulPs bottle of the same size, the second bottle with a matrass of the capacity of three pints [Imp. meas.], in which twenty-two [fluid]ounces of the Distilled Water are placed, and the matrass, by means of a tube bent twice at right angles, with an ordinary bottle containing the remaining ten [fluid]ounces of Distilled Water. Bottles 1 and 2 are empty, and the latter and the matrass which contains the twenty-two ounces of distilled water are furnished each with a siphon-safety tube, charged with a very short column of mercury. The heat of a fire, which should be very gradu- ally raised, is now to be applied to the metal pot, and continued until bubbles ®f condensible gas cease to escape from the extremity of the glass tube which dips into the water of the matrass. The process being terminated, the matrass will contain about forty-three fluidounces of Strong Solution of Ammonia. “ Bottles 1 and 2 will now include, the first about sixteen, the second about ten fluidounces of a coloured ammoniacal liquid. Place this in a flask closed by a cork, which should be perforated by a siphon-safety tube containing a little mer- cury, and also by a second tube bent twice at right angles, and made to pass to the bottom of the terminal bottle used in the preceding process. Apply heat to the flask until the coloured liquid it contains is reduced to three-fourths of its original bulk. The product now contained in the terminal bottle will be nearly of the strength of Solution of Ammonia, and may be made exactly so by the addition of the proper quantity of Distilled Water, or of Strong Solution of Ammonia.” Br. In this process the ammonia is disengaged in the usual manner from muriate of ammonia by the action of lime, as explained under the head of Aqua Am- monise. But it is perceived, by the details of the process, that the purpose is to obtain both the stronger and ordinary solution of ammonia at one operation. This is done by connecting the iron bottle containing the materials with a series of four receivers, the first two being empty Woulfe’s bottles, the third a matrass containing twenty-two fluidounces of distilled water, and the fourth an ordinary 98 Aqua Ammonise Fortior. PART I. bottle, containing the, remainder of the distilled water. In the first two bottles, impurities are condensed with a considerable portion of ammonia; in the matrass, the officinal Strong Solution of Ammonia (Br.) has been formed by the absorption of the gas; and, in the fourth, is a weaker ammoniacal liquid formed by the absorp- tion of a portion of the gas which has passed through the matrass unabsorbed. This last liquid is raised to the strength of the officinal Solution of Ammonia (Br.) by forcing into it a portion of ammoniacal gas from the impure contents of the first two bottles. We presume that the receivers are to be kept cool by means of cold water or ice, though no such direction is given in the process. If the solution in the fourth bottle be not of the required officinal strength (sp. gr. 0 959), it may be made so by the addition of stronger solution from the matrass if too weak, or of distilled water, if too strong. Water of ammonia is seldom made by the formula of the Pharmacopoeia, but is prepared on a large scale, from one of the products of the coal gas manufac- ture, by the following more economical process. Gas liquor is distilled, and the distillate, which is principally hydrosulphuret of ammonia, is converted into sulphate of ammonia by sulphuric acid. The rough sulphate is then gently dis- tilled with milk of lime, the still being connected with a series of glass carboys, arranged like Woulfe’s bottles, and three-fourths filled with distilled water. In this way solution of ammonia may be obtained of maximum strength. (See a paper by Mr. W. Lawson, in the Am. Journ. ofPharm. for July, 1855, p. 362, from the Pharm. Journ. and Trans, for April, 1855.) Properties of Aqueous Ammonia of Maximum Strength. This is a colour- less liquid, of an acrid taste, and very pungent smell. It is strongly alkaline, and immediately changes turmeric, when held over its fumes, to reddish-brown. Cooled to 40° below zero, it concretes into a gelatinous mass, and at 130° boils, owing to the rapid disengagement of the gas. Its sp. gr. is 0-875 at 50°. Properties of the Officinal Stronger Water of Ammonia. This has similar properties to those above mentioned. Its sp. gr. is 0 900, U. S., 0*891, Br. When of the former density, it contains 26 per cent, of the gas, when of the latter 325 per cent. The stronger water of ammonia of the shops usually ranges in density from 0-900 to 0-920. Even when of proper officinal strength at first, it generally becomes weaker by the escape of ammonia. To prevent its deteriorating, it should be kept in closely stopped bottles in a cool place. If precipitated by lime-water, it contains carbonic acid. After having been saturated with nitric acid, a precipi- tate by carbonate of ammonia indicates earthy impurity, by nitrate of silver, a chloride, and by chloride of barium, a sulphate. Aqua Ammonias Fortior is a convenient preparation for making Aqua Am- monias (sp. gr. 0'960, U. & , 0-959, Br.) by dilution with distilled water. To effect this reduction, the U. S. stronger solution requires to be diluted with about one and a half measures of distilled water; the British, with two measures. When purchasing the Stronger Solution of Ammonia, the apothecary should not trust to its being of the officinal strength; but should ascertain the point by taking its density, either by the specific gravity bottle or the hydrometer. Another method of ascertaining its density is by the ammonia-meter of Mr. J. J. Griffin, of London, described and figured in the Pharm. Journ. and Trans. (x. 413). In reducing it to make Liquor Ammonias, the same precaution should be taken; and, if the mixture should not have the sp.gr. 0-960, it should be brought to that density by the addition either of the stronger solution or of dis- tilled water, as the case may require. A test of its strength given in the British Pharmacopoeia is, that a fluidraehm requires for neutralization 102 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid. Medical Properties and Uses. This solution is too strong for medical use in its unmixed state. Sufficiently diluted with spirit of camphor and rosemary, it has been much employed as a prompt and powerful rubefacient, vesicatory, or Aqua Ammoniae Fortior.—Ammoniae Carbonae. part I. escharotic, in various neuralgic, gouty, rheumatic, spasmodic, and inflammatory affections, in which strong and speedy counter-irritation is indicated. When mere rubefaction is desired, a mixture may be used composed of five fluidounces of the ammoniacal liquid and eight of the diluent liquids; and this will answer even for blistering or cauterizing, unless a very prompt effect is necessary. In the latter case, a lotion may be resorted to consisting of five measures of the am- moniacal to three of the diluent liquid. These mixtures are applied by means of linen folded several times, or a thick piece of flannel saturated with the liniment. A convenient mode is to fill the wooden cover of a large pill or ointment box, an inch or two in diameter, with patent lint, saturate this with the liquid, and press it upon the part. The ammonia is thus prevented from escaping, and a definite boundary given to the inflammation. The application will generally pro- duce rubefaction in from one to six or eight minutes, vesication in from three to ten minutes, and a caustic effect in a somewhat longer period. When a, solution of ammonia of 25° (sp. gr. 0‘905) is mixed with fatty matter, the mixture forms the vesicating ammoniacal ointment of Dr. Gondret. The amended formula of this ointment is as follows. Take of lard 32 parts, oil of sweet almonds 2 parts. Melt them together by the gentle heat of a candle or lamp, and pour the melted mixture into a bottle with a wide mouth. Then add IT parts of solution of ammonia of 25°, and mix, with continued agitation, until the whole is cold. The ointment must be preserved in a bottle with a ground stopper, and kept in a cool place. When well prepared, it vesicates in ten minutes. A case of poisoning by stronger solution of ammonia, successfully treated by Dr. H. W. Reed, in which the stomach-pump, dilute acetic acid, olive oil, milk, hot fomentations, and strong purgative enemata were used, is related in the Lon- don Med. Times and Gaz. (xi. 59). The subsequent irritation and inflammation were combated chiefly by morphia, and by leeches to the stomach and throat. The immediate effects, after swallowing the ammonia, were those of the strong corrosive poisons. There may be danger of excessive irritation and inflamma- tion of the nostrils, mouth, and air-passages, from the inadvertent inhalation of the gas escaping from a bottle of the stronger water of ammonia, when freshly opened. The best antidote, under these circumstances, would be the inhalation of the vapours of vinegar or acetic acid. Pharm. Use. In the preparation of Aconitia, U. S. Off. Prep. Ammonire Phosphas, Br.; Linimentum Camphorae Compositum, Br.; Liquor Ammoniae, Br.; Spiritus Ammoniae Aromaticus, Br. B. AMMONLE CARBONAS. US.,Br. Carbonate of Ammonia. Sesquicarbonate oLAmmonia, 2NH40,3C02. Br. ThisTiaFbeen transferred, in the recent revision of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, from the Preparations to the Materia Medica, where it also stands in the British Pharmacopoeia, certainly the proper place for it, as it is prepared only by the manufacturing chemist. Carbonate of ammonia is usually prepared, on the large scale, by subliming a mixture of muriate of ammonia and chalk (carbonate of lime) from an iron pot into a large earthen or leaden receiver. By the reciprocal action of the salts employed, the carbonic acid of the chalk unites with the ammonia of the muriate, generating carbonate of ammonia, and the muriatic acid with the lime, forming water and chloride of calcium. The carbonate and water sublime together as a hydrated carbonate of ammonia, and the residue is chloride of calcium. The re- lative quantities of chalk aud muriate of ammonia, for mutual decomposition, are 50 of the former, and 535 of the latter, or one eq. of each. But a great excess Ammoniac Carbonas. PART I. of chalk is usually taken; being desirable in order to ensure the perfect decom- position of the muriate of ammonia, any redundancy of which would sublime along with the carbonate and render it impure. Sulphate of ammonia maybe substituted for the muriate with much economy, as was shown by Payen. This double decomposition between sulphate of am- monia and carbonate of lime takes place in the dry way only, that is, by sublima- tion. In the wet way, the double decomposition is reversed; carbonate of ammonia and sulphate of lime reacting so as to form sulphate of ammonia and ;arbonate of lime. Large quantities of this carbonate are manufactured indi- rectly from coal-gas liquor and bone-syirit; the ammoniacal products in these liquors beingconverted successively into sulphate, muriate, and carbonate of ammonia. (See Ammonise Murias.) The salt as first obtained has a slight odour of tar, and leaves a blackish carbonaceous matter when dissolved in acids. Hence it requires to be purified, which is effected in iron pots, surmounted with leaden heads. Properties. Carbonate (sesquicarbonate) of ammonia, recently prepared, is in white, moderately hard, translucent masses, of a fibrous and crystalline ap- pearance, a pungent ammoniacal smell, and a sharp penetrating taste. It pos- sesses an alkaline reaction, and, when held under a piece of turmeric paper, changes it to brown, owing to the escape of monocarbonate of ammonia. When long or insecurely kept, it gradually passes into the state of bicarbonate, becom- ing opaque and friable, and falling into powder. It is soluble without residue in about four times its weight of cold water, but is decomposed by boiling water into two eqs. of monocarbonate which dissolve, and one eq. of carbonic acid, which escapes with effervescence. According to Dr. Barker (Observations on the Dublin Pharmacopoeia), it dissolves abundantly in diluted alcohol, as also in heated alcohol of the sp. gr. 0 836, with effervescence of carbonic acid. When heated on a piece of glass, it should evaporate without residue, and, if turmeric paper held over it undergoes no change, it has passed into bicarbonate. As now prepared from coal-gas liquor, it usually contains traces of tarry matter, which gives a dark colour to its solution in acids. When it is saturated with nitric acid, neither chloride of barium nor nitrate of silver causes a precipitate. The non-action of these tests shows the absence of sulphate and muriate of ammo- nia. It is decomposed by acids, the fixed alkalies and their carbonates, lime- water and magnesia, solution of chloride of calcium, alum, acid salts, such as bitartrate and bisulphate of potassa, solutions of iron (except the tartrate of iron and potassa), corrosive sublimate, the acetate and subacetate of lead, and the sulphates of iron and zinc. Composition. The salt consists of three eqs. of carbonic acid 66, two of am- monia 34, and two of water 18 = 118; or, which comes to the same thing, of one eq. of bicarbonate 61, and one of monocarbonate 39, combined with the same quantity of water. The medicinal carbonate of ammonia is, therefore, when perfect, a sesquicarbonate, as it is defined in the British Pharmacopoeia. On the ammonium theory, the two eqs. of water disappear, and the salt becomes a sesquicarbonate of oxide of ammonium. Dalton and Scanlan have rendered it probable that it really consists of the two salts above mentioned; for, when treated with a small quantity of cold water, monocarbonate is dissolved and bi- carbonate left. When converted into bicarbonate by exposure to the air, each eq. of the medicinal salt loses one eq. of monocarbonate, a change which leaves the acid and base in the proper proportion to form the bisalt. The mutual de- composition of the salts, employed in its preparation, would generate, if no loss occurred, the monocarbonate, and not the sesquicarbonate. The way in which the latter salt is formed may be thus explained. By the mutual decomposition of three eqs. of muriate of ammonia and three of chalk, three eqs. of monocar- bonate of ammonia, three of water, and three of chloride of calcium are generated. PART I. Ammoniae Oarbonas. 101 During the operation, however, one eq. of ammonia, and one of water, forming together oxide of ammonium, are lost; so that there remain to be sublimed, three eqs. of carbonic acid, two of ammonia, and two of water; or, in other words, the constituents in the proper proportion for forming the hydrated ses- quicarbonate of ammonia, or sesquicarbonate of oxide of ammonium. When the salt is re-sublimed in the process of purification, two eqs. are said to lose one eq. of carbonic acid, and to become one eq. of the 5-4 carbonate. Accordingly, the medicinal carbonate, after having been submitted to a second sublimation, is not a perfect sesquicarbonate. Medical Properties and Uses. Carbonate of ammonia is stimulant, diapho- retic, antispasmodic, powerfully antacid, and in large doses emetic. Under cer- tain circumstances it may prove expectorant; as when, in the last stages of phthisis, it facilitates the excretion of the- sputa by increasing the muscular power. As a stimulant, it is exhibited principally in typhus fever, and very fre- quently in connection with wine-whey. Its principal advantage, in this disease, is its power to increase the action of the heqff pnH n.rtpyjpg without unduly ex- citing the brain. It is employed, with a view to the same effect, and as an antacid, in certain stages of atonic gout, and in the gastric derangement supervening on habits of irregularity and debauchery. As a~diaphoretic. it is resorted to in gout and chronic rheumatism, particularly the latter, in conjunction with gnaiac. Dr. Pereira has employed it in many cases of epilepsy with benefit. In diabetes it has been recommended by Dr. Barlow in England, and Bouchardat in France. In cases of scrofula attended with languid circulation and dry skin, it is said to produce excellent effects. It is very seldom used as an emetic; but is supposed to act with advantage, in this way, in some cases of paralysis. In psoriasis and lepra vulgaris. Cazenave has used it with remarkable success. Two cases of glanders, successfully treated chiefly with five-grain doses of carbonate of am- monia, repeated every hour or two hours, are reported by Dr. Mackenzie, of London. (Banking's Abstract, No. 18, p. 230.) As an external application, it is rubefacient, and may be employed in several ways. Reduced to fine powder, and mixed with some mild ointment, it is useful in local rheumatism.**T)ne part of it, incorporated with three parts of extract of belladonna, forms a plaster very effi- cacious in relieving local and spasmodic pains. Coarsely bruised, and scented with oil of lavender, it constitutes the common smelling salts, so much used as a nasal stimulant in syncope and hysteria.* The ordinary dose is five grains, every two, three, or four hours, given in the form of pill or mixture. Thedose as an emetic is thirty grains, repeated if necessary, and assisted by free dilution. It should nevqr ha given jq powder on account of its volatile nature. Pills of it may be made with some vegetable extract, as of gentian, and should be dTspensed in a wide-mouthed vial, and not in a box. Carbonate of ammonia is sometimes directed to be made into pills with sulphate of quinia. According to Mr. J. M. Maisch, these salts are incompatible; and, unless the physician wishes to give sulphate of ammonia and free quinia, they should not be ordered together. If so ordered, Mr. Maisch suggests that they should be rubbed up with a little strong alcohol, in order that the whole of the carbonic acid may be evolved, before they are made into pills. If this be not done, each pill will swell and burst from the gradual extrication of the acid. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 309.) Carbonate of ammonia is sometimes employed to make effervescing draughts, 20 grains of the salt requiring for this purpose 6 fluidrachms of lemomjuice, 24 grains of citric acid, or 25£ grains of tartaric acid. Off. Prep. Cuprum Ammoniatum, U. S.; Ferri et Ammoniae Tartras,U.S.; Liquor Ammoniae Acetatis, U. S.; Spiritus Ammoniae Aromaticus. B. * In Mounsey’s recipe for the English preparation, called Preston salts, the essence to be idded to the carbonate is made as follows. Take of oil of cloves gss; oil of lavender gj; oil of bergamot giiss; stronger solution of ammonia (sp. gr. 0-880) fgx. Mix. The bottle* PART I. 102 Ammonise Murias. AMMONLE MURIAS. U.S. Muriate of Ammonia. Off Syn. AMMONITE HYDROCHLORAS. Hydrochlorate of Ammo- nia'. NH4C1. Br. Sal ammonia 3, Hydrochlorate of ammonia; Hydrochlorate d’ammoniaque, Sel ammoniac, Salmiak, Germ.; Sale ammoniaco, rial.; Sal ammoniaco, Span. This salt is placed in the Materia Medica list of both the U. S. and Br. Phar- macopoeias. It originally came from Sgypt, where it was obtained by sublima- tion from the soot resulting from the burning of camels’ dung, which is used in that country for fuel. Preparation. At present muriate of ammonia is derived from two principal sources; the ammoniacal liquor, called gas liquor. found in the condensing ves- sels of coal-gas works, and the brown, fetid ammoniacal liquor, known under the name of bone-spirit, which is a secondary product, obtained from the destruc- tive distillation of bones, in the manufacture of bone-black. These two liquors are the chief sources of ammoniacal compounds; for they are both used to pro- cure muriate of ammonia, and this salt is employed, directly or indirectly, for obtaining all the other salts of ammonia. Other sources are stale urine, coal soot, guano, peat, and bituminous schist. Gas liquor contains carbonate, hydrocyanate, hydrosulphate, and sulphate of ammonia, but principally the carbonate. It is saturated with sulphuric acid, and the solution obtained, after due evaporation, furnishes brown crystals of sulphate of ammonia. These are then sublimed with chloride of sodium in iron pots, lined with clay, and furnished with a leaden dome or head. By the mutual action of the sulphate, water, and chloride, there are formed muriate of ammonia which sublimes, and sulphate of soda which behind. Thus NII3,H0,S03 and NaCl become NH3,HC1 and NaO,S03. Sometimes, instead of the ammonia of the gas liquor being first converted into the sulphate, it is made at once into muriate by the addition of muriatic acid or chloride of calcium. When chloride of calcium is employed, the chief reaction takes place between carbonate of am- monia and the chloride, whereby muriate of ammonia is formed in solution, and carbonate of lime precipitated. The solution is duly evaporated, whereby brown crystals of the muriate are obtained. These, after having been dried, are purified by sublimation in an iron subliming pot, coated with a composition of clay, sand, and charcoal, and covered with a dome of lead. These pots are sometimes suf- ficiently large to hold 500 pounds. “A gentle fire is kept up under the subliming pot for seven or eight days, when the dome having cooled down, and the sal am- moniac somewhat contracted, so as to loosen from the sides, the dome is thrown off from the iron pot, and about two or three hundred weight of white, semi-trans- parent sal ammoniac are knocked off in cakes.” (Pereira, Mat. Med., 3d ed., p. 446.) In the destructive distillation of bones for making bone-black, the distilled pro- ducts are the bone-spirit already mentioned, being chiefly an aqueous solution of carbonate of ammonia, and an empyreumatic oil called animal oil. These pro- ducts all result from a new arrangement of the ultimate constituents of the ani- mal matter. Thus, hydrogen and oxygen form the water; carbon and oxygen, the carbonic acid; nitrogen and hydrogen, the ammonia; and carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, the animal oil. Muriate of ammonia may be obtained from bone-spirit in the manner just de- scribed for procuring it from gas liquor. Sometimes, however, the sulphate of ammonia is not made by direct combination, but by digesting the bone-spirit are to be filled with carbonate of ammonia, half with the salt coarsely an i the remainder with it in fine powder; and then as much of the above essence as .fie si't will absorb is to be added. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xiii. 628.) part I. Ammonix Murias. 103 with ground plaster of Paris (sulphate of lime). By double decomposition, sul- phate of ammonia and carbonate of lime are formed. The sulphate of ammonia is then converted into the muriate by sublimation with common salt, in the man- ner just explained. Other processes have been proposed or practised for obtaining muriate ol ammonia. For an account of the manufacture of ammoniacal salts, and for a list of the patents issued in Great Britain, since 1827, for their preparation, the reader is referred to the Pharm. Journ. and Trans, (xii. 29, 63, and 113). Commercial History. All the muriate of ammonia consumed in the United States is obtained from abroad. Its commercial varieties are known under the names of the grade and refined. The crude is imported from Calcutta in chests containing from 350 to 400 pounds; and is consumed almost exclusively by cop- persmiths and other artisans in brass and copper, being employed for the purpose of keeping the metallic surfaces bright, preparatory to brazing. The refined comes to us exclusively from England, packed in casks containing from 5 to 10 cwt. Properties. Muriate of ammonia is a white, translucent, tough, fibrous salt, occurring in large cakes, about two inches thick, convex on one side and concave on the other. It has a pungent, saline taste, but no smell. Its sp. gr. is 145. It dissolves in three parts of cold, and one of boiling water, and cold is produced during its solution. It is less soluble in rectified spirit than in water, and spar- ingly so in absolute alcohol. This salt is very difficult to powder in the ordinary way. Its pulverization, however, may be readily effected by making a boiling saturated solution of the salt, and stirring it as it cools. The salt is thus made to granulate, and in this state, after having been drained from the remaining solution and dried, may be easily powdered. At a red heat it sublimes without decomposition, as its mode of preparation shows. Exposed to a damp atmo- sphere it becomes slightly moist. It has the property of increasing the solubility of corrosive sublimate in water. It is decomposed by the strong mineral acids, and by the alkalies and alkaline earths; the former disengaging muriatic acid, the latter, ammonia, both sensible to the smell. Muriate of ammonia is the salt usually employed for obtaining gaseous ammonia, which is conveniently disen- gaged by means of lime. It is incompatible with acetate of lead and nitrate of silver, producing a precipitate with the former of chloride of lead, with the latter of chloride of silver. Muriate of ammonia is little subject to adulteration. If not entirely volatil- ized by heat and soluble in water, it contains impurity. Still, as ordinarily pre- pared, it contains iron in the state of protochloride. This metal may be detected by boiling a small portion of a saturated solution of the salt with a drop or two of nitric acid, and then adding ferrocyanide of potassium, when the character- istic blue colour occasioned by iron will be produced. If the salt is entirely volatilized by heat, and yet produces a precipitate with chloride of barium, the presence of sulphate of ammonia is indicated. Composition. Muriate of ammonia is composed of one eq. of muriatic acid 36‘5, and one of ammonia 17 = 53'5. Viewed as chloride of ammonium, it consists of one eq. of chlorine and one of ammonium (NH4C1). Medical Properties. Muriate of ammonia acts primarily as a stimulant, purg- ing in large doses, but rather constipating in small ones. Its secondary action is that of a resolvent, conjoined with a tonic power, derived probably from the presence of chlorine. By reason of these"properties, it forms, according to Dr. 0. Ward, an excellent substitute for mercury, in cases where that medicine, on account of its debilitating effect, is inadmissible. It has been recommended in chronic rheumatism; in pleuritis, chronic bronchitis, peritonitis, dysentery, and other inflammations of the serous and mucous membranes, after the first vio- lence of the disease has abated; in chronic inflammation and enlargement of the thoracic and abdominal viscera; in scrofulous and syphilitic enlargements of Ammoniae Murias.—Ammoniae Sulphas. PART I. the lymphatic glands; and in amenorrhoea, when dependent on deficient action of the uterus. Several cases of pectoral disease simulating incipient phthisis are reported, in Otto’s Bibliothek for 1834, to have been cured by this salt. Ac- cording to Dr. Watson, it is a very efficacious remedyAaJfiemicraiiia. In the opinion of Dr. Ebden, of the Bengal medical service, it is apowerful remedy for neuralgic affections generally; such as tic douloureux, nervous headache, tooth- ache, sciatica, and neuralgic dysmenorrhoea. He gives it in the amount of from twenty-five to thirty-five grains in a fluidounce of camphor mixture, or of mint- water, every twenty minutes, for three doses. Usually, after the second dose, the immediate pain is relieved. (Ranking"1 s Abstract, No. xx. 55.) In 1851, Dr. Aran reported his success with this remedy in intermittent fever to the Academy of Medicine, of Paris, having cured eleven out of thirteen cases. M. Fischer, of Dresden, in 1821, recommended it in chronic enlargement ot the prostate: and, since then, several German practitioners have confirmed his statement. Dr. A. Lindsay, of Glasgow, has investigated the physiological and therapeutical effects of muriate of ammonia. Taken in health he found it to improve the appetite, and to give a certain buoyancy to~tfiespirits. In his hands it proved particu- larly efficacious in rheumatism, and chronic bronchitis. In the latter disease, when the sputa were tough and tenacious, it~speedily improved their quality. (Med. Exam, for Jan. 1856, from the Glasgow Med.Journ.) Similar testimony is borne to its value in chronic bronchitis by M. Delvaux, of Brussels, who found it to diminish dyspnoea, mitigate cough, and facilitate and lessen ex- pectoration. (Ann.de Therap., 1855, 99.) The dose of muriate of ammonia is from five to thirty grains, repeated every two or three hours, and given in sweetened water or mucilage. When given in enlarged prostate, the dose recommended is fifteen grains every two hours, grad- ually increased until nearly half an ounce is taken daily. When the dose is greater than the system can safely bear, it produces disordered digestion, a miliary eruption, profuse sweats, and scorbutic symptoms. Externally, muriate of ammonia is used in solution, as a stimulant and resolv- ent, in contusions, indolent tumours, &c. An ounce of the salt, dissolved in nine fluidounces of water and one of alcohol, forms a solution of convenient strength. When the solution is to be used as a wash_for ulcers, or an injection in leucor- rhoea, it should ndTJiontairrmore'TMffTrom'one to four drachms oTthe salfUTar pint of water. The vapour of muriate of ammonia has been administered by inhalation, employed several timesaday, in chronic catarrh, with marked advantage, by Dr. Gieseler, of Germany. Pharm. Use. In preparing Ammonite Valerianas, U. S. Off. Prep. Aqua Ammouise, U. S.; Spiritus Ammoniae, U. S. B. AMMONITE SULPHAS. U. S., Br. Appendix. Sulphate of Ammonia. This salt has been introduced into the Materia Medica list of the U. S. Pharma- copoeia, and into the Appendix of the British, as a substance employed in the pre- paration of other medicines. It is usually obtained as one of the steps in the pre- paration of muriate of ammonia. (See Ammonias Murias.) The impure salt result- ing from the sublimation of gas liquor or fetid bone-spirit, saturated with sulphuric acid, is submitted repeatedly to solution and crystallization until obtained pure. It is in colourless flattened prisms, unalterable in the air at common temperatures, but efflorescing ihTTieate3~air with the loss of half its water, soluble in twice its weight of cold and its own weight of boiling water, fusible by heat, and wholly volatilizable, but, according to Berzelius, with partial decomposition. It contains PART I. Ammonise Sulphas.—Ammoniacum. 105 J54 3 _per cent, of water. It is known to be a sulphate by giving a white pre- cipitate with chloride of barium, and scarcely any with a dilute solution of nitrate of silver, and to contain ammonia by emitting the smell of that gas when rubbed with hydrate of lime or of potassa. It is not used as a medicine, but enters intc the composition of two officinals; "and the sulphate of iron and ammonia. Pharm. Use. In the preparation of Acidum Sulphuricum, Br. Off. Prep. Ferri et Ammoniae Sulphas, U. S. B. AMMONIACUM. U.S.,Br. Ammoniac. The concrete juice of Porema Am.uiai4.iacum. U. S. Gum-resinous exudation from the stem. Br. Gomme ammoniaque, Fr.; Ammoniak, Germ.; Comma ammoniaco, Ital.; Gomma amo- niaco, Span.; Uskek, Arab.; Semugh belskereen, Persian. Much uncertainty long existed as to the ammoniac plant. It was generally believed to be a Ferula till Willdenow raised, from some seeds mixed with the gum-resin found in the shops, a plant which he ascertained to be a Heracleum, and named II. qummiferum, under the impression that it must be the source of the medicine? On this authority, the plant was adopted by the British Colleges, and recognised in former editions of our national Pharmacopoeia. Willdenow expressly acknowledged that he could not procure from it any gum-resin, but ascribed the result to the influence of climate. The Heracleum, however, did not correspond exactly with the representations given of the ammoniac plant by travellers; and Sprengel ascertained that it was a native of the Pyrenees, and never produced gum. Mr. Jackson, in his account of Morocco, imperfectly de- scribed a plant of that country, supposed to be a Ferula, from which gum-am- moniac is procured by the natives. This plant was ascertained by Dr. Falconer to be Ferula Tinaitana (Royle’s Mat. Med.), and its product is thought to be the ammoniacum of the ancients, which was obtained from Africa; but this is not the drug now used under that name, which comes exclusively from Persia. M. Fontanier, who resided many years in Persia, saw the ammoniac plant growing in the province of Fars, and sent a drawing of it with specimens to Paris. From these it was inferred to be a species of Ferula; and Merat and De Lens proposed for it the name, originally given to it by Lemery, of F. ammonifera. It was sub- sequently, however, ascertained, from specimens obtained in Persia by Colonel Wright, and examined by Dr. David Don, that it belonged to a genus allied to Ferula, but essentially different, which was named, by Dr. Don, Dorema. It is described in the 16th vol. of the Linn. Transactions, under the name of Dorema Ammoniacum. This is now acknowledged by the officinal authorities. The same plant was described and figured by Jaubert an'd Spach in their “Illustrations of Oriental Plants ” (Paris, 1842, t. 40, p. 78), by the name of Diserneston Qum- miferum. under the erroneous impression that it belonged to a previously un- described genus. The ammoniac plant is umbelliferous, and belongs to the class and order Pentandria Digynia of Linnaeus. It grows spontaneously in Farsistan, Irauk, Chorassan, and other Persian provinces. Dr. Grant found it abundantly in Syghan near Bameean, on the northwest slope of the Hindoo Coosh mountains. It attains the height of six or seven feet, and in the spring and early part of summer abounds in a milky juice, which flows out upon the slightest puncture. From the accounts of travellers, it appears that, in the month of May, the plant is pierced in innumerable places by an insect of the beetle kind. The juice, exuding through the punctures, concretes upon the stem, and when quite dry is 106 Ammoniacum. PART I. collected by the natives.. M. Fontanier states that the juice exudes sponta- neously, and that the harvest is about the middle of June. According to Dr. Grant, the drug is collected in Syghan, like assafetida, from the root of the plant. The gum-resin is seut to Bushire, whence it is transmitted to India, chiefly to Bombay. A small portion is said to be taken to the ports of the Le- vant, and thence distributed. The name of the drug is thought to have been derived from the temple of Jupiter Ammon in the Libyan desert, where the ammoniac of the ancients is said to have been collected; but Dr. Don considers it a corruption of Armeniacum, originating in the circumstance that the gum- resin was formerly imported into Europe through Armenia. Properties. Ammoniac comes either in the state of tears, or in aggregate masses, and in both forms is frequently mixed_with impurities. That of the tears, however,.is preferable, as the purest may be conveniently picked out and kept for use. These are of an irregular shape, usually more or less globular, opaque, yellowish on the outside, whitish within, compact, homogeneous, brittle when cold, and breaking with a conchoidal, shining fracture. The masses are of a darker colour and less uniform structure, appearing, when broken, as if composed of numerous white or whitish tears, embedded in a dirty gray or brownish sub- stance, and frequently miugled with foreign matters, such as seeds, fragments of vegetables, and sand or other earth. We have seen masses composed of agglu- tinated tears alone. The smell of ammoniac is peculiar, and stronger in the mass than in the tears. The taste is slightly sweetish, bitter, and somewhat acrid. The sp. gr. is 1-207. When heated, the gum-resin softens and becomes adhesive, but does not melt. It burns with a white flame, swelling up, and emitting a smoke of a strong, resinous, slightly alliaceous odour. It is partly soluble in water, alcohol, ether, vinegar, and alkaline solutions. Triturated with water, it forms an opaque milky emulsion, which becomes clear upon standing. The alcoholic solution is transparent, but is rendered milky by the addition of water. Bucholz obtained from 100 parts of ammoniac, 22 4 parts of gum, 72 0 of resin, l-6 of bassorin, and 4 0 of water including volatile oil and loss. Braconnot obtained 18 4 per cent, of gum, 70’0 of resin, 4-4 of a gluten-like substance (bassorin), and 60 of water, with 12 per cent, of loss. Hagen succeeded in procuring the volatile oil in a separate state by repeated distillation with water. It has a penetrating disagreeable odour, and a taste at first mild, but afterwards bitter and nauseous. The resin of ammoniac is dissolved by alcohol, and by the fixed and volatile oils; but it is divided by ether into two resins, of which one is soluble, the other insoluble in that menstruum. Medical Properties and Uses. This gum-resin is stimulant and expectorant, in large doses cathartic, and, like many other stimulants, may be so given as occasionally to prove diaphoretic, diuretic, or emmenagogue. It has been em- ployed in medicine from the highest antiquity, being mentioned in the writings of Hippocrates. The complaints in which it is most frequently used are chronic catarrh, asthma, and other pectoral affections attended with deficient expecto- ration without acute inflammation, or with a too copious secretion from the bronchial mucous membrane, dependent upon debility of the vessels. It is thought to have been useful in some cases of amenorrhoea, and in chlorotic and hysterical conditions of the system arising out of that complaint. It has also been prescribed in obstructions or chronic engorgements of the abdominal vis- cera, under the vague notion of its deobstruent power. Any good which it may do in these affections, is more probably ascribable to its revulsive action upon the alimentary mucous membrane. Authors speak of its utility in long and ob- stinate colics dependent on mucous matter lodged in the intestines; but it would be difficult to ascertain in what cases such mucous matter existed, and, even admitting its presence, to decide whether it was a cause or a result cf the dis- PAKT I. Amygdala Amara.—Amygdala Duleis. 107 eased action. Ammoniac is usually administered in combination with other ex- pectorants, with tonics, or emmenagogues. It is much less used than formerly, Externally applied, in the shape of a plaster, it is thought to be useful as a dis- cutient or resolvent in white swellings of the joints, and other indolent tumours (See Emplastrum Ammoniaci.) It is given in substance, in the shape of pill oi emulsion. The latter form is preferable. (See Mistura Ammoniaci.) The dose is from ten to thirty grains. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Ammoniaci, U. S.; Emplast. Ammoniaci cum Hy- drargyro; Emplast. Galbaui, Br.; Mistura Ammoniaci; Pil. Scillae Compositae. W. AMYGDALA AMARA. US. Bitter Almond. The kernel of the fruit of Amvgdalus communis, variety an\ara. JJ. S. Amande arnere, Fr.; Bittere Mandeln, Germ.; Mandorle amare, Ital.; Almendra amarga, Span. AMYGDALA DULCIS. US. Sweet Almond. The kernel of the fruit of Amygdalus communis, variety-tiuiczs. U. S. Off. Syn. AMYGDALA. "Jordan Almonds. Amygdalus communis, var. duleis. The sweet, almond tree. The seed. Amande douce, Fr.; Siisse Mandeln, Germ.; Mandorle dolci, Ital.; Almendra dulce, Span. Amygdalus. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Monogynia. — Nat. Qrd. Amygdalese. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-cleft, inferior. Petals five. Drupe with a nuTpcrTorated with pores. Willd. Amygdalus communis. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 982; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 507, t. 183. The almond-tree rises usually from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and divides into numerous spreading branches. The leaves stand upon short foot- stalks, are about three inches long, and three-quarters of an inch broad, ellipti- cal, pointed at both ends, veined, minutely serrated, with the lower serratures and petioles glandular, and are of a bright-green colour. The flowers are large, of a pale-red colour varying to white, with very short peduncles, and petals longer than the calyx, and usually stand in pairs upon the branches. The fruit is of the peach kind, with the outer covering thin, tough, dry, and marked with a longitudinal furrow, where it opens when fully ripe. Within this covering is a rough shell, containing the kernel or almond. There are several varieties of this species of Amygdalus, differing chiefly in the size and shape of the fruit, the thickness of the shell, and the taste of the kernel. The two most important are Amygdalus (communis) duleis and Amyg- dalus (commumsl.amara. the former bearing sweet, the latter bitter almonds!’ Anothervariety is the fragilis of De Candolle, which yields the soft-shelled almonds. The almond-tree is a native of Persia, Syria, and Barbary, and is very exten- sively cultivated in various parts of the south of Europe. It has been introduced into the United States; but in the northern and middle sections the fruit does not usually come to perfection. We are supplied with sweet almonds chiefly from Spain and the south of France. They are distinguished into the soft-shelled and hard-shelled, the former of which come from Marseilles and Bordeaux, the latter from Malaga. From the latter port they are sometimes brought to us with- out the sheik In British commerce, the two chief varieties are the Jordan and Valencia almonds, the former imported from Malaga, the latter from Valencia.* * Upon a visit to Spain, in the winter of 1860-61, the author was informed, when at Va- lencia, that the thin, paper-shelled almonds, exported from that town, were produced, not 108 Amygdala Amara.—Amygdala Dulcis. part I. The former are longer, narrower, more pointed, and more highly esteemed than the latter. The bitter almonds are obtained chiefly from Morocco, and are exported from Mogador. Properties. The shape and appearance of almonds are too well known to re- quire description. Each kernel consists of two white cotyledons, enclosed in a thin, yellowish-brown, bitter skin, which is easily separable after immersion in boiling water. When deprived of this covering, they are called blanched almonds. On exposure to the air, they are apt to become rancid; but, if thoroughly dried, and kept in well closed glass vessels, they may be preserved unaltered for many years. The two varieties require each a separate notice. 1. Amygdala Dulcis. Sweet Almonds. These, when blanched, are without smell, and have a sweet, very pleasant taste, which has rendered them a favourite article of diet in all countries where they are readily attainable. They are, how- ever, generally cansidered of difficult digestion. By the analysis of M. Boullay, it appears that they contain, in 100 parts, 5 parts of pellicle, 54 of fixed oil, 24 of albumen, 6 of uncrystallizable sugar, 3 of gum, 4 of fibrous matter, 35 of water, and 0 5 of acetic acid comprising loss. The albumen is somewhat peculiar, and is called emulsin. It may be obtained separate by treating the emulsion of almonds with' allowing the mixture, after frequent agitation, to stand until a clear fluid separates at the bottom of the vessel, drawing this off by a syphon, adding alcohol to it so as to precipitate the emulsin, then washing the precipi- tate with fresh alcohol, and drying it under the receiver of an air-pump. In this state it is a white powder, inodorous and tasteless, soluble in water, and insolu- ble in ether and alcohol. Its solution has an acid reaction, and, if heated to 212°, becomes opaque and milky, and gradually deposits a snow-white precipi- tate, amounting to about 10 per cent, of the emulsin employed. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 354, from Liebig's Annalen.) Its distinguishing property is that of producing certain changes, presently to be noticed, in amygdalin, which pro- perty it loses when its solution is boiled, though not by exposure in the solid state to a heat of 212°. (Ibid., 357.) It consists of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, with a minute proportion of sulphur, and is probably identical with the synaptase of Robiquet. The fixed oil is described under the head of Oleum Amygdalae, to which the reader is referred. Almonds, when rubbed with water, form a milky emulsion, the insoluble matters being suspended by the agency of the albuminous, mucilaginous, and saccharine principles. 2. Amygdala Amara. Bitter Almonds. These are smaller than the preced- ing variety. They have the bitter taste of the peach kernel, and, though when dry inodorous or nearly so, have, when triturated with water, the fragrance of the peach blossom. They contain the same ingredients as sweet almonds, and like them form a milky emulsion with water. It was formerly supposed that they also contained hydrocyanic acid and volatile oil, to which their peculiar taste and smell, and their peculiar operation upon the system were ascribed. It was, however, ascertained by MM. Robiquet and Boutron that these principles do not pre-exist in the almond, but result from the reaction of water; and Wohler and Liebig proved, what was suspected by Robiquet, that they are formed out of a substance of peculiar properties, denominated aniygdalin, which is the char- acteristic constituent of bitter almonds. This substance, which was discovered by Robiquet and Boutron, is white, crystallizable, inodorous, of a sweetish-bitter taste, unalterable in the air, freely soluble in water and hot alcohol, very slightly soluble in cold alcohol, and insoluble in ether. Its elementary constituents are in the immediate neighbourhood of Valencia, but chiefly in the Balearic Islands, and the Province of Alicante, whence they are sent to that port; and, in a journey through the in- terior from Valencia to Alicante, he noticed that the almond-tree, then in full bloom, was very abundant in the region back of the latter city, while there were comparatively iVw near the former.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Amygdala Amara.—Amygdala Dulcis. 109 nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; and it is supposed to be an amide; as. when treated with an alkali, it yields ammonia, and a peculiar acid which has been named amyqdalic acid. Liebig and Wohler recommend the following pro- cess for procuring It, In which the object of the fermentation is to destroy the sugar with which it is associated. Bitter almonds, previously deprived of their fixed oil by pressure, are to be boiled in successive portions of alcohol till ex- hausted. From the liquors thus obtained all the alcohol is to be drawn off by distillation; care being taken, near the end of the process, not to expose the syrupy residue to too great a heat. This residue is then to be diluted with water, mixed with good yeast, and placed in a warm situation. After the fermentation which ensues has ceased, the liquor is to be filtered, evaporated to the consist- ence of syrup, and mixed with alcohol. The amygdalin is thus precipitated in connection with a portion of gum, from which it may be separated by solution in boiling alcohol, which will deposit it upon cooling. If pure, it will form a per- fectly transparent solution with water. Any oil which it may contain may be separated by washing it with ether. One pound of almonds yields at least 120 grains of amygdalin. (Annalen der Pharm., xxn. and xxiii. 329.)* Amygdalin. mixed with an emulsion of sweet almonds, gives rise, among other products, to the volatile oil of bitter almonds and hydrocyanic acid—the emulsin of the sweet almonds acting the part of a ferment, by causing a reaction between the amygdalin and water; and the same result is obtained when pure emulsin is added to a solution of amygdalin. It appears then that the volatile oil and hydrocyanic acid, developed in bitter almonds when moistened, result from the mutual reaction of amygdalin, water, and emulsin. Certain substances have the effect of preventing this reaction, as, for example, alcohol and acetic acid. It is asserted that emulsin procured from other seeds, as those of the poppy, hemp, and mustard, is capable of producing the same reaction between water and amyg- dalin, though in a less degree. (Annal. der Pharm , xxviii. 290.) Amygdalin appears not to be poisonous when taken pure into the stomach; as there is no- thing in the system capable of acting the part of emulsin. Nevertheless, large quantities given to a dog have produced narcotic effects. Bitter almonds yield their fixed oil by pressure; and the volatile oil, impreg- nated witli hydrocyanic acid, may be obtained from the residue by distillation with water. (See Oleum Amygdalse Amarse.) Confectioners employ bitter almonds for communicating flavour to the syrup of orgeat. (See Syrupus Amygdalae.) The kernel of the peach possesses similar properties, and is frequently used as a substitute. It has been ascertained that bitter almond paste, and other substances which yield the same volatile oil, such as bruised cherry-laurel leaves, peach leaves, &c., have the property of destroy- ing the odour of musk, camphor, most of the volatile oils, creasote, cod-liver oil, the balsams, &c.; and M. Mahier, a French pharmaceutist, has employed them successfully to free mortars and bottles from the odour of assafetida, and other substances of disagreeable smell. All that is necessary is first to remove any oily substance by means of an alkali, and then to apply the paste or bruised leaves. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 209.) Medical Properties and Uses. Sweet almonds have no other influence upon the system than that of a nutrient and demulcent. The emulsion formed by tritu- rating them with water is a pleasant vehicle for the administration of other medi- cines, and is itself useful in catarrhal affections. From their nutritive properties, *>Amygdalin appears to be extensively diffused in plants, having been noticed not only in the ditterent genera of the Amygdalese, as Amygdalus, Cerasus, and Primus, but also by Wicke in various Pomaceoe, as Pyrus Malm, Sorbus Aucuparia, Sorbus hybrida, Sorbus tor- minales, Amelanchier vulgaris, Cotomaster vulgaris, and Cratsegus Oxycantha. (Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., lxxix. 79.) It may be advantageously procured from peach kernels, which have been found to yield 80 grains for each avoirdupois pound, or more than 1 per cent. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 227.) 110 Amygdala Amara.—Amygdala Bulcis.—Amylum. PART I. and the absence of starch in their composition, they have been recommended by Dr. Pavy as an ingredient in the diet of diabetic patients. (Guy’s Hosp. Rep., 1862, p. 213.) Bitter almonds are more active, and might be employed with ad- vantage in cases to which hydrocyanic acid is applicable. An emulsion made with them has proved useful in pectoral affections with cough, and is said to have cured intermittents. It probably operates by diminishing the excitability of the nervous centres. Dr. A. T. Thomson found it useful as a lotion in acne rosea and impetigo. Bitter almonds are said by Hufeland to have been success- fully employed for the expulsion of the tape-worm. In some persons they pro- duce urticaria, in the smallest quantities. Largely taken, they have sometimes proved deleterious. Landerer mentions the case of a lady, who was alarmingly affected by a bath, made from the residue of bitter almonds after expression of the fixed oil. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 321.) Wohler and Liebig propose, as a substitute for cherry-laurel water, which owes its effects to the hydrocyanic acid it contains, but is objectionable from its unequal strength, an extemporaneous mixture, consisting of seventeen grains of amygdalin, and one fluidounce of an emulsion made with two drachms of sweet almonds, and a sufficient quantity of water. This mixture contains, according to the above named chemists, one grain of anhydrous hydrocyanic acid, and is equivalent to two fluidounces of fresh cherry-laurel water. If found to answer in practice, it will have the advantage of certainty in relation to the dose; as amygdalin may be kept any length of time unaltered. If the calculation of Wohler and Liebig is correct as to the quantity of acid it contains, not more than a fluidrachm should be given as a commencing dose. Off. Prep, of Sweet Almonds. Mistura Amygdalae, TJ. S.; Pulvis Amygdalae Compositus, Br.; Syrupus Amygdalae, TJ. S. Off Prep, of Bitter Almonds. Syrupus Amygdalae, TJ. S. W. AMYLUM. TJ.S., Br. Starch. The fecula of the seed of Triticum vulgare. TJ. S. Common Wheat. Starch procured from the seed. Br. “ Amidon, Fr.; Stlirkmehl, Germ.; Amido, Ttal.; Almidon, Span. Starch is a proximate vegetable principle contained in most plants, and espe- cially abundant in the various grains, such as wheat, rye, barley, oats, rice, maize, &c.; in other seeds, as peas, beans, chestnuts, acorns, &c.; and in numerous tuberous roots, as those of the potato (Solanum tuberosum), the sweet potato (Convolvulus Batatas), the arrow-root, the cassava plant, and different species of Curcuiiia'. The process for obtaining it consists essentially in reducing the substances in which it exists to a state of minute division, agitating or washing them with cold water, straining or pouring off the liquid, and allowing it to stand till the fine fecula which it holds in suspension has subsided. This, when dried, is starch, more or less pure, according to the care taken in conducting the process!! The starch of commerce is procured chiefly from wheat, sometimes also from potatoes. Our space will not allow us to enter into deTails in relation to the particular steps of the operation to which those substances are subjected; and the omission is of less consequence, as starch is never prepared by the apothecary. Starch is white, pulverulent, opaque, and, as found in the shops, is usually in columnar masses, having a somewhat crystalline aspect, and producing a pecu- liar sound when pressed between the fingers. Its specific gravity is 1-505, at 67° F. (Payen.) When exposed to a moist air, it absorbs a considerable quan- tity of water, which may be driven off by a gentle heat. It is insoluble in alco- Amylum. PART I. hol, ether, and cold water; but unites with boiling water, which, on cooling, forms with it a soft semi-transparent paste, or a gelatinous opaline solution, according to the proportion of starch employed. The paste, placed on folds of blotting paper, renewed as they become wet, abandons its water, contracts, and assumes the appearance of horn. If the proportion of starch be very small, the solution, after slowly depositing a very minute quantity of insoluble matter, con- tinues permanent, and upon being evaporated yields a semi-transparent mass, which is partially soluble iu cold water. The starch has, therefore, been modi- fied by the combined agency of water and heat; nor can it be restored to its original condition. Exposed, in the dry state, to a temperature somewhat above 212°, it undergoes, according to Caventou, a similar modification; and a degree of heat sufficient to roast it slightly converts it into a substance soluble in cold water, called British gum, and applicable to the same purposes as gum in the arts.* The same change in regard to solubility is, to a certain extent, produced by mechanical means, as by trituration in a mortar; and that the effect is not the result of heat evolved by friction is evinced by the fact, that it takes place when the starch is triturated with water. Iodine forms with starch, whether in its original staffe or in solution, a blue compound; and the tincture of iodine is the most delicate test of its presence in any mixture. The colour varies somewhat according to the proportions em- ployed. When the two substances are about equal, the compound is of a beau- tiful indigo-blue; if the iodine is in excess, it is blackish-blue; if the starch, violet-blue. A singular property of the iodide of starch is that its solution be- comes colourless if heated to about 200°, and afterwards recovers its blue colour upon cooling. By boiling, the colour is permanently lost. Alkalies unite with starch, forming soluble compounds, which are decomposed by acids, the starch being precipitated. It is thrown down from its solution by lime-water and baryta- water, forming insoluble compounds with these earths. The solution of subacetate of lead precipitates it in combination with the oxide of the metal. Starch may be made to unite with tannin by boiling their solutions together; and a com- pound results, which, though retained by the water while hot, is deposited when it cools. By long boiling with diluted sulphuric, muriatic, or oxalic aoid, it is converted into dextrinf and glucose or grape sugar. A similar conversion into dextrin and glucose is effected by means of a principle called diastase, discovered by MM. Payen and Persoz in the seeds of barley, oats, and wlieab after germi- nation. (See Hordeum.) Strong muriatic and nitric acids dissolve it; and the latter, by the aid of heat, converts it into oxalic and malic acids. By the action of strong nitric, sulphuric, or crystallizable acetic acid, used with certain pre- cautions, the starch is rendered soluble, and may be obtained in this state by separating the acid by means of alcohol. (Chem. Gaz., Dec. 1, 1854, p. 450.) * The chief constituent of this substance is dextrin; but there is also produced another substance to which it owes its brown colour, and for which M. G61is proposes the name pyrodextrin. This is solid, black, insipid, inodorous, insoluble in alcohol or ether, but readily dissolved by water, with which it forms a viscid solution. It is always produced when substances containing much starch are exposed to a high heat. (Joum. de Pharm., Se ser., xxxiii. 405.)—Note to the twelfth edition. t Dextrin is a substance resembling gum in appearance and properties, but differing from it in not affording mucic acid by the action of nitric acid. It is largely dissolved by water, hot or cold, and forms a mucilaginous solution, from which it is precipitated by alcohol. This fluid has no action on dextrin. Large quantities of dextrin are now manu- factured in England, and employed for various purposes in the arts, under the name of artificial gum. It is found in the market in the form of mucilage, in that of a white brilliant powder, and in small masses or fragments resembling natural gum. According to M. Emile Thomas, it may be distinguished from gum arabic by the taste and smell of potato oil which it always possesses. It is made by the action either of acids or of diastase on starch. For particulars as to the manufacture, the reader is referred to a paper by M. Thomas, republished in the American Journal of Pharmacy (vol. xix. p. 284). 112 Amylum. PART I. By the continued action of concentrated sulphuric acid it is decomposed. When it is dissolved in strong nitric acid, and precipitated by water, a white powder is thrown down, called.xyloidin, in which one equivalent of the hydrogen of the starch is replaced by one eq. of hyponitric acid (N04); the formula of xyloidin being, according to Bechamp and Laurent, C12II9N014. Mixed with hot water, and exposed to a temperature of 70° or 80°, it undergoes chemical changes, wdiich result in the formation of several distinct principles, among which are sugar, a gummy substance (perhaps dextrin), and a modification of starch which De Saussure calledjimidine. With yeast starch undergoes the vinous fermenta- tion, being, howeverTfirst converted into sugar. Mixed with cheese and chalk it is said to yield alcohol without the previous saccharine conversion. (Berthelot, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxxii. 200.) Nature of Starch. The views now generally entertained in relation to starch, by which the above-mentioned phenomena may be most conveniently explained, are those originally presented by Raspail, and subsequently confirmed and ex- tended by Guibourt, Guerin, and others. According to these views, starch con- sists of organized granules, which, examined by the microscope, appear to be of various form and size. Different opinions have been held as to the precise struc- ture of the granules. The one first adopted is that they consist of a thin exterior coating, and of an interior substance; the former wholly insoluble, the latter solu- ble in water. The former constitutes, according to M. Payen, only 4 or 5 thou- sandths of the weight of starch. In relation to the interior portion, there is not an exact coincidence of opinion. M. Guerin supposed that it consisted of two distinct substances, one soluble in cold water, the other soluble at first in boiling water, but becoming insoluble by evaporation. Thus, when one part of starch is boiled for fifteen minutes in one hundred parts of water, and the liquid is allowed to stand, a small portion, consisting of the broken teguments, is gradually de- posited. If the solution be now filtered and evaporated, another portion is deposited which cannot afterwards be dissolved. When wholly deprived of this portion, and evaporated to dryness, the solution yields the part soluble in cold water. According to MM. Payen and Persoz, the interior portion of the globules consists only of a single substance, which is converted into the two just mentioned by the agency of water; and Thenard is inclined to the same opinion. An ap- propriate name for the interior soluble portion of starch is amidin, which has been adopted by some chemists. Starch, in its perfect state, is not affected by cold wrater, because the exterior insoluble teguments prevent the access of the liquid to the interior portion; but, when the pellicle is broken by the agency of heat, or by mechanical means, the fluid is admitted, and the starch partially dis- solved. Another view of the structure of the starch granule, founded on microscopic observation, has been advanced by Schleiden. According to this view, it con- sists of concentric layers, all of which have the same chemical composition; but the outer layers, having beeu first formed, have more cohesion than the inner, and are consequently more difficult of solubility. The rings observed upon the surface of the granules, in some varieties, are merely the edges of these layers; and the point or hylum about which the rings are concentrically placed, is a minute hole, through which probably the substance of the interior layers was introduced. {Pharm. Central Blatt, 1844, p. 401.) Mr. J. J. Field thinks he has demonstrated that the granule consists, as at first supposed, of an interior matter surrounded by a distinct membranous envelope. Having saturated some canna starch with glycerin, and then added a little water, an endosmose of the thinner outer liquid took place into the granules, distending them so as to rupture their investing membrane, which was distinctly visible, under the microscope, in longitudinal wrinkles. The concentric rings he thinks nothing more than folds of the membrane, produced probably by the contraction PART I. Amylum. of the granules. (Pharm. Journ , xiv. 253.) The idea has been advanced that the starch granule is a true vegetable cell with a nucleus, which surrounds itself by a cell-wall, which then secretes the contents of the cell in successive layers. This view combines that of Schleiden with that of Raspail. (Grundy, Ibid., p.447.) In accordance with it, the hylum may be considered as the eifete nucleus in the cell-wall. The cell-wall has been supposed to have a different composition from the interior; as, when separated, as above stated, by the action of boiling water, which leaves it alone undissolved, it is not coloured blue by iodine. {Ibid., p. 448.) If the granule be really a cell, it probably contains nitrogenous matter ; and this may exist in the envelope. This idea is supported by the fact that, when treated with boiling solution of potassa, starch gives out a little nitrogen in the state of ammonia. {Journ. de Pharm., Juin, 1855, p.409.) The tegumentary portion of starch, for which the name of amylin has been proposed, is, when entirely freed from the interior soluble matter, wholly insol- uble in water even by prolonged boiling, insoluble in alcohol, and said to suffer no change by the action of diastase. The acids, however, act upon it as they do upon starch. It is thought to approach nearer in properties to'lignin than to any other principle. Varieties. Starch, as obtained from different substances, is somewhat different in its characters. Wheat starch, when examined with a microscope, is found to consist of granules of various sizes, the smaller being spheroidal, the larger rounded and flattened, with the hylum in the centre of the flattened surface, and surrounded by concentric rings, which often extend to the edge. The granules are mixed with loose integuments, resulting from the process of grinding. This variety of starch has a certain degree of hardness and adhesiveness, owing, ac- cording to Guibourt, to the escape of a portion of the interior substance of the broken granules, which attracts some moisture from the air, and, thus becoming glutinous, acts as a bond between those which remain unbroken. Another opin- ion attributes this peculiar consistence to the retention of a portion of the gluten of the wheat flour, which causes the granules to cohere. Under the name of corn starch, a variety of fecula obtained from the meal of maize or Indian cornels much-used for nutritive purposes in the U. States. It is an excellent preparation. The granules of maize starch are very small, with a diameter not exceeding, ac- cording to Payen, one-sixth of that of thet potato, and little more than one-half that of the wheat granules. {Gmelin, xv. 79.) Potato starch is employed in various forms, being prepared so as to imitate more costly amylaceous substances, such as arrow-root and sago. In its ordinary state, it is more pulverulent than wheat starch, has a somewhat glistening appearance, and may be distinguished, with the aid of the microscope, by the size of its granules, which are larger than those of any other known fecula, except canna or tons les mois.* They are ex- ceedingly diversified in size and shape, though their regular form is thought to be ovate. They are characterized by concentric rings or rugae, which are most readily distinguishable in the fresh starch, and are said by Raspail to disappear upon desiccation. These surround a minute circular hole or hylum upon the surface of the granule. In some instances there are two of these holes, one at each end, or both at the same end. The characters of other kinds of fecula will be given under the heads of the several officinal substances of which they con- stitute the whole or a part. Starch consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; its formula, from whatever source it may be derived, being, according to the latest opinions, C12H10O10, or, doubling the numbers, According to Chevallier, starch is sometimes adulterated with carbonate and sulphate of lime; and the fraud is also practised oFsafurating it with moisture, of which it will absorb 12 per cent, without any obvious change. Medical Properties, &c. Starch is nutritive and demulcent, but in its ordi- nary form is seldom administered internally. Powdered and dusted upon the 114 Amylum.—Anethum.— Oleum Anethi. PART I. skin, ;t is sometimes used to absorb irritating secretions, and prevent excoria- tion. Dissolved in hot water and allowed to cool, it is often employed in ene- mata, either as a vehicle of other substances, or as a demulcent application in irritated states of the rectum. It may be used as an antidote to iodine taken in poisonous quantities.* Off. Prep. Mucilago Amyli, Br.; Pulvis Tragacanthse Compositus, Br. W. ANETHUM. Br. Dill. Anethum graveolens. The fruit. Br. OLEUM ANETHI. Br. The oil distilled in England from Dill. Aneth a odeur forte, Fr.; Dill, Germ.; Aneto, Ital.; Eneldo, Span. Anetiium. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Umbehiferae or Api- acese. Gen. Ch. Fruit nearly ovate, compressed, striated. Petals involuted, entire. Willd. Anethum qraveolens. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1469; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 125, t. 48. Dill is an annual plant, three or four feet high, with a long spindle-shaped root; an erect, striated, jointed, branching stem; and bipinnate or tripinnate, glaucous leaves, which stand on sheathing footstalks, and have linear and pointed leaflets. The flowers are yellow, and in large, flat, terminal umbels, destitute of involucre. The plant is a native of Spain, Portugal, and the south of France; and is found growing wild in various parts of Africa and Asia. It is cultivated in all the countries of Europe, and has been introduced into our gardens. The seeds, as the fruit is commonly called, are the only part used. They are usually rather more than a line in length, and less than a line in breadth, of an oval shape, thin, concave on one side, convex and striated on the other, of a brown colour, and surrounded by a yellowish membranous expansion. Their smell is strong and aromatic, but less agreeable than that of fennel-seed; their taste, moderately warm and pungent. These properties depend on a volatile oil, which may be obtained separate by distillation. The bruised seeds impart their virtues to alcohol and to boiling water. Oil of dill is of a pale-yellow colour, with the odour of the fruit, and a hot, sweetish, acrid taste. Its sp.gr. is said to be 0 881. The fruit yields about 3 5 per cent, of it. The oil is sometimes used for preparing dill water. Medical Properties. Dill seeds have the properties common to the aromatics, but are very seldom used in this country. They may be given in powder or in- fusion. The dose of the fruit is from fifteen grains to a drachm, of the oil three or four drops. Off. Prep, of Dill. Aqua Anethi, Br. W. Oil of Dill. * Gflycerate of Starch. A preparation which may be thus denominated (GlyceroU d'Amidon Fr.) has been recommended as a substitute for unctuous preparations, whether as a demul- cent application, or as an excipient of other substances, such as sulphate of copper, corro- sive sublimate, red oxide of mercury, &c., intended for external use; its advantage being that it is not likely to become irritant to the surface through chemical change. It may be prepared by heating together 15 parts of glycerin and one of starch, with constant stir- ring until the mixture becomes clear. (Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1862, p. 363.) We propose the word glycerate for the title of solutions in which glycerin is the menstruum, as prefera- ble to glycerole, perverted from the French glycerole, and inappropriate, as words with this termination are used to designate a class of organic proximate principles, as benzole &c.— Note to the twelfth edition. Angelica. 115 PART I. ANGELICA. U. S. Secondary. Angelica. The root of Angelica Archangelica. U. S. Angelique, Fr.; HugelwurzeUC'erm.; Arcangelica, Ital.; Angelica, Span. Angelica. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Umbelliferae or A pi aeeae. Gen. Ch. Fruit elliptic, compressed, somewhat solid and corticate, ridges three, dorsal acute, intervals grooved, margin alated. Gen. involucre none. (Sprengel.) Umbel large, many-rayed, spreading; umbellet dense, subhemispheric; involu- cell about eight-leaved. Calyx five-toothed. Petals inflected. (NuttallF In former editions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia it was our indigenous species, Angelica atropurpurea, which was recognised under the name of angelica, in the secondary list. In the present edition this species has been rejected, and the root of the European A. Archangelica substituted. It nevertheless deserves a brief notice in this place. Angelica atropurpurea, sometimes called masterwort. has a perennial purplish root, and a smooth herbaceous stem, the dark colour of which has given rise to the specific name of the plant. The leaves are ternate, and supported by very large inflated petioles. The partitions of the leaf are nearly quinate, with ovate, acute, deeply serrate, somewhat lobed leaflets, of which the three terminal are confluent. The flowers are greenish-white. The purple angelica extends through- out the United States from Canada to Carolina, growing in meadows and marshy woods, and flowering in June and July. It is smaller than A. Archangelica, with a less succulent stem. The whole plant was officinal. It has a strong odour, and a warm aromatic taste. The juice of the recent root is acrid, and is said to be poisonous; but the acrimony is dissipated by drying. The medical virtues of the plant are similar to those of the garden angelica of Europe, for which it has been proposed as a substitute. It is, however, little employed. An infusion is occa- sionally used in flatulent colic; and we are told that the stems are sometimes candied by the country people. Angelica Archangelica. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1428; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 86, t. 35.—Archanaelica officinalis. Hoch, De Cand., &c. Garden angelica has a long, thick, fleshy, biennial root, furnished with many fibres, and sending up an- nually a hollow, jointed, round, channeled, smooth, purplish stem, which rises five feet or more in height, and divides into numerous branches. The leaves, which stand upon round fistulous footstalks, are very large, doubly pinnate, with ovate- lanceolate, pointed, acutely serrate leaflets, of which the terminal one is three- lobed. The flowers are small, greenish-white, and disposed in very large, many- rayed, terminal umbels, composed of numerous dense, hemispherical umbellets. This plant is a native of the north of Europe, and is found in the high moun- tainous regions in the southern section of that continent, as in Switzerland and among the Pyrenees. It is cultivated in various parts of Europe, and may be occasionally met with in the gardens of this country. It flowers during the sum- mer. The whole plant has a fragrant odour and aromatic properties; but the root and fruit only are officinal. 1. The root should be dug up in the autumn of the first year, as it is then least liable to become mouldy and worm-eaten. It is spindle-shaped, an inch or more thick at top, and beset with long descending radicles. The fresh root has a yellowish-gray epidermis, a fleshy yellow parenchyma, and when wounded yields a honey-coloured juice, having all the aromatic properties of the plant. The dried root is grayish-brown and much wrinkled externally, whitish and spongy within, and breaks with a starchy fracture, exhibiting shining resinous points. Angelica.—Angustura. PART I. It is very apt to be attacked by worms, and is said to keep best, in the state of powder, in full and well-closed vessels. The smell is strong and fragrant, and the taste at first sweetish, afterwards warm, aromatic, bitterish, and somewhat musky. These properties are extracted by alcohol, and less perfectly by water. The con- stituents of the root, according to the younger Buchner, are volatile oil, a vola- tile acid which he calls angelicic acid, a wax-like substance, a crystallizable sub-resin, a brittle amorphous resin, a bitter principle, tannic acid, malic acid, sugar, starch, albumen, pectic acid, fibrin, and various salts. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ii. 124.) Five hundred parts yield nearly four parts of volatile oil. 2. The seeds, as the fruit is commonly called, are two or three lines long, oval, obtuse or somewhat notched at the ends, fiat and marked with a longitudi- nal furrow on one side, convex with three angular ridges on the other. They are ash-coloured, and have the same smell and taste as the root. They are said to keep well. Medical Properties. Garden angelica is an elegant aromatic tonic, but is little employed in the United States. The Laplanders, in whose country it flourishes, are said to esteem it highly as a condiment and medicine. In Europe, the stems are frequently made into a preserve, and used in desserts in order to excite the~stomach. The dose of the root or seeds is from thirty grains to a drachm. " W. ANGUSTURA. TJ.S. Angustura. The bark of Galipea officinalis {Hancock). U. S. Off. Syn. CTJSPARTA. Gafipea Cusparia. The bark. Br. Angusture, Fr.; Angusturarinde, Germ.) Corteccia dell’ Angustura, Ital.; Corteza de An- gostura, Span. The subject of Angustura bark, in its botanical relations, has been involved in some confusion. The drug was at first supposed to be derived from a species of Magnolia, and was referred by some to Magnolia glauca of this country. Humboldt and Bonpland were the first to throw light upon itsTtrue source. When at Angustura, a South American city on the Orinoco, they received specimens of the foliage of the plant from which the bark was obtained; and afterwards believed that they had found the same plant in a tree growing in the vicinity of Cumana. This latter they had the opportunity of personally inspecting, and were therefore enabled to describe accurately. Unable to attach it to any known genus, they erected it into a new one, with the title of Cusparia, a name of In- dian origin, to which they added the specific appellation of febrifuga. On their authority, Cusvaria febrifuga was generally believed to be the true source of the medicine, and was recognised as such by the London College. A specimen having in the mean time been sent by them to Willdenow, the name of Boiwlan- dia was imposed on the new genus by that celebrated botanist; and it was sub- sequently adopted by Humboldt and Bonpland themselves, in their great work on equinoctial plants. Hence the title of Bonvlandia trifoliala, by which the tree is described in many works on Materia Medica. De Candolle, however, having found in the description all the characters of the genus Galipea of Aublet, re- jected both these titles, and substituted that of Galipea Cusparia, which was adopted by the London College, and has been retained in the British Pharma- copoeia. But, after all these commutations, it appears from the researches of Dr. Hancock, who resided for several months in the country of the Angustura bark tree, that the plant described by Humboldt and Bonpland is not that which yields the medicine, but probably another species of the same genus. Among other striking differences between them is that of their size; the tree described by Humboldt and Bonpland being not less than sixty or eighty feet in height, PART I. Angustura. 117 while that from which the bark is obtained is never more than twenty feet Hancock proposes for the latter the title of Galipea officinalis, which has been adopted in the IJ. S. Pharmacopoeia. Galipea. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Rutacese. Gen.Ch. Corolla inferior, irregular, four or five cleft, hypocrateriform. Sta mens four; two sterile. Loudon''s Encyc. Galipea officinalis. Hancock, Trans. Lond. Medico-bot. Soc. This is a sraab tree, irregularly branched, rising to the medium height of twelve or fifteen feet with an erect stem from three to five inches in diameter, and covered with a smooth gray bark. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, and composed of three leaflets, which are oblong, pointed at each extremity, from six to ten inches in length, from two to four in breadth, and supported upon the common petiole by 6hort leafstalks. They are very smooth and glossy, of a vivid green colour, marked occasionally with small whitish round spots, and, when fresh, of a strong odour resembling that of tobacco. The flowers are numerous, white, arranged in axillary and terminal peduncled racemes, and of a peculiar unpleasant odour. The fruit consists of five bivalve capsules, of which two or three are commonly abortive. The seeds, two of which are contained in each capsule, one often abor- tive, are round, black, and of the size of a pea. The tree grows abundantly on the mountains of Carony, between the Tth and 8th degrees of N. latitude; and is well known in the missions, near the Orinoco, upwards of two hundred miles from the ocean. It flourishes at the height of from six hundred to one thousand feet above the level of the sea. Its elegant white blossoms, which appear in vast profusion in August and September, add greatly to the beauty of the scenery. The bark is generally brought from the West Indies, packed in casks; but, according to Mr. Brande, the original package, as it comes from Angustura, con- sists of the leaves of a species of palm, surrounded by a network of sticks. Properties. The pieces are of various lengths, for the most part slightly curved, rarely quilled, sometimes nearly flat, from half a line to a line or more in thickness, pared away towards the edges, covered externally with a light yellowish-gray or whitish wrinkled epidermis, easily scraped by the nail, and in- ternally of a yellowish-fawn colour. They are very fragile, breaking with a short, resinous fracture, and yield, on being pulverized, a pale-yellow powder; but, when macerated for a short time in water, they become soft and tenacious, and may be cut into strips with scissors. The smell of Angustura bark is peculiar and disagreeable when fresh, but becomes fainter with age; the taste is bitter and slightly aromatic, leaving a sense of pungency at the end of the tongue. According to Fischer, it contains volatile oil, bitter extractive, a hard and bitter resin, a soft resin, a substance* anaTogOTrs to caoutchouc, gum, ligniu, and various salts. The volatile oil, which may be obtained by distillation with water, is of a pale-yellowish colour, lighter than water, of an acrid taste, and with the odour of the bark. Its formula is given as C13H120 by Dr C. Herzog, who states that its boiling point is 511° F., probably one of the highest of the volatile oils. (Chem. Gaz., May 15, 1858.) Cusparin is the name given by Saladin to a prin- ciple, deposited in tetrahedral crystals, when an infusion of the bark is treated with absolute alcohol, at common temperatures, and allowed to evaporate spon- taneously. It is neutral, fusible at a gentle heat, by which it loses 23 09 per cent, of its weight, soluble in 200 parts of cold and 100 parts of boiling water, soluble in the concentrated acids and in the alkalies, and precipitated by the in- fusion of galls. (Journ. de Pharm., xxii. 662.) Herzog, however, was unable to isolate this principle. The virtues of the bark probably reside in the volatile oil and bitter constituent. They are extracted by water and alcohol. Dr. A. T. Thomson states that precipitates are produced with the infusion oy the solutions of sulphate of iron, tartrate of antimony and potassa, sulphate of copper, acetate and subacetate of lead, bichloride of mercury, nitrate of silver, 118 Angustura. PART I. and i nte potassa; by nitric and sulphuric acids, and by the infusions of galls and yellow cinchona; but how far these substances are medicinally incompatible with the bark, it would be difficult to determine. False Angustura. Under this title, European writers describe a bark which wasTrTf cffluced‘on’'the continent mixed with true Angustura bark, and, being possessed of poisonous properties, produced in some instances unpleasant effects, when prescribed by mistake for that medicine. It is distinguished by its greater thickness, hardness, weight, and compactness; by its resinous fracture; by the appearance of its epidermis, which is sometimes covered with a ferruginous efflorescence, sometimes is yellowish-gray, and marked with prominent white spots; by the brownish colour and smoothness of its internal surface, which is not, like that of the genuine bark, separable into laminae; by the white slightly yellow powder which it yields; by its total want of odour, and its intense tena- cious bitterness. When steeped in water, it does not become soft like the true Angustura. Analyzed by Pelletier and Caventou, it was found to contain a pecu- liar alkaline principle which they called brucia, and upon which its poisonous operation depends. (See Nux Vomica.) In consequence of the presence of this principle, a drop of nitric acid upon the internal surface of the bark produces a deep-red spot. The same acid, applied to the external surface, renders it emerald- green. In true Angustura bark, a dull-red colour is produced by the acid on both surfaces. The false Angustura was at first supposed to be derived from Brucea antidysenterica; and was afterwards referred to some unknown species of Strychnos, in consequence of containing brucia, which is a characteristic in- gredient of that genus of plants. At present, it is ascribed to Strvchnos Nux _ Vomica, the bark of which, according to Dr. O’Shaughnessy, exactly corresponds withTEe description of false Angustura, and like it contains brucia. Little of this bark reaches the United States. Medical Properties and Uses. Angustura bark had been long used by the natives of the country where it grows, before it became known elsewhere. From the continent its employment extended to the West Indies, where it acquired considerable reputation. It was first taken to Europe about eighty years since. It is now ranked amoug the officinal remedies throughout Europe and America; but it has not sustained its eariv reputation, and in the United States is not much prescribed. Its operation is that of a stimulant tonic. In large doses it also evacuates the stomach and bowels, and is often employed for this purpose in South America. It was at one time considerably used as a febrifuge in the place of Peruvian bark; but has not been found generally successful in the inter- mittents of northern latitudes. It is said to be peculiarly efficacious in bilious diarrhoeas and dysenteries; and has been recommended in dyspepsia, and other diseases requiring a tonic treatment. The testimony, however, of practitioners in Europe and the United States is not strongly in its favour; and it is probably better adapted to tropical diseases than to those of temperate climates. Hancock employed it extensively in the malignant bilious intermittent fevers, dysenteries, and dropsies of Angustura and Demarara; and speaks in strong terms of it* efficacy in these complaints. He usecTit in the torn of fermented infusion, a* recommended by the native practitioners. It may be given in powder, infusion, tincture, or extract. The dose in sub- stance is from ten to thirty grains. In larger quantities it is apt to produce nausea. From five to fifteen grains is the dose of the extract, which, however according to Dr. Hancock, is iuferior to the powder or infusion. To ubnato nausea, it is frequently combined with aromatics. Off. Prep. Infusum Angusturae, U. S.; Infusum Cuspariae, Br W PART i. Anisum. 119 ANISUM. US. Anise. The fruit of Pimpinella Anisum. U. S. Graines d’anis, Ft.; Anissame, Germ.; Semi d’aniso, Ital.; Simiente de anis, Span.; Aui- son, Arab. Pimpinella. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Orel. Umbelliferse or Apiaceae. Gen. Ch. Fruit ovate-oblong. Petals inferior. Stigma nearly globular. Willd. Pimvinella Anisum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1413; Woodv.il/ec?. Bot. p. 135, t. 52. This is an annual plant, about a foot in height, with an erect, smooth, and branching stem. The leaves are petiolate, the lower roundish-cordate, lobed, incised-serrate, the middle pinnate-lobed with cuneate or lanceolate lobes, the upper trifid, undivided, linear. The flowers are white, and in terminal compound umbels, destitute of involucres. The anise plant is a native of Egypt and the Levant, but has been introduced into the south of Europe, and is cultivated in various parts of that continent. It is also cultivated occasionally in the gardens of this country. The fruit is abundantly produced in Malta and Spain, and especially so in Romagna, in Italy, whence it is largely exported through Leghorn. The Spanish is smaller than the German or French, and is usually preferred. Anise seeds (botanically fruit) are about a line in length, oval, striated, some- what downy, attached to their footstalks, and of a light greenish-brown colour, with a shade of yellow. Their odour is fragrant, and increased by friction ; their taste, warm, sweet, and aromatic. These properties, which depend upon a peculiar volatile oil, are imparted sparingly to boiling water, freely to alcohol. The vola- tile oil exists in the envelope of the seeds, and is obtained separate by distilla- tion. (See Oleum Anisi.) Their internal substance contains a bland fixed oil. By expression, a greenish oil is obtained, which is a mixture of the two. The seeds are sometimes adulterated with small fragments of argillaceous earth, which resembles them in colour; and their aromatic qualities are occasionally impaired by a slight fermentation, which they are apt to undergo in the mass, when collected before maturity. A case of poisoning is on record from the accidental admixture of the fruits of Conium maculatum, which bear some resemblance to those of anise, but may be distinguished by their crenate or notched ridges. They are, moreover, broader in proportion to their length, and are generally separated into half-fruits, while those of anise are whole. Star aniseed, the badiane of the French writers, though analogous in sensible properties to the common aniseed, is derived from a different plant, being the fruit of lllicium anisatum, an evergreen tree growing in China, Japan, and Tartary. The fruit consists of from five to ten brownish ligneous capsules, four or five lines long, united together in the form of a star, each containing a brown shining seed. It is much used in France to flavour liquors; and the volatile oil, upon which its aromatic properties depend, and of which it is said to yield about 2 3 per cent., is imported into this country from the East Indies, and sold as com- mon oil of anise, to which, however, it is thought by some to be much superior. Medical Properties and Uses. Anise is a grateful aromatic carminative; and is supposed to have the property of increasing the secretion of milk. It has been in use from the earliest times. In Europe it is much employed in flatulent colic, and as a corrigent of griping or unpleasant medicines; but in this country fen- nel-seeu is preferred. Anise may be given bruised, or in powder, in the dose of twenty or thirty grains or more. The infusion is less efficient. The volatile oil 120 Anthemis. PART I. maybe substituted for the seeds in substance. Much use is made of this aromatic for imparting flavour to liquors. Off. Prep. Oleum Anisi. W ANTHEMIS. U.S.,Br. Chamomile. The flowers of Antherais nobilis. U. S. The flower heads, single and double, dried. Br. 1—1 Camomiile Romaine, Fr.; Romische Kamille, Germ.; Camomilla Romana, Ital.; Man- vanilla R om ana,’~Sj3,tfrc. Anthemis. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua. — Nat. Ord. Composite Sene* cionidese. Be Cand. Asteraceae. Lindley. Gen. Gh. Receptacle chaffy. Seed-down none or a membranaceous margin. Calyx hemispherical, nearly equal. Florets of the ray more than five. Willd. Several species of Anthemis have been employed in medicine. A. nobilis, which is the subject of the present article, is by far the most important. A. Cotula. or mayweed, is also recognised by the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Cotula.) A. Pyre- thrum, which affords the pellitory root, is among the officinal plants. (See Pyre- thrum.) A. aroensis, a native of this country and of Europe, bears flowers which have an acrid" bitter taste, and possess medical properties analogous though much inferior to those of common chamomile. They may be distinguished by their want of smell. * A. tinctoria is occasionally employed as a tonic and vermi- fuge in Europe. Anthemis nobilis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 2180; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 47, t. 19. This is an herbaceous plant with a perennial root. The stems are from six inches to a foot long, round, slender, downy, trailing, and divided into branches, which turn upwards at their extremities. The leaves are bipinnate, the leaflets small, thread-like, somewhat pubescent, acute, and generally divided into three seg- ments. The flowers are solitary, with a yellow convex disk, and white rays. The calyx is common to all the florets, of a hemispherical form, and composed of several small imbricated hairy scales. The receptacle is convex, prominent, and furnished with rigid bristle-like palese. The florets of the ray are numerous, narrow, and terminated with three small teeth. The whole herb has a peculiar fragrant odour, and a bitter aromatic taste. The flowers only are officinal. This plant is a native of Europe, and grows wild in all the temperate parts of that continent. It is also largely cultivated for medicinal purposes. In France, Germany, and Italy, it is generally known by the name of Roman chamomile. By cultivation the yellow disk florets are often converted into the white ray florets. Thus altered, the flowers are said to be double, while those which remain unchanged are called single; but, as the conversion may be more or less com- * M. Pattone, an apothecary in the civil hospital of Alexandria, has announced the dis- covery in Anthemis arvensis of a new alkaloid, and a new organic acid, which he proposes to call, respectively, anthemine {anthemia) and anthemic acid. The former he procured by subjecting the flowers to distillation with water so as to”separate all the volatile oil, ex- pressing the residue, filtering the expressed liquor, evaporating this to the consistence of an extract, exhausting the extract by boiling alcohol of 85°, which dissolves the resinous matter and the peculiar acid, treating the residue with boiling distilled water, filtering the liquor and allowing it to cool, and then dropping in solution of ammonia until the liquid became decidedly alkaline. After a short time, beautiful, shining, prismatic crystals were deposited. To complete the process, the liquor was allowed to stand for 24 hours, after which the mother-water was decanted, and the crystals washed repeatedly with cold dis- tilled water. Anthemia is inodorous and tasteless, very slightly soluble in cold water, some- what more soluble in boiling water, insoluble in alcohol and ether, but freely dissolved by acetic acid. It is carbonized by a high heat. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1859, p. 198.)- Note te the twelfth edition. part I. Anthemis. 121 plete, it generally happens that with each of the varieties there are intermingle?, some flowers of the other kind, or in different stages of the change. The double flowers are generally preferred; though, as the sensible properties are found ia the greatest degree in the disk, the single are the most powerful. It is rather, however, in aromatic flavour than in bitterness that the radial florets are sur- passed by those of the disk. If not well aud quickly dried, the flowers lose their beautiful white colour, and are less efficient. Those which are whitest should be preferred. The seeds yield by expression a fixed oil, which is said to be applied in Europe to various economical uses.* Though not a native of America, chamomile grows wild in some parts of this country, and is occasionally cultivated in our gardens for family use, the whole herb being employed. The medicine, as found in our shops, consists chiefly of the double flowers, and is imported from Germany and England. From the former country the flowers of Matricaria Chamomilla are also occasionally imported, under the name of chamomTTe~(See Mairicana.) In France, the flowers of two other plants are sold in the shops, indiscriminately with those of Anthemis no- bilis; viz. those of Purethrum Parthenium (the Chrysanthemum Parthenium of Persoon) or feverfew, and those of Anthemis par tlienpi ties. I)e ('and., or the Matricaria parthenoides, Desf. {Journ. d'e Pharm.7Mai"')859, p 347.) For the peculiar character by which these two flowers may be distinguished from the chamomile, see Pyrethrum Parthenium in Part III. Properties. Chamomile flowers, as usually found in the shops, are large, almost spherical, of a dull-white colour, a fragrant odour, and a warmish, bitter, aromatic taste. When fresh, their smell, is much stronger, and was fancied by the ancients to resemble that of the apple. Hence the name chamsemelum {'/a promote the operation of emetics, or to assist the stomach in relieving itself when oppressed by its contents. The flowers are sometimes applied exter- nally in the form of fomentation, in cases of irritation or inflammation of the abdominal viscera, and as a gentle incitant in flabby, ill-conditioned ulcers. The dose of the powder as a tonic is from half a drachm to a drachm three or four times a day, or more frequently. The infusion is usually preferred. The decoc- tion and extract cannot exert the full influence of the medicine; as the volatile oil is driven off at the boiling temperature. Off. Prep. Extractum Anthemidis, Br.; Infusum Anthemidis. W ANTIMONIUM. Antimony. wStibium, Lat.; Antimoine, Fr.; Antimon, Spiessglanz, Germ.; Antimonio, Span., Ital. Metallic antimony, sometimes called regulus of antimony, is not officinal in the British or IFnTEed States PharmacopceiaiTpS'at',' aslf 'enters into the compo- sition of a number of important pharmaceutical preparations, we have thought it proper to notice it under a distinct head. Antimony exists in nature, 1. uncombined; 2. as an oxide; 3. as a tersul- phuret; and 4. as a sulphuretted oxide. It is found principally in France and Germany; but has recently been discovered in the British province of New Brunswick. Extraction. All the antimony of commerce is extracted from the native tersul- phuret. The ore is first separated from its gangue by fusion. It is then reduced to powder, and placed on the floor of a reverberatory furnace, where it is sub- jected to a gentle heat, being constantly stirred with an iron rake. This process of roasting is known to be completed, when the matter is brought to the state of a dull grayish-white powder, called antimony ash. By this treatment the anti- mony is partly teroxidized, and partly converted into antimonious acid; while nearly all the sulphur is dissipated in the form of sulphurous acid gas : a portion of tersulphuret, however, remains uudecomposed. The matter is then mixed with charcoal impregnated with a concentrated solution of carbonate of soda, and the mixture heated in crucibles, placed in a melting furnace. The charcoal reduces the teroxide of antimony, while the alkali unites with the undecomposed tersul- phuret, and forms with it melted scoriae, which cover the reduced metal, and diminish its loss by volatilization. The purest commercial antimony is not entirely free from foreign metals, chiefly iron, lead, and arsenic. M. Lefort purifies it for the purposes of pharmacy, by gradually adding twenty-five parts of the metal, in fine powder, to fifty parts of nitric acid, by the action of which the antimony is precipitated as antimonious acid, while the foreign metals remain in solution. The precipitate is then thor- oughly washed with water, containing a hundredth part of nitric acid, drained completely, mixed with three or four parts of powdered sugar, and reduced to the metallic state by being heated to redness iu a Hessian crucible. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1855, 93.) Antimony is imported into the United States principally from France, packed iu casks. A portion is also shipped from Trieste, from Holland, and occasion- ally from Cadiz. The Spanish antimony is generally in the form of pigs; the French, in circular cakes of about ten inches in diameter, fiat on one side and convex on the other; the English, in cones. The French is most esteemed. Properties, &c. The time of the discovery of antimony is not known; but Basil Valentine was the first to describe the method of obtaining it, in his work entitled Currus Triumphalis Antimonii, published towards the end of the fif- teenth century. It is a brittle, brilliant metal, ordinarily of a lamellated texture, PART I. Antimonium. 123 of a silver-white colour when pure, but bluish-white as it occurs in commerce When rubbed between the fingers, it imparts a sensible odour. Its equivalent number is 129, symbol Sb, sp. gr. 6 7, and fusing point 810°, or about a red heat Recent experiments of Schneider, confirmed by Weber, make the eq. of antimony 120 2; but we shall adhere to 129, until the new number is fully confirmed. On cooling after fusion, antimony assumes an appearance on the surface bearing some resemblance to a fern leaf. When strongly heated, it burns with the emission of white vapours, consisting of teroxide, formerly called argentine flowers of anti- mony. A small portion, being fused, and then thrown upon a flat surface, divides into numerous globules, which burn rapidly as they move along. It forms three combinations with oxygen; one oxide—teroxide of antimony, and two acids—* antimonious and antimonic acids. The teroxide contains three, antimonious acia four, and antimonic acid five eqs. of oxygen, combined with one of the metal In addition to these, a suboxide is said to exist, which, according to Marchand, has a oomposition represented by the formula Sb304. The teroxide will be noticed under the head of Antimonii Oxidum. Antimonic acid is a lemon-coloured pow- der, which may be prepared by oxidizing the metal by digestion in nitric acid, and then driving off the excess of nitric acid by a heat not exceeding 600°. When exposed to a red heat, it parts with oxygen, and is converted into antimonious acid. This is a white powder, and, though medicinally inert, frequently forms a large proportion of the preparation called antimouial powder. (See Pulvis Anti- monialis.) Antimony is officinal in the following states of combination. I. Sulphuretted. Antimonii Sulphuretum, U. S. — Sulphuret of Antimony. Prepared Sulphuret of Antimony, Br. Appendix. Antimonium Sulphuratura, U. S., Br. — Sulphurated Antimony. Antimonii Oxysulphuretum, U. S. —Oxysulphuret of Antimony. Ker- mes Mineral. II. Oxidized. Teroxide. Antimonii Oxidum, U. S., Br. — Oxide of Antimony. Teroxide mixed with phosphate of lime. Pulvis Antimonialis, Br. — Antimonial Powder. III. Combined with chlorine. Liquor Antimonii Terchloridi, Br. — Solution of Terchloride of Anti- mony. IY. In saline combination. Antimonii et Potass® Tartras, U. S.; Antimonium Tartaratum, Br.— Tartrate of Antimony and Potassa. Tartarated Antimony. Tar- tar Emetic. Unguentum Antimonii, U. S.; Unguentum Antimonii Tartarati, Br. — Ointment of Antimony. Ointment of Tartarated, Antimony. Yinum Antimonii, U. S.; Yinum Antimoniale, Br. — Wine of Anti- mony. Antimonial Wine. The antimonial preparations are active in proportion to their solubility in the gastric juice. According to Mialhe, those antimonials which contain the hydrated teroxide, or are easily converted into it, are most active. Hence metallic anti- mony in fine powder, and tartar emetic act with energy. The teroxide is much more active when prepared in the moist than in the dry way. According to Serullas, all the antimonial preparations, except tartar emetic and butter or ter- chloride of antimony, contain a minute proportion of arsenic. Tartar emetic is an exception, because it separates entirely, in the act of crystallizing, from any minute portion of arsenic in the materials from which it. is prepared; the poison- ous metal being left behind in the mother-water of the process. B. 124 Antimonii Sulphuretum. PART I. ANTIMONII SULPHURETUM. U.S. Sulphuret of Antimony. Native tersulphuret of antimony, purified by fusion. U.S. Of. Syn. Prepared Sulphuret of Antimony. Ter sulphuret of Antimony, SbS3, reduced to fine powder. Br. Appendix. Artitdid.isuljjliuret of antimony; Antimoine sulfure, Fr.; Schwefelantimon, Schwefel- spiessglanz, Germ.; Solfuro cTantimonio, Ital.; Antimonio crudo, Span. Preparation, &c. The sulphuret of antimony of the Pharmacopoeias is obtained from the native sulphuret, called antimony ore, by different processes of purifi- cation ; the following being an outline of that generally pursued. The ore is placed in melting pots in a circular reverberatory furnace, and these are made to connect, by means of curved earthen tubes, with the receiving pots, situated out- side the furnace. This arrangement affords facilities for removing the residue of the operation, and allows of the collection of the melted sulphuret without in- terrupting the fire, and, consequently, without loss of time or fuel. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia it is directed to be melted in order to purify it from infusible sub- stances ; in the British to be reduced to fine powder, to fit it for pharmaceutic use. In order to bring it to this state, it should be submitted to the process of levi- gation. (See Creta Prseparata ) Properties, &c. Sulphuret of antimony is mostly prepared in France and Ger- many. It is called, in commerce, antimony, or crude antimony, and occurs in fused conical masses, denominated loaves. These are externally, and exhibit internally, when broken, a brilliant steel-gray colour, and a striated crys- talline texture. Their goodness depends upon their compactness and weight, and the largeness and distinctness of the fibres. The quality of the sulphuret cannot well be judged of, except in mass; hence it ought never to be bought in powder. It is entirely soluble in muriatic acid, by the aid of heat, with the evolution of sulphuretted hydrogen. The muriatic solution, when added to water, is decom- posed with the production of a white powder (oxychloride op-antimony). If the muriatic acid should have dissolved some lead or copper, the filtered solution, after the precipitation of the white powder, will give a dark-coloured precipitate with sulphuretted hydrogen; but if these metals should be absent, it will yield, with the same test, an orange-coloured precipitate, derived from a small quantity of antimony, not thrown down by the water. Arsenic, which is often present in considerable quantities, may be detected by the usual tests for that metal. (See Acidum Arseniosum.) Composition. The officinal sulphuret of antimony is a tersulphuret, consisting of one eq. of antimony 129, and three of sulphur 48=111. When prepared by pulverization and levigation, it is in the form of an insol- uble powder, without taste or smell, usually of a dull blackish colour, but reddish- brown, when perfectly pure. By exposure to the air, it absorbs, according to Buchner, a portion of oxygen, and becomes partially converted into teroxide. Medical Pi'operties and Uses. This preparation is very uncertain in its ope- ration; being sometimes without effect, at other times, if it meet with acid in the stomach, acting with violence by vomiting and purging. The effects attrib- uted to it are those of a diaphoretic and alterative; and the principal diseases in which it has been used are scrofula, glandular obstructions, cutaneous dis- eases, and chronic rheumatism. It is not employed by physicians in the United States; its use in this country being confined to veterinary practice. The dose is from ten to thirty grains, given in powder or bolus. Off. Prep. Antimonii Oxidum, U. S.; Antimonii Oxysulphuretum, U. S.: Anti- mouiurn Sulphuratum; Liqucr Antimonii Terchloridi, Br. C. part I. Apocynum Androsaemifolium.—A. Cannabinum. 125 APOCYNUM ANDROSSEMIFOLIUM. U.S. Secondary. Dogs-bane. The root of Apocynum androseemifolium. U. S. Apocynum. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Apocynacese. Gen. Ch. Calyx very small, five-cleft, persistent. Corolla campanulafe, balr five-cleft, lobes revolute, furnished at the base with five dentoid glands alternating with the stamens. Anthers connivent, sagittate, cohering to the stigma by the middle. Style obsolete. Stigma thick and acute. Follicles long and linear Seed comose. Nuttall. Apocynum androssemifolium. Willd. SpCTlavt. i. 1259; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 148. Dog’s-bane is an indigenous, perennial, herbaceous plant, from three to six feet in height, and abounding in a milky juice, which'exudes when the plant is wounded. The stem is erect, smooth, simple below, branched above, usually red on the side exposed to the sun, and covered with a tough fibrous bark. The leaves are opposite, petiolate, ovate, acute, entire, smooth on both sides, and two or three inches long. The flowers are white, tinged with red, and grow in loose, nodding, terminal or axillary cymes. The peduncles have very small acute bractes. The tube of the corolla is longer than the calyx, and its border spreading. The fruit consists of a pair of long, linear, acute follicles, con- taining numerous imbricated seeds, attached to a central receptacle, and each furnished with a long seed-down. The plant flourishes in all parts of the United States from Canada to the Carolinas. It is found along fences and the skirts of woods, and flowers in June and July. The root is the part employed. This is large, and, like other parts of the plant, contains a milky juice. Its taste is unpleasant and intensely bitter. Bigelow inferred from his experiments that it contained bitter extractive, a red colouring matter soluble in water and not in alcohol, caoutchouc, and volatile oil. Medical Properties. The powder of the recently dried root acts as an emetic in the dose of thirty grains, and is said to be sometimes employed by practi- tioners in the couutry for this purpose. By Dr. Zollickoffer it is considered a useful tonic, in doses of from ten to twenty grains. Dr. Lannon, of Ohio, has found it useful in dyspepsia, and states that in small doses it is laxative, and in large probably cathartic. He recommends the recently dried root in the form of infusion or decoction. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1858, p. 72.) Dr. Bigelow states that its activity is din inished and eventually destroyed by keep- ing. It is among the remedies employed by the Indians in lues venerea. W. APOCYNUM CANJSAJBINUM. U. S Secondary. Indian Hemp. The root of Apocynum cannabinum. TJ. S. Apocynum. See APOCYNUM ANDROSAEMIFOLIUM. Apocynum cannabinum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1259; Knapp, Am. Med. Rev ili. 197. In general appearance and character, this species bears a close resem- blance to the preceding. The stems are herbaceous, erect, branching, of a brown colour, and two or three feet in height; the leaves are opposite, oblong-ovate, acute at both ends, and somewhat downy beneath; the cymes are paniculate, many-flowered, and pubescent; the corolla is small and greenish, with a tube not longer than the calyx, and an erect border; the internal parts of the flower are pinkish or purple. The plant grows in similar situations with A. androsse- 126 Apocynum Cannabinum.—Aqua. PART I. mifolium, flowers about the same period, and bears a similar fruit. It abounds in a milky juice, and has a tough fibrous bark, which, by maceration, affords a substitute for hemp. From this circumstance its common name was derived. The root, which is the officinal part, is horizontal, five or six feet in length, about one-third of an inch thick, dividing near the end into branches which ter- minate abruptly, of a yellowish-brown colour when young, but dark-chestnut when old, of a strong odour, and a nauseous, somewhat acrid, permanently bitter taste The internal or ligneous portion is yellowish-white, and less bitter than the exterior or cortical part. The fresh root, when wounded, emits a milky juice, which concretes into a substance resembling caoutchouc. In the dried state, it is brittle and readily pulverized, affording a powder like that of ipecacuanha. Dr. Knapp found it to contain a bitter principle, extractive, tannin, gallic acid, resin, wax, caoutchouc, Fe’cula, a peculiar active principle which he proposed to call ayocynin. (Am. Med. Review, iii. 197.) Dr. Griscom, by a sub- sequent analysis, obtained similar results, with the addition of gum. The root yields its virtues to water and alcohol, but, according to Dr. Griscom, most readily to the former. Medical Properties and Uses. Indian hemp is powerfully emetic and cathar- tic, sometimes diuretic, and, like other emetic substances, promotes diaphoresis and expectoration. It produces much nausea, diminishes the frequency of the pulse, and appears to induce drowsiness independently of the exhaustion con- sequent upon vomiting. The disease in which it has been found most beneficial is dropsy. An aggravated case of ascites, under the care of the late Dr. Joseph Parrish, was completely cured by the decoction of the plant, which acted as a powerful hydragogue cathartic. Dr. Knapp also found it useful in a case of dropsy. Other instances of its efficacy in this complaint have been published by Dr. Griscom, of New York. (Am. Journ. Med. Sciences, xii. 55.) Dr. R.-S. Cauthorn, of Richmond, Va., has employed the bark of the root successfully in several cases of intermittent fever, and considers it scarcely inferior in antipe- riodic power to quinia. He gave from four to six grains, in the form of pill, every two or three hours, augmenting the dose to three times the quantity.* From fifteen to thirty grains of the powdered root will generally produce copious vomiting and purging. The decoction is a more convenient form for administra- tion. It may be prepared by boiling half an ounce of the dried root in a pint and a half of water to a pint, of which from one to two fluidounces may be given two or three times a day, or more frequently if requisite. The watery extract, in doses of three or four grains three times a day, will generally act on the bowels. W. AQUA. U.S.,Br. Water. Natural water in the purest attainable state. U. S. Natural water, HO, the purest that can be obtained, cleared, if necessary, by filtration. Br. "Th»g, Or.; Eau, Fr.; Wasser, Germ.; Acqua, Ital.; Agua, Span. Water has always been included in the Materia Medica of the IT. S. Phaymaco poeia, on account of its great importance as a medical and pharmaceutical agent. It was not admitted into the officinal lists of the British Pharmacopoeias until 1839, when it was first recognised by the Edinburgh College. It is more or less concerned in almost all the changes which take place in inorganic matter, and * In a paper published in the Va. Monthly Stethoscope and Med. Reporter (i. 7.), Dr. Cau- thorn ascribes these effects to Asclepias Syriaca; but, in a subsequent communication to the Va. Med. Journ. (ix. 426), he informs us that the plant employed was really the Apo- cynum cannabinum, and that he had been led into the error by the common name of milk- weed attached to both plants.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Aqua. 127 is essential to the growth and existence of living beings, whether animal or vegetable. In treating of a substance of such diversified agency, our limits will allow of a sketch only of its properties and modifications. We shall speak of it under the several heads of pure water, common water, and mineral waters. Pure Water. Water, in a pure state, is a transparent liquid, without colour, taste, or smell. Its sp.gr. is assumed to be unity, and forms the term of com- parison for that of solids and liquids. A cubic inch of it, at the temp, of 60°, weighs very nearly 252‘5 grains. It is compressible to a small extent, as was proved first by Canton, and afterwards, in an incontestable manner, by Perkins. Reduced in temp, to 32°, it becomes a solid or ice, with the sp. gr. 0 9175 (Du- four, Gomptes Rendus, Juin, I860);, and raised to 212°, an elastic fluid called steam. In the state of steam its bulk is increased nearly 1700 fold, and its sp. gr. so far diminished as not to be much more than half that of atmospheric air. At the temp, of about 39° its density is at the maximum; and consequently, setting out from that point, it is increased in bulk by being either heated or cooled. It has the power of dissolving more or less of all the gases, including common air, the constituents of which are always present in natural water. It is uniformly pre- sent in the atmosphere, in the form of invisible vapour, even in the driest weather. Wa±$r. consists one eq. of hydrogen 1, and one of oxygen 8 = 9; or, in volumes, of one volume of hydrogen and half a volume of oxygen condensed into one volume of aqueous vapour or steam. On these data, it is easy to calculate the sp. gr. of steam; for its density will be 0-0689 (sp. gr. of hydrogen) + 0-5512 (half the sp.gr. of oxygen) = 0-6201. Common Water. By reason of its extensive solvent powers, water, in its natural state, must be more or less contaminated with foreign matter. Thus, it becomes variously impregnated, according to the nature of the strata through which it percolates. When the foreign substances present are in so small an amount as not materially to alter its taste and other sensible qualities, it con- stitutes the different varieties of common water. There are almost innumerable shades of difference in common water, as ob- tained from different localities and sources; but all its varieties may be con- veniently arranged under the two heads of soft and hard. A soft water is one which contains but inconsiderable impurities, and which, when used in washing, forms a lather with soap. By a hard water is understood a variety of water which contains calcareous or magnesian salts, or other impurities, through which it curdles soap, and is unfit for domestic purposes. Tincture of soap is a conve- nient test for ascertaining the quality of water. In distilled water it produces no effect; in soft water, only a slight opalescence; but in hard water, a milky appearance. The milkiness is due to the formation of an insoluble compound between the oily acids of the soap and the lime or magnesia of the foreign salt. The most usual foreign substances in common water, besides oxygen and nitrogen, and matters held in a state of mechanical suspension, are carbonic acid, sulphate and carbonate of lime, and chloride of sodium (common salt). Car- bonic acid is detected by lime-water, which produces a precipitate before the water is boiled, but not afterwards, as ebullition drives off this acid. The pre- sence of sulphate of lime is shown by precipitates being produced by nitrate of baryta, and, after ebullition, by oxalate of ammonia. The former test shows the presence of sulphuric acid, and the latter, after boiling the water, indicates lime not held in solution by carbonic acid. Carbonate of lime, when held in solution by an excess of carbonic acid, may be detected by boiling the water, which causes it to precipitate; but, even after ebullition and filtration, the water will retain enough carbonate of lime to give a precipitate with acetate of lead; car- bonate of lime being itself to a minute extent soluble in water. Nitrate of silver will produce a precipitate, if any soluble chloride be present; and, ordinarily, the one present may be assumed to be common salt. Arsenic in minute quantity 128 Aqua. PART I. has been found in water used as drink. At Whitbeck, in Cumberland, England, the inhabitants employe both as drink and for culinary purposes, a water holding enough arsenic in solution to be quite sensible to tests, without any known in- jurious consequences. (Chem. News, Aug. 25, 1860, p. 128.) Dr. Clark has proposed to purify hard water, when the hardness arises from bicarbonate of lime, by a process which he calls liming. This consists in adding to the water sufficient lime-water to convert the bicarbonate into the very spar- ingly soluble carbonate. This procedure renders the water soft, and gets rid of all the lime, except that in the minute portion of carbonate dissolved. The merit of this process chiefly consists, not in the removal of lime, but in prevent- ing the formation of organic matters, principally confervae, the decomposition of which renders the water offensive and unwholesome. Dr. Clark’s process has been for some time in successful operation on the water obtained by boring, ' at the Plumbstead water-works near Woolwich. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., June, 1856.) River water containing the usual amount of calcareous matter, if allowed to stagnate in open reservoirs, in the summer, will become contaminated with myriads of microscopic plants and animals. Now this change is prevented, according to Dr. Clark, by his peculiar treatment, which deprives the living or- ganisms of the nutriment, derived from loosely combined carbonic acid. The oxygen and nitrogen present in natural waters are not usually in the same proportion as in atmospheric air; the oxygen in atmospheric air amount- ing to about 20 per cent, in volume, while the usual gaseous mixture, expelled from fresh water by boiling, contains about 32 per cent. Common water is also divided into varieties according to its source. Thus we have rain, snow, spring, river, well, lake, and marsh water. Rain and snow waters are the purest kinds of natural water. Rain water, to be obTairfecf as pure as possible, must be collected in large vessels in the open fields, at a distance from houses, and some time after the rain has commenced falling; otherwise it will be contaminated with the dust which floats in the at- mosphere, and with other impurities derived from roofs. The rain water of large cities contains nitrogenized organic matter, as shown by the odour produced by burning the residue left after the water has been evaporated. Rain water ordinarily contains atmospheric air, and, according to Liebig, a little nitric acid, the amount of which is increased when the rain descends during a storm. According to an analysis, made by M. Martin, of rain water which fell at Marseilles during a violent storm, 1000 parts by weight contained 0 004 of chlorine and 0 003 of ammonia. Not a trace of iodine or of nitric acid was discovered. Boussingault has ascertained that the rain which falls in towns con- tains considerably more ammonia than that which falls in the country. Thus, the rain of Paris was found by him to contain three or four parts of ammonia per million; while that collected in a mountainous region contained about four- fifths of one part only in a million. The average results of Mr. J. B. Lawes and Dr. J. II. Gilbert give one part of ammonia to the million of rain water. {Chem. Gaz., Nov. 1, 1854.) Snow water has a peculiar taste, which was sup- posed to depend on the presence of air more oxygenous than that of the atmo- sphere ; but in point of fact it contains no air, and this accounts for its vapid taste. Both rain and snow water are sufficiently pure for employment in most chemical operations. S]2r.jng water (aqua fontana) depeuds entirely for its quality on the strata through which it flows; being purest when it passes through sand or gravel. It almost always contains a trace of common salt, and generally other impurities, which vary according to the locality of the spring. River water (aqua fluvialis) is, generally speaking, less impregnated with saline matter than spring water, because made up in considerable part of rains; wdiile its volume bears a larger proportion to the surface of its bed. It is, however, PART I. Aqua. 129 much more apt to have mechanically suspended in it insoluble matters, of a vegetable and earthy nature, which impair its transparency. Well water, like that from springs, is liable to contain various impurities. As a general rule, the purity of the water of a well will be in proportion to its depth and the constancy with which it is used. Well water in large cities always con- tains a large amount of impurity, both organic and inorganic. Dr. R. D. Thom- son found 147-6 grs., per Imperial gallon, of impurity in a well in London. From the organic matter he extracted much nitric acid and ammonia, evidently the pro- duct of animal excretions. (Pliarm. Journ. and Trans., July, 1856, p. 27.) The presence of nitrates in w'ater prevents the formation of organic beings, which cannot be detected by the microscope, even after it has been long kept. Artesian ov overflowing wells, on account of their great depth, generally alford a pure water. ~Lakewater cannot be characterized as having any invariable qualities. That of most of the lakes in the United States is pure and wholesome. Marsh water is generally stagnant, and contains vegetable remains undergoing decomposition. It is an unwholesome water, and ought never to be used for medicinal purposes. Common waters are apt to contain organic matter in solution, of the nature of ulmin or aein. In order to ascertain whether its amount exceeds the minute quantity usually present in good wrater, Dupasquier has proposed chloride of gold as a test. From one to two fluidounees of the water to be tested, is put into a small flask, and a few drops of solution of chloride of gold, free from excess of muriatic acid, are added, so as to give the water a slightly yellow tint. The liquid is then boiled. If the water contain the ordinary proportion of organic matter, the yellow tint will remain unchanged; but if its quantity be greater than this, the liquid will at first become brownish, aud afterwards violet or bluish, in con- sequence of the reduction of the gold. Organic matter is also detected by its decolorizing effect on a solution of permanganate of potassa. Water rendered impure and discoloured by organic impregnation, or the presence of auimalcula, is freed from its impurities, partially at least, by the presence of a coil of bright iron wire, or admixture with sesquioxide of iron, and subsequent filtration. The term Aqua, in the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, may be considered as designating any natural water of good quality. A good water may be known by its being limpid and inodorous. It answers well for cooking, and does not curdle soap. Upon the addition of nitrate of baryta, nitrate of silver, or oxalate of am- monia, its transparency is but slightly affected; and, upon being evaporated to dryness, it leaves but an inconsiderable residue. Water should never be kept in leaden cisterns, on account of the risk of its dissolving a small portion of lead. This risk is greater in proportion to the soft- ness and purity of the water; for it is found that the presence of a minute pro- portion of saline matter, as for example of sulphate of lime, protects the water from the slightest metallic impregnation. According to Mr. R. Phillips, jun., the chlorides are not protective; as they give rise to chloride of lead, which is slightly soluble. The protection has been ascribed to an insoluble film on the surface of the lead, formed by the decomposition of the saline matter. Upon this principle is based a plan of protection by Dr. Schwartz, of Breslau, who pro- poses to fill leaden pipes through which water is conducted with a strong solu- tion of an alkaline sulphide, which forms a perfectly insoluble coating of sulphide (sulphuret) of lead, said to be quite impermeable by the water afterwards intro- duced. (Chem. News, Sept. 26, 1863, p. 157.) A coating of zinc has been em- ployed for protecting the surface of iron pipes and reservoirs against the action of water, but has failed. Experiment has shown that the water becomes impreg- nated with the salts of both metals. (Ibid., Ap. 5, 1862, p. 188.) The Schuylkill water, introduced into Philadelphia, possesses all the charac- teristics of a good water, except that it is occasionally turbid after heavy rains. 130 Aqua. PART I. It contains, on ‘in average, in a wine gallon, according to an analysis by Prof. M. H. Boyb, of Philadelphia, 4 42 grains of solid matter, nearly one-half of which is carbonate of lime, with only a trace of organic matter. It is perfectly free from lead, even after standing in leaden pipes for thirty-six hours. (Prof. E. N. Horsford.) The solid matter in the same quantity of the Delaware water at Philadelphia, is 3‘53 grains, a little over one-third of which is carbonate of lime. (Henry Wurtz.) The Croton water of New York is also a good water. It con- tains 10‘93 grs. of solid matter to the gallon. Brackish or hard water ought never to be employed in compounding prescriptions. For some pharmaceutical purposes, no natural water is sufficiently pure; and hence the necessity of resort- ing to distillation. (See Aqua Destillata.) Matters mechanically suspended in a natural water may be removed by fil- tration through sand. On a large scale they may be separated by causing the water to percolate a bed of gravel and sand. Rest, causing subsidence, effects the same purpose, but in a less perfect manner, and requires time. Mineral Waters. When natural spring waters are so far impregnated with foreign substances as to have a decided taste, and a peculiar operation on the economy, they are called mineral waters. These are conveniently arranged under the heads of carbonated, sulphuretted, chalybeate, and saline. 1. Carbonated waters are characterized by containing an excess of carbonic acid, which gives them a sparkling appearance, and the power of reddening lit- mus paper. These waters frequently contain the carbonates of lime, magnesia, and iron, which are held in solution by the excess of carbonic acid. The waters of Seltzer, Spa, and Pyrmont in Europe, and of the sweet springs in Virginia, belong to this class. 2. Sulphuretted waters are such as contain sulphuretted hydrogen, and are distinguished by the peculiar fetid smell of that gas, and by yielding a brown precipitate with the salts of lead or silver. Examples of this kind are the waters of Aix la Chapelle and Harrogate in Europe, and those of the white, red, and salt sulphur springs in Virginia. 3. Chalybeate waters are characterized by a strong inky taste, and by strik- ing a black colour with the infusion of galls, and a blue one with ferrocyanide of potassium. The iron is generally in the state of carbonate of the protoxide, held in solution by excess of carbonic acid. By standing, the carbonic acid is given off; and the protoxide, by absorbing oxygen, is precipitated as a hydrated ses- quioxide of an ochreous colour. The principal chalybeate waters are those of Tunbridge and Brighton in England, of Wiesbaden in Germany, and of Bed- ford, Pittsburg, and Brandywine in the United States. The sediments of many of the chalybeate springs of Germany have been ascertained by Walchner to contain both arsenic and copper in minute quantities. These results have been confirmed by Dr. H. Will, who finds in some of these springs a minute propor- tion of tin, lead, and antimony, in addition to the arsenic and copper. In three springs Will found the ratio of the sesquioxide of iron to the other metals to be, on an average, as 48 to 1. According to M. Lassaigne, the arsenical impreg- nation exerts no poisonous action on the inferior animals, a result which he as- cribes to the antidotal power of the iron. The mineral water of Mont Dore, in France, was found by Thenard to contain arseniate of soda, in the proportion of about one-fifteen thousandth of a grain to two pints. 4. Saline waters are those, the predominant properties of which depend upon saline impregnation. The salts most usually present are sulphates and carbo- nates of soda, lime, and magnesia, and the chlorides of sodium, calcium, and magnesium. Potassa is occasionally present, and lithia has been detected by Berzelius in the spring of Carlsbad, and other salt springs of Germany. Cassia and rubidia have also been detected in certain mineral waters. Bromine is found in the saline at Theodorshalle, in Germany, as also in the salt wells of western (ART I. Aqua. 131 Pennsylvania. The mineral springs at Saratoga contain a small proportion of iodine and bromine. The principal saline waters are those of Seidlitz in Bohe- mia, Cheltenham and Bath in England, and Harrodsburg and Saratoga in the United States. To these may be added the water of the ocean. We subjoin a summary view of the composition of most of the mineral waters enumerated under the foregoing heads. 1. Carbonated. Seltzer. In a wine pint. Carbonic acid IT cubic inches. Solid contents;—carbonate of soda 4 grs.; carbonate of magnesia 5; carbonate of lime 3; chloride of sodium 17. Total 29 grs. (Bergmann.) Spa. In a wine pint. Carbonic acid 13 cubic inches. Solid contents;—carbo- nate of soda 1-5 grs.; carbonate of magnesia 4*5; carbonate of lime 15; chlo- ride of sodium 0 2; oxide of iron 0 6. Total 8*3 grs. (Bergmann.) Pyrmont. In a wine pint. Carbonic acid 26 cubic inches. Solid contents;— carbonate of magnesia 10 grs.; carbonate of lime 4 5; sulphate of magnesia 5 5; sulphate of lime 8'5; chloride of sodium 1*5; oxide of iron 0-6. Total 30*6 grs. (Bergmann.) Vichy. Grand-Grille spring. In 1000 parts by weight. Water 992 572; car- bonic acid 0 983; carbonate of soda 4 971; carbonate of lime 0 349; carbonate of magnesia 0*084; carbonate of iron 0-012; chloride of sodium 0-570; sul- phate of soda 0 472; silica 0‘073. (Longchamp.) 2. Sulphuretted. Aix la Chapelle. In a wine pint. Sulphuretted hydro- gen 5-5 cubic inches. Solid contents;—carbonate of soda 12 grs.; carbonate of lime 4*75; chloride of sodium 5. Total 21-75 grs. (Bergmann.) Harrogate old sulphur well. Sp.gr. 1*01113; temp. 48-2°. In an Imperial gallon. Gaseous contents;—carbonic acid 22 03 cubic inches; carburetted hy- drogen 5-84; sulphuretted hydrogen 5-31; nitrogen 2*91. Total 36-09 cubic inches. Solid contents;—sulphate of lime 0-181 grs.; carbonate of lime 12*365 ; chloride of calcium 81*735; chloride of magnesium 55-693; chloride of potas- sium 64-701; chloride of sodium 866-180; sulphuret of sodium 15-479; silica 0*246; with traces of fluoride of calcium, bromide and iodide of sodium, am- monia, carbonate of iron, carbonate of manganese, and organic matter. Total 1096'580 grs. (Hofmann. Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xiv. 123.) White sulphur. Gaseous contents in a wine gallon ;—sulphuretted hydrogen 2-5 cubic inches; carbonic acid 2; oxygen 1*448; nitrogen 3 552. Total 9*5. Solid contents in a pint;—sulphate of magnesia 5-588 grs.; sulphate of lime 7 744; carbonate of lime 1*150; chloride of calcium 0*204; chloride of sodium 0180; oxide of iron a trace; loss 0*410. Total 15-276 grs. (W. B. Rogers.) 3. Chalybeate. Tunbridge. In a wine gallon. Solid contents;—chloride of sodium 2-46 grs.; chloride of calcium 0‘39; chloride of magnesium 0'29; sulphate of lime 1*41; carbonate of lime 0*27; oxide of iron 2*22; manganese, vegetable fibre, silica, &c. 0 44; loss 0-13. Total t*61 grs. (Scudamore.) Brighton. In a wine pint. Carbonic acid 2 5 cubic inches. Solid contents;— sulphate of iron 1-80 grs.; sulphate of lime 4*09; chloride of sodium 1 53; chlo- ride of magnesium 0 75; silica 0-14; loss 0*19. Total 8*5 grs. (Marcel.) Cheltenham (chalybeate). In a wine pint. Gaseous contents;—carbonic acid 2 5 cubic inches. Solid contents;—carbonate of soda 0-5 grs.; sulphate of soda 22*7; sulphate of magnesia 6; sulphate of lime 2*5; chloride of sodium 41*3: oxide of iron 0*8. Total 73*8 grs. (Brande and Parkes.) Bedford. In a wine pint. Carbonic acid not estimated. Solid contents;—car- bonate of lime 2*120 grs.; sulphate of lime 11-274; sulphate of magnesia 3*974; sulphates of alumina and sesquioxide of iron 1*280; sulphate of soda 3*092; chloride of sodium 0*343; free sulphuric acid [?] 0* 128; silica and organic mat- ter a trace. Total 22*211 grs. (J. Cheston Morris. Med. Exam., June, 1852.) Sharon (chalybeate). Gaseous contents in a wine gallon;—sulphhydric acid gas [sulphuretted hydrogen] 0-7702 cubic inches. Solid contents in a gallon ;—■ Aqua. PARI [. bicarbonate of magnesia 15-1148 grains; sulphate of lime G3-8024; sulphate of magnesia 8 1546; protosulphate.of iron 1 -4040; sulphate of soda 3-7401; sul- phate of potassa a trace; organic matter 28-48. This analysis was of water which had been kept several months, and there was a precipitate of sulphide (sul- phuret) of iron in the vessel, showing that the fresh water must have contained more of this metal than that obtained upon analysis. (Maisch. Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1861, p. 105.) Rockbridge alum spring. In a wine gallon. Carbonic acid 7*536 grs. Solid contents;—sulphate of potassa l-765 grs.; sulphate of lime 3 263; sulphate of magnesia 1*763; protoxide of iron 4 863; alumina 17*905; crenate of ammo- nia 0 700; chloride of sodium 1-008; silica 2*840; free sulphuric acid 15-224. Total 49 331. (Hayes.) A free acid and free bases are here made to coexist. Church Hill alum water, Richmond, Va. Sp. gr. 1-0069. In a wine gallon. Solid contents;—sulphate of potassa 2-444 grs ; sulphate of soda 1-943 ; chlo- ride of sodium 4*627 ; sulphate of ammonia 0*643; sulphate of lime 88 836; sulphate of magnesia 86*064; tersulphate of alumina 72-928; sulphate of protoxide of iron 24-991; tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron 51 -270 ; bisulphate of sesquioxide of iron 83 355; silica 10*429; phosphoric acid a trace. Total 427 "530 grs. (J. C. Booth. Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1854.) 4. Saline. Seidlitz. In a wine pint. Solid contents;—carbonate of magne- sia 2-5 grs.; carbonate of lime 0-8; sulphate of magnesia 180; sulphate of lime 5; chloride of magnesium 4-5. Total 192-8 grs. (Bergmann.) Cheltenham (pure saline). In a wine pint. Solid contents;—sulphate of soda 15 grs.; sulphate of magnesia 11; sulphate of lime 4*5; chloride of sodium 50. Total 80 5 grs. (Parkes and Brande.) Bath. King's well. Sp. gr. 1 0025; temp. 115°. In an Imperial gallon. Solid contents;—carbonate of lime 8-820 grs.; carbonate of magnesia 0 329; car- bonate of iron 1-064; sulphate of lime 80 052; sulphate of potassa 4*641; sulphate of soda 19-229; chloride of sodium 12 642; chloride of magnesium 14-581; silica 2 982; with traces of iodine and oxide of manganese. Total 144 34 grs. (Merck and Galloway. Chem. Gaz., 1846, p. 496.) Balston Spa. Sans Souci spring. In a wine gallon. Solid contents;—chlo- ride of sodium 143 733 grs.; bicarbonate of soda 12*66; bicarbonate of mag- nesia 39 1; carbonate of lime 43 407; carbonate of iron 5-95; iodide of sodium 1*3; silica 1. Total 247*15 grs. (Steel.) Saratoga. Iodine spring. In a wine gallon. Gaseous contents;—carbonic acid 336 cubic inches; atmospheric air 4. Total 340 cubic inches. Solid con- tents;—chloride of sodium 187 grs.; carbonate of magnesia 75; carbonate of lime 26; carbonate of soda 2; carbonate of iron 1; iodine 3 5. Total 294*5 grs. (Emmons.) Saratoga. Pavilion spring. In a wine gallon. Gaseous contents;—carbonic acid 359 05 cubic inches; atmospheric air 5 03. Total 364-08 cubic inches. Solid contents ;—chloride of sodium 187*68 grs.; carbonateof soda4‘92; carbo- nate of lime 52*84; carbonate of magnesia 56*92; carbonate of iron 3*51; sul- phate of soda 1-48; iodide of sodium 2-59; alumina 0-42; silica 1-16; phosphate of lime 019; bromide of potassium a trace. Total 311-71 grs. (Chilton.) Saratoga. Union spring. In a wine gallon. Gaseous contents;—carbonic acid 314-16 cubic inches; atmospheric air 4-62. Total 318-78 cubic inches. Solid contents;—chloride of sodium 243-620 grs.; carbonateof magnesia 84-265; car- bonate of lime 11-600; carbonate of soda 12-800; carbonate of iron 5-452; iodide of sodium and iodine 3'600; silica and alumina 1570; bromide of potassium a trace. Total 392-907 grs. (J. R. Chilton.) Saratoga. Congress spring. Gaseous contents in 100 cubic inches;—carbonic acid 114 cubic inches. Solid contents in a pound Troy;—chloride of ammonium 0 0326 grs.; chloride of potassium 1-6256; chloride of sodium 3 9*6653; iodide FART I. Aqua. of sodium 0 0046; bromide of sodium 0 1613; carbonate of soda 0 8261; car bonate of lime 5 8531; carbonate of magnesia 4 1155; carbonate of strontia 0 06Y2; carbonate of protoxide of iron 0 0173; earbonateof protoxideof manga- nese0-0202; sulphate of potassa 0 1379; nitrate of magnesia 0 1004; alumina 0 0069; silica (J'1112. Total 327452 grs. {Schweitzer.) Sea Water. English Channel. In a thousand grains. Water 964744 grs., chloride of sodium 27'059; chloride of potassium 0765; chloride of magnesium 3-667; bromide of magnesium 0 029; sulphate of magnesia 2 296; sulphate of lime 1-407; carbonate of lime 0-033. Total 1000 grs. (Schweitzer.) The pro- portion of chloride of sodium is from 36 to 37 parts in 1000 in the ocean, at a distance from land. Its amount is small in the interior of the Baltic. It is per- ceived that bromine is present in very minute amount; 100 pounds of sea water yielding only grs. of this element. According to Balard, iodine exists in the water of the Mediterranean; but it has not been detected in the water of the ocean, the bromine being supposed to mask its presence. Besides these ingredi- ents, others are alleged to exist in minute proportion in sea water; as fluorine by Dr. G. Wilson; lead, copper, and silver, by MM. Malaguti, Durocher, and Sar- zeau; and iron and manganese by M. Uziglio. Anterior to Wilson’s researches, Mr. Middleton and Prof. Silliman, jun. had inferred the existence of fluorine in sea water, from its presence in marine animals. The lead and copper, above men- tioned, were found in certain fuci only; the silver, in the sea water itself. The presence of silver in sea water has been rendered probable by Mr. F. Field, by a comparative analysis of the same copper sheathing, when new, and after having been on a vessel for many years. The old sheathing was always found to contain more silver than the new (Chem. Gaz., March 2, 1857); and the observations of Mr. Field have been subsequently confirmed by others. Schweitzer’s analysis gives a small proportion of carbonate of lime; but Bibra could not detect any. Dr. John Davy’s examinations of sea water show that carbonate of lime does not exist at a great distance from land, except in very minute proportion; but be- comes quite evident in water, taken at a distance of from fifty to a hundred miles from coasts. Boracic acid has been found by Mr. Veatch in the sea water on the coast of California. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1860, p. 330.) Sea water, filtered, and charged with five times its volume of carbonic acid, forms, according to Pasquier, a gentle purgative, which keeps very well, and is not disagreeable to take. The dose is from half a pint to a pint. By freezing, seawater is almost entirely freed from saline matter, the ice being nearly pure water. It is obvious that the unfrozen water contains much more than its ordinary proportion of salts; and this is one of the methods of concentrating this and other saline solutions. Medical Properties of Water. Water is a remedy of great importance. When taken into the stomach, it acts by its temperature, by its bulk, and by being absorbed. When of the temperature of about 60°, it gives no positive sensation either of heat or cold; between 60° and 45°, it creates a cool sensation; and below 45°, a decidedly cold one. Between 60° and 100°, it relaxes the fibres of the stomach, and is apt to produce nausea, particularly if the effect of bulk be added to that of temperature. By its bulk and solvent powers, it allays irri- tation by diluting the acrid contents of the stomach and bowels, and favouring their final expulsion; and by its absorption, it promotes the secretion of urine and cutaneous transpiration. Indeed, its influence is so great in the latter way, that it may be safely affirmed that sudorifics and diuretics will not produce their proper effect, unless assisted by copious dilution. Water, externally applied as a bath, is also an important remedy. It may act oy its own specific effect as a liquid, or as a means of modifying the heat of the oody. It acts in the latter way differently, according to the temperature at which it may be applied. When this is above 97°, it constitutes the vapour or hot bath; 134 Aqua.—Aralia Nudicaulis. when between 97° and 85°, the warm bath; between 85° and 65°, the tepid bath ; and between G5° and 32°, the cold bath. The general action of the vapour bath is to accelerate the circulation, and produce profuse sweating. It acts locally on the skin, by softening and relaxing its texture. In stiffness of the joints, and in various diseases of the skin, it has often proved beneficial. The hot bath, like the vapour bath, is decidedly stimulant. By its use the pulse becomes full and frequent, the veins turgid, the face flushed, the skin red, and the respiration quickened. If the temperature be high, and the constitution pecu- liar, its use is not without danger; as it is apt to produce a feeling of suffoca- tion, violent throbbing in the temples, and vertigo with tendency to apoplexy. When it acts favourably, it produces profuse perspiration. The warm bath, though below the animal heat, nevertheless produces a sen- sation of wrarmth; as its temperature is above that of the surface. It diminishes the frequency of the pulse, renders the respiration slower, lessens the heat of the body, and relaxes the skin. It cannot, therefore, be deemed a stimulant. By re- lieving certain diseased actions and states, accompanied by morbid irritability, it often acts as a soothing remedy, producing a disposition to sleep. It is proper in febrile exanthematous diseases, in which the pulse is frequent, the skin hot and dry, and the general condition characterized by restlessness. It is contraindicated in diseases of the head and chest. The tepid bath is not calculated to have much modifying influence on the heat of the body. Its peculiar effects are to soften and cleanse the skin, and to pro- mote insensible perspiration. The cold bath acts differently according to its temperature and manner of ap- plication, and the condition of the system to which it is applied. When of low temperature and suddenly applied, it acts primarily as a stimulant, by the sudden aud rapid manner in which the caloric is abstracted; next as a tonic, by condens- ing the living fibres; and finally as a sedative. It is often useful in diseases of relaxation and debility, when practised by affusion or plunging. But it is essen- tial to its efficacy and safety, that the stock of vitality should be sufficient to create, immediately after its use, those feelings of warmth and iuvigoration, in- cluded under the terra reaction. Currie used it with advantage, by affusion, in certain febrile diseases, especially typhus and scarlatina. To make it safe, the heat must be steadily above the natural standard, aud the patient free from all sense of chilliness, and not in a state of profuse perspiration. Cold water is frequently applied as a sedative in local inflammations, and a? a means of restraining hemorrhage. Its use, however, is inadmissible in inflam- mations of the chest. Pharm. Uses. W'ater is used in a vast number of preparations, either as a menstruum, or as a means for promoting chemical action by its solvent power. Off. Prep. Aqua Destillata. ’ B. PART I. A R ALT A NUDICAULIS. U. S. Secondary. The root of Aralia nudicaulis. U. S. Aralia. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Pentagynia.—Nat. Ord. Araliaceae. Gen. Ch. Flowers umbelled. Calyx five-toothed, superior. Petals five. Stig- ma sessile, subglobose. Berry five-celled, five-seeded. Torrey. Aralia nudicaulis. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1521; Rafinesque, Med. Flor. i. 53. False sarsaparilla, wild sarsaparilla, or small spikenard, as this plant is variously called, is an indigenous perennial, with one leaf and one flower-stem, springing together from the root, or from a very short stalk, and seldom rising False Sarsaparilla. part I. Aralia Nudicaulis.—Aralia Spinosa. 135 two feet in height. The leaf, which stands upon a long footstalk, is twice ter- nate, or once and quinate, with oblong-oval, acuminate leaflets, rounded at the Dase, serrate on the margin, and smooth on both surfaces. The scape or flower- stem is naked, shorter than the leaf, and terminated by three small umbels, each consisting of from twelve to thirty small yellowish or greenish flowers. The fruit consists of small round berries, about as large as those of the common elder. The plant grows throughout the United States, from Canada to the Carolinas, inhabiting shady and rocky woods, and delighting in a rich soil. It flowers in May and June. The root, which is the officinal portion, is horizontal, creeping, sometimes several feet in length, about as thick as the little finger, more or less twisted, of a yellowish-brown colour externally, of a fragrant odour, and a warm, aromatic, sweetish taste. It has not been analyzed. Medical Properties and Uses. False sarsaparilla is a gentle stimulant and diaphoretic, and is thought to have an alterative influence, analogous to that of the root from which it derived its name. It is used in domestic practice, and, by some practitioners in the country, in rheumatic, syphilitic, and cutaneous affec- tions, in the same manner and dose as genuine sarsaparilla. A strong decoction has proved useful as a stimulant to old ulcers. The root of Aralia racemosa, or American spikenard, though not officinal, is used for the same purposes as A. nudicaulis, which it is said to resemble in medical properties. Dr. Peck strongly recommends the root of Aralia hispida, called in Massachusetts dwarf elder, as a diuretic in dropsy. lie uses it in the form of decoction, and finds it pleasanter to the taste and more acceptable to the stomach than most other medicines of the same class. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xix. lit.) W. ARALIA SPINOSA. U. S. Secondary. Aralia Baric. The bark of Aralia spinosa. U. S. Aralia. See ARALIA NUDICAULIS. Aralia spinosa. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1520. This is an indigenous arborescent shrub, variously called angelica-tree, toothaclxe-tree, and prickly ash. The last name, however, should be dropped; as it belongs properly to Xanthoxylum fraxineum, and if retained might lead to confusion. The stem is erect, simple, from eight to twelve feet high, armed with numerous prickles, and furnished near the top with very large bipinnate or tripinnate leaves, which are also prickly, and are composed of oval, pointed, slightly serrate leaflets. It terminates in an ample panicle, very much branched, and bearing numerous small hemispherical umbels, in each of which are about thirty white flowers. This cpecies of Aralia is found most abundantly and of the largest growth in the Southern States, where it is said sometimes to attain a height of from thirty to sixty feet. It grows also in the Western States, and as far north as New York. It is sometimes cultivated in the gardens of the North as a curious or ornamental plant. It flourishes in low, fertile woods, and flowers in August and September. The bark, root, and berries are medicinal; but the first only is directed by the Pharmacopoeia. The bark, as in the shops, is usually in small quills or half quills, from two or three lines to half an inch in diameter, thin, fibrous, grayish externally, and armed with prickles or the remains of them, yellowish within, of an odour some- what aromatic, and a bitterish taste, which becomes slightly acrid on chewing, and leaves a lasting sense of pungency upon the tongue. It yields its virtues n* boiling water Aralia Spinosa.—Argentum. PART I. Medical Properties and Uses. The virtues of Aralia spinosa are those of a stimulant diaphoretic. According to Elliot, an infusion of the recent bark of the root is emetic and cathartic. The remedy is used in chronic rheumatism and cutaneous eruptions; and in some parts of the South has been employed in syphilis. Pursh states that a vinous or spirituous infusion of the berries is re- markable for relieving rheumatic pains; and a similar tincture is said to be em- ployed in Virginia with advantage in violent colic. The pungency of this tincture has also been found useful in relieving toothache. The bark is most conveniently administered in decoction. W. ARGENTUM. U.S. Silver. Off. Syn. REFINED SILVER. Br. Appendix. Argent, Fr.; Silber, Germ.; Argento, Ital.; Plata, Span. Silver is occasionally found in the metallic state, sometimes crystallized, at other times combined with gold, antimony, arsenic, or mercury; but usually it occurs in the state of sulphuret, either pure, or mixed with other sulphurets, as those of copper, lead, and antimony. It is sometimes found as a chloride. The most productive mines of silver are found on this continent, being those of Mexico and Peru; the richest in Europe are those of Norway, Hungary, and Transylvania. Mines have been opened and profitably worked in California and Nevada, and there can be little doubt that vast deposits of silver ores exist in the mountainous regions of our country, extending northward from Arizona and New Mexico. The principal ore is the sulphuret. The mineral containing silver, which is most disseminated, is argentiferous galena, which is sulphuret of lead, containing a little sulphuret of silver. Argentiferous galena exists in several localities in the United States. A mine of silver was opened, about the year 1841, in Davidson county, N. C. The ore is an argentiferous carbonate of lead, yield- ing about one-third of its weight of lead, from which from 100 to 400 ounces of silver are extracted per ton. (Eckfeldt and Du Bars. Manual of Coins.) Native silver is associated, in small quantities, with the native copper of the Lake Superior region ; and a little of it has come into the market; but in general the quantity is not so great as to render its collection profitable. The two metals, though more or less mixed, are yet quite distinct, seldom being alloyed to any considerable extent. Extraction. Silver is extracted from its ores by two principal processes, amalgamation and cupellation. At Freyberg, in Saxony, the ore, which is prin- cipally the sulphuret, is mixed with a tenth of chloride of sodium, and roasted in a reverberatory furnace. The sulphur becomes acidified, and combines with sodium and oxygen, so as to form sulphate of soda, while the chlorine forms a chloride with the silver. The roasted mass is then reduced to very fine powder, mixed with half its weight of mercury, one-third of its weight of water, and about a seventeenth of iron in flat pieces, and subjected, for sixteen or eighteen hours, to constant agitation in barrels turned by machinery. The chlorine com- bines with the iron, and remains in solution as chloride of iron ; while the silver forms an amalgam with the mercury. Tile amalgam is then subjected to press- ure in leathern bags, through the pores of which the excess of mercury passes, a solid amalgam being left behind. This is then subjected to heat in a distilla- tory apparatus, by means of which the mercury is separated from the silver, which is left in a porous mass. In Peru and Mexico the process is similar to that above given, common salt and mercury being used ; but slaked lime and sulphuret of iron are also employed, with an effect which is not very obvious. When argentiferous galenas are worked for the silver they contain, they are MRT I. Argentum.—Armoracia. 137 first reduced, and the argentiferous lead obtained is fused on a large, oval, shallow vessel called a test, and exposed to the blast of a bellows, whereby the lead is oxidized, half vitrified, and driven off the test in scales, in the form of litharge. The operation being continued on successive portions of argentiferous lead, the whole of the lead is separated, and the silver, not being oxidizable, accumulates on the test as a brilliant fused mass, until its amount is sufficient to be removed. The time required for the separation is much abridged by the process of Mr, Pattinson, of Newcastle, England. This consists in allowing the melted alloy to cool slowly, and separating the crystals which first form, consisting mainly of lead, by means of a perforated ladle. The residue is a very fusible alloy of lead a no silver, in which the latter metal is in large proportion, and from which it can be easily separated by cupellation or other means. (Brande and Taylor.) Properties. Silver is a white metal, very brilliant, tenacious, malleable, and ductile. In malleability and ductility, it is inferior only to gold. It is harder than gold, but softer than copper. Its equivalent number is 108, symbol Ag, and sp. gr. about 10‘4. It forms but one well characterized oxide, which is a protox- ide. Exposed to a full red heat, it enters into fusion, and exhibits a brilliant appearance. It is not oxidized in the air, but contracts a superficial tarnish oi sulphuret of silver by the action of sulphuretted hydrogen in the atmosphere. It is entirely soluble in diluted nitric acid. If any gold be present, it will remain undissolved as a dark-coloured powder. From the nitric solution, the whole oi the silver may be thrown down by chloride of sodium, as a white precipitate ol chloride of silver, characterized by being completely soluble in ammonia. If the remaining solution contain copper or lead, it will be precipitated or discoloured by sulphuretted hydrogen. Pharm. Uses. The only officinal preparations containing silver are the oxide, nitrate, and cyanide. The chloride will be noticed in the third part of this work. Off. Prep. Argeuti Nitras. B. ARMORACIA. Br. Horse-radish Root. Cochlearia Armoracia. The fresh root. Br. Raifort sauvage, Fr.; Meerrettig, Germ.; Rafano rusticano, Ital.; Rabano rusticano, Span. Cochlearia. Sex. Syst. Tetradynamia Silliculosa. — Nat. Ord. Brassicacese or Cruciferae. Gen. Ch. Silicula emarginate, turgid, scabrous, with gibbous, obtuse valves. Willd. Cochlearia Armoracia. Willd. Sp. Blant. iii. 451; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 400, t. l4o. 'The root of this plant is perennial, sending up numerous very large leaves, from the midst of which a round, smooth, erect, branching stem rises two or three feet in height. The radical leaves are lance-shaped, waved, scalloped on the edges, sometimes pinnatifid, and stand upon strong footstalks. Those of the stem are much smaller, without footstalks, sometimes divided at the edges, sometimes almost entire. The flowers are numerous, white, peduncled, and form thick terminal clusters. The calyx has four ovate, deciduous leaves, and the co- rolla an equal number of obovate petals, twice as long as the calyx, and inserted by narrow claws. The pod is small, elliptical, crowned with the persistent stigma, and divided into two cells, each containing from four to six seeds. The horse-radish is a native of western Europe, growing wild on the sides of ditches, and in other moist situations. It is cultivated for culinary purposes in most civilized countries, and is said to have become naturalized in some parts of the United States. Its flowers appear in June. The i oot, which is officinal in its fresh state, is long, conical at top, then nearly Armoracia.—Arnica. PART I. cylindrical for some inches, at last tapering, whitish externally, very white within, fleshy, of a strong pungent odour when scraped or bruised, and of a hot, biting, somewhat sweetish and sometimes bitterish taste. Its virtues are imparted to water and alcohol. They depend upon a volatile oil, which is dissipated by dry- ing; the root becoming at first sweetish, and ultimately insipid and quite inert. Its acrimony is also destroyed by boiling. The oil may be obtained by distilla- tion with water. It is colourless or pale-yellow, heavier than water, very volatile, excessively pungent, acrid, and corrosive, exciting inflammation and even vesi- cation when applied to the skin. Hubatka considers it as identical with the vola- tile oil of mustard. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., v. 42.) According to Gutret, only 6 parts of it are obtained from 10,000 of the root. Besides this principle, the fresh root contains, according to the same chemist, a bitter resin in minute quantity, sugar, extractive, gum, starch, albumen, acetic acid, acetate and sul- phate of lime, water, and lignin. From observations made by F. L. Winckler, it may be inferred that moronic acid exists in the root combined with potassa, and that it is from the reactionBetween this acid, mvrosine. also existing in the root, and water, that the volatile oil is produced, in the same manner as oil of mustard from mustard seed. (See Sinapis.) Horse-radish, when distilled with alcohol, yields none of the oil. {Journ. fur Pralct. Pharm., xviii. 89.) The root may be kept for some time without material injury, if buried in sand in a cool place. It is said that if, to the powder of the dried root, which has become appa- rently inert, the emulsion of white mustard seed containing myrosine be added, it reacquires its original irritant properties; so that it is the myrosine and not the myronate of potassa which is injured by drying. Hence, the powdered root may be added with advantage to mustard in preparing cataplasms, pediluvia, &c. {Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., xxvii. 268.) Medical Properties and Uses. Horse-radish is highly stimulant, exciting the stomach when swallowed, and promoting the secretions, especially that of urine. Externally it is rubefacient. Its chief use is as a condiment to promote appetite and invigorate digestion; but it is also occasionally employed as a medicine, particularly in dropsy attended with enfeebled digestion and general debility. It has, moreover, been recommended in palsy and chronic rheumatism, both as an internal and external remedy; and in scorbutic affections is highly esteemed. Cullen found advantage, in cases of hoarseness, from the use of a syrup pre- pared from an infusion of horse-radish and sugar, and slowly swallowed in the quantity of one or two teaspoonfuls, repeated as occasion demanded. The root may be given in the dose of half a drachm or more, either grated, or cut into small pieces. Off. Prep. Spiritus Armoraciae Compositus, Br. W. ARNICA. U.S.,Br. Arnica. The flowers of Arnica montana. U. S. The root, dried. Br. Leopard’s-bane, U. AT850; Arnique, Fr.; Berg YVolverly, Gemeines lichtes Fallkraut, Germ.; Xrmea "montana, Ital., Span. Arnica. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua.— Nat. Ord. Compositae-Senecio- nideae. De Cand. Asteraceae. Lindley. Gen. Oh. Calyx with equal leaflets, in a double row. Seed-down hairy, sessile. Seeds both of.the disk and ray furnished with seed-down. Receptacle hairy. Hayne. Arnica montana. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 2106; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 41, t. 17. This is a perenniaI7herbaceous plant, having a woody, brownish, horizontal root, from one to three inches long, and two or three lines thick, ending abruptly, and eendiug forth numerous slender fibres of the same colour. The stem is abovt a PART I. Arnica. 139 foot high, cylindrical, striated, hairy, and terminating in one, two, or three pe- duncles, each bearing a flower. The radical leaves are ovate, entire, ciliated, and obtuse; those of the stem, which usually consist of two opposite pairs, are lance-shaped. Both are of a bright-green colour, and somewhat pubescent on their upper surface. The flowers are very large, and of a fine orange-yellow colour. The calyx is greenish, imbricated, with lanceolate scales. The ray con- sists of about fourteen ligulate florets, twice as long as the calyx, striated, three- toothed, and hairy at the base; the disk, of tubular florets, with a fi ve-lobed margin. This plant is a native of the mountainous districts of Europe and Siberia, and is found, according to Nuttall, in the northern regions of this continent, west of the Mississippi. It has been introduced into England, and might no doubt be cultivated in this country. Its transference from the secondary to the primary catalogue, in the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, indicates that it is more used in this country than formerly. The flowers, leaves, and root are em- ployed ; but the flowers are usually preferred. Properties. The whole plant, when fresh, has a strong, disagreeable odour, which is apt to excite sneezing, and is diminished by desiccation. The taste is acrid, bitterish, and durable. Water extracts its virtues. Chevallier and Las- saigne discovered, in the flowers, gallic acid, gum, albumen, yellow colouring matter, an odorous resin, and a bitter principle which they considered identical with cytisin, discovered by them in the seeds of the laburnum-tree (Gytisus La- burnum), which are possessed of poisonous properties. (See Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., Nov. 1856, p. 446.) is yellow, of a bitter and nauseous taste, deliquescent, readily soluble in water and diluted alcohol, but with difficulty in strong alcohol, and insoluble in ether. In the dose of five grains it is powerfully emetic and cathartic; and it has been supposed to be the active principle of the plant. The flowers also contain a small proportion of a blue volatile oil. Pfaff obtained from the root a volatile oil, an acrid resin, extractive, gum, and lignin. Mr. Wra. Bastick, of London, has separated an organic alkali from the flowers, and names it arnicina. It is solid, slightly bitter, but not acrid, of the odour of castor, slightly soluble in water, and much more soluble in alcohol and ether. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., x. 389.)* The alkali, however, appears to have been previously obtained by M. Lebourdais by the charcoal process. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiii. p. 243.) Medical Properties and Uses. Leopard’s-bane is a stimulant, directed with peculiar energy to the brain and whole nervous system, as manifested by the re- sulting headache, spasmodic contractions of the limbs, and difficulty of respiration. It acts also as an irritant to the stomach and bowels, often producing an emetie and cathartic effect, and is said by Bergius to be diuretic, diaphoretic, and em- menagogue. It is capable of acting as a poison in overdoses, causing burning iu the stomach, violent abdominal pains, intense headache, and great nervous disturbance. A case of tetanic spasm of one side, and ultimate death under its use, is on record; but there is reason to doubt whether arnica was the real cause of the fatal issue. (Ann. de Therap., 1854, p. 46.) It is much used by the Ger- mans, who prescribe the flowers and root with advantage in amaurosis, paralysis, and other nervous affections. It is said to prove serviceable in that disordered * Mr. Bastick obtained the alkaloid by the following process. The flowers were mace- rated with alcohol acidulated with sulphuric acid; the tincture was filtered, and treated with lime until it evinced an alkaline reaction; the liquid was then filtered, and the filtrate treated with sulphuric acid in slight excess; the acid solution was filtered and concentrated by evaporation; to the residue a little water was added, the liquid was evaporated until all the alcohol was driven off, and was then again filtered; the filtered liquor was saturated with carbonate of potassa, and after filtration was mixed with a considerable excess of carbonate of potassa; finally, the liquid was agitated with successive portions of ether until this flu:d ceased to dissolve anything, and the ethereal solution obtained was left V) spontaneous evaporation. Arnicina remained. Arnica.—Arsenicum. PART I. condition which succeeds concussion of the brain from falls, blows, &c.; and from this circumstance has received the title of panacea lapsorum. It has also been recommended in chronic catarrh of the old, intermittent fever and its sequel®, dysentery, diarrhoea, nephritis, gout, rheumatism, passive hemorrhages, dropsy, chlorosis, amenorrhoea, and various other complaints, in most of which it seems to have been empirically prescribed. It is peculiarly useful in diseases attended with a debilitated or typhoid state of the system. Dr. T. C. Miller has found it a very valuable remedy in enteric or typhoid fever. (Penins. Med. Journ., Sept. 1859, p.382.) The powdered flowers and leaves are employed as a sternutatory; and the inhabitants of Savoy and the Vosges are said to substitute them for tobacco. They are best given in substance or infusion. The dose of the powder is from five to twenty grains frequently repeated. The infusion may be prepared by digesting an ounce in a pint of water, of which from half a fiuidounce to a fluid- ounce may be given every two or three hours. It should always be strained through linen, in order to separate the fine fibres, which might otherwise irritate the throat. The poisonous properties of the plant are said to be best counteracted by the free use of vinegar or other dilute vegetable acid; but the stomach should be first thoroughly emptied. A tincture prepared from the flowers has come into use in this country as a domestic remedy in sprains, bruises, &c., and is now among the U. S. officinals. It is employed externally. Off. Prep, of the Flowers. Extractum Arnicae Alcoholicum, U.S.; Tinctura Arnica, U. S. Off. Prep, of the Root. Tinctura Arnicae, Br. W. ARSENICUM. US. Arsenic. Arsenic, Fr.; Arsenik, Germ.; Arsenico, Ital., Span. This metal was introduced into the U. S. and Dublin Pharmacopoeias of 1850, for the purpose of being used to form the iodide of arsenic, and the solution of iodide of arsenic and mercury, two new officinals of those works. It has been re- tained in the Materia Medica of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, but was rejected by the compilers of the British. The Dublin College gave the following formula. “Take of White Oxide of Arsenic of Commerce two drachms [Dub. weight]. Place the Oxide at the sealed end of a hard German glass tube, of about half an inch in diameter and eighteen inches long, and, having covered it with about eight inches of dry and coarsely pulverized charcoal, and raised the portion of the tube containing the charcoal to a red heat, let a few ignited coals be placed beneath the Oxide, so as to effect its slow sublimation. When this has been accomplished, the metallic arsenic will be found attached to the interior of the tube at its distant or cool extremity. “ In conducting this process, the furnace used in the performance of an organic analysis should be employed, and the fuel should be ignited charcoal. It will be proper also to connect the open extremity of the tube with a flue, for the purpose of preventing the possible escape into the apartment of arsenical vapours; and, with the view of keeping it from being plugged by the metal, to introduce occa- sionally into it, as the sublimation proceeds, an iron wire through a cork, fixed (but not air-tight) in its open extremity.” In the above process, the white oxide (arsenious acid) is reduced by the agency of ignited charcoal, which attracts the oxygen of the acid, and revives the metal. On the large scale, metallic arsenic is generally obtained by heating arsenical pyrites (FeAs,FeS2) in earthen tubes; when the metal sublimes, aud two eqs of protosulphuret of iron are left. PART I. Arsenicum.—Arum. 141 Properties. Arsenic is a brittle, crystalline metal, of a steel-gray colour, and possessing much brilliancy when recently broken or sublimed. Exposed to the air, its surface becomes dull and blackish. Its texture is granular, and sometimes a little scaly. Rubbed on the hands, it communicates a peculiar odour; but it is devoid of taste. Its sp. gr. is about 5 8. When heated to about 356°, it sub- limes without fusing, giving rise to white vapours having a garlicky odour. Its equivalent number is t5. It forms two combinations with oxygen, both having acid properties, called arsenious and arsenic acids, and three with sulphur, namely, bisulphuret of arsenic or realgar; tersulphuret or orpiment, corresponding in com- position with arsenious acid; and quintosulphuret, corresponding with arsenic acid. (See Acidum Arseniosum; also realgar and orpiment in the third part of this work.) Arsenic acid is obtained by distilling a mixture of twelve parts of nitric and oneToTmuriatic acid olf four parts of arsenious acid, until the whole has acquired the consistence of a thin syrup. The liquid is then poured into a porcelain dish, and evaporated at a moderate heat. Suddenly the arsenic acid, in the anhydrous state, concretes into an opaque white mass, which should be transferred, while warm, to a well-stopped bottle. Arsenic acid is white, solid, deliquescent, and soluble in six parts of cold and two of boiling water. It forms several hydrates, corresponding to those of phosphoric acid, to which it bears a close analogy. With nitrate of silver it gives a brick-red precipitate of arseniate of silver. As a poison it is even more virulent than arsenious acid. It consists of one eq. of arsenic and five of oxygen (As05). Arsenic is much diffused. Besides being present in a great many minerals, it has been detected, in minute proportion, in the earth of graveyards by Orfila; in certain soils and mineral waters by M. Walchner; in the ashes of various plants by M. Stein; and in various kinds of mineral coal, as also in the incrustation formed in the boiler of a sea-going steamer, by M. Daubree. Arsenic is officinal:— I. In the metallic state. Arsenicum, U. S. — Arsenic. II. Combined with oxygen. Acidum Arseniosum, U. S., Br. —Arsenious Acid. . III. Combined with iodine. Arsenici Iodidum, U. S. —Iodide of Arsenic. IV. Combined with iodine and mercury. Liquor Arsenici et Hydrargyri Iodidi, U. S. — Solution of Iodide of Arsenic and Mercury. Donovan's Solution. V. In saline combination. Liquor Potassae Arsenitis, U. S.; Liquor Arsenicalis, Br. — Solution of Arsenite of Potassa. Arsenical Solution. Fowler's Solution. ARUM. U. S. Secondary. Indian Turnip. The cormus of Arum triphyllum. U. S. Arum. Sex. Syst. Moncecia Polyandria.—Nat. Ord. Araceae. Gen. Ch. Spathe one-leafed, cowled. Spadix naked above, female below, •stamineous in the middle. Willd. The root or cormus of Arum maculatum is occasionally used as a medicine in Europe, and formerly held a place in the Dublin Pharmacopoeia. Its properties bo closely resemble those of our A, trivhifllum. that the substitution of the latter in our Pharmacopoeia was obviously proper, independently of the consideration that the root is efficient only in the recent state. Its constituents, according to J. B. Enz, are a neuter acrid volatile principle soluble in ether, starch, gum, Arum. PART I. mucilage, sugar, lignin, albumen, saponin, fixed oil, resin, and phosphate of lime ; tne fresh cormus containing 58 4 per cent, of water, 5 2 of lignin, and 27 2 of svarch. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxi. 352.) In overdoses it is capable of producing fatal effects, through the violentinflammation caused by it in the mouth, fauces, oesophagus,, and stomach. A fatal case, occurring in a child three years old, is recorded in the Annuaire de Tlierapeutique (A.D. 1862, p. 16), in which, besides the effects mentioned, profound torpor occurred at the end of three hours, followed by intense febrile reaction, and subsequent prostration. It is no doubt the acrid volatile principle to which these effects are to be ascribed. The root of A. esculentum, which abounds in starch, is much used by the natives of the Sandwich and other islands of the Pacific, as an article of food, having been previously deprived of its acrimony by heat. Arum triphyllum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 480; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 52. The d'rajpn-root, Indian turnip, or wake-robin, as this plant is variously called, has a perennial root or cormus, which, early in spring, sends up a large, ovate, acuminate, variously coloured spathe, convoluted at bottom, flattened and bent over at top like a hood, and supported by an erect, round, green or purplish scape. Within the spathe is a club-shaped spadix, green, purple, black, or varie- gated, rounded at the end, and contracted near the base, where it is surrounded by the stamens or germs in the dioecious plants, and by both in the fnonoecious, the female organs being below the male. The spathe and upper portions of the spadix gradually decay, while the germs are converted into a compact bunch of shining, scarlet berries. The leaves, usually one or two in number, and upon long sheathing footstalks, are composed of three ovate acuminate leaflets, paler on their under than their upper surface, and becoming glaucous as the plant ad- vances. There are three varieties of this species, distinguished by the colour of the spathe, which in one is green, in another dark-purple, and in a third white. The plant is a native of North and South America, and is common in all parts of the United States, growing in damp woods, in swamps, along ditches, and in other moist shady places. All parts of it are highly acrid, but the root only is officinal. This is roundish, flattened, an inch or two in diameter, covered with a brown, loose, wrinkled epidermis, and internally white, fleshy, and solid. In the recent state, it has a peculiar odour, and is violently acrid, producing, when chewed, an insupportable burning and biting sensation in the mouth and throat, which continues for a long time, and leaves an unpleasant soreness behind. According to Dr. Bigelow, its action does not readily extend through the cuticle, as the bruised root may lie upon the skin till it becomes dry, without producing pain or redness. The acrid principle is extremely volatile, and is entirely driven olf by heat. It is not imparted to water, alcohol, or olive oil, but is probably solu- ble in ether, as may be inferred from the experiments of Enz, before referred to, on A. maculatum. The root loses nearly all its acrimony by drying, and in a short time becomes quite inert. It was found by Mr. D. S. Jones, besides the acrid principle, and from 10 to 17 per cent, of starch, to contain albumen, gum, sugar, extractive, lignin, and salts of potassa and lime. (Am. Journ. of Pliarm., xv. 83.) The starch may be obtained from it as white and delicate as from the potato. In Europe, the dried root of A. macula,turn is said sometimes to be em- ployed by the country people, in times of great scarcity, as a substitute for bread ; and an amylaceous substance is prepared from it, in small quantities, in the Isle of Portland, on the south coast of England, and called gprlland arrow-root, or .JZoxUand sago. The Indian turnip may be preserved fiwTrorayear, if buried in sand. Medical Properties and Uses. Arum in its recent state is a powerful local irritant, possessing the property of stimulating the secretions, particularly those of the skin and lungs. It has been advantageously given in asthma, pertussis, part I. Arum.—Asarum. 143 chronic catarrh, chronic rheumatism, and various affections connected with a cachectic state of the system. As immediately taken from the ground, it is too acrid for use. The recently dried root, which retains a portion of the acrimony, but not sufficient to prevent its convenient administration, is usually preferred. It may be given in the dose of ten grains, mixed with gum arabic, sugar, and water, in the form of emulsion, repeated two or three times a day, and gradu- ally increased to half a drachm or more. The powder, made into a paste with honey or syrup, and placed in small quantities upon the tongue, so as to be gradually diffused over the mouth and throat, is said to have proved useful in the aphthous sore-mouth of children. W. ASA RUM. TJ.S. Secondary. Wild Ginger. Canada Snakeroot. The root of Asarum Canadense. U. S. Asarum. Sex. Syst. Dodecandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Aristolochiaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx three or four cleft, sitting on the germen. Corolla none. Capsule coriaceous, crowned. Willd. Asarum Canadense. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 838; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 149; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 85. This species of Asarum very closely resembles A. Euro- peeum or asarabacca, in appearance and botanical character. It creeping, jointed, fleshy, yellowish root or rhizoma, furnished with radicles o4 a similar colour. The stem is very short, dividing, before it emerges from the ground, into two long rouud hairy leafstalks, each of which bears a broad kid- ney-shaped leaf, pubescent on both surfaces, of a rich shining light-green above, veined and pale or bluish beneath. A single flower stands in the fork of the stem, upon a hairy pendulous peduncle. The flower is often concealed by the loose soil or decayed vegetable matter; so that the leaves with their petioles are the only parts that appear. There is no corolla. The calyx is very woolly, and divided into three broad concave acuminate segments, with the ends reflexed, of a deep brownish-purple colour on the inside, and of a dull-purple inclining to greenish externally. The filaments, which are twelve in number, and of un- equal length, stand upon the germ, and rise with a slender point above the anthers attached to them. Near the divisions of the calyx are three filamentous bodies, which maybe considered as nectaries. The pistil consists of a somewhat hexagonal germ, and a conical grooved style, surmounted by six revolute stigmas. The capsule is six-celled, coriaceous, and crowned with the adhering calyx. Canada snakeroot, or ivild ginger, is an indigenous plant, inhabiting woods and shady places from Canada to the Carolinas. Its flowering period is from April to July. All parts of the plant have a grateful aromatic odour, which is most powerful in the root. This is the officinal portion. As we have seen it in the shops, it is in long, more or less contorted pieces, of a thickness from that of a straw to that of a goose-quill, brownish and wrinkled externally, whitish within, hard and brittle, and frequently furnished with short fibres. Its taste is agreeably aromatic and slightly bitter, said to be intermediate between that of ginger and serpentaria, but in our opinion bearing a closer resemblance to that of cardamom. The taste of the petioles, which usually ac- company the root, is more bitter and less aromatic. Among its constituents, according to Dr. Bigelow, gent, and fragrant volatile oil, a reddish bitter resinous matter, starch, and gum"; in addition to which Mr. Rushton found fatty matter, chlorophyll, and salts of potassa, lime, and iron. Mr. Procter found the resin to be acrid as well as bitter, and without aromatic properties. The root imparts its virtues to alcohol, and less perfectly to water. 144 Asarum.—Asclepias. PART I. Medical Properties and Uses. Canada suakeroot is au aromatic stimulant tonic, with diaphoretic properties, applicable to similar cases with serpentaria, which it resembles in its effects. It is said to be sometimes used by the country people as a substitute for ginger. Dr. J. R. Black, of Indiana, has found it to pos- sess diuretic properties, and has used it with extraordinary success in two cases of dropsy connected with albuminous urine. (N. Y. Journ. of Med.,xxxii. 289.)* From the close botanical analogy of the plant with the European Asarum, it might be supposed, like that, to possess emetic and cathartic properties; but such does not appear to be the case, at least with the dried root. It would form au elegant adjuvant to tonic infusions and decoctions. It may be given in powder or tincture. The dose in substance is twenty or thirty grains. W. ASCLEPIAS. U. S. Secondary. Butterfly-weed'. The root of Asclepias tuberosa. U. S. Syn. Aso-Lepias'Tuberosa. U. S. 1850. Asclepias. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Asclepiadace®. Gen. Gh. Calyx small, five-parted. Corolla rotate, five-parted, mostly re- flexed. Staviinal crown (or nectary) simple, five-leaved; leaflets opposite the anthers, with a subulate averted process at the base. Stigmas with the five angles (corpuscles) opening by longitudinal chinks. Pollinia five distinct pairs. Torrey. Several species of Asclepias, besides A. tuberosa, have been employed me- dicinally; and two of these. A. Syriaca and A. ipwa.rnn.ta. were recognised in the Secondary Catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, from which, however, they were discharged, perhaps not altogether judiciously, at the late revision of that work. They will be noticed particularly in the third part of the Dispensatory. Asclepias.iuberasa. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1273; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 59; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 239. The root of the butterfly-weed or pleurisy-root is perennial, and gives origin to numerous stems, which are erect, ascending, or pro- cumbent, round, hairy, of a green or reddish colour, branching at the top, and about three feet in height. The leaves are scattered, oblong-lanceolate, very hairy, of a rich, deep-green colour on their upper surface, paler beneath, and supported usually on short footstalks. They differ, however, somewhat in shape according to the variety of the plant. In the variety with decumbent stems, they are almost linear, and in another variety cordate. The flowers are of a beauti- ful reddish-orange colour, and disposed in terminal or lateral corymbose umbels. The fruit is an erect lanceolate follicle, with flat ovate seeds connected to a longitudinal receptacle by long silky hairs. This plant differs from other species of Asclepias in not emitting a milky juice when wounded. It is indigenous, growing throughout the United States from Massachusetts to Georgia, and as far west as Texas, and, when in full bloom, in June and July, having a splendid appearance. It is most abundant in the South- ern States. The root is the only part used in medicine. This is large, irregularly tuberous, branching, often somewhat fusiform, fleshy, externally brown, internally white and striated, and, in the recent state, of a sub-acrid, nauseous taste. When dried it is easily pulverized; and its taste is bit- ter, but not otherwise unpleasant. Mr. E. Rhoads has discovered in it a pecu- liar principle, which he obtained by treating the cold infusion with tannic acid, mixingtho precipitate, previously washed and expressed, with litharge, drying * Dr. Black used the root in the form of decoction, boiling four ounces in two pints of water for thirty minutes, and giving two tablespoonfuls every four hours till its effects were produced.—Note t% the twelfth edition. part i. Asclepias.—Assafcetida. the mixture and exhausting it with hot alcohol, and finally decolorizing and eva- porating the alcoholic liquor. The product was a yellowish-white powder, having the taste of the root, soluble in ether, and much less readily so in water, from which it was precipitated by tannic acid. Mr. Rhoads also found evidence of the existence in the root of tannic and gallic acids, albumen, pectin, gum, starch, a resin soluble and another insoluble in ether, fixed oil, a volatile odorous fatty matter, and various salts, besides from 30 to 35 per cent, of lignin. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 492.) Medical Properties and Uses. The root of Asclepias tuberosa is diaphoretic and expectorant, without being stimulant. In large doses it is often also cathar- tic. Dr. Pawling, of Norristown, Pa., found it always, when freely given, to diminish the volume and activity of the pulse, while it produced copious dia- phoresis {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 496); and Dr. Goodrake, of Clinton, Illinois, considers it, from his experience, slightly sedative and astringent. ( Trans, of Illinois State Med. Soc., A.D. 1857.) In the Southern States it has long been employed by regular practitioners in catarrh, pneumonia, pleurisy, consump- tion, and other pectoral affections; and appears to be decidedly useful, if ap- plied in the early stage, or, after sufficient depletion, wFen the complaint is already formed. Its popular name of pleurisy-root expresses the estimation in which it is held as a remedy in that disease. It has also been useful in diarrhoea, dysen- tery, and acute and chronic rheumatism. Dr. Lockwood speaks highly of its efficacy in promoting the eruption in exanthematous fevers. {Buffalo Med. Journ., March, 1848.) Much testimony might be advanced in proof of its possess- ing very considerable diaphoretic powers. It is said also to be gently tonic, and has been popularly employed in pains of the stomach from flatulence and indigestion. From twenty grains to a drachm of the root in powder may be given several times a day; but as a diaphoretic it is best administered in decoction or infu- sion, made in the proportion of an ounce to a quart of water, and given in the dose of a teacupful every two or three hours till it operates.* W. ASSAFCETIDA. U.S., Br. Assafetida. The concrete juice of the root of Narthex Assafcetida, U. S. A gum-resiu obtained by incision from the living root. Br. Assafcetida Fr.; Stinkasant,' Teufelsdreck, Germ.; Assafetida, Ital.; Asafetida, Span.; Umroozeh, Persian.; Hilteet, Arab. Narthex. Bex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Apiacem or Umbel- lifer je. Gen. Ch. Umbels compound. Involucres none. Calyx obsolete. Fruit thin, compressed at the back, with a dilated border. Ilidges three only, dorsal. Vittee one to each dorsal furrow, and two to the laterals. Albumen thin, flat. Bindley. Narthex Assafcetida. Falconer, Royle's Mat. Med., Am. ed., p. 407.—Ferula. Assafcetida. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1413; Koempfer, Amcenitat. Exotic. 535, tTBSB. This plant was first described by Koempfer, who wrote from actual observation. By him and others after him it was considered as belonging to the genus Ferula; * Fluid Extract of Asclepias Mr. E. Rhoads prepares & fluid extract by moistening sixteen ounces of the powdered root with four fluidounces of a menstruum consisting of three pints of alcohol and a pint and a half of water, packing the mixture into a conical glass perco- lator, pouring on it the remainder of the menstruum, reserving the twelve fluidounces which first pass, evaporating the residue of the filtered liquor by means of a water-bath to four fluidounces, mixing this with the reserved liquor, and filtering at the end of twenty-four hours. This preparation was found effective by Dr. Pawling, in the dose of a fluidrachm every four hours.—Note to the twelfth edition. Assafoetida. PART I. hut I)i Falconer, from a careful examination of the plant in its native site, as well as of specimens cultivated in the Saharunpore Botanic Garden, came to the conclusion that it belongs to a distinct genus, which he denominated Nar- tliex, and which is now generally admitted. The root is perennial, fleshy, ta- pering, simple or divided, a foot or more in length, about three inches thick at top, where it is invested above the soil with numerous small fibres, dark-gray and transversely corrugated on the outside, internally white, and abounding in an excessively fetid, opaque, milky juice. The leaves, which spring from the root, are numerous, large and spreading, nearly two feet long, light-green above, paler beneath, and of a leathery texture. They are three-parted, with bipinna- tifid segments, and oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, entire or variously sinuate, decur- rent lobes, forming a narrow winged channel on the divisions of the petiole. From the midst of the leaves rises a luxuriant, herbaceous stem, from six to nine feet high, two inches in diameter at the base, simple, erect, round, smooth, striated, solid, and terminating in a large head of compound umbels, with from ten to twenty rays, each surmounted by a roundish partial umbel. The flowers are pale-yellow, and the fruit oval, thin, flat, foliaceous, and reddish-brown. The plant is said to differ, both in its leaves and product, according to the situa- tion and soil in which it grows. It is a native of Persia, Aflghanistan, and other neighbouring regions; and flourishes abundantly in the mountainous provinces of Laar and Chorassan, where its juice is collected. Burns, in his travels into Bokhara, states that the young plant is eaten with relish by the people, and that sheep crop it greedily. Some have erroneously supposed that certain species of Ferula contribute to the pro- duction of the assafetida of commerce; and F. Persica was admitted among its probable sources in the last edition of the b'dmbu'rgFi Pharmacopoeia. This plant grows also in Persia, and has a strong odour of the drug.* The oldest plants are most productive, and those under four years old are not considered worth cutting. At the season when the leaves begin to fade, the earth is removed from about the top of the root, and the leaves and stem, being twisted off near their base, are thrown with other vegetable matters over the root, in order to protect it from the sun. After some time the summit of the root is cut off transversely, and, the juice which exudes having been scraped off, another thin slice is removed, in order to obtain a fresh surface for exudation. This process is repeated at intervals till the root ceases to afford juice, and per- ishes. During the whole period of collection, which occupies nearly six weeks, the solar heat is as much as possible excluded. The juice collected from numer- ous plants is put together, and allowed to harden in the sun. The fruit is said to be sent to India, where it is highly esteemed as a medicine. Assafetida is brought to this country either from India, whither it is conveyed from Bushire, and down the Indus, or by the route of Great Britain. It some- times comes in mats, but more frequently in cases, the former containing eighty or ninety, the latter from two hundred to four hundred pounds. It is sometimes also imported in casks. Properties. As found in the shops, assafetida is in irregular masses, softish * On a visit by the author to the Edinburgh Botanical Garden, in September, 1860, in company with Drs. Christison and Balfour, the latter the Superintendent of the garden, an assafetida plant was shown to him, of which the herbaceous part had died down, and the root only remained. The author had seen the same plant in 1848; but it was then very young, and had not yet flowered; nor did it reach perfection until 14 years old, when for the first time it flowered and bore fruit. The seeds had been planted, and, at the tine of the author’s last visit, had produced several young plants, which were then in the earliest stage of their growth, with their cotyledonous leaves, long, slender, and delicate, still re- maining. Drs. Christison and Balfour were kind enough to present some seeds to the au- thor, which, however, unfortunately, when planted in his garden, did not germinate.— Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Assafoetida. 147 when not long exposed, of a yellowish or reddish-brown colonr externally, ex- hibiting when broken an irregular, whitish, somewhat shining surface, which soon becomes red on exposure, and ultimately passes into a dull yellowish-brown. This change of colour is characteristic of assafetida, and is ascribed to the influ- ence of air and light upon its resinous ingredient. The masses appear as if composed of distinct portions agglutinated together, sometimes of white, almost pearly tears, embedded in a darker, softer, and more fetid paste. Occasionally the tears are separate, though rarely in the commerce of this country. They are roundish, oval, or irregular, and generally flattened, from the size of a pea to that of a large almond, sometimes larger, yellowish or brownish externally and white within, and not unlike ammoniac tears, for which they might be mistaken ex- cept for their odour, which, however, is weaker than that of the masses. The odour of assafetida is alliaceous, extremely fetid, and tenacious; th? taste, bitter, acrid, and durable. The effect of time and exposure is to render it more hard and brittle, and to diminish the intensity of its smell and taste particularly the former. Kcempfer assures us that one drachm of the fresh juice diffuses a more powerful odour, through a close room, than one hundred pounds of the drug as usually kept in the stores. Assafetida softens by heat without melting, and is of difficult pulverization.* Its sp. gr. is 1*327. (Berzelius.) It is inflammable, burning with a clear, lively flame. It yields all its virtues to alco- hol, and forms a clear tincture, which becomes milky on the addition of water. Macerated in water it produces a turbid red solution, and, triturated with that fluid, gives a white or pink-coloured milky emulsion of considerable permanence. In 100 Pelletier found 65 parts of resin, 19*44 of gum, 11*66 of bassorin, 3 60 of volatile oil, with traces'of supermalate of lime. Brandes obtained 4*6 parts of volatile oil, 47 25 of a bitter resin soluble in ether, 1*6 of a tasteless resin insoluble in ether, 10 of extractive, 19 4 of gum containing traces of po- tassa and lime united with sulphuric, phosphoric, acetic, and malic acids, 6*4 of bassorin, 6'2 of sulphate of lime, 3-5 of carbonate of lime, 0*4 of oxide of iron and alumina, 0*4 of malate of lime with resin, 6*0 of water, and 4*6 of impuri- ties consisting chiefly of sand and woody fibre. The odour of the gum-resin depends on the volatile-oil, which may be procured by distillation with water or alcohol. It is lighter than water, colourless when first distilled, but becoming yellow with age, of an exceedingly offensive odour, and of a taste at first flat, but afterwards bitter and acrid. It contains, according to Stenhouse, from 15*75 to 23 per cent, of sulphur. Hlasiwetz considers it as a mixture, in variable pro- portions, of the sulphuret and bisulphuret of a compound radical, consisting of carbon and hydrogen (C12Hn). A persulphide (persulphuret) of allyl, which is sublimed when oil of mustard is heated with persulphide (persulphuret) of po- tassium, is said by Wertheim to have an extremely intense odour of assafetida: a fact which justifies the supposition that it may be identical with the oil of that gum-resin. (Gmelin, ix. 377.) The oil boils at about 280°, but suffers decom- position, yielding sulphuretted hydrogen. When long exposed to the air it be- comes slightly acid, and acquires a somewhat different odour. (See Chem. Gaz., No. 178, p. 108.) The volatile oil and bitter resin are the active principles. Impurities and Adulterations. Assafetida is probably not often purposely adulterated; but it frequently comes of inferior quality, and mixed with various ’mpurities, such as sand and stones. Portions which are very soft, dark-brown -or blackish, with few or no tears, and indisposed to assume a red colour when * In the pharmaceutica* preparation of assafetida, it is sometimes very desirable to re- duce it to powder. Mr. B. S. Proctor has found that this, and other gum-resins, when incorporated with from 4 to 10 per cent, of magnesia, by first softening them by means of a water-bath, and then stirring them with the earth, become readily pulverizable; and the powder is without the tendency to agglutination which it has when procured without this preliminary preparation. [Loud. Chem. and Druggist, April 13, 1863.)—Note to the twelfth idction. Assafoetida.—Aurantii Cortex. PART T. freshly broxen, should be rejected. We have been informed that a case seldom comes without more or less of this inferior assafetida, and of many it forms the larger portion. It is sold chiefly for horses. A factitious substance, made of garlic juice and white pitch with a little assafetida, has occurred in commerce. Assafetida is sometimes kept in the powdered state; but this is objectiona- ble ; as the drug is thus necessarily weakened by the loss of volatile oil, and is besides rendered more liable to adulteration. Medical Properties and Uses. The effects of assafetida on the system are those of a moderate stimulant, powerful antispasmodic, efficient expectorant, and feeble laxative. Some consider it also emmenagogue and anthelmintic. Its volatile oil is undoubtedly absorbed; as its peculiar odour may be detected in the breath and the secretions. As an antispasmodic simply, it is employed in the treatment of hysteria, hypochondriasis, convulsions of various kinds, spasm of the stomach and bowels unconnected with inflammation, and in numerous other nervous disorders of a merely functional character. From the union of expectorant with antispasmodic powers, it is highly useful in spasmodic pecto- ral affections, such as hooping-cough and asthma, and in certain infantile coughs and catarrhs, complicated with nervous disorder, or with a disposition of the system to sink. In catarrhus senilis; in the secondary stages of peripneumonia notha, croup, measles, and catarrh; in pulmonary consumption; in fact, in all cases of disease of the chest in which there is want of due nervous energy, and in which inflammation is absent or has been sufficiently subdued, assafetida may be occasionally prescribed with advantage* In the form of enema, it is useful in cases of inordinate accumulation of air in the bowels, and, in the same form, is most conveniently administered in the hysteric paroxysm, and other kinds of convulsion. Its laxative tendency is generally advantageous, but must some- times be counteracted by opium. It may often be usefully combined with ca- thartics in constipation with flatulence. It appears to have been known in the East from very early ages, and, not- withstanding its repulsive odour, is at present much used in India and Persia as a condiment. Persons soon habituate themselves to its smell, which they even learn to associate pleasantly with the agreeable effects experienced from its internal use. Children with hooping-cough sometimes become fond of it. The medium dose is ten grains, which may be given in pill or emulsion. (See Mistura Assafcetidae.) The tincture is officinal, and is much used. When given by injection, the gum-resin should be triturated with warm water. From half a drachm to two drachms may be administered at once in this way. As assafetida is not apt to affect the brain injuriously, it may be given very freely when not contraindicated by the existence of inflammatory action. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Assafcetidae, U.S.; Mistura Assafcetidae, U.S.; Pilule Aloes et Assafcetidae; Pilulae Assafcetidae, U. S.; Pilula Assafcetidae Compositn, Br.; Pilulae Galbani Compositae, U. S.; Tinctura Assafcetidae. W. AURANTII AMARI CORTEX. U.S. The rind of the fruit of Citrus vulgaris. U.S. Off. Syn. AURANTII CORTEX. Citrus Bigaradia. The oute.* part of tla- rind, dried, from the ripe fruit. Br. Bitter Orange Peel. AURANTII DULCIS CORTEX. U. S. Sweet Orange Peel. The rind of the fruit of Citrus Aurantium. U.S. PART I. Aurantii Cortex.—Aurantii Flores. 149 AURANTII FLORES. U.S. Oranqe Flowers. The flowers of Citrus Aurantium and of Citrus vulgaris, Ecorce d’orange, Fr.; Pomieranzenschale, Germ.; Scbrze dei frutto dell’arancio, ILai. Corteza de naranja, Span. Citrus. Sex. Syst. Polyadelphia Icosandria.— Nat. Ord. Aurantiacese. Gen. Cli. Calyx five-cleft. Petals five, oblong. Anthers twenty, the filaments united into different parcels. Berry nine-celled. Willd. This very interesting genus is composed of small evergreen trees, with ovate or oval-lanceolate, and shining leaves, odoriferous flowers, and fruits which usually combine beauty of colour.?with a fragrant odour and grateful taste. They are all natives of warm climates. Though the species are not numerous, great diversity exists in the character of the fruit; and many varieties, founded upon this circumstance, are noticed by writers. In the splendid work on the natural history of the Citrus by Risso and Poiteau, 169 varieties are described under the eight following heads:—1. sweet oranges, 2. bitter and sour oranges, 8 bergamots, 4. limes, 5. shaddocks, 6. lumes, 7. lemons, and 8. citrons. Of these it is difficult to decide which have just claims to the rank of distinct species, and which must be considered merely as varieties. Those employed in medicine may be arranged in two nets, of which the orange, C. Aurantium, and the lemon, C. M'edica, are respectively the types; the former characterized by a winged, the 1 alter % a naked or nearly naked petiole. The form and character of the fruit, though not entirely constant, serve as the basis of subdivisions. C. Decumana. which yields the shaddock, agrees with C. Aurantium in the form of its peTfoIe. Citrus Aurantium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1427 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 532, t. 188. The" orange-tree grows to the height of about fifteen feet. Its stem is round, much branched, and covered with a smooth, shining, greenish-brown bark. In the wild state, and before inoculation, it is often furnished with axillary spines. The leaves are ovate, pointed, entire, smooth, and of a shining pale-green colour. When held between the eye and the light, they exhibit numerous small trans- parent vesicles, filled with volatile oil; and, when rubbed between the fingers, are highly fragrant. Their footstalks are about an inch long, and have wings or lateral appendages. The flowers, which have a delightful odour, are large, white, and attached by short peduncles, singly or in clusters, to the smallest branches. The calyx is saucer-shaped, with pointed teeth. The petals are ob- long, concave, white, and beset with numerous small glands. The filaments are united at their base in three or more distinct portions, and support yellow anthers. The germen is roundish, and bears a cylindrical style, terminated by a globular stigma. The fruit is a spherical berry, often somewhat flattened at its base and apex, rough, of a yellow or orange colour, and divided internally into nine ver- tical cells, each containing from two to four seeds, surrounded by a pulpy matter. The rind of the fruit consists of a thin exterior layer, abounding in vesicles filled with a fragrant volatile oil, and of an interior one, which is thick, white, fungous, insipid, and inodorous. There are two varieties of C. Aui'antium, considered by some as distinct species. They differ chiefly in the fruit, which in one is tweet, in the other sour and bitterish. The first retains the original title, the second is called Citrus vulgaris by De Candolle and C. Bigaradia by Risso. The Seville orange is the product of the latter.* * A variety of the orange, called the Mandarin Orange (Citrus Bigaradia Sinensis or C. Bigaradia myrtifolia), which is probably a native of China, but cultivated largely in Sicily anu the south of Italy, bears a fruit much smaller than the common orange, round but flattened above and below, with a smooth, thin, delicate rind, and a very sweet delicious pulp. A volatile oil is obtained from 1 he rind by expression, of a yellow colour, a very 150 Aurantii Cortex.—Auiantii Flores. PART I. Thii neautifu'i evergreen, in which the fruit is mingled, in every stage of its growth, with the blossoms and foliage, has been applied to numerous purposes of utility and ornament. A native of China and India, it was introduced into Europe at a very early period, was transplanted to America soon after its first settlement, and is now found in every civilized country where the climate is favourable. In colder countries, it is one of the most cherished ornaments of the hot-house, though in this situation its beauties are not fully developed, and its fruit does not attain perfection. It flourishes in the most southern portions of our own country, especially near St. Augustine in Florida, where very fine oranges are produced. The tree also grows in the gardens about New Orleans, but is sometimes destroyed by frosty winters. The fruit is brought to us chiefly from the south of Europe and the West Indies. The Havana oranges have the sweetest and most agreeable flavour. Various parts of the plant are used in medicine. The leaves, which are bitter and aromatic, are employed in some places in the form of infusion as a gently stimulant diaphoretic. They yield by distillation with water a volatile oil, which is said to be often mixed by the distillers with the oils obtained from the flowers and unripe fruit. In regard to polarized light, it has a rotatory power to the left, which is considerably weakened by the prolonged action of heat. (Ohautard, Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xliv. 28.) The fresh flowers impart to water distilled from them their peculiar fragrance; and the preparation thus obtained is much esteemed in the south of Europe for its antispasmodic virtues.(See Aqua Aurantii Florum, among the Preparations.) The dried flowers are used on the conti- nent of Europe, as a gentle nervous stimulant, in the form of infusion, which may be made in the proportion of two drachms to the pint of boiling water, and taken in the dose of a teacupful. The flowers should be dried in the shade, at a temperature between 75° and 95° F. (Annuaire de Therap., A. D. 1861, p. 59.) An oil is also obtained from the flowers by distillation which is called neroli in France, and is much used in perfumery, and in the composition of liqueurs. It is an ingredient of the famous Cologne water. That obtained from the flowers of the Seville or bitter orange (G. vulgaris) is deemed the sweetest. It was in- troduced into the Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, with the title of Aurantii Oleum, to serve for the preparation of orange-flower water. Soubeiran considers this oil rather as a product of the distillation, than as pre-existing in the flowers. The fact may thus be explained, that orange-flower water, made by dissolving even the finest neroli in water, has not the precise odour of that procured by distilla- tion from the flowers. Pure neroli has a rotating power to the right, in this respect differing from the oil of the leaves. (Ghautard.) The fruit is applied to several purposes. Small unripe oranges, about the size of a cherry or less, previously dried, and rendered smooth by a turning lathe, are sometimes employed to maintain the discharge from issues. They are preferred to peas on account of their agreeable odour, and by some are thought to swell less with the moisture; but this is denied by others, aud it is asserted that they require to be renewed at the end of twenty-four hours. These fruits are some- times kept in the shops under the name of orange be.rrj&s. They are of a gray- ish or greenish-brown colour, fragrant odour, and bitter taste, and are said to be used for flavouring cordials. A volatile oil is obtained from them by distillation, known to the French by the name of essence de petit gr&in, and employed for similar purposes with that of the flowers. The oil, however, which now goes by this name, is said to be distilled from the leaves, and those of the bitter orange yield the best. The oils from the unripe and the ripe fruit have a rotating bland agreeable odour different from that of the orange or lemon, and a not unpleasant taste, like that of the rind. When freed from colouring matter by distillation, it was found by M. S. de Luca to be a pure carbohydrogen, with the formula C20II](i. (Journ de Phamj., Se ser., xxxiii. 52.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Aurantii Cortex.—Aurantii Flores. power to the right, the latter much greater than the former; and this property might serve to distinguish them from the oil of the leaves. Several of the oils from the Aurantiace® deposit a crystalline substance, differing from camphor. (Chautard.) The juice of the Seville orange is sour and bitterish, and forms with water a refreshing and grateful drink in febrile diseases. It is employed in the same manner as lemon-juice, which it resembles in containing citric acid, though in much smaller proportion. The sweet orange is more pleasant to the taste, and is extensively used as a light refrigerant article of diet in inflamma- tory diseases, care being taken to reject the membranous portion. The rind both of the sweet and bitter varieties is directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, the bit- ter only by the British. With the latter, the outer portion is that considered officinal; as the inner is destitute of activity, and by its affinity for moisture ren- ders the peel liable to become mouldy. The best mode of separating the outer rind, when its desiccation and preservation are desired, is to pare it from the orange in narrow strips with a sharp knife, as we pare an apple. When the ob- ject is to apply the fresh rind to certain pharmaceutic purposes, as to the pre- paration of the confection of orange veel. it is best separated by a grater. The dried peel, sold in”The'sIT'ops7Ts usually that of the Seville orange, and is brought chiefly from the Mediterranean. Properties. Orange peel has a grateful aromatic odour, and a warm bitter taste, which depend upon the volatile oil contained in its vesicles. The, rind of the Seville orange is much more bitter than that of the other variety. Both yield their seusible properties to water and alcohol. The oil may be obtained by expression from the fresh grated rind, or by distillation with water. It is imported into the United States in tinned copper cans. It has properties re- sembling those of the oil of lemons, but spoils more rapidly on exposure to the air, acquiring a terebinthinate odour. The perfumers use it in the preparation of Cologne water, and for other purposes; and it is also employed by the con- fectioners. According to Dr. Imbert-Gourbeyre, they who are much exposed to the inhalation of the oil of bitter oranges are apt to be affected with cutaneous eruptions, and various nervous disorders; as headache, tinnitus auriurn, oppres- sion of the chest, gastralgia, want of sleep, and even muscular spasm. He thinks that the oils of the Aurantiaceae have much resemblance to camphor in their effects. (Ghem. Phann. Cent. Plait, Feb. 1854, p. 128.) Medical Properties and Uses. Bitter orange peel is a mild tonic, carmina- tive, and stomachic, the sweet is simply aromatic; but neither is much used alone. They are chiefly employed to communicate a pleasant flavour to other medicines, to correct their nauseating properties, and to assist their stimulant impression upon the stomach. They are a frequent and useful addition to bitter infusions and decoctions, as those of gentian, quassia, eolumbo, and especially Peruvian bark. It is obviously improper to subject orange peel to long boiling; as the volatile oil, on which its virtues chiefly depend, is thus driven off. The dose in substance is from half a drachm to a drachm three times a day. Large quanti- ties are sometimes productive of mischief, especially in children, in whom violent colic and even convulsions are sometimes induced by it. We have known the case of a child, in which death resulted from eating the rind of an orange. When orange peel is used simply for its agreeable flavour, the rind of the sweet orange is preferable; as a tonic, that of the Seville orange. Off. Prep, of Bitter Orange Peel. Infusum Aurantii, Br.; Infusum Gentian® Comp.; Spiritus Armoraci® Comp., Br.; Tinctura Aurantii, Br.; Tinct. Cin- chon® Comp.; Tinct. Gentian® Comp. Off. Prep, of Sweet Orange Peel. Confectio Aurantii Corticis, U. S.; Syrupua Aurantii Corticis, U. S. Off. Prep, of the Flowers. Aqua Aurantii Florum, U. S. W. Avenx Farina. PART I. AVENiE FARINA. U.S. Oatmeal. The me a’, prepared from the seeds of sjitiva. U. S. Fttrine d’avoine, Fr.; Hafermehl, Germ.; Farina dell’arena, Ital.; Harina de avena, Span. A vena. Sex. Syst. Triandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Graminaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx two valved, many-flowered, with a twisted awn on the back. Willd. . Avena sativa. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 446. The common oat is so well known that a minute description would be superfluous. It is specifically distinguished by its “loose panicle, its two-seeded glumes, and its smooth seeds, one of which is awned.” It was known to the ancients, and is now cultivated in all civilized countries; but its original locality has not been satisfactorily ascertained. It grows wild in Sicily, and is said to have been seen by Anson in the Island of Juan Fernandez, on the coast of Chili. This grain, though cultivated chiefly for horses, is very nourishing, and is largely consumed as food by the inhabitants of Scotland, the north of Ireland, Brittany, and some other countries. A decoction is said to possess decided diuretic properties, and to be useful in dropsy. (Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., Sept. 1854, p. 263.) The seeds deprived of their husks are called groats, but are little used in this country. It is only the meal, prepared by grinding the seeds, that is kept in our shops. Oatmeal contains, according to Yogel, in 100 parts. 59 of starch, 4 30 of a grayish substance resembling rather coagulated albumen than gluten, 8 25 of sugar and a bitter principle, 2 50 of gum, 2 of fixed oil, and 2395 of fibrous matter including loss. An elaborate analysis of oats, deprived of the husk, made by Professor J. P. Norton, of Yale College, gave as the average of four varieties of the grain, 65T1 per cent, of starch, 2 24 of sugar, 2-23 of gum, 6 55 of oil, 16 51 of a nitrogenous body analogous to casein, though differing from it in some respects, l-42 of albumen, l-68 of gluten, 2T7 of epidermis, and 209 of alkaline salts, with allowance for loss and error. Professor Nor- ton thinks there may have been some error in the proportion of the nitrogenous compounds, in consequence of the difficulty of separating them from starch ; and concludes, from the quantity of nitrogen obtained by ultimate analysis, that these compounds must amount to at least 8 per cent. (Am. Journ. of Sci. and Arts, 2d ser., iii. 330.) Oatmeal has no smell, is very slightly but not unpleasantly bitter, and yields most of its nutritive matter with facility to boiling water. Cruel made with oatmeal affords a nutritious, bland, and easily digested ali- ment, admirably adapted to inflammatory diseases; and, from its somewhat laxative tendency, preferable in certain cases to the purely mucilaginous or amylaceous preparations. It is often administered after brisk cathartics, iu order to render them easier, and at the same time more efficient in their action. It is sometimes also used in the form of enema; and the meal, boiled with water into a thick paste, forms an excellent emollient cataplasm. Oatmeal gruel may be prepared by boiling an ounce of the meal with three pints of water to a quart, straining the decoction, allowing it to stand till it cools, and then pour- ing off the clear liquor from the sediment. Sugar and lemon-juice may be added to improve its flavour; and raisins are not unfrequently boiled with the meal and water for the same purpose. W PART I. Azedarach.—Balsamum Peruvianum. 153 AZEDARACH. U.S. Secondary. Azedarach. The bark of the root of Melia Azedaraeh. U. S. Meet a. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Meliace®. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-tootlied. Petals five. Nectary cylindrical, toothed bearing the anthers in the throat. Drupe with a five-celled nut. Willd. Melia Azedaraeh. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 558; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. iii. 4- This is aKeautifut tree, rising thirty or forty feet in height, with a trunk fifteen or twenty inches in diameter. When standing alone, it attains less elevatior, and spreads itself out into a capacious summit. Its leaves are large and doubly pinnate, consisting of smooth, acuminate, denticulate, dark-green leaflets, which are disposed in pairs with an odd one at the end. The flowers, which are of a lilac colour and delightfully fragraut, are in beautiful axillary clusters near the extremities of the branches. The fruit is a round drupe, about as large as a cherry, and yellowish when ripe. This species of Melia is variously called pride, of India, prids of Chinat and common bead-tree. It is a native of Syria, Persia, and the north of India, and is cultivafed as an ornament in different parts of the world. It is abundant in our Southern States, where it adorns the streets of cities, and the environs of dwellings, and has even become naturalized. North of Virginia it does not flourish, though small trees may sometimes be seen in sheltered situations. Its flowers appear early in the spring. The fruit is sweetish, and, though said by some to be poisonous, is eaten by children without inconvenience, and is re- puted to be powerfully vermifuge. But the bark of the root is the part chiefly employed. It is preferred in the recent state, and is, therefore, scarcely to be found in the shops at the North. It has a bitter, nauseous taste, and yields its virtues to boiling water. Medical Properties and Uses. This bark is cathartic and emetic, and in large doses is said to produce narcotic effects similar to those of spigelia, espe- cially if gathered at the season when the sap is mounting. It is considered in the Southern States an efficient anthelmintic, and appears to enjoy, in some places, an equal degree of confidence with the piukroot. It is thought also to be useful in those infantile remittents which resemble verminose fevers, without being dependent on the presence of worms. The form of decoction is usually preferred. A quart of water is boiled with four ounces of the fresh bark to a pint, of which the dose for a child is a tablespoonful every two or three hours, till it affects the stomach or bowels. Another plan is to give a dose morning and eveniug for several successive days, and then to administer an active cathartic. W. BALSAMUM PERUVIANUM. U.S, Br. Balaam of Peru. The prepared juice of Mvrospermum Peruiferum (Be Candolle). U. S. rospermum Pereira:. (Boyle.) A balsam obtained from the stem by incision. Br. Baume de Peru, Fr.; Peruvianischer Balsam, Germ.; Balsamo del Peru, Ital.; Balsamc uegro, Span. Myrospermum. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Leguminosae. De Cand. Gen. Ch. Calyx campanulate, five-toothed, persistent. Petals five, the upper one largest. Stamens ten, free. Ovary stipitate, oblong, membranous, with from two to six ovules; the style originating near the apex, filiform, lateral. Lo Balsxmum Peruvianum. PART T. yume with the stalk naked at the base, broadly winged above, sainaroid, inde- hiscent, one-celled, one or two seeded, laterally somewhat pointed by the style. Seed covered over with balsamic juice. Cotyledons thick, flat. De Candolle. Most botanists agree in uniting the genera Myroxylon and Toluifera of Linnaeus, and Myrospermum of Jacquin, into one, and follow De Candolle in adopting the last-mentioned title. Klotzseh, of Berlin, however, asserts the distinctness of the genera Myroxylon and Myrospermum, and attaches the Peru balsam tree to the former. (Bonplandia, Sept. 15, 1857, p. 274.) Be- sides the officinal species, there are others which possess medical virtues, and have been more or less employed. The pod of M. frulescens (Jacq.), growing in Trinidad, is popularly used in that island as a carminative, and externally, in the form of tincture, as a lotion in rheumatic pains; and a small quantity of balsamic juice is obtained by incisions in the stem, not distinguishable from bal- uam of Tolu. {Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Sept. 1862, p. 108.) Another spe- cies is known in Paraguay under the name of qiiino-quino, the bark of which >s used, in powder and decoction, as a remedy in wouncls and ulcers; and from the trunk of which a juice is obtained, which, in its concrete state, closely re- sembles dried balsam of Peru. {Ibid., Oct. 1862, p. 183.) In relation to the particular species which yields the balsam now under consideration, there has been much uncertainty. After the death of Linnaeus, specimens of a plant were sent to the younger Linnaeus by Mutis, from New Granada, which was said by this botanist to yield the balsam of Peru. A description of the plant was published in the Supplementum Plantarum with the name of Myroxylon. Peruiferum ; and pharmacologists have generally referred the balsam to it. ButcdhsuTerable doubt has existed as to the identity of the species; nor have these doubts been satisfactorily settled up to the present time. Specimens of a plant were received by Dr. Pereira from Central America, which, there is no reason to doubt, is the real source of Peruvian balsam. Upon comparing these with the specimen of Mutis’s plant, preserved in the Herbarium of the Linnsean Society, he found a sufficiently close resemblance in the leaves; but unfortu- nately this specimen is not perfect, and a certain conclusion did not seem to be attainable. A species of Myrospermum was described by Ruiz, in his Qui- nologia, as the true Peruvian balsam plant, which he believed to be identical with Myroxylon Peruiferum of Linn., and named accordingly. But this identity is denied by Ivunth and De Candolle, who consider Ruiz’s plant to be the My-_ rospermum yubescens. {Prodrom. ii. 95.) Lambert, in his Illustrations of the genus Cinchona, translated the description of Ruiz, and gave a figure of the plant (p. 97); but, according to Dr. Pereira, he drew the figure from Pavon’s specimens contained in the British Museum, which were not those of Ruiz’s plant, and were marked in Pavon’s own handwriting Myroxylon balsamiferum. With this figure the real plant corresponds most closely; and it would appear, therefore, not to be the M. Peruiferum of Ruiz, the M. yubescens of Kunth and De Candolle. More recently,' P7of7Carson, of the University of Pennsyl- vania, has received from Central America a specimen, in leaf and flower, of the true Peruvian balsam tree, which he has described and figured in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for July, 1860 (p. 297). From a comparison of this specimen with the description of Pereira’s plant, and with that by Willdenow, in the 4th edi- tion of the Species Plantarum, of the M. Peruiferum of the younger Linnaeus, he concluded that the three plants were identical, and that the balsam is in fact, as originally supposed, the product of the Myroxylon Peruiferum of Linn., the Myrospermum Peruiferum of Kunth and De Candolle. In the uncertainty which exists upon this subject, we shall give a brief account of the plant described and figured by Pereira, with the designation of “ Myrospermum of Sonsonatef leaving its proper botanical place to be determined by further observation The Myrospermum of Sousouate, for which Dr. Royle proposes the r ume of part I. Balsa num Peruvianum. Myrospermum Pereirse, in honour of the late Dr. Pereira (Manual of Mai. Med., 2d efl7.~p. 414). the 'Mir.QX.ylqn Pereirse of Klotzscli, is a handsome tree, with a straight, round, lofty stem, a smooth ash-coloured bark, and spreading branches at the top. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, and unequally pinnate. The leaf- lets are from five to eleven, shortly petiolate, oblong, oval-oblong, or ovate, about three inches long by somewhat less than an inch and a half in breadth, rounded at the base, and contracting abruptly at top into an emarginate point. When held up to the light, they exhibit, in lines parallel with the primary veins, beau- tiful rounded and linear pellucid spots. The common and partial petioles and midribs are smooth to the naked eye, but, when examined with a microscope, are found to be furnished with short hairs. The fruit, including the winged foot- stalks, varies from two to four inches in length. At its peduncular extremity it is rounded or slightly tapering; at the top enlarged, rounded, and swollen, with a small point at the side. The mesocarp, or main investment of the fruit, is fibrous, and contains in distinct receptacles a balsamic juice, which is most abundant in two long receptacles or vittse, one upon each side. A gum-r&sin exudes sponta- neously in small quantities from the trunk of the tree, which, though containing, besides gum and resin, a small proportion of volatile oil, is wholly distinct from the proper balsam, and yields no cinnamic acid. (Attfield, Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1863, p. 248.) This tree grows in Central America, in the State of Saint Salvador, upon the Pacific Coast. Dr. Charles Dorat, in a letter to Professor Carson, states that it is never found at a greater height on the mountains than one thousand feet, that it begins to be productive after five years, and continues to yield for thirty years or more, and that the aroma of its flowers is perceived at the distance of one hundred yards. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx ii. 303.) The balsam is collected from it exclusively by the aborigines, within a small district denominated the Balsam Coast, extending from Acajutla to Port Libertad. Incisions are made into the bark, which is slightly burned, so as to cause the juice to flow. Pre- vious to the incisions, according to Dr. Dorat, the bark is beaten on four sides of the trunk, so as to separate it from the wood without breaking it; interme- diate strips being left sound, in order not to destroy the life of the tree. Cuts are then made in the bruised bark, and the exuding balsam set on fire. Fifteen days after this operation the juice begins to flow freely. It is received on cotton or woollen rags inserted into the apertures, which, after saturation, are removed and replaced by others. When sufficient is collected, the rags are boiled in water in large jars, and the liquid allowed to stand; whereupon the water rises to the top, and is poured off, leaving the balsam, which is put into calabashes or blad- ders. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans.,xi. 205.)* It is then taken for sale to the neigh- bouring town of Sonsonate, where it is purified by subsidence and straining, and put into jars for exportation. The annual average produce is said to be about 25,000 pounds. A substance called white balsam is procured from the fruit by expression. This has been confounded by some with the balsam of Tolu, but is wholly distinct. It is of a semifluid or soft solid consistence, somewhat granular, and, on stand- ing, separates into a white resinous crystalline deposit, and a superior translu- cent more fluid portion. The smell, though quite distinct from that of the balsams of Tolu and Peru, is not disagreeable. Dr. Stenhouse has obtained from it a peculiar resinous body, readily crystallizable, and remarkably indifferent in its * In a recent communication to the Pharmaceutical Journal (Dec. 1863, p. 241), Mr. Daniel Hanbury publishes an extract of a letter from Dr. Dorat, giving an account of a somewhat modified process for collecting the balsam. After the bruising of the bark as described in the text, fire is applied to the beaten bark, which becomes charred, and, after eight days, falls off in places, or is removed; and the rags are spread on the bare wood, and allowed to remain till saturated. They are then treated as above stated.—Note to the twelfth edition. 156 Balsamum Pcruvianum. PART 1 cnemLal affinities, which he denominates muroxocamoin. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., x. 290.) Dr. Dorat, however, denies that the white balsam is produced by the same tree, or in the same vicinity. Another substance obtained from the same tree, and much used in Central America, is a tincture of the fruit, made by digesting it in rum. It is called halsamito by the inhabitants, and is said to be stimulant, anthelmintic, and di- uretic. It is also used as an external application to gangrenous or indolent ulcers, and as a wash to the face to remove freckles. According to Dr. Dorat, the balsamito is not the tincture, but an alcoholic extract of the young fruit. Neither this nor the white balsam reaches the markets of this country. The balsam of Peru was named from its place of exportation ; and it was long thought to be a product of Peru. It is now shipped partly from the Pacific coast, and partly from the Balize or other ports on the Atlantic side, whither it is brought across the country. It was Guibourt who first made known the fact of its exclusive production in Central America. As imported it is usually in tin canisters, with a whitish scum upon its surface, and more or less deposit, which is dissolved with the aid of heat. The balsam is said to be adulterated in Europe with castor oil, copaiba, &c. {Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xii. 549); and a factitious substance has been sold in this country for the genuine balsam, prepared by dissolving balsam of Tolu in alcohol. This may be distinguished by taking fire readily, and burning with a blue flame. (N. Y. Journ. of Pharm., i. 133.) A method of detecting castor oil, proposed by Dr. Wagner, is to expose a small portion of the suspected balsam to distillation until somewhat more than one-half has passed, to shake the distillate with baryta-water, to remove by means of a pipette the layer of oil floating on the surface, and to shake this with a concentrated solution of bisulphite of soda. If castor oil be present, the liquid will immediately become a crystalline mass. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx. 570, from Annal. der Chem. und Pharm.) Properties. Balsam of Peru is viscid like syrup or honey, of a dark reddish- brown colour, a fragrant odour, and a warm bitterish taste, leaving when swal- lowed a burning or prickling sensation in the throat. Its sp. gr. is from 1T4 to 1T6. When exposed to flame it takes fire, diffusing a white smoke and fragrant odour. Containing resin, volatile oil, and either benzoic or cinnamic acid, it is properly considered a balsam, though probably somewhat altered by heat. Al- cohol in large proportion entirely dissolves it. Boiling water extracts the acid. From 1000 parts of the balsam, Stolze obtained 24 parts of a brown nearly in- soluble resinous matter, 20T*dT_resm readily soluble, 690 of oil, 64 of benzoic acid, 6 of extractive matter, and a small proportion of water. The oil he con- siders to be of a peculiar nature, differing from the volatile, the fixed, and the empyreumatic oils. Fremy gives the following views of the composition of the balsam. The acid is cinnamic and not benzoic acid. The oily substance is named by him cinnamein. It is decomposed by caustic potassa into cinnamic acid, which unites withThe alkali, and a light oily fluid called peruvin. The resin is a hydrate of cinnamein, and increases at the expense ofttfe Tatter principle as the balsam hardens. Cinnamein often holds in solution a crystalline substance called vietacmnaniein, isomeric with hvdruret of cinnamyl. and by its oxidation producing cinnamic acid. When none exists in the balsam, it is presumed to have been wholly converted into that acid. Medical Properties and Uses. This balsam is a warm stimulating tonic and expectorant, and has been recommended in chronic catarrhs, certain forms of asthma, phthisis, and other pectoral complaints attended with debility. It has also been used in gonorrhoea, leueorrhcea, amenorrhoea, chronic rheumatism, and palsy. At present, however, it is little employed by American physicians. As an external application it has been found beneficial in chronic indolent ulcers. The dose is half a fluidrachm. It is best administered diffused in water by means of sugar and the yolk of eggs or gum arabic. W. PART I. Balsam-urn Tolutanum. 157 BALSAMUM TOLUTANUM. U.S.,Br. Balsam of Tolu. The juice of Mvrospermum Toluiferum (De Candolle). U. S. A balsam ob tained from the stem by incision. Br. Baume de Tolu, Fr.; Tolubalsam, Germ.; Balsamo del Tolu, Ital.; Balsamo de Tolu, Span Myrospermum. See BALSAMUM PERUVIANUM. For a long time the tree from which this balsam is derived retained the name of Toluifera,JJal*amum, given to it by Linnaeus; but it is now admitted that the genus Toluifera was formed upon insufficient grounds; and botanists agree in referring the Tolu balsam tree to the genus Myroxylon, or, as it is now de- nominated, Myrospermum. Ruiz, one of the authors of the Flora Peruviana, considered it identical with Myroxylon Peruiferum; but M. Achille Richard determined that it was a distinct species, and gave it the appropriate specific name of Toluiferum, which is now recognised by the Pharmacopoeias. Sprengel and Humboldt also consider it a distinct species of Myroxylon. According to Richard, who had an opportunity of examining specimens brought from South America by Humboldt, the leaflets of M. Peruiferum are thick, coriaceous, acute, blunt at the apex, and all equal in size; while those of M. Toluiferum are thin, membranous, obovate, with a lengthened and acuminate apex, and the terminal one is longest. M. Peruiferum is found in Peru and the southern parts of New Granada; M. Toluiferum^rows in Carthagena, and abounds especially in the neighbourhood of Tolu. The wood of the latter species, according to Hum- boldt, is of a deep-red colour, has a delightful balsamic odour, and is much used for building. The balsam is procured by making incisions into the trunk. The juice is re- ceived in vessels of various kinds, in which it concretes. It is brought from Carthagena in calabashes or baked earthen jars, and sometimes in glass vessels. G. L. TJlex gives as a test of the purity of the balsam, that, if heated in sulphuric acid, it dissolves without disengagement of sulphurous acid, and yields a cherry- red liquid. (Archie. der Pharm., Jan. 1853.) Properties. As first imported, balsam of Tolu has a soft, tenacious consist- ence, which varies considerably with the temperature. By age it becomes hard and brittle like resin. It is shining, translucent, of a reddish or yellowish-brown colour, a highly fragrant odour, and a warm, somewhat sweetish and pungent, but not disagreeable taste. Exposed to heat, it melts, inflames, and diffuses an agreeable odour while burning. It is'entirely dissolved by alcohol and the vola- tile oils. Boiling water extracts its acid. Distilled with water it affords a small proportion of volatile oil; and, if the heat be continued, an acid matter sub- limes. Mr. Hatchett states that, when dissolved in the smallest quantity of solu- tion of potassa, it loses its own characteristic odour, and acquires that of the clove pink. Its ingredients are resin, cinnamic acid, and volatile oil, the pro- portion of which vary in different specimens. The acid was formerly thought to be benzoic; but was proved by Fremy to be the cinnamic. The existence of the former acid in the balsam was denied by that chemist; and, though subsequently obtained benzoic acid from it, yet, according to Kopp, this did not pre-exist in the balsam, but resulted from changes produced in the resin by heat, or the reaction of strong alkaline solutions. The pure volatile oil is a carbo- hydrogen (C10H8), which is denominated by Kopp tolene. According to the same chemist, the resinous matter is of two kinds, one very soluble in alcohol, the other but slightly so. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xi. 426.) Guibourt observed that the balsam contains more acid, and is less odorous in the solid form; and thinks that the acid is increased at the expense of the oil. Trommsdorff obtained 158 Balsamum Tolutanum.—Barium. PART I. 8.8..per cent, of resin, 12 of acid, and only 0 2 of volatile oil. According to Mr. Heaver, the balsam yields by distillation about one-eighth of its weight of pure cinnamic acid. The acid distils over in the form of a heavy oil, which condenses into a white crystalline mass. It may be freed from empyreumatic oil by press- ure between folds of bibulous paper, and subsequent solution in boiling water, which deposits it in minute colourless crystals, upon cooling. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 77.) According to Fremy, this balsam is closely analogous in constitution to the balsam of Peru, being composed of cinnamein, cinnamic acid, and resin. Medical Properties a.nd Uses. Balsam is a stimulant tonic, with a peculiar tendency to the pulmonary organs. It is given with some advantage in chronic catarrh and other pectoral complaints, in which a gently stimulating expectorant is demanded ; but should not be prescribed until after the reduction of inflammatory action. Independently of its medical virtues, its agreeable flavour renders it a popular ingredient in expectorant mixtures. Old and obstinate coughs are said to be sometimes greatly relieved by the inhalation of the vapour, proceeding from an ethereal solution of this balsam. From ten to thirty grains may be given at a dose, and frequently repeated. The best form of administra- tion is that of emulsion, made by triturating the balsam with mucilage of guru arabic and loaf sugar, and afterwards with water. Of. Prep. Syrupus Tolutanus, Br.; Tinctura Benzoini Composita; Tinctura Tolutana. W. BARIUM. Barium. This is the metallic radical of the earth baryta, and the basis of two officinal compounds. It was first obtained in 1808 by Sir II. Davy, who describes it as a difficultly fusible metal, of a dark-gray colour, effervescing violently with water, and considerably heavier than sulphuric acid. Its eq. is 68'7, and symbol Ba. When exposed to the air, it instantly becomes covered with a crust of baryta, and, when gently heated, burns with a deep-red light. The only officinal com- pounds of barium are the chloride, anrj t.he carbonate of the protoxide (baryta). Baryta, may be obtained from the native carbonate by intense ignition with carbonaceous matter; or from the native sulphate, by ignition with charcoal, which converts it into sulphuret of barium, subsequent solution of the sulpliuret in nitric acid, and strong ignition of the nitrate formed to dissipate the acid. As thus obtained, it is an anhydrous solid, caustic, alkaline, difficultly fusible, and of a grayish -white colour. Its sp. gr. is about 4. It acts on the animal economy as a poison. When sprinkled with water it slakes like lime, becomes hot, and is reduced to the state of a white pulverulent hydrate, containing one eq. of water. The same hydrate is formed in mass, when the anhydrous earth is made into a paste with water, and exposed to a red heat in a platinum crucible. The excess of water is expelled, and the hydrate, undergoing fusion, may be poured out and allowed to congeal. Baryta dissolves in water, and forms the reagent called hq.ruta-ir.atp.r A boiling saturated solution, as it cools, yields ’crystals of baryta, containing much water of crystallization. An economical process for obtaining baryta in crystals has been published by Dr. Mohr, of Coblentz. It consists in adding to a boiling solution of caustic soda an equivalent quantity of chloride of barium or nitrate of baryta. In con- sequence of the usual impurities in caustic soda, a precipitate is formed of some carbonate and sulphate of baryta, which is easily separated by subsidence from the solution of caustic baryta, kept hot. This, when clear, is drawn off by a syphon, and put in a suitable cohered vessel to cool and crystallize; when the PART I. Barytse Carbonas.—Barytse Sulphas. 159 whole liquid is often converted into a mass of acicular crystals. (Pharm. Journ and Trans., Dec. 1856.) Baryta consists of one eq. of barium 68*7, and one of oxygen 8 = 76*7. Tts symbol is, therefore, BaO. D BARYTiE CARBONAS. U.S. Carbonate of Baryta. Carbonate de baryte, Fr.; Kohlensaurer Baryt, Germ.; Barite carbonate, Ital.; Oarbc- nato de barito, Span. The officinal carbonate of baryta is the native carbonate, a rare mineral, dis- covered in 1183 by Dr. Withering, in honour of whom it is called Witherite. It is found in Sweden and Scotland, but most abundantly in the lead mines of the north of England. It occurs usually in grayish, or pale yellowish-gray, fibrous masses, but sometimes crystallized. Its sp.gr. varies from 42 to 4‘4. It is gen- erally translucent, but sometimes opaque. It effervesces with acids, and, before the blowpipe, melts into a white enamel without losing its carbonic acid. It con- sists of one eq. of acid 22, and one of baryta 16-1 = 98,1. It is distinguished from the carbonate of strontia, with which it is most liable to be confounded, by its greater specific gravity, and by the absence of a reddish flame upon the burn- ing of alcohol impregnated with its muriatic solution. If strontia be present, the reddish flame will detect it. When pure, carbonate of baryta is entirely soluble in muriatic acid. Any sul- phate of baryta present is left undissolved. If neither ammonia nor sulphuretted hydrogen produces discoloration or a precipitate in the muriatic solution, the absence of alumina, iron, copper, and lead is shown. Lime may be detected by adding an excess of sulphuric acid, which will throw down the baryta as a sul- phate, and afterwards testing the clear liquid with carbonate of soda, which, if lime be present, will produce a precipitate of carbonate of lime. Carbonate of baryta acts as a poison on the animal economy. Its only offici- lal use is to prepare chloride of barium. Off. Prep. Barii Chloridum, U. S. B. BARYTA SULPHAS. Sulphate of Baryta. Heavy spar, Baroselenite; Sulfate (le baryte, Fr.; Scbwefelsaurer Baryt, Germ.; Barite solfata, Ital. The native sulphate of baryta is used in pharmacy with the same view as the native carbonate; namely, to obtain chloride of barium. The U. S. Pharmaco- poeia directs for this purpose the carbonate of baryta; but, as the sulphate may be employed more economically, and is, in fact, generally employed in the pre- paration of chloride of barium, we retain it here, though no longer recognised as officinal. Sulphate of baryta is a heavy, lamellar, brittle mineral, varying in sp. gr. from 4'4 to 4-6. It is generally translucent, but sometimes transparent or opaque, and its usual colour is white or flesh-red. When crystallized, it is usually in very flat rhombic prisms. Before the blowpipe it strongly decrepitates, and melts into. a white enamel, which, in the course of ten or twelve hours, falls to powder. It is thus partially converted into sulphuret of barium, and, if applied to the tongue, will give a taste like that of putrid eggs, arising from the formation of sulphuret- ted hydrogen It consists of one eq. of acid 40, and one of baryta T6=116 7. 160 Barytse Sulphas.—Bela. PART I. This salt, on account of its great insolubility, is not poisonous. Ground to fine powder, it is sometimes mixed with white lead, but impairs the quality of that pigment. The artificial sulphate of baryta, under the name of permanent white or blancfix, is much used in the arts as a water colour. It is made from both the native sulphate and native carbonate. It forms a dazzling white colour, unalterable by light, heat, air, or sulphuretted hydrogen. It is used by the manu- facturers of paper hangings, and for mixing with other colours, the tone of which it does not impair. (Chem. Gaz. Feb. 1, 1857.) B. BELA. Br. Bael. -Utrle Marmelos. The half-ripe fruit, dried. Br. This is a newly introduced officinal of the British Pharmacopoeia, little known as yet in Great Britain, and scarcely at all in the United States; and probably sanctioned by the British Council out of complaisance to practitioners in the E. Indies, who are said to have used it with advantage. It is the unripe fruit of the AEgle Marmelos of De Candolle, belonging to the Aurantiacese, and with the following generic character. “Flowers bi-sexual. Petals 4-5, patent. Sta- mens 30-40, with distinct filaments, and linear-oblong anthers. Ovary 8-15 celled, with numerous ovules in each cell. Style very short and thick. Stigma capitate. Fruit baccate, with a hard rind, 8-15 celled, the cells 6-10 seeded. Seed with a woolly coat, covered with a slimy liquid.” (Wight & Arnott.) This species of iEgle, sometimes called the Bengal quince, is a rather large tree, with an erect stem, and few and irregular branches, covered with an ash- coloured bark, and furnished in general with strong, very sharp, axillary thorns, single or in pairs. The leaves are ternate, with oblong-lanceolate, crenulated, slightly dotted leaflets, of which the terminal is largest. The flowers are large, white, and in small, terminal or axillary panicles. The fruit is a berry, of about the size of a large orange, somewhat spherical, but flattened at the base, and de- pressed at the insertion of the stem, with a hard smooth shell, and from 10 to 15 cells, containing besides the seeds a large quantity of exceedingly tenacious mucilage, which, when dried, is hard and transparent. The tree is a native of Iiindostan and of further India. It is figured in the Pharm. Journ. and Trans. (Octob. 1850, p. 166), from which we have taken the foregoing account. Several parts of the tree are used in India. The ripe fruit is described as fra- grant, and of a delicious flavour; and a sort of sherbet prepared from it is deemed useful in febrile affections. The mucilage about the seeds is applied to various purposes in the arts, in connection with its viscid properties. The rind is used in dyeing. The flowers are deemed refrigerant by the native physicians. The fresh leaves yield by expression a bitterish and somewhat pungent juice, which, diluted with water, is occasionally used in the early stage of catarrhal and other fevers. The bai’k of the stem and root is thought to possess febrifuge properties. But it is the unripe or half-ripe fruit which is chiefly employed, and is the part recog- nised by the British Pharmacopoeia. Properties. The dried fruit is imported into England in vertical slices, or in broken pieces consisting of a part of the rind with the adherent pulp and seeds. The “rind is about a line and a half thick, covered with a smooth pale-brown or grayish epidermis, and internally, as well as the dried pulp, brownish-orange, or cherry-red.” (Br.) When moistened, the pulp becomes mucilaginous. The fruit is astringent to the taste, and yields its virtues to water by maceration or decoction. It was found by Mr. Pollock to contain tannic acid, a concrete essen- tial oil, and a vegetable acid. (Med. Times and Gaz., Feb. 1864, p. 199.) Medical Properties and Uses. Bael, as the medicine is called in India, or PART I. Bela.—Belladonna. 161 bela, as' it has been officinally named, is said to possess astringent properties which render it useful in diarrhoea, dysentery with an enfeebled state of the mu- cous membrane, and other diseases of the bowels with relaxation, which it relieves without inducing constipation. It is much used by some practitioners in India, generally in the form of decoction, made by slowly boiling down a pint of water with two ounces of the dried fruit to four fluidounces. Of this one or two fluid- ounces are given in acute cases every two or three hours, in chronic cases two or three times a day. A liquid extract is directed in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, the dose of which may be one or two fluidrachms. Mr. Waring, of the East India medical service, recommends an extract in the dose of half a drachm or a drachm. (Med. Times and Gaz.) Off. Prep. Extractum Belae Liquidum, Br. W. BELLADONNA FOLIUM. U.S. Belladonna Leaf. The leaves of Atropa Belladonna. U. S. Off. Syn. BELLADONNA. Atropa Belladonna. Dp ad l v Nightshade. The leaves, fresh and dried, and the fresh branches; gathered when the fnuTEaS beguD to form. Br. BELLADONNA RADIX. U.S., Br. Belladonna Root. The root of AtrapauBdl&&QBiia from plants more than two years old. U. S. The root, dried; imported from Germany. Br. Belladone, Fr.; Gemeine Tollkirsche, Wolfskirsclie, Germ.; Belladonna, Ital.; Belladona, Belladama, Span. Atropa. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Solanaceae. Gen. Gh. Corolla bell-shaped. Stamens distant. Berry globular, two-celled. Willd. Atrova Belladonna. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1017; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 230, t. 82. Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. ii. 19, pi. lxv. The belladonna, qt. deadly nightshade, is an herbaceous perennial plant, with a fleshy creeping root, from which rise several erect, round, purplish, branching stems, to the height of about three feet. The leaves, which are attached by short footstalks to the stem, are in pairs of unequal size, oval, pointed, entire, of a dusky green on their upper surface, and paler beneath. The flowers are large, bell-shaped, pendent, of a dull-reddish colour, with solitary peduncles, rising from the axils of the leaves. The fruit is a roundish berry with a longitudinal furrow on each side, at first green, after- wards red, ultimately deep purple, bearing considerable resemblance to a cherry, and containing, in two distinct cells, numerous seeds, and a sweetish violet- coloured juice. The calyx adheres to the base of the fruit. The plant is a native of Europe, where it grows in shady places, along walls, and amidst rubbish, flowering in June and July, and ripening its fruit in Sep- tember. It grows vigorously under cultivation in this country, and retains all its activity, as shown by the observations of Mr. Alfred Jones. (Am. Journ. of Vharm., xxiv. 106.) All parts of it are active. The leaves and roots are directed by the United States and British Pharmacopoeias; the latter including the young branches, which are probably not less efficient. The leaves should be collected in June or July, when the plant is in flower, the roots in the autumn or early in the spring, and from plants three years old or more. Leaves which have been kept long should not be used, as they undergo change through absorption of 162 Belladonna. PART I. atmospheric noisture, emitting ammonia, and probably losing a portion of their active nitrogenous matter. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 455.) Properties. The dried leaves are of a dull-greenish colour, with a very faint, narcotic odour, and a sweetish, subacrid, slightly nauseous taste. The root is long, round, from one to several inches in thickness, branched and fibrous, externally when dried of a reddish-brown colour, internally whitish, of little odour, and a feeble sweetish taste. As to the relative strength of these two parts, M. Hirtz, of Strasburg, has inferred from his experiments that the root yields an extract five times stronger than that obtained from the leaves; but, to determine accu- rately the point referred to, another element in the calculation is necessary; the relative quantity, namely, of the extracts from the two sources; and this is un- certain. {Annuaire de Therap., A. D. 1862, p. 22.) Both the leaves and root, as well as all other parts of the plant, impart their active properties to water and alcohol. Brandes rendered it probable that these properties reside in a peculiar alkaline principle, which he supposed to exist in the plant combined with an ex- cess of malic acid, and appropriately named atropia. Besides malate of atropia, Brandes found in the dried herb two azotized principles, a green resin (chloro- phyll), wax, gum, starch, albumen, lignin, and various salts. The alkaline prin- ciple was afterwards detected by M. Runge; and the fact of its existence was established beyond question by Geiger and Hesse, who obtained it from an ex- tract prepared from the stems and leaves of the plant. It was first, however, procured in a state of purity by Mein, a German apothecary, who extracted it from the root. Liibekind has described, under the name of belladonnin, a vola- tile alkaline principle, wholly distinct from atropia, which he obtained from bella- donna; but it yet remains to be seen whether this was not a product of the process. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., x iii. 127.) For the mode of preparing atro- pia and its properties, see the article Atropia in the second part of this work. The imported belladonna, especially that from Germany, is occasionally adul- terated. Mr. J. M. Maisch, in a communication to the American Journal of Pharmacy (xxxiv. 126), states that, in different packages of the German drug, he has met with the leaves of Digitalis purpurea, Solanum nigrum and villo- sum, and Yerbascum Thapsus, the leaves, stem, and capsules of Hyoscyamus xiiger, and various other impurities, not to speak of the flowers and fruit and immature leaves of the belladonna plant itself. The apothecary can have no difficulty in detecting these adulterations, if acquainted with the characters of the genuine leaves. One of the most distinctive of these is the unequal size of the two leaves constituting each pair. But the plant is so easily cultivated, and grows so vigorously in this country, that all the demand for it might be readily supplied from our own gardens, without the need of recourse to Europe, were a little attention paid to the subject. Medical Properties and Uses. The action of belladonna is that of a power- ful narcotic, possessing also diaphoretic and diuretic properties, and somewhat disposed to operate upon the bowels. Among its first obvious effects, when taken in the usual dose, and continued for some time, are dryness and stricture of the fauces and neighbouring parts, with slight uneasiness and giddiness of the head, and more or less dimness of vision. In medicinal doses, it may also occa- sion dilatation of the pupil, decided frontal headache, slight delirium, colicky pains and purging, and a scarlet efflorescence on the skin; but this last effect is rare. The practitioner should watch for these symptoms as signs of the activity of the medicine, and should gradually increase the dose till some one of them is experienced in a slight degree, unless the object at which he aims should be previously attained; but, so soon as they occur, the dose should be diminished, or the use of the narcotic suspended for a time. In large quantities, belladonna produces the most deleterious effects. It is in fact a powerful poison; and many instances are recorded in which it h&o been i aRT I. Belladonna. 163 taken with fatal consequences. All parts of the plant are poisonous. It is not uncommon, in countries where it grows wild, for children to pick and eat thw berries, allured by their fine colour and sweet taste. Soon after the poison has been swallowed, its peculiar influence is experienced in dryness of the moutk and fauces, burning in the throat and stomach,’great thirst, difficult deglutition, nausea and ineffectual retching, loss of vision, vertigo, and intoxication or de- lirium, attended with violent gestures and sometimes fits of laughter, and followed by coma. The pupil is dilated and insensible to light, the face red and tumid, the mouth and jaws spasmodically affected, the stomach and bowels insuscepti- ble of impressions, in fact the whole nervous system prostrated and paralyzed. A feeble pulse, cold extremities, subsultus tendinum, deep coma or delirium, and sometimes convulsions precede death. Dissection discloses appearances of in- flammation in the stomach and intestines; and it is said that the body soon begins to putrefy, swells and becomes covered with livid spots, while dark blood flows from the mouth, nose, and ears. To obviate the poisonous influence of belladonna, the most effectual method is to evacuate the stomach as speedily as possible, by means of emetics or the stomach-pump, and afterwards to cleanse the bowels by purgatives and enemata. The shocks of an electro-magnetic bat- tery have been found useful in the comatose state. (jV. Y. Journ. of Med., N. S., v. 172.) The infusion of galls may be serviceable as an antidote; and, if the experiments of M. Runge can be relied on, lime-water or the alkaline solutions would render the poisonous matter remaining in the stomach inert. Bouchardat recommends the ioduretted solution of iodide of potassium; and a case is re- corded in which it seems to have been useful. {Ann. de Therap., 1854, p. 14.) Dr. Gaxrod, of London, infers from his experiments that the caustic alkalies have the effect of destroying the activity of the poisonous principle of bella- donna, and, consequently, that solution of potassa should never be used, even though very dilute, in prescriptions with this medicine, but may be employed with the hope of some benefit as an antidote, though its influence in this respect would be much limited by the necessity of giving it in small quantities, in con- sequence of its caustic properties. It has been satisfactorily ascertained that the physiological effects of opium are to some extent antagonistic to those of belladonna; and that the prepara- tions of the former may be advantageously employed in poisoning by the latter. But, in the present state of medical experience on the subject, it would be un- safe to rely on this expedient, to the exclusion of other measures, and especially of a thorough preliminary evacuation of the stomach. Belladonna has been used as a medicine from early times. The leaves were first employed externally to discuss sehirrhous tumours, and heal cancerous and other ill-conditioned ulcers; and were afterwards administered internally for the same purpose. Much evidence of their usefulness in these affections is on record, and even Dr. Cullen spoke in their favour; but this application of the medicine has fallen into disuse. It is at present more esteemed in ndrvous diseases. It has been highly recommended in hooping-cough, in the advanced stages of which it is undoubtedly sometimes beneficial. In neuralgia it is one of the most effectual remedies in our possession; and it may be employed to give relief in other painful affections. Hufeland recommends it in the convulsions dependent on scrofulous irritation. It has been prescribed also in nervous colic, chorea, epilepsy, hydrophobia, tetanus, mania, delirium tremens, paralysis, amaurosis, incontinence of urine, rheumatism, gout, dysmenorrhoea, obstinate intermittents, scarlatina, dropsy, and jaundice; and, in such of these affections as have their seat chiefly in the nervous system, it may sometimes do good. It has been re- commended as an antaphrodisiac, and is said to have been effectually employed m several cases of strangulated hernia. It has acquired considerable credit as a preventive of scarlatina; an application of the remedy first suggested by the Belladonna.—Benzoinum. PART I. author of the homoeopathic doctrine; but its efficiency in this way is at best doubtful. In the form of tincture, it has been recently employed by Dr. Thomas Anderson, with supposed benefit, in the coma with contracted pupil, attendant on the over-action of opium. (Ranking's Abstract, xxii. 246.) Applied to the eye, belladonna has the property of dilating the pupil exceed- ingly, and for this purpose it is employed by oculists previously to the operation for cataract. Dilatation usually comes on in about an hour, is at its greatest height in three or four hours, and continues often for one or two days, or even longer. In cases of partial opacity of the crystalline lens, confined to the cen- tre of that body, vision is temporarily improved by a similar use of the remedy; and it may also be beneficially employed, when, from inflammation of the iris, there is danger of a permanent closure of the pupil. For these purposes, a strong infusion of the plant, or a solution of the extract, may be dropped into the eye, or a little of the extract itself rubbed upon the eyelids. The same ap- plication has been recommended in morbid sensibility of the eye. The extract, rubbed upon the areola of the breast, has been found quickly to arrest the secre- tion of milk; and, upon the abdomen, to relieve the vomiting of pregnancy, and other irritations sympathetic with the gravid uterus. Applied, in the form of a large plaster, above the pubes, it has been found very useful in relieving dysen- teric tenesmus, and, as a dressing to a blistered surface over the abdomen, has been known to effect a cure in epidemic cholera; but in such a case much care would be required to prevent its poisonous effects. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1860, p. 49.) The decoction or extract, applied to the neck of the uterus, is asserted to have hastened tedions labour dependent on rigidity of the os tincae; and spasmodic stricture of the urethra, neck of the bladder, and sphincter ani, anal fissures, and painful uterine affections, have been relieved by the local use of the extract, either smeared upon bougies, or administered by injection. In the latter mode it has relieved strangulated hernia. It is asserted also to be useful in paraphimosis. The inhalation of the vapour from a decoction of the leaves or extract has been recommended in spasmodic asthma. For this purpose, two drachms of the leaves, or fifteen grains of the aqueous extract are employed to the pint of water. Relief is said to have been obtained in phthisis by smoking the leaves, infused when fresh in a strong solution of opium, and then dried. Belladonna may be given in substance, infusion, or extract. The dose of the powdered leaves is for children from the eighth to the fourth of a grain, for adults one or two grains, repeated daily, or twice a day, and gradually increased till the characteristic effects are experienced. An infusion may be prepared by adding a scruple of the dried leaves to ten fluidounces of boiling water, of which from one to two fluidounces is the dose for an adult. The extract is generally preferred in the United States. (See Extractum Belladonnae.) From its quicker action, more uniform strength, and greater cleanliness, atro- pia has been recently substituted for extract of belladonua for external use. (See Atropia in Part II.) Off. Prep, of the Leaves. Extractum Belladonnae; Extract. Belladonnae A1 coholicum, U. S.; Tinctura Belladonnae. Off. Prep, of the Root. Atropia; Linimentum Belladonnae, Br. W. BENZOINUM. U.S.,Br. Benzoin. The concrete juice of Styrax Benzoin. U. S. A resinous exudation from the stem. Br. Benjoin, Fr.; Benzoz, Germ.; Belzoino, Ital.j Benjui, Span. The botanical source of benzoin was long uncertain. At one time it ww part I. Benzoinum. 165 generally supposed in Europe to be derived from the Laurus,Benzoin of this country. This error was corrected by Linnaeus, who, however, committed1 another, in ascribing the drug to Groton Benzo'e, a shrub which he afterwards described - under the name of TermlyTalia Benzp,in. Mr. Dryander was the first who as- certained the true benzoin-tree to be a Sty rax; and his description, published in the 77th vol. of the London Philosophical Transactions, has been copied by most subsequent writers. Styrax. Sex. Syst. Deeandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Stvraceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx inferior. Corolla funnel-shaped. Drupe two-seeded. Willd. Styrax Benzoin. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 623; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 294, t. 102. This Is a tall tree of quick growth, sending off many strong round branches, covered with a whitish downy bark. Its leaves are alternate, entire, oblong, pointed, smooth above, and downy beneath. The flowers are in compound, axillary clusters, nearly as long as the leaves, and usually hang all on the same side upon short slender pedicels. The benzoin, or beniamin-tree. is a native of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Laos, and Siam. By wounding the bark near the origin of the lower branches, a juice exudes, which hardens upon exposure, and forms the benzoin of commerce. A tree is deemed of a proper age to be wounded at six years, when its trunk is about seven or eight inches iu diameter. The operation is performed annually, and the product on each occasion from one tree never exceeds three pounds. The juice which first flows is the purest, and affords the whitest and most fra- grant benzoin. It is exported chiefly from Bangkok in Siam, and Acheen in Sumatra, and comes into the western markets in large masses packed in chests and casks, and showing externally the impression of the reed mats in which they were originally contained. Two kinds of benzoin are distinguishable in the market; one consisting chiefly of whitish tears united by a redaish-brown connecting medium, the other of brown or blackish masses, without tears. The first is the most valuable, and has been called benzo'e ami/qdaloides. from the resemblance of the white grains to fragments of blanched almonds; the second is sometimes called benzo'e in sortis —benzoin in sorts—and usually contains numerous impurities. Between these two kinds there is every gradation. We have seen specimens consisting exclu- sively of yellowish-white homogeneous fragments, which, when broken, presented a smooth, white, shining surface. These were no doubt identical in constitution with the tears of the larger masses. A factitious substance has been sold in our markets for benzoin, consisting of chips of wood agglutinated by a resinous substance, with no benzoic acid, and only a trace of the cinnamic. (J. M. Maisch, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxv. 494.) Properties. Benzoin has a fragrant odour, with very little taste; but, when chewed for some time, leaves a sense of irritation in the mouth and fauces. It breaks with a resinous fracture, and presents a mottled surface of white and brown or reddish-brown; the white spots being smooth and shining, while the remainder, though sometimes shining and even translucent, is usually more or less rough and porous, and often exhibits impurities. In the inferior kinds, the white spots are very few, or entirely wanting. Benzoin is easily pulverized, and, in the process of being powdered, is apt to excite sneezing. Ifs «p-y is from 1 063 to 1 092. When heated it melts, and emits thick, white, pungent fumes, which excite cough when inhaled, and consist chiefly of benzoic acid. It is wholly soluble, with the exception of impurities, in alcohol, and is precipitated by water from the solution, rendering the liquor milky. It imparts to boiling water a notable proportion of benzoic acid. Lime-water and the alkaline solu- tions partially dissolve it, forming benzoates, from which the acid may be pre- cipitated by the addition of other acids. Its chief constituents are resin and oenzoic acid; and it therefore belongs to the balsams. The white tears and the 166 Benzoinum. brownish couiectmg medium are said by Stolze to contain nearly the same pro- porficm of acid, which, according to Bucholz, is 12-5 per cent., to Stolze 19 8 per cent. In a more recent examination by Kopp, the white tears were found to contain from 8 to 10 per cent, of acid, and the brown 15 per cent. (Journ de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 46.) The resin is of three kinds, one extracted from the balsam with the benzoic acid by a boiling solution of carbonate of potassa in excess, another dissolved by ether from the residue, and the third affected by neither of these solvents. Besides benzoic acid and resin, the balsam contains a minute proportion of extractive, and traces of volatile oil. Benzoin is said to retard the oxidation of fatty matters, and thus to prevent rancidity. It appears from recent researches that benzoin, besides its own characteristic acid, often also contains the cinnamic, which is found more especially in the white tears. Indeed, Hermann Aschoff obtained from some benzoin of Sumatra a pure cinnamic acid, without any benzoic; and Messrs. Kolbe and Lautermann, upon examining a specimen of the tears, discovered what they at first supposed to be a peculiar acid, but which, on further investigation, proved to be a mix- ture of the cinnamic and benzoic acids. Aschoff recommends the following method of detecting cinnamic acid. Boil the benzoin with milk of lime, filter, decompose with muriatic acid, and add either bichromate of potassa with sulphuric acid, or permanganate of potassa, when, if cinnamic acid be present, the odour of oil of bitter almonds will be perceived (Annal. der Ghem. und Pharm., cxix. 136.) The two acids, which, when they occur together in benzoin, are said to be always mixed in the same proportion, may be at least partially separated by simple crystallization; their melting points being very different, that of benzoic acid 249° r., and that of the mixed acid, consisting of one part of the cinnamic and two of the benzoic, only 78° F. {Pharm. Journ., Aug. 1863, p. 17.) Medical Properties and Uses. Benzoin is stimulant and expectorant, and was formerly employed in pectoral affections; but, except as an ingredient of the compound tincture of benzoin, it has fallen into disuse. Trousseau and Pi- doux recommend strongly its inhalation in chronic laryngitis. Either the air of the chamber may be impregnated with its vapour by placing a small portion upon some live coals, or the patient may inhale the vapour of boiling water to which the balsam has been added. It is employed in pharmacy for the preparation of benzoic acid (see Acidum Benzoicum); and the milky liquor resulting from the addition of water to its alcoholic solution is sometimes used as a cosmetic, under the impression that it renders the skin soft. A tincture has been strongly recommended in fissures of the anus. In the East Indies the balsam is burnt by the Hindoos as a perfume in their temples.* Off. Prep. Acidum Benzoicum; Tiuctura Benzoini Composita; Unguentum Benzoiui, U. S. W. PART I. * A styptic liquid, prepared by a Roman pharmaceutist named Pariliari. and kept secret for a time, has acquired some reputation among the French army surgeons. It is made by boiling, for six hours, eight ounces of tincture of benzoin (containing about two ounces of the balsam), a pound of alum, and ten pounds of water, in a glazed earthen vessel, stirring constantly, and supplying the loss with hot water. The liquor is then strained ind kept in stopped bottles. It is limpid, styptic, of an aromatic smell, and said to have the pro- perty of causing an instantaneous coagulation of the blood. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxv. 199.)—Mote to the tenth edition. Fumigating pastiles are made from 16 parts of benzoin, 4 of balsam of Tolu, 4 of yellow saunders, 1 of labdanum, 48 of charcoal, 2 of nitre, 1 of tragacanth, 2 of gum arabic, and 12 of cinnamon-water, by reducing the solid ingredients to powder, and mixing the whole into a plastic mass, which is to be formed into cones, flattened at the base, and dr el nrst in the air, and then in a stove. (Soubeiran, Trait, de Pharm., 3e ed., i. 463.) PART I. Berberis. 167 BERBERIS. US. Secondary. Barberry. The bark of the root of Berberis vulgaris. U. S. Epine-vinette, Vinettier, Fr ; Fauerach, gemeiner Sauerdorn, Berberitze, Germ; Ber bero, Ital , Span. Berberis. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Berberaceae. Lindley Gen. Gh. Sepals 6, with interior scales. Petals 6, with 2 glands at the base Stamens 6, without denticulations. Pericarp fleshy, oblong, 2 to 3 seeded. Seede erect, oblong, with a crustaceous skin. Lindley. The plants belonging to this genus are shrubs, with the inner bark and wood yellow, and with leaves and berries of a sour taste. Besides the officinal Berberis vulgaris, there are other species of which the products have been medicinally employed. The Lycium, or Xuxcov of the ancients, highly valued as a local ap- plication in affections of the eye and eyelids, and used for various other pur- poses, is supposed to be the medicine still used in India for the same affections, under the name of rusot or ruswut. This, according to Dr. Royle, is an extract from the wood or roots of different species of Berberis, as Jj. Lvcium. B.aristata. &c., growing in Upper India, especially near Lahore. Combined with opium and alum, it is much used, and with great asserted oenefit, in both incipient and chronic ophthalmia. It has been employed also by European practitioners for the same purpose, and especially by Mr. Walker, of Edinburgh, who found it very efficient. The preparation used by him consisted of equal parts of lycium and burnt alum, with half the quantity of opium, and was applied, mixed with lemon-juice to the consistence of cream, over the eyelids and eyebrows. (J. V. Simpson, Pharm. Journ., xiii. 415; from Month, dourn. of Med. Sci.) Berberis vulgaris. Gray’s Manual of Botany, p. 19; Woodv. Med. Bot. p 618, t. 219. This is a native of Europe, but grows wild in waste grounds in the eastern parts of New England, and is sometimes cultivated in gardens on ac- count of its berries. It'is a spreading shrub, from 4 to 6 feet or more in height, with thorny branches, a light-gray bark, and a line yellow wood. The leaves are somewhat obovate, with ciliated teeth on their edges, and upon the young shoots three-parted and spiny. The flowers, which are in drooping many-flowered ra- cemes, have yellow entire petals, and are succeeded by oblong scarlet berries. It is a vulgar error to suppose that the vicinity of this plant is injurious to wheat. Under the name of Berheris Canadensis, Pursh described an American plant, which grows in hilly districts/Trom tfie borders of Canada to the Carolinas, and which is characterized, according to Gray, by its repandly-toothed leaves, with the teeth less bristly-pointed, by its few-flowered racemes, its petals notched at the apex, and its oval berries. By Dr. Hooker, however, it is considered a variety of B. vulgaris, from which it differs only in the points mentioned. It is from 1 to 3 feet high. Properties. The berries, which grow in loose bunches, are oblong, and of a red colour, have a grateful, sour, astringent taste, and contain malic and citric acids. They are refrigerant, astringent, and antiscorbutic, and are used in Europe, in the form of drink, in febrile diseases and diarrhoeas. An agreeable syrup is prepared from the juice; and the berries are sometimes preserved for the table. The root and inner bark have been used for dyeing yellow. The bark of the root is the officinal portion. This is grayish on the outside, yellow within, very bitter, and stains the saliva when chewed. Brandes found in 100 parts of the root 6-63 of bitter, yellow extractive, P55 of brown colouring matter, 0 35 of gum, 020 of starch, 0T0 of cerin, O'OY of stearin, 0 03 of chlorophyll, 0 55 of a subresin.. 55'40 of lignin, and 35 00 of water. The active properties reside in the extractive matter of Brandes, which, however, has subsequently been fourd 168 Berberis. PART I. to owe its virtues, as well as colouring properties, to a peculiar crystallizable principle, possessed of alkaline properties, and named berberin, or more properly berberina. This alkaloid appears to have been first discovered, in 1826, in a species of Xanthoxylum, by Chevallier and Pelletan, who, from its colour and taste, named it xanthopicrite. Buchner and Herberger, in 1835, found it in Ber- beris vulgaris, and named it berberin; but none of these chemists were aware of its alkaline properties. Indeed, the substance obtained by them, at least the berberin of Buchner, must have been a native salt of the proper alkaloid, which was not, therefore, procured in a pure state. Subsequently Fleitmann demon- strated its basic character, and published an account of several of its salts. It is not confined to the barberry, but has been found, by various chemists, in several other plants, particularly those combining bitterness and a yellow colour, as in various products of Cocculus palmatus, Hydrastis Canadensis, Xanthorrhiza apiifolia, Coptis Teeta, Xanthoxylum Clava Herculis, and others belonging to the natural families of Berberacese, Menispermacese, and Banunculacese. In- deed, few if any of the known alkaloids are so widely diffused as this appears to be in the vegetable kingdom.* Berberin a may be obtained most readily from its sulphate. Prof. Procter has given the following process for preparing it, based upon a suggestion of Mr. Merrill, of Cincinnati. The coarsely powdered root is to be exhausted by re- peated decoction with boiling water, and the mixed liquids, after filtration, are to be evaporated to a soft extract. This is to be digested several times with stronger alcohol, in the proportion of a pint to half a pound of the root, until exhausted, one-fourth of its bulk of water is to be added to the tincture, and five-sixths of the alcohol to be distilled off. To the residue, while still hot, sulphuric acid is to be added in excess, and the liquid allowed to cool. The sulphate of berberin is deposited in crystals, and, having been purified by re- crystallization, is to be decomposed by the addition, in excess, to its solution in boiling water, of freshly precipitated protoxide of lead, the solution being kept hot until the decomposition is completed. This may be known by the absence of a precipitate when acetate of lead is added to a drop of the clear liquid. The liquid is then to be filtered, and set aside to crystallize. Thus obtained, berberina is in the form of a yellow powder, which, under the microscope, appears to con- sist of groups of minute acicular crystals. It has a bitter taste, is soluble in about 100 parts of cold water, still less soluble in cold alcohol, freely soluble in both these liquids when hot, and insoluble in ether. It forms salts of difficult solu- bility with muriatic and sulphuric acids, and is distinguished by being copiously precipitated by the former acid from its cold watery solution in the form of crys- tals of the muriate. It is freely dissolved by acetic acid, which forms with it a readily soluble salt. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1864, p. 10.) Its formula is, according to Fleitmann, C42H18N09, but, on the more recent authority of Perrins, (Phann. Journ., April, 1863, p. 464.) The muriate of. berberina. which is the salt that has attracted most notice, may be readily obtained by using muriatic instead of sulphuric acid in the above process, and purifying the pre- cipitate by solution in hot alcohol, and subsequent refrigeration. It is in fine acicular crystals, of a bright-yellow colour, and intensely bitter taste, very slightly soluble in cold water, to which, however, it imparts a deep-yellow colour, slightly soluble also in cold alcohol, but dissolved in large proportion by both liquids when hot. By concentrated nitric acid both this salt and its base are decom- posed, with the production of a dark-red colour, and the escape of nitrous fumes. Besides berberina, another alkaloid has been discovered in the root of the barberry, for which the name of vinetina, derived from the French name of the * For a list of all plants from which it has been obtained, see a paper by J. Dyscn Per- rins, contained in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (Sept. 18G3. p. 45G). pakt I. Berberis.—Bismuthum. 169 plant, has been proposed. Oxycanthin and berbina are other, though less appro- priate names, which have been applied to this principle. To procure it, the mother- liquor of berberina is precipitated by carbonate of soda, the precipitate treated with dilute muriatic acid, and the liquid filtered, and precipitated by ammonia. The impure alkaloid thus obtained may be purified by washing with water, drying, exhausting with ether, evaporating, dissolving the residue in dilute muriatic acid, and finally precipitating by ammonia. Yinetina is a white amorphous powder, crystallizable from its alcoholic and ethereal solutions, purely bitter, fusible un- changed at 283° F., insoluble or but slightly soluble in water, sparingly dis- solved by cold but freely by hot alcohol and ether, and freely soluble in alcohol. It forms soluble salts with the acids, and its muriate is white. When deprived of one eq. of water at 212°, it has the formula CS2H23NOu. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 455.) Medical Properties. Barberry is in small doses tonic, in larger cathartic, and was formerly given in jaundice, in which, though probably originally employed on account of its yellow colour, it may be useful, when the influence of a gentle tonic and laxative is required. It may be used in the form of decoction. There can be little doubt that its alkaloid berberina, from its extensive diffusion in plants used in medicine, is possessed of valuable remedial properties, and capable of advantageous application in many diseases. It would be desirable to test thoroughly its antiperiodic properties. It may be used in the form of the muriate, of which the dose is stated at from one to ten grains, according to the effect desired. Should it come into extensive use, it would be more conveniently ob- tained from the root of our native Hydrastis Canadensis, which yields it very copiously. W. BISMUTHUM. U.S. Bismuth. In the British Pharmacopoeia, Bismuth is placed in the Appendix, as one of ihe substances used in preparing medicines. Etain de glace, Bismuth, Fr.; Wissmuth, Germ,.; Bismutte, Ital.; Bismut, Span. Bismuth occurs usually in the metallic state, occasionally as a snlphuret, and rarely as an oxide. It is found principally in Saxony. It occurs also in Corn- wall, and has been found at Monroe, in Connecticut. It is obtained almost entirely from native bismuth, which is heated by means of wood or charcoal, whereby the metal is fused and separated from its gangue. Almost all the bis- muth of commerce comes from Saxony. Bismuth was first distinguished as a metal by Agricola in 1520. Before that period it was confounded with lead. It is a brittle, pulverizable, brilliant metal, of a crystalline texture, and of a white colour with a slight reddish tint. Its crystals are in the form of cubes. It undergoes but a slight tarnish in the air. Its sp. gr. is 9'8, melting point 501° (Brande and Taylor), eq. number 213, and symbol Bi. When impure bismuth solidifies after fusion, globules of the metal, nearly pure, are thrown up from the mass. This takes place when the metal contains as much as 50 per cent, of impurity. The same phenomenon does not occur when pure bismuth is melted. (R. Schneider.) At a high tem- perature, in close vessels, bismuth volatilizes, and may be distilled over. When heated in the open air to a full red heat, it takes fire, and burns with a faint blue flame, forming an oxide of a yellow colour. This is the teroxide, and con- sists of one eq. of bismuth 213, and three of oxygen 24 = 237. There is another compound of bismuth and oxygen, consisting of one eq. of the former and five eqs. of the latter, which, having acid properties, is called bismuth,ic acid, Bi05. It is obtained in the form of a hydrate by boiling nitrate of b is mu tli TrTso1ut i o n of potassa, washing the precipitate, and mixing it while moist with solution of po- 170 Bismuthum.—Brayera. PART I, tassa into which chlorine is passed. A mixture of teroxide and bismuthic acid is precipitated, from which the former is separated by digestion with nitric acid. The hydrated acid remaining, when washed and dried, is in the form of a red powder, which gives up its water at 266°, and at a higher heat loses oxygen. Bismuth is acted on feebly by muriatic acid, but violently by nitric acid, which dissolves it with a copious extrication of red fumes. Sulphuric acid, when cold, has no action on it, but at a boiling heat effects its solution with the extrication of sulphurous acid. As it occurs in commerce, it is generally contaminated with other metals, among which is arsenic in minute quantity, and sometimes a very small proportion of thallium. It may be purified from all contaminating metals by dissolving the bismuth of commerce in diluted nitric acid, precipitating the clear solution by adding it to water, and reducing the white powder thus obtained with black flux. The same precipitate is obtained by adding ammonia to the nitric solution ; and, if the supernatant liquor is blue, the presence of copper is indicated. If the precipitate is yellowish, iron is present. Pharmaceutical Uses, &c. Bismuth is not used in medicine in an uncombined state, but is employed pharmaceutically to obtain the subcarbonate and subnitrate of bismuth, the only medicinal preparations formed from this metal. In the arts it is used to form a white paint for the complexion, called pearl white; and as an ingredient of the best pewter. Off. Prep. Bismuthi Subcarbonas, U. S.; Bismuthi Subnitras, U. S.; Bismu- thum Album, Br. B. BRAYERA. U. S. Secondary. Koosso. The flowers and unripe fruit of Brayera anthelmintica. JJ. S. Off. Syn. CUSSO. Kousso. Brayera anthelmintica. The flower. Br. Brayera. Nat. Ord. Rosace®. Geri. Gh. “Calyx with the tube bibracteolate at the base, turbinate; throat internally constricted by a membranous ring: the limb with two series of seg- ments, each five in number, the outer much larger. Petals five, inserted in the throat of the calyx, small, linear. Stamens from 15 to 20, inserted with the petals. Filaments free, unequal. Anthers bilocular, dehiscing longitudinally. Carpels two at the bottom of the calyx, free, unilocular, containing one or two pendulous ovules. Styles terminal, exserted from the throat of the calyx, thick- ened upward. Stigmas subpeltate, dilated, crenate, oblong.” The flowers are said to be dioecious; though the male have well-developed carpels. Brayera anthelmintica.. Ivunth; De Cand. Prodrom. ii. 580; Pereira, Mat. Med., 3d ed., ii. 1818. —Hagenia Abyssinica. Lamarck. — Bancksia Abyssinica. Bruce. This is a tree about 20 feet high, growing on the table-land of Abys- sinia, at an elevation of not less than six or seven thousand feet. The branches exhibit circular cicatrices, left by the fallen leaves. These are crowded near the ends of the branches, large, pinnate, sheathing at the base, with opposite, lanceolate, serrate leaflets, villose at the margin, and nerved beneath. The flowers are tinged with purple, pedicelled, writh an involucre of four roundish, oblong, ob- tuse, membranous bracts, and are arranged in fours, upon hairy, flexuous, brac- teate peduncles, with alternate branches. They are small, and of a greenish colour, becoming purple. These and the unripe fruit are the parts of the plant employed. The petals are apt to be wanting in the dried flowers. They are brought from Abyssinia packed in boxes. The Abyssinian name of the medicine has been variously spelled by European writers kosso, kousso, cusso, cosso, Ac ; but that at the head of this article is deemed the most appropriate English title, as it indicates the proper pronunciation of the word. Properties. The dried flowers are in unbroken though compressed cluster? PART I. • Brayera.—Brominium • 171 The general colour of the mass is greenish-yellow. As the medicine, from its high price, is apt to be adulterated, it should be procured in the unpowdered state, in which the botanical characters of the flower will sufficiently test its genuineness. It has a fragrant balsamic odour; and the taste, little perceptible at first, becomes in a short time somewhat acrid and disagreeable. Analyzed by Wittstein, it was found to contain, in 100 parts, 144 of fatty matter and chloro- phyll, 2-02 of wax, 625 of bitter acrid resin, 0-77 of tasteless resin, 108 of sugar, 7’22 of gum, 24 40 of tannic acid, 40 97 of lignin, 15 71 of ashes, with 0T4 parts loss. To Clemens Willing it yielded a small quantity of volatile oil, having the odour of the flowers, much extractive, tannic acid colouring iron green, a crystallizable acid, and a resin having a bitter and astringent taste and the odour of the oil. (Chem. Cent. Blatt, Marz 31, 1855, p. 224.) In which of these constituents the virtues of the medicine reside has not been determined. The claims of the koossine of Signor Pavesi, of Mortara, in Piedmont, to be considered the active principle, cannot be admitted until experimentally deter- mined ; and, indeed, it is by no means certain that it is not a complex substance. In the present state of knowledge on the subject, it appears to us premature even to give it the name of koossine, much less that of teniine, which has also been proposed for it, from its supposed relation to the tapeworm. (See Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1849, p. 274.) Medical Properties. Koosso is highly valued in Abyssinia as a vermifuge. Bruce speaks of it in his travels, and gives a figure of the plant. Dr. Brayer, a French physician, practising in Constantinople, employed the medicine, effec- tively, and published a treatise on it at Paris, so long ago as 1823. It was in his honour that Kunth adopted his generic title of the plant. Much attention has recently been attracted to this medicine; and trials made with it have proved that it has extraordinary efficacy in the destruction and expulsion of the tape- worm. Its effects, when taken internally, are not very striking. In the ordinary dose it sometimes produces heat of stomach, nausea, and even vomiting, and shows a tendency to act on the bowels, though this effect is not always produced. It appears to operate exclusively as a poison to the worms; and has been found equally effectual in both kinds of tapeworm. The high price demanded for it has tended very much to restrict the use of the remedy; but, should the demand continue, it will no doubt be supplied at a reasonable cost, as it is brought by caravans from Abyssinia into Egypt; and the monopoly which was at first the cause of its expensiveness cannot be long maintained. The medicine is taken in the morning upon an empty stomach, a light meal having been made the pre- ceding evening. A previous evacuation of the bowels is also recommended. The flowers are given in the form of powder, mixed with half a pint of warm water; the mixture being allowed to stand for fifteen minutes, then stirred up, and taken in two or three draughts at short intervals. The medicine may be preceded and fol- lowed by lemonade. The medium dose for an adult is half an ounce, which may be diminished one-third for a child of 12 years, one-half for one of 6, and two- thirds for one of 3. Should the medicine not act on the bowels in three or four hours, a brisk cathartic should be administered. One dose is said to be sufficient to destroy the worm. Should the quantity mentioned.not prove effectual, it may be increased to an ounce or more. Off. Prep. Infusum Cusso, Br. W. BROMINIUM. U.S. Bromine. In the British Pharmacopoeia Bromine is placed in the Appendix as one of the substances used in preparing medicines. Brorne, Ft.; Brom, Germ ; Bromo, Ital. 172 Brominium. PART I. Bromine is an elementary body, possessing many analogies to chlorine and iodine. It was discovered in 1826 by M. Balard, of Montpellier, in the bittern of sea-salt works, in which it exists as a bromide of magnesium. Since then it has been found in the waters of the ocean, in certain marine animals and vege- tables, in various aquatic plants, as the water-cress, in numerous salt springs, and, in two instances, in the mineral kingdom—in an ore of zinc, and in the cadmium of Silesia. It has also been detected by M. Mene in the coal-gas liquor of the Paris gasworks. In the United States it was first obtained by Professor Silliman, who found it in the bittern of the salt works at Salina, in the State of New York. It was discovered in the salt wells, near Freeport, Pa., by Dr. David Alter, who has been engaged for several years in manufacturing it on a large scale. The bittern of the salt wells of that locality contains the bromine com- bined with sodium and magnesium, and affords an average product of nine drachms of bromine to the gallon; though the yield of different wells varies greatly. Bromine has been detected also in the waters of the Saratoga springs. Preparation. Bromine is obtained from bittern, rich in this element, on the same principle that chlorine is procured from chloride of sodium; that is, by the action of diluted sulphuric acid and deutoxide of manganese. As manufac- tured near Freeport, the reaction takes place with the bromides of sodium and magnesium, with the result of forming a residue, consisting of the sulphates of soda and magnesia, mixed with sulphate of deutoxide of manganese. The dis- tillation should be performed at a gentle heat, by means of a water-bath, into a refrigerated receiver, containing water. We are informed by Dr. Thomas Ma- gill, of Allegheny Co., Pa., that Dr. Alter first heats the bittern in an iron boiler, and then introduces it hot into the retort, thus facilitating the process. The bittern of the salt works of Schoenbeck, in Germany, which contains only seveu-tenths of one part of bromine in 1000 parts, is subjected to several successive operations, whereby the solution is reduced in bulk, and so far puri- fied as to contain chiefly the bromide and chloride of magnesium. The chlorine is separated in the form of muriatic acid gas, by heating the liquid with sul- phuric acid, at a temperature not exceeding 259°; the sulphates are crystallized out; and the bromine is evolved in the usual manner by sulphuric acid and deu- toxide of manganese. The last operation, wffiich occupies six hours, is performed in a leaden still, of sufficient capacity to contain a charge of 84 pounds of the concentrated bittern, 60 or TO pounds of weak sulphuric acid from the leaden chambers, and 40 pounds of deutoxide of manganese. The product is 4 pounds of bromine. (Moritz Herman, Journ. de Pharm., Janv. 1854.) Properties. Bromine is a volatile liquid, of a dark-red colour when viewed in mass, but hyacinth-red in thin layers. Its taste is very caustic, and its smell strong and disagreeable, having some resemblance to that of chlorine. Its den- sity is very nearly 3. At 4° below zero it becomes a hard, brittle, crystalline solid, having a dark leaden colour, and a lustre nearly metallic. It boils at about 117°, forming a reddish vapour resembling that of nitrous acid, and of the sp gr. 5 39. It evaporates readily, a single drop being sufficient to fill a large flask with its peculiar vapour. Bromine is sparingly soluble in water, to which it communicates an orange colour, more soluble in alcohol, and still more so in ether. By the aid, however, of bromide of potassium, it may be dissolved to any desirable extent in water. Its alcoholic and ethereal solutions lose their colour in a few days, and become acid from the generation of hydrobroraic acid. It bleaches vegetable substances like chlorine, destroys the colour of sulphate of indigo, and decomposes organic matters. Its combination with starch has a yellow colour. It corrodes the skin and gives it a deep-yellow stain. Bromine is intermediate in its affinities between chlorine and iodine; since its combinations are decomposed by chlorine, while, in its turn, it decomposes those of iodine. Its eq. number is T8-4 (80, Dumas), PART I. Brominium. and its symbol Br. It forms acids with both oxygen and hydrogen, called and hvdrobromie acids, which are analogous in properties and composition to the corresponding acids of chlorine and iodine. It also combines with chlorine, forming chloride of _bromine. which probably has the formula BrCl5. This is prepared by pTssing chlorine through bromide, and condensing the resulting vapours at a low temperature. It is a reddish-yellow liquid, very fluid and vola- tile, soluble in water, and having a penetrating odour and disagreeable taste. Commercial bromine sometimes contains as much as 6 or 8 per cent, of bro- mide of carbon, as ascertained by M. Poselger. He discovered the impurity hy~subfniT£fhg~some bromine to distillation, during the progress of which the boiling point rose to 248°. The residuary liquid at this temperature was colour- less, and, when freed from a little bromine, proved to be the bromide of carbon in the form of an oily, aromatic liquid. In testing for bromine in mineral or saline waters, the water is evaporated in order to crystallize most of the salts. The solution, after having been filtered, is placed in a narrow tube, and a few drops of strong chlorine-water are added. If this addition produces an orange colour, bromine is present. The water ex- amined, in order that the test may succeed, must be free from organic matter, and the chlorine not be added in excess. Bromine may be detected in marine vegetables by carbonizing them in a covered crucible, exhausting the charcoal, previously pulverized, with boiling distilled water, precipitating any alkaline sulphuret present in the solution by sulphate of zinc, and then adding succes- sively a few drops of nitric acid and a portion of ether, shaking the whole to- gether. If bromine be present, it will be set free and dissolve in the ether, to which it will communicate an orange colour. (Dupasquier.) According to Reynoso, a more delicate test is furnished by oxidized water, which liberates bromine from its compounds, without reacting on it when free. The mode of proceeding is as follows. Put a piece of deutoxide of barium in a test tube, and add to it successively distilled water, pure muriatic acid, and ether. The mate- rials are here present for generating oxidized water; and so soon as bubbles are seen to rise to the surface, the substance suspected to contain bromine i? added, and the whole shaken together. If a bromide be present, the muriatic will give rise to hydrobromic acid; and the oxidized water, acting on this, will set free the bromine, which will dissolve in the ether, and give it a yellow tint. Medical Properties. Bromine, from its analogy to iodine, was early tried as a remedy, and the result has demonstrated its value as a therapeutic agent. It acts like iodine, by stimulating the lymphatic system and promoting absorption. It has been employed in bronchocele, scrofulous tumours and ulcers, amenorrhoea, diphtheritic affections, chronic diseases of the skin, and hypertrophy of the ven- tricles. Magendie recommends it in cases in which iodine does not operate with sufficient activity, or has lost its effect by habit. The form in which it is employed is aqueous solution, the dose of which, containing one part of bromine to forty of distilled water, is about six drops taken several times a day. When used as a wash for ulcers, from ten to forty minims of bromine may be added to a pint of water. Bromine has recently been found by Dr. Goldsmith, sur- geon of the U. S. volunteers, extremely efficacious as a local remedy in hospital gangrene, being applied either pure or dissolved in water; and the same remedy, dissolved in water in the proportion of from 15 to 40 drops to the fluidounce, with the aid of bromide of potassium, has produced very good effects in erysip- elas. (See Am. Med. Times, June 20,1863.) Of the compounds of bromine, the bromides of potassium, iron, and mercury have been chiefly used. See these titles in the second and third parts of this work. The chloride of bromine has been nsed in cancer by Landolfi, of Naples, both externally as a caustic and internally. The caustic was usually formed of equal parts of the chlorides of bromine, zinc, gold, and antimony, made into a paste with flour. To assist the local treatment, Brominium.—Buchu. part I. he gave a pill, composed of the tenth of a drop of chloride of bromine, half a grain of extract of hemlock, and a grain of phellandrium seed, daily, for two months, and twice a day for two months more. {Arch. Gen., Mai, 1855, p 609.) A committee of the Paris Academy of Sciences, consisting of M. Broca and others, having had an opportunity of examining the method of Landolfi applied in the hospitals, has reported decidedly against it, not only as inefficacious, but as some- times positively injurious. {Gaz. Hebdom. de Med. et Chirurg., Mai 9, 1866.) Dr. J. Lawrence Smith, of Louisville, Ky., proposes the following as a con- venient formula for a solution of bromine. Dissolve 160 grains of bromide of potassium in two fluidounces of water, add one troyounce of bromine, and, stirring diligently, pour in sufficient water to make the solution measure four fluidounces. The solution should be kept in accurately stopped bottles. This is a suitable preparation for application to hospital gangrene, and may be diluted to any desirable extent with water. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1863, p. 202.) Bromine, in an overdose, acts as an irritant poison. The best antidote, ac- cording to Mr. Alfred Smee, is ammonia. A case of poisoning by this substance, which proved fatal in seven hours and a half, is related by Dr. J. R. Snell, of Long Island, N. Y. The amount swallowed was about an ounce, and the symp- toms generally were those produced by the irritant poisons; such as violent inflammation of the lips, mouth, tongue, and oesophagus, with incessant burning pain, followed, in two hours and a half, by prostration, which soon ended iD death. {New York Journ. of Med., Sept. 1850.) Bromine is extensively used in the art of the daguerreotypist. Off. Prep; Potasii Bromidum. B. BUCHU. U.S. Bucliu. The leaves of Barosma crenata, and of other species of Barosma. TJ. S. Off. Syn. BUCCO. Buchu. Barosma betulina, Barosma crenulata, and Ba- rosma serratifolia. The dried leaves. Br. This medicine consists of the leaves of different plants growing at the Cape of Good Hope, formerly ranked in the genus Diosma, but transferred by botanists to Barosma, so named from the strong odour of the leaves {fapoe; and oaptj). B. crenata {B. betulina, Br.), B. crenulata, and B. serratifolia are described by Bindley as medicinal species. TSe'loaves of these and other Barosmas, and of some Agathosmas, are collected by the Hottentots, who value them on account of their odour, and, under the name of bookoo or buchu, rub them, in the state of powder, upon their greasy bodies. Barosma. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Rutaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-cleft or five-parted. Disk lining the bottom of the calyx, generally with a short scarcely prominent rim. Petals five, with short claws. Filaments ten; the five opposite the petals sterile, petaloid; the other five longer, subulate. Style as long as the petals. Stigma minute, five-lobed. Fruit composed of five cocci, covered with glandular dots at the back. (Condensed from Bindley.) These plants are all small shrubs, with opposite leaves and peduncled flowers. Barosma crenata. Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 213. —Diosma crenata. De Cand. Prodrom. i. 714; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., v. 52. This is a slender shrub, with smooth, somewhat angular branches, of a purplish colour. The leaves are op- posite, ovate or obovate, acute, serrated and glandular at the edge, coriaceous, and full of small pellucid dots on the under surface. The flowers are white or of a reddish tint, and stand solitarily at the end of short, lateral, leafy shoots. Properties. The leaves, as found in the shops, are from three-quarters of an PART I. Buchu.—Cadmium. 175 inch to an inch long, from three to five lines broad, elliptical, lanceolate-ovate or obovate, sometimes slightly pointed, sometimes blunt at the apex, very finely notched and glandular at the edges, smooth and of a green colour on the upper surface, dotted and paler beneath, and of a firm consistence. Their odour is strong, diffusive, and somewhat aromatic; their taste bitterish, and analogous to that of mint. These properties will distinguish them from senna, with which they might be confounded upon a careless inspection. They are sometimes mixed with portions of the stalks and fruit. Cadet de Gassicourt found them to contain, in 1000 parts, 6 65 parts of a light, brownish-yellow, and highly odorous volatile oil, 211*7 of gum, 51-7 of extractive, 11 of chlorophyll, and 21-51 of resin. Water and alcohol extract their virtues, which probably depend on the volatile oil and extractive. The latter is precipitated by infusion of galls. The foregoing description of buchu leaves applies to the drug, as first seen by the author many years ago, when the chief product imported was probably that of B. crenulata, more or less mixed with the leaves of B. crenata. The first of these has now in great measure disappeared from our market, the importations consisting either of the leaves of B. crenata or B. serratifolia, in distinct parcels. The following is a concise description of the three different kinds of leaf. The leaves of B. crenata (short buchu or round buchu, as it is called in commerce,) are “about three-quarters of an inch long, obovate, with a recurved truncated apex, and sharp, cartilaginous, spreading teeth;” those of B. crenulata, of me- dium size, “are about an inch long, oval-lanceolate, obtuse, minutely crenated, and five-nerved;” those of B. serratifolia, or long buchu, “are from an inch to an inch and a half long, linear-lanceolate, tapering to each end, sharply and firmly serrated, three-nerved.” (Br.) The last-mentioned leaves are also of more deli- cate structure than the others. Of the three species, the short-leaved was found by Mr. P. W. Bedford to yield an average of 121 per cent, of volatile oil; while the long-leaved, though more highly valued in the market, gave only 0-66 per cent., showing their great inferiority in strength. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Asso- ciation, A. D. 1863, p. 211.) Medical Properties and Uses. Buchu is gently stimulant, with a peculiar tendency to the urinary organs, producing diuresis, and, like all similar medicines, exciting diaphoresis when circumstances favour this effect. The Hottentots have long used it in a variety of diseases. From these rude practitioners the remedy was borrowed by the resident English and Dutch physicians, by whose recom- mendation it was employed in Europe, and has come into general use. It is given chiefly in complaints of the urinary organs, such as gravel, chronic catarrh of the bladder, morbid irritation of the bladder and urethra, disease of the pros- tate, and retention or incontinence of urine from a loss of tone in the parts con- cerned in its evacuation. It has also been recommended in dyspepsia, chronic rheumatism, cutaneous affections, and dropsy. From twenty to thirty grains of the powder may be given two or three times a day. The leaves are also used in infusion, in the proportion of an ounce to a pint of boiling water, of which the dose is one or two fluidounces. A tincture has been employed as a stimulant embrocation in local pains. There is an officinal fluid extract, of which the dose is half a fluidrachm. Off. Prep. Extractum Buchu Fluidum, U. S.; Infusum Bucco, Br.; Infusum Buchu, U. S.; Tinctura Bueco, Br. W. CADMIUM. U.S. Cadmium. This metal was introduced into the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, because used in the preparation of sulphate of cadmium. It is associated with 176 Cadmium PART I. zinc in its ores, and, being more volatile than that metal, comes over with the first portions of it distilled in the process for obtaining it. (See Zincum.) The cadmium is separated by dissolving the mixed metal in dilute sulphuric acid, precipitating the sulphuret by sulphuretted hydrogen, treating the precipitate with muriatic acid, and again precipitating with carbonate of ammonia. The car- bonate of cadmium thus obtained, after being washed and dried, is mixed with charcoal, and exposed to a dull-red heat in an earthen retort, when the reduced metal distils over. Properties. Cadmium is a white metal, resembling tin, but somewhat heavier and more tenacious. Like that metal, it crackles when bent. Its sp. gr. is 8'7, melting point about 440°, equivalent 55-8, and symbol Ca. It is little affected by the air, but, when heated, combines with an eq. of oxygen, forming a reddish- brown or orange-coloured oxide, CaO, which combines with the acids to form salts. From its saline solutions the oxide is precipitated by the alkalies in the form of a white hydrate. Cadmium also combines with chlorine, iodine, bromine, and sulphur, in equivalent proportions. It is distinguished by forming a colour- less solution with nitric acid, from which sulphuretted hydrogen or hydrosulphate of ammonia precipitates a lemon-yellow sulphuret, insoluble in an excess of the reagent, or in potassa or ammonia, and not volatilized at a red heat. Potassa produces a white precipitate insoluble in an excess, and ammonia a similar pre- cipitate soluble in an excess of the precipitant. Zinc precipitates cadmium in the metallic state. “A neutral solution of the metal in nitric acid, after having been fully precipitated by carbonate of soda in slight excess, yields a filtrate which is not affected by hydrosulphate of ammonia.” (U. S.) This proves the absence of arsenic. Medical Uses. According to Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, the preparations of cadmium resemble those of antimony in their effects on the system. Dr. Garrod considers the metal, in this respect, more closely allied to zinc. In overdoses its salts appear to act as corrosive poisons. Three cases are recorded in which serious consequences resulted from inhaling the powdered carbonate, while used in polishing silver. The chief symptoms were constriction of the throat, embar- rassed respiration, vomiting and purging, giddiness, and painful spasms. (Annu- aire de Therap., A. D. 1859, p. 229.) It is, however, chiefly if not exclusively for external application that the preparations of this metal are used. Twp of them have especially engaged attention; the iodide and sulphate. The latter is among the Preparations in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and will be treated of in the second part of this work. (See Cadmii Sulphas.) The former will be noticed here. The iodide of cadmium (Cal ) may "be prepared by mixing iodine and filings of cadmium in a moist state. It is soluble in water and alcohol, and may be crystallized from either solution in large, white, transparent crystals, in the form of six-sided tables, of a pearly lustre. Iodide of cadmium was introduced as an external remedy by Dr. A. B. Garrod, of London. He has employed it, with good effects, in the form of ointment, made of one part of the iodide to eight of lard, as a local application by friction to enlarged scrofulous glands, nodes, chronic inflammations of joints, certain cutaneous diseases, and chilblains. The ointment is soft and white, readily yields its iodine for absorption, and is preferable to the corresponding ointment of iodide of lead, the use of which endangers lead poison- ing. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Nov. 1857, p. 260.) Off. Prep. Cadmii Sulphas, U. S. B. Caffea. PART I 177 CAFFEA. U. S. Coffee. The seed of Caffea Arabica. U. S. Cafe, Ft ; Kaffee, Germ.; Caffe, Ital.; Caf6, Span.; Bun, Arabic; Copi cotta, Cyngalese, Baeva, Malay. Coffea. Sex.Syst. PentandriaMonogynia.— Nat. Ord.Cinchonaceae. Lindley. Gen. Ch. “ Calyx with a small, 4-5 toothed limb. Corolla tubular, funnel- shaped, with a 4-5 parted spreading limb. Stantens 4-5, inserted in the middle of the upper part of the tube, exserted or inclosed. Style bifid at the apex. Berry umbilicate, naked, or crowned with the calyx, containing two seeds in- closed in a parchment-like putamen"Bindley. Coffea Arabica. Linn. Sp. 245 ; Bot. Mag. t. 1303. The coffee plant is a small tree, from fifteen to thirty feet in height. The branches are opposite, the lower spreading, the upper somewhat declining, and gradually diminishing in length as they ascend, so as to form a pyramidal summit, which is covered with green foliage throughout the year. The leaves are opposite, upon short footstalks, ob- long-ovate, acuminate, entire, wavy, four or five inches long, smooth and shining, of a dark-green colour on their upper surface, paler beneath, and accompanied with a pair of small pointed stipules. The flowers are white, with an odour not unlike that of the jasmine, and stand in groups in the axils of the upper leaves. The calyx is very small, the corolla salverform, with a nearly cylindrical tube, and a flat border divided into five lanceolate, pointed segments. The stamens project above the tube. The fruit, which is inferior, is a roundish berry, umbil- icate at top, at first green, then red, and ultimately dark purple. It is about as large as a cherry, and contains two seeds surrounded by a paper-like membrane, and enclosed in a yellowish pulpy matter. These seeds, divested of their cover- ings, constitute coffee. This tree is a native of Southern Arabia and Abyssinia, and probably per- vades Africa about the same parallel of latitude, as it is found growing wild at Liberia, on. the western coast of the continent. It is cultivated in various parts of the world where the temperature is sufficiently elevated and uniform. Con- siderable attention has long been paid to its culture in its native country, par- ticularly in Yemen, in the vicinity of Mocha, from which the demands of com- merce were at first almost exclusively supplied. About the year 1690, it was in- troduced by the Dutch into Java, and in 1718, into their colony of Surinam. Soon after this latter period, the French succeeded in introducing it into their West India Islands, Cayenne, and the Isles of France and Bourbon; and it has subsequently made its way into the other West India Islands, various parts of tropical America, Hindostan, and Ceylon. The tree is raised from the seeds, which are sown in a soil properly prepared, and, germinating in less than a month, produce plants which, at the end of the year, are large enough to be transplanted. These are then set out in rows at suitable distances, and in three or four years begin to bear fruit. It is customary to top the trees at this age, in order to prevent their attaining an inconvenient height, and to increase the number of the fruit-bearing branches. It is said that they continue productive for thirty or forty years. Though almost always covered with flowers and fruit, they yield most abundantly at two seasons, and thus afford two harvests during the year. Various methods are employed for freeing the seeds from their coverings; but that considered the best is, by means of machinery, to remove the fleshy portion of the fruit, leaving the seeds surrounded only by their papyraceous envelope, from which they are afterwards separated by drying, and by the action of peeling and winnowing mills. The character of coffee varies considerably with the climate and mode of cul- 178 Caffea. PART I. ture. Consequently, several varieties exist in commerce, named usually from the sources from which they are derived. The Mocha coffee, which is in small round- ish grains, takes precedence of all others. The Java coffee is highly esteemed in this country; but our chief supplies are derived from the West Indies and South America. Some good coffee has been brought from Liberia. Coffee im- proves by age, losing a portion of its strength, and thus acquiring a more agree- able flavour. It is said to be much better when allowed to become perfectly ripe upon the tree, than as ordinarily collected. The grains should be hard, and so heavy as readily to sink in water. When soft, light, black or dark-coloured, or musty, they are inferior. Properties. Coffee has a faint, peculiar odour, and a slightly sweetish, some- what austere taste. An analysis by M. Payen gives for its constituents, in 100 parts, 34 of cellulose, 12 of hygroscopic water, 10 to 13 of fatty matter, 15-5 of glucose, with dextrin and a vegetable acid, 10 of legumin, 3*5 of chloroaenate of potassa and caffein, 3 of a nitrogenous body, 0*8 of free caffein, 0 001 of concrete volatile oik 0*062 of fluid volatile oil, and 6*697 of mineral substances. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., x. 266.) Pfaflf recognised, in the precipitate pro- duced by acetate of lead with the decoction of coffee, two peculiar principles, one resembling tannin, called caffeo-tannic acid, and the other an acid, called by him caffeic acid. The latter is thought to be identical with the chlorogenic acid of Payen. When strongly heated, it emits the odour of roasted coffee, and is supposed to be the principle to which the flavour of coffee as a drink is owing. A remarkable property of caffeic acid is that, when acted on by sulphuric acid and binoxide of manganese, it is converted into kinone, being in this respect analogous to kinic acid. The sugar of coffee is probably neither glucose as sup- posed by Payen, nor cane-sugar as stated by Rochleder, but peculiar; for, when the coffee is roasted, it does not answer to Trommer’s test for glucose. {Pharm. Journ., xvi. 526-8.) Caffein (caffea) was first discovered by Runge, and afterwards by Robiquet. According to Payen, it exists in the coffee partly free, partly in the form of a double salt, consisting of chlorogsjiic..acid, combined with potassa and caffein. It may be obtained in the following manner. Exhaust bruised coffee by two successive portions of boiling water, unite the infusions, add acetate of lead, in order to precipitate various principles which accompany the caffein, filter, decompose the excess of acetate of lead in the filtered liquor by sulphuretted hydrogen, concen- trate by evaporation, and neutralize with ammonia. The caffein is deposited in crystals upon cooling, and may be purified by redissolving in water, treating with animal charcoal, and evaporating. IT. J. Versmann, of Lubeck, recommends the following process as more economical. Powdered coffee, mixed with one-fifth of its weight of caustic lime previously slaked, is exhausted, by means of percola- tion, with alcohol of 0*863; the tincture is distilled to separate the alcohol; the residue is rinsed out of the still with warm water, and the supernatant oil sepa- rated; the liquid is evaporated so as to solidify on cooling; and the crystalline mass thus obtained, having been expressed and dried by pressure in bibulous paper, is purified by solution in water with animal charcoal, and recrystalliza- tion. (Chem. Gaz., Feb. 1852, p. 67.) H. Leuchsenring obtains caffein by avail- ing himself of its property of subliming unchanged by heat. He precipitates a' concentrated decoction of coffee by a weak solution of acetate of lead, filters, evaporates to dryness, mixes the residue with sand, and sublimes as in Mohr’s process for procuring benzoic acid. {Am. Journ. of Pharm.,xxx ii. 25.) Still an- other method, proposed by Yogel, is to treat coffee, ground to powder, with ben- zine, which dissolves the caffein and an oily substance, to separate the benzine by distillation, to treat the residue with boiling water which dissolves the caffein, and deposits it in a crystalline form, after filtration and concentration. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxxv. 436.) The proportion of caffein in coffee, may be stated PART I. Caffea. 179 at from 0Y5 to 10 per cent. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 521.) Caffein crystallize\ by the cooling of its concentrated solution, in opaque, silky, flexible needles, bj slow and spontaneous evaporation, in long transparent prisms. It has a feebiy bitter and disagreeable taste, is soluble in water, alcohol, and ether, melts when exposed to heat, and at a higher temperature sublimes, without residue, in needles anal- ogous to those formed by benzoic acid. It is precipitated from its aqueous solu- tion by no reagent except tannic acid and solution of iodide of potassium and mercury. When this solution, made by saturating iodide of potassium with red oxide of mercury, is added to a solution of caffein, a precipitate is produced, which soon takes the form of white, shining, acicular crystals. This reaction is proposed as a test of caffein by Prof. Dellfs; for, though the same solution will precipitate the other alkaloids, the product is always amorphous. {Ghent. Gaz., Feb. 15, 1855.) It is stated by M. Schwazenbach that, if chlorine-water with caffein is evaporated, a red residue is obtained, which becomes yellow at a higher temperature, and is restored to its original red colour by a drop of solution of ammonia. This is proposed as a delicate test of caffein. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxxix. 232.) Caffein is remarkable for containing a larger proportion of nitrogen than almost any other proximate vegetable principle, in this respect equalling some of the most highly animalized products. The present views of its composition are represented by the formula C16H10N4O4; and it is believed to be identical with thein, or the peculiar principle of tea. Notwithstanding its large proportion of nitrogen, caffein does not putrefy, even when its solution is kept for some time in a warm place. Coffee undergoes considerable change during the roasting process. It swells up very much, acquiring almost double its original volume, while it loses from 15 to 20 percent, of its weight. {Pharm. Cent. Blatt, Oct. 1850, p. 68*7.) It ac- quires, at the same time, a peculiar odour entirely different from that of the un- roasted grains, and a decidedly bitter taste. A volatile oil is developed during the process, and, according to Chenevix, a portion of tannin. The caffein does not appear to undergo material change, as, according to Garot, it may be ex- tracted unaltered from the roasted coffee. The excellence of the flavour of roasted coffee depends much upon the manner in which the process is conducted, and the extent to which it is carried. It should be performed in a covered vessel, over a moderate fire, and the grains should be kept in constant motion. When they have acquired a chestnut-brown colour, the process should cease. If too long continued, it renders the coffee bitter and acrid, or, by reducing it to charcoal, deprives it entirely of flavour. The coffee should not be burnt long before it is used, and should not be kept in the ground state. Medical and Economical Uses. More attention has been paid to the effects of coffee on the system in the roasted than in the crude state. Unroasted coffee has been employed by Dr. Grindel, of Russia, in intermittent fever; and the practice has been followed by others; but the success, though considerable, has not been such as to lead to the conclusion that this medicine would answer as a substitute for quinia. It was given in powder, in the dose of a scruple every hour; in decoction prepared by boiling an ounce with eighteen ounces of water down to six; or in the state of extract in the dose of from four to eight grains. The action of coffee is directed chiefly to the nervous system. When swal- lowed it produces a warming cordial impression on the stomach, quickly followed by a diffused agreeable nervous excitement, which extends itself to the cerebral functions, giving rise to increased vigour of imagination and intellect, without any subsequent confusion or stupor such as characterizes the action of narcotic medicines. Indeed, one of its most extraordinary effects is a disposition to wake- fulness, which continues for several hours after it has been taken. It is even capable of resisting, to a certain extent, the intoxicating and soporific influence of alcohol and opium, and may sometimes be advantageously employed for this Caffea. PART I. purpose. It also moderately excites the circulatory system, and stimulates the digestive function. A cup of coffee, taken after a hearty meal, will often relieve the sense of oppression so apt to be experienced, and enable the stomach to perform its office with comparative facility. The exhilarating effects of coffee, united with its delicious flavour when suitably qualified by cream and sugar, have given rise to its habitual employment as an article of diet. Its use for this pur- pose has prevailed from time immemorial in Persia and Arabia. In 1517 it was introduced by the Turks into Constantinople, whence it was carried to France and England about the middle of the succeeding century, and has since gra- dually made its way into almost universal use. It cannot be supposed that a substance, capable of acting so energetically upon the system, should be entirely destitute of deleterious properties. Accordingly, if taken in large quantities, it leaves, after its first effects, a degree of nervous derangement or depression equi- valent to the previous excitement; and its habitual immoderate employment is well known very greatly to injure the tone of the stomach, and frequently to occasion troublesome dyspeptic and nervous affections. This result is peculiarly apt to take place in individuals of susceptible nervous systems, and in those of sedentary habits. We have repeatedly known patients, who have long suffered with headache and vertigo, to get rid of them by abstaining from coffee. In the treatment of disease, coffee has been less employed than might have been expected from its effects upon the system. There can be no doubt that it may be advantageously used in various nervous disorders. In a tendency to stupor or lethargy dependent on deficient energy of the brain, without conges- tion or inflammation, it would be found useful by stimulating the cerebral func- tions. In light nervous headaches, and even in sick headache not caused by the presence of offending matter in the stomach, it often proves temporarily useful. It has acquired much reputation as a palliative in the paroxysms of spasmodic asthma, and has been recommended in hooping-cough, and in hysterical affec- tions. The Egyptians are said to have formerly employed it as a remedy in amenorrhoea. Hayne informs us that, in a case of violent spasmodic disease, at- tended with short breath, palpitation of the heart, and a pulse so much increased in frequency that it could scarcely be counted, immediate relief was obtained from a cup of coffee, after the most powerful antispasmodics had been used in vain for several hours. It has been given, with supposed advantage, in strangu- lated hernia. By the late Dr. Dewees it was highly recommended in cholera infantum. It is said also to have been used successfully in obstinate chronic diarrhoea; and the late Dr. Chapman, of Philadelphia, found it highly useful in calculous nephritis. Under the impression of its diuretic powers, it has been recommended in dropsy. We have heard of its effectual use in croup. In acute inflammatory affections it is contraindicated. It should be given in cases of poisoning from opium, after the evacuation of the stomach, or when from any cause such evacuation is not effected. Roasted coffee is said to have the effect of destroying offensive and noxious effluvia from decomposing animal and vegetable substances, and therefore to be capable of beneficial application as a disinfecting and deodorizing agent. The powder of the grains should be roasted until it becomes dark-brown, and then sprinkled, or placed in plates, in the infected place. Coffee is usually prepared in this country by boiling the roasted grains, pre- viously ground into a coarse powder, in water for a short time, and then clarify- ing by the white of an egg. Some prefer the infusion, made by a process similar to that of displacement. It has more of the aroma of the coffee than the decoc tion, with less of its bitterness. The proper proportion for forming the infusion for medical use is an ounce to a pint of boiling water, of which a cupfui may be given warm for a dose, and repeated, if necessary. A syri-p of coffee is prepared by Dorvault in the following manner. Treat a pourd of ground r<;ast(d coffee PART I. Caffea.—Calamus. by percolation with boiling water until two pints have passed. Evaporate eight pounds of simple syrup to six, add the infusion, and strain. Two tablespoonfub of this syrup may be added to a cup of hot water or milk. It is also used with carbonic acid water. Caffein, though undoubtedly one of the active principles of coffee, is not ex- actly identical with it in effects. Precise and reliable information as to its physi- ological action and therapeutic application is yet wanting. Lehmann found it, iu doses of from two to ten grains, to produce great disturbance of the nervous and circulatory systems. Introduced directly into the circulation, in the lower animals, such as cats, rabbits, and dogs, in doses of three-quarters of a grain or more, by Drs. Stuhlmann and Falek, it caused death, preceded by purging, vomiting of food, tonic and clonic spasms, and prostration ; but no useful reliable inference can be drawn from these results. {Ranking's Abstract, xxix. 286.) It has been used remedially both uncombined, and in the state of salt. Prof. H. F. Campbell, of Georgia, found it apparently very useful, given by enema, in a case of poisoning by opium, in the advanced stage, when the patient could bo longer swallow. He injected twenty grains in infusion of coffee. The patient recovered; but in a second case, though some favourable effects seemed to be produced, the patient ultimately succumbed. (See Am. J. of Med. Sci., July and Oct. 1860, pp. 282 and 570.) In the form of citrate of caffein, made by dissolving caffein in a solution of citric acid with a gentle heat, and evaporating carefully, it has been recommended, as a remedy and preventive in sick headache, in the dose of a grain every hour, before and during the paroxysm. The arseniate has been given as an antiperiodic; but the arsenic is no doubt the main therapeutic agent in this case. The leaves of the coffee plant possess properties analogous to those of the fruit, and are extensively used, in the form of infusion, as a beverage, in the vicinity of Padang, in the island of Sumatra. An account of their employment was published in the Singapore Free Press by Mr. N. M. Ward, of Padang. Previously to this, Dr. John Gardener, of London, had proposed to introduce them into use in Europe, and is stated to have taken out a patent for the mode •ff preparing them. A specimen examined by Dr. Stenhouse has been found to contain caffein in larger proportion than the coffee-bean, and also caffeic acid. Mr. Ward states that, in Sumatra, the leaves are prepared for use by moderately roasting them, and then powdering them coarsely by rubbing in the hands. The powder is made into an infusion like common tea. The taste is said to be like that of tea and coffee combined. {Pharm. Journ., xii. 443, and xiii. 207 and 382.) x W. CALAMUS. U. S. Secondary. Street Flag. The rhizoma of Acorus Calamus. U. S. Acorus vrai, Acorus odorant, Fr.; Kalmuswurzel, Germ.; Calamo aromatico, Ital., Span. Acorus. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Acoracem. Gen. Ch. Spadix cylindrical, covered with florets. Corolla six-petaled, na- ked. Style none. Capsule three-celled. Willd. Acorus Calamus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 199; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 63. The sweet flag, or calamus, has a perennial, horizontal, jointed, somewhat com- pressed root (rhizome), from half an inch to an inch thick, sometimes several feet in length, sending off numerous round and yellowish or whitish radicles from its base, and bunches of brown fibres resembling coarse hair from its joints, in- fernally white and spongy, externally whitish with a tinge of green, variegated with triangular stains of light brown and rose colour. The leaves are all radical, theathing at the base, long, sword-shaped, smooth, green above, but, near their Calamus. PART I. origu frun the root, of a red colour, variegated with green and white. The scape or flower-stem resembles the leaves, but is longer, and from one side, near the mi Idle of its length, sends out a cylindrical spadix, tapering at each end, about two inches in length, and crowded with greenish-yellow flowers. These are without calyx, and have six small, concave, membranous, truncated petals. The fruit is an oblong capsule, divided into three cells, and containing numerous oval seeds. This is an indigenous plant, growing throughout the United States, in low, wet, swampy places, and along the sides of ditches and streams, and flowering in and June. It is also a native of Europe and Western Asia; and a va- riety is found in India. The European plant differs slightly from the American. The leaves as well as root have an aromatic odour; but the latter only is em- ployed. It should be collected late in the autumn, or in the spring. After re- moval from the ground, the roots are washed, freed from their fibres, and dried with a moderate heat. By the process of drying they lose nearly one-half their diameter, but are improved in odour and taste. Properties. The roots, as kept in the shops, are in pieces of various length, somewhat flattened, externally wrinkled and of a yellowish-brown colour, and presenting on their under surface numerous minute circular spots, indicating the points at which the radicles were inserted. Their texture is light and spongy, their colour internally whitish or yellowish-white, and their fracture short and rough. A variety imported from Germany consists exclusively of the interior portion of the root. The pieces are usually long, slender, irregularly quadran- gular, and of a grayish-white colour. The odour of calamus is strong and fragrant; its taste warm, bitterish, pun- gent, and aromatic. Its active principles are taken up by boiling water. From 100 parts of the fresh root of the European plant, Trommsdorff obtained 0T of volatile oil, 23 of soft resin, 33 of extractive with a little chloride of potas- sium, 5*5 of gum with some phosphate of potassa, 1*6 of starch analogous to inulin, 215 of lignin, and 65 7 of water. Sixteen ounces of the dried root af- forded to Neumann about two scruples of volatile oil. The oil is at first yellow, but ultimately becomes red, and has the smell and taste of calamus. The extrac- tive matter has an acrid and sweetish taste. The root is sometimes attacked by worms, and deteriorates by keeping. The root of the India variety is said to be less thick than the European, and to have a stronger and more pleasant taste and smell. Medical Properties and Uses. Calamus is a stimulant tonic, possessing the ordinary virtues of the aromatics. It may be taken with advantage in pain 01 uneasiness of the stomach or bowels arising from flatulence, and is a useful ad- juvant to tonic or purgative medicines, in cases of torpor or debility of the ali- mentary canal. It was probably known to the ancients, and is supposed to have been the axopov of the Greeks; but the calamus aromaticus of Dioscoride? was a different product, having been derived, according to Dr. Royle, from a species of Andropogon. The medicine is at present much neglected, though well calculated to answer as a substitute for more costly aromatics. The dose in sub- stance is from a scruple to a drachm. An infusion, made in the proportion 0/ an ounce of the root to a pint of boiling water, is sometimes given in the dose of a wineglassful or more.* W. * A fluid extract of calamus may be prepared in the same manner as fluid extract of gin- ger ("see Extractum Zixgiberis Fluidum in Part II.), and given in the dose of from half a flui- drachm to a fluidrachm. From this Mr. J. M. Maisch prepares a syrup by rubbing a fluidounce of the fluid extract with about eight troyounces of sugar, exposing the mixture to a moderate heat until all the alcohol has been evaporated, then adding seven troyounce* of sugar, and half a pint of water, heating to 212°, and straining. [Am. Journ. 0/ .Pham xxxii. 113.)—Note to the twelfth edition. pakt I. Calcium.—Calcii Chloridum. 183 CALCIUM. Calcium. This is the peculiar metal of lime, and, consequently, of all calcareous sub stances. It was obtained by Dr. Matthiessen, in 1855, in masses of the size oi a pea, by the electrolysis, with a Bunsen battery, of chloride of calcium. It is a pale-yellow metal, remarkably glittering when freshly filed. Its fracture is jagged, becoming granular. It is malleable and very ductile. In a dry air it remains unaltered; but it soon tarnishes in a moist one. It melts at a red heat, and afterwards burns with splendour, forming lime. Its eq. number is 20, and symbol Ca. (See Chem. Gaz., June 15, 1855.) Calcium is a very abundant element in nature, existing in the mineral king- dom chiefly as a carbonate, in the form of limestone, marble, chalk, and calca- reous spar; and as a phosphate and carbonate in the bones and shells of animals. It is the peculiar metal in the officinals, lime, chloride of calcium, and carbo- nate, phosphate, and hypochlorite of lime. B CALCII CHLORIDUM. US. Chloride of Calcium. Fused chloride of calcium. U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia, chloride of calcium is placed in the Appendix, as one of the substances used in preparing medicines. Muriate of lime, Hydrochlorate of lime; Chlorure de calcium, Hydrochlorate de chaux, Fr.; Chlorcalcium, Salzsaurer Kalk, Germ. Chloride of calcium consists of chlorine, united with calcium, the metallic radical of lime. It may be readily formed by saturating muriatic acid with chalk or marble, evaporating to dryness, and heating to redness. The muriatic acid, by reacting with the lime, forms chloride of calcium and water, the latter of which is dissipated at a red heat. Properties. In the fused or anhydrous state, as it is directed or understood to be in the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, chloride of calcium is a colourless, slightly translucent, hard and friable solid, of an acrid, bitter, saline taste, ex- tremely deliquescent, very soluble in water, and readily soluble in rectified spirit. On account of its avidity for water, the fused salt is used for drying gases, and for bringing alcohol to its highest degree of concentration. The crystallized salt is also very deliquescent, and has the form of colourless, transparent, stri- ated, six-sided prisms. The crystals, on exposure to heat, first dissolve in their water of crystallization, and, after this has evaporated, undergo the igneous fusion. With ice or snow they form a powerful frigorific mixture. Solution of chloride of calcium, when pure, yields no precipitate with ammonia, chloride of barium, or ferrocyanide of potassium dissolved in a large quantity of water ; evincing the absence of magnesia, sulphuric acid, and iron. Chloride of calcium exists in the water of the ocean and of many springs. It is usually associated with common salt and chloride of magnesium, from which it is separated with difficulty. It consists of one eq. of chlorine 35 5, and one of calcium 20 = 55'5. When crystallized, it contains six eqs. of water = 54. Chloride of calcium is used medicinally in solution only. In this state it forms the officinal Liquor Calcii Ghloridi, under which title its medicinal pro- perties are given. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Acidum Tartaricum, Br.; Aether, Br.; JSther Fortior, U. S.; Chloroformum, Br.; Ferrum Redactum, Br. Off. Prep. Calcis Carbonas Precipitata, Br.; Morphiae Hydrochloras, Br. 184 Calx. PART I. CALX. U.S., Br. Lime. Lime fecently prepared by calcination. U. S. UaO. Br. Quicklime; Chaux, Chaux vive, Fr.; Kalk, Germ..; Calce, ItaL; Calviva, Span. Lime, which is ranked amoug the alkaline earths, is a very important phar- maceutical agent, and forms the principal ingredient in several standard prepa- rations. It is a very abundant natural production. It is never found pure, but mostly combined with a&ds ; as with carbonic acid in chalk, marble, calcareous spar, limestone, and shells; with sulphuric acid in the different kinds of gyp- sum ; with phosphoric acid in the bones of animals; and with silica in a great variety of minerals. Preparation. Lime is prepared by calcining, by a strong heat, some form of the native carbonate. The carbonic acid is thus expelled, and the lime remains behind. When the lime is intended for nice chemical operations, it should be obtained from pure white marble, or from oyster shells. For the purpose of the arts it is procured from common limestone, by calcining it in kilns of peculiar construction. When obtained in this way it is generally impure, being of a grayish colour, and containing alumina, silica, sesquioxide of iron, and occa- sionally a little magnesia and oxide of manganese. The officinal lime of the United States and British Pharmacopceias is the lime of commerce, and therefore impure. It may be obtained purer by exposing pure white marble, broken into small fragments, in a covered crucible, to a full red heat for three hours, or till the residuum, when slaked and suspended in water, no longer effervesces on the addition of muriatic acid. Properties. Lime is a grayish-white solid, having a strong, caustic, alkaline taste, and the sp.gr. 2 3. It is very refractory in the fire, having been fused only by the compound blowpipe of Dr. Hare. Exposed to the air, it absorbs moisture and carbonic acid, and falls into a white powder. On account of its liability to change by being kept, lime intended for pharmaceutical purposes should be recently prepared. It acts upon vegetable colours like an alkali. Upon the addition of water, it cracks and falls into powder, with the evolution of heat, forming hydrate of lime. In this state lime dissolves freely in syrup. (See Syrup of Lime.) If it dissolve in muriatic acid without effervescence, the fact shows the absence of carbonic acid, and that the lime has been well calcined. If any silica be present, it will remain undissolved. If the solution give no pre- cipitate with ammonia, the absence of iron and alumina is shown. Lime is but sparingly soluble in water, requiring at 60° about seven hundred times its weight of that liquid for complete solution. Contrary to the general law, it is less soluble in hot than in cold water. The solution is called lime- water. (See Liquor Calcis.) When lime in excess is mixed with water, so as to form a thick liquid, the mixture is called milk of lime. Lime is the protoxide of calcium, and consists of one eq. of calcium 20, and one of oxygen 8 = 28. (See Calcium.) It is distinguished from the other alka- line earths by forming a very deliquescent salt (chloride of calcium) by reac- tion with muriatic acid, and a sparingly soluble one with sulphuric acid. All acids, acidulous, ammoniacal, and metallic salts, borates, alkaline carbonates, and astringent vegetable infusions are incompatible with it. Medical Properties. Lime acts externally as an escharotic, and was formerly applied to ill-conditioned ulcers. The lime ointment of Spender is made by in- corporating four parts of washed slaked lime with one part of fresh mrd and three parts of olive oil, previously warmed together. Mixed with potassa, lime forms an officinal caustic. (See Potassa cum Calce.) As an internal remedy, it is always administered in solution. (See Liquor Calcis.) PART I. Calx.—Calx Chlorinata. Pharm. Uses. In preparing HCther Fortior, U. S.; Ammoniae Yalerianas, V.S.; Aqua Ammoniae, U. S.; Liquor Potassae, U. S.; Liquor Sodae, U. S., Quiniae Sulphas, U. S.; Santoninum, U. S.; Spiritus Ammoniae; Strychnia U. S.; Sulphur Praeeipitatum, U. S. Off. Prep. Calcis Hydras, Br.; Liquor Calcis, U. S.; Potassa cum Calce, U. S. B. CALX CHLORINATA. U.S. Chlorinated Lime. A compound resulting from the action of chlorine on hydrate of lime, and containing at least twenty-five per cent, of Chlorine. U. S. Off. Syn. CALX CHLORATA. Chlorinated Lime. Hypochlorite of lime, Ca0,C10, with chloride of calcium, and a variable amount of hydrate of lime. Br. Chloride of lime, Hypochlorite of lime, Oxymuriate of Lime, Bleaching powder; Calcis chloridum, Calcis hypochloris, Lat.; Chlorure do chaux, Ft.; Chlorkalk, Germ.; Cloruro di calce, Ilal. This compound was originally prepared and brought into notice as a bleach- ing agent, in 1798, by Tennant of Glasgow. Subsequently it was found to have valuable properties as a medicine and disinfectant; and, accordingly, it has been introduced into the United States and British Pharmacopoeias. The following is an outline of the process for preparing chlorinated lime on the large scale. An oblong square chamber is constructed, generally of silice- ous sandstone, the joints being secured by a cement of pitch, rosin, and dry gyp- sum. At one end it is furnished with an air-tight door, and on each side with a glass window, to enable the operator to inspect the process during its pro- gress. The slaked or hydrated lime is sifted, aud placed on wooden trays eight or ten feet long, two broad, and one inch deep. These are piled within the cham- ber to a height of five or six feet on cross-bars, by which they are kept about an inch asunder, in order to favour the circulation of the gas over the lime. The chlorine is generated in a leadeu vessel nearly spherical, the lower portion of which is surrounded with an iron case, leaving an interstice two inches wide, intended to receive the steam for the purpose of producing the requisite heat. In the leaden vessel are five apertures. The first is in the centre of the top, and receives a tube which descends nearly to the bottom, and through which a ver- tical stirrer passes, intended to mix the materials, and furnished, at the lower end, with horizontal cross-bars of iron, or of wood sheathed with lead. The second is for the introduction of the common salt and manganese. The third admits a syphon-shaped funnel, through which the sulphuric acid is introduced. The fourth is connected with a pipe to lead off the chlorine. The fifth, which is near the bottom, receives a discharge pipe, passing through the iron case, and intended for drawing off the residuum of the operation. The pipe leading off the chlorine terminates, under water, in a leaden chest or cylinder, where the gas is washed from muriatic acid. From this intermediate vessel the chlorine finally passes, by means of a pretty large leaden pipe, through the ceiling of the chamber containing the lime. The process of impregnation generally lasts four days, this time being necessary to form a good bleaching powder. If it be hast- ened, heat will be generated, which will favour the production of chloride of calcium, with a proportional diminution of chloride of lime. The proportions of the materials generally adopted are 10 cwt. of common salt, mixed with from 10 to 14 cwt. of deutoxide of manganese: to which are added, in successive portions, from 12 to 14 cwt. of strong sulphuric acid, di- luted before being used until its sp. gr. is about L65, which will be accomplished by adding about one-third of its weight of water. In manufactories in which sulphuric acid is also made, the acid intended for this process is brought to the sp.gr. 165 only, whereby the expense of further concentration is saved. Calx Chlorinata. PART I. Pi opurties. Chlorinated lime is a dry, or but slightly moist, grayish-white, pulve/ulent substance, possessing an acrid, hot, bitter, astringent taste, and an odour resembling that of chlorine. It possesses powerful bleaching properties. When perfectly saturated with chlorine, it dissolves almost entirely in water; but, as ordinarily prepared, a large proportion is insoluble, consisting of hydrate of lime. When exposed to heat, it gives off oxygen, and some chlorine, and is converted into chloride of calcium. It is incompatible with the mineral acids, carbonic acid, and the alkaline carbonates. The acids evolve chlorine copiously, and the alkaline carbonates cause a precipitate of carbonate of lime. (See Liquor Sodse Clilorinatse.)* Chlorinated lime is an oxidizing agent, the oxygen being derived from decom- posed water, the hydrogen of which unites with the chlorine to form muriatic acid. It has a powerful_action on organic matter, converting sugar, starch, cotton, linen, and similaFsubstances into formic acid, which unites with the lime. ( W. Bastick.) It also acts energetically on the volatile oils, including oil of turpentine, pro- ducing chloroform. (J. Chautart, Journ. de Pliarm., Mars, 1855.) Composition. According to Dr. Ure, bleaching powder consists of hydrate of lime and chlorine, united in variable proportions, not correspondent to equiva- lent quantities. According to Brande, Grouvelle, and Phillips, the compound obtained when chlorine ceases to be absorbed consists of one eg. of chlorine and two of hydrate of lime, resolvable, by water, into one eq. of hydrated chlo- ride of lime which dissolves, and one of hydrate of lime which is left. Dr. Thom- son, however, asserts that the compound has been so much improved in quality, that good samples consist of single equivalents of lime and chlorine, and are almost entirely soluble in water. Its ultimate constituents, exclusive of the ele- ments of water, may, therefore, be considered to be one eq. of calcium, one of oxygen, and one of chlorine. Three views may be taken “of tlie manner in which these elements are united to form the bleaching powder. The first makes it a chloride of lime, CaO,Cl; the second, oxychloride of calcium, Ca | _ and the third, hypochlorite of lime with chloride of calcium, Ca0,C10-4-CaCl, formed by doubling the equivalents of the elements present. The simplest view of the nature of bleaching powder is that which supposes it to be a compound of chlorine and lime. The view which makes it a hypo- chlorite with chloride of calcium is that of Balard, and is supported by the fact that the compound smells of hypochlorous acid. But, if it contain chloride of calcium, it ought, to deliquesce ; unless it can be shown that the metallic chlo- ride is in such a state of combination as to prevent this result. The second view, that it is an oxychloride, which assimilates its nature to that of the deutoxide * ChlorinatfiiLliBJfl is constantly becoming weaker on exposure, giving off chlorine or hypoclilorous acid, probably through the influence of the atmospheric carbonic acid, which sets them free by combining with the lime. But it would seem that, even when closely confined, it sometimes at least gives off gaseous matter, as we have an account of a well- stopped bottle containing it having been broken by a violent explosion, without any pecu- liar exposure to heat. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1861, p. 72.) M. Barreswil has found that the subjection of chlorinated lime to strong pressure greatly diminishes the tendency to decomposition. It is rendered in this way as hard as a stone, and may be kept long without undergoing change (Chcm. News, No. 58, p. 38.) Under the following conditions, it is stated by C. Schrader that good chlorinated lime may be prepared which will long retain its strength. 1. The lime used must be free from iron and alumina; but the hydrate may contain from 6 to 12 percent, of moisture with- out injury. 2. The chlorine must be brought slowly in contact with the hydrate. 3. When the hydrate of lime is oversaturated with chlorine, decomposition speedily ensues. Hence the hydrate and the muriatic acid employed must be in due proportion, to be determined by practice. 4. To ensure complete saturation, there should be free chlorine in the appa- ratus at the close of the process. By attending to these precautions, it is said that a pro- duct may be obtained, with from 33 to 35 per cent, of chlorine, and losing its strength only at the rate of 3 or 4 per cent, a year. (Ibid., Aug. 15, 1863, p. 78.)—Note to the twelfth PART I. Calx Chlorinata. 187 of calcium, is held by Millon. According to this chemist, the quantity of chlo- rine, taken up by a metallic protoxide, is regulated by the nature of its perox- ide. The peroxide of calcium is a deutoxide (Ca02); and Millon contends that, in forming bleaching powder, the lime takes up but one eq. of chlorine, corre- sponding to the second eq. of oxygen in the deutoxide, thus generating the compound Ca Again, the peroxide of potassium is represented by KOa, and Millon states that the bleaching compound which potassa (IvO) forms with chlorine is K If further observation should show that the number of equivalents of chlorine, necessary to convert a protoxide into a bleaching com- pound, is always equal to the number of equivalents of oxygen required to convert it into a peroxide, the fact will go far to prove the correctness of Millon’s views. On the supposition that the bleaching powder is a hypochlorite of lime with chloride of calcium, the mode of its formation is thus explained. Two eqs. of chlorine, by uniting separately with the elements of one eq. of lime, form one eq. of chloride of calcium, and one of hypochlorous acid; the latter of which combines with an additional eq. of lime, to form hypochlorite of lime. M. Fresenius, having submitted chlorinated lime to the action of successive portions of water, noticed that the first portions dissolved out nearly all the free chloride of calcium, with very little hypochlorite of lime, while in the subsequent operations the two salts were dissolved in regular proportion. From this fact he inferred that either the chloride of calcium and hypochlorite of lime were com- bined, or that water decomposed the chlorinated lime into them. His views as to the composition of the bleaching powder, deduced from this observation and from various experiments, are that it consists of hypochlorite of lime, combined with chloride of calcium, CaO.ClO + CaCl, of free chloride of calcium CaCl, of hydrated lime CaO,IIO, and of combined water. (Chem. Gaz., Aug. 30,1862.) Impurities and Tests. Chlorinated lime may contain a great excess of lime, from imperfect impregnation with the gas. This defect will be shown by the large proportion insoluble in water. If it contain much chloride of calcium, it will be quite moist, which is always a sign of inferior quality. When long and insecurely kept, it deteriorates from the gradual formation of chloride of calcium and carbonate of lime. Several methods have been proposed for determining its bleaching power, which depends solely on the proportion of loosely combined chlorine. Walter proposed to add a solution of the bleaching powder to a stand- ard solution of sulphate of indigo, in order to ascertain its decolorizing power; but the objection to this test is that the indigo of commerce is very variable in its amount of colouring matter. Dr. Ure has proposed muriatic acid to disen- gage the chlorine over mercury; but this test is liable to the fallacy that it will disengage carbonic acid as well as chlorine; and it has been shown, by some un- published experiments of Prof. Procter of this city, that the amount of disengaged gaseous matter is not in proportion to the decolorizing power. Dalton recom- mended, as a test, to add a solution of the bleaching powder to one of the sul- phate of protoxide of iron, slightly acidulated with muriatic or sulphuric acid, until the odour of chlorine is perceived. Chlorine is not disengaged until the iron is sesquioxidized, and the stronger the bleaching powder, the sooner will this be accomplished. A more delicate way of ascertaining when all the iron is sesquioxidized, is to test a drop of the liquid with one of a solution of ferridcy- anide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa). So long as any protoxide of iron remains in the liquid, this salt will occasion a blue precipitate (Turnbull’s Prus- sian blue), but not afterwards. This test for chlorinated lime was adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, and is applied as follows. “When 40 grains of it, triturated with a fluidounce of distilled water, are well shaken with a solu- tion of 78 grains of crystallized sulphate of protoxide of iron, and 10 drops of 188 Calx Ohlorinata. sulphuric acid, iu two fluidounces of distilled water, a liquid is formed which does not yield a blue precipitate with ferridcyanide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa).” The chlorinated lime of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is directed to con- tain at least 25 per cent, of chlorine. If it be to this extent chlorinated, 40 grains will contain enough chlorine to cause the sesquioxidation of all the protoxide of iron in 18 grains of crystallized sulphate of iron; but, if impregnated with chlo- rine to a less extent, some of the protoxide will remain unchanged, and, conse- quently, a blue precipitate will be formed with the ferridcyanide. According to Wittstein and Claude, however, the test of sulphate of iron is not reliable. The following is the test given in the British Pharmacopoeia. “ Ten grains mixed with thirty grains of iodide of potassium, and dissolved in four fluidounces of water, produce, when acidulated with two fluidrachms of hydrochloric acid, a red- dish solution, which requires for the discharge of its colour at least 85 measures of the volumetric solution of hyposulphite of soda.11 In this process iodine is separated by the chlorine in equivalent quantity, and imparts colour to the liquid, which is removed by the hyposulphite of soda, by forming colourless compounds with the iodine; and the quantity required for this purpose measures the quan- tity of iodine, and consequently that of chlorine present in the chlorinated solu- tion. (See Sulphite of Soda.) Medical Properties and Uses. Chlorinated lime, is a de- siccant and disinfectant, and has been used with advantage, in solution, as an application to ill-conditioned ulcers, burns, chilblains, and cutaneous eruptions, especially itch; as a gargle in putrid sorethroat; and as for the mouth to disinfect the breath, and for ulcerated gums. it is stimulant and astringent. It has been employed by Dr. Reid in the epidemic typhoid fever of Ireland ; by the same practitioner in dysentery, both by the mouth and injection, with the effect of correcting the fetor, and improving the appearance of the stools; by Ciraa, both internally and externally, in scrofula; and by Dr. Yarlez, of Brussels, in ophthalmia. Dr. Pereira has used a weak solution very success- fully in the purulent ophthalmia of infants. In the febrile cases, Dr. Reid found it to render the tongue cleaner and moister, to check diarrhoea, and induce sleep. The dose internally is from three to six grains, dissolved in one or two fluid- ounces of water, filtered, and sweetened with syrup. It should never be given in pills. As it occurs of variable quality, and must be used in solution more or less dilute, according to the particular purpose to which it is to be applied, it is im- possible to give any very precise directions for its strength as an external remedy. From one to four drachms of the powder added to a pint of water, and the solu- tion filtered, will form a liquid within the limits of strength ordinarily required. For the cure of itch. M. Derheims has recommended a much stronger solution— three ounces of the chloride to a pint of water, the solution being filtered, and applied several times a day as a lotion, or constantly by wet cloths. When ap- plied to ulcers, their surface may be covered with lint dipped in the solution. When used as an ointment, to be rubbed upon scrofulous enlargements of the lymphatic glands, this may be made of a drachm of the chloride to an ounce of lard. Chlorinated lime is less eligible for some purposes than the solution of chlorinated soda. (See Liquor Sodse Ghlorinatee.) In consequence of its powers as a disinfectant, chlorinated lime is a very im- portant compound in its application to medical police. It possesses the property of preventing or arresting animal and vegetable putrefaction, and, perhaps, of destroying pestilential and infectious miasms. It may be used with advantage for preserving bodies from exhaling an unpleasant odour, before interment, in the summer season. In juridical exhumations its use is indispensable; as it effect- ually removes the disgusting and insupportable fetor of the corpse. The mode in which it is applied, in these cases, is to envelope the body with a sheet complexly wet with a solution, made by adding about a pound of the chloride to a bucket- PART L PART I Calx Chlorinata.—Calumba. 189 ful of water. It is employed also for disinfecting dissecting rooms, privies, com- mon sewers, docks, and other places which exhale offensive effluvia. In destroy ing contagion and infection, it appears to be highly useful. Hence hospitals, alms-houses, jails, ships, &c. may be purified by its means. In short, all places deemed infectious from having been the receptacle of disease, may be more or less disinfected by its use, after having undergone the ordinary cleansing. Chlorinated lime acts exclusively by its chlorine, which, being loosely com- bined, is disengaged by the slightest affinities. All acids, even the carbonic, dis- engage it; and, as this acid is a product of animal and vegetable decomposition, noxious effluvia furnish the means, to a certain extent, of their own disinfection.. But the stronger acids disengage the chlorine far more readily, and, among these, sulphuric acid is the most convenient. Accordingly, the powder may be dis- solved in a very dilute solution of this acid ; or a small quantity of the acid may be added to an aqueous solution ready formed, if a more copious evolution of chlorine be desired than that which takes place from the mere action of the car- bonic acid of the atmosphere. Chlorinated lime may be advantageously applied to the purpose offensive water, a property which makes it invaluable on long voyages. When used for this purpose, from one to twojiunces of the chloride may be mixed with about sixty-five gallons of the water. The water must afterwards be exposed for some time to the air, and allowed to settle, before it is fit to drink. Strong insecticide properties have been ascribed to chlorinated lime. Hence it is recommended to sprinkle it on vegetables, flowers, fruit-trees, &c., which are apt to be attacked by worms and insects. Off. Prep. Chloroformum, Br.; Liquor Calcis Chloratse, Br.; Liquor Sodae Chloriuatae, U. S B. CALUMBA. U. S., Br. Golumbo. The root of Cocculus palmatus. U. S. The root, sliced transversely, and dried. Br. Colomba, U. S. 1850; Colombo, Fr.; Columbowurzel, Germ.; Columba, Ital.; Raiz de Columbo, Span.; Kalumbo, Port.; Calumb, Mozambique. The columbo plant was long but imperfectly known. Flowering specimens of a plant gathered by Commerson, about the year 1710, in the garden of M. Poivre in the Isle of France, and sent to Europe with that botanist’s collection, were examined by Lamarck, and described under the name of Menisyermum palmatum. But its original locality was unknown, and it was only conjectured tobe the source of columbo. In the year 1805, M. Fortin, while engaged in purchasing the drug in Mozambique, obtained possession of a living offset of the root, which, being taken to Madras, and planted in the garden of Dr. Anderson, produced a male plant, which was figured and described by I)r. Berry. From the drawing thus made, the plant was referred to the natural family of the Menispermeae; but, as the female flowers were wanting, some difficulty was ex- perienced in fixing its precise botanical position. De Candolle, who probably had the opportunity of examining Commerson’s specimens, gave its generic and specific character; but confessed that he was not acquainted with the structure of the female flower and fruit. The desideratum, however, has been supplied by ample drawings sent to England by Mr. Telfair, of Mauritius, made from plants which were propagated from roots obtained by Captain Owen in 1825, while prosecuting his survey of the eastern coast of Africa. The genus Cocculus, in which the plant is now placed, was separated by De Candolle from Menisper- mum., and includes those species which have six stamens, while the Menisper- naum is limited to those with twelve or more. 190 Calumba. PART 1. Cocculus. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Hexandria,— Nat. Ord. Menispermaceae. Gen. Gh. Sepals and Petals ternate, usually in 2, rarely in 3 rows. Stamens six, distinct, opposite the petals. Drupes berried, 1-6, generally oblique, reni- form, somewhat compressed, one-seeded. Cotyledons distant. De Cand. Cocculus palmatus. De Cand. Syst. Veg. i. 523; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., vol. v. p. 21.* This is a climbing plant, with a perennial root, consisting of several fasciculated, fusiform, somewhat curved, and descending tubers, as thick as an infant’s arm. The stems, of which one or two proceed from the same root, are twining, simple in the male plant, branched in the female, round, hairy, and about as thick as the little finger. The leaves, which stand on rounded, glandular-hairy footstalks, are alternate, distant, cordate, with three, five, or seven entire, acuminate, wavy, somewhat hairy lobes, and as many nerves, each running into one of the lobes. The flowers are small and inconspicuous, and arranged in solitary axillary racemes, w’hich, in the male plant, are compound, in the female, simple, and in both, shorter than the leaves. This species of Cocculus is a native of Mozambique, on the south-eastern coast of Africa, where it grows wild in great abundance in the thick forests extending from the sea many miles into the interior. It is not cultivated. The root is dug up in March, when dry weather prevails. Prom the base of the root numerous fusiform olfsets proceed, less fibrous and woody than the parent stock. These offsets are separated and cut into transverse slices, which are dried in the shade. The old root is rejected. Columbo is a staple export of the Portuguese from their dominions in the south-east of Africa. It is taken to India, and thence distributed. It was for- merly supposed to be a product of Ceylon, and to have derived its name from Colombo, a city of that island, from wrhich it was thought to be exported. It is possible that, when the Portuguese were in possession of Ceylon, Colombo may have been the entrepot for the drug brought from Africa, and thus have given origin to its name. Some, however, consider a more probable derivation to be from the word calumb, which is said to be the Mozambique name for the root. Dr. Christisou has been misinformed in relation to the cultivation of the true columbo plant in this country. (Dispensatory, Am. ed., p. 304.) Properties. The root, as it reaches us, is in fiat circular or oval pieces, from the eighth of an inch to near an inch in thickness, and from one to two inches in diameter. Along with these are sometimes a few cylindrical pieces an inch or two in length. The cortical portion is thick, of a bright-yellow, slightly greenish colour internally, but covered with a brownish, wrinkled epidermis. The interior or medullary portion, which is readily distinguishable from the cortical, is light, spongy, yellowish, usually more or less shrunk, so that the pieces are thinnest in the centre ; and is frequently marked with concentric circles and radiating lines. Those pieces are to be preferred which have the brightest colour, are most compact and uniform, and least worm-eaten. The odour of columbo is slightly aromatic. The taste is very bitter, that of the cortical much more so than that of the central portion, which is somewhat mucilaginous. The root is easily pulverized. The pow'der has a greenish tinge, which becomes browner with age, and deepens when it is moistened. As it attracts moisture from the air, and is apt to undergo decomposition, it should be prepared in small quantities at a time. * After the above was sent to press, the attention of the author was called to a lectura by Prof. Bentley, of London, published in the Pharmaceutical Journal (March, 1804), in which it is stated that the columbo plant is not the Cocculus palmatus of De Candolle, but has very recently been ascertained to be the Cocculus palmatus of Wallich, the Mcni- spermum Calumba of Roxburgh, the Jateorhiza Calumba of Miers; and reference is made to a paper by Miers on the Menispermacefe in the Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., Feb. 1864, which the author has not yet had an opportunity to consult.—Note to the twelfth edition. Calumba. 191 PART I. M. Planche analyzed columbo in 1811, and found it to contain an azotized substance, probably albumen, in large quantity, a bitter yellow substance not. precipitated by metallic salts, and one-third of its weight of starch. He ob- tained also a small proportion of volatile oil, salts of lime and potassa, oxide of iron, and silica. Wittstock, of Berlin, afterwards isolated a peculiar crystallizable principle, which he called colombin. This crystallizes in beautiful transparent quadrilateral prisms, is without smell, and is extremely bitter. It is but very slightly soluble in water, alcohol, or ether, at ordinary temperatures, and yet imparts to these fluids a strongly bitter taste. It is more soluble in boiling alco- hol, which deposits it upon cooling. The best solvent is dilute acetic acid. It is taken up by alkaline solutions, from which it is precipitated by acids. It has neither acid nor alkaline properties, and its alcoholic and acetic solutions are not affected by the metallic salts, or the infusion of galls. It is obtained by ex- hausting columbo by means of alcohol of the sp.gr. 0-835, distilling off three- quarters of the alcohol, allowing the residue to stand for some days till crystals are deposited, and lastly treating these crystals with alcohol and animal charcoal. The mother-waters still contain a considerable quantity of colombin, which may be separated by evaporating with coarsely powdered glass to dryness, exhaust- ing the residue with ether, distilling off the ether, treating the residue with boiling acetic acid, and evaporating the solution so that crystals may form. From the researches of Dr. Bodeker it appears that another bitter principle exists in columbo, which corresponds in composition and chemical relations with berberina, the active principle of Berberis vulgaris, and is assumed to be iden- tical with that substance. It was obtained by exhausting columbo with alcohol of 0'889, distilling off the alcohol, allbwing the residual liquor to stand for three days so as to deposit the colombin, evaporating the supernatant liquid together with the aqueous washings of the colombin to dryness, exhausting the residue with boiling alcohol of 0-863, treating the solution thus obtained as the former one, submitting the residue to the action of boiling water, filtering and adding muriatic acid, collecting the precipitate thus formed on a filter, drying it with bibulous paper, and finally, in order to separate adhering acid, dissolving it in alcohol, and precipitating with ether. The result was an imperfectly crystalline, bright-yellow powder, of a disagreeable, bitter taste, supposed to be muriate of berberina. It is stated that berberina is present in columbo in much larger pro- portion than colombin, and, being freely soluble in hot water and alcohol, while colombin is but slightly so, is probably more largely extracted in the ordinary liquid preparations of the root. (dm. Journ. of Pharm., xx. 322.) It is thought that berberina exists in columbo combined with a peculiar acid denominated columbic acid; and that, while the colombin occurs in the cells of the root in a crystalTihffsIate, the columbate of berberina is deposited in the thickening layers of the cell-membranes. (Chem. Gaz., vii. 150.) It is probable that the bitter yellow principle of Planche either was berberina or contained it. There can be little doubt that both colombin and berberina contribute to the remedial effects of columbo. The virtues of the root are extracted by boiling water and by alcohol. Precipitates are produced with the infusion and tincture by infusion of galls, and solutions of acetate and subacetate of lead; but the bitterness is not affected. Adulterations. It is said that the root of white bryony, tinged yellow with the tincture of columbo, has sometimes been fraudulently substituted for the genuine root; but the adulteration is too gross to deceive those acquainted with the characters of either of these drugs. American columbo, which is the root of Frasera Walteri, is said to have been sold in some parts of Europe for the genuine. Independently of the sensible differences between the two roots (see Frasera), M. Stolze of Halle states that, while the tincture of columbo remains unaffected by the sulphate or sesquichloride of iron, and gives a dirty-gray pre- 192 Uavwtn oa.—o amph ora. part I. cipifate with tincture of galls, the tincture of frasera acquires a dark-green colour with the former reagent, and is not affected by the latter. (Duncan.) Under the name of columbo wood. ov false columbo, the wood of Coscinium fenestrMum, a plant oFTBe family of Menispermaceae, growing in Ceylon, has been imported into England, and offered for sale in the drug market. (Pharm. Journ., x. 321, and xii. 185.) Medical Properties and Uses. Columbo is among the most useful of the mild tonics. Without astringency, with very little stimulating power, and generally acceptable to the stomach, it answers admirably as a remedy in simple dyspepsia, and in the debility of convalescence, especially when the alimentary canal is left enfeebled. Hence, it is often prescribed in the declining stages of remittent fever, dysentery, diarrhcea, cholera morbus, and cholera infantum. The absence of irritating properties renders it also an appropriate tonic in the hectic fever of phthisis, and kindred affections. It has been highly recommended in vomit- ing, unconnected with inflammation of the stomach, as in the sickness of preg- nant women. It is frequently administered in combination with other tonics, aromatics, mild cathartics, and antacids. The remedy which we have found most effectual in the permanent cure of a disposition to the accumulation of flatus in the bowels, is an infusion made with half an ounce of columbo, half an ounce of ginger, a drachm of senna, and a pint of boiling water, and given in the dose of a wineglassful three times a day. Columbo is much used by the natives of Mozambique in dysentery and other diseases. (Berry.) It was first introduced to the notice of the profession in Europe by Francis Redi, in the year 1685. It is most commonly prescribed in the state of infusion. (See Infu- sum Calumbas.) The dose of the powder is from ten to thirty grains, and may be repeated three or four times a day. It is frequently combined with powTdered ginger, subcarbonate of iron, and rhubarb. Off. Prep. Extractum Calumbae, Br.; Infusum Calumbaj; Tinctura Calumbae. W. CAMPHORA. U.S.,Br. Camphor. A peculiar concrete substance derived from Camphora officinarum, and puri- fied by sublimation. U. S. A concrete volatile oil, obtained from the wood by sublimation, and resublimed in bell-shaped masses. Br. Camphre, Fr.; Kampher, Germ.; Canfora, Ital.; Alcanfor, Span. The name of camphor has been applied to various concrete, white, odorous, volatile products, found in different aromatic plants, and resulting probably from chemical change in their volatile oil. But commercial camphor is derived ex- clusively from two plants, the Camphora officinarum of Nees or Laurus Cam- phora of Linnaeus, ar.d the Dryobalanoys Camyhora; the former of which yields our officinal camphor, the latter, a product much valued in the East, but unknown in the commerce of this country and of Europe. A considerable quantity of cam- phor, said to be identical with the officinal, was a few years since obtained upon the Tenasserim coast, in further India, by subliming the tops of an annual plant, abundant in that region, and thought to be a species of Blumia. This pro- duct, however, has not been introduced into general commerce. (Am. Journ. of Pharrn., xvi. 56.) The Rev. Mr. Mason, an American missionary in Burmah, states, in a letter to Mr. Yaux, of Philadelphia, that the Chinese settlers informed him that the same plant abounds in China, and that camphor is made from it there. (Proceed, of. the Acad, of Nat. Sci. of Phil., May 13th, 1851, p. 201.) The following observations apply to the officinal camphor. Camphora. Sex. Syst. Enneaudria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Lauraceae. Oen.Ch. Flowers hermaphrodite, panicled, naked. Calyx six-cleft, papery, with a deciduous limb. Fertile stamens nine, in three rows; the inner with two- PART I. Camphora. 193 stalked, compressed glands at the base; anthers four-celled; the outer turned inwards, the inner outwards. Three sterile stamens shaped like the first, placed in a whorl alternating with the stamens of the second row; three others stalked, with an ovate glandular head. Fruit placed on the obconical base of the calyx Leaves triple-nerved, glandular in the axils of the principal veins. Leaf buds scaly. (Lindley, Flora Medica, 332.) Among the species composing the genus Laurus of Linn., such striking dif- ferences have been observed in the structure of the flower and fruit, that bota- nists have been induced to arrange them in new genera. The camphor, cinna- mon, and sassafras trees have been separated from the proper laurels by Nees, and made the types of distinct genera, which have been adopted by most recent writers, and may be considered as well established. Camphora officinarum. Nees, Laurin. 88; Carson, lllust. of Med. Lot. ii. 29, pi. lxxiv. —Laurus Camphora. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 478; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 681, t. 236. The camphor-tree is an evergreen of considerable size, having the aspect of the linden, with a trunk straight below, but divided above into many branches, which are covered with a smooth, greenish bark. Its leaves, which stand alternately upon long footstalks, are ovatO-lanceolate, entire, smooth and shining, ribbed, of a bright yellowish-green colour on their upper surface, paler on the under, and two or three inches in length. The flowers are small, white, pediceled, and collected in clusters, which are supported by long axillary pedun- cles. The fruit is a red berry resembling that of the cinnamon. The tree is a native of China, Japan, and other parts of eastern Asia. It has been introduced into the botanical gardens of Europe, and is occasionally met with in our own conservatories.* The leaves have when bruised the odour of camphor, which is diffused through all parts of the plant, and is obtained from the root, trunk, and branches by sublimation. The process is not precisely the same in all places. The following is said to be the one pursued in Japan. The parts mentioned, particularly the roots and smaller branches, are cut into chips, which are placed, with a little water, in large iron vessels, surmounted by earthen capitals, furnished with a lining of rice-straw. A moderate heat is then applied, and the camphor, vola- tilized by the steam, rises into the capital, where it is condensed upon the straw. In China, the comminuted plant is said to be first boiled with water until the camphor adheres to the stick used in stirring, when the strained liquor is allowed to cool; and the camphor which concretes, being alternated with layers of earth, is submitted to sublimation. In the Island of Formosa, where the camphor-tree abounds, the chips are heated in an iron pot, surmounted by another, and the product of the sublimation is introduced into large vats, with holes in the bot- tom, through which an oil escapes called camphor oil, much used by the Chinese for medical purposes, and samples of sent to Europe. The cam- phor thus drained, is packed in bags and exported. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1863, p. 280.) Commercial History. Camphor, in the crude state, is brought to this coun- try chiefly from Canton. It comes also from Batavia, Singapore, Calcutta, and frequently from London. All of it is probably derived originally from China and Japan. Two commercial varieties are found in the market. The cheapest and most abundant is the Chinese camphor, most of which is produced in the Island of Formosa, and thence taken to Canton. It comes in chests lined with * The camphor-tree sometimes attains a great age and an enormous size. A tree seen by Kampfer, in Japan, in 1691, with a trunk 36 feet in circumference, was in the year 1826 described by Siebold as having a circumference of 50 feet. (Japan as it was and is, by R. Hildreth. Boston, 1855, p. 337.) The author has seen a large tree growing in the open air at Naples, and has no doubt that it might be readily, and perhaps profitably cultivated in the southern parts of our own country, and especially in California.—Note to the eleventh vnd twelfth editions. 194 Camphora. PART I. lead, each containing about 130 pounds. It is in small grains or granular masses, of a dirty-white colour, and frequently mixed with impurities. It has occurred in commerce adulterated with muriate of ammonia. The other variety is vari- ously called Japan, Dutch, or tub camphor, the first name being derived from the place of its origin, the second from the people through whom it is intro- duced into commerce, and the third from the recipient in which it is often con- tained. It has usually come from Batavia, to which port it was taken from Japan. Like the former variety, it is in grains or granular masses; but the grains are larger and of a pinkish colour, and there are fewer impurities, so that it yields a larger product when refined. Crude camphor, as brought from the East, is never found in the shop of the apothecary. It must be refined before it can be used for medicinal purposes. The process for refining camphor was first practised in Europe by the Venetians, who probably derived it from the Chinese. It was afterwards transferred to the Dutch, who long enjoyed a monopoly of this business; and it is only within a few years that the process has been generally known. It is now practised largely in this country, and the camphor refined in our domestic establishments is equal to any that was formerly imported. Crude camphor is mixed with about one-fiftieth of quicklime, and exposed, in an iron vessel placed in a sand-bath, to a gradually increasing heat, by which it is melted, and ultimately converted into vapour, which condenses in a suitable recipient.* Refined in this manner, it is usually in the form of large circular cakes, one or two inches thick, slightly convex on one side and concave on the other, and perforated in the centre. Properties. Camphor has a peculiar, strong, penetrating, fragrant odour; and a bitter, pungent taste, with a slight sense of coolness. It is beautifully white and pellucid, somewhat unctuous to the touch, brittle, and yet possessed of a tenacity which renders its reduction to a fine powder very difficult, unless its co- hesion be overcome by the addition of a minute proportion of alcohol, or other volatile liquid for which it has an affinity. It may be obtained in powder also by precipitating the tincture with water, or by grating and afterwards sifting it. The fracture of camphor is shining, and its texture crystalline. Its sp. gr. varies from 0‘9857 to 0 996. When thrown in small fragments upon water, it assumes singular circulatory movements, which cease upon the addition of a drop of oil; and this property has been applied to the detection of grease in liquids, a very small proportion of which is sufficient to prevent the movements. Its volatility is so great that, even at ordinary temperatures, it is wholly dissipated if left ex- posed to the air. When it is confined in bottles, the vapour condenses upon the inner surface, and, in large bottles partially filled, sometimes forms, after long standing, large and beautiful crystals. It melts at 288° F., boils at 400° (Tur- ner), and, in close vessels, sublimes unchanged. When allowed to concrete slowly from the state of vapour, it assumes the form of hexagonal plates. It is not altered by air and light. It readily takes fire, burning with a brilliant flame, with much smoke, and without residue. Water triturated with camphor dissolves, ac- * We are informed that the process is conducted in the following manner in the labora- tories of Philadelphia. The vessels in which the camphor is put are of cast-iron, circular, from 12 to 15 inches or more in diameter, and 4 inches deep, with perpendicular sides, and a ledge at top on which the cover rests. This consists of sheet-iron, with a hole through the centre about an inch in diameter, over which a small hollow cone of sheet-iron is placed loosely. The crude camjrhor, mixed with the lime, the object of which is said to be to combine with the moisture present, which interferes with the due solidification of the camphor vapour, is placed in the iron vessels described, of which from 20 to 50 are ar- ranged in a long sand-bath. Heat is then applied until the camphor melts, after which it is kept as nearly uniform as possible, so that the vaporization may take place regularly, without violent ebullition. The vapour condenses on the lower surface of the lid; and care is taken, by the occasional removal of the iron cone, and clearing of the opening by means of a knife, to allow the escape of any accidental excess of thevspour.—Note to the ninth edition PART I. Camphora. 195 cording to Berzelius, not more than a thousandth part; which, however, is suf- ficient to impart a decided odour and taste to the solvent. By the intervention: of sugar or magnesia, a much larger proportion is dissolved. (See Aqua, Cam.' phoree.) Carbonic acid increases the solvent power of water, as also does the spirit of nitrous ether. Ordinary alcohol will take up 75 per cent, of its weight of camphor, which is precipitated upon the addition of water. Berzelius states that 100 parts of alcohol, of the sp. gr. 0 806, dissolve 120 parts at 50° F. It is soluble without change in ether, the volatile and fixed oils, strong acetic acid, and diluted mineral acids, and is extremely soluble in chloroform. By strong sulphuric and nitric acids it is decomposed ; the former carbonizing and convert- ing it into artificial tannin, the latter, with the aid of repeated distillation, into camyhoric acid. Alkalies produce very little effect upon it. Resins unite with it, forming a soft tenacious mass, in which the odour of the camphor is some- times almost extinguished, and frequently diminished; and a similar softening effect results when it is triturated with the concrete oils.* Exposed to a strong heat, iu close vessels, camphor is resolved into a volatile oil and charcoal. It is closely analogous iu character to the essential oils; and is thought to consist of a radical called camphene united with oxygen. Camphene, which is represented by pure oil of turpentine, is composed of twenty eqs. of carbon and sixteen of hydrogen With two eqs. of oxygen it forms camphor, with eight eqs. of the same element, hydrated camphoric acid, and with one eq. of hydrochloric acid, artificial camphor, "f * As this property of camphor may have a hearing, injuriously or otherwise, on phar- maceutical processes, it is desirable that the operator, as well as prescriber, should be aware of the degree of effect produced by different resinous substances which may be mixed with it. M. Planche has found that mixtures, formed by triturating powdered camphor with powdered dragon's blood, guaiac, assafetida, and galbanum, assume, and preserve indefi- nitely the pilular consistence; with benzoin, tolu, ammoniac, and mastic, though at first of a pilular consistence, afterwards become soft by exposure to the air; with sagapenum and anime, assume a permanently semi-liquid form; with olibanum, opopanaz, gamboge, euphor- bium, bdellium, myrrh, and amber, remain pulverulent though somewhat grumous; and with tacamahac, resin of jalap, sandarac, and resinoid matter of cinchona, preserve the form of pow- der indefinitely. The same experimenter observed that camphor loses its odour entirely, when mixed with assafetida, galbanum, sagapenum, anime, and tolu; retains a feeble odour with dragon's blood, olibanum, mastic, benzoin, opopanaz, tacamahac, guaiac, and ammoniac; while, with the other resinous substances above mentioned, it either has its odour in- creased, or retains it without material change. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiv. 226.) In mixing camphor with other substances in the form of powder, it is best first to pul- verize the camphor with the aid of a little alcohol, then to pulverize the other substances together, and lastly to mix the two powders gently; much rubbing with the pestle having the effect of consolidating the granules of the camphor. (Procter in Mohr and Redwood's Pharmacy, Am. ed., p. 492.) f Sumatra Camphor. Borneo Camphor. Dryobalanops Camphor. Camphol. It has long been known that a variety of camphor is produced, in the Islaffdb of Sumatra and Borneo, by a forest tree, which remained until a recent period undetermined. It was at length, how- ever, described by Colebrooke, and is now recognised in systematic works as Dryobalanops Camphora. or JParomatica. It is a very large tree, often exceeding one hundred feet in height, with a trunk six or seven feet in diameter, and ranking among the tallest and largest trees of India.* It is found in Sumatra and Borneo, and is abundant on the N.W. coast of the former island. The camphor exists in concrete masses, which occupy longi- fudinal cavities or fissures in the heart of the tree, from a foot to a foot and a half long, at certain distances apart. The younger trees are generally less productive than the old. The only method of ascertaining whether a tree contains camphor is by incision. A party proceeds through the forest, wounding the trees, till they find one which will answer their Purpose; and hundreds may be examined before this object is attained. When discovered, * For a particular description of this tree, see a paper by Dr. W. H. De Vriese, of Leyden, in the American Journal of Pharm. (xxiv. 329), taken from Hooker’s Journal of Botany. In this paper it is stated, on the au- thority of Dr Junghuhn, who witnessed the process of collection, that the camphor is deposited in very small quantities in mir.ute fissures between the fibres, from which it is scraped off by small splinters of wood, or by the nail; and the thickest and oldest trees seldom yield more than two ounces. This account as to the productiveness of the tree differs greatly from that of Colebrooke, as stated is the note above.—.Able to the tenth edition. 196 Camphora. part I. Genuine camphor is said to be sometimes adulterated with the artificial, which may be detected by the action of ammonia upon its alcoholic solution, causing a flocculent precipitate, which does not redissolve, and the quantity of which is pro- portionate to that of the artificial product in any mixture of the two. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiv. 189.) Medical Properties and Uses. Camphor does not seem to have been known to the ancient Greeks and Romans. Europe probably derived it from the Ara- bians, by whom it was employed as a refrigerant. Much difference of opinion has prevailed as to its mode of action ;■ some maintaining its immediate sedative influence, others considering it as a direct and decided stimulant. Its operation appears to be primarily and chiefly directed to the cerebral and nervous sys- tems; and the circulation, though usually affected to a greater or less extent, is probably involved, for the most part, through the brain. It acts, also, to a cer- tain extent, as a direct irritant of the mucous membranes with which it is brought into contact, and may thus in some measure secondarily excite the pulse. The effects of the medicine vary with the quantity administered. In moderate doses it produces, in health, mental exhilaration, increased heat of skin, and oc- casional diaphoresis. The pulse is usually increased in fulness, but little, if at all, in force or frequency. According to the experiments of certain Italian physicians, it has a tendency to the urinary and genital organs, producing a burning sensation along the urethra, and exciting voluptuous dreams (N. Am. Med. and Surg. Journ., ix. 442); and these experiments have been confirmed by the observations of Dr. Reynolds in a case of poisoning by camphor (Brit. Am. Journ. of Med., June, 184G). Cullen, however, states that he has employed the tree is felled and cut into logs, which are then split, and the camphor removed by means of sharp-pointed instruments. It is stated that the masses are sometimes as thick as a man’s arm; and that the product of a middling-sized tree is nearly eleven pounds; of a large one, double that quantity. The trees which have been wounded, and left stand- ing, often produce camphor seven or eight years afterwards. Mrs. Ida Pfeiffer states, in her Second Journey round the World (Am. ed., p. 183), that the camphor is also found in a concrete state under the bark, and is swept down with long brooms. The Dryobalanops yields also a fragrant straw-coloured liquid, called in the East Indies oil of camphor, and highly valued as an external application in rheumatism and other painful affections. It is said to be found in trees too young to produce camphor, and is supposed to constitute the first stage in the development of this substance; as it occupies the cavities in the trunk, which are afterwards filled with the camphor. It has been stated to hold a large portion of this principle in solution, and to yield an inferior variety by artificial concre- tion; but this was not true of a specimen in the possession of Dr. Christison. A specimen examined by Professor Procter deposited a small quantity of the camphor at a tempera- ture near the zero of Fahrenheit. By the action of nitric acid, it may be combined with oxygen, and converted into camphor of the same character as that deposited by refrigera- tion. The whole tree is pervaded more or less by the camphor or the oil. The wood re- tains a fragrant Smell, and, being on this account less liable to the attacks of insects, is highly esteemed for carpenters’ work. The camphor wood chests, occasionally brought to this country from the East Indies, are probably made out of the wood of the Dryobalanops. It has been supposed that this variety of camphor is occasionally brought into the mar- kets of Europe and America. But this is a mistake; as the whole produce of the islands is engrossed by the Chinese, by whom it is so highly valued that it commands at Canton, according to Mr. Crawford, seventy-eight times, according to Mr. Reeves, one hundred times the price of ordinary camphor. A specimen in our possession, which was sent to this country from Canton as a curiosity, and kindly presented to us by Dr. Joseph Carson, is in tabular plates of the size of a finger nail or smaller, of a foliaceous crystalline tex- ture, white, somewhat translucent, of an odour analogous to that of common campdior, and yet decidedly distinct, and less agreeable. It has also a camp iorous taste. It is more compact and brittle than ordinary camphor; and, though the piejes will often float for a time when thrown on water, yet they sink when thoroughly moistened, and deprived of adhering air. According to Dr. Christison, its sp. gr. is 1009. It is easily pulverized with- out the addition of alcohol. It is, moreover, much less disposed to rise in vapour and to condense on the inside of the bottle containing it. Like ordinary camphor, it is fusible, volatilizable, very slightly soluble in water, and freely soluble in alcohol and in ethir Dr. Gregory considers it as the bihydrate of camphene (C^H^Oj). PART I. CampJtora. 197 it fifty times, even in large doses, without having ever observed any effect upon the urinary passages. By many it is believed to allay irritation of the urinary and genital apparatus, and to possess antaphrodisiac properties. In its primary operation, it allays nervous disorder, quiets restlessness, and produces a genera! placidity of feeling, and is thus highly useful in certain forms of disease attended with derangement of the nervous functions. In larger doses, it displays a more decided action on the brain, producing more or less giddiness and mental con- fusion, with a disposition to sleep; and, in morbid states of the system, relieving pain and allaying spasmodic action. In immoderate doses it occasions nausea, vomiting, anxiety, faintness, vertigo, delirium, insensibility, coma, and convul- sions, which may end in death. The pulse, under these circumstances, is at first reduced in frequency and force (Alexander, Experimental Essays, p. 227); but, as the action advances, it sometimes happens that symptoms of strong sangui- neous determination to the head become evident, in the flushed countenance, inflamed and fiery eyes, and highly excited pulse. (Quarin.) In three cases of poisoning by camphor, reported by Schaaf, of Strasburg, the symptoms pro- duced were violent and incessant convulsions, paleness and coolness of the sur- face, vomiting and frequent micturition, and finally stupor or coma. The patients were children, and the youngest, a girl of about eighteen months, died from the effects of the poison, of which she took about ten grains. (Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1850, p. 377.) There can be no doubt that camphor is absorbed; as its odour is observed in the breath and perspiration, and, according to Dr. Reynolds, in the urine also, though the contrary has been asserted. By its moderately stimulating powers, its diaphoretic tendency, and its influ- ence over the nervous system, camphor is admirably adapted to the treatment of diseases of a typhoid character, which combine, with the enfeebled condition of the system, a frequent irritated pulse, a dry skin, and much nervous derange- ment, indicated by restlessness, watchfulness, tremors, subsultus, and low mut- tering delirium. With a view to its anodyne and narcotic influence, it is also used in diseases of an inflammatory character; as in our ordinary remittents, and the phlegmasise, particularly rheumatism, when the increased vascular action is complicated with derangement of the nervous system. In such cases, how- ever, it should not be given until after proper depletion, and even then should be combined with such medicines as may obviate the slight stimulation it pro- duces, and increase its tendency to the skin; as, for instance, tartarized anti- mony, ipecacuanha, or nitre. In a great number of spasmodic and nervous dis- orders, and complaints of irritation, camphor has been extensively employed. The cases of this nature to which experience has proved it to be best adapted, are dysmenorrhoea, puerperal convulsions and other nervous affections of the puerperal state, and certain forms of mania, particularly nymphomania, and that arising from the abuse of spirituous liquors. In some of these cases, advantage may be derived from combining it with opium. Camphor has also been employed internally to allay the strangury produced by cantharides. It is much used locally as an anodyne, dissolved in alcohol, oil, or acetic acid, and frequently combined with laudanum.* In rheumatic and gouty affections, and various internal spasmodic and inflammatory complaints, it often yields re- lief in this way. The ardor urinse of gonorrhoea may be alleviated by injecting an oleaginous solution of camphor into the urethra; and the tenesmus from as- * An ointment of camphor may be made by heating three parts, in powder, by means of a water-bath, with twelve parts of prepared lard, and stirring the solution thoroughly when it begins to thicken on cooling. (Pharm. Journ., July, 1860, p. 41.) M. Parisel recom- mends, as affording a better product, that the powdered camphor and the lard should be mixed, at ordinary temperatures, in a thin well-glazed earthen vessel, and allowed to stand for twelve hours, with occasional agitation. The solution of the camphor is effected without apparent liquefaction, each molecule being dissolved in the surrounding molecules of the ;ard. (Joum. de Pharm., Mai, 1860, p. 362.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 198 Camphor a.—Canella. part I. carides and dysentery, by administering the same solution in the form of enema. Twenty or thirty grains of camphor, added to a poultice, and applied to the perineum, allay the chordee which is a painful attendant upon gonorrhoea. Its vapour has been inhaled into the lungs with benefit in asthma and spasmodic cough; and a lump of it held to the nose is said to relieve coryza. It has been emplQyed for the same purpose, and for nervous headache, in the form of powder snuffed up the nostrils. It enters into the composition of certain tooth-powders; but is asserted, when employed in this way, to injure the enamel of the teeth. Camphor may be given in substance, in the form of bolus or pill, or diffused in water by trituration with various substances. The form of pill is objectiona- ble ; as in.this state the camphor is with difficulty dissolved in the gastric liquor, and, floating on the top, is apt to excite nausea, or pain and uneasiness at the upper orifice of the stomach. Orfila states that, when given in the solid form, it is capable of producing ulceration in the gastric mucous membrane.* The emulsion is almost always preferred. This is made by rubbing up the camphor with loaf sugar, gum arabic, and water; and the suspension will be rendered more complete and permanent by the addition of a little myrrh. Milk is some- times used as a vehicle, but is objectionable, from its liability to become speedily sour. The aqueous solution is often employed where only a slight impression is desired. For this purpose, the Aqua Camphorse of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is preferable to the solution made by simply pouring boiling water upon a lump of camphor, which is sometimes prescribed under the name of cajuphorjea. When chloroform is not inadmissible, an elegant preparation may be made by dissolv- ing camphor in that liquid, in the proportion of two drachms of the former to a fluidrachm of the latter, and then mixing the solution with water by the in- tervention of the yolk of an egg. The medium dose of camphor is from five to ten grains ; but, to meet va- rious indications, it may be diminished to a single grain, or increased to a scru- ple. The injurious effects of an overdose are said to be best counteracted, after clearing out the stomach, by the use of opium. Off. Prep. Aqua Camphorse; Ceratum Plumbi Subacetatis, U. S.; Linimen- tum Aconiti, Br.; Linimentum Belladonnse, Br.; Linimentum Camphorse; Lini- mentum Camphorse Comp., Br.; Linimentum Saponis ; Mistura Chloroformi, U.S.; Spiritus Camphorse; Tinctura Camphorse cum Opio, Br.; Tinct. Opii Camphorata, U.S.; Unguentum Plumbi Subacetatis, Br. W. CANELLA. U.S. The bark of Canella alba, U. S. Canelle blanche, Fr.; Weisser Zimmt, Canell, Germ.; Canella bianca, Ital.; Canela blanca, Span. Canella. Sex. Syst. Dodecandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Meliaceae. De Cand. Canelleae. Lindley. Gen. Ch. Calyx three-lobed. Petals five. Anthers sixteen, adhering to an ur- reolate nectary. Berry one-celled with two or four seeds. Willd. Canella alba. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 851; Woodv. Med Bot. p. 694, t. 231; Car- son, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 24, pi. 16. This is the only species of the genus. It is an erect tree, rising sometimes to the height of fifty feet, branching only at the top, and covered with a whitish bark, by which it is easily distinguished from other trees in the woods where it grows. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, oblong. Canella. * Thwe is some difficulty in making a good pilular mass with powdered camphor. Mr. W. H. Githens states that this difficulty may be obviated by using soap and honey as euts. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 206 )—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Canella.—Canna. 199 obtuse, entire, of a dark-green colour, thick and shining like those of the laurel, and of a similar odour. The flowers are small, of a violet colour, and grow in clusters upon divided footstalks, at the extremities of the branches. The fruit is an oblong berry, containing one, two, or three black shining seeds. Canella alba is a native of Jamaica and other West India islands. The bark of the branches, which is the part employed in medicine, having been removed b} an irou instrument, is deprived of its epidermis, and dried in the shade. It comes to us in pieces partially or completely quilled, occasionally somewhat twisted, of various sizes, from a few inches to two feet in length, from half a line to two or even three lines in thickness, and, in the quill, from half an inch to an inch and a half in diameter. Properties. Canella is of a pale orange-yellow colour externally, yellowish- white on the inner surface, with an aromatic odour somewhat resembling that of cloves, and a warm, bitterish, very pungent taste. It is brittle, breaking with a short fracture, and yielding, when pulverized, a yellowish-white powder. Boil- ing water extracts nearly one-fourth of its weight; but the infusion, though bitter, has comparatively little of the warmth and pungency of the bark. It yields all its virtues to alcohol, forming a bright-yellow tincture, which is ren- dered milky by the addition of water. By distillation with water it affords a large proportion of a yellow or reddish, fragrant, and very acrid volatile oil. It contains, moreover, according to the analysis of MM. Petroz and Robinet, mannite, a peculiar very bitter extractive, resin, gum, starch, albumen, and va- rious saline substances. Meyers and Reiche obtained twelve drachms of the volatile oil from ten pounds of the bark. They found it to consist of two dis- tinct oils, one lighter and the other heavier than water. According to the same chemists, the bark contains 8 per cent, of mannite, and yields 6 per cent, of ashes. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xvi. 15.) Canella has been sometimes con- founded with Winter’s bark, from which, however, it differs both in sensible properties and composition. (See Wintera.) Medical Properties and Uses. Canella is possessed of the ordinary properties of the aromatics, acting as a local stimulant and gentle tonic, and producing upon the stomach a warming cordial effect, which renders it useful as an addi- tion to tonic or purgative medicines, in debilitated states of the digestive or- gans. It is scarcely ever prescribed except in combination. In the West Indies it is employed by the negroes as a condiment, and has some reputation as an antiscorbutic. Off. Prep. Pulvis Aloes et Canellae, U. S.; Yinum Rhei, U. S. W. CANNA. U.S. Canna. The fecula prepared from the rhizoma of an undetermined species of Canna. U. S. Canna. Sex.Syst. Monandria Monogvnia. — Nat. Ord. Marantacese. Gen. Ch. Corolla unequal, scarcely lip-shaped in any segment. Stamens peta- loid, one with half an anther on the edge. Style straight, flat, nearly free. Ovary three-celled, many-seeded, granular. Fruit membranous, three-valved, with a de- ciduous granular surface. Lindley. It is yet somewhat uncertain from what species of Canna the fecula com- monly known by the French name tous les mois, and officinally designated canna, is derived, though it is generally believed to be C. edulis. The tubers ol Canna Achiras (Gillies), growing in Central and South America, are said to be used as food in Peru and Chili (Lindley, Med. and Econom. Bot. p. 50) ; and a root or rhizoma, closely resembling turmeric, and used by the native Africans at Sierra Leone for dyeing yellow, was found by Dr, Win. F. Daniell to be the 200 Canna.—Cannabis Indica.—Cantharis. PART I. product of u species of Canna, believed to be the C. speciosa of Roscoe. (Pharrn. Journ.. Nov 1859, p. 258.) Canna edulis. Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 569, figured in FI. Med. and Econ. of the same author, p. 49. This is a tuberous plant, with erect, smooth, purplish stems, from four to six feet high, and invested with sheathing leaves, which are ovate-oblong, tapering towards each end, smooth, and of a deep glaucous green, with purplish edges. The flowers are few, and in compact racemes, of a red and yellow colour. The plant is a native of the West Indies, and is cultivated in the islands of St. Kitts, Trinidad, and perhaps others. The tubers, which are said to be three times larger than the fist, are first rasped, by means of a machine, into a pulp, from which the starch is extracted in the usual manner, by washing and straining, and, after the washings have been allowed to stand, so as to deposit the fecula, decanting the clear liquid. (Pereira, Mat. Med.) Properties. Canna starch is in the form of a light, beautifully white powder, of a shining appearance, very unlike the ordinary forms of fecula. Its granules are said to be larger than those of any other variety of starch in use, being from the 300th to the 200th of an inch in length. Under the microscope they appear ovate or oblong, with numerous regular unequally distant rings; and the circular hylum, which is sometimes double, is usually situated at the smaller extremity. {Pereira.) This fecula has the ordinary chemical properties of starch, and forms, when prepared with boiling water, a nutritious and wholesome food for infants and invalids. It may be prepared in the same manner as arrow-root, and is said to form even a stiffer jelly with boiling water. (See 3Iaranta.) W. CANNABIS INDICA. Br. Indian Hemp. Cannabis sativa. The flowering tops of the female plant from which the resin Has not been removed, dried ; cultivated in India. Br. See EXTRACTUM CANNABIS. CANTHARIS. U.S.,Br. Cantharides. Spanish Flies. Cantharis vesicatoria. U. S., Br. Cantharide,/'V.; SpanischeFliege,Kantharide, Germ.; Cantarelle,/lacI.-~ ish-brown externally, very pale and dull internally, and of a bitter, astringent, and sweetisx taste, with a smoky flavour. It is unknown in commerce. PART I. Catechu.—Cera Alba.—Cera Flava. 237 gree than the light, and is therefore usually preferred. The latter, being rather sweeter, is preferred by the Malays, Hindoos, and other Indians, who consume vast quantities of this extract by chewing it, mixed with aromatics and a small proportion of lime, and wrapped in the leaf of the Piper Betel. Catechu may be advantageously used in most cases where astringents are indicated, and, though less employed in this country than kino, is not inferior to it in virtues. The com- plaints to which it is best adapted are diarrhoea dependent on debility or relaxa- tion of the intestinal exhalants, and passive hemorrhages, particularly that from the uterus. A small piece, held in the mouth and allowed slowly to dissolve, is an excellent remedy in relaxation of the uvula, and the irritation of the fauces and troublesome cough which depend upon it. Applied to spongy gums, in the state of powder, it sometimes proves useful; and it has been recommended as a dentifrice in combination with powdered charcoal, Peruvian bark, myrrh, &c. Sprinkled upon the surface of indolent ulcers, it is occasionally beneficial, and is much used in India for the same purpose, in the form of an ointment. An infu- sion of catechu may be used as an injection in obstinate gonorrhoea, gleet, and leucorrhoea, and we have found it highly beneficial, when thrown up the nostrils, in arresting epistaxis. The dose is from ten grains to half a drachm, which should be frequently repeated, and is best given with sugar, gum arabic, and water.* Off. Prep. Infusuin Catechu, Br.; Infusum Catechu Compositum, U. S.; Pul- vis Catechu Compositus, Br.; Tinctura Catechu. Ojfi. Prep, of Pale Catechu (Gambit'). Trochisci Catechu, Br. W. CERA ALBA. U.S.,Br. White Wax. Yeliow wax, bleached. U. S., Br. Cire blanche, Fr.; Weisses Wachs, Germ.; Cera bianca, Ital.; Cere blanca, Span. CERA FLAYA. U.S., Br. Yellow Wax. A peculiar concrete substance prepared by Apis raellifica. U. S. The prepared honeycomb. Br. Cirejaune, Fr.; Gelbes Wachs, Germ.; Cera gialla, Ital.; Cera amarilla, Span. Wax is a product of the common bee, Apis mellifica of naturalists, which constructs with it the cells of the comb in which the honey and larvae are depo- sited. It was at one time doubted whether the insect elaborated the wax by its own organs, or merely gathered it from vegetables. The question was set at rest by Huber, who fed a swarm of bees exclusively on honey and water, and found that they formed a comb consisting of wax. This, therefore, is a proper secretion of the insect. It is produced in the form of scales under the rings of the belly. But wax also exists in plants, bearing in this, as in other respects, a close analogy to the fixed oils. It is, however, the product of the bee only that is recognised by the Pharmacopoeias. This is directed in two forms: 1. that of yellow wax procured immediately from the comb; and 2. that of white wax pre- * Fluid Extract of Catechu. Prof. Procter lias suggested the following formula for & fluid extract of catechu based on the solvent power of glycerin over this extract. Eight troyounces of pure catechu, in moderately coarse powder, are mixed in a mortar with four fluidounces t>f glycerin so as to form a paste, to which enough diluted alcohol is added to make a pint. The liquid is poured into a bottle, shaken occasionally for twenty-four hours, and then strained through muslin. Each fluidrachm of the fluid extract represents thirty grains of oatechu. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1.863, p. 241.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 238 Cera Alba.—Cera Flava. PART I pared by bleaching the former. We shall consider these separately, and after- wards give an account of vegetable wax. 1. Ceiia Flava or Yellow Wax. This is obtained by slicing the comb taken from the hive, draining and afterwards expressing the honey, and melting the residue in boiling water, which is kept hot for some time in order to allow the impurities to separate, and either subside or be dissolved by the water. When the liquid cools the wax concretes, and, having been removed and again melted in boiling water, is strained and poured into pans or other suitable vessels. It is usually brought to market in round flat cakes of considerable thickness. The druggists of Philadelphia are supplied chiefly from the Western States and .North Carolina, especially the latter, and from Cuba. Some of inferior quality is imported from Africa. In this state, wax has a yellowish colour, an agreeable somewhat aromatic odour, and a slight peculiar taste. To the touch it is rather soft and unctuous, though of a firm solid consistence and brittle. It has a granular fracture; but when cut with a knife presents a smooth glossy surface, the lustre of which is so peculiar as, when met with in other bodies, to be called waxy. It does not ad- here to the fingers, nor to the teeth when chewed, but is softened and rendered tenacious by a moderate heat. Its point of fusion is 142° F.; its specific gravity from 0-960 to 0 965. The colour, odour, and taste of yellow wax depend upon some associated principle or principles. Various adulterations have been practised, most of which may be readily de- tected.* Meal, earth, and other insoluble substances are at the same time dis- covered and separated by melting and straining the wax. When the fracture is smooth and shiuing instead of being granular, the presence of resin may be suspected. This is dissolved by cold alcohol, while the wax is left untouched. For other adulterating substances used, and the modes of detecting them, see the remarks which follow on white wax. Yellow wax is used in medicine chiefly as an ingredient of plasters and cerates. 2. Cera Alba or White Wax. The colour of yellow wax is discharged by ex- posing it, with an extended surface, to the combined influence of air, light, and moisture. The process of bleaching is carried on to a considerable extent in the vicinity of Philadelphia. The wax, previously melted, is made to fall in stream? upon a revolving cylinder, kept constantly wet, upon which it concretes, form- ing thin riband-like layers. These, having been removed, are spread upon linen cloths stretched on frames, and exposed to the air and light; care being taken to water and occasionally turn them. In a few days they are partially bleached; but, to deprive the wax completely of colour, it is necessary to repeat the whole process once, if not oftener. When sufficiently white, it is melted and cast into small circular cakes. The colour may also be discharged by chlorine ; but the wax is said to be somewhat altered, f White__wax sometimes contains one or more free fatty acids, consequent probably upon the employment of alkalies in * The inducements for the adulteration of wax have of late been greatly increased, in consequence of its high price, occasioned, probably, by its enormous consumption in our armies, and army hospitals.—Note to the twelfth edition. + The following process for purifying wax by steam has been patented by M. Cassgrand, in France, and is said to have been employed advantageously. Wax melted by steam is passed along with the steam through a coiled tube or worm, is received into a double bot- tom heated by steam, where it is washed with water, and is then raised by a pump into another pan, also heated by steam, where it is again washed with water; and the whole operation is repeated three or four times; the wax being allowed to rest for about four or five minutes in the upper pan after each operation, and, after the last one, an hour or two for the subsidence of impurities. The wax is then granulated by means of cold water, allowed to dry for two or three days, and then exposed to light and air. The whole process is completed in a few days. (See Am. Journ. of Pham., xxvi. 525, from Dub. Journ. of In- dustrial Progress A—Note to the eleventh edition. PART I. Cera Alba.—Cera Flava. 239 bleaching it, which render it an unfit ingredient in the unctuous preparations of certain salts. Of these acids it may be deprived by means of alcohol. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 205.) Perfectly pure wax is white, shining, diaphanous in thin layers, inodorous, in- sipid, harder and less unctuous to the touch than the yellow, soft and ductile at 95° F., and fusible at about 155°, retaining its fluidity at a lower temperature. According to Saussure, its specific gravity in the solid state is 0*966, at 178° F. 0-834, and at 201° 0’8247. By a great heat it is partly volatilized, partly de- composed ; and, when flame is applied to its vapour, it takes fire and burns with a clear bright light. It is insoluble in water, and in cold alcohol or ether, but is slightly soluble in boiling alcohol and ether, which deposit it in a great measure upon cooling. The volatile and fixed oils dissolve it with facility, resin readily unites with it by fusion, and soaps are formed by the action of soda and potassa in solution. It is not affected by the acids at ordinary temperatures, but is con- verted into a black mass when boiled with concentrated sulphuric acid. Its ulti- mate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. I)r. John found it to con- sist of two distinct principles, one of which he called cerin. the other myricin. According to MM. Boudet and Boissenot, the former constitutes at least 70 per cent, of wax, melts at about 143°, dissolves in 16 parts of boiling alcohol, and is saponifiable with potassa, yielding margaric acid, a little oleic acid, and a fatty matter insusceptible of saponification called cerain; the latter melts at 149°, is dissolved by 200 parts of boiling alcohol, and is not saponifiable by potassa. M. Lewy inferred from his experiments that cerin and myricin are isomeric with each other and with wax; that by a boiling solution of potassa wax is wholly saponified, without the formation of glycerin; that both wax and cerin are con- verted into stearic acid by saponification; and that this, by a further oxidation, is changed into margaric acid. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iii. 315.) Messrs. Warington and Francis, however, have found that the substance supposed to be stearic acid, though similar to that body in appearance, is wholly different from it in properties and composition, and is isomeric, if not identical, with the cerain above referred to. (Philos. Mag., Jan. 1844, p. 20.)* * New views have been put forth as to the constitution of wax, in communications from G. Collins Brodie to the Royal Society of London, germ, when quite pure, he considers as a peculiar acid, having the constitution C54II3404, which” lie names cerotic acid. This he procures by precipitating a boiling alcoholic solution of cerin by means "of an alcoholic solution of acetate of lead, treating the precipitated cerotate of lead by hot alcohol and ether until everything soluble-is removed, then decomposing it with concentrated acetic acid, washing the separated cerotic acid with boiling water, and still further purifying it by solution in boiling absolute alcohol and refrigeration. The acid is deposited pure. It melts at 172° F., and on cooling concretes into a crystalline mass. When distilled alone, the greater portion of it passes unchanged; whereas, if mixed with the other constituents of wax, it is wholly decomposed; and it is, consequently, not found in the results of the dis- tillation of wax itself. It is a singular fact that cerotic acid was not found in some bees- wax brought from Ceylon, showing that wax varies much according to the circumstances under which it is produced. Mvricin. when entirely separated from the cerotic acid, is saponi- fiable, but with difficulty; andTxom the results of saponification palmitic acid (C32H3204) was isolated, and a peculiar body, called by Mr. Brodie melisxine. having the composition (CgoHgaOg), and considered by him as a wax-alcohol, convertible by the loss of two cqs. of hydrogen and the gain of two of oxygen, into melissic acid, as alcohol is converted into acetic acid. (See Acetum ) In the examination of a variety of wax from China, Mr. Brodie found a substance called by him cerotine (C54H-602), -which he regards as the alcohol of cerotic acid, into which it was convertible by loss of hydrogen and gain of oxygen as above; thiii Is by oxidation, two eqs. of the hydrogen being converted into water. According to these views, the varieties of wax are composed of substances having to each other similar relations to those which characterize alcohol and acetic acid resulting from fermentation. (Chem. Gaz., vi. 225, and vii. 46.) The CJwmivax, above referred to, called pe-la by the Chinese, resembles spermaceti in whiteness and crystalline appearance, but is distinguished by greater hardness and fria- Cera Alla.— Cera Flava. PART I. White wax has been variously adulterated. White lead sinks to the bottom of the vessel when the wax is melted. Ktarwh, meal, and other insoluble sub- stances remain behind when the wax is dissolved in oil of turpentine or benzine; and the starch is known by producing a blue colour with iodine added to water in which the wax has been boiled. Water, which is said to be sometimes fraudu- lently incorporated with it, by agitation when partially melted, is driven off by heat. Fatty substances render lime-water turbid, when agitated with it and allowed to stand. For the detection of stearin and stearic acid, M. Lebel dis- solves the suspected wax in two parts of oil, beats the cerate thus formed with its wreight of pure water, and then adds a few drops of solution of subacetate of lead. If stearin is present, there is an immediate decomposition, and the mix- ture acquires an extraordinary solidity from the formation of stearate of lead. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xv. 302.) Yogel proposes chloroform as a means of detecting the adulteration with fatty matters. That liquid dissolves only 25 per cent, of wax, but stearin and stearic acid completely. If, therefore, wax, treated with 6 or 8 parts of chloroform, loses more than one-quarter of its weight, it may be considered as impure. (Ibid., xvii. 374.) Overbeck detects stearic acid by the abundant effervescence produced from the escape of carbonic acid, when a small portion of the suspected wax is boiled in a solution, composed of one part of carbonate of soda and fifty of distilled water. (Pharm. Journ., xi. 128.) Fehling detects stearic acid and resin by boiling one part of the wax in twenty of alcohol, filtering the solution when cool, and then adding water. If either of these substances be present, there will be a flocculent precipitate, whereas if the wax be pure there will scarcely be an observable turbidness. The natural fats, as tallow, suet, lard, &c., are not amenable to this test; but it may be applied by first saponifying them, and thus converting them into the fatty acids, as the stearic. But, as wax itself is somewhat liable to be affected, it is necessary to avoid- too strong an alkaline solution, and too long boiling in the process. To obviate such a result, 30 grains of the wax are to be boiled with two or three fluidounces of water containing 6 grains of pure hydrate of soda, and the mass then saturated with a very dilute acid, and heated. The wax is then to be separated, dried between folds of blotting paper, and treated as above for stearic acid. (Neues Repert. fur Pharm., viii. 78.) To detect poxaffm, which is another adulteration, Prof. Landolt, of Bonn, heats the wax with fuming sulphuric acid (Nordhausen), which destroys the wax, converting it into a black jelly-like mass, while the paraffin is left as a transparent layer on the surface. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiv. 35.) There are other less precise methods of detecting adulterations. Thus, spermaceti and lard render wax softer and less cohesive, of a smoother and less granular fracture, and of a different odour when heated. The melting point and specific gravity are lowered by tallow, suet, and lard. Legrip’s cereometer is based upon the altered specific gravity of wax when adulterated. Any one may apply this principle by making a mixture of alcohol and water such that pure wax will neither sink nor rise in it, but remain where- ever placed. Adulterated wax would either swim or sink in this liquid,. Pereira says that pure wax is yellowish-white; and that the white wax in circular cakes always contains spermaceti, added to improve its colour. bility, and a somewhat fibrous fracture. It melts at about 181° F., is very slightly solu- ble in alcohol or ether, is insoluble in cold oil of turpentine and rectified petroleum, but is dissolved by these fluids with the aid of heat. These solubilities distinguish it from sper- maceti. (Pharm. Jo Urn., xiv. 9.) It was formerly supposed to be of vegetable origin; but has been ascertained to be the product of an insect belonging to the genusjCgccus, which fixes itself to the branches of a certain tree, and, investing them closely,'becomes embed- ded in a waxy material, which is scraped off with the insects, and constitutes the crude wax. It is purified by melting and straining. (Hanbury, Pharm. Jonrn., xii. 476.) The tree from which the wax is obtained has been ascertained to be the Fraxinus Chinensis of Rox- burgh. [Ibid., Sept. 1, 1859, p. 176.) PART I. Cera Alba.—Cera Flava. 241 Medical Properties and Uses. Wax has little effect upon the system. Under the impression that it sheathes the inflamed mucous membrane of the bowels, it has been occasionally prescribed in diarrhoea and dysentery; and it is mentioned by Dioscorides as a remedy in the latter complaint. By Poerner it is highly re- commended in excoriations of the bowels, attended with pain and obstinate diar- rhoea. His mode of using it is to melt the wax with oil of almonds or olive oil. and, while the mixture is still hot, to incorporate it by means of the yolk of an egg with some mucilaginous fluid. The dose is half a drachm three or four times a day. Another method is to form an emulsion by means of soap ; but it is evi- dent that the soap would be the most energetic ingredient. Wax is also used to lill cavities in carious teeth. Its chief employment, however, is in the formation of ointments, cerates, and plasters. It is an ingredient in almost all the officinal cerates, which owe their general title to the wax they contain. 3. Vegetable Wax. Many vegetable products contain wax. It exists in the pollen of numerous plants, and forms the bloom or glaucous powder which covers certain fruits, and the coating of varnish with which leaves are sometimes sup- plied. In some plants it is so abundant as to be profitably extracted for use. Such is the Geroxylon Andicola, a lofty palm growing in the South American Andes. Upon the trunk of this tree, in the rings left by the fall of the leaves, is a coating of wax-like matter, about one-sixth of an inch thick, which is removed by the natives, and employed in the manufacture of tapers. It contains, according to Vauquelin, two-thirds of a resinous substance, and one-third of pure wax. Two kinds of wax are collected in Brazil, one called carnauba * from the leaves of a palm growing in the province of Ceara, the other ojruba, from the fruit of a shrub of the province of Para. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., v. 154.)f But the form of vegetable wax best known in this country is that derived from Myrica cerifera, and commonly called myrtle wax. The wax myrtle is an aromatic shrub, from one to twelve feet high, growing in the United States from New England to Louisi- ana, and flourishing especially on the sea-coast. The fruit, which grows in clus- ters closely attached to the stems and branches, is small, globular, and covered with a whitish coat of wax, which may be separated for use. Other parts of the plant are said to possess medical virtues. The bark of the root is acrid and astring- ent, and in large doses emetic, and has been popularly employed in jaundice. The process for collecting the wax is simple. The berries are boiled in water, and the wax, melting and floating on the surface, is either skimmed off and strained, or allowed to concrete as the liquor cools, and then removed. To render it pure, it is again melted and strained, and cast into large cakes. It is collected in New Jersey, North Carolina, and New England, and particularly in Rhode Island. * This is obtained from Qgrjoxylon carnauba and other palms of Brazil, being found on the under surface of the leaves. It is hard, brittle, and buif-coloured, resembling the resins more than wax, and melts at 192° F., which is much higher than the fusing point of other kinds of vegetable wax. “It takes a fine polish when rubbed with any soft material,” does not receive impressions from the finger at the natural temperature of the hand, and is adapted for polishing furniture, either alone or mixed with wax. (B. S. Proctor. See Am. J. of Pharm., xxxv. 527.)—Note to the twelfth edition. f Japan Wax. A substance under this name has been imported into Europe in considerable quantities, either directly from Japan, or through the Chinese ports. It is obtained from the berries of the Rhus succedaneum of Linnaeus. It has come in two forms, the one, as origi- nally distinguished byMr. Htmbury, of circular cakes, about four inches in diameter, and an inch thick, flat on one side and somewhat convex on the other; the second, as brought directly from Japan, of large rectangular blocks, which are packed in chests. It bears a considerable resemblance to purified beeswax, but is not quite so white, having a slightly yellowish tint, is softer, more friable, and has a somewhat rancid smell and taste. Its melt- ing point is below that of wax, varying from 120°, as stated by Prof. Procter, to 125°, 126°, and even 131°, as observed in different specimens by Mr. Hanbury. It is much more soluble in alcohol than beeswax, is saponifiable with the alkalies, and is said to consist of palmitic acid and glycerin. It has been employed in the preparation of candles, which yield as bril- liant light as those made of common wax. It is possible that it may be found useful in the ©reparation of cerates, &c.—Note to the twelfth edition. 242 Cera Alba.—Cera Flava.—Cetaceum. PART r. ITynif wax is of a pale grayish-green colour, somewhat diaphanous, more brittle and unctuous to the touch than beeswax, of a feeble odour, and a slightly bitterish taste. It is about as heavy as water, and melts, according to Mr. G. E. Moore, at from 116° to 120°. It is insoluble in water, scarcely soluble in cold alcohol, soluble, excepting about 13 per cent., in twenty parts of boiling alcohol, which deposits the greater portion on cooling, soluble also in boiling ether, and slightly so in oil of turpentine. It is readily saponifiable with the alkalies. By Dr. John it was found to consist, like beeswax, of cerin and myricin, containing 87 per cent, of the former and 13 of the latter; but a more accurate analysis by Mr. Moore gives as its constituents one part of palmitin and four of palmitic acid, with a little laurin or lauricacid. (Am. Journ. of Set. and Art*, May, 1862, p. 319.) The green colour and bitterness depend upon distinct principles, which may be separated by boiling with ether. On cooling, the wax is deposited colourless, while the ether remains green. The colour is ascribed by Mr. Moore to chlorophyll. Medical Properties and Uses. This variety of wax has been popularly em- ployed in the United States as a remedy for dysentery; and we are told by Dr. Fahnestock that he found great advantage from its use in numerous cases, during an epidemic prevalence of that complaint. He gave the powdered wax in doses of a teaspoonful frequently repeated, mixed with mucilage or syrup. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., ii. 313.) It is occasionally substituted by apothecaries for beeswax in the formation of plasters, and is used in the preparation of tapers and candles. It is somewhat fragrant when burning, but emits a less brilliant light than common lamp oil. W. CETACEUM. U.S., Br. Spermaceti. A peculiar concrete substance obtained from Physeter macrgoephalps- U.S. Nearly pure cetine, separated by cooling and purification from the oil contained in the head. Br. Blanc de baleine, Spermaceti, Cetine, Fr.; Wallrath, Germ.; Spermaceti, Ital.; Esperma de bellena, Span. The spermaceti whale is from sixty to eighty feet long, with an enormous head, not less in its largest part than thirty feet in circumference, and constitut- ing one-third of the whole length of the body. The upper part of the head is occupied by large cavities, separated by cartilaginous partitions, and containing an oily liquid, which, after the death of the animal, concretes into a white spongy mass, consisting of spermaceti mixed with oil. This mass is removed, and the oil allowed to separate by draining. The crude spermaceti, obtained from a whale of the ordinary size, is more than sufficient to fill twelve large barrels. It still contains much oil and other impurities, from which it is freed by expression, washing with hot water, melting, straining, and repeated washing with a weak boiling ley of potash. Common whale oil and the oil of other cetaceous animals contain small quantities of spermaceti, wrhich they slowly deposit on standing. Spermaceti is in white, pearly, semitransparent masses, of a crystalline folia- ceous texture; friable, soft, and somewhat unctuous to the touch; slightly odor- ous; insipid; of the sp.gr. 0 943; fusible at 112° F. (Bostock); volatilizable at a higher temperature without change in vacuo, but partially decomposed if the air is admitted; inflammable; insoluble in water; soluble in small proportion in boiling alcohol, ether, and oil of turpentine, but deposited as the liquids cool; readily soluble in chloroform* and in the fixed oils; not affected by the mineral acids, except the sulphuric, which decomposes and dissolves it; rendered yel- lowish and rancid by long exposure to hot air, but capable of being again purified * In consequence of its solubility in chloroform, stains made by droppipg it on cloth may be quickly removed by this liquid.—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Cetaceum.—Cetraria. 243 by washing with a warm ley of potash. As found in the shops it is not ehemicaflv pure, containing a fixed oil, and often a peculiar colouring principle. From these it is separated by boiling in alcohol, which on cooling deposits it in crys- talline scales. Thus purified, it does not melt under 120° F., is soluble in 40 parts of boiling alcohol of the sp.gr. 0-821 (Thenard), and is harder, more shining, and less unctuous than ordinary spermaceti. The name of_cetin was proposed for pure spermaceti by Chevreul. Its ultimate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. By the agency of the alkalies, it is with difficulty saponi- fied, yielding an acid, called by MM. Dumas and Stass ethdlic acid, and a pecu- liar principle named ethal by Chevreul. From a more recent analysis, however, by Dr. Ileintz, it wouTcTappear that the ethalic acid of Dumas and Stass is a complex substance, consisting of not less than five distinct acids, viz. the marga- ric, palmitic, cetic, myristic, and cociuic, and that consequently pure spermaceti is a mixture of the salts of these acids with ethal. (Chem. Gaz., x. 321.) Ethal is now considered as bearing to a hypothetical carbohydrogen cetyl (C32Hgi) the same relation that alcohol bears to ethyl; that is, to be a hydrated oxide of cetyl, and is accordingly denominated cetylic alcohol (CMH330,H0). Medical Properties and Uses. Like the fixed oils, spermaceti has been given as a demulcent in irritations of the pulmonary and intestinal mucous membranes; but it possesses no peculiar virtues, and its internal use has been generally aban- doned. It may be reduced to powder by the addition of a little alcohol or almond oil, or suspended in water by means of mucilage, or the yolk of eggs and sugar. A convenient mode of forming an emulsion with spermaceti, is to mix it first with half its weight of olive oil, then with powdered gum arabic, and lastly with water gradually added. Externally it is much employed as an ingredient of ointments and cerates. Off. Prep. Ceratum Cetacei, U. S.; Unguentum Aquae Rosae, U. S.; Unguen- tum Cetacei, Br. W. CETRARIA. U.S.,Br. Iceland Moss. Cetraria Islandica. U.S. The entire Lichen. Br. Lichen d’lslande, Fr.; Isliindisches Moos, Germ.; Licliene Islandico, Ital.; Liquen Islandico, Span. Cetraria. Sex. Syst. Cryptogamia Lichenes. — Nat. Ord. Lichenaceae. Gen. Ch. Plant cartilagino-membranous, ascending or spreading, lobed, smooth, and naked on both sides. Apothecia shield-like, obliquely adnate with the margin, the disk coloured, plano-concave; border indexed, derived from the frond. Loudon’s Encyc. The genus Lichen of Linnaeus has been divided by subsequent botanists into numerous genera, which have been raised to the dignity of a distinct order, both in the natural and artificial systems of arrangement. The name Cetraria has been conferred on the genus to which the Iceland moss belongs. Cetraria Islandica. Acharius, Lichenog. Univ. 512.—Lichen Islandicus. "Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 803, t. 271. Iceland moss is foliaceous, erect, from two to four inches high, with a dry, coriaceous, smooth, shining, laciniated frond or leaf, the lobes of which are irregularly subdivided, channeled, and fringed at their edges with rigid hairs. Those divisions upon which the fruit is borne are dilated. The colour is olive-brown or greenish-gray above, reddish at the base, and lighter on the under than the upper surface. The fructification is in flat, shield-like, reddish-Drown receptacles, with elevated entire edges, placed upon the surface of the frond near its border. The plant is found in the northern latitudes of the old and new continents, and on the elevated mountains further south. It received its name from the abundance in which it prevails in Iceland. It is also abundant cn the mountains and in the sandy plains- of New England. 244 Cetraria. PART I. Tl.e dried moss is of diversified colour, grayish-white, brown, and red, in dif- ferent parts, with less of the green tint than in the recent state. It is inodorous, and has a mucilaginous, bitter taste. Macerated in water, it absorbs rather more than its own weight of the fluid, and, if the water be warm, renders it bitter. Boiling water extracts all its soluble principles. The decoction thickens upon cooling, and acquires a gelatinous consistence, resembling that of starch in ap- pearance, but without its viscidity. After some time the dissolved matter sepa- rates, and when dried forms semitransparent masses, insoluble in cold water, alcohol, or ether, but soluble in boiling water, and in solution forming a blue compound with iodine. This principle resembles starch in its general characters, but differs from it in some respects, and has received the distinctive name of lichenin. Berzelius found in 100 parts of Iceland moss 16 of chlorophyll, 3 0 of a peculiar bitter principle, 3 6 of uncrystallizable sugar, 3 7 of gum, 7 0 of the apotheme of extractive, 44*6 of the peculiar starch-like principle, T9 of the bilichenates of potassa and lime mixed with phosphate of lime, and 36'2 of amylaceous fibrin—the excess being 1-6 parts. The name of cetrarin has been conferred on the bitter principle. The follow- ing process for obtaining it is that of Dr. Herberger. The moss, coarsely pow- dered, is boiled for half an hour in four times its weight of alcohol of 0‘883. The liquid, when cool, is expressed and filtered, and treated with dilute muriatic acid, in the proportion of three drachms to every pound of moss employed. Water is then added in the quantity of about four times the bulk of the liquid, and the mixture left for a night in a closed matrass. The deposit which forms is collected on a filter, allowed to drain as much as possible, and submitted to the press. To purify it, the mass, while still moist, is broken into small pieces, washed with alcohol or ether, and treated with two hundred times its weight of boiling alcohol, which dissolves the cetrarin, leaving the other organic principles by which it has been hitherto accompanied. The greater part is deposited as the liquor cools, and the remainder may be obtained by evaporation. By this process one pound of moss yielded to Dr. Herberger 133 grains of cetrarin. This prin- ciple is white, not crystalline, light, unalterable in the air, inodorous, and ex- ceedingly bitter, especially in alcoholic solution. Its best solvent is absolute alcohol, of which 100 parts dissolve 17 of cetrarin at the boiling temperature. Ether also dissolves it, and it is slightly soluble in water. Its solutions are quite neutral to test paper. It is precipitated by the acids, and rendered much more soluble by the alkalies. Concentrated muriatic acid changes its colour to a bright blue. It precipitates the salts of iron, copper, lead, and silver. In the dose of two grains, every two hours, it has been used successfully in intermittent fever. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiii. 505.) Drs. Schnedermann and Knopp have ascertained that the cetrarin above referred to consists of three distinct substances; 1. ce- traric acid, which is the true bitter principle, crystallizable, and intensely bitter; 2. a substance resembling the fatty acids, called lich stearic acid ; and 3. a green colouring substance, which they name thallochlor. These principles are obtained perfectly pure with great difficulty. (Ann. der Pharm., Iv. 144.) The gum and starch contained in the moss render it sufficiently nutritive to serve as food for the inhabitants of Iceland and Lapland, who employ it pow- dered and made into bread, or boiled with milk, having first partially freed it from the bitter principle by repeated maceration in water. The bitterness may be entirely extracted by macerating the powdered moss, for twenty-four hours, in twenty-four times its weight of a solution formed with 1 part of an alkaline carbonate and 375 parts of water, decanting the liquid at the end of this time, and repeating the process with an equal quantity of the solution. The powder, being now dried, is perfectly sweet and highly nutritious. This process was sug- gested by Berzelius. Medical Properties and Uses. Iceland moss is demulcent, nutritious, anl PART I. Cetraria.-—Ciienopodium. tonic, and well calculated for affections of the mucous membrane of the lungs and bowels, with debility of the digestive organs, or of the system generally Hence it has been found useful in chronic catarrhs, and other chronic pulmonary affections attended with copious puruloid expectoration, in dyspepsia, in chronic* dysentery and diarrhoea, and in the debility succeeding acute disease, or depend- ent on copious purulent discharge from external ulcers. At one time it pos sessed much reputation as a remedy in pulmonary consumption. It had long been employed in this disease, and in haemoptysis, by the Danish physicians, before it became generally known. In the latter half of the last century it camo into extensive use, and numerous cures supposed to have been effected by it are on record. But now that the pathology of phthisis is better understood, physi- cians have ceased to expect material advantage from it in that disease; and there is reason to believe that the cases which have recovered under its use, were simply chronic bronchitis. It acts only as a mild, nutritious, demulcent tonic; and can exercise no specific influence over the tuberculous affection. It is usually employed in the form of decoction. (See Decoctum Cetrarise.) By some writers it is recommended to deprive it of the bitter principle by ma- ceration in water or a weak alkaline solution, before preparing the decoction; but we thus reduce it to the state of a simple demulcent, or mild article of diet, in which respect it is not superior to the ordinary farinaceous or gummy sub- stances used in medicine. The powder is sometimes given in the dose of thirty grains or a drachm; and a preparation at one time obtained some repute, in which the ground moss was incorporated with chocolate, and used at the morn- ing and evening meal as an ordinary beverage. Off. Prep. Decoctum Cetrarise. W. CHENOPODIUM. US. Wormseed. The fruit of Chenopodium anthelminticum. U. S. Chenopodium. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Chenopodiaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-leaved, four-cornered. Corolla none. Seed one, lenticular, superior. Willd. Chenopodium anthelminticum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1304; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 183. This is an indigenous perennial plant, with an herbaceous, erect, branch- ing, furrowed stem, which rises from two to five feet in height. The leaves are alternate or scattered, sessile, oblong-lanceolate, attenuated at both ends, sinuated and toothed on the margin, conspicuously veined, of a yellowish-green colour, and dotted on their under surface. The flowers are very numerous, small, of the same colour with the leaves, and arranged in long, leafless, terminal panicles, composed of slender, dense, glomerate, alternating spikes. This species of Chenopodium, known commonly by the names of wormseed and Jerusalem oak, grows in almost all parts of the United States, but most vigorously and abundantly in the southern section. It is usually found in the vicinity of rubbish, along fences, in the streets of villages, and in open grounds about the larger towns. It flowers from July to September, and ripens its seeds successively through the autumn. The whole herb has a strong, peculiar, offen- sive, yet somewhat aromatic odour, which it retains when dried. All parts of the plant are occasionally employed; but the fruit only is strictly officinal. This should be collected in October.* * C. anthelminticum is cultivated to a considerable extent in Maryland, twenty or thirty miles north of Baltimore. The seeds are sown in small beds of rich mould early in spring, and during the monjh of June the young plants are pulled up, and set out in ridges three feet apart, with intervals of from six to ten inches. The plants do not require to be renewed Chenopodium.—Chimaphila. PART I. AV orru.seed, as found in the shops, is in small grains, not larger than the head of a pin, irregularly spherical, very light, of a dull, greenish-yellow, or brownish colour, a bitterish, somewhat aromatic, pungent taste, and possessed in a high degree of the peculiar smell of the plant. These grains, when deprived, by rub- bing them in the hand, of a capsular covering which invests the proper seed, exhibit a shining surface of a very dark colour. They abound in a volatile oil, upon which their sensible properties and medical virtues depend, and which is obtained by distillation. (See Oleum Chenopodii.) The same oil impregnates to a greater or less extent the whole plant. Medical Properties and Uses. Wormseed is one of our most efficient indi- genous anthelmintics, and is thought to be particularly adapted to the expulsion of the round worms in children. A dose of it is usually given before breakfast in the morning, and at bedtime in the evening, for three or four days succes- sively, and then followed by calomel or some other brisk cathartic. If the worms are not expelled, the same plan is repeated. The medicine is most conveniently administered in powder, mixed with syrup, in the form of an electuary. The dose for a child two or three years old is from one to two scruples. The vola- tile oil is more frequently given than the fruit in substance; though its offensive odour and taste sometimes render it of difficult administration. The dose for a child is from five to ten drops, mixed with sugar, or in the form of emulsion. A tablespoonful of the expressed juice of the leaves, or a wineglassful of the de- coction prepared by boiling an ounce of the fresh plant in a pint of milk, with the addition of orange-peel or other aromatic, is sometimes substituted in do- mestic practice for the ordinary dose of the fruit and oil. The fruit of Chenopodium ambrosioides, which is also an indigenous plant, and very prevalent in the Middle States, is said to be used indiscriminately with that of C. anthelminticum. It may be distinguished by its odour, which is weaker and less offensive, and to some persons agreeable. The plant itself is often con- founded with the true wormseed, from which it differs in having its flowers in leafy racemes. This species of Chenopodium has been employed in Europe as a remedy in nervous affections, particularly chorea. Five or six cases of this dis- ease, reported by Plenk, after having resisted the ordinary means, yielded to the daily use of an infusion of two drachms of the plant in ten ounces of water, taken in the dose of a cupful morning and evening, and associated with the employ- ment of peppermint. C. Botrys, known by the vulgar name of Jerusalem oak, is another indigenous species, possessing anthelmintic virtues. It is said to have been used in France with advantage in catarrh and humoral asthma. Off. Prep. Oleum Chenopodii, U. S. AV. CHIMAPHILA. TJ.S. Pipsissewa. The leaves of Chimaphila umbellata. U. S. Chimaphila. Sex.)Syst. Decandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. PvroIacea3. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-toothed. Petals five. Style very short, immersed in the germ. Stigma annular, orbicular, with a five-lobed disk. Filaments stipitate; stipe discoid, ciliate. Capsules five-celled, opening from the summits, margins unconnected. Nuttall. This genus was separated from Pyrola by Pursh. It embraces two species, (7 oftener than once in four or five years. The crop of the second year is moro productive than the first. The plant is fit for distillation during the first half of September. I'he dis- tillation is carried on in the same neighbourhood. The whole herbaceous part of Uie plant is used. It is said to yield from 1-5 to 2 per cent, of the oil, and the produce of an act* will yield 20 pounds. {See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxii. 304.) PART I. Chimaphila. 247 umbellata and G. maculata, which are both indigenous, and known by the com- mon title of winter-green. The generic title is formed of two Greek words, y:t/j.a winter, and n to evaporate spontaneously. A yellow crystalline substance was left, which, purified by solution in alcohol, filtration and spontaneous evaporation, constituted the substance in question. It was also obtained by simply distilling the stems with water. It is in beautiful, golden-yellow, acicular crystals, inodorous, tasteless, fusible, volatilizable unchanged, insoluble or nearly so in water, soluble in alco- hol, ether, chloroform, and the fixed and volatile oils, and possessed of neither acid nor alkaline properties. (Journ. and Trans, of the Md. Gol. of Pharm., March, 1860.) The active principle of the leaves does not appear to have been isolated, though probably contained in the substance called bitter extractive. The so-named chimaphilin has no claims to this character, nor, we think, to tho name given to it, which should be reserved for the active principle when discov- ered. The pungency of the stems is said by Mr. Fairbank to reside in the resin 248 Chimaphila.—Chiretta. Medical Properties and Uses. This plant is diuretic, tonic, and astringent. It wao employed by the aborigines in various complaints, especially scrofula, rheumatism, and nephritic affections. From their hands it passed into those of the European settlers, and was long a popular remedy in certain parts of the country, before it was adopted by the profession. The first regular treatise in relation to it that has come to our knowledge, was the thesis of Dr. Mitchell, published in the year 1803; but it was little thought of till the appearance of the paper of Dr. Sommerville, in the 5th volume of the London Medico-Chirur- gical Transactions. By this writer it was highly recommended as a remedy in dropsy; and his favourable report has been sustained by the subsequent state- ments of many respectable practitioners. It is particularly useful in cases attended with disordered digestion and general debility, in which its tonic properties and usual acceptability to the stomach prove highly useful auxiliaries to its diuretic powers. Nevertheless, it cannot be relied on exclusively in the treatment of the complaint; for, though it generally produces an increased flow of urine, it has seldom effected cures. Other disorders, in which it is said to have proved useful, are calculous and nephritic affections, and in general all those complaints of the urinary passages for which uva ursi is prescribed. It is highly esteemed by some practitioners as a remedy in scrofula, both before and after the occurrence of ulceration ; and it has certainly proved highly advantageous in obstinate ill-con- ditioned ulcers and cutaneous eruptions, supposed to be connected with the stru- mous diathesis. In these cases it is used both internally, and locally as a wash. The decoction is the preparation usually preferred, and may be taken to the amount of a pint in twenty-four hours. The watery extract may be given in the dose of twenty or thirty grains four times a day. Prof. Procter prepares a syrup by macerating four ounces of the leaves, finely bruised, in eight fluidounces of water for thirty-six-hours, and then subjecting the mass to percolation till a pint of fluid is obtained, which is reduced one-half by evaporation, and incorporated with twelve ounces of sugar. One or two tablespoonfuls may be given for a dose. Prof. Procter has suggested also a fluid extract, prepared in the same manner as the saccharine fluid extracts of the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia, especially that of uva ursi. A fluidrachm of it would represent a drachm of pipsissewa. Off. Prep. Decoctum Chimaphilse, U. S. W. PART I. CHIRETTA. U.S. Chiretta. " The herb and root of Agathotes Chirayta. U. S. Off. Syn. CHIRATA. Chiretta. Ophelia Chirata. The entire plant. Br. Agathotes. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Grentianacese. Gen. Oh. Corolla withering, rotate, in aestivation twisted to the right; with glandular hollows protected by a fringed scale upon the segments. Anthers not changing. Stigmas sessile. Capsules conical; one-celled, with spongy placentae upon the sutures. Seeds indefinite, minute. (Lindley.) Agathotes Chirayta. Don, Bond. Philos. Mag. 1836, p. 76.— Gentiana Chi- raxyta. Fleming, Asiat. Research, xi. 167. — Ophelia Chirata. Grisbaeh. The chirayta or chiretta is an annual plant, about three feet high, with a branching root, and an erect, smooth, round stem, branching into an elegant leafy panicle, and furnished with opposite, embracing, lanceolate, very acute, entire, smooth, three or five-nerved leaves. The flowers are numerous, peduncled, yellow, with a four-cleft calyx having linear acute divisions, the limb of the corolla spreading and four-parted, four stamens, a single style, and a two-lobed stigma. The cap- sules are shorter than the permanent calyx and corolla. The plant is a native of Nepaul, and other parts of northern India. The whole of it is officinal. It is gathered when the flowers begin to decay. PART I. Chiretta.—Chloroformum.—Chondrus. 249 The dried plant is imported into Europe in bundles, consisting mainly of the stems, with portions of the root attached. The stems, which have been already described, contain a yellowish pith. All parts of the plant have a very bitter taste, which is strongest in the root. It is without odour. It imparts its virtues to water and alcohol; and they are retained in the extract. According to Lassaigne and Boissel, the stems contain resin, a yellow bitter substance, brown colouring matter, gum, and various gaits. Medical Properties and Uses. Chiretta has long been used in India, where it is a favourite remedy with both the native and European practitioners. It has been introduced into Europe, and appears to be highly esteemed; but has not been employed to any considerable extent in this country. Its properties are those of the pure bitters, and probably do not differ from those of the other members of the family of Gentianacem. (See Gentiana.) Like these, in over- doses it nauseates and oppresses the stomach. Some have supposed that, in addition to its tonic properties, it exerts a peculiar influence over the liver, pro- moting the secretion of bile and correcting it when deranged, and restoring healthy evacuations in cases of habitual costiveness. But it may well be doubted whether it produces any other effects of this kind than such as are incident to its tonic power. It has been used in dyspepsia, and in the debility of convales- cence, and generally in cases in which corroborant measures are indicated. In India it has been successfully employed in intermittents and remittents, conj- oined with the seeds of Guilandina Bondxic. It may be given in powder, in- fusion, tincture, or extract. The dose in substance is twenty grains. A fluid ex- tract may be made in the same manner as that of gentian. (See Extractum Gen- tianse Fluidum.) Off. Prep. Infusum Chiratae, Br.; Tinctura Chiratce, Br. W. CHLOROFORMUM VENALE. U.S. Commercial Chloroform. In the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850 a process was given for the preparation of chloroform ; in the present edition, the drug, in its impure commercial form, has been placed in the Materia Medica Catalogue, while a process is given in the second part of the work for its purification. Thinking it expedient that what is to be said on the subject should all be included under the same head, we shall content ourselves here with referring the reader to the article Chloroformum Purificatura in Part II. Off. Prep. Chloroformum Purificatum, U. S. CHONDRUS. U.S. Irish Moss. Chondrus crispus. U. S. Chondrus. Sex. Syst. Cryptogaraia Algae. — Nat. Ord. Algaceae. Gen. Gh. Frond cartilaginous, dilating upwards into a flat, nerveless dicho- tomously divided expansion, of a purplish or livid-red colour. Fructification, subspherical capsules in the substance of the frond, rarely supported on little stalks, and containing a mass of minute free seeds. Greville. Chondrus crispus. Greville, Alg. Brit. 129, t. 15. — Sphserococcus crispus. Agardh. — Fucus crispus. Linn. The Irish moss, or carrageen as it is fre- quently called, consists of a flat, slender, cartilaginous frond, from two to twelve inches in length, dilated as it ascends until it becomes two or three lines in width, then repeatedly and dichotomously divided, with linear, wedge-shaped segments, Chondrus.— Cimicifuga. PART I. ana mure or less curlpd up so as to diminish the apparent length. The capsules are somewhat hemispherical, and are embedded in the disk of the frond. The plant grows upon rocks and stones on the coast of Europe, and is especially abundant on the southern and western coasts of Ireland, where it is collected. It is also a native of the United States, and is said to be gathered largely on the southern sea-coast of Massachusetts, where it is partly torn from the rocks, and partlj collected upon the beach, upon which it is thrpwn up during storms. It is prepared for market by spreading it out high on the beach, to dry and bleach in the sun. (Aug. P. Melzar, Proceed, of Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1860.) When collected, it is washed and dried. In the fresh state it is of a purplish colour, but, as found in the shops, is yellowish or yellowish-white, with occasion- ally purplish portions. It is translucent, of a feeble odour, and nearly tasteless. It swells in cold water but does not dissolve. Boiling water dissolves a large proportion of it, and the solution, if sufficiently concentrated, gelatinizes on cooling. According to Feuchtwanger, it contains starch and pectin, with com- pounds of sulphur, chlorine, and bromine, and some oxalate of lime. Herberger found 79T per cent, of pectin, and 9 5 of mucus, with fatty matter, free acids, chlorides, &c., but neither iodine nor bromine. M. Dupasquier discovered in it both of these elements, which had generally escaped attention in consequence of their reaction, as soon as liberated, upon the sulphuret of sodium resulting from the decomposition of the sulphate of soda of the moss when charred. (Journ. de Pliarm., Se ser., iii. 113.) The pectin Pereira thinks peculiar, and proposes to call carrageenin. It is distinguished from gum by affording, when dissolved in water, no* precipitate with alcohol; from starch, by not becoming blue with tinc- ture of iodine; from pectin, by yielding no precipitate with acetate of lead, and no mucic acid by the action of nitric acid. Carrageen is nutritive and demulcent, and, being easy of digestion and not unpleasant to the taste, forms a useful article of diet in cases in which the fari- naceous preparations, such as tapioca, sago, barley, &c., are usually employed. It has been particularly recommended in chronic pectoral affections, scrofulous complaiuts, dysentery, diarrhoea, and disorders of the kidneys and bladder. It may be used in the form of decoction, made by boiling a pint and a half of water with half an ounce of the moss down to a pint. Sugar and lemon-juice may usually be added to improve the flavour. Milk may be substituted for water, Alien a more nutritious preparation is required. It is recommended to macerate Ihe moss for about ten minutes in cold water before submitting it to decoction Any unpleasant flavour that it may have acquired from the contact of foreign substances is thus removed. W. CIMICIFUGA. U.S. Cimicifuga. Black Snakeroot. The root of Cimicifuga racemosa. U. S. Cimicifuga. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Di-Pentagynia. —Nat. Ord. Rannnculaee® Gen. Ch. Calyx four or five-leaved. Petals four to eight, deformed, thickish, sometimes wanting. Capsules one to five, oblong, many-seeded. Seeds squa mose. Nuttall. Cimicifuga racemosa. Torrey, Flor. 219; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. i. 9, pi. 3.— C. Serpentaria. Pursh, Flor. Am. Sept. p. 372.—Actsea racemosa. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1139. — Macrotys racemosa. Eaton’s Manual, p. 288. This is a tall stately plant, having a perennial root, and a simple herbaceous stem, which rises from four to eight feet in height. The leaves are la’’ge, and ternately decomposed, having oblong-ovate leaflets, incised and toothed a', their edges. The flowers are small, white, and disposed in a long, terminal, wand-lika part I. Cimicifuga. 251 raceme, with occasionally one or two shorter racemes near its base. The calyx is white, four-leaved, and deciduous; the petals are minute, and shorter than the stamens; the pistil consists of an oval germ and a sessile stigma. The fruit is an ovate capsule containing numerous flat seeds. The black snakeroot, or cohosh as this plant is sometimes called, is a native of the United States, growing in shady or rocky woods from Canada to Florida, and flowering in June and July. The root is the part employed. Properties. The dried root consists of a thick, irregularly bent or contorted body or caudex, from one-third of an inch to an inch in thickness, often several inches in length, furnished with many slender radicles, and rendered exceedingly rough and jagged in appearance by the remains of the stems of successive years, which to the length of an inch or more are frequently attached to the root. The colour is externally dark-brown, almost black, internally whitish; the odour, though not strong, is peculiar and rather disagreeable, and is gradually lost by keeping; the taste is bitter, herbaceous, and somewhat astringent, leaving a slight sense of acrimony. The root yields its virtues to boiling water. It was found by Mr. Tilghman, of Philadelphia, to contain gum, starch, sugar, resin, wax, fatty matter, tannic and gallic acids, a black colouring matter, a green colouring matter, lignin, and salts of potassa, lime, magnesia, and iron. (Journ. of Phil. Col. ofPharm., vi. 20.) It no doubt also contains, when fresh, a volatile principle, with which its virtues may be in some degree associated; as we are confident that it is more efficacious in the recent state, than when long kept. In fact, Mr. Geo. H. Davis, in a more recent analysis, has separated by distillation a small proportion of volatile oil, having decidedly the peculiar odour of the root. Mr. Davis also found, in addition to the principles above mentioned, albu- men and extractive among the organic, and silica among the inorganic constitu- ents. The sugar, moreover, noticed by him was of the uncrystallizable variety, and the resin of two kinds, one soluble in alcohol but not in ether, the other soluble in both these menstrua. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 396.) Medical Properties and Uses. The effects of cimicifuga in health have not been fully investigated. It was at one time considered a mild tonic, with the property of stimulating the secretions, particularly those of the skin, kidneys, and bronchial mucous membrane; and has been thought by some to have an especial affinity for the uterus. It undoubtedly exercises considerable influence over the nervous system, probably of a sedative character; but this influence, so far as our observation has gone, is shown more in morbid states of that system than in health. Dr. Hildreth, of Ohio, found it, in large doses, to produce ver- tigo, impaired vision’, nausea and vomiting, and a reduction of the circulation; but from very large quantities he observed no alarming narcotic effects. Dr. N. S. Davis uniformly found it to lessen the force and frequency of the pulse, to soothe pain, and allay irritability. (Trans, of Am. Med. Assoc., i. 352.) Its common name was probably derived from its supposed power as an antidote to the bite of the rattlesnake. It was originally employed in domestic practice in rheumatism, dropsy, hysteria, and various affections of the lungs, particularly those resembling consumption. The first published notice of its use in phthisis Was by Dr. Thomas J. Garden, of Charlotte, Virginia. (Am Med. Recorder, Oc- tober, 1823.)* Several cases of chorea were recorded by Dr. Jesse Young, in which it effected cures; and the editor of the Am. Journ. of the Med. Sciences stated that he had been informed by Dr. Physick that he had known it, in the close of ten grains every two hours, to prove successful in the cure of that com- plaint in several instances. Dr. Young gave a teaspoonful of the powdered root three times a day. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., ix. 310.) We have administered the medicine In chorea with complete success, and have derived the happiest effects *• In a letter from Dr. Garden to the authors, dated May 15th, 1850, that practitioner states that thirty years’ use of the medicine has fully realized the favourable anticipation* produced by the first trials. Cimicifuga.— Cinchona. PART I. from it in a case of periodical convulsions connected with uterine disorder. Dr. Hildreth has found it, in combination with iodine, very advantageous in the early stages of phthisis, {[bid., N. S., iv. 281.) Dr. F. N. Johnson has employed it with extraordinary success in acute rheumatism ; the disease generally yield- ing completely within eight or ten days. ( Trans, of Am. Med. Assoc., i. 052.) It may be given in substance, decoction, tincture, or extract. The dose of the powder is from a scruple to a drachm. The decoction has been much used, but is thought by some not to contain all the virtues of the root. An ounce of the bruised root may be boiled for a short time in a pint of water, and one or two fluidounces given for a dose. From half a pint to a pint of the decoction may be taken without inconvenience during the day. The tincture may be made in the proportion of four ounces to the pint of diluted alcohol, and given in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. In acute rheumatism, the remedy is recom- mended by Dr. Davis, in the dose of from thirty to sixty drops of the tincture, or twenty grains of the powder, repeated every two hours till its effects are ob- served. {Ibid., p. 356.) Dr. Brundige speaks, in the strongest terms, of the effi- cacy of a saturated tincture of the dried root, as an application about the eye, and to the outer surface of the eyelids in ophthalmia. {Med. Exam., N. S., vii. 809, from the N. F. Med. Gaz.) Dr. Koehler, of Schuylkill Haven, Pa., after failing with the decoction and simple tincture in the treatment of chorea, suc- ceeded satisfactorily with an acetous tincture, made by digesting, for fourteen days, five ounces of the root with a menstruum consisting of one fiuidwunce of diluted acetic acid, eight of alcohol, and eleven of water. The dose is the same as that of the simple tincture. {N. Am. Med. Chir. Rev., iii. 189.) A fluid ex- tract is now officinal; and a dry extract has been prepared by Professor Proc- ter. The dose of the former is from 30 to 60 minims, of the latter from 4 to 8 grains.* The practitioners calling themselves eclectics use, under the name of cimicifugin, an impure resin obtained by precipitating a saturated tincture of the root with water. It is given in the dose of a grain or two. The name, how- ever, is inappropriate, as it should be reserved for the pure active principle when discovered. (See N. J. Med. Reporter, viii. 247.) Off. Prep. Extractum Cimicifugae Fluidum, U. S. W. CINCHONA. Peruvian Bark. Cinchona Bark. Varieties. CINCHONA FLAVA. U. S., Br. Yellow Cinchona. The bark of Cinchona Calisaya, called in commerce Calisaya hark, and containing not less than two per cent, of alkaloids yielding crystallizable salts. TJ. S. Cinchona Calisaya. The bark. Br. CINCHONA PALLIDA. U. S., Br. Pale Cinchona. The bark of Cinchona Condaminea and of Cinchona micrantha. U. S. Cinchona Condaminea. The bark. Br. CINCHONA RUBRA. U. S., Br. Bed Cinchona. The bark of an undeter- * The dry extract ia prepared in the following manner. Sixteen ounces of the recently dried root, in powder, are put into a percolator for volatile liquids, and a mixture of a pint of alcohol and half a pint of ether is gradually added. After the liquid has ceased to pass, diluted alcohol is poured in until the filtered liquid equals a pint and a half, which is set aside in a warm place, and allowed to evaporate spontaneously until reduced to hali a pint. The percolation is continued with diluted alcohol until two pints of tincture are obtained. The two tinctures are evaporated separately to the consistence of syrup, then mixed, and carefully evaporated to dryness by means of a water bath. (iot. Journ oj Pharm., xxvi. 107.)—Note to the eleventh edition. PART I. Cinchona. 253 mined species of Cinchona, called in commerce red hark, and containing not less than two per cent, of alkaloids yielding crystallizable salts. U. S. Cinchona succirubra. The bark. Br. * Quinquina, Fr.; Cliina, Peruvianische Rimle, Germ.; China, Ital.; Quina, Span. Botanical History. Though the Peruvian bark was introduced into Europe so early as 1G40, it was not till the year 1737 that the plant producing it was known to naturalists. In that year La Condamine, on a journey to Lima, through the province of Loxa, had an opportunity of examining the tree, of which, upon his return, he published a description in the Memoirs of the French Academy. Soon after- wards Linnaeus gave it the name of Cinchona officinalis, in honour of the Countess of Cinchon, who is said to have first taken the bark to Europe; but, in his description of the plant, he united the species discovered by La Condamine with C. pubescens, a specimen of which had been sent to him from Santa Fe de Bogota. For a long time it was not known that more than one species existed; and C. officinalis continued, till a comparatively recent period, to be recognised by the Pharmacopoeias as the only source of the Peruvian bark of commerce. But a vast number of plants belonging to the Linnaean genus Cinchona were in the course of time discovered; and the list became at length so unwieldy and heterogeneous, that botanists were compelled to distribute the specie0 into seve- ral groups, each constituting a distinct genus, and all associated in the natural family of Cinchonaceae. Among these genera, the Cinchona is that which embrace the proper Peruvian bark trees, characterized by the production of the alkaloids, quinia, cinchonia, &c., as well as by certain botanical peculiarities, among which the most distinctive is probably the dehiscence of the capsule from the base to- wards the apex, or from below upward. The new genera Exostemma and Buena embrace species which have been, perhaps, most frequently referred to as Cin- chonas; but they are sufficiently characterized, the former by the projection of the stamens beyond the corolla, a peculiarity which has given name to the genus, the latter by the different shape of the corolla, the separation of the calyx from the fruit at maturity, and the opening of the capsule from above downward. More recently Weddell has separated several generally admitted species from Cinchona, and instituted a new genus, which he proposes to name Cascarilla. This includes the former Cinchona magnifolia of Ruiz and Pavon ((7. oblongi- folia of Mutis), the C. stenocarpa of Lambert, the C. aculifolia of Ruiz and * Tl. e British Pharmacopoeia gives the following methods of testing these varieties 1. “Test of Yellow Cinchona. Boil 100 grains of the bark, reduced to very fine powder, for a quarter of an hour, in a fluidounce of distilled water acidulated with ten minims of hydrochloric acid; and allow it to macerate for twenty-four hours. Transfer the whole to a small displacement tube, and, after the fluid has ceased to percolate, add at intervals about an ounce and a half of similarly acidulated water, or add until the fluid which passes through is free from colour. Add to the percolated fluid solution of subacetate of lead until the whole of the colouring matter has been removed, taking care that the fluid remains acid in reaction. Filter, and wash with a little distilled water. To-the filtrate add about thirty-five grains of caustic potash, or so much as will cause the precipitate which is at first formed to be nearly redissolved, and afterwards six fluidrachms of pure ether. Then shake briskly, and, having removed the ether, repeat the process twice with three fluidrachms of ether, or until a drop of the ether employed leaves on evaporation scarcely any perceptible residue. Lastly, evaporate the mixed ethereal solution in a capsule. The residue, which consists of nearly pure quinia, when dry, should weigh not less than two grains, and should be readily soluble in dilute sulphuric acid. 2. Test for Pale Cinchona. Two hundred grains of the bark, treated in the manner di- rected in the test for yellow cinchona, with the substitution of chloroform for ether, should yield not less than two grains of alkaloids. 3. Test for Red Cinchona. One hundred grains of the bark, treated in the manner di- rected in the test for yellow cinchona, with the substitution of chloroform for ether, should yield not less than two grains of alkaloids.” Br.—Note to the twelfth edition. 254 Cinchona. PART I. Pavon, the C. oblon gif alia of Lambert, the C. macrocarpa of Yahl, and the C. cava of Pavon, which differ from the true Cinchona in having the dehiscence of the capsules from the apex the base, or from above downward, and the barks of which contain neither of the alkaloids above referred to. (Weddell, Hid. Nat. des Quinquinas, p. 77.) With this brief preliminary notice, we shall proceed to consider the true Cinchonas. It may be proper, however, first to say, that the botanists who have personally observed these plants, besides La Condamine, of whom we have before spoken, are chiefly Joseph de Jussieu, who in the year 1739 explored the country about Loxa, and gathered specimens still existing in the cabinets of Europe; Midis, who in 1772 discovered Cinchona trees in New Granada, and afterwards, aided by his pupil Zea, made further in- vestigations and discoveries in the same region; Ruiz and Pavon, who in 1777 began a course of botanical inquiries in the central portions of Lower Peru, and discovered several new species; Humboldt and Bonpland, who visited several of the Peruvian bark districts, and published the results of their observations after 1792; Poppig, who travelled in Peru so late as 1832, and published an ac- count of his journey about the year 1835 ; and finally Weddell, whose researches in Bolivia are so well known, and have been so productive of valuable information in relation to the Calisaya bark. Cinchona. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Cinchonaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx with a turbinate tube, and a persistent five-toothed limb. Corolla with a round tube, a five-parted limb, and oblong lobes valvate in aestivation. Stamens with short filaments inserted into the middle of the tube, and linear anthers entirely enclosed. Stigma bifid, subclavate. Capsule ovate or oblong, somewhat furrowed on each side, bilocular/crowned with the calyx, septicidal-dehiscent, with the mericarps loosened from the base towards the apex, the introflexed part disjoined. Placentae elongated. Seeds numerous, erect, imbricated upward, compressed, winged, with a membranous margin, and a fleshy albumen.—The plants composing this genus are trees or shrubs. The leaves are opposite, upon short petioles with flat margins, and are attended with ovate or oblong, foliaeeous, free, deciduous stipules. The flowers are terminal, in corym- bose panicles, and of a white or purplish rose colour. (De Candolle.) The genuine Cinchona trees are confined exclusively to South America. In that continent, however, they are widely diffused, extending from the 19th degree of south latitude, considerably south of La Paz, in Bolivia, to the mountains of Santa Martha, or, according to Weddell, to the vicinity of Caracas, on the north- ern coast, in about the 10th degree of north latitude. They follow, in this dis- tance, the circuitous course of the great mountain ranges, and for the most part occupy the eastern slope of the second range of the Cordilleras. Those which yield the bark of commerce grow at various elevations upon the Andes, seldom less than 4000 feet above the sea; and require a temperature considerably lower than that which usually prevails in tropical countries.* * Transplantation of the Cinchona trees. For a long time after the discovery of the virtues of Peruvian bark, no attempt appears to have been made to transplant to other countries the trees which produced it. In 1737, La Condamine collected a large number of young plants, with the view of conveying them to Europe; but, after having descended the Amazon in safety for more than a thousand leagues, they were washed overboard, near the mouth of that river, from the boat containing them, and were all lost. After this failure, though the idea of transplanting the Cinchonas was occasionally suggested, nothing was done until 184G-7, when Dr. Weddell, now celebrated for his successful exploration of the region of the Calisaya bark, sent some seeds to France, which were planted with success in the Jardin des Plantes, and thus supplied some of the conservatories of Europe with specimens of the plant. But the first successful effort, with a view to great practical re- sults, was made, in 1853, by the Dutch Government, by whom Mr. Hasskarl, formerly superintendent of the botanical garden in Java, was sent to South America on this im- portant mission. A number of young Cinchona plants were sent by him directly across the Facific to Batavia, which they reached before the close of 1854. From these, and from PART I. Cinchona. 255 There has been much difficulty in properly arranging the species of Cinchona. One sonree of the difficulty is the varying shape of the leaves of the same species, according to the degree of elevation upon the mountainous declivities, to the severity or mildness of the climate, the greater or less humidity of the soil, and to various circumstances in the growth of individual plants. Even the same tree often produces foliage of a diversified character; and a person, not aware of this fact, might be led to imagine that he had discovered different species, from an examination of the leaves from one and the same branch. The fructification partakes, to a certain extent, of the same varying character. Lambert, in his “ Illustration of the genus Cinchona,” published in 1821, after admitting with Humboldt the identity of several varieties which had received specific names from other botanists, described nineteen species. De Candolle enumerated otdy sixteen. Lindley admits twenty-one known species, and five doubtful. Weddell describes twenty-one species, including eight new ones of his own, and two doubtful, and excluding several before admitted by other writers, which he joins to his new genus Cascarilla. Until very recently, it was impossible to decide from which species of Cinchona the several varieties of bark were respectively derived. The former references of the yellow bark to C. cordifolia, of the pale to C. lancifolia, and of the red to C. ohlongifolia, have been very properly abandoned in all the Pharmacopoeias. It is now universally admitted that the officinal barks, known in the market by these seeds obtained from other sources, which were planted in the mountains of Java, in sites selected for their supposed conformity in climate with the native locality of the Cinchona, have sprung plantations, which in 1860 contained nearly a million of trees, of which 15,000 or 16,000 were of the C. Calisaya. Dr. De Vry obtained, from the bark of one of the Cin- chona plants of Java, not live years old, 3-12 per cent, of quinia, which is equal to the product of the Bolivian trees, Many of the trees, at the end of 1861, were thirty feet high. Unfortunately, however, most of the plants in Java are of comparatively valueless species; and the Dutch will probably not be able to draw from their existing plantations all the important commercial results to which their enterprise and perseverance entitle them. The English East India Government has been more successful. Stimulated by the sug- gestions of Dr. Royle, and by the partial success of the Dutch, they engaged, in 1859, the services of Mr. Clements B. Markham, who proceeded to Bolivia, in South America, and, after almost incredible hardships, arising partly from the nature of the country, and partly from the jealousy of the native authorities, succeeded in collecting and transmitting to England upwards of 400 Calisaya plants. Most of these, however, were so much injured, on their way from England to India, by the excessive heat of the Red Sea, that very few, on their arrival in Ilindostan, had sufficient life remaining to grow when planted. Hap- pily, the deficiency was supplied by seeds of C. Calisaya sent from Java, where they were produced, to Calcutta, at the request of the English Governor General. (De Vry, Pharm. Journ., April, 1863, p. 440.) Whilst Mr. Markham was in Bolivia, other agents were col- lecting other species in Peru and Ecuador, whence seeds of the pale and red bark Cinchonas reached India, and, being planted in the selected sites, proved to be very productive. The sites selected for the Cinchona plantations were in the Neilgherry Hills, in Southern India, in the Presidency of Madras, at the junction of the East and West Ghauts, near the Sanitary Station of Ootacamund, at heights varying from 5000 to 7450 feet above the sea. These positions unite the peculiar characters of the native region of the Cinchonas in the Andes, not only as regards elevation and latitude, but also as to atmospheric moisture, an excess of which, for the greater portion of the year, seems essential to the perfection of these trees. Other situations also have been chosen, as at Darjeeling, in the mountains of British Sikhim, Presidency of Bengal, and in the mountains of Ceylon. The success of this enterprise, thus far, has been complete. In April, 1863, there were in the Neilgherry plantations alone 120,000 Cinchona trees, of which 45,000 were of the Cinchona succirubra, which yields the genuine red bark, 1500 of the C. Calisaya, and others of less valuable, but still productive species. At the latest accounts, specimens of the bark of C. succirubra, two years old, had been sent to London, and, on examination by Mr. Howard, yielded from 3-80 to 3-40 per cent, of pure alkaloids, of which 2-40 was quinia with a little cinchonidia, and (>60 cinchonia; a product quite equal to that of the South American red barks of the same age; so that the question has been determined of the productiveness of these transplanted trees; and it now only remains to be settled how far the enterprise may be successful in a commercial point of view. (Pharm. Journ., June and July. 1862, and April, July, and Aug. 1863.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 256 Cinchona. PART I. titles, are not the product of the species mentioned. It is stated by Humboldt, that the property of curing agues belongs to the barks of all the Cinchonas with hairy and woolly blossoms, and to these alone. All those with smooth corollas belong to the genus Cascarilla of Weddell. Within a few years much light has been thrown upon the botanical history of the different varieties of bark, and at present most if not all of the valuable varieties can be traced to their sources. The following species are acknowledged by the Pharmacopoeia of the U. States. 1. Cinchona Galisaya. Weddell, Hid. Nat. des Quinquinas, p. 30, t 3. This is a lofty tree, with a trunk often two feet or more in diameter, and a summit usually rising above the other trees of the forest. The leaves are petiolate, oblong or lanceolate-obovate, from three to six inches long and one or two in breadth, obtuse, acute or slightly attenuated at the base, softish, above smooth, of a velvety aspect, and obscurely green, beneath smooth and of a pale emerald hue, with scrobiculi at the axils of the veins, but scarcely visible on the upper surface. The stipules are about as long as the petioles, oblong, very obtuse, and very smooth. The flowers are in ovate or subcorymbose panicles. The calyx is pubescent, with a cup-shaped limb, and short triangular teeth ; the corolla is rose-coloured, with a cylindrical tube about four lines long, and a laciniate limb fringed at the edges ; the stamina are concealed in the tube, with anthers more than twice as long as the filaments. The fruit is an ovate capsule scarcely as long as the flower, enclosing elliptical lanceolate seeds, the margin of which is irregularly toothed, with a fimbriated appearance. The tree grows in the forests, upon the declivities of the Andes, at the height of 6000 or 7000 feet above the ocean, in Bolivia and the southernmost part of Peru. A variety of this species, described by Weddell under the name of Josephiana, is a mere shrub, not more than twelve feet high, with a slender stem, erect branches, and a strongly adherent bark. This variety is found in some places covering ex- tensive surfaces destitute of forest trees. Weddell supposes that these tracts had once been covered with forests, which, having been destroyed by fires, have been succeeded by this stunted growth springing from the roots, and prevented from receiving its full development by the want of protection from other trees. By the discovery of this species the long unsettled point of the botanical source of Calisaya bark has been determined. The immense consumption of that bark, and the wasteful methods pursued by the bark gatherers have caused the rapid destruction of the tree; and already it has disappeared from the neighbourhood of inhabited places, except in the form of a shrub. Weddell wfas compelled to make long journeys on foot through the forests, by paths scarcely opened, before he could get a sight of the tree in its full vigour. 2. Cinchona Condaminea. Ilumb. and Bonpl. Plant. Equin. i. p. 33, t. 10; Lindley, Flor. Med. 414; Carson, lllust. of Med. Pot. i. 53, pi. 45.—Cinchona officinalis. Linn.; Hooker, Bot. Mag. t. 5364. This tree, when full grown, has a stem about eighteen feet high and a foot in thickness, with opposite branches, of which the lower are horizontal, and the higher rise at their extremities. The bark of the trunk yields when wounded a bitter astringent juice. The leaves are of variable shape, but generally ovate-lanceolate, about four inches in length by less than two in breadth, smooth, and scrobiculate at the axils of the veins be- neath. The flowers are in axillary, downy, corymbose panicles. The tree grows on the declivities of the mountains, at an elevation of from about a mile to a mile and a half, and in a mean temperature of 67° F. It was seen by Humboldt and Bonpland in the neighbourhood of Loxa, and is said also to grow near Guan- cabamba and Ayavaca in Peru. It is now admitted to be the source of the crown bark of Loxa. Weddell considers as varieties of this species, though with some Hesitation, as he has never seen them alive, the following: 1. Candollii (C. ma- crocalyx of Pavon and De Candolle); 2. liicumsefolia (C. lucumcefolia of Pavon and Liudley); 3. lancifolia (C. lancifolia of Mutis), hereafter referred to as a distinct species; and 4. Pitayensis, growing in New Granada. Cinchona. 257 PART I. 3. C. micro, nth a. Ruiz and Pavon, FI. Peruv. ii. 52, t. 194; Lindley, Flor hied. 412; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 52, pi. 44. This is a large tree, forty feet high, with oblong leaves, from four to twelve inches in length and from two to six in breadth, scarcely acute, smooth, shining on the upper surface, and scro- biculate at the axils of the veins beneath. The flowers are in terminal, loose, leafless panicles, and are smaller than those of any other species except C. lanci- folia. (Bindley.) The tree grows, according to Ruiz and Pavon, in the moun- tains near Chicoplaya, Monzon, and Puebla de San Antonio, according to Poppig, at Cuchero, and, according to Weddell, in the Peruvian province of Carabaya, and in Bolivia. Ruiz states that its bark is always mixed with that sent into the market from the provinces of Panatahuas, Huamilies, and ITuanuco. The Edin- burgh and Dublin Colleges ascribed to it the cinchona cinerea, the gray or silver hark of British commerce; and the U. S. Pharmacopoeia recognises it as one of the sources of pale bark, as it undoubtedly is. Though not recognised in our officinal code, there is another species, recently determined, which, as the source of the genuine red bark, is scarcely less import- ant than either of the preceding, and has, within a few years, acquired additional value from the great success with which it has been transplanted, and propagated in the Highlands of Hindostan. We refer to the species denominated, after Pavon, Cinchona succirubra. 4. G. succirubra. Pavon, Ms.; Howard, Pharm. Journ. and Trans., Octob. 1856, p. 209, with a figure. —C. ovata, var. erythroderma. Weddell, Hist. Nat. cles Quinquin. p. 60. This species has been satisfactorily ascertained to produce the proper officinal red bark, the origin of which remained so long unknown, or at least undetermined. The name of C. succirubra originated with Pavon, having been applied by him, in an unpublished manuscript, to an undescribed species yielding the bark called cinchona coloracla de Iluaranda, which has been shown to be identical with officinal red bark ; while a specimen of the plant itself, in the collection of Ruiz and Pavon at Kew, upon examination by Mr. J. E. Howard, of London, proved to correspond exactly with a specimen of the red-bark tree which that gentleman had received from South America. The same plant was described by Weddell, in his Natural History of the Cinchonas, as a variety of C. ovata, under the designation of Cinchona ovata, var. erythroderma, and was conjectured by him to be the source of red bark, though he did not at the time feel justified in giving a decided opinion. This point, however, having been subsequently determined, and the plant elevated to the dignity of a new species, Mr. Howard proposed at first to name it Cinchona erythroderma, not only from courtesy to Dr. Weddell, but also from the appropriateness of the name itself, implying the redness of the bark; but Pavon’s name of succirubra was after- wards preferred on the ground of priority, being itself also (red-juiced) expressive of a quality of the tree. This species is, when full grown, of great magnitude; but almost all the older trees have been destroyed, and few now remain with a stem so much as a foot in diameter. The branches have a silvery epidermis, cor- responding with that of the red bark in quills as often seen in the market. The leaves are ovate, varying greatly in size, often as much as nine inches by six, nar- rowing towards the base, somewhat membranaceous, pubescent beneath, and green on both sides. The tree inhabits a region, in the present republic of Ecuador, on the western slope of Chimborazo, the sea-port of which is the town of Guayaquil. Besides the foregoing species, several others deserve a brief notice, either as contributing to furnish the bark of commerce, or on account of the attention they have received from pharmacologists. 5. C. scrobiculata. Humb. and Bonpl. Plant. Equin. i. p. 165, t. 47; Weddell, Hist. Nat. des Quinquinas, p. 42, t. 7. This species was united by Lindley with C. micrautha; but Weddell, who has had ample opportunities of forming a just conclusion, considers it as one of the best characterized species of the genus. 258 Cinchona. PART I. According to this author, the scrobiculi at the axils of the veins on the under surface of the leaf, which are one of the most prominent of its peculiarities, are not usually found in C. micrantha, as stated in its description ; but what have been taken for them, in the latter species, are simply small bundles of hairs. The tree was seen by Humboldt and Bonpland, forming large forests near the city of Jaen de Bracomoros ; and Weddell states that it is met with also in the Peruvian pro- vinces of Cuzco and Carabaya. Large quantities of the bark were formerly col- lected at Jaen, and sent to the coast to be shipped for Lima. At present the traders in this bark are said by Weddell to be chiefly at Cuzco. The bark of the younger branches has been ranked with the pale or gray barks; that of the larger branches has been sometimes employed to adulterate the Calisaya. 6. C. lancifolia. Mutis, Period, de Santa Fe, p. 465 ; Lindley, Flnr. Med. 415. This is one of the species discovered by Mutis in New Granada, and by the dis- ciples of that botanist wTas considered as embracing many trees which had received distinct specific designations. By the London College it was long recognised as the source of one of the officinal barks, under the impression, probably, that it was identical with C. Condaminea, which was knowm to yield one of the most highly valued varieties. It is, however, a native of New Granada ; and, as none of the barks recognised by the Pharmacopoeias come from Carthagena, its product, which must be shipped from that port, cannot be considered as ranking among them. It yields the orange bark of Mutis, or fibrous Carthagena bark of present pharmacologists. 7. C. cordifolia. Mutis, in Humb. Magaz. Berlin, 1807, p. 117; Lindley, Flor. Med. 839 ; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. i. 51, pi. 43. This is a spreading tree, fifteen or twenty feet high, with a single, erect, round stem, covered with a smooth bark, of a brownish-gray colour. It was first discovered by Mutis in the mountains about Santa Fe de Bogota, in New Granada, and grows at elevations varying from 5800 to 9500 feet. It was formerly considered by the British Col- leges as the source of their yellow bark; but has been ascertained not to pro- duce the officinal bark, which never comes from the region where it is known to grow. Guibourt found that the quina amarilla or yellow bark of Sante Fe, which is probably produced by C. cordifolia, is identical with hard Carthagena bark. Weddell states that the tree grows also in Peru, and yields the white and ash-coloured barks of Loxa. 8. C. Boliviana. Weddell, Hist. Nat. des Quinquinas, p. 50, t. 9. This tree was discovered and named by Weddell, who found it growing in Bolivia and Peru, extending somewhat further northward than C. Calisaya, but not so far towards the south. In the northern parts of Bolivia the two species frequently grow together. The bark of C. Boliviana is generally mixed in commerce with the proper Calisaya, from which it cannot always be easily distinguished. This is less to be regretted, as, according to Weddell, the properties of the two barks are not essentially different. It is said that this botanist now considers his C. Boliviana as scarcely more than a variety of C. Calisaya; and Mr. Markham, who joins in this opinion, proposes to designate the plant Cinchona Calisaya, var. Morada. (Pharm. Journ., Sept. 1863, p. 108.) The close resemblance of the products of the two trees is a strong evidence of their specific identity. 9. C. ovata. Iluiz and Pavon, FI. Peruv.; Weddell, Hist. Nat. des Quinquinas, p. 42, t.. xi. and xii. This species grows in close groves, in warm places at the foot of the Andes, near Pozuzo and Panao, about ten leagues from Huanuco. Lindley considers it quite distinct from C. pubescens of Yahl, and C. cordifolia of Mutis, with both of which it has been confounded. Ruiz calls its bark casca- rillo pallido or pale bark, and states that it was not to be found in commerce. Yon Bergen, however, upon comparing a specimen of the cascarillo pallido m the collection of Ruiz with the Jaen bark, found them identical. From Wed- dell’s statements it would seem that this species is widely diffused in Peru and Cinchona. 259 PART I. Bolivia, and varies extremely in the character of its bark in different situations In the parts visited by him, the finer qualities pass for Calisaya bark; and :n the Peruvian province of Carabaya, bordering on Bolivia, it is habitually em- ployed to sophisticate that bark. He believes also that much of the quilled bark of Loxa and Huanuco must be referred to this species. The variety G. ovata, var. erythroderma, referred to in the last edition of the Dispensatory, and now known to be the soux'be of the officinal red bark, has been raised to the position of a species, under the name of C. succirubra. (See p. 257.) In addition to the species above mentioned, the following, for a description of which we refer to Lindley’s Flora Medica, yield barks possessing febrifuge pro- perties.—10. C.nitida of the Flora Peruviana, incorrectly confounded, accord- ing to Lindley, with C. lanceolata by De Candolle, and C. Condaminea by Lambert, grows in groves, in cold situations upon the Andes, in the Peruvian provinces of Huanuco, Tarma, Iluamilies, and Xuaxa, and is probably the source of the finest variety of commercial Lima bark. —11. C. lucumeefolia of Pavon, confounded by Lambert with C. Condaminea, grows near Loxa, and probably contributes to the Loxa or pale barks. — 12. C. lanceolata of the Flora Peruviana is found at Cuchero, and various other places fifteen or twenty leagues distant from Huanuco, where it forms groves in lofty cold situations upon the Andes. Its bark is said by Ruiz and Pavon to be called yellow bark, from the colour of its inner surface, and to resemble Calisaya bark in flavour. —13. C. ovalifolia of Humboldt and Bonpland, the C. Humboldtiana of Romer and Schultes, and of De Candolle, is a shrub from six to nine feet high, inhabiting the province of Cuenca, where it forms considerable forests. It probably contributes to the Loxa barks, although its product is said to be of inferior quality. —14. C. pubescens of Yahl, considered by Lindley as identical with G purpurea of the FI. Peruv., is a tree of considerable magnitude, distinguished by the violet tint of its large leaves, and the purple colour of its flowers. It occurs in groves on the lower mountain ridges in the provinces of Loxa, Jaen, Pantahuas, &c., was seen by Pdppig at Cuchuo, and is stated to grow also in New Granada. The bark is inferior, and is said to be employed for adulterating the better kinds. A speci- men taken to Europe by Poppig was found by Reichel to be identical with the Iluamilies bark. By Weddell it is stated to be the bark known in French com- merce as Cusco bark, and closely to resemble that of C. cordifolia. —15. C. hir- suta of the FI. Peruv grows on wooded mountains in the province of Panata- huas near Huanuco, and is said to yield a good bark, called formerly quina delgadilla or delgada, now scarcely collected. — 16. C. glandulifera of the FI. Peruv. is a shrub of about twelve feet, flourishing on the mountains N. W. of Huanuco, and yielding an excellent bark, unknown in commerce, called by the inhabitants cascarillo negrillo from its blackish epidermis. In its flowering season, it perfumes the forest by the scent of its blossoms. —17. G. Mutisii of Lambert (G. glandulifera of Lindley) is considered among the best character- ized species. It grows in Loxa, but its bark is unknown. Besides the above species, Lindley enumerates, 18. G. rotundifolia of Ruiz and Pavon, growing in the province of Loxa ; 19. C. villosa of Pavon (C. Hnm- boldtiana of Lambert), growing at Jaen of Loxa; and 20. G. caduciflora of Bonpland, growing near Jaen de Bracomoros ; not to mention the species joined by Weddell to his now admitted genus of Cascarilla. None of the species re- ferred to in this paragraph are known to yield bark to commerce. To these must ■now be added, 21. G. amygdalifolia of Bolivia and Peru ; 22. G. australis of Bolivia, the most southern of all the known species, growing as far south as the 19th degree of latitude; 23. G. purpurascens; 24. C. Ghomeliana; 25. G.asperi- folia, also of Bolivia ; and 26. C. Garabayensis of Carabaya ; all of which were discovered and described by Weddell; but from none of which is commercial bark procured. G. dichotoma of the FI. Peruv., G. macrocalyx of De Candolle, 260 Cinchona. PART I. C. crass ifolia of Pavon, in De Candolle’s Prodromus, C. Pelalba of the same authority, and C. Muzonensis of Goudot in De Candolle’s Prodromus, are con- sidered by Lindley as uncertain species. Perhaps too much importance has been attached to the study of particular species of Cinchona. The character of the product of any one species varies much according to the part of the plant decorticated, and the circumstances of its growth. Weddell has made some observations on this point, which, if con- firmed, may lead to important practical results.* Commercial History. For more than a century after Peruvian bark came into use, it was procured almost exclusively from the neighbourhood of Loxa. In a memoir published A. D. 1138, La Condamine speaks of the bark of Rhiobambo, Cuenca, Ayavaca, and Jaen de Bracoraoros. Of these places, the first two, together with Loxa, lie within the ancient kingdom of Quito, at the southern extremity; the others are in the same vicinity, within the borders of Peru. The drug was shipped chiefly at Payta, whence it was carried to Spain, and thence spread over Europe. Beyond the limits above mentioned, the Cinchona was not supposed to exist, till, in the year 1753, a gentleman of Loxa discovered it, while on a journey to Santa Fe de Bogota, in numerous situations along his route, wherever, in fact, the elevation of the country was equal to that of Loxa, or about 6500 feet above the level of the sea. This discovery extended through Quito into New Granada, so far as two degrees and a half north of the equator. But no practical advan- tage was derived from it; and the information lay buried in the archives of the vice-royalty, till subsequent events brought it to light. To Mutis belongs the credit of making known the existence of the Cinchona in New Granada. He first discovered it in the neighbourhood of Bogota, in 1772. A botanical ex- pedition was afterwards organized by the Spanish government, with the view of * The fundamental idea is, that the chemical character of the bark is connected with peculiarities in its intimate structure, and that by knowing the latter we may ascertain, with an approach to certainty, the former also; and thus, as the virtues of the bark depend on its chemical constitution, we may have reliable criteria of its value. Now, in the differ- ent barks there are three varieties of structure; the dead exterior layers being left out of the question. First, as in the Calisaya bark, which consists of the inner bark or liber, the whole substance is tilled with short fusiform fibres, which, whether viewed in a longitudi- nal or transverse section, are seen, with the aid of the microscope, to be isolated by a cel- lular tissue, in the midst of which they are regularly disposed in parallel lines, lying end to end without absolute junction. It is known that this bark abounds in quinia, and owes its virtue to that constituent. In the second variety, such as the flat bark of C. scrobiculata, a cellular coat exists outside cf the liber. In this, under the microscope, the inner layer is seen to consist of fibres more closely arranged, more numerous and much larger than in the preceding, and firmly at- tached at their extremities; and they suddenly diminish in number as we approach the outer surface, where the bark consists solely of cells. The third variety, of which the bark of C. pubescens is an example, consists chiefly of cellular tissue, with a few irregular series of fibres in the inner half; and these fibres are three or four times as large as in the other varieties. In the two latter barks cinchonia is the predominant alkali; but it is not very abundant in either, and least so in the one last mentioned. The inference is, that quinia is most largely developed in those barks in which the fibres are short and intimately mixed with cells; while the cinchonia is more espe- cially deposited in the tissue exclusively cellular. The fracture in the first variety is, from its structure, fibrous, but short-fibrous throughout; that of the second and third is smooth where cells exist exclusively, and with long fibres where fibres exist. A short, smooth fracture, therefore, as in the young barks, or a fracture partly smooth and partly long- fibrous, as in the older barks which have not thrown off their cellular layer, indicates a cinchonia bark, and one comparatively feeble; while a fracture uniformly short-fibrous indicates a variety abounding in quinia and energetic; and, in proportion as a bark ap- proaches this latter condition, will it prove to be efficacious.—Note to the ninth edition PART I. Cinchona. exploring this part of their dominions, and the direction was given to Mntis. Its researches eventuated in the discovery of several species of Cinchona in New Granada; and a commerce in the bark soon commenced, which was carried on through the ports of Carthagena and Santa Martha. To these sources another was added about the same time, A. D. 1176, by thtw discovery of the Cinchona in the centre of Peru, in the mountainous region about the city of Huanuco, which lies on the eastern declivity of the Andes, north east of Lima, at least six degrees south of the province of Loxa. To explore this new locality, another botanical expedition was set on foot, at the head of which were Ruiz and Pavon, the distinguished authors of the Flora Peruviana/ These botanists spent several years in that region, during which time they dis- covered numerous species. Lima became the entrepot for the barks collected around Huanuco; and hence probably originated the name of Lima bark, so often conferred, in common language, not only upon the varieties received through that city, but also upon the medicine generally. Soon after the last-mentioned discovery, two additional localities of the Cin- chona were found; one at the northern extremity of the continent near Santa Martha, the other very far to the south, in the provinces of La Paz and Cocha- bamba, then within the vice-royalty of Buenos Ayres, now in the republic of Bo- livia. These latter places became the source of an abundant supply of excellent bark, which received the name of Calisava. It was sent partly to the ports on the Pacific, partly to Buenos Ayres. The consequence of these discoveries was a vast increase in the supply of bark, which was now shipped from the ports of Guayaquil, Payta, Lima, Arica, Buenos Ayres, Carthagena, and Santa Martha. At the same time, the average quality was probably deteriorated; for, though many of the new varieties were possessed of excellent properties, yet equal care in superintending the collection and assorting of the bark could scarcely be exercised, in a field so much more extended. The varieties now poured into the market soon became so numerous as to burden the memory, if not to defy the discrimination of the druggist; and the best pharmacologists found themselves at a loss to discover any permanent peculiarities which might serve as the basis of a proper and useful classification. This perplexity has continued more or less to the present time; though the dis- covery of the alkaline principles has presented a ground of distinction before unknown. The restrictions upon the commerce with South America, by direct- ing the trade into irregular channels, had also a tendency to deteriorate the character of the drug. Little attention was paid to a proper assortment of the several varieties; and not only were the best barks mixed with those of inferior species and less careful preparation, but the products of other trees, bearing no resemblance to the Cinchona, were sometimes added, having been artificially prepared so as to deceive a careless observer. The markets of this country were peculiarly ill-furnished. The supplies, being derived chiefly, by means of a con- traband trade, from Carthagena and other ports on the Spanish Main, or indi- rectly through the Havana, were necessarily of an inferior character; and most of the good bark which reached us was imported by our druggists from London, whither it was sent from Cadiz. A great change, however, in this respect, took place, after the ports on the Pacific were opened to our commerce. The best kinds of bark were thus rendered directly accessible to us; and the trash with which our markets were formerly glutted is now in great measure excluded. Our ships trading to the Pacific ruu along the American coast from Valparaiso to Guayaquil, stopping at the intermediate ports of Coquimbo, Copiapo, Arica, Callao, Truxillo, &c., from all which they probably receive supplies. Much good bark has of late also been imported from Carthagena, and other ports of the Caribbean Sea, being brought down the Magdalena river from the mountainous regions of New Granada; and, since the completion of the railroad across the 262 Cinchona. PART I. lstlm is, large quantities have reached this country by way of Panama, to which place they are brought chiefly from the Pacific ports of Buenaventura and Guay- aquil. An additional source of supply has recently been opened through the Amazon; a considerable quantity of bark having been taken to the London market from the port of Para, in Brazil, brought down that river, probably from the Peruvian province of Huanueo. According to Mr. Howard, the bark thus ob- tained is of inferior quality, yielding but a small proportion of alkaloids. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1863, p. 248.)* The persons who collect the bark are called in South America Cascarilleros. Considerable experience and judgment are requisite to render an individual well qualified for this business. He must not only be able to distinguish the trees which produce good bark from those less esteemed, but must also know the pro- per season and age at which a branch should be decorticated, and the marks by which the efficiency or inefficiency of any particular product is indicated. The bark gatherers begin their work with the setting in of the dry season in May. Sometimes they first cut down the tree, and afterwards strip off the bark from the branches; in other instances they decorticate the tree while standing. The former plan is said to be the most economical; as, when the tree is cut down, the stump pushes up shoots which in the course of time become fit for decortica- tion, while, if deprived of its bark, the whole plant perishes. The operator separates the bark by making a longitudinal incision with a sharp knife through its whole thickness, and then forcing it off from the branch with the back of the instrument. Other means are resorted to, when the trunk or larger limbs are decorticated. According to Poppig, the bark is not separated until three or four days after the tree is felled. It must then be speedily dried, as otherwise it becomes deteriorated. For this purpose it is taken out of the woods into some open place, where it is exposed to the sun. In drying it rolls up, or becomes quilled; and the degree to which this effect takes place is proportionate directly to the thinness of the bark, and inversely to the age of the branch from which it was derived. In packing the bark for exportation, it often happens that several different kinds are introduced into the same case. The packages are, in com- mercial language, called seroons. As found in this market they are usually co- vered with a case of thick and stiff ox-hide, lined within by a very coarse cloth, apparently woven out of some kind of grass. The Cinchona forests, being in very thinly inhabited districts, do not, for the most part, belong to individuals, but are open to the enterprise of all who choose to engage in the collection of the bark. The consequence is, that the operations arc carried on without reference to the future condition of this important inter- est ; and the most wasteful modes of proceeding are often adopted. Neverthe- less, the great extent to which the Cinchona foresth prevail, spreading, as they do, with some interruptions, over thirty degrees of latitude, and occupying re- gions which can never be applied to agricultural purposes, almost precludes the idea of their even remote extinction. The bitterness of the Cinchona is not confined to its bark. The leaves and flowers also have this property, which in the former is associated with acidity, in the latter with a delicious aroma, which renders the air fragrant in neighbour- hoods where the trees abound. The wood is nearly tasteless; but the bark of the root has the same virtues as that of the trunk; and rich mines of underground treasure may await future explorers, in regions which have been stripped of their trees either by fire or the axe. * An interesting history of the commerce in the Cinchona barks by Dr. II. A. WeUlell will be found in the American Journ. of Pharm. (xxvi. 539, Nov. 1854), -migiually !r>i. his Voyages dans le Nord de la Bolivie, Paris, 1853. Cinchona. 263 PART I. Classification. To form a correct and lucid system of classification is the most difficult parr of the subject of bark. An arrangement founded on the botanical basis is liable to the objection, that the product of the same species may vary according to the age of the bark and the situation of the tree ; and, besides, is at present scarcely practicable ; as, though our knowledge of the source of the several varieties has very much extended, it is still defective on some points. The Spanish merchants adopted a classification, dependent partly on the place of growth or shipment, and partly on the inherent properties, or supposed relative value of the bark. So long as the sources of the drug were very con- fined, and the number of varieties small, this plan answered the purposes of trade ; but at present it is altogether inadequate; and, though some of the names ori- ginally conferred upon this principle are still retained, they are often uncertain or misapplied. Perhaps, on the whole, the best arrangement for pharmaceutical and medicinal purposes is that founded upon difference of colour. It is true that dependence cannot be placed upon this property alone; as barks of a similar colour have been found to possess very different virtues; and, between the various colours considered characteristic, there is an insensible gradation of shade, so that it is not always possible to decide where one ends and the other begins. Still it has been found that most of the valuable barks may be arranged, according to their colour, in three divisions, which, though mingling at their extremes, are very distinctly cha- racterized, in certain specimens, by peculiarity not only in colour, but also in other sensible properties, and even in chemical constitution. The three divisions al- luded to are thepale, the yellow, and the red. This arrangement has been adopted in the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias: and as, until recently, almost all the highly esteemed barks were brought from the Pacific coast of South America, and those from the northern coast were deemed inferior, it is only the former that are recognised under the three divisions referred to. In describing, therefore, the dif- ferent kinds of bark, we shall treat first, under the officinal titles of pale, yellow, and red, of those originally brought only from the ports of the Pacific; while those coming to us from the northern ports of New Granada and Venezuela will be subse- quently considered under the headiugof non-officinal ov Carthagenabarks, by the latter of which names they have been generally known in commerce. The commer- cial name will be given whenever a knowledge of it can be useful. It is proper to state that the different barks are often mingled in the same package, and that, in deciding upon the character of a seroon, the druggist is guided rather by the predominance than the exclusive existence of certain distinctive properties. 1. Pale Bark. Tiie epithet pale, applied to the barks of this division, is derived from the colour of the powder. The French call them quinquinas gris, or gray barks, from the colour of the epidermis. They come into the market in cylindrical pieces, of variable length from a few inches to a foot and a half, sometimes singly, sometimes doubly quilled, from two lines to an inch in diameter, and from half a line to two or three lines in thickness. The kinds which were formerly deemed the finest are about the size of a goosequill; but experience has shown that the young barks are not the most efficient. Their exterior surface is usually more or less rough, marked with transverse and sometimes with longitudinal fissures, and of a grayish colour, owing to adhering lichens. The shade is different in different samples. Sometimes it is a light gray, approaching to white, sometimes dull and brown, sometimes a grayish fawn, and frequently diversified by the in- termixture of the proper colour of the epidermis with that of the patches of 264 Cinchona. PART I, licheus. The interior surface, in the finer kinds, is smooth; in the coarser, oc- casionally rough and somewhat ligneous. Its colour is a brownish-orange, some- times inclining to red, sometimes to yellow, and, in some inferior specimens, of a dusky hue. The fracture is usually smooth, with some short filaments ou the internal part only. In the coarser barks it is more fibrous. The colour of the powder is a pale fawn, which is of a darker hue in the inferior kinds. The taste is moderately bitter and somewhat astringent, without being disagreeable or nau- seous. Authors speak also of an acidulous and aromatic flavour. The better kinds have a feeble odour, which is distinct and agreeably aromatic in the powder and decoction. The pale barks are chemically characterized by containing a much larger proportion of cinchonia and quinidia or cinclionidia than of quinia ; and their infusion does not yield a precipitate with solution of sulphate of soda. Their appearance generally indicates that they were derived from the smaller branches. They are collected in the provinces about Loxa, or in the country which surrounds the city of Iluanuco, northeast of Lima, and are probably derived chiefly from Cinchona Condaminea, C. nitida, and C. micrantha. There are several commercial varieties of pale bark, obtained from different sources, and differing more or less in properties. The most highly esteemed of these is the Loxa bark, the finest specimens of which are sometimes called crown bark of Loxa, from the impression that they have the same origin and character with the bark, formerly selected with great care for the use of the King of Spain and the royal family The pale bark collected about Huanuco is named either Lima bark, because taken to that city for commercial distribution, or Huanuco bark, from its place of collection. The former name has been more common in this country, where, indeed, this commercial variety has not unfrequently been confounded with the Loxa bark. Other pale barks are the Jaen and Huamilies barks, which are scarcely known as distinct varieties in the United States.* * The following description of the several varieties of pale bark has been derived mainly from the works of Von Bergen, Guibourt, and Pereira, probably the highest European au- thorities on this subject; the first in Germany, the second in France, and the third in Eng- land. We have consulted also other pharmacological writers, and have derived advantage from the recent observations of Dr. Weddell and M. Delondre, and of Mr. J. E. Howard, of London, who has carefully examined the rich collection of Pavon deposited in the British Museum, and compared the specimens with the barks of commerce. Our remarks are put in the form of a note; as the information in relation to these varieties can be of little use to the student, though it may aid the druggist. For a proper understanding of the subject, the reader should have some idea of the gene- ral structure of the bark. In the young barks there are four layers, viz.: 1. the epidermis or outer coat, often covered or incorporated with lichens; 2. the periderm or suberous coat, sometimes of a cork-like character; 3. the cellular coat or green layer, often containing resin; and 4. the liber, or inner coat, which is more or less fibrous. 1. Loza Bark. Crou-n Bark. — Quinquina de Loza, Fr. —Loza China, Kron-China, Germ. — The following is Von Bergen’s description of this variety, contained in his splendid work upon bark, entitled Versuch einer Monographic der China, published in Hamburg in the year 1826. This bark is in cylindrical tubes, strongly rolled, from six to fifteen inches long, from two lines to an inch in diameter, and from half a line to two lines thick. The outer surface is more or less rough, seldom much wrinkled longitudinally, but marked with numerous transverse fissures, which usually run round the bark, and divide it into rings, the edges of which are somewhat elevated. In the smallest quills these fissures are not very obvious; in the larger, they are distant and apt to be interrupted. In the largest the surface is sometimes very rough and even warty. The proper colour of the epidermis is dark-gray, sometimes almost black, sometimes ash-coloured, and occasionally inclining to fawn; bat frequently diversified by whitish lichens, which are in some instances so numerous as to cover almost the whole exterior of the bark, and to give it a light-gray appearance. The inner surface is smooth and uniform, and of the colour of cinnamon, with a reddish tinge. The fracture in the smaller quills is quite smooth, in the larger somewhat fibrous. The bark is of a rather firm consistence, and when cut transversely exhibits a resinous character. Its odour is compared by Guibourt to that perceived in damp woods, by Von Bergen to that of tan. Its taste is acidulous, astringent, and bitterish. The pc wder is of a dull cinnamon colour. Guibourt, in the edition of his Histoire des Drogues published in 1850, describes four chief PA dl ). Cinchona. In this country, the pale bark has fallen into disuse. As it yields little quinia, it is not employed in the manufacture of the sulphate of that alkali, which has varieties of Loxa bark, under the names severally of 1. Quinquina de Loza grin compacte. 2. Quinquina de L oxa brun compacte, 3. Quinquina de Loxa rouge fibreux de roi d’ Espagne, and 4. Quinquina de Loxa jaune fibreux. Of these the first two appear to be embraced in the de- scription above given from Von Bergen. The third is distinguished from the common Loxa bark by its eminently fibrous texture, and its slight astringency to the taste. It is scarcely to be found in commerce. The fourth was almost the only variety of Loxa bark known in the French market. It is in quills, very thin, and usually very much rolled, but slightly rough externally, with minute transverse fissures, generally covered with a thin whitish coat which gives it a light-gray colour, reddish and very smooth internally, and of a very finely fibrous fracture. Its taste is astringent and bitter, and its odour sufficiently marked. The pieces from the trunk are much larger, and may even have a thickness of tvr.i lines, with some resemblance to the Calisaya; but its outer surface, scarcely rough, and often longitudinally wrinkled, the fineness of its texture, and the smoothness of its inner surface readily distinguish it. Guibourt has no hesitation in referring it to C. macrocalyx. English druggists distinguish Loxa bark into 1. the picked crown bark, which consists of the finest, thinnest, and longest quills; 2. the silvery crown bark, somewhat larger in size, and characterized by a whitish silvery appearance of the epidermis, derived from adhering lichens; and 3. the leopard crown bark, named from its speckled appearance, depending on whitish lichens alternating with the dark-brown epidermis. Dr. Pereira, in the last edition of his work on Materia Medica, the publication of which was completed after his death (A. D. 1853), distinguishes the following varieties of Loxa bark.—1. Original or old Loxa Bark. This is the original crown bark, and derived its name from the circumstance, that parcels of it were found on board a captured Spanish vessel returning from S. America, put up with peculiar care, and marked as for the royal family. It was in slender quills, thirteen inches long, tied up in bundles about three inches in diameter. Similar bundles were after- wards imported, and still occasionally come in the seroons of commercial crown bark. This bark is believed to have been derived from C. Condaminea, variety vera of Weddell; but, as the tree is nearly exhausted, little is obtained from it at present; and what is commonly called Loxa, or crown bark, is derived from other varieties of C. Condaminea, or from other species.—2. White Croion Bark. This is in small and large quills; the former having a sil- very appearance from the presence of crustaceous lichens, and exhibiting numerous trans- verse cracks; the latter without these transverse fissures, but ragged externally from longitudinal rents in the epidei'mis, with a satin-like lustre of the surface thus exposed. It is the produce of C. Condaminea, var. lucumsefolia of Weddell, C. lucumsefolia of Pavon.—3. H. 0. Crown Bark. This is the variety usually found in commerce, and has been named from the brand H. 0. with a crown, adopted in the time of the Spanish government in S. America. It is in quills from six to fifteen inches long, from two lines to an inch in diameter, and from one-third of a line to two lines thick. Some of the quills are without lichens, thin, externally brown and shrivelled, with numerous longitudinal wrinkles, but with few trans- verse fissures. The internal surface is cinnamon-coloured, and the fracture pale-yellow. Others are larger, coarser, grayish externally from lichens, with many transverse fissures, some of which quite surround the quills. Others again are twisted, and have a patchy black and white appearance from the adhering lichens. The botanical origin of this bark is not certainly known; though Howard ascribes it to C.glandulifera. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 128.) It comes from the port of Payta.—4. Ashy Croton Bark. This is in quills about the size of the fingers, having an external surface mottled with white, gray, and black or soot-like patches of powdery and crustaceous lichens, sometimes also marked with rusty fungoid warts. The epidermis has longitudinal wrinkles and transverse fissures; the internal surface is of an orange or cinnamon colour. Mr. Howard found it identical with the bark, in Pavon’s col- lection, ascribed to C. rolundifolia of that botanist, C. cor difolia, var. rotundifolia of Weddell. It is stated to be imported from Lima; and, according to Mr. Howard, large quantities are used for pharmaceutical purposes. (Ibid , 126 )—5. Wiry Loxa Bark. This is in very slender, wire-like quills, internally smoothish and brown, in some places slightly gray, without lich- ens, and almost destitute of transverse fissures. Many of the quills are lined within with a thin shaving of pale-yellow wood. The fracture is short and resinous. The taste is very astringent and but slightly bitter, and, as the bark is almost destitute of alkaloids, it is very nearly worthless. It is brought from Payta; but its botanical source is unknown. The earlier analyses gave as constituents of the Loxa barks cinchonia and quinia, gene- rally with a predominance of the former alkaloid. Since the discovery of quinidia and cin- chonidia, these also have been found, sometimes in considerable proportion. The different rarieties vary much in their yield of alkaloids; the larger barks, in all the varieties, af- fording more than the smaller. An average of several results, stated by Geiger, gives about tP48 per cent, of cinchonia, and 0-06 of quinia. In the thickest pieces, Thiel found 10 per Cinchona. PART I. almost superseded the bark as a remedy in intermittents; and the red or yellow bark is preferred by physicians when it is necessary to resort to the medicine in c« ut.. of cinchonia, and 0-08 of quinia. According to Soubeiran, one pound of Loxa bark yields from a drachm and a half to two drachms of sulphate of cinchonia. From some fine old Loxa bark, not now in the market, Mr. Howard obtained 0-714 per cent, of quinia, 0 514 of quinidia (or cinchonidia), and 0-04 of cinchonia. From the II. O. crown bark, which is at present the variety usually found in commerce, he got from small quills 0-57 per cent, of quinidia and 0-6 of cinchonia, and from larger 1-05 of the former and 0-8 of the latter, and no quinia from either. (Pereira, Mat. Med., 3d ed., p. 1639.) From the ashy crown bark the same chemist got 0-418 per cent, of quinia and quinidia jointly, and 0-914 of cinchonia. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 126.) From these results it would appear either that the older Loxa barks contained much more quinia than the modern, or that what was supposed to be quinia was really the then unknown alkaloid quinidia or cinchonidia. The strong reaction of a solu- tion of gelatin with the infusion of Loxa bark indicates the presence of much tannic acid. 2. Lima or Huanuco Bark. Cinchona Cinerea, Gray Bark, Silver Bark, Ed. — Quinquina de Lima, Fr. — China Iluanuco, Grave China, Germ.—Lima or Huanuco bark was introduced into notice about the year 1779, after the discovery of Cinchona trees in the central regions of Peru; but Poppig says that the trade in it began in 1785. The first name originated from the circumstance that the bark entered into commerce through the city of Lima; the second was derived from the name of the city (Huanuco or Guanuco), in the more imme- diate neighbourhood of which the trees were found. There would seem to be two varieties of this bark, which come either in separate packages, or mixed together in the same. They are distinguished in England as fine and coarse gray barks, and have a different botanical origin; the former having been ascertained by Mr. Howard to belong to C. nilida, and tho latter being ascribed to C.micrantha, probably with justice. Fine Gray Bark. — Quinquina Rouge de Lima. Guibourt. The dimensions of this variety do not materially differ from those of the preceding, although in the largest pieces the diameter is somewhat greater. Many of the smaller quills have a more or less spiral form. At the edge of most of the complete quills, a sharp oblique cut with a knife is observable. The epidermis is usually adherent. The exterior surface is marked with longitudinal wrinkles or furrows, which in the thick pieces often penetrate quite through the outer coat- ing of the bark. Transverse fissures are also generally observable; but they never run wholly round the quill, often not more than a quarter or half round, and do not exhibit elevated borders. In some pieces the epidermis is rubbed off, either wholly or in spots; and in a few the entire thickness of the external layers is here and there removed, ex- hibiting the proper bark in patches. The colour externally is very light-gray, almost milk-white, with occasionally bluish-gray and darkish spots intermingled. Where the outer crust, which imparts this whitish colour is wanting, the surface is grayish-fawn or reddish- gray, and in the thicker pieces of a dark cinnamon colour. The inner surface, though in the smaller quills sometimes tolerably uniform, is generally more or less uneven, fibrous, or splintery, especially in the larger pieces, in which may often be observed adhering yellowish-white splinters of wood. The colour is usually a rusty brown inclining some- what to red, with occasionally a purplish tinge. The transverse fracture is smooth exte- riorly, fibrous or splintery interiorly. The longitudinal fracture is generally somewhat uneven, without being splintery, and exhibits here and there minute shining spots. The inner layers of the bark are usually soft and friable. The colour of the powder is a full cinnamon-brown. The odour of the bark is like that of clay, and in this respect different from that of all other varieties. The taste is at first acidulous, astringent, and slightly aromatic, and ultimately bitter and adhesive. Coarse or Inferior Gray Bark. The characters of this bark as a distinct variety were first given by Guibourt, who calls it quinquina de Lima gris brun. The following is his descrip- tion. “It is in the form of long tubes, well-rolled, from the size of a quill to that of the little finger, offering very often longitudinal wrinkles, formed by desiccation. The exterior surface is, moreover, moderately rugose, often nearly destitute of transverse fissures, having a general deep-gray tint, but with black or white spots, and bearing here and there the same lichens as the Loxa barks. The inner bark is of a deep brownish yellow, and formed as it were of agglutinated fibres.” (Hist, des Drogues, 4e ed., iii. 108.) Mr. Howard says of this bark that its predominant feature is its general woody texture, a feature very ob- servable on reducing it to powder, while the only hard portion of the former variety is a resinous circle existing between the inner and outer coats. He further states, as distinc- tions between the two varieties, that the one now described is thinner than the former; that its prevailing superficial colour, independently of the white lichenous covering. is glaucous green, and the colour of its substance rusty yellow, while the fine gray, as regards the inner surface, varies superficially, from a maroon colour to rust, and as regards the outer is brown, the substance of the bark being red; that a decoction of the former is PART I. Cinchona. substance. There is no doubt, however, that cinchonia possesses febrifuge pro- perties little inferior to those of quinia; and the same is probably the case with pale, and gives a small flocculent deposit on cooling, while one of the latter is brown, and lets fall a copious sediment. (Pharm. Journ., xii. pp. 15 and 16.) The Edinburgh College referred the Lima bark, which it denominated cinchona cinerea or gray bark, to C. micrantha. There is at present little room to doubt, from the observations of Guibourt, Pereira, and Howard, that it is only the coarse or inferior variety that belongs to that species; while the fine gray bark must be ascribed to C. nitida, which also grows in the neighbourhood of Huanuco. The Lima or Huanuco barks contain a considerable proportion of the alkaloids, though cinchonia predominates over quinia, and the latter is said to exist in a form in which it is difficultly crystallized, at least in the fine variety. Howard gives, as the result of his anal- ysis of the fine gray bark (C. nitida), 1-4 per cent, of cinchonia, 0 571 of quinia, and 0-142 of quinidia (or cinchonidia), amounting altogether to 2-113 percent. [Pharm. Journ., xii. 12.) It also contains a good deal of tannic acid. [Ibid., p. 161.) In the inferior kind [0. micrantha) he found 1-25 of cinchonia, 0-243 of quinia, 0 28 of quinidia (or cinchonidia), together 1-773 per cent. [Ibid., p. 14.) Geiger gives as the average of several results, in relation to Lima or Huanuco bark, 1-72 per cent, of cinchonia and 0-29 of quinia. Von Santen got from the best specimens, as the maximum, 2-73 per cent, of cinchonia, and no quinia. Delondre obtained from the different varieties from 0-2 to 0-6 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and from 0-8 to 1-2 of sulphate of cinchonia. [Quinologie, pp. 27, 28 ) It would, therefore, appear that this variety of bark must become valuable, if cinchonia should come into general use. 3. Jaen Bark. Ash Bark. — China Jaen, Blasse Ten-China, Germ. — Quinquina de Loxa cen- dre of Guibom-t. This variety probably derives its name from the province of Jaen de Bracomoros, in the vicinity of Loxa, where large quantities of bark have been collected. The Jaen bark is always in quills, which do not differ much in size from those of the Loxa bark, but are distinguishable by being frequently curved longitudinally, or bent in differ- ent directions, and somewhat spiral. The outer coat is often partially or entirely rubbed off, leaving the surface smooth and soft to the touch. When the epidermis is perfect, it exhibits small irregular transverse fissures, with occasionally faint longitudinal fissures and wavy wrinkles, and here and there a few warts, but no deep furrows. The colour va- ries from light or ash-gray to light yellow, diversified with blackish and brownish spots. When the outer coat is rubbed off, it inclines still more to yellow. Considered in mass, the bark always appears somewhat yellowish or straw-coloured. The exterior layers are soft and rather spongy, and may be readily scraped by the nail. The inner surface is exceed- ingly diversified, sometimes smooth, sometimes uneven and splintery. It is usually of a dull cinnamon colour. The bark is very brittle, and the fracture is smooth in the smaller quills, more or less uneven and sometimes splintery in the larger, and in neither exhibits a, resinous appearance. The odour is sweetish, and is compared to that of tan. The taste is acidulous, slightly astringent, and bitter, without being disagreeable. The colour of the powder is cinnamon-brown. The bark is very deficient in alkaloids. Some experimenters have found none, or only traces, while the highest product obtained was 80 grains of qui- nia and 13 grains of cinchonia from a pound. M. Munzini, of Paris, extracted from it an alkaline principle which he believed to be peculiar, and named cinchovatin ; but others be- lieve that it is identical with the aricina of Pelletier; and Mr. Howard can discover no difference between it and quinidia. [Pharm. Journ., xii. 127.) Mr. Howard does not coin- cide in the general opinion of the great poverty of the ash bark in alkaloids. He found in a mean-looking specimen 0-86 per cent, of cinchonia, and 0-61 of quinidia (or cinchonidia). [Ibid., p. 127.) Delondre obtained, on the large scale, 0-4 of sulphate of cinchonia, and 1-0 of sulphate of quinia. [Quinologie, p. 29.) Von Bergen believes this bark to be the product of C. ovata; and Mr. Howard confirms this reference. Von Bergen describes a variety of pale bark, under the name of dark Jaen bark [dunkele Ten China), or pseudo Loxa, which resembles the Loxa, but may be distinguished by the oblique or bent shape of the quills, and the uneven, fibrous, or splintery appearance of the inner surface. It seldom comes in large pieces. Pereira considers it identical with the ashy crown bark already described. (See page 265.) 4. Huamilies Bark. — China Huamilies, Germ. This bark is little known as a distinct va- riety. Its commercial name was derived from the province of Huamilies, which lies in the interior of Peru, northward of Huanuco, and is a part of the region explored by the botanical expedition under Ruiz and Pavon. It came into notice in Germany about the beginning of the present century. It is in quills and flat pieces. The quills are from three line* to an inch and a half in diameter, from five to sixteen inches long, and from half a line to three lines thick. The flat pieces, which are usually only fragments of the largest quills, are from one to two inches broad, and six to twelve inches long. In general all the layers of the bark are present, but sometimes the outer coat, and even the whole of that 268 Cinchona. PART L quvnidia and cinchonidia; so that, should the source of quinia begin to fail, the pale bark may come into more extensive use for the preparation of the other alkaloids. 2. Yellow Bark. The officinal term yellow bark is applicable only to the valuable variety of the drug called commercially Calisaya, a name which has been said, though errone- ously, to be derived from a province in Bolivia, near the city of La Baz, where the bark is collected * By the druggists Calisaya bark is arranged in two sub- varieties, the quilled and the flat, which sometimes come mixed together in the same seroon, sometimes separate. It is called by the French quinquina jaune royal (royal yellow bark), from its resemblance to a variety of bark formerly collected for the Spanish king. The quilled Calisaya (Calisaya arrolada of the Spanish Americans) is in pieces from three inches to two feet long, from a quarter of an inch to two or three inches in diameter, and of equally variable thickness. The epidermis is of a brownish colour, diversified or concealed by silvery-white, whitish, or yellow- ish lichens, is marked by longitudinal wrinkles and transverse fissures, and is often partially separated, and generally easily separable from the proper bark. In the larger kinds, it is thick, rough, deeply indented by the transverse fissures, which often surround the quills, and is composed of several layers, separated from each other by a reddish-brown membrane. The epidermis yields a dark- led powder, and is tasteless and inert. It is desirable, therefore, to get rid of it before the bark is powdered, as the medicine is thus procured of greater strength. The bark itself, without the epidermis, is from one to two lines in thickness, compact, of a short-fibrous texture, and when broken presents shining points, apparently the termination of small fibres running longitudinally, which, ex- part usually called the epidermis in our descriptions of bark (including those outer layers which in the tree are destitute of vitality, having been thrown outward by the annually renewed layers beneath them), are wanting in spots, though very seldom entirely absent. The epidermis is comparatively thin, very brittle, soft, and spongy. The outer surface, in the small and middling quills, is sometimes nearly smooth, but usually marked with wavy longitudinal wrinkles, and beset here and there with warts. These warts are abundant upon the thick pieces, which they sometimes almost entirely cover. Transverse fissures are seldom found, and only in the thick pieces The colour of the epidermis is usually grayish-fawn, here and there passing into a rusty brown; but, in the thicker pieces, in which the warts are abundant, it is between a liver and chestnut colour, often mixed with a tinge of purple. When the epidermis is wanting, the colour is often a full ochre yellow. The inner surface is sometimes uniform and almost smooth, sometimes slightly fibrous, rarely splintbry. The colour of this surface is rusty-brown, occasionally reddish, and in the fibrous or splintery pieces of an ochre yellow. The fracture in the smaller quills is rather even, in the larger presents short fibres, and is sometimes even splintery The odour of the bark is feeble but agreeable, the taste somewhat aromatic, bitterish, and slightly astringent. The powder is of a full cinnamon colour. The average product of cinchonia and quinia, as stated by Geiger, is 0-67 per cent, of the former, and 0-25 of the latter; so that the bark, though dissimilar in appearance to the other varieties of pale bark, agrees with them in containing more cinchonia than quinia. Von Santen obtained, as the maxi- mum, 12 per cent, of cinchonia, and little or no quinia. Huamilies bark, on the authority of Reich el, has been referred to C. pubescens ,(<7. purpurea of the Flor. Peruv); but Dr. Fereira and Mr. Howard agree in believing it to be the product of C. Condaminea, variety Chahuarguera of De Candolle, considered by Weddell as identical with his C. Condaminea, variety vera. The bark here described is noticed by Guibourt, who names it quinquina Hua- milies ferrugineux. The same author makes four other varieties of Huamilies bark; viz. the gris terne, mince et rougedtre, blanc, and jaune de Cuenqa.—Note to the tenth edition. * No such province ej ists in Bolivia. According to M. Laubert, the name is a corruption of colisalla, said to be derived from colla, a remedy, and salla, a rocky country. (Journ. de Pharm., xxii. 614.) Weddell refers the origin of the name to the words colli and saga, which in the Quichua language signify red and sort, and have probably been applied from the redness which the outer denuded surface of the bark assumes in drying, or from the ten co our which the leaves sometimes exhibit PART I. Cinchona. 269 arnined by the microscope, are found, when freed from a salmon-coloured pow- der that surrounds them, to be yellow and transparent. When the bark is pow- dered, they readily separate, in the form of spicula, which, like those of cowhage, insinuate themselves into the skin, and produce a disagreeable itching and irri- tation. The colour of the bark is brownish-yellow with a tinge of orange, the taste less astringent than that of the pale bark, but much more bitter; and the bitterness is somewhat peculiar. The external part of the proper bark is more bitter and astringent, and consequently stronger in medicinal power, than the internal. The odour is faint, but, when the bark is boiled, resembles that of the pale varieties. The small quills closely resemble some of the pale barks, but nay be distinguished by their very bitter taste. The flat Calisaya (Calisaya plancha of the Spaniards), which is derived from the large branches and trunk, is in pieces of various lengths, either quite flat, or but slightly curved, and generally destitute of the epidermis, which has been obviously removed through its own want of adhesiveness to the proper bark, and not by a knife, as is the case with some inferior barks in other respects resembling the Calisaya. The inner surface is like that of the quilled pieces ; the outer is irregular, marked with confluent longitudinal furrows and ridges, and somewhat darker coloured than the inner, being of a brownish fawn, fre- quently diversified with darker stains. The bark is of uniform fracture through- out, generally thicker than the quilled, more fibrous in its texture, less compact, less bitter, and possessed of less medicinal power. Though weaker than the proper bark of the quills, it is usually, in equal weight, more valuable than that variety, because free from the useless epidermis. The officinal yellow bark is characterized by its strongly bitter taste, with little astringency; by its fine brownish-yellow, somewhat orange colour, which is still brighter in the powder; and by containing a large proportion of quinia with very little cinchonia. The salts of quinia and lime are so abundant, that a strong infusion of it instantly affords a precipitate when crystals of sulphate of soda are added. (Guibourt, Hist, des Drogues, 4eme ed., iii. 131.)* * Calisaya bark is described by Von Bergen, under the name of China Regia or Kbnig’s China. We present a brief abstract of his description, omitting the form and dimensions, which are given in the text. The epidermis,f which in many of the small quills is partly wanting, in the flat pieces usually quite wanting, is very thick and brittle, constituting from a third to one-half of the bark, and, in some of the largest quills or partially quilled pieces, even two-thirds. In the latter case, it often consists of six or eight different layers. The quills are generally marked with longitudinal wrinkles and furrows, and always with transverse fissures. These fissures, which often form complete circles round the quills, have usually an elevated border, and sink so deeply in many of the larger pieces, that they are observable upon the proper bark. In the smaller pieces they are often faint, but usually crowded. The colour of the epidermis varies from whitish-gray to bluish-gray; but it is very much diversified by lichens, so as to present yellowish-white, ash-gray, and blackish spots. When the outer layer of the epidermis is wanting, as is not unfrequently the case to a greater or less extent, the colour is somewhat sooty-brown or almost liver- brown. The outer surface of the pieces without epidermis is of a colour between cinnamon- brown and dark rusty-brown. The inner surface, in the pieces of all dimensions, is uni- form and almost smooth, but exhibits fine longitudinal fibres closely compressed. Splinters of wood are never found adhering to the inner surface. The prevailing colour of this sur- face is a rather dark or full-cinnamon brown, passing sometimes into a rusty brown, but seldom reddish. This bark breaks more easily in the longitudinal direction than any other variety, exhibiting a chestnut-brown colour in the part answering to the epidermis, a more or less dark cinnamon-brown in that answering to the proper bark. The transverse frac- ture of the epidermis is rather even, that of the inner bark fibrous or splintery. A resin- •j- By the epidermis is here understood the whole of the external layers which are accumulated upon the outei surface >f the bark by the annual renewal of the cortical layers, and the consequent separation of those of former years, which remain, but without life, attached to the external surface. A dilferent meaning is attached to the term by Vou Bergen; but, as we have taken pains to make the description in every instance correspond with oui definition, we do not misrepresent his meaning. 270 Cinchona. PART I. Until the recent most valuable researches of Weddell, nothing was known with certainty as to the particular species which yields Calisaya bark. At present ous layer may be seen beneath the epidermis, which usually remains when the latter is removed, and communicates to the flat pieces the dark colour which distinguishes their external surface. Small sharp splinters, which in the longitudinal fracture appear like shining points, are apt to insinuate themselves into the skin when the bark is handled. The odour is feebly tan-like; the taste slightly acidulous, strongly but not disagreeably bitter, somewhat aromatic, feebly astringent, and rather durable. The powder is of a fine cinnamon hue. Weddell speaks of a variety of Calisaya bark having a dark-coloured external surface, which is often wholly of a vinous black, and of another which has a less uneven surface, sometimes semi-cellular, and of a paler colour. The former he says is denominated in Bolivia Co Us ay a zamba, C. negra or C. macha; the latter Colisaya blanca. Thiel obtained from the flat Calisaya 2-8 per cent, of quinia, and 0-08 of cinchonia; Michaelis from the flat 3-7 per cent., and from the quill 2-0 per cent, of quinia, but no cin- chonia; Von Santen from the flat, an average of 2-0 per cent, of quinia, and little or no cinchonia; Wittstock, on an average, 3-0 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 0-12 of cin- chonia. [Geiger.) Riegel obtained as the lowest product 2-18 per cent., and the highest 3 8 per cent, of quinia. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 249.) MM. Delondre and Bouchardat have obtained from the flat Calisaya, without epidermis, from 3-0 to 3-2 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 0-6 to 0-8 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia; and from the quilled with epidermis 1-5 to 2-0 per cent, of the former, and from 0-8 to 1-0 per cent, of the latter. (Quinologie, pp. 23 and 26.) M. Guilliermond has recently obtained the very large product of 6 per cent. of quinia from a specimen of quilled Calisaya, without epidermis. (Journ. de Pharm., Jan- vier, 1862, p. 42.) Calisaya bark without epidermis should yield from 3 to 3 5 per cent, of officinal sulphate of quinia. False or Spurious Calisaya Barlcs. The great value of Calisaya bark has led to the substitution for it, or fraudulent admix- ture with it, of other varieties bearing a more or less close resemblance to it in character or appearance. Some of these are not much inferior to the genuine bark, others of little value; and it is highly important that they should be distinguished. We give below a brief notice of such as are described in pharmacological works, or have come under our own observation. Weddell states that the characters by which the true Calisaya bark may be best distinguished from all others are, 1. the shortness of the fibres in the whole surface of its transverse fracture, 2. the facility with which these may be separated, 3. the uni- form fawn colour, without any white marking in its thickness, 4. the great density of the bark, which is such that, when the nail is drawn across it, a shining track is often left, 5. the depth of the depressions on its outer surface, and the prominence of the ridges that separate them. These remarks refer to the flat variety. The quills are not so easily distin- guished, as they closely resemble certain other varieties, especially the bark of C. scrobi- culata and C. rufinervis, and the fracture does not afford signs so precise as in the older barks. The surest test is the greater bitterness of the genuine. From their deficiency in compact- ness, spurious Calisaya barks are called by the French Calisaya leger or light Calisaya. 1. Bark of C. Calisaya, variety Josephiana of Weddell. This is not known as a distinct va- riety in Europe or this country; but is very probably mingled more or less with the genu- ine, as it is collected in Bolivia. It is in quills, of a brown, grayish-black, or slate colour on the outer surface, which is also covered with pale lichens. The inner surface is irregu- lar, in consequence of the difficulty with which it is separated from the wood. From the roots of the same variety, which are probably the remains of former forest trees, is obtained another kind of bark, in short pieces, flatfish, undular, or more or less contorted, desti- tute of epidermis, internally fibrous or almost smooth, slightly cellular externally, of a uniform ochreous yellow, and of a decided bitterness, though not so strong as that of good Calisaya, which it resembles in its internal structure. The Peruvians call it ichu-cascarilla. (Weddell.) These barks can scarcely be considered as adulterations, as they have the virtues of the genuine. 2. Bark of C. Boliviano. Weddell states that this is almost always mixed in commerce with genuine Calisaya, from which it is often difficult to distinguish it. This is of the less consequence, as it is probably not much inferior in virtue. The following is Weddell’s de- scription. The quilled is in all points similar to the quilled Calisaya. The flat consists ex- clusively of the inner bark. It is generally not so thick as the Calisaya, but of equal den- sity. The furrows on the outer surface are not so deep, and the ridges which separate them more rounded. The colour of this surface is a brownish-yellow fawn, with here and there greenish shades, of the inner, a somewhat reddish or orange fawn. The fracture is like that of the Calisaya, but exhibits spots of a light almost white colour, which are neve* Cinchona. 271 PART T. there is no variety of which, in this respect, we have such accurate knowledge. The genuine bark is derived from the newly described species, named C. Cali- seen in that variety. The taste is a strong and agreeable hitter, which is developed more quickly than that of the Calisaya. 3. Bark of C. ovata, var. rufinervis of Weddell. This variety of C. ovata inhabits Bolivia and the southern province of' Peru called Carabaya, where the bark is said by Weddell to be largely employed for adulterating the Calisaya. It is known in Peru by the name of Cascarilla Carabaya. It sometimes so closely resembles Calisaya as to be with difficulty distinguished. In the quilled, the outer coating sometimes differs only in being somewhat, less thick. In other instances it has but a few annular fissures, is finely wrinkled longi- tudinally, and varies in colour from a light gray to a deep brown, being often completely covered with mosses and lichens. It is generally easily separable from the inner coat, the uncovered surface of which is of a light-brownish fawn, and smooth, or marked with lon- gitudinal depressions corresponding to rents in the outer coat. The inner surface is grayish or reddish-yellow, and finely fibrous; the transverse fracture fibrous; the resinous circle scarcely observable; the taste quickly bitter and astringent. The fiat kind is of variable form, often closely resembling the Calisaya, but generally much lighter. Sometimes it consists solely of the inner bark, but more frequently has a portion greater or less of the cellular coat attached. The outer surface is sometimes smooth, with a few linear trans- verse depressions, and wholly cellular; in other instances, uneven, with roundish depres- sions, fibrous at bottom; and is of a grayish-fawn or reddish colour, sometimes marbled with darker shades. The inner surface is of a dull grayish-yellow, or brilliant orange, with fine parallel fibres. The transverse fracture is more or less corky exteriorly, and fibrous • stringy within, or of the latter character in the whole thickness. It has considerable bit- terness, which is rapidly developed in the recent barks. Carabaya Bark. .Under this name a bark has within a few years been introduced into the commerce of this country and Europe, derived from the province of Carabaya, through the port of Islay or that of Arica. Dr. Pereira describes it as follows. — It is thin and flimsy, of a more or less rusty colour, and in some of the pieces very similar to the Hu- amilies. The quills are about as thick as the finger, and of variable length, sometimes even two feet, coated, or uncoated; the coated having a dull-rusty, or grayish-rusty, warty surface, marked by longitudinal furrows, but rarely by transverse; the uncoated some- times presenting a dark or more or less tea-green tint. The flat pieces consist of the liber alone, or of this with a portion of the cellular coat. The outer surface of the liber, in some of the uncoated pieces, is blackish, with rusty, round, fiattish warts. Sometimes it looks as if dusted over with a yellowish powder. The liber itself is more or less orange; but some jpieces resemble red bark in colour. Whether this is the product of C. ovata is uncer- tain ; but, taking its source into consideration, and the fact stated by Weddell that the bark of that species is gathered largely in Carabaya, and known by the same name in Peru, the probabilities seem to be greatly in favour of this opinion Pereira states that its total yield of alkaloids, including quinia, cinchonia, and quinidia, is from 3 to 4 per cent. In the Quinologie of MM. Delondre and Bouchardat (p. 26), the product of the better spe- cimens is stated to be from 1-5 to 1-8 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 0-4 to 0-5 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia. It is, therefore, a valuable bark. A variety of flat bark, imported into the U. States as Carabaya, is in irregular pieces, some very small, the largest about 9 inches in length, generally very thin; for the most part destitute of-epidermis, but sometimes with portions of the outer coat attached; on the outer surface, when uncoated, of a dull-cinnamon hue, with spots of a different colour sometimes much darker, more or less irregular from slight elevations and shallow depres- sions, somewhat furrowed longitudinally, seldom so transversely; on the inner surface, of a lighter hue than on the outer, smooth and somewhat shining when viewed obliquely, with fine compact straight fibres; with a decided fibrous fracture, sometimes smooth to- ward the outer edge; and, when handled, readily yielding spicnla, which penetrate the fingers like those of Calisaya. In one specimen shown us by Messrs. Powers & Weight- man, the outer surface was almost completely covered with the subepidermic layer, with little or none of the epidermis itself, and was remarkably uniform in its aspect, though sometimes presenting numerous slight longitudinal wrinkles from drying, and a few shal- low transverse impressions. We are informed that this variety contains more cinchonia than quinia, and have little doubt that it is the bark referred to by Weddell as the product of C. ovata, var. rufinervis. 4. Bark of C. scrobiculata. The younger bark of this tree has, we think, undoubtedly been imported among the pale or gray barks. The larger or flat pieces have been fraudulently substituted for Calisaya. Of these, according to Pereira, there are two varieties, derived from different varieties of the tree. a. Cusco Bark Red Bark of Cusco. (Delondre and Bouchardat, Quinologie, p. 26.) Bark of 272 Cinchona. PART I. saya; but the bark of C. Boliviano,, another of the species discovered by Wed- dell, is sometimes mixed with it in the same seroons. It is produced exclusively St. Ann. Bark of C. scrobiculata, var. Dclonclriana. This is collected in the province of Cusco, in the south of Peru; and the town of Cusco, according to Weddell, is the centre of its commerce. It is the kind to which Guibourt has especially attached the name of light Calisaya. Weddell thus describes it: “Less dense than the Calisaya; consisting generally of the liber and a thin layer of the cellulo-resinous tissue; thickness from 5 to 10 milli- metres (2 to 4 lines). Outer surface obscurely red, smooth, with some linear transverse impressions, or more or less irregular; exhibiting often superficial cavities filled with fungous detritus; raised in other instances into asperities or irregular warts, or more rarely presenting an exfoliation of the cellular coat, as complete as in the Calisaya, with digital confluent furrows fibrous at bottom, and the ridges which separate them. Interior surface uniform, of fine and straight grain, and of a handsome reddish-orange colour. Transverse fracture more or less cork-like on the outside, according to the thickness of the cellular * portion; on the inside very fibrous, with long, pliable, stringy fibres, and of a lighter colour than the outer part. Longitudinal fracture presenting numerous splinters with shining points, less marked than in the Calisaya, and medullary rays more numerous and visible. Taste bitter, quite strong and quickly developed in the middling sized barks, with very perceptible astringency. This bark yields from 0 7 to 0-8 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia, and from 0-8 to 0-4 of sulphate of quinia.” (Hist. Nat. des Quinquinas, pp. 44, 45.) b. Peruvian Calisaya. Bark of C. scrobiculata, var. genuina, Weddell. This is imported from Lima. Pereira describes it as occurring in flat pieces, closely resembling the genuine Cali- saya in colour, for which it is often sold. They are thicker and denser than the last-men- tioned variety, from which they also differ in colour. Externally the bark is smoother than the Calisaya; and the ridges between the furrows are more rounded. The fracture is fibrous, and the taste, in the larger pieces, less bitter than that of Calisaya. (Mat. Med, 3d ed., p. 1629.) This bark is probably the same with that referred to in the eighth and ninth editions of this Dispensatory (p 236 of the 9th), as having been imported into the United States about the year 1848; having been consigned to a manufacturing chemist of this city by a com- mercial house in Valparaiso, with the information that it had been sent to them by Dr. J. Villamil, and had been gathered in the forests of Huanuco in Peru. The pieces are gene- rally without the epidermis, which appears to have separated spontaneously, and, when retained, has the transverse fissures and longitudinal furrows characteristic of the Cali- saya. The colour and consistence of the bark are the same as in the genuine; and it even presents the shining spicula which characterize the latter, though they are less numerous, and do not so readily penetrate the fingers. The taste is very bitter. Examined chemically by Professor Procter, it was found to afford a precipitate with sulphate of soda, in conse- quence of containing kinate of lime, and thus in another point approaches the Calisaya: but he could not detect in it a trace of quinia. The only alkaloid it was found to contain was cindhonia, of which there was the large proportion of 2-8 per cent.; so that this must rank with the valuable barks. For a more particular account of it, the reader is referred to a paper by Prof. Procter in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xix. 178). 5. Bark of Cinchona pubescens, var. Pelleteriana of Weddell. Cusco Bark. Arica Bark. This was first known in France by the name of Arica bark, from the port at which it was ship- ped; but, both in French and English commerce, this name has given way to the more ap- propriate one of Cusco bark, derived from the Peruvian province in which it is collected. Dr. Pereira says that it was first introduced into Europe in 1829 as yellow or Calisaya bark. From the statements of Weddell, there seems to be little doubt that it is the product of the tree referred to at the heading of this paragraph; as specimens collected by himself in the mountains of Cusco were found identical with the bark as known in Europe. The following is his description condensed.—In the quilled, the outer coat is thin, very adherent, almost smooth, sometimes with traces of annular fissures, of a uniform dirty-gray colour, or marbled with darker shades. The proper bark is, without, of an obscure yellow, sprinkled with little brown spots when artificially denuded, and marked with some superficial longi- tudinal wrinkles; within, is obscurety yellow and a little reddish, coarsely fibrous, and often rough to the touch. The transverse fracture is exteriorly corky and quite short, without a resinous circle, and inwardly with a few short thick fibres. The flat pieces are very dense, and consist about equally of cellular coat and liber. The outer surface is smoothish, sometimes slightly wrinkled longitudinally, of an ochre-yellow more or less brownish, and frequently marbled with grayish or silvery spots, which are the remains of the epidermis. The inner surface is brownish or reddish, thick, and fibrous. The trans- verse fracture is cork-like outwardly, of short woody fibres inwardly. A fresh cut surface in the same direction shows inwardly rows of large isolated semitranslucent points, cor- responding to the section of the cortical fibres, agglutinated in bundles. The longit - l'nal PART I. Cinchona. 273 in Bolivia, formerly upper Peru, and in the southern portion of the adjoining Peruvian province of Carabaya. Before these countries were separated from Spain, it was shipped as well from Buenos Ayres as from the ports on the Pacific; but at present it comes only from the latter. As first announced in this work, from information derived from merchants long personally engaged in commercia1 transactions on the Pacific coast of South America, the bark is brought from the fracture is almost without splinters. The epidermis, when it remains on the large barks, is thin, unequal, sometimes warty, of an obscure gray, and more or less brownish or even greenish in some spots. When it has been scraped, the bark sometimes presents deep- brown spots, which are the points where prominences in the cellular coat had raised the epidermis so as to form the little warts referred to. These are sometimes decayed, and upon falling leave roundish depressions. The taste of the bark is bitter, astringent, and somewhat pungent. (Hist. Nat. des Quinquin., p. 56.) Yon Bergen says that this bark somewhat resembles the fibrous Carthagena. Inexperi- enced persons might mistake it for the Calisaya. Guibourt says that it may be readily distinguished by a more regularly cylindrical form, its smoother outer surface, the remains of the white and fungous layer, by its two shades of colour, orange or brownish externally, and whitish or very pale internally, and by not yielding a precipitate with sulphate of soda. Pelletier supposed that he had found a new alkaloid in this bark, which he named aricina; but the substance he obtained is now thought to have been some modification of one of the other alkaloids. The chief alkaloid in the bark is cinchonia. Frank obtained 48 ounces of it from 10U lbs. of the bark, and only a trace of quinia; Winckler, 256 grains from 16 ounces of a good specimen, and only 77 grains from the same quantity of an inferior one. Guibourt estimates the proportion at a drachm for every pound, and observes that the bark is rich in cinchonic red. 6. Bark of 0. micrantha, var. rotundifolia of Weddell. As this variety of Cinchona grows in Bolivia, and the flat bark derived from it simulates Calisaya, it is very probable that its product has been sometimes used to adulterate the latter bark. Weddell says of it that it lias little density, and consists of the liber alone, or of this and the cellular coating, which is generally semi-fungous and imperfectly exfoliated. The external surface is unequal, pre- senting superficial concavities similar to those of Calisaya, and separated by irregular corky eminences, but sometimes though rarely smooth from the persistence of the whole cellular coating, and is of a bright and grayish orange-yellow. The internal surface is con- siderably fibrous, of the same colour as the external, but of a more lively tint. The trans- verse fracture is stringy; the longitudinal but slightly splintery, and of a dull surface. The taste, is decidedly bitter and quickly developed, a little pungent, scarcely astringent. (Ilist. Nat. des Quinquin., p. 53.) 7. Bark of G. amygdalifolia. This species also inhabits Bolivia, and its bark may possibly sometimes contaminate the Calisaya, as it has been largely collected. Pereira states that it is imported alone or mixed with other Bolivian barks, both quilled and flat. According to the same author, it is distinguished from the Calisaya by its lightness, its more orange colour, the presence of the cellular coat in the pieces deprived of epidermis, the stringy transverse fracture, the splintery longitudinal fracture, the want of marked annular fis- sures in the epidermis, and the astringent and but slightly bitter taste. Mr. Howard ob- tained from a portion of the quills 0-7 per cent, of quinidia and a trace of cinchonia; from the flat 0-23 of quinidia and the same of cinchonia. (Pereira’s Mat. Med., 3d ed., p. 1629.) —Note to the tenth edition. Yelloiv Bark of Guayaquil. Under this name MM. Delondre and Bouchardat describe a bark, occurring in very long rolls, of a colour like that of Chinese cinnamon, with the outer surface marked by rather close but shallow longitudinal furrows, with traces of a very thin, white epidermis; the inner surface browner, uniform, and compact; the fracture resinous exteriorly, and shortly fibrous interiorly. The bitterness is strong, without astrin- gency. Delondre obtained from it 3-0 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia, and 0-3 to 0-4 ot sulphate of quinia. (Quinologie, p. 32.) This bark is scarce in commerce; but we have been told that portions have been brought from Guayaquil, across the Isthmus of Panama. It will be very valuable, should cinchonia come, as it ought to do, into general use. A false bark has been sometimes mixed with the genuine Calisaya, which it resembles so &losely as not to be easily distinguished by the eye. According to Weddell, it is the bark of Gomphosia chlorantha, a lofty tree, growing in the same forests where the C. Calisaya. is found. ~Tt is distinguished by a peculiar odour, and by exhibiting in its transverse section, under the microscope, “a peculiar fasciculate disposition of the cortical fibres, and some vessels gorged with a ruby-coloured juice.” It does not contain a particle of alkaloid, Dut yields a volatile oil on which its odour depends. (Howard, Pharm. Journ., xiv. 318.)— .Vote to the eleventh edition. 274 Cinchona. P4BT I. interior to th 3 port of Arica, whence it is sent to various other ports on the coast The interior commerce in the drug has its centre chiefly in the town of La Paz. The trade in this bark has been much diminished, in consequence partly of its greater scarcity, partly of restrictions by the Bolivian government, which issued a decree forbidding the cutting of it entirely for three years, from the first of January, 1851. It is generally supposed to have been first introduced into commerce towards the end of the last century, and it was probably not known by its present name till that period; but La Condamine states that the Jesuits of La Paz, at a pe- riod anterior to the discovery of the febrifuge of Loxa, sent to Rome a very bitter bark by the name of quinoquina, which, though supposed by that travel- ler to have been derived from the Peruvian balsam tree, was very probably, as conjectured by Guibourt, the true cinchona. Besides, Pomet, in his History of Drugs, published in 1694, speaks of a bark more bitter than that of Loxa, ob- tained from the province of Potosi, which borders upon that of La Paz; and Chomel also states that the cinchona tree inhabited the mountains of Potosi, and produced a bark more esteemed than that which-grew in the province of Quito. (Guibourt, Journ. de Pharm., x\i. 235.) It is possible that, though known at this early period, it may have gone out of use; and its reintroduction into notice, towards the end of the last century, may have been mistaken for an original discovery.* * The great value of Calisaya bark will justify us in giving a brief account of its mode of collection, as described by Weddell from personal observation. The tree producing it grows in the Bolivian provinces Enquisivi, Yungos, Larecaja, and Caupolican. At present it, is necessary to travel for eight or ten days from the nearest inhabited place, in order to reach the forests where it is found of a size and in numbers which will repay the trou- ble of gathering the bark. The Cascarilleros are persons educated from infancy to the business. Several of them are engaged in the service of a merchant or small company, by whom they are sent, at any period of the year except during the rains, upon an ex- pedition under the charge of a leader called a Mayordomo. Having previously received information which governs the direction of their journey, they proceed to the vicinity of their intended operations, and establish a camp in a convenient position. Henceforward the neighbourhood is considered as belonging exclusively to the party, and no other bark- gatherers pretend to interfere. From the camp the Cascarilleros are despatched, singly or in small bands, in different directions into the forests, through which they have to make their way, often with great labour and fatigue. Each man carries with him provisions for a long absence. The trees do not form forests of themselves, but are scattered singly or in groups more or less close. From some convenient point of view the explorer scans the top of the forest, and is able to recognise, at a great distance, from the peculiarity of its aspect, not only one of the Cinchonas, but the particular species of which he is in search. Sometimes he is directed by the appearance of the dry leaves upon the ground. Having found a suitable tree, he first fells it, cutting as near the soil as possible, then tops off the branches, and detaches by blows with a tvooden mallet, or the back of his axe, the outer or dead layers of the bark, -which easily separate. He next makes incisions through the bark, so as to isolate pieces usually fifteen or twenty inches long by three or four broad, which he removes by means of a knife or other instrument. The branches are decorticated without separating the epidermis. The pieces obtained from these are simply allowed to dry in the sun, and, rolling themselves up, form the quilled variety. The pieces from the trunk are disposed in square piles, one being placed over the other, and the whole kept down by some heavy body. They are thus prevented from rolling as they dry. 'When suf- ficiently dried they are carried to the camp on the back of the gatherer, who often consumes several days in his returning journey, and undergoes incredible fatigue. At the camp, the bark is assorted, and the portion deemed fit for commerce is sent to the towrn, on the backs of men or of mules, w'here it is packed in bales or seroons, covered -with fresh hides. The most wasteful methods of collecting the bark prevail, the only object being present con- venience. Not only is the tree felled, but the bark is frequently removed from the stump down into the very earth, so as to prevent the growth of sprouts, which w'ould otherw ise spring up from the old roots, and in the course of time atford another crop.—Pott to th« ninth edition. eart i. Cinchona. 275 3. Red Bark. The name of this variety is very appropriately applied; as the colour is usually distinct both in the bark and the powder. In South America it is called casca villa roxa and colorada. Some writers have divided it into several sub-varie ties; but, in relation to the true red bark, there does not seem to be ground for such division in any essential difference of properties. Like the Calisaya, it comes in quills and flat pieces, which are probably derived from different parts of the same tree. It is imported in chests. Some of the pieces are entirely rolled, some partially so, as if they had been taken from half the circumference of the branch ; others are nearly or quite flat. They vary greatly in size, the quill being sometimes less than half an inch in diameter, sometimes as much as two inches; while the flat pieces are occasion- ally very large and thick, as if derived from the trunk of a tree. They are covered with a reddish-brown or gray, sometimes whitish epidermis, which is rugged, wrinkled longitudinally, and in the thicker pieces marked with furrows, which in some places penetrate to the surface of the proper bark. In many specimens, numerous small roundish or oblong eminences, called warts, may be observed upon the outer surface. Beneath the epidermis is a layer, dark-red, brittle, and compact, which possesses some bitterness and astringency, but much less than the interior parts. These are woody and fibrous, of a more or less lively brownish-red colour, which is usually very distinct, but in some specimens passes into orange and even yellowish-brown; so that it is not always possible to distinguish the variety by this property alone. The taste is bitter and as- tringent, and the odour similar to that of other good barks. Red bark is chemi- cally distinguished by containing considerable quantities of both quinia and cinchonia * It yields a turbid salmon-coloured decoction with water. * The red bark is described by Von Bergen under the name of China rubra, or rothe China. The following is an abstract of his description. The quills are from two lines to an inch and a quarter in diameter, from one-third of a line to two lines thick, and from two to twelve inches or more in length. The smaller quills are often spiral. The flat pieces are from one to two inches broad, from three-eighths to a quarter of an inch thick, and of the same length as the quills. In the smaller and middling-sized quills, the external surface exhibits longitudinal wavy wrinkles. In the thicker pieces, these wrinkles, between which are here and there longitudinal fui’rows, often elevate themselves into roundish or oblong warts, which are of a somewhat friable and granular consistence. The longitudinal fur- rows sometimes penetrate to the bark. Transverse fissures seldom occur. The colour in the smaller quills varies from a fawn-gray to a dull reddish-brown, in the larger is reddish- brown or chestnut-brown with a tinge of purple. When the wrinkles and warts are rubbed off, the peculiar brownish-red colour of the bark appears. The pieces are often in part or almost wholly covered with a whitish-gray or yellowish-white coat, either belonging to the epidermis or consisting of lichens. In some of the quills the epidermis is wanting in spots, which exhibit a dirty reddish cinnamon-colour. The inner surface is delicately fibrous and almost uniform in the small quills, but becomes more fibrous and uneven in the larger, and in the flat pieces is splintery and very irregular. Its colour varies with the size of the pieces, being a reddish-rusty brown in the least, redder in the larger, and a full brownish-red in the largest. The inner surface is also sometimes yellowish, or brownish, or of a dirty appearance. It becomes darker when scraped with the nail. The fracture exhibits the different colours of the epidermis, the inner bark, and a resinous layer between the two. It is usually smooth in the smaller quills, fibrous in the larger, and at the same time fibrous and splintery in the largest pieces. The fracture of the epidermis, however, is in all either smooth, or only here and there somewhat granular. The odour is like that of tan, and earthy; the taste strongly but not disagreeably bitter, somewhat aromatic, and not lasting. The powder is of a dull brownish-red colour. Experiments upon many different specimens* of red bark, as stated by Pfaff, give as an average product 1-7 per cent, of pure cinchonia, and 044 of sulphate of quinia. The highest product obtained was 3-17 per cent, of cinchonia, and 0-15 of sulphate of quinia. Another specimen yielded 1-21 per cent, of the former, and 1-33 of the latter. Pelletier and Caventou obtained 0-8 per cent, of cinchonia, and 1-7 of quinia. [Geiger.) Dr. E. Riegel, of Carls- ruhc, obtained from one specimen of the best red bark 4-16 per cent, of alkaloids (2-65 of Cinchona. PART I. The species of Cinchona which produces red bark has been unknown until very recently. The notion derived from Mutis, and formerly generally prevalent, that it was obtained from the C. oblongifolia of that botanist, was long since demonstrated to be incorrect. For the proofs upon this point, which have now ceased to have any practical importance, the reader is referred to the article Cinchona, section Red Bark, in early editions of this work. It has been sup- posed that red bark may be derived from the same species with one or more of the pale barks, but taken from the larger branches or the trunk. This opinion received some support from a statement made by La Condamine, in his memoir upon cinchona. We are told by this author that three kinds of bark were known at Loxa; the white, the yellow, and the red. The white, so named from the colour of the epidermis, scarcely possessed any medicinal virtue, and was ob- tained from a tree entirely distinct from that which yielded the two other varie- ties. The red was superior to the yellow; but he was assured, on the very best authority, that the trees producing them grew together, and were not distin- guishable by the eye. Of the three varieties mentioned by La Condamine, the white, which was probably one of the inferior barks with micaceous epidermis, does not reach us ; and that which he calls yellow is probably identical with the pale variety of the Pharmacopoeias, as this grows abundantly about Loxa. At the date of the publication of the last edition of this work, it had been rendered extremely probable by Mr. Howard, that the genuine red bark is derived from the trunk and larger branches of the Cinchona ovata, var. erythroderma of Weddell, growing on the western slopes of the mountains Assuay and Chimborazo, east- ward of Guayaquil, in about 2° of south latitude. {Pharm. Journ., xvi. 207.) Since that period, this ascription has been found to be correct, though the variety re- ferred to has been raised to the dignity of a species, C. succirubra, which is now generally admitted to be the source of the red bark of the Pharmacopoeias. Non-officinal or Carthagena Barks. Under this head may be classed all the Cinchona barks brought from the north- ern Atlantic ports of South America. In commerce, they are variously called Pilaya, Bogota, Co.rlhagena, Maracaybo, and Santa Martha harks, according to the place in the vicinity of which they are collected, or the particular port at which quinia and 1-51 of cinclionia), and from another 3-85 per cent. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 250.) Delondre obtained from the genuine red bark, “bright red,” 2-0 to 2-5 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 10 to 1*2 of sulphate of cinclionia; fromthe ‘■‘■palcred” 15 to 1-8 of the former, and 0-5 to 0-6 of the latter. (Quinologic, p. 30.) It appears, therefore, that the proportion of the alkalies is exceedingly different in different specimens; and it is highly probable that some of the barks experimented upon were inferior red barks, not properly belonging to this variety. The degree of bitterness is, perhaps, the best criterion of their efficacy. Guibourt divides the red bark into two principal varieties, which he distinguishes by the names of quinquina rouge verruqueux, and quinquina rouge non verruqueux, from the presence or absence of the warts upon the outer surface. There is, however, no real distinction be- tween the varieties, as they possess the same virtues, and differ only in being derived from different parts of the same tree; the warty, it is asserted, being derived from the root and trunk, the non-warty from the branches. (Howard, Pharm. Journ., xvi. 210.) He describes also four other red barks; 1. Rouge orange verruqueux, differing from the true warty kind by its more orange colour, its very thin epidermis, its finer fibres, and the less thick- ness of the large barks; 2. Rouge blanchissant d Pair, characterized by the whitening of its fracture in the air, and by its little bitterness; 3. Rouge de Lima, with a whitish epidermis, an ochreous reddish liber, and of excellent qualities (see Fine Gray Bark, p. 239); and 4. Rouge pdle d surface blanche, resembling the first of these varieties, but distinguishable by its whiter epidermis, and generally lighter colour. Under the same head may be ranked his quinquina de Jaen ou de Loza rougedtre, whiph has a dark-gray epidermis, and a uniform fibrous proper bark, reddish or deep-brown, and of a very astringent taste with little bit- terness.—Note to the second, fourth, ninth, and twelfth editions. A specimen of bark in our possession, brought by Dr. Dillard, of the U. S. Navy, from the Pacific, and labelled red bark of Cuenca, has a thick epidermis like that of the ordinary red barks, is of a very deep dark-red colour, and possesses little bitterness. PART I. Cinchona. they may be shipped. Formerly these barks were for the most part of inferior quality, and were therefore not recognised in the Pharmacopoeias; but the defi- cient supply and consequent high price of Calisaya have directed enterprise into other quarters; and within a few years large quantities of very good bark have been imported from New Granada, derived chiefly from the neighbourhood of Bogota and Popayan, and brought down the river Magdalena. Since the com- pletion of the railroad across the Isthmus of Panama, considerable quantities have been brought to us by that route, being shipped from the port of Buenaven- tura, on the Pacific coast. There can be little doubt that the commerce in these barks will continue and increase ; as some of them are inferior in their yield of alkaloids only to the Calisaya, if even to that variety, and the region from which they are procured is almost virgin soil. It has appeared to us, from an exami- nation of such of them as have come under our notice, that they may all, at least with one exception, be referred without violence to some one or another of the varieties of Carthagena bark already recognised; but these better kinds formerly seldom reached the market; because, partaking of the general reputation of the inferior barks from the same region, it was feared that they might not pay the cost of importation. Most of the Carthagena barks are characterized by a soft, whitish, or yellowish-white epidermis, which may be easily scraped by the nail, and which, though often more or less completely removed, almost always leaves behind traces sufficient to indicate its character. Those of them which may, in other respects, bear some resemblance to Calisaya, are in general readily dis- tinguishable by this character of the epidermis when it remains, and, when it is wanting, by the peculiar appearance of the outer surface, showing that the ex- terior coating has been scraped off, or shaved off with a knife. They all contain the alkaloids in greater or less proportion, though they differ much in this re- spect. In reference to the relative proportion of the different alkaloids, they have nothing in common, except perhaps that they yield proportionably more cin- chonia, cinchonidia, and quinidia than the Calisaya, resembling, in this respect, the pale and red barks. Inferior barks, with the soft, white epidermis, are found on the western coast of South America, where they are known as white barks; but they seldom reach us. In the state of powder, the inferior Carthagena barks were formerly, and are still, to a certain extent, kept in the shops, and sold for tooth-powder, &c., under the name of common bark. They have not unfrequently been substituted, either fraudulently, or by mistake, for the better kinds. The Carthagena barks were formerly classified, according to their colour, into the yellow, orange, red, and brown; but this mode of distinction must now be abandoned; for these varieties of colour may be found in barks identical in other respects, and derived from the same species of Cinchona. The well characterized Carthagena barks may all be referred to one of the three following varieties. 1. Hard Carthagena Bark. Hard Yellow Carthagena Bark. Yellow Bark of Santa Fe. Common Yellow Carthagena Bark. — China Jlava dura. Von Bergen. — Quinquina de Carthagene jaune pale. Guibourt. This is in pieces of various size and form, sometimes wholly or partially quilled, and sometimes flat; and the flat pieces present the appearance of having been warped in drying, being frequently curved longitudinally backward, and sometimes also in the transverse direction or spirally. The quills are from three to eight lines in dia- meter, from half a line to a line and a half thick, and from five to nine and rarely fifteen inches long. The flat pieces are thicker, from half an inch to two inches broad, and from four to eight and sometimes twelve inches in length. As found in this market, the bark is sometimes in small, irregularly square or oblong, flattish, and variously warped pieces, from one to four inches long, and from one to three lines in thickness, mixed with small quills or fragments of quills; :he former appearing as if chipped from the trunk or large branches, the latter evidently derived from the small branches. In this shape it was treated of in Cinchona. PART I. Borne funner editions of this work, as a distinct variety, under the name of Santa Martha Dark, which it at one time held in the market; but a closer examination has convinced us that it is the same bark as the one above described, though collected in a different manner. The quills are generally more covered with the whitish epidermis than the flat pieces, in which it is often nearly or quite removed. The inner surface of the latter, though sometimes smooth, is often rough and splintery, as if forcibly separated from the wood. The colour of the proper bark is a pale, dull, brownish-yellow, darker in parcels which have been long kept; and the surface often appears as if rubbed over with powdered bark. The tex- ture is rather firm and compact, and the fracture abrupt, without being smooth or presenting long splinters. The taste is bitter and nauseous. This variety of bark is now universally ascribed to C. cordifolia.* 2. Fibrous Garthagena Bark. Fibrous Yellow Garthagena Bark. Spongy Garthagena Bark. Bogota Bark. Coquetta Bark. — Quinia naranjanda. Mutis.— Quinquina orange. Humboldt. — China flava fibrosa. Yon Bergen. —Quinquina Garthagene spongieux. Guibourt. This is in quills or half-quills, or is slightly rolled; and there are comparatively few pieces which are quite flat, even among the largest barks. The quills are from half an inch to an inch and a half in diameter, and of extremely variable length, with a yellowish-brown epidermis, often covered with crustaceous lichens so as to render the surface of the bark whitish and smooth, and exhibiting not unfrequently longitudinal and transverse fissures. The larger barks, which are much the most frequent in com- merce, are usually from six to twelve inches long, from one to two inches broad, and from two to five lines in thickness; but they often vary much from these dimensions, being sometimes in the smallest fragments, and sometimes forming semi-cylinders four or five inches in diameter, a foot and a half long, and nine lines thick. They are usually without epidermis, which has been scraped off, or pared off with a knife, leaving the surface smooth and uniform in the former case, and somewhat angular in the latter. Sometimes, however, the epidermis either partially or wholly remains, when it generally exhibits the soft whitish surface characteristic of most of the Carthagena barks. The bark is very fibrous, presenting generally, when broken, long, sometimes stringy splinters, though the outer edge of the fracture is occasionally short from the cellular, or * We introduce, in the form of a note, more detailed and precise information on the subject of the Garthagena barks than our space allows in the text; because, in the present condition of the manufacture of the cinchona alkaloids, it is important to be able to dis- tinguish the several varieties, and estimate their value. Hard Carihagena Bark. The following is a somewhat precise description of this variety, taken from Von Bergen. The account of the dimensions and shape of the pieces, given in the text, is sufficiently particular. The epidermis is in many pieces partially or almost wholly wanting. The outer surface is on the whole rather smooth, though it usually ex- hibits a few faint longitudinal furrows and transverse fissures, and pieces are occasionally found with hard warts or protuberances. In the flat pieces, the epidermis, when present, has somewhat the consistence of cork, and is composed of several layers. The colour of the epidermis varies from yellowish-white to ash-gray, and is sometimes diversified by bluish-gray or blackish lichens. When it is wanting, the colour is between a dark cinna- mon and brownish-yellow. These shades, however, are seldom clear, and the flat pieces have usually a somewhat dusty aspect. The inner surface of the quills is tolerably uniform, that of the flat pieces uneven or faintly furrowed and even splintery, the points of the splinters often projecting. Its colour, which is almost always dull, as if the surface were dusty, varies between a light cinnamon and a dull ochre-yellow, and in some pieces is rusty-brown, or fawn-gray, or even whitish-yellow. The bark does not readily break in the longitudinal direction. The transverse fracture presents short splinters, and in some- times fibrous. When cut transversely, the bark obscurely exhibits a very small uarker- coloured resinous layer beneath the epidermis. The odour is feeble, the taste astringent and bitter, but not strongly so. The powder is of the colour of cinnamon. This bark yielded, according to Von Bergen, on an average of two experiments, 0 57 per cent, of cin- chonia, and 0-33 of sulphate of quinia. Goebel and Ivirst found in a pound 56 grains of quinia and 43 of cinchonia. Dr. Pereira states that it contains quinidia (cinchonidia } Cinchona. 279 PART i. remains of the suberous coat. Its texture is loose, soft, and spongy under the teeth, and the bark itself is usually light. The colour both of the trimmed outer surface, and the inner, and of the bark itself, varies from an ochreous or light brownish-yellow, to orange, and red; but, for the most part, it presents more or less of the orange tint, which induced Mutis to give it the title of orange bark. The red colour is found especially in the largest barks. The larger pieces are sometimes marked on the outside with a deep spiral impression produced prob- ably by a climbing plant winding around the stem of the tree. The colour of the powder is yellowish, with not unfrequently an orange tint. The taste is more or less bitter; but varies in this respect extremely; some barks being almost insipid, while others have a very decided taste. There can be little doubt that these barks are all derived from the Cinchona lancifolia of Mutis. It is asserted that the red variety of the bark is obtained from trees which grow side by side with those which yield the yellow or orange. The productiveness of the fibrous bark in alkaloids varies greatly in the dif- ferent specimens. Thus while some have scarcely yielded any product, others have been found to afford more than three per cent. They probably contain all the cinchona alkaloids; but some have been found more abundant in one, and others in another. Thus, the red is said to be especially rich in quinidia (cin- chonidia); a Pitaya bark, which we believe to belong to the fibrous Carthagena, has yielded a very large product of quinia; while, in not a few specimens which have been examined, the cinchonia predominates. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 308.) It is probable that the richness in these principles depends in some degree on the natural position of the plants; those growing in low situations being less productive than those higher on the mountains.* A specimen labelled yellow bark of Loxa, brought from South America several years since by Dr. Dillard, of the TJ. S. Navy, and said to be used in Loxa for making extract of bark, presents characters closely analogous to those of fibrous Carthagena bark, sufficiently so to justify the supposition that it was derived from the same species of Cinchona; and we have seen a specimen sent hither from Guayaquil, which has the same character, and is so rich in alkaloids as to be worked with advantage, f * Karsten states that the bark of C. lancifolia, which on the average yields 2-5 per cent, of sulphate of quinia and from 1-0 to 1-5 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia, often yields neither, and sometimes 4-5 per cent, of the two. The bark of the young branches yields much less than that of the trunk. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx. 534.) f Fibrous Carthagena Bark. The following is an abbreviation of Von Bergen’s descrip- tion of this variety. In shape and dimensions, it does not materially differ from the pre- ceding; but the flatter pieces are almost always a little rolled, or curved laterally. The epidermis is in general either in part or wholly rubbed off. When it is present, the outer surface is nearly smooth, only marked here and there with faint irregular transverse fis- sures and longitudinal furrows. Its colour varies from a dirty whitish-gray to yellowish, Out is sometimes more or less dark. When the outer surface is rubbed off, as is almost always the case in the flat pieces, the colour is nearly pure ochre-yellow. Where the whole thickness of the outer coat is wanting, as happens here and there in spots, the surface is dark cinnamon, or dark ochre-yellow, and commonly dull or*powdery. The inner surface is usually even, but sometimes irregular and splintery, and always harsh to the fingers, leav- ing small splinters sticking in the skin when drawn over it. It is of a nearly pure ochre- yellow colour, and is very powdery. The fracture distinguishes this variety from the pre- ceding, and from all others. The longitudinal fracture is strikingly fibrous, and in the flat pieces the fragments still hang together by connecting fibres. The bark, moreover, breaks obliquely, and the fracture even of the outer coat, which in other varieties is almost always smooth, is here uneven or rough-grained. The transverse fracture exhibits very long and thin splinters or fibres, which are very flexible, and may almost be said to be soft- No traces of a resinous appearance are observable in the fracture. The odour is fee- ble, the taste at first woody and flat, afterwards slightly bitter and astringent, and weaker in this than in any other variety of bark. The colour of the powder is intermediate be- tween that of cinnamon and yellow ochre. The highest product of this bark in alkaloids was about 0-59 per cent, of cinchonia, and 0-52 of sulphate of quinia. The above description does not embrace all the varieties of this bark which have since 280 Cinchona. PART I. Hard Pitaya Bark.—Pitaya Condaminea Bark. Pereira. — Quinquina brun de Carthagene. Quinquina Pitaya, ou de la Colombia, ou d'Antioquia. Guibourt. This bark, though seen by Guibourt so long since as 1830, has come been introduced into commerce: nor does it by any means represent tlxe finest specimens. The highly fibrous character of the bark, its looseness of texture, relative lightness, and sponginess under the teeth, are properties common to all the specimens; but in appearance and virtues they vary considerably; so much so, indeed, that it is only of late that they have been united under one name, and traced to one source. In the edition of this work for 1843, we described a kind of bark of which large quan- tities had then recently been imported in a vessel from Maracaybo, and which, from its possession in a high degree of the properties just referred to, we were disposed to rank with this variety; and subsequent observation lias tended to prove the correctness of this reference. In general aspect it bore some resemblance to the flat Calisaya, particulaily in .he appearance of its inner surface; but it differed in being thicker, less hard, compact, and heavy, and much more fibrous, and especially in the character of its outer surface, which had the appearance as though the exterior coating had been removed by scraping or cutting with a knife, and not spontaneously separated at the natural juncture, as in the Calisaya. The pieces were considerably larger than those we had previously seen of the fibrous Carthagena, and differed somewhat in colour, having much more of the orange tint, especially in the outer portion, where it was decidedly reddish in some of the pieces. Though less bitter than the Calisaya, and without the property of precipitating sulphate of soda, it nevertheless had a decided bitterness; and its infusion afforded a copious pre- cipitate with infusion of galls, indicating the presence of no inconsiderable portion of the alkaline principles. Recently we have had opportunities, through the kindness of Messrs. Powers & Weight- man, of examining several varieties of the fibrous bark brought from Bogota and Popayan, which have proved of great value as sources of the cinchona alkaloids, and which we pro- pose briefly to describe, in connection with a statement, derived from the same highly re- spectable source, of their yield of these valuable principles. Bogota Bark. Fusagasuga Bark. Coquetta Bark. The first of these names is derived from the entrepot of the trade in this bark; the second, from the particular district where it is collected. Of the origin of the third, by which it is known in English commerce, we are not informed. The bark is in pieces of various lengths, often exceeding a foot, sometimes nearly flat, but generally more or less rolled, and occasionally forming semi-cylinders more than an inch in diameter. It is often either partially or wholly covered with the whitish, soft, micaceous epidermis characteristic of Carthagena barks. In other instances this has been removed by scraping, or sometimes by chipping, and the deep strokes of the knife or hatchet are not unfrequently observable. The pieces are often of considerable thickness, usually rather firm, though very fibrous, and spongy under the teeth. The colour is brownish-yellow with a tinge of red. Mr. Weightman obtained from it from 1 to 1-3 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and from 0-3 to 0-4 per cent, of sulphate of cinchonia. An inferior variety of Bogota bark, not designated as Fusagasuga, yielded him only 0-4 of sulphate of quinia. In the Am Journ. of Pharm. (xxv. 308) is a statement of results ob- tained in the examination of the Bogota (Fusagasuga) bark, which were, on the average of four specimens, 0-95 per cent, of cinchonia or quinidia or both, 1-45 of sulphate of quinia (equivalent to about 1*09 of the umcombined alkaloid), and 1-0 of extractive resi- due, which is presumed to consist mainly of amorphous quinia; so that the whole of the alkaline ingredients amounted to about 3 04 per cent. Soft Pitaya Bark. Calisaya of New Granada (Delondre and Bouchardat, Quinologie, p. 33). This, though said to be brought from the Pitaya mountain near Popayan, is wholly differ- ent from the hard Pitaya described in the text as one of the varieties of Carthagena bark. It is imported from Carthagena, whither it is brought down the Magdalena river, and from the Pacific port of Buenaventura, whence it is sent to us by the Isthmus of Panama. From the specimens we have seen of the soft Pitaya, we have no hesitation in classing it with the fibrous Carthagena barks, though superior to the others, probably in consequence of the more elevated site of its growth. It comes broken up into small irregular fragment*1 of larger pieces, either quilled, partially rolled, or flat. Few of the fragments exceed four inches in length, and many are very minute. Indeed, in some of the seroons, much of their contents seem to be almost in the state of a very coarse powder. This condition of the bark no doubt depends partly on its great fragility; but it is probable that it is pur- posely broken up for the convenience of close package in the hide seroons. The fragments are almost all destitute of epidermis, but, when portions of it remain, it has the usual whitish, soft, micaceous character, common to all these barks. The outer surface, which consists of a thin sub-epidermic suberous layer, is remarkably uniform and smooth, ap- parently from the careful scraping to which it has been subjected. By far the greater part of the bark consists of the liber, w'hich is highly fibrous, though very soft, easily broken. PART I. Cinchona. 281 into general notice only within the last eight or ten years. Much of it has beer imported into Philadelphia, coming sometimes through Carthagena, and some times over the Isthmus of Panama, whither it is brought from Buenaventura. The following description is drawn from an examination of the bark contained in several seroons that have come under our notice. It is in small irregular pieces, from less than an inch to about'four inches long, which are obviously the fragments of larger pieces both quilled and flat. Dr. Pereira states that he had pieces more than a foot in length. In thickness it varies from less than a line to four or five lines. Most of the fragments are covered with the whitish, soft epidermis, characteristic of the Carthagena barks; but some of them have a dark-brown epidermis, rugose with innumerable cracks in all directions; and others are partially or wholly destitute of the outer covering, presenting gene- rally, in the denuded part, a dark uniform or somewhat wrinkled surface. The inner surface is finely and compactly fibrous, and of a dull yellowish-brown colour with a reddish tinge; and the whole of the liber or true bark has th« same colour and texture. But outside of the liber there is in many pieces a very distinct resinous layer, which is sometimes of considerable thickness, and, when cut across by a knife, exhibits a dark, reddish-brown, shining surface. The re- sinous layer is the most striking peculiarity of the bark, though not present in all of the pieces, which sometimes consist of the liber alone. The fracture is towards the interior shortly fibrous, towards the exterior often smooth, in conse- quence of the layer just referred to. The whole bark is rather hard, compact, and heavy; differing in this respect very decidedly from the last mentioned va- riety. It has more resemblance to the hard Carthagena, from which, however, it differs by its deeper and redder colour, its much more developed resinous coat, and its occasional grater-like epidermis. The taste is very bitter, and the yield in alkaloids considerable. Mr. Weightman informed us that he had ob- tained from it an average product of 16 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 034 of sulphate of cinchonia, independently of the amorphous or uncrystalli- zable alkaline matter. It must, therefore, be ranked among the efficient barks, though not so productive as the fine variety of fibrous bark denominated soft Pitaya. It contains also a large proportion of resin. This bark comes from the mountain of Pitaya near Popayan, and the particu- lar seroons examined by ourselves were said to have been brought down the Magdalena river from the town of Honda. It is referred by Dr. Pereira and Mr. Howard to the Cinchona Condaminea, var. Pitayensis of Weddell, of which that author has more recently made a distinct species, under the name of Cinchona Pitayensis. (Ann. des Sci. Nat., May, 1849.)* and yielding with great facility under the teeth. The colour is externally and internally a uniform fine brownish-yellow, with an orange tint, and is brighter than in most others of the analogous barks. The taste is very bitter. Mr. Weightman obtained from ordinary specimens of this bark 2-0 per cent, of sulphate of quinia, and 0*05 of sulphate of cincho- nia; from a very fine specimen, 3-0 per cent, of the former, and but a trace of the latter. It is, therefore, one of the most valuable varieties of bark, scarcely yielding in produc- tiveness to Calisaya. The results stated in the Am. Journ ofPharm. (xxv. 308) even exceed these. The average yield of four ditferent specimens, including the uncrystallizable pro- duct, was 4-42 of alkaloids, probably in the state of sulphates, and, without the uncrys- tallizable matter, about 3-4 per cent.—Note to the tenth and eleventh editions. * Hard Pitaya Bark. The following is Guibourt’s description of this bark. “ In the young barks, the crust is fine, whitish externally, fissured, almost like the young red Lima barks. In the large barks, and in the parts not worn by rubbing, the crust is always whitish exteriorly, but interiorly it is rust-coloured and fungous. The liber presents a very fine fibrous tex- ture, joined to a considerable density and hardness; the internal surface is smooth and red- dish ; its taste is very bitter and disagreeable, and its watery infusion strongly precipitates with sulphate of soda. It yields largely of the alkalies, but proportionably more cinchonia than quinia.” Guibourt obtained 2-3 per cent, of cinchonia, and 1-15 of sulphate of quinia; ar about 3-16 per cent, of pure alkaloids. {Hist. Nat. des Drogues, 3&me ed., iii. 141.) Under the title of Pitaya-Condaminea bark, Pereira describes this variety as follows. Cinchona. PART I. False Barks. Before dismissing the subject of the varieties of cinchona, it is proper to ob- serve that numerous barks have at various times been introduced into the market, and sold as closely resembling or identical with the febrifuge of Peru, which ex- perience has proved to differ from it materially, both in chemica1 composition and medical virtues. These barks are generally procured from trees formerly ranked among the Cinchonas, but now arranged in other genera. They are dis- tinguished from the true Peruvian bark by the absence of its peculiar alkaloids. Among them are 1. a bark known to the French pharmaceutists by the name of quinquina nova or new bark, which, though at one time thought to be possessed of some virtues, has been proved to be worthless, and was ascertained by Guibourt to be the produce of the G. oblongifolia of Mutis, now ranked in Weddell’s genus Cascarilla;* 2. the Caribbean bark,from Exostemma Caribaea; 3. the St. Lucia bark, or quinquina piton of the French, derived from Exostemma floribunda: and 4. a bark of uncertain botanical origin, called in France quinquina bicolore, and in Italy china bicolorata, and sometimes erroneously named Pitaya bark. Of these the last only is known in this country. A considerable quantity of it was some time since imported into New Orleans, whence a portion reached this city. The specimen in our possession is in quills, for the most part singly, but in some instances doubly rolled, from eight or ten inches to more than two feet in length, and from a quarter of an inch to an inch or more in diameter. The outer surface is of a dull grayish-olive colour, with numerous large oval or irregu- lar spots, much lighter coloured, sometimes even whitish, and slightly depressed beneath the general surface, as if a layer of the epidermis had fallen off within their limits. It is to this appearance that the bark owes the name of bicolorata. The colour of the internal surface is deep-brown or almost blackish ; that of the fresh fracture, brownish-red. The bark is hard, compact, and thin, seldom as much “Bark consisting of single or double quills, or half-rolled pieces. I have specimens which are more than a foot in length. Some samples, however, which I have received, consist of pieces not more than two or three inches in length, sometimes entirely, at others only par- tially coated; the partially coated pieces consist of the suberous and cellular coats and liber. Epidermis, when present, dark-brown, frequently coated by crustaceous lichens, marked by numerous, closely set, transverse cracks, with prominent or slightly everted bor- ders, which give the bark a grater-like feel; and here and there presenting round or oval warts, or fungoid rusty tubercles, varying in size from a grain of wheat to a seed of coffee, and usually marked like the latter with a longitudinal, sometimes also with a transverse fissure. The suberous coat in some pieces much developed, spongy or fungous, fawn-yellow, sometimes brown in the interior, and yellow externally and internally, llesinous tissue on the inside of the suberous coat, from which it is definitely separated, shining, of a dark- reddish colour. Liber gradually passing into the resinous coat, hard, dense, dark, reddish- brown : cortical fibres small and short. Pitaya-Condaminea bark is firm and heavy, and has a very bitter, rather disagreeable taste, which is slowly developed.” It contains cinchonia, quinidia (cinchonidia), and quinia. (Mat. Med , 3d ed., p. 1643.)—Noteto the tenth edition. * This was formerly called red Carthagena bark, but must not be confounded with the genuine red Carthagena bark, which belongs to the fibrous Carthagena, and has been already noticed. As described by Guibourt, it is in pieces a foot or more long, rolled when small, open or nearly flat when larger, in general perfectly cylindrical, with a whitish, thin, uniform epi- dermis, showing scarcely any cryptogamia, and but a few transverse fissures which are some- times entirely wanting; one to three lines thick without the epidermis; of a pale carnation colour, becoming deeper in the air, especially upon the outer surface, which, when destitute of epidermis, is always reddish-brown; of a fracture which is foliaceous in the outer part, and sliort-fibrous in the inner; and exhibiting under the microscope, between its fibres, and especially between the laminae, a great abundance of two granular matters, of which one is red and the other whitish. In some pieces the fracture exhibits, nearer the external than the internal surface, a yellow, transparent, resinous or gummy exudation. The taste is fiat and astringent like that of tan, the odour feeble, between that of tan and of the pale baiks. The powder is decidedly red. It contains neither quinia nor cinchonia. Its most in'erest- ing constituents are a peculiar tannic acid, kinic acid, kinovic acid discovered by Wirickler, and a peculiar red colouring matter called kinovic red. (Illasiwetz, Chem. Gaz., ix. 421 and 441.) PART I. Cinchona. 283 as a line in thickness, and breaks with a short rough fracture. It is inodorous, and has a very bitter taste, not unlike that of some of the inferior kinds of cinchona.* Chemical History. In the analysis of Peruvian bark, the attention of chemists wss at first di rected exclusively to the action of water and alcohol upon it, and to the deter mination of the relative proportions of its gummy or extractive and resinous matter. The presence of tannin and of various alkaline or earthy salts in minute quantities was afterwards demonstrated. Fourcroy made an elaborate analysis, which proved the existence of other principles in the bark besides those previ- ously ascertained. Dr. Westring was the first who attempted the discovery of an active principle in the bark, on which its febrifuge virtues might depend; but he was not successful. Seguin afterwards pursued the same track, and endea- voured, by observing the effects of various reagents, to discover the relative value of different varieties of the drug; but his conclusions have not been supported by subsequent experiment. M. Deschamps, an apothecary of Lyons, obtained from bark a crystallizable salt of lime, the acid of which Vauquelin afterwards sepa- rated, and called kinic acid. The latter chemist also pushed to a much further extent the researches of T3eguin as to the influence of reagents, and arrived at the conclusion that those barks were most efficient which gave precipitates with tannin or the infusion of galls. Reuss, of Moscow, succeeded in isolating a pecu- liar colouring matter from red bark, which he designated by the name of cincho- nic red, and obtained a bitter substance which probably consisted in part of the 'peculiar alkaline principles subsequently discovered. The first step, however, towards the discovery of cinchonia and quinia appears to have been taken by the late Dr. Duncan, of Edinburgh, so early as 1803. He believed the precipitate, afforded by the infusion of cinchona with that of galls, to be a peculiar vegetable principle, and accordingly denominated it cinchonine. Dr. Gomez, a Portuguese physician, convinced that the active principle of bark resided in this cinchonine, but mixed with impurities, instituted experiments upon some pale bark, which resulted in the separation of a white crystalline substance, considered by him to be the pure cinchonine of Dr. Duncan. It was obtained by the action of potassa upon an aqueous infusion of the alcoholic extract of the bark, and was un- doubtedly the principle now universally known by the name of cinchonine or cin- chonia. But Dr. Gomez was ignorant of its precise nature, considering it to be analogous to resin. M. Laubert afterwards obtained the same principle by a dif- ferent process, and described it under the name of white matter, or pure white resin. To Pelletier and Caventou was reserved the honour of crowning aTT these experiments, and applying the results which they obtained to important practical purposes. In 1820, they demonstrated the alkaline character of the principle dis- covered by Gomez and Laubert, and gave it definitively the name of cinchonine They discovered in the yellow or Calisava bark another alkaline principle, which they denominated quinine". Both these bases they proved to exist in the barks, combined with kinic acid, in the state of kinate of cinchonine and of qui- nine. It was, moreover, established by their labours that the febrifuge property oHbark depends upon the presence of these two principles. In 1833, MM. 0. Henry and Delondre discovered a new alkaloid, but afterwards, finding its com- position in its anhydrous state the same as that of quinia, concluded that it was * In previous editions of this work, it was stated that this hark had been employed in itaiy successfully in intermittents; and that Folchi and Peretti had discovered in it a new alkali, which they named pitaijna. But there is reason to believe that this was a mistake, caused by the confused use of the name Pitaya bark; and that the bark employed in Italy, and analyzed by the chemists mentioned, was that described as hard pitaya in a preceding page. It is conjectured that the alkaloid pitayna may have been either quinidia or eincho- nidia, or a mixture of the two.—Note to the tenth and eleventh editions. 284 Cinchona. PART I. a hydrate of that base. About 1844, Winckler announced anew the existence of the same principle, which he considered distinct, and named chinidine: and, under the similar title of quinidine. it is now generally admitted to a place among the cinchona alkaloids. In 1853, M. Pasteur found that what had been considered as quinidine consisted in fact of two alkaloids, for one of which he retained the name of quinidine. and called the other cinchonidine; and, on pushing his inves- tigations further, he ascertained that no less than six alkaloids may be obtained from different varieties of Peruvian bark ; namely quinine and quinidine isome- ric with each other, cinchonine and cinchonidine alsd'isoraeric, and two others, derivatives from the preceding through the agency of heat, viz., quiniginn from quinine, and cinclionicine from cinchonine, each being isomeric with the alka- loid from which it is derived. As the termination a or ia has been generally adopted by American and English chemists to distinguish the organic alkaloids from other organic proximate principles, the names of which terminate in in or ine, the terms quinine and cinchonine of the French writers have been changed with us into quinia and cinchonia. On the same principle, quinidine, quinicine, cinchonidine, and cinclionicine should be called respectively quinidia, qujjii- cia,. cinchonidja, and cinchonicia. This method of designating the vegetable alkaloids is uniformly followed in the present work.* It has before been stated, on more than one occasion, that the three officinal varieties of bark are distinguished by peculiarities of composition. We give the result of the analysis of each variety, as obtained by Pelletier and Caven- tou. (Jo-urn. de Pharm., vii. 70, 89, 92.) Pale bark of Loxa contains, 1. a fatty matter ; 2. an insoluble red colouring mailer a yellow colouring matter ; 4. tannin, or soluble red colouring mat- ter ; 5. gum ; 6. starch ; 7. lignin ; 8. kinate of lime ; 9. kinate of cinchonia, with a very minute proportion of kinate of quinia. Yellow Calisaya bark contains the fatty matter, the cinchonic red, the yellow colouring tannin, starch, lignin, kinate of lime, and kinate of quinia, with a comparatively small proportion of kinate of cinchonia. Red hark contains the fatty matter, a large quantity of the cinchonic red, the yellow colouring matter, tannin, starch, lignin, kinate of lime, and a large pro- portion both of kinate of quinia and of kinate of cinchonia. Carthagena bark generally contains the same ingredients with the red bark, but indifferent proportions. It has less of the alkaline matter, which it also yields with much greater difficulty to water, in consequence of the abundance of insoluble cinchonic red which it contains, and which either involves the salts of quinia and cinchonia so as to prevent the full contact of water, or retains these alkaloids in combination. (Journ. de Pharm., vii. 105.) * Reference lias been made in a note to the discovery, by Pelletier and Coriol, of an alkaloid called aricina in the Arica or Cusco bark. It was obtained by the same process as that em- ployecTTn fhe extraction of quinia from yellow bark. It is white, crystallizable, and distin- guishable from cinchonia, which it in many respects resembles, by exhibiting a green colour under the action of nitric acid, and by the property, possessed by its sulphate, of forming a tremulous jelly when a saturated boiling solution of the salt is allowed to cool. Manzini obtained from Jaen bark an alkaline substance which he supposed to be-peculiar, and named cinchovatin; but the same had been obtained by Bouchardat, and considered by him, as well as by Pelletier, to be identical with aricina; and Winckler, having extracted a portion from the bark, and examined it with great care, coincided in this conclusion. (Journ. de Fharm., 3e s€r., ii. 95 et 313; Central Blatt, A. D. 1844, p. 126.) Much doubt, however, exists on the subject of this supposed alkaloid, and by Mr. Howard it is thought most probably to have been quinidia. Besides the alkaloids mentioned in the text, the claims of which as characteristic con- stituents of Peruvian bark are admitted, and besides the aricina of Pelletier, there are others, the discovery of which has been from time to time announced, but of which the pretensions to this rank have not been so satisfactorily determined. Of these mention will be made in notes, as the opportunity offers; our limits not permitting that they srould be introduced into the text of the work. PART i. Cinchona. 285 Besides quinia and cinchonia, there can be little doubt that two other alka- loids, quinidia and cinchonidia as they are denominated in this work, exist in Peruvian bark ; and it is highly probable that, though found most abundantly in the pale, and some of the Carthagena barks, they are contained at least occa sionally, to a greater or less extent, in all; while two others, quinicia and cin- chonicia, if they do not pre-exist in the barks, result from the processes employed in the separation of the alkaloids just mentioned. Another bitter principle was extracted from Calisaya bark by Winckler. He named it kinovic bitter; but, having been supposed to possess acid properties, it was afterwards denominated kinovic acid. It is thought to exist in the bark in a free state. (Schwartz, Pharm. Gent. Blatt, 1852, p. 194.) The nauseous taste of some of the barks has been ascribed to this principle. By the experiments of Henry, jun. and Plisson, it may be considered as estab- lished, that the alkaloids of the different varieties of bark are combined at the same time with kinic acid, and with one or more of the colouring matters, which, in relation to these substances, appear to act the part of acids. This idea was originally suggested by Robiquet. {Journ. de Pharm., xii. 282, 369.) The com- pounds of quinia, cinchonia, &c. with the colouring matter, are scarcely soluble iu water, while their kinates are very soluble. From these statements it appears that the three officinal varieties of bark differ little except in the proportion of their constituents. All contain quinia and cinchonia; the yellow bark most of the first, the pale of the second, and the red a considerable quantity of both. All probably contain, occasionally at least, the other characteristic alkaloids. Gum was found in the pale, but not in the red or yellow. Kinovic bitter, though first discovered in the yellow, probably exists in others. The odour of bark appears to depend on a volatile oil, which Fabroni and Trommsdorff obtained by distillation with water. The oil floated on the surface of the water, was of a thick consistence, and had a bitterish, acrid taste, with the odour of bark.* The fady matter, which was first obtained pure by M. Laubert, is of a greenish colour asTobtained from the pale bark, orange-yellow from the yellow. It is in- soluble in water, soluble in boiling alcohol, which deposits a part of it on cooling, very soluble in ether even cold, and saponifiable with the alkalies. The cinchonic red of Reuss, the insoluble red colouring matter of Pelletier and Caventou, is reddish-brown, insipid, inodorous, largely soluble in alcohol especially when hot, and almost insoluble in ether or water, though the latter dissolves a little at the boiling temperature. The acids promote its solubility in water. It precipitates tartar emetic, but not gelatin ; but, if treated with a cold solution of potassa or soda, or by ammonia, lime, or baryta, with heat, and then precipitated by an acid, it acquires the property of forming an insoluble com- pound with gelatin, and seems to be converted into tannin. It is precipitated by subacetate of lead. It is most abundant in the red bark, and least so in the pale. Berzelius supposed it to be formed from tannin by the action of the air. Accord- ing to Schwartz, it results from the absorption by the tannin of three eqs. of oxy- gen, and the elimination of two eqs. of carbonic acid and one eq. of water. {Pharm. Gent. Blatt, 1852, p. 194.) The yellow colourinq matter has little taste, is soluble in water, alcohol, and * A. very careful chemital examination of several varieties of Peruvian bark has been made by Dr. E. Reichardt, the results of which are given in a paper, which received a prize from •.lie Philosophical Society of Jena. The following are the constituents of the barks exam- ined. ■*. Organic constituents; quinia, cinchonia, ammonia, kinic acid, kinovic acid, cincho- tannic acid, oxalic acid, sugar, wax, cinchonic red, humic acid, and cellulose. 2. Inorganit constituents; chloride of potassium, carbonates of potassa, magnesia, and lime, phosphates of lime, alumina, and iron, silicate of lime, sulphate of lime, and oxide of manganese. {Chem. Pharm. Cent. Blatt, Sept. 12, 1855, p. 637.)—Note to the eleventh edition. 286 Cinchona. PART I. ether, precipitates neither gelatin nor tartar emetic, and is itself precipitated by subacetate of lead. The tannic^acid, tannin, cincho-tannic acid, or soluble red colouring matter of Pelletier and Caventou, has been considered as possessing all the properties which characterize the vegetable principles associated together under the name of tannic acid, has a brownish-red colour and austere taste, is solu- ble in water and alcohol, combines with metallic oxides, and produces precipi- tates with the salts of iron, which vary in colour according to the variety of bark, being deep-green with the pale bark, blackish-brown with the yellow, and red- dish-brown with the red. It also forms white precipitates with tartar emetic and gelatin, and readily combines with atmospheric oxygen, becoming insoluble. It must, however, differ materially from the tannic acid of galls, which could not exist in aqueous solutions containing cinchonia and quinia without forming in- soluble compounds with them. But the most interesting and important constituents of Peruvian bark are the alkaline and active principles quinia, cinchonia, &c., and the kinie and kinovic acids, with the former of which the latter principles are combined. In relation to these, therefore, we shall be more minute in our details. (Quinia. As usually prepared, quinia is whitish, rather flocculent, and not crystalline; but it may with care be crystallized from its alcoholic solution in silky needles; and Liebig obtained it from a somewhat ammoniacal watery solution in the same form. It is inodorous and very bitter. At about 300° F. it melts with- out chemical change, and on cooling becomes brittle. It is soluble in about 400 parts of cold and 250 of boiling water, is very soluble in alcohol and ether, and dissolved by the fixed and volatile oils. The alcoholic solution is intensely bitter. Quinia is unalterable in the air. It forms salts with the acids which readily crystallize. The tannate, tartrate, and oxalate are said to be insoluble or nearly so, but are dissolved by an excess of acid. The acetate, according to Mr. J. M. Maisch, is so slightly soluble that it is precipitated from a solution of the sul- phate by the acetates of magnesia and the alkalies. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx. 386.) When recently precipitated quinia, diffused in water, is exposed to the action of a stream of carbonic acid gas, the quinia is dissolved; and, if the solution be exposed, acicular crystals of carbonate of quinia are deposited, which effloresce in the air, are soluble in alcohol, but insoluble in ether, have an alka- line reaction, and effervesce with acids. After the deposition of the crystals has ceased, the solution yields quinia on evaporation. (Langlois, Comptes Rendus, Nov. 7, 1853, p. 727.) Quinia and its salts may be distinguished from all other vegetable alkalies and their salts, excepting only quinidia, by the beautiful emerald-green colour which results, when their solution is treated first with solution of chlorine and then with ammonia, and which changes to a white or violet upon saturation with a dilute acid. The least quantity of quinia may be detected by powdering the sub- stance supposed to contain it, then shaking it with ether, and adding successively the tests just mentioned. Its salts are precipitated by the bichlorides of mercury and platinum, and of a buff colour by the terchloride of gold. The composition of quinia is differently given. According to Liebig, it con- sists of twenty eqs. of carbon, twelve of hydrogen, one of nitrogen, and two of oxygen and its combining number is 162. This formula is based on the supposition that, of the two salts which quinia form§ with most acids, the one containing the smallest proportion of acid is a di-salt, consisting of two eqs. of base and one of acid, and the other neutral, consisting of one eq. of each. Another view is, that the first of these salts is neutral, and the second a bi-salt; and, if this be admitted, the above combining number must be doubled. Upon the latter supposition, the formula, according to Laurent, is C38H22N204 and the combining number 310; according to Regnault and Strecker, the former is tar I I. Cinchona 287 C4flTI24N204 and the latter 324, being just double the number of Liebig, and probably correct, at least so far as concerns the relative proportion of the seve- ral ingredients.* There is reason to believe that quinia may become uncrystallizable without change of composition, and impart to its salts the same uncrystallizable char- acter. In this state it is called amorphous quinia. This is always among the substances left in the mother-waters after the crystallization of sulphate of quinia, in its preparation from Calisaya bark. More will be said of this under sulphate of quinia in the second part of this work. Quinia is obtained by treating its sulphate with the solution of an alkali, collecting the precipitate, washing it till the water comes away tasteless, then drying it, dissolving it in alcohol, and slowly evaporating the solution The most important artificial salt of quinia is the sulphate, the process for pro- curing which, as well as its properties, will be hereafter described. The valerianate has been introduced into the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia, and the citrate of' iron and quinia both into this and the British, which give processes for their preparation. The phosphate, acetate, citrate, lactate, f errocyanate, tannate, arsenite, ammoni- ate, urate, and hypophosphite have also been employed and recommended; but none of them has yet gained admittance into the Pharmacopoeias, and none pro- bably is superior to the officinal sulphate. The first four may be prepared by satu- rating a solution of the acids respectively with quinia, and evaporating the solu- tions. Th a ferr ocyanate is directed to be made by boiling together two parts of sulphate of quinia and three of ferrocyanide of potassium in a very little water, pouring off the liquor from a greenish-yellow substance of an oily consistence which is precipitated, washing the latter with distilled water, then dissolving it in strong alcohol at 100° F., filtering immediately, and afterwards evaporating the solution. (.4m. Journ. ofPharm.,xii. 351.) M. Pelouze, however, found this pre- paration to be pure quinia, mixed with a little Prussian blue. (Archives Gen., 3e ser., xv. 236.) The tannate may be prepared by precipitating the infusion of bark, or solution of sulphate of quinia, by the infusion of galls or solution of tannic acid, and then washing and drying the precipitate. It has the advantage of possessing little taste, while experience has shown that it is little if at all inferior in anti- periodic powers to the sulphate; but its amorphous condition renders it more liable to adulteration. Either of these salts may be given in the same dose as the sulphate. Arsenite of quinia has been recommended by Dr. Ringdon, espe- cially in chronic cutaneous affections. He prepares it by boiling 64 grains of arsenious acid, with half the quantity of carbonate of potassa, in four fluidounces * Langlois found the carbonate of quinia, deposited from a solution in carbonic acid water, to contain one eq. of acid and one of base, admitting the combining number of the latter to be 162; and, if this salt be considered neutral, the result will tend to confirm the view of Liebig. (Comptes Rendus, Nov. 7, 1853, p. 727.) On the contrary, Adolphus Streeter, who has made an elaborate analysis of quinia and its compounds, has adopted the formula C, H24N20. (eq. 324), basing his opinion chiefly on the composition of the double chloride of”platinum and quinia, and on the fact, that the only crystallizable nitrate he could obtain coincides with the officinal sulphate, and that in this compound one eq. of oxide of silver may be made to replace one eq. of water, so as to form a nitrate of silver and quinia. (See Am Jo urn. of % harm., xxvii. 241 and 321.) To the same point tends the fact, that the officinal sulphate of quinia is the moi-e permanent of the two sulphates. Upon the whole, we are inclined to the view which considers the formula to be C40H24N2O4, and the combining number 324.—Note to the eleventh edition. Oxyquinia. Schutzenberger has ascertained that when sulphate of quinia is boiled with a solution of nitrite of potassa, nitrogen escapes with effervescence, and the liquid, after cooling, deposits, on the addition of ammonia, a white, granular substance, which, when dissolved in alcohol, and obtained in a dry state by the evaporation of the menstruum, assumes a transparent, resinous appearance. By contact with water it becomes crystalline. This substance has alkaline properties, and differs from quinia only in containing two ad- ditional eqs. of oxygen. It has, therefore, been named oxyquinia. (Comptes Rendus, Juillet 12, 1858, p. 81.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 288 Cinchona. PART I. of distilled water uutil dissolved, adding water enough to make the solution measure four lluidounces, and then mixing five drachms of this solution with two scruples of sulphate of quinia, previously dissolved in boiling distilled water. The arsenite of quinia is thrown down in the form of a white curdy precipitate, which is to be washed on a filter and dried. It is uncrystallizable, insoluble in water, and soluble in alcohol. The dose is one-third of a grain, given at first twice a day, and afterwards three and four times a day. (Prov. Med. & Surg. Journ., Aug. 25, 1841.) Antimoniate of quinia has been recommended by Dr. La Camera, of Naples, as a febrifuge, being especially applicable to cases of doubtful periodicity. It unites, he thinks, the evacuatit properties of the anti- nionials with the antiperiodic property of quinia. The dose is two or three grains, four times a day. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e Her., xxv. 411.) The urate of quinia is thought by Dr. Perayre, of Bordeaux, to be peculiarly efficacious in ob- stinate intermittents. It is prepared by boiling 10 parts of crude quinia in water, adding gradually 20 parts of crystallized uric acid, and, after sufficient ebullition, filtering and evaporating. A yellow salt is obtained, sometimes amorphous, more frequently crystalline, soluble in hot and less so in cold water, and, according to the author, capable of curing intermittent fever in smaller doses than the sul- phate, with less cerebral disturbance, less bitterness, and easier tolerance by the stomach. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxxvii. 139.) The hypophosphite of quinia has been brought into notice by Dr. J. Lawrence Smith, of the University of Louisville, who prepares it by mixing, in a large porcelain capsule, 50 ounces of sulphate of quinia, 2 gallons of distilled water, and 2 ounces of hypophosphorous acid, heating the mixture to 200°, and then adding a solution of hypophosphite of baryta sufficient to produce complete decomposition, an excess of the latter salt being scrupulously avoided. Sulphate of baryta and hypophosphite of quinia are formed, the latter in solution. The solution is filtered while hot, and on cooling deposits the salt in crystals. If the sulphate of baryta be washed, the washings added to the mother-waters of the first crystallization, and the mixed liquors care- fully evaporated, a fresh crop of crystals will be obtained. The salt consists of one eq. of quinia (admitting the double numbers) and one of hypophosphorous acid, with two eqs. of water of crystallization. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. I860, p. 410.) Cinchonia. This, when pure, is white, crystallizable from its alcoholic solu- tion in four-sided prisms with oblique terminal facets, soluble in 2500 parts of boiling water, almost insoluble in cold water, soluble in boiling alcohol which deposits a portion upon cooling, and slightly soluble in ether and in the fixed and volatile oils.* Its bitter taste, at first not very obvious in consequence of its difficult solubility, is developed after a short time by the solution of a minute portion in the saliva. Its alcoholic, ethereal, and oleaginous solutions are very bitter. By heat it is melted and partially changed, and, if the heat be cautiously increased, sublimes into a matted tissue of fine crystals, which have the same formula as the pure alkaloid. (Illasivvetz, Ghem. Gaz., ix. 90.) Its alkaline character is very decided, as it neutralizes the strongest acids. Of the salts of cinchonia, the sulphate, nitrate, muriate, phosphate, and acetate are soluble in water. The neutral tartrate, oxalate, and gallate are insoluble in cold water, but soluble in hot water, alcohol, or an excess of acid. Winckler has shown that cinchonia is rendered uncrystallizable or amorphous by sulphuric acid in excess, aided by heat; a fact of importance in the preparation of the sulphate of this alkaloid. (Ghem. Gaz., March 15, 1848.) Cinchonia is but little more soluble in carbonic acid water than in pure water, and does not, like quinia, yield crystals of the carbonate on exposure of its carbonic acid solution. ( Comptes Pendus, Nov. 1, 1853, p. 121.) * According to Hesse, cinchonia is soluble at 68° F. in 3670 parts of water, in 125 7 parts of alcohol of 0-852, and in 371 parts of ether of 0-7305. (See Am. Journ. of Pham., xxxv. 54.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Cinchona. 289 Several processes have been employed for the preparation of cinchonia. One of the simplest is the following. Powdered pale bark is submitted to the action of sulphuric or muriatic acid very much diluted, and the solution obtained i» precipitated by an excess of lime. The precipitate is collected on a filter, washed with water, and treated with boiling alcohol. The alcoholic solution is filtered while hot, and deposits the cinchonia when it cools. A further quantity is ob- tained by evaporation. If not perfectly white, it may be made so by converting it into a sulphate with dilute sulphuric acid, then treating the solution with ani- mal charcoal, filtering, precipitating by an alkali, and redissolving by alcohol in the manner already mentioned. It may also be obtained from the mother-waters of sulphate of quinia by diluting them with water, precipitating with ammonia, collecting the precipitate on a filter, washing and drying it, and then dissolving it in boiling alcohol, which deposits the cinchonia in a crystalline form upon cool- ing. It may be still further purified by a second solution and crystallization. The same remarks in relation to equivalent composition apply to cinchonia, as those already made in reference to quinia. According to the view which con- siders the salts as basic and neutral, cinchonia consists of twenty eqs. of carbon, twelve of hydrogdn, one of nitrogen, and one of oxygen (C20II12NO); aud its combining number is 154. This is the formula of Liebig. The other view would double these numbers; the formula being and the eq. 308. Exposed to the air, cinchonia does not sulfer decomposition, but very slowly absorbs carbonic acid, and acquires the property of etfervescing slightly with acids. It is precipitated of a sulphur-yellow by the terchloride of gold. Chlorine water dissolves it or any of its salts without change; but if ammonia be now added, a white precipitate is produced. It is thus distinguishable from quinia. Dr. J. W. Bill, U. S. A., proposes ferrocyanide of potassium as a very delicate test of cinchonia. If added to the solution of a salt of this alkaloid, it produces a yellowish-white curdy precipitate, which is dissolved upon the application of a gentle heat, but is again deposited, when the liquid cools, as an abundant crop of golden-yellow crystals No other alkaloid exhibits the same reaction. A cloudy precipitate is produced by the same reagent with a salt of quinia, but this does not happen when the ferrocyanide is in excess, and, if the precipitate is dissolved by heat, no subsidence takes place on cooling. Hence, in the appli- cation of this test to cinchonia, a slight excess of the ferrocyanide should be added. {Am. Journ. of Sci. and Arts, July, 1858, p. 108.) Sulphate of cinchonia {disulphate of Liebig), the only salt of this base which has been employed in a separate state, is now one of the IT. S. officinals, and will be treated of in the second part of this work among the Preparations. Quinidia (quinidine) and Cinchonidiaf cinchonidine). It has been already stated”that tile'subsT'ance, at one time considered as a peculiar alkaloid, and denominated quinidia or quinidine, has been ascertained to be generally com- plex, and to consist of two distinct alkaloids iu variable proportions. For one of these, in consequence of its similarity in chemical constitution to quinia, Pas- teur retained the name of quinidine (quinidia), while he called the other, from a. similar resemblance to cinchonia, cinchonidine (cinchonidia). It is unfortunate that Pasteur’s quinidine is the alkaloid which in general constitutes the smaller proportion of the complex substance formerly so named; his cinchonidine ex- isting in it much more largely, and sometimes, there is reason to believe, con- stituting almost the whole of it. Nevertheless, it is necessary to adopt the nomenclature of Pasteur, as corresponding strictly with the chemical relations of the several substances concerned. The student will, therefore, take care not to confound the quinidia as formerly described with the pure alkaloid of the same name, and to recollect that the former substance corresponds more closely with cinchonidia (the cinchonidine of Pasteur), and sometimes probably consists of it exclusively, or nearly so. 290 Cinchona. PART I. Quinidia (quinidi/.e, Pasteur) is isomeric with quinia, having the constitu- tion (J40lI24N2O4, or It crystallizes readily in rhombic prisms, which contain four eqs. of water, and effloresce on exposure to the air. It resembles quinia not only in composition, but also in its chemical relations with chlorine and ammonia, being rendered green by the successive action of those agents. According to Dr. Herapath, it resembles quinia also in causing a fluorescent ap- pearance when dissolved in water, which is not the case with either cinchonia or cinchonidia, or is so at least in a much less degree. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 245.) It differs, however, in its greater facility of crystallization, in its much less solubility in ether, and in its influence on polarized light, quinidia producing deviation to the right, and quinia to the left. De Try, of Rotterdam, states, as the result of his observation, that quinidia (of Pasteur) forms a salt of very difficult solubility with hydriodic acid ; and, consequently, when a solu- tion of iodide of potassium is added to a solution of sulphate of quinidia,.a white precipitate takes place. By this test quinidia may be distinguished from the other cinchona alkaloids, and detected when mixed with them in solution; no other yielding a precipitate with iodide of potassium. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 233.) Dr. Herapath proposes another test to distinguish this alkaloid from quinia. If to a solution of sulphate of quinia in acetic acid tincture of iodine be added, and the mixture heated and then allowed to cool, a beautiful emerald-green compound is formed ; while sulphate of quinidia treated in the same way, yields a brown precipitate. When the mixture of this alkaloid with cinchonidia is exposed to hot air, the crystals of quinidia effloresce, and may be distinguished from the others by their opaque whiteness. For practical purposes this separation is unnecessary; for there is probably no appreciable difference in their effects as remedial agents * Cinchonidia (cinchonidine, Pasteur) is isomeric with cinchonia, having the constituOoh C40H24N2O2, or and agrees also with that alkaloid in forming anhydrous crystals, and in not producing the green colour with chlo- rine and ammonia. It differs in being more soluble in ether, and in producing deviation to the left in its influence on polarized light; cinchonia producing deviation to the right. (Regnault, Cours Element, de Chim., 4eed., iv. 314.) If, on exposure to hot air, white effloresced crystals show themselves, it may be taken for granted that there is an admixture of quinidia. As the two preceding alkaloids have not been thoroughly investigated, in their perfectly pure and isolated state, in reference either to their chemical or practi- cal relations, it will be proper to state what has been made known of the com- mercial quinidia, in which they are believed to exist, in general, conjointly. Commercial quinidia, consisting generally of proper quinidia with a much * Cinchonia, quinia, qtiinidia, and strychnia, when heated with caustic potassa, yield acrid vapours, which condense into an oily liquid having alkaline properties, for which the name of quinolein was proposed by its discoverer Mr. Gerhardt, and which is also called cincholin. It liafal'peculiar odour, not unlike that of the bean of St. Ignatius, and an ex- tremely acrid and bitter taste; is slightly soluble in water, and freely so in alcohol, ether, and the volatile oils; forms crystallizable salts with the acids; and is characterized by producing a yellow crystalline precipitate with chromic acid. It results also from the dry distillation of quinia. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., ii. 341.) Dr. A. W. Hofmann has found that the substance called fajucoL existing in coal-gas naphtha, is identical with cincholin. (Chcm. Gazette, June, 1845, pTzol.) More recently Mr. C. Greville AVilliams has shown that the alkaline matter called cincholin is complex, and that several volatile alkaloids result from the decomposition of cinchonia by potassa with heat, analogous to those found in coal gas tar. (Ibid., Aug. 15, 1855, p. 301. See also Gregory's Chemistry, 4th ed., Lond., p. 400.) Dr. Stenhouse proposes, as a test of the presence of alkaline principles in bark, to macerate with dilute sulphuric acid, precipitate with solution of carbonate of potassa or soda in ex- cess, and distil the precipitate with a great excess of caustic potassa or toda. Cincholin will distil over in oily drops, recognisable by its peculiar odour «ind strong alkaline proper- ties. (Philos. May., xxvi. 199.) PART I. Cinchona. 291 larger proportion of cinchonidia, and sometimes, there is reason to believe, ex- clusively, or nearly so, of the latter alkaloid, was carefully examined by H. (t Leers, from whose paper, published originally in the Ann. der Chem. und Pharm. (May, 1852), the following account of its properties has been chiefly derived. It readily crystallizes from its alcoholic solution, by spontaneous evaporation, in hard, shining, colourless crystals, which are easily pulverized, and yield a snow-white powder. They melt without decomposition or loss of water at 347° F., and on cooling concrete into a grayish-white crystalline mass. At a higher heat they take (ire, and burn with the odour of kinole, and volatile oil of bitter almonds. Their taste is bitter, but less intensely so than that of quinia. Quinidia is soluble, according to Leers, in 2580 parts of water at 62°, and in 1858 parts at 212°, in 143 (169 Winckler) of ether, and 12 of alcohol of 0-835, both at 62° F.; but its solubilities must, of course, vary more or less according to the quantities of its two components, quinidia proper and cin- chonidia, contained in it. With the acids it forms salts, most of which are beautifully crystallizable, and much more soluble than those of quinia. There are, as of quinia and cinchonia, two sets of the salts of quinidia, which may be considered either as neutral and acid, or as basic and neutral. When treated first with chlorine and then with ammonia, it does not like quinia yield a green colour, nor like cinchonia a white one, but remains unaffected. It differs from quinia also by its much less solubility in ether. From the aqueous solution of its salts, the alkalies, their carbonates, and bicarbonates throw down pulver- ulent precipitates not soluble in an excess of the precipitant. With phosphate of soda, nitrate'of silver, and bichloride of mercury it forms white, with ter- chloride of gold light yellow, and with bichloride of platinum orange-yellow precipitates. It may be obtained by first precipitating it from the solution of one of its salts by an alkali, and then repeatedly dissolving in alcohol and crys- tallizing, until it is entirely freed from a greenish-yellow resinous substance which is apt to attend it. From quinia it may be separated by repeated washing with ether, until the ethereal solution no longer affords evidence of the presence of quinia by the test of chlorine and ammonia. In this state, it must be looked on as unmixed cinchonidia. One of the distinctive characters of this complex alkaloid is, according to Gruibourt, that, while oxalate of quinia is quite insolu- ble in water, oxalate of quinidia (commercial) is very soluble, and easily crystal- lizable by refrigeration or evaporation. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxii. 414.) Sulphate j>f quinidia (commercial) is, according to one view, neutral, con- sisting‘of'oheeq.,"each, of quinidia, sulphuric acid, and water; according to another, basic, containing two eqs. of base, one of acid, and one of water, and therefore a disulphate. It is in long, shining, silky acicular crystals, soluble in 130 parts of water at 62° F., in 16 parts at 212°, readily soluble in alcohol, but almost insoluble in ether. It is obtained from the quinidia (strictly, cinchonidia) barks by the same process as that by which sulphate of quinia is procured from the Calisaya. When the two alkaloids are contained in the same bark, the sul- phate of quinidia (commercial) remains in the mother-waters in consequence of its greater solubility. By the addition to its solution of a quantity of sulphuric acid equal to that which it contains, it is converted into the bisulphate (sulphate on the basic view), crystallizable in fine acicular crystals like asbestos. Quinicia (quinicine) and Cinclionicia (cinchonicine). When quinia and cin- chonia, or quinidia and cinchonidia, or their salts, are exposed to heat, these alka- loids have been found by Pasteur to be converted into other but isomeric alkaloids; the quinia and quinidia into quinicia, isomeric with themselves; and cinchonia and cinchonidia into cinchonicia, isomeric with its own antecedents. These new alka- .oids are, therefore, products rather than educts, and generally result, in greater or less proportion, from the processes employed in extracting the other alkaloids from bark; though it is not impossible that they may pre-exist in bark to a certain Cinchona. PART I. extent, being formed by a natural process, from the same original alkaloids, either in the living tree, or in the barks while drying, after separation from the tree. Quinicia is almost insoluble in water, but very soluble in alcohol, and differs fronfqufina in causing deviation of the plane of polarization to the right instead of the left (Regnault), and in being apparently uncrystallizable. Cinchonicia is also insoluble in water and soluble in alcohol. It agrees with cinchomarTrom which it is derived, in producing deviation of the plane of polar- ization to the right; but differs from cinchonidia in this respect; and differs from both of these alkaloids in being amorphous or uncrystallizable. The amorphous quinia of Liebig {quinoidine or quinoidia) is probably wheD pure identical with quinicia; but, as it occurs in commerce, is generally a mix- ture of this with cinchonicia. For a particular account of it, see Sulphate of Quinia, in the second part of this work.* Kinie A nidi called also Cinchonic or Quinic Acid), and the Kinaies of Cin- ch oma~andQuinia.— It may be desirable to procure the alkaline principles iu the state of saline combination in which they exist in the bark; as it is possible that they may exert an influence over the system in this state, somewhat different from that produced by their combinations with the sulphuric or other mineral acid. As it is impossible to procure the kinates immediately from the bark in a pure state, it becomes necessary first to obtain the kinic acid separately, which * Cinchonidia of Wittstein. Wittstein lias announced the discovery of a new alkaloid in a variety ofbark belonging probably to the division of barks here considered under the name of fibrous Carthagena barks. He calls the alkaloid cinchonidine; but it must not be con- founded with the cinchonidine of Pasteur. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiix. 115.) From the researches of Dr. Herapath it appears that its claims to be considered as a distinct alkaloid are well founded; its iodo-sulphate being readily distinguishable by the eye from the other iodo-sulphates examined by him. {Pharm. Journ , xvii. 468.) It ought, therefore, to receivo another designation, in order to prevent confusion. 18. cinchonine of Schwabe. Still another cinchona alkaloid has been brought into notice by SchwalieTwho extracted it from quinoidine. He calls it j&. cinchonine (/3. cinchonia), and ob- tained it by dissolving quinoidine in dilute muriatic acid, precipitating with ammonia, washing the precipitate successively with cold and hot water and drying it, treating it with cold alcohol for 24 hours, then exhausting it successively with alcohol and water, and finally dissolving it in dilute sulphuric acid. The solution was heated, and, carbonate of soda being added till a pellicle began to form, was set aside to cool. Sulphate of cinchonia was now deposited in crystals, from which the pure alkaloid was obtained by precipitating an acidu- lated solution with ammonia. It ditfers from the other cinchona alkaloids in the shape of its crystals, solubilities, and chemical properties. For an account of some of these properties, see dm. Journ. of Pharm. (March, 1861, p. 174). 0 Hesse, however, having compared the jg. cinchonia of Schwabe with cinchonia obtained directly from bark, believes them to be identical. {Ibid., Jan. 1863, p. 54.) There seems also to be a discrepancy in the account of the alkaloid given in the journal from which this sketch is extracted, which tends to in- validate the conclusions of the paper. Thus, the alkaloid is said to be soluble in 173 part? of cold alcohol; yet is also said to be procured from the quinoidine after having been com- pletely exhausted by water and cold alcohol. Huanocliine. This was extracted by Erdmann from a variety of bark imported into Bre- menfseventeen or eighteen years since, supposed to be flat Huanuco bark, derived from Cin- chona nitida. He obtained it by boiling the bark with water acidulated with muriatic acid, treating the decoction with caustic soda in slight excess, washing the precipitate thus ob- tained and dissolving it in diluted acetic acid, again precipitating with caustic soda, digest- ing the precipitate with alcohol, decolorizing with animal charcoal, filtering, evaporating and crystallizing. The substance obtained was found to be an alkaloid, isomeric with quinia. yet differing from this and all the other cinchona alkaloids in properties. It crys- tallized in small prisms, which were tasteless, almost insoluble in water, soluble in 400 parts of alcohol of 80 per cent, at 62° F. and in 110 parts at the boiling point, in 600 parts of ether at 62° and 470 parts of boiling ether, readily fusible and volatilizablo, and inflam- mable, burning with a smoky flame, and without residue. Though tasteless itself, its salts were very bitter. The alkaloid was found efficient as an antiperiodic. To us, how ever. it. seen s most probable, from the method of obtaining the alkaloid, that it is a mixture of cm chonia with one or more of the other known cinchona alkaloids. (See Am. Journ. if Pharm . xxix. 553.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Cinchona. 293 may thus become of some practical importance. We shall, therefore, briefly de- scribe the mode of procuring it, and its characteristic properties. By evaporating the infusion of bark to a solid consistence, and treating tiie extract thus obtained with alcohol, we have in the residue a viscid matter consisting chiefly of mucilage with kinate of lime, which is insoluble in alcohol. If an aqueous solution of this substance be formed, and allowed to evaporate at a gentle heat, crystals of the kinate will be deposited, which may be purified by a second crystallization. The salt thus obtained, being dissolved in water, is decomposed by means of oxalic acid, which precipitates the lime, and leaves the kinic acid in solution. This may be procured in the crystalline state by spontaneous evaporation, though, as usually prepared, it is in the form of a thick syrupy liquid. The crystals are trans- parent and colourless, sour to the taste, and readily soluble in alcohol and in water. The kinates of cinchonia and quinia may be obtained either by the direct combination of their constituents, or by the mutual decomposition of the sul- phates of those alkalies and kinate of lime. Kinate of cinchonia has a bitter and astringent taste, is very soluble in water, is soluble also in alcohol, and is crystal- lized with difficulty. Kinate of quinia is also very soluble in water, but less so in rectified alcohol. Its taste is very bitter, resembling exactly that of yellow bark. It crystallizes in crusts of a mammillated form, and opaque or semitransparent. The salt is with difficulty obtained free from colour, and only by employing the ingredients in a state of extreme purity. (Ann. de Chim. et de P/iys., Juillet, 1829.)* Lauteman found, in experiments upon himself, that kinic acid, when taken into the system, undergoes a conversion into hippuric acid, and in this state escapes with the urine. (Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., cxxv. 9.) Kinic acid is said by Zwenger to have been found in the leaves of Vaccinium Myrtillus. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1861, p. 128.) Kinovic Bitter. Kinovin. Kino vie Acid. Originally discovered in the false bark called quinquina nova or new bark)'ThTs~substance has since been found in the Calisaya bark, aud probably exists, in greater or less proportion, in all the Cin- chona barks. It was detected by Dr. de Yry not only in the bark, but also in the wood and leaves of C. Calisaya and C. lucumaefolia. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1860, pp. 225 and 258.) It is white, uncrystallizable, almost insoluble in water, but readily dissolved by alcohol and ether. It is very bitter, and, as it is asserted to have_no febrifuge virtues, may on this account mislead the judgment in relation to the activity of the bark in which it may be found. Some barks are said to owe their bitterness mainly to this ingredient. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; its formula being, according to Illasiwetz and Grilm, Cr)0H4gO16. It has been supposed to possess acid properties, and a solution of its combination with magnesia is said to precipitate solutions of acetate of lead, bichloride of mercury, and the salts of cinchonia. Winckler gives, as a certain test of its presence in any bark, the sulphate of copper, which is indifferent to infusion of bark con- taining none of this principle, but detects the smallest proportion of it by ducing a dirty-green colour, soon followed by the deposition of a fine similarly coloured powder. This is a salt of copper, and has a very bitter and metallic taste. * When kinic acid is mixed with sulphuric acid and deutoxide of manganese, and dis- tilled, a neuter substance called ktnuile or kinone is obtained, in crystalline needles, of a beautiful golden-yellow colour ami high Tustre7~fusible and volatilizable without change, and having a peculiar odour. The production of this substance, when a concentrated de- coction of a bark is distilled with half its weight of sulphuric acid and deutoxide of man- ganese, has been proposed as a test of the presence of kinic acid in the bark, and conse- quently of its belonging to the cinchona barks. If there be the least quantity of that acid, the first portion of liquid distilled will have a yellow colour and the odour of kinone, and will become bright-green on the addition of chlorine water. (Philos. Mag., xxvi. 198.) The test, however, cannot be fully relied on; as it has been ascertained that caffeic acid also yields kinone, when treated as above with sulphuric acid and deutoxide of manganese. (Stenhouse, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 249, from Philos. Mag.) 294 Cinchona. (See An. Journ. of Pharin., xxv. 343.) Hlasiwetz and (iilra deny the acid pro- perties of this substance, considering it a glucoside, capable of being resolved, through the action of muriatic acid on its alcoholic solution, into a peculiar acid, and a kind of sugar which they consider as identical with the mannitan of Berthelot. This acid they propose to call kinovicjicid, adopting the name which had been given to the kinovic bitter under the impression of its acid character. Its formula is CLIT 0,. It is white, in rhomboidal crystals, insoluble in water, but slightly soluble in ether, somewhat more so in boiling alcohol, but very soluble in ammonia and the fixed alkalies. All its solutions are decidedly bitter. Its acid properties are feeble, yet it is capable of decomposing the alkaline carbonates. (Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 386.) These results have been confirmed by I)r. de Try, who proposes the following method of isolating the kinovic bitter. Macerate powdered cinchona with a very weak solution of caustic potassa or soda, precipitate the filtered liquid with an acid, redissolve the precipitate in milk of lime to separate the cinchonic red, filter and precipitate the solution boiling hot with muriatic acid, separate the precipitate, wash it, express as much as possible, and lastly dry it on porous stones, and powder it. Thus prepared, the kinovic bitter forms soluble compounds with magnesia and lime, and has been employed, in this mode of combination, as a jgnic, in the hospital of Batavia, with encou- raging success. (Ibid., Avril, 1860, p. 258.) Incompatibles. Of the relations of bark to the several solvents employed in pharmacy we shall speak hereafter, under the heads of its infusion, decoction, and tincture; where we shall also have an opportunity of mentioning some of the more prominent substances which afford precipitates with its liquid preparations. It is sufficient at present to state that all the substances which precipitate the infusion of bark do not by any means necessarily affect its virtues ; as it contains several inert ingredients which form insoluble compounds with bodies that do not disturb its active principles. As tannic acid forms with the alkaloids compounds insoluble in water, it is desirable that substances containing this acid, in a free state, should not be prescribed in connection with the infusion or decoction of bark; for, though these insoluble tannates might be found efficacious if admin- istered, yet, being precipitated from the liquid, they would be apt to be thrown away as dregs, or at any rate would communicate, if agitated, an unpleasant tur- bidness. The same may be said of the tincture and compound solution of iodine, which form insoluble compounds with all the cinchona alkaloids, and of the alka- lies, alkaline carbonates, and alkaline earths, which precipitate these alkaloids from their aqueous solution. Estimation of Value. It is evident, from what has been said, that an infusion of bark, on account of the tannin-like principle which it contains, may precipitate gelatin, tartar-emetic, and the salts of iron, without having a particle of cincho- nia, quinia, or other alkaloid in its composition ; and that consequently any in- ference as to its value, drawn front these chemical properties, would be fallacious; but, as the active principles are thrown down by the tannic acid of galls, no bark can be considered good which does not afford a precipitate with the infusion of this substance.* PART I. * A test of the cinchona barks, containing one or more of their characteristic alkaloids, has been proposed by Grahe. It is founded on the fact, that, when these barks are exposed to destructive distillation, a product is obtained of a bright carmine colour, which is yielded by no other bark under the same circumstances, and not by cinchona unless it contain one or more of its peculiar alkaloids. Nor do the pure alkaloids afford it; but, if mixed with a little acetic, kinic, tannic, citric, or tartaric acid, they exhibit the reaction, showing that in the bark it takes place between the alkaloids and organic acids containe 1 in it. Grahe applies the test by heating a piece of the bark weighing from five to ten grains in an ordi- nary test-tube, and gradually increasing the heat to redness. Whitish smoke, ar-d watery vapour condensing on the surface of the tube, are first given off, which are soon followed by the appearance of redness in the fumes, and by the deposition, an inch above the bsalea PART I. Cinchona. It is impossible to determine, with accuracy, the relative proportion of the active ingredients in the different varieties of cinchona; as the quantity is by no means uniform in different specimens of the same variety. The results of the most recent experiments have been already stated under the head of the several varieties of bark described. But it is highly important, in relation to any particu- lar sample of bark, to be able to ascertain its medicinal efficiency, which is met sured by the quantity of the peculiar cinchona-alkaloids it may contain. The fol lowing is Winckler’s process, which he prefers to all others. In determining the value of a large quantity of bark, it is necessary first to ascertain whether it may not consist of more than one variety, and if it do, to assort it, and act on each kind separately. The pieces are to be reduced to a fine powder, of which 1000 grains are to be digested with 6 ounces of alcohol of 80 per cent., by means of a water-bath, until completely exhausted. The tincture, when cold, is to be strained through thin but close linen; and the residue to be again digested with 3 ounces of alcohol, and strained as before. The residue now obtained is to be once more treated in like manner with alcohol. The tinctures are then to be united, filtered, and treated, at common temperatures, with a mixture of equal parts of fresh- slaked lime and crude well-burnt animal charcoal, of which about 500 grains will be required. The mixture is to be frequently shaken, and the maceration to be continued until the supernatant liquid is rendered colourless. In most of the genuine barks the decolorization is soon effected ; but in those containing kinovic acid it is imperfect. The decolorized liquid is to be Separated, and the residue to be repeatedly shaken with small quantities of alcohol, washed on a filter with the same liquor, and dried. The alcoholic liquids are to be mixed, and the alco- hol distilled off. The whole of the alkaloids is contained in the residue, with a peculiar fatty matter, cinchonic red, and any kinovic acid which may have ex- isted in the bark. To remove these, the matter is to be transferred to a small evaporating basin from the distilling vessel, which is to be washed with a little water acidulated with sulphuric acid, and the liquid thus obtained to be added to the rest. A slight excess of sulphuric acid is now to be dropped into the mix- ture, which is to be heated, allowed to cool, and then filtered, so as to remove the precipitated kinovic acid and other impurities. From the filtered acidulated solution, the alkaloids are to be precipitated by a slight excess of ammonia, and the mixture evaporated by a gentle heat to dryness. The sulphate of ammonia is to be removed from the residue by a small quantity of very cold water, and the •residual alkaloid matter dried and weighed. Though not absolutely pure, it is sufficiently so for the purposes of the investigation. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 343.) Winekler states that the barks will yield to the manufacturer quite as much as is obtained in this way, and generally from one eighth to one-quarter of one per cent, more, in consequence of the loss in working being less on a large scale.* part, of a red pulvei'ulent film, which is gradually changed into a thick, oily liquid, run- ning down the glass in drops or streaks of a fine carmine colour. (Chemmches Central Blatt, Feb. 17, 1858, p. 97.)—Note to the twelfth edition. * M. Rnbourdin has proposed choloroform as an agent for testing the alkaloid richness of barks. The following is the method, applied to the Calisaya. Five drachms of the pow- der, previously passed through a fine hair sieve, are to be exhausted by water, acidulated with hydrochloric acid (2 drachms of acid to a pound of water), in a percolation apparatus, the liquid being added until it passes colourless and tasteless. Five or six ounces of liquid are thus obtained, to which a drachm and a half of caustic potassa and five drachms of chlo- roform are to be added. These are to be agitated for a short time, and then allowed to stand. A dense whitish deposit forms, consisting of the alkaloids and chloroform. Sometimes th>* separation is complete and effected in an instant, leaving a red transparent liquid floating on the surface, which is to be immediately poured off. The chloroformic solution is then washed with water, put into a capsule, and allowed to evaporate. The alkaloids remain uehind in a pure state. Red bark is to be treated as the Calisaya; but for the pale or cinchonia barks the process i» to be carried furthei The matter left after the evaporation of the chloroform contains 296 Cinchona. BART I. The quantity of alkaloid matter obtained by the above process will measure *he efficacy of the bark; for all the organic alkaline principles contained in it nre efficient as medicines, ana in all probability in a nearly equal degree. But, for manufacturing purposes, it is necessary to push the investigation further, and ascertain the proportion of the several alkaloids in the mixture. This is most conveniently done by means of ether. Cinchonia is scarcely soluble in ether, quinidia is soluble in small proportion, quinia is freely soluble. When, therefore, a mixture of these alkaloids is treated with that menstruum, quinia and quinidia are dissolved, and cinchonia left. The two former may be separated by allowing the ethereal solution to evaporate. Quinidia crystallizes from the solution, and quinia is obtained uncrystallized, as the last product of the evaporation of the ether. These remarks apply to quinidia, as it was understood before the investi- gations of Pasteur.* From the most recent and carefully conducted experiments, it appears that the best officinal yellow Calisaya bark, the finest red bark, and the finest fibrous Carthagena bark {soft Pitaya) are about equal in their amount of alkaloids, each containing from 3 to 4 per cent.; while between these and the barks of cinchonic red as well as cinchonia. It is to be treated with water acidulated with hydro- chloric acid, which dissolves all the alkaloid, and a portion of the cinchonic red. The liquid is to be filtered, and solution of ammonia, diluted with 15 or 20 parts of water, added drop by drop, with constant stirring, until a white cloud appears which is not removed by the agitation. The cinchonic red is thus precipitated without the alkaloid. It is easy to know when to stop this part of the process; as the cinchonic red is precipitated in reddish-brown flakes, the cinchonia in white curdled flakes. The liquid is now to be filtered, the filter washed with a little distilled water, and the united liquors precipitated by an excess of am- monia. The precipitate is the pure alkaloid. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiii. 249.) M. Guillermond employs another test, which, as last improved by himself, is as follows. Take 20 grammes (about gv) of yellow bark, powder it without residue, pour on the powder sufficient alcohol of 76° (sp. gr. 0-872) to form a soft paste, which is to be heated for some minutes on a salt-water bath, so that the particles may be thoroughly penetrated by the liquid; then add 10 grammes of hydrated lime, finely powdered, mix it thoroughly with the paste, and dry the mixture on a plate till quite free from moisture. Introduce the resulting powder into a percolator, pack it firmly, and pour upon it 100 grammes of rectified ether. This, in passing, carries with it all the quinia. The filtered liquid, rapidly evaporated at the temperature of boiling water, leaves a residue consisting of quinia, with a little colouring matter, which is altogether insignificant. The weight of this residue, when entirely dried, will represent the quinia strength of the bark employed. By afterwards passing alcohol through the mass remaining in the percolator, the cinchonia may also be obtained. (Armu- aire de Therap., A. D. 1859, p. 149.)—Note to the twelfth edition. * Mr. Robert Howard employs the following method of ascertaining the presence or ab- sence of these alkaloids, severally, in any mixture of their sulphates, founded on the fact, that ten grains of sulphate of quinia dissolve in sixty drops of ether, but only one grain of sulphate of quinidia. Ten grains of the salt are put into a strong test-tube, ten drops of dilute sulphuric acid (one of acid and five of water) with fifteen drops of water are added, and a moderate heat applied till the salt is dissolved. When the solution has quite cooled, sixty drops of officinal ether with twenty of spirit of ammonia are added, and the mixture is well shaken, the tube being closed by the thumb. After this the tube is closely stopped with a well-fitting cork, and gently shaken from time to time. If the salt contain only quinia, or not more than 10 per cent, of quinidia, it will be completely dissolved, while, at the surface of contact of the two clear liquids, only mechanical impurities will be seen. After some time the layer of ether becomes gelatinous, and then no further observation can be made. Ten grains of the salt examined may contain one grain of quinidia, and yet be completely dissolved by the ether and ammonia; but in this case the quinidia will soon begin to crystallize in the layer of ether. The least trace of quinidia may be detected by employing, instead of ordinary ether, the same fluid previously saturated with quinidia, in which case all the quinidia must remain undissolved. It is necessary, in the last experi- ment, to observe, after the shaking, whether or not all has dissolved; for, owing to the great, tendency of quinidia to crystallize, it may again separate, and thus become a source of error. If more than a tenth of quinidia, or if cinchonia be present in the sait,, an inso- luble precipitate will be seen between the layers of the two fluids. If it be quinidia, it will be dissolved on the addition of proportionately more ether; while, if cinchonia. it will remain unaffected. {Pharm. Journ., xi. 394.) part I. Cinchona. 297 lowest value there is every grade of productiveness, down to a mere trace of alkaline matter.* Medical Properties and Uses. This valuable remedy was unknown to the civilized world till about the mid die of the seventeenth century, though the natives of Pern are generally supposed to have been long previously acquainted with its febrifuge powers. Humboldt.. however, is of a different opinion. In his Memoir on the Cinchona forests, he states that it is unknown as a remedy to the Indians inhabiting the country where it grows; and, as these people adhere pertinaciously to the habits of their ancestors, he concludes that it never was employed by them. They have gene- rally the most violent prejudices against it, considering it poisonous, and in the treatment of fever prefer the milder indigenous remedies. Humboldt is disposed to ascribe the discovery of the febrifuge powers of the bark to the Jesuits, who were sent to Peru as missionaries. As bitters had been chiefly relied on in the treatment of intermittent fevers, and as bitterness was observed to be a pre- dominant property in the bark of certain trees which were felled in clearing the forests, the missionaries were naturally led to give it a trial in the same com- plaint. They accordingly administered an infusion of the bark in the tertian ague, then prevalent in Peru, and soon ascertained its extraordinary powers. A tradition to this effect is said by Humboldt to be current at Loxa. Ruiz and Pavon, however, ascribe the discovery to the Indians; and Tschudi states, in his Travels in Peru {Am. ed., ii. 280), that the inhabitants of the Peruvian forests drink an infusion of the green bark as a remedy in intermittent fever.f The Countess of Cinchon, wife of the Viceroy of Peru, having in her own person experienced the beneficial effects of the bark, is said, on her return to Spain in the year 1640, to have first introduced the remedy into Europe. Hence the name of pulpit Commitissse, by which it was first known. After its introduction, it was distributed and sold'by the Jesuits, who are said to have obtained for it the price of its weight in silver. Prom this circumstance it was called Jesuits’ powder, a title which it long retained. It had acquired some reputation in Eng- land so early as the year 1658, but, from its high price, and from the prejudice excited against it, was at first little used. At this early period, however, its origin and nature do not seem to have been generally known; for we are told that Sir John Talbot (Sir Robert Talbor, Pereira), an Englishman, having employed it with great success in France, in the treatment of intermittents, under the name of the English powder, at length, in the year 1679, sold the secret of its origin and preparation to Louis XIV., by whom it was divulged. When taken into the stomach, bark usually excites in a short time a sense of warmth in the epigastrium, which often diffuses itself over the abdomen and even the breast, and is sometimes attended with considerable gastric and intestinal irritation. Nausea and vomiting are sometimes produced, especially if the sto- mach was previously in an inflamed or irritated state. Purging, moreover, is not an unfrequent attendant upon its action. After some time has elapsed, the * To obviate the disadvantages arising from the variable strength of bark, M. Guiller- mond recommends to fix on an appropriate strength, as indicated by the percentage of quinia, below the highest yet much above the lowest, and either to select bark of this strength, or to bring that employed to the medium strength, by adding a stronger or weaker bark, as the case may require, in due proportion. He recommends as this standard the yield of 3-2 per cent, of sulphate of quinia. This is to be treated by alcohol till entirely >xhausted, and the tincture evaporated so as to yield an extract which shall exactly re- present the virtues of the bark, and shall always have the same strength. From this ex- tract all the preparations of bark are to be made, which will thus always be uniform in strength. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1863, p. 124.) f Tschudi also observes that he has found the fresh bark more efficacious than the dried; as, in less than half the usual dose, it not only effects cures in a short time, but ensures ahe patient against the return of the disease. Cinchona. PART I. circulation often experiences its influence, as exhibited in the somewhat increased frequency of pulse; and, if the dose be repeated, the whole system becomes more or less affected, and all the functions undergo a moderate degree of excitement. Its action upon the nervous system is often evinced by a sense of tension, or fulness, or slight pain in the head, singing in the ears, and partial deafness, which are always experienced by many individuals when brought completely under its influence. The effects above mentioned entitle bark to a place among the tonics, and it is usually ranked at the very head of this class of medicines. But, besides the mere excitation of the ordinary functions of health, it produces other effects upon the system, which must be considered peculiar, and independent of its mere tonic operation. The power by which, when administered in the intervals be- tween the paroxysms of intermittent disorders, it interrupts the progress of the disease, is something more than what is usually understood by the tonic pro- perty; for no other substance belonging to the class, however powerful or per- manent may be the excitement which it produces, exercises a control over inter- mittents at all comparable to that of the medicine under consideration. As it is probable that, in the intervals of these complaints, a train of morbid actions is going on out of our sight, within the recesses of the nervous system; so it is also probable that bark produces, in the same system, an action equally mysterious, which supersedes that of the malady, and thus accomplishes the restoration of the patient. When taken very largely, especially in the form of its active principles, in which its effects on the system can be obtained with less of the direct irritant influence on the stomach, cinchona has been found, while it produces the effects already adverted to upon the brain, at the same time to lessen considerably the force and frequency of the pulse. This sedative effect is probably secondary, and dependent on an influence upon the nervous centres in the encephalon, interfering with the due performance of their functions, and con- sequently of'tlie in some degree dependent function of the heart. From the pos- session of tonic, anti-intermittent, and indirect sedative properties, bark is capable of being usefully employed in the treatment o? numerous diseases. It may usually be employed with benefit in all morbid conditions of the system, whatever may be the peculiar modifications, in which a permanent corroborant effect is desirable, provided the stomach be in a proper state for its reception. In low or typhoid forms of disease, in which either no inflammation exists, or that which does exist has been moderated by proper measures, or has passed into the suppurative or the gangrenous stage, this remedy is often of the greatest advantage in supporting the system till the morbid action ceases. Hence its use in the latter stages of typhus gravior; in malignant scarlatina, measles, and smallpox; in carbuncle and gangrenous erysipelas; and in all cases in which the system is exhausted under large purulent discharges, and the tendency of the affection is towards recovery. As a tonic, bark is also advantageously em- ployed in chronic diseases connected with debility; as, for example, in scrofula, dropsy, passive hemorrhages, certain forms of dyspepsia, obstinate cutaneous affections, amenorrhoea, chorea, hysteria; in fact, whenever a corroborant influ- ence is desired, and no contraindicating symptoms exist. But in all these cases it greatly behooves the physician to examine well the condition of the system, and, before resorting to the tonic, to ascertain the real existence of an enfeebled condition of the functions, and the absence of such local irritations or inflamma- tions, especially of the stomach or bowels, as might be aggravated by its use. In doubtful cases, we have been in the habit of considering the occurrence of profuse sweating during sleep as an indication for its use, and, under these circumstances, have prescribed it very advantageously, in the form of sulphate of quinia, in acute rheumatism, and in the advanced stages of protracted fevers. But it is in the cure of intermittent diseases that bark displays its most ex- traordinary powers. It was originally introduced into notice as a reme ly iu PART i. Cinchona. 299 fever and ague, and the reputation which it acquired at an early period it has ever since retained. Very few cases of this disease will be found to resist the judicious use of bark, or some one of its preparations. This is not the place to speak of the precise circumstances under which it is best administered. It will be sufficient to say that physicians generally concur in recommending its earl} employment, in divided doses, to the extent of one or two ounces, during the intermission, and the repetition of this plan till the disease is subdued, or the remedy is found insufficient for its cure. Other intermittent diseases have been found to yield with almost equal certainty to the remedy, particularly those of a neuralgic character. Hemicrania and violent pains in the eyes, face, and other parts of the body, occurring periodically, are often almost immediately relieved by the use of bark. Some cases of epilepsy, in which the convulsions recurred at regular intervals, have also been cured by it; and even the hectic intermittent is frequently arrested, though, as the cause still generally con- tinues to operate, the relief is too often only temporary. Diarrhoea and dysen- tery sometimes put on the intermittent form, especially in miasmatic districts; and under these circumstances may often be cured by bark. Nor is it necessary that, in the various diseases which have been mentioned, the intermission should always be complete, in order to justify a resort to the remedy. Remittent fe- vers, in which the remission is very decided, not unfrequently yield to the use of bark, if preceded by proper depleting measures. But, as a general rule, the less of the diseased action there is in the interval, the better is the chance of success. In reference to its indirect sedative effects, bark or its alkaloids have been of late considerably used, in large doses, in various febrile and inflammatory affec- tions, as in the early stage of remittent and yellow fevers, typhoid and typhus fevers, and acute rheumatism; but, in this use of the medicine, caution is required lest, in suppressing the general arterial excitement, injurious congestion or in- flammation of the brain may be induced. In the form of sulphate of quinia, it has of late been recommended, in large doses, in puerperal fever. Some observations are requisite as to the choice of the bark, and the forms of administration. In the treatment of intermittents, either the best red or the yellow (Calisava) bark is decidedly preferable to the pale. The pale bark may, in its finest forms, be superior for the purposes of a general tonic; as it is less liable to offend the stomach, and perhaps to irritate the bowels. Where the object is to obtain the full influence of the bark, it may in some instances be advisable to administer it in substance. We are not absolutely cer- tain that the alkaloids are the only active ingredients; and, even supposing them to be so, we are equally uncertain whether they may not be somewhat modified in their properties, even by the therapeutically inert principles with which they are associated. In fact, bark in substance has been repeatedly known to cure intermittents when sulphate of quinia haslailedT" It is best administered diffused in water or some aromatic infusion. Experience has proved that its efficacy in intermittents is often greatly promoted by admixture with other sub- stances. A mixture of powdered bark, Virginia snakeroot, and carbonate of soda was at one time highly esteemed in this city; and another, consisting of bark, confection of opium, lemon-juice, and port wine, has proved highly effica- cious in obstinate cases of fever and ague.* But, notwithstanding the supposed superior efficacy of the bark in substance, in the same relative dose, it is in the great majority of instances sufficient to resort to some one of its preparations; and in many cases we are compelled to this resort by the inability of the stomach to support the powder, or the uu- * The following are the formulas for these mixtures.-—1. R. Cinchon. Pulv. |jss; Ser- pentarise pulv. gj; Sodas Carhonat. Misce et in pulveres quatuor divide, una tertist ret quarta quaque hora sumenda. 2. R. Cinchon. Rub. pulv. Confect. Opii gj; Suo, Limon. recentis fgij; Yin. Rub. fjjiv. Misce. Tertia pars tertia quaque hora sumenda. 300 Cinchona.—Cinnamomum. PART I. willingness of the patient to encounter its disagreeable taste. The best substi- tutes, in intermittent diseases, are the sulphates of its alkaloids. Sulphate of quinia has until recently been used almost to the exclusion of the others; but sulphate of cinchonia is now considerably employed, and with nearly equal effect; and there is every reason to believe that the sulphates of quinidia and cinchonidia will be found not less efficient. In fact any one, or any combination of the cinchona alkaloids, may be used with propriety for obtaining the thera- peutic effects of bark. The advantage of these preparations is their facility of administration, and the possibility, by their employment, of introducing a large quantity of the active matter, with less risk of offending the stomach. (See Quinise Sulphas ) Though the alkaloids possess the anti intermittent power of bark, they have not been certainly ascertained to exert all the peculiar influence of that medi- cine as a tonic; but, as bark in powder can seldom be supported, by a delicate stomach, for a sufficient period to ensure the necessary influence of the medicine in chronic disease, it is customary to resort, in this case, to some one of its preparations in which the alkaloids are extracted in connection with the other principles; as the infusion, decoction, tincture, extract, and fluid extract. Each of these will be particularly treated of among the Preparations. It is here only necessary to say that their use is mostly confined to chronic cases, or those of a malignant character, as typhus gravior, &c., in which the whole virtues of the bark are desired, but the stomach is unable to bear the powder. Should bark or its preparations produce purging, as they occasionally do, they ought to be corabiued with a small portion of laudanum. It is sometimes desirable to introduce bark into the system by other avenues than the stomach; as it exercises its peculiar influence to whatever part it is applied. Injected into the rectum, in connection with opium to prevent purg- ing, it has been employed successfully in the cure of intermittents; and the use of bark jackets, made by quilting the powder between two pieces of flannel or muslin, and worn next the skin, and of bark baths made by infusing the medi- cine in water, has proved serviceable in cases of children. But the ration of bark for injection, or external use, is sulphate of quinia, which, thrown with a little laudanum into the rectum, or applied to a blistered surface denuded of the cuticle, produces on the system effects scarcely less decided than those which result from it when swallowed. The medium dose of bark, as administered in intermittents, is a drachm, to be repeated more or less frequently according to circumstances. When given as a Jtonic ijELchronic complaints, the dose is usually smaller; from ten to thirty grains being sufficient to. commence with. • Off Prep, of Yellow Bark. Decoctum Cinchonae Flavae; Extractum Cincho- nae, U. S.; Extractum Cinchonae Fluidum, U. S.; Extractum Cinchonae Flavae Liquidum, Br.; Infusum Cinchonae Flavae; Quiniae Sulphas; Tinctura Cincho- nae, U. S.; Tinctura Cinchonae Flavae, Br. Off. Prep, of Pale Bark. Tinctura Cinchonae Composita, Br. Off. Prep, of Red Bark. Decoct um Cinchonae Rubrae, U. S.; Infusum Cinchonae Rubrae, U. S.; Tinctura Cinchonae Composita, U. S. W. CINNAMOMUM. U.S.,Br. Cinnamon. The bark of Cinnamomum Zeylanjcum and of Cinnamomum aromaticunp U. S. Cinnamomum Zeylanicum. Theinner bark of shoots from the truncated stock. Br. Cinnamon,—Canelle, Fr.; Brainier Canel, Zimmt, Germ.; Canella, IlaL; Canela, Span.; Kurundu, Cingalese; Karua puttay, Tamul. Cassia.—Cassia lignea; Casse, Fr.; Cassienzimmt, Germ.; Cannellina, Ilal.; Casia, fyau. PART I. Cinnamomum. 301 The U. S. Pharmacopoeia embraces, under the title of cinnamon, not only the bark of that name obtained from the island of Ceylon, which is the only variety recognised in the new British Pharmacopoeia, but also the commercial cassia, which is imported from China; and, as the two products, though very different in price, and somewhat in flavour, possess identical medical properties, and are used for the same purposes, there seems to be no necessity for giving them dis- tinct officinal designations. Indeed, the barks of all the species of the genus Cin- namomum, possessing analogous properties, are as much entitled to the common name of cinnamon, as the barks of the Cinchonas are to the name of cinchona, and the juice of different species of Aloe to that of aloes. Yarieties may be suffi- ciently distinguished by an appropriate epithet. Both cinnamomum and cassia were terms employed by the ancients, but whether exactly as now understood, it is impossible to determine. The term cassia., or cassia lignea, has been gener- ally used in modern times to designate the coarser barks analogous to cinnamon. It was probably first applied to the barks from Malabar, and afterwards extended to those of China and other parts of Eastern Asia. It has been customary tc ascribe cassia lignea to the Laurus Cassia of Linnaeus; but the specific char- acter given by that botauist was so indefinite, and based on such imperfect in- formation, that the species has been almost unanimously abandoned by botanists. The fact appears to be, that the barks sold as cinnamon and cassia in different parts of the world are derived from various species of Cinnamomum. Dr. Wight, who was commissioned by the British Indian Government to inquire into the botanical source of “the common cassia bark of the markets of the world,” ex- presses his belief, that the list of plants yielding this product extends to nearly every species of the genus, including not less than six plants on the Malabar coast and in Ceylon, and nearly twice as many more in the eastern part of Asia, and in the islands of the Eastern Archipelago. (Madras Joarn. of Lite rat. and Sci., 1839, No. 22.) We shall describe only the two species recognised in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Cinnamomum. Sex. Syst. Enneandria Monogynia..— Nat.Ord. Lauracepe.. Gen. Ch. Flowers hermaphrodite or polygamous, panicled or fascicTe3, naked, Calyx six-cleft, with the limb deciduous. Fertile stamens nine, in three rows; the inner three with two sessile glands at the base; anthers four-celled, the three inner turned outwards. Three capitate abortive stamens next the centre. Fruit seated in a cup-like calyx. Leaves ribbed. Leaf-buds not scaly. Lindley. 1. Cinnamomum Zeylanicum. Nees, Laurinese, 52 ; Lindley, Flor. Med. 329; Hayne, Darstel. und Beschreib. &c. xii. 263.—Laurus Cinnamominn. Linn. This is a tree about twenty or thirty feet high, with a trunk from twelve to eigh- teen inches in diameter, and covered with a thick, scabrous bark. The branches are numerous, strong, horizontal, and declining; and the young shoots are beau- tifully speckled with dark green and light orange colours. The leaves are oppo- site for the most part, coriaceous, entire, ovate, or ovate-oblong, obtusely pointed, and three-nerved, with the lateral nerves vanishing as they approach the point. There are also two less obvious nerves, one on each side, arising from the base, proceeding towards the border of the leaf, and then quickly vanishing. The foot- stalks are short and slightly channeled, and, together with the extreme twigs, are smooth and without the least appearance of down. In one variety, the leaves are very broad and somewhat cordate. When mature, they are of a shining green upon their upper surface, and lighter-coloured beneath. The flowers are small, white, and arranged in axillary and terminal panicles. The fruit is an oval berry, which adheres like the acorn to the receptacle, is larger than the black currant, and when ripe has a bluish-brown surface, diversified with numerous white spots The tree emits no smell perceptible at any distance. The bark of the root has the odour of cinnamon with the pungency of camphor, and yields this principle upon distillation. The leaves have a spicy odour when rubbed, and a hot taste. 302 Cinnamomum. PART I. A volatile oil distilled from them has been introduced into commerce.* The petiole has the flavour of cinnamon. It is a singular fact, that the odour of the flowers is to people in general disagreeable, being compared by some to the scent exhaled from newly sawn bones. The fruit has a terebinthinate odour when opened, and a taste in some degree like that of juniper berries. A fatty sub- stance, called cinnamon-sue*, is obtained from it when ripe, by bruising and then boiling it in water, and removing the oleaginous matter which rises to the surface, and concretes upon cooling. It is the prepared bark that constitutes the genuine cinnamon. This species is a native of Ceylon, where it has long been cultivated. It is said also to be a native of the Malabar Coast, and has at various periods been introduced into Java, the Isle of France, Bourbon, the Cape de Yerds, Brazil, Cayenne, several of the West India islands, and Egypt; and in some of these places is at this time highly productive, especially in Cayenne, where the plant was flourishing so early as 1755. It is exceedingly influenced, as regards the aromatic character of its bark, by the circumstances of soil, climate, and mode of culture. Thus we are told by Marshall that in Ceylon, beyond the limits of Negombo and Matura, in the western and southern aspect of the island, the bark is never of good quality, being greatly deficient in the aromatic flavour of the cinnamon; and that even within these limits it is of unequal value, from the various influence of exposure, soil, shade, and other circumstances. 2. G. aromaticum. Nees, Laurinese, 52; Lindley, Flor. Med. 330.—G. Gas- jig. Blume, Ed. Ph.;~Hayne,Z>ars/eZ. und Beschreib. &c. xii. 23. — Laurus CasL- j>ia. Aiton, Hort. Kew. ii. 427. — Not Laurus Cassia of Linn. ThisTis of about 'the same magnitude as the former species, and like it has nearly opposite, shortly petiolate, coriaceous, entire leaves, of a shining green upon the upper surface, lighter-coloured beneath, and furnished with three nerves, of which the two lat- eral vanish towards the point. The leaves, however, differ in being oblong-lance- olate and pointed, and in exhibiting, under the microscope, a very fine down upon the under surface. The footstalks and extreme twigs are also downy. The flow- ers are in narrow, silky panicles. The plant grows in China, Sumatra, and other parts of Eastern Asia, and is said to be cultivated in Java. It is believed to bo the species which furnishes, wholly or in part, the Chinese cinnamon or cassia brought from Canton, and is supposed to be the source of the cassia buds. Besides the two species above described, others have been thought to contri- bute to the cinnamon and cassia of commerce. The opinion of Dr. Wight has been already stated. QHLgureirii of Nees, growing in the mountains of Cochin China near Laos, and in according to Loureiro, a cinnamon of which the finest kind is superior to that of Ceylon. G- nitidum, growing in Ceylon, Java, and on the continent of India, is said to have beerTtfie chief source of the drug, known formerly by the name of Fplia Malabathri, and consisting of the leaves of different species of Cinnamomum mixed together. The leaves of . G. Tamala of Hindostan have been sold under the same name. G. Gulilawan of the Moluccas yields the aromatic bark called culilawan. noticed in the tKird part of this work; and similar barks are obtained from another species of the same region, namedj?. rubrum, and from (ifjintoc of Java. Massou-bark, from which an aromatic volatile oil is obtained called oil of massoy, is the product of C.Kiamis. (Gmelin, Hand-book, xiv. 3S0.) * The cinnamon leaf oil, as imported into Great Britain, is of two kinds, one containing a considerable quantity of a fatty fixed oil, perhaps cinnamon-suet from the fruit, the other a pure volatile oil. The oil is said to be obtained by distilling the leaves after maceration in sea-water. It resembles the oil of cloves and pimento in sensible properties, having a brownish colour, a penetrating, fragrant odour, and a very pungent taste. According to Stenhouse, it is of the sp. gr. 1 -053, has an acid reaction, and consists essentially of eugenio acid and a neuter substance with the formula but contains also a minute proportion of benzoic acid. (Pharm. Journ., xiv. 319.)—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Cinnamomum. 303 Culture, Collection, Commerce, &c. Our remarks under this head will first be directed to the cinnamon of Ceylon, in relation to which we have more precise information than concerning the aromatic obtained from other sources. The bark was originally collected exclusively from the tree in a wild state; but the Dutch introduced the practice of cultivating it, which has been continued since the British came into possession of the island. The principal cinnamon gardens are in the vicinity of Columbo. The seeds are planted in a prepared soil at certain distances; and, as four or five are placed in a spot, the plants usually grow in clusters like the hazel bush. In favourable situations they attain the height of five or six feet in six or seven years; and a healthy bush will then afford two or three shoots fit for peeling, and every second year afterwards from four to seven shoots in a good soil. The cinnamon harvest commences in May, and continues till late in October. The first object is to select shoots proper for decortication, and those are seldom cut which are less than half an inch, or more than two or three inches in diameter. The bark is divided by longitudinal inci- sions, of which two are made in the smaller shoots, several in the larger, and is then removed in strips by means of a suitable instrument. The pieces are next collected in bundles, and allowed to remain in this state for a short time, so as to undergo a degree of fermentation, which facilitates the separation of the epidermis. This, with the green matter beneath it, is removed by placing the strip of bark upon a convex piece of wood, and scraping its external surface with a curved knife. The bark now dries and contracts, assuming the appearance of a quill. The peeler introduces the smaller tube% into the larger, and connects them also endwise, thus forming a congeries of quills which is about forty inches long. When sufficiently dry, these cylinders are collected into bundles weighing about thirty pounds, and bound together by pieces of split bamboo. The com- merce in Ceylon cinnamon was formerly monopolized by the East India Com- pany; but the cultivation is now unrestricted, and the bark may be freely ex- ported upon'the payment of a fixed duty. It is assorted in the island into three qualities, distinguished by the designations of first, second, and third. The in- ferior kinds, which are of insufficient value to pay the duty, are used for the preparation of oil of cinnamon. Immense quantities of cinnamon are exported from China, the finest of which is little inferior to that of Ceylon, though the mass of it is much coarser. It passes in commerce under the name of cassia, and is said by Mr. Reeves to be brought to Canton from the province of Kwangse, where the tree producing it grows very abundantly. {Trans. Medico-Bot. Soc., 1828, p. 26.) It has already been stated that this tree is supposed to be the Cinnamomum arqrnaticum; but we have no positive proof of the fact. TravellersTiiform us that cinnamon is also collected in Cochin China; but that the best of it is monopolized by the sovereign of the country. It is supposed to be obtained from the Cinnamomum Loureirii of Nees, the Laurus Cinnamomum of Loureiro. According to Sie- bold, the bark of the large-branches is of inferior quality and is rejected; that from the smallest branches resembles the Ceylon cinnamon in thickness, but has a very pungent taste and smell, and is little esteemed; while the intermediate branches yield an excellent bark, about a line in thickness, which is even more highly valued than the cinnamon of Ceylon, and yields a sweeter and less pungent oil. {Amial. der Pharm., xx. 280.) Cinnamon of good quality is said to be col- lected in Java, and considerable quantities of inferior quality have been thrown into commerce, as cassia liancm from the Malabar Coast. Manilla and the Isle of France are also mentioned as sources whence this drug is supplied. Little, however, reaches the United States from these places. Cayenne, and several of the West India islands, yield to commerce consider- able quantities of cinnamon of various qualities. That of Cayenne is of two kinds, one of which closely resembles, though it does not quite equal, the aromatic Cinnamomum. PART I. of Ceylon, the other resembles the Chinese. The former is supposed to be de- rived from plants propagated from a Ceylonese stock, the latter from those which have sprung from a tree introduced from Sumatra.* By far the greater proportion of cinnamon brought to this country is imported from China. It is entered as cassia at the custom house, while the same article brought from other sources is almost uniformly entered as cinnamon. Much of it is afterwards exported. From what source the ancients derived their cinnamon and cassia is not cer- lainly known. Neither the plants nor their localities, as described by Dioscorides, Pliny, and Theophrastus, correspond precisely with our present knowledge; but in this respect much allowance must be made for the inaccurate geography of the ancients. It is not improbable that the Arabian navigators, at a very early period, conveyed this spice within the limits of Phoenician and Grecian, and subsequently of Roman commerce. Properties. Ceylon cinnamon is in long cylindrical fasciculi, composed of numerous quills, the larger enclosing the smaller. In the original sticks, which are somewhat more than three feet in length, two or three fasciculi are neatly joined at the end, so as to appear as if the whole were one continuous piece. The finest is of a light brownish-yellow colour, almost as thin as paper, smooth, often somewhat shining, pliable to a considerable extent, with a splintery frac- ture when broken. It has a pleasant fragrant odour, and a warm, aromatic, pun- gent, sweetish, slightly astringent, and highly agreeable taste. When distilled it affords but a small quantity of essential oil, which, however, has an exceed- ingly grateful flavour. .It is brought to this country from England; but is very costly, and is not generally kept in the shops. The inferior sorts are browner, thicker, less splintery, and of a less agreeable flavour, and are little if at all su- perior to the best Chinese. The finer variety of Cayenne cinnamon approaches in character to that above described, but is paler and in thicker pieces, being usually collected from older branches. That which is gathered very young is scarcely distinguishable from the cinnamon of Ceylon. Chinese cinnamon, or cassia, is in tubes from the eighth of an inch to an inch in diameter, usually single, sometimes double, but very rarely more than double. In some instances the bark is rolled very much upon itself, in others is not even completely quilled, forming segments more or less extensive of a hollow cylinder. It is of a redder or darker colour than the finest Ceylon cinnamon, thicker, rougher, denser, and breaks with a shorter fracture. It has a stronger, more pungent and astringent, but less sweet and grateful taste; and, though of a similar odour, is less agreeably fragrant. It is the kind almost universally kept in our shops. Of a similar character is the cinnamon imported directly from various parts of the East Indies. But under the name of cassia have also been brought to us very inferior kinds of cinnamon, collected from the trunks or large branches of the trees, or injured by want of care in keeping, or perhaps derived from inferior species. It is said that cinnamon from which the oil has been dis- tilled, is sometimes fraudulently mixed with the genuine. These inferior kiuds * While on a visit, Nov. 1860, to the Palais cTIndustrie, in Paris, where is kept a noble collec- tion of industrial and natural products from the various French colonies, we noticed spe- cimens of the Ceylon cinnamon (C. Zeylanicum), from the W. India island of Martinique. It was apparently of fine quality, consisting of pieces, singly and doubly quilled, and bearing a close resemblance to the product of Ceylon, except that the quills were single, and not, like the Ceylonese, introduced one into the other, forming a sort of compact cylinder. There were, besides, large flat pieces of the bark from the same source, bearing, in their general aspect, some resemblance to the flat Calisaya bark. These were, no doubt, fron the trunk or larger branches. How far they possessed the aromatic properties of the trie cinnamon could not be determined; for they were enclosed in cases in such a manner that, though they could be seen, they could not be submitted to the test of taste and smell — Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Cinnamomum.—Cocculus. 305 are detected, independently of their greater thickness, and coarseness of fracture, by their deficiency in the peculiar sensible properties of the spice. According to the analysis of Yauquelin, cinnamon contains a peculiar vola- tile oil, tannin, mucilage, a colouring matter, an acid, and lignin. The tannin is of the variety which yields a greenish-black precipitate with the salts of iron The oil obtained from the Cayenne cinnamon, he found to be moye bitiug thai* that from the Ceylonese, and at the same time to be somewhat peppery. Bu- cholz found in 100 parts of cassia lignea, 0 8 of volatile oil, 4-0 of resin, 14*6 of gummy extractive (probably including tannin), 64 3 of lignin and bassorin, and 16 3 of water including loss. This aromatic yields its virtues wholly to alcohol, and less readily to water. At the temperature of boiling alcohol very little of the oil rises, and an extract prepared from the tincture retains, therefore, the aro- matic properties. For an account of the volatile oil, see Oleum Cinnamomi. Medical Properties and Uses. Cinnamon is among the most grateful and efficient of the aromatics. It is warm and cordial to the stomach, carminative, astringent, and, like most other substances of this class, more powerful as a local than general stimulant. It is seldom prescribed alone, though, when given in powder or infusion, it will sometimes allay nausea, check vomiting, and relieve flatulence. It is chiefly used as an adjuvant to other less pleasant medicines, and enters into a great number of officinal preparations. It is often employed in diarrhoea, in connection with chalk and astringents; and has recently been recommended as peculiarly efficacious in uterine hemorrhage. The dose of the powder is from ten grains to a scruple. Cassia Buds. This spice consists of the calyx of one or more species of Cin- namomum, surrounding the young germ, and, as stated by Dr. Martius, on the authority of the elder Nees, about one-quarter of the normal size. It is pro- duced in China; and Mr. Reeves states that great quantities of it are brought to Canton from the province which affords cassia. The species which yields it is in all probability the same with that which yields the bark, though it has been ascribed by Nees to Cinnamomum Loureirii. In favour of the former opinion is the statement of Dr. Christison, that C. aromaticum, cultivated in the hot- houses of Europe, bears a flower-bud which "closely resembles the cassia bud when at the same period of advancement. Cassia buds have some resemblance to cloves, and are'compared to small nails with round heads. The enclosed germen is sometimes removed, and they are then cup-shaped at top. They have a brown colour, with the flavour of cinnamon, and yield an essential oil upon distillation. They may be used for the same purposes as the bark. Off. Prep. Acidum Sulphuricum Aromaticum; Aqua Cinnamomi, Br.; De- coctum Haematoxyli, Br.; Infusum Catechu, Br.; Infus. Catechu Comp., U. S.; Pulvis Aromaticus; Pulvis Catechu Compositus, Br.; Pulvis Kino cum Opio, Br.; Spiritus Lavandulae Comp., U. S.; Syrupus Ithei Aromaticus, U. S.; Tinc- tura Cardamomi Comp.; Tinctura Catechu; Tinctura Cinnamomi; Tinctura Lavandulae Comp., Br.; Yinum Opii, U. S. W. COCCULUS. Br. Cocculus Indicus. Anamirta Cocculus. The fruit, dried. Br. Coque du Levant, Br.; Kokkelskorner, Fischkorner, Germ.; Galla di Levante, Ital. The plant which produces cocculus Indicus was embraced by Linnaeus, with several others, under the title of Menispermum Cocculus. These were referred by De Candolle to a new genus, denominated Cocculus. From this the particu- lar species under consideration has been separated by Wight and Arnott, and erected into a distinct genus with the name of Anamirta. 306 Cocculus. PART I. Auamipta. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Dodecandria.—Nat. Ord. Menispermacese. Gen. Ch. Flowers dioecious. Calyx of six sepals in a double series, with two close-pressed braceteoles. Corolla none. Male. Stamens united into a central column dilated at the apex. Anthers numerous, covering the whole globose apex of the column. Female. Flowers unknown. Drupes one to three, one-celled, one seeded. Seed globose, deeply excavated at the hilum. Albumen fleshy. Cotyledons very thin, diverging. ( Wight and Arnolt.) Anamirta Cocculus. Wight and Arnott, Flor. Penins. Ind. Orient, i. 446; Lindiey, Flor. Med. 371.—Menispermum Cocculus, Linn.— Cocculus suber- osus. De Cand. Prodrom. i. 97. This is the only species. It is a climbing shrub, with a suberose or corky bark; thick, coriaceous, smooth, shining, roundish or cordate leaves, sometimes truncate at the base; and the female flowers in lateral compound racemes. It is a native of the Malabar Coast, and of Eastern Insular and Continental India. The fruit is the officinal portion. This plant was proved to be the source of cocculus Indicus by Roxburgh, who raised it from genuine seeds which he had received from Malabar. It is believed that other allied plants, bearing similar fruit, contribute to furnish the drug; and the Cocculus Plukenetii of Malabar, and C.Ian imp sun of Celebes and the Moluccas, are particularly designated by authors. It was known to the Arabian physicians, and for a long time was imported into Europe from the Levant, from which circumstance it was called cocculus Levanticus. It is now brought exclusively from the East Indies. Properties, &c. Cocculus Indicus, as found in the shops, is roundish, some- what kidney-shaped, about as large as a pea; having a thin, dry, blackish, wrinkled exterior coat, within which is a ligneous bivalvular shell, enclosing a whitish, oily, very bitter kernel. It is without smell, but has an intensely and permanently bitter taste. It bears some resemblance to the bay berry, but is not quite so large, and may be distinguished by the fact, that in the cocculus Indicus the kernel never wholly fills the shell. When the fruit is kept long, the shell is sometimes almost empty. The Edinburgh College directed that “the kernels should fill at least two-thirds of the fruit.” M. Roullay discovered in the seeds a peculiar bitter principle which he denominated picrotoxin. This is white, crystallizable in quadrangular prisms, soluble in 25 parts of boiling and 150 of cold water (Glover), and very soluble in alcohol and ether, but insoluble in the oils. Its composition is C12II705 (Pelletier and Couerbe), or C.2nH1„08, accord- ing to Gmelin, who considers it as isomeric with eantharidin. (Hand-book, xiv. 475.) It is poisonous, and, given to strong dogs in the quantity of from five to ten grains, produces death, preceded by convulsions, which, according to Dr. R. M. Clover, are very similar in character to those produced by Flourens by sec- tion of the corpora quadrigemiua and cerebellum; being attended with back- ward and rotatory movements and tetanic spasms. It also greatly increases the animal heat. (Ed. Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., iii. 303.) To procure it, the watery extract of the seeds is triturated with pure magnesia, and then treated with hot alcohol, which dissolves the picrotoxin, and yields it upon evaporation. In this state, however, it is impure. To obtain it colourless it must be again dissolved in alcohol, and treated with animal charcoal. After filtration and due evaporation, it is deposited in the crystalline form. Besides picrotoxin, cocculus Indicus contains a large proportion of fixed oil, and other substances of less interest. The active principle above described is said to re- side exclusively in the kernel. In the shell MM. Pelletier and Couerbe discovered two distinct principles; one alkaline and named menispermin (menispermia), the other identical with it in composition, but distinguishable by its want of alkalinity, its volatility, and its solubility and crystalline form, and denominated ■para,menispermin. They found also in the shell a new acid, which they called hypopicrotoxic. The picrotoxin of M. Boullay they believed to possess acid PART 1. Cocculus.—Coccus. 307 properties, an 1 proposed for it the name ofpicrotoxic acid,. [Joum. de Pharm., xx. 122.) In Europe, picrotoxin is said to be added to malt liquors, in order to give them bitterness and intoxicating properties; although the practice is for- bidden by the law, in England, under heavy penalties.* Medical Properties, &c. Cocculus Indicus acts in the manner of the acrid nar- cotic poisons, but is never given internally. In India it is used to stupefy fishes in order that they may be caught; and it has been applied to the same purpose in Europe and this country. It is asserted that the fish thus taken are not poi- sonous. The powdered fruit, mixed with oil, is employed in the East Indies as a local application in obstinate cutaneous affections. An ointment made with the powder has been used in tinea capitis, and to destroy vermin in the hair. Picrotoxin has been successfully substituted by Dr. Jeager for the drug itself. Rubbed up with lard in the proportion of ten grains to the ounce, it usually effected cures of tinea capitis in less than a month. A case is recorded by W. B. Thompson, of New York, in which death in a child six years old, preceded by tetanic spasms, and extremely contracted pupil, resulted from the application of a strong tincture of the fruit to the scalp. [Med. Exam., N. S., viii. 227.) It should be used with great caution when the surface is abraded.f Off. Prep. Unguentum Cocculi, Br. W COCCUS. U. S., Br. Cochineal. Coccus Cacti. U. S. The female insect, dried. Br. Coclienille, Fr., Germ..; Cocciniglia, Ital ; Cochinilla, Span. The Coccus is a genus of hemipterous insects, having the snout or rostrum in the breast, the antennte filiform, arid the posterior part of the abdomen fur- * Gunckel proposes the following mode of detecting and separating picrotoxin from liquids containing it, founded on the facts, that it is soluble in dilute acids though not com- bining with them, and that ether extracts it from its acidulous solutions, but not from those in water or alcohol, even with the presence of potassa. The substance suspected to contain it, having been brought to the consistence of paste, is to be digested with alcohol and a little tartaric acid, the liquid separated, the alcohol evaporated, the residue diluted with a little water and then treated with ether, and, finally, the ethereal solution submit- ted to evaporation in a watch-glass. Picrotoxin, if present, is deposited, recognisable by its feathery crystallization, its bitter taste, and the property of reducing the tartrate of copper and potassa. If strychnia, which perhaps resembles it most closely in its effects, should have been present, it would be left behind in the acidulated solution. (Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1858, p. 78, from Archiv. der Pharrn., xciv. 14.) In the instance of adulter- ated malt liquor, in consequence of the resin of hops it contains, it might be expedient first to evaporate the liquor to dryness, and prepare a watery extract of the residue, and then to proceed as stated. Mr. J. W. Langley proposes, as a means of detection, the oxidation of picrotoxin. When to a little of this substance, mixed with nitrate of potassa in a watch-glass, a drop of sul- phuric acid is added, no observable reaction takes place; but, if a very strong solution of caustic potassa or soda be now added, a bright reddish-yellow colour is produced, whiclj is highly characteristic. A very minute quantity may thus be detected. Mr. Langley, how- ever, thinks it extremely probable that this phenomenon is owing to a minute quantity of some nitrogenous principle strongly attached to the picrotoxin; for, if this principle be purified by combining it in solution with potassa, and then precipitating it with an acid, it does not answer the test. (Am. Journ. of Sci. and Arts, July, 1862, p. 109.) -j- FluidJExtract of Cocculus Indicus. This is a convenient form for external use. Prof. Procter prepares it by moistening a moderately coarse powder, obtained from 16 troy- ounces of the fruit, with 6 ounces of a menstruum composed of two parts of alcohol and one of water; packing the mixture, after two hours, in a conical percolator; pouring upon it a similar menstruum till twelve fluidounces have passed; digesting the coatings, from which the powder was sifted, in two pints of diluted alcohol; pouring the whole, when cool, into the percolator; after the liquid has disappeared, pouring on diluted alcohol until two pints of filtered liquor are obtained; evaporating this to four fluidounces; mixing the residue with the reserved tincture; and, after 24 hours, filtering through paper. (Am. Journ. of Pharrn., March, 1863, p. 112.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 308 Coccus. PART r. nhhed with bristles. The male has two erect wings, the female is wingless. The G. Cacti is characterized by its depressed, downy, transversely wrinkled body, its purplish abdomen, its short and black legs, and its subulate antennae, which are about one-third of the length of the body. (Rees's Cyclopaedia.) Another spe- cies, C. Iligis. which inhabits a species of oak, is collected in the mountainous parts of the Morea, in Greece, and used as a dye-stuff in the East. (Landerer.) The Coccus Cacti is found wild in Mexico and Ceutral America, inhabiting different species of Cactus and allied genera of plants; and is said to have been discovered also in some of the West India islands, and the southern parts of the United States. In Mexico, particularly in the provinces of Oaxaca and Guaxaca, it is an important object of culture. The Indians form plantations of the nopal (Opuntia cochinillifcra), upon which the insect feeds and propagates. During the rainy season, a number of the females are preserved under cover upon the branches of the plant, and, after the cessation of the rains, are distributed upon the plants without. They perish quickly after having deposited their eggs. These, hatched by the heat of the sun, give origin to innumerable minute insects, which spread themselves over the plant. The males, of which, according to Mr. Ellis, the proportion is not greater than one to one hundred or twro hundred females, being provided with wings and very active, approach and fecundate the latter. After this period, the females, which before moved about, attach themselves to the leaves, and increase rapidly in size; so that, in the end, their legs, antennae, and proboscis are scarcely discoverable, and they appear more like excrescences on the plant than distinct animated beings. They are now gathered for use, by detaching them by means of a blunt knife, a quill, or a feather, a few being left o continue the race. They are destroyed either by dipping them enclosed in a bag into boiling water, or by the heat of a stove. In the former case they are subsequently dried in the sun. The males, which are much smaller than the full grown females, are not collected. It is said that of the wild insect there are six generations every year, furnishing an equal number of crops; but the domestic is collected only three times annually, the propagation being suspended during the rainy seasoij, in consequence of its inability to support the inclemency of the weather. The insect has been taken from Mexico to the Canary Islands; and very large quantities of cochineal have been delivered to commerce from the island of Teneriffe.* The culture has also been successfully introduced into Java; and attempts have been made to introduce it into Spain, Corsica, and Algiers, j As kept in the shops, the finer cochineal, granjxjma of Spanish commerce, is in irregularly circular or oval, somewhat angular grains, about one-eighth of an inch in diameter, convex on one side, concave or flat on the other, and marked with several transverse wrinkles. Two varieties of this kind of cochineal are known to the druggist, distinguished by their external appearance. One is of a reddish-gray colour, formed by an intermixture of the dark colour of the insect with the whiteness of a powder by which it Is almost covered, and with patches * Various species of Opuntia are adapted to the support of the cochineal insect, espe- cially those which are very juicy, with few thorns, and a thick skin. It is the 0. Ficus In- aica which is chiefly cultivated in Teneriffe, the dry but hot climate of which is peculiarly adapted to the growth both of the plant and the insect. In the year 1856, the product of the Canaries is stated to have amounted to more than one and a half millions of pounds, having increased to that amount from eight pounds in 1881. (Neues Reperlorium fur Pharm., viii. 195.)—Note to the twelfth edition. f At the Palais d'Industrie, in Faris, in Nov. 1860, the author noticed considerable quan- tities of apparently good cochineal, said to be the product of Algiers. la Spain, the culti- vation seems to have proved unprofitable. The author observed a small field near Malaga in 1861, still appropriated to the culture; but was informed that it was now neglected. In Asia Minor, in the vicinity of Oushak, are great quantities of an insect, closely resembling the Coccus Cacti, which feed on a species of cistus- but it is unknown whether any portion has been introduced into general commerce. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxv. 455.)— Nof io the twelfth edition. PART I. Coccus. 309 of a rosy tinge irregularly interspersed. From its diversified appearance, it is called by the Spaniards cochinilla jaspeada. It is the variety commonly kept in our shops. The other, cochinilla renec/rida, or arana nigra, is dark-coloured, almost black, with only a minute quantity of the whitish powder between the wrinkles. The two are distinguished in our markets by the names of silver' grains and black grains. Some suppose the difference to arise from the mode of prepa- ration; the gray cochineal consisting of the insects destroyed by a dry heat; the black, of those destroyed by hot water, which removes the external whitish pow- der. According to Mr. Faber, who derived his information from a merchant re- sident in the neighbourhood where the cochineal is collected, the silver grains con- sist of the impregnated female just before she has laid her eggs; the black, of the female after the eggs have been laid and hatched. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv;L 47.) There is little or no difference in their quality.* Another and much inferior variety is the grana sylvestra, or wild_cochineal, consisting partly of very small separate insectsTpaftry’of roundish or oval masses, which exhibit, under the micro- scope, minute and apparently new born insects, enclosed in a white or reddish cotton-like substance. It is scarcely known in our drug market. Cochineal has a faint heavy odour, and a bitter slightly acidulous taste. Its powder is of a purplish carmine colour, tinging the saliva intensely red. Ac- cording to Pelletier and Caventou, it consists of a peculiar colouring principle, a peculiar animal matter constituting the skeleton of the insect, stearin, olein, an odorous fatty acid, and various salts. Tvrosin. a crystallizable animal principle, has been found in it by De la Rue. (Qmelin, xiii. 358.) It was also analyzed by John, who called the colouring principle cochinilin. This is of a brilliant purple- red colour, unalterable in dry air, fusible at 122° F., very soluble in water, soluble in cold, and more so in boiling alcohol, insoluble in ether, and without nitrogen among its constituents. It is obtained by macerating cochineal in ether, and treat- ing the residue with successive portions of boiling alcohol, which on cooling depo- sits a part of the cochinilin, and yields the remainder by spontaneous evaporation. It may be freed from a small proportion of adhering fatty matter, by dissolving it in alcohol of 40° Baume, and then adding an equal quantity of sulphuric ether. The pure cochinilin is deposited in the course of a few days. The watery infusion of cochineal is of a violet-crimson colour, which is brightened by the acids, and deepened by the alkalies. The colouring matter is readily precipi- tated. The salts of zinc, bismuth, and nickel produce a lilac precipitate, and those of iron a dark-purple approaching to black. The salts of tin, especially the nitrate and chloride, precipitate the colouring matter of a brilliant scarlet, and form the basis of those splendid scarlet and crimson dyes, which have ren- dered cochineal so valuable in the arts. With alumina the colouring matter forms the pigment called lake. The finest lakes are obtained by mixing the de- coction of cochineal with freshly prepared gelatinous alumina. The pigment called carmine is the colouring matter of cochineal precipitated from the decoc- tion by acids, the salts of tin, &c., or by animal gelatin, and when properly made is of the most intense and brilliant scarlet. The colouring principle has been named carminic acid, in consequence of its possession of acid properties. Cochineal has been adulterated by causing certain heavy substances, such as powdered talc and carbonate of lead, by shaking in a bag or otherwise, to ad- here to the surface of the insects, and thus increase their weight. The fraud may be detected by the absence, under the microscope, of a woolly appearance, which * Cake cochineal is the name given to a variety of this drug, produced in the Argentine Republic, in South America, a specimen of which was recently sent by Mr. Black from Cor- dova, in that country, to London, and has been examined by Dr. Stark. It is in flat cakes about a quarter of an inch thick, and, under the microscope, is seen to consist chiefly of the cochineal insect, mixed with small portions of the thorns and epidermis of the cactus, in consequence of careless gathering. It is inferior for dyeing purposes to the ordinary variety. (Pharm. Journ., xiv. 346.) Coccus.—Colchici Radix.—Colchici Semen. PART I. chaiact. r.zes the white powder upon the surface of the unadulterated insect. Metallic lead, which is said frequently to exist in fine particles in the artificial coating, may be discovered by powdering the cochineal, and suspending it in water, when the metal will remain behind. Grains of a substance artificially pre- pared to imitate the dried insect have been mixed with the genuine in France. A close inspection will serve to detect the difference. (Journ. de Pharm., Be ser., ix. 110.) Vermilion and chromic-red (dichromate of lead) are said also to have been largely used in the adulteration of carmine, to the extent sometimes of 60 or even 70 per cent. {Pharm. Journ., May, 1860, p. 54“’.) There can be no dif- ficulty in detecting them by the appropriate tests. Starch has been used, accord- ing to Mr. Maisch, for the same purpose in the U. States, and in one specimen he found 57 14 per cent. (Am. Journ. of Pliarm., xxxiii. 18.) Medical Properties, &c. Cochineal is supposed by some to possess anodyne properties, and has been highly recommended in hooping-cough and neuralgic affections. It is frequently associated, in prescription, with carbonate of potassa, especially in the treatment of hooping-cough. In pharmacy it is employed to colour tinctures and ointments. To infants with hooping-cough, cochineal in substance is given in the dose of about one-third of a grain three times a day. The dose of a tincture, prepared by macerating one part of the medicine in eight parts of diluted alcohol, is for an adult from twenty to thirty drops twice a day. In neuralgic paroxysms, Sauter gave half a tablespoonful, with the as- serted effect of curing the disease. Off. Prep. Tinctura Cardamomi Composita; Tinct. Cinchonae Comp., Br.; Tinct. Cocci, Br. W. COLCHICI RADIX. US. GolcJdcum Root. The Cormus of Colchicum autumnale. XJ. S. Off. Syn. COLCHICI CORMUS. Colchicum autumnale. Thecorm; col- lected about the end of June; and the same stripped of its coats, sliced trans- versely, and dried at a temperature not exceeding 150°. Br. COLCHICI SEMEN. U.S., Br. Colchicum Seed. The seed of Colchieura autumnale. U. S. The seed fully ripe. Br. Colchique, Fr.; Zeitlose, Herbst-Zeitlose, Germ,.; Colchico, Ital., Span. Colchicum. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Trigynia.— Nat. Ord. Melanthaceie. Gen. Ch. A spathe. Corolla six-parted, with a tube proceeding directly from the r:ot. Capsules three, connected, inflated. Willd. Cclchicum autumnale. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 272; Woodv. Med Bot. p. 759, t. 258. This species of Colchicum, often called meadow-saffron, is a perennial bulbous plant, the leaves of which appear in spring, and the flowers in autumn. Its manner of growth is peculiar, and deserves notice as connected in some measure with its medicinal efficacy. In the latter part of summer, a new bulb, or cormus as the part is now called, begins to form at the lateral inferior por- tion of the old one, which receives the young offshoot in its bosom, and embraces it half round. The new plant sends out fibres from its base, and is furnished with a radical spathe, which is cylindrical, tubular, cloven at top on one side, and half under ground. In September, from two to six flowers, of a lilac or pale- purple colour, emerge from the spathe, unaccompanied with leaves. The corolla consists of a tube five inches long, concealed for two-thirds of its length in the ground, and of a limb divided into six segments. The flowers perish by flu end part I. Colchici Radix. 311 of October, and the rudiments of the fruit remain under ground till the follow- ing spring, when they rise upon a stem above the surface, in the form of a thre*-- lobed, three-celled capsule. The leaves of the new plant appear at the same time; so that in fact they follow the flower instead of preceding it, as might bo inferred from the order of the seasons in which they respectively show them- selves. The leaves are radical, spear-shaped, erect, numerous, about five inches long, and one inch broad at the base. In the mean time, the new bulb has been increasing at the expense of the old one, which, having performed its appointed office, perishes; while the former, after attaining its full growth, sends forth shoots, and in its turn decays. The old bulb, in its second spring, and a little before it perishes, sometimes puts forth one or more small bulbs, which sepa- rate from the parent, and are supposed to be sources of new plants. C. autumnale is a native of the temperate parts of Europe, where it grow? wild in moist meadows. Attempts have been made to introduce its culture into this country, but with no great success; though small quantities of the bulb, ot apparently good quality, have been brought into the market. The officinal por- tions are the bulb or cormus, and the seeds. The root, botanically speaking, consists of the fibres attached to the base of the bulb. The flowers possess similar virtues with the bulb and seeds. 1. Colchici Radix. The medicinal virtue of the bulb depends much upon the season at which it is collected. Early in the spring, it is too young to have fully developed its peculiar properties; and, late in the fall, it has become exhausted by the nour- ishment afforded to the new plant. The proper period for its collection is from the early part of June, when it has usually attained perfection, to the middle of August, when the offset appears.* It may be owing, in part, to this inequality at different seasons, that entirely opposite reports have been given of its powers. Krapf ate whole bulbs without inconvenience; Haller found the bulbs entirely void of taste and acrimony; and we are told that in Carniola the peasants use it as food with impunity in the autumn. On the other hand, there can be no doubt of its highly irritating and poisonous nature, when fully developed, under ordinary circumstances. Perhaps soil and climate may have some influence in modifying its character. The bulb is often used in the fresh state in the countries where it grows; as it is apt to be injured in drying, unless the process is carefully conducted. The usual plan is to cut the bulb, as soon after it has been dug up as possible, into thin transverse slices, which are spread out separately upon paper or perforated trays, and dried with a moderate heat. The reason for drying it quickly, after removal from the ground, is that it otherwise begins to vegetate, and a change in its chemical nature takes place; and such is its retentiveness of life, that, if not cut in slices, it is liable to undergo a partial vegetation even during the drying process. Dr. Iloulton recommends that the bulb should be stripped of its dry coating, carefully deprived of the bud or young bulb, and then dried whole. It is owing to the high vitality of the bud that the bulb is so apt to vegetate. Much loss of weight is sustained by exsiccation. Mr. Bainbridge obtained only two pounds fifteen ounces of dried bulb from eight pounds of the fresh. Properties. The recent bulb or cormus of C. autumnale resembles that of the tulip in shape and size, and is covered with a brown membranous coat. Inter- nally it is solid, white, and fleshy; and, when cut transversely, yields, if mature, * Dr. Christison, however, has found the roots collected in April, though shrivelled and less abundant in starch than those gathered in July, to be even more bitter; and conjec- tures, therefore, that the common opinion of their superior efficacy at the latter season may not be well founded. Prof. Schroff states, as the result of his observation, that the autumn root is much stronger than that dug in summer. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 324.) 312 Colchici Radix. PART I. an acrid milky juice. There is often a small lateral projection from its base, particula’ly noticed by Dr. J. II. Coxe, which appears to be merely a connecting process between it and the new plant, and is not always present. When dried, and deprived of its external membranous covering, the bulb is of an ash-brown colour, convex on one side, and somewhat flattened on the other, where it is marked by a deep groove, extending from the base to the summit. As found in our shops it is always in the dried state, sometimes in segments made by verti- cal sections of the bulb, but generally in transverse circular slices, about the eighth or tenth of an inch in thickness, with a notch at one part of their circum- ference. The cut surface is white, and of an amylaceous aspect. The odour of the recent bulb is said to be hircine. It is diminished but not lost by drying. The taste is bitter, hot, and acrid. Its constituents, according to Pelletier and Caventou, are a vegetable alkali combined with an excess of gallic acid; a fatty matter composed of olein, stearin, and a peculiar volatile acid analogous to the eevadic; a yellow colouring matter; gum; starch; inulin in large quantity; and lignin. The active properties are ascribed to the alkaline principle, which was believed by its discoverers to be identical with veratria, but has been subsequently found to be peculiar, and has received the appropriate name of colchicine, or colchicia * Wine and vinegar extract all the virtues of the bulbT UrT5. T. * The subject of the alkaloid of colchicum does not appear to have been satisfactorily settled. According to Geiger and Hesse, to whom has generally been ascribed the credit of determining the precise nature of this principle, colchicine (colchicia) is crystallizable, and has a very bitter and sharp taste, but is destitute of the extreme acrimony of veratria, and does not, like that principle, excite violent sneezing when applied to the nostrils. It differs also in being more soluble in water, and less poisonous. To a kitten eight weeks old, one-tenth of a grain was given dissolved in a little dilute alcohol. Violent purging and vomiting were produced, with apparently severe pain and convulsions, and the animal died at the end of twelve hours. The stomach and bowels were found violently inflamed, with effusion of blood throughout their whole extent. A kitten somewhat younger was destroyed in ten minutes by only the twentieth of a grain of veratria; and, on examination after death, marks of inflammation were found only in the upper part of the oesophagus. The alkaloid was obtained from the seeds by a process similar to that employed in the pre- paration of hyoscyamia from hyoscyamus. (SeeHyoscyamus.) A simpler process is to digest the seeds of meadow-saffron in boiling alcohol, precipitate the tincture with magnesia, treat the precipitated matter with boiling alcohol, and finally filter and evaporate. The nature of the active principle of colchicum subsequently engaged the attention of L. Oberlin. Upon repeating the process of Geiger and Hesse, he was unable to obtain a crystallizable product, and came to the conclusion that the substance obtained by them was complex. By acidifying its watery solution by sulphuric or muriatic acid, and concen- trating until the liquid became intensely yellow, he obtained, upon the addition of water, a yellowish-white precipitate, which, when well washed and freed from colouring matter, dissolved readily in alcohol or ether, and crystallized with facility. The crystalline product thus obtained he proposed to call colchiceinc. It is a neuter substance, contains no acid and is therefore not a salt, crystallizes'Tn'pearly lamellae, is almost insoluble in cold water, to which, however, it imparts a slight bitterness, is more soluble in boiling water, and readily dissolves in alcohol, ether, methylic alcohol, and chloroform. It is dissolved by concen- trated sulphuric, muriatic, and nitric acids, becoming yellow, by acetic acid without change of colour, and by ammonia and potassa. It is not altered nor precipitated by acetate or subacetate of lead, nitrate of silver, bichloride of mercury, or infusion of galls, but is ren- dered green by sesquichloride of iron. It consists of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It was found to be very poisonous to rabbits, killing an animal in 12 hours in the dose of about one-seventh of a grain, and in a few minutes in five times that quantity. (Comptes Rendus, Dec. 1856, p. 1199. See also Am. Journ. of Pharm , xxix. 235.) More recently, Mr. J. E. Carter, of Philadelphia, has made some experiments which ap- pear to invalidate the conclusions of Oberlin as to the nature of colchicia, and to confirm the previous opinion of its alkaloid character. Mr. Carter used the bulb, instead of the seeds, which had previously in general been made the subject of experiment. He employed two processes for the extraction of the alkaloid, but found the following most productive. The dried and powdered bulb was exhausted by alcohol of 0-835 by means of percolation; the tincture thus obtained was evaporated to the consistence of syrup; water acidulated with acetic acid was added, and the liquor, after filtration, was nearly neutralized with ammonia, and ti en precipitated by solution of tannic acid; the precipitated taanatc, after PART l. Cvlchici Radix. 313 Thomson states that the milky juice of fresh colchicum produces a fine blut- colour, if rubbed with the tincture of guaiac; and that the same effect is obtained from an acetic solution of the dried bulb. He considers the appearance of this colour, when the slices are rubbed with a little distilled vinegar and tincture of guaiac, as a proof that the drug is good and has been well dried. Dr. J. M. Maclagan has shown that this change of colour is produced with the albumen, which is not affected if previously coagulated; so that the value of the test con- sists simply in proving that the drying has not been effected at a heat above 180°, or the temperature at which albumen coagulates. A very deep or large notch in the circumference of the slices is considered an unfavourable sign; as it indicates that the bulb has been somewhat exhausted in the nourishment of the offset. The decoction yields a deep-blue precipitate with solution of iodine, white precipitates with acetate and subacetate of lead, nitrate of protoxide of mercury, and nitrate of silver, and a slight precipitate with tincture of galls. The value of colchicum is best tested by its bitterness. Medical Properties and Uses. Colchicum root is believed to act upon the nervous system, allaying pain and producing other sedative effects, even when it exerts no obvious influence over the secretions. Generally speaking, when taken in doses sufficiently large to affect the system, it gives rise to more or less dis- order of the stomach or bowels, and sometimes occasions active vomiting and purging, with the most distressing nausea. When not carried off by the bowels, it often produces copious diaphoresis, and occasionally acts as a diuretic and expectorant; and a case is on record of violent salivation, supposed to have re- sulted from its use. It appears in fact to have the property of stimulating all the secretions, while it somewhat diminishes the action of the heart. In an over- dose, it may produce dangerous and even fatal effects. Excessive nausea and vomiting, abdominal pains, purging and tenesmus, great thirst, sinking of the pulse, coldness of the extremities, and general prostration, with occasional symp- toms of nervous derangement, such as headache, delirium, and stupor, are among the results of its poisonous action. It was well known to the ancients as a poi- son, and is said to have been employed by them as a remedy in gout and other diseases. Storck revived its use among the moderns. He gave it as a diuretic and expectorant in dropsy and humoral asthma; and on the continent of Europe it acquired considerable reputation in these complaints; but the uncertainty of its operation led to its general abandonment, and it had fallen into almost entire neglect, when Dr. Want, of London, again brought it into notice by attempting to prove its identity with the active ingredient of the eau medicinale d'Husson, so highly celebrated as a cure for gout. In James’s Dispensatory, printed in 1747, it is said to be used in gout as an external application. The chief em- ployment of the meadow-saffron is at present in the treatment of gout and rheu- matism, in which experience has abundantly proved it to be a highly valuable being well washed, was rubbed with five times its weight of freshly prepared hydrated oxide of lead, small quantities of aicohol being added from time to time during the tritura- tion; the whole was then filtered, and the filtered liquid evaporated at a gentle heat. Twenty grains were thus obtained from three pounds of the dried root. Thus obtained eolchicia was yellowish in mass, nearly white in powder, inodorous, bitter without being acrid, not sternutatory, soluble in water hot or cold, still more so in dilute acids and alka- line solutions, very soluble in alcohol and chloroform, sparingly so in pure ether, and in- soluble in benzole. Mr. Carter did not succeed in crystallizing it. It was alkaline to test-paper, neutralized the acids, and with sulphuric acid formed a crystallizable salt. The most delicate test appeared to be that of sulphuric acid and nitre. A piece of nitre, added to its solution in sulphuric acid, produced a beautiful blue colour, changing to green, dark-brown or purple, and finally reddish-yellow. (For a further account of Mr. Carter’s experiments, see Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1858, p. 209.) There can be little doubt, we think, that there is an alkaloid in colchicum; but it may be doubted whether it was obtained pure by Mr. Carter. The colchiceine of Oberlin was probably a product, the result of chemical reaction, rather than a proximate principle of the plant.—Notes to tk< eleventh and twelfth editions. „ 314 Colchici Radix.—Colchici Semen. PAHT I. remedy. We have, within our own observation, found it especially useful in these affections, when of a shifting or neuralgic character. It sometimes pro- duces relief without obviously affecting the system; but is more efficient tvhen it evinces its influence upon the skin or alimentary canal. Professor Chelius states that it changes the chemical constitution of the urine in arthritic patients, pro- ducing an evident increase of the uric acid. Dr. Maclagan has found it greatly to increase the proportion both of urea and uric acid in the urine, and, where these previously existed in the blood, to separate them from it. (Ed. Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., v. 23.) Dr. Elliotson successfully treated a case of prurigo with the wine of colchicum, given in the dose of half a drachm three times a day, and continued for three wreeks; and it has been found useful in urti- caria and other cutaneous affections. Dr. Smith, of Port au Prince, employed it advantageously in tetanus both traumatic and idiopathic. He gave it in full doses, repeated every half hour till it produced an emetic or cathartic effect. (Am. Journ. of the Med. Sci., xvii. 66.) Mr. Ritton found the powdered bulb an effectual remedy in numerouscasesof leucorrhoea. (Ibid., vi. 527.) Colchicum has also been recommended in inflammatory and febrile diseases as an adjuvant to the lancet, in diseases of the heart with excessive action, in various nervous complaints, as chorea, hysteria, and hypochondriasis, and in chronic bronchial affections. It is generally given in the state of vinous tincture (see Vinum Colchici Radicis); but there are various other officinal preparations, any one of which may be used efficiently. The wine has been employed externally in rheumatism. The dose of the dried bulb is from twTo to eight grains, wrhich may be repeated every four or six hours till its effects are obtained. 2. Colchici Semen. The seeds of the meadow-saffron ripen in summer, and should be collected about the end of July or beginning of August. They never arrive at maturity in plants cultivated in a dry soil, or in confined gardens. (Williams.) They are nearly spherical, about the eighth of an inch in diameter, of a reddish-brown colour externally, white within, and of a bitter acrid taste. Dr. Williams, of Ips- wich, in England, who first brought them into notice, recommends them in the warmest terms in chronic rheumatism, and considers them superior to the bulb, both in the certainty of their effects, and the mildness of their operation. Prof. Schroff, however, has found that their activity is inferior to that of the dried bulb, dug in autumn. (Am. Journ. of Phorm., xxix. 324.) There is no doubt that they possess virtues analogous to those of the bulb, and have this advantage, that they are not liable to become injured by drying; an advantage of peculiar value in a country where the plant is not cultivated, and a fresh bulb cannot be readily procured. A wine, fluid extract, and tincture of the seeds are directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Their dose is about the same with that of the bulb.* * The following description of the seeds is given by Mr. Gray in the Lond. Med. Repository for April, 1821. “Seeds, ovate, globose, about one-eightli of an inch in diameter. Integu- ments, simple, soft, spongy, membranaceous, thin, reddish brown, closely adherent to the perisperm. Perisperm or albumen, hard, rather cartilaginous, pellucid, pale, not in the least divided, of the same shape as the seed. Corculum or embryo, very small, ovate-globose, not in the least divided, whitish, placed nearly opposite to the hyluin, or that part where seed is affixed to the parent plant, but out of the axis of the seed. Base pointing to the bylum, slender. Apex very obtuse.” An acquaintance with the characters of these seeds vs the more necessary, as the seeds of other plants have been sold for them. The flowers have been repeatedly employed as a substitute for the root or seeds, and by some have been thought more uniform in their effects, and at the same time less irritating. M. Luskind, of Geneva, Switzerland, prepares them in the following manner. The flo wers having been gathered when in full perfection, on a sunny day, are submitted to expression in a silk bag. A dark-brown juice is obtained, which is to be mingled with an esa- flesh, and 1 preserve. Imparities and Adulterations. Creasote is apt to contain eupion, picamar, and capnomor, and is sometimes adulterated with rectified oil of tar, and the fixed and volatile oils. All these substances are detected by strong acetic acid, which dissolves the creasote, and leaves them behind, floating above the creasote solution. Creasote, however, from beech-wood tar, is only partially dissolved by hv t acetic acid of ordinary strength. Fixed oils are also discovered by a stain on paper, not discharged by heat. Any trace of the matter which produces the 334 Creasotum. PART I. brownish tinge (see page 332) is detected by the liquid becoming discoloured by exposure to sunshine. Commercial creasote, when obtained from coal tar, is always contaminated with phenylic acid (phenic acid — carbolic acid — phenol — hydrated oxide of phenyl), C12H5,D -f- HO. Indeed, this acid is often sold for creasote, which it closely resembles in properties, and to a considerable extent, it is said, in medical virtues also. The use now made of phenylic or carbolic acid renders it worthy of a distinct consideration; and an article will be devoted to it in Part III. of this work. The substitution of phenylic acid may be discovered by its lower boiling point (368° F.). Its presence in creasote is detected by the addition of sesquiehloride of iron, which causes a violet-blue colour, and afterwards a whitish turbidness, if this impurity is present. According to Mr. E. N. Kent, of New York, phenylic acid from the oil of coal tar, and creasote from wood tar are es- sentially the same; the former being a purer state of the latter. (N. Y. Journ. of Pharm., Oct. 1853.) This view is contradicted by the results of Gorup-Besanez, who obtained creasote which did not respond to the tests of phenylic acid. Still lie admits that creasote, as pure as he could get it with a boiling point between 398° and 406°, is not a chemically definite compound. Gmelin considers the creasote from wood tar, and the carbolic acid from coal tar, as differing from each other only in the degree of purity. In this unsettled state of opinion in re- lation to the precise chemical constitution of creasote, we continue to consider it under a distinct head, and give its properties as practically ascertained. Medical Properties, &c. Creasote is irritant, narcotic, styptic, antiseptic, and moderately escharotic. Internally, it has been employed in a number of diseases; externally, for the most part, as an application to eruptions, wounds, arnd ulcers, and as an injection and gargle. Dr. R. Dick, of Glasgow, recommends it as ar. internal remedy in chronic gonorrhoea and gleet. Dr. Elliotson, of London, con- siders it an efficacious remedy in arresting nausea and vomiting, when not de- pendent on inflammation or structural disease of the stomach, as in hysteria, pregnancy, and sea-sickness. Mr. Ivesteven, of England, found it a very useful remedy in diarrhoea ; and others have confirmed this statement. Dr. D. J. Cain, of Charleston, used it with advantage in cholera morbus and cholera infantum, either alone, or conjoined with charcoal, chalk, or bicarbonate of soda. It has *also been used with.benefit in dysentery and malignant cholera; and has been recommended in pectoral affections with purulent expectoration. The eruptions, to the treatment of which creasote has been supposed to be best suited, are those of a scaly character. In burns its efficacy has been insisted on, especially in those attended with excessive suppuration and fungous granu- lations. In chilblains also it is stated to be a useful application. Mixed with four parts of lard, it is said to have proved very serviceable in erysipelas. When ap- plied to wounds it acts as a hemostatic, stopping the capillary hemorrhage, but possesses no power to arrest the bleeding from large vessels. Accordingly, crea- sote water has been applied locally in .menorrhagia, and to arrest uterine hemor- rhage and the bleeding from leech-bites. The ulcers, in the treatment of which it has been found most useful, are those of an indolent and gangrenous character, in which its several properties of escharotic, stimulant, and antiseptic are use- fully brought into play. It is also praised as an application to syphilitic, scrofu- lous, and cancerous ulcers, and to malignant pustule. In all these cases, should the remedy cause irritation, it must be suspended, or alternated with emollient and soothing applications. Injected into fistulous ulcers, it proves a useful re- source, by exciting the callous surfaces, and disposing them to unite. Dr. Hii dreth, of Zanesville, Ohio, found it efficacious, mixed with mercurial ointment, in the proportion of from ten to thirty drops to the ounce, in scrofulous ophthalmia, and scrofulous ulceration of the cornea. A small portion of the ointment is in- troduced under the upper eyelid, morning and evening, and rubbed over the whole PART I. Creasotum.—Creta. globe. The application should be strong enough to produce a smarting pain for about five minutes. The local must of course be combined with constitutional treatment. In chronic varicose ophthalmia it is a valuable remedy, in the form of collyrium, of the strength of from one to three drops to the fluidounce of water. In putrid sorethroat, requiring the use of a stimulant and antiseptic, a gargle of creasote acts beneficially; and in chronic suppuration of the external meatus of the ear, it is valuable as an injection. It has been much used topically in diphtheria, in which it corrects the fetor, and is said to cure the local affec- tion. In deafness from deficient cerumen, Mr. Curtis has found it useful. The meatus is first well cleansed, and afterwards brushed over, night and morning, by means of a camel’s hair brush, with a mixture formed of a drachm of creasote and four drachms of oil of almonds. The meatus may be cleansed by dropping into the ear at night a few drops of olive oil, and syringing it out the next morn- ing with a weak and warm solution of castile soap, to which a sixth of Cologne water has been added. This may be repeated for five or six days, if required. In leucorrhoea M. Arendt has found creasote very useful in the form of injection, made with two drops to the fluidounce of water, used several times a day. Dr. Mackenzie has derived advantage from it as a vaginal injection in puerperal fever, arising from the absorption of vitiated secretions. It is also efficacious in the de- struction of warts, applied freely every day or two, and kept on by adhesive plaster. In toothache, depending on caries of the tooth and exposure of the nerve, crea- sote often acts promptly and radically in the removal of the pain. One or two drops of the pure substance must be carefully introduced into the hollow of the tooth, on a little cotton, avoiding contact with the tongue or cheek. To render it effectual, the hollow of the tooth must be well cleansed before it is applied. A mixture of 15 parts of creasote and 10 of collodion has a jelly-like consistence, and may be usefully applied to carious teeth, which it protects from the air. Creasote is employed in the pure state, in mixture or solution, and in the form of ointment. (See Mistura Creasoli and Unguentum Greasoti.) In the pure state, it may be brushed over indolent or ill-conditioned ulcers, or applied to them by means of lint. Internally it is given in the dose of from one to two drops or more, repeated several times a day, diluted with weak mucilage in-the proportion of half a fluidounce to the drop. When used as a lotion for eruptions, ulcers, or. burns, or as a gargle or injection, it is employed in solution, containing two, four, or six drops to the fluidounce of water; the strength being determined by the circumstances of each particular case. In some cases the solution of creasote is used externally, mixed with poultices. Creasote, in an overdose, acts as a poison. It produces giddiness, obscurity of vision, depressed action of the heart, convulsions, and coma. No antidote is known. The medical treatment consists in the evacuation of the poison, and the administration of ammonia and other stimulants. The addition of three or four drops of creasote to a pint of ink effectually pre- vents it from becoming mouldy. Dr. Christison finds that creasote water is as good a preservative of some anatomical preparations as spirit, with the advan- tage of not hardening the parts. It is probably to creasote that the antiseptic properties of wood-smoke and of pyroligneous acid are owing. Off. Prep. Aqua Creasoti, U. S.; Mistura Creasoti, Br.; Unguentum Crea- soti. B. CRETA. U. S. Chalk. Native friable carbonate of lime. U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia, chalk is. placed in the Appendix, as one of the substances employed in preparing medicines. 336 Creta.— Crocus. PART I. Craie, Fr.; Kreide, Germ.; Creta, ltal.; Greda, Span., Fort. Carbonate of lime, in the extended meaning of the term, is the most abundant of simple minerals, constituting, according to its state of aggregation and other peculiarities, the different varieties of calcareous spar, common and shell lime- stone, marble, marl, and chalk. It occurs also in the animal kingdom, forming the principal part of shells, and a small proportion of the bones of the higher orders of animals. It is present in small quantity in most natural waters, being held in solution by the carbonic acid which they contain. In the waters of lime- stone districts it is a very common impregnation, and causes purging in those not accustomed to their use. In all such cases, boiling the water, by expelling the carbonic acid, causes the carbonate to be deposited. (See page 127.) Besides being officinal in the state of chalk, carbonate of lime is also ordered as it exists in marble and oyster-shell, and as obtained by precipitation. (See Marmor, Testa, and Calcis Carbonas Prsecipitata.) In the present article we shall confine our observations to chalk. This occurs abundantly in the south of England and north of France. It has not been found in the United States. It occurs massive in beds, and very frequently contains nodules of flint, and fossil remains of land and ma- rine animals. Properties. Chalk is an insipid, inodorous, insoluble, opaque, soft solid, gene- rally white, but grayish-white when impure. It is rough to the touch, easily pul- verized, and breaks with an earthy fracture. It soils the fingers, yields a white trace when drawn across an unyielding surface, and when applied to the tongue adheres slightly. Its sp. gr. varies from 2 3 to 2-6. It is never a perfectly pure carbonate of lime; but contains, besides gritty silicious particles, small portions of alumina and of oxidized iron. If pure it is entirely soluble in muriatic acid; but usually a little silica is left. If the muriatic solution is not precipitated by ammonia, it is free from alumina and iron. Like all carbonates it effervesces with acids. Though insoluble in water, it dissolves in an excess of carbonic acid. It consists, like the other varieties of carbonate of lime, of one eq. of carbonic acid 22, and one of lime 28 = 50. Chalk, on account of the gritty particles which it contains, is unfit for medi- cinal use, until it has undergone levigation, when it is called prepared chalk. (See Creta Prseparata.) Off. Prep. Creta Prseparata. B. CROCUS. U.S.,Br. Saffron. The stigmas of Crocus sativus. U. S. The stigma, and part of the style, dried. Br. Safran, Fr., Germ,.; Zafferano, Ital.; Azafran, Span. Crocus. Sex. Syst. Triandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Iridaceae. Gen. Ch. Corolla six-parted, equal. Stigmas convoluted. Willd. Crocus sativus. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 194; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 763, t. 259. The common cultivated saffron is a perennial plant, with a rounded and depressed bulb or cormus, from which the flower rises a little above the ground, upon a long, slender, white, and succulent tube. The flower is large, of a beautiful lilac or bluish-purple colour, and appears in September or October. The leaves are radical, linear, slightly revolute, dark-green upon their upper surface with a white longitudinal furrow in the centre, paler underneath with a prominent flattened midrib, and enclosed at their base, together with the tube of the corolla, in a membranous sheath, from which they emerge soon after the appearance of the flower. The style hangs out on one side between the two segments of the corolla, and terminates in three long convoluted stigmas, which are of a rich orange colour, PART I. Crocus. highly odorous, rolled in at the edges, and notched at the summit. These stigmas are the officinal part of the plant. C. sativus, or autumnal crocus, is a native of Greece and Asia Minor, where it has been cultivated from the earliest ages. It is also cultivated for medicinal use in Sicily, Spain, France, England, and other temperate countries of Europe. Large quantities of saffron are raised in Egypt, Persia, and Cashmere, whence it is sent to India. Much of the drug reaches the market of Constantinople from the neighbourhood of Tifflis and the Caucasus. We cultivate the plant in this country chiefly, if not solely, as a garden flower. It is liable to two diseases, which interfere with its culture; one dependent on a parasitic fungus which attaches itself to the bulb, the other called by the cultivators in France iacon, by which the bulb is converted into a blackish powder. (Journ. de Pharm., xviii. 41.) In England the flowers appear in October, and the leaves continue green through the winter; but the plant does not ripen its seed, and is propagated by offsets from the bulb. These are planted in grounds prepared for the purpose, and are arranged either in rows, or in small patches at certain distances. The flowers are gathered soon after they show themselves, as the period of flowering is very short. The stigmas, or summits of the pistils, together with a portion of the style, are separated from the remainder of the flower, and carefully dried by artificial heat, or in the sun. During this process, they are sometimes made to assume the form of a cake by pressure; but the finest saffron is that which has been dried loosely. The two forms are distinguished by the names of cake- saffron and hay-saffron. Five pounds of the fresh stigmas are said to yield one pound of the dried. The English saffron, formerly most highly esteemed in this country, has dis- appeared from our market. What may be sold under the name is probably derived from other sources. Much of the drug is imported from Gibraltar, packed in canisters. Parcels of it are also brought from Trieste, and other ports of the Mediterranean. The Spanish saffron is generally considered the best. Genuine cake-saffron is at present seldom found in commerce. According to Landerer, tlie"stigmas of several other species besides those of C. sativus are gathered and sold as saffron in Greece and Turkey.* Properties. Saffron has a peculiar, sweetish, aromatic odour, a warm, pun- gent, bitter taste, and a rich deep-orange colour, which it imparts to the saliva when chewed. The stigmas of which it consists are an inch or more in length, expanded and notched at the upper extremity, and narrowing towards the lower, where they terminate in a slender, capillary, yellowish portion, forming a part of the style. Analyzed by Vogel and Bouillon-Lagrange, it afforded 65 0 per cent, of a peculiar extractive matter, and 7‘5 of an odorous volatile oil, together with wax, gum, albumen, saline matter, water, and lignin. The extractive was named polychroite, from the changes of colour which it undergoes by the action of reagents! TEey prepared it by evaporating the watery infusion to the con- sistence of honey, digesting the residue in alcohol, filtering the tincture, and evaporating it to dryness. Thus obtained, it is in the form of a reddish-yellow mass, of an agreeable smell, slightly bitter, soluble in water and alcohol, and somewhat deliquescent. Its solution becomes grass-green by the action of nitric acid, blue and then violet by that of sulphuric acid, and loses its colour alto- gether on exposure to light, and by chlorine. M. Henry, sen., found it to contain about 20 per cent, of volatile .oil, which could be separated only by an alkali. M. Quadrat obtained it pure by exhausting saffron with ether, then treating it with boiling water, precipitating with subacetate of lead, decomposing the com- pound of oxide of lead and colouring matter thus obtained with sulphuretted * At the International Exhibition, in London, in the year 1862, the author noticed a spe- cimen of saffron, from the island of Ceylon, closely resembling that of the Crocus sativus. It consisted of the stigmas of the Crocus orientalis.—Note to the twelfth edition. 338 Crocus. PART I. hydrogen, treating the precipitate with boiling alcohol, evaporating the solu- tion, dissolving the residue in water, and lastly evaporating by means of a water- bath. Thus procured, it is of a brilliant red colour, inodorous, slightly soluble in water which it renders yellow, much more soluble by the least addition of an alkali, readily soluble in alcohol, but sparingly in ether. Its formula is C.2nHl3Ou. M. Quadrat found also, in saffron, a fatty matter, glucose, and a peculiar acid. (Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., lxxx. 340.) According to M. Henry, the colour- ing principle constitutes 42 percent, of saffron, and the essential oil 10 per cent. It is to the latter that the medicine owes its activity. It may be partially sepa- rated by distillation. It is yellow, of a hot, acrid, bitterish taste, and heavier than water, in which it is slightly soluble. Adulterations. The high price of this medicine gives rise to frequent adul- terations. Water is said to be very often added in order to increase its weight Oil is also added for the same purpose, or to improve the appearance. Some- times the flowers of other plants, particularly Carthargus tinctjgrius or safflower, Calendula officinalis or officinal marygold, and arnica, are fraudulently mixed They may be known byTheiFshape, which is rendered obvious by throwing a portion of the suspected mass into hot water, which causes them to expand. (See Carthamus.) Other adulterations are the fibres of dried beef, the stamens of the Crocus distinguishable by their yellow colour, the stig- mas previously exhausted in the preparation of the infusion or tincture, and various mineral substances easily detected upon close examination. The flowers of a Brazilian plant, named Fuminella, have, according to M. J. L. Soubeiran, been recently employed for the adulteration of saffron. They may be detected by shaking gently but repeatedly a large pinch of the suspected saffron over a piece of paper. The flowers of Fuminella, being smaller and heavier, separate and fall, and may be seen to consist of very short fragments, with a colour like that of saffron, but a rusty tint which the latter does not possess. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1855, p. 267.) J. Muller recommends concentrated sulphuric acid as the most certain test of saffron. It instantly changes the colour of pure saffron to indigo blue. (Chem. Gaz., May, 1845, p. 197.) Choice of Saffron. Saffron should not be very moist, nor very dry, nor easily pulverized; nor should it emit an offensive smell when thrown upon live coals. The freshest is the best, and that, which is less than a year old should, if possible, be selected. It should possess in a high degree the characteristic properties of colour, taste, and smell. If it do not colour the fingers when rubbed between them, or if it have an oily feel, or a musty flavour, or a black, yellow, or whitish colour, it should be rejected. In the purchase of this medicine in cakes, those should be selected which are close, tough, and firm in tearing; and care should be taken to avoid calces of safflower. As its activity depends, partly at least, on a volatile ingredient, saffron should be kept in well-stopped vessels. Some recommend that it should be enclosed in a bladder, and introduced into a tin case. Medical Properties and Uses. Saffron was formerly considered highly stimu- lant and antispasmodic. It has been alleged that, in small doses, it moderately excites the different functions, exhilarates the spirits, relieves pain, and produces sleep; in large doses, gives rise to headache, intoxication, delirium, stupor, and other alarming symptoms; and Shroder asserts that, in the quantity of two or three drachms, it proves fatal. It was thought also to act powerfully on the uterine system, promoting menstruation. The ancients employed it extensively, both as a medicine and condiment, under the name of crocus. It was also highly esteemed by the Arabians, and enjoyed considerable reputation among the phy- sicians of modern Europe till within a comparatively recent period. On the continent it is still much used as a stimulant and emmenagogue. But the ex- periments of Dr. Alexander have proved it to possess little activity; and i« PART T. Crocus.—Cubeba. Great Britain and the United States it is seldom prescribed. In domestic prac- tice, saffron tea is occasionally used in exanthematous diseases, to promote the eruption. At present the chief use of the drug is to impart colour and flavour to officinal tinctures. The dose is from ten to thirty grains. Off. Prep. Acetum Opii, U.S.; Decoctum Aloes Compositum, Br.; Pilulse Aloes et Myrrhse; Pulvis Aromaticus, Br.; Tinctura Aloes et Myrrhae, U.S.; Tinct. Cinchonae Comp.; Tinct. Croci, Br.; Tinct. Rhei, Br.; Tinct. Rhei et Sennse, U. S. W. CUBEBA. JJ. S., Br. Cuheb. The berries of Piper Cubeba. U. S. The unripe fruit. Cubeba officinalis. The unripe fruit, dried. Br. Cubebs, Br.; Cubebe, Fr.; Kubeben, Germ.; Cubebe, Ttal.; Cubebas, Span.; Kebabeh,Arab. Piper. Sex. Syst. Diandria Trigynia.—Nat. Ord. Piperaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx none. Corolla none. Berry one-seeded. Willd. Piper Cubeba. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 159; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., v. 95.— Cubeba officinalis. Miquel. This is a climbing perennial plant, with a smooth, flexuous, jointed stem, and entire, petiolate, oblong or ovate-oblong, acuminate leaves, rounded or obliquely cordate at the base, strongly nerved, coriaceous, and very smooth. The flowers are dioecious and in spikes, with peduncles about as long as the petioles. The fruit is a globose, pedicelled berry. This species of Piper is a native of Java, Penang, and probably other parts of the East Indies. It grows wild in the woods, and does not appear to be cul- tivated. The dried unripe fruit is the officinal portion. Dr. Blume thinks it probable that the drug is derived chiefly from another species, the P. caninum, inhabiting the same countries ; but Dr. Lindley could discover no difference be-" tween the fruit of P. Cubeba and ordinary cubebs.* Properties. Cubebs are round, about the size of a small pea, of a blackish or grayish-brown colour, and furnished with a short stalk, which is continuous with raised veins that run over the surface of the berry, and embrace it like a net- work. The shell is hard, almost ligneous, and contains within it a single loose seed, covered with a blackish coat, and internally white and oleaginous. The odour of the berry is agreeably aromatic; the taste warm, bitterish, and cam- phorous, leaving in the mouth a peculiar sensation of coolness, like that produced by oil of peppermint. The powder is dark-coloured and of an oily aspect. From 1000 parts of cubebs M. Monheim obtained 30 parts of a ceruminous substance, 25 of a green volatile oil, 10 of a yellow volatile oil, 45 of cubebin, 15 of a bal- * Cubebs were exhibited, at the great London Exhibition of 1862, among the products of Ceylon. It was at one time supposed that cubebs were also produced in Western Africa; but this was a mistake, originating probably in the fact, that a peculiar pepper growing in that region has, like cubebs, the stalk attached. It is, however, a different product, being, as shown by Dr. W. F. Daniell, the fruit of a distinct species, the Piper Afzelii of Lindley, Cubeba Glusii of Miquel, figured in the Pharm. Journ. (xiv. 201). This Guinea pepper, or African black pepper, was formerly taken to Europe in considerable quantities by the Por- tuguese, but has been superseded by the more agreeable products of the E. Indies. The fruit is one-third smaller than the officinal cubebs, is more compact, and has a taste mere analogous to that of ordinary black pepper. Dr. Stenhouse has also shown that it is chemi- cally more analogous to black pepper than to cubebs, as it contains piperin and not cubebin. ylbid., xiv. 864.) Under the name of cubebs, a product has been introduced into commerce from the Dutch E. Indies, which is probably the fruit of a different species of Piper, as it differs essen- tially from genuine cubebs, being somewhat larger, with less distinct veins and somewhat flattened footstalks, of a less agreeable odour, and a less hot and pungent taste. It has been ascribed to Piper anisatum. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxv. 511; from Journ. de Ghim. Med )—Note to theeleventh and twelfth editions. 340 Cubeba.—Cuprum. part r. samic resin, 10 of chloride of sodium, 60 of extractive, and 650 of lignin, with 155 parts lost. According to MM. Capitaine and Soubeiran, cube bin is best obtained by expressing cubebs from which the oil has been distilled, preparing with them an alcoholic extract, treating this with a solution of potassa, washing the residue with water, and purifying it by repeated crystallizations in alcohol. Thus prepared, it is white, inodorous, and insipid, not volatilizable by heat, almost insoluble in water, slightly soluble in cold alcohol, freely so in that liquid when hot, and soluble also in ether, acetic acid, and the fixed and volatile oils. It bears a close resemblance to piperin, but materially differs from it in composi- tion, as it contains no nitrogen. (Journ. de Pharm., xxv. 355.) In the officinal oleoresin of cubebs a deposit takes place consisting chiefly of cubebin, which may be obtained by washing the deposit with a small quantity of cold alcohol to remove adhering resin and oil, and then dissolving repeatedly in boiling alcohol, and crystallizing until the product is white. The volatile oil is officinal. (See Oleum Cubebae.) Cubebs gradually deteriorate by age, and in powder become rapidly weaker, in consequence of the escape of their volatile oil. They should be kept whole, and pulverized when dispensed. The powder is said to be some- times adulterated with that of pimento. Medical Properties and Uses. Cubebs are gently stimulant, with a special direction to the urinary organs. In considerable quantities they excite the cir- culation, increase the heat of the body, and sometimes occasion headache and giddiness. At the same time they frequently produce an augmented flow of the urine, to which they impart a peculiar odour. Among their effects are also oc- casionally nausea and moderate purging; and they are said to cause a sense of coolness in the rectum during the passage of the feces. We have no evidence that they were known to the ancients. They were probably first brought into Europe by the Arabians, and were formerly employed for similar purposes with black pepper; but they were found much less powerful and fell into disuse. Some years since they were again brought into notice in England as a remedy in go- norrhoea. This application of cubebs was derived from India, where they have long been used in gonorrhoea and gleet, and as a grateful stomachic and carmin- ative in disorders of the digestive organs. They are said to have sometimes pro- duced swelled testicles, when given in gonorrhoea; and, though recommended in all its stages, will probably be found most safe and effectual in cases where the inflammation is confined to the mucous membrane of the urethra. If not speedily useful, they should be discontinued. They have been given also in leucorrhoea, cystirrhoea, the urethritis of women and female children, abscess of the prostate gland, piles, and chronic bronchial inflammation. In connection with copaiba they have been especially recommended in affections of the neck of the bladder and the prostatic portion of the urethra. They are best administered in pow- der, of which the dose in gonorrhoea is from one to three drachms, three or four times a day. For other affections, the dose is sometimes reduced to ten grains. The volatile oil may be substituted, in the dose of ten or twelve drops, sus- pended in water by means of sugar. An ethereal extract is directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and considerably used. (See Oleoresina Cubebae.) An infusion, made in the proportion of an ounce of cubebs to a pint of water, has been em- ployed as an injection in discharges from the vagina, with asserted advantage. Off. Prep. Oleoresina Cubebae, U.S.; Oleum Cubebae, U. S.; Tinctnra Cu- bebae, U. S. W. CUPRUM. Cuivre, Fr.; Kupfer, Germ.; Rame, Ital.; Cobre, Span. This metal is very generally diffused in nature, and exists principally in four states; as native copper, as an oxide, as a sulphuret, and as a 6alt. Its princi Copper. PART I. Cuprum. 341 pal native salts are the sulphate, carbonate, arseniate, and phosphate. In the United States it occurs in various localities, but especially in the neighbourhood of Lake Superior. The principal copper minps of Europe are those of the Pyre- nees in France, Cornwall in England, and Fahlun in Sweden. Properties. Copper is a brilliant, sonorous metal, of a reddish colour, and very ductile, malleable, and tenacious. It has a slightly nauseous taste, and emits a disagreeable smell when rubbed. Its texture is granular, and its fracture hackly. Its sp.gr. is 8-89, and its fusing point 1996°, according to Daniell, being intermediate between the fusing points of silver and gold. Its equivalent number is 31 15. Exposed to the air it undergoes a slight tarnish. Its combina- tions are numerous and important. With oxygen it forms two well characterized oxides, a red suboxide or dioxide, consisting of two eqs. of copper and one of oxygen, and a black protoxide formed of one eq. of metal and one of oxygen. The latter oxide, which alone is salifiable, forms with acids several salts, import- ant in medicine and the arts. With metals, copper forms numerous alloys, of which that with zinc, called brass, is the most useful. Characteristics. Copper is recognised by its colour, and the effects of tests on its nitric solution. This solution, with potassa, soda, and ammonia, yields a blue precipitate, soluble in excess of the latter alkali, with which it forms a deep-blue liquid. Ferrocyanide of potassium occasions a brown precipitate of ferrocyanide of copper ; and a bright plate of iron, immersed in the solution, immediately be- comes covered with a film of metallic copper. The ferrocyanide of potassium is an exceedingly delicate test for minute portions of copper in solution. Another test, proposed by M. Verguin, is to precipitate the copper in the metallic state on platinum by electro-chemical action. For this purpose a drop of the liquid to be examined is placed on a slip of platinum foil, and a slip of bright iron is brought in contact with the platinum and the liquid. If copper be present, it will be instantly precipitated on the surface of the platinum. Action on the Animal Economy. Copper, in its pure state, is perfectly inert, but in combination is highly deleterious. Nevertheless, a minute portion of the metal has been found in the human body. According to Millon, copper, when it exists in the blood, is, like the iron, attached to the red corpuscles. To bring the copper into a state favourable for ready detection, he advises that the blood, as it escapes from a vein, be received in about three times its bulk of water, and the mixture poured into a bottle of chlorine and agitated. The whole, upon being rapidly filtered, furnishes a liquid in which copper is readily detected. Wacken- roder found copper in the blood of man, but does not consider it a constant and normal constituent. He also detected this metal in the blood of domestic ani- mals living on a mixed diet, but not in their blood when nourished on vegetable food only. ( Chem. Gaz., May 1,1854.) The combinations of copper, when taken in poisonous doses, produce a coppery taste in the mouth; nausea and vomiting; violent pain in the stomach and bowels; frequent black and bloody stools; small, irregular, sharp, and frequent pulse ; faintings; burning thirst; difficulty of breath- ing; cold sweats; paucity of urine, and burning pain in voiding it; violent head- ache ; cramps, convulsions, and finally death. The best antidote, according to Dr. Schrader, of Gottingen, is the ferrocyanide of potassium, given freely, which forms, with the poison, the very insoluble ferrocyanide of copper. Before the antidote can be procured, large quantities should be given of milk, and white of eggs mixed with water, which act favourably*by forming the caseate and albuminate of copper; but these compounds should be evacuated as soon as possible by vomiting and purging. Should vomiting not take place, the stomach-pump may be employed. Magnesia was proposed as an antidote by M. Roucher; but Dr. Schrader says it is not to be depended upon. (Med. Times and Gaz., May, 1855.) The symptoms of slow poisoning by copper are, according to Dr. Corrigan, of Dublin, a cachectic appearance, emaciation, loss of muscular strength, colicky 342 Cuprum.—Cupri Subacetas. part I. pains, cojgh without physical signs, and retraction of the gums, with a persistent purple edge, quite distinct from the blue edge produced by lead. (Braithumite's Retrospect, Am. ed., xxx. 303.) Dr. Horsley has detected sulphate of copper in bread and flour, used in London, and presumes that it was added with the view of improving the appearance of the flour. (Chem. News, No. 63, p. Ill, and No. 65, p. 142.) In medico-legal examinations, where cupreous poisoning is suspected, Orfila recommends that the viscera be boiled in distilled water for an hour, and that the matter obtained by evaporating the filtered decoction to dryness be carbonized by nitric acid. The carbonized product will contain the copper. By proceeding in this way, there is no risk of obtaining the copper which may happen to pre- exist in the animal tissues. This method of search is preferable to that of ex- amining the contents of the stomach and intestines, from which copper may be absent; while it may have penetrated the different organs by absorption, espe- cially the abdominal viscera. Vessels of copper should be discontinued in all operations connected with pharmacy and domestic economy; for, although the metal uncombined is inert, yet the risk is great that the vessels may be acted on; in which event, whatever may be contained in them would be rendered deleterious. The following is a list of the preparations containing copper in the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias. Cupri Subacetas, U. S. — Subacetate of Copper. Cupri Sulphas, TJ. S., Br. — Sulphate of Copper. Blue Vitriol. Cuprum Ammoniatum, U. S.—Ammoniatcd Copper. B. CUPRI SUBACETAS. U.S. Subacetate of Copper. Impure subacetate of copper. U. S. Verdigris ; iErugo, Lat. ; Acetate de cuivre brut, Vert-de-gris, Fr. ; Griinspan, Germ.; Verde rame, Ital.; Cardenillo, Span. Preparation. Yerdigris is prepared in large quantities in the south of France, more particularly in the neighbourhood of Montpellier. It is also manufactured in Great Britain and Sweden. In France the process is conducted in the follow- ing manner. Sheets of copper are stratified with the residue of the grape after the expression of the juice in making wine, and are allowed to remain in this state for a month or six weeks. At the end of this time, the plates are found coated with a considerable quantity of verdigris. This is scraped off, and the plates are then replaced as at first, to be further acted on. The scrapings thus obtained form a paste, which is afterwards well beaten with wooden.mallets, and packed in oblong leathern sacks, about ten inches in length by eight in breadth, in which it is dried in the sun, until the loaf of verdigris, as it is called, attains the proper degree of hardness. The rationale of the process is easily understood. The grape-refuse contains a considerable quantity of juice, which, by contact with the air, undergoes the acetous fermentation. The copper becomes oxidized, and the resulting oxide, by combination with the acetic acid generated during the fermentation, forms the subacetate of copper, or verdigris. In England a purer verdigris is prepared by alternating copper plates with pieces of woollen cloth, steeped in pyroligneous acid. Yerdigris comes to this country exclusively from France, being imported prin- cipally from Bordeaux and Marseilles. The leathern packages in which it is pu- up, called sacks of verdigris, weigh generally from twenty-five to thirty pounds, and arrive in casks, each containing from thirty to forty sacks. Properties. Yerdigris is in masses of a pale-green colour, and composed of a part I. Cupri Subacetas.— Cupri Sulphas. multitude of minute silky crystals. Sometimes, however, it occurs of a bright-blue colour. Its taste is coppery. It is insoluble in alcohol, and, by the action ot water, a portion of it is resolved into the neutral acetate which dissolves, and the trisacetate which remains behind in the form of a dark-green powder, gradu- ally becoming black. It is hence evident that, when verdigris is prepared by levi- tation with water, it is altered in its nature. The neutral acetate is the crystal- lized acetate of copper, or Crystals of Venus. (See Fart Third.) When verdigris is acted on by sulphuric acid, it is decomposed, vapours of acetic acid being evolved, easily recognised by their vinegar odour. It is soluble almost entirely in ammonia, and dissolves in muriatic and dilute sulphuric acid with the excep- tion of impurities, which should not exceed 5 per cent. When of good quality, it has a lively green colour, is free from black or white spots, and is dry and dif- ficult to break. The green rust, called in popular language verdigris, which cop- per vessels are apt to contract when not kept clean, is a carbonate of copper, and should not be confounded with true verdigris. Composition. Verdigris, apart from its impurities, is a variable mixture of the subacetates of copper; the basic sesquiacetate predominating in the green variety, the diacetate in the blue. When acted on by water, two eqs. of the portion con- sisting of diacetate are converted into one eq. of soluble neutral acetate, and one of insoluble trisacetate. Medical Properties. Verdigris is used externally as a detergent and escha- rotic, and is occasionally applied to chronic eruptions, foul and indolent ulcers, and venereal warts. The special applications of it will be mentioned under its preparations. For its effects as a poison, see Cuprum. B. CUPRI SULPHAS. U.S.,Br. Sulphate of Copper. Blue vitriol, Roman vitriol, Blue stone; Sulfate de cuivre, Vitriol bleu, Couperose blue, Fr.; Schwefelsaures Kupfer, Kupfervitriol, Blauervitriol, Blauer Galitzenstei.i, Germ.; Rame solfato, Vitriolo di rame, Ital.; Sulfato de cobre, Vitriolo azul, Span. Preparation, &c. Sulphate of copper occasionally exists in nature, in solution in the water which flows through copper mines. In this case the salt is pro- cured by merely evaporating the waters which naturally contain it. Another method for obtaining it is to roast the native sulphuret in a reverberatory fur- nace, whereby it is made to pass, by absorbing oxygen, into the state of sulphate. The roasted mass is lixiviated, and the solution obtained evaporated that crys- tals may form. The salt, procured by either of these methods, contains a little tersulphate of the sesquioxide of iron, from which it may be freed by adding either an excess of protoxide of copper, which precipitates the sesquioxide of iron, or recently precipitated subcarbonate of copper, which causes the deposi- tion of the iron as a carbonate. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiv. 50*7.) A third method consists in wetting, and then sprinkling with sulphur, sheets of copper, which are next heated to redness, and while hot plunged into water. The same operation is repeated until the sheets are entirely corroded. At first a sulphuret of the metal is formed, which, by the action of heat and air, gradually passes iuto the state of sulphate of the oxide. This is dissolved by the water, and ob- tained in crystals by evaporation. A fourth method is to dissolve copper scales to saturation in sulphuric acid, contained in a wooden vessel, lined with sheet lead. The scales consist of metallic copper, mixed with oxide, and are produced in the process for annealing sheet copper. Sometimes sulphate of copper is obtained in pursuing one of the methods for separating silver from gold. The silver is dissolved by boiling the alloy in sul- phuric acid. The sulphate of silver formed is then decomposed by the immersion Cupri Sulphas. PART I. of copper plates in its solution, with the effect of forming sulphate of copper and precipitating the silver. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, sulphate of copper is presumed to be obtained pure from the manufacturer; in the British, the following process is given for the purification of the Sulphate of Copper of Commerce, which has been in- troduced into its Appendix among the substances used in the preparation of medicines. “Take of Sulphate of Copper of Commerce eight ounces [avoirdu- pois]; Boiling Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Sulphate of Copper in the Water; filter the solution, and set it by that it may crystallize. Remove the crystals to filtering paper placed upon a porous brick, and, having dried them without heat, enclose them in a bottle.” Br. Properties. Sulphate of copper has a rich deep-blue colour, and strong metallic styptic taste. It reddens vegetable blues, and crystallizes in large, transparent, rhomboidal prisms, which effloresce slightly in the air, and are soluble in four parts of cold, and two of boiling water, but insoluble in alcohol. When heated it first melts in its water of crystallization, and then dries and becomes white. If the heat is increased, it next undergoes the igneous fusion, and finally, at a high temperature, loses its acid, protoxide of copper being left. Potassa, soda, and ammonia throw down from it a bluish-white precipitate of hydrated protoxide of copper, which is immediately dissolved by an excess of the last-mentioned alkali, forming a rich deep-blue solution, called aqua sap- pliirina. It is decomposed by the alkaline carbonates, and by borax, acetate and subacetate of lead, acetate of iron, nitrate of silver, corrosive chloride of mercury, tartrate of potassa, and chloride of calcium; and it is precipitated by all astringent vegetable infusions. If it becomes very green on the surface by the action of the air, it contains sesquioxide of iron. This oxide may also be detected by ammonia, which will throw it down along with the oxide of copper, without taking it up when added in excess. When sulphate of copper is obtained from the dipping liquid of manufacturers of brass or German silver ware, it is always contaminated with sulphate of zinc, as pointed out by Mr. S. Piesse. This liquid is at first a mixture of sulphuric and nitric acids, but becomes, at last, nearly saturated with copper. When zinc is present in sulphate of copper, it will be taken up by solution of potassa, added in excess, from which it may be thrown down, in white flocks, by a solution of bicarbonated alkali. Sulphate of copper consists of one eq. of sulphuric acid 40, one of protoxide of copper and five of water 45 = 124‘75. Medical Properties. Sulphate of copper, in small doses, is astringent and tonic; in large ones a prompt emetic. With a view to its tonic effect, it has been given in intermittent fever, as well as in epilepsy and other spasmodic diseases; and as an emetic, for discharging poisons from the stomach, especially opium. In croup it has been employed as an emetic with encouraging success. M. Honerkopf, a German practitioner, speaks warmly of his success with it in this disease. He uses the salt freely, especially in severe cases, in which great in- sensibility of the stomach is usually manifested. Out of ninety cases, half of which he estimates to have been pseudo-membranous croup, he reports the cure of seventy-seven. (Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1855.) Sulphate of copper has also been highly recommended in chronic diarrhoea. Externally it is employed in solution as a stimulant to ill-conditioned ulcers, as an eseharotic for destroying warts, fungous granulations, and callous edges, and as a styptic to bleeding sur- faces. It is found, in not a few instances, to promote the cicatrization of ulcers, and is not unfrequently employed, with that view, as a w’ash for chancres. In weak solution, either alone or associated with other substances, it forms a useful collyrium in the chronic stages of some forms of ophthalmia. Eight grains ol it, with an equal weight of Armenian bole, and two grains of camphor, added to half a pint of boiling water, form, after becoming limpid by rest, a collyrium Cupri Sulphas.—Curcuma. 345 part I. strongly recommended by Mr. Ware in the purulent ophthalmia of infants. The preparation called cuprum aluminatum (lapis divinus—pierre divine) i« made, according to the French Codex, by mixing, in powder, three ounces, eacu, of sulphate of copper, nitrate of potassa, and alum, heating the mixture in a crucible, so as to produce watery fusion, then mixing in a drachm of pow- dered camphor, and, finally, pouring out the whole on an oiled stone to congeal. The mass, when cold, is broken into pieces, and kept in a well-stopped bottle. When this preparation is used as a collyrium, a filtered solution is made of the average strength of thirty grains to the pint of water. It is employed in various affections of the eyes, in which astringent applications are admissible. It is often desirable to employ sulphate of copper, as a caustic, in the form of pencil Its tendency to effloresce interferes with its use in this way in the pure state. M. Llovet recommends for the purpose a mixture of one part of potassa-aluru and two of sulphate of copper, which are to be first powdered, and then gradu- ally melted together in a porcelain vessel, and poured into moulds made ot bronze. (Gaz. des Hop., Juillet 28, 1863.) Another mode of preparing pencils of sulphate of copper is to rub briskly together four parts of that salt and one of borax, and to mould the plastic mass which results into the desired form. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1864, p. 106.) The dose of sulphate of copper, as an astringent or tonic, is a quarter of a grain, gradually increased; as an emetic, from two to five grains. As a stimu- lant wash, the solution may be made of the strength of two, four, or eight grains to the fluidounce of water. Orfila cautions against giving large doses of this salt as an emetic in cases of poisoning; as it is apt, from its poisonous effects, to increase the mischief when not expelled by vomiting. Upon the whole, such is the activity of sulphate of copper, that it should always be exhibited with caution. For its effects as a poison, see Cuprum. Off. Prep. Cuprum Ammoniatum, U. S. B. CURCUMA. U.JS. Secondary. Turmeric. The rhizoma of Curcuma longa. U. S. Safrandes Indes, Fr.; Kurkuma, Gclbwurz, Germ.; Curcuma, Ital., Span.; Zirsood, Arab.; Huldie, Hindoo. Curcuma. Sex.Syst. Monandria Monogvnia.—Nat. Ord. Zingiberaceae. Gen. Oh. Both limbs of the corolla three-partite. Anther with two spurs at the base. Seeds with an arillus. Loudon's Encyc. Cureumajonga. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 14; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 737, t. 252. The root of this plant is perennial, tuberous, palmate, and internally of a deep- yellow or orange colour. The leaves are radical, large, lanceolate, obliquely nerved, sheathing at their base, and closely embrace each other. The scape or flower-stem, which rises from the midst of the leaves, is short, thick, smooth, and constitutes a spike of numerous imbricated bracteal scales, between which the flowers successively make their appearance. The plant is a native of the East Indies and Cochin China, and is cultivated in various parts of southern Asia, particularly in China, Bengal, and Java, whence the root is exported. The best is said to come from China. The dried root is in cylindrical or oblong pieces, about as thick but not as long as the finger, tuberculated, somewhat contorted, externally yellowish-brown or greenish-yellow, internally deep orange-yellow, hard, compact, breaking with u fracture like that of wax, and yielding a yellow or orange-yellow powder. Another variety, comparatively rare, is round or oval, about the size of a pigeon’s egg, and marked externally with numerous annular wrinkles. Some- 346 Curcuma.—Cydonium. FART i. times it comes cut into two transverse segments. It is distinguished by the name of curcuma rotunda, the former being called curcuma langa. The two varie- ties have a. close resemblance in sensible properties, and are thought to be de- rived from the same plant, though formerly ascribed to different species of Cur- cuma. The odour of turmeric is peculiar; the taste warm, bitterish, and feebly aromatic. It tinges the saliva yellow. Analyzed by Pelletier and Vogel, it was found to contain lignin, starch, a peculiar yellow colouring matter called curcu- jnuL, a brown colouring matter, gum, au odorous and very acrid volatile oUTancl a small quantity of chloride of calcium. Curcumin is obtained, mixed with a little volatile oil, by digesting the alcoholic extract of turmeric in ether, and evaporating the ethereal tincture. It may be procured perfectly pure by separat- ing it from its combination with oxide of lead. M. Lepage procures it by ex- hausting turmeric with sulphuret of carbon, which does not dissolve curcumin, drying the residue, and treating it with 8 times its weight of distilled water, containing 2 or 3 per cent, of caustic potassa or soda, then filtering, and pre- cipitating with a slight excess of dilute muriatic acid, which takes the alkali, and throws down the curcumin. To obtain it quite pure, the precipitate is washed, dried, and treated with ether, which dissolves only the curcumin, and yields it by spontaneous evaporation. (Bev. Pliarmaceut., A. D. 1857, p. 8.) It is brown in mass, but yellow in the state of powder, without odour or taste, in- soluble in benzine, scarcely soluble in water, but very soluble in alcohol, ether, and the oils. The alkalies rapidly change its colour to a reddish-brown; and paper tinged with tincture of turmeric is employed as a test of their presence. Berzelius, however, states that its colour is changed to red or brownish-red by the concentrated mineral acids, by pure boracic acid, especially when dissolved in alcohol, and by numerous metallic salts; so that its indications cannot be cer- tainly relied on. Its alcoholic solution produces coloured precipitates with ace- tate of lead, nitrate of silver, and other salts. Turmeric is used for dyeing yellow; but the colour is not permanent.* Medical Properties, &c. This root is a stimulant aromatic, bearing some re- semblance to ginger in its operation, and is much used in India as a condiment. It is a constant ingredient in the curries so generally employed in the East. In former times it had some reputation in Europe as a remedy in jaundice and other visceral diseases; but at present it is employed only to impart colour to oint- ments, and other pharmaceutic preparations. Turmeric paper, used as a test, is prepared by tinging white unsized paper with a tincture or decoction of turmeric. The tincture may be made with ODe part of turmeric to six parts of proof spirit; the decoction, with one part of the root to ten or twelve of water. The access of acid or alkaline vapours should be carefully avoided. W. CYDONIUM. US. Secondary. Quince Seed. The seed of Cydonia vulgaris. U. S. Semences de coings, Fr.; Quittenkerne, Germ.; Semi di cotogno, Ital.; Simiente de mem- brillo, Span. The quince-tree has been separated from the genus Pyrus, and erected into a new one called Cydonia, which differs in the circumstance that the cells of it# fruit contain many seeds, instead of two only as in Pyrus. * African Turmeric. Dr. Wm. F. Daniell has brought into notice a product, much used by the native Africans of Sierra Leone in dyeing, consisting of rhizomas, closely resembling the E. Indian turmeric, having a similar odour and taste, and in like manner tinging the saliva yellow, and imparting their colouring matter readily to alcohol and water. H e found it to be derived from a species of Canna, supposed to be the C. speciosa of RoscDe. (7 harm Journ., Nov. 1859, p. 258.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Cydonium.—Cypripedium. 347 Cydonia. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Pentagynia. — Nat. Ord. Pomaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted, with leafy divisions. Apple closed, man} seeded. Testa mucilaginous. Loudon’s Encyc. Cudonia vulgaris. Persoon, Enchir. ii. 40. — Pyrus Cvdonia. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1020; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 505, t. 182. The common quince-tree is characterized as a species by its downy deciduous leaves. It is supposed to b« a native of Crete, but grows wild in Austria, on the banks of the Danube. It. is abundantly cultivated in this country. The fruit is about the size of a pear, yellow, downy, of an agreeable odour, and a rough, astringent, acidulous taste: and in each of its five cells contains from eight to fourteen seeds. Though not eaten raw, it forms a very pleasant confection; and a syrup prepared from it may be used as a grateful addition to drinks in sickness, especially in looseness of the bowels, which it is supposed to restrain by its astringency. The seeds are the officinal portion. They are ovate, angled, reddish-brown externally, white within, inodorous, and nearly insipid, being slightly bitter when long chewed. Their coriaceous en- velope abounds in mucilage, which is extracted by boiling water. Two drachms of the seeds will render a pint of water thick and ropy. It has been proposed to evaporate the decoction to dryness, and powder the residue. Three grains of this powder form a sufficiently consistent mucilage with an ounce of water. Ac- cording to M. Garot, one part communicates to a thousand parts of water a semi-syrupy consistence. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iii. 298.) Dr. Pereira con- siders the mucilage as peculiar, and proposes to call it cydonin. It differs from arabin in not yielding a precipitate with silicate of potassa, and from bassorin and cerasin, in being soluble in water both hot and cold. Medical Properties, &c. The mucilage of quince seeds may be used for the same purposes as other mucilaginous liquids. It is preferred by some practi- tioners as a local application in conjunctival ophthalmia, but in this country is less used for that purpose than the infusion of sassafras pith. W. CYPRIPEDIUM. U.S. Secondary. Cypripedium. The root of Cypripedium pubescens. U. S. Cypripedium. Sex. Syst. Gynandria Diandria.— Nat. Ord. Orchidacese. Gen. Ch. Sepals spreading; the two anterior generally united into one under the lip. Petals similar but usually narrower, spreading. Lip a large inflated sac, somewhat slipper-shaped. Column short, three-lobed; the lateral lobes bearing an anther under each, the middle dilated and petal-like. Gray. Under the common name of ladies’ slipper, or moccasin plant..several spe- cies of Cypripedium inhabit the woods in different parts of the United States. They are small plants, with large many-nerved, plaited leaves, sheathing at the base, and large often beautiful flowers, of a shape not unlike the Indian moccasin, whence they derived one of their common names. Their generic name of Cypri- pedium (Kunpts, Yenus, and -odcuv, sock) had a similar origin. Several of them have beeu used by American physicians, the root being the part employed. Dr. R. P. Stevens, of Ceres, Pennsylvania, says of them, that he has found the C. spectobile and C. acaule, especially when growing in dark swamps, to be possessecTof narcotic "properties, and to be less safe than the C. parviforum, which is gently stimulant with a tendency to the nervous system, and is quite equal to valerian. He has employed it advantageously in hysteria, and in the pains of the joinis following scarlet fever. {N. Y. Journ. of Med.,\\. 359.) Dr. E. Ives considers C. pubescens, spectobile, and humile identical in their effects, but C. pubescens the most powerful. {Trans, of Am. Med. Assoc., iii. 312.) C pubescens is the only one designated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. 348 Cypripedium.—Delphinium. PART 1. Cypripedium pubescens. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 142; Darlington, Flor. Ces- iric. p. 514. The pellow ladies’ slipper, as this plant is called from the colour of its flowers, has a simple", often flexuous, pubescent, leafy stem, from one to two feet high. The leaves are pubescent, ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, narrowing at the base, about four or five inches long by two in breadth, alternate, sessile, and sheathing. The flower is usually solitary and terminal; with four divisions of the perianth, the two outer cohering nearly to the apex, the inner longer, nar- rower, undulatory or twisted, and the lip an inch or two in length, swelling, sac- like, and of a yellow colour. The fruit is an oblong capsule, tapering at each end, recurved, pubescent, and peduncled. (Darlington.) The plant is indigenous, growing abundantly in rich, moist woods throughout the United States. The root is the part used. Properties. The dried root, as brought to the shops, has a small, knotted head or caudcx, with numerous somewhat contorted fibres or radicles, consider- ably thicker than those of serpentaria, from four to six inches long, of a yellow- ish-brown colour, which is darker in the caudex, of a somewhat aromatic odour which diminishes by time, and a bitter, sweetish, peculiar, and in the end some- what pungent taste. It yields its virtues to water and alcohol. The root, so far as we know, has not been analyzed. The so-called eclectics prepare what they improperly call cypripedin by precipitating with water a concentrated tincture of the root. The substance thus obtained is complex, and has no claim to the name given it, which ought to be reserved for the active principle when discovered. It is probable that the virtues of the root reside in a volatile oil and bitter principle. Medical Uses. Cypripedium appears to be a gentle nervous stimulant or antispasraodic, and has been used for the same purposes as valerian, though less powerful. Dr. E. Ives, of New Haven, Conn., has employed the remedy in a variety of nervous diseases with advantage, and has known it even to cure epi- lepsy. The other complaints mentioned by him are hypochondriasis, neuralgia, and morbid sensitiveness of the nervous system generally, and especially of the eye. The medicine may be used in powder, infusion, or tincture. The dose of the powder given by Dr. Ives was fifteen grains three times a day. The oleo- resin obtained by precipitating the tincture has been given in doses varying from half a grain to three grains. W. DELPHINIUM. U. S. Secondary. Larkspur. The root of Delphinium Cousolida. U. S. Pied d’allouette, Ft.; Feld-Rittersporn, Germ. Delphinium. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Trigynia.— Nat. Ord. Ranunculaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Petals five. Nectary bifid, horned behind. PoJstliree or one. Willd. Delphinium Consolida. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1226; Loudon’s Encyc. of PlamsppTVlS, 783ST. The larkspur is a showy annual plant, with an erect, branched, slightly pubescent stem~ Its leaves are divided into linear segments, widely separated, and forked at the summit. The flowers are usually of a beau- tiful azure-blue colour, and disposed in loose terminal racemes, with peduncles longer than the bractes. The nectary is one-leaved, with an ascending horn nearly equalling the corolla. The seeds are contained in smooth, solitary cap- sules. This species of larkspur has been introduced from Europe into the United States, where it has become naturalized, growing in the woods and fields, and flowering in June and July. Various parts of the larkspur have been employed in medicine; and the plant PART I. Delphinium.—Digitalis. 349 is said to have properties closely analogous to those of Delphinium Stayhisa- gria. (See Staphisagria.) The flowers are bitter and acrid, and/havlng formerly been supposed to possess the power of healing wounds, gave the name of con- solida to the species. Aconitic acid has been obtained from the expressed juice by W. Wicke. (Journ.de Pharm., Juillet, 1854, p. 79.) The seeds were ana- lyzed by Mr. Thomas C. Hopkins, of Baltimore, and found to contain delvhinia, volatile oil, fixed oil, gum, resin, chlorophyll, gallic acid, and salts of potassa, lime, and iron. (Am. Journ.of Pharm., xi. 8.) The flowers were formerly considered diuretic, emmenagogue, and vermifuge; but are not now used. The seeds are very acrid, are esteemed diuretic, and in laige doses produce vomiting and purging. A tincture, prepared by macerating an ounce of them in a pint of diluted alcohol, has been found useful in spasmodic asthma and dropsy. The dose is ten drops, to be gradually increased till some effect upon the system is evinced. The remedy has been employed both in Ame- rica and England; and the seeds of an indigenous species, D. exaltatumv have been applied to a similar purpose. The root probably possesses the same pro- perties as other parts of the plant; but, though designated in the Pharmacopoeia, is little if at all used. W. DIGITALIS. U.S.,Br. Digitalis. Foxglove. The leaves of Digitalis purpurea, from plants of the second year’s growth. U. S. The dried leaf; from wild indigenous plants, gathered when about two- thirds of the flowers are expanded. Br. Digitale Doightier, Fr.; Purpurrother Fingerliut, Germ.; Digitate purpurea, Ital.; Dedalera, Span. Digitalis. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Angiospermia.—Nat. Ord. Scrophulari- aceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted. Corolla bell-shaped, five-cleft, ventricose. Cap- sule ovate, two-celled. Willd. Digitalis purpurea. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 383; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 218, t. 78. The foxglove is a beautiful plant, with a biennial or perennial fibrous root, which, in the first year, sends forth large tufted leaves, and in the following summer, a siugle erect, downy, and leafy stem, rising from two to five feet, and terminating in an elegant spike of purple flowers. The lower leaves are ovate, pointed, about eight inches in length and three in breadth, and stand upon short, winged footstalks; the upper are alternate, sparse, and lanceolate; both are obtusely serrate, and have wrinkled velvety surfaces, of which the upper is of a fine deep green, the under paler and more downy. The flowers are numerous, and attached to the upper part of the stem by short peduncles, in such a manner as generally to hang down upon one side. At the base of each peduncle is a floral leaf, which is sessile, ovate, and pointed. The calyx is divided into five segments, of which the uppermost is narrower than the others. The corolla is monopetalous, bell-form, swelling on the lower side, irregularly divided at the margin into short obtuse lobes, and in shape and size not unlike the end of the finger of a glove, a circumstance which has suggested most of the names by which the plant is designated in different languages. Its mouth is guarded by long soft hairs. Externally, it is in general of a bright purple; internally, is sprinkled with black spots upon a white ground. There is a variety with white flowers. The filaments are white, curved, and surmounted by large yellow anthers. The style is simple, and supports a bifid stigma. The seeds are numerous, very small, grayish-brown, and contained in a pyramidal two-celled capsule. The foxglove grows wild in the temperate parts of Europe, where it flowers in the middle of summer. In this country it is cultivated both for ornament and Digitalis. PART I. for medical use The leaves are the part generally employed. Much care is re- quisite in selecting, preparing, and preserving them, in order to ensure their activity. They should be gathered in the second year, immediately before or during the period of inflorescence, and those only chosen which are full-grown and perfectly fresh. {Geiger.) It is said that those plants are preferable which grow spontaneously in elevated places, exposed to the sun. {Duncan.) As the leaf-stalk and midrib are comparatively inactive, they may be rejected. Withering recommends that the leaves should be dried either in the sunshine, or by a gentle heat before the fire; and care should be taken to keep them separate while drying. Pereira states that a more common, and, in his opinion, a preferable mode, is to dry them in a basket, in a dark place, in a drying stove. It is probably owing, in part, to the want of proper attention in preparing digitalis for the market, that it is so often inefficient. Much of the medicine kept in our shops is obtained from the Shakers, and is in oblong compact masses, into which the leaves have been compressed. In some of these cakes the digitalis is of good quality; but we have seen others in which it was quite the reverse, and some which were mouldy in the interior; and, upon the whole, cannot but consider this mode of preparing the drug as objectionable. The dried leaves should be kept in tin canisters, well closed so as to exclude light and moisture ; or they may be pul- verized, and the powder preserved in well-stopped and opaque bottles. As fox- glove deteriorates by time, it should be frequently renewed, as often, if possible, as once a year. Its quality must be judged of by the degree in which it possesses the characteristic properties of colour, smell, and especially taste. It is said to be sometimes adulterated; but if it be bought in leaf, there can be little difficulty with one acquainted with the characters of the genuine leaves in detecting the sophistication. The seeds contain more of the active principle than the leaves, are less apt to suffer in drying, and keep better; but are little used. So far as the relative strength of these two parts can be determined from that of their alcoholic ex- tracts, it would appear, from the experiments of Prof. Hirtz, that the seeds are ten times stronger than the leaves. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 414.) Properties. Foxglove is without smell in the recent state, but acquires a faint narcotic odour when dried. Its taste is bitter and nauseous. The colour of the dried leaf is a dull pale green, modified by the whitish down upon the under sur- face ; that of the powder is a fine deep green. Digitalis yields its virtues both to water_and alcohol. These virtues reside in a peculiar bitter principle, which was firstisblated Fy M. Homolle. In the extraction of this principle, called diai- _ taline; he employed the agency of tannic acid, as originally proposed by M. 0. Henry. The latter chemist has somewhat simplified the process of M. Homolle. An alcoholic extract is first prepared. This is treated with distilled water acidu- lated with acetic acid, and heated to about 110° F., a little animal charcoal being added. To the liquor, filtered, and partially neutralized by ammonia, a fresh con- centrated infusion of galls is gradually added, so long as a precipitate is produced. This precipitate, which is tannate of digitaline, is obtained separate by decanting the liquid, is washed with pure water mixed with a little alcohol, and then rubbed in a mortar with one-third of its weight of very finely powdered litharge. The mixture is heated gently, and submitted to the action of twice its volume of alco- hol at about 90°. The alcoholic solution is treated with a little animal charcoal, filtered, and evaporated at a very gentle heat. The residue is acted on twice or three times with cold and very pure sulphuric ether, which removes impurities, and leaves the digitaline. This may be powdered, or obtained in small scales by dissolving it in the least quantity of alcohol, and allowing the concentrated solu- tion to evaporate in a stove upon plates of glass. From 1000 parts of the leaves, M. Henry obtained between 9 and 10 parts of digitaline. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser.,vii. 462.) This substance is white, inodorous, crystallizable with difficulty, l’ART I. Digitalis. 351 intensely bitter, sternutatory when powdered, slightly decomposed at a boiling heat, soluble in about 2000 parts of cold water, more soluble in boiling water, which retains one part in 1000 when it cools, very soluble in alcohol cold or hot, very slightly soluble in ether, incapable of precipitating salts, without alkaline or acid reaction, and destitute of nitrogen. It forms an insoluble compound with tannic acid. It has the characteristic property of giving a fine emerald-green colour to concentrated muriatic acid. In the plant, it is rendered soluble in water by means of saline or extractive matters. It has all the effects of digitalis on the system, at least upon the heart. Besides the bitter principle, digitalis contains a volatile oil, a fatty matter, a red colouring substance analogous to extractive, chlorophyll, albumen, starch, sugar, gum, lignin, and salts of potassa and lime, among which, according to Rein and Haase, is superoxalate of potassa. M. Morin, of Geneva, has discovered in the leaves two acids; one fixed, called digi-_ tnli.c acid. the other volatile and resembling valerianic acid, which he proposes to name antirrhinic acid. (Ibid., vii. 294.) Dr. Morries obtained a narcotic empyreumatic oiTby the destructive distillation of the leaves. ■ It appears, from the experiments of M. Kosmann, that digitaline must be ranked among the glucosides; as, when boiled with dilute sulphuric acid, it is resolved into glucose (grape-sugar) and a peculiar substance to which he gives the name of digitaliretin, a compound of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, having feeble acid properties, and somewhat bitter in solution, though much less so than digitaline itself. Under the influence of caustic soda digitaline is converted into a substance decidedly acid, which M. Kosmann names digit,alinic acid.. The same chemist has shown that digitaline exists in two states, hydrous ancTanhydrous, the former being converted into the latter at 212° F., with the loss of eight eqs. of water; the formula of the hydrous being, according to Kosmann, C54H53038= 681, that of the anhydrous C54H45O30= 609. It is always the anhydrous which is used in medicine. Digitalinic acid is somewhat bitter, but much less so than its original. Like digitaline, it is converted by diluted sulphuric acid and heat into glucose and digitaliretin. (Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1860, p. 6, and Aout, p. 87.) From more recent researches by Waltz, and by MM. Homolle and Quevenne themselves, it has been determined that the digitaline of Homolle, though suf- ficiently pure for practical use, yet contains more or less of two other principles, from which it may be separated by the agency of ether and alcohol, as stated in the note below.* * The following are the results of the chemical examination of digitalis, as given by MM. Homolle and Quevenne, in Bouchardat’s Archives de Physiologie, $c. for January, 1854. Unfortunately these authors employ the very similar names digitaline and digitalin to desig- nate different substances; the former being applied by them to the bitter active principle, the latter to a tasteless and probably inert constituent. In conformity with their example, and to prevent confusion, we employ the term digitaline as the name of the active prin- ciple, though digitalin would be in accordance with our general usage. Besides the proper active constituent, digitalis contains, according to MM. Homolle and Quevenne, three pe- culiar neuter principles, digitalin, digitalose, and digilalide; four organic acids, the digiialic. antirrhinic, digitaleic, and tannic; various other neuter organic substances, viz. starch, sugar, "pectin, an albuminoid substance, an orange-red crystallizable colouring matter, chlorophyll, volatile oil, and lignin ; and, lastly, various inorganic salts and earthy matters. It is to the digitaleic acid, which is a fatty substance, that M. Homolle ascribes the nauseating and emetic properties and effects on vision, from which pure digitaline is exempt. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1862, p. 71.) Digit aim (digitasolin of Waltz) is a white, imperfectly crystalline powder, tasteless or very slightly acrid, soluble in water and alcohol, and insoluble in ether. Digitalose (digitalierm of Waltz) is of a white, crystalline, almost micaceous appearance, tasteless,TnsoIubIei in water, and soluble in alcohol and ether. These two principles are often contained in the digitaline procured in the manner directed in the text. To separate them, advantage may be taken of the fact, that, though but very slightly soluble in perfectly pure ether, digita- line is readily dissolved by that liquid containing but a very small proportion of alcohol. If the impure digitaline be submitted to the action of ether, brought by the addition of 352 Digitalis. PART I. Since this article was revised for the press, we have seen the announcement, that a volatile alkaloid has been obtained by W. Bnglehardt from the leaves of digitalis, by a process similar to that by which couia is extracted from hemlock. It is described as an exceedingly volatile liquid, of an oily consistence, a very penetrating odour, an alkaline reaction, soluble with difficulty in water, readily dissolved by alcohol, soluble in pure ether, and but slightly so in chloroform. Should this discovery be confirmed, and the alkaloid prove to be one of the active principles of digitalis, it should receive the name of digital ia. In the mean time, the discoverer calls it digitalinum jluidum. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1864, p. 126.) Medical Properties and Uses. Digitalis is narcotic, sedative, and diuretic. Administered in quantities sufficient to bring the system decidedly under its in- fluence, it is apt to produce a sense of tightness or weight with dull pain in the head, vertigo, dimness or other disorder of vision, and more or less confusion of thought. At .the same time it occasionally gives rise to irritation in the pharynx and oesophagus, which extends to the larynx and trachea, producing hoarseness; and, in more than one instance, ptyalism has been observed to result. It some- times also disturbs the bowels, and excites nausea, or even vomiting. Another and highly important effect is an augmented flow of urine. This has been as- cribed by some to increased absorption; and, in support of this opinion, it is stated that its diuretic operation is observable only when dropsical effusion ex- ists ; but the fact seems to be, that it is capable of augmenting the quantity of urine in health, and it probably exerts a directly stimulating influence upon the secretory function of the kidneys. This influence is said sometimes to extend to the genital organs. Besides the effects above detailed, digitalis has a remarka- bly sedative action upon the heart. This is exhibited in the reduction both of the force and frequency of the pulse, which sometimes sinks to 50, 40, or even 30 strokes in the minute. In some instances, however, it undergoes little change; in others only becomes irregular; and we are told that it is even occasionally increased in frequency. It was observed by Dr. Baildon that the effects of digi- talis upon the circulation wTere much influenced by posture. Thus, in his own case, the pulse, which had been reduced from 110 to 40 in the recumbent position, was increased to 72 when he sat, and to 100 when he stood. We do not discover anything remarkable in this circumstance. It is well known that the pulse is always more frequent in the erect than in the horizontal posture, and the differ- ence is greater in a state of debility than in health. Digitalis diminishes the frequency of the pulsations of the heart by a directly debilitating power; and this very debility, when any exertion is made which calls for increased action in that organ, causes it to attempt, by an increase in the number of its contrac- alcohol to the sp. gr. 0-780, the digitaline and digitalose will be dissolved, and digitalin left; and, by a repetition of the treatment, almost the whole of the bitter principle may be extracted. If the ethereal solutions thus obtained be mixed, the ether distilled otf until the residue has a pap-like consistence, and this residue be treated with boiling alcohol of 60°, the digitaline will be taken up, and most of the digitalose remain undissolved. The former may now be obtained by a gentle evaporation of the alcohol; and, by repetitions of the process, may be rendered very nearly free from digitalose, though not perfectly so. In its purest state, digitaline, instead of being white, has a pale-yellow tint, and is crys- tallizable with even greater difficulty than in its ordinary condition. Indeed, MM. Homolle and Quevenne are disposed to consider it quite uncrystallizable when perfectly pure. One of its peculiarities is a disposition to assume a globular form when deposited from its solu- tion. If its alcoholic or ethereal solution be concentrated until it becomes turbid, and then examined with a microscope, innumerable globules will be seen of variable size, closely resembling those of milk. These coalesce, and, when deposited, adhere to the bottom of the vessel in grains or masses of a resinoid appearance. [Op. cit., pp. 21 and 22.) As a test of the sufficient purity of digitaline, the authors state that its bitterness should be such as to require, in order to be rendered imperceptible, the addition of 10 litres (about 21 pints) of water to 5 centigrammes (about 0-77 gr.) of the digitaline. [Ibid., p. 126.1—Note to the eleventh and twelfth editions. PART I. Digitalis. tions, to meet the demand which it is unable to supply by an increase in their force. According to Dr. Traube, it directly diminishes animal temperature in febrile and inflammatory diseases, without antecedent effect on the circulation. (See Archives Gen., 4e ser., xxviii. 338.) It is said also to have a powerful seda- tive influence on the generative organs. This statement is not altogether incom- patible with that already made, that the medicine sometimes stimulates these organs. The normal depressing effect may be experienced through the nervous c« ntres; while the occasional irritation may proceed, either from the direct ac- tion of the medicine through the blood on the tissues affected, or a sympathetic influence extended from the urinary organs. Dr. A. Buchner states that digita- line arrests vinous fermentation, and consequently poisons the yeast plant. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 154.) The effects above detailed may result from digitalis given in remediate doses. In larger quantities its operation is more violent. Nausea and vomiting, stupor or delirium, cold sweats, extreme prostration of strength, hiccough, convulsions, aud syncope are among the alarming symptoms which indicate its poisonous character. These effects are best counteracted by stimulants, such as brandy, the volatile alkali, and opium. Should any of the poison be suspected to remain, it would be proper, before employing other measures, to evacuate the stomach by the free use of warm liquids. From the experiments of M. Bonjean, it ap- pears that powdered digitalis may be given to fowls, in large quantities, with entire impunity. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 21.) A peculiarity of digitalis is that, after having been given in moderate doses for several days without apparent effect, it sometimes acts suddenly with an ac- cumulated influence, even endangering life. It is, moreover, very permanent in its operation, which, having once commenced, is maintained for a considerable period without fresh accessions of the medicine. The practical inferences deducti- ble from these properties of digitalis are, first, that, after it has been given for some time without effect, care should be taken not to increase the dose too greatly; and, secondly, that, after its effects have begun to appear, it should be suspended for a time, or exhibited in smaller doses, lest a dangerous accumula- tion should be experienced. In numerous instances death has resulted from its incautious employment. Digitalis has been long known to possess medicinal powers; but it was never regarded as a standard remedy till after its application by Withering to the treatment of dropsy, about the year 1775. It is at present employed very exten- sively, both for its diuretic power, and for its sedative influence over the circula- tion. The former renders it highly useful in dropsical diseases, though like all other remedies it frequently fails; the latter adapts it to cases in which the action of the heart requires to be controlled. The idea was at one period enter- tained, that it might serve as a substitute for the lancet in febrile and inflamma- tory complaints; and it has been much employed for this purpose by the advo- cates of the contra-stimulant doctrine in Italy; but experience has proved that it is a very frail support where the symptoms of inflammation are such as to call for the loss of blood. A s an adjuvant to the lancet, and when circumstances forbid the employment of that remedy, it is often useful. Though it certainly has not the power, at one time ascribed to it by some, of curing phthisis, it acts beneficially as a palliative in that complaint by depressing the excited move- ments of the heart. In the same way it proves advantageous in aneurism, hypertrophy and dilatation of the heart, palpitations from rheumatic or gouty 'rritation, and in various forms of hemorrhage, after action has been sufficiently reduced by the lancet. Some consider it especially efficient in menorrhagia. It has also been prescribed in nervous headache, mania, epilepsy, pertussis, and spasmodic asthma; and highly respectable testimony can be adduced in favour of its occasional efficacy in these complaints. In delirium tremens it has been 354 D ig it a lis. —Diospyros. PART I. recommended as a specific, given in infusion, in the full dose, repeated every two hours till symptoms of narcotism are induced; but the practice is somewhat hazardous, unless the patient is carefully watched. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xvii. 501.) Much testimony has recently been given in favour of large doses of digitalis in this affection; the tincture having been taken in doses of from half a fiuidrachm to half a fluidounce, and repeated afterwards in smaller quantities, at intervals of two, four, or six hours till sleep was obtained. (Ibid., Jan. 1861, p. 25T.) The same practice has been recommended in acute mania. But we would reiterate the necessity of caution; for, though the tincture, as found in the shops, may no doubt often be administered safely in large doses, yet, if the medicine is of good quality, they cannot but be hazardous. Digitalis is said to be a very effi- cient remedy in spermatorrhoea. Externally applied, it sometimes acts speedily and powerfully as a diuretic, and has proved useful in dropsy. For this purpose the fresh leaves bruised, or the tincture, may be rubbed over the abdomen and on the inside of the thighs. (Revue Medicate, May, 1834.) Digitalis is administered in substance. The dose of the powder is one grain, repeated twice or three times a day, and gradually increased till some effect is produced upon the head, stomach, pulse, or kidneys, when it should be omitted or reduced. The infusion and tincture are officinal preparations often resorted to. (See Infusum Digitalis and Tinctura Digitalis.) The extract has also been employed; and Orfila found it, whether prepared with water or alcohol, more powerful than the powder. Enormous doses of this medicine have been given with asserted impunity; and, when they occasion full vomiting, it is possible that they may sometimes prove harmless; but, when the alarming effects sometimes experienced from comparatively moderate doses are considered, the practice must be condemned as exceedingly hazardous. JHgitaline has been used internally, but its employment requires caution. With all the powers of digitalis, it possesses the advantage of more equable strength, and consequently greater precision and certainty in regard to the dose. It may be used for any of the purposes to which the leaves are applicable; and may be administered in pill, or alcoholic solution. The dose to begin with should not exceed the fiftieth or sixtieth of a grain, and should not be carried beyond the twelfth. It is much administered in the form of granules, made .by saturating small globules of sugar with an alcoholic solution of digitaline. The granules of Homolle, which are commonly used in Europe, contain each a milligramme, or about the seventieth of a grain; equivalent, on the average, to perhaps a grain and a half of digitalis of medium strength. One of these globules may be given as a commencing dose. Forty of them taken with a view to suicide, though followed by copious vomiting, so that most of the poison was probably discharged, produced the most alarming prostration, with a pulse weak, 46 to 48 in a minute, intermittent, and sometimes scarcely perceptible. The patient, however, ulti- mately recovered. (Ann.de Therap., A.D. 1858, p. 103.) Off. Prep. Digitalinum, Br.; Extractum Digitalis Alcoholicum, U. S.; Infu- sum Digitalis; Tinctura Digitalis. W DIOSPYROS. US. Secondary. Persimmon. The unripe fruit of Diospyros Virginiana. U. S. Diospyros. Sex. Syst. Dicecia Octandria. — Nat. Ord. Ebenaceae. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx four to six-cleft. Corolla urceolate, four to six-cleft. Womens eight to sixteen; filaments often producing two anthers. Female. Flower as the male. Stigmas four to five. Berry eight to twelve-seeded. Nuttall. Diospyros Virginiana. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 110T; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. PART I. Diospyros.—Dracontium. 355 ii. 219. The persimmon is an indigenous tree, rising sometimes in the Southern States to the height of sixty feet, with a trunk twenty inches in diameter; but seldom attaining more than half that size near its northern limits, and often not higher than fifteen or twenty feet. The stem is straight, and in the old tree covered with a furrowed blackish bark. The branches are spreading; the leaves ovate-oblong, acuminate, entire, smooth, reticulately veined, alternate, and sup- ported on pubescent footstalks. The buds are smooth. The male and female flowers are on different trees. They are lateral, axillary, solitary, nearly sessile, of a pale-orange colour, and not conspicuous. The fruit is a globular berry, dark-yellow when perfectly ripe, and containing numerous seeds embedded in a soft yellow pulp. This tree is very common in the Middle and Southern States, but, according to Michaux, does not flourish beyond the forty-second degree of north latitude. The flowers appear in May or June; but the fruit is not ripe till the middle of autumn. While green, the fruit is excessively astringent, and, we presume, will retain its astringency if carefully sliced and dried in this state; but, when per- fectly mature, and after having been touched by the frost, it is sweet and pala- table. Michaux states that, in the Southern and Western States, it is made into cakes with bran, and used for preparing beer with the addition of water, hops, and yeast. A spirituous liquor may be obtained by the distillation of the fer- mented infusion. The unripe fruit was examined by Mr. B. R. Smith, of Phila- delphia, and found to contain tannic acid, sugar, malic acid, colouring matter, and lignin. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 167.) The tannic acid has been as- certained by Mr. John E. Bryan not to be of the kind existing in galls and oak- bark. {Ibid., xxxii. 215.) The fact that tannin is a glucoside may throw some light on the rapid and complete change which the fruit undergoes from astrin- gency to sweetness during maturation. It has been used by Dr. Mettauer, of Virginia, in diarrhoea, chronic dysentery, and uterine hemorrhage. He gave it in infusion, syrup, and vinous tincture, prepared in the proportion of about an ounce of the bruised fresh fruit to two fluidounces of the vehicle, and adminis- tered in the dose of a fluidrachm or more for infants, and half a fluidounce or more for adults. The bark is astringent and very bitter, and is said to have been used advantageously in intermittents, and in the form of a gargle in ulcer- ated sorethroat. W. DRACONTIUM. U. S. Secondary. Skunk Cabbage. The root of Dracontium fcetidum, Ictodes foetidus {Bigelow), Symplocarpus fcetidus (Salisbury). U. S. Botanists have had some difficulty in arranging this plant. It was attached by Willdenow to the genus Dracontium, by Michaux and Pursh was considered a Poth.os, and by American botanists has been erected into a new genus, vhich Nuttall calls Symplocarpus after Salisbury, and Dr. Bigelow proposes to name Ictodes, expressive of the odour of the plant. The term Symplocarpus, though erroneous in its origin, was first proposed, and, having been adopted by several botanists, should be retained. Symplocarpus. Sex. Syst. Tetrandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Araceae. Gen. Ch. Spothe hooded. Spadix covered with perfect flowers. Calyx with four segments. Petals none. Style pyramidal. Seeds immersed in the spadix. Symplocarpus fcetida. Barton, Med. Bot. i. 123. — Ictodes fcetidus. Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 41. The skunk cabbage is a very curious plant, and the only one of the genus The root is perennial, large, abrupt, and furnished with nu- merous fleshy fibres, which penetrate to the depth of two feet or more. The 356 Dracontium. PART I. spathe, which first appears, is ovate, acuminate, obliquely depressed at the apex, auriculated at the base, folded inwards at the edges, and of a brownish-purple colour, varied with spots of red, yellow, and green. Within the spathe, the flowers, which resemble it in colour, are placed in great numbers upon a globose peduncled spadix, for which they form a compact covering. After the spathe has decayed, the spadix continues to grow, and, when the fruit is mature, has attained a size exceeding several times its original dimensions. At the base of each style is a roundish seed, immersed in the spadix, about the size of a pea, and speckled with purple and yellow. The leaves, which appear after the flowers, are numerous and crowded, oblong-cordate, acuta, smooth, strongly veined, and attached to the root by long petioles, which are hollowed in front, and furnished with coloured sheathing stipules. At the beginning of May, when the leaves are fully developed, they are very large, being from one to two feet in length, and from nine inches to a foot in breadth. The plant is indigenous, growing abundantly in meadows, swamps, and other wet places throughout the northern and middle sections of the Union. Its flowers appear in March and April, and in the lower latitudes often so early as February. The fruit is usually quite ripe, and the leaves are decayed before the end of August. The plant is very conspicuous from its abundance, and the magnitude of its leaves. All parts of it have a fetid odour, thought to resemble that of the offensive animal after which it is named. This odour resides in an extremely volatile principle, which is rapidly dissipated by heat, and diminished by desiccation. The root is the part employed. It should be collected in autumn, or early in spring, and dried with care. The root, as found in the shops, consists of two portions; the body either whole or in transverse slices, and the separated radicles. The former, when whole, is cylindrical or in the shape of a truncated cone, two or three inches long by about an inch in thickness, externally dark-brown and very rough from the in- sertion of the radicles, internally white and amylaceous. The latter are of various lengths, about as thick as a hen’s quill, very much flattened and wrinkled, white within, and covered by a yellowish reddish-brown epidermis, considerably lighter coloured than the body of the root. More or less of the fetid odour remains for a considerable period in the dried root. The taste, though less decided than in the fresh, is still acrid, manifesting itself, after the root has been chewed for a short time, by a pricking and smarting sensation in the mouth and throat. The acrimony, however, is dissipated by heat, and is quite lost in decoction. It is also diminished by time and exposure; and the root should not be kept longer than a single season. The radicles are said to have less acrimony than the caudex. The seeds are very acrid, and, though inodorous when whole, give out strongly, when bruised, the peculiar odour of the plant Medical Properties and Uses. The root is stimulant, antispasmodic, and narcotic. In large doses it occasions nausea and vomiting, with headache, ver- tigo, and dimness of vision. Dr. Bigelow has witnessed these effects from thirty grains of the recently dried root. The medicine was introduced into notice by the Rev. Dr. Cutler, who recommended it highly in asthma; and it has been subsequently employed with apparent advantage in chronic catarrh, chronic rheumatism, hysteria, and dropsy. Dr. Heintzelman thinks it expectorant as well as antispasmodic, and lias used it beneficially in hooping-cough and pulmonary consumption. (N.. J. Med. Reporter, iv. 310.) It is best given in powder, of which the dose is from ten to twenty grains, to be repeated three or four times a day, and gradually increased till some evidence of its action is afforded. A strong infusion is sometimes employed, and the people in the country prepare a syrup from the fresh root; but the latter preparation is very unequal. The root itself, as kept in the shops, is of uncertain stiengtk, in consequence of its deterioration by age. W. PART I. Dulcamara. 357 DULCAMARA. US., Br. Bittersweet. The stalks of Solarium Dulcamara. U. S. The young branches, dried. Br. Douce-amiire, Fr.; Bittersiiss, Alpranken,Germ.; Dulcamara, Ilal., Span. Solanum. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Solanaceae. Gen. Ch. Corolla wheel-shaped. Anthers somewhat coalescing, opening by two pores at the apex. Berry two-celled. Willd. This genus includes numerous species, of which several have been used in medicine. Besides S. Dulcamara, which is the only officinal species, a few others merit notice. 1. Solanum nigrum, the common garden or black nightshade, is an annual plant ffonToneTto two feet high, with an unarmed herbaceous stem, ovate, angular-dentate leaves, and white or pale-violet flowers, arranged in peduncled nodding umbel-like racemes, and followed by clusters of spherical black berries, about the size of peas. There are numerous varieties of this spe- cies, one of which is a native of the United States. The leaves are the part em- ployed. They are said to produce diaphoresis, sometimes diuresis and moderate purging, and in large doses nausea and giddiness. As a medicine they have been used in cancerous, scrofulous, and scorbutic diseases, and other painful ulcerous affections, being given internally, and applied at the same time to the parts affected in the form of poultice, ointment, or decoction. A grain of the dried leaves may be given every night, and gradually increased to ten or twelve grains, or till some sensible effect is experienced. The medicine, however, is scarcely used at present. By some persons the poisonous properties ascribed to the common nightshade are doubted. M. Dunal, of Montpellier, states, as the result of numerous experiments, that the berries are not poisonous to man or the inferior animals; and the leaves are said to be consumed in large quantities in the Isles of France and Bourbon as food, having been previously boiled in water. In the latter case, the active principle of the plant must have been ex- tracted by decoction. 2. The leaves, stalks, and unripe berries of Solanum tuberosum, or the common potato, are asserted to be narcotic; and an extract prepareffTrom the leaves has been employed in cough and spasmodic affections, in which it is said to act like opium. {Geiger.) From half a grain to two grains may be given as a dose. Dr. Latham, of London, found the extract to produce favourable effects in protracted cough, chronic rheumatism, angina pectoris, cancer of the uterus, &c. Its influence upon the nervous system was strongly marked, and, in many instances, the dose could not be increased above a few grains without giving rise to threatening symptoms. It appeared to Dr. Latham to be analogous in its operation to digitalis. His experiments were repeated in Philadelphia by Dr. Worsham with different results. The extract was found, in the quantity of nearly one hundred grains, to produce no sensible effect. (Philad. Journ. of the Med. and Phys. Sciences, vi. 22.) We can reconcile these opposite statements only upon the supposition, that the properties of the plant vary with the season, or with the place arid circumstances of culture. Dr. Julius Otto found solania in the germs of the potato. He was induced to make the investiga- tion by observing that cattle were destroyed by feeding on the residue of germi- nated potatoes, used for the manufacture of brandy. A case of death in a girl of fourteen, from eating the unripe fruit of the potato, is recorded in the British Med. Journ. for Sept. 3d, 1859. The prominent symptoms were partial stupor, epeechlessness, jactitation, hurried breathing, lividness of the skin, cold sweats, very frequent and feeble pulse, and a constant spitting through the closed teeth of viscid frothy phlegm. Death occurred on the second day. 3. The well-known lomatc, so much used as a vegetable at the table, and so advantageous through 358 Dulcamara. PART i. its nuHtiie laxative, and antiscorbutic properties, is the fruit of a species of So- lanura, dew initiated S. Lycopersicum. Though the juice of the fruit is free from solania, the seeds probably contain it, as their alcoholic extract has a bitter, pungent taste. (See Am. Journ. of Pharni., xxxiv. 519.) 4. Several instances of poisoning are on record from the fruit of Sjjpseudocapsicum, or Jerusalem cherry, which, from its resemblance to the common cherry, is liable to be eaten by children. Solarium Dulcamara. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1028; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 237, t. 84 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 169. The bittersweet or woody nightshade is a climbing shrub, with a slender, roundish, branching, woody stem, which, in favourable situations, rises six or eight feet in height. The leaves are alternate, petiolate, ovate, pointed, veined, soft, smooth, and of a dull-green colour. Many near the top of the stem are furnished with lateral projections at their base, giving them a hastate form. Some have the projection only on one side. Most of them are quite entire, some cordate at the base. The flowers are disposed in elegant clusters, somewhat analogous to cymes, and standing opposite to the leaves. The calyx is very small, purplish, and divided into five blunt persistent segments. The corolla is wheel-shaped, with five pointed, reflected segments, which are of a violet-blue colour, with a darker purple vein running longitudi- nally through their centre, and two shining greenish spots at the base of each. The filaments are very short, and support large, erect, lemon-yellow anthers, which cohere in the form of a cone around the style. The berries are of an oval shape and a bright scarlet colour, and continue to hang in beautiful bunches after the leaves have fallen. This plant is common to Europe and North America. It flourishes most luxuriantly in damp and sheltered places, as on the banks of rivulets, and among the thickets which border our natural meadow's. It is also found in higher and more exposed situations, and is frequently cultivated in gardens. In the United States it extends from New England to Ohio, and is in bloom from June to August. The root and stalk have medicinal properties, though the latter only is officinal. The berries, which were formerly esteemed poisonous, and thought to‘act witl. great severity on the stomach and bowels, have of late been said to be innoxious. A case, however, of death from their use in a child has recently been recorded. (SeePharm. Journ., Feb. 1861, p. 436.) Bittersweet should be gathered in autumn, after the fall of the leaf; and the extreme twigs should be selected. That grown in high and dry situations is said to be the best. The dried twigs, as brought to the shops, are of various lengths, cylindrical, about as thick as a goose-quill, externally wrinkled, and of a grayish-ash colour, consisting of a thin bark, an interior ligneous portion, and a central pith. They are inodorous, though the stalk in the recent state emits, when bruised, a pecu- liar, rather nauseous smell. Their taste, which is at first bitter and afterwards sweetish, has given origin to the name of the plant. Boiling wTater extracts all their virtues. These are supposed to depend, at least in part, upon a peculiar alkaline principle called solanin or solania, which was origiually discovered by M. Desfosses, of Besan9007111 the berries of Solanum nigrum, and has subse- quently been found in the stalks, leaves, and berries of S. Dulcamara and S. tuberosum. It is supposed to exist in the bittersweet combined with malic aciu * * Solania,is most conveniently obtained from the sprouts of the common potato. The fot lowing is Wackenroder’s process for extracting it. The sprouts, collected in the beginning of June, and pressed down in a suitable vessel by means of pebbles, are macerated for twelve or eighteen hours in water enough to cover them, previously acidulated with sul- phuric acid, so as to have a strongly acid reaction during the maceration. They are then expressed by the hand; and the liquor, with the addition of fresh portions of sulpnurio acid, is added twice successively, as at first, to fresh portions of sprouts, and in like man- ner separated by expression. After standing for some days, it is til ered, and treated with powdered hydrate of lime in slight excess. The precipitate which forms is separated Vy PART i. Dulcamara. 359 Solania is in the form of a white opaque powder, or of delicate aeieular crys- tals, somewhat like those of sulphate of quinia, though finer and shorter. It is inodorous, of a bitter taste, fusible at a little above 212°, scarcely soluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, and capable of neutralizing the acids. It is distinguished by the deep-brown, or brownish-yellow colour which iodine imparts to its solution, and by its reaction with sulphuric acid, which becomes first red- dish-yellow, then purplish-violet, then brown, and lastly again colourless, with the deposition of a brown powder. {Pharm. Gent. Blatt, A. D. 1843, p. 117.) Given to a cat, it was found by M. Desfosses to operate at first as an emetic, and afterwards as a narcotic. Dr. J. Otto observed, among its most striking effects, a paralytic condition of the posterior limbs of animals. One grain of the sulphate of solania was sufficient to destroy a rabbit in six hours. Dr. Frass did not observe paralysis of the lower limbs of animals as one of its effects. Given to different animals, he found it to occasion loss of appetite, vomiting, sometimes diarrhoea, excitement of the circulation, dilatation of the pupils, and, in large doses, heaviness, apathy, slowness of movement, and sometimes convulsions. Injected into the jugular vein, it caused accelerated circulation, difficult, and even spasmodic respiration, convulsions, tetanic spasms, and death. Two grains of the acetate, injected into the rectum of a rabbit, killed it in six hours. Ten grains given to a dog, and confined by a ligature round the oesophagus, though it occasioned great disturbance, did not prove fatal. Twenty grammes (3v) pro- duced no effect on a hog. (See B. & F. Medico-Chirurg. Rev., Am. ed., July, 1854, p. 189.) Besides solania, the stalks of S. Dulcamara contain, according to Pfatf, a peculiar principle to which he gave the name of 'picroglxjcion, indi- cative of the taste, at once bitter and sweet, which it is said to possess.' This was obtained by Blitz, in the following manner. The watery extract was treated with alcohol, the tincture evaporated, the residue dissolved in water, the solution precipitated with subacetate of lead, the excess of this salt decomposed by sul- phuretted hydrogen, the liquor then evaporated to dryness, and the residue treated with acetic ether, which yielded the principle in small isolated crystals by spon- taneous evaporation. Pfaff found also in dulcamara a vegeto-animal substance, gummy extractive, gluten, green wax, resin, benzoic acid, starch, lignin, and vari- ous salts of lime. straining, dried in a warm air, and boiled several times with alcohol. The alcoholic solu- tion, having been filtered while hot, will, upon cooling, deposit the solania in flocculent crystals. An additional quantity of the alkaloid may be obtained by evaporating the mother- liquor to one-quarter of its volume, and then allowing it to cool. The whole residuary liquor will assume a gelatinous consistence, and, upon being dried, will leave the solania in the form of a translucent, horny, amorphous mass. (Pharm. Central Blatt, 1843, p. 174.) Opinion at present seems to be unsettled as to the nature of solanin or solania: and the results obtained by different chemists are so very different as almost to necessitate the conclusion that they have operated on different substances. Indeed, M. Moitessier states expressly that the alkaloids obtained from different species of Solanum differ perceptibly \n their physical properties. By this chemist the alkaloid, as obtained from dulcamara, was found, after a careful examination, to have the formula C42H35N014, though M. Blan- •Jiet had previously given it as C84H68N028. It appears to have very feeble alkaline pro- perties, and forms amorphous compounds with the acids. (Comptes Rendus, Nov. 17, 1866 ) Zwengor and Kind ascertained that, when boiled with sulphuric or muriatic acid, eohmia is resolved into grape sugar and a much stronger alkaloid, which they name sol- anidin (solanidia). This has a decided alkaline reaction and a bitter taste, and forms crys- “Tallizable salts. According to this statement, solania ranks among the glucosides. {Liebig's Annalen, cix.) The reaction between solania and sulphuric acid, resulting in the produc- tion of a red colour, is said by these chemists actually to take-place between the acid aird solanidin, which has been first produced by it. Still more recentlv. the astonishing information is given, on the basis of experiments oy Otto Gmelin, that not only are solanin and solanidin glucosides, but that neither of them contains nitrogen, the formula of the former being that of the latter C52H4204. I Ibid., cx. p. 167.) To us it seems impossible that the many experienced chemists who have found nitrogen in solania should have been mistaken; and the inference is that Gmelin has probably operated on a different suDstance- —Nate to the twelfth edition. 360 Dulcamara.—Elaterium. PART I. Medical Properties and Uses. Dulcamara possesses feeble narcotic proper- ties, with the power of increasing the secretions, particularly that of the kidneys and skin. We have observed, in several instances, when the system was under its influence, a dark purplish colour of the face and hands, and at the same time considerable languor of the circulation. Its narcotic effects do not become ob- vious, unless when it is taken in large quantities. In overdoses it produces nau- sea, vomiting, faintness, vertigo, and convulsive muscular movements. A case is recorded in Casper’s Wochenschrift, in which a man took, in one forenoon, from three to four quarts of a decoction made from a peck of the stalks, and was attacked with pain in the joints, numbness of the limbs, dryness of the mouth, and palsy of the tongue, with consciousness unimpaired, the pulse quiet, but small and rather hard, and the skin cool. The symptoms disappeared under the use of stimulants. (Lond. Med. Gaz., Sept. 1850, p. 548.)* Dulcamara has been recom- mended in various diseases, but is now chiefly employed in the treatment of cuta- neous eruptions, particularly those of a scaly character, as lepra, psoriasis, and pityriasis. In these complaints it is often beneficial, especially in combination with minute doses of the antimonials. Its influence upon the secretions is insuf- ficient to account for its favourable effects. Perhaps they may be ascribed to its sedative influence on the capillary circulation. It is said to have been beneficially employed in chronic rheumatism and chronic catarrh. Antaphrodisiac properties have been ascribed to it. We have seen it apparently useful in mania connected with strong venereal propensities. The usual form of administration is that of decoction, of which two fluidounces may be taken four times a day, and gradually increased till some slight disorder of the head indicates the activity of the medi- cine. (See Decoctum Dulcamaras.) An extract and fluid extract are officinal. The dose of the former is from five to ten grains, of the latter from thirty minims to a fluidrachm. That of the powder would be from thirty grains to a drachm. In cutaneous affections, a strong decoction is often applied to the skin, at the same time that the medicine is taken internally. Off. Prep. Decoctum Dulcamara, U. S.; Extraction Dulcamaras, U. S.; Ex- traction Dulcamara Fluidum, U. S.; Infusum Dulcamara, Br. W. ELATERIUM. U. S., Br. Elaterium. A substance deposited by the juice of the fruit of Momordica Elaterium. Ecba- .lium agreste (Richard). U. S. Ecbalium officinarumSquirting Cucumber. A sediment from the expressed juice of the fruiter. * Prof. Caylus, of Leipsick, has made numerous experiments upon man and animals, in re- lation to the physiological effects and relative strength of dulcamara and its preparations, including solania, with the following results. 1. They are poisonous, and may prove fatal in overdoses. 2. In the character of their operation they are identical. 8. The extract of the twigs is from five to ten times stronger than the twigs themselves, that of solania thirty timesstronger than tfie extract. 4. They produce congestion of the kidneys, and solnetimes an increased flow of urine, which, in that case, is always albuminous. 5. They cause a con- stant. and remarkable diminution in the frequency of respiration, and death from their action is ascribed to a paralyzing influence on the respiratory nerve-centres. 6. In the last period of their operation, they weaken while they accelerate the action of the heart. 7. Prof. Caylus thinks that they act. especially on the spinal marrow and medulla oblongata, as evinced not only by their influence on the breathing, but also by the tetanic contraction they occasion in the muscles of the chest and extremities. 8. They produce little direct effect on the brain, and cause but a feeble contraction of the pupil. 9. They increase the sensibility of the skin, and have no direct irritant influence on the stomach and bowels. They are applicable, the Professor thinks, to spasmodic and irritative affections of the respiratory organs; and inflammation either of the lungs or bowels constitutes no contra- indication to their use. He recommends solania in the form of acetate, in the dose of from one-sixth of a grain to a grain. He prefers the alcoholic extract to the aqueous. (Ann. da Therap., A I). 1859, p. 24, and Arch. Generates, Mars, 1859, p. 350.) —Note to the twelfth edition part I. Elaterium. 361 In the Br. Pharmacopoeia, the "nearly ripe fruit” has a place in the Appen dix, with the name of Squirting Cucumber Fruit, as one of the substanres used in the preparation of medicines. Elaterion, Fr.; Elaterium, Germ.; Elaterio, Ital., Span. Momordica. Sex. Syst. Monoecia Monadelphia.—Nat. Ord. Cucurbitacese. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx five-cleft. Corolla five-parted. Filaments three. Fe male. Calyx five-cleft. Corolla five-parted. Style trifid. Gourd bursting elasti cally. Willd. Momordica Elaterium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 605; Woodv. Med. Bot. p 192, t. 12.—Ecbalium agrestg. Richard; Lindley, Med. and CEcon. Bot. p. 95.— Ecbalium ojjiyinarum. Br. — Ecbalium Elaterium. French Codex, A. D. 1837. The wild or squirting cucumber is a perennial plant, with a large fleshy root, from which proceed several round, thick, rough stems, branching and trailing like the common cucumber, but without tendrils. The leaves are petiolate, large, rough, irregularly cordate, and of a grayish-green colour. The flowers are yel- low, and proceed from the axils of the leaves. The fruit has the shape of a small oval cucumber, about an inch and a half long, an inch thick, of a greenish or grayish colour, and covered with stiff hairs or prickles. When fully ripe, it separates from the peduncle, and throws out its juice and seeds with considerable force through an opening at the base, where it was attached to the footstalk. The name of squirting cucumber was derived from this circumstance, and the scientific and officinal title is supposed to have had a similar origin ; though some authors maintain that the terra elaterium was applied to the medicine, rather from the mode of its operation upon the bowels, than from the projectile property of the fruit.* This species of Momordica is a native of the south of Europe, and is culti- vated in Great Britain, where, however*,.it perishes in the winter.'}' Elaterium is thembstance spontaneously deposited by the juice of the fruit, when separated and allowed to stand. From the experiments of Dr. Clutterbuck, it has been supposed that only the free juice about the seeds, which is obtained without ex- pression, affords the product. The substance of the fruit itself, the seeds, as well as other parts of the plant, have been thought to be nearly or quite inert. From the statements made by Mr. Bell (see note, page 362), these opinions must be somewhat modified; but there is no doubt that strong expression injures the product. When the fruit is sliced and placed upon a sieve, a perfectly limpid and colourless juice flows out, which soon becomes turbid, and in the course of a few hours begins to deposit a sediment. This, when collected and carefully dried, is very light and pulverulent, of a yellowish-white colour, slightly tinged with green. It is the genuine elaterium, and was found by Clutterbuck to purge violently in the dose of one;eighth’ of a grain. But the quantity contained in the fruit is very small. Clutterbuck obtained only six grains from forty cucum- bers. Commercial elaterium is often a weaker medicine, owing in part, perhaps, to adulteration, but much more to the mode in which it is prepared. In order to increase the product, the juice of the fruit is often expressed with great force; and there is reason to believe that it is sometimes evaporated so as to form an extract, instead of being allowed to deposit the active matter. The French elaterium is prepared by expressing the juice, clarifying it by rest and filtration, and then evaporating it to a suitable consistence. As the liquid remaining after the deposition of the sediment is comparatively inert, it will be perceived that the preparation of the French Codex must be relatively feeble. The following * From the Greek i\a.uvu> I drive, or T!»g driver. The word elaterium was used by Hip- pocrates to signify any active purge. Dioscorides applied it to the medicine of which we are treating. f On a visit to Spain, in the year 1861, the author noticed the plant growing abundantly in different localities upon the Rock of Gibraltar, especially on its southern declivity, which faces Africa, where, in some spots, it almost covered the ground.—Note to the twelfth edition. JElaterium. are the directions of the British Pharmacopoeia. “ Cut the fruit lengthwise, and lightly press out the juice. Strain it through a hair sieve, and set aside to de- posit. Carefully pour olf the supernatant liquor; pour the sediment on a linen filter, and dry it on porous bricks with a gentle heat. The decanted fluid may deposit a second portion of sediment, which can be dried in the same way.” The latter portion deposited is of a lighter colour. {Pereira.) The slight pressure directed is necessary for the separation of the juice from the somewhat immature fruit employed. The perfectly ripe fruit is not used; as, in consequence of its disposition to part with its contents, it cannot be carried to market. In the British Pharmacopoeia, the former name of Extractum Elaterii of the London College has been very properly abandoned; as the preparation is in no correct sense of the word an extract. As the plant is not cultivated in this country for medicinal purposes, our Pharmacopoeia very properly adopts, as officinal, the medicine as found in commerce. It is brought chiefly from England; but it is probable that a portion of the elaterium, of which Dr. Pereira speaks as coming from Malta, reaches our market also.* Properties. The bestjtlaterium is in thin flat or slightly curled cakes or frag- ments, often bearing the impression of the muslin upon which ITwas drfed” of a greenish-gray colour becoming yellowish by exposure, of a feeble odour, and a bitter somewhat acrid taste. It is pulverulent and inflammable, and so light that it swims when thrown upon water. When of inferior quality, it is sometimes dark-coloured, much curled, and rather hard, either breaking with difficulty, or pre- senting a resinous fracture. The Maltese elaterium is in larger pieces, of a pale colour, sometimes without the least tinge of green, destitute of odour, soft, and friable; and not unfrequently gives evidence of haviug been mixed with chalk or starch. It sinks* in water. Dr. Clutterbuck first observed that the activity.of elaterium_iesided in the portion of it soluble in alcohol and not in water. This fact was afterwards con- firmed by Dr. Paris, who found that the alcoholic extract, treated with boiling distilled water, and afterwards dried, had the property of purging in minute doses, PART I. * The following notice of the cultivation of the elaterium plant, and the preparation ef the drug at Mitcham, in Surrey, England, condensed from a paper by Mr. Jacob Bell in the Pharm. Journ. for October, 1850, may have some interest for the American reader. The seeds are sown in March, and the seedlings planted in June. In the luxuriant plants the stem sometimes acquires an extraordinary breadth. In one instance, though not thicker than the forefinger where it issued from the earth, it was in its broadest part four inches wide and half an inch thick. A wet season interferes with the productiveness of the plant. At the spontaneous separation of the fruit, it throws out its juice sometimes to the distance of twenty yards; and hazard of injury to the eyes is incurred by walking among the plants at their period of maturity. A bushel of the fruit weighs 40 pounds, and the price varies from 7 to 10 shillings sterling. In the manufacture of elaterium, which begins early in September, the fruit, having been washed, if necessary, to cleanse it from earthy matters, is sliced longitudinally into halves, and then submitted to expression, wrapped in a hempen cloth, in a common screw-press. Considerable force is used in the expression. The juice is then strained through hair, cypress, or wire sieves, and set aside for deposition. The deposit usually takes place in three or four hours. When this part of the process is completed, the supernatant liquor is carefully poured off, the deposit is placed on calico cloths resting on hair sieves, and allowed to drain for about twelve hours, after which it is removed by a knife, spread over small cloths, and dried on canvas frames in the drying stove. About half an ounce of fine elaterium is obtained from a bushel of fruit. Some obtain more; but the product is inferior, in consequence of the use of too much force in the expression. Good elaterium has a pale pea-green tint; that of inferior quality is of a duller hue. The Truce expelled in bursting is said to undergo very little changeTn the air, while that expressed from the ripe fruit immediately afterwards, becomes milky, and deposits elaterium. The recently burst fruit, therefore, is nearly if not qui*e as good for the preparation of the drug as that collected before perfect maturity. For a paper on the cultivation of the elaterium plant at Hitchin, Herts, England, taken from the Pharmaceutical Journal, see the American Journal of Pharmacy, Marcii, 1860, p. 163 — to the ninth and twelfth editions. PART I. Elaterium. 363 while the remaining portion of the elaterium was inactive. The subsequent ex- periments of Mr. Hennell, of London, and Mr. Morries, of Edinburgh, which were nearly simultaneous, demonstrated the existence of a crystallizable matter in elaterium, which is the active principle, and has been named elaterin. Accord- ing to Mr. Hennell, 100 parts of elaterium contain 44 of elaterin, 17 of a green resin (chlorophyll), 6 of starch, 27 of lignin, and 6 of saline matters. The alco- holic extract which Dr. Paris called elatin, is probably a mixture of elaterin and the green resin or chlorophyll.* Elaterin. according to Mr. Morries, crystallizes when pure in colourless micro- scopic rhombic prisms, having a silky appearance when in mass. It is extremely bitter and somewhat acrid, insoluble in water and alkaline solutions, soluble in alcohol, ether, and hot olive oil, and sparingly soluble in dilute acids. At a tem- perature between 300° and 400° it melts, and at a higher heat is dissipated in thick, whitish, pungent vapour, of an ammoniacal odour. It has no alkaline re- action. It may be procured by evaporating an alcoholic tincture of elaterium to the consistence of thin oil, and throwing the residue while yet warm into a weak boiling solution of potassa. The potassa holds the green resin in solution, and the elaterin crystallizes as the liquor cools. Mr. Hennell obtained it by treating with ether the alcoholic extract procured by the spontaneous evapora- tion of the tincture. This consists of elaterin and the green resin, the latter of which, being much more soluble in ether than the former, is completely extracted by this fluid, leaving the elaterin pure. But, as elaterin is also slightly soluble in ether, a portion of this principle is wasted by Mr. Hennell’s method. By evaporating the ethereal solution, the green resin is obtained separate. Mr. Hennell says that this was found to possess the purgative property of elaterium, as it acted powerfully in a dose less than one-third of a grain. But the effect was probably owing to the presence of a portion of elaterin which had been dissolved by the ether. The late Dr. Duncan, of Edinburgh, ascertained that the crystalline principle or elaterin produced, in the quantity of T'3 or y’g of a grain, all the effects of a dose of elaterium. The proportion of elaterin varies exceed- ingly in different parcels of the drug. Mr. Morries obtained 26 per cent, from the best British elaterium, 15 per cent, from the worst, and only 5 or 6 per cent, from the French; while a portion, procured according to the directions of the London College, yielded to Mr. Hennell upwards of 40 per cent. Experiments by Mr. John Williams satisfactorily prove that the fruit, exhausted of the free juice from which elaterium is obtained, contains very little if any elaterin, cer- tainly not enough to compensate for the cost of its extraction. (Ghem. News, Feb. 18, 1860, p. 124.) Mr. Williams substitutes the name of ecbalin for that of elaterin; a change which, we think, is uncalled for, at least so long as that of elaterium is retained for the medicine. Choice of Elaterium,. The inequality of elaterium depends probably in general more on diversities in the mode of preparation than on adulteration. Sometimes, nowever, it is greatly sophisticated; and large quantities are said to have been imported into this country, consisting mainly of chalk, and coloured green arti- * The substance to which Pelletier gave the name of chlorophyll, under the impression that it was a peculiar proximate principle, was afterwards ascertained by that chemist to be a mixture of wax and a green fixed oil. (Journ. de Pharm., xix. 109.) More recently, M. Frerny has succeeded, by the joint action of a menstruum composed of two parts of ether and one of muriatic acid diluted with a little water, in separating chlorophyll into two colouring principles, one yellow and the other blue; the former being dissolved by the ether, and the latter by the muriatic acid. The yellow, M. Fremy proposes to phyllo- nanthxy, the blue phyflocyanin. If the two are separated from their solvents ancTtlien dis- solved in alcohol, the green colour of chlorophyll is reproduced. The change of the green eolour of leaves to yellow in autumn is thus easily explained. The blue colouring matter is changed under the influence of the season, and the yellow only remains. (Ibid., Avril, 18(10, p. 241.)—.Wole to the. twelfth edition. Elaterium.—Elemi. PART I. ficially (B. Canavan, N. Y. Journ. of Pharm., iii. 385.) It should possess the sensible properties above indicated as characterizing good elaterium, should not effervesce with acids, and should yield from one-sixth to one-fourth of elaterin. Medical Properties and Uses. Elaterium is a powerful hydragoguecathartic, and in a large dose generally excites nausea and vomiting. If too freely admin- istered, it operates with great violence both upon the stomach and bowels, pro- ducing inflammation of these organs, which has in some instances eventuated fatally. It also increases the flow of urine. The fruit was employed by the an- cients, and is recommended in the writings of Dioscorides as a remedy in mania and melancholy. Sydenham and his contemporaries considered elaterium highly useful in dropsy; but, in consequence of some fatal results from its incautious employment, it fell iuto disrepute, and was generally neglected till again brought into notice by Dr. Ferriar. It is now considered one of the most efficient hydra- gogue cathartics in the treatment of dropsical diseases, in which it has some- times proved successful after all other remedies'have failed. The full dose of com- mercial elaterium is often from one to two grains; but, as in this quantity it generally vomits, if of good quality, the best plan is to give it in the dose of a quarter or half of a grain, repeated every hour till it operates. The dose of Clut- terbuck’s elaterium is the eighth of a grain. That of ejaterin is from the sixteen?]! to the twelfth of a grain, and is best given in solution. One grain may be dis- solved in a fluidounce of alcohol with 4 drops of nitric acid, and from 30 to 40 minims may be given diluted with water. W. ELEMI, Br. Elemi. Botanical source undetermined, probably from Canarium commune. A con- crete resinous exudation. Br. K6sine 61emi, Fr.; Oelbaumharz, Elemi, Germ ; Elemi, Ital.; Goma de limon, Span. Amyuis. Sex. Syst. Octandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Terebintaeese, Juss.; Amyrideae, It. Brown, Lindley. Gen. Gh. Calyx four-toothed. Petals four, oblong. Stigma four-cornered. Berry drupaceous. Willd. Some botanists separate from this genus the species which have their fruit in the form of a capsule instead of a nut, and associate them together in a distinct genus with the name of Idea. This is recognised by De Candolle. Most of the trees belonging to these two genera yield, when wounded, a resi- nous juice analogous to the turpentines. It is not improbable that the drug, usually known by the name of elemi, is derived from several different trees. That known to the ancients is said to have been obtained from Ethiopia, and all the elemi of commerce was originally brought from the Levant. The tree which af- forded it was not accurately known, but was supposed to be a species of Amyris. At present the drug is said to be derived from three sources, namely, Brazil, Mexico, and Manilla. The Brazilian is believed to be the product of a plant mentioned by Marcgrav under the name of icicariba, and called by De Candolle Idea Idcariba. It is a lofty tree, with pinnate leaves, consisting of three or five pointed, perforated leaflets, smooth on their upper surface and woolly beneath. It is erroneously stated in some works to be a native of Carolina. The elemi is obtained by incisions into the trees, through which the juice flows and concretes upon the bark. The Mexican is said by Dr. Royle to be obtained from a species of Elaphrium, which that author has described from dried specimens, and pro- poses to name E. elemiferum. (Mat. Med., Am. ed., p. 339.) The Manilla elemi is conjecturally referred to Canarium commune. (Ibid., p. 340.) Elemi is in masses of various consistence, sometimes solid aud heavy like wax, PART I. Elemi.—Ergota. 365 sometimes light and porous; unctuous to the touch; diaphanous; of diversified colours, generally greenish with intermingled points of white or yellow, sometimes greenish-white with brown stains, sometimes yellow like sulphur; fragile and friable when cold; softening by the heat of the hand ; of a terebinthinate some- what aromatic odour, diminishing with age, and said, in some varieties, to re- semble that of fennel; of a warm, slightly bitter, disagreeable taste; entirely soluble, with the exception of impurities, in boiling alcohol; and affording a volatile oil by distillation. A variety examined by M. Bonastre was found to con- sist of 60 parts of resin, 24 of a resinous matter soluble in boiling alcohol, but deposited when the liquid cools, 125 of volatile oil, 2 of extractive, and 1'5 of acid and impurities. M. Baup found the resin to be of two kinds, one amorphous, the other crystallizable; the latter of which he proposes to call elemin. {Journ. de Pharm., Be ser., xx. 331.) Elemi is sometimes adulterated with colophony and turpentine. The Manilla elemi is in masses of a light-yellowish colour, in- ternally soft, and of a strong odour of fennel. {Boyle.) We have been told that a considerable amount of elemi is used in this country by the hatters. Dr. Emil Mannkoff obtained from Brazilian elemi about 6 per cent, of a colourless volatile oil, insoluble in water, but easily dissolved both by alcohol and ether, of a not unpleasant odour, and a somewhat acrid and bitter taste, and of a composition represented, according to Stenhouse and Deville, by the formula C5HB. Dr. Mann- koff considers the oil as coinciding in medical properties with oil of turpentine, for which it may be substituted, with the advantage of a less disagreeable taste. (B. and F. Med.-Chir. Rev., July, 1859, p. 170, from Virchow's Archiv.) Medical Properties and Uses. Elemi has properties analogous to those of the turpentines; but is exclusively applied to external use. In the United States it is rarely employed even in this way. In the pharmacy of Europe it enters into the composition of numerous plasters and ointments. We are told that it is oc- casionally brought to this country in small fragments, mixed with the coarser kinds of gum arabic from the Levant and India. Off. Prep. Unguentum Elemi, Br. W ERGOTA. U.S., Br. Ergot. The diseased seed of Segals, cereale. U. S. The grain diseased by the presenct rf an imperfect fungus. Br. Spurred rye; Secale cornutum; Siegle ergots, Fr ; Mutterkorn, Germ. In all the Graminacese or grass tribe, and in some of the Cyperaceae, the place of the seeds is sometimes occupied by a morbid growth, which, from its re- semblance to the spur of a cock, has received the name of ergot, adopted from the French. This product is most frequent in the rye, Sepale cere ale, and, hav- ing been found, as occurring in that plant, to possess valuable medicinal pro- perties, was adopted in the first edition of the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia, under the came of secale cornutum or spurred rye. In the edition of 1840, this name was changed for ergota, in conformity with the nomenclature of the London and Edinburgh Colleges. It is probable that this morbid growth has similar pro- perties from whatever plant derived; and the fact has been proved in relation to the ergot of wheat. (See Am. Joxtrn. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxxii. 479.) Indeed, in a case reported by Dr. D. L. McGugin (Iowa Med. Journ., iv. 93), this variety of ergot is said to have succeeded promptly, when that of rye, previously tried, had failed * * Ergot of Wheat. M. Leperdriel, jun., of Montpellier, in France, recommends this pro- luct as preferable to the ergot of rye, on the grounds that it is destitute of the poisonous properties of the latter, and is more certain in its remediate influences, in consequence of being less liable to change. The former point is, to say the least, very uncertain; but in Ergota. PART I. Different opinions have been held in relation to the nature of this singular substance. It was at one time thought to be merely the seed altered by disease; the morbid condition being ascribed by some to the agency of an insect, by others to excess of heat and moisture. A second opinion considered it a parasitic fun- gus, occupying the place of the seed. This was entertained by De Candolle, who called the fungus Sclerotium Clavus. According to a third and intermediate opinion, the ergot is the seed, diseased and entirely perverted in its nature by the influence of a parasitic fungus, attached to it from the very beginning of its development. This view was put forth by M. Leveille, in a memoir published in the Annals of the Linnsean Society of Paris for the year 1826. He gave to the supposed fungus the name of Sphacelia segetum; but his observations as to its characters have not been sustained. To the late Mr. E. J. Quekett, of London, belongs the credit of having fully investigated this subject, and established the last-mentioned view of the nature of ergot. According to Mr. Quekett, the be- ginning of the growth of the ergot is marked by the appearance, about the young grain and its appendages, of multitudes of minute filaments like cobwebs, which run over all its parts, cementing anthers and stigmas together, and of a white coating upon the surface of the grain, from which, upon immersion in water, in- numerable minute particles separate, which after a time sink in the fluid. These particles, when examined by the microscope, prove to be the germs or sporidia of a species of fungus, and may be observed to sprout and propagate in various ways under favourable circumstances. Their length, upon the average, is about the four-thousandth of an inch. The filaments are the results of the growth of these singular germs. The sporidia and filaments do not increase with the in- crease of the ergot; and, when this has projected beyond the paleae and become visible, it has lost a portion of its white coating, and presents a dark-violet colour. It now increases with great rapidity, and attains its full size in a few days. When completely developed, it exhibits very few of the filaments or spo- ridia upon its surface. But Quekett believed that the germs of the fungus emit their filaments through the tissue of the ergot when young and tender, and that, as this increases, it is made up partly of the diseased structure of the grain, and partly of the fungous matter. The fungus was named by Quekett Ergotsetic ahortifaciens; for which title Hr. Pereira, at the suggestion of the Rev. M. J Berkeley, substituted that of Oidium ahortifaciens. This view of the nature and cause of ergot is supported by the asserted facts, that the microscopic fun- gus has an existence independent of the morbid grain, being found in various other parts of the plant, and growing even when entirely separated from it; and that the sporidia or white dust upon the surface of ergot, if applied to the seeds of certain Graminaceae before germination, or sprinkled in the soil at the roots of the plants after they have begun to grow, will give rise to ergotized fruit. That the ergot is not itself a peculiar fungus, but the perverted grain, is evinced by the frequent remains of the stigma upon its summit, by the scales at its base, and by the circumstance that in some instances only a portion of the seed is er- gotized. How far its peculiar medical properties may depend upon the morbid substance of the grain, and how far on the fungous matter associated with it, has not been determined. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xi. 116 and 237.) relation to the latter there is some reason to think that M Leperdriel is right; for Prof. Bentley, of London, found that of two specimens, one of the ergot of rye, the other of wheat, which had been kept under similar circumstances for ten years, the f onncr was quite destroyed, while the latter was apparently unchanged. Ergot is rarer in wheat than in rye; and in the head of the former there is generally but one and very rarely more than two of the diseased grains. It is produced usually in wheat in wet seasons, and on that side of the head most exposed to the dampness. It is shorter and much thicker than the ergot of rye, being about half an inch long and three-quarters of an inch or more in cir- cumference, and cleft into two or three divisions. In colour and smell it resembles the spurred rye. (Pharm. Journ., March and April, 1863, pp. 423 and 442.)—Note to the twelfth edition Part I. JErgota. The ergot usually projects out of the glume or husk beyond the ordinary out- line of the spike or ear. In some spikes the place of the seeds is wholly occu- pied by the ergot, in others only two or three spurs are observed. It is said to be much more energetic when collected before than after harvest. Rye has gen- erally been thought to be most subject to the disease in poor and wet soils, and in rainy seasons; and intense heat succeeding continued rains has been said to favour its development, especially if these circumstances occur at the time the flower is forming. It is now, however, asserted that moisture has little or no- thing to do with its production.* It should not be collected until some days after it has begun to form ; as, according to M. Bonjean, if gathered on the first day of its formation, it does not possess the poisonous properties which it ex- hibits when taken on the sixth day. (See Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1842.) Properties. Ergot is in solid, brittle yet somewhat flexible grains, from a third of an inch to an inch and a half long, from half a line to three lines'in thick- ness, cylindrical or obscurely triangular, tapering towards each end, obtuse at the extremities, usually curved like the spur of a cock, marked with one or two longitudinal furrows, often irregularly cracked or fissured, of a violet-hrown colour and often somewhat glaucous externally, yellowish-white or violet-white within, of an unpleasant smell when in mass, resembling that of putrid fish, and of a taste which is at first scarcely perceptible, but ultimately disagreeable and slightly acrid. Under the microscope, the surface appears more or less covered with spondia, which occasion its glaucous aspect; and the interior structure is found to be composed of minute roundish cells, containing, according to Quekett, particles of oil. Ergot yields its virtues to water and alcohol. The aqueous in- fusion or decoction is claret-coloured, and has an acid reaction. It is precipi- tated by acetate and subacetate of lead, nitrate of silver, and tincture of galls; but affords with iodine no evidence of the presence of starch. Long boiling im- pairs the virtues of the medicine. Ergot has been analyzed by Vauquelin, Winckler, Wiggers, Wright, Legrip, and several others. The analysis by M. Legrip is among the most recent and complete. That chemist obtained from 100 parts of ergot 3450 parts of a thick, fluid, fixed oil, of a fine yellow colour; 2T5 of starch; LOO of albumen; 225 of inulin; 2 50 of gum ; 1-25 of uncrystallizable sugar; 2 Y5 of a brown resin; 3-50 of fungin; 13‘50 of vegeto-animal matter; 0T5 of osmazome; 0'50 of a fatty acid; 24 50 of lignin ; 050 of colouring principles; an odorous principle not isolated; 2'25 of fungate of potassa; 0-50 of chloride of sodium; 0 50 of sulphate of lime and magnesia; L25 of subphosphate of lime; 0’25 of oxide of iron; 015 of silica; and 2-50 of water, with 2'35 loss. (Ann. de Therap., 1845, p. 44.) Wiggers obtained a substance which he denominated ergotin, under the impression that it was the active ingredient. It was reddish-brown, of a pecu- liar nauseous odour and bitter slightly acrid taste, soluble in alcohol, but insolu- ble in water or ether. It was obtained by digesting ergot in ether and afterwards in alcohol, evaporating the alcoholic solution, and treating the extract thus ob- tained with water, which left the ergotin undissolved. It was given with fatal effects to a hen. But, though the ergotin of Wiggers may exercise some influ- ence on the system, it is very obvious that it cannot be the active principle of ergot, which yields its virtues to water, and partially at least to ether. Dr. Wright supposed the virtues of ergot to reside in the fixed .oil, which he therefore recom- mended as a substitute for the medicine. The oil of_ ergot, when obtained from grains recently collected, is, according to Dr. Wright, often quite free from * Mr. J. Price Wetherill informed the author that, in two seasons, he had found rye, sown very late, so as scarcely to come up before spring, to be almost universally ergot- ized; while neighbouring rye, sown at the proper season, in the same kind of soil pre- cisely, had nothing of the disease, though the seed was the same in both cases.—Note to the sixth edition. 368 Ergota. part r. colour; but, as usually prepared, is reddish-brown. It has a disagreeable, some- what acrid taste, is lighter than water, and is soluble in alcolioT alkaline solutions. It is prepared by forming an ethereal tincture of ergot by the process of displacement, and evaporating the ether with a gentle heat. Experience has shown that, though the oil thus prepared with ether may have produced effects analogous to those of ergot, they were to be ascribed rather to some principle extracted along with the oil by the menstruum than to the oil itself; for, when procured by expression, this has been found to be inactive. Indeed, Prof. Proc- ter has ascertained that it contains a little.secalin, one at least of the active principles of ergot, which may be separated from it by washing with acidulated water. According to Mr. T. R. Baker, the oil has a taste and smell similar to those of castor oil, with which it also agrees in ultimate composition, and yields analogous results in saponification. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 101-2.) The sugar of ergot was found by Mitscherlich to be peculiar, and was named by him mvcose. He described it as crystallizable, very soluble in water, almost insoluble in cold but dissolved by about 100 parts of boiling alcohol, quite insoluble in ether, and without the action of glucose on the salts of copper. Its formula is C12HnOu-f 2HO. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxx. 346.) Dr. F. L. Winckler dis- covered a peculiar colouring matter in ergot, which he considered, if not iden- tical with hematin, as closely resembling it. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 86.) Secalia. Propylamia. By the same chemist a volatile alkaloid was detected in ergot, which he named secalin (secalia), and believed to exist in the drug in the form of erpotate of secalin, being combined with the ergotin of Wiggers, to which he ascribed acid properties, and therefore gave the name of era otic-acid. This alkaloid has been ascertained to be identical with vroyylamin (propylamia), the odorous principle of herring pickle. Winckler obtained it by distilling the watery extract of ergot with potassa. The following process, employed by Prof. Procter, yields it with facility. Ergot, having been exhausted by ether, is sub- mitted to percolation with water; the aqueous solution, after the addition of foui times its bulk of alcohol, which precipitates the gummy and albuminous matter, is filtered; the liquid is concentrated and mixed with milk of lime, and the mix- ture distilled into a receiver containing water acidulated with sulphuric acid. The secalia escapes freely, and is condensed in the receiver, forming a sulphate with the acid present. If to a little of this liquid a drop of solution of potassa is added, the odour of ergot is perceived; and the presence of a rod moistened •with muriatic acid produces visible vapours of muriate of secalia. (Proceed, of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1857.) It can scarcely be doubted that the virtues of ergot are connected in some degree with this alkaloid; and the conjecture of Winckler that the ergotate of secalia is the active principle of ergot, if wrong, is so probably only by its exclusiveness.* * EraoUna. Ecbolina. Experiments have recently been made on ergot by Mr. Wm. T. Wen- dell, of La Crosse, Wisconsin, which, if confirmed by future observation, will throw new and most valuable light upon the intricate subject of the composition of that drug. Mr. Wenzell claims to have discovered in it two new fijjyijdkaloids, which he proposes to name respectively eclmlina and ergotina. and in which, along with the volatile alkaloid nronv- lamia, the virtues of the medicine reside. Mr. Wenzell claims also'to have ascertained that ergotic acid, the peculiar acid of ergot, with which the alkaloids are probably combined, is volatile. The acid reaction, however, which is evinced by an infusion of ergot, is not, he thinks, owing to this acid, but to an acid phosphate of magnesia. Ecbolina was obtained by precipitating a cold infusion of ergot with acetate of lead, throwing down the lead with sulphuretted hydrogen, filtering and concentrating the liquid, adding gradually bichloride of mercury so long as a precipitate was produced, washing the precipitate, treating it with sulphuretted hydrogen, and filtering. The chloride (muriate) of ecbolina thus obtained was treated with an excess of phosphate of silver, the chloride of silver formed and the excess of the phosphate were removed by filtration the phosphoric acid was separated by hydrate of lime, the liquid was again filtered, lime was removed by a stream of carbonic acid, and the gas expelled by a gentle heat. The liquid now contained the pure alkaloid, which was obtained by evaporation at a low temperature. PART I. Erg eta. The odour of ergot is no doubt owing to the liberation of its volatile alkaloid, probably in consequence of a slow decomposition of the native salt. A method of detecting ergot in a mixed powder, rye flour for example, is thus afforded. If, on the addition of solution of potassa, the odour of ergot is perceived, its presence is sufficiently proved. Ergot, when perfectly dry and kept in well-stopped bottles, will retain its vir- tues for a considerable time; but, exposed to air and moisture, it speedily under- goes chemical change and deteriorates. It is, moreover, apt to be attacked by a minute worm, which consumes the interior of the grain, leaving merely the ex- terior shell and an excrementitious powder. This insect is sometimes found in 1he ergot before removal from the plant. In the state of powder, the medicine still more readily deteriorates. It is best, as a general rule, to renew it every year or two. M. Yiel recommends that it should be well dried at a gentle heat, and incorporated with double its weight of loaf sugar, by means of which, if pro- tected from moisture, it will retain its virtues for many years. According to M. Zanon, the same result is obtained by stratifying it with well washed and perfectly dried sand, in a bottle from which air and light are excluded. Camphor is said to prevent injury from worms. Medical Properties and Uses. Given in small doses, ergot produces, in the system of the male, no obvious effects; but, in the female, exhibits a strong ten- dency to the uterus, upon thiLCmitractile which it operates with great energy. In the quantity of half a draohm or a drachm it often occasions nausea or vomiting, and in still larger doses produces a sense of weight and pain in the head, giddiness, dilatation of the pupils, delirium,'and even stupor, proving that it possesses narcotic properties. It is said also to excite febrile symptoms; but our own observation coincides with that of authors who ascribe to it the power of Alie frequency of the pulse. We have seen this effect produced by it in a remarkable degree, even without nausea. A case is recorded in which it produced great prostration, with an almost absent pulse, paleness and coldness of the surface, partial palsy, with pricking of the limbs, and great restlessness, without stupor or delirium. {Gazette Med. de Paris, Juillet 25,1857.) Dr. Hardy, of the Dublin Lying-in Hospital, found it to diminish the pulsations of the foetal heart. and free ussis highly dangerous, even when no imme- diate effects are perceptible. Fatal epidemics in different parts of the continent of Europe, particularly in certain provinces of France, have long been ascribed Ergotina was obtained by filtering the liquid which remained after precipitation with bicKToriae of mercury, treating it with phospho-molybdic acid, washing the precipitate ob- tained, suspending it in water with an excess of carbonate of baryta, and digesting until the yellowish colour of the mixture was exchanged for a pure white, with the evolution of carbonic acid. Nothing now remained but to filter and carefully evaporate the solution, which yielded the ergotina. The alkaloids thus obtained are brownish, apparently uncrystallizable, slightly bitter, alkaline in their reaction on litmus and turmeric, soluble in alcohol and water, and inso- luble in pure ether and chloroform. They form salts with the acids, which are uncrystal- lizable and generally deliquescent. Ignited, they are entirely consumed, leaving no residue. As they yield ammonia when heated with lime, they contain nitrogen. With ecbolina in solution bichloride of platinum produces a deep orange-coloured, and cyanide of potassium a jvhite precipitate, while a solution of ergotina is affected by neither of these reagents. As to their operation upon the system, ecbolina in the dose of half a grain, supposed to be equivalent to 30 grains of ergot, produced decided effects on the brain and spinal mar- row, with involuntary contractions of the muscles, followed by nausea and general depres- sion, with little change in the pulse, and is believed by Mr. Wenzell to be the ingredient which causes uterine contraction in women. Ergotina was found less active, but produced some cerebral disturbance with reduction of the pulse. Ergotic acid was obtained by distilling ergot with sulphuric acid. It is supposed by Mr. Wenzell to be Combined naturally with ecbolina, ergotina, and potassa; while the propy- eamia exists in ergot as a phosphate. [Am. Journ. ofPharm., May, 1864, p. 193.) 370 Ergota. PART I. to the use f, f bread made from rye contaminated with this degenerate grain. Dry _gangrenej_tyrphus fever, and disorder of the nervous system attended with convulsions, are the forms of disease which have followed the use of this unwhole- some food. It is true that ergot has been denied to be the cause; but accurate investigations, made by competent men upon the spot where the epidemics have prevailed, together with the result of experiments made upon inferior animals, leave no room for reasonable doubt that at least the gangrenous affection alluded to may result from it. Very large quantities are required for immediate poisonous effects. From two to eight drachms have been given at one dose to a man without very serious results; and three ounces, according to Dr. Wright, were required to kill a small dog. Death from single doses, in inferior animals, is preceded by symptoms indicating irritation of the stomach and bowels, great muscular pros- tration, loss of sensation, and sometimes slight spasms. A case of acute poison- ing from ergot is recorded by Dr. Pratschke, in which uneasiness in the head, oppression of stomach, diarrhoea, urgent thirst, burning pains in the feet, tetanic spasms, violent convulsions, and death ensued upon eating freely of ergotized grain. (Lond. Med. Gaz., Oct. 1850, p. 579.) Ergot has been much used for promoting the contraction of the uterus. On the continent of Europe, in Germany, France, and Italy, it has long been empi- rically employed by mid wives for this purpose; and its German name of mutter - korn implies a popular acquaintance with its peculiar powers. But the attention of the medical profession was first called to it by a letter from Dr. Stearns, of Saratoga County, N. Y., addressed to Dr. Ackerly, in 1807, and published in the eleventh volume of the New York Medical Repository. The journals afterwards teemed with communications attesting its efficacy in facilitating parturition ; and, though it sometimes failed, the general opinion wTas so decidedly in its favour, that it soon took a place among the established articles of the materia medica. When it proves wholly inefficient, the result is ascribable to peculiarity of con- stitution in the individual, or inferiority in the ergot used. In its operation upon the pregnant uterus, it produces a constant unremitting contraction and rigidity, rather than that alternation of spasmodic effort and relaxation wdiich is observable in the natural process of labour. Hence, unless the osjuteri and external parts are sufficiently relaxed, the medicine is apt to produce injury to the foetus by the incessant pressure wdiich it maintains; and the death of the child is thought not unfrequently to have resulted from its injudicious employment. The cases to wdiich it is thought to be especially adapted are those of lingering labour, when the os uteri is sufficiently dilated, and the external parts sufficiently relaxed, when no mechanical impediment is offered to the passage of the child, and the delay is ascribable solely to wrant of energy in the uterus. Other cases are those in wdiich the death of the foetus has been ascertained, and when great exhaustion or dangerous constitutional irritation imperiously calls for speedy delivery. The medicine may also be given to promote the expulsion of the placenta, to restrain inordinate hemorrhage after delivery, and to hasten the discharge of the foetus in protracted cases of abortion. In women subject to dangerous flooding, a dose of ergot given immediately before delivery is said to have the happiest effects. It has also been recommended for the expulsion of coagula oJtLhlpod, polypi, and hydatids from the uterine cavity. It has been accused of'producing puerperal convulsions, hour-glass contraction of the uterus, and hydrocephalus in the new- born infant. In uterine hemorrhage, unconnected with pregnancy, the medicine is deemed very useful; and its employment has been extended to other hemor- rhages with asserted advantage. We have seen it promptly effectualTnqjulmonary hemorrhage, after all the usual means had failed. May it not have the power of producing contraction of the capillaries in general, or of interfering in some other way with the circulation of the blood in these vessels, as by the exertion of a direct sedative or paralyzing influence upon them ? We might in this way part I. Ergota.—Erigeron. 371 account for the dry gangrene which results from its abuse, as well as for its influ ence in restraining hemorrhage. It has also been employed in amenorrhcea, bui not with encouraging success. Gonorrhoea, gleet, leucorrhoea, dysmenorrhoea, chronic dysentery and diarrhoea, inordinate thirst, excessive sensitiveness of the eyes with pain upon use, paraplegia, paralysis or debility of the bladder and of the rectum, spermatorrhoea, hooping-cough, hysteria, intermittent fever, and pul- monary consumption are among the complaints in which it has been recommended Ergot is usually given in substance, infusion, or decoction. The dose of the powder to a woman in labour is fifteen or twenty grains, to be repeated every twenty minutes till its peculiar effects are experienced, or till the amount of a drachm has been taken. Of an infusion made with a drachm of ergot and four fluidounces of water, one-third may be given for a dose, and repeated with the same interval. For other purposes the dose of the medicine is ten or fifteen grains, repeated three times a day, and gradually increased, but not continued for a great length of time. In urgent cases of hemorrhage, the dose may be re- peated every two hours, or oftener if necessary. A wine and fluid extract of ergot are directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Vinum Eryotse and Ex- tractum Ergotee Fluidum.) The oil of ergot, prepared by means of ether, as already described (page 368), was given by Dr. Wright in the dose of from twenty to fifty drops, diffused in cold water, warm tea, or weak spirit and water. TJnder the name of egrgotirij Bonjean’s purified extract is sometimes used in the dose of from five to ten grains. It is made by exhausting ergot with water, evaporating to the consistence of syrup, precipitating the albumen, gum, &c., by a large excess of alcohol, decanting the clear liquid, and evaporating to the consistence of a soft extract. Ergot has been employed externally. Dr. Muller found it to check the bleed- ing from divided arteries; and Dr. Wright states that in powder or infusion it acts promptly in arresting hemorrhage. It is recommended by the latter as an injection in uterine hemorrhage. It should be used, however, with caution, as the powder applied to abraded surfaces has produced sloughing in the lower animals. Ergot should be powdered only when wanted for use. Off. Prep. Extractum Ergot® Fluidum, U. S.; Extractum Ergot® Liquidum, Br.; Infusum Ergot®, Br.; Tinctura Ergot®, Br.; Yinum Ergot®, U. S. ERIGERON. US. Fleabane. The herb of Eriggron heterophyllum and of Erigeron Philadelphicum. U. S. Erigeron. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua.—Nat. Ord. Composite-Asteroi- de®. De Gaud. Asterace®. Lindley. Gen. Ch. Calyx imbricated, sub-hemispherical, in fruit often reflected. Flo- rets of the ray linear, very narrow, numerous. Receptacle naked. Pappus double, exterior minute, interior pilose, of few rays. Nuttall. 1. Erigeron heterophyllum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1956; Barton, Am. Med. Pot. i. 231. — E.gnnuum. Persoon, Synop. ii. 431; Torrey and Gray, Flor. of N. Am. ii. 175. This is a biennial herbaceous plant, belonging both to North America and Europe. It has a branching root, with several erect, roundish, striated, pubescent stems, much divided near the top, and rising two or three feet in height. The lower leaves are ovate, acute, deeply toothed, and supported on long winged footstalks; the upper are lanceolate, acute, deeply serrate in the middle, and sessile; the floral leaves are lanceolate and entire; all, except those from the root, are ciliate at the base. The flowers are in terminal corymbs. The florets of the disk are yellow; those of the ray numerous, very slender, and of a white, pale-blue, or pale-purple colour. The flowering period is from June to October 372 Erigeron.—Erigeron Canadense. part r. 2. Erigeron Philadelphicum. Barton, Med. Pot. i. 227.—E. strigosum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1956; Torrey and Gray, Flor. of N. Am. ii. 176. The Phila- delphia fleabane is perennial and herbaceous, with a branching yellowish root, and from one to five erect stems, which rise two or three feet in height, and are much branched at top. The whole plant is pubescent. The lower leaves are ovate- lanceolate, nearly obtuse, ciliate on the margin, entire or marked with a few serratures, and supported on very long footstalks; the upper are narrow, ob- long, somewhat wedge-shaped, obtuse, entire, sessile, and slightly embrace the stem ; the floral leaves are small and lanceolate. The flowers are numerous, radiate, and disposed in a panicled corymb, with long peduncles bearing from one to three flowers. They resemble those of the preceding species in colour, and make their appearance about the same period. We include these two species under one head because they grow together, possess identical medical properties, and are indiscriminately employed. They are found in various parts of the United States, and abound in the fields about Philadelphia, where they are known and used under the common though inaccu- rate name of scabious. The whole herb is used, and should be collected while the plants are in flower. It has a feebly aromatic odour, and bitterish taste, and imparts its properties to boiling water. Mr. F. L. John, of Philadelphia, ob- tained from E. Philadelphicum a volatile oil by distillation, but in exceedingly small proportion; 45 pounds of the herb having yielded only half a drachm of the oil. As described by Prof. Procter, this is of a greenish-yellow colour, a powerful, penetrating, aromatic odour, and a bitterish, pungent, disagreeable taste. It is more viscid than the oil of E. Canadense, has a higher sp. gr. (0 946), and contains more oxygen. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 105.) Medical Properties and Uses. Fleabane is diuretic, without being offensive to the stomach. It has been a favourite remedy, with some highly respectable practitioners of Philadelphia, in gravel and other nephritic diseases, and has been used advantageously in dropsy. By the late Prof. Wistar it was recommended in hydrothorax complicated with gout. It cannot be relied on for the cure of dropsy; but may be employed as an adjuvant to more efficient medicines. It is most conveniently administered in infusion or decoction, of which a pint, con- taining the virtues of an ounce of the herb, may be given in twenty-four hours. In a communication by Dr. Wilson, of Philadelphia, to the College of Physi- cians, Nov. 1, 1854, it is stated that the oil of Philadelphia fleabane had been employed with great advantage by Dr. Bournonville and himself in uterine hemorrhage, in the dose of five drops every two hours. (Transact, of Col. of Phys., N. S. ii. 330.) There can be little doubt, from the account of the oil at the same time given, that it was the oil of E. Ganadense, and not that of E. Philadelphicum, which was really used. W. ERIGERON CANADENSE. U.S. Canada Fleabane. The herb of Erigeron Canadense. U. S. Erigeron. See ERIGEROX. Erigeron Canadense. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1954. This is an indigenous an- nual plant, with a stem from two to six feet high, covered with stiff hairs, and divided into many branches. The leaves are linear-lanceolate, and edged with hairs ; those at the root are dentate. The flowers are very small, numerou*, white, and arranged in terminal panicles. They differ from those of the other species of Erigeron in having an oblong calyx, the rays very minute and more numerous than the florets of the disk, and the seed-down simple. Hence by some botanists the plant is placed in a sub-genus with the title Gxnotus An- PART I. Erigeron Canadense.—Euonymus. 373 other variety of E. Canadense, which Mr. Nuttall makes a distinct species, with the title E. pusilum, is not more than from four to six inches high, and haa an erect smooth stem, less~branched than the preceding, with all its leaves entire and scabrous on the margin. The panicle is simple, and the peduncles filiform., neaidy naked, divaricate, each bearing two or three flowers. Canada fleabane is very common throughout the northern and middle sections of the United States, and has become naturalized in many parts of Europe. It abounds in neglected fields, and blooms in July and August. The plant, all parts of which are medicinal, should be collected while in flower. The leaves and flowers are said to possess its peculiar virtues in greatest perfection. This species of Erigeron has an agreeable odour, and a bitterish, acrid, some- what astringent taste. Among its constituents, according to Dr. De Puy, are bitter extractive, tannin, gallic acid, and volatile oil. Both alcohol and water extract its virtues. Its acrimony is diminished by decoction, in consequence, probably, of the escape of the oil, upon which its virtues in part depend. The oil is included among the Preparations in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and will be described in Part II. of this work. (See Oleum Erigerontis Canadensis.) Medical Properties and Uses. From the observations of Dr. De Puy, Canada fleabane appears to be diuretic, tonic, and astringent; and has proved useful in dropsical complaints and diarrhoea. It may be given in substance, infusion, tinc- ture, or extract. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm; of an infusion, prepared with an ounce of the plant and a pint of boiling water, from two to four fluidounces; of the aqueous extract, from five to ten grains. The dose should be repeated every two or three hours. The oil has been em- ployed for arresting hemorrhage, in the dose of five drops every two hours. Off. Prep. Oleum Erigerontis Canadensis, U. S. W. EUONYMUS. U.S Secondary. Walioo. The bark of Euqnjmus atropurpureus. U. S. Euonymus. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Celastracese. Lindley. Gen. Gh. Calyx four or five-parted, fiat. Corolla four or five-petaled, infe- rior, flat. Capsule three to five-valved, three to five-celled, coloured, each cell containing one or two seeds, surrounded by a red arillus. The plants belonging to this genus are shrubs or small trees, presenting in the autumn a striking appearance from the rich red colour of their fruit, which has obtained for them the name of burning bush. E. Americanus and E.Europseus have been cultivated in gardens as ornamental plants. Two or more of the species have been used in medicine. Their properties are probably similar, if not identical. Grundner, who experimented with the fruit of E. Europaeus, found it to have no other effect than that of a diuretic. (Pliarm. Cent. Blalt, A. D. 1847, p. 873.) An oil expressed from the seeds is used in Europe for the de- struction of vermin in the hair, and sometimes also as an application to old sores. {Ibid., A. D. 1851, p. 641.) Dr. Griffith says that the seeds of this and other species are purgative and emetic, and that the leaves are poisonous to sheep and other animals feeding on them. He states also that the inner bark of E. tin (urns is beautifully yellow, and used in India for dyeing, and in diseases of the eye. {Med. Bot., p. 220.) About twenty years since a bark was introduced into notice in this city, as a remedy for dropsy, under the name of Walioo, by Mr. Geo. W. Carpenter, who had obtained a knowledge of its virtues in the Western States. On a journey in the North West in the year 1845, the author made some inquiries into the source of this medicine, and, having had the op- 374 Euonymus. PART I. portunity of examining the plant producing it, found it to he E. atropurpureus ; and this is recognised in the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. TFe name of wahoo (pronounced wawhoo) was given to it by the Indians. The same name has also been applied to Ulmus alata, of the Southern States, and has thus led to mistakes. It is probable that the product of E.Americanus has been indiscriminately used with that of the officinal-species. Euonymus atropurpureus. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1132; Gray’s Manual, p. 81; figured in Griffith’s Med. Bot. p. 219. This plant has been named variously wahoo, spindletree, and burning bush. It is a tall, erect shrub, with quadran- gular branchlets, and opposite, petiolate, oval-oblong, pointed, serrate leaves. The flowers, which stand in loose cymes on axillary peduncles, are small and dark-purple, with sepals and petals commonly in fours. The capsule or pod is smooth and deeply lobed. The plant is indigenous, growing throughout the Northern and Western States, and sometimes cultivated for the beauty of its crimson fruit. The bark is the part used. Properties. The dried bark is in thin pieces, whitish with a darker grayish epidermis, brittle, of a feeble, peculiar, not disagreeable odour, and a bitterish slightly sweetish taste, and somewhat pungent after-taste. It imparts its virtues to water and alcohol. Analyzed by Mr. Wm. T. Wenzell, it was found to contain a bitter principle which he named euonymin, asparagin, a soft resin, a crystalli- zable resin, a yellow resin, a brown resin, fixed oil, wax, starch, albumen, glu- cose, pectin, and various salts of organic and inorganic acids. Euonymin was obtained by agitating with chloroform a tincture made with diluted alcohol, sepa- rating the chloroformic solution and allowing it to evaporate spontaneously, treating the residue with ether, dissolving what was left in alcohol, adding acetate of lead to the solution, filtering, precipitating the lead with hydrosulphuric acid, and evaporating. The euonymin obtained was uncrystallizable, intensely bitter, soluble in water and alcohol, and neuter in its reactions. It was abundantly pre- cipitated from its solution by subacetate of lead and phospho-molybdic acid. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 387.) Mr. W. P. Clothier found the bark to yield no volatile oil on distillation. According to the same writer, if a concentrated tincture is poured into water, a dark-yellow bitter substance is thrown down, containing resin and fixed oil, which is the euonymine of the Eclec- tics, very improperly so named, as, though it contains a poi’tion of the active principle, it is a very complex substance. Mr. Clothier found it to purge actively without griping. (Ibid., Nov. 1861, p. 491.) Kubel has discovered in the fresh inner bark of E. Europseus a saccharine, crystallizable substance, closely resem- bling in its crystalline form, and melting point. He calls it euonumite. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1862, p. 523.) Medical Properties and Uses. The precise virtues of wahoo have not been determined. Mr. C. A. Santos, in a dissertation upon the American species, published in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xx. 80), speaks of the bark as tonic, hydragogne cathartic, diuretic, and antiperiodic. Dr. Twyman, of Westport, Missouri, informed the author that he had found it as a cathartic rather to resemble rhubarb, than to possess hydragogue properties, and thought he had obtained useful effects from it as an alterative to the hepatic function. Similar information was obtained from other sources. On the whole, the char- acter of its action must be considered as somewhat uncertain; and it might well form a subject of further examination. As a diuretic in dropsy it may be used in the form of decoction or iufusion, made in the proportion of an ounce to a pint of water, and given in the dose of a wineglassful several times a day. A fluid extract, prepared with diluted alcohol, would no doubt be an eiflc'ert, ai d would probably be found a convenient preparation. W PART I. Eupatorium. 375 EUPATORIUM. U.S. Tliorongliwort. The tops and leaves of Eupatorium perfoliatum, gathered after dowering has sommenced. U. S. Eupatorium. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia iEqualis.—Nat.Ord. Compositie-Eupa- toriacete. De Cand. Asteracese. Lindley. Gen. Ch. Calyx simple or imbricate, oblong. Style long and semi-bifid. Receptacle naked. Pappus pilose, or more commonly scabrous. Seed smooth and glandular, quinquestriate. Nuttall. Of this numerous genus, comprising not less than thirty species within the limits of the United States, most of which probably possess analogous medical properties, E.perfoliatum alone now holds a place in our national Pharmaco- poeia. E purnureum and E. teucrifolium were originally in the Secondary List, but were discarded at the revision of 1840. They merit, however, a brief notice, if only from their former officinal rank. Eupatorium purpurewnv or gravel root, is a perennial herbaceous plant, with a purple stem, five or six feet in height, and furnished with ovate-lanceo- late, serrate, rugosely veined, slightly scabrous, petiolate leaves, placed four or five together in the form of whorls. The flowers are purple, and consist of nume- rous florets contained in an eight-leaved calyx. It grows in swamps and other low grounds, from Canada to Virginia, and flowers in August and September. The root has, according to Dr. Bigelow, a bitter, aromatic, and astringent taste, and is said to operate as a diuretic. Its vulgar name of gravel root indi- cates the popular estimation of its virtues. Eupatorium teucrifolium (Willd. Sp. Plant, in. 1753), E. pilosum (Walt. Flor. Car. 199), E. verbensefolium (Mich. Flor. Am. ii. 98), commonly called wild horehound, is also anTndigenous perennial, with an herbaceous stem, which is about two feet high, and supports sessile, distinct, ovate, acute, scabrous leaves, of which the lower are coarsely serrate at the base, the uppermost entire. The flowers are small, white, composed of five florets within each calyx, and arranged in the form of a corymb. The plant grows in low wet places from New England to Georgia, and abounds in the Southern States. It is in flower from August to November. The whole herb is employed. In sensible properties it cor- responds with E. perfoliatum, though less bitter and disagreeable. It is said to be tonic, diaphoretic, diuretic, and aperient; and has been employed as a domestic remedy in intermittent and remittent fevers. Dr. Jones, formerly president of the Georgia Medical Society, first made its properties known to the profession. It is usually given in the form of infusion, made with an ounce to a quart of water, the whole to be taken during the day. E. Cannabinum. of Europe, the root of which was formerly used as a pur- gative, and E. Aya-pana, of Brazil, the leaves of which at one time enjoyed a very high reputation, have fallen into entire neglect. The aya-jyana is an aro- matic bitter, like E. perfoliatum, but weaker. Eupatorium perfoliatum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1761; Bigelow, Am. Med. Pol i. 33; Bartorq Med~Bot. ii. 125. Thoroughwort, or boneset, is an indige- nous perennial plant, with numerous herbaceous stems, which are erect, round, hairy, from two to five feet high, simple below, and trichotomously branched near the summit. The leaves serve to distinguish the species at the first glance, fhey may be considered either as perforated by the stem, perfoliate, or as con- sisting each of two leaves, joined at the. base, connate. In the latter point of view, they are opposite and in pairs, which decussate each other at regular dis- tances upon the stem; in other words, the direction of each pair is at right angles with tnat of the pair immediately above or beneath it. They are narrow Eupatorium.—Euphorbia Corollata. part I. in proportion to their length, broadest at the base where they coalesce, gradu- ally tapering to a point, serrate, much wrinkled, paler on the under than the upper surface, and beset with wdiitish hairs, which give them a grayish-green colour. The uppermost pairs are sessile, not joined at the base. The flowers are white, numerous, supported on hairy peduncles, in dense corymbs, forming a flattened summit. The calyx, which is cylindrical and composed of imbricated, lanceolate, hairy scales, encloses from twelve to fifteen tubular florets, having their border divided into five spreading segments. The anthers are five, black, and united into a tube, through which the bifid filiform style projects. This species of Eupatorium inhabits meadows, the banks of streams, and other moist places, growing generally in bunches, and abounding in almost all parts of the United States. It flowers from the middle of summer to the end of Octo- ber. All parts of it are active; but the herb only is olficinal. It has a faint odour, and a strongly bitter, somewhat peculiar taste. The virtues of the plant are readily imparted to water and alcohol. Mr. W. Peterson found it to contain a peculiar bitter principle, chlorophyll, resin, a crystalline matter of undetermined character, gum, tannin, yellow colouring matter, ex- tractive, lignin, and salts. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxn\. 210.) Mr. Bickley found also albumen, gallic acid, and signs of volatile oil. (Ibid., xxvi. 495.) Eupatorin will be the proper name to apply to the bitter principle, when isolated and satisfactorily determined; but is wholly inapplicable to any complex substance, consisting of different proximate principles, however concentrated, and whether possessing or not the virtues of the leaves. Medical Properties and Uses. Thorough wort is tonic, diaphoretic, and in large doses emetic and aperient. It is said to have been employed by the In- dians in intermittent fever, and has proved successful in the hands of several regular practitioners. The general experience, however, is not in its favour in that complaint. We have seen it arrest intermittents when given freely in warm decoction, immediately before the expected recurrence of the paroxysm; but it operated in this instance by its emetic rather than its tonic power. The medi- cine has also been used as a tonic and diaphoretic in remittent and typhoid fevers, and is said to have been productive of advantage in yellow fever. Given in warm infusion, so as to produce vomiting or copious perspiration, at the com- mencement of catarrh, it will frequently arrest that complaint; and has been especially recommended in influenza. It has also been recommended as a diapho- retic in acute rheumatism; and may prove serviceable in the absence of high arterial excitement. As a tonic it is given with advantage in dyspepsia, general debility, and other cases in which the simple bitters are employed. With a view to its tonic effects, it is best administered in substance, or cold infusion. The dose of the powder is twenty or thirty grains, that of the infusion a fluidounce, frequently repeated. (See lnfusum Eupatorii.) The aqueous ex- tract has been used with advantage. When the diaphoretic operation is required iu addition to the tonic, the infusion should be administered warm, and the pa- tient remain covered in bed. As an emetic and cathartic, a strong decoction, prepared by boiling au ounce with three half pints of water to a pint, may bo given in doses of one or two gills, or more. Off. Prep. lnfusum Eupatorii, U. S. W. EUPHORBIA COROLLATA. U. S. Secondary. Large-flowering Spurge. The foot or Euphorbia corollata. U. S. Euniorbia. SeafSyst. Podecandria Trigynia, Linn.; Monoecia Monadelphia, Michai.x. — Nat. Ord. Euphorbiacese. /AftT I. Euphorbia Corollata. Gen. Ch. Involucrum caliciform, eight to teiTtoothed, exterior alternate den tures glanduloid or petaloid. Stamina indefinite, twelve or more, rarely less; filaments articulated. Receptacle squamose. Female flower solitary, stipitate, naked. Capsule three-grained. Nuttall. In the flower of the Euphorbiae, the stamina are arranged two or more to- gether, in distil ct parcels, corresponding in number with the inner segments oi the calyx. The.-e parcels were considered by Michaux as distinct male florets; while the central stipitate germ, with its three bifid styles, was considered as a distinct female floret, and the calyx as an involucre. He accordingly placed the genus in the class and order Moncecia Munadelphia, and in this respect has been followed by most American botanists. The genus Euphorbia contains nu- merous species, having the common property of yielding a milky juice. They are herbaceous or shrubby, with or without leaves; and the leafless species, which are chiefly confined to the African deserts, have fleshy, naked, or spiny stems, like those of the Cactus. They nearly all afford products which act powerfully as emetics and cathartics, and in overdoses occasion dangerous if not fatal pros- tration, with symptoms of inflamed gastro-intestinal mucous membrane. Their milky juice, which concretes on exposure, usually possesses these properties in a high degree, and, in addition, that of powerfully irritating the skin when applied to it. Two species are acknowledged in our national Pharmacopoeia, E. corol- lata and E. Ipecacuanha, which are both indigenous. E. hypericj folia. which is also indigenous, has been highly commended as a remedy in dysentery after due depletion, diarrhoea, menorrhagia, and leucorrhoea by Dr. W. Zollickoffer. He infuses half an ounce of the dried leaves in a pint of boiling water, and gives half a fluidounce every hour in dysentery till the symptoms begin to yield, the same quantity after every evacuation in diarrhoea, and two fluidounces, morning, noon, and night, in menorrhagia and fluor albus. The herb is at first sweetish, afterwards harsh and astringent to the taste, and appears to contain tannin. Its effects upon the system are those of an astringent and feeble narcotic. It dif- fers, therefore, considerably, both in sensible and medicinal properties, from most of the other species. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xi. 22.) In a subsequent commu- nication, it is stated that E. macufata^possesses similar properties. {Ibid., N. S., iii 125.) Dr. 13. J. I). Irwin, of the U. S. Army, having heard much, while in New Mexico and Arizona, of the efficacy, among the native Mexicans, of a cer- tain plant called by them gollindrinera, as an antidote to the poison of serpents, was induced to make trials of it, which convinced him that its reputation was not unmerited. A specimen of the plant having been sent to Prof. Torrey, it was pro- nounced by him to be Euphorbia prostrata, which is abundant in the South- western parts of the IT. States and Mexico. Dr. Irwin thinks that the virtues reside in the milky juice of the plant, but the liquid obtained by bruising the herb is commonly used. Like other Euphorbiae, it is emetic and cathartic in large quantities, but he has heard of no injurious effects from its use. {Ibid., Jan. 1861, p. 89.) Euphorbia corollata. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 916; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 119. The blooming or large-flowering spurge, frequently called milk-weed, is an erect plant, with a large, perennial, branching, yellowish root, which sends up several stems from two to five feet in height, round and generally simple. The leaves, which stand irregularly upon the stem, and without footstalks, are oblong- obovate, wedge-form or linear, flat or revolute at the margin, smooth in some plants, and hairy in others. The flowers are disposed upon a large terminal umbel, with a five-leaved involucrum, and five trifid and dichotomous rays, at each fork of which are two oblong bractes. The calyx is large, rotate, white, with five obtuse segments closely resembling a corolla, from which the species has been named. At the base of these divisions are five interior smaller segments, which are described as nectaries by many systematic writers, while the larger are con- 378 Euphorbia Corollata.—Euphorbia Ipecacuanha. part I. sidered as belonging to a real corolla. The stamens are twelve, evolving gra- dually, with double anthers. Many flowers have only stamens. The pistil, when existing, is stipitate, nodding, rounded, with three bifid styles. The fruit is a smooth, three-celled, three-seeded capsule. The plant grows in various parts of the United States, from Canada to Florida, and abounds in Western Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. It prefers a dry, barren, and sandy soil, seldom growing in woods or on the borders of streams. Its flowers appear in July and August. The root is the only part used. This, when full grown, is sometimes an inch in thickness, and two feet in length. It is without unpleasant taste, producing only a sense of heat a short time after it has been taken. The medical virtues are said to reside in the cortical portion, which is thick, and constitutes two-thirds of the whole root. They are taken up by water and alcohol, and remain in the extract formed by the evaporation of the decoction or tincture. Medical Properties and Uses. In a full dose, the root of E. corollata ope- rates actively and with sufficient certainty as an emetic, producing ordinarily several discharges from the stomach, and sometimes acting with considerable energy upon the bowels. In quantities insufficient to vomit, it excites nausea, almost always followed by brisk purging. In still smaller doses it is diaphoretic and expectorant. It cannot, however, like ipecacuanha, be given largely in cases of insensibility of stomach, without endangering hypercatharsis with inflamma- tion of the mucous coat of the stomach and bowels. It is in fact greatly inferior to this emetic in mildness, while it is no less inferior to the tartarized antimony in certainty. It is objectionable as a purge, in consequence of the nausea which it occasions when given in cathartic doses. Dr. Zollickoffer was the first to in- troduce it to the particular notice of the medical profession. It is little pre- scribed, and seldom kept in the shops. The dose of the dried root as an emetie is from ten to twenty grains, as a cathartic from three to ten grains. The recent root, bruised and applied to the skin, produces vesication. W. EUPHORBIA IPECACUANHA. U. S. Secondary. Ipecacuanha Spurge. The root of Euphorbia Ipecacuanha. U. S. Euphorbia. See EUPHORBIA COROLLATA. Euphorbia Ipecacuanha. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 900; Barton, Med. Pot. i. 211; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 108. Ipecacuanha spurge, or American ipecacu- anha, is a singular plant, varying so much in the shape and colour of Tts leaves, and in its whole aspect, that mere individual peculiarities might without care be attributed to a specific difference. The root is perennial, yellowish, irregular, and very large, penetrating sometimes to the depth of six or seven feet in the sand, and in its thickest part, when full grown, from three-quarters of an inch to an inch and a half in diameter. The stems are numerous, herbaceous, erect or procumbent, smooth, dichotomous, jointed at the forks, white under the ground, red, pale-green, or yellow above, sometimes almost buried in the sand, usually forming thick low bunches upon its surface. The leaves are opposite, sessile, entire, smooth, generally oval, but sometimes round, obovate, or even lanceolate or linear. They are small early in the spring, and increase in size with the ago of the plant. Their colour varies from green to crimson. The flowers are soli- tary, on long axillary peduncles. The calyx is spreading, with five exterior obtuse segments, and the same number of inner, smaller segments. The fertile flowers have a roundish, drooping, pedicelled germ, crowned with six revolute stigmas The capsule is three-celled, and contains three seeds. E. Ipecacuanha is indigenous, growing in pine-barrens and other sandy PART I. Euphorbia Ipecacuanha.—Extractum Cannabis. 379 places in the Middle and Southern States, especially along the sea-board, and abundantly in New Jersey, on the banks of the Delaware. It blooms from May to August. The root, which is the officinal portion, is, according to Dr. Barton, equally efficacious at whatever period collected. The dry root is light and brittle, of a grayish colour externally, white within, inodorous, and of a sweetish not unpleasant taste. Its active principle has not been isolated. Dr. Bigelow inferred from his experiments that it contained caout- chouc, resin, gum, and probably starch. Medical Properties and Uses. Ipecacuanha spurge is an active, tolerably cer- tain emetic, rather milder than E. corollata, but, like it, disposed to affect the bowels, and liable, if given in overdoses, to produce excessive nausea and vomit- ing, general prostration, and alarming hypercatharsis. It is, therefore, unfit to supersede ipecacuanha. In small doses it is diaphoretic. The specific name of the plant indicates that the emetic property of the root has been long known. The late Professor Barton alluded to it in his “ Collections;” but it did not come into general notice till after the publication of Dr. W. P. C. Barton’s Medical Botany. The late Dr. Hewson, of Philadelphia, informed us that this emetic was the subject of an inaugural essay by Dr. Royal, and that experiments, conducted with it among the convicts in the Walnut Street prison, proved it to be advan- tageously available for all the purposes of an emetic; while, in consequence of its want of nauseous taste, it seemed to answer even better than ipecacuanha as an expectorant and diaphoretic. The dose of the powdered root is from ten to fifteen grains. W. EXTRACTUM CANNABIS. US. Extract of Hemp. An alcoholic extract of the dried tops of Cannabis sativa. var. Indica. U. S. Off Syn. EXTRACTUM CANNABIS INDICT. Br. Cannabis. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Pentandria.— Nat. Ord. Cannabinaceae. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx five-parted. Stamens five. Female. Calyx one- leaved, rolled up. Styles two. Lindley. Cannabis sativa. Linn. Sp. Plant. 1451; Griffith, Med. Bot. p. 572. Hemp is an annual plant, from four to eight feet or more in height, with an erect, branching, angular stem. The leaves are alternate or opposite, on long, lax footstalks, roughish, and digitate with linear-lanceolate, serrated segments. The stipules are subulate. The flowers are axillary; the male in long, branched, drooping racemes; the female in erect simple spikes. The stamens are five, with long pendulous anthers; the pistils two, with long, filiform, glandular stigmas. The fruit is ovate and one-seeded. The whole plant is covered with a fine pu- bescence, scarcely visible to the naked eye, and is somewhat viscid to the touch. The hemp plant of India, from which the drug is derived, has been considered by some as a distinct species, and named Cannabis Indica; but the most ob- servant botanists, upon comparing it with our cultivated plant, have been unable to discover any specific difference. It is now, therefore, regarded merely as a variety, and is distinguished by the epithet Indica. Dr. Pereira states that, in the female plant, the flowers are somewhat more crowded than in the common hemp; but that the male plants in the two varieties are in all respects the same. It is unfortunate that the name of Indian hemp has been attached to the medi- cinal product; as, in the United States, the same name has long been appropriated to Apocynum cannabinum; and some confusion has hence arisen. C. sativa is a native of the Caucasus, Persia, and the hilly regions in the north of India. It is cultivated in many parts of Europe and Asia, and largely in our Western States. It is from the Indian variety exclusively that the medicine is 380 Extractum Cannabh. PART I. obtained; the heat of the climate in Ilindostan apparently favouring the de- velopment of its active principle.* The seeds, though not now officinal, have been used in medicine. They are about the eighth of an inch long, roundish-ovate, somewhat compressed, of a shining ash-gray colour, inodorous, and of a disagreeable, oily, sweetish taste. They yield by expression a fixed oil, which has the drying property, and is used in the arts. They contain also uncrystallizable sugar and albumen, and when rubbed with water form an emulsion, which may be used advantageously in inflammations of the mucous membranes, though without narcotic properties. They are much used as food for birds, which are fond of them. They are gene- rally believed to be in no degree poisonous; but M. Michaud relates the case of a child, in which serious symptoms of narcotic poisoning occurred after taking a certain quantity of them. It is probable that some of the fruit eaten by the child was unripe; as, in this state, it would be more likely to partake of the peculiar qualities of the plant itself. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1860, p. 159.) In Ilindostan, Persia, and other parts of the East, hemp has long been habitu- ally employed as an intoxicating agent. The parts used are the tops of the plant, and a resinous product obtained from it The plant is cut after flowering, and formed into bundles from two to four feet long by three inches in diameter, which are sold in the bazaars under the name of gunjah. The hashish of the Arabs is essentially the same. The name bang is given to a mixture"oFthe larger leaves and capsules without the stems. There is on the surface of the plant a resinous exudation to which it owes its clammy feel. Men clothed in leather run through the hemp fields, brushing forcibly against the plants, and thus separating the resin, which is subsequently scraped from their dress, and formed into balls. These are called churrus. In these different states of preparation, the hemp is smoked like tobacco, with which it is said to be frequently mixed. An infusion or decoction of the plant is also sometimes used as an exhilarating drink. The medicinal resin or extract of hemp, directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, is made by evaporating a tincture of the dried tops. Dr. O’Shaughnessy directs it to be prepared by boiling the tops of the gunjali in alcohol until all the resin is dissolved, and evaporating to dryness by means of a water-bath. Mr. Robert- son, of the Calcutta Medical College, prepares it by passing the vapour of boil- ing alcohol from the boiler of a still into the dried plant contained in a con- venient receptacle, and evaporating the condensed liquor by a heat not exceeding 150° F. The Messrs. Smith, of Edinburgh, obtain a purer resin by the fol- lowing process. Bruised gunjah is digested, first in successive portions of warm water, till the expressed liquid comes away colourless; and afterwards, for two days, with a moderate heat, in a solution of carbonate of soda, containing one part of the salt for two of the dried herb. It is then expressed, washed, dried, * On a visit to the botanical garden of Edinburgh, in the autumn of 1860, the author saw a full-grown specimen of Cannabis sativa, and was surprised to find that it was only about 4 feet high, had little or no odour, and was scarcely adhesive when handled. If this is the general character of the hemp plant in the North of Europe, it is not surprising that it should be destitute of the medicinal properties of the Indian plant. As cultivated in his own garden in Philadelphia, the plant attains a height usually of six or eight feet, has a decided narcotic odour, and exudes so much of its peculiar resin as to be very adhesive to the fingers. It is highly probable, therefore, that, the hemp plant grown in this country might be advantageously used in medicine. On this occasion Dr. Christison informed the author, from information he had received from India, that the plant, there cultivated in the hot plains, does not yield hashish satisfactorily; but that this product is chiefly if not ex clusively obtained from it in the hilly regions. He said, moreover, that the story of the natives running through the hemp fields, and collecting the resin on their clothing, from which it is afterwards scraped, is, if not quite untrue, at least apocryphal. He had been informed that the real mode of gathering it is to rub the hemp-tops between the hands, and, when the palms and fingers are sufficiently loaded with the resin, to scrape it off. It is possible, however, that different methods may be followed in different localities.—Xolt to the twelfth edition. PAKT I. Extractum Cannabis. 381 and exhausted by percolation with alcohol. The tincture, after being agitated with milk of lime containing one part of the earth for twelve of the gunjah used, is filtered; the lime is precipitated by sulphuric acid; the filtered liquor is agi- tated with animal charcoal, and again filtered; most of the alcohol is distilled otf, and to the residue twice its weight of water is added; the liquid is then allowed to evaporate gradually; and, finally, the resin is washed with fresh water until it ceases to impart a sour or bitter taste to the liquid, and is then dried in thin layers. Thus obtained, it retains the odour and taste of the gunjah, of which 100 pounds yield 6 or 7 pounds of the extract. Much of the com- mercial extract is very impure, and is but partially soluble in alcohol. Under the name of Extractum Cannabis PuriUcatum. the U. S. Pharma- copoeia directs a preparation~made Try evaporating a tincture of the crude ex- tract, which, from its greater uniformity of strength, is preferable for prescrip- tion. (.See Part II.) The British Pharmacopoeia directs the Extract of Indian Hemp to be prepared by.macerating an avoirdupois pound of the dried tops ol the hemp, in coarse powder, in four Imperial pints of rectified spirit, for seven days, then expressing, and evaporating to the proper consistence. From this a tincture is ordered to be prepared. Properties. Fresh hemp has a peculiar narcotic odour, which is said to be capable of producing vertigo, headache, and a species of intoxication. It is much less in the dried tops, which have a feeble bitterish taste. According to Dr. Royle, churrus is when pure of a blackish-gray, blackish-green, or dirty olive colour, of a fragrant and narcotic odour, and a slightly warm, bitterish, and acrid taste. Schlesinger found in the leaves a bitter substance, chloro- phyll, green resinous extractive, colouring matter, gummy extract, extractive, albumen, lignin, and salts. The plant also contains volatile oil in very small proportion, which probably has narcotic properties. The resin is probably the active principle, and has received the name of cannabin. It is neuter, soluble in alcohol and ether, and separable from the alcoholic solution by water as a white precipitate. According to M. Laneau, of Brussels, it is insoluble in cold alcohol of 80 or 90 per cent., but is soluble in the same liquid heated, in cold absolute alcohol, ether, acetic ether, spirit of nitric ether, muriatic ether, chloro- form, and bisulphuret of carbon. (See Am. Journ. of Pliarm., xxviii. 362.) Its taste is warm, bitterish, acrid, somewhat balsamic, and its odour fragrant, espe- cially when heated.* Medical Properties. Extract of hemp is a powerful narcotic, causing exhilara- tion, intoxication, delirious hallucinations, and, in its subsequent action, drowsi- ness and stupor, with little effect upon the circulation. It is asserted also to act as a decided aphrodisiac, to increase the appetite, and occasionally to induce the cataleptic state. In overdoses it may produce poisonous effects. In morbid states of the system, it has been found to cause sleep, to allay spasm, to com- * From the effects on the system of the exhalations from fresh hemp, it was a very pro- bable supposition that the plant owed its medical properties, in part at least, to a volatile principle. By repeated distillation of the same portion of water from relatively large quantities of hemp renewed at each distillation, M. J. Personne obtained a volatile oil, of a stupefying odour,, and an action on the system such as to dispose him to think that it was the active principle of the plant. As the water distilled was strongly alkaline, he supposed that this volatile principle might be a new alkaloid; but the alkaline reaction was found to depend on ammonia; and the liquid obtained proved to be a volatile oil, lighter than water, of a deep amber colour, a strong smell of hemp, and composed of two distinct oils, one colourless, with the formula the other a hydrate of the first. For the former M. Personne proposes the name of cannabene. When this is inhaled, or taken into *he stomach, a singular excitement is felt throughout the system, followed by a depression, sometimes amounting to syncope, with hallucinations which are generally disagreeable, but an action on the whole slighter and more fugitive than that of the resin. The pure resin of the Messrs. Smith, M. Personne considers to be complex, depending on volatile principles for its activity, deprived of which at a temperature of about 300° C., it becomes quite inert. (Journ. de Pharrn., A. D. 1857, p. 46.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 382 Extractum Cannabis.—Extractum Grlycyrrhizse. PART I. pose nervous inquietude, and to relieve pain. In these respects it resembles opium; but it differs from that narcotic in not diminishing the appetite, check- ing the secretions, or constipating the bowels. It is much less certain in its effects; but may sometimes be preferably employed, when opium is contraindi- cated by its nauseating or constipating effects, or its disposition to produce headache, and to check the bronchial secretion. The complaints in which it has been specially recommended are neuralgia, gout, rheumatism, tetanus, hydro- phobia, epidemic cholera, convulsions, chorea, hysteria, mental depression, deli- rium tremens, insanity, and uterine hemorrhage. It has been found to cure obstinate intermittent fever, given before the paroxysm. Dr. Alexander Christi- son, of Edinburgh, has found it to have the property of hastening and increasing the contractions of the uterus in delivery, and has employed it with advantage for this purpose. It acts very quickly, and without anaesthetic effect. It ap- pears, however, to exert this influence only in a certain proportion of cases. (Ed. Month. Journ. of Med. Sci., xiii. 117, and xv. 124.) The strength of the extract varies much as found in commerce; and therefore no definite dose can be fixed. When it is of good quality half a grain or a grain will affect the system. The Messrs. Smith found two-thirds of a grain of their extract to produce powerful narcotic effects. In some instances it will be necessary to give as much as ten or twelve grains of the extract; and half an ounce of it has been taken without sensible effect. The proper plan is to begin with one-quarter or half a grain, re- peated at intervals of two, three, or four hours, and gradually increased until its influence is felt, and the strength of the parcel employed is thus ascertained. After- wards the dose will be regulated by the ascertained strength; but, should a new parcel be employed, the same caution must be observed as to the commencing dose. A tincture is prepared by dissolving six drachms of the extract in a pint of alcohol. The dose of this, equivalent to a grain of the extract, is about twenty minims, or forty drops. Dr. O’Shaughnessy gave ten drops every half hour in cholera, and a fluidrachm every half hour in tetanus. As the resin is precipitated by water, the tincture should be administered in mucilage or sweetened water. Alarming effects have been produced by overdoses.* Off. Prep. Extractum Cannabis Purificatum, U. S.; Tinctura Cannabis In- die®, Br. W. EXTRACTUM GLYCYRRHIZiE. U.S.,Br. Liquorice. The extract of the root of Glycyrrhiza glabra, U.S. Extrait de reglisse, Fr.; Siissholzsaft, GemTTSugo di liquirizia, Ital.; Eegaliza en bollos, Span. For an account of Glycyrrhiza glabra, see article GLYCYRRHIZA. The British Pharmacopoeia gives directions for preparing this extract; but, as it is seldom made in this country by the apothecary, it is very properly placed, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, in the catalogue of the Materia Medica. The British directions are to macerate an avoirdupois pound of liquorice root, in coarse powder, for twelve hours, in eight jluidounces of distilled water; then to pack in a percolator, and add more distilled water, until the root is ex- hausted; and finally to heat the liquor to 212°, strain it through flannel, and evaporate by means of a water-bath. The object in heating the infusion to 212° is to coagulate the albumen, and thus exclude it from the extract. Liquorice is an article of export from the north of Spain, particularly Cata- * A preparation of hfimpjias been recommended as an anodyne liniment in painful affections, made by heating together for five or six hours upon a salt-waier bath one part of the bruised tops of Indian hemp and two parts of the oil of hempseod, and then ex- pressing and filtering. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1863, p. 239.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Extraetum Glycyrrhizse. 383 Ionia, where it is obtained in the following manner. The roots of the G. glabra, having been dug up, thoroughly cleansed, and half dried by exposure to the air, are cut into small pieces, and boiled in water till the liquid is saturated. The decoction is then allowed to rest, and, after the dregs have subsided, is decanted, and evaporated to the proper consistence. The extract, thus prepared, is formed into rolls from five to six inches long by an inch in diameter, which are dried in the air, and wrapped in laurel leaves. Much liquorice is also prepared in Calabria, according to M. Fee, from the G. echinatcij which abounds in that country. The process is essentially the same as that just described, but conducted with greater care; and the Italian liquorice is purer and more valuable than the Spanish. We have been informed that most of the extract brought to this country comes from the ports of Leghorn and Messina. It is in cylinders, generally somewhat smaller than the Spanish, and sometimes stamped with the manufacturer’s name.* Perhaps in no part of the world is more liquorice consumed thairin this country; from four to five thou- sand tons having been imported annually before the war. Much of it is used in the manufacture of tobacco. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 449.) Crude liquorice is in cylindrical rolls, somewhat flattened, and often covered with bay leaves. We have seen it in the London market in large cubical masses. When good, it is very black, dry, brittle, breaking with a shining fracture, of a very sweet, peculiar, slightly acrid or bitterish taste, and almost entirely soluble when pure in boiling water. Neumann obtained 460 parts of aqueous extract from 480 parts of Spanish liquorice. It is, however, considerably less soluble in cold water. It is often impure from accidental or fraudulent addition, or care- less preparation. Starch, sand, the juice of prunes, &c. are sometimes added ; and carbonaceous matter, and even particles of copper are found in it, the latter arising from the boilers in which the decoction is evaporated. Four pounds of the extract have yielded two drachms and a half of metallic copper. (Fee.) In different commercial specimens examined by Chevallier, he found from 9 to 50 per cent, of insoluble matter (Journ. de Pharm., xxx. 429.) This is by no means, however, always impurity. In the preparation of the extract by decoction, a portion of matter originally insoluble, or rendered so by decoction, is taken up, and is, in fact, necessary to the proper constitution of the liquorice. When this is prepared with cold water, or even with hot water by simple displacement, the extract obtained attracts moisture from the air, becomes soft, and loses the charac- teristic brittleness of the drug. The additional substances taken up in decoction serve to protect the extract against this change. M. Delondre has obtained the same result by using steam as the solvent. He prepares from the root an excel- lent liquorice, having all the requisite qualities of colour, taste, and permanence, by passing steam, in suitable vessels, through the coarse powrder of the root. The vapour thoroughly penetrates the powder, and is drawn off as it condenses. With about 500 lbs. of the root, this treatment is continued for 12 hours, and repeated at the end of 5 days. The liquors are collected, decanted, clarified with about 4 lbs. of gelatin, and quickly evaporated. After being put into the form of cylinders, the extract is kept for ten days in a drying room, at a temperature of 77°. (Potd., p. 433.) A bitter or empyreumatic taste is a sign of inferior quality in liquorice. As ordinarily found in commerce it requires to be purified for use. * Much liquorice is now prepared in this country, chiefly at the laboratory of the Messrs, l’ilden, at New Lebanon, Columbia Co., New York. The best roots being selected, are ground into a coarse powder, which is submitted to the action of condensing steam, so as to make a concentrated infusion, which is then evaporated without access of air. The ex- tract is prepared in three forms: 1, in boxes containing 25 lbs. in which it solidifies in mass; 2, in small rolls of 80 to the pound; and 3, in lozenges like those of the Pontefract liquorice. the next ■page.') In the two latter forms, the addition of gum arabic is necessary to give the extract a proper consistence; as, without this, it softens in warm weather, so as not to retain its form. It is much lighter-coloured than the imported liquorice, but darkens on exposure. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 311.)—Note to the eleventh edition. Extra ctum Gby ey rrli izx. —Fa rina. part I. The refined liquorice, kept in the shops in small cylindrical pieces not thicker than a pipe stem, is prepared by dissolving the impure extract in water without boiling, straining the solution, and evaporating. The object of this process is to separate not only the insoluble impurities, but also the acrid oleo-resinous sub- stance, which is extracted by long boiling from the liquorice root, and is neces- sarily mixed with the unrefined extract. It is customary to add, during the pro- cess, a portion of sugar, gum, flour, starch, or perhaps glue. These additions, or something equivalent, are necessary to obviate the deliquescent property of the pure liquorice. According to M. Delondre, 15 per cent, of gum is the proper proportion, when this substance is used ; Dr. Geisler has found the sugar of milk to lessen the disposition of the extract to absorb moisture; but he considers the best addition, on the whole, to be very finely powdered liquorice root, which should be used in the proportion of 1 part to 16 of the purified extract. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 225.) The preparation is sometimes attacked by small worms, probably in consequence of the farinaceous additions. Excellent liquorice is prepared, in some parts of England, from the root cultivated in that country. The Pontefract cakes are small lozenges of liquorice of superior quality, made in the vicinity of Pomfret. Medical Properties and Uses. Liquorice is a useful demulcent, much employed as an addition to cough mixtures, and frequently added to infusions or decoc- tions, in order to cover the taste or obtund the acrimony of the principal medicine. A piece of it held in the mouth and allowed slowly to dissolve, is often found to allay cough by sheathing the irritated membrane of the fauces. It is used in phar- macy to impart consistence to pills and troches, and to modify the taste of other medicines. Much is also used in the preparation of tobacco for chewing. Off. Prep. Confectio Sennas, Br.; Decoctum Aloes Compositum, Br.; Mis- tura Glyeyrrhizas Composita, U.S.; Tinctura Aloes; Tinctura Rhei et Sennae, U. S.; Trochisci Glycyrrhizae et Opii, U. S.; Trochisci Cubebas, U. S.; Trochisci Opii, Br. W. FARINA. Wheat Flour. This is placed, under the name of Flour, in the Appendix of the British Phar- macopoeia, among the substances used in preparing medicines, and defined “the grain of wheat, Triticum vulgare, ground and sifted.” Farine de fromcnt, Ft.; Waizenmehl, Germ.; Farina di frumento, Ital.; Flor del trigo, Acemite, Span. Triticum. Sex. Syst. Triandria Digynia.— Nat. Ord. Graminaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx two-valved, solitary, transverse, many-flowered, on a flexuose, toothed receptacle. Rees's Cyclopaedia. Triticum hybernum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 477.— var. ;3. hvber- num. Kunth, Gramin. 438. The common winter wheat has a fibrous root and one or more erect, round, smooth, jointed stems, which rise from three to five feet in height, and are furnished with linear, pointed, entire, flat, many-ribbed, rough, somewhat glaucous leaves, and jagged bearded stipules. The flowers are in a solitary, terminal, dense, smooth spike, two or three inches long. The calyx is four-flowered, tumid, imbricated, abrupt, with a short compressed point. In the upper part of the spike it is more elongated; and in this situation the corolla is more or less awued. The grain is imbricated in four rows. The native country of wheat is unknown; but its cultivation is supposed to have spread from Sicily over Europe. It is now an object of culture in almost all countries having a temperate climate. Sown in the autumn, it stands the winter, and ripens its seeds in the following summer. Numerous varieties have beeD produced by cultivation, some of which are usually described as distinct part I. Farina. 385 species. Among these may perhaps be ranked T. aestivum. or spring wheat, dis- * tinguished by its long beards, and T. compositumLov Egyptian wheat, by its com . pound spikes. The seeds are too well known to need description. They are ' prepared for use by grinding and sifting, by which the interior farinaceous part is separated from the husk. The former is divided according to its fineness into different portions, but so far as regards its medical relations may be considered under one head, that of farina or flour. The latter is called bran, and consti- tutes from 25 to 33 per cent. Flour is white, inodorous, and nearly insipid. Its chief constituents are starch, gluten, albumen, saccharine matter, and gum, the proportions of which are not constant. Vauquelin obtained, as an average product, from eight varieties of flour which he examined, 10-25 per cent, of water, 10*80 of gluten (including coagulated albumen), 68'08 of starch, 5*61 of sugar, and 4T1 of gum. Accord- ing to Christison, subsequent experiments have given an average of 16 or IT per cent, of gluten and albumen. The ashes of wheat, which amount only to about 0T5 per cent., contain, according to Henry, superphosphates of soda, lime, and magnesia. The gummy substance found in wheat flour is not precisely identical with ordinary gum; as it contains nitrogen, and does not yield mucic acid by the action of nitric acid. The starch, which is by far the most abundant iugredient, is much employed in a separate state. (See Amylum.) The gluten. however, is not less important; as it is to the large proportion of this principle in wheat flour, that it owes its superiority over that from other grains for the preparation of bread. The gluten here alluded to is the substance first noticed as a distinct principle by Beccaria. It is the soft, viscid, fibrous mass which re- mains, when wheat flour, enclosed in a linen bag, is exposed to the action of a stream of water, and at the same time pressed with the fingers till the liquor comes away colourless. But this has been ascertained to consist, in fact, of two different substances. When boiled in alcohol, one portion of it is dissolved, while another remains unaffected. Einhof ascertained that the part of the glutinous mass left behind by alcohol is identical with vegetable albumen, while the dis- solved portion only is strictly entitled to the name of gluten, which had been previously applied to the whole mass. As these two principles are contained in numerous vegetable products, and as they are frequently referred to in this work, it is proper that they should be briefly noticed. They both contain nitrogen, and both, when left to themselves in a moist state, undergo putrefaction. From these circumstances, and from their close resemblance to certain proximate animal principles in chemical habitudes and relations, they are sometimes called, in works on chemistry, vegeto-animal substances. They are separated from each other by boiling the gluten of Beccaria, above referred to, with successive por- tions of alcohol, till the liquid, filtered while yet hot, ceases to become turbid on cooling. The proper gluten dissolves, and may be obtained by adding water to the solution, and distilling off the alcohol. Large cohering flakes float in the liquor, which, when removed, form a viscid elastic mass, consisting of the sub- stance in question with slight impurity. The part left behind by the alcohol is coagulated albumen. Pure glulf!3, sometimes called v&gztable. fibrin, is a pale-yellow, adhesive, elastic substance, which, by drying, becomes more deeply yellow and translucent. It is almost insoluble in water, and quite insoluble in ether, and in the oils both fixed and volatile. Hot alcohol dissolves it much more readily than cold; and from its solution in boiling alcohol it separates unchanged when the liquor cools. It is soluble in the dilute acids, and in caustic alkaline solutions, in consequence of forming soluble compounds with the acids and alkalies. With the earths and metallic oxides it forms nearly insoluble compounds, which are precipitated when earthy or metallic salts are added to the solution of gluten in liquid potassa. Corrosive sublimate precipitates it from its acid as well as alkaline solutions, Farina. PART I. and, in solution to moist gluten, forms with it a compound, which, when dry, is haid, opaque, and incorruptible. Gluten is also precipitated by infusion of galls. Its name originated in its adhesive property. It exists in most of the farinaceous grains, and in the seeds of some leguminous plants. Vegetable, albumen is destitute of adhesiveness, and, when dried, is opaque, and of a white, gray, or brown colour. Before coagulation, it is soluble in water, but insoluble in alcohol. By heat it coagulates and becomes insoluble in water. It is dissolved by solutions of the caustic alkalies. Most of the acids, if added to its solution in excess, precipitate compounds of the acids respectively with the albumen, which, though soluble in pure water, are insoluble in that liquid when acidulated. It is not, however, precipitated by an excess of phosphoric or acetic acid. Its relations to the earthy and metallic salts are similar to those of gluten. Corrosive sublimate precipitates it from its solutions, except from those in phosphoric and acetic acids, and, when added in a state of solution to moist albumen, forms with it a hard, opaque compound. It is also precipitated by infu- sion of galls. This principle derived its name from its very close resemblance to animal albumen. It is associated with gluten in most of the farinaceous grains, is a constituent of all the seeds which form a milky emulsion with water, and exists in all the vegetable juices which coagulate by beat. The mixture of vegetable fibrin and albumen which constitutes the gluten of Beccaria, exercises an important influence over starch, which, with the presence of water, and the aid of a moderate heat, it converts partly into gum and partly into sugar. The production of saccharine matter in the germination of seeds, and in malting, which is an example of germination, is thus explained. The gluten becomes acid in the process, and loses the property of reacting on starch. It is now thought by many chemists that vegetable albumen is identical in all respects with animal albumen, and the gluten of vegetables with animal fibrin; and that both these principles, as well as another named casein, found also both in the animal and vegetable kingdoms, consist of a principle named protein. combined with a very small proportion of mineral substances, such as sulphur and phosphorus. Protein consists of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; and its formula, according to Liebig, is It is procured by dissolving any one of the substances above named in a strong solution of potassa, keeping the solution for some time at a heat of 120°, and precipitating with acetic acid. It is scarcely necessary to state that bread is formed by making flour into a paste with water, with the addition of yeast, setting it aside to ferment, and then exposing it to the heat of an oven. The fermentation excited by the yeast is accompanied with the extricatiou of carbonic acid gas, which, being retained by the tenacity of the gluten, forms innumerable little cells throughout the mass, and thus renders the bread light. Medical Properties and Uses. Wheat flour in its unaltered state is seldom used in medicine. It is sometimes sprinkled on the skin in erysipelatous inflam- mation, and various itching or burning eruptions, particularly the nettlerash; though rye flour is generally preferred for this purpose. Bread is more employed. Anjnfusion of toasted bread in water is a nutritive drink, well adapted to febrile complaints. Within our experience, no drink has been found more grateful in such cases than this infusion, sweetened with a little molasses, and flavoured by lemon-juice. Boiled with milk, bread forms a good emollient poultice, which may be improved by the addition of a little perfectly fresh lard. Slices of it steeped in lead-water, and the crumb mixed with the fluid and confined within gauze, afford convenient modes of applying this preparation to local inflammations. The crumb (mica panis) is, moreover, frequently used to give bulk to minute doses of very active medicines, administered in the form of pill. It should be recollected that it always contains common salt, which is incompatible with certain substances, as, for example, nitrate of silver part I. Far in a.—Fer mention. 387 Bran is sometimes used in decoction, as a demulcent in catarrhal affections . and complaints of the bowels. When taken in substance, it is laxative, and may be used with advantage to prevent costiveness. Bran bread, made from the unsifted flour, is an excellent laxative article of diet in some dyspeptic cases. The action of the bran is probably mechanical, consisting in the irritation pro- duced upon the mucous membrane of the bowels by its coarse particles. Brai* also forms an excellent demulcent bath. Off. Prep. Cataplasma Fermenti. W. FERMENTUM. US. Yeast. Off. Syn. CEREYISIJE FERMENTUM. Beer Yeast. The ferment obtained in brewing beer. Br. Levure, Fr.; Bierhefen, Germ.; Fermento di cervogia, Ital.; Espuma de cerveza, Span. This is the substance which rises, in the form of froth, to the surface of beer, and subsides, during the process of fermentation. A similar substance is pro duced during the fermentation of other saccharine liquids. It is flocculent, frothy, somewhat viscid, semi-fluid, of a dirty yellowish colour, a sour vinous odour, and a bitter taste. At the temperature of fi0° or 10°, in a close vessel or damp atmosphere, it soon undergoes putrefaction. Exposed to a moderate heat, it loses its liquid portion, becomes dry, hard, and brittle; and may in this state be preserved for a long time, though with the loss of much of its peculiar power. In France it is brought to the solid state by introducing it into sacks, washing it with water, then submitting it to pressure, and ulti- mately drying it.* * M. C. Gutkind, of Paris, recommends tlie following process for preparing bakers’ yeast. Barley, having been slightly malted,, is dried in a rapid current of heated air, then re- duced to fine flour without bolting, and placed in a vat, where it is made into dough with water of 104° F., and afterwards brought with water at the same temperature to the con- sistence of porridge. For each pound of flour about a pint and a half of water is required (100 kilogrammes and 2 hectolitres). The porridge is heated in a boiler to 178° F., beyond which degree the temperature is not to be raised, and introduced into canvas bags, in which it is submitted to expression. The expressed liquid is put into large vats, where it cools. The solid matter is again put into a vat, mixed with 2 pints of water at 114° F. for each pound, and stirred into a porridge, which is then heated to 201° F., and kept so for an hour. The mass is put into bags and expressed; and the two expressed liquids are mixed, and exposed to the air in large vats for a period of time varying from two to ten days according to the atmospheric temperature. To cause the liquid to ferment, it is heated to 90° F., and a little fresh yeast added. During the whole period of fermentation, which may be conducted in vats or vessels, an exterior temperature of at least 59° F. must be maintained. The yeast thus obtained is free from bitterness or acidity, is extremely white, and consequently does not require washing, and is superior in raising power to all others. The residuary liquid after fermentation may be used for making vinegar. (Lond. Pharm. Journ., xiv. 331.)—Note to the eleventh edition. Dried Yeast. For keeping, and for transmission from place to place, it is often desirable to have yeast in the dried state. Yeast cakes have appeared in commerce. They may be prepared by washing the ordinary yeast with water, expressing the liquid portion, and spreading out the residue, in thin layers, on linen or cotton cloth, in order to dry, in tbe sun, or in heated chambers, or on porous bricks to absorb the moisture. The layers may be cut in pieces of convenient shape, which may be occasionally turned to facilitate drying. The following plan is recommended in the Chemical News (Aug. 29th, 1863, p. 109). To every pound of the yeast, previously washed and drained, a drachm of pure carbonate of potassa or soda, and three drachms of officinal alcohol are to be added, the whole to be thoroughly mixed by stirring, and the mass thus prepared to be allowed to stand for half an hour, and then put into bags and expressed. Two drachms of solution of gelatin, in the form of a nearly cold jelly, are now to be thoroughly incorporated by kneading with the mixture, which is to be exposed for twelve hours in a cold place, for the complete solidifi- cation cf the gelatin. The mass is, finally, to be cut into slices of the desired shape and size, and dried on muslin at ordinary temperatures.—Note to the twelfth edition. Fermentum. PAKT I. Teasr is insoluble in alcohol or water. It was analyzed by Westrumb, and found to contain, in 15,142 parts, 13 of potassa, 15 of carbonic acid, 10 of acetic acid, 45 of malic acid, G9 of lime, 240 of alcohol, 120 of extractive, 240 of muci- lage, 315 of saccharine matter, 480 of gluten, 13,595 of water, besides traces of silica and phosphoric acid. Its bitterness is attributable to a principle derived from the hops. The property for which it is chiefly valued is that of exciting the vinous fermentation in saccharine liquids, and in various farinaceous sub- stauces. This property it owes to its azotized ingredient; for, if separated from 1 his, it loses its powers as a ferment, and reacquires them upon its subsequent addition. It is also rendered ineffective by strong alcohol, by several of the acids, as sulphuric and concentrated acetic acids, by various other substances, and by a heat of 212°. At a high temperature it is decomposed, affording products similar to those which result from the decomposition of animal matters. Examined with a microscope, yeast is seen to abound in minute transparent vesicles, which appear to contain one or more granules. These are now believed to be a fungous plant, which has the power of propagating itself at the expense of organic proximate principles with which it may be brought into contact; and attempts have been made to solve the mysteries of fermentation by the con- jecture, that the sugar or other fermenting substance, while contributing to the nourishment of the fungus, undergoes a decomposition resulting in the forma- tion of new products. Another theory, originally put forth by Liebig, is that fermentation is merely a chemical movement, excited by a movement of decom- position going on in the ferment. Mulder considers the cell-wall of the yeast plant to consist of a substance analogous to cellulose, and its contents to be a protein body, differing in some respects from gluten and albumen, and probably a superoxide of protein. During fermentation, this protein body makes its way through the vesicular coat, undergoes decomposition by the agency of heat, and, in the act of decomposition, sets on foot the changes in sugar which result in the formation of alcohol and carbonic acid. ( Chern. Gazette, Feb. 15, 1845.)* Medical Properties and Uses. Yeast has been highly extolled as a remedy * There can, we think, scarcely be a doubt, at present, that fermentation and the re- production of yeast are best explained upon the basis of an organic process. The germs of various microscopic plants, mucedinese, as they are called, are always floating in the ait, which, incorporated with certain nitrogenous substances, such as albumen, gluten, &c , essential to their nutrition, constitute what are called ferments. These have the property when mixed with other substances, of producing certain chemical changes, accompanied with phenomena called fermentation, and resulting in the decomposition of these sub - stances, and the production of new ones. Different plants produce different results, each giving rise to a peculiar fermentation, characterized by its own peculiar product. The vinous fermentation is one of these. Yeast, containing its proper plant, Torula cerevisise, mixed with a solution of sugar and water, at a sufficient temperature, causes a decomposition of the sugar, and the generation of alcohol and carbonic acid, with the phenomena of vinous fermentation, while the yeast itself, instead of being destroyed, is in fact greatly increased. The plants, by abstracting, in the process of their growth and reproduction, a portion of the constituents of the sugar, decompose this substance, the remaining constituents of which enter into new combinations, forming alcohol and carbonic acid. Thus the yeast is aug- mented by the growth of the old and the abundant generation of new plants; and in this way, much better than in any other, is explained the singular phenomenon of the generation of the new yeast. Pasteur has given a strong evidence of the truth of this explanation by the discovery, that, though the yeast plant, when exposed to the air, will grow freely, yet it has comparatively little effect on the sugar, while, with the air excluded, it operates on t his substance energetically. In the former case, it derives the oxygen necessary to its respiration from the air, in the latter, exclusively from the sugar. Opposed to this view is the asserted fact, that the alcohol and carbonic acid produced exactly represent the sugar lost, which could not be if a part of the sugar were consumed as food by the plant. But this difficulty is removed by the consideration, that, as the plant exposed to the air, while absorbing oxygen, gives out carbonic acid, so, when it derives oxygen from the sugar, it yields an equivalent product of carbonic acid, the surplus carbon of the sugar being pro- bably appropriated in the nutritive process.—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Fermentum.—Ferrum. 389 in low fevers of a typhoid character, and is said to have been given with advan* tage in hectic. It is, however, little employed; as its somewhat tonic and stimu lating effects, ascribable to the bitter principle of hops, the alcohol, and the carbonic acid, which are among its constituents, may be obtained with equal certainty from more convenient medicines. The late Dr. Hewson, of Philadel- phia, informed the authors that, in a case of typhoid fever, attended with great irritability of the stomach, the patient was benefited and sustained by taking a pint of yeast daily for five days, during which period no other remedy was em- ployed. We have used it with apparent advantage in diabetes. (See Trans, of Col. of Ph.ys. of Phil., N. S., i. 390 ) It has also been recommended internally in boils. When largely taken, it generally proves laxative; and it may some- times be necessary to obviate this effect by opium. Externally applied, it is very useful in foul and sloughing ulcers, the fetor of which it corrects while it affords a gentle stimulus to the debilitated tissue. It is usually employed mixed with farinaceous substances in the form of a cataplasm. The dose is from half a fluidouuce to two fluidounces every two or three hours. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Acidum Citricum, Br. Of. Prep. Cataplasma Fermenti, Br. W. FERRUM. U.jS. Iron. Fer, Fr.; Eisen, Germ.; Ferro, Ital.; Hierro, Span. In the British Pharmacopoeia, Iron Wire is placed in the Appendix as one of the substances used in preparing medicines. Annealed Iron Wire and Bind- ing Wire are given as synonymes. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, this metal is em- ployed in different preparations, in the form either of wire or filings; and each of these forms, therefore, will be briefly noticed in the following article; the general properties of the metal having been first considered. Iron is the most abundant and useful of the metals, and so interwoven with the wants of mankind, that the extent of its consumption by a nation may be taken as an index of its progress in civilization. It is universally diffused in na- ture, not only in the mineral, but also in the vegetable and animal kingdoms. There are very few minerals in which traces of it are not to be found, and it is an essen- tial constituent in many parts of animals, but particularly in the blood. It is one of the few metals which are not deleterious to the animal economy. Iron occurs, 1. native; 2. sulphuretted, forming magnetic and cubic pyrites; 3. oxidized, embracing the magnetic, specular, red, brown, and argillaceous oxides of iron; 4. in saline combination, forming the carbonate, sulphate, phosphate, and arseniate of iron. Those minerals of iron which admit of being worked to ad- vantage are called iron ores. These include the different native oxides, and the carbonate fsjmrry iron). The best iron is obtained from the varieties of the na- tive oxide, usually called magneticjron ore and specular iron ore. These occur abundantly in Sweden, and furnish the superior iron of that country. As a gene- ral rule, those ores yield the best iron which occur in primitive formations. Extraction. The mode of extracting iron from its ores varies somewhat with The nature of the ore; but the general principles of the operation are the same ror all. The ore, previously broken into small pieces and roasted, is exposed to the action of an intense heat, in contact with carbonaceous matter, such as char- coal, coke, or anthracite, and in connection with some flux, capable of fusing with the impurities of the ore. The flux varies with the nature of the ore, and is generally either limestone or clay; limestone being employed when the ore is argillaceous, clay when it is calcareous. The flux, whatever it may be, enters into msion with the impurities, and forms what is called the slag; while the carbona- 390 Ferrum. PART I. eeou.i matter, acting on the oxide of iron, reduces it to the metallic state. The reduced metal, from its density, occupies the lower part of the furnace, and is protected from die action of the air by the melted slag which floats on its sur- face. When the reduction is completed, the slag is allowed to run out by a hole in the side of the furnace, and the melted metal by an aperture at the bottom, the latter being received into long triangular moulds, where it solidifies in masses, known in commerce by the name of pig or cast iron. In this state the metal is brittle and far from being pure; as it contains about 10 per cent, of carbon, with silicon, phosphorus, sulphur, calcium, aluminium, and sometimes manganese. It is purified, and brought to the state of malleable iron, by being fused, and sub- jected, while stirred, to the action of a current of air on its surface. By these means the carbon is nearly burnt out, and the other impurities are oxidized and made to rise to the surface as a slag. As the metal approaches to purity, it be- comes tough and less liquid, and its particles agglutinate so as to form semi-fused lumps, though the temperature of the furnace continues the same. These lumps are then taken out of the furnace, and their particles, by means of ponderous hammers, moved by steam or water power, are beaten together so as to form one tenacious mass. The metal is finally rolled out into bars of a convenient size, when it constitutes the malleable iron of commerce. Very pure malleable iron is now manufactured by the new process of Mr. W. Bessamer, from the crude metal while still in a state of fusion, by running it into a separate vessel, and there subjecting it to a blast of atmospheric air. The car- bon is thus burnt out; and by the heat generated the temperature of the fused metal is increased, with the effect of dissipating the volatile impurities, such as sulphur, &c., and of burning some of the iron into oxide, which, fusing with the earthy impurities, separates them in the form of slag. The loss of weight is 18 per cent., against 28 per cent, by the old process. (Pharm. Journ., Sept. 1856.) Iron mines occur in most countries, but more particularly in northern ones. In Spain, the principal mines furnish sparry irou, and the red and brown oxides. The chief iron ores of France are the sparry iron, and the specular, brown, and argillaceous oxides; of Germany, the sparry iron and brown oxide. The island of Elba is celebrated for its rich and abundant specular iron ore. In the United States iron is abundant. The principal ores that are worked are the magnetic, brown, and argillaceous oxides. They occur in the greatest abund- ance in the States of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The ores of the three last-mentioned States rival the best Swedish in quality. Properties. Iron is a hard, malleable, ductile, and tenacious metal, of a gray- ish-white colour and fibrous texture, a slightly styptic taste, and a sensible odour when rubbed. In tenacity it yields only to nickel and cobalt. (Deville.) Its sp. gr. is about 7-7, and its fusing point very high. It possesses the magnetic and welding properties. It is combustible, and, when heated to whiteness, burns in atmospheric air, and with brilliant scintillations in oxygen gas. At a red heat, its surface is converted into black oxide, and at common temperatures, by the combined agency of air and moisture, it becomes covered with a reddish matter, called rust, which consists of the hydrated sesquioxide. It combines with all the non-metallic elements, except hydrogen and nitrogen, and with most of the metals. Its eq. is 28 and symbol Fe. It forms three principal compounds with oxygen, a protoxide and sesquioxide, which, by their union, form the native black oxide, and a teroxide. possessing acid properties, called ferric acid. The protoxide is of a dark-blue colour, attracted by the magnet, and spontaneously combustible in the air, being converted into sesquioxide. It is the base of green vitriol, and of the green salts of iron generally. It is very prone to absorb oxygcM; and hence the salts which contain it are soon partially converted, when in soiutioiq into salts of the sesquioxide. It consists of one eq. of iron 28, and one of oxygtn Ferrum. 391 PART I. 8 = 36. The sesquioxide is readily obtained by dissolving iron in nitromuriatic acid, precipitating by ammonia, and igniting the precipitate. It is of a red colour, not attracted by the magnet, and forms salts, which for the most part have a red dish colour. It is composed of two eqs. of iron 56, and three of oxygen 24 = 80 An allotropic variety of the sesquioxide, soluble in water, and not responding to the ordinary tests of iron, has been discovered by M. Pean de Saint-Grilles. The native black oxide, the magnetic oxide of mineralogists, is officinal in the British Pharmacopoeia under the name of Ferri Oxidum 1Magnetic am. It consists of one eq. of protoxide 36, and one of sesquioxide 80= 116. The teroxide or ferric acid, discovered by Fremy, may be obtained, in union with potassa, by passing chlorine through a very concentrated solution of the alkali, holding hydrated sesquioxide of iron in suspension. . This acid consists of one eq. of iron 28, and three of oxygen 24 = 52. Iron, combined with a minute proportion of carbon, and perhaps of silicon and aluminium, forms steel, a modification of iron formerly used in medicine, but now very properly laid aside. It also forms a number of important salts, several of which are officinal. Iron is readily detected, even in minute quantities, by bringing it to the state of sesquioxide in solution, and adding ferrocyanide of potassium or tincture of galls; the former of which will strike a deep-blue, the latter a black colour. The object of bringing it to the state of sesquioxide is readily effected by boil- ing the solution containing it with a little nitric acid. General Therapeutic Effects of Iron. The preparations of iron are pre- eminently tonic, and peculiarly well fitted to improve the quality of the blood, when impoverished from any cause. Hence they are useful in diseases charac- terized by debility, especially when the consequence of inordinate discharges. The diseases in which they are usually employed are chronic anaemia or chlo- rosis, hysteria, fluor albus, scrofula, rickets, passive hemorrhages, dyspepsia when dependent on deficient energy of the digestive function, and neuralgia. Tliej are contraindicated in all inflammatory diseases, producing, when injudiciously employed, heat, thirst, headache, difficulty of breathing, and other symptoms of an excited circulation. In order to understand their effect in improving the blood, it must be borne in mind that this fluid always contains iron, as an essen- tial constituent of the red corpuscles. The amount in ten thousand parts of blood, according to different authorities, is 23 parts (Le Canu), 24 (Denis), 55 (Becquerel and Rodier), 8 7 (Poggiale), mean 47. In anmmia the blood is deficient in iron, not because the red corpuscles contain less of the metal, for they, individually considered, always contain the normal quantity; but be- cause there are fewer of them. (Becquerel and Rodier.) The question here arises, which are the preparations of iron best adapted to promote the forma- tion of the red constituent of the blood, and what are the conditions of their administration most favourable to their efficient action ? According to M. Bouchardat, the preparations most easily assimilated are metallic iron and the protoxide; and, when the latter is in saline combination, it should be united either with carbonic acid, or with some organic acid. He holds that, when the iron is combined with a mineral acid, such as the sulphuric or phosphoric, the preparation acts solely as an astringent. Quevenne did not go so far as this, but believed that the mineral acid salts were not well adapted for assimilation, and that they were less so in proportion to their astringent power. Quevenne laid it down as a rule, that, when the iron preparations are given with the view of improving the blood, they should be taken with the meals, and not on an empty stomach. Doses, thus given, were well borne, which often caused uneasiness and pain, when taken fasting. The gastric juice of the empty stomach is usually alkaline; and Quevenne proved that reduced iron, introduced, through a fistulous opening, into the stomach of fasting dogs, was not acted on, and was without effect in exciting the secretion. The juice, during digestion, is 392 Ferrum. PART I. acid, and has been shown by the experiments of Quevenne to be in a favourable state for dissolving iron. The ferruginous preparations, it is true, were found to be unequally soluble; for, while iron filings were freely soluble, the subcar- bonate of iron was but slightly attacked. It was observed that the acidity of the gastric juice was but little diminished by the solution of the iron; which "fact can be explained only by supposing that the presence of the metal caused a nearly proportional increase of the acid secretion. Assuming these observations to be accurate, it is easy to perceive why the ferruginous preparations should be taken with the food, selecting of course those most soluble in the gastric juice. The digested iron, being intimately blended with the digested food, is in a favour- able state to fulfil its indispensable agency in sanguification. In the use of ferruginous preparations, it is often necessary to persevere for several months, in order to reap the fullest benefit. Even after the cure appears to be accomplished, it is safest to continue them, in diminishing doses, for a considerable time. For further information on the properties of iron, the reader is referred to the able memoir of the late T. A. Quevenne, entitled Memoir sur HAction Physiologique et Therapeutique des Ferrugineux (Paris, 1854). The following table embraces all the preparations of iron to be found in the United States and British Pharmacopoeias, together with their synonymes. Iron is officinal— I. In the metallic state. Ferrum, U. S.—Iron. Iron Wire, Br. Ferrum Redactum, TJ. S., Br. — Reduced Iron. Powder of Iron. II. Oxidized. Ferri Oxidum Hydratum, TJ. S.; Ferri Peroxidum Hydralum, Br.—Hy- drated Oxide of Iron. Hydrated Peroxide of Iron. Ferri Oxidum Magneticum, Br. — Magnetic Oxide of Iron. Ferri Peroxidum, Br. —Peroxide of Iron. Eraplastrum Ferri, Br. — Chalybeate Plaster. Ill Sulphuretted. Ferri Sulphuretum, TJ. S., Br. Appendix. — Sulphuret of Iron. IV. In saline combination. Ferri Arsenias, Br. — Arseniate of Iron. Ferri Carbonas Saccharata4 Br. — Saccharated Carbonate of Iron. Pilula Ferri Carbonatis, Br. —Pill of Carbonate of Iron. Pululae Ferri Carbonatis, TJ. S.—Pills of Carbonate of Iron. Valletta ferruginous pills. Pilulae Ferri Composite, U. S.— Compound Pills of Iron. Ferri Chloridum, TJ. S. — Chloride of Iron. Tinctura Ferri Chloridi, TJ. S. — Tincture of Chloride of Iron. Ferri Citras, TJ. S. — Citrate of Iron. Liquor Ferri Citratis, TJ. S.— Solution of Citrate of Iron. Ferri et Ammoniae Citras, TJ. S., Br. — Citrate of Iron and Ammonia. Ferri et Ammoniae Sulphas, TJ. S. — Sulphate of Iron and Ammonia. Ammonio-ferric Alum. Ferri et Ammoniae Tartras, TJ. S.— Tartrate of Iron and Ammonia. Ferri et Potass® Tartras, TJ. S.; Ferrum Tartaratum, Br.— Tartrate of Iron and Potassa. Tartarated Iron. Vinum Ferri, Br. — Wine of Iron. Ferri et Quiniae Sulphas, U. S., Br. — Sulphate of Iron and Quinia. Ferri Ferrocyanidum, TJ. S. — Ferrocyanide of Iron. Pure Prussian blue. Potassii Ferrocyanidum, TJ. S. — Ferrocyanide of Potassium, Br. Pilulae Ferri lodidi, U. S.— Pills of Iodide of Iron. FART I. Fer rum. 393 Syrupus Ferri Iodidi, U. S, Br. — Syrup of Iodide of Iron. Ferri Iodidum, Br.—Iodide of Iron. Ferri Lactas, U. S.—Lactate of Iron. Liquor Ferri Nitratis, U.S.; Liquor Ferri Pernitratis, Br. — Solution of Nitrate of Iron. Liquor Ferri Perchloridi, Br. — Solution of Perchloride of Iron. Tinctura Ferri Perchloridi, Br.— Tincture of Perchloride of Iron. Ferri Phosphas, U. S., Br. — Phosphate of Iron. Syrupus Ferri Phosphatis, Br. — Syrup of Phosphate of Iron. Ferri Pyrophosphas, U. S.—Pyrophosphate of Iron. Ferri Subcarbonas, U. S. — Subcarbonate of Iron. Emplastrum Ferri, U. S.—Plaster of Iron. Strengthening plaster. Trochisci Ferri Subcarbonatis, U. S. — Troches of Subcarbonate of Iron. Liquor Ferri Subsulphatis, U. S. —Solution of Subsulphate of Iron. Ferri Sulphas, U. S., Br. — Sulphate of Iron. Ferri Sulphas Exsiccata, U. S., Br. — Dried Sulphate of Iron. Mistura Ferri Composita, U. S., Br. — Compound Mixture of Iron. Ferri Sulphas Granulata, Br. — Granulated Sulphate of Iron. Liquor Ferri Tersulphatis, U. S. —Solution of Tersulphate of Iron. Iron Wire. Ferri Filum. U. S. 1850. Fit de fer, Fr.; Eisendraht, Germ.; Fil di Ferro, Ital.; Hilo de hierro, Span. Iron Filings. Ferri Ramenta. U. S. 1850. Limatura Ferri. Limaillesde fer, Fr.; Eisenfeilicht, Germ ; Limatura di ferro, Ital.; Limatura de hierro, Span. Iron, when employed in pharmaceutical operations, should be of the purest kind; and hence the Pharmacopoeias generally direct it, when wanted in small masses, to be in the form of iron wire, which is necessarily made from the purest; because the softest and most ductile iron, and is readily cut into pieces. Iron filings are usually obtained from the workshops of the blacksmith; but, as furnisEecT from this source, they are generally very impure, and unfit for medi- cinal use. M. Gobley, upon examining thirty-six samples of iron filings, found but three exempt from copper. The rest, besides wood, sand, and oxide of iron, contained as high as 2 per cent, of this metal. Iron filings cannot be com- pletely purified by the magnet; as they often have adhering to them bits of foreign matter, which are carried up with them. The only way to obtain them pure1 is to file a piece of pure iron with a clean file. The French Codex directs iron in an impalpable powder, prepared by porphyrizing bright and clean iron filings without water. A dull black powder is formed, which must be carefully preserved from moisture. An impalpable powder of the metal, obtained by re- ducing the sesquioxide by hydrogen, is officinal in the U. S. and Br. Pharmaco- poeias. (See Fer rum Redactum.) Medical Uses. In the form of wire, iron is never used internally; in that of filings, it was formerly much employed. Though undoubtedly an efficacious remedy, iron filings have been entirely superseded by one of the forms of powdered iron which have lately been brought into use, and which have the great advan- tages of more entire purity and more ready solubility in the liquids of the sto- mach, while exempt, by their impalpable character, from the liability to produce irritation mechanically, which was objected against the filings. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Potassii Bromidum, U. S. Off. Prep. Ferri Chloridum, U. S.; Ferri Iodidum, Br.; Ferri Lactas, U. S.; Ferri Sulphas; Ferri Sulphas Granulata, Br.; Liquor Ferri Nitratis, U.S.; Liquor Ferri Perchloridi, Br.; Liquor Ferri Pernitratis, Br.; Pilulae Ferri todidi; Syrupus Ferri Iodidi; Tinctura Ferri Chloridi, U. S. B. Ferri Sulphuretum. PART 1 FERRI SULPHURETUM. U.S. Sulphuret of Iron. “Protosulphuret of Iron, prepared by melting together Iron in small pieces and Sublimed Sulphur.” U. S. This has been introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia as the material from which sulphuretted hydrogen may be obtained, which, though not officinal, is in constant use as a reagent, and is often employed wdth great advantage in pro- cesses for isolating the active principles of medicinal substances. The officinal sulphuret of iron is best prepared by bringing iron and sulphur into contact at a red or white heat. The following is the process of the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia. “Take of rods of Iron, of the size employed in the manufacture of nails, any convenient number. Having raised them to a strong red or white heat, apply them in succession by their heated extremities to sticks of Sulphur, operating so that the melted Sulphuret, as it is formed, may drop into a stone cistern filled with water, and be thus protected from oxidation. The water being poured off, let the product be separated from the Sulphur with which it is mixed, and, when dried, let it be enclosed in a well stopped bottle.” Dub. “An inferior sort, good enough, however, for pharmaceutic purposes, is ob- tained by heating one part of Sublimed Sulphur and three of Iron Filings, in a crucible, in a common fire till the mixture begins to glow, and then removing the crucible, and covering it until the action, which at first increases considera- bly, shall come to an end.” Ed. Iron and sulphur form a number of sulphurets, among which the most im- portant are the protosulphuret and sesquisulphuret, corresponding with the pro- toxide and sesquioxide of iron, the bisulphuret or cubic pyrites, and magnetic pyrites, which is a compound of five eqs. of protosulphuret, and one of bisul- phuret. When the sulphuret is obtained by the application of solid sulphur to white-hot iron, the product corresponds with magnetic pyrites; but, when pro- cured by heating flowers of sulphur with an excess of iron filings, as directed in the above Edinburgh process, a protosulphuret is formed mixed with metallic iron. When sulphur is applied to white-hot iron over water, the metal appears to become hotter, burns with scintillations in the vapour of the sulphur, and forms instantly the sulphuret, which, being comparatively fusible, melts mto globules, and drops into the water, which serves to extinguish them. Properties, &c. The officinal sulphuret of iron has a yellowish colour and the metallic lustre. When obtained over water it is in the form of brownish-yellow globules, having a somewhat crystalline texture. When pure it furnishes a yel- low powder, and dissolves in dilute sulphuric or muriatic acid without leaving a residue of sulphur, and with the production of hydrosulphuric acid gas (sul- phuretted hydrogen), free from admixture of hydrogen. As prepared, however, by the officinal processes, it is not entirely soluble in dilute sulphuric acid, a portion of uncombined sulphur being left. The fused globules have the compo- sition 5FeS-fFeSa, or, according to some, This sulphuret is em- ployed solely as a pharmaceutical agent for the production of hydrosulphuric acid. It yields this gas by reaction with diluted sulphuric acid. Water is decom- posed; its hydrogen combines with the sulphur to form hydrosulphuric acid, while Hie oxygen converts the iron into protoxide, with which the sulphuric acid unites. Hydrosulphuric acid is a colourless gas, having a smell like tba* of putrid eggs. Its sp. gr. is 1 1782. It saturates bases, with which it formi salts called hydrosulphates, sulphohydrates, or hydrosulphurets. It consists of one eq. of sulphur 16, and one of hydrogen 1 = 17. B PART I. Ficus. 395 FICUS. U.S.,Br. Fig. The dried fruit of Ficus Carica. U. S., Br. Figues, Fr.; Feigen, Germ.; Fichi, Ital.; Higos, Span. Ficus. Sex. Syst. Polygamia Dioecia.—Nat. Ord. Frticaceae. Gen. Ch. Common receptacle turbinate, fleshy, converging, concealing the florets in the same or distinct individuals. Male. Calyx three-parted. Corolla none. Stamens three. Female. Calyx five-parted. Corolla none. Pistil one. Seed one, covered with the closed, persistent, somewhat fleshy calyx. Willd. Ficus Carica. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 1131; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 714, t. 244. The fig-tree, though often not more than twelve feet high, sometimes rises in warm climates twenty-five or even thirty feet. Its trunk, which seldom exceeds seven inches in diameter, is divided into numerous spreading branches, covered with a brown or ash-coloured bark. Its large, palmate leaves, usually divided into five obtuse lobes, are deep-green and shining above, pale-green and downy beneath, and stand alternately on strong, round footstalks. The flowers are situated within a common receptacle, placed upon a short peduncle in the axils of the upper leaves. This receptacle, the walls of which become thick and fleshy, constitutes what is commonly called the fruit; though this term is, strictly speaking, applicable to the small seed-like bodies found in great numbers on the internal surface of the receptacle, to which they are attached by fleshy pedicels. Cultivation has produced in the fig, as in the apple and peach, a great diversity in shape, size, colour, and taste. It is usually, however, turbinate or top-shaped, umbilicate at the large extremity, of the size of a small pear, of a whitish, yel- lowish, or reddish colour, and of a mild, mucilaginous, saccharine taste. The fig-tree is supposed to have come originally from the Levant. It was in- troduced at a very early period into various parts of the south of Europe, and is now very common throughout the whole basin of the Mediterranean, particularly in Italy and France. To hasten the maturation of the fruit, it is customary to puncture it with a sharp-pointed instrument covered with olive oil. The ancient process of caprification is still practised in the Levant. It consists in attaching branches of the wild fig-tree to the cultivated plant. The fruit of the former con- tains great numbers of the eggs of an insect of the genus Cynips, the larvae of vhich, as soon as they are hatched, spread themselves over the cultivated fruit, and, by conveying the pollen of the male organs over which they pass to the female florets, hasten the impregnation of the latter, and cause the fig to come quickly to perfection, which might otherwise ripen very slowly, or wither and drop off before maturity. Some authors attribute the effect to the piercing of the fruit by the young insects. According to Landerer, the unripe fig contains an irritant juice, which inflames the skin, and may even disorganize it. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxxiii. 215.) The figs, when perfectly ripe, are dried by the heat of the sun or in ovens. Those imported into this country come chiefly from Smyrna, packed in drums or boxes. They are more or less compressed, and are usually covered in cold weather with a whitish saccharine efflorescence, which melts in the middle of summer, and renders them moist. The best are yellowish or brownish, somewhat translucent when held to the light, and filled with a sweet viscid pulp, in which are lodged numerous small yellow seeds. They are much more saccharine than the fresh fruit. Their chief constituents are sugar and mucilage. Medical Properties and Uses. Figs are nutritious, laxative, and demulcent. In the fresh state they are considered in the countries where they grow a whole- some and agreeable aliment, and have been employed from time immemorial. Ficus.—Filix Mas. PART I. They are apt, however, when eaten freely, to produce flatulence, pain in the bowels, and diarrhoea. Their chief medical use is as a lamtive article of diet in constipation. They occasionally enter into demulcent decoctions; and, when roasted or boiled, and split open, are sometimes applied as a suppurative cata- plasm to parts upon which an ordinary poultice cannot be conveniently retained, as, for example, to the gums. Off. Prep. Confectio Sennae. "W. FILIX MAS. U.S. Male Fern. The rhizoma of Aspidiura Filix mas. U. S. Off. Syn. FILIX. Aspidium Filix mas. The rhizoma dried. Br. Foug&re male, Fr.; Johanniswurzel, Germ.; Felce maschio, Ital.; Helecho, Span. Aspidium. Sex. Syst. Cryptogamia Filices.—Nat. Ord. Filices, Jussieu. Filicales, Bindley. Oen.Ch. Fructification in roundish points, scattered, not marginal. Involucre umbilicated, open almost on every side. Smith. The root of a species of Aspidium, growing in South Africa, has been used by the Kaffirs in the vicinity of Natal, by whom it is called inkomankomo, or un- comocomo as the name is given by Dr. Theodore Martius. The plant is the A.. athamanticum, and the root has received the name of panna in Europe, where it was first brought into notice in 1851. It is probably in no respect superior to the European species. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 447.) Aspidium Filix mas. Willd. Sp. Plant, v. 259; Smith, Flor. Britan. — N%- phrodium Filix mas. Lindley, Flor. Ned. 619. — Polypodium Filix mas. Linn.; Woodv. IfedFBot. p. 795, t. 267. The male fern has a perennial, horizontal root or rhizoma, from which numerous annual fronds or leaves arise, forming tufts from a foot to four feet in height. The stipe or footstalk, and midrib are thickly beset with brown, tough, transparent scales; the frond itself is oval-lanceolate, acute, pinnate, and of a bright-green colour. The pinnae or leaflets are remote below, approach more nearly as they ascend, and run together at the summit of the leaf. They are deeply divided into lobes, which are of an oval shape, crenate at the edges, and gradually diminish from the base of the pinna to the apex. The fructification is in small dots on the back of each lobe, placed in two rows near the base, and distant from the edges. The plant is a native of Europe, Asia, and the north of Africa. It is said also to be indigenous, growing in shady pine forests from New York to Virginia; but it may be doubted whether the Ameri- can plant is identical with the European. The proper period for collecting the root is during the summer, when, accord- ing to M. Peschier, of Geneva, it abounds more in the active principle than at any other season. The same writer informs us that it deteriorates rapidly when and in about two years becomes entirely inert. The roots of other species of fern are frequently substituted for the officinal; and in the dried state it is difficult to distinguish them. Properties, &c. As taken from the ground, the root consists of a long cylin- drical caudex, around which are closely arranged, overlapping each other like the shingles of a roof, the remains of the leafstalks or stipes, which are an inch or two in length, from two to four lines thick, somewhat curved and directed up- wards, angular, brown, shining, and surrounded near their origin from the root with thin silky scales, of a light-brown colour. From between these remains of the footstalks emerge numerous small radical fibres. The whole root, thus con- stituted, presents a somewhat flexible, cylindrical mass, one or two inches thick, and a foot or more in length. In this form, however, it is not usually found in Filix Mas. 397 PART I our shops The whole is ordiuarily broken up into fragments, consisting of the separated remains of the leafstalks before described, with a small portion of the substance of the root attached to their base, where they are surrounded by the silky scales. These fragments, as seen in the shops, often appear as if long kept, and are probably, in general, much deteriorated by time. The following observa- tions are made by Geiger in relation to the collection and preservation of the root. The inner parts of the fresh root, and of the portions of stalk attached to it, are fleshy and of a light yellowish-green colour. In collecting them, all the black discoloured portions should be cut away, the fibres and scales separated, and only the sound green parts preserved. These should be immediately but carefully dried, and then pulverized; and the powder should be kept in small well-stopped glass bottles. The powder thus prepared has a pale-yellowish colour with a greenish tinge. Dried fern root is externally of a brown colour, internally yellowish-white or reddish, with a peculiar but feeble odour which is most obvious in the powder and decoction, and a sweetish, bitter, astringent, nauseous taste. It has been analyzed by H. Bock, who gives as its constituents, volatile oil, fixed oil, resin, starch, vegetable jelly, albumen, gum, sugar, tannic and gallic acids, pectin, liguin, and various salts. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 64.) Peschier ascertained that its active properties reside in the ethereal extract, which is the fixed oil in an impure state, containing volatile oil, resin, colouring matter, &c. It is a thick dark liquid, with the odour of the fern, and a nauseous, bitterish, somewhat acrid taste. t)r. E. Luck has found in it a peculiar acid, which he denominates filicic acid, and has extracted from the root two others named tannaspidic and pteri- tannic acids. (Ghem. Gaz., ix. 407 and 452.) The aspidin of Pavesi is not en- titled to the name, as, though it may contain, it does not itself constitute the active principle, and is probably little if at all superior to the ethereal extract. Medical Properties and Uses. Male fern is slightly tonic and astringent; but produces, when taken internally, no very obvious effects upon the system. It was used by the ancients as a vermifuge, and is mentioned in the works of Dioseorides, Theophrastus, Galen, and Pliny. Its anthelmintic powers were also noticed by some of the earlier modern writers, among whom was Hoffmann. But it does not appear to have been generally known to the profession, till brought into notice, about the year 1775, by the publication of the mode of treat- ing tsenia, employed by Madame Nouffer. This lady, who was the widow of a surgeon in Switzerland, had acquired great celebrity in the cure of tape-worm by a secret remedy. Her success was such as to attract the attention of the medical profession at Paris; and some of the most eminent physicians of that city, who were deputed to examine into the subject, having reported favourably of the remedy, the secret was purchased by the King of France, and published by his order. The outlines of her plan were to give a dose of the powdered root of the male fern, and two hours afterwards a powerful cathartic, to be followed, if it should not operate in due time, by some purging salt; and this process was to be repeated, with proper intervals, till the worm should be evacuated. A German physician, named Herrenschwand, had used the male fern in a manner somewhat similar, before Madame Nouffer’s secret was known. Different c pi- nions have been held of the value of this anthelmintic; but the accounts of its efficacy in the treatment of tape-worm are too numerous and authentic to admit of any reasonable doubt. Dr. Peschier stated that, in the course of nine months, 150 tape-worms had been expelled by the ethereal extract. Dr. Ebers found the same preparation completely successful in eight cases. The testimony of Brera is also strongly in favour of the remedy, which he found effectual even against the armed tsenia. M. Ronzel cured with it more than 100 cases of tsenia, and never found it to fail. (Journ. de Pharm., Be ser., iv. 474.) Perhaps tfye different re- sults obtained by different practitioners may be in part ascribed to the variable 398 Filix Mas.—Foeniculum. PART I. strength and character of the root employed. It is said that the remedy proves more effectual against the tape-worm of the Swiss (Bothriocephalus latus) than against the Tsenia solium, which is more frequent in France and England. (Bremser.) It appears to act as a poison to the worm, which it destroys; thereby facilitating its expulsion from the bowels. The medicine may be given in the form of powder or ethereal extract. The dose of the powder is from one to three drachms, to be administered in electuary or emulsion, and repeated morning and evening for one or two days. M. Ronzel gives half an ounce to adults, made into boluses, to be swallowed in fifteen minutes, in the morning, on an empty stomach. The dose of the ethereal extract {oil of fern) is from twelve to twenty-four grains. Dr. Mayor, of Geneva, recommends it in the dose of from thirty to fifty drops, one-half to be taken at night, the other half in the morning, and followed, at the interval of an hour, by an ounce and a half of castor oil. The decoction has also been employed, made with an ounce of the root and a pint of water. It is customary to follow the medicine by some brisk cathartic, though this is not considered essential. Off. Prep. Extractum Filicis Liquidum, Br. W. FCENICULUM. U.S.,Br. Fennel. The fruit of Foeniculum vulgare. U. S. Foeniculum_ dulce. The fruit. Br. Sweet Fennel Fruit, Br.; Fenouil, Fr.; Fenchel, Germ.; Finnocchio, Ital.; Hinojo, Span. The plant producing fennel-seed was attached by Linnaeus to the genus Ane- ihum, but was separted from it by De Candolle, and placed, with three or four others, in a new genus styled Foeniculum, which has been generally adopted by botanists. The Anethum Foeniculum of Linnaeus embraced two varieties, the common or wild fennel, and the sweet fennel; the latter being the plant usually eultivatecTTn the gardens of Europe. These are considered by De Candolle as distinct species, and named respectively Foeniculum vulgare and Foeniculum dulce. In the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, the former of these is recognised as the source of the medicine; in the British Pharmacopoeia, the latter, In the late Ed. Pharmacopoeia, the F officinale of Allioni was recognised. The last-men- tioned plant De Candolle considers as belonging to his F. vulgare (Prodromus, iv. 142); while Merat treats of it as a distinct species, differing both from the F. vulgare and F. dulce of De Candolle {Diet, de Mat. Med.); and Dr. Christi- son, in his Dispensatory, is disposed to unite it with the last-mentioned plant. In this confusion it is impossible to arrive at any definite and satisfactory con- clusion as to the botanical history of the drug under consideration. One thing, however, is certain, that there are two kinds of fennel-seed found in the shops; and it is highly probable that these are derived, if not from distinct species of fennel, at least from marked varieties of the plant. One of them corresponds ulosely with the description given of the fruit of F. vulgare, while the other is undoubtedly produced by the plant cultivated under the name of sweet fennel, whether that be the F. dulce of De Candolle, or F. officinale of Allioni and Merat. Foeniculum. Sex. Sgst. Pentandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. TJmbellifene or Apiaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx a tumid obsolete rim. Petals roundish, entire, involute, with a squarish blunt lobe. Fruit nearly taper. Half-fruits with five prominent bluntly keeled ridges, of which the lateral are on the edge, and rather broadest. Vittse single in the channels, two on the commissure. Involucre none. (Bindley.) Foeniculum vulgare. De Cand. Prodrom. iv. 142.—Anethum Foeniculum. Linn.; Woody. Med. Bot. p. 127, t. 49. Common fennel has a biennial or per- ennial tapering root, and an annual, erect/ round, striated, smooth, green, and Foeniculum. PA/tT I. copiously branching stem, which usually rises three or four feet in height. The leaves, which stand alternately at the joints of the stem, upon membranous striated sheaths, are many times pinnate, with long, linear, pointed, smooth, deep-green leaflets. The flowers are in large, flat, terminal umbels, with from thirteen to twenty rays, and destitute both of general and partial involucres. The corolla consists of five petals, which, as well as the stamens, are golden-yellow. The fruit is ovate, rather less than two lines in length by about a line in breadth, and of a dark colour, especially in the channels. The plant is a native of Europe, growing wild upon sandy and chalky ground throughout the continent. F. officinale. Merat and De Lens, Diet, de Mat. Med. iii. 270; Allioni, Ed. is sometimes called sweet fennel, is also perennial, with shorter leaves and less elongated leaflets than the common fennel, but resembling it very closely except in the character of the fruit. This is twice as long as that of the former plant, a little curved, of a less dark colour, with prominent ridges, and a persistent peduncle. It is sweeter and more aromatic than common fennel- seed. The plant is a native of the south of Europe; but is cultivated elsewhere in gardens, and is probably the source of much of the fennel-seed of the shops. Whether it is a distinct species, or a mere variety of F. vulgare, is not deter- mined. Some confound it with the following. F. dulce.-De Cand. Prodrom. iv. 142. This plant is eminently entitled to the name of sweet, fenjiel. It bears a general resemblance to F. vulgare, but differs in having its stem somewhat compressed at the base, its radical leaves somewhat distichous, and the number of rays in the umbel only from six to eight. It is also a much smaller plant, being only about a foot in height; its flowers appear earlier; and its young shoots or turiones are sweeter and edible. It is a native of Portugal, Italy, and perhaps other parts of Southern Europe; and is culti- vated largely in Italy and Sicily for the sake of the shoots, which are eaten raw, or in salad, or boiled as potherbs. The fruit is described by Merat and De Lens as “being globular-ovate, twice the size of that of common fennel, and with prominent ridges.” This description does not answer to the character of any of the fennel-seed we have seen in the shops. In all these species or varieties, the whole plant has an aromatic odour and taste, dependent on a volatile oil by which it is pervaded. The roots were formerly employed in medicine, but are generally inferior in virtues to the fruit, which is now the only officinal portion. Our shops are partly supplied from our own gardens; but much the larger portion of the medicine is imported from Europe, and chiefly, as we have been informed, from Germany. The fennel-seed cultivated here is sweeter and more aromatic than that from abroad, probably in conse- quence of its greater freshness. Fennel-seeds (half-fruits) are oblong-oval, from one to three or four lines in length, flat on one side, convex on the other, not unfrequently connected by their flat surfaces, straight or slightly curved, of a dark grayish-green colour, with longitudinal yellowish ridges on the convex surface. There are two varieties j one of them from one to two lines long, dark-coloured, rather flat, almost always separate, and without footstalks; the other from three to five lines in length, lighter-coloured, with much more prominent ridges, often conjoined by their flat surface, and very frequently provided with a footstalk. They do not differ essen- tially in aromatic properties. The odour of fennel-seed is fragrant, its taste warm, sweet, and agreeably aromatic. It yields its virtues to hot water, but more freely to alcohol. The essential oil may be separated by distillation with water. (See Oleum Fceniculi.) The seeds contain also fixed oil. From 960 parts, Neumann obtained 20 parts of the former and 120 of the latter. Medical Properties and Uses. Fennel-seed was used by the ancients, is among our most grateful aromatics, and in this country is much employed as a carmina- tive, and as a corrigent of other less pleasant medicines, particularly senna and 400 Foeniculum.—Frasera. PART I. rhubarb. It is recommended for these purposes by the absence of any very highly excitant property. The infusion, prepared by introducing two or three drachms of the seeds into a pint of boiling water, is the form usually preferred. The dose of the bruised or powdered seeds is from a scruple to half a drachm. In infants, the infusion is frequently employed as an enema for the expulsion of flatus. Off. Prep. Aqua Fceniculi, Br.; Oleum Foeniculi, U. S.; Tinctura Rhei et Semite, U. S. W. FRASERA. U. S. Secondary. American Golumbo. •The root of Frasera Walteri. U. S. Frasera. Sex.Syst. Tetrandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Gentianacese. Gen. Gh. Calyx deeply four-parted. Corolla four-parted, spreading; seg- ments oval, with a bearded, orbicular gland in the middle of each. Capsule com- pressed, partly marginated, one-celled. Seeds few, imbricated, large, elliptical, with a membranaceous margin. Nuttall. Frasera Walteri. Michaux, Flor. Bor. Americ. i. 96 ; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 103.-F. 0arolmensis. Walter. This is among our most elegant indigenous plants, and the only one of its genus. From the root, which is triennial, long, spindle-shaped, horizontal, fleshy, and yellow, a strong, succulent, solid, smooth stem rises, from five to ten feet in height. The leaves are sessile, entire, glabrous, of a deep-green colour, and disposed in whorls, which commence at the root, and ascend to the summit with successively diminishing intervals. The radical leaves, from five to twelve in number, are elliptical, obtuse, a foot or more in length by about four inches in breadth, and lie upon the ground in the form of a star. Those constituting the whorls are successively smaller as they ascend; the lowest ob- long-lanceolate, the upper lanceolate and pointed. The flowers are numerous, large, yellow'ish-white, and disposed in a beautiful terminal pyramidal panicle, from one to five feet long, the branches of which spring from the axils of the upper leaves. The segments of the calyx are lanceolate, acute, and somewhat shorter than those of the corolla. The filaments are inserted into the base of the corolla, between its segments, which they do not equal in length. The anthers are oblong and notched at the base. The germ is oblong-ovate, compressed, and gradually tapers into the style, which ends in a bifid stigma. The fruit is an oval, acuminate, compressed, two-valved, one-celled, yellow capsule, containing from eight to twelve flat, elliptical seeds. The Frasera flourishes in the southern and western portions of the United States, and in many situations is very abundant, especially in Arkansas and Mis- souri. It prefers rich woodlands and moist meadows. The period of flowering is from May to July; but the stems and flowers are produced only in the third year, the radical leaves being the only part of the plant which previously appears above ground. From this manner of growth, it is inferred that the root should t)e collected in the autumn of the second, or spring of the third year. Before being dried, it should be cut into transverse slices. As formerly in the market, frasera was in pieces irregularly circular, an eighth of an inch or more in thickness, about an inch in diameter, somewhat shrunk in the middle, consisting of a central medullary matter and an exterior cortical por- tion, of a yellowish colour on the cut surfaces, with a light reddish-brown epi- dermis. In appearance these pieces somewhat resembled columbo, but were easily distinguishable by the greater uniformity of their internal structure, the absence of concentric and radiating lines, and their purer yellow colour without a greenish tinge. We have met with a parcel of the root sliced longitudinally, so as to imi- tate gentian, though not likely to be confounded with it by an experienced per- son. It was called American gentian. The taste of frasera is bitterish and sweet- PART I. Frasera.—Galbanum. 401 ish. Water and diluted alcohol extract its virtues; and the tincture lets fall a precipitate upon the addition of water, but is not disturbed by tincture of galls. The hot infusion is not precipitated by solution of gelatin, and gives with iodine no signs of starch. These reactions afford additional means of distinguishing the root from columbo. Mr. Higinbothom, of Bermuda, found in it gum, pectin, glu cose, wax, resin, fatty matter, yellow colouring matter, bitter extractive, and an acid which was probably peculiar. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1862, p. 23.) Medical Properties and Uses. Frasera is a mild tonic, calculated to meet the same indications with the other simple bitters. It has been thought to resemble columbo in medical properties as well as in appearance, and hence has received the popular name of American columbo; but experience has not confirmed the high estimate at one time lofined of its virtues; and though, perhaps, still occa- sionally used in some places, it has failed to supplant the tonic of Mozambique. It may be given in powder or infusion. The dose of the former is from thirty grains to a drachm; that of an infusion, made in the proportion of an ounce of the bruised root to a pint of boiling water, is one or two fluidounces, to be re- peated several times a day. The fresh root is said to operate as an emetic and cathartic, and has been given with a view to the latter effect. W. GALBANUM. U.S.,Br Galbanum. The concrete juice of an undetermined plant. TJ. S. A gum-resin, derived from an unascertained umbelliferous plant. Br. Galbanum, Fr.; Mutterharz, Germ.; Galbano, Ital., Span. * It is uncertain from what plant galbanum is derived. At one time it was sup- posed to be the product of Bubon Galbanum, an umbelliferous plant of the eastern coast of Africa. It has also been referred to the Ferula ferulago of Linnaeus, the Ferula galbanifera of Lobel, which inhabits the coasts of the Mediterranean, and is found also in Transylvania and the Caucasus. But on part of either of these plants has the odour of galbanum; and it is, therefore, scarcely probable that they yield the drug. Mr. Don, having found the seeds laken from a parcel of galbanum to belong to an undescribed genus of umbelli- ferous plants, and concluding that they came from the same source as the gum- resin itself, gave the title of Galbanum to the new genus, and named the species Galbanum officinale. This was rather hastily adopted by the London College; as it~is”by^no~means certain that the same plant produced the seeds and the gum-resin. Specimens of a plant were received in England from Persia having a concrete juice adhering to them, which was taken by Dr. Lindley for galba- num ; and that botanist, finding that the plant belonged to an nndeseribed genus, named it Opoidia. with the specific name galbanifera. Dr. Pereira, however, found the substance not to be galbanum; and this supposed origin of the drug, therefore, though admitted as probable by the Edinburgh College, and recognised by the Dublin, must be considered as more than doubtful. A German traveller, F. A. Bukse, who has resided in Persia, states that, in 1848, he met with the galbanum plant on the declivities of the Demawend, near the southern coast of the Caspian. He saw the gum-resin exuding spontaneously from the plant, and was informed by the natives that the drug was collected from it. The plant is a Ferula, and closely resembles the F. erubescens of Boissier, if not identical with it. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, March 17, 1852, p. 206.) Galbanum is said to be ob- tained by making incisions into the stem, or cutting it off a short distance above the root. A cream-coloured juice exudes, which concretes upon exposure to the air. A portion of juice also exudes spontaneously from the joints, and hardens fn the shape of tears. The drug is brought from India and the Levant Galbanum.—Galla. part I. Properties. Galbanum usually appears in the form of masses composed of whitish, reddish, or yellowish tears, irregularly agglutinated by a darker coloured yellowish-brown, or greenish substance, more or less translucent, and generally mixed with pieces of stalk, seeds, or other foreign matters. It is also found, though rarely in our markets, in the state of distinct roundish tears, about as large as a pea, of a yellowish-white or pale brownish-yellow colour, shining ex- ternally as if varnished, translucent, and often adhering together. Galbanura has in cool weather the consistence of firm wax; but softens in summer, and by the heat of the hand is rendered ductile and adhesive. At 212° F. it is suffici- ently liquid to admit of straining; and it generally requires to be strained before it can be used. A dark-brown or blackish colour, a consistence always soft, the absence of whitish grains, a deficiency in the characteristic odour and taste, and the intermixture of earthy impurities are signs of inferiority. The odour of galbanum is peculiar and disagreeable; its taste bitterish, warm, and acrid; its sp.gr. 1-212. Triturated with water, it forms an imperfect milky solution, which on standing deposits the greater portion of what was taken up. Wine and vinegar act upon it in a similar manner. Alcohol dissolves a con- siderable proportion, forming a yellow tincture, which has the smell and taste of galbanum, and becomes milky with water, but affords no precipitate. In dilute alcohol it is wholly soluble, with the exception of impurities. Ether dissolves the greater portion. Pelletier found in 100 parts, 6G-86 parts of resin, 19'28 of gum, 6-34 of volatile oil including the loss, 7-52 of wood and impurities, with traces of supermalate of lime. A small proportion of bassorin was found by Meissner. The medicine is, therefore, a gum-resin. By distillation at the temperature of about 250° F., the volatile oil is obtained of a fine indigo-blue colour, which it imparts to alcohol. Procured by distillation with water, it is colourless, and becomes yellowish by age. It is lighter than water. According to Ludewig, a gum-resin, designated as Persian galbanum, is re- ceived in Russia by the way of Astracan or Orenburg, and is the kind used in that country. It comes enclosed in skins, and is in masses of a reddish-brown colour with whitish streaks, of a disagreeable odour somewhat like that of assa- fetida, and of an unpleasant, bitter, resinous taste. It is so soft as to melt with a slight elevation of temperature. It differs from common galbanum in its odour, in its colour which is never greenish, and in the absence of tears, and is probably derived from a different plant. It abounds in impurities. Medical Properties and Uses. Galbanum was known to the ancients. It is •stimulant, expectorant, and antispasmodic; and is considered as intermediate in power between ammoniac and assafetida, though much less employed than either of these gum-resins. The complaints to which it has been thought appli- cable, are chiefly chronic affections of the bronchial mucous membrane, amenor- rhoea, and chronic rheumatism. It is occasionally applied externally as a plaster to indolent swellings, with the view of promoting resolution or suppuration. The dose is from ten to twenty grains, and may be given in pill, or triturated with gum arabic, sugar, and water, so as to form an emulsion. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Assafoetidae, U.S.; Emplastrum Galbani, Br.; Em- plastrum Galbani Compositum, U. S.; Pilula Assafoetidae Comp-osita, Br.; Tilulae Galbani Composite, U. S. W. GALLA. U.S., Br. Nutgall. Galls. A morbid excrescence upon Quercus infectoria. U. S. Excrescences caused by the punctures and deposited ova of Diplolepis Gallae tinctoriae. Br. Noix de galle, Fr.; Gallapfel, Germ.; Galla, Ital.; Agallas de Levante, Span. Many vegetables, when pierced by certain insects, particularly those of th« part i. G-alla. genus Cynips, are affected at the points of puncture with a morbid action, resulting in excrescences, which, as they are derived from the juices of the plant, partake more or less of its chemical character. Most of the oaks are occasion- ally thus affected; and the resulting excrescences, having in a high degree the astringency of the plant, have been employed for various practical purposes. They are known by the name of galls, a term which, as well as their use in medicine, has been handed down from the ancients. Quercus infectoria, Q. PEgi- lops, Q. excelsa, Q. Ilex, JQ. Cerris, and Q robur have been particularized as affording this product; but it is now generally admitted, on the authority ot Olivier, that the officinal galls are derived chiefly, if not exclusively, from Q. in- fectoria; and this is recognised as their source in the U. S. and Br. Pharma- copoeias.* Quercus. See QUERCUS ALBA. Quercus infectoria, Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 436; Olivier, Voy. Orient, t. 14 el 15 ; (ffarson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 40, pi. 85. The dyers' oak is a small tree or shrub, with a crooked stem, seldom exceeding six feet in freight. The leaves are obtusely toothed, smooth, of a bright-green colour on both sides, and stand on short footstalks. The acorn is elongated, smooth, two or three times longer than the cup, which is sessile, somewhat downy, and scaly. This species oi Quercus grows, according to Olivier, throughout Asia Minor, from the Archi- pelago to the confines of Persia. Captain M. Kinneir found it also in Armenia and Kurdistan; General Hardwicke observed it growing in the neighbourhood of Adwanie; and it probably pervades the middle latitudes of Asia. The gall originates from the puncture of the Cynips quercusfolii of Linnaeus, khe Diplolepis gallse tinctorise of Geoffroy, a hymenopterous insect or fly, with a fawn-coloured body, dark antennae, and the upper part of its abdomen shining brown. The insect pierces the shoots and young boughs, and deposits its egg in the wound. This irritates the part, and a small tumour quickly rises, which is the result of a morbid growth, exhibiting various cells under the microscope, but no proper vegetable fibre. The egg grows with the gall, and is soon con- verted into a larva, which feeds upon the vegetable matter around it, and thus forms a cavity in the centre of the excrescence. The insect at length becomes * Under the name of Chinese galls, a product has been brought from China, supposed to be caused by an insect toTh'e Aphis, as such an insect has been found in the interior of them. A specimen, which came under our notice, consisted of irregularly spindle-shaped bodies, often more or less bent, with obtusely pointed protuberances, about two inches long by an inch in diameter at the central thickest part, of an ash colour and a soft velvety feel, very light, hollow, with translucent walls about a line in thickness, of a slight odour recalling that of ipecacuanha, and a bitter astringent taste. From an examination of frag- ments of leaves and petioles found among these galls, Dr. Schenck concluded that the tree on which they are found is a species of Rhus; but, according to M. Decaisne, professor at the Museum of Natural History in Paris, their true source is probably the Distylium race- mosumTof Zuccarini (Flor. Japan., i. p. 178, t. 94), a large tree of Japan, the leaves of yvhich produce a velvety gall, resembling the one in question. (Guibourt, Hist. Nat. des Drogues. A. D. 1850, iii. 703.) More recently, however, it has been asserted by Mr. Daniel Hanbury that this opinion of Decaisne is erroneous; as, in his of the packages im- ported from China and Japan, he has found remains of different parts of a species of Rhus, Dut never any of a Distylium. Besides, the form of the galls of the Distylium, as figured oy Siebold and Zuccarini, is entirely different. The species of Rhus to which they are ascribed is the R. semi-alata. (Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1862, p. 421.) The Chinese make great use of this product both in dyeing and as a medicine. L. A. Buchner, jun., has found it to contain 65 per cent, of tannic acid identical with that of the officinal galls. (Pharm. Cent. Platt, July, 1851, p. 526.) It is recommended by Stenhouse for the manufact ire of gallic acid, being preferable for this purpose to the officinal galls, in consequence of its less amount of colouring matter. [Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1862, p. 330.) An inferior kind of galls has been recently produced in great quantities in England, by tb* attack of another species of Cynips, the C. Kollari of Hartig, upon the common English oa.V. But they have been ascertained to contain little tannic acid, and will not, probably, supersede the galls of the Levant.—Note to the twelfth edition. Galla. PART I. u fly, and escapes by eating its way out. The galls are in perfection when fully developed, before the egg has been hatched, or the fly has escaped. Collected at this period, they are called, from their dark colour, blue, green, or black galls, and are most highly esteemed. Those which are gathered later, and which have been injured by the insect, are called white galls. They are usually larger, less heavy and compact, and of a lighter colour than the former. The galls collected in Syria and Asia Minor are brought to this country chiefly from the ports of Smyrna and Trieste, or from London. As they are produced abundantly near Aleppo, it has been customary to designate them by the name of that town; though the designation, however correct it may formerly have been, is now wholly inapplicable, as they are obtained from many other places, and the produce of different parts of Asiatic Turkey is not capable of being discriminated, at least in our markets. Great quantities of galls, very closely resembling those from the Mediterranean, have been brought to the United States from Calcutta. Dr. Royle states that they are taken to Bombay from Bussorah through the Persian Gulf. We are, nevertheless, informed that galls are among the products of Moultan. Those of France and other southern countries of Europe have a smooth, shining, reddish surface, are little esteemed, and are seldom or never brought to the United States. Properties. Galls are nearly round, from the size of a pea to that of a very large cherry, with a surface usually studded with small tuberosities, in the inter- vals of which it is smooth. The best are externally of a dark-bluish or lead colour, sometimes with a greenish tinge, internally whitish or brownish, hard, solid, brittle, with a flinty fracture, a striated texture, and a small spot or cavity in the centre, indicating the presence of the undeveloped or decayed insect. Their powder is of a light yellowish-gray. Those of inferior quality are of a lighter colour, sometimes reddish or nearly white, of a loose texture, with a large cavity in the centre, communicating externally by a small hole through which the fly has escaped. Galls are inodorous, and have a bitter, very astringent taste. From 500 parts Davy obtained 185 parts of matter soluble in water, of which, according to his analysis, 130 were tannin, 31 gallic acid with a little extractive, 12 mucilage and matter rendered insoluble by evaporation, and 12 saline matter and calcareous earth. Braconnot discovered the presence of a small quantity of an acid to which he gave the name ellagic, derived from galle, the French name for galls, by reversing the order ofThe letters. According to M. Pelouze, however, neither gallic nor ellagic acid pre-exists in galls, being formed by the reaction of atmospheric oxygen upon their tannin. (Journ. de Pharm., xx. 359.) Galls also yielded to Professor Branchi, by distillation with water, a concrete volatile oil. Guibourt found 65 per cent, of tannic acid, 10 5 of lignin, 5-8 of gum, sugar, and starch, 4 0 of gallic, ellagic, and luteo-gallic acids, and 11 5 of water, besides extractive, chlorophyll, volatile oil, albumen, and salts. For some interesting views of the chemical nature of galls, see Acidurn Gallicum in the second part of this work. All the soluble matter of galls is taken up by forty times their weight of boiling water, and the residue is tasteless. Alcohol dissolves seven parts in ten, ether five parts. {Thomson's Dispensatory.) A saturated decoction deposits upon cooling a copious pale-yellow precipitate. The infusion or tincture affords precipitates with sulphuric and muriatic acids, lime-water, and the carbonates of ammonia and potassa; with solutions of ace- tate and subacetate of lead, the sulphates of copper and iron, the nitrates of silver and mercury, and tartrate of antimony and potassa; with solution of gelatin; and with the infusions of Peruvian bark, columbo, opium, and many other vege- tables, especially those containing alkaloids, with most of which tannic acid forms insoluble compounds. The infusion of galls reddens litmus paper, is ren- dered orange by nitric acid, milky by the corrosive chloride of mercurv, and has its colour deepened by ammonia; but yields no precipitate with either of PART I. G-alla.—Gambogia. these reagents. Sulphate of zinc was said by Dr. A. T. Thomson to occasion » slow precipitate, but this result was not obtained by Dr. Duncan. Medical Properties and Uses. Galls are powerfully astringent. They are little employed as an internal remedy, though occasionally prescribed in chronic diar- rhoea and chronic dysentery. They have been recommended as an antidote to tartar emetic, and those vegetable poisons which depend for their activity upon organic alkalies; but, though the insoluble compounds which these principles form with galls may be less active than their soluble native compounds, they cannot be considered as inert. In the form of infusion or decoction, made in tie proportion of half an ounce to a pint of water, galls may be advantageously used as an astringent gargle, lotion, or injection; and, mixed with simple oint- ment, in the proportion of one part of galls, in very fine powder, to eight parts of the unguent, they are frequently applied to the anus and rectum in hemor- rhoidal affections. The dose of powdered galls is from ten to twenty grains, to be repeated several times a day.* Off. Prep. Acidum Gallicum; Acidum Tannicum; Tinctura Gallee; Unguen- tum Gallae; Unguentum Gallse cum Opio, Br. W. GAMBOGIA. US. Gamboge. The concrete juice of an undetermined tree. U. S. Off. Syn. CAMBOGIA. An undetermined species of Garcinia. The gum- resin. Br. Gomme gutte, Fr.; Gummigut.t, Germ.; Gomma-gotta, Ital.; Gutta gamba, Span. Several plants belonging to the natural family of Guttiferee, growing in the equatorial regions, yield on incision a yellow opaque juice, which hardens on ex- posure, and bears a close resemblance to gatiaboge ; but it is not certainly known from which of these plants the officinal gum-resin is procured. Until recently the United States and all the British Pharmacopoeias ascribed it to Stalagmitis Cam.bonioid.es. This genus and species were established by Murray of Gottingen, in 1788, from dried specimens belonging to Konig, procured in Ceylon; and, from information derived from the same source, it was conjectured by Murray that the tree yielded not only the gamboge of Ceylon, but that-also collected in Siam. On this authority, the British Colleges made the reference alluded to. But it has been ascertained by Dr. Graham, of Edinburgh, that there is no such plant as Stalagmitis Cambogioides; the description of Murray having been drawn up from accidentally conjoined specimens of two trees belonging to different genera; one being the Xanthochymus ovalifolius of Roxburgh, and the other, the Hebradendron Gam.honioid.es of Graham. By several botanists the gum- resin has been ascribed to Garcinia Cambogia, also a tree of Ceylon belonging to the Guttiferae, and yielding a yellowish cUb'crete juice; but a specimen of the product of this tree, sent to Edinburgh, was found by Dr. Christison to differ from gamboge both in composition and appearance, being of a pale lemon-yellow colour. Thus it appears that neither of these references is correct; and, besides, * The following preparation has been made in imitation of one much used by the late Dr. Physick and Dr. Jos. Parrish, of Philadelphia. Macerate for twenty-four hours half an ounce of powdered galls, two drachms of bruised cinnamon, and two drachms of bruised nutmeg, in half a pint of brandy; then percolate, and, when the liquor has ceased to pass, idd enough diluted alcohol to yield half a pint of filtered liquor. Put this into a shallow capsule, suspend over it two ounces of sugar on a slip of wire-gauz.e, and set the tincture on fire. The sugar melts with the flame, and falls into the liquid beneath. When the com- bustion ceases, agitate and filter. A highly astringent aromatic is obtained, which may be given in obstinate diarrhoeas in the dose of a fluidrachm. (Am. Journ. ofl'harm., txvii. 416.)—Note to the eleventh edition. 406 G-ambogia. PART I. tlie fart, seoms to have been overlooked, that commercial gamboge is never ob- tained from Ceylon, but exclusively from Siam and Cochin China. A gum-resin from Ceylon having been found similar in composition to the gamboge of com- merce, and the tree which produced it having been referred by Dr. Graham to a new genus, and named by him Hebradendron Camboqioides, the Edinburgh College, in the last edition of its Pharmacopoeia, was induced to adopt this Cey- lon gamboge as officinal, and to recognise the name proposed by Dr. Graham for the tree producing it. But, as this variety is never found in western com- merce, and exists only in cabinets, or the bazaars of India, it scarcely merited a place in an officinal catalogue; and the sufficiency of the grounds upon which the proposed genus Hebradendron was separated from Garcinia is not univer- sally admitted. The decision of the Ed. College would, therefore, seem to have been somewhat premature; though there is reason to believe that the Siam gam- boge may be derived from a tree belonging to the same genus as the H. Carn- bogioides of Graham, but of a species hitherto undescribed.* Gamboge is collected in Siam and Cochin China. Similar products are ob- tained in Ceylon ; but they do not appear to be sent out of the island. Milburn does not mention gamboge among the exports. It is said to be procured in Siam by breaking off the leaves and shoots of the tree, from which the juice issues in drops, fxnd, being received in suitable vessels, gradually thickens, and at length becomes solid. Portions of it, when of the requisite consistence, are rolled into cylinders, and wrapped in leaves. The juice is sometimes received into the hollow joints of the bamboo, which give it a cylindrical form; and, as it contracts dur- ing concretion, the cylinder is often hollow in the centre. The name gummi gutta, by which it is generally known on the continent of Europe, probably originated from the circumstance that the juice escapes from the plant by drops. The officinal title wras undoubtedly derived from the province of Cambodia, in which the gutn-resin is collected. It was first brought to Europe by the Dutch about the middle of the 17th century. We import gamboge from Canton and Calcutta, whither it is carried by the native or resident merchants. There is no difference in the appearance or character of the drug as brought from these two ports; an evidence that it is originally derived from the same place. Varieties. The best gamboge is in cylindrical rolls, from one to three inches in diameter, sometimes hollow ip the centre, sometimes flattened, often folded double, or agglutinated in masses so that the original form is not always easily distinguishable. The pieces sometimes appear as if rolled, but are in general striated longitudinally from the impression made by the inner surface of the bam- boo. They are externally of a dull-orange colour, which is occasionally displaced by greenish stains, or concealed by the bright-yellow powder of the drug, slightly adhering to the surface. In this form the drug is sometimes called jnjge gamboge. Another variety is imported under the name of cake or lumv gamboge. It is in irregular masses of two or three pounds or more, often mixed with sticks and other impurities, containing many air cells, less dense, less uniform in texture, and less brittle than the former variety, and breaking with a dull and splintery, instead of a shining and conchoidal fracture. The worst specimens of this variety, as well as of the cylindrical, are sometimes called by the druggists coarse gam- boge. They differ, however, from the preceding, only in containing a greater amount of impurities. Indeed, it would appear, from the experiments of Cnris- tison, that all the commercial varieties of this drug have a common origin, and that cake or lump gamboge differs from the cylindrical, only from the circum- * In the autumn of 1860, there was shown to the author, in one of the hot-houses of the Edinburgh Botanical Garden, a plant which had been sent from Siam to Dr. Christ >son as a specimen of the true, gamboge tree. It was about five feet high; but, a? it had o-f course not yet flowered, and as no specimen of the flowers had been received, th< botsai- cal character of the plant could not be determined.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Grambogia. 407 stance that the latter is the pure concrete juice; while to the former, farinaceous matter and other impurities have been added for the purpose of adulteratiou The inferior kinds of gamboge may be known by their greater hardness and coarser fracture; by the brownish or grayish colour of their broken surface which is often marked with black spots; by their obvious impurities; and by the green colour which their decoction, after having been cooled, gives with tincture of iodine. When pure, the gum-resin is completely dissolved by the successive action of ether and water.* Properties. Gamboge, in its pure form, is brittle, with a smooth, conchoidal, shining fracture; and the fragments are slightly translucent at their edges. The colour of the mass when broken is a uniform reddish orange, which becomes a beautiful bright yellow in the powder, or when the surface is rubbed with water. From the brilliancy of its colour, gamboge is highly esteemed as a pigment. It has no smell and little taste; but, after remaining a short time in the mouth, produces an acrid sensation in the fauces. Its sp. gr. is 1-221. Exposed to heat, it burns with a white flame, emitting much smoke, and leaving a light spongy charcoal. It is a gum-resin, without volatile oil. In 100 parts of it Braconnot found 19 5 parts of gum, 80 of resin, and 0 5 of impurities. John obtained 10 5 per cent, of gum, 89 of resin, and 0-5 of impurities. Christison has shown that the proportion of gum and resin varies in different specimens even of the purest drug. In one experiment, out of 100‘8 parts he obtained 74'2 of resin, 21 '8 of gum, and 4'8 of water. The gum is quite soluble in water, and of the variety denominated arabin. In a specimen of cake gamboge he found 11'2 per cent, of fecula and lignin, and in a very bad one of coarse gamboge, no less than 41 per cent, of the same impurities. In addition to gum and resin, Ph. Buchner found a small and variable proportion of a peculiar reddish-yellow colouring matter, soluble both in alcohol and water. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iii. 303.) Gam- boge is readily and entirely diffusible in water, forming a yellow opaque emul- sion, from which the resin is very slowly deposited. It yields its resinous ingre- dient to alcohol, forming a golden-yellow tincture, which is rendered opaque and bright-yellow by the addition of water. Its solution in ammoniated alcohol is not disturbed by water. Sulphuric ether dissolves about four-fifths of it, taking up only the resin. It is wholly taken up by alkaline solutions, from which it is partially precipitated by the acids. The strong acids dissolve it; but the solution when diluted with water deposits a yellow sediment. The colour, acri- mony, and medicinal power of gamboge reside in the resin. This has the neu- tralizing property of the acids, and has been named gambogic_aeid. It is ob- tained by evaporating an ethereal tincture of the gum-resin. In mass it is of a cherry-red colour, but becomes of a deep-orange in thin layers, and yellow when powdered. So intense is its colour, that one part of it communicates a percepti- ble yellowness to ten thousand parts of water or spirit. It is insoluble in water, but soluble in alcohol, and very soluble in ether, chloroform, and benzole. It forms with the alkalies dark-red solutions of gambogiates, from which the acids throw down gambogic acid of a yellow colour, and with the soluble salts of lead, copper, and iron, gambogiates of those metals respectively; the salt of lead being yellow, that of copper brown, and that of iron dark-brown. Its com- position is given by Johnston as (Load. Philos. Trans., 1839.) In * Ceylon gamboge, derived from the Hebradendron Cambogioides of Graham (Camboqia qutta. Garcmia Morelia, De Cand.), is procured by incisions, or by cutting away a portion of the bark, and scraping off the juice which exudes. The specimens sent to L>r. Christi- son were in flattish or round masses, eight or nine inches in diameter, apparently com- posed of aggregated irregular tears, with cavities which are lined with a grayish and brownish powdery incrustation. It resembled coarse gamboge', and was identical in com- position. In Ceylon it is used as a pigment and purgative. (Christison.) This note wai already stereotyped, when we learned that Mr. Hanbury has rendered it almost certain, that Garcinia Morelia is also the source of the true gamboge of Siam. 408 Gambogia.—Gaultheria. PART I. khe dose of five grains it is said to produce copious watery stools, with little or ho uneasiness. If this be the case, it is probable that, as it exists in the gum- resin, its purgative property is somewhat modified by the other ingredients. Medical Properties and Uses. Gamboge is a powerful, drastic, hydragogue cathartic, very apt to produce nausea and vomiting when given in the full dose. In large quantities it is capable of producing fatal effects, and death has resulted from a drachm. It is much employed in the treatment of dropsy attended with torpid bowels, generally in combination with bitartrate of potassa or jalap. It is also prescribed in cases of obstinate constipation, and has frequently been found effectual in the expulsion of the tape-worm. It is often combined with other and milder cathartics, the action of which it promotes and accelerates, while its own is moderated. The full dose is from two to six grains, which in cases of taenia has been raised to ten or fifteen grains. As it is apt to occasion much sickness and griping, the best plan, under ordinary circumstances, is to give it in small doses, repeated at short intervals till it operates. It may be given in pill or emulsion, or dissolved in an alkaline solution. The last method of admi- nistration has been recommended in dropsical complaints. Off. Prep. Pilulae Cathartic® Composite, U. S.; Pilula Cambogiae Comp., Br. GAULTHERIA. U.S. Gciultlieria. Partridge-berry. The leaves of Gaultheria procurabens. U. S. Gaultheria. Sex. Syst. Deeatidria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. ErjcaQ£§3._ Gen. Gh. Calyx five-cleft, bibracteate at the base. Corolla ovate. Capsule five-celled, invested with the berried calyx. Pursh. Gaultheria procumbens. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 616; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 27; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 171. This is a small, indigenous, shrubby, ever- green plant, with a long, creeping, horizontal root, which sends up at intervals one or two erect, slender, round, reddish stems. These are naked below, leafy at top, and usually less than a span in height. The leaves are ovate or obovate, acute, revolute at the edges with a few mueronate serratures, coriaceous, shining, bright-green above, paler beneath, of unequal size, and supported irregularly on short red petioles. The flowers, of which not more than from three to five are usually on each stem, stand upon curved, drooping, axillary peduncles. The calyx is white, five-toothed, and furnished at its base with two concave cordate bractes, described by some as an outer calyx. The corolla is white, ovate or urceolate, contracted at the mouth, and divided at the border into five small acute segments. The stamens have curved, plumose filaments, and oblong orange- coloured anthers opening on the outside. The germ, which rests upon a ring having ten teeth alternating with the ten stamens, is roundish, depressed, and surmounted by an erect filiform style, ending in an obtuse stigma. The fruit is a small, five-celled, many-seeded capsule, with a fleshy covering, formed by the enlarged calyx, and presenting the appearance of a bright scarlet berry. The plant extends from Canada to Georgia, growing in large beds in moun- tainous tracts, or in dry barrens and sandy plains, beneath the shade of shrubs and trees, particularly of other evergreens, as the Kalmise and Rhododendra. It is abundant in the pine-barrens of New Jersey. In different parts of the country, it is variously called partridge-berry, deer-berry, tea-berry, winter-green, and mountain-teg. The flowers appear from May to September, and the fruit ripens at corresponding periods. Though the leaves only are officinal, all parts of the plant are endowed with the peculiar flavour for which these are employed, and which is found in several other plants, particularly in the bark of Betula lent a. or sweet birch. The fruit possesses it in a high degree, and, being at the same PAKT I. Gaultheria.—Gelsemium. 409 time sweetish, is much relished by some persons, and forms a favourite article of food with partridges, deer, and other wild animals. To the very peculiar aromatic odour and taste which belong to the whole plant, the leaves add a marked astringency. The aromatic properties reside in a volatile oil, which may be separated by distillation. (See Oleum Gaultherise.) Medical Properties and Uses. Gaultheria has the usual stimulant operation of the aromatics, united with astringency; and may, therefore, be used with ad- vantage in some forms of chronic diarrhoea. Like other substances of the same class, it has been employed as an emmenagogue, and with the view of increasing the secretion of milk; but its chief use is to impart an agreeable flavour to mix- tures and other preparations. It may be conveniently administered in the form of infusion, which, in some parts of the country, is not unfrequently used at the table as a substitute for common tea. The oil, however, is more used in regular practice than the leaves. Instances of death are on record, resulting from the taking of the oil, by mistake, in the quantity of about a fluidounce. On exami- nation after death, strong marks of gastric inflammation were discovered. {Journ. of Phil. Col. of Pharm., vi. 290.) Off. Prep. Oleum Gaultheri®, U. S. W. GELSEMIUM. U.S. Secondary. Yellow Jasmine. The root of Gelsemium sempervirens {Gray). U. S. Gelsemium. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Scrophulariaceae Loganiaceae. (Gray, Man. of Bot. pp. 296, 703.) Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted. Corolla funnel-form, with a spreading border, five lobed, nearly equal. Anthers oblong, sagittate. Style long and slender. Stigma* two, two-parted. Capsule elliptical, flat, two-valved, two-celled. Seeds flat, at- tached to the margin of the valves. Gelsemium sempervirens. Gray, Man. of Bot. — Gelseminum nitidum. Mi- c\vf the part I. GrlycyrrMza.—Gossypii Radix.—Grossypium. 423 * bowels and urinary passages. It is best given in the form of decoction, either alone, or combined with other demulcents. It is frequently employed as an addi- tion to the decoctions of acrid or irritating vegetable substances, such, ior ex ample, as seneka and mezereon, the acrimony of which it covers, while it renders them more acceptable to the stomach. Before being used, it should be deprived of its cortical part, which is somewhat acrid, without possessing the peculiar virtues of the root. The decoction may be prepared by boiling an ounce of the bruised root, for a few minutes, in a pint of water. By long boiling, the acrid resinous principle is extracted. Perhaps, however, to this principle may in part be ascribed the therapeutical virtues of liquorice root in chronic bronchial dis- eases. The powder is used in the preparation of pills, either to give due con- sistence, or to cover their surface and prevent them from adhering together. Off. Prep. Confectio Terebinthinae, Br.; Decoctum Sarsae Compositum, Br.; Decoctum Sarsaparillae Compositum, U. S.; Extractum Glycyrrhizae, Br.; Ex- tractum Sarsaparillae Fluidum Compositum, U. S.; Infusum Lini, Br.; Iufusum Lini Compositum, U. S.; Pilula Ferri Iodidi, Br.; Pil. Hydrargyri; Syrupus Sarsaparillae Compositus, U.S. W. GOSSYPII RADIX. U.S. Secondary. Cotton Root. The root of Gossypium herbaceum, and of other species of Gossypium. U. S. GOSSYPIUM. U.S Cotton. A filamentous substance separated from the seed of Gossypium herbaceum, and of other species of Gossypium. U. S. Cotton. Cotton Wool. The hairs of the seed of various species of Gossypium. Br. Appendix. Coton, Fr.: Baumwolle, Germ.; Cotone. Ilal.; Algodon, Span. Gossypium. Sex. Syst. Monadelphia Polyandria.—Nat. Ord. Malvacese. Gen.Ch. Calyx cup-shaped, obtusely-five-toothed, surrounded by a three- parted involucel, with dentate-incised, cordate leaflets, cohering at the base. Stigmas three to five. Capsule three to five-celled, many-seeded. Seeds sur- rounded by a tomentose wool. Be Gand. In consequence of changes produced in the plants of this genus by cultivation, botanists have found great difficulty in determining which are distinct species, and which merely varieties. De Candolle describes thirteen species in his Pro- dromus, and mentions six others; but considers them all uncertain. Poyle de- scribes eight and admits others. Schwartz thinks they may all be referred to one original species. The plants inhabit different parts of tropical Asia and Africa, and many of them are cultivated for their cotton in climates adapted to their growth. The species from which most of the cotton of commerce has been thought to be obtained, is the one specially indicated by the U. S. Pharmaco- poeia. According to Dr. Royle, it is the India cotton which is produced by G. herbaceum, while G. Barbadense furnishes all the cotton of N. America, and G. Peruvianum that produced in Brazil, Peru, and other parts of S. America. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1858, p. 339.) Dr. A. W. Chapman, how- ever, in his Flora of the Southern United States (N. Y., A. D. 1860, p. -58), states that tne numerous varieties of the cotton-plant are now referred to two species, the long-staple or sea-island to G. album (Haw.), and the short-staple or upland, to G. nigrum, (Haw.). Gossypium. PART I. Gossypium herlaceum. Linn. Sp. 975; De Cand. Prodrom. i. 456. This is a biennial or triennial plant, with a branching stem from two to six feet high, and palmate hoary leaves, the lobes of which are somewhat lanceolate and acute. The flowers are pretty, with yellow petals, having a purple spot near the claw. The leaves of the involucel or outer calyx are serrate. The capsule opens when ripe, and displays a loose white tuft of long slender filaments, which surround the seeds, and adhere firmly to the outer coating. The plant is a native of Asia, but is cultivated in most tropical countries. It requires a certain duration of warm weather to perfect its seeds, and, in the United States, cannot be culti- vated advantageously north of Virginia. The herbaceous part of the plant contains much mucilage, and has been used as a demulcent. The seeds yield by expression a fixed oil of the drying kind, which is employed for making soap and other purposes.* The root has been supposed to possess medical virtues, and is now recognised by the U. S. Pharma- copoeia, Another officinal portion, and that for which the plant is cultivated, is the filamentous substance surrounding the seeds. This when separated con- stitutes the cotton of commerce. Cotton consists of filaments, which, under the microscope, appear to be flat- tened tubes, with occasional joints indicated by transverse lines. It is without smell or taste, insoluble in water, alcohol, ether, the oils, and vegetable acids, soluble in strong alkaline solutions, and decomposed by the concentrated mineral acids. In chemical character, it bears a close analogy to lignin. By nitric acid it is converted into that remarkable explosive substance denominated gun cotton, for an account of which, as well as of a valuable adhesive preparation made by dissolving it in ether, the reader is referred to the articles Gun Cotton and Col- lodiuyi. For medical use it should be carded into thin sheets; or the wadding of the milliners may be employed, consisting of sheets somewhat stiffened, and glazed on the surface by starch. It the latter case, the sheets should be split open when applied. It is said that air, passed through cotton, loses the pro- perty of inducing the putrefactive fermentation in animal substances. (Bost. Med. and Surg. Journ., liii. 68, from Gaz. des Hopitaux.) Medical Properties, &c. Cotton has been used from time immemorial for the fabrication of cloth; but it is only of late that it has entered the catalogue of medicines. It is chiefly employed in recent burns and scalds; an application of it adopted from popular practice. It is said to relieve the pain, diminish the inflammation, prevent vesication, and very much to hasten the cure. Whatever advantages result from it are probably ascribable to the absorption of effused liquids, and the protection of the part affected from the air. It is applied in thin and successive layers; and benefit is said to result from the application of * Cottonseed Oil. This is obtained by expression from the seeds previously deprived of their shells. In this state, they yield two gallons of oil to the bushel. As first obtained, it is thick and turbid, but deposits a portion of its impurities on standing. Besides this crude oil, there are three varieties in the shops of the South, more or less purified, recog- nised as the clarified, the refined, and the ivinter-bleached. The last-mentioned is of a pale- straw colour, a mild peculiar odour, and a bland sweetish taste, not unlike that of almond oil. The oil is used in the preparation of woollen cloth and morocco leather, and for oil- ing machinery. There seems to be some doubt of its drying qualities. It has been found to be an excellent substitute for almond and olive oil in most pharmaceutical preparations in which they are employed; but does not answer well in the formation of the lead plaster. Citrine ointment carefully prepared with it, too great heat being avoided, retains long a rich-orange colour and proper unctuous consistence. Its sp. gr. is stated at 0-921. It is insoluble in alcohol, soluble in not less than its own bulk of ether, and dissolved in all proportions by chloroform. By sulphuric acid it is made deep-red, almost brown: but it is not obviously affected by nitric and muriatic acids. These interesting facts have beei. ex- tracted from a dissertation by Mr. Win. Henry Weat.herby, whose residence in a cotton- growing district of the South gave him peculiar opportunities. (See Am. Journ of Phurm., May, 18G1, p. 208.)—Note to the twelfth, edition. part I. Granati Fructds Cortex.—Granati Radicis Cortex. 425 a bandage when the skin is not too much inflamed. We have, however, seen cotton do much harm in burns, by becoming consolidated over a vesicated sur- face, and acting as a mechanical irritant. Such a result may be prevented by first dressing the burn with a piece of fine linen spread with simple ointment. Cotton is also recommended in erysipelas, and as a dressing for blisters; and we have found it useful, applied in a large batch over parts affected with rheuma- tism, especially in lumbago. The root of the cotton plant has been employed by Dr. Bouchelle, of Missis- sippi, who believes it to be an excellent emmenagogue, and not inferior to ergot in promoting uterine contraction. He states that it is habitually and effectually resorted to by the slaves of the South for producing abortion; and thinks that it acts in this way, without injury to the general health. To assist labour, he employs a decoction made by boiling four ounces of the inner bark of the root in a quart of water to a pint, and gives a wineglassful every twenty or thirty minutes. (West. Jo urn. of Med. and Surg., Aug. 1840.) Dr. T. J. Shaw, of Tennessee, thinks it superior, in the treatment of amenorrhoea, to any other emmenagogue, and equal to ergot as a parturient, while attended with less danger. He uses a tincture made by macerating eight ounces of the dried bark of the root in two pounds of diluted alcohol for two weeks, and gives a drachm three or four times a day. (Nashv. Journ. of Med. and Surg., July, 1855.) Mr. Weatherby denies the statement that the root is used for producing abortion among the slaves, at least within his observation. (Am. Journ. of Pharm.) Cotton seeds have been employed in our Southern States with great asserted success in the treatment of intermittents. In a communication from Prof. II. R. Frost to the Charleston Medical Journal for May, 1850, it is stated, on the authority of Dr. W. K. Davis, of Monticello, that this application of the cotton seed originated with a planter in Newberry District, S. Carolina, who had often used the remedy in intermittents, and never failed to effect a cure. A pint of the seeds is boiled in a quart of water to a pint, and a teacupful of the decoction is given to the patient in bed, an hour or two before the expected return of the chill. Off. Prep. Collodium, TJ. S.; Pyroxylin, Br. Appendix. W. GRAN ATI ERUCTUS CORTEX. U. S. Pomegranate Rind. The rind of the fruit of Punica Granatum. U.S. GRAN AT I RADICIS CORTEX. U.S. Bark of Pomegranate Root. The bark of the root of Punica Granatum. U. S. Off. Syn. GRAXATI RADIX. Punica Granatum. The bark of the root, fresh or dried. Br. Ecorce de granade, Fr.; Granatapfel-Echalin, Germ.; Malicorio, Scorza del icelogra- nati, Ital.; Corteza de granada, Span. Punica. Sex.Syst. Icosandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Myrtacese. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-cleft, superior. Petals five. Pome many-celled, many seeded. Willd. Punica Granatum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 981; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 531, t. 190; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. i. 45, pi. 38. The pomegranate is a small shrubby tree, attaining in favourable situations the height of twenty feet, with a very unequal trunk, and numerous branches, which sometimes bear thorns. The leaves are opposite, entire, oblong or lance-shaped, pointed at each end, G-ranati Radicis Cortex. PART I. smooin, shining, of a bright-green colour, and placed on short footstalks. The flowers are large, of a rich scarlet colour, and stand at the end of the young branches. The petals are roundish and wrinkled, and are inserted into the upper part of the tube of the calyx, which is red, thick, and fleshy. The fruit is a globular berry, about the size of an orange, crowned with the calyx, covered with a reddish-yellow, thick, coriaceous rind, and divided internally into many cells, which contain an acidulous pulp, and numerous oblong, angular seeds. This tree grows wild upon both shores of the Mediterranean, in Arabia, Persia, Bengal, China, and Japan, has been introduced into the East and West Indies, and is cultivated in all civilized countries, where the climate is sufficiently warm to allow the fruit to ripen. In higher latitudes, where it does not bear fruit, it is raised in gardens and hot-houses for the beauty of its flowers, which become double, and acquire increased splendour of colouring by cultivation. Doubts have been entertained as to its original country. The name of Punicum ma- lum, applied by the ancients to its fruit, implies that it was abundant at an early age in the vicinity of Carthage. The fruit, for which the plant is cultivated in tropical climates, varies much in size and flavour. It is said to attain greater perfection, in both these respects, in the West Indies than in its native country. The pulp is red, succulent, pleasantly acid, and sweetish, and is used for the same purposes as the orange. The rind of the fruit, and the bark of the root are the parts indicated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The flowers were formerly recognised by the Dublin College, and the seeds are officinal in France. Rind of the Fruit. This is presented in commerce under the form of irregular fragments, hard, dry, brittle, of a yellowish or reddish-brown colour externally, paler within, without smell, and of an astringent, slightly bitter taste. It con- tains a large proportion of tannin, and in countries where the tree abounds has been employed for tanning leather. Flowers. The flowers, sometimes called balaustines, are inodorous, have a bitterish, astringent taste, and impart a violet-red colour to the saliva. They contain tannic and gallic acids, and were used by the ancients in dyeing. Bark of the Root. The roots of the pomegranate are hard, heavy, knotty, ligneous, and covered with a bark which is yellowish-gray or ash-gray ou the outer surface, and yellow on the inner. As found in the shops, the bark is in quills or fragments, breaks with a short fracture-, has little or no smell, colours the saliva yellow when chewed, and leaves in the mouth an astringent taste without disagreeable bitterness. It contains, according to M. Latour de Trie, fatty matter, tannin, gallic acid, a saccharine substance having the properties of mannite, resin, wax, and chlorophyll, besides insoluble matters. The name of punicin has been given by Giovanni llighini to a peculiar principle which he extracted from the bark. It has the aspect of an oleo-resin, affects the nostrils somewhat like medicinal veratria, and is of an acrid taste. It may be obtained by rubbing a hydro-alcoholic extract of the bark with one-eighth of hydrate of potassa, heating the mixture with eight parts of pure water gradually added, and then dropping in dilute sulphuric acid to saturate the potassa. The punicin subsides, and may be separated by filtration. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e. ser., v. 298.) The infusion of the bark yields a deep-blue precipitate with salts of iron, and a yellowish-white precipitate with solution of gelatin. The inner surface of the bark, steeped iu water and then rubbed on paper, produces a yellow stain, which, by the contact of sulphate of iron, is rendered blue, and by that of nitric acid acquires a slight rose tint, which soon vanishes. (Ibid., xvii. 438.) These properties serve to distinguish this bark from those of the box root and barberry, with which it is said to be sometimes adulterated. When used it should be separated from the ligneous portion of the root, as the latter is inert. Medical Properties and Uses. The rind of the fruit is astringent, and in the form of decoction is sometimes employed in diarrhoea and colliquative sweats, part L Granati Radicis Cortex.— Guaiaci Lignum. 427 and, more frequently, as an injection in leucorrhcea, and as a gargle in soremroat in the earlier stages, or after the inflammatory action has in some measure sub- sided. The powdered rind has also been recommended in intermittent fever. The flowers have the same medical properties, and are used for the same pur- poses. The bark of the root was used by the ancients as a vermifuge, aud is recommended in the writings of Avicenna; but was unknown in modern practice till brought into notice by Dr. F. Buchanan, who learned its powers in India. The Mahometan physicians of Hindostan consider it a specific against tsenia. One of these practitioners, having relieved an English gentleman in 1804, was induced to disclose his secret, which was then made public. Numerous cures were subsequently effected in Europe; and there can be no doubt of the occa- sional efficacy of the remedy. The French writers prefer the pi-oduct of the wild pomegranate, growing on the borders of the Mediterranean, to that of the plant cultivated in gardens for ornamental purposes. The bark may be administered in powder or decoction; but the latter form is usually preferred. The decoction is prepared by macerating two ounces of the bruised bark in two pints of water for twenty-four hours, and then boiling to a pint. Of this a wineglassful may be given every half hour, hour, or two hours, until the whole is taken. It often nauseates and vomits, and usually purges. Portions of the worm often come away soon after the last dose. It is recommended to give a dose of castor oil, and to diet the patient strictly on the day preceding the administration of the remedy; and, if it should not operate on the bowels, to follow it by castor oil, or an enema. If not successful on the first trial, it should be repeated daily for three or four days, until the worm is discharged. It appears to have been used by the negroes of St. Domingo before its introduction into Europe. The dose of the rind and flowers in powder is from twenty to thirty grains. A decoction may be prepared in the proportion of an ounce of the medicine to a pint of water, and given in the dose of a fluidounce. The seeds are demulcent Off. Prep, of the Bark of the Boot. Decoctum Granati Radicis, Br. W GUAIACI LIGNUM. U.S.,Br. Guaiacum Wood. The wood of Guaiacum officinale. U. S. The wood sliced, or coarsely turned. Br. Bois de gayac, Fr.; Pockenholz, Germ.; Legno guaiaco, Ital.; Guayaco, Span. Guaiacum. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Zygophyllaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-cleft, unequal. Petals five, inserted into the calyx. Capsule angular, three or five-celled. Willd. Guaiacum officinale. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 538; Woodv. Med.Boi. p. 557, t. 200; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. i. 25, pi. 17. This is a large tree, of very slow growth. When of full size it is from forty to sixty feet high, with a trunk four or five feet in circumference. The branches are knotted, and covered with an ash-coloured striated bark. That of the stem is of a dark-gray colour, varie- gated with greenish or purplish spots. The leaves are opposite, and abruptly pinnate, consisting of two, three, and sometimes four pairs of leaflets, which are obovate, veined, smooth, shining, dark-green, from an inch to an inch and a half long, and almost sessile. The flowers are of a rich blue colour, stand on long peduncles, and grow to the number of eight or ten at the axils of the upper leaves. The seeds are solitary, hard, and of an oblong shape. G. officinale grows in the West Indies, particularly in Hayti and Jamaica, and is found also in the warmer parts of the neighbouring continent. All parts of the tree are possessed of medicinal properties; but the wood and the concrete juice only are officinal. The hark, though much more efficacious than the wood, is not kept in the shops. It is said that other species of Guaiacum contribute Guaiaci Lignum. part T. to the supplies brought into the market. G. sanctum of Linnaeus, and G arboreum_ of De Candolle, are particularly specified. The former, however, is said Sy Wood- ville not to be sufficiently characterized as a distinct species. Fee states that the wood of G. sanctum is paler, and less heavy and hard than the officinal. Guaiacum wood is imported from Hayti and other West India islands, in the shape of logs or billets, covered with a thick gray bark, which presents on its inner surface, and upon its edges when broken, numerous shining crystalline points. These were supposed by Guibourt to be benzoic acid, by others a resin- ous exudation from the vessels of the plant; but Dr. Otto Berg has determined that they are crystals of sulphate of lime. The billets are used by the turners for the fabrication of various instruments and utensils, for which the wood is well adapted by its extreme hardness and density. It is kept by the druggists and apothecaries in the state of shavings or raspings, which they obtain from the turners. It is commonly called lignum vitae, a name which obviously origi- nated from the supposition that the wood was possessed of extraordinary re- medial powers. Properties. The colour of the sap-wood is yellow, that of the older and cen- tral layers greenish-brown, that of the shavings a mixture of the two. It is said that, when the wood is brought into a state of minute division, its colour is ren- dered green by exposure to the air, and bluish-green by the action of nitric acid fumes; and the latter change may be considered as a test of its genuineness. (Duncan.) An easier test is a solution of corrosive sublimate, which, added to the shavings and slightly heated, causes a bluish-green colour in the genuine wood. (Ghem. Gaz., No. 80, Feb. 1846.) Guaiacum wood is almost without smell unless rubbed or heated, when it becomes odorous. When burnt it emits an agreeable odour. It is bitterish and slightly pungent, but requires to be chewed for some time before the taste is developed. It contains, according to Trommsdorff, 26 per cent, of resin, and 0 8 of a bitter pungent extractive, upon both of which, probably, though chiefly on the former, its medicinal virtues de- pend. (See Guaiaci Resina.) It yields its virtues but partially to water. One pound of the wood afforded to Geiger two ounces of extract. In this extract M. Thierry discovered a volatilizable acid, which he considered peculiar, and named guaiacic acid (acide gayacique). He obtained it by treating the extract with ether, evaporating the liquid, and carefully subliming the residue. The acid condenses in small, brilliant needles. If the heat be pushed too far, an oil is also produced which colours the crystals. He procured the same acid from the guaiac of the shops. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvii. 381.) According to Jahn, how- ever, this substance is nothing more than benzoic acid, rendered impure by adhering volatile oil and resin. (Pharm. Central Blatt, 1843, p. 309.) Medical Properties and Uses. Guaiacum wood ranks among the stimulant diaphoretics. It is said to have been introduced to the notice of European prac- titioners by the natives of Hispaniola, soon after the discovery of America. It was used in Europe so early as 1508, and attained great celebrity as a remedy for lues venerea; but more extended experience has proved it to be wholly in- adequate to the cure of that disease; and it is now employed simply to palliate the secondary symptoms, or to assist the operation of other and more efficient remedies. It is thought to be useful also in chronic rheumatism and gout, scro- fula, certain cutaneous eruptions, ozaena, and other protracted diseases dependent on a depraved or vitiated condition of the system. It is usually exhibited in decoction, and in combination with other medicines, as in the compound decoc- tion of sarsaparilla. As but a small proportion of the guaiac contained in it is soluble in water, the probability is that its virtues have been greatly overrated, and that the good which has followed its employment resulted rather from the more active medicines with which it is associated, or from the attendant regi- men, than from the wood itself. The simple decoction may be prepared by boil- PART I. Guaiaci Lignum.—Guaiaci Resina. 429 ing an ounce in a pint and a half of water down to a pint, the whole of which may be administered in divided doses during the twenty-four hours. An aque- ous extract is directed by the French Codex. Off. Prep. Decoctum Sarsse Compositum, Br.; Decoctum Sarsaparillm Comp , XJ. S.; Syrupus Sarsaparillse Comp., U. S. W GUAIACI RESINA. U.S., Br. Guciiac. The concrete juice of Guaiacum officinale. U. S. The resin obtained from the stem by natural exudation, by incisions, or by heat. Br. R6sine de gayac, Fr.; Guajakkarz, Germ.; Resina de guajaco, Ital.; Resina de guayaco, Span. For a description of Guaiacum officinale, see GTJAIACI LIGNUM. Guaiac is the concrete juice of this tree. It is obtained in several different modes. The most simple is by spontaneous exudation, or by incisions made into the trunk. Another method is by sawing the wood into billets about three feet long, boring them longitudinally with an auger, then placing one end of the billet on the fire, and receiving in a calabash the melted guaiac, which flows out through the hole at the opposite extremity. But the plan most frequently pur- sued is probably to boil the wood, in the state of chips or sawdust, in a solu- tion of common salt, and skim off the matter which rises to the surface. Guaiac is brought to this market from the West Indies. It is usually in large irregular pieces of various size, in which small fragments of bark, sand, and other impu- rities are mixed with the genuine guaiac, so as to give to the mass a diversified appearance. Sometimes we find it in small roundish homogeneous portions, sepa- rate or agglutinated; sometimes in homogeneous masses, prepared by melting and straining the drug in its impure state. It is probable that the guaiac, ob- tained from the billets in the manner above described, is of uniform consistence. Properties. The masses are of a deep greenish-brown or dark-olive colour on their external surface, and internally wherever the air could penetrate. The predominant hue of those parts not exposed to the air is reddish-brown or hyacinthine, diversified, however, with shades of various colours. The odour is feeble but fragrant, and is rendered stronger by heat. The taste, which is at first scarcely perceptible, becomes acrid after a short period, and a permanent sense of heat and pungency is left in the mouth and fauces. Guaiac is brittle, and when broken presents a shining glass-like surface, conchoidal or splintery, with the smaller fragments more or less translucent. It is readily pulverized; and the powder, at first of a light-gray colour, becomes green on exposure to the light. Its sp.gr. varies from 1*2 to 123. It softens in the mouth, and melts with a moderate heat. According to Mr. Brande, it consists of 91 per cent, of a pe- culiar substance analogous to the resins, and 9 per cent, of extractive. Buchner found 79‘8 parts of pure resin, and 20T of bark consisting of 16*5 of lignin, 1-5 of gum, and 2T of extractive; but he must have operated on the unstrained guaiac. An acid discovered by M. Thierry is asserted by Jahn to be benzoic acid. Water dissolves a small proportion of guaiac, not exceeding nine parts in 100, forming an infusion of a greenish-brown colour and sweetish taste, which, upon evaporation, yields a brown substance soluble in hot water and alcohol, but scarcely so in ether. Alcohol takes up the whole with the exception of im- purities. The tincture is of a deep-brown colour, is decomposed by water, and affords blue, green, and brown precipitates with the mineral acids. It is coloured blue by nitric acid and by chlorine, and usually by spirit of nitrous ether; and is similarly changed when treated successively by dilute hydrocyanic acid, and so- lution of sulphate of copper. Either in substance or tincture, guaiac gives a blue 430 Guaiaci Resina. colour to gluten and substances containing it, to mucilage of gum arabic, to milk, and to various freshly cut roots, as the potato, carrot, and horseradish. It is soluble also in ether, alkaline solutions, and sulphuric acid. The solution in sul- phuric acid is of a rich claret colour, deposits, when diluted with water, a lilac precipitate, and, when heated, evolves charcoal. Exposed to air and light, guaiac absorbs oxygen and becomes green, and the change takes place rapidly in the sunshine. Guaiacin is a name given to the pure resinoid principle of guaiac. It is in- soluble in water, but is dissolved readily by alcohol, and less readily by ether. It combines with the alkalies, forming soluble compounds, which are decomposed by the mineral acids and by several salts. Hence it has been called guaiacic acid. It has been obtained in crystals by Prof. Hlasiwetz by first forming a soap with potassa, dissolving this in hot solution of potassa, precipitating with muriatic acid, washing the precipitated resin, and then dissolving it in alcohol, which jields it crystallized by spontaneous evaporation. (Anna,l. der Chem. und Pharm., cxii. 183.) It differs from most of the resins in being converted by nitric acid into oxalic acid instead of artificial tannin. It is also peculiar in the changes of colour, already alluded to, which it undergoes under the influence of various reagents. By nitric acid and chlorine it is made to assume successively a green, blue, and brown colour. These changes are ascribed by Mr. Brande to the absorption of oxygen, which forms variously coloured compounds according to the quantity absorbed. M. Kossman considers guaiacin to be a glucoside, having, by heating it with dilute sulphuric acid, succeeded in converting it into glucose, and a peculiar principle which he names qaiaretine. (Journ. de Pharm., A out, 1860, p. 83.) According to Jahn, guaiac resin consists of three distinct bodies, viz.: 1. a soft resin soluble in ether and ammonia, and constituting 18'7 per cent.; 2. another soft resin, soluble in ether, bqt with difficulty dissolved by ammonia, amounting to 58-3 per cent.; and 3. a hard resin, insoluble in ether, but soluble in ammonia, in the quantity of 11 3 per cent. The same chemist found in guaiac traces of benzoic acid, and 117 per cent, of impurities. {Pharm. Cent. Blalt, 1843, p. 317.)* It will be inferred, from what has been said, that the mineral acids are incom- patible with the solutions of guaiac. This drug is sometimes adulterated with the resin of the pine. The fraud may be detected by the terebinthinate odour exhaled when the sophisticated guaiac is thrown upon burning coals, as well as by its partial solubility in hot oil of turpentine. This liquid dissolves resin, but leaves pure guaiac untouched. Amber is said to be another adulteration. Nitric acid affords an excellent test of guaiac If paper moistened with the tincture be exposed to the fumes of this acid, it speedily becomes blue. Medical Properties and Uses. Guaiac is stimulant and alterative, producing, when swallowed, a sense of warmth in the stomach, with dryness of the mouth and thirst, and promoting various secretions. If given to a patient when covered warm in bed, especially if accompanied with opium and ipecacuanha or the anti- monials, and assisted by warm drinks, it often excites profuse perspiration; and hence has been usually ranked among the diaphoretics. If the patient be kept cool during its administration, it is sometimes directed to the kidneys, the action PART I. * By the destructive distillation of guaiac, Unverdorben obtained two volatile oils; one heavier than water, and variously called vuroaavic acid. gqjiaggl. and hudruret of aavacyl. the last of which names was given by MM. Pelletier and" Deville, who determined its re- semblance to creasote; the other called by Voelkel, who has particularly investigated it, pgyol, and having an odour which recalls that of bitter almonds. {Journ. de Pham., Mai, 185?7p- 39(5.) Ebermayer has obtained, by the dry distillation of the same resiD a crys- tallized product which he calls pyroguaiacine. (Chem. Gaz., Oct. 16, 1854, p.386.)- Note to the eleventh edition. PART I. Guaiaci Resina.—Gutta-percha. 431 of which it promotes. In large doses it purges; and it is thought by some prac- titioners to be possessed of emmenagogue powers. The complaint in which it has been found most beneficial is rheumatism. In the declining stages of the acute form of this disease, after due depletion, it is given in combination with opium, ipecacuanha, nitre, and the antimonials; and in the chronic form is fre- quently useful without accompaniment. It is also advantageously prescribed in gouty affections, and is occasionally used in secondary syphilis, scrofulous dis- eases, and cutaneous eruptions; though the guaiacum wood is more frequently resorted to in these latter complaints. It was much relied upon by the late Dr. Dewees in the cure of amenorrhoea and dysmenorrheea. Dr. D. Lewis has found it useful in the hay-fever, given at bedtime, for six successive nights, in the dose of twenty grains, in a cup of warm tea. Dr. James Jackson, of Boston, recom- mends it occasionally as a laxative, in the dose of a drachm. {Letters to a Young Physician, p. 291.) The medicine is given in substance or tincture. The dose of the powder is from ten to thirty grains, which may be exhibited in pill or bolus, or in the shape of an emulsion formed with gum arabic, sugar, and water. An objection to the form of powder is that it quickly aggregates. Guaiac is sometimes administered in combination with alkalies, with which it readily unites. Several European Pharmacopoeias direct a soap of guaiac. under the name of sapo guaiacinus, to be prepared by dilutingTheTaquor Potassas with twice its weight of water, boiling lightly, then adding guaiac gradually, with continued agitation, so long as it continues to be dissolved, and finally filtering, and evaporating to the pilular consistence. One scruple may be taken daily in divided doses. Off. Prep. Mistura Guaiaci, Br.; Pilulas Antimonii Composite, U. S.; Pilula Calomelanos Composita, Br.; Tinctura Guaiaci, U. S.; Tinctura Guaiaci Am- moniata. W. GUTTA-PERCHA. U.S. Gutta-percha. The concrete juice of Isonandra gutta. (Hooker, Loudon's Journal of Bot- any, 1848.) U.S. This valuable product of the East Indies was first brought into notice by Dr. Wm. Montgomerie, a British army surgeon, who became acquainted with its singular properties in the year 1842, at Singapore, and in the following year sent specimens of it to Europe. It is the product of a large tree growing in the southern extremity of the Malayan Peninsula, the island of Singapore, Borneo, and probably many other islands in the neighbourhood. This tree belongs to the Linnsean class and order Decandria Monogynia, natural family Sapotaceae, and genus Isonandra of Dr. Wight, and has received the name of Isonandra gutta. It is of considerable magnitude, with a trunk commonly three feet, and sometimes as much as six feet in diameter, having numerous ascending branches, which are crowded with leaves at their extremities. The flowers are small and white; the leaves petiolate, oblong, four or five inches long by two in breadth, bright-green above and brownish beneath.* Dr. Montgomerie states that the natives procure the gutta percha by the very wasteful mode of cutting down the tree, stripping off the bark, and then collecting the milky juice, which is put into convenient recipients, and coagulates on expo- sure to the air. Twenty or thirty pounds are thus collected from each tree; but * A product analogous to percha is said to be produced by a tree, Sapota Mulleri, growing in great abundance in Dutch Guiana in S. America. It is classed at Amsterdam among the best kinds from the East Indies. (Journ. de Fharrn., 3e ser., xxxii. 437.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 432 Gutta-percha. PART I. the probability is that the product would be much greater if obtained by tapping the tree, and thus preserving it for future use. In consequence of the abundance in which it is collected, and the wasteful methods pursued, fears are entertained that the tree will before long be extirpated. Large quantities of gutta percha are now imported into Europe and this country. As found in commerce it is generally impure, containing fragments of vegetable matter and earth. From tnese it may be freed by kneading it in hot water, or by melting it with oil of turpentine, straining, and evaporating. It may also be purified by means of chloroform. One part of gutta percha cut into small pieces, put into a flask with 20 parts of chlo- roform, and frequently shaken, will be fully dissolved in two or three days. To this solution, which cannot be readily filtered, add one-fourth of a part of water, shaking the mixture, and then allowing it to rest for two weeks. The impurities rise or sink, and the clear intervening liquid yields pure gutta percha by the dis- tillation of the chloroform. {Chem. Gent. Blatt, Feb. 1857, p. 108.)* Properties. Gutta percha is of a dull-white or whitish colour, of a feeble odour, tasteless, at ordinary temperatures hard and almost horny, somewhat flexible in thin pieces, having an unctuous feel under the fingers, and very tenacious. Its sp.gr. is 0-9791. (Soubeiran.) At about 120° F., it becomes softer and more flexible, but is still elastic, resisting, and tenacious. At 150° or 160°, it is soft, very plastic, and capable of being welded and moulded into any form. It is thus softened, whether by means of hot water or by dry heat. On cooling it reas- suraes its former state, and retains any form which may have been given to it. In the softened state it is readily cut with a knife, though with some difficulty when cold. Exposed to a heat of 830° it loses a portion of water, and on hardening becomes translucent and gray; but it recovers its original characters if im- mersed in water. Subjected to igneous distillation, it yields volatile products, resembling closely the volatile oil obtained from caoutchouc by the same pro- cess. Heated in an open vessel, it melts, foams up, and takes fire, burning with a brilliant flame and smoke. A portion thus melted retains the state of a viscid fluid on cooling. Gutta percha is a non-conductor of electricity. It is insoluble in water, alcohol, alkaline solutions, and the weak acids. Ether and the volatile oils soften it in the cold, and imperfectly dissolve it with the aid of heat. Oil of turpentine dissolves it perfectly, forming a clear colourless solution, which yields it unchanged by evaporation. It is also dissolved by bisulphuret of carbon, chloroform, and benzole. According to Soubeiran, it contains, besides pure gutta percha, small portions of a vegetable acid, casein, and two resins, one soluble in ether and oil of turpentine, the other in alcohol. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xi. 22.) Freed from these impurities, it has an ultimate composition closely analo- gous if not identical with that of caoutchouc. For a particular account of the distinctive properties of pure gutta percha, and the two resins mixed with it, the reader is referred to an article by M. Payen, in the Journ. de Pharm. (3e ser.t xxii. 183), also in the Chem. Gaz. (x. 353). According to Baumhauer, pure gutta percha, as it issues from the tree, is a carbohydrogen, with the formula which he calls gutta, and by the oxidation of which in various degrees, the different bodies constituting gutta percha are produced. This carbohydrogen can be separated by treating gutta percha with dilute muriatic acid, and boiling the residue with ether, which deposits the gutta on cooling; but the ethereal treat- ment must be frequently repeated to obtain it quite pure. {Journ. fur prakt. Chem., lxxviii. 279.) M. Arppe considers gutta percha as a mixture of six dif- * A more satisfactory method is probably by dissolving one part of gutta percha in twenty of boiling benzole, shaking the solution frequently with sulphate of lime, which upon standing two or three days carries down with it the colouring matter, then decanting the clear liquid, and adding it, in small portions at a time, to alcohol, agitating continually. Puring this process the gutta percha is deposited perfectly white. To dry it thoroughly requires an exposure of several weeks; but the result may be hastened by rubbing in a mortar. (Journ. de Pharrn., Aout, 1863, p. 138.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART i. Grutta-percha. 433 ferent resins, which may have been formed from a carbohydrogen C10HS. (See Chem. Gaz., ix. 471.) This vegetable product resists putrefaction strongly; but in certain situations, as when employed to protect underground telegraph wires passing near the roots of the oak, it has been observed to undergo speedy de- composition, in consequence, as is supposed, of the action of fungi arising fron* sporules generated in such exposures. (Pharvi. Journ., xvii. 193.) Gutta percha has been applied to many useful and ornamental purposes. Its plasticity when moderately heated, great firmness and tenacity at ordinary tem- peratures, and insolubility in water and alcohol, are the properties to which it chiefly owes its value. By immersing it in hot water, it is made susceptible of being formed into any desirable shape; so that utensils of various kinds, orna- mental impressions, casts, sheets, bands, cords, sticks, tubes, &c., applicable to numerous purposes in the arts, may be made from it with great facility. To give it greater pliability, it is sometimes mixed with the tar resulting from the igneous decomposition of caoutchouc, or with its own tar, and lampblack. It may be vulcanized, in the same manner as caoutchouc, and undergoes a similar change of properties. (See Caoutchouc.) In the dissolved state it may be em- ployed as a varnish, impervious to moisture. Medical Uses. Gutta percha has been introduced into surgery, in order to pre- serve limbs and joints in fixed positions; and has been used beneficially in club- foot, fractures, and diseases of the joints. It is employed for these purposes in the shape of bands, two or three inches broad and about a line thick, which, being softened in water, are applied in this state, and, when they harden, form a firm case for the limb. Holes should be made through the bands, for the escape of the vapour from the surface. It is also used for the formation of catheters and other tubes, splints, stethoscopes, bougies, specula, pessaries, and various other instruments, useful in surgery. The author has seen it employed, in the form of a bandage, in fracture of the thigh, in the hospital at Edinburgh. Being soft- ened by immersion in warm water at the time, it was applied without difficulty; and hardening, afterwards, it acted as a splint to the injured limb. Yogel re- commends the solution in bisulphuret of carbon as an application to the skin in incised wounds. The liquid speedily evaporates, producing a refrigerant effect; while the gutta percha hardens, and holds the edges of the wound firmly together. According to Mr. Acton, the best substance for protecting the surface from the contact of poisons, contagions, &c., is prepared by dissolving with a gentle heat a drachm of gutta percha in an ounce of benzole, and ten grains of caoutchouc in the same quantity of the same menstruum, and mixing the solutions. It may be applied by a brush, and a delicate film is left by the evaporation of the liquid. A saturated solution in chloroform is very useful in slight superficial injuries and in various chronic affections of the skin. It is applied by means of a camel’s hair pencil, and forms, on the evaporation of the solvent, a thin elastic covering, wdiich completely excludes the air, and acts like an artificial cuticle to the part. The crusts or scales should be previously removed by poultices or alkaline solu- tions. The affections in which it has been found most efficacious are the dry ecaly and tubercular diseases of . the skin, especially psoriasis. It has been used also to render the variolous eruption abortive. The preparation is now officinal under the name of Liquor Gutta-perch se. (See Part II.) Another application of gutta percha is to serve as a vehicle of certain caustic substances, particularly chloride of zinc, and caustic potassa. The preparation is made by reducing the caustic substance to fine powder, and then thoroughly mixing it with its weight of gutta percha, melted at the lowest possible temperature. (See Potassa, and Zinci Chloridum.) A great advantage of the preparation is that it may be made into any desirable form, and will retain that form without spreading when ap- plied. Off. Prep. Liquor Gutta-perchse, U. S. W. 434 Hsematoxylon. PART I. HAEMATOXYLON. U.S. Logwood. The wood of Haematoxylon Campechianum. U. S. Off. Syn. HiEMATOXYLUM. Haematoxylum Campechianum. The heart- wood sliced. Br. Bois de Campeche, Fr.; Blutholz, Kampcschenholz, Germ.; Legno di Campeggio, ltal.; Palo de Campeche, Span. ILematoxylon. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia. •—Nat. Ord. Fabaceae or Leguminosae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted. Petals five. Capsule lanceolate, one-celled, two-valved, with the valves boat-form. Willd. Haematoxylon Campechianum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 547; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 455, t. 163; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. i. 33, pi. 25. This is a tree of middle size, usually not more than twenty-four feet high, though, under favourable cir- cumstances, it sometimes rises forty or fifty feet. The trunk, seldom exceeding twenty inches in diameter, is often very crooked, and is covered with a dark rough bark. The branches are also crooked, with numerous smaller ramifica- tions, which are beset with sharp spines. The sap-wood is yellowish, but the interior layers are of a deep-red colour. The leaves are alternate, abruptly pin- nate, and composed of three or four pairs of sessile, nearly obcordate, obliquely nerved leaflets. The flowers, which are in axillary spikes or racemes near the ends of the branches, have a brownish-purple calyx and lemon-yellow petals. They exhale an agreeable odour, said to resemble that of the jonquil. The tree is a native of Campeachy, the shores of Honduras Bay, and other parts of tropical America; and has become naturalized in Jamaica. The wood, which is the part used in medicine, is a valuable article of commerce, and largely employed in dyeing. It comes to us in logs, deprived of the sap-wood, and having a blackish-brown colour externally. For medical use it is cut into chips, or rasped into coarse powder, and in these states is kept in the shops. Properties. Logwood is hard, compact, heavy, of a deep-red colour becoming dark by exposure, of a slight peculiar odour, and a sweet, somewhat astringent Taste. It imparts its colour to water and to alcohol. The infusion made with cold water, though red, is less so than that with boiling water. It affords pre- cipitates with sulphuric, nitric, muriatic, and acetic acids, alum, sulphate of copper, acetate of lead, and sulphate of iron, striking a bluish-black colour with the last-mentioned salt. ( Thomson’s Dispensatory.) Precipitates are also pro- duced with it by lime-water and gelatin. Chevreul found in logwood a volatile oil, an oleaginous or resinous matter, a brown substance the solution of which is precipitated by gelatin {tannin), another brown substance soluble in alcohol but insoluble in water or ether, an azotized substance resembling gluten, free acetic acid, various salts, and a peculiar principle, called hematoxylin or hematin, on which the colouring properties of the wood depend. This"is obtained by digest- ing the aqueous extract in alcohol, evaporating .the tincture till it thickens, then adding a little water, and submitting the liquid to a new but gentle evaporation. Upon allowing it to rest, hematoxylin is deposited in crystals, which may be purified by washing with alcohol and drying. Thus procured, the crystals are shining, of a yellowish rose colour, bitterish, acrid, and slightly astringent to the taste, readily soluble in boiling water, forming an orange-red solution which becomes yellow on cooling, and soluble also in alcohol and ether. According to Erdman, who obtained hematoxylin by the process of Chevreul, substituting ether for alcohol, its crystals, when quite pure, are yellow without a tinge of redness; its taste is sweet like that of liquorice, without bitterness or astrin- gency; and it is not of itself a colouring substance, but affords beautiful red, TART i. Hsematoxylon.—Hedeoma. blue, and purple colours, by the joint action of an alkaline base and the oxygei. of the air. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ii. 293.) Its formula in crystals is given as C32Hu012-f 2HO, or C„HU 012-f 6IIO, according to the amount of its water of crystallization. ( Chem. Gaz. June 15, 1859, p. 227.) It is sometimes found in distinct crystals in the crevices of the wood. Medical Properties and Uses. Logwood is a mild astringent, devoid of irri- tating properties, and well adapted to the treatment of that relaxed condition of bowels which is apt to succeed cholera infantum. It is also occasionally used with advantage in ordinary chronic diarrhoea and chronic dysentery. It may be given in decoction or extract. Off. Prep. Decoctum Hasmatoxyli; Extractum Hsematoxyli. W HEDEOMA. U.S. Hedeoma. American Pennyroyal. Herb of Hedeoma pulegioides. U. S. This herb, first attached to the genus Melissa, and afterwards to Cunila, is at present universally considered by botanists as belonging to the Hedeoma of Persoon. It has been very erroneously confounded by some with Mentha Pule- gium, or European pennyroyal. Hedeoma. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Lamiacese or La- biatse. Gen. Ch. Calyx bilabiate, gibbous at the base, upper lip three-toothed, lower two; dentures all subulate. Corolla ringent. Stamens two, sterile; the two fertile stamens about the length of the corolla. Nuttall. Hedeoma pulegioides. Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 165. — Cunila pulegioides. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 122. This is an indigenous annual plant, from nine to fifteen inches high, with a small, branching, fibrous, yellowish root, and a pubescent stem, which sends off numerous slender erect branches. The leaves are opposite, oblong-lanceolate or oval, nearly acute, attenuated at the base, remotely serrate, rough or pubescent, and prominently veined on the under surface. The flowers are very small, pale-blue, supported on short peduncles, and arranged in axillary whorls along the whole length of the branches. The plant is common in all parts of the United States, preferring dry grounds, and, where abundant, scent- ing the air for a considerable distance with its grateful odour. Both in the recent and dried state it has a pleasant aromatic smell, and a warm, pungent, mint-like taste. It readily imparts its virtues to boiling water. The volatile oil upon which they depend may be separated by distillation, and employed instead of the herb itself. Medical Properties and Uses. Pennyroyal is a gently stimulant aromatic, and may be given in flatulent colic and sick stomach, or to qualify the action of other medicines. Like most of the aromatic herbs, it possesses the property, when administered in warm infusion, of promoting perspiration, and of exciting the menstrual flux when the system is predisposed to the effort. Hence it is much used as an emmenagogue in popular practice, and frequently with success. A large draught of the warm tea is given at bedtime, in recent cases of suppres- sion of the menses, the feet having been previously bathed in warm water. Off. Prep. Oleum Hedeomse, U. S. W 436 Helianthemum.—Helleborus. PART I. HELIANTHEMUM. US. Secondary. Frostwort. The heib of Heliantheraum Canadense. U. S. Heliantiiemum. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Cistacese. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-leaved, the two exterior sepals bract-like, smaller, or wanting. Petals five, rarely three, sometimes abortive. Stigma capitate, some- times subsessile. Capsule triangular, three-valved, with the dissepiments in th middle of the valves. Seeds angular. Helianthemum Canadense. Michaux, Flor. i. 308; Torrey & Gray, Flor. of N. Am. i. 151. — Cistus Canadensis. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1199. The frost- wort, frost-weed, or rock rose, as this plant is variously called, is an herbaceous perennial, from six to eighteen inches high, with a slender, rigid, pubescent stem, oblong, somewhat lanceolate leaves about an inch in length, and large yellow flowers, the calyx and peduncles of which, as well as the branches, are covered with a white down. The flowers which first appear are terminal, few or solitary, large, on short peduncles, with erosely emarginate petals about twice as long as the calyx. Later in the season, or on different plants, other flowers appear, very small, axillary, solitary or somewhat clustered, nearly sessile, some- times destitute of petals, and usually wanting the two outer sepals of the calyx. The fruit is a capsule, smooth and shining, with brown, scabrous, punctate seeds. Baton states that, in the months of November and December, he has seen hun- dreds of these plants sending out, near the roots, broad, thin, curved ice crys- tals, about an inch in breadth, which melted in the day, and were renewed in the morning. (Manual of Botany, 1th ed., p. 24(3.) Frostwort grows in all parts of the United States, preferring dry sandy soils, and flowering in June in the Middle States. Medical Properties and Uses. The herb has an astringent, slightly aromatic, and bitterish taste; and appears to possess tonic and astringent properties. Attention has only recently been attracted to it as a medicine. We have been told that it was first introduced into regular practice by Dr. Ives, of New Haven, Connecticut, who considers it a valuable remedy in scrofula. The late Dr. Isaac Parrish, of Philadelphia, informed us that he had employed it with much appa- rent benefit, as an internal remedy, in scrofulous affections of the eyes. In a pamphlet upon the frost-weed, by Dr. D. A. Tyler, published at New Haven, A. D. 1846, it is stated that H. corymbosum possesses similar properties, and is indiscriminately employed with li. Canadense. He found both useful in scrofula, diarrhoea, and secondary syphilis, and locally as a gargle in scarlatina, and a wash in prurigo. The plant has been used in the forms of powder, decoction, tincture, and syrup; and may be given freely with impunity. Dr. Tyler, how- ever, has known the strong decoction and the extract to produce vomiting. He considers two grains of the latter as a full dose for an adult. W. HELLEBORUS. U. S. Black Hellebore. Root of Helleborus niger. U. S. E116bore noire, Fr.; Schwarze Niesswurzel, Germ,.; Elleboro nero, Ilal.; Heleboro negro, Span. Helleborus. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia.—Nat. Ord. RanunculacepB. Gen. Gh. Calyx none. Petals five or more. Nectaries bilabiate tubular. Capsules many-seeded, nearly erect. Willd. part I. Helleborus. 437 Helleborus niger. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1336; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 473, t 169; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 8, pi. 1. The root or rhizoraa of the black hellebore is perennial, knotted, blackish on the outside, white within, and sends off numerous long, simple, depending fibres, which are brownish-yellow when fresh, but become dark-brown upon drying. The leaves are pedate, of a deep- green colour, and stand on long footstalks which spring immediately from the root. Each leaf is composed of five or more leaflets, one terminal, and two, three, or four on each side, supported on a single partial petiole. The leaflets are ovate-lanceolate, smooth, shining, coriaceous, and serrated in their upper portion. The flower-stem, which also rises from the root, is six or eight inches high, round, tapering, and reddish towards the base, and bears one or two large, pendent, rose-like flowers, accompanied with floral leaves, which supply the place of the calyx. The petals, five in number, are large, roundish, concave, spreading, and of a white or pale-rose colour, with occasionally a greenish tinge. There are two varieties of the plant—hurnilifolius and altifolius—in the former of which the leaves are shorter than the flower-stem, in the~latter longer. It is a native of the mountainous regions of southern and temperate Europe, and is found in Greece, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, France, and Spain. It is cultivated in gardens for the beauty of its flowers, which expand in the middle of winter, and have thus given it the name of Christmas rose. Till the publication of Tournefort's^lraveTs'm tEe Levant, this plant was re- garded as identical with the hellebore of the ancient Greeks and Romans. But in the island of Anticyra, and various parts of continental Greece, in which it appears from the testimony of ancient writers that the hellebore abounded, this traveller discovered a species entirely distinct from those before described, and particularly from H. niger. He called it H. orientalis, and reasonably inferred that it was the true hellebore of the ancients; and botanists at present generally coincide in this opinion. But, as H. niger is also found in some parts of Greece, it is not impossible that the two plants were indiscriminately used. It is, indeed, highly probable that they possess similar properties; and a third, which grows in the west of Europe, is said to be frequently substituted for H. niger, which it closely resembles, if it does not equal in medicinal power. The roots of various other plants, not belonging to the same genus, are said to be frequently substituted for the black hellebore. They may usually be readily dis- tinguished by attending to the characters of the genuine root.* * The following minute description of the root, which we translate from Geiger’s Iland- buch der Pharmacie, may, perhaps, be useful in enabling the druggist to distinguish this from other analogous roots, mingled with or substituted for it in commerce. “It is usually a many-headed root, with a caudex or body half an inch thick or less, seldom thicker, and several inches long, horizontal, sometimes variously contorted, uneven, knotty, with trans- verse ridges, slightly striated longitudinally, presenting on its upper surface the short re- mains of the leaf and flower stalks, and thickly beset upon the sides and under surface ■with fibres of the thickness of a straw, and from six to twelve inches long. These are undivided above, but, at the distance of from two to six inches from their origin, are fur- nished with small, slender branches. The colour of the root is dark-brown, sometimes rather light-brown, dull, and for the most part exhibiting a gray, earthy tinge. Internally it is whitish, with a somewhat darker pith, which, when cut transversely, shows lighter converging rays. Sometimes it is porous. It has a medullary or fleshy, not a ligneous consistence. The fibres, when dried, are wrinkled, very brittle, sometimes grayish inter- nally, horny, with a white point in the centre. The odour of the dried root is feeble, some- what like that of seneka, but more nauseous, especially when it is rubbed with water. The taste is at first sweetish, then nauseously acrid and biting, but not very durable, and slightly bitterish.” (Handbuch, ii. s. 1181.) A root said to be not unfrequently substituted for or mixed with the genuine, and often to be met with in the shops of this country, is thought to be that of the Actsca xvicata of Europe. This has been particularly described by Dr. Carson in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xx. 163). The points of difference upon which that writer especially insists are the diffuse, jointed, stem-like character of the caudex of the false root, the straggling, se- 438 Helleborus. PART I. The medicine of which we are treating is sometimes called melampodium. in honour of Melampus, an ancient shepherd or physician, who is said to have cured the daughters of King Prmtus by giving them the milk of goats which had been fed on hellebore. Properties. Though the whole root is kept in the shops, the fibres are the portion usually recommended. They are about as thick as a straw, when not broken from four inches to a foot in length, smooth, brittle, externally black or deep-brown, internally white or yellowish-white, with little smell, and a bitterish, nauseous, acrid taste. In their recent state they are extremely acrimonious, pro- ducing on the tongue a burning and benumbing impression, like that which re- sults from taking hot liquids into the mouth. This acrimony is diminished by drying, and still further impaired by age. MM. Feneulle and Capron obtained from black hellebore a volatile oil, an acrid fixed oil, a resinous substance, wax, a volatile acid, bitter extractive, gum, albumen, gallate of potassa, supergallate of lime, a salt of ammonia, and woody fibre. Mr. William Bastick discovered a peculiar crystalline principle, which he proposed to call helleborin. It was obtained by diluting with water a strong tincture of the root, expelling the alcohol by heat, filtering to separate the resin, adding carbonate of potassa in excess, and agitating the mixture with three or four times its volume of ether. The ethereal solution was separated, and on evaporation yielded the helleborin, which was purified by solution in alcohol, and crystallization. It is in white, translucent crystals, of a bitter taste with a tingling effect on the tongue, not volatilizable, slightly soluble in water, more so in ether and alcohol, and more readily in these liquids hot than cold. Though nitrogenous, it is neither acid nor alkaline. It probably exists uncombined in the root. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 214.) Water and alcohol extract the virtues of the root, which are impaired by long boiling. Medical Properties and Uses. Black hellebore is a drastic hydragogue ca- thartic, possessed of emmenagogue powers, which by some are ascribed to a specific tendency to the uterus, by others are supposed to depend solely on the purgative property. In overdoses it produces inflammation of the gastric and intestinal mucous membrane, with violent vomiting, hypercatharsis, vertigo, cramp, and convulsions, which sometimes end in death. The fresh root applied to the skin produces inflammation and even vesication. The medicine was very highly esteemed by the ancients, who employed it in mania, melancholy, amen- orrhoea, dropsy, epilepsy, various cutaneous affections, and verminose diseases. By the earlier modern physicians it was also much used. Bacher's pills, cele- brated for the cure of dropsy, consisted chiefly of black hellebore. It is at pre- sent little employed except as an emmenagogue, in which capacity it is highly esteemed by some practitioners. Dr. Meade considered it superior to all other medicines belonging to this class. It may be given in substance, extract, decoc- tion, or tincture. The dose of the powdered root is from ten to twenty grains as a drastic purge, two or three grains as an alterative. The decoction is pre- pared by boiling two drachms in a pint of water, of which a fluidounce may be given every four hours till it operates. The extract and tincture are officinal. Off. Prep. Extractum Hellebori Alcoholicum, U. S.; Tinctura Hellebori, U. S. W. parated, and horizontal arrangement of the fibres, and their dense, woody structure, and reddish-brown colour, contrasted with the thickness, double-headed form, and sponginess of the genuine caudex, the close-set, perpendicular position of its fibres, and their wrinkled appearance, soft texture, and grayish-brown colour. The transverse section of the fibre of the Actaea presents the appearance of a cross, which is not obvious in that of the black hellebore, though the central point of this, if closely examined, will be found to piesent a somewhat stellate appearance. In the Pharm. Journ. and Trans, for Aug. 1861, p. 112, Prof. Bentley states that solution of perchloride of iron produces little change of colour and little or no precipitation with an infusion of black hellebore, while, with a similar lofus'ou of the Actsea root, it causes a deep-blue or black colour and a copious precipitate. PAKT I. Hemidesmus.—Hepatica. 439 HEMIDESMUS. Br. Hemidesmus. Indian Sarsaparilla. Hemidesmus Indicus. The root dried. Br. 1 ' for Hemidesmus. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Asclepiadacete. Gen. Ch. Corolla rotate. Filaments connate at the base, nolTunited above, inserted into the tube of the corolla. Anthers cohering separate from the stigma, with twenty pollen-masses. Stigma flattish, pointless. Hemidesmus Indicus. R. Brown, Hort. Kew. ii. 75; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 543. — Periploca Indica. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1251. This is a climbing plant, with twinihg, woody, slender stems,'and opposite petiolate leaves, which are en- tire, smooth, shining, and of a firm consistence. The leaves vary much in size and shape, some being linear and acute, others broad-lanceolate, and others again oval or ovate. The flowers are small, green on the outside, purple within, and disposed in axillary racemes. The calyx is five-parted, with acute divisions; the corolla flat, with oblong, pointed divisions. The fruit consists of two long, slender, spreading follicles. This plant is common over the whole peninsula of Hindostan. The officinal portion is the root, which has long been used in India as a substitute for sarsa- parilla. It is long, slender, tortuous, cylindrical, and little branched, consisting of a ligneous centre, and a brownish, corky bark, marked with longitudinal fur- rows and transverse fissures. It has an aromatic odour and bitter taste. Mr. Garden obtained from it a peculiar volatilizable acid principle, which he named smilasperic acid, under the erroneous impression that the root was derived from Smilax aspera? Pereira proposed to call it hemidesmic acid. Medical Properties and Uses. Indian sarsaparilla is saicftobe tonic, diuretic, and alterative. It was introduced into Great Britian from India, and was em- ployed for some time under the name-of smilax aspera. It is used for the same purposes as sarsaparilla. In some instances it is said to have proved successful in syphilis when that medicine had failed; but it cannot be relied on. The na- tive practitioners in India are said to employ it in nephritic complaints, and in the sore-mouth of children. It is used in the form of infusion or decoction, made in the proportion of two ounces of the root to a pint of water. A pint may be given, in wineglassful doses, in the course of the day. A syrup is directed in the British Pharmacopoeia. (See Syrupus Hemidesmi.) Off. Prep. Syrupus Hemidesmi, Br. W. HEPATICA. U. S. Secondary. Liverwort. The leaves of Ilepatica Americana. U. S. Hepatica.' Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia.— Nat. Ord. Ranunculaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx three-leaved. Petals six to nine. Seeds naked. Nut tall. Heyatica Ameruuma. De Cand.; Eaton, Manual of Botany, p. 241.—JET. triloba. Willd. Enum.; figured in Rafinesque’s Med. Flor. i. 238. Botanists generally admit but one.species of Hepatica, II. triloba, and consider as acci- dental the difference of structure and colour observable in the plant. Pursh speaks of two varieties, one with the lobes of the leaf oval and acute, the other with the lobes rounded and obtuse. These are considered as distinct species by He Candolle, and the latter is the one adopted by the Pharmacopoeia, and popularly employed as a medicine in this country, under the name of liverwort. Both have a perennial fibrous root, with three-lobed leaves, cordate at their 440 Hepatic a.—Heuchera. PART i. basft, fotiVeous, nearly smooth, glaucous and purplish beneath, and supported upon hairy footstalks from four to eight inches long, which spring directly from the root. The scapes or flower-stems are several in number, of the same length with the petioles, round, hairy, and terminating in a single bluish, or pur- plish flower. The calyx is at a little distance below the corolla, and is con- sidered by some an involucre, while the corolla takes the name of the calyx. In H. acutiloba the leaves are cordate, with from three to five entire, acute lobes; andThe leaflets of the calyx are acute. In H. Americana the leaves are cordate- reniform, with three entire, roundish, obtuse lobes; and the leaflets of the calyx are obtuse. Both are indigenous, growing in woods upon the sides of hills and mountains; the former, according to Eaton, preferring the northern, the latter the southern exposure. The leaves resist the cold of the winter, and the flowers make their appearance early in spring. The whole plant is used. It is without smell, and has a mucilaginous, somewhat astringent, slightly bitterish taste. Water extracts all its active properties. Medical Properties and Uses. Liverwort is a very mild, demulcent tonic and astringent, supposed by some to possess diuretic and deobstruent virtues. It was formerly used in Europe in various complaints, especially chronic hepatic affections, but has fallen into entire neglect. In this country, some years since, it acquired considerable popular reputation, which, however, it has not main- tained, as a remedy in haemoptysis aud chronic coughs. It may be used in infusion, and taken ab libitum. The term liverwort properly belongs to the cryptogamous genus Marchaniia. W. HEUCHERA. U. S. Secondary. Alum-root. The root of Heuchera Americana. U. S. Heuchera. Sex.Syst.*Pe n tan d ri a Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Saxifragaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-cleft. Petals five, small. Capsule bi-rostrate, bi-locular, many-seeded. Nuttall. Heuchera Americana. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1328; Barton, Med. Pot. ii. 159. — HTcortusa. Michaux, Flor. Boreal. Am. i. 171.—H. viscida. Pursh, Flor. Am. Bept.pAsi. The alum-root or American sanicle is a perennial, herba- ceous plant, the leaves of which are all radical, petioTate, cordate, with rounded lobes, furnished with obtuse mucronate teeth. There is no proper stem; but numerous scapes or flower-stems are sent up by the same root, from one to three feet in height, very hairy in their upper part, and terminating in long, loose, pyramidal, dichotomous panicles. The calyx is small, with obtuse segments; the petals lanceolate, rose-coloured, and of the same length with the calyx; the filaments much longer, yellowish, and surmounted by small, red, globose anthers. The whole plant is covered with a viscid pubescence. It is found in shady, rocky situations, from New England to Carolina, and flowers in June and July. The root, which is officinal, is horizontal, somewhat compressed, knotty, irregular, yellowish, and of a strongly styptic taste. Medical Properties. Alum-root is powerfully astringent, and may be em- ployed in similar cases with other medicines belonging to the same class. It has hitherto, however, been little used. We are informed, in Dr. Barton’s “Collec- tions,” that it is applied by the Indians to wounds and obstinate ulcers, and that it is the basis of a powrder which, when the author wrote, enjoyed some reputa- tion as a cure for cancer. Mr. Frederick Stearns, in a report to the Am. Phar- maceutical Association in reference to the medicinal plants of Michigan {Pro- ceedings, A. D. 1858, p. 263), speaks of two other species. H. caulesccns a id H. pubescens, as having similar properties. W. PART I. Hirudo. 441 HIRUDO. Br. The Leech. Sanguisuga officinalis, and S. medicinalis. Br. SangsueJ"Fr.; Blutegal, Germ ; Mignatta, Ital.; Sauguijuela, Span. Hirudo. Class 1, Annelides. Order 3, Abranchiatae. Family 2, Asetigerse Cuvier. The leech belongs to that class of invertebrated articulated animals called Annelides. This class contains the worms with red blood, having soft retractile bodies composed of numerous segments or rings, breathing generally by means of branchiae, with a nervous system consisting in a double knotted cord, desti- tute of feet, and supplying their place by the contractile power of their segments or rings. The third order of this class — Abranchiatae—comprehends those worms which have no apparent external organ of respiration. This order is again divided into two families, to the second of which — the Asetigerae, or those not having setae to enable them to crawl — the leech belongs. It is an aquatic worm with a flattened body, tapering towards each end, and terminating in circular flattened disks, the hinder one being the larger of the two. It swims with a vertical undulating motion, and moves when out of the water by means of these disks or suckers, fastening itself first by one and then by the other, and alternately stretching out and contracting its body. The mouth is placed in the centre of the anterior disk, and is furnished with three cartila- ginous lens-shaped jaws at the entrance of the alimentary canal. These jaws are lined at their edges with fine sharp teeth, and meet so as to make a triangular incision in the flesh. The head is furnished with small raised points, supposed by some to be eyes. -Respiration is carried on through small apertures ranged along the inferior sui’face. The nervous system consists of a cord extending the whole length, furnished with numerous ganglions. The intestinal canal is straight, and terminates in the anus, near the posterior disk. Although herma- phrodite, leeches mutally impregnate each other. They are oviparous, and the eggs, varying from six to fifteen, are contained in a sort of spongy, slimy cocoon, from half an inch to an inch in diameter. These are deposited near the edge of the water, and hatched by the heat of the sun. The leech is torpid, during the winter, and casts off from time to time a thick slimy coating from its skin. It can live a considerable time in sphagnous moss, or in moistened earth, and is frequently transported in this manner to great distances by the dealers. Savigny has divided the genus Hirudo of Linnaeus into several genera. The true leech is the Sanguisuga of this author, and is characterized by its three len- ticular jaws, each armed with two rows of teeth, and by having ten ocular points. Several species are used for medical purposes, of which the most common are the gray and the green leech of Europe, both of which are varieties of the Hirudo medicinalis of Linnaeus; and the Hirudo decora of this country. 1. Hirudo medicinalis. Linn. Ed. Gmel. i. 3095. — Sanguisuga officinalis. Savigny, Mon. Hir. p. 112, t. 5, f. 1. The green leech. — Sanguisuga medicinalis. Savigny, Mon. Hir. p. 114, t. 5, f. 2. The gray leech. Many ofthe best zoolo- gists regard the Sanguisuga officinalis and S. medicinalis of Savigny as mere varieties. They are both marked with six longitudinal dorsal ferruginous stripes, the four lateral ones being interrupted or tesselated with black spots. The1 colour of the back varies from a blackish to a grayish-green. Thq, belly in the first variety is of a yellowish-green colour, free from spots, and bordered with longi- tudinal black stripes. In the second it is of a green colour, bordered and macu- lated with black. This leech varies from two to four inches in length. It inhabits marshes and running streams, and is abundant throughout Europe.* * A variety of the leech has recently come into use in Europe, called in commerce Afri- tan leeches. They are of a beautiful light-green colour, varying to a deep-green, and often 442 Hirudo. PART I. The great use made of leeches in the modern practice of medicine has occa- sioned them to become a considerable article of commerce. They are collected in Spain, France, Italy, Germany, and Sweden, and carried in large numbers to London and Paris. They are also frequently brought to this country; as the practitioners in some of our large cities use only the foreign leech, although our own waters furnish an inexhaustible supply of this useful worm.* 2. Hirudo decora. Say, Colonel Long"1 a Second, Expedition, ii. 268. The medicinal leech of America has been described by Say under the name of Hirudo decora, in the Appendix to the Second Expedition of Colonel Long. Its back is of a deep pistachio-green colour, with three longitudinal rows of square spots. These spots are placed on every fifth ring, and are twenty-two in number. The lateral rows of spots are black, and the middle range, of a light brownish-orange colour. The belly is of the latter colour, variously and irregularly spotted with black. The American leech sometimes attains the length of four or five inches, although its usual length is from two to three. It does not make so large and deep an incision as the European leech, and draws less blood. The indigenous leech is much used in the city of Philadelphia. The practi- tioners of New York and Boston are supplied chiefly from abroad. The leeches employed in Philadelphia are generally brought from Bucks and Berks county, in Pennsylvania, and occasionally from other parts of the State. The proper preservation of leeches is an object of importance to the practi- tioner, as they are liable to a great and sudden mortality. They are usually kept in jars, in clear, soft water, which should be changed twice a week in winter, and every other day in summer. The jar must be covered with a linen c'oth, and placed in a situation not liable to sudden changes of temperature. They will live a long time and continue active and healthy, without any other attention than that of frequently changing the water in which they are kept. M. Derheims has proposed the following excellent method of preserving them. In the bottom of a large basin or trough of marble he places a bed, six or seven inches deep, of a mixture of moss, turf, and fragments of wood. He strews pebbles above, so as to retain them in their place without compressing them too much, or pre- venting the water from freely penetrating them. At one end of the trough, and about midway of its height, is placed a thin slab of marble or earthenware, pierced with numerous holes, and covered with a bed of moss, which is compressed by a thick layer of pebbles. The reservoir being thus disposed is half-filled with water, so that the moss and pebbles on the shelf shall be kept constantly moist. The basin is protected from the light by a linen cover stretched over it. By this arrangement the natural habits of the leech are not counteracted. One of these habits, essential to its health, is that of drawing itself through the moss and roots inclining to red, with black points on the back, and broad streaks of a bright orange-yel- low, which are black towards the abdomen. They correspond perfectly with the Sangui- suga interrupta of Moquin-Tandon. These leeches draw very well. (Pharm. Journ., x. $8, from "Buchner’s Repertorium, A. D. 1850, p. 376.) The leeches from Algiers, called in French com- merce dragons (Sanguisuga troctena of Moquin-Tandon), of which considerable numbers have been taken to France, are said by M. A. de Quatrefages, contrary to former opinion, to t>e quite equal to the European. {Journ. de Pharm., Se sdr., xxxiii. 105.)—Note to the ninth and twelfth editions. W. * Attempts have recently been made, in France, on a large scale, to propagate leeches for sale. This is done by means of natural meadows, in which numerous small ponds are made, where the leeches, with certain precautions as to nourishment and preservation, multiply and grow so rapidly as to become a source of profit. In order that they may pi’opagate, it is necessary that they should be fed on blood, which is given them either by causing animals, as horses, cows, &c., to be driven into the meadows, or, by obtaining blood from slaughter houses, and, after depriving it of fibrin by agitation, immersing the animals for a time in it while yet warm. For very interesting particulars in relation to this kind of culture, the reader is referred to papers in the Journ. de Pharm. ( 'an. 1854, p. 5, and Mai, 1854, p. 336).—Note to the eleventh edition. W. Hirudo. 443 PART 1. to clear its body from the slimy coat which forms on its skin, and is a principal cause of its disease and death. Mr. James Banes recommends that, when kept in jars, they should be cleansed by means of a whisk of very fine broom or willow, when the water is changed.* Medical Uses. Leeches afford the least painful, and in many instances the most effectual means for the local abstraction of blood. They are often appli- cable to parts which, either from their situation or their great tenderness when inflamed, do not admit of the use of cups; and, in the cases of infants, are under all circumstances preferable to that instrument. They are indeed a powerful therapeutic agent, and give to the physician, in many instances, a control over disease which he could obtain in no other way. Their use is in great measure restricted to the treatment of local inflammation; and, as a general rule, they should not be resorted to until the force of the circulation has been diminished by bleeding from the arm, or in the natural progress of the complaint. In applying leeches to the skin, care should be taken to shave off the hair, if there be any, and to have the part well cleansed with soap and water, and after- wards with pure water. If the leech do not bite readily, the skin should be moistened with a little blood, or milk and water. It is said to bite more freely if the skin is previously reddened by a sinapism, and then washed perfectly clean. Sometimes the leech is put into a large quill open at both ends, and ap- plied with the head to the skin until it fastens itself, when the quill is withdrawn. If it be desirable that the leech shall bite in a particular spot, this end may be attained by cutting a small hole in a piece of blotting paper, and then applying this moistened to the skin, so that the hole shall be immediately over the spot from which the blood is to be taken. Leeches continue to draw blood until they * M. Soubeiran considers it important that they should be kept in running water, and has figured an apparatus for this purpose in the second edition of his Treatise on Phar- macy. The addition of a solution of chlorine to the water, in the proportion of one or two drops to the pint, or of a little muriatic or sulphuric acid to neutralize the ammonia which forms, has sometimes been found a preservative against disease. (Journ. dePharm., 3e ser., x.186.) M. Domine has found the following plan for preserving leeches most successful. lie selects the greenest moss he can find, washes it perfectly clean, and puts alternately it and the leeches, also well wnshed, into a glass vessel of convenient size, taking care to fill the vessel completely with the loosened moss, and then to cover it with a piece of linen. In win- ter, it is sufficient merely to introduce the leeches and moss moistened; but, as soon as warm weather approaches, a little water should be put at the bottom of the vessel. It is not necessary to change often in winter; but in summer the moss should be renewed neai’ly every other day, and the vessel should be kept in the cellar. (Ibid., xvi. 110.)—Note to the ninth edition. W. Mr. Alfred Allchin has had great success in the preservation of leeches by the use of aquaria, in which the natural conditions necessary for the health of the animal are sup- plied, by introducing a living and growing water plant, to afford oxygen and consume carbonic acid, and water snails to consume the decaying vegetable matter, the confervse which grow on the sides of the vessel, and the slimy matter given off by the leeches them- selves. For full particulars in relation to the structure and management of these aquaria, the reader is referred to the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxviii. 222), and the Pharm. Journ. (xv. 453), in the latter of which journals the account was originally published.—Note to the eleventh edition. W. An interesting account of the culture of both the Spanish and American leech (the latter H. decora) has been published in the “Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association” for the year 1857, by Mr. Frederick Stearns, of which the following is an epi- tome. A wooden tank, eight feet in length by six in breadth and four in depth, is placed in the ground, near a running stream, so that a portion of the water passes through it, tne orifices through which it enters and escapes being covered with wire-gauze to prevent the exit of the animal. A layer of cobble stones eighteen inches thick is placed in the bottom of the tank. The outlet is about ten inches below the top of the tank, and from the edge at top, all round, a ledge of boards is made to project inward. A few frogs are thrown in once a week for food. In winter the animal is torpid, and the tank is allowed to remain frozen over till spring. The eggs are produced in June and July; the leech is mature in about two years, and will live fifteen.—Note to the twelfth edition. W 444 JTirudo. are gorged, when they drop off.* The quantity of blood which they draw varies with the part to which they are applied, and the degree of inflammation exist- ing in it. From the loose and vascular textures they will abstract more than from those which are firm and compact, and more from an inflamed than a healthy part. As a general rule our leechers apply six for every fluidoune.e of blood. A single European leech will draw from half an ounce to an ounce. The quantity may often be much increased by bathing the wound with warm water. Leeches will continue to suck after their tails are cut off, which is sometimes done, al- though it is a barbarous practice. It is said that they will draw better if put into cold beer, or diluted wine, and allowed to remain until they become very lively. They may be separated from the skin at any time by sprinkling a little salt upon them. After they drop off, the same application will make them disgorge the blood they have swallowed. Some leechers drawr the leeches from the tail to the head through their fingers, and thus squeeze out the blood, after which all that is necessary is to put them in clean water, and change it frequently.f Leeches which are gorged with blood should be kept in a vessel by themselves; as they PART I. * As a very efficient mode of applying leeches, it is recommended, after having moistened the skin with pure warm water, to put the leeches into a tumbler half full of cold water, and by an adroit movement invert it upon the part. The leeches are said to attach them- selves so rapidly that it seems to the patient as though they made but a single bite. When they are all attached, the glass is to be carefully removed, the water being absorbed, as it runs off on one side, by a sponge or linen cloths. Another method of increasing the efficiency of leeches, recommended by Dr. C. R. Sloan, of Ayr, Scotland, is to cover them with a cupping glass, and, by means of an air-pump, moderately exhaust the air over them. An extraordinary increase in their activity is im- mediately observable. (Ed. Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., Aug. 1852, p. 126 ) W. •j- MM. Soubeiran and Bouchardat, after numerous experiments upon the different modes of fitting the gorged leeches for use again, came to the conclusion, that a carefully managed pressure is the best. Two conditions, however, are necessary to success; one that they should be disposed to disgorge the blood, and the other that they should be immersed in warm water previously to the stripping. The first object is effected by common salt. The following plan is recommended. The leeches are to be thrown into a solution of 16 parts of common salt in 100 of water, from which they are to be taken out one by one, and, being held by the tail, are to be dipped into water which feels hot to the hand, but yet can be borne by it, and then passed lightly between the fingers. Thus treated, they easily give up the blood. After being stripped, they should be placed in vessels containing fresh water, which should be renewed once a day. At the end of eight or ten days, they are fit for re- application. (Journ. de Pharrn., Seser., xi. 343 and 350.) It is said that, in the French mili- tary hospitals, a mixture of vinegar and water, consisting of one part of the former to eight of the latter, is preferred to salt water for promoting disgorgement. (Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., Oct. 1856, p. 375.) It has been stated that, if the leeches, after being stripped, be put into water sweetened with a little white sugar, and the solution be renewed several times, at intervals of six or twelve hours, they will speedily recover their activity, and may be reapplied two or three times in the course of a few days. Immersion in camphor water, for a few moments, is said by Mr. Boyce to cause them to vomit the blood. They should afterwards be put into clean water, to be changed in half an hour. Dr. Frodsham, of England, has found camphor water preferable either to salt water or diluted vinegar, for disposing the gorged leech to part with blood. M. Grannat, a French military pharmaceutist, has found the natural process of disgorg- ing preferable to all others. He placed some gorged leeches in wooden tubs, containing at bottom a little clay and water, and renewed the water every forty-eight hours. After eight days, the leeches, now in good health, were transferred to a pond prepared for the purpose, where they propagated. He put 1000 leeches in the pond, and at the end of a year had taken out 850 fit for service, without interfering with the reproduction. (Journ. de Pharrn., 3c sir., xx. 186.) M. Vayson’s plan of preserving leeches has been highly commended. It consists simply in putting them, after stripping, if they have been used, in an earthenware vessel of the shape of an inverted truncated cone, with holes in the bottom so small as to prevent the escape of the leech, and filled with turfy earth. After the introduction of the leech the opening is to be closed with a coarse cloth. The vessel is then placed in a tub containing water four inches deep. If to be sent to a distance, the earth in the vessel should be moist- ened throughout. W PART I. Hirudo.—Hordeum. 445 are more subject to disease, and often occasion a great mortality among the others. They should not be again used until they have recovered their activity. In cases where the bleeding from leech-bites continues longer than is desirable, it may be stopped by continued pressure, with the application of lint, by the use of collodium, or by touching the wounds with lunar caustic.* It may sometimes be necessary, in the case of a deep bite, to sew the wound, which is readily done with a single stitch of the needle, that need not penetrate deeper than the cutis.f HORDEUM. U.S.,Br. Barley. Pearl Barley. The decorticated seed of Hordeum distichon. U. S. The seeds deprived of their husks. Br. Orge, Fr.; Gcrstengraupen, Germ.; Orzo, Ital.; Cebada, Span. Hordeum. Sex.Syst. Triandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Qraminaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx lateral, two-valved, one-flowered, three-fold. Willd. Several species of Hordeum are cultivated in different parts of the world. The most common are H. vulgare and H. distichon, both of which have been introduced into the United States. 1. Hordeum vulgare. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 472; Loudon’s Encyc. of Plants, p. 13. 'The"culm or stalk of common barley is from two to four feet in height, fistular, and furnished with alternate, sheathing, lanceolate, roughish, and pointed leaves. The flowers are all perfect, and arranged in a close terminal spike, the axis of which is dentate, and on each tooth supports three sessile flowers. The calyx or outer chaff has two valves. The corolla or inner chaff is also composed of two valves, of which the interior is larger than the other, and terminates in a long, rough, serrated awn or beard. The seeds are arranged in four rows. 2. H. distichon. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 473; Loudon’s Encyc. of Plants, p. 73. * A little cotton, impregnated with a saturated solution of alum in boiling-hot water, and, after it has become sufficiently cool, and before the alum has begun to crystallize, pressed upon the wound, will often prove effectual. Another mode of repressing the hemor- rhage is to press upon the bite a piece of thin caoutchouc, previously softened upon one side by heat, so as to become adhesive. If lunar caustic be applied, the stick must first be brought to a fine point, which is to be inserted in the wound. Some have even recom- mended the use of a fine wire made red-hot. When the part wounded is without a bony basis, pressure may be made by pinching the wound between the fingers. W. f An instrument has been invented called the mechanical leech, by which the attempt has been made to imitate the action of the leech in drawing blood. It consists essentially of two parts, one for making the puncture, and the other for abstracting blood through the agency of atmospheric pressure. In other words, it is a minute cupping instrument. Practically, however, it has not been found so convenient a% to supersede the use of the living leech. For an account of the instrument, see the Am. Journ. of the Med. Sciences (xvi. 207). W. Danger from Leeches. Young leeches are sometimes swallowed by men and animals while drinking from streams or ponds inhabited by them. If swallowed they probably perish in the stomach; but occasionally they attach themselves in the passages, in man most fre- quently to the fauces or pharynx, but in the lower animals also to the gums, cheeks, soft palate, and even the nasal passages. The animal has been known to attach itself within the larynx, with the most alarming effects. It grows in its new quarters, living on the blood which it draws, much of which also escapes from the punctures, causing spitting of blood, which probably first calls attention to the case. There are also various morbid sensations, such as arise from the presence of a foreign body in the throat, and symptoms of impending suffocation when the animal is near the glottis. Death has occurred from this cause. Generally there is little danger, and anemic symptoms are the most serious of those existing. The animal can generally be seen when in the fauces, and may be removed by seizing it with an instrument. If it cannot be seized, or if invisible, as in the nares, it should be attacked by solution of salt or vinegar, which will cause it to give up its hold. Emetics have been recommended, and in one instance laryngotomy was performed. (See Archives Gen., Aofit, 1803, p. 161.)—Note to the twelfth edition. W. 446 Hordeum. PART I. This species is distinguished by its flat spike or ear, which on each flat side has a double row of imperfect or male florets without beards, and on each edge, a single row of bearded perfect or hermaphrodite florets. The seeds, therefore, are in two rows, as indicated by the specific name of the plant. The original country of the cultivated barley is unknown. The plant has been found growing wild in Sicily, and various parts of the interior of Asia. H. vulgare is said by Pursh to grow in some parts of the United States, appa- rently in a wild state. The seeds are used in various forms. 1. In their natural state they are oval, oblong, pointed at one end, obtuse at the other, marked with a longitudinal furrow, of a yellowish colour externally, white within, having a faint odour when in mass, and a mild sweetish taste. They contain, according to Proust, in 100 parts, 32 of starch, 3 of gluten, 5 of sugar, 4 of gum, 1 of yellow resin, and 55 of hordein, a principle closely analogous to lignin. Berzelius suggests that hordein may be an intimate mixture of vegetable fibre with gluten and starch, which are very difficultly separable as they exist in this grain. Einhoff found in 100 parts 67T8 of starch, 5*21 of uncrystallizable sugar, 4 62 of gum, 3 52 of gluten, 1T5 of albumen, 0 24 of phosphate of lime, and 7-29 of vegetable fibre; the remainder being water and loss. 2. Malt consists of the seeds made to germinate by warmth and moisture, and then baked so as to deprive them of vitality. By this process the sugar, starch, and gum are increased at the expense of the hordein. as shown by the analysis of Proust, who found in 100 parts of malt, 56 of starch, 1 of gluten, 15 of sugar, 15 of gum, 1 of yellow resin, and only 12 of hordein, Berzelius attributes the diminution of the hordein to the separation, during germination, of the gluten or starch from the fibrous matter with which he supposes them to be associated in that substance. It is in the form of malt that barley is so largely consumed in the manufacture of malt liquors. An interesting substance, called diastase, was discovered by MM. Payen and Persoz in the seeds of barley, oats,"and wheat, and in the potato. It is found, however, only after germination, in which process the production of it appears to be the first step. Germinated barley seldom contains it in larger proportion than two parts in a thousand. It is obtained by bruising freshly germinated barley, adding about half its weight of water, expressing strongly, treating the viscid liquid thus obtained with sufficient alcohol to destroy its viscidity, then separating the coagulated albumen, and adding a fresh portion of alcohol, which precipitates the diastase in an impure state. To render it pure, it must be re- dissolved as often as three times in water, and precipitated by alcohol. It is solid, white, tasteless, soluble in water and weak alcohol, but insoluble in the latter fluid when concentrated. Though without action upon gum and sugar, it has the extraordinary property, when mixed, in the proportion of only one part to 2000, with starcl/suspended in water, and maintained at a temperature of about 160°, of converting that principle into dextrin and sugar of grapes. The whole of the starch undergoes this change, except the teguments of the granules, amounting to about 4 parts in 1000. The change which barley under- goes during germination, and in malting, is of a similar character. 3. Hulled, barley is merely the grain deprived of its husk, which, according to Einhoff, amounts to 18-75 parts iu the hundred.* * M. Lemoine, a French pharmaceutist, proposes a chemical method of decorticating barley and other seeds. Putting 100 parts of the seeds into a wooden vessel, he pours upon them 15 parts of sulphuric acid, stirs the mixture for 15 or 20 minutes, applying in the case of barley a gentle heat, then adds 50 parts of water, which he decants after a very few moments of constant agitation. After sufficient washing, and the neutralization of the last remains of acid by solution of carbonate of soda or potassa, he puts the grain upon a piece of cloth with large meshes stretched upon a frame, where he allows it to drain for about an hour, then transfers it to a similar cloth, and exposes it to a current of air for sevei a? days to dry. (Journ. de Pharni., Mars, 1863, p. 223.)—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Hordeum.—Humulus. 447 4. Barley meal is formed by grinding the seeds, previously deprived of their husk. It has a grayish-white colour, and contains, according to Fourcroy and Yauquelin, an oleaginous substance, sugar, starch, azotized matter, acetic acid, phosphates of lime and magnesia, silica, and iron. It may be made into a coarse, heavy, hard bread, which in some countries is much used for food. 5. Pearl barley (hordeum. perlatunx) is the seed deprived of all its invest- ments, and afterwards rounded and polished in a mill. It is in small round or oval grains, having the remains of the longitudinal furrow of the seeds, and of a pearly whiteness. It is wholly destitute of hordein, and abounds in starch, with some gluten, sugar, and gum. This is the proper officinal form of barley, and is kept in the shops almost to the exclusion of the others. Medical Properties. Barley is one of the mildest and least irritating of fari- naceous substances; and, though not medically used in its solid state, forms, by decoction with water, a drink admirably adapted to febrile and inflammatory complaints, and much employed from the time of Hippocrates to the present. Pearl barley is the form usually preferred for the preparation of the decoction, though the hulled grain is sometimes used, and malt affords a liquor more de- mulcent and nutritious. (See Decoctum Hordei.) The decoction of malt may be prepared by boiling from two to four ounces in a quart of water and straining. When hops are added, the decoction takes the name of and acquires tonic properties, which render it useful in debility, especially wFeniattended with sup- puration. Off. Prep. Decoctum Hordei. W. HUMULUS. U. S. Hops. The strobiles of Humulus Lupulus. U. S. Off. Syn. LUPULUS. Humulus Lupulus. The dried catkins of the female plant. Br. Houblon, Fr.; Hopfen, Germ.; Luppolo, Ital.; Lupulo Hombrecillo, Span. Humulus. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Pentandria.—Nat. Ord. Urticaceae. Gen. Gh. Male. Calyx five-leaved. Corollanone. Female. Calyx one-leafed. obliquely spreading, entire. Corolla none. Styles two. Seed one, within a leafy calyx. Willd. Humulus Lupulus. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 769; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 163. The root of the hop is perennial, and sends up numerous annual, angular, rough, flexible stems, which twine around neighbouring objects in a spiral direc- tion, from left to right, and climb to a great height. The leaves are opposite, and stand upon long footstalks. The smaller are sometimes cordate; the larger have three or five lobes; all are serrate, of a deep-green colour on the upper surface, and, together with the petioles, extremely rough, with minute prickles. At the base of the footstalks are two or four smooth, ovate, reflexed stipules. The flowers are numerous, axillary, and furnished with bractes. The male flowers are yellowish-white, and arranged in panicles; the female, which grow on a sepa- rate plant, are pale-green, and disposed in solitary, peduncled aments, composed of membranous scales, ovate, acute, and tubular at the base. Each scale bears near its base, on its inner surface, two flowers, consisting of a roundish com- pressed germ, and two styles, with long filiform stigmas. The aments are con- verted into ovate membranous cones or strobiles, the scales of which contain, each, at its base, two small seeds, surrounded by a yellow, granular, resinous powder. The hop is a native of North America and Europe. It is occasionally found growing wild in the Eastern States, and, according to Mr. Nuttall, is abundam 448 Humulus. PART I. on the banks of the Mississippi and Missouri. In parts of New England and New York it is extensively cultivated, and most of the hops consumed in the United States are supplied by those districts. The part of the plant used is the fruit or strobiles. These when fully ripe are picked, dried by artificial heat, packed in bales, and sent into the market under the name of hops. They consist of numerous thin, translucent, veined, leaf-like scales, which are of a pale greenish-yellow colour, and contain near the base two small, round, black seeds. Though brittle when quite dry, they are pulverized with great dif- ficulty. Their odour is strong, peculiar, somewhat narcotic, and fragrant; their taste very bitter, aromatic, and slightly astringent. Their aroma, bitterness, and astringency are imparted to water by decoction; but the first-mentioned pro- perty is dissipated by long boiling. The most active part of hops is a substance formed on the surface of the scales, and, in the dried fruit, existing in the state of very small granules. This substance was called lupulin by the late Dr. A. W. Ives, of New York, by whom its properties were first investigated and made generally known; though it was previously noticed by Sir J. E. Smith, of Eng- land, and M. Planche, of France. The scales themselves, however, are not des- titute of virtues, and contain, as shown by MM. Payen and Chevallier, the same, active principles as the lupulin, though in less proportion.* Lupulina. U. S. Lupulin. This is obtained separate by rubbing or thresh- the strobiles, of which it constitutes from one-sixth to one-tenth by weight. It is in the* state of a yellowish powder, mixed with minute par- ticles of the scales, from which it cannot be entirely freed when procured by a mechanical process. It has the peculiar flavour of hops, and appeared to MM. Lebaillif and Raspail, when examined by the microscope, to consist of globules filled with a yellow matter, resembling in this respect the pollen of vege- tables; but, from the investigations of M. Personne, it appears to be of the nature of a gland, commencing in a cell formed among those of the epidermis, and, when fully developed, secreting a resinous matter. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxvi. 242.) It is inflammable, and when moderately heated becomes some- * Hops are often subjected in Germany to tlie fumes of burning sulpliur, from the sup- position that they keep better when thus treated. Besides, by being partially bleached by the process, old hops, which have suffered from time, having become darker, generally spotted, and weaker, assume a brighter appearance, as if fresher, and generally command a better price in the market. To detect the consequent presence of sulphurous acid, the brewers put a silver spoon in a mixture of hops and water, under the impression that it will produce a black stain upon the silver. But this test will answer only when applied within a fortnight after the use of the sulphur. A more delicate method is that of Dr. Ileidenreich, who puts 20 or 30 cones of the hops in a flask with zinc and muriatic acid, and passes the hydrogen evolved through solution of acetate of lead. If sulphurous acid be present, sulphuretted hydrogen will be produced, which will occasion a dark precipitate with the solution. But even this plan often fails when the hops have been kept more than three or four weeks. A modification of this test has been proposed by Dr. R. Wagner. For the solution of acetate of lead used in Ileidenreich’s method, there is to be substituted a solution of nitroprusside of sodium, so weak as to have a very light-brown colour, to which have been added a few drops of solution of potassa. If the gas evolved contain the minutest proportion of sulphur, a violet colour will be produced when the first bubble passes into the solution; and this will by a continuance of the process become a magnificent purple. The least trace of sulphurous acid may thus be found; but, a few months after the sul- phuring of hops, none at all can be detected. (Chem. Gaz., April 1,1850, from Comptes Rendus.) Hops are said to be sometimes threshed in order to separate the lupulin, which is sold separately. Their efficiency is thus, no doubt, greatly impaired. Hops thus treated have the scales more or less broken; and any parcel presenting this appearance may be sus- pected. Hops often contain a variable quantity of lupulin, in consequence of the granules of this substance sepai'ating, especially on agitation, and seeking the lower portion of the mass, which thus becomes richer, while the upper is poorer. They should always be ex- amined in reference to the lupulin they contain, and, if nearly or quite destitute of n. should be deemed of inferior value, though not worthless.—Note to the eleventh and twelfth editione. PART I. Humulus. 449 what adhesive. MM. Chevallier and Payen obtained from 200 parts, 105 of resit and 25 of a peculiar bitter principle, besides volatile oil, gum, traces of fixed oil, a small quantity of an azotized substance, and various salts. Dr. Ives found in 120 grains, 5 of tannin, 10 of extractive, 11 of bitter principle, 12 of wax, 36 of resin, and 46 of lignin. M.Personne found in the liquid distilled from it not only volatile oil, but also valerianic acid. {Ibid., p. 333.) The virtues of the powder probably reside in tlm volatile oil and bitter principle, and are readily imparted to alcohol. By boiling in water the bitterness is extracted, but the aroma is partially driven off. The volatile oil, which may be obtained by dis- tillation with water, is yellowish, of the odour of hops, of an acrid taste, and lighter than water. It was formerly supposed to be narcotic, but this is denied by Dr. Wagner, who gave twenty drops of it to a rabbit, with no observable effect. ( Chem. Gaz., July 15, 1853.) It is said to consist of a carbo-hydrogen isomeric with pure oil of turpentine, and of an oxygenated oil. The bitter principle, which has been named lupulite or luyuline, but ought to be called humulin. may be procured by treating with alcohol the aqueous extract of lupulin, previously mixed with a little lime, evaporating the tincture thus formed, treating the resulting extract with water, evaporating the solution, and washing the residue with ether. When pure it is yellowish or orange-yellow, inodorous at common temperatures, but of the smell of hops when heated, of the peculiar bitter taste of hops, partially soluble in water which takes up 5 per cent, of its weight, readily soluble in alcohol, almost insoluble in ether, neither acid nor alkaline in its reaction, and destitute of nitrogen. It is scarcely affected by the weak acids or alkaline solutions, or byjthe metallic salts. It is probably the tonic principle pf the medicine.* Hops, according to Wagner, contain from 3 to 7 per cent, of tannic acid, of the variety which precipitates the salts of iron greenish, and differing, moreover, from the tannic acid of galls in not being convertible into gallic acid, and in not having the characteristic property of the glucosides. Besides the tannin, Wag- ner has discovered in hops a yellow substance which appeared to him to be quercitrin. {Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1859, p. 459.) Medical Properties and Uses. Hops are tonic and moderately narcotic, and have been highly recommended in diseases of general or local debility, associated with morbid vigilance, or other nervous derangement. They have some tendency to produce sleep and relieve pain, and may be used for these purposes in cases where opiates, from their disposition to constipate, or other cause, are inadmis- sible. Diuretic properties have also been ascribed to them, but are by no means very obvious. The complaints in which they have been found most useful are dyspepsia, and the nervous tremors, wakefulness, and delirium of drunkards. Dr. Maton found the extract advantageous in allaying the pain of articular rheuma- tism. Dr. W. Y. Godberry, of Benton, Miss., has found hops efficacious in inter- mittents, and considers them inferior in antiperiodic powers only to quinia. {West. Journ. of Med. and Surg., March, 1853.) The medicine may be given in substance, infusion, tincture, or extract. From three to twenty grains are mentioned as the dose of the powder; but the quan- tity is too small to produce any decided effect; and this mode of administration is scarcely ever resorted to. An infusion, prepared with half an ounce of hops and a pint of boiling water, may be given in the dose of two fluidounces three or * It is extremely doubtful whether the lupulite thus obtained is the active principle in a pure state. Dr. J. C. Lermer has recently obtained from hops a crystalline bitter principle, which he believes to have acid properties, and the composition of which is represented by the formula C32H2507. He obtained it by a very complex process; and it is, perhaps, some- what doubtful whether it may not be a product of the operation rather than an educt; especially as he has found two other crystalline bitter principles, which he was still in* vestigating. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1863, p. 540.)—Note to the twelfth edition 450 Humulus.—Hydrargyrum. PART I. four times a daj In intermittents Dr. Godberry gives, in the apyrexia, a pint of the infusion made with an ounce of hops. The extract and tincture are officinal. (See Extractum Lupuli and Tinctura Ilumuli.) A pillow of hops has proved useful in allaying restlessness and producing sleep in nervous disorders. They should be moistened with spirit previously to being placed under the head of the patient, in order to prevent rustling. Fomentations with hops, and cataplasms made by mixing them with some emollient substance, are often beneficial in local pains and tumefactions. An ointment of the powder with lard is recommended by Mr. Freake as an anodyne application to cancerous sores. The effects of hops may be obtained most conveniently by the use of lupulin. Dr. Wrn. Byrd Page, of Philadelphia, has found this substance very effectual as an antaphrodisiac, in the treatment of gonorrhoea, spermatorrhoea, and other irritated conditions of the genito-urinary apparatus; and the same result has been obtained by other practitioners. We have found it apparently effectual in irritable bladder, when other narcotics had failed. The dose of lupulin in sub- stance is from six to twelve grains, given in the form of pills, which may be made by simply rubbing the powder in a warm mortar till it acquires the consistence of a ductile mass, and then moulding it into the proper shape. There is an officinal tincture. (See Tinctura Lupulinse.) Mr. Livermore proposes an alcoholic ex- tract of lupulin, prepared by exhausting commercial lupulin with alcohol by the process of percolation, and exposing the tincture thus formed to spontaneous evaporation. The dose will be about one-third less than that of lupulin itself. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xx\. 294.) A fluid extract and oleoresin have been introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Part II.) Lupulin may be in- corporated with poultices, or formed into an ointment with lard, and used exter- nally for the same purposes as hops. Off. Prep, of Hops. Extractum Lupuli, Br.; Infusum Humuli, U. S.; Infusum Lupuli, Br.; Tinctura Humuli, U.S.; Tinctura Lupuli, Br. Off. Prep, of Lupulin. Extractum Lupulin® Fluidum, U. S.; Oleoresina Lupulin®, U. S.; Tinctura Lupulin®. W. HYDRARGYRUM. U. S., Br. Mercury. Quicksilver; Mercurius, Lat.; Mercure, Yif argent, Fr.; Quecksilber, Germ.; Mercuno, Ital.; Azogue, SponTan(\ Port. Mercury is found pure, forming an amalgam with silver, in the form of proto- chloride (native calomel), but most abundantly as the bisulphuret, or native cinnabar. Mines of this metal are found at Almaden in Spain, at ldria in Car- niola, in the Duchy of Deux-ponts, in Corsica, in the Philippine Islands and China, near Huancavelica in Peru, near Azogue in New Granada, at Durasco in Mexico, and at New Almaden, New ldria, and other localities in Santa Clara County, California, about sixty-six miles from San Francisco. The most ancient mine is that of Almaden in Spain, which was worked before the Christian era. This mine, and the mine in California are the most productive at the present day; the Spanish mine yielding about three millions of pounds, and the Cali- fornia, more than this amount annually. The ore in all the mines mentioned is cinnabar. The cinnabar from old Almaden is of a dull-red colour in mass, of a dull brick-red colour when in fine powder, and of the sp. gr. 3 6. That from New Almaden is of a bright red colour, slightly inclining to purple, not so hard as the Spanish ore, of a brilliant vermilion colour in powder, and having the sp. gr. 4*4. The California cinnabar is richer in mercury, because purer, than the Spanish; the former yielding about TO, the latter about 38 per cent, of mercury, according to the analyses of Mr. Adam Bealey. The California mine PART i. Hydrargyrum. had been long known to the Indians, but its commercial value was first made known, about 1843, by a Mexican, named Castillero, who beeame its first owner At present it is in the hands of Americans. (See Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1855 : also a paper by Dr. Ruschenberger, U. S. N., in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., Marcn. 1856.) Dr. Ruschenberger has detected selenium in California cinnabar. Extraction, &c. Mercury is obtained almost exclusively from the bisulphuret, or native cinnabar. It is extracted by two principal processes. According to one process, the mineral is picked, pounded, and mixed with lime. The mixture is then introduced into cast-iron retorts, which are placed in rows, one above the other, in an oblong furnace, and connected with earthenware receivers, one-third full of water. Heat being applied, the lime combines with the sulphur, so as to form sulphuret of calcium and sulphate of lime; while the mercury distils over, and is condensed in the receivers. The process is practised at Almaden in Spain. Here a square furnace is employed, the floor of which is pierced with many holes, for the passage of the flame from the fire-place beneath. In the upper and lateral part of the furnace, holes are made, communicating with several rows of aludels, formed of adapters passing into one another, which terminate in a small chamber that serves both as condenser and receiver. The mineral, having been picked by hand and pulverized, is kneaded with clay, and formed into small masses, which are placed on the floor of the furnace. Heat being ap- plied, the sulphur undergoes combustion; while the mercury, being volatilized, passes through the aludels to be condensed in the chamber. The process pur- sued at New Almaden is described by Dr. Ruschenberger. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1856.) Mercury, as found in commerce, is contained in cylindrical wrought-iron bot- tles, called flasks, each containing 75 pounds. Since the regular working of the California mine of New Almaden, the importation of the metal from Spain and Austria has gradually diminished’ and at present the domestic production is suf- ficient not only to supply the home consumption, but to give an excess for ex- portation. The value of American mercury exported was 94,335 dollars for the year ending June 30th, 1854, and 806,119 dollars, or more than eight-fold, for the next fiscal year. (Treasury Report on the Finances, Washington, 1856.) The different mines of California were, in the year 1862, said to be yielding mer- cury at the rate of four millions of pounds per annum. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 410.) The exports are made principally to China, Mexico, Chili, and Peru. The chief uses of the metal are in mining silver and gold, in pre- paring vermilion, in making thermometers and barometers, in silvering looking- glasses, and in forming various pharmaceutical compounds. Properties. Mercury is a very brilliant liquid, of a silver-white colour, and without taste or smell. When perfectly pure it undergoes no alteration by the action of air or water, but in its ordinary state suffers a slight tarnish. When heated to near the boiling point, it gradually combines with oxygen, and is con- verted into deutoxide; but at the temperature of ebullition it parts with the oxygen which it had absorbed, and is reduced again to the metallic state. Its sp.gr. is 13 5, and its equivalent 200.* It boils at 662°, and congeals at 39° below zero, forming a malleable solid resembling lead. It is a good conductor of caloric, and its specific heat is small. It is not attacked by muriatic acid, nor by cold sulphuric acid; but boiling sulphuric acid or cold nitric acid dissolves * Some chemists adopt 100 as the equivalent of mercury, or half the number given in the text. There are many arguments in favour of the smaller number; but, as the phar- maceutical processes involving this metal are generally explained by the use of the larger number, we shall adhere to it for the present. The use of the smaller number makes a per- plexing change in the nomenclature of the mercurial compounds. Thus, the. black oxide becomes the dioxide, and the red oxide the protoxide, instead of the deutoxide. Agaiu, calomel becomes the dichloride, and corrosive sublimate the protochloride, instead of tlm bichloride.—Note to the eleventh edition. 452 Hydrargyrum. PART I it, gtner&ting a bisulphate or binitrate of the deutoxide; with the extrication, in the former case, of sulphurous acid ; in the latter, of nitric oxide becoming hyponitric acid fumes. Its combinations are numerous, and several of them constitute important medicines. It forms two oxides, two regular sulphurets, two chlorides, three iodides, and one cyanide, all of which, excepting the protoxide, protosulphuret, and sesquiodide, are officinal. Both the oxides are capable of uniting with acids so as to form salts, of which the binitrate, sulphate, and bi- sulphate of the deutoxide are officinal, or enter into officinal compounds. Mercury, as it occurs in commerce, is in general sufficiently pure for pharma- ceutical purposes. Occasionally it contains foreign metals, as lead, tin, zinc, and bismuth. Mr. Braude informs ns that, in examining large quantities of this me- tal in the London market, he found it only in one instance intentionally adulte- rated. When impure, the metal has a dull appearance, leaves a trace on white paper, is deficient in due fluidity and mobility, as shown by its not forming per- fect globules, is not totally dissipated by heat, and, when shaken in a glass bottle, coats its sides with a pellicle, or, if very impure, deposits a black powder. If agitated with strong sulphuric acid, the adulterating metals become oxidized and dissolved, and thus the mercury may to a limited extent be purified. Lead is detected by shaking the suspected metal with equal parts of acetic acid and water, and then testing the acid by sulphate of soda, or iodide of potassium. The former will produce a white, the latter a yellow precipitate, if lead be pre- sent. Bismuth is discovered by dropping a nitric solution of the mercury, pre- pared without heat, into distilled water, when subnitrate of bismuth will be precipitated. The complete solubility of the metal in nitric acid shows that tin is not present; and, if sulphuretted hydrogen does not act upon muriatic acid previously boiled upon the metal, the absence of contaminating metals is shown. Mercury may be purified by digesting it with a small portion of weak nitric acid, or with a solution of bichloride of mercury (corrosive sublimate) ; whereby all the ordinary contaminating metals will be removed. M. Ulex recommends its purification by triturating, for ten minutes, a pound of the metal with an ounce of the solution of sesquichloride of iron (sp.gr. L48), diluted with an equal measure of water. The mercury is thus divided to a very great extent, and the contaminating metals are separated as chlorides; the sesquichloride of iron being, in the mean time, reduced to protochloride. After decanting the iron solution, and washing with water, the mercury is dried by a gentle heat, and subjected to trituration, when the greater portion of it runs together. Mercury, however, is usually purified by distillation. The British Pharmacopoeia, though pure mercury is placed in its Materia Medica list, nevertheless gives the following process for its preparation, using for this purpose an impure form of the metal, which, under the name of Com- mercial Mercury or Quicksilver, has been introduced into the Appendix as one of the articles used in the preparation of medicines. “Take of Mercury of Commerce three pounds [avoirdupois'] ; Hydrochloric Acid three fluid drachms; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Place the Commercial Mercury in a glass retort or iron bottle, and applying heat cause two pounds and a half of the metal to distil over into a flask employed as a receiver. Boil on this for five minutes the Hydrochloric Acid diluted with nine fluid drachms of Distilled Water, and having, by repeated affusions of Distilled Water and decan tations, removed every trace of acid, let the mercury be transferred to a porce lain capsule, and dried first by filtering paper, and finally on a water bath.” Br. Mercury, being much more volatile than the contaminating metals, rises first in distillation, while they are left behind. But it is necessary to avoid pushing the distillation too far; for in that event, some of the foreign metals are apt to be carried over. The British Council, on account of this danger, directs only five-sixths of the mercury to be distilled. The distilled product is b'drtd for a Hydrargyrum. PART I. few minutes with dilute muriatic acid, which, while it does not attack the mer cury, dissolves any contaminating metals which may have passed over. The dis filiation is directed to be performed from a glass retort over a gas lamp; but it is more conveniently conducted from an iron retort, over a common fire, inti, water contained in a receiver. In small operations a wash-hand basin will an- swer for a receiver. Millon has ascertained the curious fact, that the presence 01 so small a quantity as one ten-thousandth of lead or zinc in mercury raises its boiling point. M. Yiolette has made known a new method of distilling mercury, or amalgamated silver, which presents many advantages. It consists in subject- ing the metal, in iron vessels, to a current of high pressure steam, which serves the double purpose of imparting the necessary heat, and carrying over the mercurial vapour by a mechanical agency. (Philos. Mag., Dec. 1850, from Comptes Bendus.) As it is difficult and troublesome to purify mercury by dis- tillation, it is better to purchase pure samples of the metal, which may always be found in the market. Medical Properties. Mercury, in its uncombined state, is inert; but, in com- bination, acts as a peculiar and universal stimulant. When exhibited in minute division, as it exists in several preparations, it produces its peculiar effects; but this does not prove that the uncombined metal is active, but only that the con- dition of minute division is favourable to its solution in the stomach. Its com- binations exhibit certain general medical properties and effects, which belong to the whole as a class; while each individual preparation is characterized by some peculiarity in its operation. In this place we shall consider the physiological action of mercury, and the principles by which its administration should be regu- lated; while its effects, as modified in its different combinations, will be noticed under the head of each preparation. Of the modus operandi of mercury we know nothing, except that it probably acts through the medium of the circulation, and that it possesses a peculiar al- terative power over the vital functions, which enables it in many cases to subvert diseased actions. This alterative power is sometimes exerted, without being at- tended with any other vital phenomenon than the removal of disease; while at other times it is attended with certain obvious effects, indicative of the agency of a potent stimulus. In the latter case, its operation is marked by a quickened circulation, by a frequent, jerking pulse, by an increased activity of all the secre- tory functions, particularly those of the salivary glands and the liver, by an exaltation of nervous sensibility, and, in short, by a general excitation of the organic actions of the system. When mercury acts slowly as an alterative, there is not the least apparent dis- turbance of the circulation. When it operates decidedly and obviously, it is very prone to let the brunt of its action fall upon the salivary glands, causing, in many instances, an immoderate flow of saliva, and constituting the condition denominated ptyalism or salivation. Under these circumstances the effects of depletion and revulsion are added to the alterative action of the metal. In the saliva discharged, as a consequence of its action, mercury has been detected by chemical tests. Occasionally its depletory action is exhibited in an increased secretion of urine, or an immoderate flow of the bile; and one or both of these effects are apt to be experienced where ptyalism cannot be induced. Mercury has been found in the urine of those under the influence of corrosive sublimate, by M. Audouard. It has, indeed, been detected in most of the solids and fluids of the body, including the blood. When in the blood it cannot be detected by the ordinary tests, on account of its intimate union with the organic matter of that liquid. To discover it, the blood must be subjected to destructive distilla- tion. The liver is the organ which retains mercury the longest. It has been de- fected in that viscus, though absent in the lungs, heart, bile, and spinal marrow, in the body of a person who had long worked in mercury, but had desisted from 454 Hydrargyrum. PART r. the occupation for a year before death, on account of the occurrence of mercurial cachexy. Mercury has been used in almost every disease, but too often empirically, and •without the guidance of any recognised therapeutic principle. Nevertheless, its efficacy in certain classes of diseases is universally acknowledged. In functional derangement of the digestive organs, mercurials in minute doses often exert a salutary operation, subverting the morbid action, and that too by their slow, alterative effect, without affecting the mouth. In these cases no decided disturb- ance of the vital functions takes place; but the alvine discharges, if clay-coloured, are generally restored to their natural hue, a certain proof that the remedy is stimulating the liver, and promoting the secretion of the bile. Indeed, there is no fact better established in medicine than that of the influence of the mercurial preparations over the hepatic system; and, whether the liver be torpid and ob- structed as in jaundice, or pouring out a redundancy of morbid bile as in melsena, its judicious use seems equally efficacious in unloading the viscus, or restoring its secretion to a healthy state. In the acute and chronic hepatitis of India it is considered as almost a specific; but here its use must be carried to the ex- tent of exciting ptyalism. In chronic inflammation of the mucous and serous membranes, the alterative effects of mercury are sometimes attended with much benefit. In many of these cases effusion has taken place; and, under these cir- cumstances, the mercury often proves useful, as well by promoting absorption as by removing the chronic inflammation on which the effusion depends. Hence it is often given with advantage in chronic forms of meningitis, bronchitis, pleuritis, pneumonia, dysentery, rheumatism, &c., and in hydrocephalus, hydrothorax, as- cites, and general dropsy. Mercury may also be advantageously resorted to in certain states of febrile dis- ease. In some forms of remittent and typhoid fever, a particular stage is marked by a parched tongue, torpor of the bowels, scanty urine, and dryness of the sur- face. Here depletion by the lancet or leeches is generally inadmissible, and one of the measures most to be relied on is the very cautious employment of mercury. It acts in such cases by increasing the secretions and stimulating the exbalant capil- laries, and, perhaps, by producing a new impression incompatible with the disease. In syphilitic affections, mercury, until of late years, was held to be indispen- sable. Of its mode' of action in these affections we know nothing, except that it operates by substituting its own peculiar impression for that of the disease. Without entering into the question of the necessity of mercury in venereal com- plaints, we are free to admit that the discussion which has grown out of it has shown that this remedy has frequently been unnecessarily resorted to in affec- tions resembling syphilis, though of a different character; and that the disease in question ought to be treated less empirically, and more in accordance with the general principles of combating morbid action. Mercury exerts a peculiar control over the deleterious effects of lead; and hence, in eolica pictonum, it is accounted by some writers to act almost as a specific. For inducing the specific effects of mercury on the constitution, blue pill or calomel is generally resorted to. In order to produce what we have called the slow alterative effects of the metal, from half a grain to a grain of blue pill may be given in the twenty-four hours, or from a sixth to a fourth of a grain of calo- mel ; or, if a gentle ptyalism be our object, two or three grains of the furmer, or a grain of the latter, two or three times a day. Where the bowels are peculiarly irritable, it is often necessary to introduce the metal by means of frictions with mercurial ointment; and, where a speedy effect is desired, the internal and ex- ternal use of the remedy may be simultaneously resorted to. The first observable effects of mercury in inducing ptyalism are a coppery taste in the mouth, a slight soreness of the gums, and an unpleasant sensation in the sockets of the teeth, when the jaws are firmly closed. Shortly alterw at -Is tiho PART I. Hydrargyrum. 455 gums begin to swell, a line of whitish matter is seen along their edges, and the breath is infected with a peculiar and very disagreeable smell, called the mer curial fetor. The saliva at the same time begins to flow; and, if the affection proceeds, the gums, tongue, throat, and face are much swollen; ulceration* attack the lining membrane of the mouth and fauces; the jaws become exces- sively painful; the tongue is coated with a thick whitish fur; and the saliva flows in streams from the mouth. It occasionally happens that the affection of the mouth proceeds to a dangerous extent, inducing extensive ulceration, gan- grene, and even hemorrhage. The best remedies are astringent and detergent gargles, used weak at first, as the parts are extremely tender. In cases attended with swelling and protrusion of the tongue, the wash is best applied by injec- tion, by means of a large syringe. We have found lead-water among the best applications in these cases; and dilute solutions of chlorinated soda or of chlo- rinated lime, while they correct the fetor, will be found to exert a curative in- fluence on the ulcerated surfaces. A wash of nitrate of silver, made by dissolving eight grains in a fluidounce of water, has also been used with benefit. While the system is under the action of mercury, the blood is more watery than in health, less charged with albumen, fibrin, and red globules, and loaded with a fetid fatty matter. {Dr. S. Wriglit, quoted by Christison.) When drawn from a vein, it exhibits the same appearance as in inflammation. In the foregoing observations we have described the ordinary effects of mer- cury ; but occasionally, in peculiar constitutions, its operation is quite different, being productive of a dangerous disturbance of the vital functions. The late Mr. Pearson gave a detailed account of this occasional peculiarity in the ope- ration of mercury, in his work on the venereal disease. The symptoms which characterize it are a small and frequent pulse, anxiety about the praecordia, pale and contracted countenance, great nervous agitation, and alarming debility, appearance is the signal for discontinuing the mercury; as a further per- severance with it might be attended with fatal consequences. Mercury also pro- duces a peculiar eruption of the skin, which is described by writers under the various names of hydrargyria, eczema mercuriale, and lepra mercurialis. Those who work in mercury, and are, therefore, exposed to its vapour, such as water-gilders, looking-glass silverers, and quicksilver miners, are injured seri- ously in their health, and not unfrequently affected with shaking palsy, attended with vertigo and other cerebral disorders. The miners are often salivated. Mercury is sometimes given in the metallic state, in the quantity of a pound or two, in obstruction of the bowels, to act by its weight: but the practice is of doubtful advantage. Mercury is detected with great delicacy by Smithson’s process, which consists in the use of a plate of tin, lined with one of gold, in the form of a spiral. When immersed in a mercurial solution, this galvanic combination causes the precipitation of the mercury on the gold, which consequently contracts a white stain. In order to be sure that the stain is caused by mercury, the metal must be volatilized in a small tube, so as to obtain a characteristic globule. MM. Dan- ger and Flandin have improved on Smithson’s process. (See Chem. Gaz., No. Cl, p. 191.) A minute portion of any of the preparations of mercury, either in the solid state or in concentrated solution, being placed on a bright plate ol copper, and a drop of a strong solution of iodide of potassium added, a silvery characteristic stain will immediately appear on the copper. Mercury is officinal:— I. In the Metallic state. Hydrargyrum, US., Br.—Mercury. Emplastrum Ammoniaci cum Hydrargyro, U. S., Br.—Plaster of Ammoniac with Mercury. Emplastrum Hydrargyri, U. S., Br.—Plaster of Mercury. 456 Hydrargyrum.—Hydrastis. part I Hydrargyrum cum Creta, U. S., Br.—Mercury with Chalk. Pilulae Hydrargyri, U. S.; Pilula Hydrargyri, Br. Mercurial Pills. Blue Pills. Unguentum Hydrargyri, U. S., Br. — Mercurial Ointment. Linimentum Hydrargyri, Br. —Liniment of Mercury. IJ. Oxidized. Hydrargyri Oxidum Rubrum, U.S., Br. — Red Oxide of Mercury. Red precipitate. Unguentum Hydrargyri Oxidi Rubri, U. S., Br. — Ointment of Red Oxide of Mercury. Red precipitate ointment. III. Sulphuretted. Hydrargyri Sulphuretum Rubrum, U. S. — Red Sulphuret of Mer- cury. Cinnabar. IV. As Protochloride. Hydrargyri Chloridum Mite, U. S.; Calomelas, or Hydrargyri Sub- cliloridum, Br.—Mild Chloride of Mercury. Calomel. Pilul® Antimonii Composite, U. S.; Pilula Calomelanos Composita, Br. — Compound Pills of Antimony. Compound Pills of Calomel. Plummer's Pills. Pilulae Cathartic* Composite, U. S Compound Cathartic Pills. V. As Bichloride. Hydrargyri Chloridum Corrosivum, U. S.; Hydrargyrum Corrosivum Sublimatum, or Hydrargyri Chloridum, Br. — Corrosive Chlo- ride of Mercury. Corrosive Sublimate. Hydrargyrum Ammoniatum, U. S., Br.—Ammoniated Mercury. White precipitate. Unguentum Hydrargyri Ammoniati, U. S , Br. ■— Ointment of Ammoniated Mercury. White precipitate ointment. YI. Combined with Iodine. Hydrargyri lodidum Rubrum,!/. S., Br. — Red Iodide of Mercury. Liquor Arsenici et Hydrargyri Iodidi, U.S. — Solution of Iodide of Arsenic and Mercury. Donovan's Solution. Unguentum Hydrargyri Iodidi Rubri, Br. — Ointment of Red Iodide of Mercury. Hydrargyri lodidum Yiride, U. S., Br. — Green Iodide of Mercury. YII. Combined with Cyanogen. Hydrargyri Cyanidum, U. S. — Cyanide of Mercury. VIII. Oxidized and combined with Acids. Liquor Hydrargyri Nitratis, U.S.; Liquor Hydrargyri Nitratis Acidus, Br. — Solution of Nitrate of Mercury. Unguentum Hydrargyri Nitratis, U. S.} Br. — Ointment of Nitrate of Mercury. Citrine ointment. Hydrargyri Sulphas, Br. Appendix. — Sulphate of Mercury. Hydrargyri Sulphas Flava, U. S. — Yellow Sulphate of Mercury. Turpeth Mineral. B. HYDRASTIS. U.S. Secondary. Hydrastis. The root of Hydrastis Canadensis. U.S. Hydrastis. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia. — Nat. Ord. Ranunculaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx of three petalloid sepals, falling when the flower opens. Ovaries in a roundish-ovoid head; stigmas subsessile, dilated, flat, rounded at the apex. Carols fleshy, one or two seeded, cohering in a compound beny. PART I. Hydrastis. This genus was at first included by Linnaeus in Hydrophyllum, but was after wards separated, and received the name by which it is now generally recognised The officinal species is the only known one of the genus. Hydrastis Canadensis. Gray, Manual of Bot. p. 14; figured in Griffith’s Med. Bot. p. 82. — Yellow-root. Oranqe-root. Yellow Puccoon. This is a small, herbaceous, perennial plant, with ”a tnick7 fleshy, yellow rhizoma, from which numerous long radical fibres proceed, and an erect, simple, pubescent stem, from six inches to a foot in height. There are usually but two leaves, which are unequal, one sessile at the top of the stem, the other attached to it a short distance below by a thick, roundish footstalk, causing the stem to appear as if bifurcate near the summit. The leaves are pubescent, roundish-cordate, with from three to seven, but generally five lobes, which are pointed and unequally serrate. A solitary flower stands upon a peduncle rising from the basis of the upper leaf. It is whitish, rose-coloured, or purplish, without corolla, but with a coloured calyx, the sepals of which closely resemble petals, and are very cadu- cous, falling very soon after the flower has expanded. The fruit is a globose, compound, red or purple berry, half an inch or more in diameter, composed of many minute granules, each containing one, or more rarely two seeds. The plant grows in moist, rich woodlands, in most parts of the United States, but abundantly in the North and West. The fruit bears a close resemblance to the raspberry, but is not edible. The root is the part employed. Though long in use in domestic and empirical practice, and more or less among regular practi- tioners, it was not recognised as officinal before the publication of the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, in which it holds a place in the Secondary Catalogue. The Indians employed it for staining and dyeing yellow, and it is said to impart a rich and permanent yellow, and with indigo a fine green to wool, silk, and cotton. Properties. The fresh root is juicy and loses mtich'of its weight in drying. The dried caudex or rhizoma is contorted, irregular, very rough and wrinkled, hard and brittle, from an inch to two inches or more in length, usually two or three lines in thickness, and either beset with numerous slender rootlets, or showing marks upon the surface where they have been broken off. Many of the detached rootlets are mixed with the rhizomas in mass. The colour of the rhi- zoma, though yellow in the recent root, becomes of a dark yellowish-brown by age; that of the rootlets and the interior of the root is yellow, and of the powder still more so. The odour is strong, sweetish, and somewhat narcotic, the taste bitter and peculiar. The root imparts its virtues and colouring matters to water and alcohol. Examined by Mr. Alfred A. B. Durand, of Philadelphia, it was found to contain albumen, starch, fatty matter, resin, yellow colouring matter, sugar, lignin, and various salts. He also discovered a peculiar nitrogenous, crys- tallizable substance, for which he proposed the provisional name of hydrastin, _ until it should be determined whether it was, as he suspected, an organic alkali. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., April, 1851, p. 112.) Since that time it has been ascer- tained that the claims of this principle to be considered an alkaloid were just, and it has definitely taken the name of hydrastia. of which hydrastin and hydrastina are merely synonymes. It has also been determined that the root contains another alkaloid, to which it owes its yellow colour, and which is probably identical with the yellow colouring matter of Mr. Durand. A muriate of this latter alkaloid, obtained by the precipitation essentially of fin infusion of the root by muriatic acid, has been for some time known and used by the “Eclectics” under the name of hydrastin, and the reader must be cautious not to confound this substance with the alkaloid to which the name properly belongs. Mr. F. Mahla first ascertained that this new alkaloid of hydrastis is in fact berberina (Am Journ. of Sci. and Arts, Jan. 1862, p. 48), which was long since found in the root of Berberis vulgaris, and has since been detected in columbo, and other 458 Hydrastis. part I. medio ital roots. An account of its mode of preparation and properties is con- tained in the article on Berberis. (See page 168.) It exists in large proportion in hydrastis, constituting, according to Perrins, nearly 4 per cent. There can be no doubt that this medicine owes much of its virtues to berberina. Hydrastia, which is its characteristic alkaloid, may be obtained by exhausting the powdered root as far as possible with water by percolation, adding muriatic acid to the infusion so as to precipitate the berberina in the form of muriate, and treating the mother-liquor with solution of ammonia in slight excess. The hy- drastia is precipitated, in an impure state, and may be purified by repeated solution in boiling alcohol, which deposits it in crystals on cooling. A little animal charcoal may be used towards the close of the process, in order com- pletely to deprive the crystals of colour. To Mr. Mahla, of Chicago, and Mr. Perrins, of London, is due the credit of having fully investigated the properties of this alkaloid.* Hydrastia crystallizes in brilliant, four-sided prisms, which are white or colourless when pure, inodorous, and almost tasteless in conse- quence of their insolubility in the saliva, but become bitter and somewhat acrid in saline combination. It melts at 275° F., is decomposed at a higher tempera- ture, and is inflammable. It is nearly insoluble in water, but is readily dissolved by alcohol, ether, chloroform, and benzole. It has an alkaline reaction, and with the acids forms salts, most of which are readily soluble in water, and, according to Mr. Merrill, of Cincinnati, either unerystallizable, or crystallizable with diffi- culty. The alkalies and tannic acid precipitate it from its saline solutions. With sulphuric acid and bichromate of potassa or red oxide of lead, it assumes a red colour; but differs from strychnia in exhibiting no tint of blue or violet. Its constituents are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, and its formula, as given by Mr. Mahla, is C44H24NOI2. Mr. Perrins obtained 15 per cent, of it from the root; and, having given five grains of it to a rabbit, without any other effect than a slight uneasiness which soon ceased, concluded justly that it was not poisonous. It is highly probable, from the odour of hydrastis, that, besides the two alka- loids here mentioned, it contains also an active volatile principle; but this has not yet been isolated. Medical Properties and Uses. Yery diversified powers have been claimed for hydrastis. Thus, while all admit its tonic properties, it is considered by different practitioners as aperient, alterative in its influence on the mucous membranes, eholagogue, deobstruent in reference to the glands generally, diuretic, antiseptic, &c. It has been employed in dyspepsia and other affections requiring tonic treatment, in jaundice and other functional disorders of the liver, as a laxative in constipation and piles, and as an alterative in various diseases of the mucous membranes, as catarrh, chronic enteritis, cystirrhoea, leucorrhoea, gonorrhoea, &c., being used in the latter complaints both internally and locally. By some it is used as one of the best substitutes for quinia in intermittents. In the form of infusion, it has been used in the Western States as a topical application in ophthalmia; and the Indians are said to employ it in the same manner in old ulcers of the legs. The notion of its efficacy in cancer, originating in a report which reached the late Professor Barton, that it was used in the cure of this complaint by the Cherokees, is probably altogether groundless. Dr. U. E. Ewing, of Lexington, Ky., and Dr. I). M. McCann, of Martinsburgh, Ohio, have recom- mended an infusion or deeoction of the root as an injection in gonorrhoea. Dr. McCann made the decoction in the proportion of a drachm of the dried root to a pint of water, and injected a syringeful three times a day. Dr. Ewing used the infusion with the addition of sulphate of copper. {Med. Examiner, N S., * For a paper by Mr. Mabla, see American Journal of Sci. and Arts, July, 1863, p. 57. v\d for another by Mr. J. Dyson Perrins, of London, the Pharm. Journ., May, 1862, p part I. Hydrastis.—Hyoscyamus. 459 vii. 733.) Dr. P. C. Gooch has subsequently used it in five cases, and obtained no good effect whatever. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxiii. 286.) But a more precise investigation into its physiological and therapeutic properties is necessary, before we can venture to decide upon its place among medicines. It has been given in the form of infusion, decoction, tincture, and extract; but no preparation is yet officinal. Till regular formulas are adopted, the root may be treated like columbo or gentian. The impure muriate of berberina, ob- tained as above mentioned from hydrastis, is used by the “Eclectics.” under the name of hydrastin, in the dose of from three to five grains. Hydrastis might probably be advantageously prepared in the form of a fluid extract; as little as possible of its odorous volatile principle being allowed to escape. W. HYOSCYAMI FOLIUM. U.S. Henbane Leaf. The leaves of Hyoscyamus niger. U. S. , Off. Syn. HYOSCYAMUS. Hyoscyamus niger. The leaves and branches of the biennial plant dried; collected when about two-thirds of the flowers are expanded. Br. HYOSCYAMI SEMEN. U.S. Henbane Seed. The seed of Hyoscyamus niger. TJ. S. Jusquiame noire, Fr.; Schwarzes Bilsenkraut, Germ.; Giusquiamo nero, Ital.; Beleno, Span. Hyoscyamus. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Solanaceas. Gen. Gh. Corolla funnel-form, obtuse. Stamens inclined. Capsules covered with a lid, two-celled. Willd. Hyoscyamus niger. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1010; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 204, t. 76; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 19, pi. 66. Henbane is usually a biennial plant, with a long, tapering, whitish, fleshy, somewhat branching root, not unlike that of parsley, for which it has been eaten by mistake, with poisonous effects. The stem, which rises in the second year, is erect, round, branching, from one to four feet high, and thickly furnished with leaves. These are large, oblong- ovate, deeply sinuated with pointed segments, undulated, soft to the touch, and at their base embrace the stem. The upper leaves are generally entire. Both the stem and leaves are hairy, viscid, and of a sea-green colour. The flowers form long, one-sided, leafy spikes, which terminate the branches, and hang downwards. They are composed of a calyx with five pointed divisions, a funnel- shaped corolla, with five unequal, obtuse segments at the border, five stamens inserted into the tube of the corolla, and a pistil with a blunt, round stigma. Their colour is an obscure yellow, beautifully variegated with purple veins. The fruit is a globular two-celled capsule, covered with a lid, invested with the per- sistent calyx, and containing numerous small seeds, which are discharged by the horizontal separation of the lid. The whole plant has a rank offensive smell. H. niger is susceptible of considerable diversity of character, causing varie- ties which have by some been considered as distinct species. Thus, the plant is sometimes annual, the stem simple, smaller, and less downy than in the biennial piant, the leaves more deeply incised and less hairy and viscid, and the flowers often yellow without the purple streaks. It is not known whether any difference tff medical properties is connected with these diversities of character; but the London College directs the biennial variety. The plant is found in the northern and eastern sections of the United States, Uyoscyami Folium.—Uyoscyami Semen. PART I. occupying waste grounds in the older settlements, particularly graveyards, old gardens, and the foundations of ruined houses. It grows in great abundance about Detroit, in Michigan. It is not, however, a native of this country, having been introduced from Europe. In Great Britain, and on the continent of Eu- rope, it grows abundantly along the roads, around villages, amidst rubbish, and in uncultivated places. Both varieties are cultivated in England. The annual plant flowers in July or August, the biennial in May or June.* H. so named from the whiteness of its flowers, is used in France in- discriminately with the former species, with which it appears to be identical in medicinal properties. All parts of Ilyoscyamus niger are active. The leaves are usually employed, but both these and the seeds are recognised in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Much of the efficacy of henbane depends upon the time at which it is gathered. The leaves should be collected soon after the plant has flowered. In the biennial plant, those of the second year are preferred to those of the first. The latter, according to Dr. Houlton, are less clammy and fetid, yield less extractive, and are medicinally much less efficient. It is said that the plant is sometimes de- stroyed by severe winters in England, and that no leaves of the second year’s growth are obtainable. This is, perhaps, one of the causes of the great uncer- tainty of the medicine as found in the shops. The root also is said to be much more poisonous in the second year than in the first. Properties. The recent leaves have, when bruised, a strong, disagreeable, narcotic odour, somewhat like that of tobacco. Their taste is mucilaginous and very slightly acrid. When dried, they have little smell or taste. Thrown upon the fire, they burn with a crackling noise as if they contained a nitrate, and at the same time emit a strong odour. Their virtues are completely extracted by diluted alcohol. The watery infusion is of a pale-yellow colour, insipid, with the narcotic odour of the plant. The leaves were analyzed by Lindbergsen, who ob- tained from them a narcotic principle. They contain a large proportion of nitrate of'potassa; Mr. F. Mahla having obtained, as nearly as he could esti- mate from his experiments, 2 per cent, of that salt. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1859, p. 402.) The seeds are very small, roundish, compressed, somewhat kidney-shaped, a little wrinkled, of a gray or yellowish-gray colour, of the odour of the plant, and an oleaginous, bitterish taste. Analyzed by Brandes, they yielded 24-2 per cent, of fixed oil, 14 of a solid fatty substance, traces of sugar, 1-2 of gum, 2’4 of bassorin, D5 of starch, 34 of a substance soluble in water, insoluble in alcohol, and precipitated by infusion of galls (phyteumacolla, Brandes), 4-5 of albumen, 26 0 of vegetable fibre, 24T of water, and 9'7 of salts, including the malate of an alkaline principle called hyoscyamin or hyoscya- mia. But the process employed by Brandes for separating this principle has not succeeded in other hands; and it is doubtful whether the substance obtained by him was really what he supposed it to be. Geiger and Hesse were the first to demonstrate the existence of an organic alkali in hyoscyamus. Its extraction from the plant is somewhat difficult, in consequence of its tendency to undergo change by the contact of alkaline solutions, which render it very soluble in water. The following is the process of these chemists. The seeds are macerated in alcohol; the tincture obtained is evaporated by a very gentle heat, decolorized by repeated additions of lime and sulphuric acid, with filtration after each addi- tion, and then still further concentrated by evaporation; an excess of powdered carbonate of soda is added, and the precipitate produced is separated, as speedily as possible, from the alkaline carbonate by expressing and treating it with abso- lute alcohol, while the mother-waters are at the same time treated with ether; * For an account, of the cultivation of the biennial variety of H. niger at Ilitchin, Herts, England, see Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1860, p. 414. part r. Hyoscyami Folium.- -Ilyoscyami Semen. 461 the alcoholic and ethereal liquors are united, again treated with lime, filtered, de- colorized with animal charcoal, and evaporated by a very gentle heat. If the hvoseyamia now deposited should still be coloured, it will be necessary to com- bine it anew with an acid, and proceed as before, in order to obtain it quite pure. The product is very small. Fiom experiments made by Mr. Hirtz upon the relative medicinal power of extracts from the seeds and leaves, he inferred that the former had ten times the strength of the latter. Hyoscyamia crystallizes in colourless, transparent, silky needles, is inodorous, of an acrid disagreeable taste, slightly soluble in water, very soluble in alcohol and ether, and volatilizable with little change if carefully distilled. It is quickly altered by contact with water and an alkali, and when heated with potassa or soda is completely decomposed, with the disengagement of ammonia. It neu- tralizes the acids, forming crystallizable salts, and is precipitated by infusion of galls. The alkaloid and its salts are very poisonous; and the smallest quantity, introduced into the eye, produces dilatation of the pupil, which continues long. Henbane leaves yield, by destructive distillation, a very poisonous empyreu- matic oil. Medical Properties and Uses. Hyoscyamus ranks among the narcotics. In moderate quantities it gently accelerates the circulation, increases the general warmth, occasions a sense of heat in the throat, and after a short period induces sleep. This action is sometimes attended with vertigo, pain in the head, and dilated pupils; and the medicine occasionally acts as a diaphoretic or diuretic, and even produces a pustular eruption. It does not constipate like opium, but, on the contrary, often proves laxative. In overdoses it powerfully irritates the brain and alimentary canal, causing dilatation of the pupil, disordered vision, loss of speech, difficult deglutition, delirious intoxication or stupor, great rest- lessness or jactitation, sometimes tonic spasms, convulsions, paralysis, pain in the bowels, diarrhoea, excitement of the circulation, followed by great feeble- ness of the pulse, coldness of the surface, petechiae, and other alarming symp- toms, which sometimes end in death. Dissection exhibits marks of inflamma- tion of the stomach and bowels. The poisonous effects are to be counteracted in the same manner as those of opium. Dr. Garrod has suggested animal charcoal as an antidote, as it has the property of absorbing the active prin- ciple, and thus rendering it inert. All parts of H. niger are deleterious when largely taken; but the seeds are said to be most powerful. Upon inferior animals its effects are not always the same. Though fatal to birds and dogs, the leaves are eaten with entire impunity by horses, cows, sheep, goats, and swine. It is not impossible that injury has in some cases resulted from the use of milk, derived from cows or goats which had been feeding on henbane. Ac- cording to Dr. Garrod, the remedial properties of hyoscyamus are completely neutralized by solution of potassa or soda ; so that they cannot properly be com- bined in prescriptions; but as the carbonates of the alkalies have no such effect, these should be substituted. From these facts it might be inferred that the caustic alkalies would be the best antidote to the poisonous effects of hyoscya- mus; but the quantity required would be so great as to endanger the integrity of the gastric raucous membrane, and thus probably to cause more danger than the poison itself. {Med. Times and Gaz., Dec. 1857, p. 589.) The remedial operation of hyoscyamus is anodyne and soporific. The medi- cine was known to the ancients, and was employed by some of the earlier modern practitioners; but had fallen into disuse, and was almost forgotten, when Baron Storck again introduced it into notice. By this physician and some of his suc- cessors it was prescribed in numerous diseases, and, if we may credit their tes- timony, with the happiest effects; but subsequent experience of its operation has been such as very much to narrow the extent of its application. It is at 462 Hyoscyami Folium.—Hyoscyami Semen. PART I. present used almost exclusively to relieve pain, procure sleep, or quiet irregular nervous action; and is not supposed to exercise any specific curative influence over particular diseases. Even for the purposes which it is calculated to answer it is infinitely inferior to opium or its preparations; and is generally resorted to only in cases in which the latter remedy is from peculiar circumstances deemed inadmissible. Hyoscyamus has one great advantage over opium in certain cases, that it has no tendency to produce constipation. The diseases to which it is applicable it would be useless to enumerate, as there are few in which circum- stances might not be such as to call for its employment. Neuralgic and spas- modic affections, rheumatism, gout, hysteria, and various pectoral diseases, as catarrh, pertussis, asthma, phthisis, &e., are among those in which it is most frequently prescribed. It is also much used in connection with griping cathar- tics, the disagreeable effects of which it is thought to counteract. The officinal pills of colocynth and henbane are formed upon this principle. In Europe, where the fresh leaves are readily obtained, it is often applied externally in the shape of lotion, cataplasm, or fomentation, to allay pain and irritation, in scrof- ulous or cancerous ulcers, scirrhous, hemorrhoidal, or other painful tumours, gouty and rheumatic swellings, and nervous headache. The smoke of the leaves or seeds has also been used in toothache; but the practice is deemed hazardous. Henbane is used by European oculists for dilating the pupil, previously to the operation for cataract. For this purpose an infusion of the leaves, or a solu- tion of the extract, is dropped into the eye. The effect is usually greatest at the end of four hours from the application, and in twelve hours ceases entirely. Vision is not impaired during its continuance. Reisinger recommends a solution of hyoscyamia in the proportion of one grain to twenty-four of water, of which one drop is to be applied to the eye. Its solubility in water gives it an advan- tage for this purpose over atropia, the alcoholic solution of which irritates the conjunctiva. According to Schroff, there is nothing which acts so quickly and so powerfully in dilating the pupil. He uses one part of hyoscyamia, one hundred parts of water, and ten of alcohol, the latter fluid being added to prevent decom- position. (Annuaire de Therap., A. D. 1858, p. 25.) Henbane may be given in substance, extract, or tincture. The dose of the powdered leaves is from five to ten grains, of the seeds somewhat smaller. The common extract, or inspissated juice of the fresh leaves (Extractum Hyoscy- ami, U. S.), is exceedingly variable in its operation, being sometimes active, sometimes almost inert. The usual dose is two or three grains, repeated and gradually increased till its effects are obtained. Cullen rarely procured its anodyne operation till he had carried the dose to eight, ten, or even fifteen or twenty grains. Collins pushed it to thirty-six grains; and Professor Fouquier, who experimented largely with hyoscyamus in the Ilopital de la Charite, gave two hundred and fifty grains of the extract during twenty-four hours, without any specific or curative impression. (Richard, Elem. Hid. Nat. Med.) The alco- holic extract, prepared from the recently dried leaves (Extractum Hyoscyami Alcoholicum, U. S), is said to be more certain. The dose of this to begin with is one or two grains, which may be increased gradually to twenty or thirty grains. An extract from the seeds would, no doubt, be much more efficacious The dose of the tincture is one or two fluidrachms. A fluid extract is directed by the TT. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Extractum Hyoscyami Fluidum.) A good, plan, in administering any of the preparations, is to repeat the dose every hour or two till its influence is felt. Schroff has given hyoscyamia with good effects in allaying cough and procuring sleep, prescribing it in the form of powder mixed with sugar, in doses varying from the sixtieth to the twentieth of a grain. He has found the tenth of a grain too much. Off. Prep. Extractum Hyoscyami; Extractum Hyoscyami Alcoholicum, TJ. S.; Extractum Hyoscyami Fluidum, U.S.; Tinctura Hyoscyami. W. PART I. Iclithyocollc. 463 ICHTHYOCOLLA. U.S. Isinglass. The swimming bladder of Acipenser Huso, and of other species of fish. U. S. Fish-glue; Ichtliyocolle, colle de poisson, Fr.; Hausenblase, Fischleim, Germ.; Colla di pesce, Ital.; Cola de pescado. Span. Isinglass is a gelatinous substance, prepared chiefly from the sounds or swim- ming bladders of fishes, especially those of different species of sturgeon. Though not retained in the British Pharmacopoeia, it still has a place in that of the U. States, and is universally kept in the shops. In most fishes there is a membranous bag, placed in the anterior part of the abdomen, communicating frequently, though not always, by means of a duct, with the oesophagus or stomach, and containing usually a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen gases in various proportions. From the supposition that it was in- tended by its expansion or contraction to enable the fish to rise or sink in the water, it has been denominated swimming bladder. It is of different shape in different fishes, and consists of three coats, of which the two interior are thin and delicate, the outer tough and of a silvery whiteness. The Acipenser Huso, or beluga of the Russians, is particularly designated by the Pharmacopoeia as the species of sturgeon from which isinglass is pro- cured; but three others, the A. Ruthenus, or sterlet, A. sturio, or common stur- geon, and A. stellatus, or starred stnrgebhTalso furnisbTTarge quantities to com merce. AirTheslTfish inhabit the interior waters of Russia, especially the Wolga and other streams which empty into the Caspian Sea. Immense numbers are annually taken, and consumed as food by the Russians. The air-bags are re- moved from the fish, and, having been split open and washed in water in order to separate the blood, fat, and adhering extraneous membranes, are spread out, and when sufficiently stiffened are formed into cylindrical rolls, the ends of which are brought together and secured by pegs. The shape given to the roll is that of a staple, or more accurately that of a lyre, which it firmly retains when dried. Thus prepared it is known in commerce by the name of staple isinglass, and is distinguished into the long and short staple. Sometimes tfie'membFanes are dried in a flat state, or simply foldecf, and then receive the name of leaf or book isinglass. The scraps or fragments of these varieties, with various other parts oFtne"fisli, are boiled in water, which dissolves the gelatin, and upon evaporation leaves it in a solid state. This is called cake isinglass, from the shape which it is made to assume. It is sometimes, however, in globular masses. Of these varieties, the long staple is said to be the best; but the finest book isinglass is not surpassed by any brought to this country. It is remarkable for its beautiful iridescence by transmitted light. One hundred grains of this isinglass dissolve in ten ounces of water, forming a tremulous jelly when cold, and yield but two grains of insoluble residuum. That in cakes is brownish, of an unpleasant odour, and employed only in the arts. Inferior kinds, with the same commercial titles, are said to be prepared from the peritoneum and intestines of the fish. An in- ferior Russian product, known in English commerce by the name of Samovey isinglass, is procured, according to Pereira, from the Silurus Glanis. It comes, like the" better kind, in the shape of leaf, book, and short staple. Isinglass, little inferior to the Russian, is made in Iceland from the sounds of 'Tie cod and ling. It is said also to be prepared by the fishermen of Newfound- land. We receive from Brazil the air-bladders of a large fish, prepared by drying them in their distended state. They are oblong, tapering, and pointed at one end, bifid with the remains of their pneumatic duct at the other, and of a firm consistence. The Brazilian isinglass is inferior to the Russian. Considerable quantities have been manufactured in New England, as formerly supposed, from the 464 Icldhyocolla. PART I. intestines of the cod, and of other allied fishes. This sort is in the form of thin ribbons several feet in length, and from an inch and a half to two inches in width. One hundred grains dissolve almost entirely in water, leaving but two grains of insoluble membrane, and form a tremulous jelly when cold with eight ounces of water. It is, therefore, as pure and nearly as strong a gelatin as the Russian isinglass; but it retains a fishy taste arid odour, which render it unfit for culinary or medicinal purposes. Isinglass of good quality has also been made in New York from the sounds of the weak fish—Ololithus reaalis of Cuvier (Storer, Hep. on Fishes of Mass., p. 33)—and perhaps of other'fishes caught in the neighbourhood. The sounds are dried whole, or merely split open, and vary much in size and texture, weighing from a drachm to an ounce. An article called “refined or bransparent._jsiruj 1 ass" is made by dissolving the New England isinglass in hot water, and spreading the solution to dry on oiled muslin. It is in very thin transparent plates, and is an excellent glue, but retains a strong fishy odour. A preparation called Cooper's gelatin has been introduced as a substitute for isinglass in making jellies! It appears to be the dried froth of a solution of pure bone glue. Most of the above facts, in relation to American isinglass, were derived from papers by D. B. Smith, in the Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm. (iii. 17 and 92). Mi. C. T. Carney states that the New England isinglass is prepared, not as supposed from the intestines of fish, but from the sounds of the hake (Cadus_ merluccius), by the following process. Having been taken from the fish, split open, cleansed, and dried, they are soaked in water till sufficiently soft, then passed through rollers so as to form a large, homogeneous, dough-like sheet, which is cut into strips, and then again passed through rollers till reduced to a ribbon-like form. The pieces thus prepared are thoroughly dried, and folded iuto bundles. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1857.) Isinglass is sometimes kept in the shops cut into fine shreds, and is thus more easily acted on by boiling water. Properties. In its purest form it is whitish, semi-transparent, of a shining, pearly appearance, and destitute of smell and taste. The inferior kinds are yel- lowish and more opaque. In cold water it softens, swells up, and becomes opa- lescent. Boiling water entirely dissolves it, with the exception of a minute pro- portion of impurities, amounting, according to Mr. Hatchet, to less than 2 per cent. The solution on cooling assumes the form of a jelly, which consists of pure gelatin and water. Isinglass is in fact the purest form of gelatin with which we are acquainted, and may be used whenever this principle as a test. It is insoluble in alcohol, but is dissolved readily by most of the diluted acids, and by alkaline solutions. It has a strong affinity for tannin, with which it forms an insoluble compound. Boiled with sulphuric acid, it is converted into a peculiar saccharine matter, called glycocoll, or sugar of gelatin. Its aqueous solution speedily putrefies. An ingenious adulteration of isinglass has been practised in London, appa- rently by rolling a layer of gelatin between two layers of the genuine substance. This may be detected by the disagreeable odour and taste of the adulterated drug, and the effects of water upon it. Genuine isinglass, cut into shreds and treated with water, becomes opalescent and more opaque than before; while the shreds, though they soften and swell, remain unbroken, and, when examined by the microscope, are seen to be decidedly fibrous. Gelatin, on the contrary, when similarly treated, becomes more transparent than before; the shreds are disin- tegrated, and the structure appears amorphous under the microscope. In the adulterated article, both these characters are presented in layers more or less distinct. {Pharm. Journ., ix. 505.) A false isinglass has been imported into England from Para, in Brazil, con- sisting ofTHe'dried ovary of a large fish. It has somewhat the form of a bunch PART I. Ichthyocolla.—Ignatia. 465 of grapes, consisting of ovoid or roundish masses, attached by a footstalk to a central axis. It is not gelatinous, and is unfit for the purposes to which isinglass is applied. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 144.)* Medical Properties and Uses. Isinglass has no peculiar medical properties. It may be given internally, in the form of jelly, as a highly nutritious articlu of diet; but it has no advantage over the jelly made from calves-feet. Three- drachms impart sufficient consistency to a pint of water. It is employed for clari- fying liquors, and imparting lustre to various woven fabrics. Added in small quantities to vegetable jellies, it gives them a tremulous appearance, which they want when unmixed. As a test of tannin it is used in solution, in the propor- tion of a drachm to ten fluidouuces of distilled water. It forms the basis of the English court-plaster. W. IGNATIA. U.S. Ignatia. Bean of Saint Ignatius. The seed of Strychnos Ignatia (Lindley). U. S. Faba Sancti Ignatii, Lat.; Fbve de Saint Ignace, Fr.; Ignatiusbohne, bittere Fieber- nuss, Germ.; Fava di Santo Ignazio, Ital.; Haba de Santo Ignacio, Span. Strychnos. See NUX VOMICA. Slri/chnos Ignatia. Lindley, Flor. Med. 530.—Ignatia amara. Linn. Suppl. This species of Strychnos is a tree of middling size, with numerous long, cylin- drical, glabrous, vine-like branches, which bear opposite, nearly sessile, oval, pointed, entire, and very smooth leaves. The flowers are long, nodding, white, tubular, fragrant, and arranged in short axillary racemes. The fruit is of the size and shape of a pear, with a smooth, whitish, ligneous rind, enclosing about twenty seeds, embedded in a dry medullary matter, and lying one upon the other. The seeds are the part used. The tree is a native of the Philippine Islands, where the seeds were highly esteemed as a medicine, and, having attracted the attention of the Jesuits, were honoured with the name of their founder. Properties. The seeds are about an inch long, rather less in breadth, still less in thickness, convex on one side, obscurely angular, with two, three, or four faces on the other, and marked at one end with a small depression indicating their point of attachment. They are externally of a pale-brown colour, appa- rently smooth, but covered in fact with a short down or efflorescence, which may be removed by scraping them with a knife. They are somewhat translucent, and their substance is very hard and horny. They have no smell, but an excessively bitter taste. To Pelletier and Caventou they yielded the same constituents as nux vomica, and, among them, 12 per cent, of strychnia. Analyzed by Mr. J. M. Caldwell, they were found to contain the two alkaloids, strychnia and brucia, * Japanese Isinglass. Under this name, which, however, is altogether inappropriate, a substance has been recently brought into the English market, prepared from sea-weeds in China and Japan. Two forms of it are described by Mr. Hanbury, one in irregularly four- sided sticks, about eleven inches long, very light and porous, the other in long shrivelled strips about one-eighth of an inch thick. It is translucent, yellowish-white, without smell or taste, insoluble in cold water, but swelling up and softening under its influence, and dissolved in great measure by boiling water, with which it gelatinizes on cooling. The peculiarities of this substance are owing to a principle denominated gelose by Payen, which resembles gelatin in its gelatinizing property, but differs in its cheroicaTrelations, and is probably peculiar. It resembles the carrageenin of Irish moss, but has a greater gelati- nizing power. The jelly formed by dissolving it in boiling water and allowing the solution to cool, requires a higher temperature to liquefy it than gelatin jelly, and does not melt in the mouth. Gelose differs from gelatin in not being precipitated by tannic acid, and from •rice jelly in not being rendered blue by iodine. Japan isinglass is used for the same pur- poses as that of animal origin. It is derived, according to Mr. Hanbury, frcm different species of various genera of sea-weed, and especially Gelidium corneum. (See Am. Journ. qf I'harm., July, 1860, p. 354.)—Note to the twelfth edition. ~ “ 466 Ignatia.—Inula. PART I. combined *Uh igasuric acid, and, besides these, a volatile principle, extractive, gum, resin, colouring matter, fixed oil, and bassorin, but no starch or albumen. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1857, p. 298.) In consequence of the relatively larger proportion of strychnia which they yield, they have been considerably used, instead of nux vomica, in the preparation of that alkaloid. Medical Properties and Uses. MM. Magendie and Delile have proved that ignatia acts on the human system in the same manner as nux vomica. In the Philippines; the seeds have been employed for the cure of obstinate intermittents, and in numerous other diseases. It is probable that, in small doses, they act as a tonic. Recently, an extract prepared from them has been much used, having been first introduced into notice empirically, under the name of ignatia amara. It has been employed chiefly in cases of debility of the digestive organs, or gen- eral defect of nervous power; but, being in all probability identical in its effects with a similar preparation of nux vomica, though somewhat stronger, it may be used for all the therapeutic purposes to which the latter medicine is applied. It is scarcely necessary to observe that so energetic a substance should never be taken without regular medical supervision, as it may prove, if abused, a terrific poison. An extract is directed, in the present edition of the U. S. Pharma- copoeia. (See Extractum Ignalise Alcoholicum.) The dose may be from half a grain to a grain and a half, in pill, three times a day. A tincture may also be used. Prof. Procter has given the following formula for its preparation. Powder four troyounces of the beans coarsely by grinding, or in a mortar, add two fluid- ounces of water to the powder in a bottle, and heat by a water-bath until it swells up; then pour on it half a pint of alcohol, and, having continued the heat for three hours, put the whole into a percolator, and displace with alcohol until a pint of tincture is obtained. Or, half an ounce of the extract may be dissolved in a pint of alcohol. The commencing dose, CQrresponding with that above stated of the extract, would be about sixteen minims. Off. Prep. Extractum Ignatise Alcoholicum, U. S. W INULA. TJ.S. Secondary. Elecampane. The root of Inula Selenium. U. S. Aun6e, Fr.; Alantwurzel, Germ.; Enula campana, Ital., Span. Inula. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua.— Nat. Ord. Compositae-Asteroidese, De Cand. Asteraceae, Lindley. Gen.Ch. Receptacle naked. Seed-doicn simple. Anthers ending in two bristles at the base. Willd. Inula Ilelenium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 2089; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 64, t. 26. Elecampane has a perennial root, and an annual stem, which is round, furrowed, villous, leafy, from three to six feet high, and branched near the top. The leaves are large, ovate, serrate, crowded with reticular veins, smooth and deep-green upon the upper surface, downy on the under, and furnished with a fleshy midrib. Those which spring directly from the root are petiolate, those of the stem sessile and embracing. The flowers are large, of a golden-yellow colour, and stand singly at the ends of the stem and branches. The calyx exhibits several rows of imbricated ovate scales. The florets of the ray are numerous, spreading, linear, and tridentate at the apex. The seeds are striated, quadrangular, and iurnished with a simple somewhat chaffy pappus. This large and handsome plant is a native of Europe, where it is also culti- vated for medical use. It has been introduced into our gardens, and has become naturalized in some parts of the country, growing in low meadows, and on the roadsides, from New England to Pennsylvania. It flowers in July and August. PART I. Inn la. —Io dinium. 467 The roots, which are the officinal part, should be dug up in autumn, and in their seeoud year. When older they are apt to be stringy and woody. The fresh root of elecampane is very thick and branched, having whitish cylin- drical ramifications, furnished with thread-like fibres. It is externally brown, internally whitish and fleshy; and the transverse sections present radiating line* The dried root, as found in the shops, is usually in longitudinal or transverse slices, and of a grayish colour internally. The smell is slightly camphorous, and, especially in the dried root, agreeably aromatic. The taste, at first glutinous, and compared to that of rancid soap, becomes, upon chewing, warm, aromatic, and bitter. Its medical virtues are extracted by alcohol and water, the former becoming most strongly impregnated with its bitterness and pungency. A pecu- liar principle, resembling starch, was discovered in elecampane bj Valentine . Rose, of Berlin, who named it alantin; but the title inulin, proposed by Dr. 1 Thomson, has been generally adopted. It differs from starch in being deposited unchanged from its solution in boiling water when the liquor cools, and in giving a yellowish instead of a blue colour with iodine. It has been found in the roots of several other plants. It may be obtained white and pure by precipitating a concentrated decoction with twice its volume of alcohol, dissolving the precipi- tate in a little distilled water, treating the solution with purified animal char- coal, and again precipitating with alcohol. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 69.) Besides this principle, elecampane contains, according to John, a white, concrete substance, called helenin, intermediate in its properties between the essential oils and camphor, and separable by distillation with water; a bitter extractive, soluble in water and alcohol; a soft, acrid, bitter resin, having an aromatic odour when heated ; gum ; albumen; lignin ; traces of volatile oil; a little wax; and various saline substances. If water is added to a tincture made by boiling the fresh root in alcohol, the liquid becomes turbid, and, in twenty- four hours, long white crystals of pure helenin are formed, leaving very little in solution. (Archiv. der Pharm., lx. 30.) Medical Properties and Uses. Elecampane is tonic and gently stimulant, and has been supposed to possess diaphoretic, diuretic, expectorant, and emmena- gogue properties. By the ancients it was much employed, especially in the com- plaints peculiar to females; and it is still occasionally resorted to in amenorrhoea. In this country it is chiefly used in chronic diseases of the lungs, and is some- times beneficial when the affection of the chest is attended with weakness of the digestive organs, or with general debility. From a belief in its deobstruent and diuretic virtues, it was formerly prescribed in chronic engorgements of the abdo- minal viscera, and the dropsy to which they so often give rise. It has also been highly recommended both as an internal and external remedy in tetter, psora, and other diseases of the skin. The usual modes of administration are in powder and decoction. The dose of the powder is from a scruple to a drachm. The decoction may be prepared by boiling half an ounce of the root in a pint of water and given in the dose of one or two fluidounces. W. IODINIUM. U. S. Iodine. Off. Syn. IODUJUBr. lode, Fr.; Jod, Germ.; Iodina, Ital., Span. The Iodine of the U. S. and Br. Materia Medica Catalogues is considered as pure: but, while in our officinal standard, the medicine in this condition is sup- posed to be purchasable in the market, as it undoubtedly is, the British Pharma- copoeia contains a process for its purification from an impure commercial variety, which, under the name of Iodine of Commerce, has been inserted in the Ap- pendix of that work, among The articles used in the preparation of medicines. 468 lodinium. PAKT I. Iodine is a non-metallic element, discovered in 1812 by Courtois, a soda manu- facturer of Paris. It exists in certain marine vegetables, particularly the fuci Of common sea-weeds, which are its most abundant natural source. It has been detected in some fresh-water plants, among which are the water-cress, brooklime, and fine-leaved water-hemlock; also in the ashes of tobacco, and of Honduras sarsaparilla. (Chatin.) It has been found in the beet-root of the Grand Duchy of Baden. (Lamy.) M. Chatin announced the presence of iodine in the atmo- sphere and in rain-water; but the negative experimental results of Dr. S. Mac- adam of Edinburgh, of Dr. Lohmeyer of Gottingen, and of M. S. De Luca of Paris, threw doubts on the experiments of M. Chatin, who was supposed to have been misled by the use of reagents containing iodine. Nevertheless, M. Chatin, in answer to the two chemists first named, reasserts the correctness of his results; and declares that he has found iodine in the rain-water of Paris, Ver- sailles, and many other towns in France, while he has failed to discover it in the waters of the Alps and of the Norwegian mountains. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril 1860, p. 259.) Dr. Macadam detected a trace of iodine in 100 gallons of water used for domestic purposes in Edinburgh, in several of the domestic animals, and in man. He detected it also in potatoes, beans, peas, wheat, barley, and oats. {Pharm. Journ., Nov. 1854, p. 235.) Iodine is moreover found in the animal kingdom, as in the sponge, the oyster, various polypi, cod-liver oil, and eggs; and, in the mineral kingdom, in sea-water in minute quantity, in certain salt springs, as iodide of silver in a rare Mexican mineral, in a zinc ore of Silesia, in native nitrate of soda, and in some kinds of rock salt. It 1ms been detected by M. Genteles in the aluminous schists of Sweden, by Prof. Sigwart in bituminous slate, by M. Lembert in limestone rocks, and by M. Bussy and M. Duflos in coal. M. Bussy has recently obtained iodine, in the proportion of one part in five thousand, from the coal-gas liquor of the gas-works of Paris. It was first discovered in the United States in the water of the Congress Spring, at Saratoga, by Dr. William Usher. It was detected in the Kenhawa saline waters by the late Professor Emmet; and it exists in the bittern of the salt-works of western Pennsylvania, in the amount of about eight grains to the gallon. In sea-weeds the iodine exists in the state probably of iodide of sodium. In different countries, sea-weeds are burned for the sake of their ashes; the product being a dark-coloured fused mass called kelp. This substance, besides carbonate of soda and iodide of sodium, contains more or less common salt, chloride of potas- sium, sulphate of soda, &c. The deep-sea fuci contain the most iodine; and, when these are burned at a low temperature for fuel, as is the case in the island of Guernsey, their ashes furnish more iodine than ordinary kelp. {Graham.) According to Dr. Geo. Kemp, the laminarian species, especially Laminaria diqitata, L. saccharina. and L. bulbosa, which are deep-water sea-weeds, and contain more potassium than sodium,’are particularly rich in iodine. In a paper on the extraction of iodine from sea-weeds, Dr. Kemp makes many useful sug- gestions, having chiefly in view the prevention of the waste of the element, which takes place in the ordinary kelp process. {Chem. Gaz., July 1, 1850.)* * Dr. Wallace and Mr. Lamont, of Glasgow, in a paper describing a new method of esti- mating the proportion of iodine in kelp, state that, in parcels from the West Highlands, they had obtained from 0-162 to 0175 per cent., which is a much larger product than that mentioned in the text; but they operated on small quantities, which yield a larger per- centage than is procured by operations on a large scale, in consequence of the loss neces- sarily incurred in them. (Chem. Gaz., April 1, 1859, p. 137.) A complete analysis of kelp by Mr. Lamont is contained in the same journal. (June 1, 1859, p. 210.) To prevent the loss of iodine by volatilization in the burning of sea-weeds, Dr. Wallace proposes, instead of burning them, to extract all the iodine compounds they contain by boiling them with water, and evaporating the decoction. The extract thus obtained is to be treated a3 kelp. New method of preparing kelp. As the preparation of kelp for the extraction of iodiue may possibly become a source of profitable occupation upon the sea-coast of some parts of in« part I. Iodinium. 469 Preparation. Iodine is obtained from kelp, and in Great Britain is mann factured chiefly at Glasgow. The kelp, which on an average contains a 224tl part of iodine, is lixiviated with water, in which about half dissolves. The solu tion is concentrated to a pellicle and allowed to cool; whereby nearly all the salts, except iodide of sodium, are separated, they being less soluble than the iodide. The remaining liquor, which is dense and dark-coloured, is made very sour by sulphuric acid, which causes the evolution of carbonic acid, sulphuretted hydrogen, and sulphurous acid, and the deposition of sulphur. The liquor is then introduced into a leaden still, and distilled with deutoxide of manganese into a series of glass receivers, inserted into one another, in which the iodine is con- densed. In this process the iodide of sodium is decomposed, and the iodine evolved; and the sulphuric acid, deutoxide of manganese, and sodium unite, so as to form sulphate of protoxide of manganese and sulphate of soda. The following is the British Pharmacopoeia process for purifying iodine. “ Take of Iodine of Commerce one ounce. Introduce the Commercial Iodine into a porcelain capsule of a circular shape, cover this as accurately as possible with a glass matrass filled with cold water, and apply to the capsule the heat of boiling water for twenty minutes. Let the matrass be now removed, and should colourless acicular prisms of a pungent odour be found attached to its bottom, let them be separated from it. This being done, the matrass is to be restored to its previous position, and a gentle and steady heat (that of a gas lamp answers well) applied, so as to sublime the whole of the iodine. Upon now allowing the capsule to cool, and lifting off the matrass, the purified product will be found attached to the bottom of the latter. When separated it should be immediately enclosed in a bottle furnished with an accurately ground stopper.” Br. In this process, which is that of the former Dublin Pharmacopoeia, a short preliminary sublimation by the heat of a water-bath is ordered, in which the bottom of a glass matrass filled with cold water is the refrigerator. The object of this is to separate any iodide of cyanogen that may happen to be present. This impurity is sometimes present in considerable amount. KlObach obtained from eighty avoirdupois pounds of commercial iodine twelve ounces of this iodide, which is in the proportion of nearly one per cent. (Chem. Gaz., April 15, 1850.) Should the matrass, upon its removal, have attached to its bottom United States, the following observations, contained in a paper on its manufacture, read by Mr. Ed. C. C. Stanford before a meeting of the British Pharmaceutical Society, may be of advantage. The present process, employed in the Highlands of Scotland, is on vanous accounts objectionable, but especially from the waste of iodine attending it. From the high heat to which the sea-weed is exposed in its conversion into ashes, much of the iodine is driven off. From the 'same cause, the sulphates are deoxidized, and converted into sul- phurets, the separation of which in the process for extracting the iodine necessitates a large expenditure of sulphuric acid. Besides, there is an entire loss of the volatile matters escaping during combustion, which might be utilized by an improved process. The plan suggested by Mr. Stanford is to carbonize the weed in close vessels. The following is a summary of his method, as specified in a patent taken out in Great Britain and France. The sea-weeds, which may be gathered at all seasons, should be well dried, and then compressed into cakes of convenient size. These are put into large cylindrical vessels of wrought iron heated from without, placed vertically, with the base and upper end conical, and with arrangements for introducing and withdrawing the charge. The retorls, thus formed, are furnished at the upper end with pipes which carry the volatilized products to an iron main, whence they pass through a series of ordinary iron pipe condensers, from which the uncondensed matter passes through a pair of scrubbers to a gasometer. When sufficiently charred, the contents of the retorts are withdrawn into closely-covered iron boxes, which are to be removed to a convenient place. When cool, the charcoal is lixiviated nke kelp, and the solution treated in the ordinary manner for separating the iodine. The fixiviated charcoal may be used for heating the retort, and the gas collected in the gaso- meter for lighting the factory, or for producing heat. The ashes resulting from the burn- ing of the charcoal is a valuable manure. The condensed products of the distillation may be used for obtaining muriate of ammonia, and utilized in various other ways. (Pharm,. Journ., April, 1862, p. 502.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 470 Iodinium. PART L while iu icu'lar crystals, these will be the iodide in question, and must be rejected. The matrass having been replaced, heat is again applied until the whole of the iodine has sublimed, and attaches itself to the cool bottom of the matrass. Water has sometimes been found in iodine to the extent of 15 or 20 per cent. If considerable, it is easily discovered by the iodine adhering to the inside of the bottle. M. Bolley estimates its amount by rubbing together, until the smell of iodine disappears, 30 grains of iodine with about 240 of mercury, in a small weighed porcelain dish, using a small weighed agate pestle. When complete combination has been effected, the whole is placed in a water-bath to dissipate the water. The loss of weight gives the amount of water in the iodine. (Chem. Gaz., Mar. 15, 1853, p. 118.) The presence of water is injurious only as it rend- ers all the preparations of iodine weaker than they should be. In the former Ed. Pharmacopoeia, directions were given to dry it, by placing it “in a shallow basin of earthenware, in a small confined space of air, with ten or twelve times its weight of fresh-bu~nt lime, till it scarcely adheres to the inside of a dry bottle.” Properties. Iodine is a soft, friable, opaque substance, in the form of crys- talline scales, having a bluish-black colour and metallic lustre. It possesses a peculiar odour, somewhat resembling that of chlorine, and a hot acrid taste. Applied to the skin, it produces a yellow stain, which soon disappears. Its sp. gr. is 49. It is a volatile substance, and evaporates even at common temperatures. When heated, it volatilizes more rapidly, and, when the temperature reaches 225°, it melts and rises in a rich purple vapour, a property which suggested its name. Its vapour has the sp gr. 8 7, being the heaviest aeriform substance known. If inhaled mixed with air, it excites cough and irritates the nostrils. When it comes in contact with cool surfaces, it condenses in brilliant steel-gray crystals. Iodine is freely soluble in alcohol and ether, but requires 7000 times its weight of water to dissolve it. If water stands on iodine for some time, especially in a strong light, it apparently dissolves more iodine; but the result depends upon the formation of hydriodic acid, in a solution of which iodine is more soluble than in water. The solution of iodine in water has no taste, a feeble odour, and a light-brown colour; in alcohol or ether, is nearly black. Its solubility in water is very much increased by the addition of certain salts, as the chloride of sodium, nitrate of ammonia, or iodide of potassium ; and the same effect is produced, to some extent, by tannic acid. Its solution in tannic acid is called iqdo-tannin, of which MM. Socquet and Guillermond make a syrup for internal, and an aqueous solution for external use. For the formulas, see the B. and F. Medico- Ghir. Rev., July, 1854, p. 181. It is also soluble in glycerin, as ascertained by M. Cap in 1854. In chemical habitudes iodine resembles chlo- rine, but its affinities are weaker. Its eq. is 126 3, and symbol L It combines with most of the non-metallic, and neaflyalT the metallic elements, formiug a class of compounds called iodides. Some of these are officinal, as the iodides of iron, mercury, lead, potassium, and sulphur. It forms with oxygen one oxide, oxjjie_of iodine, and three acids, iodous, iodic* and hyperiodic, and with hy- drogen, a gaseous acid, calledTT?/driodic acid. Tests, &c. Iodine, in most cases, may be recognised by its characteristic pur- * Dr R. H. Brett, of Liverpool, has found that when a small portion of several of the alkaloids, or their salts, is mixed with about an equal portion of iodic acid and a few drops of water, and the mixture gently heated, a succession of distinct explosions, attended by the evolution of gas, takes place. Dr. Brett finds that this phenomenon occurs with all the alkaloids yet tried by him, but not with other classes of organic substances, whether nitro- genous or non-nitrogenous, and thinks it will prove a valuable test for the former. (Pharm. Jourv., Nov. 1854.) According to Mr. R. F. Fairthorne, of this city, several of the more poisonous alkaloids, dissolved by the aid of an acid, yield, with the officinal compo ind solution of iodine, precipitates, insoluble in weak sulphuric, muriatic, or acetic acid. He therefore infers that the above-mentioned solution might prove useful as a t tilde to the alkaloids. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1856.)—Note to the eleventh editxm. part I. Iodinium. 471 pie vapour; but where this cannot be made evident, it is detected unerringly by starch, which produces with it a deep-blue colour. This test was discovered by Colin and Gaultier de Claubry, and is so delicate that it will indicate the presence of iodine in 450,000 times its weight of water. In order that the test may succeed, the iodine must be free and the solutions cold. To render it free when in combination, as it always is in the animal fluids, a little nitric acid, free from iodine, must be added to the solution suspected to contain it. Thus, in testing urine for iodine, the secretion is mixed with starch, and acidulated with a drop or two of nitric acid; when, if iodine be present, the colour produced will vary from a light purple to a deep indigo blue, according to the amount of the element present. Sometimes, in mineral waters, the proportion of iodine is so minute that the starch test, in connection with nitric acid, gives a doubtful colora- tion. In such cases, Liebig recommends the addition to the water of a very small quantity of iodate of potassa, followed by a little starch and muriatic acid. Assuming the iodine to be present as hydriodic acid, the liberated iodic acid sets free the iodine of the mineral water, and becomes itself deoxidized, thus increasing the amount of the free iodine (5HI and I05 = 5H0 and I(i). This test would be fallacious, if iodic acid, mixed with muriatic acid, coloured starch; but this is not the case. Still, Liebig’s test is inapplicable in the presence of reducing agents, such as sulphurous acid, which would give rise to free iodine from the test itself, independently of the presence of the element in the water tested. {Dr. W. Knop.) Another test for iodine, proposed by M. Rabourdin, is chloroform, by the use of which he supposes that the element may be not only detected in organic substances, but approximately estimated. Thus, if 150 grains of a solution, containing one part in one hundred thousand of iodide of potas- sium, be treated with 2 drops of nitric and 15 or 20 of sulphuric acid, and afterwards shaken with 15 grains of chloroform, the latter acquires a distinct violet tint. M. Rabourdin applies his test to the detection of iodine in the several varieties of cod-liver oil. For this purpose he incinerates, in an iron spoon, 50 parts of the specimen of oil with 5 of pure caustic potassa, dissolved in 15 of water, and exhausts the cinder with the smallest possible quantity of water. The solution is filtered, acidulated with nitric and sulphuric acids, and agitated with 4 parts of chloroform. After a time the chloroform subsides, of a violet colour more or less deep according to the proportion of iodine present. M. Lassaigne considers the starch test more delicate than that of chloroform. For detecting iodiue in the iodides of the metals of the alkalies, he considers bichloride of palladium as extremely delicate, producing brownish flocks of biuiodide of palladium. According to M. Moride, benzine is a good test for free iodine, which it readily dissolves, forming a solution of a bright-red colour, deeper in proportion to the amount of iodine taken up. As benzine does not dissolve chlorine or bromine, it furnishes the means of separating iodine from these elements. Mr. D. S. Price has pointed out the nitrites as exceedingly sensitive tests of iodine, combined as an iodide. The suspected liquid is mixed with starch paste, acidulated with muriatic acid, and treated with solu- tion of nitrite of potassa. The iodine is set free, and a blue colour appears, more or less deep, according to the proportion of iodine present. By this test, iodine may be detected in an aqueous solution containing only one in 400,000 parts. A similar test had been previously proposed by M. Grange. Adulterations. Iodine is said to be occasionally adulterated with mineral coal, charcoal, plumbago, and black oxide of manganese. These are easily de- fected by their fixed nature, while pure iodine is wholly volatilized by heat. Jlerberger found native sulphuret of antimony in one sample, and plumbago in another; and Righini has detected as much as 25 per cent, of chloride of calcium. The presence of iodide of cyanogen and of water have already been referred to, and the modes of detecting and separating them pointed out. (See pages 469-70.) 472 Iodinium. PART I. The British Pharmacopoeia directs that officinal iodine should be entirely soluble in ether and should sublime without residue, that the part which first comes over should contain no colourless prisms of a pungent odour, and that 12T graius dissolved in a fluidounce of water with 15 grains of iodide of potassium, should be completely decolorized by 100 measures of the volumetric solution of hypo- sulphite of soda. Medical Properties. Iodine was first employed as a medicine in 1819, by Dr. Coindet, sen., of Geneva. It operates as a general excitant of the vital ac- tions, especially of the absorbent and glandular systems. Its effects are varied by its degree of concentration, state of combination, dose, &c.; and hence, under different circumstances, it may prove corrosive, irritant, desiccant, tonic, diuretic, diaphoretic, and emmenagogue. It probably acts by entering the circulation ; at least it has been proved by numerous observations that, whether taken inter- nally, or applied externally, it always passes with the secretions, particularly the urine and saliva, not, however, uncombined, but in the state of hydriodic acid or an iodide. Cantu detected it not only in the urine and saliva, but also in the sweat, milk, and blood. According to Dr. John C. Dalton, jun., of New York, iodine, taken in a single moderate dose, appears in the urine in thirty minutes, and may be detected for nearly twenty-four hours. In two cases in which large doses of iodide of potassium had been taken for six or eight weeks, and the medicine intermitted, all trace of iodine disappeared from the urine in eighty- four hours. From this observation Dr. Dalton infers, as Becquerel had previ- ously done, that iodine does not accumulate in the system, and that, therefore, the effect of moderate doses is probably equal to that of large ones, the excess constantly passing off, principally by the kidneys. But iodine is not, like iron, a reconstructive element, and does not act by supplying anything to the system. Hence, its rapid elimination by the urine may have a therapeutic effect; and this effect may be in proportion to the amount eliminated. It is certainly not an un- reasonable supposition that the medicine, while passing off in larger or smaller quantity by the kidneys, may carry with it more or less abnormal material, and thus act as a sorbefacient. The tonic operation of iodine is evinced by its increasing the appetite, which is a frequent effect of its use. Salivation is occasionally caused by it, and some- times soreness of the mouth only. In some cases, pustular eruptions and coryza have been produced; especially when the remedy has been given in the form of iodide of potassium. In an overdose it acts as an irritant poison. Doses of two drachms, administered to dogs, have produced irritation of the stomach, and death in seven days; and the stomach was found studded with numerous little ulcers of a yellow colour. From four to six grains, in man, cause a sense of constriction in the throat, sickness and pain at the stomach, and at length vomit- ing and colic. Even in medicinal doses, it sometimes causes alarming symptoms; such as fever, restlessness, disturbed sleep, palpitations, excessive thirst, acute pain in the stomach, vomiting and purging, violent cramps, frequent pulse, and, finally, progressive emaciation, if the medicine be not laid aside. The condition of the system, marked by these effects of iodine, is called iodism. Upon their first appearance, the remedy should be discontinued, and a milk diet prescribed. Though iodism, when it occurs, is generally the result of incautious doses of the medicine too long continued, yet it sometimes arises, under other circumstances, from causes not well understood. On the other hand, large doses have been given for a long time with perfect impunity. Dr. Lugol, of Paris, never observed alarming effects to arise from iodine, given in the doses and in the state of dilu- tion in which he prescribed it. On the contrary, many of his patients gained flesh, and improved in general health. Testimony is not wanting to the effect, that a long course of the remedy has in some instances occasioned absorption of the mammas and wasting of the tes PART I. Iodinium. 473 tides. Yet Dr. T. H. Silvester, who had the opportunity of making extensive observations in St. Thomas’s Hospital, London, on the effects of iodine in the form of iodide of potassium, did not meet with a single instance of atrophy or absorption of the glands. Numerous cases of syphilitic periostitis were suc- cessfully treated, enlarged testicles from a syphilitic cause reduced, and chronic induration of the inguinal glands removed; but in no case was atrophy or ab- sorption of the breast or testicle observed. It would thus appear that iodine, as a general rule, does not affect the healthy glands, but acts upon abnormal material, such as tumours, enlargements, and thickenings. The variable operation of iodine may to some extent be accounted for by the more or less .amylaceous character of the food; starch having the property of uniting with iodine and rendering it mild. Dr. Lebert, who has practised both in Switzerland and France, explains the fact in another way. Under his observa- tion, the accidents produced by iodine, with scarcely an exception, were in those cases of goitre in which the remedy acted rapidly in removing the tumour ; while in scrofulous, tuberculous, and syphilitic patients, free from goitre, though the medicine was given in considerable doses, no injury to the system ensued. He supposes that the bad effects, in the goitre cases, arose from the too prompt absorption of the abnormal material of the tumour, which, entering the circula- tion in the course of its elimination, produced the poisonous effect, and not from the iodine itself. {Ann. de Therap., 1855, p. 228.) Iodine has been principally employed in diseases of the absorbent and gland- ular systems. It has been used with success in ascites, especially when connected with diseased liver. It acts most efficiently immediately after tapping. It has proved successful with several British practitioners in ovarian tumours, but has failed in the hands of others. Dr. B. Roemer, of Otter Bridge, Va., reports three cases of ovarian tumour, removed by the combined internal and external use of the remedy. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1857.) In glandular enlarge- ments and morbid growths, it has proved more efficacious than in any other class of diseases. Dr. Coindet discovered its extraordinary power in curing goitre;* and it has been used with more or less advantage in enlargements and indurations of the liver, spleen, mammae, testes, and uterus. In hepatic affections of this kind, where mercury has failed or is inadmissible, iodine is our best resource. In chronic diseases of the uterus, with induration and enlargement, and in hard tumours of the cervix and indurated puckerings of the edges of the os tincae, iodine has occasionally effected cures, administered internally, and rubbed into the cervix, in the form of ointment, for ten or twelve minutes every night. The emmenagogue power of iodine has been noticed by several practitioner’s. It has been recommended in gleet; also in gonorrhoea and leucorrhoea, after the inflam- matory symptoms have subsided. In the latter complaint, iodine, rendered soluble by iodide of potassium, has been used successfully, in the form of injection, by Dr. T. T. Russell, of Pattersonville, La. He joined to the local treatment, the internal use of the tincture of chloride of iron. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1854.) In pseudo-syphilis and mercurial cachexy, it is one of our best remedies, in the form of iodide of potassium. In the same form, it is a favourite remedy in chronic rheumatism, and, by Gendrin, was employed in acute gout, with the * M. Chatin, finding, according to his observations, a great variation in the amount of iodine in the air, water, and soil of different localities, has founded on this supposed fact an explanation of the prevalence of goitre and cretinism in some places, and their absence in others. Thus, in certain parts of France, near Paris, which he calls the Paris zone, the amount of iodine thus distributed is comparatively large, and goitre and cretinism are unknown; while, in the Alpine valleys, where only one-tenth the amount of iodine is found, these affections are endemic. The conclusions of M. Chatin are controverted by the ex- periments, so far as they go, of M. Lohmeyer, of Gottingen, and of M. Kletzinsky, of Vi- enna, who failed to detect iodine in the air of those cities, the inhabitants of which are free from goitre.—Note to the eleventh edition. 474 Iodinium. PART l. supposed effect of cutting short the fits. Dr. Manson, as early as 1825, recorded cases of the efficacy of iodine in several nervous diseases, such as chorea and paralysis. In various scaly eruptions, the internal and external use of the remedy is very much relied on. But it is in scrofulous diseases that the most striking results have been ob- tained by the use of iodine. Dr. Coindet first directed attention to its effects in scrofula, and Dr. Manson reported a number of cases of this affection, in a large proportion of which the disease was either cured or meliorated. The latter phy- sician derived benefit from its use also in white swelling, hip-joint disease, and distortions of the spine, diseases admitted to be connected with the scrofulous taint. We are indebted, however, to Dr. Lugol for the most extended researches in relation to the use of iodine in scrofula. This physician began his trials in the hospital Saint Louis, in 1827, and published his results in three memoirs, in 1829, 1880, and 1831. The scrofulous affections, cured by Dr. Lugol by the iodine treatment, were glandular tubercles, ophthalmia, ozaena, lupus, and fistu- lous and carious ulcers. After the publication of Dr. Lugol’s memoir, his practice was imitated and extended. Dr. Bermond, of Bordeaux, succeeded with the iodine treatment in enlarged testicle from a venereal cause, scrofulous ophthalmia of six years’ dura- tion, and scrofulous ulcers and abscesses of the cervical and submaxillary glands. In numerous other cases of scrofula under his care, iodine proved beneficial; though, before its commencement, the cases underwent no improvement. The only peculiarity in Dr. Bermond’s treatment was that, in some cases, he asso- ciated opiates with the iodine. In ophthalmia, the collyrium employed by him consisted of thirty drops of tincture of iodine, thirty-six of laudanum, and four fiuidounces of distilled water. When the local application of the iodine created much pain or rubefaction, he found advantage from combining extract of opium with it. A plaster, which proved efficacious as an application to an enlarged parotid, consisted of lead plaster (diachylon) and iodide of potassium, each, four parts, and iodine and extract of opium, each, .three parts. In confirmation of Dr. Bermond’s statements, M. Lemasson has published a number of cases, prov- ing the efficacy of a combination of iodine and opium in the local treatment of scrofulous ulcerations. One of the combinations which he employed consisted of fifteen grains of iodine, a drachm of iodide of potassium, and two drachms of Rousseau’s laudanum, made into an ointment with two ounces of fresh lard. The most eligible form of iodine for internal administration is its solution in water, aided by iodide of potassium. This is the form preferred by Dr. Lugol; and such a solution is among the preparations of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The solutions employed by Dr. Lugol contained one part of iodine and two of iodide of potassium; and the doses given by him were equivalent to half a grain of iodine daily for the first fortnight, three-quarters of a grain daily for the second aud third fortnights, one grain daily during the fourth and fifth, and, in some cases, a grain and a quarter daily for the remainder of the treatment; always largely diluted. (See Liquor Iodinii Gompositus.) The tincture of iodine is not eligible for internal use; for, when freshly prepared, the iodine is precipitated from it by dilution with water; and, as a consequence, the irritating solid iodine will come in contact with the stomach when the dose is swallowed. The same objection is not applicable to the compound tincture, or to the simple tincture after having been long kept. The favourable results obtained by Dr. Lugol, in the treatment of scrofulous diseases by the iodine preparations, are so numerous as to leave no doubt of their efficacy in these affections. To judge fairly, however, of his results, it is not sufficient to give iodine; but it should be given in the manner in wnich it was employed by him. We can readily conceive that a dilute aqueous solution of iodiue may act differently from the tincture; for a therapeutical ageut may PART I. Iodinium. 475 in a dilute form be introduced gradually into the current of the circulation, and thus produce important alterative effects; while in a concentrated form it may create irritation of the stomach without being absorbed, and thus prove mis- chievous. A case in point is furnished by natural mineral waters, which, though generally containing a minute proportion of saline matter, often produce reme- dial effects which cannot be obtained by their constituents in larger doses. These views are confirmed and extended by M. Benj. Belli, in an able paper on the efficacy of a certain dilution of medicines, illustrated by examples drawn from iodine, bromine, iron, antimony, belladonna, oil of turpentine, and common salt, published in the Annuaire de Therapeutique for 1857, p. 270. They cor- respond also with the views of Dr. A. Buchanan, of Glasgow, who gives iodine in the form of iodide of starch, and of hydriodic acid largely diluted with water. (See Iodide of Starch and Hydriodic Acid in Part III.) A mode of safely bringing and maintaining the system under the influence of iodine, proposed by M. Boinet, and called by him iodic alimentation, is to mix the medicine with the food, as with bread and other farinaceous substances, so that the patient may take daily a due quantity, which, with this mode of administra- tion, may be large, if desirable, without inconvenience. The compound formed with starch by the iodine, while destitute of irritating properties, is taken readily into the system, and produces the remedial effects of the medicine. M. Marchal (de Calvi), under the impression that cod-liver oil owed its chief virtue to the presence of iodine, proposed, in 1848, to prepare an iodized oil. Following out this proposal, M. Personne devised the following formula. Five parts of iodine are mixed with a thousand of almond oil, and the mixture is sub- jected to a jet of steam, until decolorized. The same operation is repeated with five additional parts of iodine. The oil is then washed with a weak alkaline solution, to remove the hydriodic acid, developed in the process. By this mode of proceeding, it may be presumed that the iodine is intimately united with the oil, along with which it would find an easy entrance into the system; and that, while about half of the iodine is lost as hydriodic acid, the remainder takes the place of the hydrogen eliminated from the oil. In 1851, the French Academy appointed MM. Guibourt, Soubeiran, Gibert, and Ricord, to report upon the therapeutic value of a definite combination of iodine and oil. The reporter (Guibourt) approved of M. Personne’s process; and MM. Gibert and Ricord reported favourably of the therapeutic effects of the preparation. M. Personne’s iodized oil differs little in appearance and taste from almond oil, and is easily taken alone or in emulsion. The usual dose is two fluidounees daily, which may be increased to three fluidounees or more. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xxiii. 502.) M. Berthe and M. Lepage have objected to M. Personne’s iodized oil, that it is of variable iodine strength, and that it is liable to become rancid, in conse- quence of the use of*steam in its preparation. M. Berthe makes an iodized oil, which he alleges to be free from these objections, by heating, to about 17G°, five parts of iodine with a thousand parts of almond oil, in a water-bath, until deco- loration shall have taken place. The resulting oil is colourless, perfectly trans- parent, without odour or rancidity, not acted on by starch, and of a constant '•omposition. To shorten the time in preparing the oil, M. Lepage dissolves the Iodine in three times its weight of ether, before adding it to the oil, and briskly shakes the mixture for eight or ten minutes. The preparation is then heated in i water-bath, to decolorize it and drive off the ether. M. Hugounenq objects to this process that, if the oil be completely deprived of the odour of ether, the heating must be continued for several hours. He also objects to any process which requires the continued application of heat, as rendering the oil liable to become quickly rancid. Ilis plan is to rub up the iodine, for five or six minutes, in a porcelain mortar, with a small portion of the oil, and then gradually to add the remainder. red limpid liquid is obtained, which may be completely deco- 476 Iodinium. PART I. lorized by exposure for fifteen minutes to the sun’s rays. Iodized oil, thus pre- pared, has the odour and taste of almond oil, is not more liable to become rancid than the pure oil, and is free from hydriodic acid. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1856.) From the above statements it is not easy to determine which is the best method of preparing iodized oil; but it may be useful to state that the prepara- tion may be made with good olive oil, instead of the more expensive almond oil. The external treatment by iodine may be divided into general and topical. By its use in this way it does not create a mere local effect; but, by its absorp- tion, produces its peculiar constitutional impression. The external treatment, when general, consists in the use of the iodine bath. This for adults should con- tain from two to four drachms of iodine, with double that quantity of iodide of potassium, dissolved in water, in a wooden bath tub; the proportion of the water being about a gallon for every three grains of iodine employed. The quantity of ingredients for the baths of children is one-third as much as for adults, but dissolved in about the same proportional quantity of water. The quantity of iodine and iodide for a bath having been determined upon, it is best to dissolve them in a small quantity of water (half a pint for example), before they are added to the water of the bath ; as this mode of proceeding facilitates their thorough diffusion. The iodine baths, which may be directed three or four times a week, usually produce a slight rubefacient effect; but, occasionally, a stronger impression, causing the epidermis to peel off, particularly of the arms and legs. The skin at the same time acquires a deep-yellow tinge, which usually disappears in the interval between the baths. The topical application of iodine is made by means of several officinal prepa- rations. (See Unguenlum Iodinii and Unguentum Iodinii Compositum.) Be- sides these, several others have been employed topically. Lugol’s iodine lotion consists of from two to four grains of iodine, and double that quantity of iodide of potassium, dissolved in a pint of water. It is used as a wash or injection in scrofulous ophthalmia, ozaena, and fistulous ulcers. His rubefacient iodine solu- tion is formed by dissolving half an ounce of iodine and an ounce of iodide of potassium in six fluidounces of water. This is useful for exciting scrofulous ul- cers, for touching the eyelids, and as an application to recent scrofulous cica- trices, to render them smooth. The rubefacient solution, added to warm water in the proportion of about a fluidrachm to the gallon, makes a convenient local bath for the arms, legs, feet, or hands; and, mixed with linseed meal or some similar substance, it forms a cataplasm useful in certain eruptions, especially where the object is to promote the falling off of scabs. External applications of iodine have been recommended for the removal even of internal plastic exuda- tions, as to the side for example in protracted pleurisy. The rubefacient prepa- ration of iodine, at present most commonly employed, is the tincture. (See Tinctura Iodinii.) The preparation, called iodine paint, is a tincture twice as strong as the officinal tincture, and is made by dissolving a drachm of iodine in a fluidounce of alcohol, and allowing the solution to stand in a glass-stoppered bottle for several months before it is used, when it will become thick and syrupy. It is applied, with a glass or a camel’s hair brush, in one or more coatings, ac- cording to the degree of effect desired. Iodine paint is used as a counter-irritant, with advantage, in pains of the chest; in aphonia, applied to the front of the throat; in chronic pleuritic effusion, or consolidated lung, applied extensively opposite to the diseased part; in periostitis, whether syphilitic, strumous, or the result of injury; in inflammation of the joints; in serous effusion into bursa*; and in the cicatrices of burns. When thus used, it must be borne in mind that the iodine acts also by being absorbed. Another valuable application of it is for the removal of cutaneous nsevi. Lugol’s caustic iodine solution is made of iodine and iodide of potassium, each, an ounce, dissolved in two fluidounces of water. This is used to destroy soft and fungous granulations, and has been em- part I. Iodinium. 477 ployed with decided benefit in lupus. The Liniment of Iodine of tin British Pharmacopoeia is intermediate in strength between the two solutions last men- tioned. (See Linimentum Iodi.) Another caustic solution of iodine, under the name of iodized glycerin, is made by dissolving one part of iodide of potassium in two parts of glycerin, and adding the solution to one part of iodine, which it com- pletely dissolves. Dr. Max Ritcher, of Vienna, to whom the credit belongs oi having introduced into practice the solution of iodine in glycerin, found this caustic particularly useful in lupus, non-vascular goitre, and scrofulous and con- stitutional syphilitic ulcers. The solution is applied by means of a hair pencil to the diseased surface, which must then be covered with gutta percha paper, fixed at the edges by strips of adhesive plaster, in order to prevent the evaporation of the iodine. The application produces burning pain, which rarely lasts foi more than two hours. The dressing is removed in twenty-four hours, and pledgets, dipped in cold water, applied. This iodine caustic is too strong for ordinary local use. A weaker solution is recommended by Dr. Szukits, formed of one part of iodine to five of glycerin, for application to the neck, female breast, abdomen, &c. After four or five paintings it causes excoriation, which requires its discon- tinuance, and the use of cold applications. Iodine is used by injection into various cavities. It has been employed in this way for the cure or relief of hydrocephalus, pleuritic effusion, hydropericar- dium, ascites, ovarian dropsy, hernia, hydrocele, spina bifida, dropsy of the joints, and chronic abscesses. Dr. J. M. Winn, of London, reports a case of chronic hydrocephalus in an infant, in which the injection of iodine was used, after tap- ping, with the apparent effect of retarding the reaccumulation of the fluid. M. Aran, of Paris, tried the same treatment, after tapping, in two cases of pleuritic effusion, and with success in one of the cases. The same physician reports a case of hydropericardium, relieved by twice tapping the sac, and twice injecting it with iodine within the space of twelve days. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1856, p. 499.) Dr. Costes has tried these injections in ascites, but not with encouraging results. In practising them in this disease, Dr. Tessier lays down these rules; first, not to empty the peritoneal cavity before performing the in- jection, as the injected fluid requires dilution by the effused fluid; second, to regulate the amount of the injected fluid by the nature of the effused fluid, using twice as much, if the latter is decidedly alkaline and albuminous; and third, to practise a tapping some days before the time of injecting, if the abdomen be very voluminous, in order to diminish the peritoneal surface. Iodine injections in ovarian cysts were first practised, in 1846, by Dr. Allison, of Indiana, in a case that terminated favourably. They are now advocated by Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, who has employed them in twenty or thirty cases, with variable but encouraging results. A fatal case, however, is recorded by M. Demarquay. (B. and F. Med.-Chirurg. Rev., April, 1862, p. 553.) The injection causes little or no pain, if the case is one of genuine cystic dropsy. Three cases of the radical cure of hernia by similar injections are reported by M. Jobert, of Paris. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1855, p. 241.) In hydrocele iodine has superseded the wine injection formerly employed. It would seem hazardous to inject drop- sical joints with a substance so irritating as iodine; and yet Velpeau is stated to have repeatedly used it in these cases with success; and, when the operation nas failed, no bad consequences, it is alleged, have followed to the joint. Iodine injections have been employed by Dr. Brainard of Chicago, in seven cases of spina bifida, in all without dangerous symptoms, and in three, uncomplicated with hy- drocephalus, with the effect of a permanent cure. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., July, 1861, p. 67.) In all these cases, the object is to excite a new action in the walls of the cavity, with the effect either of obliterating it by the adhesive inflamma- tion, or of restoring its secreting surface to a healthy condition. Iodine injections have been used with advantage in fistula in ano, effecting the cure, when sue- Iodinium. PART L 1'iessful, by exciting adhesive inflammation. This treatment originated with Mr. Charles Clay, of London, and is praised by Dr. Boinet, who recommends that it should always be tried, before having recourse to the knife. For the mode of preparing iodine injections, see Tinctura Iodinii. As connected with the subject of iodine injections, it is proper to notice in this place the method of treating serpent bites and other poisoned wounds, pro- posed by Prof. Brainard, of Chicago. This consists in infiltrating the tissues, where the bite has been inflicted, with from half a drachm to a drachm and a half of a solution, made of five grains of iodine and fifteen of iodide of potas- sium in a fluidounce of distilled water. A cupping glass is applied over the wound as soon as possible; and the infiltration is effected by passing beneath the skin, under the edge of the cup, a small trocar, through the cannula of which the solution is injected. Forty experiments were tried with this treatment on pigeons, kittens, and dogs, with generally successful results. Prof. Brainard pro- poses to extend it to dissection wounds, and all poisoned wounds of a dangerous character. (See Prof. Brainard’s Essay, &c., Chicago, 1854; also N. Y. Med. Times, iii. 210.) Dr. E. Harwood treated successfully two cases of snake bite, by simply brushing the tincture of iodine over the wound. (Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., May 17, 1854, from the N. W Med. and Surg. Journ.) Enemata containing iodine have been used, by several practitioners, in the chronic dysentery and diarrhoea of both adults and children, with decided bene- fit, a prominent effect being the relief of tenesmus. They are supposed to act locally on ulcers in the colon and rectum, and generally by absorption. The pre- paration of iodine used was the tincture, rendered miscible with water, without precipitation, by iodide of potassium. The formula recommended by M. Delioux is from three to six fluidrachms of the tincture, with from fifteen to thirty grains of iodide of potassium, dissolved in half a pint of water. The injection should be preceded by an emollient enema to empty the intestine, and should be re- peated once or twice daily, gradually increasing its strength. If the pain be severe, a laudanum injection will bring immediate relief. Dr. Norman Cheevers, of India, strongly recommends iodine gargles in mer- curial salivation. The gargle employed by him was composed of from four to ten fluidrachms of the compound tincture of iodine and a pint of water. Iodine, in the state of vapour, has been employed by inhalation; and the ex- periments, as yet tried, have been in the treatment chiefly of phthisis and chronic bronchitis. Sir Charles Scudamore, Sir James Murray, and Dr. Corrigan have recommended iodine vapour in phthisis. The plan of Sir Charles is to inhale from a glass inhaler, for ten minutes, two or three times a day, a small portion of a solution of ioduretted iodide of potassium, mixed with a saturated tincture of conium. The ioduretted solution is made by dissolving six grains, each, of iodine and iodide of potassium, in five ounces and three-quarters of distilled water, and a quarter of an ounce of alcohol. The dose, for each inhalation, is from half a drachm to a drachm of the ioduretted solution, gradually increased, writh half a drachm of the tincture, added to a portion of water at 120° F., nearly sufficient to half fill the inhaler. M. Piorry employs iodine vapour in phthisis in a different way. He places one or two scruples of iodine, or from one to three fluidounces of the tincture, in a quart jar, and causes the patient to take a deep inspiration from the air in the vessel, one or two hundred times a day. The patient is made to inhale iodine vapour also during sleep, by placing iodine in several saucers near his pillow, and in numerous vials, attached to his bedstead. Modes of internal treatment, appropriate to each case, concur- rently adopted. M. Piorry avers that, in almost every case subjected to iodine treatment in this way, there was a diminution of the space in which the physical signs of diseased lung manifested. Many patients with cavities in the lungs were apparently cured. {Comptes Bendus, Jan. 24, 1854.) Another application PART I. Todinium. 479 of iodine inhalations is to the cure of aphonia, a plan of treatment suggested by Prof. Pancoast, of this city. A successful case of this affection, of twenty months’ standing, treated in this way, is related by Dr. Edward B. Stevens. (Charleston Med. Journ., March, 1854, from the Iowa Med. Journ.) Another method of administering iodine vapour by inhalation in phthisis and chronic bronchitis has been proposed by M. Barrere, of Toulouse. It consists in forming what he calls iodized camphor, which is to be taken like snuff. This is prepared by putting powdered camphor in a snuff-box, with a hundredth part in bulk of iodine, contained in a muslin bag. In the course of a few hours, the substances, by occasional shaking, unite, forming a powder resembling iodine in colour. The difficulty in practising ordinary iodine inhalation depends chiefly on the irritation caused by the vapour, which excites cough and fatigues the patient. According to M. Barrere, this inconvenience is avoided by the use of the iodized camphor. A pinch of it produces sneezing and some smarting in the nostrils; but, when the vapour reaches the lungs, it causes a refreshing sensa- tion, which induces the patient to draw a long and deep breath. {Ann. de Therap., 1855, p. 232.) The only remaining proposition for iodine inhalation that we have seen, is the one made by M. Huett, who recommends the use of hydriodic ether. This has been employed by him, with success, in a case of phthisis with cavities at the top of the left lung. Dr. Brainard employs the vapour of iodine, with great advantage, in the treatment of indolent ulcers, first dressing the ulcer with simple cerate spread on lint, then applying over this several layers of lint in which from one to four grains of iodine have been folded, and covering the whole with oiled silk and tin foil, secured by a bandage, so as to prevent the escape of the iodine, which is vaporized by the heat of the body. {Chicago Med. Journ., Jan. I860.) In cases of poisoning by iodine, the stomach must be first evacuated, and afterwards drinks administered containing an amylaceous substance, such as flour, starch, or arrow-root. Iodine is.officinal:— I. As SIMPLE TINCTURE AND OINTMENT. Tinctura Iodinii, U. S.— Tincture of Iodine. Unguentum Iodinii, U. S.— Ointment of Iodine. II. Combined with hydrogen. Acidum Hydriodicum Dilutum, U. S.— Diluted Hydriodic Acid. III. Combined with sulphur. Sulphuris Iodidum, U. S.— Iodide of Sulphur. Unguentum Sulphuris Iodidi, U. S. — Ointment of Iodide of Sulphur. IV. Combined with metals. Arsenici Iodidum, U. S. — Iodide of Arsenic. Liquor Arsenici et Hydrargyri Iodidi, U. S. — Solution of Iodide of Arsenic and Mercury. Donovan's solution. Ferri Iodidum, Br. — Iodide of Iron. Syrupus Ferri Iodidi, U. S., Br. — Syrup of Iodide of Iron. Pilulse Ferri Iodidi, U.S.; Pilula Ferri Iodidi, Br. — Fills of Iodide of Iron. Hydrargyri Iodidum Rubrum, TJ. S., Br. — Red Iodide of Mercury. Unguentum Hydrargyri Iodidi Ilubri, Br. — Ointment of Red Iodide of Mercury. Hydrargyri Iodidum Yiride, U. S., Br. — Green Iodide of Mercury. Plumbi Iodidum, TJ. S. — Iodide of Lead. Potassii Iodidum, U. S., Br.-—Iodide of Botassium. Unguentum Potassii Iodidi, U. S., Br. — Ointment of Iodide of Bo- tassium. lodinium.—Ipecacuanha. PART I. Y. Associated with iodide of potassium. Linimentum Iodi, Br.—Liniment of Iodine. Liquor Iodinii Compositus, U. S. — Compound Solution of Iodine. Tinctura Iodinii Composita, V. S ; Tinctura Iodi, Br. — Compound Tincture of Iodine. Unguentum Iodinii Compositum, TJ.S.; Unguentum Iodi Compositum, Br. — Compound Ointment of Iodine. B. IPECACUANHA. U.S., Br. Ipecacuanha. Ipecacuan. The root of Cephaelis Ipecacuanha. U. S. The root, dried. Br. Ipecacuanha, Brechwurzel, Ipecacuanha, Germ.; Ipecacuana, Ital., Span. The term ipecacuanha, derived from the language of the aborigines of Brazil, has been applied to various emetic roots of South American origin.* The U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias recognise only that of Cephaelis Ipecacuanha; and no other is known by the name in the shops of this country. Our chief attention will, therefore, be confined to this root, and the plant which yields it; but, as others are employed in South America, are occasionally exported, and may pos- sibly reach our markets mingled with the genuine drug, we shall, in a note, give a succinct account of those which have attracted most attention. The botanical character of the ipecacuanha plant was long unknown. Pison and Marcgrav, who were the first to treat of this medicine, in their work on the Natural History of Brazil, published at Amsterdam, A. D. 1648, described in general terms two plants; one producing a whitish root, distinguished by the name of white ipecacuanha, the other, a brown root, which answers in their de- scription precisely to the officinal drug. But their account was not sufficiently definite to enable botanists to decide upon the character of the plants. The medicine was generally thought to be derived from a species of Viola, which Linmeus designated as V. Ipecacuanha. Opinion afterwards turned in favour of a plant, sent to Linnaeus by Mutis from New Granada, as affording the ipecacuanha of that country and of Peru. This was described in the Supple- menturn of the younger Linnaeus, A. D. 1781, under the name of Pyschotrig. emetica, and was long erroneously considered as the source of the true ipeca- cuanha. Dr. Gomez, of Lisbon, was the first who accurately described and figured the genuine plant, which he had seen in Brazil, and specimens of which he took with him to Portugal; but Brotero, professor of Botany at Coimbra, with whom he had left specimens, having drawn up a description, and inserted it with a figure in the Linnaean Transactions without acknowledgment, enjoyed for a time the credit due to his countryman. In the paper of Brotero the plant is named Gallicocca Ipecacuanha; but the term Callicocca, having been applied by Sehreber, without sufficient reason, to the genus already established and named, has been universally abandoned for the Cephaelis of Swartz, though this, also, it appears, is a usurpation upon the previous rights of Aublet. Cephaelis. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Rubiaceae, Juss. Cinchonaceae, Bindley. Oen. Ch. Flowers in an involucred head. Corolla tubular. Stigma two- parted. Berry two-seeded. Receptacle chaffy. Willd. Cephaelis Ipecacuanha. Richard, Hist. Ipecac, p. 21, t. i.; Martins, Spec. Mat. Med. Brazil, p. 4, t. i.; Curtis's Bot. Mag. N. S. vol. xvii. pi. 4063, A. D. 1844. — Callicocca Ipecacuanha. Brotero, Linn. Trans, vi. 137. This is a small shrubby plant, with a root from four to six inches long, about as thick as a * M. AYeddell states that the word ipecacuanha is nowhere in Brazil used to designate the Cephaelis, which is generally called poaya. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xvi. 34.) PART I. Ipecacuanha. 481 goose-quill, marked with annular rugae, simple or somewhat branched, descend- ing obliquely into the ground, and here and there sending forth slender fibrils. The stem is two or three feet long; but, being partly under ground, and often procumbent at the base, usually rises less than a foot in height. It is slender; in the lower portion leafless, smooth, brown or ash-coloured, and knotted, with radicles frequently proceeding from the knots; near the summit, pubescent, green, and furnished with leaves seldom exceeding six in number. These are opposite, petiolate, oblong-obovate, acute, entire, from three to four inches long, from one to two broad, obscurely green and somewhat rough on their upper surface, pale, downy, and veined on the under. At the insertion of each pair of leaves are deciduous stipules, embracing the stem, membranous at the base, and separated above into numerous bristle-like divisions. The flowers are very small, white, and collected to the number of eight, twelve, or more, each accompanied with a green bracte, into a semi-globular head, supported upon a round, solitary, axil- lary footstalk, and embraced by a monophyllous involucre, deeply divided into four, sometimes five or six obovate, pointed segments. The fruit is an ovate, obtuse berry, which is at first purple, but becomes almost black when ripe, and contains two small plano-convex seeds. The plant is a native of Brazil, flourishing in moist, thick, and shady woods, and abounding most within the limits of the eighth and twentieth degrees of south latitude. According to Humboldt, it grows also in New Granada. It flowers in January and February, and ripens its fruit in May. The root is usually collected during the period of flowering, though equally good at other seasons. By this practice the plant is speedily extirpated in places where it is most eagerly sought. Were the seeds allowed to ripen, it would propagate itself rapidly, and thus maintain a constant supply. Weddell, however, states that the remains of the root, often left in the ground when it is collected, serve the purpose of propagation, each fragment giving rise to a new plant. The root is collected chiefly by the Indians, who prepare it by separating it from the stem, cleaning it, and hanging it up in bundles to dry in the sun. The Brazilian mer- chants carry on a very brisk trade in this drug. According to Weddell, most of it was, at the time he wrote, A. D. 1851, collected in the interior province of Matto-Grosso, upon the upper waters of the Paraguay, where it was discovered in the year 1824. The chief places of export are Rio Janeiro, Bahia, and Per- nambuco. It is brought to the United States in large bags or bales. Properties. Genuine ipecacuanha is in pieces two or three lines thick, va- riously bent and contorted, simple or branched, consisting of an interior slender, light straw-coloured, ligneous cord, with a thick cortical covering, which pre- sents on its surface a succession of circular, unequal, prominent rings or rugae, separated by very narrow fissures, frequently extending nearly down to the central fibre. This appearance of the surface has given rise to the term annele or annulated, by which the true ipecacuanha is designated by French pharma- ceutists. The cortical part is hard, horny, and semi-transparent, breaks with a resinous fracture, and easily separates from the tougher ligneous fibre, which possesses the medicinal virtues of the root in a much inferior degree. Attached to the root is frequently a smoother and more slender portion, which is the base of the stem, and should be separated before pulverization. Pereira has met, in the English market, with distinct bales composed of these fragments of stems, with occasionally portions of the root attached. Much stress has been laid upon vhe colour of the external surface of the ipecacuanha root; and diversity in this respect has even led to the formation of distinct varieties. Thus, the epidermis is sometimes deep-brown or even blackish, sometimes reddish-brown or reddish- gray, and sometimes light-gray or ash-coloured. Hence the distinction into brown, red, and gray ipecacuanha. But these are all derived from the same pTanb'are essentially the same in properties and composition, and probably dif- 482 Ipecacuanha. PART I. fer onl> n consequence of difference in age, place of growth, or mode of desic- cation. The colours in fact are often so intermingled, that it would be impossible to decide in which variety a particular specimen should be placed. The brown is the most abundant in the packages brought to our market. The red, besides 1 he colour of its epidermis, presents a rosy tint when broken, and is said to be somewhat more bitter than the preceding variety. The grcn/jz much lighter- coloured externally, usually rather larger, with less prominent rings and wider furrows, and is still more decidedly bitter. Many years since we saw in this market bales of gray ipecacuanha, with very imperfectly developed rings, which were said to have come from Caracas. This commercial variety afterwards quite disappeared; but, under the name of Carthaqena ipecacuanha, it would seem to have been again imported into New York. (Am. Journof Fharm., xxv. 474.) When the bark in either variety is opaque, with a dull amylaceous aspect, the root is less active. As the woody part is nearly inert, and much more difficult of pulverization than the cortical, it often happens that, when the root is pow- dered, the portion last remaining in the mortar possesses scarcely any emetic power; and care should be taken to provide against any defect from this cause. The colour of the powder is a light grayish-fawn. Ipecacuanha has little smell in the aggregate state, but when powdered has a peculiar nauseous odour, which in some persons excites violent sneezing, in others dyspnoea resembling an attack of asthma. The taste is bitter, acrid, and very nauseous. Water and alcohol extract its virtues, which are injured by decoction. Its emetic property resides in a peculiar alkaline principle called enietia, discovered by Pelletier in the year 1817. The cortical portion of the brown ipecacuanha, analyzed by this chemist under the erroneous name of Psy- cholria emetica, yielded, in 100 parts, 16 of an impure salt of emetia, which was at first considered the pure emetic principle, 2 of an odorous fatty matter, 6 of wax, 10 of gum, 42 of starch, 20 of lignin, with 4 parts loss. The woody fibre was found to contain only 1T5 per cent, of the impure emetia. M. A. Richard detected in the cortical part traces of gallic acid. The bark of red ipecacuanha was found by Pelletier to contain but 14 per cent, of impure emetia. In addition to these principles, Bucholz found extractive, sugar, and resin; and Erwin Wil- ligk, afterwards, traces of a disagreeably smelling volatile oil, phosphatic salts, and a peculiar acid which he named ipgcacuanhic acid, and which had previously been mistaken for the gallic. It would seem to~beTong to the tannic acid group. (See Am. Journ. of Pliarm., xxiii. 352.) Good ipecacuanha contains about 80 per cent, of cortical and 20 of ligneous matter. Emetia. when perfectly pure, is whitish, inodorous, slightly bitter, pulverulent, unalterable in the air, very fusible, sparingly soluble in cold water and ether, more soluble in hot water, and very soluble in alcohol. It is not reddened by nitric acid, forms crystallizable salts with the mineral acids and acetic acid, is precipitated by gallic and tannic acids from its solutions, and contains nitrogen. It is, however, very difficult to procure it in this state of purity, and the propor- tion afforded by the root is exceedingly small. As originally obtained it was very impure, probably in the condition of a salt, and in this state is directed by the French Codex. Impure emetia is in transparent scales of a brownish-red colour, almost inodorous, of a bitterish acrid taste, deliquescent, very soluble in water and alcohol, insoluble in ether, precipitated from its solutions by gallic acid and the acetates of lead, but not by tartar emetic or the salts of iron. The Codex directs it to be prepared by evaporating a filtered aqueous solution of an alcoholic extract of ipecacuanha. According to the original method, it was ob- tained by treating powdered ipecacuanha with ether to remove the fatty matter, exhausting the residue with alcohol, evaporating the alcoholic solution to dry- ness, and subjecting the extract to the action of cold water, which dissolves the emetia with some free acid, and leaves the wax and other matters. To separate PART I. Ipecacuanha. 483 the acid, the watery solution is treated with carbonate of magnesia, fdtered, and then evaporated. If pure emetia is required, magnesia is used instead of the carbonate. The salt is'tliBs decomposed, and the organic alkali, being insoluble, is precipitated with the excess of the earth. The precipitate is washed with coin water, and digested in alcohol, which dissolves the emetia; the alcoholic solution is then evaporated, the residue redissolved in a dilute acid, and the alkali again precipitated by a salifiable base. To deprive it of colour it is necessary to em- ploy animal charcoal. Berzelius has obtained emetia by treating the powdered root with very dilute sulphuric acid, precipitating with magnesia, and treating the precipitate in the manner above directed. Pure emetia has at least three times the strength of the impure.* * Non-officin.al Ipecacuanhas. When ipecacuanha began to be popular in Europe, the roots of several other plants were imported and confounded with the genuine; and the name came at length to be applied to almost all emetic roots derived from America. Seve- ral of these are still occasionally met with, and retain the name originally given to them. The two most worthy of notice are the ipecacuanha of New Granada and Peru, and the white ipecacuanha of Brazil. On each of these we shall offer a few remarks. N 1. Peruvian Ipecacuanha. Striated Ipecacuanha. Black Ipecacuanha. This is the root of Psychotria emetica. formerly supposed to produce the genuine Brazilian ipecacuanha. This plant, like the Cephaelis, belongs to the class and order Pentandria Monogynia, and to the natural order Rubiaceae of Jussieu. A description of it, sent by Mutis, was published by Linnaeus, the younger, in his supplement. It has since been described in the Plant. JEquin. of Humb. and Bonpl.; and has been figured by A. Richard in his History of the Ipecacu- anhas, and by Hayne in the eighth volume of his Medical Botany published at Berlin. It is a small shrub, with a stem twelve or eighteen inches high, simple, erect, round, slightly pubescent, and furnished with opposite, oblong-lanceolate, pointed leaves, narrowed at their base into a short petiole, and accompanied with pointed stipules. The flowers are small, white, and supported in small clusters towards the end of an axillary peduncle. The plant flourishes in Peru and New Granada, and was seen by Humboldt and Bonpland growing in abundance near the river Magdalena. The dried root' is said to have been exported from Carthagena. It is cylindrical, somewhat thicker than the root of the Cephaelis, usually simple, but sometimes branched, not much contorted, wrinkled longitudinally, presenting here and there deep circular intersections, but without the annular rugae of the true ipecacuanha. The longitudinal direction of the wrinkles has given it the name of striated ipecacuanha. It consists of an internal woody cord, and an external cortical portion; but the former is usually larger in proportion to the latter than in the root of the Cephaelis. The bark is soft and easily cut with a knife, and when broken exhibits a brown, slightly resinous frac- ture. The epidermis is of a dull reddish-gray colour, which darkens with age and expo- sure, and ultimately becomes almost black. Hence the root has sometimes been called black ipecacuanha. The ligneous portion is yellowish, and perforated with numerous small holes visible by the microscope. Peruvian ipecacuanha is nearly inodorous, and has a flat taste, neither bitter nor acrid. From 100 parts Pelletier obtained 9 of impure emetia, 12 of fatty matter, with an abundance of starch, besides gum and lignin. The dose, as an emetic, is from two scruples to a drachm. 2. White Ipecacuanha. Ipecacuanha. TJndulated Ipecacuanha. This variety was noticed in the work of Pison7"'"but the vegetable whicb"produced It was not satisfactorily ascertained till a recent date. Gomez, indeed, in the memoir which he published at Lisbon, A. D. 1801, gave a figure and description of the plant; but the memoir was not generally known, and botanists remained uncertain upon the subject. By the travels of M. Saint Hilaire and Dr. Martius in Brazil, more precise information has been obtained; and the white ipecacuanha is now confidently referred to different species of Richardsonia, the Richardia of Linnaeus. R. scabra, or R. Braziliensis of Gomez, and R. are specially indicated by Martius. For the root usually called white ipecacuanha, Guibourt has proposed the name of undulated ipecacuanha, derived from the peculiar character of the surface, which presents indentations or concavities on one side, corresponding with prominences or convexities on the other, so as to give a wavy appearance to the root. It differs little in size from the genuine; is of a whitish-gray colour externally; and, when broken, pre- sents a dull-white farinaceous fracture, offering by the light of the sun shining points, which are nothing more than small grains of fecula. Like the other varieties it has a woody centre. It is inodorous and insipid, and contains, according to Pelletier, a very targe proportion of starch, with only 6 per cent, of impure emetia, and 2 of fatty mat- ter. Richard found only 3-5 parts of emetia in the hundred. It is said to be sometimes 484 Ipecacuanha. Medical Properties and Uses. Ipecacuanha is in large doses emetic, in smal- ler, diaphoretic and expectorant, and in still smaller, stimulant to the stomach, exciting appetite and facilitating digestion. In quantities not quite sufficient to vomit, it produces nausea, and frequently acts on the bowels. As an emetic it is mild but tolerably certain, and, being usually thrown from the stomach by one or two efforts, is less apt to produce dangerous effects, when taken in an over- dose, than some other substances of the same class. It is also recommended by the absence of corrosive and narcotic properties. It was employed as an emetic by the natives of Brazil, when that country was first settled by the Portuguese; but, though described in the work of Pison, it was not known in Europe till 1672, and did not come into use till some years afterwards. John Helvetius, grandfather of the famous author of that name, having been associated with a merchant who had imported a large quantity of ipecacuanha into Paris, employed it as a secret remedy, and with so much suc- cess iu dysentery and other bowel affections, that general attention was drawn to it; and the fortunate physician received from Louis XIV. a large sum of money g,nd public honours, on the condition that he should make it public. As an emetic it is peculiarly adapted, by its mildness and efficiency, to cases in which the object is merely to evacuate the stomach, or a gentle impression only is desired; and, in most other cases in which emetics are indicated, it may be ad- vantageously combined with the more energetic medicines, which it renders safer by insuring their discharge. It is especially useful where narcotic poisons have been swallowed; as, under these circumstances, it may be given in almost indefi- nite doses, with little comparative risk of injury. In dysentery it has been sup- posed to exercise peculiar powers. Asa nauseating remedy it is used in asthma, hooping-cough, and the hemorrhages; as a diaphoretic, combined with opium, in numerous diseases. (See Pulvis Ipecacuanhse Compositus.) Its expectorant properties render it useful in catarrhal and other pulmonary affections. It has been given, also, with supposed advantage, in very minute doses, in dyspepsia, and in chronic disease of the gastro-intestinal mucous membrane. Ipecacuanha is most conveniently administered, as an emetic, in the form of powder suspended in water. The dose is about twenty grains, repeated, if neces- sary, at intervals of twenty minutes till it operates. In some persons much smaller quantities prove emetic, and we have known an individual who was generally vomited by the fraction of a grain. The operation may be facilitated, and rendered milder, by draughts of warm water, or warm chamomile tea. An PART r. jnixed with the genuine ipecacuanha; but we have discovered none in the bales that we have examined. According to Martius, different species of Ionidium (Viola, Linn.) also produce what is called while ipecacuanha. The roots of all the species of Ionidium possess emetic or purga- tive properties, and some of them have been reported to be equal to the genuine ipecacu- anha. The root of I. Ipecacuanha is described by Guibourt as being six or seven inches long, as thick as a quill, somewhat tortuous, and exhibiting at the points of flexion semi- circular fissures, which give it some resemblance to the root of the Cephaelis. It is often bifurcated at both extremities, and terminates at top in a great number of small ligne- ous stalks. It is wrinkled longitudinally, and of a light yellowish-gray colour. The bark is thin, and the interior ligneous portion very thick. The root has little taste or smell. According to Pelletier, it contains, in 100 parts, 5 of an emetic substance, 35 of gnm, 1 of azotized matter, and 37 of lignin. (Hist. Ahreg. des Drogues Simples, i. 514.) The root of a species of Ionidium growing in Quito has attracted some attention as a remedy in elephantiasis, under the South American name of cuichunchulli. The plant, being considered an undescribed species by Dr. Bancroft, was named by him J. Marcuccij but Sir W. Hooker found the specimen, received from Dr. Bancroft, to be identical with the/,par- viflorum of Ventenat. Lindley thinks a specimen he received under the same name from Quito, to be the I. microphyllum of Humboldt. If useful in elephantiasis, it is so prtbablv by its emeto-purgative action. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., vii. 186 ) The reader is referred to a paper on Ipecacuanha by the late R. E. Griffith, M.D., in tha Journ of the Philad. Col. of Pharm. (iii. 181), for a moi’e extended account of the • oota have been used under that name. PART I. Ipecacuanha.—Iris Florentina. infusion of boiling water, in the proportion of two drachms to six fluidounces,, may be given in the dose of a fluidounce repeated as in the former case. For the production of nausea, the dose in substance may be two grains, repeated more or less frequently according to circumstances. As a diaphoretic it may be given in the quantity of a grain; as an alterative, in diseases of the stomach and bowels, in that of a quarter or half a grain two or three times a day. A fluid extract is officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, having been introduced at the late revision of that work. (See Extractum Ipecacuanhas Fluidum.) One flui- drachm of this preparation represents a drachm of the root. Emetia has been used on the continent of Europe as a substitute, but with no great advantage. Its operation on the stomach is apt to be more violent and continued than that of ipecacuanha; and, if given in overdoses, it may produce dangerous and even fatal consequences. From the experiments of Magendie, it appears to have a peculiar direction to the mucous membranes of the alimentary canal and the bronchial tubes. Ten grains of the impure alkali, administered to dogs, were generally found to destroy life in twenty-four hours, and the mu- cous membranes mentioned were observed to be inflamed throughout their whole extent. The same result took place when emetia was injected into the veins, or absorbed from any part of the body. The dose of impure emetia is about a grain and a half, of the pure not more than half a grain, repeated at proper intervals till it vomits. In proportional doses, it may be applied to the other purposes for which ipecacuanha is used. It will excite vomiting when applied to a blis- tered surface after the removal of the cuticle. Dr. Turnbull recommends the external use of ipecacuanha as a counter- irritant. An ointment, made with one part of the powder, one of olive oil, and two of lard, rubbed once or twice a day for a few minutes upon the skin, pro- duces a copious eruption, which continues out for many days, without pain or ulceration. (London Lancet, May, 1842.) It has, however, been found by others of little efficacy in the great majority of cases. Off. Prep. Extractum Ipecacuanhae Fluidum, U. S.; Pulvis Ipecacuanhas Com- positus, U. S.; Pulvis Ipecacuanhae cum Opio, Br.; Trochisci Ipecacuanhae, XJ. S.; Trochisci Morphiae et Ipecacuanhae, Br.; Yinum Ipecacuanhae. W IRIS FLORENTINA. U. S. Secondary. Florentine Orris. The rhizoma of Iris Florentina. U. S. Iris de Florence, Fr.; Florentinisclie Violenwurzel, Germ.; Ireos, Ital.; Lirio Florentina, Span. Iris. Sex. Syst. Triaridria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Iridaceae. Gen. Ch. Corolla six-parted; the alternate segments reflected. Stigmas petal- shaped. Willd. In all the species belonging to this genus, so far as examined, the roots are more or less acrid, and possessed of cathartic and emetic properties. In Europe, Iris foetidissima, I. Flprentina, I. Germanica, I. pseudo-acorus, and I. tube - rosa have at various times been admitted into use. Of these I. Florentina is the only one officinal in this country. Iris Florentina. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 226; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 176, t. 262. The root (rhizoma) of the Florentine Iris is perennial, horizontal, fleshy, fibrous, and covered with a brown epidermis: The leaves spring directly from the root, are sword-shaped, pointed, nerved, and shorter than the stem, which rises from the midst of them more than a foot in height, round, smooth, jointed, and bear- ing commonly two large white or bluish-white terminal flowers. The calyx is a spathe with two valves. The corolla divides into six segments or petals, oi Iris Florentina.—Iris Versicolor. PART r. which three stand erect, and the remaining three are bent backward, and bearded within at their base with yellow-tipped white hairs. The fruit is a three-celled capsule, containing many seeds. This plant is amative of Italy and other parts of the south of Europe, where it is also cultivated. The root, which is the officinal portion, is dug up in spring, and prepared for the market by the removal of its cuticle and fibres. It is brought from Leghorn in large casks. Properties. Florentine orris is in pieces of various form and size, often branched, usually about as thick as the thumb, knotty, flattened, white, heavy, of a rough though not fibrous fracture, an agreeable odour resembling that of the violet, and a bitterish, acrid taste. The acrimony is greater in the recent than in the dried root; but the peculiar smell is more decidedly developed in the latter. The pieces are brittle and easily powdered, and the powder is of a dirty- white colour. Yogel obtained from Florentine orris, gum, a brown extractive, f'ecula, a bitter and acrid fixed oil or soft resin, a volatile crystallizable oil, and vegetable fibre. According to Landerer, the acrid principle is volatile, separat- ing in the form of a stearoptene from water distilled from the root. {Arch, der Pharm., lxv. 302.) In order to preserve the root from the attacks of insects, Mr. Maisch recommends to put a little ether in the bottle in which it may be kept. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1858, p. 310.) Medical Properties. This medicine is cathartic, and in large doses emetic, and was formerly employed to a considerable extent on the continent of Europe. It is said also to be diuretic, and to have proved useful in dropsies. At present it is valued for its agreeable odour. It is occasionally chewed to conceal an offensive breath, and enters into the composition of tooth-powders. In the form of small round balls, about the size of a pea, it is used by the French for main- taining the discharge from issues, a purpose to which it is adapted by its odour, by the slight acrimony which it retains in its dried state, and by the property of swelling very much by the absorption of moisture. W. IRIS VERSICOLOR. U. S. Secondary. Blue Flag. The rhizoma of Iris versicolor. U. S. Iris. See IRIS FLORENTINA. Iris versicolor. Wiild. Sp. Plant, i. 233; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 155. This indigenous species of Iris has a perennial, fleshy, horizontal, fibrous root or rhizoma, and a stem two or three feet high, round on one side, acute on the other, and frequently branching. The leaves are sheathed at the base, sword- shaped, and striated. The flowers are from two to six in number, and are usually blue or purple, though varying much in colour. The capsule has three valves, is divided into three cells, and when mature is oblong, three-sided, writh obtuse angles, and contains numerous flat seeds. The blue flag is found in all parts of the United States, flourishing in low wet places, in meadows, and on the borders of swamps, which it serves to adorn with its large and beautiful flowers. These make their appearance in June. The root is the medicinal portion. The flowers afford a fine blue infusion, which serves as a test of acids and alkalies. The recent root is without odour, and has a nauseous, acrid taste, which is imparted to water by decoction, and still more perfectly to alcohol. The acri- mony as well as medicinal activity is impaired by age. If cut when fresh into slices, dried at the temperature of about 100°, and then powdered and L-ept in bottles excluded from the air,‘ the root retains its virtues unimpaired foi a cur siderable time. {Andrews.) PART i. Iris Versicolor.—Jalapa. 487 Blue flag possesses the cathartic, emetic, and diuretic properties common to most of its congeners. It was said by Mr. Bartram to be much esteemed by the southern Indians; and Dr. Bigelow states that he has found it efficacious as a purgative, though inconvenient from the distressing nausea and prostration which it is apt to occasion. Dr. M. H. Andrews, of Michigan, has employed it frequently as a cathartic, and found it, when combined with a grain of Cayenne pepper, or two grains of ginger, not less easy and effectual in its operation thau the ordinary more active cathartics, and preferable on account of its less disa- greeable taste. (N. Y. Journ. of Med., ix. 129.) Dr. Macbride found it useful in dropsy. It is, however, little used by the profession at large, and seldom kept in the shops. It may be given in substance, decoction, or tincture. The dose of the dried root is from ten to twenty grains. Under the unscientific name of iridin or irisin, which should be reserved for the pure active principle when discovered, the “ Eclectics” have for some time used an oleo-resiu, obtained by precipitating a tincture of the root with water, and mixing the precipitate with an equal weight of some absorbent powder, for which purpose powdered liquorice root would probably answer well. This may be given in the form of pill, in the dose of three or four grains. It is thought to unite cholagogue and diuretic with aperient properties; and a writer in the London Lancet states that he has found it to produce effects similar to those caused by a mixture of blue pill, rhubarb, and aloes. (Aug. 30, 1862, p. 239.) W. JALAPA. U. S., Br. Jalap. The root of Exogonium Purga (Bent-ham), Ipomsea Jalapa (Nutlall). U. S. Exogonium Purga. The tubers dried. Br. Jalap, Fr.; Jalappen-W urzel, Germ ; Sciarappa, Ital.; Jalapa, Span. The precise botanical origin of jalap remained long unknown. It was at first ascribed by Linnaeus to a Mirabilis, and afterwards to a new species of Con- volvulus, to which he gave the name of C. Jalapa. The correctness of the latter reference was generally admitted ; and, as the Tpnmaea macrorrhiza of Michaux, growing in Florida and Georgia, was believed to be identical with the C. Jalapa of Linn., it was thought that this valuable drug, which had been obtained ex- clusively from Mexico, might be collected within the limits of the United States. But the error of this opinion was soon demonstrated ; and it is now an admitted fact, that jalap is the product of a plant first made known to the scientific world by Dr. John It. Coxe, of Philadelphia, and described by Mr. Nuttall under the name of Ipomeea Jalapa. When this Dispensatory was first published, opinion in relation to the botanical history of the drug was unsettled, and it was deemed proper to enter at some length into the consideration of the subject; but the subsequent general admission of the views then advocated renders an equal de- gree of minuteness now unnecessary. It is sufficient to state that Dr. Coxe received living roots of jalap from Mexico in 1827, and succeeded in producing a perfect flowering plant, of which a description, by Mr. Nuttall, was published in the Am. Journ. of Med. Sci. for January, 1830; that the same plant was afterwards cultivated in France and Germany from roots transmitted to those countries from Mexico; and that one of the authors of this work has produced, from roots obtained in the vicinity of Xalapa, and sent to him by the late Dr. Marmaduke Burrough, then United States consul at Yera Cruz, luxuriant plants, which he was enabled to compare with others descended from the plaut of Dr. Coxe, and found to be identical with them. In the United States and British Pharmacopoeias, this origin of jalap is now recognised. J. II. Balfour ( Curtis’s Bot. Mag., Feb. 1847) maintains that the plant belongs to the genus Exogo- Jalapa. PART I, nium Choisy, as defined in De Candolle’s Prodromus, being distinguished from ipomsea by its exserted stamens; and this view has been taken by the framers of the British Pharmacopoeia. IroMiEA. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia. *—Nat. Ord. Convolvulaceae. Gen. Ch. Sepals five. Corolla campanulate. Stamens included. Style one. Stigma two-lobed; the lobes capitate. Ovary two-celled; cells two-seeded. Capsule two-celled. Lindley. Ipomsea Jalapa. Nuttall, Am. Journ. of Med. Sciences, v. 300; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 13, pi. 61.—Ipomsea Purga. Hayne, Darstel. und Be- schreib. &c. xii. 33 and 34; Lindley, Flor. Med. 396.—Exogonium Purga. Balfour, Curtis’s Bot. Mag., 3d ser., vol. iii. tab. 4280. The root of this plant is a roundish somewhat pear-shaped tuber, externally blackish, internally white, with long fibres proceeding from its lower part, as well as from the upper root- stalks. A tuber produced by Dr. Coxe was, in its thi£d_year, between two and three inches in diameter. The stem is round, smooth, much disposed to twist, and rises to a considerable height upon neighbouring objects, about which it twines. The leaves are heart-shaped, entire, smooth, pointed, deeply sinuated at the base, prominently veined on their under surface, and supported upon long footstalks. The lower leaves are nearly hastate, or with diverging angular points. The flowers, which are large and of a lilac-purple colour, stand upon peduncles about as long as the petioles. Each peduncle supports two, or, mor£ rarely, three flowers. The calyx is without bractes, five-leaved, obtuse, with two of the divisions external. The corolla is funnel-form. The stamens are five in number, with oblong, white, somewhat exserted anthers. The stigma is simple and capi- tate. The above description is taken from that of Mr. Nuttall, published in Dr. Coxe’s paper in the American Journal of the Med. Sciences. The jalap-plant is a native of Mexico, and derived its name from the city of Xalapa, in the state of Vera Cruz, in the neighbourhood of which it grows, at the height of about 6000 feet above the ocean. The drug is brought from the port of Vera Cruz in bags, containing usually between 100 and 200 pounds. Properties. The tuber comes either whole, or divided longitudinally into two parts, or in transverse circular slices. The entire tubers are irregularly roundish, or ovate and pointed, or pear-shaped, usually much smaller than the fist, and marked with circular or vertical incisions, made to facilitate their drying. The root is preferred in this state, as it is less apt to be defective, and is more easily distinguished from the adulterations than when sliced. A much larger proportion comes entire than formerly, indicating a greater scarcity of the older roots, which it is necessary to slice in order to dry them properly. The tuber is heavy, compact, hard, brittle, with a shining undulated fracture, exhibiting nu- merous resinous points, distinctly visible with the microscope. It is externally brown and wrinkled, internally of a grayish colour, diversified by concentric darker circles, in which the matter is denser and harder than in the intervening spaces. Jalap is always kept in the shops in the state of powder, which is of a vellowish-gray colour, and when inhaled irritates the nostrils and throat, and provokes sneezing and coughing. The odour of the root, when cut or broken, is heavy, sweetish, and rather nauseous; the taste is sweetish, somewhat acrid, and disagreeable. It yields its active properties partly to water, partly to alco- hol, and completely to diluted alcohol. M. Cadet de Gassicourt obtained from 500 parts of jalap, 24 of water, 50 of resin, 220 of gummy extract, 12-5 of feeula, 12-5 of. albumen, 145 of lignin, 16 3 of saline matters, 21 of silica, with a loss of 17 parts. Buchner and Ilerberger supposed that they had discovered a basic substance, which they called jalapin. G. A. Kayser found that the resin of jalap consists of two portions, one of which, amounting to seven parts out of ten, is hard and insoluble in ether, the other is soft and soluble in that men- struum The hard resin he named rhodeoretin, and found to be identical with PART I. Jalapa. 489 the jalapin of Buchner and Herberger. By reaction with the alkalies it is con- verted into an acid, called rhodeoretinic acid. Rhpdeoretin is slightly soluble in water, freely so in alcohol, and insoluble in ether, chloroform, or benzole; and the alcoholic solution is precipitated both by ether and water. It is dis- solved by solutions of the alkalies, more quickly if heated, and is not precipi- tated by acids, having become soluble by conversion into the acid above referred to. It purges violently in the dose of three or four grains, and is supposed to be the active principle of jalap. Mayer has confirmed and extended the obser- vations of Kayser. The formula of rhodeoretin, according to the latter chemist, is according to the former, C72IIM0.j6. (See Chem. Gaz., iii. 15, and xi. 21.) Rhodeoretin and rhodeoretinic acid are both glucosides, being con- vertible by the action of acids into glucose and a peculiar substance named rho- deoretinol. (Pelouze and Fremy.) The proportion of resin to the other ingre- dients of the root varies considerably in different specimens. According to Gerber, the root contains 7-8 per cent, of hard resin, 3'2 of soft resin, 17 '9 of extractive, 14 5 of gummy extract, 8-2 of a colouring substance which becomes red under the influence of the alkaline carbonates, 19 of uncrystallizable sugar, 15'6 of gum mixed with some saline matters, 32 of bassorin, 3'9 of albumen, 6’0 of starch, 8 2 of lignin, with some water, and various salts. For the method of obtaining the resin of jalap pure, see Resina Jalapee. Jalap is apt to be attacked by worms, which, however, are said to devour the amylaceous or softer parts, and to leave the resin; so that the worm-eaten drug is more powerfully purgative than that which is sound. Thus, out of 397 parts of the former, M. Henry obtained 72 parts of resin, while from an equal quan- tity of the latter he procured only 48 parts. Hence worm-eaten jalap should be employed for obtaining the resin, but should not be pulverized, as it would afford a powder of more than the proper strength. The drug is also liable to various adulterations, or fraudulent substitutions, which, however, can usually be detected without difficulty. Those which have attracted particular attention are mentioned in the note below.* Jalap should be rejected when it is light, * Adulterations, $c. Jalap is said to be sometimes adulterated with bryony root; but no instance of the kind has come under our notice; and the two drugs are so widely ditferent that the fraud would be instantly detected. (See Bryony in Part Third.) it is probable, however, that the adulteration which has been considered as bryony root is the mechoacan. which in Europe is sometimes called American bryony, and was formerly erroneously sup- posed to be derived from a species of Bryonia. Mechoacan is a product of Mexico, which was taken to Europe even before the introduction of jalap. The plant producing it has been conjectured to be Ipomsea macrorrhiza of Michaux, which is believed to grow in Mexico near Vera Cruz, as well as in our SoutFe’rii States, and the root of which is said to weigh, when of full size, from fifty to sixty pounds, and, according to Dr. Baldwin, has little or no purgative power. But this origin is quite uncertain. Mechoacan is in circular slices, or fragments of various shapes, white and farinaceous within, and, as in the European markets, generally destitute of bark, of which, however, portions of a yellowish colour sometimes continue to adhere. The larger slices are sometimes marked with faint con- centric striae; and upon the exterior surface are brown spots and ligneous points, left by’ the radicles after removal. (Guibourt.) Though tasteless when first taken into the mouth, it becomes after a time slightly acrid. It is very feebly purgative. We have seen flat cir- cular pieces of root, mixed with jalap, altogether answering this description, except that the cortical portion still remained, between which and the starchy parenchyma there was an evident line of division. A drug, formerly known in our markets as spurious jalap, sometimes comes mingled with the genuine, and has been imported, unmixed, in mistake for that root. It is proba- bly the same with that referred to by French writers as the product of a plant denomi- nated male jalap in Mexico, and named by M. Ledanois Convolvulus Orizabemis. from the city of Orizaba, in the neighbourhood of which it grows abundantly. In the shops of Paris the drug is called light jalap, and, in Guibourt’s Histoire des Drogues, is described under the title of fusiform jaUff. A description of it was first published in this country by Mr. D. B. Smith, in a paper Upon Ipomrna Jalapa, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (ii. 22). For an account of the plant, the reader is referred to the same journal (x. 224). The ’’ecent root is large, spindle-shaped, sometimes twenty inches in length, branched at its 490 Jalap a. PART r. of a whitish colour internally, of a dull fracture, spongy, or friable. Powders of calomel and jalap, taken on long voyages to southern climates, are said, lower extremity, yellow on its outer surface, and white and milky within. The drug, as described by Guibourt, is in circular pieces, two or three inches in diameter, or in longer and more slender sections. As we have seen it, the shape of the pieces is often such as to indicate that the root was sliced transversely, and each circular slice divided vertically into quarters. The horizontal cut surface is dark from exposure, unequal from the greater shrinking in desiccation of some parts than others, and presents the extremities of numerous fibres, which are often concentrically arranged, and run in the longitudinal direction of the root. Internally the colour is grayish, and the texture, though much less compact than that of jalap, is sometimes almost ligneous. The taste is at first slight, but after a time becomes somewhat acrid and nauseous. The root, analyzed by M. Leda- nois, yielded, in 1000 parts, 80 of resin, 256 of gummy extract, 32 of fecula, 24 of albumen, and 580 of lignin. It has cathartic properties similar to those of the true jalap, but feebler. ’ requiring to be given in a dose of from thirty to sixty grains in order to operate effectively. The proportion of resin, which in both is the purgative principle, is considerably less in the male jalap; while that of lignin, which is wholly inert, is about double. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiv. 166.) This resin, according to G. A. Kayser, differs from jalap resin in con- sisting of only one principle, which is entirely soluble in ether. But both resins are dis- tinguished from all others by being gradually dissolved in concentrated sulphuric acid, and deposited again after some hours in a soft state. (Chem. Gaz., No. 53, from Liebig’s Annalen.) The resin of C. Orizabensis, which has been unfortunately named jalapin by Mayer, is, according to that chemist, changed by boiling with baryta-water into an acid called jalapic acid; and both jalapin and'jalapic acid are glucosides, being resolved by boiling dilute acid into glucose, and a peculiar substance which he designates as jalapinol. (See Journ. de, Pliarm., 3e ser., xxix. 123.) A false jalan was some years since brought into the United States, different from any- thing before seen in our market. It was said to have been imported from Mexico into New York in considerable quantities, and was offered for sale under the name of over- grown jalap. A specimen, brought to Philadelphia, and examined by a Committee of~tho College oi Pharmacy, presented the following characters. It was in light, entire or ver- tically sliced tubers, of different form and magnitude, spindle-shaped, ovate, and kidney- form, some as much as six inches long and three thick, others much smaller, externally somewhat wrinkled, with broad flattish light-brown ridges, and shallow darker furrows, internally grayish-white, with distant dai’ker concentric circles, sometimes uniformly amy- laceous, of a dull rough fracture, a loose texture, a slight, peculiar, and sweetish odour, and a feeble jalap-like taste. The powrder wras of a light-gray colour, and did not irritate the nostrils or throat during pulverization. The root differed from mechoacan by the absence of the marks of rootlets, and from male jalap by the want of a fibrous struc- ture. It yielded by analysis, in 100 parts, 3 of a soft and 4 of a hard and brittle resin, 17 of gummy extractive, 28 of starch and inulin, 10 of gum and albumen, 23-2 of lignin, and 14-8 of saccharine matter and salts of lime, including loss. In doses of from fifteen to twenty grains it produced no effect on the system. A similar root was described by Guibourt by the name of rose-scented jalap. It was taken to France from Mexico, mixed with genuine jalap. It as a purgative, and probably had the same origin. This spurious drug is probably the product of a Convolvulus or Ipomsea. See report by Messrs. Ellis, Duhamel, and Ecky, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xiv. 289). Two varieties of false jalap, imported into New are described by Mr. John II Currie in the N. Y. Journ. of Pharm. for Jan. 1852. The first corresponds with the root above described as that of Convolvulus Orizabensis, or male jalap, both in appearance and in the character of its resinous ingredient. The second is a tuberous root, resembling in shape, colour, and size, the butternut, or fruit of Juglans cinerea, being black or nearly so externally, dull over most of the surface but glossy in spots, with deep longitudinal in- cisions, internally yellow or yellowish-white, with a horny fracture, and upon the trans- versely cut surface marked with sparse dots, as if from delicate fibres. It contains no resin, and appears to be inert. In the numbers of the Journal de Pharmacie, &c. for Dec. 1863 (p. 477), and for March, 1864 (p. 212), three other tubers are described by M. Guibourt, which have been offered in the market for jalap; one named false jalap of New Orleans, because imported into Franco from that city, the second digitate jalap (jalap digits) from the arrangement of its component tubers, and the third radjated false-mlap (faux-jalap rayonnS) from the stellate appearance of the cut surface. Our space will not permit a particular description of these substances, which is the less important, as they are not likely to be mistaken for the true jalap by one at all acquainted with the characters of the latter; and, besides, do not appear m them- selves to possess any valuable properties. We must, therefore content e'itli referring to the original papers as above indicated. PART I. Jalap a. —Juglans. 491 when brought back, to have become consolidated, and so far chemically altered as plainly to exhibit globules of mercury. This change is ascribed by Schacht and Wackenroder to a fungous growth. (Arch, der Pharm., xxxix. 289.) Medical Properties and Uses. Jalap is an active cathartic, operating briskly and sometimes painfully upon the bowels, and producing copious watery stools. The aqueous extract purges moderately, without much griping, and is said to increase the flow of urine. The portion not taken up by water gripes severely. The watery extract obtained from jalap, previously exhausted by rectified spirit, is said to have no cathartic effect, but to operate powerfully by urine. (Duncan.) The alcoholic extract, usually called resin of jalap, purges actively, and often produces severe griping. From these facts, it would appear that the virtues of this cathartic do not depend exclusively upon any one principle. Experi- ments, however, by Mr. John C. Long, of Philadelphia, seem to show that the gummy extract, which he took in the quantity of a drachm without any effect, is inert; while the soft resin, or that soluble in ether, which was thought to have but feeble power, if any, acted powerfully as a hydragogue cathartic, in the dose of three grains. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 489.) Jalap was introduced into Europe in the latter part of the sixteenth, or beginning of the seventeenth century, and now ranks among the purgative medicines most extensively employed. It is applicable to most cases in which an active cathartic is required, and from its hydragogue powers is especially adapted to the treatment of dropsy. It is generally given in connection with other medicines, which assist or qualify its operation. In dropsical complaints it is usually combined with bitartrate of potassa; and the same mixture is much employed in the treatment of the hip disease, and scrofulous affections of other joints. With calomel it forms a cathartic compound, which has long been highly popular, in the United States, in bilious fever and other complaints attended with congestion of the liver or portal circle. In overdoses it may produce dangerous hypercatharsis. It is said to purge when applied to a wound. The dose of jalap in powder is from fifteen to thirty grains; of the resin, or alcoholic extract, from four to eight grains; of the extract of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, from ten to twenty grains. The latter extract is preferable to the alcoholic, as it more completely represents jalap itself. The dose of calomel and jalap is ten grains of each ; of bitartrate of potassa and jalap, two drachms of the former and ten or fifteen grains of the latter. Off. Prep. Extractum Jalapae; Pulvis Jalap® Compositus; Pulvis Scarn- raonii Comp., Br.; Resina Jalap®; Tinctura Jalap®. W. JUGLANS. U.jS. Butternut. The inner bark of the root of .Indians cineren, JJ. S. Juglans. Sex. Syst. Monoecia Polyandria.— Nat. Ord. Juglandacese. Gen. Gh. Male. Amentum imbricated. Calyx a scale. Corolla six-parted. Filaments four to eighteen. Female. Calyx four-cleft, superior. Corolla, four-cleft. Styles two. Drupe coriaceous, with a furrowed nut. Willd. Several products of Juglans regia, or common Eurojoean walnut, are used medicinally in Europe. The hull of the fruit has been employed as a vermifuge from the times of Hippocrates, and has been recommended in syphilis and old ulcers. The expressed oil of the fruit has been deemed efficacious against the tape-worm, and is also used as. a laxative injection. The leaves, long occasion- ally employed for various purposes both in regular and domestic practice, have been found by Professor Negrier. of Angers, in the highest degree efficacious in scrofula. He gave to children a teacupful of a pretty strong infusion, or six 492 Juglans. PART I. grains of the aqueous extract, or an equivalent dose of a syrup prepared from the extract, two, three, or four times a day; and at the same time applied a strong decoction to the ulcers, and as a collyrium when the eyes were diseased. No injury ever resulted from a long-continued use of the remedy. It appears to act as a moderately aromatic bitter and astringent. (Arch. Gen., Se serie, x. 399 and xi. 41.) They are said also to have proved useful as a topical application in malignant pustule. (Ibid.., be ser., x. 609.) The leaves of our J. nigra, or com- mon black walnut, and those of J. cinerea, the only officinal species, probably possess the same properties. Juglans cinerea. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 456; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 115; Carson, Tltust. of Med. Bot. ii. 42, pi. 86.—J. cathartica. Michaux, N. Am. Sylva, i. 160. This is an indigenous forest tree, known Tiri different sections of the country by the names of butternut, oilnut, and white wglnut. In favourable situations it attains a great size, rising sometimes fifty feet, with a trunk three or four feet in diameter at the distance of five feet from the root. The stem divides, at a short distance from the ground, into numerous nearly horizontal branches, which spread widely, and form a large tufted head. The young branches are smooth and of a grayish colour, which has given origin to the spe- cific name of the plant. The leaves are very long, and consist of seven or eight pairs of sessile leaflets, and a single petiolate leaflet at the end. These are two or three inches in length, oblong-lanceolate, rounded at the base, acuminate, finely serrate, and somewhat downy. The male and female flowers are distinct upon the same tree. The former are in large aments, four or five inches long, hanging down from the sides of the shoots of the preceding year’s growth, near their extremity. The fertile flowers are at the end of the shoots of the same spring. The germ is surmounted by two large feathery, rose-coloured stigmas. The fruit is sometimes single, suspended by a thin pliable peduncle; sometimes several are attached to the sides and extremity of the same peduncle. The drupe is oblong-oval, with a terminal projection, hairy, viscid, green in the im- mature state, but brown when ripe. It contains a hard, dark, oblong, pointed nut, with a rough, deeply and irregularly furrowed surface. The kernel is thick, oily, and pleasant to the taste. The butternut grows in Upper and Lower Canada, and throughout the whole northern, eastern, and western sections of the United States. In the Middle States, the flowers appear in May, and the fruit ripens in September. The tree, if pierced immediately before the leaves unfold, yields a richly saccharine juice, from which sugar may be obtained, nearly if not quite equal to that from the sugar maple. The wood, though neither strong nor compact, is useful for some purposes on account of its durability, and exemption from the attacks of worms. The fruit, when half-grown, is sometimes made into pickles, and, when ripe, affords in its kernel a grateful article of food. The bark is used for dyeing wool a dark-brown colour, though inferior for this purpose to that of the black walnut. It is said, when applied to the skin, to be rubefacient. The inner bark is the medicinal portion, and that of the root, being considered most efficient, is directed by the Pharmacopoeia. It should be collected in May or June. On the living tree, the inner bark, when first uncovered, is of a pure white, which becomes immediately on exposure a fine lemon colour, and ultimately changes to deep brown. It has a fibrous texture, a feeble odour, and a peculiar, bitter, somewhat acrid taste. Its medical virtues are extracted by boiling water. Dr. Bigelow could detect no resin in the bark; and the presence of tannin was not evinced by the test of gelatin, though a brownish-black colour was produced by sulphate of iron. Medical Properties and Uses. Butternut is a mild cathartic, operating with- out pain or irritation, and resembling rhubarb in the property of evacuating without debilitating the alimentary canal. It was much employed, during onr FART I. Juniperus. 493 revolutionary war, by Dr. Rush and other physicians attached to the army. It is especially applicable to cases of habitual costiveness and other bowel affections, particularly dysentery, in which it has acquired considerable reputation. In connection with calomel it has sometimes been used in our intermittent and re- mittent fevers, and other complaints attended with congestion of the abdominal viscera. It is given in the form of decoction or extract, never in substance. The extract is officinal, and is almost always preferred. The dose of it is from twenty to thirty grains as a purge, from five to ten grains as a laxative. Off. Prep. Extractum Juglandis, U. S. W. JUNIPERUS. U.S. Juniper. The fruit of Juniperus communis. U. S. Genevrier commun, Baies de Genievre, Fr.; Gemeiner Wacliholder, Wacliliolderbeeren, Germ.; Ginepro, Ital.; Enebro, Bayas de Enebro, Span. Juniperus. Sex.Syst. Dicecia Monadelphia.—Nat.Ord. Pinaceae or Coniferae. Gen. Ch. Male. Amentum ovate. Calyx a scale. Corolla none. Stamens three. Female. Calyx three-parted. Petals three. Styles three. Berry three- seeded, irregular, with the three tubercles of the calyx. Willd. Juniperus communis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 853 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 13, t. 6. This is an erect evergreen shrub, usually small, but sometimes twelve or fifteen feet high, with numerous very close branches. The leaves are narrow, longer than the fruit, entire, sharply pointed, channeled, of a deep green colour, somewhat glaucous on their upper surface, spreading, and attached to the stem or branches in threes, in a verticillate manner. The flowers are dioecious, and disposed in small, ovate, axillary, sessile, solitary aments. The fruit is formed of the fleshy coalescing scales of the ament, and contains three angular seeds. The common juniper is a native of Europe; but has been introduced into this country, in some parts of which it has become naturalized. It is not uncommon in the neighbourhood of Philadelphia. The plant described in Bigelow’s Ame- rican Medical Botany, under the title of J. communis, and very common in certain parts of New England, deserves, perhaps, to be considered a distinct species. It is a trailing shrub, seldom more than two or three feet high, spread- ing in all directions, throwing out roots from its branches, and forming beds which are often many rods in circumference. The name of J. depressa has been proposed for it. The common juniper flowers in May, but Joes not ripen its fruit till late in the following year. All parts of the plant contain a volatile oil, which imparts to them a peculiar flavour. The wood has a slight aromatic odour, and was formerly used for fumigation. A terebinthinate juice exudes from the tree and hardens on the bark. This has been erroneously considered as identical with sandarach. The peasantry in the south of France prepare a sort of tar, which they call “ h.uile de cade” from the interior reddish wood of the trunk and branches, by a distillation per descensum. (See Oil of Cade in Part Third.) The fruit and tops of juniper are the only officinal parts. The berries, as the fruit is commonly called, are sometimes collected in this country, and parcels are occasionally brought to the Philadelphia market from New Jersey. But, though equal to the European in appearance, they are inferior in strength, and are not much used. The best come from the south of Europe, particularly from Trieste and the Italian ports. They are globular, more or less shrivelled; about as large as a pea; marked with three furrows at the sum- mit, and with tubercles from the persistent calyx at the base; and covered with a glaucous bloom, beneath which they are of a shining blackish-purple colour. They contain a brownish-yellow* pulp, and three angular seeds. They have an Juniperus.—Juniperus Virginiana. PART I. agreeable somewhat aromatic odour, and a sweetish, warm, bitterish, slightly terebinthinate taste. These properties, as well as their medical virtues, they owe chiefly to a volatile oil. (See Oleum Juniperi.) The other ingredients, according to Trammsdorff, are resin, sugar, gum, wax, lignin, water, and various saline substances. The proportion of these ingredients varies according to the greater or less maturity of the berries. The volatile oil is most abundant in those which have attained their full growth and are still green, or in those which are on the point of ripening. In the latter, Trommsdorff found one per cent, of the oil. In those perfectly ripe it has been partly changed into resin, and in those quite black, completely so.* The berries impart their virtues to water and alcohol. They are very largely consumed in the preparation of gin. The tops of juniper were formerly directed by the Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges. Their odour is balsamic, their taste resinous and bitterish, and they possess similar virtues with the berries. Medica,l Properties and Uses. Juniper berries are gently stimulant and diuretic, imparting to the ufine the smell of violets, and producing occasionally, when largely taken, disagreeable irritation in the urinary passages. They are chiefly used as an adjuvant to more powerful diuretics in dropsical complaints; but have been recommended also in scorbutic and cutaneous diseases, catarrh of the bladder, and atonic conditions of the alimentary canal and uterus. They may be given in substance, triturated with sugar, in the dose of one or two drachms three or four times a day. But the infusion is more convenient. It is prepared by macerating an ounce of the bruised berries in a pint of boiling water, the whole of which may be taken in the course of twenty-four hours. Extracts are prepared from the berries, both bruised and unbruised, and given in the dose of one or two drachms; but, in consequence of the evaporation of the essential oil, they are probably not stronger than the berries in substance. Off. Prep. Iufusum Juniperi, U.S.; Oleum Juniperi. W. JUNIPERUS VIRGINIAN A. U.S. Secondary. Red Cedar. The tops of Juniperus Virginiana. U. S. Juniperus. See JUNIPERUS. JiuLip&cus PAxginiana. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 853; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 49; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. iii. 221. This species of Juniper, commonly called red cedar,Is an evergreen tree of slow growth, seldom very large, though sometimes rising forty or fifty feet, with a stem more than a foot in diameter. It has numerous very close branches, which, in the young tree, spread out horizontally near the ground; but, as the tree advances, the lower branches slowly decay, leaving the trunk irregular with knots and crevices. The leaves are very small, fleshy, ovate, concave, pointed, glandular on their outer surface, * Franz Steer of Casliau, in a more recent analysis, found the sugar to be glucose, and, besides the principles discovered by TrommsdorfF, obtained pectin, malic acid, and a peculiar resin-like substance, which he names juniverin. This is black, with a yellow tint in thin layers by transmitted light, brittle, easily pulverizable, tasteless, insoluble in water and ether, but soluble in alcohol, and without acid or alkaline reaction. A sin- gular property is that, when rubbed with a little water, it changes into a yellow powder, which is perfectly soluble in 66 parts of water, and has in solution an unpleasant bitter taste. It is obtained by distilling a tincture of the berries until nearly all the alcohol has passed over, pouring the residue while hot into a vessel, in which it deposits a gum-resin on cooling, decanting the clear liquid and reducing it with a gentle heat to a small volume, and allowing it to stand. A yellow powder separates, resembling powdered rhubarb, which disappears by further evaporation, and is followed by resinous drops, which, ieparated and washed, constitute the substance in question. (Chem. Cent. Blatt, Dec. 31, 1856, p. 961 ) TART I. Juniperus Virginiana.—Kino. 495 ternate or in pairs, and closely imbricated. Those of the young shoots are often much longer and spreading. The leaves closely invest the extreme twigs, in- creasing with their growth, till ultimately lost in the encroachments of the bark “The barren flowers are in oblong aments, formed by peltate scales with the anthers concealed within them. The fertile flowers have a proper perianth, which coalesces with the germ, and forms a small, roundish berry, with two or three seeds, covered on its outer surface with a bright blue powder.” {Bigelow.) The red cedar grows in all latitudes of the United States, from Burlington, in Vermont, to the Gulf of Mexico; but it is most abundant and vigorous in the southern section. The interior wood is of a reddish colour, and highly valuable on account of its great durability. Small excrescences, which are sometimes found on the branches of the tree, are popularly used as an anthelmintic, under the name of cedar apples, in the dose of from ten to twenty grains three times a day. The tops~or leaves only are officinal. They have a peculiar not unpleasant odour, and a strong, bitterish, somewhat pungent taste. These properties reside chiefly in a volatile oil, and are readily imparted to alcohol. Tiie leaves, analyzed by Mr. Wm. J. Jenks, were found to contain volatile oil, gum, tannic acid, albumen, bitter extractive, resin, chloro- phyll, fixed oil, lime, and lignin. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 285.) They bear a close resemblance to the leaves of Juniyerus Sabina, from which they can be certainly distinguished only by the difference oFodour. Medical Properties and Uses. The resemblance of red cedar to savine is said also to extend to their medical properties; the former being considered, like the latter, stimulant, emmenagogue, diuretic, and, under certain circum- stances, diaphoretic. It is, however, much less energetic; and, though advan- tage may, as has been asserted, have accrued from it in amenorrhoea, chronic rheumatism, and dropsy, it has not acquired the confidence of the profession generally. Externally applied it acts as an irritant; and an ointment, prepared by boiling the fresh leaves for a short time in twice their weight of lard, with the addition of a little wax, is employed as a substitute for savine cerate in maintaining a purulent discharge from blistered surfaces. Sometimes the dried leaves in powder are mixed with six times their weight of resin cerate, and used for a similar purpose. But neither of these preparations is as effectual as the analogous preparation of savine.* W KINO. U.S.,Br. Kino. The inspissated juice of Pterocarpus Marsupium. and of other plants. U. S. Pterocarpus Marsupium. The juice obtained' from incisions in the trunk, inspis- sated. Br. Kino, Fr., Germ., Ital.; Quino, Span. The term kino was originally applied to a vegetable extract or inspissated juice, taken to London from the western coast of Africa, and introduced to the * In the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal (xl. 469), several cases of poisoning are re- corded by Dr. S. C. Watt, of Gouverneur, New York, resulting from the use of “cedar oil” which we presume to be the volatile oil procured by distillation from the red cedarTThough no information on that point is given. It appears that this oil has the reputation of pro- ducing abortion, and was taken, in three of the cases described, with a view to this effect. In one instance a fluidrachm was taken, in another a fluidounce, and in both of these cases recovery took place. Two of the cases were fatal. The symptoms were burning in the stomach, sometimes vomiting, violent convulsions, coma, and a very slow pulse. The cperation of the poison was mainly on the brain. No abortive effect was experienced in either case. The stomach, on examination after death, showed marks of inflammation, but not violent.—Note to tke ninth edition. 496 Kino. PART I. notice of the profession by Dr. Fothergill. Vegetable products obtained from various other parts of the world, resembling kino in appearance and properties, afterwards received the same name; and much confusion and uncertainty have existed, and in some degree still exist, in relation to the botanical and commer- cial history of the drug. We shall first give an account of the general properties of the medicines denominated kino, and then treat of the several varieties. General Properties. Kino, as found in the shops, is usually in small, irre- gular, angular, shining fragments, seldom so large as a pea, of a dark reddish- brown or blackish colour, very brittle, easily pulverizable, and affording a red- dish powder, much lighter coloured than the drug in its aggregate state. If in large masses, it may be reduced without difficulty into these minute fragments. It is without odour, aud has a bitterish, highly astringent taste, with a somewhat sweetish after-taste. It burns with little flame, and does not soften with heat. It imparts its virtues and a deep-red colour to water and alcohol. Cold water forms with it a clear infusion. Boiling water dissolves it more largely; and the saturated decoction becomes turbid on cooling, and deposits a reddish sediment The tincture is not disturbed by water. When long kept it often gelatinizes, and loses its astringency. (See Tinctura Kino.) Kino has been supposed to consist chiefly of a modification of tannic acid or tannin, with extractive, gum, and sometimes probably a little resin ; but we need a careful analysis of the dif- ferent well-ascertained varieties. The aqueous solution is precipitated by gelatin, the soluble salts of iron, silver, lead, and antimony, bichloride of mercury, and sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acids. The precipitate with iron is of an olive or greenish-black colour. The alkalies favour the solubility of kino in water, but essentially change its nature, and destroy its astringency. 1. East India Kino. This is the variety at present probably most used, and most highly esteemed, and the only one recognised by the British Pharmaco- poeia. Its origin was long unknown. It is now ascertained, through the united researches of Drs. Pereira, lloyle, Wight, and others, to be the product of Ptero- carpus Marsupium, a lofty tree, growing upon the mountains of the Malabar coast of Hindostan. Kino is the juice of the tree, extracted through longitudinal incisions in the bark, and afterwards dried in the sun. Upon drying it breaks into small fragments, and is put into wooden boxes for exportation. It is collected near Tellicherry, and exported from Bombay. It is sometimes imported into this country directly from the East Indies, but more commonly from London. From a communication in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, by the Rev. F. Mason, it appears that kino is also collected in the Tenasserim provinces, in Fur- ther India, and has been exported from Maulmain to Europe. It is produced by a tree called Pa-douk, which is supposed to be a species of Pterocarpus; but its precise character was not certainly known. (Aw. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 134.) Dr. Christison has subsequently recognised, in a description of this tree furnished to him by Mr. Begbie, of Maulmain, the precise characters of Pterocarpus Mar- supium; so that this kino has the same origin with that from Malabar. East India kino is in small, angular, glistening fragments, of a uniform con- sistence, appearing as if formed by the breaking down of larger masses. The larger fragments are opaque and nearly black; but minute splinters are some- times translucent, and of a deep garnet redness when viewed by transmitted light. This variety of kino is very brittle, readily breaking between the fingers, and easily pulverized, affording a dark-reddish powder, a portion of which, re- sulting from the mutual attrition of the fragments, is often found interspersed among them. When chewed, it softens in the mouth, adheres somewhat to the teeth, and tinges the saliva of a blood-red colour. In odour, taste, and chem- ical relations, it corresponds with the account already given of kino in general. According to Vauqueliu, it contains 75 per cent, of tannin and peculiar extrac- tive, 24 of red gum, and 1 of insoluble matter. But new views have been ad- PART I. Kino. 497 vanced as to its composition. When kino is boiled jn water, the decoction deposits on cooling a bright-red substance; and a similar deposition takes place when a cold filtered aqueous solution is long exposed with a broad surface to the air. Dr. Gerding considers this deposit as the result of the combination of oxygen with kino-tannic acid, and calls it kino-red. (Ghent. Gaz., ix. 260, from Liebig’s Annalen.) Hennig, who has examiTnecTEaist India kino with some care, considers this kino-red as a colouring matter in intimate combination with the tannic acid, which he is disposed to think identical in its pure state with the tan- nic acid of galls; and he extends the same views to the other forms of this astrin- gent principle which give greenish precipitates with the salts of sesquioxide of iron, and which are generally believed to be somewhat different as they occur in different plants. Finding this red colouring matter to possess acid properties, he has named it kinoic acid. According to Hennig, kino consists of tannic acid with a trace of gallic acid7kinoic acid, pectin, ulraic acid, and inorganic salts with excess of earthy bases. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 544.) 2. WesLjndia or Jamaica Kino. This is believed to be the product of the Coccoloba umferdfor sea-sidefirape, a tree twenty feet or more in height, bear- ing beautiful broad shinfng leaves, and large bunches of purple berries, to which it owes its vernacular name. It grows in the West Indies and neighbouring parts of the continent. The kino is said to be obtained by evaporating a de- coction of the wood and bark, which are very astringent. Many years since, a thick reddish-brown liquid was imported into Philadelphia from the West Indies, which, when dried by exposure to the air in shallow vessels or by heat, afforded an extract having all the properties of kino, for which it was sold by the druggists. This has been long exhausted; but some years since, a consid- erable quantity of West India kino was brought into this market, which may still enter into the consumption of the country. It was contained in large gourds, into which it was evidently poured while in a liquid or semi-liquid state, and then allowed to harden. We have specimens of this kino in our possession. When taken from the gourd, it breaks into fragments of various sizes, upon an average about as large as.a hazelnut, and having some tendency to the rect- angular form. The consistence of these fragments is uniform, their surface smooth and shining, and their colour a dark reddish-brown, approaching to black. They are, however, not so glistening, nor so black as the East India kino. In mass they are quite opaque, but in thin splinters are translucent and of a ruby redness. They are readily broken by the fingers into smaller frag- ments, are easily pulverized, and yield a dull-reddish powder, considerably lighter-coloured than that of the former variety. The West India kino is with- out odour, and has a very astringent, bitterish taste, with a scarcely observable sweetish after-taste. It adheres to the teeth when chewed, though rather less than the East India variety, and colours the saliva red. The solubility of Ja- maica kino was very carefully examined, at our request, by Dr. Robert Bridges* of this city, who found that cold water dissolved 89 per cent., and ordinary of- ficinal alcohol 94 per cent. The portion dissolved by alcohol and not by water was probably of a resinous nature; as it appeared to be viscid, and very much impeded the filtration of the watery solution. Considering the nature of this substance, the form of kino in which it was found is probably, like that from the East Indies, an inspissated juice. Guibourt, who states that Jamaica kino is but slightly dissolved by cold water, must have operated on a different product. 3. South American Kino.— Caracas .Kino. In 1839, when the fourth edition of this Dispensatory was publishedTan astringent extract was described, which had recently been introduced into our market, derived, as we were informed, from Caracas, and known by that name to the druggists. Since that period it has come much more extensively into use. It is probably the same as thafi de- scribed by Guibourt, in the last edition of his History of Drugs, as the kino of 498 Kino. PART I. Columbia. As imported, this variety of kino is in large masses, some weighing several pounds, covered with thin leaves, or exhibiting marks of leaves upon their unbroken surface, externally very dark, and internally of a deep reddish- brown or dark port-wine colour. It is opaque in the mass, but translucent in thin splinters, very brittle, and of a fracture always shining, but in some masses wholly rough and irregular, in others rough only in the interior, while the outer portion, for an inch or two in depth, breaks with a rather smooth and uniform surface, like that of the West India kino. This outer portion is easily broken into fine angular fragments, while the interior crumbles quite irregularly. Some of the masses are very impure, containing pieces of bark, wood, leaves, &c.; others are more homogeneous, and almost free from impurities. The masses are broken up by means of a mill so as to resemble East India kino, from which, however, this variety differs in being more irregular, less sharply angular, more powdery, and less black. On comparing the finer and more angular portions of the masses with the West India kino, we were strongly struck with their re- semblance ; and in fact could discover no difference between the two varieties either in colour, lustre, taste, the colour of th§ powder, or other sensible pro- perty. South American kino was found by Dr. Bridges to yield 93 5 per cent, to cold water, and 93 per cent, to alcohol; so that, while it has almost the same solubility as Jamaica kino in alcohol, it is somewhat more soluble in cold water. The aqueous solution, in this case, was not embarrassed by the adhesive matter which impeded the filtration in the former variety; and the want of a minute proportion of resinous matter in the South American kino is the only difference we have discovered between the two drugs. It is not improbable that they are derived from the same plant; and there is no difficulty in supposing that this may be the Coccoloba uvifera, as that tree grows as well upon the continent as in the islands. 4. African Kino. The original kino employed by Dr. Fothergill was known to be the produce of a tree growing in Senegal, and upon the banks of the Gambia, on the western coast of Africa; but the precise character of the tree was not ascertained until a specimen, sent home by Mungo Park during his last journey, enabled the English botanists to decide that it was the Pterocarpus erinaceus of Lamarck and Poiret.* The Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges'ac- cordingly referred kino in chief to this plant; but, in so doing, overlooked the fact that not one of the varieties uow used is brought from Africa. The importation of African kino has long ceased; and the most experienced phar- macologist cannot speak with certainty of having seen a specimen. That de- scribed by Guibourt has turned out to be the Butea gum;f and the description in the first edition of Christison’s Dispensatory evidently applies to the common * A particular account of Pterocarpus erinaceus and its concrete juice, with a figure by Dr. W. F. Daniell, is contained in the Pharm. Journ. for August, 1854 (vol. xiv. p. 55). f Butea gum is the concrete juice of the Butea frondosa or Dhak-tree of Hindostan. The juice flows from natural fissures, and from wounds made in the bark of the tree, and quickly hardens. It is in small elongated tears, or irregular angular masses, less in size than a grain of barley, apparently black and opaque, but translucent and of a ruby-red colour, when examined in small fragments by transmitted light. Many of the tears have small portions of bark adhering to them. They are very brittle, and readily pulverizable, yielding a reddish powder. They are very astringent to the taste, do not adhere to the teeth when chewed, and tinge the saliva red. The relations of this product to water, alco- hol, and other chemical reagents are nearly the same as those of ordinary kino. When freed from impurities, consisting of from 15 to 25 per cent, of wood, bark, sand, &c., it contains, according to Mr. E. Solly, 73-26 per cent, of tannin, 5-05 of soluble extractive, and 21 -67 of gum and other soluble substances. It is used in the arts in India, and might undoubtedly be employed as kino in medicine. It is, however, very seldom imported into England, and never, at present, into this country. Dr. Fereira found a quantity in an old drug store in London, and sent a portion to Guibourt, from which that writer drew up his description of African kino. It is possible that the kino which formerly reached tis, full of small pieces of wood, bark, &c., may have been the Butea gum. PART I. Kino. East India kino. A specimen given to Dr. A. T. Thomson as African kino, and described in his Dispensatory, is certainly not the drug spoken of by Fothergill., but rather resembles the Butea gum. As described by Fothergill, the African kino, for which he proposed the name of gvmmi rubrum astringens Gambinense, was in lumps of about the size of those of gum SenegaTor dragon’s bloody and so similar in appearance to the latter that a good judge might easily be deceived. These lumps were hard, brittle, opaque, and almost black; but minute fragments were reddish and transparent like garnet. The drug was inodorous, of a strongly astringent and sweetish taste, aud soluble in water to the extent of about five or six parts out of seven, forming a deep-red astringent infusion. There can be little doubt that this variety of kino is a concrete juice, which exudes either spontaneously or from wounds in the bark, and hardens in the air. (Med. Obs. and Inq., i. 358.) 5. Botany Bay Kino. This is the concrete juice of Eucalyptus resinifera. or brown gum tree of New Holland, a lofty tree, belonging to the class and order Icosandria Monogynia, and the natural order Myrtacese. When the bark is wounded, the juice flows very freely, and hardens in the air. According to Mr. White, a single tree is capable of furnishing 500 pounds of kino in one year. (White's Voyage.) Duncan states that specimens of the juice have reached Great Britain in the fluid form, and that, when he first examined kino in 1802, it was common, and was the finest kind in commerce. According to information received by Dr. Thomson, its importation into Great Britain must have ceased soon after that period ( Thomson's Dispensatory, 1826, p. 506); but Dr. Pereira speaks of it as imported in boxes, and has himself met with a parcel of it from Van Diemen’s Land. Ainslie informs us that he has seen it in the markets of Hindostan. Until after the publication of the tenth edition of this Dispensa- tory, we had never met with it in this country; but a specimen was afterwards presented to us by Mr. S. W. Osgood, druggist, of New York, with the in- formation that it had been brought to that city in a vessel directly from western Australia.* * Of the specimen presented to us by Mr. Osgood, one portion is in the liquid state, con- sisting, I presume, of the juice of the tree not yet inspissated, another portion is concrete. The liquid, which is contained in a corked and sealed bottle, is of a deep reddish-brown colour, transparent and redder in very thin layers, and somewhat viscid, with a slight solid deposit. The concrete parcel consists, for the most part, of very small grains, from the size of powdery particles up to that of a pea. But with these are mixed pieces of a larger size, and two of them comparatively very large, being not less than two or three inches long by an inch, more or less, in breadth and thickness. These latter consist of a thick irregular deposit of the concrete juice on pieces of a thick, spongy, soft, and very brittle bark, which may be easily broken by the nail, and fragments of which of all sizes are mixed with the proper kino, which it resembles in colour, though somewhat lighter. In the irregular angular form of its granules, their dark reddish-brown colour and shining surface, their extreme brittleness and ready pulverization, the reddish colour of their powder, and their astringent bitterish taste, this drug corresponds closely with the mere common varieties of kino; and, if deprived of the cortical matter with which it is min- gled, might, I have no doubt, be used advantageously for the general purposes of the medicine. If the juice could be imported in quantities, and inspissated here, a pure pro- duct might be insured. Examined at our request by Professor Procter, this kino formed, when rubbed Avith water, a soft adhesive mass, and yielded to the water 67 per cent, of its weight in solution; though, as it was very slowly dissolved, more might have been taken up by the water, had the treatment been longer continued. Alcohol of sp. gr. 0-835 dis- solved the whole with the exception of 1-5 grains, which might well have been impurity: as particles of the bark may have been embedded in the fragments examined. The tincture was not precipitated by water. The watery solution gave precipitates with gelatin, lime- water, sesquichloride of iron, and sulphate of copper, and slight ones with corrosive sub- Jimate and tartar emetic.—Note to the eleventh edition. The liquid referred to in the preceding paragraph was afterwards examined by Prof Procter, with the following results. Evaporated to dryness, it yielded 13 per cent, of solid product, resembling the kino in appearance and taste. With reagents it acted like a solu- tion of the kmo, being precipitated copiously by gelatin, acetate of lead, and lime-water. 500 Kino.—Krameria. PART I. The specimen examined by Pereira was in irregular masses, many of them in the form of tears as large as those of Senegal gum. “ The purer pieces were vitreous, almost black in the mass, but transparent and of a beautiful ruby-red in small and thin fragments. Some of the pieces, however, were opaque and dull, from the intermixture of wood and other impurities.” This variety of kino is brittle, with a resinous unequal fracture, and yields a reddish-brown powder. It is infusible, without odour, of an astringent taste followed by sweetness, and when long chewed adheres to the teeth. {Duncan.) It swells up and becomes gelatinous with cold water, yielding a red solution, which gives precipitates with lime-water, gelatin, and sesquichloride of iron, but not with alcohol or tartar emetic. With rectified spirit it also becomes gelatinous, and forms a red tincture which is not precipitated by water. {Pereira.) White states that only one-sixth of this kino is soluble in water; Guibourt found it wholly soluble with the exception of foreign matters; and Dr. Thomson informs us that water at 60° dissolves more than one-half. These writers must have experimented with different substances. According to Dr. Duncan, alcohol dissolves the whole ex- cept impurities; and the tincture, with a certain proportion of water, lets fall a copious red precipitate, but with a large proportion only becomes slightly turbid. It is said that catechu, broken into small fragments, has sometimes been sold as kino. Fortunately little injury can result from the substitution, as the medical virtues of the two substauces are very nearly the same. Medical Properties and Uses. Kino is powerfully astringent, and in this country is much used for the suppression of morbid discharges. In diarrhoea, not attended with febrile excitement or inflammation, it is often an excellent adjunct to opium and the absorbent medicines, and is a favourite addition to the chalk mixture. It is also used in chronic dysentery when astringents are admissible; in leucorrhcea and diabetes; and in passive hemorrhages, particu- larly that from the uterus. It was formerly used in intermittent fever. It may be given in powder, infusion, or tincture. The dose of the powder is from ten to thirty grains. The infusion, which is a very convenient form of ad- ministration, may be made by pouring eight fluid ounces of boiling water on two drachms of the extract, and straining when’cool. Aromatics may be added, if deemed advisable. The dose is a fluidounce. The proportion of alcohol in the tincture renders it frequently an unsuitable preparation. Locally applied, kino is often productive of benefit. Its infusion is useful as an injection in leucorrhcea and obstinate gonorrhoea, and thrown up the nostrils we have found it very efficacious in suppressing epistaxis. A case of obstinate hemorrhage from a wound in the palate, after resisting various means, yielded to the application of powdered kino, which was spread thickly on lint, and pressed against the wound by the tongue. The powder is also a very useful ap- plication to indolent and flabby ulcers. Off. Prep. Pulvis Catechu Compositus, Br.; Pulvis Kino cum Opio, Br.; Tinctura Kino. W. KRAMERIA. U.S.,Br. Rhatany. The root of Krameria triandra. U. S. The root, dried. Br. Ratanhie Fr.; Ratanhiawurzel, Germ.; Ratania, Ital., Span. Krameria. Sex. Syst. Tetrandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Polygaleae, De Cand. Krameriaceae, Bindley. and yielding a greenish-black colour with the salts of sesquioxide of iron. Dr. Fereira found in Botany Bay kino a peculiar pectin-like substance, which he named eucalyptin. a characteristic property of which was that it was precipitated from the tincture hy solution of ammonia; and Prof. Procter found this juice to act similarly when treated in the same manner. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 228.)—Note to the twelfth edition PART I. Krameria. 501 Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Corolla four-petaled; the superior nectary three- parted, and inferior two-leaved. Berry dry, echinated, one-seeded. Willd. Krameria triandra. Ruiz and Pavon, Flor. Peruv. i. 61. The rhatany plant is a shjmb, having a long, much branched, spreading root, of a blackish-rec. colour; with a round, procumbent, very dark-coloured stem, divided into nu- merous branches, of which the younger are leafy aud thickly covered with soft hairs, giving them a white, silky appearance. The leaves are few, sessile, oblong- ovate, pointed, entire, presenting on both surfaces the same silky whiteness with the young branches. The flowers are lake-coloured, and stand singly on short peduncles at the axils of the upper leaves. There are only three stamens. The nectary consists of four leaflets, of which the two upper are spatulate, the lower roundish and much shorter: it does not correspond with the generic character of Willdenow, which was drawn from the Krameria Ixina. The fruit is globu- lar, of the size of a pea, surrounded by stiff reddish-brown prickles, and fur- nished with one or two seeds. The name rhatany is said to express, in the language of the Peruvian Indians, the creeping character of the plant. This species of Krameria is a native of Peru, growing in dry argillaceous and sandy places, and abundant about the city of Huanuco. It flowers at all sea- sons, but is in the height of its bloom in October and November. The root is dug up after the rains. Tschudi states that most of the rhatany now exported is obtained in the southern provinces of Peru, particularly in Arica and Islay. ( Trav. in Peru, Am. ed., p. 214.) The K. Ixina, growing in the West Indies and northern parts of South AmericaTaffords a root closely analogous in appearance and properties to that of the Peruvian species; but the latter only is officinal. This root is occasionally imported into Europe, and is known in England by the name of Savanilla rhatany, derived from the port of New Granada, from which it was imported. It has been described by Dr. Mettenheiraer of Giessen, and more recently by Dr. Schuchardt of Dresden, whose accounts of it are more particularly referred to in the note below.* We receive rhatany in pieces of various shapes and dimensions, some being simple, some more or less branched, the largest as much as an inch in thickness, derived from the main body of the root, the smallest not thicker than a small quill, consisting of the minute ramifications. The pieces are often nearly cylin- drical, and as much as two or three feet in length. Sometimes many of the * Savanilla Rhatartv. Mettenlieimer describes a .false. That ary/, which has occurred in German commerce, as follows. The body of the root is fromT to 2 inches thick and 4 long, knotty, with many branches; but these are generally separate, from 4 to 12 inches long, and nearly half an inch thick. The body resembles the genuine; but the branches are smoother, in parts somewhat shining, with deeper longitudinal furrows, and transverse fissures, which sometimes divide the bark quite around the root. They arc more undulat- ing, and, as well as the body, have more frequent wart-like elevations. The false root is more bitter than the genuine, with a thicker bark, and in mass has a dirty violet reddish- brown colour. Exteriorly the bark is of a dirty dark brownish-red, with a granular frac- ture; interiorly it is lighter coloured, with a fibrous fracture; and when cut with a knife has a shining surface. The ligneous part is pale-red, hard, of a short-fibrous fracture, and, when cut across, dull, and without the dark central point of the genuine root. The false root is inodorous. Its taste is more astringent than that of the genuine. Its source is unknown. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, March 24, 1852, p. 221.) The above description, which we leave entire, corresponds closely with that of a variety of the drug, known in English commerce as Suyanilla r hat any, given by Dr. Schuchardt of Dresden, by whom it is referred, in all probability correctly, to Krameria Ixina. In ad- dition to what has been stated above, it may be mentioned that, in this variefy”oFrhatany, the bark adheres more firmly to the root than in the genuine, that it has a more abrupt and less fibrous fracture, and consequently is more readily pulverized,_and that both the wood and bark contain a large proportion of tannic acid. [Pharm. Jonrn. and Trans., xvi. 29 and 132, from Botanische Zeitung.) A root, sent to this city from London, as a specimen of the srhatany known there as Savanilla, corresponds exactly with the description here given.— Note to the tenth and eleventh editions. Krameria. PART I. radicles are united in a common head, which is short, and from half an inch to two inches or more in diameter. The roots are composed of a dark reddish- brown, slightly fibrous, easily separable bark, and a central woody portion, less coloured, but still reddish or reddish-yellow. Rhatany is without smell, but has a bitter, very astringent, slightly sweetish taste, which is connected with its medical virtues, and is much stronger in the cortical than the ligneous part. The smallest pieces are therefore preferable, as they contain the largest propor- tion of the bark. The powder is of a reddish colour. The virtues of the root are extracted by water and alcohol, to which it imparts a deep-reddish-brown colour. From the researches of Vogel, Gmelin, Peschier, and Trommsdorff, it appears to contain tannic acid, lignin, and minute quantities of gum, starch, saccharine matter, and an acid which Peschier considered as peculiar, and named kramerw acid. The tannic acid is in three states; 1st, that of purity, in which it is without colour; 2d, that of apotheme, in which it has lost its astringency, and been rendered insoluble by the action of the air, and 3d, that of extractive, which is a soluble combination of tannin and its apotheme, and is the sub- stance which imparts to the infusion and tincture their characteristic reddish- brown colour. (Soubeiran, Journ. de Pliarm., xix. 596.) The tannic acid of rhatany (krameria-tannic or rhatania-tannic acid) is separated by treating the ethereal extract of the bark with alcohol, and evaporating the alcoholic solution. It gives a dark-green precipitate with sesquichloride of iron, a flesh- coloured one with gelatin, and none with tartar emetic. (Gmelin, Handbook, xv. 529.) The proportion of red astringent matter obtained by Vogel was 40 per cent. The mineral acids and most of the metallic salts throw down precipi- tates with the infusion, decoction, and tincture of rhatany, and are incompatible in prescription. Cold water, by means of displacement or percolation, extracts all the astrin- gency of rhatany, forming a clear deep-red infusion, which, upon careful eva- poration, yields an almost perfectly soluble extract. The root yields its virtues also to boiling water by maceration; but the resulting infusion becomes turbid upon cooling, in consequence of the deposition of apotheme taken up by the water when heated. By boiling with water a still larger proportion of the apo- theme is dissolved, and a considerable quantity of the pure tannin becomes in- soluble in cold water and medicinally inert, either by combining with the starch which is also dissolved, or by conversion into apotheme through the agency oi the atmosphere. The decoction is, therefore, an ineligible preparation, and the extract resulting from its evaporation, though greater in weight than that from the cold infusion, contains much less soluble and active matter. Alcohol dis- solves a larger proportion of the root than water; but this excess is owing to the solution of apotheme, and the alcoholic extract contains little if any more of the astringent principle than that prepared by cold water, while it is encum- bered with much inert matter. (See Extractum Krameriae.) Medical Properties and Uses. Rhatany is gently tonic and powerfully as- tringent; and may be advantageously given in chronic diarrhoea, passive hemor- rhages, especially menorrhagia, some forms of leucorrhoea, and in all those cases in which kino and catechu are beneficial. It has long been used in Peru as a remedy in bowel complaints, as a corroborant in cases of enfeebled stomach, and as a local application to spongy gums. Ruiz, one of the authors of the Peru- vian Flora, first made it known in Europe. It was not till after the yeer 1816 that it began to come into general use. It has the advantage over the astrin- gent extracts imported, that, being brought in the state of the root, it is free from adulteration, and may be prescribed with confidence. The dose of the powder is from twenty to thirty grains; but in this form the root is little used. The infusion or decoction is more convenient. The propor- tions are an ounce of the bruised or powdered root to a pint of water, and the PART I. Lactucarium. 503 dose one or two fluidounces. The extract, tincture, ana syrup are officinal, and may be given in the dose, the first of fifteen or twenty grains, the second of two or three fluidrachms, and the third of half a fluidounce. In the form of infusion tincture, and extract, rhatany has been highly recommended as a local remedy in fissure of the anus, prolapsus ani, and leucorrhoea. Off. Prep. Extractum Krameri®; Infusum Kraraeri®; Pulvis Catechu Com- positus, Br.; Syrupus Krameri®, U. S.; Tinctura Krameri®. W. LACTUCARIUM. U.S. Lactucarium. The concrete juice of Lactuca sativa. U. S. Lactuca. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia —Nat. Ord. Composite Cicho- raeese, Be Gand. Cichoraceae, Lindley. Gen. Gh. Receptacle naked. Calyx imbricated, cylindrical, with a membran- ous margin. Pappus simple, stipitate. Seed smooth. Willd. The plants of this genus yield when wounded a milky juice, to which, indeed, they owe their generic name. In some of them this juice possesses valuable narcotic properties. This is the case, among others, with L. saliva, L. virosa, and L. altissima. It was supposed that our native L. elongata, or wild lettucet might have similar virtues; and Dr. Bigelow was informed by physicians who had employed it, that it acts as an anodyne, and promotes the secretion from the skin and kidneys. But, according to M. Aubergier, who experimented with different species of Lactuca, in order to ascertain from which of them lactucarium might be most advantageously obtained, the milky juice of this plant is of a flat and sweetish taste without bitterness, contains much mannite, but no bitter prin- ciple, and is destitute of narcotic properties. (Ann.de Therap., 1843, p. 18.) The probability is that it is nearly or quite inert. Therefore, though formerly holding a place in our national Pharmacopoeia, it has been discarded. Lactuca saliva. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1523. The garden lettuce is an annual plant. The stem, which rises above two feet, is erect, round, simple below, and branching in its upper part. The lower leaves are obovate, rounded at the end, and* undulating; the upper are smaller, sessile, cordate, and toothed; both are shining, and of a yellowish-green colour. The flowers are pale-yellow, small, and disposed in an irregular terminal corymb. Before the flower-stem begins to shoot, the plant contains a bland, pellucid juice, has little taste or smell, and is much used as a salad for the table; but during the period of inflorescence it abounds in a milky juice, which readily escapes from incisions in the stem, and has been found to possess decided medicinal as well as sensible properties. The juice is more abundant in the wild than the cultivated plants. Inspissated by ex- posure to the air, it constitutes the lactucarium of our Pharmacopoeia. This was formerly recognised by all the British Pharmacopoeias; but has been discarded, we think upon insufficient grounds, in the new code. The original native country of the garden lettuce is unknown. The plant has been cultivated from time immemorial, and is now employed in all parts of the civilized world. It flourishes equally in hot and temperate latitudes. Some botanists suppose that L. virosa of the old continent is the parent of all the varieties of the cultivated plant. Lactuca virosa. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1526; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 15, t. 31. The acrid or strong-scented lettuce is biennial, with a stem from two to four feet high, erect, prickly near the base, above smooth and divided into branches. The lower leaves are large, oblong-obovate, undivided, toothed, commonly prickly on the under side of the midrib, sessile, and horizontal; the upper are smaller, clasping, and often lobed; the bractes are cordate and pointed. The Lactucarium. PART I. flon *rs are numerous, of a sulphur-yellow colour, and disposed in a panicle. The plant is a native of Europe. L. virosa is lactescent, and has a strong disagreeable smell like that of opium, and a bitterish, acrid taste. It was admitted by the late Edinburgh and Dublin Pharmacopoeias as one of the sources of lactucarium, which it is said to yield in greater quantity, and of better quality, than the garden lettuce. Mr. Schutz, of Germany, obtained only 17 grains, on the average, from a single plant of the garden lettuce, while a plant of L. virosa yielded 56 grains. The milky juice of these species of Lactuca undergoes little alteration, if con- fined in closely stopped bottles from which the air is excluded. But, when ex- posed to the air, it concretes, and assumes a brownish colour.somewhat like that of opium. The following mode of collecting it from L. sativa was recommended by Mr. Young, of Edinburgh. When the stem is about a foot high, the top is cut off, and the juice which exudes, being absorbed by cotton or a piece of sponge, is pressed out into a cup or other small vessel, and exposed till it concretes. In order to obtain all the juice which the plant is capable of affording, it is necessary to cut off five or six successive slices of the stem at short intervals, and to repeat the process two or three times a day. The juice may also be collected by the finger as it flows from the incisions. A plan proposed by Mr. Probart, of London, is to collect the milky juice on pieces of woven cotton about half a yard square, to throw these when fully charged into a vessel containing a small quantity of water, and allow the water thus impregnated to evaporate in shallow dishes at the ordinary atmospheric temperature. The lactucarium is left in the form of an extract. Another method of extracting the virtues of the lettuce has been recom- mended by Mr. Probart. When the plant begins to assume a yellow hue, the white juice concretes in the bark of the stem, and in the old leaves, which be- come very bitter. These parts, being separated, are macerated for twenty-four hours in water, then boiled for two hours; and the clear decoction, having been allowed to drain off through a sieve, is evaporated in shallow vessels by simple exposure. The resulting extract, according to Mr. Probart, has half the strength of lactucarium, and may be obtained at one-sixth of the cost. The inspissated expressed juice both of L. sativa and L. virosa was formerly officinal; but this must be exceedingly uncertain, from the variable quantify of the milky juice contained in the plant; and, as the young leaves, which contain little or none of it, were often employed, the preparation was liable to be quite inert. The Ihridace of Dr. Francis, at one time supposed to be identical with lactu- carium, is in all probability nothing more than the inspissated expressed juice of lettuce, and, indeed, is directed as such in the last French Codex; the leaves being rejected, and the stalks alone, near the flowering period, being subjected to pressure. M. Aubergier, of Clermont, in a treatise presented to the French Academy of Sciences in November, 1842, states that lactucarium, identical with that of the garden lettuce, can be abundantly and cheaply procured from Lactuca altis- jdma, which is a large plant, with a stem more than nine feet highland an inch amTaThalf in diameter. (Annuaire de Therap., 1843, p. 18.) Lactucarium, as brought from England, is in small irregular lumps, about the size of a pea or larger, of a reddish-brown colour externally, and of a nar- cotic odour and bitter taste. As prepared near Edinburgh, it is commonly in roundish, compact, and rather hard masses, weighing several ounces. (Christi- son.) A variety, known in our market as German lactucarium, is in pieces about an inch and half by an inch in thickness, four-sided, with one side convex and the three others flat, or slightly concave from shrinking, as if quarter sec- tions of a saucer-shaped cake, which had been divided before it was quite dry. The colour on the outer or convex surface is darkish-browu, that of the cut sur- PART I. Lactucarium. 505 faces light yellowish-brown. From experiments by Messrs. Parrish and Bakes, the German appears to be inferior to the English; as 44 per cent, of spiritu- ons extract was obtained from the latter, and only 36 per cent, from the for- mer, while the two extracts were about equal in their sensible properties. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1860, p. 226.) In colour, taste, and smell lactucariun: bears considerable resemblance to opium, and has sometimes been called lettuce opium. It does not attract moisture from the air. It yields nearly half its weight to water, with which it forms a deep-brown infusion. From its resemblance in sensible properties and therapeutical effects to opium, it was conjectured to contain morphia, or some analogous principle; but this conjecture has not yet been verified. Buchner, Aubergier, and Walz claim severally to have discovered the active principle, which has been named lactucin; but the substances ob- tained by these different chemists are not exactly identical in properties; and the lactucin of Walz and Aubergier is considered by M. Lenoir as owing its bitterness to impurities, separated from which it is without taste and inert. It is at least doubtful whether the constituent upon which the medical virtues of lactucarium depend has yet been isolated. We give in a note the results of various analyses of this medicine. They all relate to the lactucarium obtained from Lactuca virosa.* * Buchner published experiments on lactucarium in 1832. His results are not essen- tially different from those subsequently obtained. The principle, named by him lactuciuj is bitter, soluble in water, more soluble in alcohol, less so in ether, without alkaline reac- tion though precipitated by tannic acid, destitute of nitrogen, capable of forming with acids very soluble bitter combinations, and not easily obtained perfectly white and crys- tallized. (See Pharm. Journ., vii. 74.) Dr. Walz, in an inaugural thesis published at Heidelberg in 1839, gives the following constituents of lactucarium from I ■ virosa: viz., a peculiar principle denominated lactucin, volatile oil, a fatty matter easily dissolved by ether, and another of difficult solubility'in that fluid, a reddish-yellow tasteless resin, a greenish-yellow acrid resin, common sugar, uncrystallizable sugar, gum, pectic acid, a brown humus-like acid, a brown basic sub- stance, albumen, oxalic, citric, malic, and nitric acids, potassa, lime, and magnesia. Lac- obtained by Walz, is in yellow crystalline needles, inodorous, of a strong and durable bitter taste, easily fusible, soluble in from 60 to 80 parts of cold water, freely soluble in alcohol, less so in ether, soluble in very dilute acids, and without alkaline or acid reaction. (Annal. der Pharm., xxxii. 97.) It was obtained by treating lactucarium with alcohol acidulated with one-fifteenth of concentrated vinegar, adding an equal volume of water, precipitating by subacetate of lead, separating the excess of lead by sulphuretted hydrogen, filtering, evaporating by a gentle heat, treating the residuum by ether, and allowing the solution to evaporate. M. Aubergier, in his memoir presented to the French Academy in 1842, gives the fol- lowing as the result of his analysis:—1. a bitter crystallizable substance (l<]£tucin), soluble in alcohol and boiling water, scarcely soluble in cold water, insoluble in etHer, without alkaline reaction, and supposed to be the active principle; 2. mannite; 3. asparamide; 4. a crystallizable substance having the property of colouring green the sesquisalts of iron; 5. an electro-negative resin, combined with potassa; 6. a neuter resin; 7. ulmate of potassa; 8. cerin, myricin, pectin, and albumen; 9. oxalate, malate, nitrate, and sul- phate of potassa, chloride of potassium, phosphate of lime and magnesia, oxides of iron and manganese, and silica. The bitter principle above referred to separates from its solution in boiling water, upon cooling, in pearly scales. By the action of alkalies it loses its bitterness, which is not restored by acids. The lactescence of the fresh juice of lettuce is owing to a mixture of wax and resin, and not to caoutchouc. (Ann. de Therap., 1843, p. 19.) The bitter principle of Aubergier differs from that of Dr. Walz in being less soluble in cold water, and insoluble in ether. M. Lenoir considers the lactucin of these two chemists as impure, and denies that it is ike active principle, which,TieT Hunks, is probably an organic alkali. He obtained the .actucin pure by treating the lactucarium of L. virosa with boiling alcohol, and filtering w hile hot. It was deposited on the cooling of the liquid, and afterwards purified by fre- quent crystallization from alcohol, and treatment with animal charcoal. Thus obtained, ft was without taste or smell, and without effect upon the system. It was nearly insoluble in water, but readily dissolved by alcohol, ether, and the volatile and fixed oils. He pro- posed to name it lactucone, leaving the former name for the active principle when isolated. [Ann. de Chim. et ’3e~PKj/s.', Feb. 1847.) According to Walz, the lactucone of Lenoir is only Lactucarium. PART I. Medical Properties and Uses. That lettuce possesses soporific properties is a fact which was known to the ancients; but Dr. J. R. Coxe, of Philadelphia, enjoys the credit of having first proposed the employment of its inspissated milky juice as a medicine. From experiments with a tincture prepared from lactu- carium, Dr. Coxe obtained the same results as usually follow the administration of laudanum. Dr. Duncan, senior, of Edinburgh, afterwards paid particular attention to the subject, and, in his treatise on pulmonary consumption, recom- mended lactucarium as a substitute for opium, the anodyne properties of which it possesses, without being followed by the same injurious effects. In consequence of this recommendation, the medicine came into extensive use, and was adopted as officinal in several of the Pharmacopoeias. Dr. Francis, a French physician, also investigated the medicinal properties of the inspissated juice of lettuce According to that author, it is sedative, diminishing the rapidity of the circula- tion, and consequently the temperature of the body, without producing that dis- turbance of the functions which often follows the use of opium. The general inference which may be drawn from the recorded experience in relation to lactu- carium is, that it has, in a much inferior degree, the anodyne and calming pro- perties of opium, without its disposition to excite the circulation, to produce headache and obstinate constipation, and to derange the digestive organs. In this country the medicine is occasionally employed to allay cough, and quiet the fatty matter discovered by himself. Thieme could not divide this into the two kinds noticed by Walz as differing in their solubility in ether, and, considering it as peculiar, proposed for it the name of lacti^.e.rin— The most recent analysis of lactucarium is by Ludwig. That chemist found, in 100 parts, 48 63 of substances insoluble in water, and 51-37 of those soluble in water. Of the in- soluble matter 42-64 parts were of lactucerin or lactucone. which he obtained by first ex- hausting lactucarium with water, therTTreating the insoluble residue several times with hot alcohol of 0-833, allowing the alcoholic solution to evaporate slowly, washing the yel- lowish substance thus procured with water, and purifying it by re-solution in alcohol, and crystallization. Thus obtained, it is in snow-white aggregated granules, dissolves in strong hot alcohol which deposits it on cooling, is readily soluble in ether but insoluble in water, becomes transparent and tenacious when moderately heated in a platinum dish, melts completely at a higher heat with the escape of white odorous vapours, is incapable of saponification by caustic potassa, and is therefore not properly a fat, and in alcoholic solution faintly reddens litmus-paper. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (C40H34O5). Besides this principle there were 3-99 parts of wax, and 2-00 of lignin and of a substance which swelled in ammonia, and was insoluble in water, alcohol, and ether. Of the 51-37 parts soluble in water, 6-98 were albumen, 1-75 lactucerin held in solution by other substances, 27-68 bitter extract soluble in water and in alcohol, and 14-96 watery extract insoluble in alcohol of 0-830. The former of these extracts was found to contain a peculiar acid substance called lactucic acid, and the lactucin of Aubergier. To obtain these prin- ciples, 80 parts of lactucarium, in fine powder, were triturated with 80 of pure cold diluted sulphuric acid, and then mixed with 400 parts of alcohol of 0-851; the liquor was filtered, shaken with hydrate of lime till it yielded no precipitate with baryta-water or oxalate of potassa, then decolorized with pure animal charcoal, and evaporated; the brown tena- cious mass thus obtained (alcoholic extract) was treated with boiling water, which left behind a viscid substance; the aqueous solution was treated with animal charcoal, and on being evaporated yielded a mixture of lactucic acid and lactucin ; these were separated by dissolving the mixture in boiling water, which on cooling deposited the latter in white crystalline scales, and gave up the former on subsequent evaporation. Lactucic ac\d is of difficult crystallization, light-yellow, strongly bitter, without sour taste7”oF an acid '•eaction, and readily soluble in alcohol and water. It has as much claim as any other discovered substance to be considered the active principle of lactucarium. Lactucin, puri- fied by animal charcoal, is in white pearly scales, the solution of which exhibits no reac- tion with subacetate of lead, or solution of iodine. It is dissolved without change of colour by concentrated sulphuric acid. Besides the above ingredients, Ludwig found also in lactucarium a substance resembling mannite, oxalic acid, another organic acid not well de- termined, a soft resin, potassa, magnesia, and oxide of iron. Distilled with diluted sulphuric acid, it gave an acid product smelling like lactucarium, which, saturated with carbonate of lime, and again distilled with bisulphate of potassa, yielded an acid fluid haring the odour of valerian. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, June, 1847, p. 438, from Arch, der Pharm., A. i and 129. See also Am. Journ. of Pharm., xx. 57.)—Note to the eighth edition. part I. Lactucarium. —Lappa. 507 nervous irritation. It may be given in all cases in which, while opium is indi- cated in reference to its anodyne or soothing influence, it cannot be administered from idiosyncrasy of the patient. It is, however, very uncertain. The dose i? from five to fifteen or twenty grains. An alcoholic extract would be a good preparation. It may be given in the dose of from two to five grams. A syrup is directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Syrupus Lactucarii, Part II.)* Water distilled from lettuce (eau de laitue) is used in France as a mild seda- tive, in the quantity of from two to four ounces. The fresh leaves boiled in water are sometimes employed in the shape of cataplasm. It is said that in Egypt a mild oil is derived from the seeds, fit for culinary use. The extract or inspissated expressed juice of L. virosa is a sedative narcotic, said also to be gently laxative, powerfully diuretic, and somewhat diaphoretic. It is employed in Europe, particularly in Germany, in the treatment of dropsy, and is especially recommended in cases attended with visceral obstruction. It is usually, however, combined with squill, digitalis, or some other diuretic; and it is not easy to decide how much of the effect is justly ascribable to the lettuce. The medicine is never used in this country. The dose is eight or ten grains, which may be gradually increased to a scruple or more. Lactuca Scariola, another European species, possesses similar properties, and is used for the same purposes. Off. Prep. Syrupus Lactucarii, TJ. S. W. LAPPA. U. S. Secondary. Burdock. The root of Lappa minor. U. S. Bardane, Fr.; Gemeine Klette, Qerm.; Bardana, Ital., Span. Arctium. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia jEqualis.— Nat. Ord. Composite Cina- rese, De Cand. Cynaracese, Lindley. Gen. Gh. Receptacle chaffy. Calyx globular; the scales at the apex with inverted hooks. Seed-down bristly, chaffy. Willd. Arctium Lappa. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1631; Woodv. Med. Rot. p. 32, t. 13. —Lappa major. De Cand. Prodrom. vi. 661. Burdock is biennial, with a simple spindle-shaped root, a foot or more in length, brown externally, white and spongy within, furnished with thread-like fibres, and having withered scales near the summit. The stem is succulent, pubescent, branching, and three or four feet in height, bearing very large cordate, denticulate leaves, which are green on their upper surface, whitish and downy on the under, and stand on long footstalks. The flowers are purple, globose, and in terminal panicles. The calyx consists of imbricated scales, with hooked extremities, by which they ad- here to clothes, and the coats of animals. The seed-down is rough and prickly, and the seeds quadrangular. This plant, which is the one intended in the Pharmacopoeia, is a native of * Mr. ffm. Hodgson has recommended that lactucarium should be prepared for use by freeing it from a caoutchouc-like principle, which, without possessing any medicinal vir- tues, interferes with its convenient exhibition. He recommends chloroform for this pur- pose, but lound benzole to answer better, as it removes this tenacious matter without afl'ecting the active principle. Fluid Extract of Lactucarium. Messrs. Parrish and Bakes propose a fluid extract, prepared by completely exhausting lactucarium with diluted alcohol, evaporating the tincture till each fluidounce represents a troyounce of the drug, separating the resinous matter de- posited in the course of the evaporation, rubbing this with a little strong alcohol till dis- solved, and adding the solution to the fluid extract before the entire completion of the process. Thus prepared, the fluid extract is black, of a heavy narcotic odour, and intensely bitter. Each minim of it represents a grain of the lactucarium. [Am. Journ. of Pharm May, 18Gb, p. —Note to the twelfth edition. 508 Lappa.—Lauro-cerasus. PART I. Europe, and is abundant in the United States, where it grows on the roadsides, among rubbish, and in cultivated grounds. Pursh thinks that it was introduced. The root, which should be collected in spring, loses four-fifths of its weight by drying The odour of the root is weak and unpleasant, the taste mucilaginous and sweetish, with a slight degree of bitterness and astringency. Among its con- stituents, inulin has been found by Guibourt, and sugar by Fee. The seeds are aromatic, bitterish, and somewhat acrid. Medical Properties and Uses. The root is considered aperient, diaphoretic, and diuretic, without irritating properties; and has been recommended in gouty, scorbutic, venereal, rheumatic, scrofulous, leprous, and nephritic affections. To prove effectual its use must be long continued. It is administered in the form of decoction, which may be prepared by boiling two ounces of the recent bruised root in three pints of water to two, and given in the quantity of a pint during the day. A fluid extract and syrup have also been prepared from it.* The seeds are diuretic, and have been used in the same complaints, in the form of emulsion, powder, and tincture. The dose is a drachm. Thejeaves have been employed both externally and internally in cutaneous eruptions amTulcerations. LAURO-CERASUS. Br. Cherry-laurel Leaves. Prunus Lanro-cerasus. The fresh leaves. Br. Laurier cerise, Fr.; Kirschlorbeer, Germ.; Lauro ceraso, Ital. Cerasus. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Amygdalejg. Gen. Gh. Differing from Prunus only in its fruit being destitute of bloom, with the stone round instead of acute, and the leaves when in bud folded flat, not rolled up. (Lindley, Flor. Med., 232.) Cerasus Lauro-cerasus. De Cand. Frodrom. ii. 540.—Prunus Lauro-cer- asus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 988; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 513, t. 185. This is a small evergreen tree, rising fifteen or twenty feet, with long spreading branches, which, as well as the trunk, are covered with a smooth blackish bark. The leaves, stand- ing alternately on short strong footstalks, are oval-oblong, from five to seven inches in length, acute, finely toothed, firm, coriaceous, smooth, beautifully green and shining, with oblique nerves, and yellowish glands at the base. The flowers are small, white, strongly odorous, and disposed in simple axillary racemes. The fruit is an oval drupe, very similar in shape and structure to a small black cherry. The cherry laurel is a native of Asia Minor, but has been introduced into Europe, throughout which it is cultivated both for medical use, and for the beauty of its shining evergreen foliage. Almost all parts of it are more or less impregnated with the odour, supposed to indicate the presence of hydrocyanic acid. The leaves only are officinal. In their recent and entire state they have scarcely any smell; but, when bruised, they emit the characteristic odour of the plant in a high degree. Their taste is somewhat astringent and strongly bitter, with the flavour of the peach kernel. * Fluid Extract of Burdock. This is prepared by Mr. I. J. Graham in the following man- ner. Sixteen ounces of the root, in moderately fine powder, are first moistened with diluted alcohol, and then submitted to percolation with the same menstruum until exhausted; one and a half fluidounces of the tincture which first passes being reserved. The remainder of the filtrate is evaporated, by means of a water-bath, to nine fluidounces, to which four ounces of sugar, and, after filtration, the reserved portion are added. A fluidrachm, re- presenting eighty grains of the root, may be given for a dose. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1860, p. 178.) A syrup may be prepared by mixing four fluidounces of this fluid extract with twelve fluidounces of simple syrup, and given in the dose of a —Note to the twelfth edition. part 1. Lauro-eerasus.—Lavandula. 509 By drying they lose their odour, but retain their bitterness. They yield a pecu- liar oil and hydrocyanic acid by distillation with water, which they stronglj impregnate with their flavour. One pound, avoirdupois, of the fresh leaves yields 40 5 grains of the oil. (Cent. Blatt, A. D. 1855, p. 205.) The oil resembles that of bitter almonds, for which it is said to be sometimes sold in Europe, where it lVempToyed to flavour liquors and various culinary preparations; but, as it is highly poisonous, danger may result from its careless use. It has not been determined how far the mode of production of this oil resembles that of bitter almonds. (See Amygdala Ama.ra.) Chemists have failed in obtaining amygdalin from the leaves. That the oil exists already formed, to a certain extent, in the fresh leaves, is rendered probable by the fact, stated by Winckler, that they yield it in considerable quantity when distilled without water. (Journ. de Pharm., xxv. 195.) The fresh leaves are used to flavour milk, cream, &c., and more safely than the oil; though they also are poisonous when too largel) employed. Medical Properties and Uses. The leaves of the cherry laurel possess pro- perties similar to those of hydrocyanic acid; and the water distilled from them i / much employed in various parts of Europe for the same purposes as that active medicine. But it is deteriorated by age, and, therefore, as kept in the shopa, must be of variable strength. Hence, while Hufeland directs only twenty drops for a dose every two hours, to be gradually increased to sixty drops, M. Fou- quier has administered several ounces without effect. Another source of inequality of strength must be the variable quality of the leaves, according to the time they have been kept after separation from the tree, and probably also to their age and degree of development. It is not, therefore, to be regretted that tho want of the plant in this country has prevented the general introduction of the distilled water into use. Off- Prep. Aqua Lauro-cerasi, Br. LAVANDULA. U.S. Lavender. The flowers of Lavandula vera. U. S. Lavande Fr.; Lavandelblumen. Germ.; Lavandola, Ital.; Espliego, Alhu Span. Lavandula. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Gymnospermia.—Nat Ih d. Lamiacese or Labiatae. Gen. Gh. Calyx ovate, somewhat toothed, supported by a bracte. Corolla resupine. Stamens within the tube. Willd. Lavandula vera. De Cand. Flor. Fr. Sup. p. 398. — L. Spica. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 60; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 321, t. 114. The Lavandula Spica of Lin- naeus includes two distinct species, which were considered by him merely as varie- ties of the same plant, but have been separated by subsequent botanists. Of these, the officinal plant, the narrow-leaved variety of Linnaeus, has been de- nominated by De Candolle L. vera, while the broad-leaved variety still retains the title of.L. The latter is scarcely cultivated in the United States. Common lavender is a small shrub, usually not more than two or three feet high, but sometimes as much as six feet. The stem is woody below, and covered with a brown bark; above, is divided into numerous, slender, straight, herba- ceous, pubescent, quadrangular branches, furnished with opposite, sessile, nar- row, nearly linear, entire, and green or glaucous leaves. The flowers are small, blue, and disposed in interrupted whorls around the young shoots, forming term- inal cylindrical spikes. Each whorl is accompanied with two bractes. The corolla is tubular and labiate, with the lower lip divided into three segments, the upper larger and bifid. The filaments are within the tube. 510 Lavandula.—Leptandra. PART I. The plant is a native of Southern Europe, and covers vast tracts of dry and barren land in Spain, Italy, and the south of France. It is cultivated in our gardens, and in this country flowers in August. It is said that in fields, when too thickly planted, it is apt to suffer from a disease consequent on the noxious influence of its own aroma, which is relieved by thinning the plants. {Pharm. Journ., x. 119.) All parts of it are aromatic; but the flowers only are officinal. The spikes should be cut when they begin to bloom.* Lavender flowers have a strong fragrant odour, and an aromatic, warm, bit- terish taste. They retain their fragrance long after drying. Alcohol extracts their virtues; and a volatile oil upon which their odour depends rises with that liquid in distillation. The oil may be procured separate by distilling the flowers with water. (See Oleum Lavandulae..) Hagan obtained from a pound of the fresh flowers from half a drachm to two drachms of the oil. Medical Properties and Uses. Lavender is an aromatic stimulant and tonic, esteemed useful in certain conditions of nervous debility, but seldom given in its crude state. The products obtained by its distillation are much used in per- mmery, and as adjuvants to other medicines, which they render at the same time more acceptable to the palate, and cordial to the stomach. Ciff Prep. Oleum Lavandulae; Spiritus Lavandulae, U. S. LEPTANDRA. U.S. Lepiandra. The root of Yeronica Virginica {Linn.), Leptandra Virginica {Nuttall). U. S. Leptandra. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Scrophulariaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted, segments acuminate. Corolla tubular-campanu- late, border four-iobed, a little ringent, unequal, the lower lamina narrower. Stamens and at length the pistils much exserted; filaments below, and tube of the corolla pubescent. Capsule ovate, acuminate, two-celled, many-seeded, opening at the summit. Nuttall. The genus Leptandra was separated by Nuttall from the Yeronica of Linnmus; and, though the new genus is not universally admitted, and has been rejected in the Manual of Gray, and the Flora of Chapman, yet it has in its favour the dis- tinctive character of its medical properties, and is retained here on tins and other considerations. * Leptandra Virginica. Nuttall, Genera of N. Am. Plants, i. 7 ; Rafinesque, Med. Flora, vol. ii. — Veronica Virginica, Linn.; Gray, Man. of Bot. &c. p. 290. This plant, commonly called Culver's root, or Culver's physic, is a her- baceous perennial, with a simple, erect stem, three or four feet high, smooth or downy, furnished with leaves in whorls, and terminating in a long spike of white flowers. The leaves, of which there are from four to seven in each whorl, are lanceolate, pointed, and minutely serrate, and stand on short footstalks. A va- riety was seen by Pursh with purple flowers, which was described and figured as a distinct species by Rafinesque, under the name of The plant flowers in July and August. It grows throughout the United States east of the Mississippi, affecting mountain meadows in the South, and rich woods in the North, and not unfrequently cultivated. The root is the part employed. Under the title of Veronica, it was recognised in the first and second editions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, holding a place in the secondary catalogue; was omitted in the third and fourth editions; and, so * For accounts of the cultivation of lavender at Hitchim, in England, see Pharm. Journ., Nov. 1859, p. 276, and the Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., Jan. 14, 1864, p. 481.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Leptandra. 511 rapidly had it gained favour in the intervening decennial period, that in the fifth edition it was not only readmitted with the name of Leptandra, but took a place in the primary list. Properties. The root consists of a rhizoma or root-stalk several inches in length, sometimes branched, with numerous long slender radicles. As brought dried to the shops, the rhizoma is usually broken into pieces an inch or more long, from two to four lines in thickness, either beset with the rootlets or very rough from their remains when broken, very hard and firm, and of difficult frac- ture, dark-brown externally, light-coloured and ligneous within. The rootlets are round, smooth, slender, generally broken, but, when not so, six inches or more in length, and almost black, being much darker-coloured than the caudex. The odour is feeble and not disagreeable, the taste bitterish, somewhat nauseous, and feebly acrid. Water and alcohol extract the virtues of the root. Accord- ing to Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, it contaius volatile oil, extractive, tannin, gum, resin, and a peculiar crystalline principle, to which the virtues of the medicine may be ascribed. To this principle the name of leptandrin properly belongs. Mr. Wayne obtained it by treating an infusion of the root with sub- acetate of lead, filtering, precipitating the excess of lead by carbonate of soda, filtering to separate the carbonate of lead, passing the filtered liquid through animal charcoal which absorbed all the active matter, washing the charcoal with water till the waohings began to be bitter, then treating it with boiling alcohol, and allowing the alcoholic solution to evaporate spontaneously. By dissolving the powder thus obtained in water, treating this with ether, and allowing the ether to evaporate, needle-shaped crystals were obtained, which had the bitter taste of the root. The resinous matter obtained by making a tincture of the root, and precipitating this with water, has been improperly called leptandrin, and considered the active principle. The pure resin is probably inert; and the preparation referred to owes what activity it may possess to some of the true leptandrin associated with it. Leptandrin is soluble in water, alcohol, and ether. It has not been isolated for use. (Proceedings of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1856, p. 34.) Subsequently, Mr. Wayne has obtained from the root a saccharine prin- ciple, which he found to have the properties of man nite {Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 557); and Prof. F. F. Mayer has extracted a saponaceous prin- ciple, closely resembling senegin, which he ascertained to be a glucoside. {Ibid., July, 1863, p. 298.) The chemistry, however, of leptandra needs further investi- gation. Medical Properties. The recent root \s said to act violently as a cathartic, and sometimes as an emetic. In the dried state it is much milder, but less cer- tain. The practitioners calling themselves Eclectics consider it an excellent cholagogue, and use both the impure resin, which they call leptandrin, and the root itself as a suljgtitute for mercurials. The dose of the powder is from twenty grains to a drachm; that of the impure resin referred to from two to four grains Prof Procter has prepared a fluid extract of leptandra, which probably con- tains all its virtues, and may be given as an aperient cholagogue in the dose of from twenty to sixty minims.* W. * The following is the formula referred to in the text. Moisten sixteen troyounces of the powdered root with three fluidounces of mixture consisting of two parts of alcohol by measure and one of water, pack it in a glass percolator, and pour upon it the diluted alco- hol. When a pint of the tincture has passed, set this aside in a warm place, so that it may evaporate to one-half. Continue the percolation until three pints mort are obtained, which are to be evaporated on a water-bath to a pint. To this add four ounces of sugar, and, having continued the evaporation till the liquid is reduced to half a pint, add this while hot to the reserved liquid, so as together to make a pint. (Am. Journ. of iyharm., March, 1863, p 112.;—Note to the twelfth edition. 512 Limones.—Limonis Cortex.—Limonis Succus. PART i. LIMONES. Lemons. The fruit of Citrus Limonum. Limons, Citrons, Ft.; Limonen, Citronen, Germ,.; Limoni, Ital.; Limones, Span. LIMONIS CORTEX. U.S.,Br. Lemon Peel. The rind of the fruit of Citrus Limonum. U. S. The fresh outer part of the rind of the ripe fruit. Br. " LIMONIS SUCCUS. U.S.,Br. The juice of the fruit of Citrus Limonum. U. S. The expressed juice of the ripe fruit. Br. For some general remarks on the genus Citrus, see Aurantii Cortex. Citrus medica. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1426; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 582, t. 189. ThisTree closely resembles Citrus Aurantium, before described. The leaves, however, are larger, slightly indented at the edges, and stand upon footstalks which are destitute of the winged appendages that characterize the other species. The flowers, moreover, have a purplish tinge on their outer surface, and the fruit is entirely different in appearance from the orange. There are several varieties of Citrus medica, which some botanists consider as distinct species, but which scarcely differ except in the character of their fruit. Those particularly deserv- ing of notice are the citron, lemon, and lime. 1. In the citron, C. medica of Risso, the fruit is very large, sometimes six inches in ovoidal, with a double rind, of which the outer layer is yellowish, thin, unequal, rugged, with innumera- ble vesicles filled with essential oil; the inner is white, very thick, and spongy. It is divided in the interior into nine or ten cells, filled with oblong vesicles, which contain an acid juice precisely like that of the lemon, and used for the same purposes. The rind is applied to the preparation of conserves, to which it is adapted by its thickness. The fruit is called cedrat by the French. 2. The lemon (C. medica, var. limon of Linn., Citrus Limonium of Risso) is smaller than the preceding, with a smoother and thinner rind, a pointed nipple-shaped summit, and a very juicy, acid pulp. In other respects it closely resembles the citron, to which, however, it is usually preferred in consequence of the greater abundance of its juice. 3. Thejme is still smaller than the lerqpn, with a smooth- er and thinner rind, oval, rounded at the extremities, of a pale-yellow or greenish- yellow colour, and abounding in a very acid juice, which renders it highly useful for the purposes to which the lemon is applied. It is the product of the variety C. acris of Miller. The"Cilru&.medica, like the orange-tree, is a native of Asia. It was intro- duced into Europe from Persia or Media, was first cultivated in Greece, after- wards in Italy, so early as the second century, and has now spread over the whole civilized world, being raised by artificial heat where the climate is too cold to admit of its exposure during winter to the open air. We are supplied with lemons and limes chiefly from the West Indies and the Mediterranean. Though the former of these fruits only is directed by the United States Pharmacopoeia, both kinds are employed indiscriminately for most medicinal purposes; and the lime affords a juice at least equal, in proportional quantity and acidity, to that obtained from the lemon. Lemon Juice. PART I. Limoms.—Limonis Cortex.—Limonis Succus. Properties. The exterior rind of the lemon has a fragrant odour, and & warm, aromatic, bitter taste, somewhat similar to that of the orange, though less agreeable. It contains a bitter principle, and yields, by expression or distilla tion, an essential oil, which is much used for its flavour. Both this and the rinc itself are recognised in the Pharmacopoeias. (See Oleum Limonis.) When the white spongy portion of the rind is boiled in water, and the decoction evapo- rated, crystals are deposited, of a substance called hesperidin. This is bitter, but, as it is found most largely in the spongy and comparatively tasteless part of the rind, it may be doubted whether it is entitled to be considered as the ac- tive bitter principle. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm , xxvi. 553.) Lemon peel yields its virtues to water, wine, and alcohol. The juice is the part for which the fruit is most esteemed. It is sharply acid, with a peculiar grateful flavour, and consists chiefly of citric acid, mucilage, and extractive, dissolved in water. As lemons cannot always be obtained, the juice is often kept in a separate state; but, from its liability to spontaneous decomposition, it speedily becomes unfit for medical use; and, though various means have been resorted to for its preservation, it can never be made to retain for any length of time its original flavour unaltered. The best medicinal sub- stitute for lemon juice is a solution of crystallized citric acid in water, in the proportion of about an ounce to the pint, with the addition of a little oil of lemons.* One of the most effectual methods of preserving the juice is to allow it to stand for a short time after expression, till a coagulable matter separates, then to filter, and introduce it into glass bottles, with a stratum of almond oil or other sweet oil upon its surface. It will keep still better, if the bottles con- taining the filtered juice be suffered, before being closed, to stand for fifteen minutes in a vessel of boiling water. Another mode is to add one-tenth of alcohol, and to filter. The juice may also be preserved by concentrating it either by evaporation with a gentle heat, or by exposure to a freezing temperature, which congeals the watery portion, and leaves the acid much stronger than be- fore. When used, it may be diluted to the former strength; but, though the acid properties are retained, the flavour of the juice is found to have been dete- riorated. Lemon syrup is another form in which the juice is preserved. A solution of tartaric acid in water, with the addition of a little sulphuric acid, and flavoured with the oil of lemons, has been fraudulently substituted for lemon juice, particularly as an antiscorbutic on long voyages, for which purpose it is quite useless. An application of the tests for tartaric and sulphuric acid will at once detect the fraud. Medical Properties and Uses. The rind of the lemon is sometimes used to qualify the taste and increase the power of stomachic infusions and tinctures. The juice is refrigerant, and, properly diluted, forms a refreshing and agreeable beverage in febrile and inflammatory affections. It may be given with sweetened water in the shape of lemonade, or may be added to the mildly nutritive drinks, such as gum-water, barley-water, &c., usually administered in fevers. It is also much employed in the formation of those diaphoretic preparations known by the names of neutral mixture and effervescing draught. (See Mistura Potassee Gitratis.) One of the most beneficial applications of lemon juice is to the pre- vention and cure of scurvy, for which it may be considered almost a specific. For this purpose, ships destined for long voyages should always be provided with a supply of the concentrated juice, or of crystallized citric acid with the oil of lemons. Lemon juice is sometimes prescribed in connection with opium and Peruvian bark, the effects of which it has been thought to modify favourably, by substituting the citrate of their respective alkalies for the native salts. It has * Nine drachms and a half, dissolved in a pint of water, form a solution of the average strength of lime juicp; but, where precision is not requisite, the proportion mentioned in the text is most convenient. 514 Linum.—Lini Farina. PART I. recently been employed with great supposed advantage in acute rheumatism, having been given in quantities varying from one to four fluidounces, from four to six times a day. It has been used with benefit as a local application in pru- ritus of the scrotum, and in uterine hemorrhage after delivery. Off. Prep, of the Peel. Spiritus Limonis, U. S.; Syrupus Limonis, Br.; Tinc- tura Limonis, Br. Off. Prep, of the Juice. Acidum Citricum, Br.; Mistura Potass® Citratis, U. S.; Syrupus Limonis. W. LINUM. U.S. Flaxseed. The'seed of Linum usitatissimum. U. S. Off. Syn. LINllSEMEX. Linum usitatissimum. The seeds. Br. Linseed; Grains de tin, Fr.; Leinsame, Germ.; Semi di lino, Ital.; Linaza, Span. LINI FARINA. U.S.,Br. Flaxseed Meal. Linseed Meal. The meal prepared from the seed of Linum usitatissimum. U. S. The seeds ground and deprived of their oil by expression. Br. Linum. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Pentagynia.— Not. Ord. Linacese. Gen.Ch. Calyx five-leaved. Petals five. Capsule five-valved, ten-celled. Seeds solitary. Willd. Linum usitatissimum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1533; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 565, t. 202. Common flax is an annual plant, with an erect, slender, round stem, about two feet in height, branching at top, and, like all other parts of the plant, entirely smooth. The leaves are small, lanceolate, acute, entire, of a pale-green colour, sessile, and scattered alternately over the stem and branches. The flowers are terminal, and of a delicate blue colour. The calyx is persistent, and com- posed of five ovate, sharp-pointed, three-nerved leaflets, which are membranous on their border. The petals are five, obovate, striated, minutely scalloped at their extremities, and spread into funnel-shaped blossoms. The filaments are also five, united at the base; and the germ, which is ovate, supports five slender styles, terminating in obtuse stigmas. The fruit is a globular capsule, about the size of a small pea, having the persistent calyx at the base, crowned with a sharp spine, and containing ten seeds in distinct cells. This highly valuable plant, now almost everywhere cultivated, is said by some to have been originally derived from Egypt, by others from the great elevated plain of central Asia. It flowers in June and July, and ripens its seeds in August. The seeds, and an oil expressed from them, are officinal. The seeds are oval, oblong, flattened on both sides with acute edges, some- what pointed at one end, about a line in length, smooth, glossy, brown externally, and yellowish-white within. They are inodorous, and have an oily mucilaginous taste. Meyer found in them fixed oil, wax, resin, extractive, tannin, gum, azo- tized mucilage, starch, albumen, gluten, and various salts. M. Meurein could find no starch, but detected phosphates, which had escaped the notice of Meyer. (Journ. de Pharm., 3eser., xx. 97.) Their investing coat abounds in a peculiar gummy matter or mucilage, which is readily imparted to hot water, forming a thick viscid fluid, that lets fall white flakes upon the addition of alcohol, and affords a copious dense precipitate with subacetate of lead. By Berzelius the term mucilage was applied to a proximate vegetable principle, distinguished from gum by being insoluble in cold, and but slightly soluble iu boiling water, K1RT I. Lini Farina.—Lithise Carhonas. in which it swells up and forms a mucilaginous, viscid body, which loses its water when placed upon filtering paper, or other porous substance, and contracts like starch in the gelatinous state. The name, however, is unfortunate ; as it is gene- rally applied to the solution of gum, and must inevitably lead to confusion. Nor* is it strictly a distinct proximate principle ; as it embraces a number of different bodies, such as bassorin, cerasin, &c. According to Guerin, the mucilage of (lax- seed, obtained at a temperature of from 120° to 140°, and evaporated to dryness, by means of a salt-water bath, contains, in 100 parts, 52'70 of a principle soluble in cold water, 29-89 of a principle insoluble in that liquid, and 10-30 of watti, and yields 711 per cent, of ashes. The soluble part he believes to be arabiu or pure gum; the insoluble he found not to afford mucic acid with the nitric, and, therefore, to differ from both bassorin and cerasin. There was also a small pro- portion of azotized matter which he did not isolate. {Ann. de Chim. et de Phys., xlix. 263.) Vauquelin found free acetic acid, silica, and various salts of potassa and lime. Meurein discovered in the mucilage extracted by cold water, albumen, and a very small proportion of an oleo-resin, which resides in the coats of the seeds, and to which they owe their peculiar odour and taste. The interior of the seed, or nucleus, is rich in a peculiar oil, which is separated by expression, and extensively employed in the arts. (See Oleum Lini) The ground seeds are kept in the shops under the name of flaxseed meal. This is of a dark-gray colour, highly oleaginous, and when mixed with hot water forms a soft adhesive mass, much employed for luting by practical chemists. The cake remaining after the expression of the oil, usually called oil-cake, still retains the mucilaginous matter of the envelope, and affords a nutritious food for cattle. This is the Lini Farina of the British Pharmacopoeia. Flaxseed is sometimes accidentally or fraudulently mixed with other seeds, especially of plants growing among the flax. We have seen a parcel containing a considerable proportion of the seeds of a species of garlic.* Medical Properties and Uses. Flaxseed is demulcent and emollient. The mucilage obtained by infusing the entire seeds in boiling water, in the propor- tion of half an ounce to the pint, is much and very advantageously employed in catarrh, dysentery, nephritic and calculous complaints, strangury, and other inflammatory affections of the mucous membrane of the lungs, intestines, and urinary passages. By decoction water extracts also a portion of the oleaginous matter, which renders the mucilage less fit for administration by the mouth, but superior as a laxative enema. The meal mixed with hot water forms an excel- lent emollient poultice. Off. Prep, of the Seeds. Infusum Lini, Br.; Infusum Lini Compositum, U. S. Off. Prep, of the Meal. Cataplasma Carbonis, Br.; Catap. Conii, Br.; Catap. Lini, Br.; Sinapis, Br.; Catap. Soclae Chlorinatae, Br. W. CARBONAS. U. S., Br. Carbonate of Lithia. “A white powder, sparingly soluble in water, and having a feeble alkaline re- action. It dissolves with effervescence in dilute sulphuric acid, and forms a freely soluble salt. It imparts to the flame of burning alcohol a carmine-red colour. ” U. S. * Light-coloured Flaxseed. A variety of flax has recently originated, and is now largely cultivaTed in OhioTtEe seecls of which, instead of having the brown colour of ordinary flax seed, are of a greenish-yellow, and the flower white instead of blue. According to informa- tion obtained by Mr. E. L. Wayne, of Cincinnati, the plant is more productive than the common flax; and the seeds are preferred by some in the manufacture of oil. Professor 1’rocter states that, so far as he could judge from a somewhat superficial examination, thej differ from the common seeds chemically only in the absence of the brown colouring mat- ter [ArH. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 493.)—Note to the eleventh edition. 516 Lithise Carbonas. PART I. This salt has for the first time been made officinal in the recent editions of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, in which it is placed in the Materia Medica list, as an article to be obtained from the manufacturer. The alkali lithia, so far as has yet been ascertained, is rare in nature; for though extensively diffused, it exists but in very small proportion, except in a few scarce minerals. It was discovered by Arfwedson in 1811, in certain minerals from the iron mines of Uto'n, as the petalite, iriphane, and a variety of tourmaline. (Berzelius.) It has since been found in other minerals, as the lepidolite, zpodumene, amblygonite, mica, &c., and in numerous mineral waters, as those of Carlsbad, Pyrmont, Kissingen, Kreuznach, Aix-la-Chapelle, Yichy, &c., in which it exists generally as a car- bonate or bicarbonate. By the spectrum analysis, it has been detected in the waters of the Atlantic and the Thames, the ashes of plants grown on a granite soil, and even in milk and human blood. In the mother-waters of tartaric acid, in the factories, it has been found in a proportion to justify extraction. It has been most largely obtained from a phosphatic triplnjlene, found in Bavaria, in which it existed as a phosphate; but this source is said to be exhausted. There are several methods of extracting lithia, from the minerals containing it, an account of which may be seen in Gmelin’s Handbook (iii. 123). They con- tain the alkali in various proportions, from 3-6 per cent, in lepidolite to 11 per cent, in amblygonite. Carbonate of lithia is prepared from lepidolite in the fol- lowing manner. One part of the mineral is ignited with two parts of lime; water is added so as to form a paste; this is treated with dilute sulphuric acid, and water is added; the solution is filtered and concentrated; carbonate of soda is added to precipitate earths and metals; the liquor is again concentrated, and, while boiling hot, is treated with carbonate of soda dissolved in twice its weight of water, by which carbonate of lithia is precipitated somewhat impure. To ob- tain it pure, it is dissolved in very dilute muriatic acid, and the solution precipi- tated by carbonate of ammonia. (Gmelin ) Lithia, LO, is the oxide of the metal lithium, and ranks in chemical properties with the fixed alkalies. In the form cf hydrate, LO,HO, it is white and trans- lucent; does not deliquesce in the air, but absorbs carbonic acid, and becomes opaque; is fusible below ignition, but not volatilizable at a white heat; is solu- ble in water, but less so than potassa or soda; is sparingly soluble in alcohol; and in solution has an acrid alkaline taste, caustic properties, and a strong alka- line reaction. The salts of lithia are generally freely soluble, with the exception of the neutral carbonate and phosphate, the latter of which is nearly insoluble. Lithium, which was first obtained by MM. Bunsen and Matthiessen, in 1855, is silver-white, brilliant, softer than lead, ductile, capable of welding, and the lightest known solid. Its sp. gr. is 0-594, melting point 356° F., equivalent 7, and symbol L. (Brande and Taylor.) The eq. of lithia, therefore, is L=7-f 0 — 8, or L0 = 15; which is the lowest combining number of the fixed alkalies. Carbonate of lithia may be prepared directly from one of the lithia minerals, in the manner already described, or from sulphate of lithia or chloride of lithium in concentrated solution by adding carbonate of ammonia. The precipitated salt should be washed with alcohol and dried. It is a white powder, of a mild alkaline taste, fusible at a high temperature, soluble in about 100 parts of water, more soluble in carbonic acid water, and insoluble in alcohol. Its aqueous solu- tion has an alkaline reaction. It consists of one eq. of lithia and one of car- bonic acid, L0,C02, and its eq. is 37. It is known by imparting a carmine- red colour to the flame of alcohol, and by dissolving in dilute sulphuric acid with effervescence; the latter property distinguishing it from the salts of stron- tia, which also colour the flame of alcohol red. In the British Pharmacopoeia, the following test is given. Ten grains, neutralized with sulphuric acid, and heated to redness, leave I4 86 grains of dry sulphate, which, when dissolved iu water, yields no precipitate with oxalate of ammonia or lime-water \ .ART I. Litlnx Carbonas.—Liriodendron. 517 Medical Properties and Uses. Carbonate of lithia has the ordinary remedia, properties of the alkaline carbonates, over which, however, it possesses advan- tages, under certain circumstances, which render it a valuable addition to the Materia Medica. In the year 1843, Mr. Alexander Ure, of London, called at tention to the extraordinary solvent power of a solution of lithia over uric acid, with which, unlike the other alkalies, it forms a very soluble salt, and suggested its injection into the bladder, for the solution or disintegration of uric acid cal- culi. In 1851, Dr. Garrod, of London, gave it internally in cases of gout and gouty diathesis, in reference to the same property, as well as in considera- tion of its low combining number, and consequent extraordinary neutralizing power. From these properties, it is admirably adapted to cases in which it is desirable to eliminate uric acid from the system, and especially to cases of gout, in which there is a strong indication to prevent the formation of insoluble salts of uric acid, and their deposition in the bladder, kidneys, or joints, and to favour the solution of such salts when already formed, as in the chalky deposits in the joints and ligamentous tissues of gouty patients, consisting chiefly of urate of soda. Dr. Garrod has, moreover, found the carbonate of lithia, in dilute solution, not only to exceed the other alkalies in rendering the urine neuter or alkaline, but also to act powerfully as a diuretic, probably more so than the correspond- ing salts of potassa and soda. {Med. Times and Gaz., March, 1864, p. 303.) The dose of carbonate of lithia is from three to six grains, and is most advantageously given in carbonic acid water. Off. Prep. Lithiae Citras, Br. W. LIRIODENDRON. U. S. Secondary. Tulip-tree Bark. The bark of Liriodendron tulipifera. U. S. Liriodendron. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia. — Nat. Orel. Magnoliaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx three-leaved. Petals six. Samarse sublauceolate, one or two- seeded, imbricated in a cone. Nuttall. Liriodendron tulipifera. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1254 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. lOt; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 92. This noble tree is the boast of American land- scape. Rising on an erect, straight, cylindrical stem, which is often of nearly equal thickness for the distance of forty feet, it attains, in favourable situations, an elevation seldom less than fifty and sometimes more than one hundred feet, with a diameter of trunk varying from eighteen inches to three feet; and indi- viduals are occasionally met with which greatly exceed these dimensions. The bark is of a brown or grayish-brown colour, except in the young branches, on which it is bluish or of a reddish tinge. The leaves, which stand on long foot- stalks, are alternate, somewhat fleshy, smooth, of a beautiful shining green colour, and divided into three lobes, of which the upper one is truncated and notched at its summit, so as to present a two-lobed appearance, and the two lower are rounded at the base and usually pointed. In the larger leaves, the lateral lobes have each a tooth-like projection at some distance below their apex. This pecu liar form of the leaf serves to distinguish the tree from all others inhabiting the American forests. On isolated trees the flowers are very numerous. They are large, beautifully variegated with different colours, among which yellow pre- dominates, and in appearance bear some resemblance to the tulip, which has given a name to the species. Each flower stands on a distinct terminal peduncle. The calyx is double, the outer two-leaved and deciduous, the inner consisting of three large, oval, concave leaves, of a pale-green colour. The corolla is composed of six, seven, or more obtuse, concave petals. The stamens are numerous, with short filaments, and long linear anthers. The pistils are collected into the form 518 Liriodendron.—Lobelia. PART I. of a cone, the upper part of which is covered with minute stigmas. The fruit consists of numerous long, narrow scales, attached to a common axis, imbricated ,n a conical form, and containing each two seeds, one or both of which are often hbortive. The tulip-tree extends from New England to the borders of Florida, but is most abundant, and attains the greatest magnitude in the Middle and Western States. It delights in a rich strong soil, and luxuriates in the exhaustless fer- tility of the banks of the Ohio and its tributaries. Throughout the United States it is known by the inappropriate name of American poplar. When in full bloom, about the middle of May, it presents, in its profusion of flowers, its shining, luxuriant foliage, its elevated stature, and elegant outline, one of the most mag- nificent objects which the vegetable kingdom affords. The interior or heart- wood is yellowish, of a fine grain, and compact without being heavy; and is much employed in the making of furniture, carriages, door-panels, &c. It is re- commended by its property of resisting the influence of atmospheric moisture, and the attacks of worms. The bark is the officinal portion. It is taken for use indiscriminately from the root, trunk, and branches; though that of the root is thought to be most active. Deprived of the epidermis, it is yellowish-white; the bark of the root being somewhat darker than that of the stem or branches. It is very light and brittle, of a feeble, rather disagreeable odour, strongest in the fresh bark, and of a bit- ter, pungent, and aromatic taste. These properties are weakened by age, tind we have found specimens of the bark, long kept in the shops, almost insipid. The peculiar properties of liriodendron appear to reside in a volatile principle, which partially escapes during decoction. The late Professor Emmet, of the University of Virginia, believed that he had isolated this principle, and gave it the name of liriodendrin. As described by Professor Emmet, it is, in the pure state, solid, white, crystallizable, brittle, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, fusible at 180°, volatilizable and partly decomposed at 270°, of a slightly aromatic odour, and a bitter, warm, pungent taste. It does not unite either with acids or with alkalies; and the latter precipitate it from the Infusion of the bark by combining with the matter which renders it soluble in water. Water precipitates it from its alcoholic solution. It is obtained by macerating the root in alcohol, boiling the tincture with magnesia till it assumes an olive- green colour, then filtering, concentrating by distillation till the liquid becomes turbid, and finally precipitating the liriodendrin by the addition of cold water. (Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., iii. 5.) The virtues of the bark are ex- tracted by water and alcohol, but are injured by long boiling. Medical Properties. Liriodendron is a stimulant tonic, with diaphoretic pro- perties. It has been used as a substitute for Peruvian bark in intermittent fevers, and has proved serviceable in chronic rheumatism, dyspepsia, and other com- plaints in which a gently stimulant and tonic impression is desirable. The dose of the bark in powder is from half a drachm to two drachms. The infusion and decoction are also used, but are less efficient. They may be prepared in the pro- portion of an ounce of the bark to a pint of water, and given in the quantity cf one or two fluidounces. The dose of the saturated tincture is a fluidraehra. W LOBELIA. U.S.,Br. Lobelia. The herb of Lobelia inflata. U. S. The herb in flower, dried. Br Lobelia. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Lobeliaceie. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-cleft. Corolla irregular, five-parted, cleft on the upper side nearly to the base. Anthers united into a tube. Stigma iwo-lobe«i Capsule inferior or semi-superior, two or three-celled, two-valved at the npex Torrey. PART 1. Lobelia. 519 Lobelia, injlala. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 946; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 177 ; Bar- ton, Med. Bot. i. 181; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 60, pi. 51. This species of Lobelia, often called Indian tobacco, is an annual or biennial indigenous plant, usually a foot or more in height, with a fibrous root, and a solitary, erect, angu- lar, very hairy stem, much branched about midway, but rising considerably above the summits of the highest branches. The leaves are scattered, sessile, oval, acute, serrate, and hairy. The flowers are numerous, small, disposed in leafy terminal racemes, and upon short axillary footstalks. The segments of the calyx are linear and pointed. The corolla, which is of a delicate blue, has a labiate border, with the upper lip divided into two, the lower into three segments. The united an- thers are curved, and enclose the stigma. The fruit is an oval, striated, inflated capsule, crowned with the persistent calyx, and containing, in two cells, numerous very small, brown seeds.* Lobelia inflata is a very common weed, growing on the road-sides, and in neglected fields, throughout the United States. Its flowers begin to appear to- wards the end of July, and continue to expand in succession till the occurrence of frost. All parts of it are medicinal; but, according to Dr. Eberle, the root and inflated capsules ai'e most powerful. The plant should be collected in August or September, when the capsules are numerous, and should be carefully dried. It may be kept whole, or in powder. As found in the shops, it is often in oblong compressed cakes, prepared by the Shakers. Dried lobelia has a slight irritating odour, and when chewed, though at first without much taste, soon produces a burning acrid impression upon the poste- rior parts of the tongue and palate, very closely resembling that occasioned by tobacco, and attended, in like manner, with a flow of saliva and a nauseating effect. The powder is greenish. The plant yields its virtues readily to water and alcohol. Water distilled from it has its odour without its acrimony. Prof. Procter found the plant to contain an odorous volatile principle, probably vola- tile oil; a peculiar alkaline principle named lobelina; a peculiar acid, first no- ticed as distinct by Pereira, called lobelic acid; besides gum, resin, chlorophyll, fixed oil, lignin, salts of lime and potassa, and oxide of iron. The seeds contain at least twice as much of lobelina, in proportion, as the whole plant, which yield- ed only one part in five hundred. They contain also 30 per cent, of a nearly colourless fixed oil, having the drying property in an extraordinary degree. Lobelina was obtained by Prof. Procter by the following process. The seeds were treated with alcohol acidulated with acetic acid, until deprived of acrimony, and the tincture was evaporated; the resulting extract was triturated with mag- nesia and water, and, after repeated agitation for several hours, the liquor, hold- ing lobelina in solution, was filtered ; this was then shaken repeatedly with ether until no longer acrid; and the ethereal solution, having been decanted, was al- lowed to evaporate spontaneously. The residue, which was reddish-brown, and of the consistence of honey, was deprived of colouring matter by dissolving it in water, adding a slight excess of sulphuric acid, boiling with animal charcoal, satu- rating with magnesia, filtering, agitating with ether until this fluid had deprived the water of acrimony, and finally decanting, and allowing the ether to evaporate. Thus obtained, lobelina is a yellowish liquid, lighter than water, of a somewhat aromatic odour, and a very acrid durable taste. It is soluble in water, but much * In case of poisoning by lobelia, it may be very desirable to be able to recognise the see Is. The following microscopic characters of them are given by Mr. Frederick Curtis m the Lnnd. Med. Gaz. for July, 1851 (p. 160). They are almond-shaped, about l-30th of an inch tong by l-75th broad, puce-coloured, regularly marked with longitudinal ridges and turrows, and cross ridges generally at right angles with the former; so that the sur- face presents the appearance of basket-work. No other seeds examined by the author could be mistaken for them, except those of Jjobelia cardinalis, which, however, are larger, coarser, ef a lighter colour, and with the superficial rectangular chequering less distinct.—Note to the tenth edition. Lobelia. PART r. more (opiously in alcohol and ether; and the latter fluid readily removes it from its aqueous solution. It has an alkaline reaction, and forms soluble and crystal- lizable salts with sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acids, and a very soluble but not crystallizable salt with acetic acid. It forms an insoluble compound with tannic acid, which instantly precipitates it from its solution. By a boiling heat it is entirely decomposed, losing all its acrimony; but, when combined with acids, it may be subjected to ebullition with water without change. Prof. Procter intro- duced a grain of it diluted with water into the stomach of a cat, which became immediately prostrate, remained for an hour nearly motionless, with dilated pupils, and had not wholly recovered at the end of fifteen hours. It did not occa- sion vomiting or purging. There can be little doubt that it is the narcotic prin- ciple of (A??i. Journ. of Pharm., ix. 105, aud xiii. 1.)* The late Dr. S. Colhoun,~oTPhiladelphia, was the first to announce the existence of a peculiar principle in lobelia, capable of forming salts with the acids; but he did not ob- tain it in an isolated state. An important inference from the effects of heat upon lobelina is, that, in preparing lobelia for use, the plant should never be heated in connection with a salifiable base. Medical Properties and Uses. Lobelia is emetic, and, like other medicines of the same class, is occasionally cathartic, and in small doses diaphoretic and expectorant. It is also possessed of narcotic properties. The leaves or capsules, chewed for a short time, occasion giddiness, headache, general tremors, and ulti- mately nausea and vomiting. When swallowed in the full dose, the medicine produces speedy and severe vomiting, attended with continued and distressing nausea, copious sweating, and great general relaxation. Its effects in doses too large, or too frequently repeated, are extreme prostration, great anxiety and dis- tress, and ultimately death preceded by convulsions. Dr. Letheby found 110 grains of it in the stomach of a patient killed by this poison, and states that he has known much less to cause death. (Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., March, 1853, p. 270.) From experiments made by Mr. Curtis and Dr. Pearson on hedgehogs and cats, it would appear that the poison produces inflammation of the aliment- ary mucous membrane in those animals, but- that death mainly results from the suspension of respiration; the heart continuing to act after that process has ceased. It is probable that it paralyzes, by a directly depressing influence, the respiratory centres in the medulla oblongata. Death has often resulted from its empirical use. Its poisonous effects are most apt to occur, when, as sometimes happens, it is not rejected by vomiting. In its action upon the system, therefore, as well as in its sensible properties, lobelia bears a close resemblance to tobacco. It is among the medicines which were employed by the aborigines of this coun- try, and was long in the hands of empirics before it was introduced into regular practice. The Rev. Dr. Cutler, of Massachusetts, first attracted to it the atten- tion of the profession. As an emetic it is too powerful, and too distressing as well as hazardous in its operation for ordinary use. The disease in which it has proved most useful is spasmodic asthma, the paroxysms of which it often greatly mitigates, and sometimes wholly relieves, even when not given in doses sufficiently large to vomit. It was from the relief obtained from an attack of this complaint in his own person, that Dr. Cutler was induced to recommend the medicine. It has been used also in catarrh, croup, pertussis, and other laryngeal and pectoral * Mr. William Bastick, of London, published in the Pharmaceutical Journal and Transac- tions for December, 1850, an account of lobelina and its mode of extraction, apparently in entire ignorance of the previous experiments and observations of Prof. Procter. His pro- cess does not differ essentially from that above given. In one magnesia is used to decom- pose the native salt of lobelina, in the other lime; the caustic alkalies not being applicable to the purpose, as they decompose this organic alkali with great facility.—Note to the nintk edition. PART I. Lobelia.—Lupulina.—Lycopodium. 521 affections; and we have seen it apparently advantageous in some of these com- plaints, especially in severe croup, and in chronic bronchitis with dyspnoea; bu> it should always be used with caution. Administered by injection it produces the same distressing sickness of stomach, profuse perspiration, and universal relaxation, as result from a similar use of tobacco. Dr. Eberle administered a strong decoction of it successfully by the rectum in a case of strangulated hernia. It has been employed effectually, in small doses repeated so as to sustain a slight nausea, for producing relaxation of the os uteri. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci.. xvii. 248.) A case is recorded in the Charleston Med. Journ. and Rev. (xi. 58), by Dr. Gaston, of Columbia, S. C., in which the tincture of lobelia was successfully used in tetanus. It may be given in substance, tincture, or infusion. The dose of the powder as an emetic is from five to twenty grains, to be repeated if necessary. The tincture is most frequently administered. The full dose of this preparation for an adult is half a fluidounce; though in asthmatic cases it is better administered in the quantity of one or two fluidrachms, repeated every two or three hours till its effects are experienced.* Two other species of Lobelia have attracted some attention from medical writers. L. cardinalis or cardinal flower, distinguished for its showy red flowers, is supposed to possess anthelmintic properties; but is seldom used. L. syphilitica is said to have been used by the Indians in the cure of syphilis, but has been found wholly inefficacious in that complaint. It is emetic and cathartic, and appears also to possess diuretic properties; whence it has been conjectured that it might have proved serviceable in gonorrhoea. Dr. Chapman states that it has been employed, as he has been informed, by some practitioners of the western country in dropsy, and not without success. The root is the part used. Both these species of Lobelia are indigenous. For a more detailed account of them, the reader is referred to Dr. W. P. C. Barton’s Medical Botany. Off. Prep. Acetum Lobelise, U. S.; Tinctura Lobelise; Tinct. Lobeliie .Etherea, Br. W. LUPULINA. U.jS. Lupulin. The yellow powder attached to the strobiles of Humulus Lupulus. U. S. Lupulina is described under HUMULUS, p. 448. LYCOPODIUM. U.S. The sporules of Lycopodium clavatum, and of other species of Lycopodium. U.S. Pied de Loup, Fr.; Gemeiner Biirlapp, Kolbenmoos, Germ.; Licopodio, Ital., Span. Lycopodium. Sex. Syst. Cryptogamia Filices. — Nat. Ord. Lycopodiacete. Gen. Ch. Thecae unilocular, of one or two forms; that containing powder somewhat reniform and two-valved, the other roundish, three or four valved. Lindley. Lycopodium. * Professor Procter prepares a fluid extract by macerating eight ounces of finely bruised lobelia, mixed with a fluidounce of acetic acid, in a pint and a half of diluted alcohol, for "wenty-four hours; then percolating with an equal quantity of diluted alcohol, and after- wards with water, until three pints of liquor are obtained; next evaporating to ten fluid- ounces, straining, adding six fiuidounces of alcohol, and finally filtering through paper, hach teaspoonful of this preparation is equal to half a fluidounce of the tincture, which represents about 30 grains of the powder {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 207.)—Note to the .cnth edition. 522 Lycopodium.—Lycopus. PART I. Lycopodium ciavatum. Linn. Sp. Plant. 1564; Smith, Engl. Flor. iv. 331. This plant, commonly called club-moss, has a trailing, branching stem, several feet long, and thickly beset with linear-lanceolate, flat, ribless, smooth, partly ser- rate leaves, with a capillary point, curved upward, and of a deep-green colour. The flowers are in terminal spikes, single or in pairs, with crowded ovate, entire, pointed scales, and yellow thecae or capsules. The plant is a native of Europe and this country. The capsules of this moss, and of others belonging to the same genus, contain a fine dust or powder, which is collected in Switzerland and Germany, and used in the shops of Europe under the name of lycopodium, or vegetable sulphur. It is this that constitutes the officinal part of the plant, of which it is the seeds or sporules. It is extremely fine, very light, of a delicate yellow colour, inodor- ous and tasteless, and exceedingly inflammable, so much so that it takes fire like gunpowder when thrown upon a burning body. Under the microscope, it is found to be composed of cells, which, on pressure between glasses, give out a transpa- rent fluid, resembling oil. {Ed. Monthly Journ., Nov. 1854, p. 469.) It is said to be often adulterated with the pollen of the pines and firs, and sometimes with talc and starch. In medicine, it is used as an absorbent application to excori- ated surfaces, especially those which occur in the folds of the skin in infants. In . pharmacy, it answers the purpose of facilitating the rolling of the pilular mass, and of preventing the adhesion of the pills when formed. The moss itself has been esteemed diuretic, antispasmodic, &c.; and has been employed, in the form of decoction, in rheumatism, epilepsy, and complaints of the lungs and kidneys; and has been supposed to be of great service in the removal of plica Polonica. It has, however, fallen into discredit. W. LYCOPUS. U.S. Secondary. Bugle-weed. The herb of Lycopus Yirginicus (Michaux). U. S. Lycopus. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.—Nat.Ord. Lamiaceaeor Labiatse. Gen. Ch. Calyx tubular, five-cleft or five-toothed. Corolla tubular, four-lobed, nearly equal; the upper segment broader, and emarginate. Stamens distant. Seeds four, naked, retuse. Nuttall. Lycopus Virginicus. Michaux, Flor. Boreal. Americ. i. 14; Rafinesque, Med. Flor. vol. ii. The bugle-weed is an indigenous herb, with a perennial creeping root, which sends up an erect, nearly simple, obtusely quadrangular stem, from twelve to eighteen inches high, and furnished with opposite sessile leaves. These are broad-lanceolate, attenuated and entire at both extremities, remotely serrate in the middle, somewhat rough, purplish, and beset with glandular dots on their under surface. The flowers are minute, in small axillary whorls, with two small subulate bractes to each flower, and a white corolla. The seeds are longer than the calyx, which is spineless. This plant grows in shady and wet places throughout the greater part of the United States. Its flowering period is August. The whole herb is used. Jt has a peculiar odour and a nauseous slightly bitter taste, and imparts these proper- ties, as well as its medical virtues, to boiling water. Lycopus Euroyaeus is said to be frequently collected and sold for L. Vir- ginicus. The former may be distinguished by its acutely quadrangular stem, its narrow lanceolate leaves, of which the lower are somewhat pinnatifid, its more crowded flowers, and the acute segments of its calyx, armed with short spines. It has been employed in Europe as a substitute for quinia. Medical Properties and Uses. According to Dr. A. W. Ives, the bugle-tveed is a very mild narcotic. It is said also to be astringent. It was introduced into Lycopus.—Magnesise Carbonas. 523 PART I. notice by Drs. Pendleton and Rogers, of New York, who obtained favourable effects from it in incipient phthisis and pulmonary hemorrhage. (N. Y. Med. and Phys. Journ., i. 179.) It proves useful by diminishing the frequency of the pulse, quieting irritation, and allaying cough. The use of it has been extended with advantage to the hemorrhages generally. (Transact, of the Am. Med. Assoc., i. 317.) It is most conveniently employed in the form of infusion, which may be prepared by macerating an ounce of the herb in a pint of boiling water. From half a pint to a pint may be taken daily. W. MAGNESITE CARBON AS. U.S., Br. Carbonate of Magnesia. “A white substance in powder or pulverulent masses, wholly dissolved by dilute sulphuric acid, forming a solution which does not afford a precipitate with oxalate of ammonia. Distilled water which has been boiled with it does not change the colour of turmeric, and yields no precipitate with chloride of barium or nitrate of silver.” U. S. Magnesia alba, Lat.; Carbonate de magnesie, Fr.; Kolilensaure Magnesia, Germ.; Car- bonato di magnesia, Ital.; Carbonato de magnesia, Span. Carbonate of magnesia sometimes though rarely occurs as a native mineral. That which is sold in the shops is prepared on a large scale by the manufac- turer ; and the article is, therefore, very properly placed in the list of Materia Medica of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. In the British Pharmacopoeia directions are given for preparing it in two forms; that of Magnesia Carbonas, or Car- bonate of Magnesia; and that of Magnesia Carbonas Levis, or Light Car- bonate of Magnesia. The following are the directions. 1. Magnesite Carbonas. Carbonate of Magnesia. Br. “ Take of Sulphate of Magnesia ten ounces (avoirdupois); Carbonate of Soda twelve ounces (avoird.); Boiling Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dissolve the Sulphate of Magnesia and Carbonate of Soda, each, in a pint [Imp. Meas.] of the Water, mix the two so- lutions, and evaporate the whole to perfect dryness, by means of a sand-bath. Digest the residue for half an hour with two pints [Imp. Meas.] of the Water, and, having collected the insoluble matter on a calico filter, wash it repeatedly with Distilled Water, until the washings cease to give a precipitate with chloride of barium. Finally, dry the product at a temperature not exceeding 212°.” Br. This is essentially the old process of the Dublin College for Magnesite Car- bonas Ponderosum, or Heavy Carbonate of Magnesia, and yields a product which is characterized, in the British Pharmacopoeia, as “a white granular pow- der, which dissolves with effervescence in the dilute mineral acids, yielding solu- tions which, when first treated with hydrochlorate of ammonia, are not disturbed by the addition of an excess of solution of ammonia, but yield a copious crystal- line precipitate upon the addition of phosphate of soda. With excess of hydro- chloric acid it forms a clear solution, in which chloride of barium causes no pre- cipitate. Another portion of the solution, supersaturated with ammonia, gives no precipitate with oxalic acid. Fifty grains, calcined at a red heat, are reduced to twenty-two.” 2. Magnesite Carbonas Levis. Light Carbonate of Magnesia. Br. The same quantity of materials are taken as in the preceding formula, the Distilled Water being now cold instead of boiling. The two salts are dissolved separately, each in half a gallon (Imp. Meas.) of the Water, the solutions are mixed, and the mixture is boiled in a porcelain dish for fifteen minutes. The precipitate is then washed and dried as in the former process. The resulting carbonate is characterized, in the Br Pharmacopoeia, as “a very light powder, which, when examined under the microscope, is found to be partly amorphous with numerous slender prisms 524 Magnesiae Carbonas. PAKT I. intermixed. The other characters are the same as those of carbonate of mag- nesia.” Carbonate of potassa is less eligible than carbonate of soda for the prepara- tion of carbonate of magnesia. It is difficult to separate the last portions of sul- phate of potassa from the precipitate, and carbonate of potassa usually contains silica, which is thrown down with the magnesia. The consequence is that, when prepared with that salt, carbonate of magnesia is liable to be gritty to the touch, and to have a saline taste. The following method is said to be pursued by some of the best manufacturers. To a saturated solution of 100 parts of sulphate of magnesia, a solution of 125 parts of crystallized carbonate of soda is gradually added, the solutions being constantly stirred. The mixture is heated to ebulli- tion, to complete the precipitation of the magnesia, which is then washed with tepid and finally with cold water, until the washings no longer give a precipitate with barytic salts. When sufficiently washed, the carbonate is allowed to drain for one or two days on large linen filters, and is then placed in wooden moulds with a porous bottom of brick or gypsum, and subjected to pressure in order to give it a square and compact form. The density of carbonate of magnesia is said to depend upon the strength of the solutions from which it is first precipitated, and its fineness and softness to the touch, upon the use of carbonate of soda in its preparation. Much of the carbonate of magnesia used in this country is imported from Scot- land. In New England it is prepared from the bittern of salt-works, which con- sists chiefly of sulphate of magnesia and chloride of magnesium ; and it is manu- factured in Baltimore from the sulphate of magnesia prepared in that city. The Scotch magnesia is generally put up in cases of 120 lbs. each, the American, in boxes containing 50 lbs.* When made from the bittern of salt-works, carbonate of magnesia is contami- nated with carbonate of lime, salts of that earth being contained in sea-water; and, when it is prepared from magnesite, or from magnesian schist, iron is almost always present. The only way in which these impurities can be avoided, is to prepare pure sulphate of magnesia by repeated crystallization, and to use a pure carbonate of soda. It is also necessary that the water with which the precipi- tate is washed should be free from earthy salts, which would be decomposed and contaminate the magnesia. Properties. Carbonate of magnesia is inodorous, nearly insipid, perfectly white, smooth to the touch, and nearly insoluble in water, requiring 2493 parts of cold, and 9000 parts of hot water for solution. It is decomposed by strong heat, by all the acids, by potassa, soda, lime, baryta, and strontia, and by acidu- lous and metallic salts. Two kinds of carbonate of magnesia are distinguished, the light and the heavy. The light carbonate is the kind manufactured in Scotland. The British process for the heavy has been already given. It may also, according to Dr. Pereira, be prepared as follows. “Add oue volume of a cold saturated solution of carbonate of soda to a boiling mixture of one volume of a saturated solution of sulphate of magnesia, and three volumes of water. Boil until effervescence has ceased, con- stantly stirring with a spatula. Then dilute with boiling water, set aside, pour off the supernatant liquor, and wash the precipitate with hot water on a linen cloth : afterwards dry it by heat in an iron pot.” Dr. Pereira states that the light carbonate, when examined with the microscope, is seen to consist of an amor- phous powder, more or less intermingled with slender prismatic crystals, which * Carbonate of magnesia is now largely prepared in Great Britain by submitting cal- cined magnesian limestone to the action of water and carbonic acid under pressure. Th? magnesia is dissolved in the state of bicarbonate, and heat is applied to the solution, so aa to drive off a portion of the carbonic acid, and to cause thereby a precipitation of the in- soluble carbonate. (Chem. News, Sept. 12, 1863, p. 128.)—Note to the twelfth edition. W. PART I. Magnesise Carlonas. 525 appear as if they were eroded or efflorescent; the heavy carbonate consists of granules of various sizes, without any traces of the prismatic crystals observed in the former variety. A solution in carbonic acid water, prepared by passing carbonic acid gas into a reservoir containing carbonate of magnesia suspended in water, has been in- troduced into use as a cathartic and antacid. Dinneford’s magnesia is a solu- tion of this nature. According to Dr. Christison, it contains only nine grains of carbonate in the fluidounce, though alleged to contain twice that quantity. Its taste is more disagreeable than that of the undissolved carbonate. Adulterations and Tests. Carbonate of magnesia may contain an alkaline car- bonate or sulphate, or both, from insufficient washing; also chloride of sodium, alumina, aud carbonate of lime. If water boiled on it changes turmeric, an alka- line carbonate is indicated. If chloride of barium produces a precipitate in the water, the presence of a sulphate or carbonate is shown; and if nitrate of silver produces the same effect, a chloride is indicated. When dissolved in an exces? of muriatic acid, an excess of ammonia will throw down alumina, which is almost always present in minute quantity; and oxalate of ammonia, afterwards added to the filtered muriatic solution, will throw down oxalate of lime, if that earth be present. If the same solution, nearly neutralized, be rendered blue by ferro- cyanide of potassium, the presence of iron will be indicated. Composition. According to Berzelius, carbonate of magnesia of the shops (magnesia alba) is a combination of three eqs. of carbonate of magnesia with one of hydrate of magnesia. Each eq. of carbonate contains an eq. of water, and the composition of the salt may be thus stated:—three eqs. of carbonate (acid 66, magnesia 60, water 27) = 153+one eq. of hydrate (magnesia 20, water 9) = 29 = 182. This theoretic composition agrees nearly with the analysis of Ber- zeli.us, who fixes it at 4475 magnesia, 35 77 acid, and 19 48 water. According to Phillips, whose analysis agrees with a subsequent one by Fownes, four eqs of the carbonate are combined with one of the bihydrate, and four of water. (Pharm. Journ., iii. 480.) The formula given by the British Pharmacopoeia is 3(MgO,CO., + HO) + MgO,2HO ; in other words, a combination of 3 eqs. of hy- drated carbonate of magnesia and one of the bihydrate of magnesia. The com- position of this salt varies with the mode of preparation. Thus Bucholz, by de- composing sulphate of magnesia with 170 per cent, of carbonate of soda, and using only cold water throughout, obtained a very light, spongy, somewhat cohe- rent carbonate of magnesia, containing 32 acid, 33 base, and 35 water. By using 120 per cent, of the carbonate, and boiling for fifteen minutes, he obtained a heavy, granular precipitate, containing 35 acid, 42 base, and 23 water. Medical Properties and Uses. Carbonate of magnesia is antacid, and, by combining with acid in the stomach, becomes generally cathartic. When it undergoes no change in the alimentary canal, it produces no purgative effect. Under these circumstances, it may usually be made to operate by following it with draughts of lemonade. It is useful in all cases which require a laxative antacid; and, though apt to produce llatulence in consequence of the extrication of its carbonic acid in the stomach and bowels, and therefore in ordinary cases inferior to calcined magnesia, it sometimes operates favourably, in consequence of this very property, in sick stomach attended with acidity. Carbonate of mag- nesia is also an excellent antilithic when uric acid is secreted in excess. The dose is from half a drachm to two drachms, which may be given in water or milk. In order that it may be accurately diffused through water, it should be previously rubbed down with syrup or ginger syrup.* * Dalby's carminative consists of carbonate of magnesia oil of peppermint }, oil of nutmeg oil of aniseed tincture of castor tincture of assafetide. Tl|,xvi tincture of opium Tl|v, spirit of pennyroyal tT(xv, compound tincture of cardamom B] xxx, peppermint water fjij Magnesise Sulphas. PART I. Carbonate of magnesia is a useful agent for diffusing camphor and the vola- tile oils through water, in preparing several of the medicated waters. Off. Prep. Magnesia. D. B. S. MAGNESLE SULPHAS. U.S.,Br. Sulphate of Magnesia. “In colourless crystals, which slowly effloresce on exposure to the air, and are very soluble in water. The solution is not coloured nor precipitated by fer- rocyanide of potassium, and gives off no muriatic acid upon the addition of sul- phuric acid. One hundred grains of the salt, dissolved in water, and mixed with sufficient boiling solution of carbonate of soda to decompose it completely, yield a precipitate of carbonate of magnesia, which, when washed and dried, weighs thirty-four grains.” U. S. Epsom salt; Sulfate de Fr.; Schwefelsaure Magnesia, Germ.; Solfato di mag- nesia, Ital.; Sulfato de magnesia, Span. Sulphate of magnesia is a constituent of sea-water, and of some saline springs. It also occurs native, either crystallized in slender, prismatic, adhering crystals, or as an efflorescence on certain rocks and soils, which contain magnesia and a sulphate or sulphuret. In the United States it is found in the great caves, so numerous to the west of the Alleghany mountains. In one of these caves, near Corvdon in Indiana, it formed a stratum on the bottom several inches deep; or appeared in masses sometimes weighing ten pounds, or disseminated in the earth of the cavern, one bushel of which yielded from four to twenty-five pounds of the sulphate. It also appeared on the walls of the cavern, and, if it was removed, acicular crystals again appeared in a few weeks. ( Cleaveland.) Sulphate of magnesia was originally procured by evaporating the wraters of saline springs at Epsom in England. Dr. Grew prepared it in this manner in 1675. It was afterwards discovered that the brine, remaining after the crystal- lization of common salt from sea-water, furnished by careful evaporation pre- cisely the same salt; and, as this was a much cheaper product, it superseded the former. The residual brine or bittern consists of sulphate of magnesia, and the chlorides of magnesium and calcium. As the sulphate of magnesia crystal- lizes first, it may with proper care be obtained nearly pure, although most fre- quently the salt prepared in this way is deliquescent from the presence of chloride of magnesium. It may be freed from this impurity by washing the crystals with its own saturated solution. It was from this source that the greater part of the Epsom salt of commerce was long obtained in Europe. The salt works of New England supplied our own markets with an impure and deliquescent sulphate. With the improvements of chemistry, other and better processes have been adopted. In the neighbourhood of Genoa and Nice, sulphate of magnesia is prepared in large quantities from a schistose rock, containing magnesia and sulphuret of iron. The mineral is roasted, and exposed in heaps for some months to the action of air and water. It is then lixiviated, the sulphate of iron decomposed by lime-water, and the salt obtained pure by repeated solution and crystallization. William Henry, of Manchester, whose calcined magnesia has become famous throughout the world, took out a patent for a mode of preparing magnesia and its salts from the double carbonate of magnesia and lime — the dolomite of mineralogists. Ilis process was to drive off the carbonic acid by heat, and to convert the remaining earths into hydrates. He treated these with a sufficient quantity of muriatic acid to dissolve out the lime, and then converted the mag- nesia into a sulphate either by sulphuric acid or sulphate of iron. The salt is extensively manufactured in Baltimore and Philadelphia from tho PART I. Magnesise Sulphas. 527 siliceous hydrate of magnesia, or magnesite. This mineral occurs in 7eins in the serpentine and other magnesian rocks which abound in the neighbourhood of Baltimore, and in the southern counties of Pennsylvania. The advantage which it possesses over the dolomite, in the preparation of this salt, is the almost entire absence of lime, owing to which there is little or no waste of acid, and the ope- ration is much simplified. The mineral is reduced to a fine powder and satu- rated with sulphuric acid. The mass is then dried and calcined at a red heat, in order to convert the sulphate of iron, which may be present, into red oxide. It is then dissolved in water, and sulphuret of lime added to separate any re- maining portion of iron. The salt is crystallized and dissolved a third time, in order to purify it. The sulphate prepared by this process is generally very pure and clean, although it sometimes contains sulphate of iron. Properties, &c. Sulphate of magnesia is a colourless transparent salt, with- out smell, and of a bitter, nauseous, saline taste. It crystallizes in quadrangular prisms, terminating in a four-sided pyramid or in a dihedral summit. It usually occurs in small acicular crystals, which are produced by agitating the solution while crystallizing. It slowly effloresces in the air. At 32° F. 100 parts of water dissolve 25 76 parts of the anhydrous salt, and, for every increased degree, 0 8597 parts additional are taken up. The crystals contain 51'22 per cent, of water of crystallization, and dissolve in their own weight of water at 60°, and in three-fourths of their weight at 212°. They melt in their water of crystalli- zation, and at a high temperature fuse into an enamel. (Berzelius.) The salt consists of one eq. of acid 40, one of base 20, and seven of water 63=123. Sulphate of magnesia is completely decomposed by potassa, soda, and their carbonates; by lime, baryta, and strontia, and their soluble salts. Ammonia partially decomposes it, and forms with the remainder a double sulphate. The bicarbonates of potassa and soda do not decompose it, except by the aid of heat. “It gives copious white precipitates with chloride of barium, and with a mixed solution of ammonia, hydrochlorate of ammonia, and phosphate of soda.” Br. Sulphate of magnesia is liable to contain iron and chloride of magnesium, the former of which may be detected by ferrocyanide of potassium, and the latter by its rendering the salt moist. If the addition of sulphuric acid produce no extrication of muriatic acid gas, the fact will prove the absence of chlorides. An aqueous solution of 100 grains of the salt should yield, when completely de- composed by a boiling solution of carbonate of soda, 34 grains of dry carbonate of magnesia, and, according to the British Pharmacopoeia, 16-26 grains of the carbonate after having been heated to redness. If the dry precipitate is less, the specimen tested is not all sulphate of magnesia, and probably contains sulphate of soda. v Medical Properties and. Uses. Sulphate of magnesia is a mild and safe cathartic, operating with little pain or nausea, and producing watery stools. It is more acceptable to the stomach than most medicines of its class, and will often be retained when others are rejected. Like many of the other neutral salts it is refrigerant, and may be made to act as a diuretic by keeping the skin cool, and walking about after it has been taken. It is well adapted to the treatment of fevers and inflammatory affections, especially after a previous thorough evacu- ation of the bowels by a more energetic cathartic. It is also useful in colic and obstinate constipation, and may be employed in most cases which require the use of a cathartic, without being attended with debility or relaxation of the stomach and bowels. The medium dose is an ounce; but advantage often re- sults from its administration in divided doses, frequently repeated. It is often given in combination with other medicines, especially with senna, the gripiug effect of which it tends to obviate. The most agreeable form for administering the salt, and that in which it usually agrees best with the stomach, is a solution in carbonic acid water with lemon syrup. By Dr. Henry, of Dublin, it is highly 528 Magnolia. PART I. recommended in connection with sulphuric acid. To seven ounces of a saturated aqueous solution of the salt he adds an ounce of the diluted sulphuric acid of the Pharmacopoeias, and gives a tablespoonful of the mixture for a dose, in a wineglassful of water.* Off. Prep. Enema Magnesias Sulphatis, Br.; Magnesioe Carbonas, Br.; Mag- nesias Carbonas Levis, Br. D. B. S. MAGNOLIA. U. S. Secondary. Magnolia. The bark of Magnolia glauca, M. acuminata, and M. tripetala. U. S. Magnolia. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia.—Nat.Ord. Magnoliaceas. Gen. Gh. Calyx three-leaved. Petals six or more. Capsules twc-valved, one- seeded, imbricated in a cone. Seeds berried, pendulous. Bigelow. The medicinal properties of the Magnolia are common to most, if not all of the species composing this splendid genus. Among the numerous trees which adorn the American landscape, these are most conspicuous for the richness of their foliage, and the magnificence as well as delicious odour of their flowers; and M. grandijlora of the Southern States rivals in magnitude the largest inhabitants of our forests. The Pharmacopoeia designates M. glavea, 31. acu- minata, and 31 tripetala, each of which we shall briefly describe. 1. Magnolia glauca. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1266; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 67; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 77; Michaux, N. Am,. Sylv. ii. 8. This species of Magnolia, which in the Northern States is often nothing more than a shrub, sometimes attains in the South the height of forty feet. The leaves are scat- tered, petiolate, oval, obtuse, entire, glabrous, thick, opaque, yellowish-green on their upper surface, and of a beautiful pale glaucous colour beneath. The flowers are large, terminal, solitary, cream-coloured, strongly and gratefully odorous, often scenting the air to a considerable distance. The calyx is composed of three leaves; the petals, from eight to fourteen in number, are obovate, obtuse, concave, and contracted at the base; the stamens are very numerous, and in- serted on a conical receptacle; the germs are collected into a cone, and each is surmounted by a linear recurved style. The fruit is conical, about an inch in length, consisting of numerous imbricated cells, each containing a single scarlet seed. This escapes through a longitudinal opening in the cell, but remains for some time suspended from the cone by a slender thread. M. glauca extends along the seaboard of the United States, from Capo Ann, in Massachusetts, to the shores of the Gulf of Mexico. It is abundant in the Middle and Southern States, usually growing in swamps; but is seldom met with in the interior, west of the mountains. It begins to flower in May, June, or July, according to the latitude. It is known by the name of magnolia simply in the Northern and Middle States, by that of white hay or sweet hay in the South, and is occasionally called swamp sassa fras, heaver tree, &c. 2. M. acuminata. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1257 ; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. ii. 12. This species is much larger than the preceding, often growing to the height of seventy or eighty feet. The leaves are six or seven inches long, by three or four in breadth, oval, acuminate, and pubescent on their under surface. The flowers are five or six inches in diameter, bluish or cream-coloured, slightly odorous, with obovate rather obtuse petals from six to nine in number. Mingled with the splendid foliage, they give a magnificent aspect to the tree when large and * It is said that a solution of an ounce of the salt in about a pint of water, boiled for three minutes with a grain and a half of tannic acid, or with two or three drachms of roasted coffee, is entirely deprived of bitterness. The liquid prepared with coffee should be strained, and may be sweetened with sugar. (Combes, Journ de Pharm., 3e ser., xii. Ilf j PART I. Magnolia.—Manganesii Oxidum Nigrum. 529 in full bloom. The tree grows in the interior mountainous regions of the United States, extending along the Alleghanies from the State of New York to their termination in Georgia, and seldom existing in the low country far either to the east or west of that range. It is called cucumber tree, from the resemblance of its fruit in shape and size to the common cucumber. 3. M. tripetala. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1258; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. ii. 18 This is a small tree, sometimes though rarely reaching an elevation of thirty feet, and almost always having an inclined trunk. It is remarkable for the size of its leaves and flowers. The former are eighteen or twenty inches long by seven or eight in breadth, thin, obovate, somewhat wedge-shaped, entire, acute at both extremities, pubescent when young, and often disposed in rays at the extremity of the shoots, displaying a surface thirty inches in diameter. Hence has arisen the name of umbrella tree, by which this species is distinguished. The flowers are terminal, seven or eight inches in diameter, white, with from five to twelve oval acute petals, of which the three outer are reflexed. This species extends from the northern parts of New York to the southern limits of the United States. It is found only in shady situations, with a strong, deep, and fertile soil. The leaves of this species are highly recommended by Dr. J. S. Wilson, of Ala- bama, as a dressing for blisters. He scalds them previously to their application, but presumes that they would answer as well in their natural state. (South. Med. and Surg. Journ., July, 1854.) The bark and fruit of all the species of Magnolia are possessed of similar medicinal properties; but the bark only is officinal, and that of the root is thought to be most efficient. It has an aromatic odour, and a bitter, pungent, spicy taste. The aromatic property, which resides in a volatile principle, is diminished by desiccation, and entirely lost when the bark is long kept. The bitterness, however, remains. The bark is destitute of astringency. The bark of examined by Dr. Stephen Procter, was found to contain volatile oil, resin, and a principle analogous to the liriodendrin of Professor Emmet. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 95.) Medical Properties and Uses. Magnolia is a gently stimulant aromatic tonic and diaphoretic, useful in chronic rheumatism, and capable, if freely given, of arresting the paroxysms of intermittent fever. It has been used advantageously in these complaints, and in remittents, especially of a typhoid character. The dose of the recently dried bark in powder is from half a drachm to a drachm, frequently repeated. The infusion may also be used, but is less efficient. Diluted alcohol extracts all the virtues of the medicine; and a tincture, made by macerating the fresh bark or fruit in brandy, is a popular remedy in chronic rheumatism. W. MANGANESII OXIDUM NIGRUM. U.S. Blade Oxide of Manganese. Native impure deutoxide of manganese in powder, containing at least 66 per cent, of the pure deutoxide. U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia, this is placed in the Appendix, as one of the substances employed in preparing medicines. It is defined as binoxide of man- ganese, Mn02. Manganese, Peroxide of manganese, Deutoxide of manganese, Black oxide of manga- nese, Pyrolusite; Oxide noir de manganese, Fr.; Braunstein, Germ.; Manganese, I tat., ‘Span. The officinal oxide of manganese is the deutoxide or binoxide of a peculiar metal properly called manganese; though this name is commonly applied to the oxide 'tself. Metallic manganese was discovered by Scheele and Gahn in 1774, and is 530 Manganesii Oxidum Nigrum. PART I. obtained from th>j native black oxide by intense ignition with charcoal. As ob- tained by 0. Brunner, bv decomposing the fluoride by sodium, manganese is brittle, grayish-white, and very hard, being capable of cutting glass, and scratch- ing the best tempered steel. It is susceptible of the most perfect polish, and is not altered, even in moist air, at the ordinary temperature. Its sp. gr. varies from 7 1 to 7‘2. (Chem. Gaz., May 1, 1857.) Deville suspects that Brun- ner’s manganese contains a little carbon. This chemist obtained the metal by heating the black oxide in excess with charcoal, in a lime crucible. The metal, thus obtained, is more refractory than iron; while that procured by Brunner fused at the same heat as white cast iron. {Ibid., June 1, 1857.) The eq. num- ber of manganese is 27'7. With oxygen it forms five compounds, three regular oxides and two acids. The protoxide is of a light-green colour, and is the oxide present in the salts of manganese. The sesquioxide is black or dark-brown, and the deutoxide black. The two acids are formed by the action of potassa on the deutoxide, and are called manganic and hypermanganic acids. Assuming one eq. of manganese in each of these compounds, the protoxide contains one, the sesquioxide one and a half, the deutoxide two, manganic acid three, and hyper- manganic acid three and a half equivalents of oxygen. Besides these, there exist a double oxide, of a brownish-red colour, called red oxide, consisting of one eq. of protoxide and one of sesquioxide, and invariably formed when any one of the other oxides of manganese is exposed to a white heat; and a native oxide, called Varvicile, composed of two eqs. of deutoxide and one of sesquioxide. Metallic manganese is an occasional constituent of organic matter. It has been detected in minute quantity in bone, hair, brain, epidermis, gastric juice, bile, urine, and pus, and has been found by Millon and others in the blood. M. Glenard, of Lyons, denies that it is a normal constituent of the blood, although sometimes present; but the evidence of numerous experimenters shows that it generally exists in that fluid; and, when not detected, it may be because the quantity present is too minute for discovery. According to Mr. E. Davy, caustic potassa, dissolved in an equal weight of water, forms a delicate test for manganese, not obscured by the presence of other metals. The smallest portion of matter, sus- pected to contain the metal, being finely pulverized or in solution, is placed upon a slip of silver foil, and a drop of the test added. Upon evaporating to dryness with a spirit-lamp, and raising the heat, the characteristic green manga- nate of potassa will appear on the foil. {Chem. Gaz., March 15,1854.) Manga- nese is a constituent of all arable land, and is found in the ashes of most of the vegetables which form the food of man and the inferior animals. In the mineral kingdom, it occurs sometimes as a sulphuret, rarely as a phosphate, but very abundantly as the black or deutoxide, called pyrolusite. It is the latter mineral which constitutes the officinal oxide. Properties. Deutoxide of manganese, as it occurs in nature, is very diversified in its appearance. Its sp. gr. varies from 4'7 to 4 9. It is found sometimes in brilliant needle-shaped crystals, often in compact masses having the metallic lustre, but far more frequently in the form of a dull earthy-looking substance, of a black or brown colour. It is purest when crystallized. As it occurs in com- merce it is usually in the form of a black powder, insoluble in water, and con- taining more or less oxidized iron, carbonate of lime, sulphate of baryta, and earthy matter. Iron, which is rarely absent, is detected by the production of a greenish or blue tint on the addition of ferrocyanuret of potassium to its muriatic solution. When exposed to a red heat it yields half an equivalent of oxygen, and is reduced to the state of sesquioxide. Hence its use in obtaining that gas. Good samples, after being dried, lose, when heated to whiteness, 12 per cent, of oxygen. It is distinguished from sulphuret of antimony by its infusibility, and by causing the evolution of chlorine on being heated with muriatic acid When of a brown colour, it is not of good quality. part I. Manganesii Oxidum Nigrum.—Manganesii Sulphas. 531 But few mines of deutoxide of manganese exist; though the metal itself is very generally diffused throughout the mineral kingdom. It occurs most abund- antly in Bohemia, Saxony, the Hartz, France, and Great Britain. In the United States no mines have been opened, except in Vermont, from which State an in- ferior brown ferruginous manganese is supplied through Boston. Besides this source, the mineral is received from Nova Scotia, France, Germany, England, and occasionally Scotland. It comes packed in casks or barrels, generally in lumps and coarse powder, just as it is dug out of the mines; though occasion- ally it is received from England ready pulverized. It is a good rule to buy it unpowdered ; as its quality can be better judged of in that state. A dark shining crystalline appearance may be taken as an indication of good quality. The Nova Scotia manganese is better than the Vermont; but that from Germany, England, and Scotland is the best, and commands the highest price. Medical Properties and Uses. Deutoxide of manganese is deemed tonic and alterative. When slowly introduced into the system, as happens to those en- gaged in grinding the mineral, it acts, according to Dr. Coupar, of Glasgow, as a cumulative poison, inducing a disease which begins with a staggering gait, and ends in paraplegia. It has been used in syphilis, chlorosis, scurvy, and various skin diseases, especially itch and porrigo. The dose is from three to twenty grains, three times a day, given in the form of pill. For external use, an ointment may be made of one or two drachms of the oxide to an ounce of lard. The sulphate is officinal. For a notice of some other compounds of manganese which have been tried as medicines, see Part Third. This oxide is used in the arts for obtaining chlorine in the manufacture of bleaching powder, for giving a black glazing to pottery, and for freeing glass from the colour which it derives from iron. In the laboratory, it is employed to obtain oxygen and chlorine, and to form the salts of manganese. In pharmacy it is used for liberating chlorine from muriatic acid and from common salt, and iodine from iodide of sodium, contained in kelp. Pharm.Uses. In preparing Aqua Chlorinii, U. S.; Hydrargyri Chloridum or Hydrargyrum Corrosivum Sublimatum, Br.; Liquor Chlori, Br.; Liquor Sodae Chloratse, Br.; Potassse Chloras, Br. Off. Prep. Potassse Permanganas, Br. B. MANGANESII SULPHAS. U.S. Sulphate of Manganese. This salt was first made officinal in the present edition of the TJ. S. Pharma- copoeia, in which it has a place in the Materia Medica list. It may be prepared by heating the native black oxide with concentrated sulphuric acid. Oxygen is evolved, and the sulphate of the protoxide is formed. The product, when ex- hausted by water, furnishes a solution which must be heated to nearly the boil- ing point, and treated with carbonate of manganese, added by small portions at a time, which will precipitate any iron present, and change the colour of the liquid from a dark-red to a pale-rose tint. The liquid is then filtered, evapo- rated to the consistence of a thin syrup, and set aside to crystallize. Properties. Sulphate of manganese consists of one eq. of protoxide of manga- nese and one of sulphuric acid (MnO,S03). From its aqueous solution it crys- tallizes in rhombic prisms, which contain variable proportions of water of crys- tallization according to the temperature of the solution and other circumstances. Obtained by evaporation at a gentle heat, they contain four eqs. of water; be- tween 45° and 68°, five eqs.; under 42°, seven eqs.; and a concentrated solution, mixed with sulphuric acid, and evaporated, yields granular crystals with one eq Heated to 240°, the crystals lose three eqs. of water, and at a red heat become Manganesii Sulphas.—Manna. PART I. anhydrous. (Brands and Taylor.) The crystals usually have a pale-rose or pink colour. The salt has an astringent and bitterish taste. It is very soluble in water; but its solubility varies with its water of crystallization. When anhy- drous it is dissolved by two parts of water at 60°, and in its own weight at 212°. It is insoluble in alcohol. If carelessly prepared, it is apt to contain copper and arsenic, as well as iron. As it is the source of nearly all the preparations of man- ganese, it is of importance that it should be pure. Hence, the sulphate, as first obtained, should be calcined at a low red heat at least twice, to render the con- taminating metals insoluble, and then tested in solution, to be sure of its purity. According to M. A. Gorgeu, copper and iron, as well as nickel and cobalt, are completely precipitated by sulphuret of manganese. In applying this reagent, the impure solution is shaken for about a quarter of an hour with the sulphuret, and then boiled for a few minutes. (Chem. Oaz., July 1, 1853, p. 249.) In the description of it in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, the salt is stated not to be precipi- tated by tincture of nutgall, to give with alkalies a white precipitate soon be- coming brown on exposure, and to throw down a flesh-coloured precipitate with hydrosulphate of ammonia, and a white one with ferrocyanide of potassium. Medical Properties and Uses. C. G. Graelin found sulphate of manganese to produce an extraordinary secretion of bile when given to the inferior animals, and its effects as a cholagogue have been observed in man. According to the late Dr. Thomas Thomson, of Glasgow, it resembles sulphate of soda both in taste and effect, operating as a purgative in the dose of one or two drachms. From the circumstance that manganese had been found in small proportion in the blood, it was conjectured that this metal, like iron, might play an important part in the human economy; and trial was made of its various preparations in debilitated states of the system, and especially in anaemia, in which the hope was entertained that it might prove a useful adjuvant of the chalybeates as a recon- structive agent. When given with iron, its use was certainly in many instances followed by the most satisfactory results; but it may be questioned whether the beneficial effects were in any respect greater than those which the iron would have produced without such an auxiliary ; and, where manganese has been used alone in anemic cases, it has generally failed. Dr. Garrod, of London, has re- cently reported the result of some trials made with it, in one of the hospitals of that city, in cases of anaemia, the inference from which is altogether unfavour- able to manganese as a remedy in that disease. (Med. Times and Gaz., Feb. 1863, p. 222.) The dose of sulphate of manganese as a tonic is from five to twenty grains. B. MANNA. U S, Br. Manna. The concrete juice, in flakes, of Fraxinus Ornus, and of Fraxinus rotundifolia. U. S. A concrete exudation from the stem, obtained by incisions. Br. Manne, Fr.; Manna, Germ., Ital.; Mana, Span. Manna is not the product of one plant exclusively. Besides Ornus Furopasa indicated by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, it is said to be obtained also from several other trees, belonging to the genera Ornus and Fraxinus, among which 0. ro- tundifolia, F. excelsior, and F. varvi flora have been particularly designated. Many saccharine substances, generally exudations from plants, have, from their resemblance to this substance, obtained the name of manna, and attracted more or less attention from writers. They are described in a note.* * False Mannas. Burkhardt states that a species of manna, which exudes from the tama- risk of the north of Africa ( Tamarix Gallica, Ehrenberg), is used by the Bedouin Arabs near Mount Sinai with their food. This substance, however, according to Mitscherbch, con- tains no mannite, but consists wholly of mucilaginous sugar. M. Bert.helot found a sample of manna from Sinai to consist of 55 per cent, of cane sugar. 25 of Icvulou and glucose. PART I. Manna. Ornus. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.— Nat.Ord. Oleacem. Gen.Ch. Calyx very small, four-cleft. Corolla divided to the base into linear segments. Pericarp a winged key not dehiscing. Lindley. This genus was separated by Persoon from the Fraxinus of Linuteus. Ornus Europsea. Persoon, Synops. i. 9; Lindley, Flor. Med. 547; Carson. must, of Med. Bot. ii. 8, pi. 61.—Fraxinus Ornus. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 1104 . Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 589, t. 209. The flowering ash* is a tree of moderate height, usually from twenty to twenty-five feet, very branching, with opposite, petiolate, pinnate leaves, composed of three or four pairs of leaflets, and an odd one at the end. The leaflets are oval, acuminate, obtusely serrate, about an inch and a half in length, smooth, of a bright-green colour, and supported on short footstalks. The flowers are white, and usually expand with the leaves. They grow in close panicles at the extremity of the young branches, and have a very short calyx with four teeth, and four linear-lanceolate petals. Both this species of Ornus and 0. rotundifolia are natives of Sicily, Calabria, and Apulia; and both contribute to supply the manna of commerce. The former is cultivated in Sicily, yields manna after the eighth year, and continues to yield it for ten or twelve years, when it is usually cut down, and young sprouts allowed to grow up from the root. (Stettner, Archie, der Pharm., liii. 194.) During the hot months the juice exudes spontaneously from the bark, and concretes upon its surface; but, as the exudation is slow, it is customary to facilitate the process by making deep longitudinal incisions on one side of the trunk. In the following season these are repeated on the other side, and thus alternately for the whole period during which the trees yield manna, extending sometimes, it is said, to thirty or even forty years. Straw or chips are frequently placed so as to receive the juice, which concretes upon them. The manna varies iii its character accord- and 20 of dextrin and analogous substances. {Annales de Chim. et Phys., lxvii. 82.) The same chemist obtained from Turkish manna a new variety of sugar, which he named tre- halose. (Gaz. Med. de Paris, A. D. 1857, No. 49.) The manna used in India is said to be the product of Iledysarum Alhagi. of Linn., Alhayi Maurorum of De Candolle, a thorny shrub which grows abundantly in the deserts of Persia and Arabia. It is much inferior to that obtained from the Ornus. A substance closely resembling manna is procured by exudation from Eucalyptus mannifera, growing in New South Wales. It contains a saccharine matter called meUldse, different from mannite, and from all the varieties of sugar in properties, though isomeric with glucose. It is susceptible of the vinous fermentation. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 157.) Another manna found in New Holland is produced upon the leaves of Eucalyptus dumosa, when very small, and sometimes appears spread over large extents of countryTfke a kind of snow. The natives use it for food. It is a complex body, contain- ing sugar, gum, starch, inulin, and lignin. {Journ. de Chim. et de Pharm., xvi. 240.) It is said to be a secretion from an insect, formed into minute cells, each of which is the abode of one of the insects. It is called lerp by the natives. (See Am Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1862. p. 547.) The substance known in France by the name of Briangon manna, is an exudation from the common European larch {iLarix Europsea or Pinus Larix), and differs chemically from ordinary manna in containing no mannite. Berthelot found in it a peculiar sugar, analogous to that of the cane, which he named melezitose. (See Am Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1859, p. 61.) Larix Cedrus, of Mount Lebanon, yields a similar product, which has some repute in Syria as a remedy in phthisis. {Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xiii. 411.) A substanee resembling manna, of a sweet, slightly bitter, and terebinthinate taste, and actively purga- tive, exudes from incisions in Pmus Lambertiana. of Southern Oregon, and is used by the natives. {Nar. of U. S. Expl. Exped., v. 2S27)~Tdn3erthelot has extracted from this product a peculiar saccharine principle, which he calls pinite. It is very sweet, but does not un- dergo the vinous fermentation (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 157.) In the neighbour- hood of Diarbekir, in Asiatic Turkey, a saccharine substance, known as Diarbekir manna, is found on the leaves of dwarf oaks, from which it appears to be exuded. {Ibid., Nov. 1862, p. 546.) Certain seaweeds, after their death, become covered, on exposure to the air, with an efflorescence of mannite, supposed not to pre-exist in the plant, but to be formed at the expense of their mucilaginous matter. {Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1859, p. 314.) * A syrup prepared from the inner bark of this tree has been employed, in Europe, bj Dr Devergie, with supposed advantage, in chronic eczema and impetigo; The bark con- tains much tannin, and a mucilaginous principle, which renders diluted alcohol a better menstruum than boiling water. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e stir., ix. 347.) 534 Manna. PART I. ing to the mode of collection, nature of the season, and period of the year in which the exudation takes place. That procured in Sicily is said to be the best. Three varieties are distinguishable in commerce. 1. The purest is that named Jlake manna, or manna cannulata. It exudes spontaneously, or by incisions, during the hottest and dryest weather in July and August. According to Stettner, it is furnished by the upper incisions upon the trunk; while the lower incisions yield the inferior varieties. It is in irregular, unequal pieces, often several inches long, resembling stalactites, rough, light, porous, brittle, whitish or yellowish-white, and frequently concave on the surface by which they were attached to the trunk, and which is often soiled by impuri- ties, sometimes by adherent fragments of the bark. When broken, these pieces exhibit a crystalline or granular structure. This variety is sometimes in small fragments, generally less than an inch in length. 2. Common manna—manne en sorle of French pharmacy—is next in quality, and is collected in September and the beginning of October, when the heat of the weather has begun to moderate. The juice does not now concrete so readily, and a portion, falling on the ground at the root of the tree, becomes more or less mixed with impurities, and forms imperfectly solid masses, which require to be further dried in the suu. Common manna consists of whitish or yellowish frag- ments, similar to the pieces of flake manna, but much smaller, mixed with a soft, viscid, uncrystallized brownish matter, identical with that which constitutes the following variety. 3. Fat manna is collected in the latter part of October and November, when the weather is cooler and rains more common. The juice is now still less dis- posed to concrete, and flowing down the trunk is received in a small excavation at its base. As found in commerce, it is in the form of a soft, viscous mass, containing few crystalline fragments, of a brown or yellowish-brown colour, and full of impurities. Manna may be found in the shops, of every grade, from the most impure of the third variety to the purest of the first; but the worst kind is not often im- ported into this country. Attempts have sometimes been made to counterfeit manna; but the facility of detection renders frauds of this kind unprofitable, and they are not often practised. Dr. R. P. Thomas has described, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiv. 208), a sophisticated drug, which was brought into our markets under the name of manna, but differed from the genuine drug both in sensible and chemical properties, not even containing mannite. Baume describes a method in which common manna is purified so as to resemble flake manna. It consists in dissolving common manna in a little water, allowing the liquid to settle, de- canting it in order to separate the impurities, then inspissating it so that it will congeal on cooling, and immersing threads in the inspissated liquid, several times successively, in the manner practised by candle-makers. It may be still further purifled by the use of animal charcoal. Thus prepared it contains less mannite than flake manna, and less of the nauseous principle; but is said not to operate less effectively as a laxative. Properties. Manna has a slight, peculiar odour, and a sweet taste, which in the impure kinds is also very nauseous, but, in the finest flake manna, scarcely so much so as to be disagreeable. It melts with heat, and takes fire, burning with a blue flame. When pure it is soluble in three parts of cold, and in its own weight of boiling water. From a boiling saturated aqueous solution, it separates in partially crystalline masses on cooling. Alcohol also dissolves it, and, if saturated by means of heat, deposits upon cooling a large proportion of the manna in a beautifully crystalline form. Fourcroy and Yauquelin found mar ha to consist of, 1. a peculiar sweet principle, called mannite, which constitute e 75 per cent.; 2. true sugar; 3. a yellow nauseous matter, upon which the purgative PART I. Manna.—Maranta. 535 property is thought chiefly to depend; and 4. a little mucilage. Leuehtweiss obtained from 105 parts of manna 11 6 of water, 0 4 of insoluble matter, 9 1 of sugar, 42-6 of mannite, 40-0 of a mixture of mucilaginous matter containing mannite, resin, organic acid, and a nitrogenous substance, and 13 of ashes. It is owing to the presence of true sugar that manna is capable of fermeuting. Mannite is white, inodorous, crystallizable in semi-transparent needles, of a sweetish taste, soluble in five parts of cold water, scarcely soluble in cold alcohol, but readily dissolved by that liquid when hot, and deposited when it cools. Its composition is C12Hu012. Unlike sugar, it does not undergo the vinous fer- mentation ; but, if mixed with chalk and cream cheese, and kept for some weeks at the temperature of 104° F., it yields alcohol largely, with the disengagement of carbonic acid and hydrogen, and the production of lactic acid. No fungus is produced, as in the ordinary fermentation of sugar. (Berthelot, Journ. de Pharm., xxx. 269.) With lime, baryta, and strontia, it forms definite compounds, soluble in water, and precipitable from their aqueous solutions by alcohol. (Ibid., Jan. 1860, p. 56.) It does not reduce an alkaline solution of oxide of copper; and a test of its purity is thus presented. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1861, p. 26.) It may be obtained by boiling manna in alcohol, allowing the solution to cool, and redissolving the crystalline precipitate. Pure mannite is now de- posited. Another method is to dissolve flake manna in water, precipitate by solution of subacetate of lead, filter, throw down the excess of lead by sulphuric acid, evaporate the solution, and mix with alcohol. On cooling, the mannite is deposited. (Bonsall, Arcli. der Pharm., cxxxiv. 70.) This principle has been found in numerous vegetables. It is said to be gently laxative in the dose of one or two ounces. Manna, when long kept, acquires a deeper colour, softens, and ultimately deliquesces into a liquid, which, on the addition of yeast, undergoes the vinous fermentation. This is probably owing to its conversion into sugar by the absorp- tion of enough oxygen to neutralize the slight excess of hydrogen, which con- stitutes the only essential difference in composition between it and proper sugar. That which is dryest resists this change the longest. It is said that manna, re- cently gathered, is less purgative than it afterwards becomes. Medical Properties and Uses. Manna is a gentle laxative, usually operating mildly, but in some cases producing flatulence and pain. Though peculiarly adapted to children and pregnant women, it may be given with advantage in ordinary cases of piles from constipation, unattended with dyspeptic symptoms. It is usually, however, prescribed with other purgatives, particularly senna, rhu- barb, magnesia, and the neutral salts, the taste of which it conceals, while it adds to the purgative effect. The dose for an adult is from one to two ounces; for children, from one to /our drachms. It is usually given dissolved in water or some aromatic infusion; but the best flake manna may be administered in substance. W. MARANTA. U.S. Arrow-root. The fecula of the rhizoma of Maranta arundinacca. U. S. Arrow-root,, Fr.; Amerikanisclies Stark’mehl, Arrowmehl, Germ. Maranta. Sex. Syst. Monandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Marantacese. Gen. Ch Anther attached to the petal-like filament. Style petal-shaped. Stigma three-sided. Flowers panicled. Loudon's Encyc. Maranta arundinacea. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 13; Carson, lllust. of Med. Bot. ii. 53, pi. S'17 The root (rhizoma) of this plant is perennial, tuberous, fleshy, horizontal, nearly cylindrical, scaly, from six inches to a Toot or more in length, Maranta. PART I. and furnished with numerous long white fibres. It sends forth several tuberous, jointed, curved, white, scaly stoics, the points of which sometimes rise above the ground, and become new plants. The stems, of which several proceed from the same root, are annual, slender, branched, jointed, leafy, and about three feet in height. The leaves are ovate-lanceolate, about four inches long, alternate, and supported solitarily, at the joints of the stem, upon long, sheathing footstalks. The flowers are in a long, loose, spreading, terminal panicle, at each ramification of which is a solitary linear bracte. The calyx consists of three small lanceolate leaves. The corolla is white and monopetalous, with a tube longer than the calyx, and a double border, of which the three outermost segments are smallest, and the two inner obovate, and slightly emarginate. The arrow-root plant is a native of the West Indies, where it is largely cul- tivated. It is cultivated also in the East Indies, Sierra Leone, the south of Africa, and our Southern States, especially Georgia and Florida. The plant is easily propagated by cuttings of the root. The fecula is prepared in the follow- ing manner. The roots are dug up when a year”old, washed, and then beaten into a pulp, which is thrown into water, and agitated so as to separate the amylaceous from the fibrous portion. The fibres are removed by the hand, and the starch remains suspended in the water, to which it gives a milky colour. The milky fluid is strained through coarse linen, and allowed to stand that the fecula may subside, which is then washed with a fresh portion of water, and afterwards dried in the sun. We obtain the officinal arrow-root from the West Indies, and the Southern Atlantic States. That from the Bermudas has in general been most highly esteemed.* Other plants contribute to furnish the arrow-root of commerce. Lindley states that it is procured in the West Indies from Maranta Allouya and nobilis. besides M. arundinacea. Under the name of M. Indie a. Tussac de- scribes a distinct species, which he says was originally brought from the East Indies, and is now cultivated in Jamaica. This, however, is generally con- sidered as a mere variety of M. arundinacea, from which it differs chiefly in having leaves more elongated at the point, and smooth on both sides. Very fine arrow-root is obtained in the East Indies from the root of Curcuma anjji.stifo- lia of Roxburgh, which is cultivated in Travancore. But the product is lighter than the Maranta arrow-root, and does not so quickly make a jelly. Ainslie states that M. arundinacea has been introduced from the West Indies into Cey- lon, where good arrow-root is prepared from it. A fecula, closely resembling that of the Maranta, is said by Guibourt to be prepared in the West Indies from the root of the cassava plant (Janipha Manihot): and it is not improbable that a variety of arrow-root brought to this country from Brazil has a similar origin. In fact, it often contains small lumps, as large as a pin’s head, identical with tapioca, which is a product of J. Manihot. A variety of arrow-root has been imported from the Sandwich Islands. Mr. Nuttall, during a visit to these islands, found that it was obtained from a species of Tacca, which he described by the name of Tacca oceanica. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., ix. 305.) It is said that a similar product is afforded by Tacca pinnatifida, growing in the East India province of Arracan. {Pharm. Journ., vi. 383.) Arrow-root has been brought from Florida, prepared near St. Augustine from the root of Zamiaintegrifolia4 by a process similar to that employed for the fecula of the Maranta (Dr J. Car- son, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 22); but care must be taken not to confound this with the genuine maranta from the same State. The tuberous roots of dif- ferent species of Alstroemeria, growing in S. America, yield a fecula, used for the same purposes as the maranta; and a specimen, under the name of Talcahuana * For an account of the cultivation of the plant and the preparation of the fecula in Georgia, see a report by Mr. Robert M. Batfey, of Rome, Georgia, on Maranta arundinacea, in the Proceedings of the Am. l’harm. Association, A. D. 1858, p. 332.—Note to the twelfth edition. part 1. Maranta. 537 arrow-root, was sent from Chili by Dr. Ruschenberger to Prof. Carson of this city, who ascertained it to be the product of the Alstrcemeria liatu. (Ibid., xxxii 289.) In the West Iudies, substitutes for arrow-root are furnished by the roots or Dioscorea sativa or yam, and of Colocasia esculenta, and by the fruit of carpus incisa or bread-fruit tree.* Attempts have been made to substitute finely prepared potato starch for arrow-root; and there is no doubt that in nutritive properties it is quite equal; but patients complain of an unpleasant taste of the potato which it is apt to retain. Arrow-root is in the form of a light white powder, or of small pulverulent masses, without smell or taste. It has a firm feel when pressed between the fingers, and produces a faint crackling sound when rubbed. It is a pure starch, corresponding in chemical properties with that of wheat and the potato. It is very apt to be musty, and should then be rejected. The odour and taste are the best criteria of its purity. It should be perfectly free from smell and un- pleasant flavour. Prof. Procter has rendered musty arrow-root sweet and fit for use by washing it thoroughly with two successive portions of cold water, and then drying it upon frames of muslin in a warm place. (Am. Jourm of Pharm., xiii. 188.) Arrow-root is said to be sometimes adulterated with com- mon starch, and that of the potato. These may be detected by the aid of the microscope. Muriatic acid has been proposed as a test. A mixture of equal parts of that acid and of water, rubbed with about half its weight of potato or wheat starch, very quickly forms so thick a mucilage that the mortar in which the trituration is effected may be raised by the pestle; while the same result does not take place with rice flour or arrow-root under 25 or 30 minutes. So small a proportion as from 4 to 6 per cent, of the impurity may, it is asserted, be detected in this way. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ii. 246.) As the microscope offers the best means of distinguishing the different varie- ties of fecula sold as arrow-root, or used for its adulteration, it is proper to indi- cate the form of their granules as exhibited by this instrument. Those of the proper officinal or Maranta arrow-root are rarely oblong, somewhat ovate- oblong, or irregularly convex, with very-fine rings, a circular hilum which cracks in a linear or stellate manner, and small mammillary processes occasionally pro- jecting from them. (Pereira.) The largest are the 750th of an inch, but many not more than the 2000th of an inch long; and their breadth is generally two- thirds of their length. (Christison.) The granules of the East India arrowy- root are, according to Pereira, of unequal size, ovate or oblong-ovate, flattened, ancToften furnished with a very short neck or nipple-like projection. The rings are numerous, close, and very fine; and the hilum, which is situated at the nar- row extremity, is circular, small, and indistinct. The microscopic appearance of the tapioca fecula will be described under the head of Tapioca. The Tacca fecula from the South Sea Islands, examined by Pereira, consisted of circular, muller-shaped, or polyhedral granules, with few and not very distinct rings, and a small, circular hilum, which cracked in a linear or stellate manner. The Florida or Zamia arrow-root was found by Dr. Carson to consist of granules forming the half, third, or quarter of a solid sphere. The 'potato starch granules are of vari- ous shape and size, but generally ovate or elliptical, and from the 7000th to the 300th of an inch in length; the largest being inferior in size only to the largest of the canna starch or tous-les-mois. (See Ganna.) They are strongly marked with concentric rings, and have a circular hilum, fronuwhich usually proceed the cracks observable in some of the larger grains. (Pereira.) Medical Properties and Uses. Arrow-root is nutritious and demulcent, af- fording a light, very mild, and easily digested article of diet, well adapted for the sick and convalescent, and peculiarly suited, from its demulcent properties, * Specimens of these feculas were seen by the author in the Pnluis d’Industrie of Paris, among the French colonial products, in the autumn of 1860. 538 Marmor.—Marrubium. PART I. to bowel complaints and diseases of the urinary passages. It is much used as food for infants after weaning, or when the mother’s milk is insufficient. It is prepared by dissolving it in hot water, with which it forms a pearly gelatinous solution, and, if in sufficient quantity, a jelly-like mass on cooling. A table- spoonful will communicate sufficient consistence to a pint of water. It should first be formed into a paste with a little cold water, and the boiling water then gradually added with brisk agitation. The preparation may be rendered more palatable by lemon-juice and sugar, or in low forms of disease by wine and spices. For children, arrow-root is usually prepared with milk. Off. Prep. Trochisci Ipecacuanhas, U. 8. W. MARMOR. U.S. Marble. White granular carbonate of lime. U. S. Marble. Hard white crystalline na- tive carbonate of lime, in masses. Br. Appendix. White Marble; Marbre, Fr.; Marmor, Germ,.; Marmo, Ital.; Marmot, Span. Marble is used for obtaining carbonic acid, and for making several officinal preparations. For the former purpose common marble is sufficiently pure; for the latter, the purer varieties must be selected. The officinal marble is a white granular substance, having a sp. gr. varying from 2T to 2-8. It is brittle, pulverizable, and insoluble in water. It is wholly dissolved by dilute muriatic acid with effervescence. If magnesia be present, the neutral muriatic solution will be precipitated by ammonia; and if baryta or strontia be an impurity, a similar effect will be produced by a solution of sul- phate of lime. When marble is exposed to a full red heat, it loses about 44 per cent, of carbonic acid, and is converted into lime. (See Calx.) In composition it agrees with chalk. The purest kind of marble is that of Carrara, sometimes called statuary marble; but it is not necessary that this kind should be obtained for pharma- ceutic operations. Marble, sufficiently pure for these purposes, is found in various parts of the United States. It is necessary, however, to reject the dolomitic marbles, which contain a considerable proportion of magnesia. Marble is used, in pharmacy, chiefly for furnishing carbonic acid gas. Off. Prep, Aqua Acidi Carbonici, U. S.; Liquor Calcii Chloridi, U. S.; Pc* tassas Bicarbonas, Br.; Soda? Bicarbonas, Br. B MARRUBIUM. U.S. Horehound. The herb of Marrubium vulgare. U. S. Marrube blanc, Fr.; Weisser Andorn, Germ.; Marrubio, Ital., Span. Marrubium. Sex. Syst. Didyuamia Gymnospermia. —Nat. Ord. Lanu'aceae oi Labi at se. Vfen. Vh. Calyx salver-shaped, rigid, ten-streaked. Corolla with the uppei lip bifid, linear, and straight. Marrubium vulgare. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. Ill; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 332, t. 118. White horeliound has a perennial fibrous root, and numerous annual stems, which are quadrangular, erect, very downy, and from twelve to eighteen inches high. The leaves are roundish-ovate, dentate or deeply serrate, wrinkled, veined, hoary on the under surface, and supported in pairs upon strong footstalks. The flowers are white, and in crowded axillary whorls. The calyx is tubular, and divided at the margin into ten narrow segments, which are hooked at the end PART I. Marrubium.—Mastiche. 539 The corolla is also tubular, with a labiate margin, of which the upper lip is bifid, the under reflected and three-cleft, with the middle segment broad and slightly scalloped. The seeds are four, in the bottom of the calyx. The plant is a native of Europe, but has been naturalized in this country, where it grows on the road- sides, and flowers in July and August. The herb has a strong rather agreeable odour, which is diminished by drying, and lost by keeping. Its taste is bitter and durable. The bitterness is extracted by water and alcohol. It contains a vol tile oil, bitter extractive, resin, tannin, and lignin. Medical Properties and Uses. Horehound is tonic, in large doses laxative, and may be so given as to increase the secretion from the skin, and occasionally from the kidneys. It was formerly considered a valuable deobstruent, and re- commended in chronic hepatitis, jaundice, amenorrhoea, phthisis, and various cachectic affections. By its gently tonic powers it may have proved advantageous in some of these complaints; but it exerts no specific influence over any, and has passed mainly from the hands of physicians into domestic use. It is em- ployed chiefly in catarrh, and other chronic affections of the lungs attended with cough and copious expectoration. The infusion made in the proportion of an ounce of the herb to a pint of boiling water may be given in wineglassful doses. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm. The medicine is also much used in the shape of syrup and candy. W. MASTICHE. U.S.,Br. The concrete juice of Pistacia Lentiscus. U. S. A resinous exudation from the stem, obtained by incision. Br. Mastic, Fr.; Mastix, Germ.; Mastice, Ital.; Almastiga, Span.; Sakes, Turk.; Arab, Arab. Pistacia. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Pentandria.—Nat. Ord. Anacardiaceae. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx five-cleft. Corolla none. three-cleft. Corolla none. Styles three. Drupe one-seeded. Willd. Pistacia Lentiscus. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 753; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 26, t. 11. The lentisk is a shrub or small tree, seldom more than twelve feet in height, much branched towards the top, and furnished with petiolate, abruptly pinnate leaves. The leaflets are from eight to twelve, and usually alternate, with the exception of the two upper, which are opposite. They are ovate-lanceolate, entire, obtuse, often mucronate, and sessile upon the common footstalk, wdiich has a narrow foliaceous expansion on each side. The flowers are dioecious, and very small. The male are in an axillary ament; the female are arranged alter- nately upon a common peduncle, which is also axillary. The tree is a native of the countries bordering upon the Mediterranean. The fruit yields by expression a fixed oil, of a deep-green colour, and liquid at about 90° F., which the Arabs of North Africa use both as an article of diet and for light. A resinous exuda- tion from the stem and branches is the officinal part, but it does not appear to be collected in all places where the tree flourishes. Mastic is obtained chiefly from the island of Scio or Chios, in the Grecian Archipelago^where the tree is cultivated for this "product. Tncisions are made in the" trunk and principal branches, from which the juice slowly exudes, and either hardens in tears upon the bark, or drops on the ground, where it is re- ceived upon cloths, or the bare earth, and concretes in irregular masses. The tears arf* most esteemed. They are of various sizes, oval or roundish, often compressed, smooth, semi-transparent, of a pale-yellow colour, of a shining frac- ture, friable, and usually covered with a whitish powder, occasioned by their 'fiction against each other. The masses consist of yellowish agglutinated tears, Mastic. 540 Mastich e. —Matico. PART I. with others of a darker colour and less translucent, and often fragments of wood, bark, or earthy matter intermingled. Mastic is nearly inodorous, unless rubbed or heated, when it becomes fra- grant. Its taste is weak but agreeably terebinthinate, and, after long chewing, very slightly acrid. It is at first friable under the teeth, but soon becomes soft and ductile, and acquires a white opaque appearance. Its.sp.gr. is l-074. It is fusible and inflammable by heat. Alcohol dissolves about four-fifths of it, leav- ing a viscid substance which becomes brittle when dried, and for which the name of masticin has been proposed. This substance, though not dissolved by alco- hol, softens and swells up in it, as gluten does in water. According to Berzelius, it possesses the same general properties as copal, and should be considered as a variety of resin. Mastic is wholly soluble in ether, chloroform, and oil of tur- pentine, scarcely soluble in the fixed oils, and insoluble in water. It consists chiefly of resin, with masticin, and a minute proportion of volatile oil, which can scarcely be said to have been obtained in a separate state, though it imparts flavour to alcohol and water distilled from the mastic, especially when this has been previously triturated with an equal weight of carbonate of potassa. Mastic is occasionally adulterated with olibanum, sandarach, and other resin- ous bodies; and, in seasons of scarcity, with sea-salt. Medical Broperties and Uses. Mastic was formerly thought to possess pro- perties analogous to those of the turpentines, and was used in debility of the stomach, haemoptysis from ulceration, leucorrhoea, chronic diarrhoea, &c.; but its virtues were overrated, and it is at present scarcely ever given internally. In the East, however, an aqueous infusion is said to be still used in infantile cholera; and the Greeks employ cataplasms made by mixing it with bread and red wine, which they apply to the lower abdomen. (Landerer.) It is sometimes employed to fill the cavities of carious teeth, for which purpose it is well fitted by its softness. Great quantities of it are consumed in Turkey, where it is habitually chewed by the women, under the impression that it sweetens the breath, and preserves the gums and teeth. The alcoholic solution has been em- ployed as a styptic in bleeding from the nose, leech-bites, &c., being applied by means of a camel’s hair pencil directly to the bleeding vessel. Dissolved in alcohol or oil of turpentine, it forms a brilliant varnish. A solution made by macerating half an ounce of mastic and fifteen grains of caoutchouc in two fluidounces of chloroform, and filtering in close vessels, forms a varnish highly esteemed by some mieroscopists. The following mode of applying it to carious teeth has been recommended. Dissolve four parts of mastic in one of ether, in a bottle well stopped. With the solution thus formed, which is yellow and of an oily consistence, saturate a small piece of cotton of the size of the carious cavity, and, having well cleansed and dried the cavity, introduce the cotton, without painful pressure, so as to fill it exactly. The resin attaches itself to the diseased surface of the tooth, which it protects from the air, and from the food taken into the mouth. Off. Prep. Pilulce Aloes et Mastiches, U. S. W. MATICO. US. Matico. The leave: of Artanthe elongata. U. S., Br. Off. Syn. Matic'a.’Artanthe elongata, The dried leaves. Br. Artanthe. Sex. Syst. Diandria Trigynia.—Nat. Ord. Piperaceae. Gen. Ch. Spikes solitary, opposite the leaves. Flowers hermaphrodite. Style none. Bractes peltate or cucullate. Miquel. This genus, separated by Miquel from Piper, is very extensive, embracug PART I. Matico. 541 nearly a hundred species diffused through South and Central America. At least, two of these have contributed to furnish their products to commerce; but it is to the A. elongata exclusively that the medicine called matico has been offi- cinally ascribed.* Artanthe elongata. Miquel; Lindley, Med. and CEconom. Bot. p. 133, fig. 195.—Piper angustifolium. Ruiz and Pavon, Flor. Peruv.—Piper elongating. Vahl. This is a shrub with a jointed stem about twelve feet in height. In a dried specimen received from Dr. Ruschenberger, of the IJ. S. Navy, the leaves are sessile or very shortly petiolate, oval-lanceolate, acuminate, two or three inches long by about an inch in breadth, bright-green on the upper surface, paler and downy beneath, crenate, minutely and strongly reticulated, of an agreeable aromatic odour, and a strong spicy taste. The spikes are solitary, opposite the leaves, and cylindrical. The bractes are peltate or cucullate; the flowrers hermaphrodite. The plant is a native of Peru. The leaves, spikes, and stalks are mixed together, and more or less com- pressed, in the packages of the imported drug; and are all possessed of activity, though the leaver only are recognised by the Pharmacopoeias. Their shape and general aspect have been described above, as well as their smell and taste. They are readily pulverized, forming a light, greenish, absorbent powrder. According to Dr. Hodges, they contain chlorophyll, a soft dark-green resin, brown and yellow colouring matters, gum, salts, lignin, a light-green, thickish volatile oil. and a peculiar bitter principle, soluble in water and alcohol, but not in ether, which he calls maticin. (Philos. Mag., Sept. 1844, p. 206.) According to Mr. Wiegand, the maticin of Dr. Hodges is a salt of potassa. Mr. John J. Stell, who examined the drug in the expectation of discovering a principle analogous to cubebin or piperin, failed in the attempt. He found, however, the resin to be very acrid and pungent, and reasonably inferred that the virtues of matico reside in it and the volatile oil. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1858, p. 392.) Medical Properties and Uses. Matico is an agreeable aromatic tonic and stimulant, having a tendency, like cubebs, to act on the urinary passages, it has long been known as a medicine in Peru. Dr. Martius speaks of its use by the natives externally as a vulnerary, and internally as aphrodisiac [Pharm. Cent. Blatt, 1843, p. 12); and, according to Dr. Scrivener, wdio practised medi- cine at Lima, it is much employed in Peru locally for arresting hemorrhage, and in the treatment of ulcers. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 175.) In 1839 it was brought to England, and was prescribed by Dr. Jeffreys, of Liverpool, with advantage, in diseases of the mucous membranes; as gonorrhoea, leucorrhoea, menorrhagia, catarrh of the bladder, hemorrhoids, and epistaxis. Others have employed it wTith benefit in similar cases and in diarrhoea; and it is said to have proved useful in haemoptysis, hsematemesis, dysentery, and haematuria. Dr. * Ava. Kava. The root of another species of the old genus Piper, Pmethysticum (Macrs viper methysticum, Miguel), is used in the Sandwich Islands to form an intoxicating drink, under the name of ava, kava, or kaica. See an article by Mr. Morson in the Pharm. Journ. and Trans, (iii. 472), where the plant is figured. M. Gobley has discovered in this root a crystalline principle analogous to piperin which he calls melhysticin, and which, possessing neither odour nor taste, is probably inert. He found also a greenish-yellow resin, of a strong aromatic smell, and an acrid pungent taste, to which he ascribes the powers of the root. [Journ. de, Pharm,., Janv. 1860, p. 20.) The priority of this discovery having been dis- puted by M. Cuzent, the question was referred by the Society of Pharmacy of Paris to a committee, who, after investigating the subject, ascertained that the priority of the dis- covery was in fact due to Mr. Morson of London, who had announced the discovery so early as 1844; though both the other chemists were ignorant of this fact. The name of kavnne has been proposed for the acrid resin supposed to be the active principle of the kava. The root contains also a volatile oil, which probably participates with the resin in its effects. [Ibid., Mars, 1862, p. 215.) It is said to be an excellent remedy in gonorrhoea [Ann. de Therap., 1857, p. 61); and a tincture of it has been recently strongly recommended by Dr. E. W. Pritchard, used internally and locally, as a remedy in gout. (Med. Times and Gaz., Dec. 1854, p. 591.) 542 Matico.—Matricaria. PART I. Tlusenenberger gives strong testimony in its favour in several of the diseases mentioned. Its most useful internal application is probably as an alterative stimulant to the diseased raucous membranes. If efficient as a haemostatic, it must be on principles similar to those npon which oil of turpentine acts; for it is not astringent. As a local styptic it probably acts mechanically in' the same manner as agaric. The dose of the powder is from half a drachm to two drachms three times a day. The infusion and tincture are officinal. Prof. Bentley, of London, describes a new variety of matico, brought from a port of Central America, consisting of broken leaves, spikes, and branches, which he referred to another species of the same genus, Artanthe adunca, grow- ing in the W. Indies and various parts of S. America. The medicine is dis- tinguishable from the genuine, by the want of the reticulated upper surface and downy under surface which characterize the latter. Prof. Bentley found the sensible properties of the new variety very similar to the old, and assumes that in medicinal virtues the two are nearly identical. {Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1864, p. 290.) Of. Prep. Infusum Maticse, Br. W. MATRICARIA. U.S. German Chamomile. The flowers of Matricaria ChamomiHa. U. S. Matricaria. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua. — Nat.Ord. Composite-Sene- cionideae, De Cand. Asteraceae, Lindley. Gen. Ch. Calyx flat, imbricate, with scales having scarious margins. Recep- tacle naked, terete. Pappus none. Matricaria ChamomiHa. Linn. Sp. 1256. This is an annual plant, with a branching'sfern'alborbr two in height, bearing alternate leaves about two inches long, the lower ones tripinnate, the upper bipinnate or simply pinnate, and all of them very green, and nearly or quite smooth. The leaflets are linear and very small. The flowers appear singly at the ends of the stem and branches. They are about three-quarters of an inch in diameter, with the ray spreading. The scales of the calyx are obtuse, green in the middle, and whitish, membra- nous, and translucent at the margin. The ray florets are white, at first spread- ing, and ultimately reflected. The disk is of a deep-yellow colour, at first flat, but in the end convex, and even somewhat conical. The plant is a native of Europe, and is occasionally cultivated in our gar- dens. All parts of it are active; but the flowers only are officinal. These shrink in drying, so that they are scarcely half as large as in their recent state. Those found in our shops are imported from Germany. The dried flowers of the Matricaria are considerably smaller than common chamomile, and exhibit a larger proportion of the disk florets compared with those of the ray. They have a strong, peculiar, rather unpleasant odour, and a disagreeable bitter taste. Their active constituents are volatile oil and bitter extractive, which are readily taken up by water and alcohol. The oil, which is obtained by distillation with water, is thick, somewhat tenacious,’"oFaTfine deep- blue colour becoming brown by age, and almost opaque in mass. Though sup- posed by Gerhardt to be identical with the oil of the proper chamomile (An- themis nobilis), it has been shown to be distinct. (Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1862, p. 429.) It congeals at —4° F. Diluted muriatic and nitric acids render it green, concentrated sulphuiic acid reddish-yellow, chlorine yellowish-white and tena- cious, iodine reddish-brown and thick, and bromine brown and elastic. (See Am Journ. of Pharm., March, 1864, p. 109.) Medical Properties and Uses. Matricaria is a mild tonic, very similar to part I. Matricaria.—Mel. 543 chamomile in medical properties, and, like it, capable, in large doses, of pro- ducing an emetic effect. It is esteemed also in Europe antispasmodic and an- thelmintic. It is much employed in Germany; but in this country scarcely at all, unless by German practitioners It may be given for the same purposes and in the same manner as chamomile. W. MEL. U. S., Br. Honey. A liquid prepared by Apis mellifica. U. S. A saccharine secretion deposited 6y the insect in the honey-comb. Br. Miel, Fr.; Honig, Germ.; Miele, Ital.; Miel, Span. Naturalists have not yet determined whether honey is a secretion of the bee, Apis mellifica, or whether it exists already formed in plants. It is certain that the nectaries of flowers contain a saccharine matter, which is extracted by the insect; and the fact is well known that the flavour and character of honey are very much affected by the nature of the plants which predominate in the vicinity of the hive; so much so that, when these plants are poisonous, the fluid some- times partakes of their noxious qualities. Several cases of poisoning from eating honey from a particular source, are recorded in the New Jersey Med. Reporter for November, 1852, p. 46. Still, it probably undergoes change in the organs of the bee; as the saccharine matter of the nectaries, so far as it has been possible to examine it, wants some of the characteristic properties of honey. The finest honey is that which is allowed to drain from the comb. If obtained from hives that have never swarmed, it is called virgin honey. An inferior kind is procured by submitting the comb to pressure; and, if heat be employed pre- vious to expression, the product is still more impure. Honey is collected in different parts of the United States; but much also of that used in the shops is imported from the West Indies. In the recent state honey is fluid ; but, on being kept, it is apt to form a crys- talline deposit, and to be ultimately converted into a soft granular mass. In the shops it is found of every consistence, from that of a viscid liquid like thin syrup or oil, to that of lard or soft suet. Its colour is sometimes white, but usually yellowish, and occasionally of a brown or reddish tinge. It has a peculiar agreeable odour, varying somewhat with the flowers from which it was collected, and a very sweet, feebly aromatic taste, which is followed by a slight prickling, or sense of acrimony in the fauces. Its sp. gr. is about 1*333. (Duncan.) Cold water dissolves it readily, alcohol with less facility. It contains crystallizable sugar analogous to that of grapes, and, according to Soubeiran, two other kinds of sugar, one of which is changed by acids, and has the property of turning to the right the plane of polarization; and the other, not acted on by acids, and possessedt of a strong left-handed rotating power. The first of these two sugars is not always present; as there is reason to believe that it is in time wholly changed by acid into granular sugar. It is especially abundant in the honey taken from the comb. The second variety is very similar to the uncrystallizable sugar produced by the reaction of acids on cane-sugar, being identical with it in composition, and like it incapable of crystallizing, and very sensitive to the action of alkalies. But it is distinguished by the impossibility of converting it into granular sugar, and by having nearly twice the rotating power of common uncrystallizable sugar. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xvi. 252.) Honey contains, besides these saccharine principles, an aromatic principle, an acid, wax, and, according to Guibourt, a little mannite. The crystalline sugar may be obtained by treating granular honey with a small quantity of alcohol, which, when ex- pressed, takes along with it the other ingredients, leaving the crystals nearly 544 Mel.—Melissa. PART I. untouched. The same end may be attained by melting the honey, saturating its acid with carbonate of lime, filtering the liquid, then setting it aside to crystal- lize, and washing the crystals with alcohol. Inferior honey usually contains a large proportion of uncrystallizable sugar and vegetable acid. Diluted with water, honey undergoes the vinous fermentation. In warm weather, honey, if not very pure, sometimes ferments, acquiring a pungent taste and deeper colour. Starch is said to be occasionally added to the inferior kinds to give them a white appearance. The adulteration may be de- tected by dilution with water, which dissolves the honey and leaves the starch at the bottom of the vessel. The nature of the deposit may be tested by the tinc- ture of iodine. Water is said to be sometimes added to honey to increase its bulk. Its presence may be suspected from the greater thinness of the liquid, and its want of disposition to crystallize. Medical Properties and Uses. Honey possesses the same medical properties with sugar, but is more disposed to run off by the bowels, and to occasion grip- ing pain. Though largely consumed as an article of food, it is seldom employed medicinally, except as the vehicle of more active substances. Its taste and de- mulcent qualities render it a useful addition to gargles; and it is sometimes employed as an application to foul ulcers, and in the form of enema. Off. Prep. Mel Depuratum, Br.; Mel Despumatum, U. S. "W. MELISSA. US. Secondary. Balm. The herb of Melissa officinalis. U. S. Melisse, Fr.; Garten-Melisse, Germ,.; Melissa, Ital.; Torongil, Span. Melissa. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Gymnospermia.— Nat. Ord. Lamiaceae or Labi at®. Gen. Ch. Calyx dry, nearly flat above; with the upper lip sub-fastigiate Corolla, upper lip somewhat arched, bifid; lower lip with the middle lobe cor- date. Willd. Melissa officinalis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 146; Woodv. Med. Bot, p. 334, t. 119. Balm has a perennial root, which sends up annually several erect quad- rangular stems, usually branched towards the base, and a foot or two in height. The leaves are opposite, ovate or cordate, deeply serrate, pubescent; the lower on long footstalks, the uppermost nearly sessile. The flowers are white or yel- lowish, upon short peduncles, and in axillary whorls, surrounding only half the stem. The calyx is tubular, pentangular, and bilabiate, with the upper lip tri- dentate and flattened, the lower cut into two pointed teeth. The corolla is also tubular and bilabiate, the upper lip less convex and notched, the lower three- cleft. The plant is a native of the south of Europe. It has been introduced into this country, where it is cultivated in gardens, and grows wild along the fences of our roads and lanes. For use the herb should be cut before the appearance of the flowers, which begin to expand in July. In the fresh state, it has a fragrant odour very similar to that of lemons; but is nearly inodorous when dried. The taste is somewhat austere, and slightly aromatic. The herb contains a minute proportion of a yellowish or reddish-yellow essential oil, which has its peculiar flavour in a very high degree. It coutains also tannin, bitter extractive, and gum. Medical Properties and Uses. Balm scarcely produces any remedial effects upon the system. The quantity of oil which it contains is not more than suf- ficient to communicate an agreeable flavour to the infusion, which forms an ex- cellent drink in febrile complaints, and when taken warm tends to promote the operation of diaphoretic medicines. W. PART L Mentha Piperita. 545 MENTHA PIPERITA. U.S. Peppermint. The herb of Mentha piperita. U. S. Menthe poivree, Fr.; Pfeffermiinze, Germ.; Menta piperita, Ilal.; Pimenta piperita, Span. Mentha. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Gvmnospermia.— Nat. Ord. Lamiaceae or Labiatse. Gen. Gh. Corolla nearly equal, four-cleft; the broader segment emarginate. Stamens upright, distant. Willd. Several species of Mentha possess medicinal properties. Besides the two here described, M. piperita, namely, and M. viridis, the Mentha Pulegium, under the name of pulegium or pennyroyal, long held a place in the British Pharmaco- poeias. It has, however, been discarded, and in the present Br. Pharmacopoeia is not recognised. As in the other species, the herb in flower was employed, both fresh and dried. The plant is specifically characterized by its roundish prostrate stems, its ovate, obtuse, somewhat crenate leaves, and its verticillate flowers. It is a native of Europe, and neither cultivated nor employed in this country ; our native pennyroyal belonging to a different genus. (See Hedeoma Pulegioides.) Pulegium possesses similar properties, and has been employed for the same pur- poses, and in the same manner with the other mints. It was used in the forms of water, spirit, and volatile oil. Mentha piperita. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 79; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. 330, t. 120; Carson, 7uuslTof'Med. Pot. ii. 16, pi. 63. Peppermint is a perennial herbaceous plant, with a creeping root, and quadrangular, channeled, purplish, somewhat hairy stems, branched towards the top, and about two feet in height. The leaves are opposite, petiolate, ovate, serrate, pointed, smoother on the upper than the under surface, and of a dark-green colour, which is paler beneath. The flowers are small, purple, and in terminal obtuse spikes, interrupted below. The calyx is tubular, furrowed, and five-toothed; the corolla is also tubular, with its bor- der divided into four segments, of which the uppermost is broadest, and notched at its apex. The anthers are concealed within the tube of the corolla; the style projects beyond it, and terminates in a bifid stigma. The four-cleft germ is con- verted into four seeds, which are lodged in the calyx. This species of mint is a native of Great Britain, whence it has been conveyed to the continent of Europe and to this country. In some parts of the United States, especially in New England, Michigan,* the western part of New York, Ohio, and New Jersey, it is largely cultivated for the sake of its volatile oil. We occasionally find it growing wild along the fences of our villages. The cul- tivators of this herb have observed that, in order to maintain its flavour in per- fection, it is necessary to transplant the roots every three years. It should be cut for medical use in dry weather, about the period of the expansion of the flowers. These appear in August. The herb, both in the recent and dried state, has a peculiar, penetrating, grate- ful odour. The taste is aromatic, warm, pungent, glowing, camphorous, bitter- ish, and attended with a sensation of coolness when air is admitted into the *nouth. These properties depend on a volatile oil, which abounds in the herb, and may be separated by distillation with water. (See Oleum Menthse Piper it ee.) * For an account of the cultivation of the plant in Michigan, from one county of which, 'hat of St. Joseph, it is stated that, “for the last ten years, the largest proportion of the '):1 of peppermint, produced in the world, has been sent,” see a paper by Mr. Frederick Stearns, of Detroit, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1859, p. 33. For some interesting remarks in relation to the cultivation of peppermint in England, the reader is referred to the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiii. 239.) 546 Mentha Piperita.—Mentha Viridis.—Mezereum. PART I. The leaves are said to contain a little tannic acid. The virtues of the herb are imparted to water, and more readily to alcohol. Medical Properties and Uses. Peppermint is a grateful aromatic stimulant, much used for all the purposes to which medicines of this class are applied. To allay nausea, relieve spasmodic pains of the stomach and bowels, expel flatus, and cover the taste or qualify the nauseating or griping effects of other medi- cines are among the most common of these purposes. The fresh herb, bruised and applied to the epigastrium, often allays sick stomach, and is useful in the cholera of children. The medicine may be given in infusion; but the volatile oil, either alone, or in some state of preparation, is generally preferred. Off. Prep. AquaMenthae P i p e r i t ae, U. S.; Oleum Menthae Piperitae; Spiritus Menthse W MENTHA VIRIDIS. U.S. Spearmint. The herb of Mentha viridis. TJ. S. Menthe a epi, ffr.; Grune Miinze, Germ.; Menta Romana, Ital.; Yerba buena puntia- guda, Span. Mentha. See MENTHA PIPERITA. Mentha viridis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 16; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 338, t. 121. Spearmint, sometimes called simply nvjM, differs from M. piperita chiefly in having sessile or nearly sessile, lanceolate, naked leaves; elongated, interrupted, panicled spikes; setaceous bractes; and stamens longer than the tube of the corolla. Like the preceding species, it is a native of Europe. In this country it is cultivated in gardens for domestic use, and in some places more largely for the sake of its oil. It also grows wild in low grounds, in long settled parts of the country. Its flowering season is August.. According to Thomson, it should be cut in very dry weather, and, if intended for medical use, just as the flowers appear; if for obtaining the oil, after they have expanded. The odour of spearmint is strong and aromatic, the taste warm and slightly bitter, less pungent than that of peppermint, but considered by some as more agreeable. These properties are retained for some time by the dried plant. They depend on a volatile oil, which is obtained by distillation, and is imparted to alcohol and water by maceration. (See Oleum Menthse Viridis.) Medical Properties. The virtues and applications of this plant are the same as those of peppermint. Off. Prep. Aqua Menthse Viridis, U. S.; Oleum Menthse Viridis; Spiritus Menthse Viridis, U. S. 7 W MEZEREUM. U.S., Br. Mezereon. The bark of Daphne Mezereum. and of Daplrne Gnidium. U. S. Daphne Me- zereum, or Daphne Laureola. The bark dried. Br. Bois gentil, Fr.; Kellerhals, Germ.; Mezereo, Ital.; Mecereon, Span. Daphne. Sex. Syst. Octandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Thymelacese. Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Corolla four-cleft, withering, enclosing the stamens. Drupe one-seeded. Willd. All the species of Daphne are possessed of active properties; but three only are officinal—D. Mezereum, D. Laureolaand D. Gnidium—the first two of which are recogmsecl in the British Pharmacopoeia, the last in the French Codex, and the first and last in the Pharmacopoeia of the United States. 1. Daphne Mezereum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 415; Woodv. Med. Bot p 717, part r. Mezereum. t. 245; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 26, pi. 72. This is a very hardy shruh. three or four feet high, with a branching stem, and a smooth dark-gray bark, very easily separable from the wood. The leaves spring from the ends of tne branches, are deciduous, sessile, obovate-lan'ceolate, entire, smooth, of a pale- green colour, somewhat glaucous beneath, and about two inches long. They are preceded by the flowers, which appear very early in spring, and sometimes bloom even amidst the snow. These are of a pale-rose colour, highly fragrant, and disposed in clusters, each consisting of two or three flowers, forming to- gether a kind of spike at the upper part of the stem and branches. At the base of each cluster are deciduous floral leaves. The fruit is oval, shining, fleshy, of a bright-red colour, and contains a single round seed. Another variety produces white flowers and yellow fruit. This species of Daphne is a native of Great Britain and the neighbouring continent, in the northern parts of which it is particularly abundant. It is cul- tivated in Europe both for medicinal purposes and as an ornamental plant, and is occasionally found in our own gardens. It flowers in February, March, or April, according to the greater or less mildness of the climate. 2. Daphne Gnidium. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 420. In this species, called garou or sain-bois by the French, the leaves are linear-lanceolate, acute, entire, smooth, and irregularly but closely set upon the branches. The flowers are white, downy, odoriferous, and disposed in terminal panicled racemes. The fruit is globular, dry, at first green, but ultimately black. D. Gnidium grows in dry uncultivated places in the south of Europe, and flowers in June. In France its bark is used indiscriminately with that of the former species. Besides the species above described, Daphne Laureola, or spurge laurel, is said to furnish a portion of the mezereon of commerce; but its product is infe- rior in acrimony, and consequently in medicinal activity. The bark of the root was formerly directed; but the mezereon with which our markets are supplied is evidently the bark of the stem; and the Pharma- copoeias at present very properly direct the bark, without designating the part from which it must be taken. British writers state that the bark of the root is the most active. The berries and leaves of the plant are also active; and the former have sometimes proved fatal to children who have eaten them. Pallas states that they are used as a purgative by the Russian peasants, and that thirty berries are required to act. French authors observe that fifteen are sufficient to kill a Frenchman. A tincture of them is used in Germany as a local applica- tion in neuralgia. (Ann. de Therap., 1854, p. 42.) Mezereon is brought to us chiefly from Germany. Properties. Mezereon, as it comes to us, is usually in strips, from two to four feet long and an inch or less in breadth, sometimes flat, sometimes partially rolled, and always folded in bundles, or wrapped in the shape of balls. It is covered externally with a grayish or reddish-brown wrinkled epidermis, very thin, and easily separable from the bark. Beneath the epidermis is a soft, green- ish tissue. The inner bark is tough, pliable, fibrous, striated, and of a whitish colour. When fresh it has a nauseous smell, but in the dry state is nearly in- odorous. Its taste is at first sweetish, but afterwards highly acrid and even cor- rosive. It yields its virtues to water by decoction. Vauquelin discovered a peculiar principle in the bark of Daphne Alpina. This has subsequently been found in other species, and has received the name of daphnin. Gmelin and Bar found it in the bark of D. Mezereum. associated - with wax, an acrid resin, a yellow colouring matter, reddish-brown extractive, an uncrystallizable and fermentable sugar, a gummy matter containing azote, ligneous fiore, malic acid, and several malates. By J. B. Eng it has been dis- covered, together with a volatile oil, in the flowers of Daphne Mezereum. (Witt- stein's Viert. Sohr., viii. 23.) Daphnin is in prismatic crystals grouped together, 548 Mezereum. PART I. colourless, transparent, brilliant, slightly soluble in cold water, very soluble in boiling water and alcohol, without odour, and of a bitter, somewhat austere taste. By Zwenger it is said to be insoluble in ether. The same chemist states that it has an acid reaction, and acts like the glucosides, being resolvable by sul- phuric or muriatic acid into sugar, and a peculiar crystallizable principle called daphne tin. He gives for daphnin the formula C62H34038-f 8HO. (Annal. der Chem. und Pharm., cxv. 1.) It is obtained by treating ttie alcoholic extract of the bark with water, decanting the solution, precipitating with subacetate of lead, filtering, decomposing the excess of the subacetate by sulphuretted hydro- gen, again filtering, evaporating to dryness, submitting the residue to the action of anhydrous alcohol, and evaporating the alcoholic solution to the point of crystallization. Though daphnin is probably not inert, it is not the principle upon which the virtues of mezereon chiefly depend. Yauquelin thinks that in the recent plant they reside in an essential oil, which by time and exposure is changed into a resin, without losing its activity. The acrid resin, observed by Gmelin and Bar, is probably the characteristic principle to which the bark owes its vesicating properties. It is obtained separate by boiling mezereon in alcohol, allowing the liquor to cool in order that it may deposit some wax which it has taken up, then distilling off the alcohol, and treating the residue with water, which leaves the resin. This is of a dark-green, almost black colour, hard and brittle, and of an exceedingly acrid and permanent taste. In the isolated state it is slightly soluble in water; and it is much more so when combined with the other principles of the bark. It appears, however, not to be a pure proximate prin- ciple, but rather a resinoid combination of an acrid fixed oil with another sub- stance. The acrid principle of mezereon is partially given off by decoction with water, as proved by the irritating character of the vapour when inhaled; but none of it appears to escape when the bark is boiled with alcohol. (Squire, Pharm. Transact., i. 395.) Medical Properties and Uses. The recent bark applied to the skin produces inflammation followed by vesication, and has been popularly used as an epis- pastic, from time immemorial, in some of the southern countries of Europe. The dried bark, though less active, is possessed of a similar property, and is occa- sionally employed in France by regular practitioners for the purpose of forming issues. A small square piece, moistened with vinegar, is applied to the skin, and renewed twice a day till a blister is formed, and occasionally afterwards to keep up the discharge. It is slow in its operation, generally requiring from twenty-four to forty-eight hours to vesicate. An irritant ointment is prepared from mezereon, which is used for maintaining the discharge from blistered sur- faces, and may be applied advantageously to obstinate, ill-conditioned, indolent ulcers. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, it was directed to be made by digest- ing the bark with melted lard, and straining; but was discarded at the last revi- sion of that work. This, we think, was unfortunate; for, though the method of preparing it was defective, another might have been adopted, which would have yielded a good preparation, and an irritating ointment of the kind is needed. It may be made by mixing two drachms of an alcoholic extract of mezereon with nine ounces of lard and one of wax, melted together. The alcoholic extract has also been employed to communicate irritant properties to issue peas. Internally administered, mezereon is a stimulant capable of being directed to the skin or kidneys, and in large doses apt to excite purging, nausea, and vomit- ing. In overdoses it produces the fatal effects of the acrid poisons; and a case of apparently severe narcotic effects has been recorded. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sbi., xxi. 518.) It had at one time much reputation as a remedy in the secondary stages of syphilis, and still enters as an ingredient into the officinal compound decoction of sarsaparilla. It has also been thought to act favourably as an alterative in scrofulous affections, chronic rheumatism, and obstinate di'eases of PART I. Mezereum.—Monarda.—Mon Succus. 549 the skin. For this purpose it is usually administered in decoction. (SeeDecoctum Mezerei.) Dr. Withering cured a case of difficult swallowing from palsy, by directing the patient to chew frequently small pieces of the root. The dose ot the bark in substance is ten grains; but it is seldom used in this way. Off. Prep. Decoct. Sarsae Compositum, Br.; Decoctum Sarsaparillae Com- positum, U. S.; Extractum Sarsaparille Fluidum Compositum, U. S. W. MONARDA. U.S. Horsemint. The herb of Monarda punctata. TJ. S. Monarda. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Lamiaceae or La; biatae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-toothed, cylindric, striate. Corolla ringent, with a long cylindric tube; upper lip linear, nearly straight and entire, involving the fila- ments ; lower lip reflected, broader, three-lobed, the middle lobe longer. Nuttall. Monarda punctata. WTilld. Sp. Plant, i. 126; Am. Med. Recorder, vol. ii. p. 496. This is an indigenous perennial or biennial plant, with herbaceous, obtusely angled, downy, whitish, branching stems, rising one or two feet in height, and furnished with oblong-lanceolate, remotely serrate, smooth, punctate leaves. The flowers are yellow, spotted with red or brown, and disposed in numerous whorls, provided with lanceolate, coloured bractes, longer than the whorl. The horsemint grows in light gravelly or sandy soils from New Jersey to Louisiana, and flowers from June to September. The whole herb is employed. It has an aromatic smell, and a warm, pungent, bitterish taste, and abounds in a volatile oil, which may be separated by distillation with water. Medical Properties and Uses. Horsemint is stimulant and carminative ; but is seldom used in regular practice. In the state of infusion it is occasionally employed in families as a remedy for flatulent colic and sick stomach, and for other purposes to which the aromatic herbs are applied. It was introduced into the primary catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, on account of the volatile oil which it affords. (See Oleum Monardae.) Off. Prep. Oleum Monardae, U. S. W. MORI SUCCUS. Br. Mulberry Juice. Morus nigra. The juice of the ripe fruit. Br. -—7 Mures, Fr.; Schwarze Maulbeeren, Germ.; Morone. Ital ; Moras, Span. Morus. Sex. Syst. Moncecia Tetrandria. — Nat. Ord. Urticaceae. Gen.Ch. Male. Calyx four-parted. Corolla none. Female. Calyx four- leaved. Corolla none. Styles two. Calyx berried. Seed one. Willd. Morus nigra. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 36; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 712, t. 243. This species of mulberry is distinguished by its cordate-ovate or lobed, un- equally toothed, and scabrous leaves. It is a tree of middle size, supposed to have been brought originally from Persia into Italy, and thence spread over Europe and America. Its leaves afford food for the silk-worm; and the bark of the root, which is bitter and slightly acrid, has been employed as a vermifuge, especially in cases of the tape-worm, in the dose of two drachms infused in eight ounces of boiling water. The juice of the fruit is the officinal portion. The fruit is oblong-oval, of a dark reddish-purple almost black colour, and consists of numerous minute berries, united together and attached to a common receptacle, each containing a single seed, the succulent envelope of which is 550 Mori Succus.—Moschus. PART I. formed by the calyx. It is inodorous, has a sweet, mucilaginous, acidulous taste, and abounds in a deep-red juice. The sourish taste is owing, according to Hermbstadt, to the presence of tartaric acid. Medical Properties and Uses. Mulberries are refreshing and laxative, and serve to prepare a grateful drink well adapted to febrile cases. A syrup is made from their juice, and used as an agreeable addition to gargles in inflammation of the throat. They are, however, more used as food than medicine. Our native mulberry, the fruit of Morus rubra, is quite equal to that of the imported spe- cies. Morus alba, originally from China, and now extensively cultivated as a source o^food for the silk-worm, bears a white fruit, which is sweeter and less grateful than the others. Off. Prep. Syrupus Mori, Br. W. MOSCHUS. U. S., Br. Mush. A peculiar concrete substance obtained from Moschus moschiferus. U. S. The inspissated secretion from the preputial follicles, dried. Br. Muse, Ft.; Bisam, Germ.; Muschio. Ital.; Almizcle, Span. Moschus. Glass Mammalia. Order Pecora. Gen. Gh. Horns none. Fore teeth eight in the lower jaw. Tusks one on each side, in the upper jaw, projecting out of the mouth. Moschus moschiferus. Gmclm, Syst. Nat. i. 172; Reese’s Cyclopaedia. This animal bears a close resemblance to the deer in shape and size. It is usually about three feet in length and two feet high, with haunches considerably more elevated than the shoulders. From its upper jaw two tusks project downwards out of the mouth, each about two inches long, curved backwards, and serving to extract the roots which are used as food by the animal. The ears are long and narrow, and the tail very short. The fleece, consisting of strong, elastic, undu- lated hairs, varies in colour with the season, the age of the animal, and perhaps the place which it inhabits. The general colour is a deep iron-gray. The indi- vidual hairs are whitish near the root, and fawn-coloured or blackish towards the tip. The musk is contained in an oval, hairy, projecting sac, found only in the male, situated between the umbilicus and the prepuce, from two to three inches long, and from one to two broad, opening by a small hairy orifice at its anterior part, and marked posteriorly by a groove or furrow which corresponds with the opening of the prepuce. It is lined internally by a smooth membrane, thrown into a number of irregular folds, forming incomplete partitions. In the vigorous adult animal, the sac sometimes contains six drachms of musk; but in the old, seldom more than two drachms, and none in the young.* The musk is secreted by the lining membrane, and in the living animal forms a consistent mass, which, on the outside, is compact, and marked with the folds of the mem- brane, but is less firm towards the centre, where there is sometimes a vacant space. As first secreted it is probably liquid, and a portion is occasionally forced out by the animal, to which it communicates its odour. The musk deer inhabits the vast mountainous regions of central Asia, extend- ing from India to Siberia, and from the country of the Turcomans to China. It is an active and timid animal, springing from rock to rock with surprising agility. * According to Col. Frederick Markham, as muck as two ounces are sometimes found, and the average for a full grown animal is an ounce; but, as many of the deer are killed young, the pods in the market probably do riotcontain more than half an trace upon an average. He states that the musk of the young animal, though not so st.n ng as that if the old. has a much pleasanter smell. (Pharm. Journ. and Trans., xv. 472; fi cm ‘ c tiny in :h« HimalayasN &c.)—Note to the eleventh edition. PART I. Moschus. and frequenting the snowy recesses, and most inaccessible crags of the mountains. Concealing itself during the day, it chooses the night for roaming in search ol food; and, though said to be abundant in its native regions, is taken with diffi- culty. It is hunted for its hide, as well as for the musk. The natives often take it by snaring. As soon as the animal is killed, the sac is cut off, and dried with its contents; and in this state is sent into the market. Musk varies in quality with the country inhabited by the animal. That pro- cured from the mountains on the southern borders of Siberia, and brought into the market through Russia, is comparatively feeble. The best is imported from China, and is said to be the product of Tonquin. A variety intermediate be- tween these is procured in the Himalaya Mountains and Thibet, and sent to Calcutta. This is sometimes enclosed in the membranous lining of the sac, with- out the hairy envelope, and in this condition is said to be quite equal if not superior to that surrounded by the skin, as, in the former condition, it dries readily in the sun, while, in the latter, the aid of artificial heat is deemed neces- sary, by which the musk may sometimes be injured. (F. Peake, Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1861, p. 399.) We derive our chief supply from Canton, though portions are occasionally brought hither from Europe. Two varieties are known in commerce, the Chinese and Russian. Both come in sacs, convex and hairy on one side, flat and'destitute of hair on the other. The hairs are brownish-yellow, grayish, or whitish, stiff and short, and arranged concentrically around the orifice of the sac. The Chinese, which is the most highly valued, is in bags of a rounder shape, covered with brownish-yellow or reddish-brown hairs, and containing at most a drachm and a half of large-grained, dark, strong-scented musk, of an ammoniacal odour. The Russian is in longer and larger bags, small-grained, of a light yellowish-brown colour, and of a weaker and more fetid odour, with less smell of ammonia. Properties. Musk is in grains or lumps concreted together, soft and unctuous to the touch, and of a reddish-brown or ferruginous colour, resembling that of dried blood. Some hairs of the pod are generally mixed with it. The odour is strong, penetrating, and so diffusive, that one part of musk communicates its smell to more than 3000 parts of inodorous powder. (Fee.) In some delicate individuals it produces headache and other disagreeable symptoms, and has even caused convulsions. The taste is bitter, disagreeable, and somewhat acrid. The colour of the powder is reddish-brown. Musk is inflammable, burning with a white flame, and leaving a light spongy charcoal. Reduced to ashes, it leaves about 5 per ceut., containing potassa, lime, magnesia, iron, carbonic, phosphoric, and sulphuric acids, chlorine, and traces of ferrocyanate of potassa and sulphuret of ammonium. (Prof. W. Bernatzik.) It yields, upon analysis, a great number of proximate principles. Guibourt and Blondeau obtained water, ammonia, stearin, oleiu, cholesterin, an oily acid combined with ammonia, volatile oil, muriate of ammonia, chlorides of potassium and calcium, an uncertain acid combined with ammonia, potassa, and lime, gelatin, albumen, fibrin, a highly carbonaceous mat- ter soluble in water, a soluble calcareous salt with a combustible acid, carbonate and phosphate of lime, hair, and sand. (Annal. de Ghim. el de Phys., ix. 327.) Besides these constituents, Geiger and Reinman found a peculiar bitter resin, osmazome, and a peculiar substance in part combined with ammonia. Accord- ing to Guibourt and Blondeau, it contains 47 per cent, of volatile matter, thought by some to be chiefly ammonia, by others to be a compound of ammonia and volatile oil. Theimann obtained only from 10 to 15 per cent. But the quantity of volatile as well as of soluble matter varies exceedingly in different specimens. Thus. Theimann found from 80 to 90 per cent, of matter soluble in water, Buch- ner, only 54 5 per cent., and other chemists intermediate proportions. The pro- portion soluble in alcohol, as ascertained by different experimenters, varies from 25 to 62 per cent Ether is a good solvent. The watery infusion has a yellowish- Moechus. PART I. brown, colour, a bitterish taste, a strong smell of musk, and an acid reaction. The alcoholic tincture is transparent, and of a reddish-brown colour, with the peculiar odour of the medicine. The action of potassa upon musk is accompa- nied with the extrication of ammonia, and an increase of its peculiar odour. By the influence of heat and moisture long continued, ammonia is developed, which acts upon the fatty matter, producing a substance resembling adipocire, but, according to Guibourt, without diminishing the activity of the medicine. The correctness, however, of this opinion is perhaps questionable ; and it is advisable to preserve the musk as much as possible unaltered. When kept in glass bottles, in a situation neither moist nor very dry, it remains for a great length of time without material change. The odour of musk is very much diminished by mix- ing it with emulsion or syrup of bitter almonds, or cherry-laurel water. From the experiments of Wimmer, it appears that musk loses its odour when rubbed with kermes mineral, or golden sulphur of antimony, and reacquires it' on the addition of a little solution of ammonia. (Pharm. Gent. Blatt, A. D. 1843, p. 406.) Camphor rubbed up with musk is also said to destroy its odour. Adulterations.—The price of this medicine is so high, and its sources so limited, as to offer strong temptations to adulteration; and little genuine un- mixed musk is to be found in the market. The sophistication commences in China, and is completed in Europe and this country. A common practice in the East is to open the sac, and to supply the place of the musk with an adulterated mixture. Sometimes the scrotum of the animal is filled with this mixture, and not unfrequently the sacs are made out of the skin. Dried blood, from its resemblance to musk, is among the most common adulterations; but, besides this, sand, lead, iron-filings, hair, animal membrane, tobacco, the dung of birds, wax, benzoin, storax, asphaltum, artificial musk, and other substances are intro- duced. These are mixed with a portion of musk, the powerful odour of which is diffused through the mass, and renders the discovery of the fraud sometimes difficult. It is said that the Chinese sometimes mix the musk of Tonquin with that of Siberia. The bags containing the drug should have the characters be- fore described as belonging to the natural sac, and should present no evidence of having been opened. The slit is sometimes carefully sewed up, sometimes glued together. The former condition may be discovered by close inspection, the latter by immersion in hot water. When the bag is made from any other por- tion of the skin, the difference may be detected, according to Mr. Neligan, by a microscope which magnifies 300 diameters. The genuine hairs exhibit innumer- able cells, which are wanting in the spurious. (Cliem. Gaz., Feb. 1846, p. 79.) Musk which burns with difficulty, has a feeble odour and a colour either pale or entirely black, feels gritty to the finger, is very moist, so as to lose much weight in drying, or contains obvious impurities, should be rejected. Russian musk is said never to be adulterated before leaving Russia.* Medical Properties and Uses. Musk is stimulant and antispasmodic, increas- ing the vigour of the circulation, and exalting the nervous energy, without pro- ducing, either as an immediate or secondary effect, any considerable derange- ment of the purely cerebral functions. Its medical uses are such as may be inferred from its general operation. In almost all spasmodic diseases,-so far as mere reiaxation of spasm is desirable, it is more or less efficacious; but peculiar advantage may be expected from it when a prostrate state of the system, at- tended with great nervous agitation, or irregular muscular action, calls for the * For an account of the effects of numerous reagents on musk, and other modes of iden- tification as well as of detecting adulterations, see a paper by Prof. W. Bernatzik, translated in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for Sept. 1861, p. 427. There is a discrepancy between Prof. Bernatzik’s statement of the solubilities of musk and that of the text. According to the Vetter, ether is a good solvent; according to the former, ether and chloroform possess ; sarcely any solvent power.—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Moselius.—Mucuna. united influence of a highly diffusible stimulant and powerful antispasmodic Such are low cases of typhous disease, accompanied with subsultus tendinum, tremors, and singultus. Such also are many instances of gout in the stomach, and other spasmodic affections of that organ. In very obstinate hiccough we have found it more effectual than any other remedy; and have seen great advantage from its use in those alarming convulsions of infants originating in spasm of the intestines. It is said to have done much good, combined with opium, and ad ministered in very large doses, in tetanus. Epilepsy, hysteria, asthma, pertussis, palpitations, cholera, and colic are also among the spasmodic affections in which circumstances may render its employment desirable. The chief obstacles to its general use are its high price, and the uncertainty in regard to it3 purity. Musk was unknown to the ancients. Aetius was the first writer who noticed it as a medicine. It was introduced into Europe through the Arabians, from whose language its name was derived. It may be given in the form of pill or emulsion. The medium dose is ten grains, to be repeated every two or three hours. To children it may be admin- istered with great advantage in the form of enema.* W. MUCUNA. TJ.S. Secondary. Cowhage. The hairs of the pods of Mucuna pruriens. U. S. Pois a gratter, Fr.; Kulikratze, Germ.; Dolico Scottante, Ital. Mucuna. Sex. Syst. Diadelphia Decandria. — Nat. Ord. Fabaceae or Legu- minosae. Oen. Ch. Calyx campanulate, bilabiate; the lower lip trifid, with acute seg- ments, the middle one longest; the upper lip broader, entire, obtuse. Corolla with the vexillum ascending, shorter than the wings and keel; the wings oblong, equal to the keel in length; the keel oblong, straight, acute. Stamens diadel- phous, with five anthers oblong-linear, and five ovate, hirsute. Legume oblong, torose, bivalvular, with cellular partitions. Seeds roundish, surrounded circularly by a linear hilum. (De Candolle.) Mucuna pruriens. De Cand. Prodrom. ii. 405; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 254. — Dolichos pruriens. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1041; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 422.— Stizolobium pruriens. Persoon. This is a perennial climbing plant, with an herbaceous branching stem, which twines round the trees in its vicinity, and rises to a considerable height. The leaves are pinnately trifoliate, and stand on long footstalks, placed alternately on the stem at the distance of a foot from each other. The leaflets are acuminate, smooth on their upper surface, and hairy be- neath. The lateral leaflets are oblique at the base, the middle one somewhat rhomboidal. The flowers, which resemble those of the pea in form, are large, of a red or purplish colour, usually placed in threes on short peduncles, and hang from the axils of the leaves in pendant spikes about a foot in length. The fruit is a coriaceous pod, shaped like the Italic letter f, about four inches long, and * Vegetable Musk. It has been proposed to substitute for musk the volatile oil of certain plants^navlng'the characteristic odour of that product. The Malva moschata and Mimulus moschatvs have been used for this purpose. Dr. Hanon, of Belgium, h“as*experimented with *£e~ctlslllled oil of these plants, and found it, in the dose of two or three drops, to be an energetic excitant of the primse vise and encephalon, producing a sense of weight at the epigastrium, with excitation, vertigo, headache, dryness of the pharynx and oesophagus, general lassitude, yawning, somnolence, and sleep in five or six hours. The pulse is little affected, and no unpleasant symptoms are felt on awaking. He has found it an admirable remedy in hysterical disorders, and various nervous affections attendant on other diseases when not inflammatory, and thinks that it is in no regpect inferior to musk in antispas* modic properties. (Journ. de Pharrn., xxv. 66.)—Note to 'he eleventh edition. Mucunu —Myristica.—Myristicse Adeps.—Macis. PART I. coverel with brown bristly hairs, which easily separate, and when handled stick in the fingers, producing an intense itching sensation. The plant is a native of the West Indies, and other parts of tropical America. It has been supposed to grow also in the East Indies; but the plant of that region is now considered a distinct species, and entitled Mununa prurita. The part usually imported is the pod, of which the hairs are'officinal. Medical Properties and Uses. The spicula are said to possess powerful vermifuge properties, and are thought to act mechanically, by penetrating the worms. That they do act in this manner is evinced as well by the result of direct experiment upon worms out of the body, as by the fact that neither the tincture nor the decoction is in the least degree anthelmintic. The medicine was first employed as a vermifuge in the West Indies, and thence passed into British practice. There can be no reasonable doubt of its efficiency. It has been chiefly employed against the round worm; but all the different species which infest the alimentary canal have been expelled by its use. It is best administered in some tenacious vehicle. The usual mode of preparing it is to dip the pods into syrup or molasses, and scrape off the hairs with the liquid, which is in a proper state for administration when it has attained the consistency of thick honey. The dose of this preparation is a tablespoonful for an adult, a teaspoonful for a child three or four years old, to be given every morning for three days, and then fol- lowed by a brisk cathartic. M. Blatin has proposed to employ cowhage as an external irritant; seven grains being mixed with an ounce of lard, and seven or eight grains of the ointment rubbed for ten, fifteen, or twenty minutes on the skin. A stinging and burning sensation is produced, followed by white eleva- tions, which soon disappear, leaving no unpleasant effect. The root of M. pruriens (M. prurita, figured in Curtis's Bot. Mag. N. S. xii., Oct. 1856, tab. 4945) is said by Ainslie to be employed in the East Indies in the treatment of cholera; and both this part and the pods have been thought to possess diuretic properties. W. MYRISTICA. U.S.,Br. The kernel of the fruit of Myristica fragrans (Houttuyn). U. S. Myristica officinalis. The kernel of the seed. Br. Noix muscade, Fr.; Muskatnuss, Germ.; Noce mosckata, Ital.; Nuez moscada, Span. Nutmeg. MYRISTKEE ADEPS. Br. Concrete oil of Nutmeg. A concrete oil obtained by means of expression and heat from nutmegs. Br MACIS. U.S. Mace. The arillus of the fruit of Myristica fragrans. U. S. Macis, Fr.; Muskatbliitke, Germ.; Macis, Ital.; Macias, Span. Myristica. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Monadelphia.—Nat. Ord. Myristicacese. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx none. Corolla bell-shaped, trifid. Filament colum- nar. Anthers six or ten united. Female. Calyx none. Corolla bell-shaped, trifid, deciduous. Style none. Stigmas two. Drupe with a nut involved in an arillus with one seed. Willd. Myristica moschala. Thunberg; Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 869; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 698, t. 238.—M. officinalis. Linn. Suppl. 265; Lindlej, FU'r. Med p. Myristica. —Mach. 555 PARI I. 21.—M. fragrans. Houttuyn, Nat. Hist. vol. ii., part iii., p. 333. Of these bo- tanical titles, that recognised by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 18G3 has the re- commendation of priority of date; M. Moschata, that of most general usage since the times of Thunberg. The nutmeg tree is about thirty feet high, with numerous branches, and an aspect somewhat resembling that of the orange tree. The leaves stand alternately on short footstalks, are oblong-oval, pointed, entire, undulated, obliquely nerved, bright-green and somewhat glossy on their upper surface, whitish beneath, and of an aromatic taste. The flowers are male and female upon different trees. The former are disposed in axillary, peduncled, solitary clusters; the latter are single, solitary, and axillary; both are minute and of a pale-yellowish colour. The fruit, which appears on the tree mingled with the flowers, is round or oval, of the size of a small peach, smooth, at first pale-green, but yellow when ripe, and marked with a longitudinal furrow. The external covering, which is at first thick and fleshy, and abounds in an austere, astringent juice, afterwards becomes dry and coriaceous, and, separating into two valves from the apex, discloses a scarlet reticulated membrane or arillus, com- monly called mace, closely investing a thin, browu, shining shell, which contains the kernel or nutmeg. Not less than eight varieties of the plant are said by Crawford to be cultivated in the East Indies. Myristica moschata is a native of the Moluccas and other neighbouring islands, and abounds especially in that small cluster distinguished by the name of Banda, whence the chief supplies of nutmegs were long derived. But the plant is now cultivated in Sumatra, Java, Singapore, Penang, Ceylon, and other parts of the East Indies; and has been introduced into the Isles of France and Bour- bon, Cayenne, and several of the West India islands. The tree is produced from the seed. It does not flower till the eighth or ninth year; after which it bears flowers and fruit together, without intermission, and is said to continue bearing for seventy or eighty years. Little trouble is requisite in its cultivation. A branch of the female tree is grafted into all the young plants when about two years old, so as to insure their early fruitfulness. In the Moluccas the tree yields three crops annually. The fruit is gathered by the hand, and the outside covering rejected. The mace is then carefully sepa- rated, so as to break it as little as possible, is flattened, and dried in the'sun, and afterwards sprinkled with salt water, with the view of contributing to its preservation. Its fine red colour is much impaired by drying. The nuts are dried in the sun or by ovens, and exposed to smoke till the kernel rattles in the shell. They are then broken open; and the kernels, having been removed and steeped for a short time in a mixture of lime and water, probably in order to preserve them from the attack of worms, are next cleaned, and packed in casks or chests for exportation. Dr. Lumsdaine has found them to keep better, if rubbed over with dry lime, than when prepared in the moist way. (See Am. Journ. of Sci. and Arts, Nov. 1851.) Nutmegs are brought to this country either directly from the East Indies, or indirectly through England and Holland. They are also occasionally imported in small quantities from the West Indies. Properties. The nutmeg (nux moschata) is of a roundish or oval shape, obtuse at the extremities, marked with vermicular furrows, of a grayish colour, hard, smooth to the touch, yielding readily to the knife or the grater, but not very pulverulent. When cut or broken it presents a yellowish surface, varied with reddish-brown, branching, irregular veins, which give to it a marbled ap- pearance. These dark veins abound in oily matter, upon which the medicinal properties depend. The odour of nutmeg is delightfully fragrant, the taste warm, aromatic, and grateful. Its virtues are extracted by alcohol and ether. M. Bonastre obtained from 500 parts, 120 of a white insoluble oily substance, 38 of a coloured soluble oil (olein), 30 of volatile oil, 4 of acid, 12 of fecula, 6 Myristica.—Myristicse Adeps. PART I. of gum, 270 of lignin; and 20 parts were lost. The volatile oil is obtained by distillation with water. (See Oleum Myristicse.) By pressure with heat an oily matter is procured from the kernels, which becomes solid on cooling, and is commonly though erroneously called oil of mace. Nutmegs have been punctured and boiled in order to extract their essential oil, and the orifice afterwards closed so carefully as not to be discoverable un- less by breaking the kernel. The fraud may be detected by their levity. They are also apt to be injured by worms, which, however, attack preferably the parts least impregnated with the volatile oil. The Dutch were formerly said to heat them in a stove in order to deprive them of the power of germinating, and thus prevent the propagation of the tree. The small and round nutmegs are pre- ferred to the large and oval. They should be rejected when very light, with a feeble taste and smell, worm-eaten, musty, or marked with black veins. A kind of nutmeg is occasionally met with, ascribed by some to a variety of M. moschata, by others to a different species (Myristica fatua), which is dis- tinguished from that just described by its much greater length, its elliptical shape, the absence of the dark-brown veins, and its comparatively feeble odour, and disagreeable taste. It has been called male, wild, or long nutmeg, the other being designated as the female or cultivated nutmeg.* The concrete or expressed oil of nutmeg (Myristica: Adeps, Br.), com- monly called oil of mace, is obtained by bruising nutmegs, exposing them in a bag to steam, and then compressing them strongly between heated plates. A liquid oil flows out, which becomes solid when it cools. Nutmegs are said'to yield from 10 to 12 per cent, of this oil.f The best is imported from the East Indies in stone jars. It is solid, soft, unctuous to the touch, of a yellowish or orange-yellow colour more or less mottled, with the odour and taste of nutmeg. It is composed, according to Schrader, of 52-09 per cent, of a soft oily sub- stance, yellowish or brownish, soluble in cold alcohol and ether; 43 75 of a white, pulverulent, inodorous substance, insoluble in these liquids; and 4T6 of volatile oil. The pulverulent constituent, which received from Playfair the name of myristicin, has a silky lustre, melts at 88°, and yields in saponification gly- cerin and myristicic acid. It may be obtained directly from nutmeg by exhaust- ing it by means of benzole, filtering the liquid, and allowing it to crystallize by spontaneous evaporation. To purify the product, it may be dissolved in a mix- ture of two parts of absolute alcohol and three of benzole with the aid of heat, then filtering the liquid while hot, aud setting it aside. On cooling, it deposits the pure myristicin in crystals. {Journ. de Phai'm., Juin, 1859, p. 471.) An in- ferior kind of the oil is prepared in Holland, and sometimes found in the shops. It is in hard, shining, square cakes, lighter coloured than that from the East Indies, and with less smell and taste. It is supposed to be derived from nut- megs previously deprived of most of their volatile oil by distillation. An arti- * A few years since, attention was called to a California product, derived from Torreua n,nd. from its resemblance to the fruit of the Myristica, called California nutmeg. It is, however, quite distinct in its characters from the true nutmeg, and cannot be sub- stituted for it. At the same time a variety of nutmeg appeared in our markets, which was at first supposed to be the California product referred to; but, on examination by Prof. Jos. Carson, was found to be the variety of drug mentioned in the text as the male or wild nutmeg, and to be wholly distinct from the fruit of the Torreya. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 247 and 499.)—Note to the eleventh edition. f A process for obtaining it by means of bisulphuret of carbon has been proposed by M. Lepage, of Gisors, in France, and has received the sanction of the Society of Pharmacy of Paris. It consists in treating the nutmeg, thoroughly comminuted, with three times its weight of the liquid referred to, well rectified, agitating the mixture frequently for 24 hours, expressing, repeating the process with two parts only of the menstruum, mixing the products of the two macerations, filtering in a covered vessel, and then distilling off the sulphuret, at a temperature of 160°, until the residue is entirely deprived of the nen- stiuum. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xxxi. 28 )—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Macis.—My) / lia. ficial preparation is sometimes sold for the genuine oil. It is made by mixing various fatty matters, such as suet, palm oil, spermaceti, wax, &c., adding some colouring substance, and giving flavour to the mixture by the volatile oil. Mace (Macis, XJ. S.) is in the shape of a flat membrane irregularly slit, smooth, soft, flexible, of a reddish or orange-yellow colour, and an odour and taste re- sembling those of nutmeg. It contains, according to M. Henry, a volatile oil in small quantity; a fixed oil, odorous, yellow, soluble in ether, insoluble in boil- ing alcohol; another fixed oil, odorous, red, soluble in alcohol and ether in every proportion; a peculiar gummy matter, analogous to amidin and gum, constituting one-third of the whole; and a small proportion of ligneous fibre. Mace yields a volatile oil by distillation, and a fixed oil by pressure. Neumann found the former heavier than water. The latter is less consistent than the fixed oil of nutmeg. Mace is inferior when it is brittle, less than usually divided, whitish or pale-yellow, or with little taste and smell. Medical Properties and Uses. Nutmeg unites, with the medicinal properties of the ordinary aromatics, considerable narcotic power. In the quantity of two or three drachms, it has been known to produce stupor and delirium; and dan- gerous if not fatal consequences are said to have followed its free use in India. It is employed to cover the taste or correct the operation of other medicines, but more frequently as an agreeable addition to farinaceous articles of diet, and to various kinds of drink in cases of languid appetite and delicate stomach. It is usually given in substance, and is brought by grating to the state of a powder. Mace possesses properties essentially the same with those of nutmeg; and, like that medicine, has been known, when taken in excess, to produce alarming sen' sorial disturbance. (G. C. Watson, Prov. Med. and S. Journ., Jan. 26, 1848.) It is, however, less used as a medicine. The dose of either is from five to twenty grains. As the virtues of nutmeg depend chiefly if not exclusively on the volatile oil, the latter may be substituted, in the dose of two or three drops. The ex- pressed oil is occasionally used as a gentle external stimulant, and is an ingre- dient in the Emplastrum Picis of the British Pharmacopoeia. The ancients were wholly unacquainted with the nutmeg; and Avicenna is said to be the first author by whom it is noticed. Off. Prep, of Nutmeg. Acetum Opii, U. S.; Pulvis Aromaticus; Pulvis Cate- chu Compositus, Br.; Spiritus Armoraciae Comp., Br.; Spiritus Lavandula? Comp., [7. Spiritus Myristicae, U. S.; Svrupus Rhei Aromaticus, U.S.; Tine tura Lavandulae Comp., Br.; Trochisei Cretae, U. S.; Trochisci Magnesiae,U. S Off. Prep, of the Concrete Oil. Emplastrum Picis, Br. W MYRRHA. U. S., Br. Myrrh. The concrete juice of Balsamodendron Myrrha. U. S. A gum-resinous exuda- tion from the stem. Br. Myrrhe, Fr., Germ.; Mirra, Ital., Span.; Murr, Arab.; Bowl, Ilindoost. Though myrrh has been employed from the earliest times, the plant which yields it was not determined till quite recently. The Amyris Kataf of Forskhal, seen by that traveller in Arabia, was supposed by him to be the myrrh tree, but without sufficient proof. Afterwards Ehrenberg met on the frontiers of Arabia Felix with a plant, from the bark of which he collected a gum-resin precisely similar to the myrrh of commerce. From specimens of the plant taken by Ehren- berg to Germany, Nees von Esenbeck referred it to the genus Balsamodendron of Kunth, and named it Balsamodendron Myrrha. This genus was formed by fvuntil from Amyris, and includes the Amyris Kataf of Forskhal, which may possibly also produce a variety of myrrh. The new genus differs from Amyris 558 Myrrha. PART I. ehr tty in having the stamens beneath instead of upon the germ. It was not thought by De Candolle sufficiently distinct. Balsamodendron Myrrha. Fee, Gours. d'Hist. Nat. Pharm. i. 641; Carson, Jllnst. of Med. Hot. i. 28, pi. 20. This is a small tree, with a stunted trunk, covered with a whitish-gray bark, and furnished with rough abortive branches terminating in spines. The leaves are ternate, consisting of obovate, blunt, smooth, obtusely denticulate leaflets, of which the two lateral are much smaller than the one at the end. The fruit is oval-lanceolate, pointed, longitudinally furrowed, of a brown colour, and surrounded at its base by the persistent calyx. The tree grows in Arabia Felix, in the neighbourhood of Gison, in dwarfish thickets, interspersed among the Acaciae and Euphorbias. The juice exudes spontaneously, and concretes upon the bark. Formerly the best myrrh was brought from the shores of the Red Sea by way of Egypt and the Levant, and hence received the name of Turkey myrrh; while the inferior qualities were imported from the East Indies, ancTcommonly called India myrrh. These titles have ceased to be applicable; as myrrh of all quali- ties is now brought from the East Indies, whither it is carried from Arabia and the north-eastern coast of Africa. Aden in the former region, and Berbera in the latter would appear, from the statements of Mr. James Vaughan, to be the chief entrepots of the trade. {Pharm. Journ., xii. 226.) Great quantities are collected on the African coast, near the mouth of the Red Sea, whence it is taken to Aden. {Ibid., Oct. 1859, p. 217.) It is usually imported in chests containing between one and two hundred weight. Sometimes the different qualities are brought separate; sometimes more or less mingled. Only the best kind should be selected for medical use. Properties. Myrrh is in small irregular fragments or tears, or in larger masses, composed apparently of agglutinated portions differing somewhat in their shade of colour. The pieces are exceedingly irregular in shape and size, being some- times not larger than a pea, and sometimes, though rarely, almost as large as the fist. They are often powdery upon the surface. When of good quality, myrrh is reddish-yellow or reddish-brown and translucent, of a strong peculiar some- what fragrant odour, and a bitter aromatic taste. It is brittle and pulverizable. presenting, when broken, a shining surface, which in the larger masses is very irregular, and sometimes exhibits opaque whitish or yellowish veins. In powder it is of a light-yellowish colour. Under the teeth it is at first friable, but soon softens and becomes adhesive. It is inflammable, but does not burn vigorously, and is not fusible by heat. Its sp. gr. is stated at U36. The inferior kind, com- monly called India myrrh, is in pieces much darker than those described, more opaque, less odorous, and often abounding with impurities. We have seen pieces of India myrrh enclosing large crystals of common salt; as if the juice might have fallen from the tree, and concreted upon the ground where this mineral abounds. Pieces of bdellium, and other gummy or resinous substances of un- known origin, are often mixed with it. Among these is a product which may be called false myrrh. It is in irregular pieces, of a dirty reddish-brown colour, a vitreous brownish-yellow fracture, semitransparent, of a faint odour of myrrh, and a bitter balsamic taste. Myrrh is best purchased in mass; as in powder it is liable to adulterations not easily detected. Myrrh is partially soluble in water, alcohol, and ether. Triturated with water it forms an opaque yellowish or whitish emulsion, which deposits the larger por- tion upon standing. Its alcoholic tincture is rendered opaque by the addition of water, but throws down no precipitate. According to Neumann, alcohol and water severally extract the whole of its odour and taste. By distillation a vola- tile oil rises, having the peculiar flavour of myrrh, and leaving the residue in the retort simply bitter. The gum-resin is soluble in solutions of the alkalies, and, when triturated with them in a crystalline state, forms a tenacious liquid. Hence PART I. Myrrlia.—Nectandra. 559 carbonate of potassa may be used to facilitate its suspension in water. Bracon- not found 2-5 per cent, of volatile oil, 23 of a bitter resin, 46 of soluble, and 12 of insoluble gum. (Ann. de Chim., lxvii. 52.) Pelletier obtained 34 per cent, of resin, with a small proportion of volatile oil, and 66 of gum. A more recent analysis by Ruickoldt gave 2-183 per cent, of volatile oil, 44160 of resin, 40'818 of gum or arabin, 1-415 of water, and 3‘650 of carbonate of lime and magnesia, with some gypsum and sesquioxide of iron. The resin, which he calls myrrhin, is neuter, but becomes acid when kept for a short time in fusion. In the latter state, M. Ruickoldt proposes to call it myrrhic acid (Archiv. der Pharm., xli. 1.) According to MM. Bley and Diesel, myrrh containing little volatile oil always has an acid reaction, which they ascribe to the oxidation of the oil. They found formic acid in the specimen examined by them. (Ibid., xliii. 304.) The same writers give, as a test of myrrh, the production of a transparent dirty-yellow liquid with nitric acid ; while false myrrh affords a bright-yellow solution in the same fluid, and bdellium is not dissolved, but becomes whitish and opaque. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 228 ) According to M. Righini, if powdered myrrh, rubbed for 15 minutes with an equal weight of muriate of am- monia, and 15 times its weight of water gradually added, dissolve quickly and entirely, it may be considered pure. (Journ. de Chim. Med., 1844, p. 33.) Medical Properties and Uses. Myrrh is a stimulant tonic, with some tendency to the lungs, and perhaps to the uterus. Hence it is employed as an expectorant and emmenagogue in debilitated states of the system, in the absence of febrile excitement or acute inflammation. The complaints in which it is usually admin- istered are chronic catarrh, phthisis pulmonalis, other pectoral affections in which the secretion of mucus is abundant but not easily expectorated, chlorosis, amen- orrhoea, and the various affections connected with this state of the uterine func- tion. It is generally given combined with chalybeates or other tonics, and in amenorrhcea very frequently with aloes. It is used also as an application to spongy gums, the aphthous sore-mouth of children, and various kinds of un- healthy ulcers. The dose is from ten to thirty grains, and may be given in the form of powder or pill, or suspended in water, as in the famous antihectic mix- ture of Dr. Griffith, which has become officinal by the name of Mistura Ferri Composita. The infusion is also sometimes given, and an aqueous extract has been recommended as milder than myrrh in substance. The tincture is used chiefly as a local application. A plaster of myrrh is made by rubbing together powdered myrrh, camphor; and balsam of Peru, of each an ounce and a half, then adding the mixture to 32 ounces of lead plaster previously melted, and stirring well until the plaster thick- ens on cooling. It is then to be formed into rolls. This plaster may be employed in all cases where a gentle and long-continued rubefacient effect is desired. Off. Prep. Decoctum Aloes Compositum, Br.; Mistura Ferri Comp.; Pilulae Aloes et Myrrh®; Pil. Assafoetid® Comp.,j5r.; Pil. Ferri Comp., U. S.; Pil. Galbani Comp., U. S.; Pil. Rhei Comp.; Tinctura Aloes et Myrrh®, U. S.; Tinc- tura Myrrh®. W. NECTANDRA. U.S.,Br. Nectandrci. Bebeeru Baric. The bark of Xectandra Rodiei (Schomburg). U. S. Xectandra Rodisei (Schom- burgle). The Greenheart tree. The Bark. Br. Xectandra. Sex. Syst. Dodecandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Laurace®. Gen. Ch. Flowers hermaphrodite. Calyx six-parted, rotate, the three outer segments somewhat broader. Stamens twelve, in four series, the nine outer fer- tile; the anthers of the first and second series turned inwards, of the third out- wards, all ovate, sub-sessile, four-celled. Ovary one-celled, with one ovule. Style Nectandra. PART I. short. Stigma short, truncated. Berry one-seeded, partly immersed in the tube of the calyx. Endlicher. Nectandra Rodiaei. Schomburgk ; Hooker's Bond. Journ. of Bot., Dec. 1844, p. 624. The bebeeru, bibiru, or sipiri, as it has been differently named, is a tree sixty feet or more in height, branching near the top, with a smooth, ash- gray bark. The leaves, which are five or six inches long by two or three in breadth, are nearly opposite, coriaceous, oblong-elliptical, shortly acuminate, smooth, shining, and obscurely reticulate on the upper surface. The flowers are yellowish-white, in axillary panicles, much shorter than the leaves, and few-flow- ered. The fruit is a large, obovate or obcordate, somewhat compressed berry, of the size of a small apple, with a single seed about as large as a walnut. The tree inhabits Guiana and neighbouring regions of South America, where the wood is used in ship-building, under the name of greenheart. It received its specific name of Rodiei from Sir Robert Schomburg, in honour of Dr. Rodie, by whom it was first described. Though the fruit is very bitter, its seeds yield a starch which is said to be used as food by the Indians. The bark is officinal. Properties. This is in large, flat, heavy pieces, from one to two feet long, from two to six inches broad, and three or four lines thick, with a rough and somewhat fibrous fracture, of a grayish-brown colour on its outer surface, and a dark-cinnamon on the inner. It has an intensely bitter, somewhat astringent taste. Analyzed by Dr. Maclagan, of Edinburgh, it was found to contain tannic acid of the kind that precipitates the salts of iron green, resin, gum, sugar, albu- men, fibrin, various salts, and two peculiar alkaloids, named respectively bebee- rin (bebeeria) and sipeerin (sipeeria). In the seeds, besides the foregoing prin- ciples, Dr. Maclagan found 53 per cent, of starch, and a peculiar white, crystal- line, volatile acid, which he named bebeeric acid. The alkaloids are extracted together from the bark, in the form of impure sulphate, by a process similar to that for preparing sulphate of quinia. This preparation is known as the com- mercial sulphate of bebeerin. The sipeerin, which Dr. Maclagan believed to be a distinct alkaloid in the bark, he was afterwards induced to consider as the result of oxidation of bebeeria. (Pereira, Mat. Med.) Bebeeria, which, in accordance with the ordinary nomenclature of the alka- loids, should be called nectandria, was obtained pure by Messrs. Maclagan and Tilley by the following procesST'The impure sulphate is dissolved in water, and precipitated by ammonia. The precipitate, mixed with an equal weight of re- cently precipitated oxide of lead, and dried, is treated with absolute alcohol, which, being evaporated, leaves the two alkaloids in the form of a translucent resinoid mass. The bebeeria is separated by means of ether, which yields it by evaporation. Another process is to dissolve the precipitate obtained by ammo- nia, previously washed, in diluted acetic acid, add acetate of lead, precipitate by potassa, exhaust the precipitate by strong ether, evaporate the ether to the con- sistence of a syrup, dissolve the residue in absolute alcohol, and pour the solu- tion gradually into water. A flocculent deposit is formed, which, when washed and dried, is the alkaloid in question. Bebeeria is pale-yellow, amorphous, of a resinous aspect, inodorous, very bitter, very slightly soluble in water, freely soluble in alcohol and ether, fusible at 356°, inflammable, and of an alkaline reac- tion. It forms uncrystallizable salts with the acids. Its formula is differently given and C^H^NOg. Sipeeria (sipeerin) is left after the separation of the bebeeria by ether in the foregoing processes. This also is amorphous, very sparingly soluble in water, freely soluble in alcohol, but differing from bebeeria in being insoluble in ether. Medical Properties and Uses. Nectandra is tonic, somewhat astringent, and febrifuge, resembling cinchona in its virtues, though much inferior, at least in antiperiodic power. It has generally been employed in the form of the impure sulphate, and sometimes with great asserted success, in the treatment of inter- PART I. Neciandra.—Nux Vomica. mittent and remittent fevers. Dr. Rodie recommended it so early as 1834; buv it did not attract general attention until brought into notice by Dr. Douglas Maclagan, of Edinburgh, who published a number of observations, tending to prove its possession of valuable antiperiodic properties. Others afterwards con firmed his statements in its favour, and it was hoped that a substitute had been fouud for the alkaloids of Peruvian bark; but the more recent published accounts by M. Becquerel, of France (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xx. 439), of Dr. Wm. Pepper, of Philadelphia (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci , N. S., xxv. 13), and of Dr. E. D. Dailey, of Smyrna, Delaware (Med. Exam., N. S., ix. 557), show satisfac- torily that, though frequently successful, it often fails, and cannot be relied on as a substitute for quinia. From a scruple to a drachm may be given between the paroxysms, in doses of two grains. Prof. A. P. Merrill has employed the sul- phate with advantage in menorrhagia, in the dose sf five grains. (N. Y. Journ. of Med., N. S., xv. 433, from the Memphis Med. Recorder.) The impure sulphate (commercial sidphate) of bebeeria may be prepared by first boiling the powdered bark with a solution of carbonate of soda, to re- move the tannic acid and colouring matter, and afterwards with water acidulated with sulphuric acid, which extracts the alkaloids in the form of sulphates. The solution is then filtered, the alkaloid precipitated by carbonate of soda, the pre- cipitate dissolved and neutralized with dilute sulphuric acid, the solution decolor- ized with animal charcoal, then concentrated, filtered, and finally evaporated in open vessels, with a gentle heat. Thus obtained, the sulphate is fit for medical use, though it is not pure, containing sipeeria, a little sulphate of lime, and colouring matter. It is in brownish, thin, shining scales, which become yellow in powder. It is freely soluble in alcohol, and sparingly in water, but is readily dissolved in the latter if acidulated. It may be given in the form of pill, or of solution in water acidulated with sulphuric acid, one minim of the officinal diluted or aromatic sulphuric acid being added for each grain of the sulphate. The dose is from two to five grains. The pure sulphate may be readily prepared by dissolving bebeeria, obtained as above directed, in water with sulphuric acid to neutralization, and evaporating the solution. Off. Prep. Beberiae Sulphas, Br. W. NUX VOMICA. U.S.,Br. Nux Vomica. The seed of Strychnos nux vomica. TJ. S. The seeds. Br. Noix voinique, Fr.; Kriikenaugen, Breckniisse, Qerm.; Noce vomica, Ital.; Nuez vomica, Span. Strychnos. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Apocynacese. Gen. Ch. Corolla five-cleft. Berry one-celled, with a ligneous rind. Willd. Strychnos Nux vomica. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1052; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 222, t. 19. This tree is of a moderate size, with numerous strong branches, covered with a smooth, dark-gray bark. The young branches are long, flexuous, smooth, and dark-green, with opposite, roundish-oval, entire, smooth, and shining leaves, having three or five ribs, and short footstalks. The flowers are small, white, funnel-shaped, and in terminal corymbs. The fruit is a round berry, about as large as an orange, with a smooth, yellow or orange-coloured, hard, fragile rind, and many seeds embedded in a juicy pulp. The tree is a native of the East Indies, growing in Bengal, Malabar, on the Coromandel Coast, in Ceylon, in many islands of the Indian Archipelago, in Cochin China, and other neighbouring countries. The wood and root are very bitter, and are employed in the East Indies for the cure of intermittents. The Nux Vomica. PART I. radices colubrinse and lignum colubrinum of the older writers, long known in Europe as iwcotic poisons, have been ascribed to this species of Strychnos, under the impression that it is identical with StrychuoiNGaLubrina, to which Linnaeus refers them. They have been ascertained by Feller ler anTTtlaventou to contain a large quantity of strychnia. The bark is said by Dr. O’Shaughnessy to answer exactly to the description given by authors of the false anguslura, and, like that, to contain a large quantity of brucia. The identity of the two barks has been confirmed by Dr. Pereira, from a comparison of specimens. (See Angustura.) The seeds are the only officinal portion. These are circular, about three-quarters of an inch in diameter, and two lines in thickness, fiat, or slightly convex on one side, and concave on the other. They are thickly covered with fine, silky, shining, ash-coloured or yellowish-gray hairs, attached to a thin fragile coating, which closely invests the interior nucleus or kernel. This is very hard, horny, usually whitish and semitransparent, some- times dark-coloured and opaque, and of very difficult pulverization. The powder is yellowish-gray, and has a faint sweetish odour. The seeds are destitute of odour, but have an acrid, very bitter taste, which is much stronger in the kernel than in the investing membrane. They impart their virtues to water, but more readily to diluted alcohol. Nux vomica has been analyzed by several chemists, but most accurately by Pelletier and Caventou, who discovered in it two alka- line principles, strychnia and brucia, united with a peculiar acid which they named igasuric. Its other constituents are a yellow colouring matter, a con- crete oil, gum, starch, bassorin, a small quantity of wax, and, according to Mr. J. M. Maisch, several earthy phosphates. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1860, p. 524.) M. Desnoix has announced the discovery of another alkaloid, which he denominates igasuria ; and M. Schutzenberger, in examining specimens of igasuria, separated nine alkaloids, each having a distinct composition, and all probably derived from brucia by oxidation under vital influences. These alka- loids are the active principles of nux vomica. Strychnia was discovered by Pelletier and Caventou, A. D. 1818, both in the nux vomica and bean of St. Ignatius, and received its name from the generic title of the plants (Strychnos) to which these two products belong. According to these chemists, it exists much more abundantly in the bean of St. Ignatius than in the nux vomica, the former yielding L2 per cent., the latter only 0-4 per cent, of the alkaloid. For an account of its properties and mode of prepa- ration, see Strychnia, in Part II. Brucia was discovered by Pelletier and Caventou, first in the bark called false angustura, in combination with gallic acid, and subsequently associated with strychnia in the form of igasurates, in the nux vomica and bean of St. Igna- tius. It is crystallizable, and its crystals are said to contain 18'41 per cent, of water. It is without smell, but of a permanent, harsh, very bitter taste; soluble in 850 parts of cold, and 500 of boiling water; very soluble in alcohol, whether hot or cold ; but insoluble in ether and the fixed oils, and only slightly dissolved by the volatile oils. It is permanent in the air, but melts at a temperature a little above that of boiling water, and on cooling congeals into a mass resembling wax. It forms crystallizable salts with the acids. Concentrated nitric acid pro- duces with brucia or its salts an intense crimson colour, which changes to yellow by heat, and upon the addition of protochloride of tin becomes violet. These effects serve to distinguish brucia from strychnia, and, if produced with the latter alkaloid, evince the presence of the former. According to MM. Larocque and Thibierge, chloride of gold produces, with solutions of the salts of brucia, pre- cipitates at first milky, then coffee-coloured, and finally chocolate-brown. (Journ. de Chim. Med., Oct. 1842.) Brucia is analogous in its operation to strychnia, but possesses, according to M. Andral, only about one-twelfth of its strength, when the latter principle is entirely pure. It is therefore seldom employed. It part i. Nux Vomica. 563 may be procured from false Angustura bark, in a maimer essentially the sarnw with that in which strychnia is procured from nux vomica; with this difference, that the alcoholic extract, obtained from the precipitate produced by lime or magnesia, should be treated with oxalic acid, and subsequently with a mixture of rectified alcohol and ether, which takes up the colouring matter, leaving the oxalate of brucia. This is decomposed by magnesia, and the brucia is separated by alcohol, which, by spontaneous evaporation, yields it in the state of crystals. According to Dr. Fuss and Professor Erdmann, brucia is nothing more than a compound of strychnia and resin. Igasuria is found in the mother-waters from which strychnia and brucia have been precipitated by lime. It is strongly bitter; readily crystallizable, with 10 per cent, of water of crystallization; more soluble in water and weak alcohol than the two other alkaloids; reddened by nitric acid even more intensely than brucia; rendered by sulphuric acid at first rose-coloured, and afterwards yel- lowish and greenish-yellow; dissolved by the diluted acids, which form with it easily crystallizable salts; precipitated from its solution by the alkalies, and redissolved by them in excess, especially bypotassa; precipitated yellow by bi- chloride of platinum, and white by tannic acid ; slowly precipitated by iodide of potassium in light reddish-yellow crystals; and thrown down as crystalline needles by bicarbonate of soda, in the presence of tartaric acid, in which pro- perty it resembles strychnia, but differs from brucia. One of its most distinguish- ing properties is its degree of solubility in water, of which it requires at 212° only 200 parts for solution ; while brucia requires 500 parts, and strychnia 2000. M. Desnoix inferred from his experiments on animals that it is intermediate in power between the two other alkaloids of nux vomica. The nine alkaloids into which Schutzenberger separated igasuria, he distin- guished by affixing the letters of the alphabet, as a igasuria, b igasuria, &c. They may be separated by the agency of hot water, by taking advantage of their different solubility, and their several periods of crystallizing as the solution cools.. They are all colourless, crystallizable in needles or tufts, of a persistent bitter- ness, and almost as energetic as strychnia in their influence on the system. All are coloured red by nitric acid, like brucia, which, moreover, they resemble in their characters, except their greater solubility in water and alcohol. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1858, p. 537 ; from Comptes Pendus.) It is difficult to resist the conjecture that the alkaloids, instead of pre-existing, are formed by changes in the igasuria during the crystallizing process. Asa test for nux vomica, Vielgruth proposes to treat a few grains of the sus- pected powder with proof spirit, evaporate the tincture to dryness at a heat not exceeding 96°, then add a drop or two of dilute sulphuric acid, and again raise to the heat mentioned. If nux vomica is present, a beautiful carmine-red colour is produced, which disappears in ten or fifteen minutes after cooling, and reap- pears, but less brightly, on the reapplication of the heat. Medical Properties and Uses. Nux vomica is very peculiar in its action. In very small doses, frequently repeated, it is tonic, and is said to be diuretic, and occasionally diaphoretic and laxative. When it is given in larger doses, so as to bring the system decidedly under its influence, its action appears to be directed chiefly to the nerves of motion, probably through the medium of the spinal mar- row. Its operation is evinced at first by a feeling of weight and weakness, with tremblings in the limbs, and some rigidity on attempting motion. There seems to be a tendency to permanent involuntary muscular contraction, as in tetanus; but at the same time frequent starts or spasms occur, as from electric shocks. These spasms are first brought on by some exciting cause, as by a slight blow or an attempt to move; but, if the medicine is persevered in, they occur with- out extraneous agency, and are sometimes frequent and violent. In severe cases, there is occasionally general rigidity of the muscles. A sense of heat in the Nux Vomica. PART I. stomach, constriction of the throat and abdomen, tightness of the chest, and retention of urine are frequently experienced, to a greater or less extent, according to the quantity of the medicine administered. It sometimes, also, produces pain in the head, vertigo, contracted pupil, and dimness of vision. •Sensations on the surface analogous to those attending imperfect palsy, such as formication, tingling, &c., are often experienced. The pulse is not materially affected, though sometimes slightly accelerated. Strychnia, given to the inferior animals, has been observed strikingly to lessen the bulk of the spleen. In over- doses, the medicine is capable of producing fatal effects. Given to the inferior animals in fatal doses, it produces great anxiety, difficult and confined breath- ing, retching to vomit, universal tremors, spasmodic action of the muscles, and ultimately violent convulsions. Death is supposed to take place from a suspen- sion of respiration, resulting from a spasmodic constriction of the muscles con- cerned in the process. Yet it poisons animals which have no lungs. (.Am.Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xviii. 369.) Upon dissection, no traces of inflammatory action are observable, unless large quantities of the nux vomica have been swallowed, when the stomach appears inflamed. A division of the spinal marrow near the occiput does not prevent the peculiar effects of the medicine, so that the inter- vention of the brain is not essential. That it enters the circulation, and is brought into contact with the parts upon which it acts, is rendered evident by the ex- periments of Magendie and others. For further observations on the effects of this poison, and for the modes of obviating them, see Strychnia in Par/ II. Nux vomica has long been employed in India, and was known as a medicine to the Arabian physicians. On the continent of Europe, it has at various times been recommended as an antidote to the plague, and as a remedy in intermit- tents, dyspepsia, pyrosis, gastrodynia, dysentery, diarrhoea of debility, colica pictonum, worms, mania, hypochondriasis, hysteria, rheumatism, and hydro- phobia. It is said to have effectually cured obstinate spasmodic asthma. Its peculiar influence upon the nerves of motion, to which the public attention was first called by Magendie, suggested to M. Fouquier, a French physician, the application of the remedy to paralytic affections, in which he met with great success. Others have subsequently employed it with variable results; but the experience in its favour so much predominates, that it may now be considered a standard remedy in palsy. It is a singular fact, that its action is directed more especially to the paralytic part, exciting contraction in this before it is extended to other muscles. The medicine, however, should be administered with judg- ment, and never given in cases depending on inflammation or organic lesion of the brain or spinal marrow, until after the removal of the primary affection. It has been found more successful in general palsy and paraplegia than in hemi- plegia, and has frequently effected cures in palsy of the bladder, incontinence of urine from paralysis of the sphincter, amaurosis, and other cases of partial palsy, and has been employed with asserted success in prolapsus ani, sperma- torrhoea, and impotence. Upon the same principles, it is said to have proved useful in obstinate constipation from deficient contractility of the bowels; and is thought to promote the action of cathartics, when •added to them in small proportion. It has recently been recommended in neuralgia, chorea, and atonic dropsy, and has been found peculiarly useful in gastralgia, gastro-enteralgia, aud other debilitated conditions of the alimentary canal. Nux vomica may be given in powder in the dose of five grains, repeated three or four times a day, and gradually increased till its effects are experienced. In this form, however, it is very uncertain; and fifty grains have been given with little or no effect. It is most readily reduced to powder by filing or grating; and the raspings may be rendered finer by first steaming them, then drying them by stove heat, and lastly rubbing them in a mortar. The Edinburgh Col- lege directed that the seeds should be first well softened with steam, then diced, part I. Nux Vomica.—Olea.—Olea Fixa. 565 dried, and ground in a coffee-mill. It has been recommended that, before being pulverized, they should be deprived of their exterior coating, which is easih done when they are exposed for a short time to the action of hot water. The alcoholic extract is more convenient and more certain in its operation. From half a grain to two grains may be given in the form of pill, repeated as above mentioned, and gradually increased. (S ee Extract am Nucis Vomicse.) The watery extract is comparatively feeble. Strychnia has recently been much used, and possesses the advantage ol greater certainty and uniformity of action. Its effects are precisely similar. With very few exceptions, it is the most violent poison in the catalogue of medi- cines, and should, therefore, be administered with great caution. The dose is from one-sixteenth to one-twelfth of a grain, repeated twice or three times a day, and gradually increased. Even the quantity mentioned often produces spasmodic symptoms, and these generally occur when the dose is augmented to half a grain three times a day; but in the latter quantity the remedy, if pure, is unsafe. The system is not so soon habituated to its impression as to that of the narcotics gen- erally ; so that, after its effects are experienced, it is unnecessary to go on increas- ing the dose. Strychnia has been applied externally with advantage in amaurosis. It should be sprinkled upon a blistered surface near the temples, in the quantity of from one-fourth to one-half a grain, morning and evening; and the quantity may be gradually augmented. The best form of administration is that of pill, in consequence of the excessive bitterness of the solution. Strychnia may, however, be given, dissolved in alcohol, or in water by the intervention of an acid. Brucia may be used, for the same purposes with strychnia, in the dose of one grain twice or three times a day. Dr. Bardsley noticed that the quantity of two grains, three or four times a day, was seldom exceeded without the occurrence of the characteristic effects of the medicine. Magendie found this alkaloid very useful in small doses as a tonic. He employed for this purpose one-eighth of a grain frequently repeated. It is very important, in reference to the dose, that it should contain no strychnia. Off. Prep. Extractum Nucis Vomicae, Br.; Extractum Nucis Vomicae Alco- holicum, XJ.S.; Strychnia; Tinctura Nucis Vomicae W. OLEA. Oils. These are liquid or solid substances, characterized by an unctuous feel, in- flammability, and the property of leaving a greasy stain upon paper. They are divided into two classes, the fixed and volatile, distinguished, as their names imply, by their different habitudes in relation to the vaporizing influence of caloric. 1. OLEA FIXA. Fixed Oils. These are sometimes termed expressed, oils, from the mode in which they are procured. Though existing in greater or less proportion in various parts of plants, they are furnished for use exclusively by the fruit; and, as a general rule, are most abundant in the dicotyledonous seeds. They are obtained either by submitting the bruised seeds to pressure in hempen bags, or by boiling them in water, and skimming off the oil as it rises to the surface. When pressure is employed, it is customary to prepare the seeds for the press by exposing them to a moderate heat, so as to render the oil more liquid, and thus enable it tc flow out more readily. The consistence of the fixed oils varies from that of tallow to perfect fluidity • but by far the greater numbei are liquid at ordinary temperatures. They are 566 Olea Fixa. PART I. somewhat viscid, transparent, and usually of a yellowish colour, which disap- pear! when they are treated with animal charcoal. When pure they have little taste or smell. They are lighter than water, varying in specific gravity from 0913 to 0936. (Berzelius.) They differ very much in their point of congela- tion ; olive oil becoming solid a little above 32° F., while linseed oil remains fluid at 4° below zero. They are not volatilizable without decomposition. At about 600° they boil, and are converted into vapour, which, when condensed, is found to contain, besides other products, a large proportion of oleic and margaric acids, together with benzoic acid, sebacic acid proceeding from the decomposition of the olein, and the vapours of acrolein, a highly volatile liquid resulting from the decomposition of glycerin, upon which the fumes of oils de- pend mainly for their irritating effects on the eyes and nostrils. Exposed to a red heat, in close vessels, they yield, among other products of the destructive distillation of vegetables, a large quantity of the combustible compounds of carbon and hydrogen. Heated in the open air they take fire, burning with a bright flame, and producing water and carbonic acid. When kept in air-tight vessels, they remain unchanged for a great length of time; i>ut, exposed to the atmosphere, they attract oxygen, and ultimately become concrete. Some, in drying, lose their unctuous feel, and are converted into a transparent, yellowish, flexible solid. These are called drying_ oils. Others, especially such as contain mucilaginous impurities, become rancid, acquiring a sharp taste and unpleasant smell. This change is owing to the formation of an acid, from which the oil may be freed by boiling it for a short time with hydrate of magnesia and water. The fixed oils are insoluble in water, but are miscible with that fluid by means of mucilage, forming mixtures which are called emulsions. They are in general very sparingly soluble in alcohol, but readily dissolved by ether, which serves to separate them from other vegetable proximate principles. By the aid of heat they dissolve sulphur and phosphorus. Chlorine and iodine are converted by them into muriatic and hydriodic acids, which, reacting upon the oils, increase their consistence, and ultimately render them as hard as wax. If to one of the fixed oils be added one-tenth of its volume of chloride of sulphur, a reaction speedily takes place, attended with an elevation of temperature and the escape of muriatic acid gas, and followed immediately by solidification of the oil, which is wholly converted into a firm elastic substance, bearing considerable resem- blance to caoutchouc. (Journ. de Pharm., Fev. 1859, p. 97.) The stronger acids decompose them, giving rise, among other products, to oleic and margaric acids. Boiled with diluted nitric acid, they are converted into malic and oxalic acids, besides other substances usually resulting from the action of this acid upon vege- table matter. Several acids are dissolved by them without producing any sensible change. They combine with salifiable bases; but at the moment of combination undergo a change, by which they are resolved into a peculiar substance called glycerin, and into the oleic and margaric or other fatty acids, which unite with the base employed. The compounds of these acids with potassa and soda are called soaps. (See Sapo and Emplastrum Plumbi.) By the addition of one part of carbonate of potassa or of soda, 160 parts of oil may be brought with distilled water into the form of an emulsion. The potassa and soda soaps, and the alka- line sulphurets have a similar effect; but not the bicarbonates. The fixed oils also serve as good vehicles for various metallic bases and subsalts, which form soaps to a certain extent soluble in the oil, and thus become less irritant to the tissues. Oils thus impregnated may, like the pure oils, be brought to the state of emulsion with water, for convenient administration, by the addition of a small proportion of carbonate of potassa (Jeannel et Monsel, Revue Pliarm., 1857, p. 48.) The fixed oils dissolve many of the organic alkalies, the volatile oils, resin, and other proximate principles of plants. The alkaloids are more readily dissolved in them by being first combined with oleic acid; the •dcaLcs being PART i. Olea Fixa. 567 more soluble than the alkaloids themselves. (Attfield, Pharm. Joum., March. 1863, p. 308.) According to Buignet, they are, with very few exceptions, in- different to polarized light; of all those used in medicine, the only exceptions being the liver-oils of the ray and dog-fish, which have a very feeble left rota- tory power, and castor oil, which is decidedly dextrogyrate. (Joum. de Pharm., Octob. 1861, p 264.) The fixed oils, whether animal or vegetable, in their natural state, consist of at least two distinct oleaginous ingredients, one liquid at ordinary temperatures, and the other concrete. The liquid is a distinct proximate principle called olein : the concrete consists of stearin or marqarin, the former being found most largely in animal, the oils or fats, and the two not unfrequently existing together in the same oil. But several oils have peculiar constituents, differing in properties from either margarin or stearin, and specially named ac- cording to the substance containing them; as valmitin in palm oil, butvrin in butter, &c. As the most frequent of these proximate constituents of the fixed oils, and existing in many different oleaginous substances, olein, margarin, and stearin merit a special notice. Preliminarily, however, to their individual con- sideration, it will be proper to refer to the existing views in relation to their nature and composition generally. It is supposed that these oleaginous principles are of the nature of salts, consisting severally of an acid combined with a substance called glycerin, which acts the part of a base. When, therefore, one of them is treated with an alka- line solution, it is decomposed; its acid uniting with the alkali to form soap, and the glycerin being set free. The analogy between these fatty salts and those consisting of inorganic ingredients may be carried still further; as glycerin is supposed to be, like the inorganic bases, an oxide, and to consist of a compound radical called glyceryl (C6H7) with live eqs. of oxygen, united with one eq. of water; its formula being C6H7,05+H0. The fatty acids, existing in these oleaginous salts, are named severally from the oily principles containing them. Thus, the acid of olein is called oleic acid, that of stearin stearic acid, and that of margarin marqaric acid. It must be admitted that this view of the nature of the oily principles was at first received with some hesitation; and many sup- posed that, when an alkali with water was made to act on the oils, the resulting fatty acids and glycerin were generated by the reactions set on foot between the oil and water, and did not pre-exist in the oii. In favour of this view was the fact, that the presence of water was necessary to the change. But this is ex- plained by the supposition that the oxide of glyceryl cannot exist separately unless combined with water, the presence of which, therefore, is necessary to detach it from its combination with the fatty acid in the oils. Moreover, the received view has been synthetically confirmed; for M. Berthelot has succeeded in combining glycerin with various acids, forming salts, and among others with oleic, stearic, and margaric acids, thus reconstructing olein, stearin, and margarin out of their constituents. Olein. Elain. Liquid Princiyle of Oils. It is extremely difficult to obtain oleiiTpTire. Being the liquid menstruum which, in most oils, holds the concrete principles in solution, it has for the latter an affinity which retains portions of them with a tenacity not easily overcome. As ordinarily procured, therefore, olein contains more or less of margarin or stearin or both. In this somewhat impure state, it is obtained either by the agency of alcohol or by expression. When one of the oils, olive oil, for example, is dissolved in boiling alcohol, the solution, on cooling, deposits the concrete principles, still retaining the olein, which it yields upon evaporation. The other method consists in compressing jnt- of the solid fats, or of the liquid oils rendered concrete by cold, between folds of bibaious paper, which absorb the olein, and give it up afterwards by comoression under water Olein is a liquid of oily consistence, becoming con- Olea Fixa. 1»ART I. orete at 2O0 F., colourless when pure, with little odour and a sweetish taste, in- soluble in water, soluble in boiling alcohol and ether, and composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. These elements are believed to be so combined as to form a salt, consisting, according to Berthelot, of one eq. of glycerin C6H70. and three eqs. of oleic acid 3(C36H33O3) = Cll4H106O14, the teroleate of glycerin, or Lrioleinsii Berthelot.* By reaction with nitric acid, olein is converted into a deep- yellow, butryaceous mass. If this be treated with hot alcohol, a deep orange-red oil is dissolved, and a peculiar fatty matter remains called elaidin. This is white, fusible at 97°, insoluble in water, readily soluble in ether, and supposed to be isomeric with olein. It is resolved by saponification with the alkalies into elaidic acid and glycerin; and is, therefore, elaidate of glycerin. It is now generally thought that olein, as obtained from different oils, is not precisely identical in properties; and a distinct compound is recognised, consisting of one eq. of gly- cerin CBII705and one of oleic acid without water C42H40O8, the oleate of glycerin, or monolein of Berthelot. Stearin. This exists abundantly in tallow and other animal fats. It may be obtained by treating the concrete matter of lard, free from olein, by cold ether so long as anything is dissolved. The margarin is thus taken up, and stearin remains. A better method is to dissolve suet in heated oil of turpentine, allow ihe solution to cool, submit the solid matter to expression in unsized paper, re- peat the treatment several times, aiid finally dissolve in hot ether, which deposits the stearin on cooling. This is concrete, white, opaque in mass, but of a pearly appearance as crystallized from ether, pulverizable, fusible at about 143°, solu- ble in boiling alcohol and ether, but nearly insoluble in those liquids cold, and quite insoluble in v«rater. It consists of glycerin and stearic acid; but there are several varieties of it, having different points of fusion, and somewhat differing in composition. Besides the natural stearin, which appears to consist of four eqs. of stearic acid and one of glycerin, Berthelot obtained two others by heat- ing glycerin with stearic acid; one of them with one eq. of each of its compo- nents, the other with two of the acid and one of the base. Margarin. This is obtained by treating the concrete matter of oil, previously deprived of olein, with cold ether, and allowing the liquid to evaporate; or by boiling a mixture of stearin and margarin with ether, which dissolves both, but deposits the former on cooling, and yields the latter upon subsequent evapora- tion. It resembles stearin closely, differing mainly in its lower melting point, in being soluble in cold ether, and in yielding margarates on saponification. The natural margarin is stated to consist of four eqs. of margaric acid and one of glycerin. Another has been produced artificially which is considered as a mo- nomargarin, consisting of one eq. of each of its components. ' As stated above, there is some reason to consider olein, stearin, and margarin, as being rather representatives of sets of proximate principles, than as quite distinct and peculiar; and this appears to have been the impression of Berzelius. It is possible, as may be inferred from the observations of Berthelot, that the several oleins, stearins, and margarins may differ in the proportion in which the acid constituent combiues with the glycerin.f * Oleic acid has been proposed as a solvent, of the vegetable alkaloids for external use. Its supposed advantages are that it dissolves these principles more freely than the oils them- selves, and that the compounds it forms -with them would probably find ready entrance into the system. It is not, however, in general use. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 72.) f Some interesting results in relation to the fixed oils were obtained by MM. Pelouze and Boudet, and published in the Journ. de Pharm., xxiv. 385. According to these chemists, the variable fusibility of the margarin and stearin of fixed oils, which has induced some chemists to believe that they are severally not entirely identical as obtained from different oils, is owing to the existence of definite combinations of margarin and stearin respec- tively with olein; and each of these principles, in a state of purity, is probably the same from whatever source derived, whether from vegetable or from animal oils. Thus they part I. Olea Fiza.—Olea Volatilia. As, besides oleic, stearic, and margaric acids, there are in certain oils other analogous fatty acids, such as the palmitic, for example, which united with glycerin forms palmitiri; so, besides glycerin or oxide of glyceryl, there are other bases of fatty~salts7as oxide of cetyl, oxide of propyl, &c. So far as these have par- ticular interest for the pharmaceutist they will be considered under the several substances into the constitution of which they enter. To distinguish the oils having glycerin for their base, they are now denominated glycerides. The fixed oils are liable to certain spontaneous changes, which have been in- vestigated by MM. Pelouze and Boudet. It appears, from their researches, that the oils are accompanied, in the seeds which contain them, with principles which act as a ferment, and cause the oils to resolve themselves spontaneously into the several fatty acids which .they afford on saponification, and into glycerin. This change takes place in the seeds as soon as the cells containing the oil are broken, so as to permit the contact of the fermenting principle existing in the grain. Sometimes the fermenting principle is to a certain extent separated from the seeds along with the oil. In such a case, the oil undergoes this resolution into the fatty acids and glycerin after expression. Such was ascertained to be the case with palm oil, in which, after long keeping, MM. Pelouze and Boudet de- tected the presence of glycerin, and of palmitic and oleic acids. They moreover proved that, under the continued influence of the ferment, the fatty acids them- selves undergo changes, among which is the conversion of the oleic into sebacie acid ; and it is probable that, with a still longer continuance of the same influence, the oil would be completely destroyed. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1856, p. 274.) It is sometimes desirable to deprive the fixed oils of colour. The following process for this purpose is recommended by M. Brunner. The oil is first brought to the state of emulsion by strongly agitating it with water rendered mucilagi- nous by gum or starch; the emulsion is treated for each part of oil with two parts of wood-charcoal, previously well heated, and coarsely powdered, the finer particles being sifted out; the pasty mass is then completely dried at a heat not exceeding 212° F., and exhausted by cold ether in a percolator; finally, the ethereal solution, having been allowed to stand in order that any charcoal pre- sent in it may subside, is submitted to distillation so as to separate the ether, and the oil remains colourless in the retort. {Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1858, p. 214.) The ultimate constituents of the fixed oils are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; the hydrogen being in much larger proportion than is necessary to saturate the oxygen. Those which are least fusible contain most carbon and least oxygen; and, according to De Saussure, their solubility in alcohol is greater in propor- tion to their amount of oxygen. {Berzelius.) Some of them contain a very mi- nute proportion of nitrogen. 2. OLEA YOLATILIA. Volatile Oils. These are sometimes called distilled oils, from the mode in which they are usually procured; sometimes essential oils, from the circumstance that they possess, in a concentrated state, the properties of the plants from which they are derived. They exist in all odoriferous vegetables, sometimes pervading the found the same margarin in palm oil and in human fat. But there appear to be two dis- tinct kinds of olein; one existing in the drying oils, as linseed oil, the oil of poppies, &c.; the other in the oils which are not drying, a3 olive oil, almond oil, human fat, and lard. These two forms of olein are different in their solubility in different menstrua, and in the circumstances that one is drying and the other not so, that one remains liquid under the action of nitric acid, while the other is converted by it into a solid substance called elmdin,,and finally that the former contains much less hydrogen than the latter. Besides, the oleic acid formed in the process of saponification from these two kinds of olein is de- cidedly different; inasmuch as, in the one case, it is converted by nitrous acid into elaidte »cid, and in the other it is not thus changed.—Note to the fourth edition. 570 Olea Volatilia. PART I. plant, sometimes confined to a single part; in some instances contained in dis- tinct cellules, and preserved after desiccation, in others formed upon the surface, as in many flowers, and exhaled as soon as formed. Occasionally two or more are found in different parts of the same plant. Thus, the orange tree produces one oil in its leaves, another in its flowers, and a third in the rind of its fruit. In a few instances, when existing in distinct cellules, they may be obtained by pressure, as from the rind of the lemon and orange; but they are generally procured by distillation with water. (See Olea Destillata.) Some volatile oils, as those of bitter almonds and mustard, are formed, during the process of dis- tillation, out of substances of a different nature pre-existing in the plant. The volatile oils are usually yellowish, but often brown, red, green, or blue, and occasionally colourless. There is reason, however, to believe that, in all instances, the colour depends on foreign matter dissolved in the oils. Septimus Piesse has succeeded, by the fractional distillation of certain volatile oils, in separating a blue liquid, which, by repeated rectification, he has obtained quite pure. In this state, it has the sp. gr. (>910, and a fixed boiling point of 576° F., and yields a dense blue vapour, having peculiar optical properties. He has named this principle azulene, and believes that, upon it depends the blueness of volatile oils wherever existing. The yellowness of the oils he ascribes to the resin resulting from their oxidation, the green and brown colours to a mixture of azulene and resin in various proportions. The formula of azulene is C16HJ30. (Chem. News, Nov. 21, 1863, p. 245.) The volatile oils ha“ve a strong odour, resembling that of the plants from which they were procured, though generally less agreeable. Their taste is hot and pungent, and, when they are diluted, is often gratefully aromatic. The greater number are lighter than water; some are heavier; and their sp.gr. varies from 0847 to 1T7. They partially rise in vapour at ordinary temperatures, diffusing their peculiar odour, and are completely volatilized by heat. Their boiling point is various, generally as high as 320° F., and sometimes higher; but most of them rise readily with the vapour of boiling water. When distilled alone, they almost always undergo partial decomposition. They differ also in their point of congelation. A few are solid at ordinary temperatures, several become so at 32° F., and may remain liquid considerably below that point. Heated in the open air, they take fire, and burn with a bright flame attended with much smoke. Almost all those hitherto examined have the property of very decidedly deviat- ing the plane of polarization of light, some in one direction, and some in the other; and advantage may sometimes be taken of this property to detect adulte- rations of one of these oils with another. Exposed at ordinary temperatures, they absorb oxygen, assume a deeper colour, become thicker and less odorous, and are ultimately converted into resin. This change takes place most rapidly under the influence of light. Before the alteration is complete, the remaining portion of oil may be recovered by distilla- tion. Some of them form well characterized acids by combination with oxygen. * The volatile oils are very slightly soluble in water. Agitated with this fluid they render it milky; but separate upon standing, leaving the water impreg- nated with their odour and taste. This impregnation is more complete when water is distilled with the oils, or from the plants containing them. Trituration with magnesia or its carbonate renders them much more soluble, probably in consequence of their minute division. The intervention of sugar also greatly * Recovery of volatile oils from their resinified condition. A process for this purpose, em- ployed by M. Curieux, is to treat the old resinified oil with a solution of borax and animal charcoal; these being first mixed to form a magma, the oil then added, and the mixture shaken for fifteen minutes. The borax unites with the resinous matter; and the magma, adhering to the sides of the vessel, leaves the oil clear and possessed of As origins pro- perties. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1858, p. 398; from Journ. de Chim. Mid.)~ to the twelfth edition. part I. Olea Volatilia. 571 increases their solubility, and affords a convenient method of preparing them for internal use. Most of them are very soluble in alcohol, and in a degree pro- portionate to its freedom from water. The oils which contain no oxygen are scarcely soluble in diluted alcohol; and, according to De Saussure, their solu- bility generally in this liquid is proportionate to the quantity of oxygen which they contain. They are readily dissolved by ether. The volatile oils dissolve sulphur and phosphorus with the aid of heat, and deposit them on cooling. By long boiling with sulphur, they form brown, unc- tuous, fetid substances, formerly called balsams of sulvhur. They absorb chlo- rine, which converts them into resin, and then combines with the resin. Iodine produces a similar effect. They are decomposed by the strong mineral acids, and unite with several of those from the vegetable kingdom. When treated with a caustic alkali, they are converted into resin, which unites with the alkali to form a kind of soap. Several of the metallic oxides, and various salts which easily part with oxygen, convert them into resin. The volatile oils dissolve many of the proximate principles of plants and animals, such as the fixed oils and fats, resins, camphor, and several of the organic alkalies. Exposed to air and light, they acquire a decolorizing property, analogous to that of chlorine, which is ascribed by Faraday to their combination with the ozonized oxygen of the atmosphere. For some interesting observations on this property of the vola- tile oils, the reader is referred to papers by Dr. J. L. Plummer, of Richmond, Indiana, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxv. 398 and 508).* The volatile, like the fixed oils, are mixtures of two or more principles, which differ in their point of volatilization or congelation, or in their composition. It is, however, impossible to separate them by distillation alone so as to obtain the several principles entirely pure. When, as often happens, the constituents con- geal at different temperatures, they may be separated by compressing the frozen oil between folds of bibulous paper. The solid matter remains within the folds; and the fluid is absorbed by the paper, from which it may be separated by dis- tillation with water. The name of stearoptene. has been proposed for the former, that of eleoptene for the latter. The solid crystalline substances deposited by volatile oils upon standing are also called stearoptenes. Some of them are deno- minated camphors, from their resemblance to true camphor. Some are isomeric with the oils in which they are formed, others are oxides. Certain oils, under the influence of water, deposit crystalline hydrates of the respective oils. In reference to their ultimate constituents, the volatile oils may be divided into three sets: 1. the non-oxygenated, consisting exclusively of carbon and hy- drogen, as the oils of turpentine and copaiba; 2. the oxygenated oils, contain- ing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, as oil of cinnamon ana most of the aromatic oils; and 3. the sulphuretted, containing sulphur, as the oils of horseradish and mustard. In relation fo the first division, or non-oxygenated oils, it is a remark- able fact, that, however differing in sensible properties, almost all of them con- tain carbon and hydrogen- in the same proportion; their formulas being the same, or differing only in the whole number of equivalents; as C5II4,C10H8, and of which the last two are simple multiples of the first. The volatile oils are often sophisticated. Among the most common adultera- tions are fixed oils, resinous substances, and alcohol. The presence of the fixed oils may be known by the permanent greasy stain which they leave on paper, while that occasioned by a pure volatile oil disappears entirely when exposed to heat. They may also in general be detected by their comparative insolubility * See a.so the same journal (xxviii. 197) for some curious facts in relation to a repul- sive influence exerted upon, and changes of colour produced in a mixture of chromate of potassa and sulphuric acid, by different volatile oils, at sensible and sometimes consider- able distances from the mixture, effected probably through the vapour of the oils.—Note to the eleventh edition. Olea Volatilia. PART I. In alcohol. Both the fixed oils and resins are left behind when the adulterated oil is distilled with water. If alcohol is present, the oil becomes milky when agitated with water, and, after the separation of the liquids, the water occupies more space and the oil less than before. The following method of detecting alcohol was proposed by M. Beral. Put twelve drops of the suspected oil in a perfectly dry watch-glass, and add a piece of potassium about as large as the head of a pin. If the potassium remains for twelve or fifteen minutes in the midst of the liquid, there is either no alcohol present, or less than 4 per cent. If it disappears in five minutes, the oil contains more than 4 per cent, of alco- hol; if in less than a minute, 25 per cent, or more. M. Borsarelli employs chloride of calcium for the same purpose. This he introduces in small pieces, ■well dried and perfectly free from powder, into a small cylindrical tube, closed at one end, and about two-thirds filled with the oil to be examined, and heats the tube to 212°, occasionally shaking it. If there is a considerable proportion of alcohol, the chloride is entirely dissolved, forming a solution which sinks to the bottom of the tube ; if only a very small quantity, the pieces lose their form, and collect at the bottom in a white adhering mass; if none at all, they remain unchanged. {Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 429.) J. J. Bernoulli proposes as a test dry acetate of potassa, which remains unaffected in a pure oil, but is dissolved if alcohol is present, and forms a distinct liquid. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 82.) Sometimes volatile oils of little value are mixed with the more costly. The taste and smell afford in this case the best means of detecting the fraud. The specific gravity of the oils may also serve as a test of purity. When two oils, of which one is lighter and the other heavier than water, are mixed, they are separated by long agitation with this fluid, and will take a place correspond- ing to their respective specific gravities; but it sometimes happens that an un- adulterated oil may thus be separated into two portions. The difference of ap- parent effect produced by iodine with the several oils has been proposed as a test; and bromine has been employed for the same purpose by Mr. John M. Maisch. Mr. Maisch uses both these tests preferably in the state of ethereal solution; which, as it is liable to spontaneous change by keeping, should be prepared when wanted for use.* According to Liebig, when iodine is made to act on a volatile oil, a portion of it combines with the hydrogen of the oil forming liydriodie acid, while another portion takes the place of the lost hydro- gen. Oil of turpentine may be detected by remaining in part undissolved, when the suspected oil is treated with three or four times its volume of alcohol of the sp. gr. 0‘84; or, according to M. Mero, by causing the suspected oil, when agi- tated with an equal measure of poppy oil, to remain transparent, instead of be- coming milky, as it would do if pure. The latter test will not apply to the oil of rosemary. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., vii. 303.) Gr. S. Heppe suggests a very delicate test of oil of turpentine and most other non-oxygenated oils, when used to adulterate one of the oils containing oxygen. A piece of nitroprusside of copper, of the size of a pin’s head, is put into a little of the suspected oil in a test-tube, and heated until the liquid begins to boil. The boiling must be con- tinued only a few seconds. If the oil be pure and oxygenated, the nitroprusside of copper will become black, brown, or gray; if oil of turpentine or other non- oxygenated oil be present, the deposit will be green or bluish-green, and the supernatant liquid colourless or yellowish. (Chern. Gaz., Ap. 15, 1857, p. 155.)f Volatile oils may be preserved without change in small well-stopped bottles, entirely filled with the oil, and secluded from the light. W. * Mr. Maisch’s paper on the application of these tests to the several volatile oils is con- tained in the Proceedings of the Am. Pharm. Association, A. D. 1859, p. 342. j- For an elaborate paper on the detection of adulterations in volatile oils by Mr. Joiii Nl. Maisch, see Proceedings of the Am. Pharm. Association, A. D. 1858, p. 344. PART I. Oleum Amygdalae Amarse. 573 OLEUM AMYGDALAE AMARiE. U.S. Oil of Bitter Almond. The oil obtained by distilling with water the kernels of the fruit of Amjg- dalus communis, variety amara. U. S. WTrSif bitter almonds "are ex}5ressed, they yield a bland fixed oil; and the residuary cake, reduced to powder by grinding, and submitted to distillation with water, gives over a volatile oleaginous product, commonly called oil of bitter almonds. This does not pre-exist in the almond, but is produced by the reaction of water upon the amygdalin contained in it, through the intervention of auother constituent denominated emulsin. (fee Amygdala Amara.) It is obtained also by the distillation of the leaves of the cherry-laurel, and of various products of the genera Amygdalus, Cerasus, Prunus, and others. (See note, page 109.) Mr. Whipple obtained, upon an average, from the ground bitter almond cake, 135 per cent, of the oil. (Pharm. Journ., x. 297.) Pettenkoffer has ascer- tained that the product is greater, if the cake be macerated in water for forty- eight hours before being submitted to distillation. {Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1862, p. 432.) Oil of bitter almonds has a yellowish colour, a bitter, acrid, burning taste, and the odour of the kernels in a high degree. It is heavier than water, soluble in alcohol and ether, slightly soluble in water, and deposits, upon standing, a white crystalline substance consisting chiefly of benzoic acid. Besides a peculiar volatile oil, it contains also hydrocyanic acid, with a small proportion of ben- zoic acid, and of a concrete principle called benzoine. It may be obtained pure by agitating it strongly with hydrate of lime and a solution of protochloride of iron, submitting the mixture to distillation, and drying the oil which comes over by digestion with chloride of calcium. Mr. George Whipple states that, if crude oil be redistilled into a solution of nitrate of silver, and again distilled from a fresh solution of the same salt, it is obtained entirely free from hydrocyanic acid, which reacts with the silver, and remains behind as cyanuret of silver. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 348.) Thus purified it is colourless, but still retains its peculiar odour, with a burning, aromatic taste; and is destitute of the poi- sonous properties of the oil in its original state, dependent on hydrocyanic acid. The odour of the oil of bitter almonds has been erroneously ascribed to that acid, which, on examination, will be found to smell differently and more feebly. Like most other volatile oils, this may produce deleterious effects if taken very largely. Hippuric acid is found in the urine of animals to which it has been given freely. The sp.gr. of the crude oil varies from 1 052 to L082, and is said to be greater when the oil is distilled from salt water than in the ordinary mode. That of the purified oil is L043, and its boiling point 356°. It probably consists of a compound radical called benzyl (C14H502) and one eq. of hydro- gen, and is therefore a hydruret of benzyl. This radical is capable of uniting with other bodies, andTorming a series of Compounds. The benzoic acid which the oil of bitter almonds deposits on standing does not pre-exist in it, but re- sults from the absorption of oxygen. The concrete substance above referred to by the name of benzoine is isomeric with the oil, crystallizable in colourless shining prisms, without smell or taste, fusible at 248°, and volatilizable un- changed at a higher temperature. It is formed abundantly in the original im- pure oil by the reaction of alkalies; but cannot be produced in it when deprived of hydrocyanic acid.* Schonbein has satisfied himself that oil of bitter almonds * Nitrobenzole. or Artificial Oil of Bitter Almonds. This substance was discovered by Vlitscherlich, who obtained it by the reaction of nitric acid on benzole, a carbohydrogen originally procured by distilling benzoic acid with lime. (See Pari Third.) It is cliarac- ferized by having an otbur closely resembling that of the oil of bitter almonds, for which Oleum Amygdalae Amarae. part r. has, like electricity and phosphorus, an ozonizing effect on oxygen. (Chem. Central Platt, Dec. 15, 1858, p. 905.) Zeller mentions, as characteristics of the officinal oil by which its genuineness and purity may be known, its peculiar odour and high specific gravity; its ready solubility in sulphuric acid, with the production of a reddish-brown colour, but without visible decomposition; the slow action of nitric acid; the slow and par- tial solution of iodine without further reaction ; the want of action of chromate of potassa upon it; and the production of crystals when it is dissolved in an alcoholic solution of potassa. (See Pharm. Journ., ix. 575.) Mr. Redwood stales that a very small proportion of alcohol may be detected in the oil, by the 'effer- vescence, with disengagement of nitrous vapours, which ensues when the oil, thus contaminated, is mixed with an equal volume of nitric acid of the sp.gr. 15. With pure oil no other effect is obvious than a slight change of colour. {Ibid., xi. 486.) If sulphuric acid produces with the oil a bright-red, instead of a brownish- red colour, it indicates that the oil has probably been distilled with salt water, in which case it is apt, according to Mr. Ferris, to deposit a blood-red matter, occasionally complained of by druggists. {Ibid., p. 565.) Medical Properties and Uses. The unpurified volatile oil of bitter almonds, which is the product directed by the Pharmacopoeia, operates upon the system in a manner closely analogous to that of hydrocyanic acid. A single drop is sufficient to destroy a bird, and four drops have caused the death of a dog of middle size. The case of a man is recorded, who died in ten minutes after taking two drachms of the oil. It might probably be substituted with advantage for medicinal hydrocyanic acid; as the acid contained in the oil is much less liable to decomposition, remaining for several years unaltered, if the oil is preserved in well-stopped bottles. According to Schrader, 100 parts of the oil contain sufficient acid for the production of 22'5 parts of Prussian blue; but the pro- portion is not constant, varying, according to Mr. Groves, from 8 to 12 5 per cent. From one-fourth of a drop to a drop may be given for a dose, to be cau- tiously increased till some effect upon the system is observed. It may be ad- ministered in emulsion with gum arabic, loaf sugar, and water. It has been employed externally, dissolved in water in the proportion of one drop to a fluid- ounce, in prurigo senilis and other cases of troublesome itching. To facilitate the solution in water, the oil may be previously dissolved in spirit. Oil of bitter almonds is said to conceal the taste of cod-liver oil, and of castor oil. Off. Prep. Aqua Amygdalae Amarae, U. S. W. it has recently been substituted to a considerable extent in perfumery, in consequence of the discovery of benzole among the products of the distillation of coal tar, and the facility thus offered for preparing nitrobenzole cheaply. In its preparation a large glass worm is used, bifurcated at its upper end, so as to form two funnel-shaped tubes. Into one of these concentrated nitric acid is poured, and into the other benzole, and the two, meeting at the point of junction of the tubes, form the compound in question, which is cooled as it passes through the worm, and is afterwards fitted for use by washing it with water, or dilute solution of carbonate of soda. Much of it is consumed, in London, for scenting soap, in confectionery, and for culinary purposes, to which it is even better adapted than the proper oil of bitter almonds, because free from hydrocyanic acid. (Pharm. Journ., xi. 421.) It is, however, not destitute of activity, and should not, therefore, be incautiously used. Mr. J. M. Maisch has known nitrobenzole to be used for the adulteration of the oil of bitter almonds, and proposes the following mode of detecting it. Dissolve half a drachm of the suspected oil in two or three drachms of alcohol, add fifteen grains of pure lused caustic potassa, heat for a few minutes so as to dissolve the potassa and reduce the liquid to one-third, and then set aside to cool. If the oil be pure it will remain liquid, while, if nitrobenzole be present, there will, after cooling, be a crystalline deposit, proportionate to the amount of adulteration, (,4m. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1857, p. 544.)—Note to the tenth and twelfth editions. PART I. Oleum Amygdalae Dulcis. OLEUM AMYGDALAE DULCIS. U.S. Oil of Sweet Almond. The fixed oil obtained from the kernels of the fruit of Amygdalus communis, jEanety dulcis, U. S ~~Off. Syn. OLEUM AMYGDALAE. The oil expressed from Almonds. Br. Huile d’amandes, Ft.; Mandelol, Germ.; Olio di mandorle, Ital.; Aceyte de almendras. Span. See AMYGDALA. This oil is obtained equally pure from sweet and bitter almonds. In its pre- paration, the almonds, having been deprived of a reddish-brown powder adher- ing to their surface, by being rubbed together in a piece of coarse linen, are ground in a mill resembling a coffee-mill, or bruised in a stone mortar, and then pressed in canvas sacks between plates of iron slightly heated. The oil, which is at first turbid, is clarified by rest and filtration. Sometimes the almonds are steeped in very hot water, deprived of their cuticle, and dried in a stove, pre- viously to expression. The oil is thus obtained free from colour, but in no other respect better, while it is more apt to become rancid on keeping. Bitter almonds, treated in this way, impart a smell of hydrocyanic acid to the oil. M. Boullay obtained 54 per cent, of oil from sweet almonds, Yogel 28 per cent, from bitter almonds. Though sometimes expressed in this country from imported almonds, the oil is generally brought from Europe. Oil of almonds is clear and colourless, or slightly tinged of a greenish-yellow, is nearly inodorous, and has a bland sweetish taste. It remains liquid at tem- peratures considerably below the freezing point of water. Its sp. gr. is from 0 911 to 0'92. From the statement of Braconnot, it appears to contain 16 per cent, of olein and 24 of margarin. Oil of almonds is said to be sometimes adulterated with poppy oil, or other drying oils of less value. This sophistication may be detected, as suggested by M. Wimmec, by taking advantage of the property of being converted into solid elaidic acid by the action of nitric acid, belonging to the olein of the non-drying but not to that of the drying oils. By treating iron filings with nitric acid in a flask, nitrous acid is produced, which is to be conducted into water upon which the suspected oil is placed. If the almond oil contain even but a small quantity of poppy oil, or other drying oil, this will remain in the form of drops on the surface, while the genuine oil will be converted entirely into crystallized elaidin. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1862, p. 500.) Colza oil, another not uncommon adulteration, may be detected, according to M. Schneider, by the action of nitrate of silver. Dissolve the oil in twice its volume of ether, add about 30 drops of a concentrated alcoholic solution of the nitrate, shake the mixture, and allow it to stand in the dark. If there be much colza oil, the lower part of the liquid will become first brown and then black; if but little, the brown colour will not appear for about 12 hours; but always the discoloration will be obvious on the evaporation of the ether. (Pharm. Journ., March, 1862, p. 484.) Oil of almonds may be used for the same purposes with olive oil; and, when suspended in water by means of mucilage or the yolk of eggs and loaf sugar, forms a pleasant emulsion, useful in pulmonary affections attended with cough. From a fluidrachm to a fluidounce may be given at a dose. Off. Prep. Unguentum Cetacei, Br.; Unguentum Simplex, Br.; Unguentum Aquae Rosae, U. S. W. 576 Oleum Anthemidis.—Oleum Bergamii. part I. OLEUM ANTHEMIDIS. Br. Oil of Chamomile. The oil distilled in England from Chamomile flowers. Br. For an account of the plant yielding this oil, see AN THE MIS, page 120. This oil has been introduced into the Materia Medica list of the British Pharmacopoeia, under the name of English Oil of Chamomile, and with the direction that it shall be distilled in England. It is seldom prepared or used in this country. Baume obtained thirteen drachms of the oil from eighty-two pounds of the flowers; according to Mr. Braude, the average product of 100 pounds is two pounds twelve ounces. It has the peculiar smell of chamomile, with a pungent somewhat aromatic taste. When recently distilled it is of a pale sky-blue or greenish-blue colour, which changes to yellow or brownish on expo- sure. The sp. gr. of the English oil is said to be 0'9083. According to M. Gerbardt, oil of chamomile is a mixture of a carbohydrogen with an oxygenated oil (C10H6O2). (Ghem. Gaz., vi. 483.) It has sometimes been em- ployed in spasm of the stomach, and as an adjunct to purgative medicines. Its chief use, however, appears to be as an ingredient of the extract of chamomile of the British Pharmacopoeia, to which it is added in order to supply the place of the oil driven oil by the heat used in its preparation. This oil must not be con- founded with the product of Matricaria Ghamomilla, employed on the continent of Europe under the name of oil of chamomile. (See Matricaria.) The dose is from five to fifteen drops. Off. Prep. Extractum Anthemidis, Br. W. OLEUM BERGAMII. U.S. Oil of Bergamot. The volatile oil obtained from the r&d of the fruit of Citrus Limetta (De Candolle). XJ. S. Huile de bergamotte, Fr.; Bergamottol, Germ.; Oleo di bergamotta, Ital. Citrus. See AURANTII CORTEX. Citrus Limetta. De Cand. Prodrom. i. 539. The bergamot tree has been generally ranked among the lemons; but is now considered as a variety of the Citrus Limetta of Risso, and is so placed by De Candolle. It has oblong-ovate, dentate, acute, or obtuse leaves, somewhat paler on the under than the upper surface, and with footstalks more or less winged or margined. The flowers are white, and usually small; the fruit pyriform or roundish, terminated by an obtuse point, with concave receptacles of oil in the rind. The pulp of the fruit is sourish, somewhat aromatic, and not disagreeable. The rind is shining, and of a pale-yellow colour, and abounds in a very grateful volatile oil. This may be obtained by expression or distillation. In the former case, it preserves the agreeable flavour of the rind, but is somewhat turbid; in the latter, it is limpid but less sweet. The mode of procuring it by expression is exactly that used for oil of lemons. (See Oleum Limonis.) It is brought from Italy, the south of France, and Portugal. The oil of bergamot, often called essence of bergamot, has a sweet, very agreeable odour, a bitter aromatic pungent taste, and a pale greenish-yellow colour. Its sp. gr. varies from O'STO to 0-888 (Lewis, Zeller); and its composi- tion is essentially the same as that of oil of lemons. It is distinguished from the lemon and orange oils by readily dissolving in liquor potassx, and forming with it a clear solution. (Zeller.) Though possessed of the excitant properties of the volatile oils in general, it is employed chiefly, if not exclusively, as a perfume. W. PART I. Oleum Bubulum.—Oleum Cajuputi. 577 OLEUM BUBULUM. U.S. Neats-foot Oil. The oil prepared from the bones of ~Bos domesticus. U. S. Huile de pied de boeuf, Fr.; Ochsenfussefeft, Germ. Neats-foot oil is obtained by boiling in water for a long time the feet of the ox, previously deprived of their hoofs. The fat and oil which rise to the sur- face are removed, and introduced into a fresh portion of water heated nearly to the boiling point. The impurities having subsided, the oil is drawn off, and, if required to be very pure, is again introduced into water, which is kept for twenty-four hours sufficiently warm to enable the fat which is mixed with the oil to separate from it. The liquid being then allowed to cool, the fat concretes, and the oil is removed and strained, or filtered through layers of small frag- ments of charcoal free from powder. The oil is yellowish, and, when properly prepared, inodorous and of a bland taste. It thickens or congeals with great difficulty, and is, therefore, very useful for greasing machinery in order to prevent friction. It was introduced into the officinal catalogue of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia as an ingredient of the ointment of nitrate of mercury. It has recently been used as a substitute for cod-liver oil in scrofulous diseases, and, according to Dr. C. R. Hall, of England, with happy effects, especially in cases in which the latter does not agree with the stomach. It is apt to be laxative, and in certain cases proves useful in this way. It is given in the same dose as cod-liver oil. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxiv. 498.) Off. Prep. Unguentum Hydrargyri Nitratis, TJ. S. W. OLEUM CAJUPUTI. U.S., Br. Oil of Cajeput. The volatile oil obtained from the leaves of Mejalenca Cajujmti. U. S. Mela- leuca minor. The oil distilled from the leaves. Br. - 'THuile de cajeput, Fr.; Cajeputol, Germ.; Olio di cajeput, Ital.; Kayuputieh, Malay. Melaleuca. Sex. Syst. Polyadelphia Icosandria. — Nat. Ord. Myrtaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted, semi-superior. Corolla five-petaled. Stamens about forty-five, very long, conjoined in five bodies. Style single. Capsule three- celled. Seeds numerous. Roxburgh. It was long supposed that the oil of cajeput was derived from Melaleuca leucadendron; but from specimens of the plant affording it, sent from the Moluccas, anXcultivated in the botanical garden of Calcutta, it appears to be a distinct species, which has received the name of M. Cajuputi. It corresponds with the arbor alba minor of Rumphius, and is a smaller plant than M. leuca- dendron. It is possible, however, that the oil may be obtained from different species of Melaleuca; as M. Stickel, of Jena, succeeded in procuring from the leaves of M. hvvericifolia. cultivated in the botanical garden of that place, a specimen of oil not distinguishable from the cajeput oil of commerce, except by a paler green colour. {Annal. der Pharm., xix. 224.) Two other species of Melaleuca, M. viridi folia, and M. lati folia. large trees growing abundantly in the island of New Caleclonia, are said to yield a volatile oil very analogous to the oil of cajeput. The leaves of different species of Melaleuca have been used advantageously, in the form of bath, in chronic rheumatism. (Annuaire de Therap., A. D. 1861, p. 67.) Melaleuca Cajuputi. Rumphius, Eerbar. Amboinense, tom. ii. tab. 17; Rox- tirghjTfans. Bond. Med. Bot. Soc., A. D. 1829; Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Oleum Cajuputi. part I. Pharm., vol. i. p. ’’93. —Melaleuca minor. De Candolle. This is a small tree, with an erect but crooked"stem, arid scattered branches, the slender twigs of which droop like those of the weeping willow. The bark is of a whitish-ash co- lour, very thick, soft, spongy, and lamellated, throwing off its exterior layer from time to time in flakes. The leaves have short footstalks; are alternate, lanceo- late, when young sericeous, when full grown smooth, deep-green, three and five- nerved, slightly falcate, entire, from three to five inches long, from one-half to three-quarters of an inch broad; and when bruised exhale a strong aromatic odo r. The flowers are small, white, inodorous, sessile, and disposed in terminal and axillary downy spikes, with solitary, lanceolate, three-flowered bractes. The filaments are three or four times longer than the petals, and both are inserted in the rim of the calyx. This species of Melaleuca is a native of the Moluccas, and other neighbouring islands. The oil is obtained from the leaves by distillation. It is prepared chiefly in Amboyna and Bouro, and is exported from the East Indies in glass bottles. The small proportion yielded by the leaves, and the extensive use made of it in India, render it costly. Properties. Cajeput oil is very fluid, transparent, of a fine green colour, a lively and penetrating odour analogous to that of camphor and cardamom, and a warm pungent taste. It is very volatile and inflammable, burning without any residue. The sp. gr. varies from 0 914 to 0 9274. Its composition, according to Blanchet and Sell, is represented by the formula C^H^-f^IlO; and its boiling point is 347° F. Schmidt proposes the name of cajeputene for the carbohy- drogen of which it is a bihydrate. (Trans. Royal Soc. Edin., xii. 360.) The oil is wholly soluble in alcohol. When it is distilled, a light colourless liquid first comes over, and afterwards a green and denser one. The green colour has been ascribed to a salt of copper, derived from the vessels in which the distilla- tion is performed; and Guibourt obtained two grains and a half of oxide of cop- per from a pound of the commercial oil. But neither Brande nor Goertner could detect copper in specimens examined by them; and M. Lesson, who witnessed the process for preparing the oil at Bouro, attributes its colour to chlorophyll, or some analogous principle, and states that it is rendered colourless by rectifi- cation. Guibourt, moreover, obtained a green oil by distilling the leaves of a Melaleuca cultivated at Paris. A fair inference is that the oil of cajeput is natu- rally green; but that, as found in commerce, it sometimes contains copper, either accidentally present, or added with a view of imitating or maintaining the fine colour of the oil. The proportion of copper, however, is not so great as to forbid the internal use of the oil; and the metal may be separated by distillation with water, or agitation with a solution of ferrocyanide of potassium. The high price of cajeput oil has led to its occasional adulteration. Oil of rosemary, or that of turpentine, impregnated with camphor and coloured with the resin of milfoil, is said to be employed for the purpose. The best test, ac- cording to Zeller, is iodine, which, after a moderately energetic reaction, with little increase of temperature, and but a slight development of orange vapours, occasions immediate inspissation into a loose coagulum, which soon becomes a dry greenish-brown, brittle mass. Medical Properties and Uses. This oil is highly stimulant, producing whea swallowed a sense of heat, with an increased fulness and frequency of pulse, and exciting in some instances profuse perspiration. It is much esteemed by the Malays and other people of the East, who consider it a panacea. They are said to employ it with great success in epilepsy and palsy. (Ainslie.) The complaints to which it is best adapted are probably chronic rheumatism, and spasmodic affections of the stomach and bowels, unconnected with inflammation. It has been extolled as a remedy in spasmodic cholera, and has been used also as a diffusible! stimulant in low fevers. Diluted with an equal proportion of olive oil, i* ip ap- PART I. Oleum Cajuputi.—Oleum Camphorse. 579 plied externally to relieve gouty and rheumatic pains. Like most other highly stimulating essential oils, it relieves toothache, if introduced into the hollow of the carious tooth. M. Delvaux, who has made extensive use of this oil, has found it beneficial, internally given, in dyspepsia with flatulence, in the early stages and milder forms of cholera, in verminose affections in children, in chronic laryn- gitis and bronchitis, in chronic catarrh of the bladder, in chronic rheumatism ot the joints with little or no swelling, and in painful chronic rheumatism of the muscles and fibro-muscular tissues, whether external or internal. Externally ap- plied, M. Delvaux has derived great benefit from it in various cutaneous diseases, as pityriasis, psoriasis, and especially in that extremely obstinate affection of the face, acnea rosacea, which he has often succeeded in curing by the simple appli- cation of this oil, three times a day. (Annuaire de Therap., A. D. 1862, p. 38.) The dose is from one to five drops, given in emulsion, in the form of pill, or upon a lump of sugar. Off. Prep. Spiritus Cajuputi, Br. W. OLEUM CAMPHORS. TJ.S. Oil of Camphor. The volatile oil obtained from Camphora officinarum. U. S. As there are two camphors known in commerce, those, namely, of Camphora officinarum and of Dryobalanops Camphora, so there are two oils of camphor, derived from those plants respectively. It is that of the Camphora officinarum which is recognised in our Pharmacopoeia, being the one which most commonly reaches this country, and is almost exclusively found in the shops. As the Cam- phora officinarum has been already described under the head of Camphora, it is unnecessary to say anything more of it here. (See Camphora, page 193.) In the same place an account has been given of the mode of procuring the oil, as prac- tised in the island of Formosa. The commercial oil of camphor, as found in our markets, is a fluid of a light reddish-brown colour with a yellowish tint, having a strong odour precisely like that of camphor, a bitterish camphorous taste, and the specific gravity, accord- ing to Prof. Procter, of 0-940. As described by M. Lallemand, the oil of the Camphora officinarum is very fluid, scarcely coloured, and of a strong smell of camphor. It acts strongly on polarized light, and is dextrogyrate. Martius and Ricker give as its formula It begins to boil at 356° F., but the tem- perature gradually rises to 401°, when it remains stationary. The part which first comes over is the proper volatile oil, that which rises at the higher tem- perature condenses after distillation, and is true camphor. The former, when duly rectified, distils at 356°, and appears to be a carbohydrogen isomeric with pure oil of turpentine, forming a crystallizable compound with muriatic acid. \journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1860, p. 289.) Commercial oil of camphor is there- fore a fluid carbohydrogen, holding camphor in solution. The Dryobalanops oil of camphor is a different product, resembling the genu- ine oil in odour, yet having also something peculiar in addition, which enables it to be readily distinguished when the two are examined together. An account of this oil is given at page 196, in a note treating of the Dryobalanops Cam- phora and its products. A volatile oil, received by M. Biot from Dr. Junghun, who is said to have collected it from the Dryobalanops Camphora in the island of Sumatra, was sent to M. Lallemand, who describes it as somewhat viscid, of a strong balsamic odour and reddish colour, and as separable by distillation into it volatile liquid and a non-volatile matter, which concretes on cooling into a resinous brittle mass, resembling colophony. The volatile liquid consists of two distinct oils, isomeric with each other and with pure oil of turpentine, but dif* 580 Oleum Camphorse.—Oleum Cinnamomi. part I. fering fn their boiling point, and in various other respects. The original oil yielded nothing similar to camphor. It is obviously a very different product from that which has been generally ascribed to the Dryobalanops, and much more closely resembles the turpentines than the camphorous oils. If it really was obtained from the Dryobalanops Camphora, this must be a very different tree from what it has been described to be; and the probability is, that there has been some mistake as to the origin of the oil described by M. Lallemand. The oil of camphor has properties similar to those of camphor but more stimu- lant, and is especially applicable to affections of the stomach and bowels, in which an anodyne and stimulant impression is indicated, as flatulent colic and spas- modic cholera. It may also be used externally, as a rubefacient and anodyne liniment, diluted with soap liniment, or olive oil, in local rheumatism and neu- ralgic pains, bruises, sprains, &c. The dose is two or three drops. W. OLEUM CINNAMOMI. U.S.,Br. Oil of Cinnamon. The volatile oil obtained from the bark of Cinnamomum Zevlanicum. U. S. The oil distilled from Cinnamon; imported from Ceylon. Br. Huile de cannelle, Fr.; Zimmtol, Germ.; Olio di cannella, Ital.; Aceyte de cannela, Span. See CINNAMOMUM. There are two oils of cinnamon in commerce; one procured from the Ceylon cinnamon, which, as having the finest flavour, is the only one recognised by the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias; the other from the Chinese cinnamon, and often distinguished by the name of oil of cassia, which it held in the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia. There is, however, no essential difference in the two oils; and that of the Chinese cinnamon, as much the cheaper and more abundant of the two, will probably continue to be generally employed, notwithstanding the offi- cial preference for the Ceylon product. Oil of cinnamon of Ceylon is prepared in that island from inferior kinds of cinnamon, of insufficient value to pay the export duty. The following account of the method of extraction is given by Marshall. The bark, havipg been coarsely powdered, is macerated for two days in sea-water, and then submitted to distil- lation. A light and a heavy oil come over with the water, the former of which separates in a few hours, and swims upon the surface, the latter falls to the bot- tom of the receiver, and continues to be deposited for ten or twelve days. In future distillations, the saturated cinnamon water is employed with sea-water to macerate the cinnamon. Eighty pounds of the freshly prepared bark yield about 2 5 ounces of the lighter oil, and 5’5 of the heavier. From the same quantity kept for several years in store, about half an ounce less of each oil is obtained. The two kinds are probably united in the oil of commerce. Recently prepared oil of cinnamon is of a light-yellow colour, becoming deeper by age, and ultimately red. Pereira states that the London druggists redistil the red oil, and thus obtain two pale-yellow oils, one lighter and the other heavier than water, with a loss of about 10 per cent, in the process. The oil has the flavour of cinnamon, and when undiluted is excessively hot and pungent. It is said sometimes to have a peppery taste, ascribable to an admixture of the leaves with the bark in the preparation of the oil. Chinese oil of cinnamon (oil of cassia) is imported from Canton and Singa- pore. Like the former it is pale-yellow, becoming red with age. Its flavour is similar to that of the Ceylon oil, though inferior; and it commands a much less price. Zeller states that it is heavier, less liquid, and sooner rendered turbid by cold, and that in the Ceylon oil iodine dissolves rapidly, with a considerable in- crease of heat, and the production of a tough residue like extract, while In oil part I. Oleum Cinnamomi.—Oleum Limonis. 581 of cassia the reaction is slow, quiet, and with little heat, and the residue is soft or liquid. The following remarks apply to both. Oil of cinnamon has the sp.gr. of about 1-035. Alcohol completely dissolves it; and, as it does not rise in any considerable quantity at the boiling tempera- ture of that liquid, it may be obtained by forming a tincture of cinnamon and distilling off the menstruum. When exposed to the air, it absorbs oxygen, and is slowly converted into a peculiar acid denominated cinnamic acid, two distinct resins, and water Cinnamic acid is colourless, crystalline, sourish, volatilizable, slightly soluble in water, readily dissolved by alcohol, and convertible by nitric acid with heat into benzoic acid. It is sometimes seen in crystals in bottles of the oil which have been long kept. Like benzoic acid, it is said when swallowed to cause the elimination of hippuric acid by urine. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iii. 64.) It may be obtained by distilling the balsam of Tolu. Of the two resins, one is soluble both in hot and cold alcohol; the other readily in the former, but sparingly in the latter. Oil of cinnamon is almost wholly converted by nitric acid, slowly added, into a crystalline mass, thought to be a compound of the oil and acid. From the researches of Dumas and Peligot, it appears that there ex ists in the oil a compound radical, named cinnamyl (C18II702), which with one eq. of hydrogen forms pure oil of cinnamon, 7>rhydruret of cinnamyl, and with one of oxygen anhydrous cinnamic acid. Crystallized cinnamic acid contains, in addition, one eq. of water. All the constituents of the ordinary oils of cinnamon are supposed to be derived from the pure oil or hydruret of cinnamyl by the absorption of oxygen. The oil has been produced artificially by Strecker from styrone, a derivative from styrax. (See Styrax.) Oil of cinnamon is said to be frequently adulterated with oil of cloves, which, according to Ulex, cannot be detected by the smell or taste. Thus sophisticated, it is stated, on the same authority, to evolve a very acrid vapour when a drop is heated on a watch-glass, to swell up and evolve red vapours if treated with fuming nitric acid, to remain liquid with concentrated caustic potassa, and to assume an indigo-blue colour when protochloride of iron is added to its alco- holic solution; none of which events happens when the oil is pure. (Arcliiv. der Pharm., Jan. 7, 1853.) It is said also to be frequently adulterated with alcohol and fixed oil, the mode of detecting which is given in page 572. Medical Properties and Uses. This oil has the cordial and carminative pro- perties of cinnamon, without its astringency; and is much employed as an adju- vant to other medicines, the taste of which it corrects or conceals, while it con- ciliates the stomach. As a powerful local stimulant, it is sometimes prescribed in gastrodynia, flatulent colic, and languor from gastric debility. The dose is one or two drops, and may be administered in the form of emulsion. Mitscherlich found six drachms to kill a moderate-sized dog in five hours, and two drachms in forty hours. Inflammation and corrosion of the gastro-intestinal mucous mem- brane were observed after death. Of Prep. Aqua Cinnamomi, U. S.; Spiritus Cinnamomi. U. S. W. OLEUM LIMONIS. U.S.,Br. Oil of Lemon. The volatile oil obtained from the rind of the fruit of Citrus Limonum. XJ. S The oil expressed or distilled from fresh Lemon Peel. Br. ~ Huile de citron, Fr.; Citronenol, Germ,.; Olio di limone, Ital.; Aceyte de limon, Span. See LIMON. The exterior rind of the lemon abounds in a volatile oil, which, being con- tained in distinct cellules, may be separated by simple expression. The rind is first grated from the fruit, and then submitted to pressure in a bag of fine cloth. 582 Oleum Limonis.—Oleum Lini. PART I. The oil Ihus obtained is allowed to stand till it becomes clear, when it is de- canted, and kept in stopped bottles. By a similar process, the oil called by the French huile de cedrat is procured from the citron. (See Oleum Bergamii and Limon ) These oils may also be obtained by distillation; but thus procured, though clearer, and, in consequence of the absence of mucilage, less liable to change on keeping, they have less of the peculiar flavour of the fruit; and the mode by expression is generally preferred. They are brought originally from Italy, Portugal, or the south of France. Properties. Oil of lemons is a very volatile liquid, having the odour of the fruit, and a warm, pungent, aromatic taste. As commonly procured it is yellow, and has the sp.gr. 0-8517; but by distillation it is rendered colourless, and, if three-fifths only are distilled, its sp. gr. is reduced to 0 847, at 71° F. It is so- luble in all proportions in anhydrous alcohol. In its ordinary state, it contains oxygen, but when purified by distillation in vacuo, at a low temperature, it con- sists exclusively of carbon and hydrogen, in the same proportion as in pure oil of turpentine, or camphene; its formula being In this state it is capa- ble of absorbing almost half its weight of muriatic acid gas, by which it is con- verted into a crystalline substance, and a yellow oily fuming liquid. The crys- talline substance is analogous to artificial camphor, produced by the action of muriatic acid upon oil of turpentine, and is a compound of the oil and acid. The oil of lemons is said to consist of two isomeric oils. It is often adulterated by the fixed oils and by alcohol. But in this country the most frequent sophistication is with oil of turpentine, which is difficult of detection from its similar composition and specific gravity. Perhaps the best test of the presence of this oil is the terebinthinate smell, produced when the adulterated oil is evaporated from heated paper. Oil of lemons, procured by expression, is apt to let fall a deposit, and to undergo chemical change. Mr. J. S. Cobb has found no method so effectual to obviate this result, and at the same time to retain unimpaired the flavour of the oil, as to shake it with a little boiling water, and allow the mixture to stand. A mucilaginous matter separates, and floats on the surface of the water, from which the purified oil may be de- canted. (Annals of Pharm., ii. 86.) Medical Properties and Uses. Oil of lemons has the stimulant properties of the aromatics; but is chiefly used to impart flavour to other medicines. It has been commended as an application to the eye in certain cases of ophthalmia. Off. Prep. Spiritus Ammonise Aromaticus; Syrupus Acidi Citrici, U. S. OLEUM LINI. U.S.,Br. Flaxseed Oil. The oil obtained from the seed of Linum usitatissimum. U. S. The oil expressed without heat. Br. ■ Linseed oil; Huile de lin,Fr.; Leinol, Germ.; Olio di lino, Ital.; Aceyte de linaza, Span. See LINUM. This oil is obtained by expression from the seeds of Linum usitatissimum, or common flax, which, according to M. Berjot, contain 34 per cent. (Journ. de Pliarm., Avril, 1863, p. 277.) In its preparation on a large scale, the seeds are usually roasted before being pressed, in order to destroy the gummy matter contained in their coating. The oil is thus obtained more free from mucilage, but more highly-coloured and acrid than when procured by cold expression. For medical use, therefore, it should be prepared without heat; and, as it is apt to become rancid quickly on exposure, should be used as soon after expression as possible. It may, however, be rendered sweet again by agitation with warm water, rest, and decantation. It is said to be obtained purer and in larger pro- PART I. Oleum Lini.—Oleum Morrhuse. 583 portion, by treating the crushed seeds with bisulphuret of carbon, than by ex- pression. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 265.) Flaxseed oil has a yellowish brown colour, a disagreeable odour, and a nauseous somewhat acrid taste; is of the sp.gr. 0-932; boils at 600° F.; does not congeal at zero; dissolves in forty parts of cold and five of boiling alcohol, and in one part and a half of ether; and has the property of drying, or becoming solid on exposure to the air. The drying property resides in its fluid constituent, which, to distinguish it from the olein of the non-drying oils, is named linolein. Its acrimony is owing to the presence of a small proportion of an acrid oleo-resin. From its drying property, it is useful in painting, and the formation of printers’ ink. Medical Properties and Uses. It is laxative in the dose of a fluidounce; but on account of its disagreeable taste is seldom given internally. It has, however, been highly recommended as a cure for piles, in the dose of two ounces of the fresh oil morning and evening. It is sometimes added to purgative enemata; but its most common application is externally to burns, usually in combination with lime-water.* Off. Prep. Ceratum Resinae Compositum, U. S.; Linimentum Calcis, U. S. W. OLEUM MORRHUiE. U.S.,Br. Cod-liver Oil. A fixed oil obtained from the liver of Gadus Morrhua of other species of Gadus. U. S. The oil extracted from the fresh liverLy a steam heat not exceed- ing 180°. Br. Oleum jecoris Aselli; Huile de morue,Fr.; Stockfischleberthran, Germ. Gadus. Class Pisces. Order Jugulares. Linn. Malacopterygii Subbrachiati. Family Gadidas. Cuvier. Gen. Ch. Recognised by the ventrals attached under the throat, and atten- uated to a point. Gadus Morrhua. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. Gmelin, i. p. 1162; Cuvier, Begne Animate, n. 212; Bloch. Ichthyologie, pi. lxiv. — Morrhua vulgaris. Storer, Synops. of Fishes of N. Am. p. 216. The common cod fs" bet ween two and three feet long, with brown or yellowish spots on the back. The body is moderately elongated and somewhat compressed, and covered with soft rather small scales, of which the head is destitute. Of the fins, which are soft, there are three on the back, two anal, and a distinct caudal; and the fin under the throat is nar- row and poiuted. The jaws are furnished with pointed irregular teeth, in several ranks. The gills are large with seven rays. This species of cod inhabits the Northern Atlantic, and is especially abundant on the banks of Newfoundland, where it finds food adapted to its wants. Besides the common cod, several other species of Gadus, frequenting the seas of Northern Europe and America, contribute to furnish the cod-liver oil of com- merce. Among these De Jongh mentions Gadus callarias or dorsch (Morrhua * Oiled Paper. A substitute for waxed cloth, for the dressing of wounds and ulcers, pre- pared in the following manner by M. Gauthier, of Geneva, with flaxseed oil, has been highly recommended. To facilitate its drying, 3 litres (about 6-4 pints) of the oil are boiled for an hour or two with 30 grains of acetate of lead, 30 grains of litharge, 15 grains of yellow wax, and 15 grains of turpentine. Thus prepared, the oil is spread upon silk- naper by means of a brush on both surfaces. On the top of the first sheet another is then placed so as to overlap it at one corner. The lower surface of the second sheet thus be- comes impregnated with the oil, which now requires to be applied only to the upper. Any desired number of sheets may thus be successively superimposed. They are then sepa- rated, and suspended in a drying apartment, attached to a cord by means of hooks or pins. Whin dry, they should be sprinkled over with chalk to prevent adhesion, and packed awai. [Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1860, p. 363.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 584 Oleum Morrhuae. PART I. Americana of Storer), G. molva or ling, G. carbonarius or coal fish, and G. pollachius or pollock, as affording the oil on the coast of Norway; while, from information obtained by Professor Procter, there is reason to believe that, on our own coast, in addition to the pollock above mentioned, it is obtained also from the hake ( G. merlucciue) and the haddock (Q. JEglifinusf It is said that 24,000 gallons of the oil are obtained annually on our coasF between Boston and Eastport, in Maine, in reference to the drug market. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 500.) Preparation. Fishermen have long been in the habit of collecting this oil, which is largely consumed in the arts, particularly in the preparation of leather. Upon the coasts of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and New England, the boats which fish near the shore, being small, soon obtain a load, and running in to land, deliver their cargoes to persons whose business it is to cleanse and salt the fish. The oil is prepared either in the huts of the fishermen, or more largely at establishments to which the livers are conveyed in quantities. These are put into a boiler with water, and heated until they are broken up into a pultaceous mass, which is thrown upon a strainer covering the top of a cask or tub. The liquid portion passes, and upon standing separates into two parts, the oil rising to the surface of the water. The oil is then drawn off, aud, having been again strained, is prepared for the market. Another and improved method, which has come into use since the extensive employment of the oil as a medicine, is to heat the livers in a large tin vessel by means of steam externally applied. The pultaceous mass resulting is drained as before mentioned; the livers themselves containing, besides oil, a considerable portion of watery fluid, which passes off with it in the form of emulsion, and separates on standing. The oil thus procured is called shore oil, and is the purest kind. The crews of the larger boats, which fish upon the banks far from land, cleanse the fish on board, and, throwing the offal into the sea, put the livers into barrels or other receptacles, where they undergo a gradual decomposition, the oil rising to the surface, as it escapes from the dis- integrating tissue. The oil which first rises, before putrefaction has very de- cidedly commenced, approaches in purity to the shore oil, but is somewhat darker and less sweet. This is sometimes drawm off, constituting the straits oil of the fishermen. The remaining mass, or the whole, if the portion which first rises be not separated, continues exposed for a variable length of time to the heat of the sun, undergoing putrefaction, until the boat, having completed her cargo, returns to port. The contents of the casks are then put into boilers, heated with water, and treated as already described. Before being finally put into barrels, the oil is heated to expel all its water. Thus prepared, it is denomi- nated banks oil, and is of the darkest colour, and most offensive to the taste and smell. Much of the oil prepared by the fishermen is collected by the wholesale dealers, who keep it in very large reservoirs of masonry in their cellars, where it becomes clarified by repose, and is pumped into barrels as wanted for sale. By the further exposure, however, which it thus undergoes, it acquires a still more offensive odour; while that which has been originally introduced into barrels, and thus kept secluded from the air, is better preserved. The above facts In relation to the collection of cod-liver oil have been mainly derived from a very interesting paper by Professor Procter, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiii. 97). To the same journal (xxvi. 1) the reader is referred for an account, by Dr. E. II. Robinson, of Nova Scotia, of the method in which the oil is prepared by the fishermen of that Province. The oil is sometimes procured by expression. Mr. Donovan recommends the following plan, which affords a very fine oil. The livers, perfectly sound and fresh, are to be placed in a clean iron pot over a slow fire, and stirred until they assume the condition of a pulp, care being taken that the mass be not heated beyond 192°. When this temperature is attained, the pot is to be removed fiom PART I. Oleum Morrhuee. 585 the fire, and its contents introduced into a canvas bag, through which water ana oil will flow into a vessel beneath. After twenty-four hours, the oil is to be de- canted and filtered through paper. In this state it is pale-yellow, with little odour, and a bland not disagreeable taste. Properties. Three varieties of cod-liver oil are known in the market, the white or pale-yellow, the brownish-yellow, and the dark-brown, corresponding to the three commercial varieties already alluded to. These dilfer in no essen- tial character, but simply from the mode of preparation; the pale being pre- pared from fresh sweet livers, the dark-brown from livers in a state of putre- faction, and the brownish-yellow from those in an intermediate state; and the three varieties run together by insensible shades. The colour of the pale is from the slightest tint of transparent yellow to a fine golden yellow, that of the light- brown very similar to the colour of Malaga wine, that of the dark-brown what its name implies, with opacity in mass, but transparency in thin layers. They are of the usual consistence of lamp-oil, and have a characteristic odour and taste, by which they may be distinguished from other oils. This smell and taste are familiar to most persons, being very similar to those of shoe-leather; at least as prepared in this country, where the curriers make great use of cod-liver oil. We regard these sensible properties as the most certain test of the genuine- ness of the oil. They are much less distinguishable in the pale than in the dark-brown varieties, but we have met with no specimen which did not possess them in some degree. In the purest they are scarcely repulsive, in the dark- brown they are very much so. When a decided smell of ordinary fish-oil is per- ceived, the medicine may always be suspected. It is quite distinct from that peculiar to the cod-liver oil. The taste of all the varieties is more or less acrid, and in the most impure is bitterish and somewhat empyreumatic. The sp. gr. at 72° F., as ascertained by Prof. Procter, varied from 0-915 to 0-9195; the first being that of the hake oil, the second that of the haddock, while the sp. gr. of the purest oil from the common cod was 0 917. De Jongh found the sp. gr. at 63° I\, of the pale 0 923, of the light-brown 0-924, of the dark-brown 0 929. The oil from the cod does not congeal at 14° F., though that of G. carbonarius and that of the livers of different species of Raja, let fall at that temperature a solid fatty matter, supposed to be margarin. Alcohol dissolves from 2-5 to 6 per cent., water from 0-637 to 1-28 percent, of different varieties; the pale yielding least to these solvents. (Journ. de Pharm., Jan. 1854, p. 39.) From an analysis of the oil by De Jongh, it appears to consist of a peculia substance named gaduin: oleic and margaric acids with glycerin; butyric ana acetic acids; various biliary principles, as felliuic, cholic, and bilifellinic acids, and bilifulvin; a peculiar substance soluble in alcohol; a peculiar substance insoluble in water, alcohol, or ether; iodine, chlorine, and traces of bromine; phosphoric and sulphuric acids; phosphorus, lime, magnesia, soda, and iron. These were found in all the varieties, though not in equal proportion in all; yet it is quite uncertain whether the difference had any relation to their degree of efficacy. Gaduin is obtained by saponifying the oil with soda, decomposing the soap by acetate of lead, and treating the resulting lead soap with ether, which dissolves the oleate of lead and gaduin, leaving the margarate of lead be- hind. The ethereal solution, which is dark-brown, is decomposed by sulphuric acid, which liberates the brown oleic acid. This owes its colour to gaduin, to separate which soda is added in excess. The resulting oleate of soda, which is insoluble in an excess of the alkaii, is dissolved in alcohol; and the alcoholic solution is cooled below 32°, by which means the oleate of soda is separated, the gaduin remaining in solution. This is precipitated from its solution by the addition of sulphuric acid. Gaduin is a dark-brown substance, brittle and pul- verizable when dry, without odour or taste, quite insoluble in water, and in great measure soluble in ether and alcohol. It is insoluble in nitric and muri- 586 Oleum Morrhuse. PART L atic icids, but is dissolved by sulphuric acid, giving a blood-red colour to the solution, from which it is precipitated by water and the alkalies. It is soluble in alkaline solutions. Chlorine decolorizes it. Its formula is C35H2309. Gaduin itself is yellow, but becomes brown by exposure to the air. It has not been as- certained to be in any degree connected with the virtues of. the oil. It is not improbable that the biliary principles associated with the oil are concerned in its peculiar influences; as it is by their presence mainly that this differs from other oils. It has been thought that gaduin itself is of biliary origin. Winckler has inferred from his researches that cod-liver oil is an organic whole, differing from all other fixed oils. Thus, it yields no glycerin upon saponification, but, in place of it, a peculiar body which he denominates oxide of propyl. The fatty acids generated are the oleic and margaric. Dr. Luck has found a peculiar fatty acid in turbid oil, which he names qadic acid, and the same is obtained from the clear oil by saponification. (Neues JahrEuch fur Pharm., vi. 249.) By re- action with ammonia in distillation, the oil yields a peculiar volatile alkali, called propylamin, which has a strong pungent odour, recalling that of herring- pickle, of which the same alkali is an ingredient. No other officinal fatty oil yields a similar product. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 343.) Some have been disposed to ascribe the virtues of the oil to its iodine and bromine; but these are in too small proportion for much effect, and the oil has produced re- sults which have never been obtained from iodine and bromine themselves. The presence of iodine cannot be detected by the usual tests. It is necessary to con- vert the oil into a soap, and to carbonize this before it will give evidence of iodine. The proportion never exceeds 0 05 per cent., or 1 part in 2000. The oil is capable of dissolving a larger proportion; and, if any specimen contain more, there is reason to suspect that it has been fraudulently added. Tests of Purity. In consequence of the great demand for this oil, it has not unfrequently been adulterated with other fixed oils, and occasionally others have been fraudulently substituted for it. The importance, therefore, is obvious of ascertaining some mode of testing its purity and genuineness. There,is reason to believe that all the oils from the livers of the Gadidse have analogous proper- ties. They have been indiscriminately used; and upon the results of their em- ployment is based, in part, the present reputation of the medicine. They may, therefore, be considered as in fact one oil, so far as their medicinal use is con- cerned. Unfortunately chemistry has yet discovered no perfectly reliable test. The furthest it has yet gone is to point out certain reactions, which may be considered as evidences of the presence of biliary principles in the oil, thus in- dicating its hepatic origin. Among these probably the most characteristic is that of sulphuric acid, a drop of which, added to fresh cod-liver oil, on a porce- lain plate, causes a centrifugal movement in the oil, and gives rise to a fine violet colour, soon passing into yellowish or brownish-red. Sometimes, instead of assuming the violet hue, the colour immediately becomes a clear red, or dark brownish-red. This is said to be especially the case with those specimens of the oil which have been prepared by boiling the livers with water. Shark-liver oil responds in like manner to the test of sulphuric acid, but is said to have the sp. gr. 0 866, which is much lower than that of any variety of the genuine oil. Strong nitric acid causes instantly, when agitated with cod-liver oil, a pinkish or rose-red colour, which soon becomes brown; while no such effect is produced on other animal or vegetable oils. According to Winckler, the oil should afford the smell of herring-pickle when heated with potassa, lime, and muriate of am- monia. But the most reliable tests are the sensible properties of odour and taste. If there be none of the peculiar shoe-leather smell and taste, or if a strong lamp-oil odour is perceptible, the oil may be suspected. Little of importance can be inferred from the colour. Some have been disposed to prefer tae daik offensive oil; but our own experience accords with that of those v\ho have found Oleum Morrhuse. part I. the pale or light-brown equally efficient; and, for facility of administration ana acceptability to the stomach, the latter is greatly preferable. It is important that the oil should be secluded from the air, which effects a gradual change, no doubt impairing its efficiency. Hence the vessels containing it should be full; and apothecaries ought to keep it in bottles well stopped, holding about the quantity generally wanted for use at one time. Medical Properties and Uses. Cod-liver oil has been long popularly em- ployed in northern Europe in rheumatic and strumous diseases. It was first brought to the notice of the profession generally by German practitioners, and had acquired great reputation on the continent before it was used to any extent in Great Britain. At Manchester, in England, it was employed by the medical profession in the treatment of chronic rheumatism and gout, as early as 1766; but it was not until the appearance of the treatise of Professor Bennett, of Edinburgh, in 1841, that it came into general notice in Great Britain and the United States. It is at present one of the most esteemed remedies in the cata- logue of the Materia Medica. The diseases in which it has proved most efficient are chronic rheumatism and gout, and the various morbid affections connected with a scrofulous diathesis, such as external glandular scrofula, diseases of the joints and spine, carious ulcers, tabes mesenterica, rickets, and phthisis. It has been found useful also in chronic cutaneous eruptions, lupus, ulcers of the mouth, some varieties of palsy, chronic pectoral complaints not tuberculous, pertussis, obstinate constipation, intestinal worms, and incontinence of urine; and may be employed with the hope of good in all chronic cases in which the disease ap- pears to consist mainly in impaired digestion, assimilation, and nutrition. In pulmonary consumption, in the experience of the author, it has far exceeded in efficacy any other remedy or combination of remedies that he has hitherto em- ployed. It is necessary, however, to persevere for four or six weeks before look- ing for any decidedly favourable results, though the change does often begin earlier. In most cases remarkable temporary relief is afforded; in many, the disease is favourably modified, and its fatal termination postponed; and in some, cures appear to have been effected. As to its mode of action, there has been much difference of opinion. Some consider it merely as a nutritive agent, having the advantage over other ole- aginous substances, of a readier entrance into the system, and more easy assimi- lation. But we cannot agree with this opinion. Other oleaginous substances, certainly not less nutritious, have not been equally efficient, though taken in much larger quantities. If this be the true explanation, persons living chiefly on milk which abounds in oil, or on fat pork, ought to show a special exemp- tion from scrofulous complaints. The probability appears to us to be that, in consequence of some peculiar principle or principles it contains, it exercises a stimulant and alterative influence on the processes of assimilation and nutrition thereby causing the production of healthy tissue, instead of that abortive ma- terial which is deposited by the blood-vessels in scrofula and phthisis. With our views of the modus operandi of cod-liver oil, it would of course be contra- indicated in all cases where there is existing plethora, or a strong tendency to it. The medicine has been accused of having occasionally produced serious conges- tion of the lungs. The dose is a tablespoonful three or four times a day for adults, a teaspoon- ful repeated as frequently for children, which may be gradually increased as the stomach will permit, and continued for a long time. It may be taken alone, or mixed with some vehicle calculated to conceal its taste, and obviate nausea. For this purpose recourse may be had to any of the aromatic waters, to the aromatic tinctures, as the tincture of orange-peel, diluted with water, or to a bitter infusion, as that of quassia. It may be given floating on the vehicle, or mixea with it by means of gum or the yolk of eggs, with sugar, in the form of Oleum MorrTiuse.—Oleum Myristicse. PART i. an emulsion. Perhaps the best vehicle, when not contraindicated, is the froth of porter. Let a tablespoonful of porter be put into the bottom of a glass, upon the surface of this the oil, and over all some of the froth of the porter. A small piece of orange-peel may be chewed before and after taking the medicine. Va- rious other methods have been adopted to conceal or correct its taste, and favour its administration. Common salt has been recommended; but nothing, perhaps, so effectually destroys the taste as oil of bitter almonds, of which one part will answer for 200 parts of the oil; but a better plan is to shake strongly, in a flask, one measure of the oil with from one to two of cherry-laurel water, according to the degree of offensiveness, and to separate the liquids after they have been allowed to stand for twenty-four hours. The oil should be filtered if not quite clear. The medicine has sometimes also been given in capsules; but this must be a very tedious method. M. Dufourmantel prepares a jelly by dissolving half a drachm of ichthyocolla in as little hot water as possible, and then gradually mixing with it a fluidounce of the oil with four drops of the oil of anise, taking care not to exceed the heat of 75° F. (Journ. de Pharm., Juin, 1864, p. 72.) The oil is sometimes applied externally by friction, and, in cases of ascarides or lumbri- coides, is injected into the rectum. It has been recommended locally in chronic articular affections, paralysis, various chronic cutaneous eruptions, and in opacity of the cornea after the subsidence of inflammation. In the last-mentioned af- fection, one or two drops of the oil are applied by means of a pencil to the cor- nea, and diluted, if found too stimulating, with olive or almond oil. It is said, when long used internally, to occasion sometimes an exanthematous or eczema- tous eruption. The olein of cod-liver oil has been recommended by Dr. Arthur Learned, when the oil itself disagrees with the stomach. He has found it to produce the same remedial effects, and to be much better borne. It may be given in the same dose. A solution of quinia in the oil has been proposed in cases where the two medicines are jointly indicated. It may be made by adding the freshly precipi- tated alkaloid to the oil, in the proportion of two grains to a fluidounce, and heating them together, by means of a water-bath, until the mixture becomes quite clear.* * W. OLEUM MYRISTICiE. U.S., Br. Oil of Nutmeg. Volatile Oil of Nutmeg. The volatile oil obtained from the kernels of the fruit of Myristica fragrana (Houttuyri). U. S. The oil distilled in England from Nutmeg, iff. * See MYRISTICA. This oil is obtained from powdered nutmegs by distillation with water. A better method, according to M. J. Cloez, who has carefully examined the sub- ject of oil of nutmeg, is to exhaust the powder with bisulphuret of carbon or ether, distil off the solvent by means of a water-bath, and expose the butter- like residue to a current of steam, the vapour being conveyed into a refrige- rated receiver where it condenses. {Journ. de Pharm., Fev. 1864, p. 150.) Oil of nutmeg is colourless or of a pale-straw colour, limpid, lighter than water, soluble in alcohol and ether, with a pungent spicy taste, and a strong smell of * Duaona .Oil. An oil has been brought into notice, as a substitute for cod-liver oil, ob- tained from two species of Halecore, U. Australis [Owen) Dugong[lllig.), cetaceous animals inhabiting the rivers and bays of Northern and EasternAuslralia, and many of the East India islands. The flesh of these animals is said to be delicate and palatable, and valued for food. The oil is obtained by boiling the superficial fat. It is bland and sweet, and free from disagreeable taste and smell, so that it may be taken more freely than cod-liver oil, which it is thought to equal in virtues. It was introduced into use by Mr. TV. Hobbs, a surgeon of Brisbane, on Moreton Bay. (Chem. News, Jan. 28,1860, p. 87, and Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1858, p. 335, and May, 1860, p. 230.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Oleum Myristicse.—Oleum Olivse. 589 nutmeg. The sp. gr. is stated differently at 0-920 and 0 948. (Gmelin.) It con- sists of two oils, which may be separated by agitation with water, one rising to the surface, the other sinking to the bottom. Upon standing it deposits a crys- talline stearoptene, which is called by John myristicin. M. Cloez found that, when the oil was distilled at a temperature below 347° F., there came over 95 per cent, of a liquid, which, when treated with a little caustic potassa and subse- quently distilled from a little sodium, in order to separate traces of a compound of oxygen, was a pure colourless carbohydrogen, remaining liquid at zero of F., of the sp. gr. 0 853 at 59° F., and corresponding in composition with pure oil of turpentine, having the formula CMH16. It differs, however, in yielding, when acted on by a current of muriatic acid gas, a liquid instead of solid compound with the acid. In this purified state the oil has an odour recalling that of nutmeg, but, when the oil is diluted, approaching to that of the oil of lemons. It absorbs oxygen slowly, losing its fluidity. Chlorine and bromine act on it vigorously, nitric acid violently with the disengagement of red vapours, and concentrated sulphuric acid dissolves and darkens it. {Ibid., p. 150-2.) The oil may be used for the same pur- poses as nutmeg, in the dose of two or three drops; but is not often employed. Off. Prep. Spiritus Ammoniae Aromaticus; Spiritus Myristicae, Br. W. OLEUM OLIViE. U.S., Br. Olive Oil. The oil obtained from the fruit of OIea.Europgea> TJ. S., Br. Huile d’olive, Fr.; Olivenol, Germ.; Olio delle olive, Ital.; Aceyte de olivas, Span. Olea. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Oleaceae. Gen. Ch. Corolla four-cleft, with subovate segments. Drupe one-seeded. Willd. Olea Eur op sea. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 44; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 280, t. 98. This valuable tree is usually from fifteen to twenty feet in height, though sometimes much larger, especially in Greece and the Levant. It has a solid, erect, unequal stem, with numerous straight branches, covered with a grayish bark. The leaves, which stand opposite to each other on short footstalks, are evergreen, firm, lanceolate, entire, two or three inches in length, with the edges somewhat re- verted, smooth and of a dull-green colour on their upper surface, whitish and almost silvery beneath. The flowers are small, whitish, and disposed in oppo- site axillary clusters, about half as long as the leaves, and accompanied with small, obtuse, hoary bractes. The fruit or olive is a smooth, oval drupe, green- ish at first, but of a deep-violet colour when ripe, with a fleshy pericarp, and a very hard nut of a similar shape. Clusters of not less than thirty flowers yield only two or three ripe olives. The olive tree, though believed by some to have been originally from the Le- vant, flourishes at present in all the countries bordering on the Mediterranean, and has been cultivated from time immemorial in Spain, the south of France, and Italy. It begins to bear fruit after the second year, is in full bearing at six years, and continues to flourish for a century. There are several varieties, dis- tinguished by the form of the leaves, and the shape, colour, and size of the fruit. The variety longifoliq,. of Willdenow is said to be chiefly cultivated in Italy and the south of France, and the latif glia in Spain. The latter bears much larger fruit than the former; but the oil is less esteemed. The leaves and bark of the olive tree have an acrid and bitterish taste, and have been employed as substitutes for cinchona, though with no great success. Attention has recently been called, in France, to a hydro-alcoholic extract of the leaves, as having considerable febrifuge powers. In the quantity of from ten to twenty grains daily, in divided doses, it has been found useful in prevent- ing the hectic paroxysms. In hot countries, a substance resembling the gum- Oleum Olivse. PART I. resins extides spontaneously from the bark. It was thought by the ancients to possess useful medicinal properties, but is not now employed. Analyzed by Pel- letier, it was found to contain resin, a little benzoic acid, and a peculiar prin- ciple analogous to gum, which has been named olivi]&. But the fruit is by far the most useful product. In the unripe state it isTmrdand insupportably acrid; but, when macerated in water or an alkaline solution, and afterwards introduced into a solution of common salt, it loses these properties, and becomes a pleasant and highly esteemed article of diet. The pericarp, or fleshy part of the ripe olive, abounds in a fixed oil, which constitutes its greatest value, and for which the tree is chiefly cultivated in Southern Europe. In the unripe olive a peculiar green substance, together with mannite, has been found by M. S. de Lutz, both of which disappear as the fruit ripens, being probably converted into oil, which now takes their place. {Journ. de Pharm., Juin and Dec. 1862.) The oil is ob- tained by first bruising the olives in a mill, and then submitting them to pressure. The product varies much, according to the state of the fruit, and the circum- stances of the process. The best, called virgin oil, is obtained from the fruit picked before perfect maturity, and immediately pressed. It is distinguished by its greenish hue. The common oil used for culinary purposes, and in the manu- facture of the finest soaps, is procured from very ripe olives, or from the pulp of those which have yielded the virgin oil. In the latter case, the pulp is thrown into boiling water, and the oil removed as it rises. An inferior kind, employed in the arts, especially in the preparation of the coarser soaps, plasters, unguents, &c., is afforded by fruit which has been thrown into heaps, and allowed to fer- ment for several days, or by the marc left after the expression of the finer kinds of oil, broken up, allowed to ferment, and again introduced into the press. The remarks made under the head of Oleum Myristic® {page 588), in relation to the extraction of that oil by means of bisulphuret of carbon, are applicable also to olive oil. Olive oil is imported in glass bottles, or in flasks surrounded by a kind of net- work of grass, and usually called Florence flasks. The best comes from the south of France, where most care is exercised in the choice of the fruit. Properties. The pure oil is an unctuous liquid, of a pale-yellow or greenish- yellow colour, with scarcely any smell, and a bland, slightly sweetish taste. Its sp. gr. is 0 ’9153. It is soluble in twice its volume of ether, but is only partially soluble in alcohol, at least unless this liquid be in very large proportion. It be- gins to congeal at 38° F. At a freezing temperature a part of it becomes solid, and the remainder, retaining the liquid consistence, may be separated by press- ure, or by the agency of cold alcohol, which dissolves it. The concrete portion has been found by MM. Pelouze and Boudet to be a definite compound of mar- garin and olein; the liquid portion is uncombined olein. According to Bracon- not, the oil contains 72 per cent, of olein, and 28 of margarin. Olive oil is solidi- fied by nitrous acid and nitrate of mercury, and converted into a peculiar fatty substance, called glaidin. The olein of all oils which have not the drying pro- perty undergoes the same"change, when acted on by nitrous acid; and the singu- lar fact is stated by MM. Pelouze and Boudet, that the margarin of olive oil, combined as it is with olein, is converted by that acid into ela'idin, while the same principle, in a state of purity, is not affected by it. {Journ. de Pharm., xxiv. 391.)* Olire oil, when exposed to the air, is apt to become rancid, acquiring a dis- * The following table gives the solubility of various alkaloids in olive oil as ascertained by Pettenkotfer. At the ordinary temperature, 100 parts of the oil dissolve of Morphia 0-00 Narcotina 025 Cinchonia 1-00 Quinia 4-20 Strychnia l-OO Brucia 1-78 Atropia 2'62 Yeratria 1 78 (Journ. de Pharm., Juio, 1859, p. 486.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Oleum Olivae. 591 agreeable smell, a sharp taste, a thicker consistence, and a deeper colour; and the change is promoted by heat. It is frequently adulterated with the cheaper fixed oils, especially with that of poppies; but the adulteration may be easily detected by reducing the temperature to the freezing point. As other oils are less readily congealed than the olive oil, the degree of its purity will be indi- cated by the degree of concretion. Another mode has been indicated by M. Poutet, founded on the property possessed by supernitrate of mercury of solidi- fying the oil of olives, without a similar influence upon other oils. Six parts of mercury are dissolved at a low temperature in seven and a half parts of nitric acid of the sp. gr. 135; and this solution is mixed with the suspected oil in the proportion of one part to twelve, the mixture being occasionally shaken. If the oil is pure, it is converted after some hours into a yellow solid mass; if it con- tains a minute proportion, even so small as a twentieth, of poppy oil, the result- ing mass is much less firm; and a tenth prevents a greater degree of consistence than oils usually acquire, when they concrete by cold. M. Gobel has invented an instrument which he calls the ela'iometer, by which the smallest quantity of poppy oil can be detected. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xvi. 24.) According to M. Marchand, strong sulphuric acid produces with poppy oil a lemon-yellow colour, which rapidly becomes darker, and, after ten or fifteen minutes, is fol- lowed by tints of rose-colour and bright violet, which are never afforded with the same reagent by pure olive oil. (Ibid., xxvi. 432.) The presence of colza oil may be detected by the test of nitrate of silver, as stated under the head of Oleum Amygdalae (page 575). M. Diesel states that the pure oil is coloured green by common nitric acid; whereas, if mixed with rape oil, it is rendered of a yellowish-gray colour. (Arch, der Pharm., xlvi. 287.) According to M. Behrens, whose statement is confirmed by MM. Guibourt and Reveil, the presence of oil of sesamum is known by the beautiful deep-green colour immediately produced, when the suspected oil is added, in equal weight, to a mixture of equal parts of sulphuric and nitric acids; which acids cause with the pure oil, at first, a bright- yellow colour. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxiv. 351.) Immense quantities of lard oil are said to be exported from this country to France, and employed in the adulteration of olive oil. The reaction with nitric acid would probably serve to detect this adulteration, which, however, in a pharmaceutical point of view, is of little inconvenience. Medical Properties and Uses. Olive oil is nutritious and mildly laxative, and is occasionally given in cases of irritable intestines, when the patient objects to more disagreeable medicines. Taken into the stomach in large quantities, it serves to involve acrid and poisonous substances, and mitigate their action. It has also been recommended as a remedy for worms, and is a very common in- gredient in laxative enemata. Externally applied, it is useful in relaxing the skin, and sheathing irritated surfaces from the action of the air; and is much employed as a vehicle or diluent of more active substances. In the countries bordering on the Mediterranean, it is thought, when smeared over the skin, to afford some protection against the plague; and applied warm, by means of fric- tion over the surface, is said to be useful as a remedy in the early stages of that complaint. But the most extensive use of olive oil is in pharmacy, as a con- stituent of liniments, ointments, cerates, and plasters. The dose as a laxative is from one to two fluidounces. Off. Prep. Ceratum Cetacei, U. S.; Cerat. Plumbi Subacetatis, U. S.; Cerat. Saponis, U. S.; Emplastrum Ammoniaci cum Hydrargyro; Empl. Hydrargyri; Emp. Lithargyri, Br.; Emp. Ficis, Br.; Emp. Plumbi, U. S.; Linimentum Cam- phor®, Br.; Liniment. Crotonis, Br.; Unguentum Cantharidis, Br.; Unguent. Hydragyri Nitratis, Br.; Unguent. Plumbi Subacetatis, Br.; Unguent. Vera- triae, Br.; Enema Magnesise Sulphatis, Br.; Linimentum Ammoniae; Liniment. Caicis, Br. W. 592 Oleum Ricini. PART I. OLEUM KICINI. U.S.,Br. Castor Oil. The oil obtained from the seeds of Ricinus communis. U. S., JBr. Huile de ricin, Fr.; Ricinusol, Germ.; otTo di ricino, Ital.; Aceyte de ricino, Span. Ricinus. Sex. Syst. Monoecia Monadelphia. — Nat. Ord. Euphorbiaceae. Gen. Ch. Male. Calyx five-parted. Corolla none. Stamens numerous. Fe- male. Calyx three-parted. Corolla none. Styles three, bifid. Capsules three- celled. Seed one. Willd. Ricinus communis. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 564; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 624, t. 221. The castor oil plants or palma Christy attains in the East Indies and Africa theVha'racter of a tree, and rises sometimes thirty or forty feet. In the temperate latitudes of North America and Europe it is annual; though ML Achille Richard saw, in the south of France, in the vicinity of Nice, on the sea- coast, a small wood consisting entirely of what he supposed to be this species ot Ricinus.* The following description applies to the plant as cultivated in cool latitudes. The stem is of vigorous growth, erect, round, hollow, smooth, glau- cous, somewhat purplish towards the top, branching, and from three to eight feet or more in height. The leaves are alternate, peltate or supported upon foot- stalks inserted into their lower disk, palmate with seven or nine pointed serrate lobes, smooth on both sides, and of a bluish-green colour. The flowers are monoecious, stand upon jointed peduncles, and form a pyramidal terminal raceme, of which the lower portion is occupied by the male flowers, the upper by the female. Both are destitute of corolla. In the male flowers the calyx is divided into five oval, concave, pointed, reflected, purplish segments; and encloses nu- merous stamens, united into fasciculi at their base. In the female the calyx has three or five narrow lanceolate segments; and the ovary, which is roundish and three-sided, supports three linear, reddish stigmas, forked at their apex. The fruit is a roundish glaucous capsule, with three projecting sides, covered with tough spines, and divided into three cells, each containing one seed, which is expelled by the bursting of the capsule. This species of Ricinus is a native of the East Indies and Northern Africa, naturalized in the West Indies, and cultivated in various parts of the world, in few countries more largely than in the United States. New Jersey, "Virginia, North Carolina, and the States upon the right bank of the Ohio, especially Illi- nois, are the sections in which it is most abundant. The flowers appear in July, and the seeds ripen successively in August and September. A decoction of the leaves is said to be employed effectively in the Cape Verde Islands, as a local application to the breast, for promoting the secretion of milk; and an infusion of the leaves has been given internally by Dr. Routh, with great supposed suc- cess in producing the same effect in lying-in women, with deficiency of milk. (London Lancet, Dec. 24, 1859.) The officinal part is the fixed oil extracted from the seeds. 1. The Seeds. These are about as large as a small bean, oval, compressed, obtuse at the extremities, very smooth and shining, and of a grayish or ash colour, marbled with reddish-brown spots and veins. At one end of the seed is a small yellowish tubercle, from which an obscure longitudinal ridge proceeds to the opposite extremity, dividing the side upon which it is situated into two * While at Montpellier, in France, in the spring of 1861, the author was assured by Dr. Martius, Professor of Botany in the University of that city, that the species seen by Richard forming a grove in the south of France, was not, as believed by that botanist, the Ricinus communis, but the Ricinus Africanus. This Prof. Martius knew from personal observation; and he stated, all the plants of the genus Ricinus growing wild on the borders of the Mediterranean were of this species, viz., the R. Africanus.— Note to the twelfth edition. part I Oleum Ricini. 593 flattish surfaces. In its general appearance the seed is thought to resemble the insect called the tick, the Latin name of which has been adopted as the generic title of the plant. Its variegated colour depends upon a very thin pellicle, closelv investing a hard, brittle, blackish, tasteless, easily separable shell, within which is the kernel, highly oleaginous, of a white colour, and a sweetish taste, suc- ceeded by a slight degree of acrimony. The seeds easily become raucid, and are then unlit for the extraction of the oil, which is acrid and irritating. In 100 parts Geiger found, exclusive of moisture, 23 82 parts of envelope, and 69 00 of kernel. These 69 09 parts contained 4619 of fixed oil, 2 40 of gum, 20 00 of starch and lignin, and 0 50 of albumen. Mr. Henry Bower could find no starch, but separated from the seeds an albuminoid principle, which acted with amygdalin and water like emulsin, producing the odour of oil of bitter almonds, though in a less degree. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 208.) It is highly proba- ble that it is this principle which, acting as a ferment on the oily matter of' the seeds, gives rise to changes in its nature which render them rancid. More re- cently, Mr. G. J. Scattergood found the odour of castor oil to be developed in the beans when bruised with water, and much more powerfully in those long kept than in the fresh. The water distilled from the seeds has a peculiar nauseous odour, quite distinct from that of the oil. (Ibid., xxviii. 207.)* Taken internally the seeds are powerfully cathartic, and often emetic. Two or three are sufficient to purge, and seven or eight act with great violence. This property depends upon an acrid principle, which has by some been thought to exist exclusively in the integuments, by others in the embryo. But it is now satisfactorily ascertained that the integuments are inert; and Guibourt main- tains that the principle alluded to pervades the whole kernel, in connection with the oil. This principle is considered by some as volatile, and is said to be dis- sipated by the heat of boiling water. This view is strengthened by the experi- ments of Mr. Scattergood above referred to; as the water distilled from the seeds proved decidedly purgative in the dose of half a fluidounce, and in twice the quantity both purged and vomited. The same experimenter found that the resi- due, after the seeds had been exhausted by ether and alcohol, was inert in the dose of 28 grains; and the ethereal extract proved a mild cathartic in the dose of from two to five fluidrachms. After expression of the oil, and treatment with pure alcohol, M. Calloud found the residue to be powerfully emetic in the quantity of 30 grains, taken in two doses. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xiv. 190.) M. Parola states that ether also is incapable of extracting the acrid emetic prin- ciple from the seeds. At a temperature much above 212° the oil itself becomes altered, and acquires acrid properties. * Ricinin. Very recently Professor Tuson lias announced tlie discovery in the seeds of a peculiar alkaloid, which lie proposes to name ricinine, but which should be called ricinia. To obtain it, the crushed seeds are exhausted by successive portions of boiling water'; the decoction is filtered through wet muslin; the filtered liquid is evaporated to dryness over a water-bath; the extract thus obtained is exhausted by boiling alcohol; the alcoholic solution is allowed to cool, then filtered to separate a little resinous matter, and lastly concentrated and permitted to stand. In the course of some hours, a mass of nearly white crystals is deposited, which when recrystallized from alcohol, and decolorized by ani- mal charcoal, are the alkaloid in a pure state. Ricinine crystallizes in rectangular prisms and tables, has a feebly bitter taste, somewhat, resembling that of bitter almonds, is fusible «.nd crystallizes on cooling, volatilizable unchanged, inflammable, soluble most readily in water and alcohol, and very slightly in ether or benzole. Heated with hydrate of potassa, it evolves ammonia, and therefore contains nitrogen. It appears to combine with sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acids. But a more accurate investigation is needed, before it can be admitted to be undoubtedly a distinct and pure alkaloid. A minute quantity is said to be obtained from castor oil by shaking it with water, evaporating the liquid, treating the resi- due with boiling benzole, and allowing the solution to evaporate spontaneously. Professor Tuson does not claim for the new alkaloid the possession of purgative properties. Two grains given to a rabbit produced no observable effect.—Note to the twelfth edition. 594 Oleum Ricini. PART I. 2. The Oil. This may be extracted from the seeds in three ways; 1. by de- coction, 2. by expression, and 3. by the agency of alcohol or other solvent. The process by decoction, which has been practised in the East and West Indies, consists in bruising the seeds, previously deprived of their husk, and then boiling them in water. The oil, rising to the surface, is skimmed or strained off, and afterwards again boiled with a small quantity of water to dissipate the acrid principle. To increase the product it is said that the seeds are sometimes roasted. The oil is thus rendered brownish and acrid; and the same result takes place in the second boiling, if care is not taken to suspend the process soon after the water has been evaporated. Hence it happens that the West India oil has generally a brownish colour, an acrid taste, and irritating properties. The oil is obtained in this country by expression. The following, as we have been informed, are the outlines of the process usually employed by those who prepare it on a large scale. The seeds, having been thoroughly cleansed from the dust and fragments of the capsules with which they are mixed, are conveyed into a shallow iron reservoir, where they are submitted to a gentle heat insuffi- cient to scorch or decompose them, and not greater than can be readily borne by the hand. The object of this step is to render the oil sufficiently liquid for easy expression. The seeds are then introduced into a powerful screw press. A whitish oily liquid is thus obtained, which is transferred to clean iron boilers, supplied with a considerable quantity of water. The mixture is boiled for some time, and, the impurities being skimmed off as they rise to the surface, a clear oil is at length left upon the top of the water, the mucilage and starch having been dissolved by this liquid, and the albumen coagulated by the heat. The latter ingredient forms a whitish layer between the oil and the water. The clear oil is now carefully removed ; and the process is completed by boiling with a minute proportion of water, and continuing the application of heat till aqueous vapour ceases to rise, and till a small portion of the liquid, taken out in a vial, continues perfectly transparent when it cools. The effect of this last operation is to clarify the oil, and to render it less irritating by driving off the acrid vola- tile matter. But much care is requisite not to push the heat too far; as the oil then acquires a brownish hue, and an acrid peppery taste. After the completion of the process, the oil is put into barrels, and sent into the market. There is reason, however, to believe that much of the American oil is prepared by merely allowing it to staud for some time after expression, and then drawing off the supernatant liquid. One bushel of good seeds yields five or six quarts, or about 25 per cent, of the best oil. If not carefully prepared, it is apt to de- posit a sediment upon standing; and the apothecary may find it necessary to filter it through coarse paper before dispensing it. Perhaps this may be owing to the plan just alluded to of purifying the oil by rest-and decantation. We have been told that the oil in barrels occasionally deposits in cold weather a copious whitish sediment, which it redissolves when the temperature rises. A large proportion of the drug consumed in the eastern section of the Union has been derived, by way of New Orleans, from Illinois and the neighbouring States, where it has been at times so abundant that it has been used for burning in lamps, and for lubricating machinery.* We were informed, however, that in the year 1857, from a failure of the crops, and the consequent high price of the oil, considerable quantities were brought from the East Indies; and, in a report made to the American Pharmaceutical Association, in the autumn of 1859, it is stated that, after the first of January of that year, 20,000 gallons of castor oil, * For a particular account of the mode of cultivating the castor oil plant, and prepar- ing the oil in the Western States, see a paper by Prof. Procter in the Am. Joum. of Pharm. (xxvii. 99). It is stated in this paper that, by the aid of an improved press, the product of oil has been so much increased, that 15 bushels of seeds will yield 40 gallons of oil. Most of the seeds produced in Illinois are now expressed in St. Louis.—NoU to the eleventh edition. PART I. Oleum Ricini. and 50,000 bushels of castor beans had been imported from the same source at the port of Boston. The process for obtaining castor oil by means of alcohol has beeD practised in France; but the product is said to become rancid more speedily than that pro cured in the ordinary mode. Such a preparation has been employed in Italy and is asserted to be less disagreeable to the taste, and more effective than the common oil obtained by expression. According to M. Parola, an ethero-alcoholic extract, and an ethereal or alcoholic tincture of the seeds, operate in much smaller doses than the oil, and with less disposition to irritate the bowels or to cause vomiting. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xiii. 143.) Properties. Pure castor oil is a thick, viscid, colourless liquid, with little or no odour, and a mild though somewhat nauseous taste, followed by a slight sense of acrimony. As found in the shops it is often tinged with yellow, and has an unpleasant smell; and parcels are sometimes though rarely met with, of a brown- ish colour, and hot acrid taste. It does not readily congeal by cold. When ex- posed to the air it slowly thickens, without becoming opaque. It is heavier than most of the other fixed oils; its sp. gr. having been stated to be 0'969 at 55° F. It differs also from other fixed oils in being soluble in all proportions in cold absolute alcohol. Weaker alcohol, of the sp. gr. 0‘8425, takes up about three- fifths of its weight. It has been supposed that adulterations with other fixed oils might thus be detected, as the latter are much less soluble in that fluid; but Pereira has shown that castor oil has the property of rendering a portion of other fixed oils soluble in alcohol; so that the test cannot be relied on. (Pharm. Journ., ix. 498.) Such adulterations, however, are seldom practised in this country.* Castor oil is soluble also in ether. Its proximate composition is but imperfectly understood. When exposed to destructive distillation, it yields va- rious gaseous products, volatile oleaginous liquids, and two peculiar substances called acrolein and oenanthole; and there is left behind a spongy elastic mass of remarkable properties. By nitrous acid the oil is solidified, and converted into a fatty substance, which was named at first palmin, but afterwards ricinelaidin, from its analogy with the product of a similar reaction on olive oil. This prin- ciple yields palmic or ricinelaidic acid and glycerin on saponification. The oil appears to be a glyceride; amdTwfieTrit is saponified, and the soap decomposed by an acid, an oily liquid is obtained, consisting chiefly of ricinoleic acid, and a small portion of a solid acid, which is supposed to be a mixture of stearic and palmitic acids. (Gregory’s Handbook, 4th ed., p. 303.) Its constituents would, therefore, seem to be mainly ricinolein and a little stearin and palmitin. Ricino- leic acid is converted by causficTpotassa into caprylic alcohol and sebacic acid, * Cohesion figures as a means of testing liquids. A new mode of testing liquids has been recently proposed by Mr. Charles Tomlinson, which is applicable to this oil, and may suc- ceed when purely chemical methods fail. When one liquid is dropped on the surface of another, there are often curious figures produced, as the drop spreads out on the surface of the liquid upon which it falls, occasioned by the conflict between the cohesion of the drop, and the forces which cause its diffusion. These the author calls cohesion figures. As a gen- eral rule, each liquid has its own characteristic figures, which are modified by the admix- ture of other liquids, and thus the means are afforded of testing not only the identity of any suspected liquid, but also its purity. To one not acquainted with the characteristic cohesion figures, it would be sufficient to try the experiment with a specimen known to be pure, and then to compare with the figure it forms, those formed by the specimen to be tested. The experiment should always be made under precisely similar circumstances. In reference to castor oil, it should be dropped from the end of a glass rod upon the surface of perfectly clear water, in a glass vessel scrupulously clean; as any imperfection in these respects might interpose a physical impediment to the success of the experiment. (Chem. News, Feb. 13, 1864, p. 79. See also Am. Journ. of Charm., July, 1864.) Effect on light. Another test for castor oil is its influence on polarized light. The fixed oils generally have little or no power. Castor oil deviates the plane of polarization to the right, but loses this property if heated to 270° C. (Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 339.)— Note to the twelfth edition. Oleum Iticini. PART I. with disengagement of hydrogen; and the same products are obtained by the reaction of potassa with the oil itself. (See Journ. de Pharm., Aoiit, 1855, p. 113.) M. Lefort gives the formula C&6HM08, as representing the ultimate com- position of castor oil. {Ibid., 3e ser., xxiii. 348.) Its pi rgative property is sup- posed by MM. Bussy and Lecanu to belong essentially to the oil, and not to any distinct principle which it may hold in solution. Castor oil which is acrid to the taste may sometimes be rendered mild by boiling it with a small proportion of water. If turbid, it should be clarified by filtration through coarse paper. On exposure to the air, it is apt to become rancid, and is then unfit for use.* Medical Properties and Uses. Good castor oil is a mild and speedy cathartic, usually operating with little griping or uneasiness, and evacuating the contents of the bowels without much increasing the alvine secretions. Hence, it is par- ticularly applicable to constipation from collections of indurated feces, and to cases in which acrid substances have been swallowed, or acrid secretions have accumulated in the bowels. From its mildness it is also especially adapted to diseases attended with irritation or inflammation of the bowels; as colic, diar- rhrea, dysentery, and enteritis. It is habitually resorted to in cases of pregnant and puerperal women, and is decidedly, as a general rule, the best and safest cathartic for children. Infants usually require a larger relative dose than adults, probably because they digest more of the oil. The dose for an adult is about a fluidounce, for an infant from one to three or four fluidrachms. It is sometimes difficult of administration, not so much from any peculiarly disagreeable taste, as from the recollection of former nausea, or other uneasiness which it may have produced, and from its clamminess and ad- hesiveness to the mouth. In a few cases, the disgust which it excites is utterly unconquerable by any effort of resolution. It is desirable, therefore, to obviate this inconvenience, as far as possible, by the mode of exhibition. A common method is to give it floating in mint or cinnamon water; but that which we have found upon the whole the least offensive, is to mix it with a cup of hot sweetened coffee, by which it is rendered more fluid, and its taste considerably disguised. Some take it in wine, or spirituous liquors, or the froth of porter; but these are often contraindicated by their stimulant property. When the stomach is unusually delicate, the oil may be made into an emulsion with mu- cilage or the yolk of an egg, loaf sugar, and an aromatic water. Tragacanth has been recommended as producing a better emulsion than gum arabic. Lauda- num may be added in cases of intestinal irritation. It has been proposed to give the oil in the air-bladders of fishes, which may be preserved in alcohol for the purpose.f Castor oil may also be beneficially used as an enema, in the quantity of two or three fluidounces, mixed with some mucilaginous liquid. It has been recommended as a local application to the breasts of nursing women, to promote the secretion of milk. Though apt to become rancid by itself, it loses much of this susceptibility when mixed with lard; and some apothecaries are said to use it as a substitute for olive oil in unguents and cerates. But the slightly irritating properties of even the mildest castor oil render it unfit for those preparations which are in- tended to alleviate irritation. Off. Prep. Pilula Calomelanos Composita, Br. W. * The following method of purifying rancid castor oil is recommended by M. Pavesi. Mix 1000 parts of the oil with 25 parts of purified bone black and 10 of magnesia; allow the mixture to stand for three days, with occasional agitation; then filter through paper or felt. (Repert. de Pharm., Sept. 1857.)—Note to the twelfth edition. f Oil of bitter almonds has been proposed as an effectual means of destroying the tasf» of castor oil. It is to be employed in the same method as in the case of cod-liver oil. (See page 58$.)~~Ihother measure is to beat the oil well with the contents of an egg, adding a little salt, sugar, and a few drops of orange flower water.—Note to the twelfth edition. PABT I. Oleum Rosae. 597 OLEUM ROSiE. U.S. Oil of Roses. The volatile oil obtained from the petals of Rosa centifolia. U. S. ' See ROSA CENTIFOLIA. — This is commonly called attar, otto, or essence of roses. It is prepared ob a large scale in Turkey in Europe especially in the Balkan mountains, in Egypt, Persia, Cashmere, India, and other countries of the East, and in small quanti- ties in the south of France, by distilling the petals of the rose with water. The oil concretes and floats upon the surface of the water when it cools. The pre- cise species of rose from which the oil is extracted is not in all instances cer- tainly known; but it is said to be obtained from R. damascena in Northern India, R. moschata in Persia, and R. centifolia (provincialis) in the north ot European It is furnished in very minute proportion; not more than three drachms having been obtained by Colonel Polier, in Hindostan, from 100 lbs. of the petals. It is usually imported in small bottles, and is very costly.* Oil of roses is said to be prepared in Macedonia by crushing the petals in mills, expressing the fluid part, filtering it, and then exposing it to the sun in small glass vessels. The oil gradually collects on the surface of the liquid, and is removed. (Pharm. Gent. Blatt, 1847, p. 783.) Lauderer states that, at Damascus and other parts of Asia Minor, the oil is prepared by dry distillation. The buds being collected before sunrise are placed in a glass retort; and the distillation is effected by a salt-water bath, care being taken so to regulate the heat as not to scorch the petals. The water of the fresh roses and their oil come over together, and the latter, floating on the top, is separated in the usual mode. Oil of roses is nearly colourless, or presents some shade of green, yellow, or red; but, according to Polier, the colour is no criterion of its value. It is con- crete below 80°, and becomes liquid between 84° and 86°. Its odour is very powerful and diffusive. At 90° its sp.gr. is 0-832. Alcohol dissolves it, though not freely when cold. It consists of two oils, one liquid, the other concrete at ordinary temperatures. These may be separated by freezing the oil, and com- pressing it between folds of blotting paper, which absorbs the liquid oil, and leaves the concrete or stearoptene. The latter consists exclusively of carbon and hydrogen; the former, of these with oxygen. Sandal-wood oil, other volatile oils, fixed oils, spermaceti, &c. are said to be added as adulterations. The volatile additions may be detected by not being concrete; the fixed, by the greasy stain they leave on paper when heated. Gui- aourt has offered certain tests by which he thinks the purity of the oil may be determined. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 318.) It is said that the oil of one of the sweet-scented Pelargoniums, perhaps the rose-geranium, is much employed in Turkey for the purpose of adulteration ; but this is probably a mis- take. According to Mr. Han bury, who appears to have thoroughly investigated the subject, two substances especially are used in Constantinople for adulterating the oil; one spermaceti, the other a volatile oil, produced by certain grasses in the E. Indies belonging to the genus Andropogon, large quantities of which are exported from Bombay, partly directly to Europe, partly through the Arabian Gulf, whence it reaches Constantinople. The same oil is imported into London under the name of Turkish essence of geranium. (Pharm. Journ., April, 1859, p. 50G.) Oil of roses may be added, as a grateful perfume, to various spirituous prepa- rations for internal use, and to cerates and ointments. W. * See a paper by Prof. J. L. Smith, on the preparation of the otto of rose in the Balkans, In. the Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1859, p, 824. Oleum Sesami.— Oleum Succini. PART 1 OLEUM SESAMI. U.S. Secondary. Benne Oil. Th(> oil of the seeds of Sesamum Indicum, and of Sesamum orientale. U. S. See SESAMI FOLIUM. — ' OLEUM SUCCINI. U.S. Oil of Amber. The volatile oil obtained by the destructive distillation of am liar. U. S. Amber. Succinum. This is a fossil resin, derived, probably, from extinct coniferse, occurring generally in small detached masses, in alluvial deposits, in different parts of the world. It is found chiefly in Prussia, either on the sea shore, where it is thrown up by the Baltic, or underneath the surface, in the allu vial formations along the coast. Large deposits occur in some lakes on the east ern coast of Courland, and an extensive bed of yellow amber was discovered in 1854, on sinking a well in the coal mines near Prague. The largest mass of amber, yet found, weighed thirteen pounds. Amber also occurs in eonsideruole quantities near Catania, in Sicily. It is usually associated with lignite, and some- times encloses insects and parts of vegetables. In the United States, it was found at Cape Sable, Maryland, by Dr. Troost. In this locality it is associated with lignite and iron pyrites. It has also been discovered in New Jersey. The amber, consumed in this country, is brought from the ports of the Baltic. It is a brittle solid, generally in small irregular masses, permanent in the air, having a homogeneous texture and vitreous fracture, and susceptible of a fine polish. It becomes negatively electric by friction. Its colour is generally brown- ish-yellow, either light or deep; but is occasionally reddish-brown or even deep- brown. It has no taste, and is inodorous when cold, but exhales a peculiar, aromatic smell when heated. It is usually translucent, though occasionally trans- parent or opaque. Its sp. gr. is about L07. Water and alcohol scarcely act on it. When heated in the open air, it softens, melts at 548°, swells, and at last in- flames, leaving, after combustion, a small portion of ashes. Subjected to distil- lation in a retort furnished with a tubulated receiver, it yields, first, a yellow acid liquor; and afterwards a thin yellowish oil, with a yellow waxy substance, which is deposited in the neck of the retort and the upper part of the receiver. This waxy substance, exhausted by cold ether of the part soluble in that menstruum, is reduced to a yellow micaceous substance, identical with the clirysen of Lau- rent. A white crystalline substance, identical with the idrialin of Dumas, may be separated from the micaceous substance by boiling alcohol. Both chrysen and idrialin are carbohydrogens. (Pelletier and Walter, Journ. de Pharm., v. 60.) As the distillation proceeds, a considerable quantity of combustible gas is given off, which must be allowed to escape. By continuing the heat, the oil gradually deepens in colour, until, towards the end of the distillation, it becomes black and of the consistence of pitch. The oil obtained is called oil of amber, and the acid liquor is a solution of impure succinic acid. RepeatedlyMistilleTTrom nitric acid, amber yields an acid liquor, from which, after it has been neutralized with caustic potassa, ether separates pure camphor. (Doepping, Journ. de Pharm., vi. 168.) Camphor is also obtained by distilling to dryness powdered amber with an ex- tremely concentrated solution of caustic potassa. (Gr. Reich, Ibid., xib. 33.) According to Berzelius, amber consists of 1. a volatile oil of an agreeable odour in small quantity; 2. a yellow resin, intimately united with a volatile oil, very soluble in alcohol, ether, and the alkalies, easily fusible, and resembling ordinary resins; 3. another resin, combined with a volatile oil, soluble ether and part r. Oleum Succini.— Oleum Terebintliinse. 599 the alkalies, sparingly soluble in cold, but more soluble in boiling alcohol; 4. succinic acid; 5. a bituminous principle insoluble in alcohol, ether, and the alka lies, having some analogy to the lac resin of John, and constituting more thao four-fifths of the amber. It also contains a strongly odorous, bright-yellow sub- stance, which hardens by time, but preserves in part its odour. The ultimate constituents of amber are carbon 80 59, hydrogen 7 ‘31, oxygen, 6 73, ashes (silica, lime, and alumina) 3-27 = 97-90. A minute proportion of sulphur has also been found among its constituents. (Journ. de Pharni., Mai, 1864, p. 404 ) Amber was held in high estimation by the ancients as a medicine; but at present is employed only in pharmacy and the arts. In pharmacy it is used to prepare oil of amber and succinic acid. In the arts it is made into ornaments, and employed in preparing varnishes. When put to the latter use it requires to be first subjected to roasting, whereby it is rendered soluble in a mixture of lin- seed oil and oil of turpentine. This solution forms amber varnish. B. Oil of Amber. Oleum Succini. Crude oil of Amber. In the U. S. Phar- macopoeia of 1850, this is placed among the Preparations; in the existing edi- tion, it has been transferred to the Materia Medica list. The following are the former officinal directions for its preparation. “ Take of Amber, in powder, any quantity. Put the Amber, previously mixed with an equal weight of sand, into a glass retort, which is to be only half filled; then distil, by means of a sand-bath, with a gradually increasing heat, an acid liquor, an oil, and a concrete acid impregnated with oil. Separate the Oil from the other matters, and keep it in well-stopped bottles.” U. S. The amber in this process undergoes decomposition, and affords, among other products, an empyreumatic oil, which floats in the receiver upon the surface of an acid liquor. The heat requisite for the complete decomposition of the amber cannot be supported by a glass retort; and, in order that all the oil which it is capable of yielding may be collected, the distillation should be performed in a tubulated iron or earthenware retort, which may be placed immediately upon the fire. The sand is added to prevent the amber from swelling too much. The oil may be separated from the acid liquor by means of the separating funnel. As first procured, it is a thick, very dark-coloured liquid, of a peculiar strong empyreumatic odour. In this state it is occasionally employed as a liniment; but for internal use it should be rectified. It is said that the scrapings of copal and the resin dammar are often substituted for amber, and yield an oil scarcely distinguishable from the genuine. {Pereira.) Off. Prep. Oleum Succini Rectificatum, U. S. W. OLEUM TEREBINTHINxE. U.S.,Br. Oil of Turpentine. The volatile oil distilled from the turpentine of Pinus palustris and of other species of Pinus. U. S. Piuus palustris, Pinus Tceda, and sometimes Pinus Pinas- ter. The oil distilled from the turpentine. Br. Ituile volatile de Fr.; Terpentbinol, Germ.; Olio della trementina, Ital.; .Yceyte de trementina, Span. See TEREBINTHINA. This oil is commonly called spirits or spirit of turpentine. It is prepared by distillation from our common turpentine, though equally afforded by other varieties. It may be distilled either with or without water; but in the latter case a much higher temperature is required, and the product is liable to be em- pyreumatic. To obtain it quite pure it should be redistilled from a solution of caustic potassa. The turpentine of Pinus palustris is said to yield about 17 per cent, of oil; while the common turpentine of Europe affords 24 per cent. Large quantities are distilled in North Carolina for exportation. Oleum Terebinthinse. PART I. Pure oil of turpentine is perfectly limpid and colourless, of a strong, pene- trating, peculiar odour, and a hot, pungent, bitterish taste. It is much lighter than water, having the sp.gr. 0-86 at '72° F.; is highly volatile and inflamma- ble; boils at a temperature somewhat higher than 300°; is very slightly soluble in water, less soluble in alcohol than most other volatile oils, and readily soluble in ether. Boiling alcohol dissolves it with facility, but deposits most of the oil upon cooling. One hundred parts of alcohol of 0 84 dissolve 13 5 parts of the oil at 72°. As found in commerce, it always contains oxygen; but, when per- fectly pure, itvconsists exclusively of carbon and hydrogen, and is thought to be someric with the radical of camphor. Hence it has been denominated camphene. (See page 195.) According to Blanchet and Sell, it consists of two distinct isomeric oils, which, by the absorption of oxygen, are converted into two dis- tinct resins, corresponding to those found by Unverdorben in colophony. (Journ. de Pharm., xx. 226.) But there is reason to believe that these oils are the re- sults of chemical reaction; as, when isolated, they have boiling points higher than that of the original oil. Heated in close vessels to 482° F., oil of turpen- tine undergoes certain changes in properties, without any discoverable change of composition. (Ibid., 3e ser., xxiv. 428.) It absorbs muriatic acid, forming with it two compounds, one a red dense liquid, the other a white crystalline substance resembling ca*mphor, and hence called artificial camphor. The latter consists of the unaltered oil (camphene) combined with the acid, and is there- fore muriate of camphene. In the former the oil appears to have undergone some molecular change, being converted into an oil isomeric with the oil of tur- pentine, but differing from it in its action on polarized light, and in forming a liquid compound with muriatic acid. Nitric acid converts oil of turpentine into resin, and by long boiling into lurpentinic acid. Mixed with water and chlo- ride of lime, and then distilled, the oil yields a liquid which M. Chautard found to be identical with chloroform. (Ibid., Se ser., xxi. 88.) On exposure to air and light, it deposits white acicular crystals, which are without taste or smell, insoluble in cold water, but soluble in ether and alcohol. (Boissenot, Journ. de Chim. Med.,\\. 143.) White crystals of stearoptene, heavier than water and fusible at 20°, separate from the oil at the temperature of 18° below zero. These are probably a hydrate of the oil. The hydrate may be produced by ex- posing on a plate four volumes of the oil recently distilled, three of alcohol, and one of nitric acid. Crystals form at the end of a week or more. This happens though the oil may be mixed with others, and may serve to detect adulterations with it of oils which do not have the same composition. (Berthelot, Journ. de Pharm. et de Chim., xxviii. 451.) Exposed to the air the oil absorbs oxygen, becomes thicker and yellowish, and loses much of its activity, owing to the formation of resin. A small pro- portion of formic acid is said also to be generated. Hence the Edinburgh Col- lege directed the oil to be rectified by distilling it with about four measures of water. But the process is difficult in consequence of the great inflammability of the vapour, and its rapid formation, which causes the liquid to boil over. In this country it ts scarcely necessary; as the recent oil can be obtained at an ex- pense less than that which would be incurred by redistillation on a small scale. Another mode of purifying the oil is to agitate it with one-eighth of alcohol, which dissolves the resinous portion. About one-fifth of the alcohol is retained by the oil, but is readily separated by agitation with water. The oil as obtained from different species of pine or fir, though having many common properties, and identical in composition, is somewhat different, espe- cially in relation to its influence on polarized light. Thus, the oil used in this country, derived from Pinus palnstris, produces deviation of the plane of polari- zation to the right, while the French oil, from Pinus maritime, has the con- trary effect. M. Berthelot, after numerous come to the oonclu* part I. Oleum Terehinthinse. 601 sion, that the oils of turpentine of the formula whether from the samf» or different trees, are mixtures of several isomeric carburets, constituting per- manent varieties, which carry their distinctive character with them into combi- nation, as in their artificial camphors and hydrates, which have the same rotary power as their respective oils. (Journ. de Pharm. et de Ghim., xxv. 263.) Berthelot has shown that oil of turpentine has, under certain conditions, the power, while undergoing oxidation itself, of causing the oxidation of other bodies, to which it imparts a portion of the oxygen absorbed from the air. All that is necessary to give this power to the oil is that, soon after distillation, it should be exposed to the air, as in a bottle half filled. Solar light assists, but is not essential to the change, which goes on even in the dark. The oil retains the pro- perty thus acquired indefinitely, but may be deprived of it by exposure to a boil- ing heat, or by agitation with certain other substances, as pyrogallate of potassa No other chemical or physical change can be detected in the oil. {Journ. d* Pliarm., Mai, 1860, p. 351.) Medical Properties and Uses. Oil of turpentine is stimulant, diuretic, occa- sionally diaphoretic, anthelmintic, in large doses cathartic, and externally rube- facient. Swallowed in moderate quantities it produces a sense of warmth in the stomach, accelerates the circulation, and increases the heat of the skin, without especially affecting the functions of the brain. In small doses, frequently re- peated, it stimulates the kidneys, augmenting the secretion of urine, and often producing, especially if long continued, painful irritation of the urinary passages, amounting sometimes to violent strangury. At the same time it imparts the odour of violets to the urine; and this effect is also produced by its external application, or even by breathing the air of an apartment impregnated with its vapours. In large doses it occasions slight vertigo, or a sense of fulness in the head, sometimes amounting to intoxication, attended frequently with nausea, and succeeded generally, though not always, by speedy and brisk catharsis. When this effect is experienced, the oil is carried out of the bowels, and, no time being allowed for absorption, is less apt to irritate the kidneys and bladder than in small and repeated doses. In some constitutions it produces, even when taken internally, an erythematic eruption on the skin. Persons who inhale its vapour are liable to strangury and even bloody urine. We have seen cases of haematuria in seamen from on board vessels loaded with turpentine. A case is on record in which a woman was found dead, after having swallowed a large quantity of the oil, probably about six ounces. The muscles were in a state of rigid contraction ; the membranes of the brain and spinal marrow were greatly congested, and the brain in a less degree; and the lungs and right cavities of the heart were gorged with blood. The inference is that death resulted from asphyxia, produced pro- bably by a tetanic contraction of the muscles of respiration. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1858, p. 562.) The oil is employed in numerous diseases. As a stimulant it sometimes proves serviceable in low forms of fever. We have found it extremely useful in the advanced stage of typhoid or enteric fever; and especially in cases in which the tongue has partially or completely thrown off its fur in flakes, and after- wards become dry, with a surface destitute of its ordinary papillary appearance, and often contracted and fissured. The remedy has, in our hands, proved almost uniformly successful under these circumstances. With small doses of the oil fre- quently repeated, the tongue becomes moist and again coated, the tympanitic state of the bowels disappears, and the patient goes on to recover as in a favour- able case of fever. Its efficiency, however, in typhoid fever, is ascribable not so much to its stimulant properties, as to an alterative influence upon the ulcerated surface of the bowels characteristic of that disease. The medicine has been re- commended as a counter-irritant in yellow and puerperal fevers; and may un- doubtedly be given with advantage in the latter stages of these diseases, and in Oleum Terebinthinse. PART I. other instances of gastric and enteric inflammations, which require a resort to stimulation. In chronic rheumatism, particularly sciatica and lumbago, the oil has often been given with great benefit. It has also been much extolled as a re- medy in neuralgia, in epilepsy and tetanus, in passive hemorrhages, particularly from the bowels, in disordered conditions of the alimentary canal attended with sallow countenance, foul tongue, tumid abdomen, sour or fetid eructations, and general depravation of health, in obstructions of the bowels, in chronic dysen- tery and diarrhoea, in obstinate gleets and leucorrhoea, in suppression of urine, and retention and incontinence of urine from debility, and in chronic nephritic and calculous affections. In certain cases of dysentery, whether acute or chronic, when the tongue is quite dry, and smooth as if from defect of the papillary struc- ture, no remedy has proved so efficient in our hands as oil of turpentine. We have seen it also very beneficial in haemoptysis. Asa vermifuge it is highly es- teemed, especially in cases of taenia. It appears to destroy or debilitate the worm, which, losing its hold upon the bowels, is then easily discharged. In cases of worms in the stomach it is very useful. The worms, in this instance, are de- stroyed, and then digested as any other dead animal matter. In dropsies with feeble action the oil may sometimes be advantageously given as a diuretic; and in amenorrhoea from torpor of the uterine vessels it is occasionally useful. As a local stimulant it may be given beneficially in some instances of flatulent colic, and gout in the stomach. The dose for ordinary purposes is from five to thirty drops, repeated every hour or two in acute, and three or four times a day in chronic diseases. In rheu- matism it is recommended by some in the dose of a fluidrachm every four hours. As a remedy for the tape-worm it is given in the quantity of one or two fluid- ounces, and should be followed by castor oil if it do not operate in three or four hours. It has also proved successful in tmnia in the dose of half a drachm, twice a day, continued for a considerable time. In ordinary cases of worms, the usual dose may be given. It may be administered on sugar, or in emulsion with gum arabic, loaf sugar, and cinnamon or mint water. In the form of enema, the oil has been employed in amenorrhoea, and to pro- mote uterine contraction in child-birth, and is highly useful in cases of ascarides, obstinate constipation, and distension of the bowels from accumulation of air. No remedy is more effectual in tympanites'than injections of oil of turpentine. From half a fluidounce to two fluidounces may be administered, suspended by the yolk of eggs in half a pint or a pint of water, or some mucilaginous fluid. Externally applied, oil of turpentine irritates and speedily inflames the skin; and, in low forms of fever with coldness of the surface, is when heated one of the most efficacious rubefacients. It is also used as a liniment in rheumatic and, paralytic affections, and various internal inflammations. It should generally, in mild cases, be diluted with olive oil; and in some constitutions, even in this state, produces such violent inflammation of the skin, with extensive eruptions, as to render its external use in any shape improper. Mixed with some mild oil, aud introduced on cotton into the ear, it is sometimes beneficial in deafness arising from a deficient or unhealthy secretion of wax. Applied to recent burns, it is thought by some to be highly useful in allaying the burning pain and pro- moting a disposition to heal. For this purpose, however, it is usually mixed with resin cerate (basilicon ointment), so as to form a liniment capable of being spread upon linen rags. (See Linimentum Terebinthinse.)* The oil has been recommended also in anthrax and erysipelas. Oil of turpentine has been recommended in the form of bath, in affections in * The following is the formula adopted by the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy for the preparation of the rubefacient liniment, so much sold under the name ol Bri’ish oil. R. Olei Terebinth, Olei Lini Olei Succini Olei Juniperi t'gi tv?V\ 13arbadensis Petrolei Americani (Seneca oil) Misce. part I. Oleum Terebinthinae.—Oleum Theobromse. 603 which its constitutional impression is desired. For this purpose Dr. T. Smith, of Cheltenham, England, employs from five to ten fiuidounces of the oil, with half a fluidounce of the oil of rosemary, and two pounds of carbonate of soda in each bath. The breath becomes strongly impregnated with theterebinthinate odour. (Brair.h- ivaite's Retrospect, xxi. 355.) Applied in vapour, the oil is said to be a very speedy cure for the itch. The bed and night clothes are sprinkled with thirteen drachms of the oil, and the patient finds himself cured on awaking in the morn- ing. (Am. Joxirn. of Med. Sci., July, 1857, p. 232.) Baths of the vapour of tur- pentine are stated to be very beneficial in chronic rheumatism. They are said tc be borne well, for twenty-five minutes, at a temperature from 140° to 160° F. (Arch. Gen., 4e ser., xxviii. 80.) Inhalation of the vapour has been recom- mended by Skoda in gangrene of the lungs. Off. Prep. Confectio Terebinthinae, Br.; Enema Terebinthinae, Br.; Linimen- turn Cantharidis, U. S.; Liniment. Terebinthinae; Liniment. Terebinthinae Aceti- cum, Br.; Unguentum Terebinthinae, Br. W. OLEUM THEOBROMiE. U. S. Oil of Theobroma. Batter of Cacao. The concrete oil of the kernels of the fruit of Theobroma Cacao. U. S. Theobroma. Sex. Syst. Polyadelphia Decandria. Nat. &rd. Sterculiaceag. Lindley. Gen.Ch. Calyx sepaled. Petals 5, vaulted at the base, ligulate above. Stamens 15, connected into an urceolus at the base; sterile filaments 5, alternate with the petals; fertile ones short, united into 5 filaments, each opposite to a petal and bearing 2 anthers. Style 5-cleft at the apex. Stigmas simple. Fruit inde- liiscent, 5-celled. Seeds embedded in a buttery pulp. Theobroma Cacao. Linn..$p. PI. 1100; Hayne, Darstel. und Beschreib. &c., ix. 35. This is a handsome tree, from twelve to twenty fe$£ in height, growing in Mexico, the West Indies, and South America, in some parts of whicii it is largely cultivated, particularly in Guayaquil and Yenezdehi. The fruit 4s an oblong-ovate capsule or berry, six or eight inches in lengtmjvith a thinly coria- ceous, somewhat ligneous rind, enclosing a whitish pulp,|in which n’ppierous seeds are embedded. These are ovate, somewhat about asflarge as an almond, and consist of an exterior thin shell, and a browh%4y kernel Sepa- rated from the matter in which they are enveloped, they consfckiateiihe cocoa,, cacao, or chocolate nuts of commerce. They have a slightly aromahP|kitterish, oily taste, and, when bruised or heated, an agreeable odour. Analyze J(by Mitsch- erlich, they were found to contain, in 100 parts, from 45 to 49 of fixed oil (cacao butter), 14 to 18 of starch, 034 of glucose, 0‘26 of cane sugar, 5-8 of cellulose, 35 to 5 of colouring matter, 13 to 18 of albuminoid matter, 12 to 1-5 of theo- bromin, 5-6 to 6 3 of water, with 3 5 ashes. The colouring matter is probably the result of chemical change, as the fresh seeds are white. Theobrotnin has been found also in the shells in the proportion of about 1 per cent. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1862, p. 509.) The shells of the nuts are sometimes employed in the state of infusion, as a substitute for tea or coffee. They impart to boiling water a taste analogous to that of chocolate, but weaker. The kernel is consumed in great quantities, in the shape of chocolate, or in some analogous form. Theobromin (or more properly theobromia) was discovered by M. Woskre- sensky, who obtained it in the following method. The kernels are exhausted with water by means of the water-bath; the solution is strained through linen, pre- cipitated by acetate of lead, and filtered; the filtered liquid is freed from lead by sulphuretted hydrogen, and evaporated; the brown residue is treated with boil- ing alcohol, and the liquid filtered while not. Upon cooling, the theobromia is 604 Oleum Theobromse. PART I. deposited in the form of a reddish-white powder, which is rendered colourless by repeated crystallization. Keller obtained it still purer by heating the powder between two watch-glasses, by which a brilliant white sublimate was obtained. (Gmelin's Handbook.) Theobromia is a nitrogenous crystallizable principle, capable of forming salts with the acids, very bitter, volatilizable without change, freely soluble in hot alcohol, sparingly so in hot water, and closely analogous to cafl'ein. Its formula, according to Dr. F. Keller, is CUH8N404. It has been con- verted into eaffein by Prof. Strecker. (See Am. J. of Pliarm., Sept. 18151, p. 406 ) Chocolate is differently prepared in different countries. In Great Britain and the United States, it usually consists, when pure, exclusively of the cocoa or chocolate nuts, which are first roasted, then deprived of their shell, and lastly re- duced, by grinding between heated stones, to the state of a paste, which is moulded into oblong cakes. Not unfrequentlv rice flour or other farinaceous substance, with butter or lard, is added; but these must be considered as adulterations. On the continent of Europe, sugar is generally incorporated with the paste, and spices, especially cinnamon, are often added. Yanilla is a favourite addition in South America, France, and Spain. Cocoa is often sold in the state of powder, which is sometimes mingled with other ingredients, such as ground rice, barley flour, sugar, &c. Chocolate is prepared for use by reducing it to powder, and boiling it in milk, water, or a mixture of these fluids. In this state it is much employed as a drink at breakfast and tea, and serves as a substitute for coffee in dyspepsia. It is also a good article of diet for convalescents, and may sometimes be given advantageously as a mild nutritive drink in acute disease. Oil of Theobroma. Cacao Butter. This is the fixed oil of the chocolate nut. It is extracted either by expression, decoction, or the action of a solvent. Sou- beiran recommends that the seeds, previously ground, be mixed with one-tenth of their weight of water, then pressed between hot plates of tinned iron. It is advisable that the heat should not exceed that of boiling water, and even a lower heat will answer. When the method of decoction is used, the cacao should be slightly roasted before boiling. As a solvent, bisulphuret of carbon has been found to answer well, as recommended in the preparation of the expressed oil of nutmeg. (See Oleum Myristicae.) Upon the wdiole, the method of expression is perhaps preferable. The presence of water in the ground seeds is said greatly to facilitate the process. The expressed oil, which is generally imported, comes in the shape of oblong cakes, like those of chocolate, weighing about half a pound each. It is whitish or yellowish, of the consistence of tallow, with an agreeable odour resembling that of chocolate, and a bland, pleasant taste. It was analyzed by Specht and Gossman, who found it to consist af stearin, palmitin, and olein. From its large proportion of stearin, it is one of the best fats for the prepara- tion of stearic acid. (Chem. Gaz., Aug. 15, 1854, p. 306.) It is said to be fre- quently adulterated with animal fats. Butter of cacao is used as an ingredient in cosmetic ointments, and in phar- macy for coating pills, and preparing suppositories. For the last purpose it is admirably adapted by its consistence and blandness, and is now largely consumed. It was, indeed, on this account chiefly that it was introduced into the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia.* W. * Mafurra Tallow. Under this name a fatty matter is known, obtained from the fruit of a tree growing in Mozambique, and the Isles of Madagascar and Bourbon, and bearing a close resemblance in qualities to cacao butter. The kernel of the fruit is described as of the size of the cacao bean, having the same characteristic odour when bruised, and a bit- ter taste. The fatty matter is extracted by boiling the kernels in water. It is of a firm solid consistence, less fusible than tallow, of a yellowish colour, and the odour of cacao butter. It agrees, moreover, with that substance in containing olein and palnritin and yields palmitic acid largely when saponified. The tree which yields it will probably be i«und to bear a close botanical affinity to Theobroma. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 16?.) PART I. Oleum Thymi.—Oleum Tiglii. OLEUM THYMI. US. Oil of Thyme. The volatile oil obtained from Thymus vulgaris, U. S. This was introduced into the "present emtion of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, under the impression, that what is usually employed under the name of oil of origanum, and under that name was recognised in former editions of the Phar- macopoeia, is really the product of the Thymus vulgaris, or common thyme. This fact was ascertained by Mr. Daniel Hanbury, during a journey in the south of Prance, where the thyme grows wild in great abundance, and is largely collected for distillation. The oil is taken from France to England, and thence reaches this country under the name of oil of origanum, having, probably from its greater cheapness, been substituted for the genuine oil. The substitution is of the less importance, as, for all the purposes for which oil of origanum was used, that of thyme is not less useful, while it is at least quite as agreeable. Thymus vulgaris is a very common plant, indigenous in the south of France, and cultivated in our gardens. It is a labiate plant, belonging to the Linnman class and order Didynamia Gymnospermia, and characterized as a genus by its subcampanulate calyx, having its throat closed with hairs, and its corolla with the upper lip flat and emarginate, and a longer lower lip. It is a low under- shrub, procumbent at the base, with ovate-linear, revolute leaves, and flowers in a whorled spike. The herbaceous portion, which should be gathered when the plant is in flower, has a peculiar, strong, aromatic, agreeable odour, not lost by drying, and a pungent, aromatic, camphorous taste; Its active constituent is the volatile oil, which is obtained separate by distillation with water. The oil, as prepared in the south of France, is, after one distillation, of a red- dish-brown colour, and called the red oil, but when again distilled is colourless, and in this condition is distinguished as the white oil. It is the former that is exclusively found in our shops. According to Zeller, one pound of the fresh herb yields 45'7 grains of the oil, of the dried herb 38 grains. The oil, as found in our shops, is of a reddish-brown colour, and of an odour recalling that of thyme, but less agreeable. Its sp. gr. is stated at 0-905, but probably varies, as the oil is a complex body. Besides other ingredients, it contains a principle called thymol, which is concrete at ordinary temperatures, and comes over last in dis- tillation, and which in the solid state is somewhat heavier than water. Thyme has the aromatic properties of sage, lavender, &c., and may be used for the same purposes; but it is more employed in cooking than in medicine. T. or the wild thyme of Europe, is analogous in properties to the garden thyme. Both are occasionally used in baths, fomentations, and cata- plasms, along with other aromatic herbs. The oil is used almost exclusively as a local application. Introduced on lint or cotton into the cavity of a carious tooth, it will sometimes allay toothache. It is often used as a mild irritant in chronic rheumatism, sprains, bruises, &c., generally in connection with spirit and camphor. It is an ingredient, under the name of oil of origanum, in opodeldoc, the Linimentum Saponis Camphoratum of former editions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, which has, we think unfortunately, been discarded from the recent edition. W OLEUM TIGLII. U.S. Groton Oil. The oil obtained from the seeds of Crjjian.Tiglium. U. S. Off. Syn. OLEUM CROTONIS. Croton Tiglium. The oil expressed from the seeds in England. Br. Huile de Croton, Ft.; Crotondl, Germ.; Nervalum unnay, Tamool. Oleum Tiglii. PART I. Croton.# See CASCARILLA. Croton Tiglium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 543; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., vol. v. p. 71. This species of Croton is a small tree or shrub, with a few spreading branches, bearing alternate petiolate leaves, which are ovate, acuminate, serrate, smooth, of a dark-green colour on the upper surface, paler beneath, and fur- nished with two glands at the base. The flowers are in erect terminal racemes, scarcely as long as the leaf; the lower being female, the upper male, with straw- coloured petals. The fruit is a smooth capsule, about the size of a filbert, with three cells, each containing a single seed. The tree is a native of Ilindostan, Cgylon, the Moluccas, and other parts of India. It is pervaded by an acrid purgative principle, probably analogous to that found in other plants belonging to the family of Euphorbiacese. Rumphiua says that the employed in Amboyna, in the dose of a few grains, as a drastic purge in dropsy; and, according to the same author, the leaves are so acrid that, when chewed and swallowed, they excite inflammation in the lips, mouth, and throat, and along the whole course of the alimentary canal. The wood is said in small doses to be diaphoretic, in larger, purgative and emetic. But the seeds are the most active part. These have been long used in India as a powerful purgative, and were employed so early as 1630 in Europe, under the names of grana Molucca and grana tiglia. But in consequence of their violent effects they fell into neglect, and had ceased to be ranked among medicines, when, at a comparatively recent period, attention was again called to them by the writings of some English physicians in India. They are now imported for their oil, which is the only product of the plant considered officinal. These seeds are rather-larger than a grain of coffee, oblong, rounded at the extremities, with two faces, the external considerably more convex than the in- ternal, separated from each other by longitudinal ridges, and each divided by a similar longitudinal ridge, so that the wrhole seed presents an irregular quad- rangular figure. Sometimes, as in the coffee grain, their internal surface is flat with a longitudinal groove, owing to the presence of only two seeds in the cap- sule, the groove being produced by the central column or axis. The shell is covered with a soft, yellowish-brown epidermis, beneath which the surface is black and smooth; and, as the epidermis is often partially removed by friction during their carriage, the seeds as they come to us are frequently mottled, and sometimes nearly black. The kernel or nucleus is yellowish-brown, and abounds in oil. In India the seeds are prepared for use by submitting them to slight tor- refaction, by which the shell is rendered more easily separable. In the dose of one or two grains the kernel purges with great activity. The oil is obtained by expression from the seeds, previously deprived of the shell. It may also be separated by decoction in water, or by the action of ether, or bisulplmret of carbon, which dissolves the oil, and leaves it behind when evaporated.* Guibourt recommends, after the first expression, to digest the residue with alcohol at a temperature of 120° to 140° F., and then submit it to * Extraction with ether. Haring washed and dried the seeds, grind them in a coffee-mill, and form a soft paste with ether. Introduce this into a narrow percolation tube, and gradu- ally pour ether upon it until exhausted. Evaporate the ether by means of a water-bath, and filter the remaining oil through paper. (Journ. de l’harm., Aout, 1862, p. 116.) Extraction with bisulphuret of carbon. The seeds, well bruised, are introduced into a bottle with three times their weight of bisulphuret of carbon well rectified; the mixture is allowed to stand, with frequent agitation, for at least 24 hours; the whole is then poured upon a cloth and rapidly expressed. The residue is similarly treated with twice its weight of the bisulphuret, and expressed after standing as before. The products of the two macerations are mixed, then filtered in a covered funnel, and finally submitted to distillation, by means of a water-bath, in a glass retort, at the temperature of 160° or 170° F. The bisulphuret should be recovered by condensing its vapour in a refrigerated receiver. The oil is to be poured into a capsule, to show that it contains none of the bisulphuret, and then introduced into a bottle. {Journ. de Pharrn., 3e ser., xxxi. 28.)—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Oleum Tiylii. a new expression. The alcohol is to be separated by distillation from the oil, which is then to be mixed with the first product. According to Dr. Nimmo, the seeds consist of 64 per cent, of kernel, and 36 of envelope. From the seeds im- ported into England, about 2.2 per cent, of oil is obtained by simple expression. Guibourt, by his process, obtained 52 per cent, from the kernels, equivalent to about 35 from the seeds. Croton seeds yielded to Brandes upon analysis, inde- pendently of the shell, traces of a volatile oil, fixed oil, a peculiar fatty acid called crotonic acid, an alkaloid which he called crotonin, resin, stearin, wax, extractive, s~ugar, starch, gum, albumen, gluten, lignin, and salts. The crotonic. has been subsequently found to be nothing more than a magnesian soap with an alkaline reaction. The crotonic acid, which is separated along with the oil on expression, has been thought to be the active principle of the seeds, but is now said to be inert. It may be obtained by treating the oil with solution of potassa decomposing the resulting soap by tartaric acid, filtering and distilling the solu- tion, neutralizing the product with baryta-water, evaporating to dryness, decom- posing the salt of baryta with strong phosphoric acid, and again distilling. (Christison's Dispensatory.) The acid solidifies at 23° F., is highly volatile, has a very acrid taste, and is very irritating to the nostrils.* Properties. Croton oil, as found in the shops, varies from a pale-yellow to a dark reddish-brown. That imported from India is usually pale, that expressed in Europe dark, like the deepest coloured sherry. Its consistence is rather viscid, and is increased by time. Its smell is faint, but peculiar, its taste hot and acrid, leaving in the mouth a disagreeable sensation which continues for many hours. The oil is wholly soluble in ether and oil of turpentine. Its relations to pure alcohol differ somewhat with the variety of the oil. That obtained by ex- pression in England is wholly and readily soluble, forming a solution which is permanent at ordinary temperatures; while the India or pale oil forms an opaque mixture, which becomes clear and uniform upon being heated, but sepa- rates on standing into two portions, one consisting of alcohol somewhat dimin- ished in bulk, the other of the oil correspondingly increased in bulk by retaining a portion of the alcohol. It is possible that the difference in colour, and in their relations to alcohol, between the India and English oils, may be owing to a change in the kernels from being kept. Some croton oil examined by M. Dublanc, of Paris, when agitated with ten times its weight of alcohol, was separated into two parts, one of which amount- ing to 6 per cent, was dissolved by the alcohol, the other remained undissolved, but retained 50 per cent, of alcohol. The latter, upon being repeatedly treated with alcohol, lost all its acrimony; while the portion dissolved was extremely acrid. From these observations it would appear that t]je acrid and probably active principle of the oil is dissolved by alcohol; while a bland fixed oil, which constitutes the chief part of it, is not taken up by that liquid.f * Prof. Tuson believes that he has found in croton seeds a peculiar alkaloid,.analogous to cascarillin. He extracts it by the same process as that, already described, by which he obtained ricinin from the castor-bean. (See note, page 593.) But further experiments are required for satisfactory results. (SeeHm. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1864, p. 418.) -f Some experiments have recently been made by Thomas Schlippe on the composition of croton oil, with very interesting results. The crotonic acid referred to in the text is only one out of a number of fatty acids contained in the oil, and is neither the acrid nor the purga- tive principle. Besides the proper fatty part, there are probably other ingredients upon which the medicinal activity of the oil depends. Of these Schlippe has separated the acrid, but not as yet the purgative principle. The former he calls crotonoL . The fatty part of the oil, when saponified, yielded stearic, palmitic, mynstic, and lauric acids; and of the oleic acid series, besides some not well defined, crotonic and angelic acids; all of which exist as glycerides, that is, as compounds of the acids respectively with glyce- rin, in the recent oil. CrotonoL or the acrid principle, which exists in the expressed oil in the proportion of 4 per cent., may be separated in the following manner. Agitate the oil with sufficient alco- holic solution of soda to form a milky fluid; heat this gently for some hours, and then add 608 Oleum Tiglii. PART I. It is thought that croton oil is often adulterated with other fixed oils. In the Br. Pharmacopoeia, it is given as a test of the purity of the oil expressed from the imported seeds, that when agitated with an equal volume of alcohol and gently heated, it forms a clear solution, from which about three-fourths of the oil separate on cooling; but that statement is asserted to be untrue of the English expressed oil, though correct of the imported. The test was intended to detect the presence of castor oil, which would be dissolved by the alcohol, and thus occasion a diminution of the bulk.* We were told by the late Dr. M. Burrough, who was for some time in India, that much of the oil there prepared, under the name of croton oil, is derived from the seeds of a plant different from the Croton Tiglium. From a parcel of these seeds presented to him by Dr. Burrough, Dr. R. E. Griffith produced a plant which proved to be Jatropha Curcas. the seeds of which' are known by the name of Barbadoes nuts. (See Tapioca.) This oil, though weaker than the genuine, was said by Dr. Burrough to be an efficient cathartic in the dose of three or four drops. Dr. Hamilton states that croton seeds are afforded by Croton Parana, growing in Ava and the eastern parts of Bengal; and it is probable that a portion of the croton oil of commerce is obtained from these seeds. {Trans. Lin. Soc., xiv. 257.) These facts may explain some of the dis- crepancies in reference to the effects of alcohol above mentioned. Medical Properties and Uses. Croton oil is a powerful hydragogue pur- gative, acting for the most part, when given in moderate doses, with ease to the patient, but in large doses apt to excite vomiting and severe griping pains, and capable, if immoderately taken, of producing fatal effects. It acts with great rapidity, frequently evacuating the bowels in less than an hour, and generally exciting a rumbling sensation in half that period. It possesses also great ad- vantage in the minuteuess of the dose, on account of which it may frequently be given when we should fail with more bulky medicines; as in mania, coma, and the cases of children. A drop placed on the tongue of a comatose patient will generally operate. Though loug used in India, and known more than a century ago to the Dutch physicians, it did not attract general notice till about 1820, when it was introduced into England by Mr. Couwell.. It is chiefly employed in cases of obstinate constipation, in which it often produces the happiest effects after the failure of other medicines; but it may also be advantageously used in almost all cases in which powerful and speedy purging is demanded. Dropsy, apoplexy, mania, and visceral obstructions are among the complaints in which it has been particularly recommended. It has recently been employed with great water or solution of chloride of sodium, so as to cause the oil to rise and form a stratum on the surface; separate this fatty oil by passing the liquid through a moist filter; to the filtrate add dilute muriatic acid, which will separate and cause to rise to the surface another oily matter; dissolve this in cold alcohol, and treat it.with freshly prepared hydrated oxide of lead. When the acid reaction has quite ceased, add freely a weak watery solution of soda, by which the fluid is rendered milky, and afterwards divides into a watery liquid and a clear oil, which sinks to the bottom. To obtain this result, it is often necessary to add chloride of calcium freely to the alcoholic solution. Separate the oil, wash it with water on a moist filter, and dissolve it in ether. Agitate the etheral solution with water in a cylindrical glass vessel, and, having drawn off the clear ethereal solution, allow the ether to evaporate in a capsule in vacuo. The crotonol remains as a tenacious mass, colour- less or of a slightly wine colour, and of a weak and peculiar odour. Schlippe ascribes to a decomposition of the crotonol the odour, like that of decoction of seneka, which is often possessed by croton oil. (Liebig's Annalen, cv. 1.)—Note to the twelfth edition. * Mr. Maisch proposes to detect croton oil in any mixture by the following plan, based upon Schlippe’s results in reference to crotonol. The suspected oil is agitated with an alcoholic solution of soda or potassa, and the solution, having been separated, is then satu rated with hydrochloric or sulphuric acid. If croton oil be present, its acrid principle, cro tonol, will rise to the surface in the form of an oil, which, when applied to the skin, will produce in three or four hours, not only inflammation, but also the peculiar eruptive affection excited by croton oil. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1860, p. 307.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Oleum Tiglii.—Opium. 609 asserted benefit in neuralgia, epilepsy, and spasm of the glottis, and has been supposed to have powers in these affections independent of its purgative pro- perty. The seeds are said to have been used with great success in India in amenorrboea. Applied externally, the oil produces inflammation of the skin, attended with a pustular eruption, and has been used in this way in rheumatism, gout, neuralgia, glandular and other indolent swellings, and in laryngeal and pulmonary diseases. It should be diluted with three parts of olive oil, soap liniment, oil of turpentine, or other convenient vehicle, and applied as a liniment twice or oftener in the twenty-four hours. Sometimes the insusceptibility of the skin is such as to require its application undiluted. The oil may also be applied externally, in the form of a plaster, made by incorporating one part of it with four parts of lead plaster, melted by a very gentle heat. Sometimes it appears to produce inflammation in parts distant from those to which it was directly applied. It has been said that four drops, used externally by friction around the umbilicus, will produce a purgative effect; but this is denied by Dr. Barlai, ot Tuscany, who states that it is only when the oil is applied to the skin divested of the cuticle that it will operate upon the bowels. The dose for an adult is one or two drops, and is most conveniently admin- istered in the form of pill. A safe and convenient plan is to make two drops into four pills with crumb of bread, and to give one every hour till they operate. The oil may also be given in emulsion. The form of tincture may be advan- tageously resorted to when a minute quantity of the medicine is required; as it affords the means of readily dividing the dose. Off. Prep. Linimentum Crotonis, Br. W. OPIUM. U. S., Br. Opium. The concrete juice of the unripe capsules of Papaver somniferum. U. S. The inspissated juice, obtained by incision from the unripe capsules grown in Asia Minor. Br. “Opium should yield at least seven per cent, of morphia by the officinal pro- cess.” U. S. Opium, Fr.; Opium, Mohnsaft,, Germ.; Oppio, Ital.; Opio, Span.; Affioni, Turk.; Ufyoon, Arab.; Sheerikkaskash, Persian; Ufeem, Hindoo. Papaver. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Papaveraceae. Gen. Ch. Corolla four-petaled. Calyx two-leaved. Capsule one-celled, open- ing by pores under the persistent stigma. Willd. Opium is at present generally believed to be derived exclusively from the Papaver somniferum; though every species of poppy is capable of yielding :t to a greater or less extent, and some authors have indicated the Papaver orient ale as its real source. The British and French Pharmacopoeias unite with our own m recognising only the first-mentioned species. Papaver somniferum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1141; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 376, t.. 138. There are several varieties of this species, of which the two most pro- minent are distinguished by the titles of the white and black poppy, derived from the colour of their seeds. It is the former which is usually described as the proper opium plant. The white poppy is annual, with a roundish, smooth, erect, glaucous, often branching stem, usually rising two or three feet in height, but sometimes five or even six feet in favourable situations. The leaves are large, variously lobed and toothed, and alternately disposed on the stem, which they closely embrace. The flowers are terminal, very large, and of a white or silver- gray colour. In India they appear in February, in Europe and the United States not earlier than June, July, or August. The calyx is smooth and com- 610 Opium. PART I. posed of twr- leave* which fall when the petals expand. These are usually four in number; but there is a variety in which the flower is double. The germen, which is smooth and globular, supports a radiated stigma, and is surrounded by numerous short and slender filaments, with erect, oblong, compressed anthers. The capsule is smooth and glaucous, rounded, from two to four inches in diam- eter, somewhat flattened at the top and bottom, and crowned with the persistent stigma, the diverging segments of which are arranged in a circle upon the sum- mit. It contains numerous minute wrhite seeds, which, when perfectly ripe, escape through small openings beneath the stigma. In the black poppy, the flower, though sometimes white, is usually violet-coloured or red, the capsule somewhat smaller and more globular, and the seeds of a brown or blackish colour. All parts of the poppy contain a white, opaque, narcotic juice; but the leaves, analyzed by M. Blondeau, yielded none of the active principles by which opium is characterized. (Journ. de Pharm., vii. 214.) It is in the capsqle that the juice most abounds, and the virtues of the plant chiefly reside. Hence this part is sometimes employed medicinally. (See Pa,paver.) The seeds are destitute of narcotic properties, and are even used as food. The Romans employed them in the preparation of various dainties. They abound with a bland oil, which may be extracted by expression. According to M. Berjot, the seeds yield from 46 to 50 per cent. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1863, p. 271.) This is an article of much importance on the continent of Europe, particularly in France and Germany. In the former of these countries, the value of the oil annually produced is said to be 25 or 30 millions of francs. (Roux, Ibid., Sept. 1859, p. 202.) The oil is employed for culinary and pharmaceutic purposes, in painting and the manufacture of soap, and in other ways as a substitute for olive oil. The poppy does not ap- pear to elaborate the milky fluid in which its narcotic properties reside before a certaiu period of its growth; for we are told that, in Persia, the young plants which are pulled up to prevent too thick a crop are used as potherbs; and the Ij-Y'-u)i/ of the Greeks, which is believed to be identical with the Papaver som- niferum, is said by Hippocrates to be nutritive. • Though generally believed to be a native of Asia, this species of poppy grows wild in the south, of Europe, and even in England, whither its seeds are sup- posed to have been brought at a very early period. It was cultivated by the ancient Greeks, and is mentioned by Homer as a garden plant. It is at present cultivated very extensively in India, Persia, Egypt, and Asiatic Turkey, for opium; and in several parts of Europe, especially in the northern departments of France, and in the south of Germany, mainly for the seeds. In this country it is found only in our gardens as an ornamental flower. The process for procuring opium from the poppy, as practised by the modern inhabitants of India and Persia, according to the reports of Kerr and Koempfer, is very nearly the same with that described by Dioscorides as employed in his own times, about eighteen hundred years since; and the accounts of Belon, Olivier, Texier, and more recently M. Bourlier, as to the modes of collection in Asia Minor, are not materially different. As the capsules abound most in the narcotic juice, it is from these that the opium is procured. According to Teder, a few days after the fall of the flower, men and women proceed to the fields, and make horizontal incisions in the capsule, taking care not to penetrate its cavity. A white juice exudes, and appears in the form of tears upon the edges of the incisions. The field is left in this state for twenty-four hours, after which the juice is scraped off by means of large blunt knives. A portion of the epidermis of the capsule is also removed, and constitutes about one-twelfth of the whole product. Each poppy-head affords opium but once. Thus collected, the opium is in the state of an adhesive and granular jelly. It is placed in smaller ves- sels, where it is beaten, and at the same time moistened with saliva. When of a proper consistence, it is wrapped in leaves, and sent into the market. (Journ. PART T. Opium. 611 de Pharm., xxi. 196.) Considerable quantities of good opium have been ob- tained in England by scarifying the capsules of the poppy. Similar success has been met with in France; and the drug obtained by incisions, in the latter coun- try, has been found equal if not superior to that imported from tne East.* Another method of extracting the virtues of the capsules is to select such as have ceased to yield their juice by exudation, to beat them with a small propor- tion of water, and inspissate the liquid thus obtained by artificial heat. The an- cient Greeks were acquainted with both processes, as appears from the writings of Dioscorides. The term ontov, derived from oxoq, juice, they applied to the substance procured by incisions, which answers precisely to the modern opium. The inspissated expressed juice they called firjxwvtov, from ;j.r]xa>v, the name of the plant. Tournefort states that it is the latter preparation which is exported from Turkey as opium; the former being much more valuable, and therefore retained in the country for the use of the great and wealthy. This error has been copied by many writers on materia medica; and, till within a compara- tively few years, opium was generally believed to be an extract obtained by eva- porating either the expressed juice, or a decoction of the capsules. Commercial History. Commerce is supplied with opium chiefly from Hin- dostan, Persia, Egypt, and Asiatic Turkey. Immense quantities are produced in the Indian provinces of Bahar and Benares, and in the more interior province of Malwa. The opium of Hindostan is distributed extensively through conti- nental and insular India, where it is habitually employed in the place of spirit- uous liquors. Great quantities are also sent to China, into which it finds an easy entrance, notwithstanding prohibitory laws. Much was formerly imported by the East India Company into England, through which a small proportion reached our own country; but it was so far inferior to that from Turkey, that it was at length excluded from the market, and none is now brought directly from the * So early as the year 1796, a premium was awarded by the Society for the Encourage- ment of Arts, to Mr. Ball, for a specimen of British opium; and in 1823, Messrs. Cowley and Stains collected 196 pounds, which sold for nearly seven dollars a pound, from little more than twelve acres of land. This product, however, was by no means equal to that obtained in Scotland by Mr. John Young. From one acre of ground, planted with poppies and potatoes, he procured fifty six pounds of opium, valued at 450 dollars, while the whole expense was more than repaid by the potatoes, and the oil expressed from the seeds. For papers on the subject of the cultivation of the poppy in England, see Edin. Phil. Journ. (i. 258), and the Quart. Journ. of Science (iv. 69). M. Aubergier has cultivated opium in France, with encouraging results. Instead of al- lowing the juice after the incision to inspissate" on the capsule, he collected it immediately, and dried it by artificial heat. One workman collected in a day 300 grammes (9-64 troy- ounces) of juice, which yielded one-quarter of its weight of opium. The product differed in strength very greatly, according to the variety of poppy used; the yield of morphia having varied from 3 to 17-8 per cent. He gives the preference to the purple poppy. (Ann. de Thirap., A. D. 1852, p. 29.) See also the same work (A. D. 1853, p. 1) for an elaborate report on M. Aubergier’s memoir, by a committee consisting of MM. Rayer, Orfila, and others. Attempts have been made to introduce the cultivation of opium into Algiers; and specimens of the drug produced in that country have yielded from 7 to 11 per cent, of morphia. (Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1854, p. 293.) From various communications in the jour- nals, it appears that the collection of opium in France is on the increase; and an important fact is said to have been proved beyond doubt, that the production of the seed for oil, and of opium, may be carried on together, without injury. In Armenia, where opium is largely produced, four varieties of seeds are used, the white, yellow, black, and sky-blue. The flower produced by the white seeds is white, that by the yellow is red, that by the black is black, and that by the sky-blue is deep purple. The wmte and sky-blue seeds yield large, somewhat oblong capsules, like citrons in shape; the yellow and black, small and round capsules. For an extent of ground forty paces square, forty drachms of seeds are required. Each head yields about a grain of opium. The ope- rators, not accustomed to the work, are apt to become intoxicated or stupefied during the period of harvest. (Gaultier de Claubry, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xiii. 105.) A very interesting paper, by Mr. S. II. Maltass, on the cultivation and collection of opium in Turkey, and its preparation for the market, affording minute information on these points, is contained in the Phatm. Journ. and Trans, for March, 1854 (p. 395). Opium. PART I. East. The great demand for it in the Indian Archipelago, and in China, and its consequent high price, have probably contributed even more than its reputed inferiority to this result. Indeed, Ainslie explicitly states that India opium is inferior to none; and it is probable that the specimens, from which the descrip- tion formerly current among authors was drawn up, were the refuse of the Eastern market. We know that the drug was formerly very much and variously adulterated by the natives. Among the impurities mentioned by authors are the extract of the poppy procured by decoction, the powdered leaves and stems of the plant made into a paste with mucilage, oil of sesamum, catechu, and even cow-dung. But a more careful official inspection has resulted in a great improve- ment of the India opium. Of that produced in Persia, very little is brought to this country ; and it is scarcely known in our market as a distinct variety. Much was formerly produced in Upper Egypt, especially in the district of ancient Thebes, which was supposed to yield it in greatest perfection. Hence it was TongTraown by the name of Opium Tlxebaicum. and laudanum is still frequently directed in prescriptions as Tinctura Thebaica. Its cultivation has been again introduced into Egypt; and considerable quantities are exported. Turkey opium is produced in Anatolia, and shipped chiefly from the port of Smyrna. It is brought to the United States, either directly from the Levant, or indirectly through different European ports. From the treasury returns foi the years from 1827 to 1845 inclusive, according to a table prepared by Dr. J B. Biddle, and published in the American Journal of Pharmacy for April, 1847, it appears that the average value of the annual importations for the pe- riod referred to was from Turkey 128,137 dollars, from England 13,744, from France 4,470, and from all other places 6,607 dollars. Of this amount so much was exported as to leave, for the average annual consumption of the country, the value of 66,809 dollars. Turkey opium usually comes to us in masses of irregular size and shape, generally more or less flattened, covered with leaves, or the remains of leaves, and with the reddish capsules of some species of Rv.mex, which are said to be absent in the inferior kinds, and may therefore be considered as affording some indication of the purity of the drug. We may ac- count for this circumstance upon the very probable supposition, that these cap- sules are removed during the operation which the masses undergo in the hands of the merchants, after leaving those of the cultivators. We are told by the French writers that extensive frauds are practised at Marseilles in this branch of commerce. The opium taken thither from the Levant is first softened, and then adulterated with various matters which are incorporated in its substance. To use a strong expression of M. Guibourt, they make the opium over again at Marseilles. Our traders to the Mediterranean would do well to bear this asser- tion in mind. According to Dr. A. T. Thomson, one-fourth part of Turkey opium generally consists of impurities. Sand, ashes, the seeds of different plants, extracts of the poppy, Lactuca virosa, Glycyrrhiza glabra, and Chelidonium glaucum, gum arabic, tragacanth, salep, aloes, even small stones, and minute pieces of lead and iron, are mentioned among the substances employed in the sophistication of the drug. Mr. Landerer, of Athens, was informed by a person who had been engaged in the extraction of opium, that grapes, freed from their seeds and crushed, were almost universally mixed with the poppy juice, and that another adulteration consisted of the epidermis of the capsules and stem of the plant, pounded in a mortar with the white of eggs. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., xv. 238.) According to Mr. Wilkins, who witnessed the collection of opium, the inspissated juice of the grape, thickened with flour, is often used for the same purpose. (Pharm. Journ., xiv. 400.) In England a sophisticated opium was some years since prepared, which, though so nearly resembling good Turkey opium in appearance that by the eye alone it was difficult to detect the fraud, was yet wholly destitute of the active principle of the drug. Portions of it were PAfcT I. Opium. 613 sent into the markets both of France and this country. A sample of a similai drug, perhaps the same, was examined by Prof. Aikin, Examiner of drugs foi the port of Baltimore, and found to contain but 110 per cent, of morphia. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1859, p. 314.) It was probably the genuine drug, deprived of its morphia by some process which did not materially disturb the visible arrangements of its particles.* (Ibid., x. 261.) * The great importance of opium renders it desirable that all its commercial varieties should be accurately described, and their relative value so far as possible ascertained. The following statement has been drawn up from the most recent published accounts of the drug, and from the personal observations of the author. The varieties of this drug may be arranged, according to the countries in which they are produced, under the heads of Turkey, Egyptian, India, and Persia opium. I. TURKEY OPIUM. This title belongs to the opium produced in the Tui’kish pro- vince of "Anatolia, ancUexported from Smyrna and Constantinople. According to some authorities, there is no essential difference between the parcels of the drug brought from these two ports. Others maintain that they are distinct varieties, differing in their interior structure, and probably also in the precise place of their production, and the mode of their collection. The truth probably is, that most of the opium shipped at Constantinople is produced in the more northern parts of the opium districts of Anatolia, while that from Smyrna is collected in the provinces more convenient to the latter city; and, though it is possible that an identical drug may often be brought from the two ports, yet there are grounds for arranging it under different varieties, as derived from these different sources. 1. Smyrna Opium. This is the variety which is, beyond all comparison, most abundant in our markets; ancFit is from this that the ordinary descriptions of opium are drawn up. It comes to us in masses of various size, usually from half a pound or somewhat less to a pound in weight, sometimes, though rarely, as much as two or even three pounds, origi- nally, perhaps, of a globular form, but variously indented, and rendered quite irregular in shape, by the pressure to which they have been subjected, while yet soft, in the cases which contain them. Sometimes they are even pressed out into flat cakes. As brought into market, the lumps are usually hard on the outside, but still soft within. They are covered externally with the remains of leaves, and with the reddish capsules of a species of Rumex, which have no doubt been applied in order to prevent the surfaces from adher- ing. Notwithstanding, however, this coating, the masses sometimes stick together, and two or more become consolidated into one. In this way the fact may be accounted for, that the seeds of the Rumex are occasionally found in the interior of the masses. In the finer parcels of Smyrna opium, the colour internally is light-brown; in the inferior it is darker. A peculiar character of this variety is that, when a lump of it is cut into and then carefully torn, numerous minute shining tears are observable, particularly under a micro- scope, bearing some resemblance to small seeds, but readily distinguishable by pressure between the fingers. They are undoubtedly formed from the drops of juice which escape from the incisions in the capsules, and which, according to B61on, are allowed to concrete before they are removed. From the account of the same author it appears that, after the juice has been collected, it is not subjected to the process of kneading or beating, as in the case of other varieties of opium; so that the tears preserve their original shape in the mass. It is probably owing to the peculiar mode of collecting Smyrna opium, that minute pieces of the'skin of the poppy capsules are found intermingled in the mass; these being separated in the process of removing the adhering tears. In the best specimens of Smyrna opium, these fragments of the capsules are the only impurities. This variety of the drug is of very different qualities; the finest kinds yielding, according to Merck, as much as 13 per cent, of pure morphia, while from some very bad parcels he could not procure more than 3 or 4 per cent. In these inferior specimens the colour is darker, the smell is often musty, and there is very generally more or less mouldiness both upon the surface, and in the interior of the masses, indicating perhaps too much moisture in the opium originally, or its subsequent exposure to an injurious degree of dampness. Good Smyrna opium ought to yield 10 or 11 per cent, of morphia. Dr. Christison, however, states that he has not been ablfc to procure more than 9 per cent, from the finest Smyrna opium.* * According to Landerer, little of the opium is produced in the immediate neighbourhood of Smyrna; the greater portion being brought to that port, on the backs of camels, from a distance of from ten to eighteen days’ journey. (Journ. de Pharm., Ze sir., xxiii. 33.) The same writer states that the opium is chiefly prepared at Kara Chissar, near Magnesia. The incisions are generally made before sunrise. The juice is partly caught in mussel- shells, and dried in the sun. This is considered the best. Every evening the juice which has dried upon the cap- sules is scraped off, with a portion of the epidermis. The poppy is then cut down, and stripped of its leaves, which are boiled in water; and the liquor is evaporated to the consistence of an extract. With this the inspissated juice ’s incorporated, and the mixture is then formed into cakes, wrapped in poppy leaves, and placed on shelves to dry. 'See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiii. 251.) It is very evident, from the interior structure of the best Smyrna opium, 4hat it has not been prepared in the way described by Landerer; though his account is probably true in reference fo inferior varieties of the drug.—Note to the tenth edition. Opium. PART I. Opium is regarded as inferior when it has a blackish colour; a weak or em- pyreumatic smell; a sweet or slightly nauseous and bitter taste; a soft, viscid, tr greasy consistence; a dull fracture; or an irregular, heterogeneous texture, 2. (lanxtantmnple. Opium. Most of the Constantinople opium is in lumps from half a pound to two and a half pounds in weight, and scarcely distinguishable in exterior ap- pearance from those of the former variety, being equally irregular in shape, and in like manner covered with the capsules of the Rumex. It often, however, differs strikingly from the Smyrna opium in its interior constitution, being, according to Merck, wholly destitute of the tears which characterize that variety. This would indicate some difference in the mode of collecting and preparing the juice. In the case of the Constantinople opium, it is probably removed from the capsules before concretion. Merck says that he has not discov- ered, in this variety, those minute portions of the poppy capsules which are usually present in Smyrna opium. The average quality of the Constantinople opium, as above described, is about equal to that of the drug from Smyrna; but it appears to be occasionally purer; as Merck obtained from one specimen as much as 15 per cent, of pure morphia. In a recent account, by M. Bourlier, of the culture of the poppy and collection of opium in Bithynia, a province of Asia Minor, near Constantinople, it is stated that the lumps, when formed out of the concrete juice, are enveloped in poppy leaves; and no mention is made of the use of the Rumex capsules to prevent adhesion. It is the opium here collected, which, according to M. Bourlier, is known throughout the Levant and in Europe as Con- stantinople opium. On the same authority, it is stated that the yolk of eggs is sometimes largely used for adulterating opium; a fraud which may be detected by the large propor- tion of fatty matter which the adulteiated drug yields to ether, and by the impossibility of drying it so as to fit it for pulverization. (Annuaire de ThSrap., A. D. 1859, p. 4.) Guibourt describes another variety of Const antinople opium of much inferior character. “It comes,” he observes, “in small flattened cakes, sufficiently regular and of a lenticular shape, from two to two and a half inches in diameter, and always covered with a poppy leaf, the midrib of which divides the surface into two equal parts. It has an odour similar to that of the preceding variety, but feebler, and it blackens and dries in the air. It is more mucilaginous than Smyrna opium, and contains only half as much morphia.” These characters are obviously those of Egyptian opium; and, though the parcels which came under the notice of Guibourt may have been imported directly from Constantinople, it is highly probable that they were originally from Alexandria. Mr. Stettner, of Trieste, though well acquainted with the opium commerce of that port, admits no such Constanti- nople opium as that described by Guibourt. (Annal. der Pliarm., xxiv. 65.) II. EGYPTIAN OPIUM. This is in flat roundish cakes, of various dimensions, some- times as much as six Inches in diameter, and a pound in weight, usually, however, much smaller, and sometimes not weighing more than half an ounce. These cakes are either wrapped in a poppy leaf, so placed that the midrib divides the surface into two equal parts, or exhibit vestiges of such a covering. Occasionally the brown colour of the opium is seen through the leaf, and the surface appears as if uncovered, wffiile the leaf is still present. This variety of opium is always destitute of the Rumex capsules, and differs from the Smyrna opium also in being brittle instead of tenacious, and equally hard in the centre as at the surface of the mass. Its fracture is conclioidal and of a waxy lustre, and small fragments of it are translucent. Its colour is usually redder than that of Smyrna opium, though sometimes dark. Some of the pieces, on exposure to the air, become damp and sticky on the surface, indicating the fraudulent addition of a deliquescent substance. The odour is similar to that of Smyrna opium, 1 ut weaker. It is an inferior variety; as the best of it, examined by Merck, yielded only 6 or 7 per cent, of morphia; and a specimen of' it was found by Mr. J. Evans, of Philadelphia, to contain not more than 3-55 per cent. Egyptian opium, therefore, should never be dispensed by the apothecary, or employed in the preparation of his tinctures; as the prescription of the physician is based upon the strength of good Smyrna opium, which is about twice that of the Egyptian. ILL INDIA OPIUM. Little if any of this opium reaches our market. There appear to be two'cUTcf varieties of it; one produced in Bahar and Benares, in the Bengal Presidency, and called Bengal opium, the other in the interior provinces, and designated by the name of Malwa opium. 1. ,/Bengal Opium. For a minute account of the cultivation and preparation of ibis variety of opium, the reader is referred to elaborate papers by Dr. Eatwell, of Calcutta, contained in the eleventh and twelfth volumes of the London Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions, an abstract of which will be found in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiv. 118), and in the last edition of Pereira’s Materia Medica (vol. ii. p. 1009, Am. ed.). Bengal opium is identical with the variety sometimes called Patna opium. It is in round balls, weighing three pounds and a half, invested by a coating half an inch thick, composed of agglutinated leaves xnd poppy-petals. The interior of the mass is of a brownish-black colour, of tne consistence part I. Opium. 615 from the intermixture of foreign substances. It should not impart a deep-brown colour to the saliva, nor leave a dark uniform trace when drawn over paper, not form with water a thick viscid solution. of a stiff paste, and possessed in a high degree of the characteristic odour and taste of opium. The proportion of active matter in this opium varies somewhat with the season, and in the different specimens. From a table given by Dr. Eatwell, it appears that the percentage of morphia varies from 2-17 to 3-67, and that of narcotina from 3-85 to 5-70. l’rof. Procter found a specimen of Patna opium to yield about 5 per cent, of morphia. (Am: Journ. of Pkarm., xxi. 194.) It is, therefore, much inferior to the best Smyrna opium in its yield of morphia, while it is richer in narcotina. Yet Christison states that all the India opium which he has seen is exempt from the mixture of leaves, seeds, and fragments of poppy capsules so abundant in Smyrna opium. Its inferior character is possibly, in Some degree, owing to the circumstance, that the juice, after collection, is kept for some time before it is made up, and consequently undergoes fermentation. Prof. Carson, of the University of Pennsylvania, in describing a specimen of this variety, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for July, 1849 (p. 194), speaks of acicular crystals, which he had noticed by the aid of the microscope; and he informs me (Sept. 1864), that on becently examining a spe- cimen of the same opium, now perfectly dry, he found similar crystals. No such crystals, he states, are to be found in Smyrna opium. The India opium examined by Dr. A. T. Thomson was apparently of inferior character. As described by that author, it was in round masses, covered with the petals of the poppy in successive layers, to the thickness of nearly one-fourth of an inch. It had a strong em- pyreumatic smell, with little of the peculiar heavy odour of Turkey opium. Its taste was more bitter and equally nauseous, but less acrid. Its colour was blacker, and its texture, though as tenacious, was less plastic. It was more friable, and, when triturated with water, was wholly suspended or dissolved, leaving none of that plastic residue which is afforded by the other variety. It yielded to Dr. Thomson more narcotina than Turkey opium, but only about one-third the quantity of morphia. All these are the characters of an extract of the poppy heads, rather than of their inspissated juice. The absence of the plastic prin- ciple Analogous to caoutchouc is strong evidence in favour of this view of its nature; for it is obvious that water would not extract this principle from the capsules, while it is hardly probable that the juice is destitute of it. Besides, the strength indicated by Dr. Thomson is very nearly the same with that of the extract of the capsules prepared in France. Bengal opium is at present superior to that here described, though still inferior to the Smyrna opium. There is a variety of Bengal or Patna opium, called garden Patna opium, which wTas de- scribed in the fifth edition of this work, on the authority of Dr. (jhristison, as "Maiwa opium. Dr. Christison has subsequently ascertained its true origin. It is prepared in Bahar with peculiar care, from juice which has not been suffered to undergo fermentation. It is in cakes three or four inches square, and about half an inch thick, which are packed in cases with a layer of mica between them. These cakes are without covering, hard, dry, and brittle, of a uniform shining fracture, and not unlike an extract in appearance. The colour is sometimes almost black, and sometimes of a light-brown, not unlike that of Egyptian opium. Dr. Christison states that it is much superior to the globular Bengal opium, and that some specimens are little inferior to Turkey opium in the proportion of morphia. 2. Malwa Opium. This is in flat, roundish cakes, five or six inches in diameter, and from four to 'SfglTr'bunces in weight. They are commonly quite hard, dry and brittle, of a light-brown colour, a shining fracture, a compact homogeneous texture, and free from mechanical impurities. The quality is superior to that of common Bengal opium. (Chris- tison's Dispensatory.) A specimen of Malwa opium, described by Dr. Carson (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 195), broke with a short rough fracture, which was of a blackish-brown colour, here and there showing irregular oily spots. Prof. Procter obtained from it 9|- per cent, of morphia. IV. PERSIA OPIUM. A variety of opium under this name has sometimes existed in the marketsofXbhctonTahd has even found its way to this country, though it is very rare. Recently it is said to have reached Europe in considerable quantities, and has received especial attention in France. It is in different forms. The most common is in cylindrical pieces, about three and a half inches long, and half an inch thick, wrapped in glossy paper, and tied with a cotton thread, and each weighing about half an ounce. It is of a uniform consistence, but exhibits, nevertheless, under the microscope, small agglutinated tears, much less than those of Smyrna opium. It has the liver-brown colour of Egyptian opium, a virose, musty odour, and a very bitter taste; and, like Egyptian opium, softens in a moist atmosphere. According to Dr. Reveil it contained 15 per cent, of glucose. The first specimens were brought to England from Trebizond on the Black Sea; but their pre- cise origin was nof Known. Three other forms of Persia opium have been described by Dr. Opium. TART I. Properties. Good opium has a peculiar, strong, narcotic odour, and a bitter, somewhat acrid taste. When long chewed it excites much irritation in the lips and tongue, and may even blister the mouth of those unaccustomed to its use. Its colour is reddish-brown or deep-fawn ; its texture compact; its sp. gr. 1-336. When drawn over paper it usually leaves an interrupted trace of a light-brown colour. It is often soft in the interior of the mass, and in this state is tenacious; but when exposed to the air it gradually hardens, and ultimately becomes brit- tle, breaking with a shining fracture, and affording, when pulverized, a yellowish- brown powder, which becomes adhesive upon a slight elevation of temperature. It readily inflames upon the application of a lighted taper. It yields its virtues to water, alcohol, and diluted acids, but not to ether. To all these menstrua it imparts a deep-brown colour. Alcohol dissolves about four-fifths of it. Pelletier states that the proportion taken up by water varies in all specimens. He never found the quantity of extract prepared with cold water to exceed 12 parts 'out of 16. {Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1832.) Much attention has been devoted to the chemical constitution of opium. It Reveil, as they were offered to his notice in Paris. One was in spherical cakes, without envelope, or Rumex capsules. In physical characters, it closely resembled the cylindrical variety, though softer and more hygrometric. It had a strongly virose odour, and a bitter slightly sweetish taste. The second was in irregular masses, liver-coloured, of a virose smell and bitter taste, brittle, smooth and shining, compact, and very hygrometric. The third was in the form of flat cakes, covered with an unknown leaf with some Rumex capsules, of a reddish-brown colour, tasting and smelling like the preceding, compact, and smooth. Of these the first and third contained, each, 31-6 per cent, of glucose; the second 13-9 per cent. All these varieties were remarkable by the absence of obvious impurities, such as are insoluble in water and alcohol. From 75-2 to 84-2 per cent, was soluble in water, from 71'6 to 81-6 in alcohol at 85°. The cylindrical variety yielded 8-15 per cent, of morphia; the spherical 6-4 per cent.; the irregular 7-1 per cent.; and the flat and coated 5-10 per cent. The presence of glucose in such large proportions may be explained by the asserted fact that honey is sometimes mixed with opium at the time of its collection. Though the proportion of morphia is considerable in these varieties, yet, in consequence of their large proportion of soluble matter, they yield comparatively feeble extracts. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1860, p. 101.) Since M. Reveil’s investigation, two samples of Persia opium have been examined by M. Sdput of Paris, one of which yielded 9-33, and the other 9-37 per cent, of morphia. (Ibid, Mars, 1861, p. 163.') From the report of a trial in New York, published in the Jour- nal of Commerce, it appears that a parcel of Persia opium, imported into that city from London in 1835, was in small round balls, and contained only 3 per cent, of morphia. Relative strength of the varieties of opium. It is highly important that the real value of these commercial varieties should be known; as otherwise, there can be no certainty in relation to the strength of the preparations which may be made from them. In the preparation of lauda- num and the other tinctures into which opium enters, it is understood that the drug em- ployed should have the average quality of good Smyrna opium. The inferior kinds should be used only for the extraction of morphia. M. Guibourt has recently published a series of investigations into the richness in morphia of different varieties of opium', giving the percentage yielded in the soft, the hard, and the dried states. The following table con- tains an abstract of his results. It is obvious that he operated only on fair specimens of the several varieties. Soft. Hard. Dried. Anatolia (Smyrna) opium .. 9-60 per c.... do. do. do ... 18-24 ... 19-77 ... 21-46 do. do. do .. 12 40 ... 13-57 ... 14-78 Constantinople do ... 10-90 ... 13-32 ... 14-40 do. do ... 14 00 ... 15-72 ... 17-00 Egyptian do ... 519 ... 5-81 do. do ... 11-45 ... 12-21 Fersian do .. 10-52 ... 11-37 Indian (Patnaj do ... 5-09 ... 5-27 do. do. do ... 6-93 ... 7-72 French do ... 14-21 ... 14-83 do. do 21-10 ... 22-88 do. do ... 16-77 ... 17-69 (Juurn. de Pharm., Janv., Fev., et Mars, 1862.) PART I. Opium. 617 was by their researches into the nature of this substance that chemists were led to the discovery of those vegetable alkaloids, which, as the active principles ot the plants in which they are found, have attracted so much attention, and been applied so advantageously to the treatment of disease. To Sertiirner, an apo- thecary at Eimbeck, in Hanover, belongs the credit of having opened this new and most important field of experiment. In the year 1803, M. Derosne mad6 known the existence of a crystallizable substance which he had discovered in opium, and which he erroneously believed to be the active principle. In the following year, Seguin discovered another crystallizable body, which experience has proved to be the true narcotic principle of opium; but he did not fully in- vestigate its nature, and no immediate practical advantage accrued from his excellent analysis. About the same time Sertiinier was engaged in a similar investigation, the results of which, very analogous to those obtained by Seguin, were published in a German journal, without, however, attracting general atten- tion. In this state the subject remained till 1817, when Sertiirner announced the existence of a saline compound in opium, consisting of a peculiar alkaline principle united with a peculiar acid, and clearly demonstrated the precise na- ture of a substance, which, though before discovered both by Seguin and by himself, had been hitherto but vaguely known. To the alkaloid, in which he correctly conceived the narcotic powers of opium to reside, he gave the name of morphium, which has been subsequently changed to morphia, in order to render it conformable with the titles of the other alkalies. The acid fie called meconic. a term derived from the Greek name of the poppy. The correctness of the state- ments of Sertiirner was confirmed by Robiquet, who also satisfactorily demon- strated that the substance obtained by Derosne, and called by him the salt of opium, was- a principle altogether distinct from morphia, though supposed to possess considerable influence over the system. In the belief of its narcotic powers, Robiquet denominated it narcotin, a title which it still retains. Several other peculiar principles have since been discovered; though it is difficult to resist the impression, that some of them may be the result of the processes to which opium is submitted for their extraction. According to the views of its constitution at present admitted, opium contains, 1. morphia; 2. narcotin or nar- vrotina; 3. codeia; 4. paramorphia; 5. papaverina; 6. 7. narceiti or '.arcema; 8. meconin; 9. pprphyroxin ; 10. meconic and sulphuric acids; 11. a peculiar acid, not yet fully investigated; 12. extractive matter; 13. gum; 14. bassorin; 15. glucose; 16. a peculiar resinous body insoluble in ether and con- taining nitrogen; 17. fixed oil; 18. a substance resembling caoutchouc; 19. an odorous volatile principle ; together with lignin, and a small proportion of acetic acid, sulphate of lime, sulphate of potassa, alumina, and iron. Besides these principles, Pelletier announced the discovery of another, which he called pseudo- morphia. but which appears to be only an occasional constituent of opium. (SeeJourn. de Pharm., xxi. 575.)* In relation to their optical properties, all * Glucose, mentioned in the text as one of the ingredients of opium, has but recently- been proved to exist normally in the drug. M. Lakens, of Toulouse, has found it in a tincture of poppy capsules, and in all the commercial varieties of opium, in proportions varying from 3 to 14 5 per cent. This fact is of some importance in reference to the use of grape-juice in the adulteration of opium, showing that the presence of glucose, even in considerable quantity, piust not be considered as a proof of sophistication. (Journ. cU Pharm., Oct. 1854, p. 2(i5.) Besides the components of opium above enumerated, notice has been given by Dr. G. C. Wittstein of the discovery of another alkaloid, which, from its near alliance to morphia, he proposes to name metamorvhia. We shall give a brief notice of it here, until its claims shall have been established by further investigation. If we count the pseudomorphia of Pelletier, it is the ninth alkaloid which has been extracted from opium. Metamorvhia. This was obtained by Wittstein from a substance separated from the dregs of laucTanum, m an attempt to prepare morphia from them by Mohr’s method with lime. By crystallization fine white silky needles were obtained, which consisted of the hydro- 618 Opium. PART r. the organic bases of opium produce deviation of the plane of polarization to the left. (Bouchardat and Boudet, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxiii. 294.) Of the principles above mentioned morphia is by far the most important. It is generally admitted to exist in opium united with meconic acid in the state of meconate, and to a certain extent also as a sulphate. Of morphia and its prepa- rations we shall treat under another head. (See Morphia.) Narcotina or narcotin receives one or the other of these names, according as it is considered^alkaline or neuter. It exists in opium, chiefly at least, in the free state, and is left behind in considerable quantity when the drug is macerated with water. It is white, tasteless, and inodorous; and crystallizes in silky flexible needles, usually larger than the crystals of morphia, fusible at a moderate eleva- tion of temperature, insoluble in cold water, soluble in 400 parts of boiling water, in 100 parts of cold and 24 of boiling alcohol which deposits it upon cooling, and very soluble in ether. The fixed and volatile oils, and the diluted acids also dissolve it. As it exerts no alkaline reaction upon vegetable colours, and does not prevent the acids from reddening litmus paper, there would appear to be some reason for denying it the rank of an alkali. But it unites with some of the acids forming definite compounds, which may be procured in a separate state; and Robiquet obtained the sulphate and muriate of narcotina well crys- tallized. (Journ. de Pharm., xvii. 639, and xix. 59.) Hence many chemists, among whom is Berzelius, consider it alkaline; and, perhaps, this view of it is the most convenient. It must be admitted, however, to have a very feeble neu- tralizing power. With acetic acid it does not appear to form a permanent com- bination ; for, though dissolved by cold acetic acid, it is separated by heating the solution. Narcotina consists of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen; and its formula, as given by Ilinterberger, is C44H23NOu. According to Messrs. Matthiessen and Foster, it contains the elements of cotarnin and meconin. It may be distinguished from morphia by its insipidity, solubility in ether, and insolubility in alkaline solutions, by not affecting vegetable colours, by assuming a yellowish instead of a blood-red colour under the action of strong nitric acid, by not decomposing iodic acid, and by not producing a blue colour with the salts of iron. It is, however, reddened by a mixture of nitric and sulphuric acids. Hence, if to a mixture of it with strong sulphuric acid a small piece of nitre be added, a deep blood-red colour is produced; while morphia, under the same circumstances, yields a brownish or olive-green colour. It gives a greasy stain to paper when heated upon it over a candle. Heated with an excess of sul- phuric acid and deutoxide of manganese, it is converted into an acid called opianic acid, and into a substance of feeble alkaline properties, which has re- ceived the name of cotarnin (cotarjua). (Journ.de Pharm., 3e ser., vi. 99.) chlorate of a new alkaloid. This was separated by exactly saturating with sulphate of silver, and macerating the precipitate with carbonate of baryta. The alkaloid was extracted by alcohol, and, after evaporation, was obtained in hard flat prisms, arranged in a stellate form. The crystals were fused by heat, but at the same time decomposed. They were dis- solved by about 6000 parts of cold and by 70 of boiling water, by 9. parts of boiling and 830 of cold alcohol of 90 per cent. The alcoholic solution had a sharp, bitter taste, and a feeble alkaline reaction. The alkaloid was insoluble in ether, but rapidly soluble in so- lution of potassa, somewhat less so in ammonia, and soluble also in the alkaline carbo- nates, especially with the aid of heat. Nitric acid instantly coloured the crystals orange- red, and formed a yellow solution. A concentrated solution of iodic acid gradually produced a yellow colour with its aqueous solution, and a purple colour in starch paper suspended above it. The aqueous solution is not disturbed by sesquichloride of iron, is vendered grayish-black by nitrate of silver, and causes gradually a yellow turbidness in solution of terchloride of gold, which results in a brownish precipitate. It was not subjectel to elementary analysis. From its origin in the dregs of laudanum, it appears to us most jro* bable that it was the result of chemical change in morphia. (Chemisches Central Hiatt, No. 61, p. 966; see also Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1861, p. 24.) Dr. Fronmiiller found \\ itt- stein’s metamorphia to be soporific in doses of half a grain. [Ibid., Sept. 1861, p. 418 )-« Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Opium. 619 .Meconin is said also to be among the results of its decomposition by oxidizing ag’eiits. When distilled with potassa, it yields a colourless volatile liquid having alkaline properties, with the strong smell of herring-pickle together with that of ammonia. This is a peculiar alkaloid, and has received the name of propylamin. (Wertheim, Pharm. Cent. Blatt, June 1, 1850, p. 421, and DecTTTfTSbT, P~ 918.)* Water extracts narcotina partially from opium, incon- sequence of the acid which the latter contains, either free or combined with the narcotina. It is usually obtained mixed with morphia in the processes for pro- curing that principle; and may be separated by the action of ether, which dis- solves it without affecting the morphia, and yields it upon evaporation. It may also be obtained by digesting opium in ether, and slowly evaporating the ethe- real solution, which deposits crystals of narcotina. Another mode of procuring it is to treat opium, exhausted by previous maceration in water, with dilute acetic acid, filter the solution, precipitate by an alkali, wash the precipitate with water, and purify it by solution in boiling alcohol, from which it crystallizes as the liquid cools. Should it still be impure, the solution in alcohol and crystalli- zation may be repeated. The proportion of this principle found in opium varies extremely in the dif- ferent varieties, and in different specimens of the same variety. Thus in Smyrna opium it has been found, according to different observers, in quantities varying from 130 to 9-36 per cent. Though narcotina itself is tasteless, its salts are very bitter, even more so than those of morphia. (Berzelius.) Their solution reddens litmus, and yields precipitates with the alkalies and infusion of galls. It has already been stated that Ilobiquet obtained the sulphate and muriate crystallized. Different opinions have been advanced relative to the action of narcotina on the system. Derosne believed it to be the active principle of opium; though, upon experimenting with it, he obtained effects but little stronger than those produced by an equal dose of opium itself. Others found it possessed in different degrees of narcotic properties; and the results of various experiments which led to this conclusion may be seen in former editions of this work. But a more thorough investigation has led to the conclusion that it cannot be ranked among narcotic medicines. It is now pretty well established that narcotina is identical with aconella, an alkaloid recently extracted by the Messrs. Smith of Edinburgh from aconite. (See page 65.) The effects of a narcotic character which have been attributed to it, have probably arisen from the employment of a prepara- tion not entirely freed from other principles contained in the opium. Indeed, so little has it of this character, that the name of anarcoiina has been pro- posed for it, expressive of its total want of narcotic power. Dr. O’Shaugh- liessy, Professor of Chemistry in the Medical College of Calcutta, recommends narcotina very highly in intermittent fever, and believes that he has discovered in it even stronger antiperiodic properties than those of quinia. In the cases * There would seem, from the observations of Wertheim and Hinterberger, to be four homologous modifications of narcotina, having a fixed relation to each other in composi- tion, the number of eqs. of nitrogen and oxygen being the same in all, while those of car- bon and hydrogen increase by 2 eqs. in regular progression. Thus 1. normal narcotina (Hinterberger) has the formula NC42H21014; 2. methylic narcotina (Wertheim) jNtC44II23Ou; 3. ethylic narcotina (Wertheim) NC46H25014; and 4. propylic narcotina (Wertheim) NC48H270lr Another interesting point is that each of these yields a peculiar volatile alkaloid by dis- tillation with potassa; and the several products bear to each other the same chemical re- lation as exists between the fixed alkaloids from which they are derived. They are am- monia from the first, methylamin from the second, ethylamin from the third, and propylamin from the fourth. The last of these volatile alkaloids has been referred to in the text a« facing the smell of herring-pickle. It has been produced also by distilling ergot with fcotassa. Methylamin was procured by Wertheim. The other products are, we believe, -bus far hypothetical. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, Dec. 17, 1851, p. 918; and Journ. de Pharm., 3* mV., xxiii. 154.)—Note to the tenth edition. Opium. PART I. reported by him, it was employed in combination with muriatic acid. Given in this form, though powerfully febrifuge, it was found not to produce narcotic effects, not to constipate the bowels, and never to occasion the distressing head- ache and restlessness which sometimes follow the use of quinia. It proved, moreover, powerfully sudorific. It was given in doses of three grains, three times a day. Dr. O’Shaughnessy was induced to recommend its employment to his medical friends in India, from a knowledge that it had proved effectual in mild agues, in the hands of Dr. Roots and Mr. Jetson in England.* Codeia was discovered in 1832 by Robiquet in the muriate of morphia pre- pared according to the process of Gregory. It exists in opium combined like morphia with meconie acid, and is extracted along with that alkali in the pre- paration of the muriate. (See Morphia.) When the solution of the mixed muriates of morphia and codeia is treated with ammonia, the former alkaloid is precipi- tated, and the codeia, remaining in solution, may be obtained by evaporation and crystallization. It may be purified by treating the crystals with hot ether, which dissolves them, and yields the codeia in colourless crystals by spontaneous evaporation. This alkaline product melts at 300° without decomposition. It is soluble in water, which takes up 126 per cent, at 60°, 31 at 110°, and 59 at 212°. When added in excess to boiling water, the undissolved portion melts and sinks to the bottom, having the appearance of an oil. It is soluble also in alcohol and ether, but insoluble in alkaline solutions. Hence, it may be separated from morphia by a solution of potassa or soda, which dissolves the morphia, and leaves the codeia. It has an alkaline reaction on test paper, and combines with acids to form salts, some of which are crystallizable, particularly the nitrate. Its capacity of saturation is almost identical with that of morphia. According to Robiquet, 1 part of muriatic acid is saturated by 7‘837 of codeia, and by D88 of morphia. It is distinguishable, however, from the latter principle by the dif- ferent form of its crystals, which are octohedral, by its solubility in boiling ether, greater solubility in water, and insolubility in alkaline solutions, and by not as- suming a red colour with nitric acid, nor a blue one with the salts of sesquioxide of iron. (Journ. de Pliarm., xix. 91.) Tincture of galls precipitates from its solutions a tanuate of codeia. Crystallized from a watery solution, it contains about 6 per cent, of water, which is driven off at 212°. The crystals obtained from a solution in ether contain no water. Like most of the other organic alka- lies, it consists of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen ; its received formula being C35H20NO5, and its combining number consequently 284. According to Dr. Anderson, however, the formula of the anhydrous alkaloid is C36H21N06, with the additiou of two eqs. of water in the hydrate. {Month. Journ. of Med. Sci., May, 1850, p. 492.) Dr. Gregory tried the effects of nitrate of codeia upon himself and several of his pupils, and found that, in a dose of three grains or less, it produced no obvious effect, but, in the quantity of from four to six grains, accelerated the pulse, occasioned a sense of heat in the head and face, and gave rise to an agreeable excitement of the spirits like that resulting from intoxicating drinks, which was attended with a sense of itching upon the skin, and, after lasting for several hours, was followed by an unpleasant depression, with nausea and sometimes vomiting. No tendency to sleep was observed, ex- cept in the state of depression. In two or three cases the medicine produced a slight purgative effect; .but in others it appeared to exercise no peculiar influ- .ence on the bowels. M. Barbier, of Amiens, administered codeia uncombined in numerous cases, and observed that, in the dose of one or two grains, it acted on the nervous system, and appeared to be directed especially to the great sym- * The different effects, obtained by different experimenters from narcotina, are readily explicable, should the statements as to the existence of a powerful alkaloid (opiania), which may have been mixed with the narcotina, and of several different modifications of narcotina itself (pige 619), prove to be correct.—Note to the tenth edition. PART I. Opium. 621 pathetic; as it relieved painful affections having their origin apparently in dis- orders of that nerve, while it exerted no influence over pains of the back and extremities supplied by nerves from the spinal marrow. He did not find it to affect the circulation, disturb digestion, or produce constipation. In sufficient quantity, it induced sleep without giving rise, like opium, to signs of cerebral congestion. Dr. Mirandi, of Havana, employed it with advantage in several bad cases of dyspepsia. Dr. Aran, of Paris, considers it one of the most efficient means in our possession for relieving pain, and obtaining calm sleep, inferior to morphia only that it must be given in larger doses, and having the advantage over it that it does not occasion disturbed sleep, disorder of the stomach, constipation, or sweating with cutaneous eruptions. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1, 1863, p. 184.) Dr. Garrod, of London, however, has had a different experience, having found it, in large doses, neither anodyne nor soporific. (Med. Times and Ga.z., March, 1864, p. 333.) On the whole, there can be little doubt that codeia has a decided action on the animal economy, and is among the principles upon which opium depends for its peculiar powers. It may be given in syrup, in a dose of from half a grain to two grains or more, and M. Aran has found it efficient in the dose of one-third of a grain. Paramorphia (thebaina) is the name given by Pelletier to a principle, dis- co veredlbynunTnAheprectpitate thrown down from an infusion of opium, treated with milk of lime. The precipitate being washed with water till the liquid came away colourless, and then treated with alcohol, instead of affording morphia to this solvent, as was anticipated, yielded a new alkaline principle, which was obtained separate by evaporating the alcohol, acting on the residue with ether, allowing the ethereal solution to evaporate spontaneously, and then purifying the resulting crystalline mass by dissolving it in an acid, precipitating by am- monia, and recrystallizing by means of alcohol or ether. Pelletier named it paramorphia, from its close analogy in composition with morphia, from which, however, it is quite distinct in properties. It is white, crystallizable in needles, of an acrid and styptic rather than bitter taste, fusible at about 300°, scarcely soluble in water, very soluble in alcohol and ether when cold, and still more so when heated, and capable of combining with the acids, with which it forms salts not crystallizable from their aqueous solution. Alkalies precipitate it from its acid solutions, and, unless in very concentrated solution, do not dissolve it when added in excess. It is not, like morphia, reddened by nitric acid, nor does it become blue with solutions of the salts of sesquioxide* of iron. From codeia it differs in never being in large crystals, in not forming crystallizable salts, in being always precipitated from its acid solutions by ammonia, and in not melting in oily drops. From narcotina, which it most resembles, it may be distinguished by its shorter crystals, which want the peai'ly appearance of those of narcotina, by its different taste, by its much greater solubility in cold alcohol, of which 10 parts will dissolve 1 of this principle, while narcotina requires 100 parts, and by the action of nitric acid, which converts it into a resin-like matter before dis- solving it, while the same acid instantly dissolves narcotina. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen; its formula being, according to Dr. Anderson, C38H21N06. (See Journ. de Ph.arm., 3e ser., xxiv. 233.) The name of thebain was proposed for it by M. Couerbe, who was disposed to give the credTToF"its discovery to M. Tiiiboumery, the director of Pelletier’s laboratory. Magendie considered it closely analogous, in its effects on the system, to fctrychnia and brucia, producing tetanic spasms in the dose of a grain. Pa/paverina (papaverinl. The discovery of this alkaloid was announced by Dr. G. MerckT Ttis crystallizable in needles, insoluble in water, very sparingly soluble in cold alcohol or ether, more soluble in these liquids boiling hot, and deposited by them on cooling. With acids it forms salts, most of which are very Sparingly dissolved by water. The muriate crystallizes with extraordinary facility. 622 Opium. PART I. The alkaloid is readily dissolved by moderately concentrated muriatic acid, from which, on the addition of more acid, the muriate separates, assuming the form of an oily layer at the bottom of the vessel, which is readily converted on stand- ing into a mass of acieular crystals. These crystals are very sparingly soluble in cold water. The muriate yields with bichloride of platinum a yellow precipi- tate which is insoluble in boiling water or alcohol. Papaverina is prepared by precipitating the aqueous infusion of opium with soda, exhausting the precipi- tate with alcohol, evaporating the tincture to dryness, treating the residue with a dilute acid, filtering, precipitating by ammonia, dissolving the precipitate in muriatic acid, mixing acetate of soda with the solution, and treating with boiling ether the resulting precipitate. The ethereal solution deposits the papa- verina on cooling. A characteristic property of this alkaloid is that its crystals, when moistened with concentrated sulphuric acid, acquire a dark-blue colour. Its formula is ( Ghem. Gaz., March 15,1850, from Liebig's Annalen.) Papaverina has been further investigated by Dr. Thos. Anderson, who confirms the statements of Merck {Ghem. Gaz., Jan. 15, 1855, p. 21.) Opiania (opianin). This was found by Dr. Hinterberger in some supposed narcotina, which had been obtained by Engler, an apothecary-of Vienna, from a parcel of Egyptian opium which he was working for morphia. An infusion of the opium was precipitated by ammonia, and the precipitate, having been washed first with water and then with cold alcohol, was dissolved in hot alcohol, and decolorized by animal charcoal. A crystalline mass was thus obtained, consist- ing apparently of morphia and narcotina. By repeated solutions in hot alcohol and crystallization, the former was separated, remaining in the alcohol, while the supposed narcotina was obtained in crystals. These, upon being examined by Dr. Hinterberger, proved to be a new alkaloid, to which he gave the name of opianin. It is in long, colourless, transparent needles, belonging to the prismatic system. When precipitated by ammonia from the solution of the muriate, it is in the form of a soft white powder. It is without smell, and in alcoholic solution has a strong and durable bitter taste. At the temperature of 212° F. it remains unchanged. It is insoluble in water, and requires for solution a large quantity of boiling alcohol, from which it is entirely thrown down, upon cooling, in the state of crystals. In alcoholic solution it has a strong alkaline reaction; and from this solution both opiania itself and its salts are thrown down by alkalies. Concentrated sulphuric acid dissolves without changing it; nitric acid renders it yellow, and, if added to its sulphuric acid solution, blood- red, but after a short time changing to light-yellow. Its formula, according to Hinterberger, is C6(.H:16N2021. From experiments, it has been inferred to be powerfully narcotic, and to resemble morphia in its action. About one-tenth of a grain of one of these alkaloids was given to a cat, and the same quantity of the other to another cat, with very similar etfects. These were decidedly narcotic, and continued for a considerable time, but had ceased at the expiration of 24 hours, without fatal effects. (Ghem. Gaz., Dec. 1, 1852, p. 444.) \ Narceina or narcein. discovered by Pelletier in 1882, is white, in silky acieular crystals, inodorous, of a slightly bitter taste, fusible at 197° F., soluble in 375 parts of cold and 220 of boiling water, soluble also in alcohol, and insoluble in ether.’ It forms a bluish compound with iodine, the' colour of which is destroyed by heat and the alkalies. It is rendered blue by the action of mineral acids so far diluted as not to decompose it; but does not, like morphia, become blue by the action of the salts of iron, nor red by that of nitric acid. It is dissolved by the acids, but was thought not to neutralize them, and, though at first considered alka- line by Pelletier, was afterwards ranked with indifferent bodies. At present, however, its alkaloid character is admitted, as it unites with sulphuric acid to form a crystallizable sulphate. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1864, p. 367.) It re- sembles, moreover, the organic alkalies in its constitution, consisting of carbon, PART I. Opium. 623 hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen. Tts formula, according to Dr. Anderson, is Pelletier obtained it in the course of his analysis of opium. Having formed an aqueous extract of opium, he treated it with distilled water, precipi tated the morphia by ammonia, concentrated the solution, filtered it, threw down the meconic acid by baryta-water, separated the excess of baryta by carbonate of ammonia, drove oft’ the excess of the ammoniacal salt by heat, evaporated the liquor to the consistence of syrup, set it aside till a pulpy matter formed con- taining crystals, separated and expressed this pulpy matter, then treated'it with alcohol, and concentrated the alcoholic solution. This, on cooling, deposited crystals of narcein, which were easily purified by repeated solution and crystal- lization. Meconin, which often crystallizes with it, may be separated by the agency of ether. It is without known influence upon the system. Two grains were introduced into the jugular vein of a dog without observable effect. Meconin. the existence of which was announced in 1832 by M. Couerbe, is identical with a substance discovered several years previously by M. Dublanc, jun., but of which no account was published. It is perfectly white, in the form of acicular crystals, soluble in about 265 parts of cold and 18 of boiling water, very soluble in ether, alcohol, and the essential oils, fusible at 195°, volatilizable without change, and possessed of a degree of acrimony which favours the sup- position that it may not be. without action upon the system. It is neither acid nor alkaline, and contains no nitrogen. Meconin is obtained by precipitating the aqueous infusion of opium with ammonia, washing the precipitate with water until the latter nearly ceases to acquire colour, mixing the watery fluids, evaporating them to the consistence of molasses, setting them aside for two or three weeks, during which a mass of granular crystals is formed, then decanting the liquid, expressing the mass, and drying it with a gentle heat. The meconin may be separated from the mass by treating it with boiling alcohol of 36° Baume, evaporating so as to obtain crystals, dissolving these in boiling water with animal charcoal, filtering the liquid while hot, and subjecting the crystals formed upon the cooling of the solution to the action of ether, which dissolves the meconin, and yields it in a state of purity by spontaneous evaporation. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1832.) Porphvroxin may be obtained, according to Merck, by treating powdered opium, previousTyexhausted by boiling ether, and then made into a pulp by means of water, with carbonate of potassa, agitating it with ether, evaporating the ethereal solution, dissolving the residue in dilute muriatic acid, and pre- cipitating with ammonia. Paramorphia and porphyroxin are thus obtained to- gether. These are to be dissolved in ether, which, by spontaneous evaporation, deposits the former in crystals, and the latter in the form of resin. The porphy- roxin is separated by the cautious use of alcohol, and obtained by the evapora- tion of the alcoholic solution. It is neuter, crystallizable in shining needles, in- soluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, and characterized by the property of assuming a purple-red or rose colour, when heated in dilute muriatic acid. ( Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xiv. 188.) Qf yseudomorphia. as it is found in opium only as an occasional ingredient,’ and is not generally present, it is scarcely necessary to treat iu detail. An interesting fact, however, in relation to it, and one of some toxicological im- portance, is that it possesses two properties considered characteristic of mor- phia, those namely of being reddened by nitric acid, and of striking a blue colour with the salts of iron, and yet is without any poisonous influence upon the animal economy. {Journ. de Pharm., xxi. 575.) But it differs in not forming salts with the acids, and in not decomposing iodic acid. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen. Meconic acid is in white crystalline scales, of a sour taste followed by bit- terness. fusible and volatilizable by heat, soluble in four parts of boiling water, Opium. PA11T I. soluble also in cold water and alcohol, with the property of reddening vegetable blues, and forming salts. Its compounds with the earths and heavy metallic oxides are generally insoluble in water. Its characteristic properties are, that it produces a blood-red colour with the salts, of sesquioxide of iron, a green precipitate with a weak solution of ammoniated sulphate of copper, and white precipitates soluble in nitric acid, with acetate of lead, nitrate of silver, and chloride of barium. It is obtained by macerating opium in water, filtering the infusioft, and adding a solution of chloride of calcium. Meconate and sulphate of lime are precipitated. The precipitate, having been washed with hot water and with alcohol, is treated with dilute muriatic acid at 180°. The meconate of lime is taken up, and upon the cooling of the liquid, bimeconate of lime is de- posited. This is dissolved in warm concentrated muriatic acid, which deposits pure meconic acid when it cools. It may be freed from colouring matter by neutralizing it with potassa, decomposing the crystallized meconate thus obtained by muriatic acid, and again crystallizing. Meconic acid has little or no action on the system, and is not used separately in medicine; but its natural relation to morphia requires that it should be understood. Incompatibles. All the substances which produce precipitates with opium du not necessarily affect its medical virtues; but the alkalies, and all vegetable in- fusions containing tannic and gallic acids, are strictly incompatible; the former separating and precipitating the active principle, the latter forming with it an insoluble compound. The proportion of morphia which any particular specimen of opium will furnish, may be considered as the best test of its value, except that of actual trial upon the system. Good opium should yield 10 or 12 per cent, of the im- pure morphia precipitated from the infusion by ammonia with alcohol, according to the process of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See Morphia.) The U. S. Pharma- copoeia directs that it should yield at least 1 per cent, of the pure alkaloid by the officinal process. The Br. Pharmacopoeia requires at least 6 per cent. M. Guilliermoud gives the following mode of estimating the strength of opium, as tested by the amount of morphia to be obtained from it. Take 15 parts of opium, cut it in pieces, rub it up with 60 parts of alcohol at 160°, drain the mixture on linen and express, treat the residue with 40 parts of alcohol at the same temperature, unite the tinctures in a vessel with a large mouth into which 4 parts of solution of ammonia (22° Cartier) have been introduced, and allow the mixture to stand 12 hours. The crystals which form are to be put upon linen, washed repeatedly with water to separate the meconate of ammonia, and then introduced into a small vessel of water. The crystals of narcotina, being very light, continue suspended in the water, and may be decanted along with it, while those of morphia remaining at the bottom, may be collected and weighed. Good opium, treated in this way, will yield for the fifteen parts employed from 125 to 1-15 parts of the crystals of morphia. {Journ. de Pharm., xvi. 18.)* * As the morphia obtained in the above process is not quite free from narcotina, M. De "Vry proposes the following modification. The mixture of morphia and narcotina, pre- cipitated from the alcoholic solution by ammonia, after being washed, is to be heated with a slight excess of sulphate of copper dissolved in pure water. The narcotina has no ac- tion on the sulphate of copper, which is decomposed by the morphia, producing sulphate of morphia and tribasic sulphate of copper. The latter and the narcotina remain undis- solved, and a solution is obtained containing sulphate of morphia with a little sulphate of copper. This, having been filtered, is treated first with sulphuretted hydrogen which pre- cipitates the copper, and afterwards with ammonia which throws down the morphia. (Pharm. Journ., x. 77.) M. Fordos' method of estimating the proportion of morphia. Practical difficulties having been experienced in the application of M. Guilliermond’s method, though much better than any plan previously proposed, the Belgic Academy of Medicine made the offer of a prize, which seems to have elicited the following process, considered by M. Fordos as the easiest of ex- ecution, and most accurate in its results. Macerate in 60 cubic centimetres of water lfi PART I. Opium. 625 Tests of Opium. It is sometimes highly important to be able to ascertain the presence or absence of opium in any suspected mixture. As meconic acid and morphia have been found only in the products of the poppy, if either or both of them be shown to exist in any substance, very strong evidence will be afforded of the presence of opium. The test should, therefore, be applied in reference to the detection of these two principles. If an aqueous infusion of the substance ex- amined yields a red colour with the tincture of chloride of iron, there is presump- tive evidence of the presence of meconic acid. Greater certainty may be obtained by the following process. Add in excess to the filtered liquor a solution of acetate of lead. If opium be present, there will be a precipitate of meconate of lead, and the acetates of morphia and lead will remain in solution. The pre- cipitate is then to be suspended in wmter, and decomposed, either by adding a little dilute sulphuric acid, w7hich forms sulphate of lead and leaves the meconic acid in solution, or by passing through it a stream of sulphuretted hydrogen, grammes of opium, cut into fine slices, agitating occasionally. After 24 hours, or sooner if there is any urgency, pour the mixture into a mortar, and divide the opium thoroughly by the pestle. Then pour the whole on a small filter, and, after the liquid has passed, wash the filter with 15 cubic centimetres of water with which the mortar and pestle have been thoroughly cleansed. Repeat the washing a second and a third time, using each time 10 cubic centimetres of water. The opium is thus sutficiently exhausted. One-third of the mixed liquids is taken in order tp determine the quantity of ammonia necessary to precipitate the morphia. To this add the ammonia drop by drop till the liquor oifers a slight ammoniacal odour, and then immediately cease. Note the quantity of ammonia consumed. Operate then on the residuary two-thirds of the liquid, representing 10 grammes of opium, with the view of ascertaining the proportion of morphia. Add an equal volume of alcohol of 85°, and twice the quantity of ammonia consumed in the previous operation. A slight excess of ammonia is requisite to separate all the morphia. Agitate the liquor, and allow it to stand in a bottle well stopped. Narcotina is soon deposited in fine needles but slightly coloured, and morphia in prisms larger and somewhat more coloured. After two or three days, shake the bottle, and then allow it to rest for some hours, in order to give time for the deposition of the whole of the morphia. Collect the crystals on a small filter, and wash them with 15 or 20 cubic centimetres of weak alcohol, of only 40 or 50 to the 100. This washing removes the adhering mother-water, and“frees the crystals from the colouring matter. There re- main crystals of morphia little coloured, and white crystals of narcotina. Allow them to dry on the same funnel. Then pour on the filter from 10 to 15 cubic centimetres of pure sulphuric ether; and afterwards, at two or three times, from 10 to 15 cubic centimetres of chloroform. The crystals of narcotina are instantly dissolved in the chloroform, and carried off with it; and the morphia remains untouched. Lastly wash the filter with 15 cubic centi- metres of ether, to remove the last traces of chloroform and narcotina. Dry the filter, and weigh the crystals of morphia, which may be very easily detached. To verify the result, as- certain that the crystals are entirely soluble in a solution of caustic potassa. The weight will represent the quantity of morphia in 10 grammes of the opium. We have been particular in presenting each step of the process precisely, as much depends upon a proper manipula- tion. The French weights and measures have been given for the sake of accuracy; but the operator may easily translate them into the equivalent weights and measures in use with us by consulting the table in the Appendix; or he can use any other convenient weight and measure, taking care to observe the same proportions. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., Xxxii. 101.) In the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for Sept. 1863 (p. 385) is an interesting and valuable ar- ticle on the assay of opium by Prof. F. F. Mayer, to which, for want of space, we must content ourselves with referring the reader. It is highly important that the apothecary should be able to determine the strength of his opium, and never to use any in his offi- cinal operations, excepting for the preparation of morphia or its salts, which does not come up at least to the percentage required by our officinal standard. Sometimes it may happen that the opium is much stronger in morphia than that in ordinary use, and the con- sequence may be that an unexpected violence of operation may result. Hence it has been proposed in France to adopt some standard, and by mixing parcels of different strengths in proper proportion to get an opium which shall always be the same. In a paper on opium in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (March, 1860, p. 115), Dr. Squibb has treated on this subject, and proposes a preparation which, whatever may be the strength of the opium used, shall always have a fixed value. Could such a preparation, based on sound princi- Dles, and of sufficiently easy execution, receive the sanction of our national code, it would jertaimy be of great practical importance.—Notes to the twelfth edition. Opium PART I. removing bj filtration the precipitated sulphuret of lead, and heating the clear liquor so as to drive off the sulphuretted hydrogen. With the clear liquor thus obtained, if it contain meconic acid, the tincture of chloride of iron will pro- duce a striking red colour, ammoniated sulphate of copper a green precipitate, and acetate uf lead, nitrate of silver, and chloride of barium, white precipitates soluble in nitric acid. Sulphocyanide of potassium, which, according to Dr. Wright, is an invariable constituent of saliva (Simon’s Chemistry, ii. 6), pro- duces a red colour with the salts of sesquioxide of iron, resembling that pro- duced by meconic acid; but, according to Mr. Everitt, this colour is entirely and at once destroyed by a solution of corrosive sublimate, which has no effect on the red colour of the meconate of iron. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xii. 83.) On the contrary, chloride of gold reddens a solution of hydrosulphocyanic acid or a sulphocyanide, but not of meconic acid. Pereira says the acetates also redden the salts of sesquioxide of iron, but do not afford the results just men- tioned with acetate of lead and chloride of barium. To test the presence of morphia, the liquid from which the meconate of lead has been precipitated, and which may be supposed to contain the acetates of morphia and lead, must be freed from the lead by a stream of sulphuretted hydrogen, and then from the sulphuretted hydrogen by heat; after which, the following reagents may be ap- plied:—viz. 1. nitric acid, which colours the morphia red; 2. iodic acid, which is decomposed by the morphia with the extrication of iodine, which colours the liquid reddish-brown, and, if starch is present, unites with it to form a blue com- pound ; 3. solution of ammonia, which, if carefully added so as not to be in excess, throw's down a precipitate of morphia soluble in a great excess of that alkali or of potassa; and 4. tannic acid, which precipitates taunate of morphia. If the precipitate throwm down by ammonia afford a deep-red colour becoming yellow with nitric acid, and a blue colour with sesquichloride of iron, the proofs may be considered as complete.* Though opium is little injured by time if well kept, yet it does undergo spon- taneous change, and M. Guibourt found less morphia in a specimen which had been in his possession nearly twrenty years than it had yielded in its recent state. There was also more colouring matter. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1863, p. 5.) Medical Properties and Uses. Opium is a stimulant narcotic. Taken by a healthy person in a moderate dose, it increases the force, fulness, and frequency of the pulse, augments the temperature of the skin, invigorates the muscular system, quickens the senses, animates the spirits, and gives new energy to the intellectual faculties. Its operation, while thus extending to all parts of the sys- tem, is directed with peculiar force to the brain, the functions of which it excites sometimes even to intoxication or delirium. In a short time this excitation sub- sides ; a calmness of the corporeal actions, and a delightful placidity of mind succeed; and the individual, insensible to painful impressions, forgetting all sources of care and anxiety, submits himself to a current of undefined and un- connected, but pleasing fancies; and is conscious of no other feeling than that of a quiet and vague enjoyment. At the end of half an hour or an hour from * Merck has proposed a test of opium, founded on the property, which characteri jes porphyroxin, of assuming a red colour when heated in dilute muriatic acid. The sus- pected liquid is first to be carefully evaporated, a few drops of solution of potassa arf, to be added, and the mixture agitated with ether. The ethereal solution being filtered otf, a slip of unsized paper is to be dipped into it and dried; and the moistening and drying should be repeated several times. The paper thus prepared is to be moistened with dilute muriatic acid, and then exposed to the vapour of boiling water. If it become reddened, opium may be inferred to exist in the liquid tested. Heusler states that this test is not applicable to the aqueous solution or extract of opium, because porphyroxin is insoluble in water; but Mr. Robertson, of Rotterdam, has found it to succeed with the watery ex- tract, and infers that the porphyroxin is so combined in opium as to render it in some measure soluble. (Journ. de Pkarm., 3s ser., xxii. 190.)—Note to the tenth edition. PART I. Opium. 627 the administration of the narcotic, all consciousness is lost in sleep. The sopo rifle effect, after having continued for eight or ten hours, goes off, and is gen- erally succeeded by more or less nausea, headache, tremors, and other symptom# of diminished or irregular nervous action, which soon yield to the recuperative energies of the system; and, unless the dose is frequently repeated, ana the powers of nature worn out by over-excitement, no injurious consequences ulti- mately result. Such is the obvious operation of opium when moderately taken; but other effects, very important in a remedial point of view, are also experi- enced. All the secretions, with the exception of that from the skin, are either suspended or diminished ; the peristaltic motion of the bowels is lessened ; pain and inordinate muscular contraction, if present, are allayed; and general ner- vous irritation is composed, if not entirely relieved. In doses insufficient to produce the full soporific effect, the stimulant influence upon the mental functions continues longer, and the subsequent calming effect is sustained for hours; sleep being not unfrequently prevented, or rendered so light and dreamy that, upon awaking, the patient will scarcely admit that he has slept at all. From large doses the period of excitement and exhilaration is shorter, the soporific and anodyne effects are more intense and of longer dura- tion, and the succeeding symptoms of debility are more obvious and alarming. From quantities sufficient to destroy life, after a brief excitement, the pulse is reduced in frequency though not in force, muscular strength is diminished, and feelings of languor and drowsiness supervene, which soon eventuate in a deep apoplectic sleep. A stertorous respiration; a dark suffusion of the countenance; a full, slow, and labouring pulse; an almost total insensibility to external im- pressions ; and, when a moment of consciousness is obtained by violent agitation or irritating applications, a confused state of intellect, and an irresistible dispo- sition to sink back into comatose sleep, are symptoms which, for the first few hours, attend the operation of the poison. Though not signs of an elevated condition of the bodily powers, neither do they imply a state of pure, unmixed debility. The pulse is, indeed, slow; but it is often so full and strong as even to suggest the use of the lancet. In the space, however, of a few hours, vary- ing according to the quantity of the narcotic taken, and the powers of the pa- tient’s constitution, a condition of genuine debility ensues; and this condition will be hastened in point of time, though it will be more under the control of remedies, if the opium be evacuated from the stomach. Called to an individual labouring under the influence of a fatal dose of opium, at a period from six to eight hours after it has been swallowed, the practitioner will generally find him with a cool, clammy skin; cold extremities; a pallid countenance; a feeble, thread-like, scarcely perceptible pulse; a slow, interrupted, almost gasping re- spiration ; and a torpor little short of absolute, death-like insensibility. Death soon follows, unless relief is afforded. No appearances are revealed by the dissection of those who have died of the immediate effects of opium, which can be considered as affording satisfactory evidence of its mode of operation. The redness occasionally observed in the mucous membrane of the stomach is not constantly present, and is ascribable as much to the irritating effect of remedies prescribed, or to the spirituous vehicle of the opiate, as to the action of the poison itself. Such at least is the inference drawn by Nysten from his experiments and observations; and Orfila states that the stomachs of dogs which he had killed by opium, internally administered, did not present the slightest vestige of inflammation. The force of the medicine is directed to the cerebral and nervous functions; and death is produced by a sus- pension of respiration, arising from the want of due influence from the brain. The section of the par vagum, on both sides, has not been found to prevent or retard the death of animals to which large doses of opium have been given, nor even materially to modify its narcotic effects. {Nysten, quoted by Orfila.) It Opium. Jb’AKT I. would seem, therefore, that the active principle is conveyed into the circulation, and operates upon the brain, and probably upon the nervous system at large, by immediate contact. It is an error to attribute the anodyne, sedative, and soporific effects of the medicine to the previous excitement. They are, as much as this very excitement, the direct results of its action upon the brain. It is in the state of exhaustion and collapse which ensue after the peculiar influence of the opium has ceased, that we are to look for an illustration of that principle of the system, by which any great exaltation of its functions above the natural standard is followed by a corresponding depression. We may be permitted to advance the conjecture, that the excitement which almost immediately super- venes upon the internal use of opium, may be in some degree produced by means of nervous communication ; while the succeeding narcotic effects are attributable to its absorption and entrance into the circulation; and the ultimate prostration of all the powers of the system is a necessary consequence of the previous agi- tation of the various organs. On some individuals opium produces peculiar effects, totally differing from the ordinary results of its operation. In very small quantities it occasionally gives rise to excessive sickness and vomiting, and even spasm of the stomach; in other cases it produces restlessness, headache, and delirium; and we have known it, even in large doses, to occasion obstinate wakefulness. The headache, want of appetite, tremors, &c., which usually follow, in a slight degree, its narcotic operation, are uniformly experienced by some individuals to such an extent as to render the use of the medicine very inconvenient. It is possible that some of these disagreeable effects may arise not from the meeonate of morphia contained in the opium, but from some other of its ingredients; and those which do result from the meeonate may not be produced by other salts of morphia. It has, in- deed, been found that the operation of opium may often be favourably modified by changing the state of combination in which its active principle naturally ex- ists. Dissolved in vinegar or lemon juice, it had been known to act in some instances more pleasantly and effectually than in substance, or tincture, long before physicians had learned to explain the fact by referring it to the produc- tion of an acetate or citrate of morphia. When upon the subject of morphia, we shall take occasion to treat of the medical properties of this principle in its various combinations. An occasional effect of opium, which has not yet been alluded to, is a disagree- able itching or sense of pricking in the skin, sometimes attended with a species of miliary eruption. We have found the effect to result equally from all the officinal preparations of this narcotic. The general operation of opium may be obtained by injecting it into the rectum, or applying it to the surface of the body, especially upon a part denuded of the cuticle. It has appeared to us, when thus applied, to produce less general excitement, in proportion to its other effects, than when administered by the mouth; but we do not make the statement with entire confidence. It is said that, when introduced into the cellular membrane, it acts with great energy; and, when thrown into the cavity of the peritoneum, speedily produces convul- sions and death. Injected into the cavity of the heart, it impairs or altogether destroys the powers of that organ. The local effects of opium are similar in character to those which follow its general operation. An increased action of the part is first observable; then a diminution of its sensibility and contractility; and the latter effect is more speedy, more intense, and of longer continuance, the larger the quantity applied. In all parts of the world, opium is habitually employed by many with a view to its exhilarating and anodyne influence. This is particularly the case among the Mahomedans and Hindoos, who find in this narcotic the most pDasirg sub stitute for alcoholic drinks, which are interdicted by their religion. In India, Opium. 629 PART I. Persia, and Turkey, it is consumed in immense quantities; and many nations o the East smoke opium as those of the West smoke tobacco. This is not the place to speak of the fearful effects of such a practice upon both the intellectual and bodily faculties. The use of opium as a medicine can be clearly traced back to Diagoras, who was nearly contemporary with Hippocrates ; and it was probably employed before his time. It is at present more frequently prescribed than perhaps any other article of the materia medica. Its extensive applicability to the cure of disease will be rendered evident by a view of the indications which it is calculated to fulfil. 1. It is excitant in its primary action. In low or typhoid complaints, requiring a supporting treatment, it exalts the action of the arterial and nervous systems, and, in moderate doses frequently repeated, may be employed with ad- vantage in conjunction or alternation with other stimulants. 2. It relieves pain more speedily and effectually than any other known medicine taken into the stomach. If possessed of no other property than this, it would be entitled to high consideration. Not to mention cancer, and other incurable affections, in which, the alleviation afforded by opium is of incalculable value, we have nu- merous instances of painful diseases which are not only temporarily relieved, but entirely cured by the remedy; and there is scarcely a complaint in*the catalogue of human ailments, in the treatment of which it is not occasionally demanded for the relief of suffering, which, if allowed to continue, might aggravate the dis- order, and protract if not prevent a cure. 3. Another very important indica- tion, which, beyond any other narcotic, it is capable of fulfilling, is the produc- tion of sleep. For this purpose it is given in a great variety of diseases; when- ever, in.fact, morbid vigilance exists, not dependent on acute inflammation of the brain. Among the complaints in which it proves most serviceable in this way is delirium tremens, or the mania of drunkards. Opium produces sleep in two ways; first, by its direct operation on the brain, secondly, by allaying that morbid nervous irritation upon which wakefulness often depends. I» the latter case it may frequently be advantageously combined with camphor, or Hoffmann’s ano- dyne. 4. Opium is powerfully antispasmodic. No medicine is so efficient in re- laxing spasm, and in controlling those irregular muscular movements which depend on unhealthy nervous action. Hence its great importance as a remedy in tetanus; colic ; spasm of the stomach attending gout, dyspepsia, and cholera; spasm of the ureters in nephritis, and of the biliary ducts during the passage of calculi; and in various convulsive affections. 5. Probably dependent upon a similar influence over the nervous system, is the property which it possesses of allaying general and local irritations, whether exhibited in the nerves or blood- vessels, provided the action do not amount to positive inflammation ; and even in this case it is often prescribed with advantage. Hence its use in composing restlessness, quieting cough, and relieving nausea, tenesmus, and strangury. 6. In suppressing morbid discharges, it answers another indication which fits it for the treatment of a long list of diseases. This effect it is, perhaps, enabled to produce by diminishing the nervous energy upon which secretion and muscular motion depend. Upon this principle it is useful in diarrhoea, when the com- plaint consists merely in increased secretion into the bowels, without high action or organic derangement; in consumption, chronic catarrh, humoral asthma, and other cases of morbidly increased expectoration; in diabetes; and in certain forms of hemorrhage, particularly that from the uterus, in combination with other remedies. I. It remains to mention one other indication; that, namely, of producing perspiration, in fulfilling which, opium, conjoined with small doses of emetic medicines, is pre-eminent. No diaphoretic is so powerful or so exten- sively used as a combination of opium and ipecacuanha. We shall speak more hilly of this application of the remedy under the head of Pulvis Ipecacuanha! Compositus. It is here sufficient to say, that its beneficial effects are espe- 630 Opium. part r. daily experienced in rheumatism, the bowel affections, and certain pectoral dis- eases. From this great diversity of properties, and the frequent occurrence of those morbid conditions in which opium affords relief, it is often prescribed in the same disease to meet several indications. Thus, in idiopathic fevers, we frequently meet with morbid vigilance and great nervous irritation, combined with a low condition of the system. In typhous pneumonia, there is the same depression of the vital powers, combined often with severe neuralgic pains, and much nervous irritation. In diarrhoea, besides the indications presented by the spasmodic pain and increased discharge, there is a strong call for the diaphoretic operation of the opium. It is unnecessary to multiply instances. There is hardly a complaint which does not occasionally present a complication of symptoms demanding the use of this remedy. But a medicine possessed of such extensive powers may do much injury, if improperly directed; and conditions of the system frequently occur, in which, though some one of the symptoms calls for its use, others, on the contrary, are incompatible with it. Thus, opium is contraindicated by a high state of inflam- matory excitement, which should be reduced before we can with propriety ven- ture upon its Employment; and, when there is doubt as to the sufficiency of the reduction, the opium should be given in combination with tartarized antimony or ipecacuanha, which modify its stimulant operation, and give it a more decided tendency to the skin. It is also contraindicated by inflammation of the brain, or strong determination of blood to the head, by deficient secretion from inflamed raucous membranes, as in the early stages of bronchitis, and generally by consti- pation. When, however, the constipation depends upon intestinal spasm, as in colic, it is sometimes relieved by the antispasmodic action of the opium; and the binding effects of the medicine may be counteracted by laxatives. Opium may be administered in substance or tincture. In the former state it is given in the shape of pill, which, as a general rule, should be formed out of powdered opium, as it is thus more readily dissolved in the liquors of the stomach, and therefore operates more speedily and effectually than when made, as it some- times is, immediately from the plastic mass. There is no medicine of which the dose is more variable, according to the habits of the patient, the nature of the complaint, or the purpose to be effected. While in catarrh and diarrhoea we often prescribe not more than one-fourth or one-third of a grain, in tetanus it has been administered, without abating the violence of the symptoms, in the enormous quantity of two drachms in twenty-four hours; and in a case of cancer of the uterus, under the care of the late Drs. Monges and La Roche, of this city, the quantity is stated to have been gradually increased till the amount taken dur- ing one day, either in the shape of tincture or in substance, was equivalent to more than three ounces. The medium dose, in ordinary cases of disease, to pro- duce the anodyne and soporific effects of the medicine, is one grain. Experience has shown that the action of opium is sometimes favourably modi- fied by employing those constituents only which are soluble in water. Hence the watery extract is sometimes advantageously substituted for the drug itself, and an infusion for the tincture.* (See Extractum Opii.) * A good extemporaneous infusion of opium cannot well be prepared. Hence, to obtain the effects of this preparation, it is best to dissolve the extract in water. Mr. Eugene Hupuy, of New York, first prepares an infusion, and then adds alcohol enough to preserve it; so that the preparation may be kept ready made by the apothecary, to be used as a substi- tute for laudanum. He takes ten drachms of opium, reduces it to a thin pulp with wat ir, allows the mixture to stand 48 hours, then percolates with water so as to obtain twelve fluidounces of infusion, to which four fluidounces of alcohol of 95 per nent are added. The preparation is intended to be of about the same strength as laudanum. Conf equeiHly the dose should be from twelve to fifteen minims, or about as many drops \Am 1±um t/ Fharm., xxiii. 211.) part I. Opium. 631 Opium may often be administered with great advantage by the rectum. In this way it operates most advantageously in obstinate vomiting, painful nephri tic and uterine affections, strangury from blisters, and dysenteric tenesmus. It may be employed as a suppository, or in the form of enema made with laudanum and a small quantity of viscid liquid, as flaxseed tea, mucilage of gum arabic, or starch prepared with hot water. The quantity, as a general rule, may be three times that administered by the mouth; but the relative susceptibility of the stomach and rectum in different persons is not always the same; and the effects produced by the narcotic, given by injection, are sometimes much greater than was anticipated. The practitioner, moreover, should take into consideration the previous habits of the patient. In an individual long accustomed to take opium internally, and whose stomach will receive large doses with impunity, it is possible that the rectum may not have lost, in a proportionate degree, its ab- sorbing power or susceptibility; and that serious consequences might result by adhering, in such a case, to the general rule as to the relative quantity to be given in the way of enema or suppository. In some one of its liquid preparations, opium is often used locally as an addi- tion to collyria in ophthalmia, to injections in gonorrhoea, and to lotions and cataplasms in various complaints of the skin, and external pains, as those of gout and rheumatism. It is also employed in substance, in the form of a plaster or cataplasm made from the powder. But its external use requires some cau- tion, especially when the skin is deprived of the cuticle. Death is said to have resulted from a cataplasm, containing a large quantity of laudanum, applied to the epigastrium. (Ann. de Therap., 1843, p. 5.) When opium has been taken in an overdose, the only effectual mode of relief is immediately to evacuate the stomach, either by the stomach-pump, or, when this is not attainable, by the more active emetics, such as tartarized antimony, sulphate of zinc, or sulphate of copper, conjoined with ipecacuanha. Emetics are preferable to the stomach-pump, when opium has been swallowed in sub- stance ; as the capacity of the tube is insufficient to permit the passage of the masses in which the poison is sometimes taken. The operation of the emetic should be promoted by a very free use of warm drinks, by irritating the fauces with a feather, by keeping the patient in motion, and, if the insusceptibility to the action of the remedy is very great, by dashing cold water upon the head and shoulders, thus counteracting, for a moment, the narcotic influence of the opium upon the brain, and enabling this organ to receive and transmit the ne- cessary impressions. Advantage will sometimes accrue from a moderate loss of blood, which tends to diminish the cerebral congestion, and thus not only awaken susceptibility to the impression of the emetic, but obviate also the dan- ger of hemorrhagic effusion; but the bleeding should not be carried far, in con- sequence of danger from the subsequent debility. For the same purpose of favouring the emetic action, it has been recommended to pass a current of elec- tricity through the brain.* After the evacuation of the poison, the chief indi- cation is to obviate the debility which generally supervenes, and which, when the * From numerous observations recently recorded, there can be no doubt that a certain antagonism exists between opium on the one hand and belladonna and stramonium on the other, so that these poisons are to a certain extent reciprocally antidotal. For what is known on this subject, the reader is referred to a very interesting article by Dr. Wm. F. Norris, in the American Journal of Medical Sciences ((Jet. 1862, p. 395). In numerous in- stances, the administration of belladonna freely, in cases of opium poisoning, so far from adding to the narcotic effect, appears to have superseded the influence of the opium by substituting its own; while the opium in the system has rendered innoxious, quantities of belladonna which might otherwise have produced poisonous effects. Nevertheless, our experience on the subject is not yet sufficient to justify us in abandoning the old treat- ment of evacuating the stomach, and afterwards supporting the system, which has proved efficacious m so many instances.—Note to the twelfth edition. 632 Opium.—Os. PART I. quantity of the narcotic has been large, or it has remained long in the stomach, ii sometimes alarming and even fatal. For this purpose the carbonate of am- monia, or the aromatic spirit of ammonia, with wine-whey, may be employed internally, and sinapisms and stimulant frictions applied to the surface. The practitioner should not despair, even if called at the last moment. The stomach tube may be applied at any period; and it is possible that, even without evacua- tion of the stomach, a little aid may enable the system to resist the prostrating influence of the poison, if not taken in an overwhelming dose. The electro- magnetic battery was employed with great advantage in a case of prostration of this kind by Dr. Page, of Valparaiso; and the practice has been imitated in Europe and this country. Strong coffee, under these circumstances, has been found useful, aud is obviously suggested in all cases by its powerful influence in producing wakefulness. Caffein has been employed as a substitute for coffee ; but, as this principle is not the only active one in coffee, it should not be re- lied on until further tested by experience. Should other measures fail, resort may be had to artificial respiration, by which the functions of the lungs and heart may be sustained till the brain has struggled through its conflict with the narcotic, and is enabled to resume its healthful action. Brodie has demonstrated that death from many of the narcotics results from a suspension of the cerebral influence necessary to sustain the respiratory function, and that the heart ceases to act in consequence of the cessation of respiration. If this can be restored artificially before the contractions of the heart have entirely ceased, the circula- tion may continue, and life be supported for a time without aid from the brain, which now receives a supply of arterial blood, and is thus better enabled to rise above the repressing action of the opium. As this narcotic does not produce structural derangement, but operates chiefly on the nervous power, a favourable result is more likely to be experienced than in poisoning from some other arti- cles of the same class. Several cases are on record, in which patients, apparently in the very last stage, were saved by a resort to artificial respiration. Off. Prep. Acetum Opii, U. S.; Confectio Opii, U. S.; Emplastrum Opii, Br.; Extractum Opii; Morphia, U.S.; Morphias Hydrochloras, Br.; Pilul® Opii; Pil. Piumbi cum Opio, Br.; Pil. Saponis Composit®, U. S.; Pulvis Cretae Aro- maticuscum Opio, Br.; Pulvis Ipecacuanhas Compositus, U.S.; Pulvis Ipecacu- anhas cum Opio, Br.; Pulvis Kino cum Opio, Br.; Tinctura Camphor® cum Opio, Br.; Tinctura Opii; Tinct. Opii Acetata, U.S.; Tinct. Opii Camphorata, U. S.; Tinct. Opii Deodorata, U. S.; Trochisci Glycyrrhizae et Opii, U. S.; Unguentum Gall® cum Ooio, Br.; Vinum Opii. W. OS. U.S. Bone. Bone Ash is directed in the Appendix of the British Pharmacopoeia, with the definition :—“the residue of Ox and Sheep Bones, which have been burned while in contact with air, reduced to powder.” Os, Ft.; Knocken, Germ.; Ossa, Ilal.; Huesos, Span. Bones are employed in several pharmaceutical processes, and those derived from domestic quadrupeds, especially the ox, are the kind intended. Properties, &c. Bones are solid, white, and of a lamellated texture, and con- stitute the skeleton of the superior orders of animals, of which they are the hardest and densest parts. They consist of a cellular gelatinous tissue, the cavi- ties of which are filled with certain earthy salts. When subjected to destructive distillation, in close vessels, they are decomposed without alteration of shape, lose about three-sevenths of their weight, become brittle, and are converted into a black substance, containing the earthy salts of the bone, and constituting the PART I. Os. species of animal charcoal called bone-black. (See Garbo Anirnalis.) The por tions which distil over consist of the usual ammoniacal products derived from animal matter. (See Ammoniae Murias.) Before the distillation is performed, the bones are boiled with water, to separate the fat, which amounts to 5 or 6 per cent.; but gelatin is at the same time extracted, with the effect of rendering the bones less fitted to furnish a good bone-black. In view of this fact, M. Deiss, of Paris, has proposed to extract the fat by bisulphuret of carbon, which gives a product of 10 or 12 per cent., without injuring the bones for subsequent con- version into bone-black. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1856, p. 356.) When calcined in open vessels, bones lose more of their weight in consequence of the combustion of the animal matter, and are converted into a white friable substance, consisting of the incombustible part, and commonly called bone-earth, or bone- ash; and a similar residue is obtained by calcining horn. (See Cornu Ustum.) Treated with boiling water, a small portion of the gelatinous matter is dissolved ; but, when acted on by wrater in a Papin's digester, the whole of it is taken up, and the earthy salts, deprived of their cement, crumble into powder, and become diffused through the solution. When subjected to dilute muriatic acid, the earthy salts are dissolved, and the bone softens without losing its shape, and becomes semitransparent and flexible. The portion remaining unattacked by the acid is the gelatinous tissue, which may be converted into gelatin by long boiling. This is nutritious, and has been prepared so as to form a wholesome aliment by M. d’Arcet. His process for obtaining it consists in digesting bones in weak muri- atic acid for seven or eight days, occasionally renewing the acid, plunging them for a few moments in boiling water, and then subjecting them to a strong current of cold water. The pure animal matter, thus procured, is made into cakes, called portable soup (tablettes de bouillon), by dissolving it in water, concentrating the solution until it gelatinizes, and drying the jelly obtained. Composition. The bones of different animals, and of the same animal at dif- ferent ages, vary somewhat in composition. Dry ox-bones, according to Berze- lius, consist of bone-gelatin (cartilage of bone) 333, bone-phosphate of lime with a little fluoride of calcium 57 35, carbonate of lime 3 85, phosphate of magnesia 2 05, soda with a very little chloride of sodium 3-45 = 100. Human bones differ somewhat in the proportions of their constituents, and in containing traces of iron and manganese. According to Dr. W. Heintz, however, bones exhausted by water, so as to remove the colouring matter of blood, contain not a trace of iron. Marchand found 1 per cent, of fluoride of calcium in human bone. Bone- phosphate of lime consists, according to Mitscherlieh, of one eq. of acid and three of lime. This analysis makes it the tribasic subphosphate, and the same composition has been assigned to it by Dr. Heintz. Uses. Bones are applied to numerous uses. Burnt to whiteness, they furnish bone-phosphate of lime, from which phosphorus and all its compounds are either directly or indirectly obtained. (See Phosphorus.) Subjected to destructive distillation in close vessels, they yield impure carbonate of ammonia and empy- reumatic oil, and a carbonaceous residue, called bone-black. Calcined, pulverized, and washed, they form the material of which cuvels are made. As bone-dust, they form an excellent manure. Deprived of their earthy salts by weak acids, they furnish a nutritious article of diet. By proper treatment with water they yield several varieties of gelatin, not only the coarser sorts, called size and glue, but also the finer kinds, which are employed, under the name of isinglass, in making animal jellies, and for the clarifying of wines. (See Ichthyocolla and Cornu.) The hoof bones of the ox, when boiled with water, furnish a peculiar oil, called neats-footoil. 'V&eeTHeum Bubulum.) Off. Prep. Calcis Phosphas Praecipitata, U. S.; Sodae Phosphas, U.S. Off. Prep, of Bone Ash. Calcis Phosphas Praecipitata, Br. B. Ovum. PART I. OVUM. V. S. Egg- The egg of Phasianus Gallus. U. S. White of Egg. The liquid albumen of the egg of Gallus Banckiva, var. do- mestica. Br. Appendix. (Eu£ Fr.: Ei, Germ.; Ovo, Ital.; Iluevo, Span. The common dunghill fowl is supposed to have come originally from India, where it is found in a wild state. It is now almost everywhere domesticated. The egg, which is the only officinal product, consists of 1. an exterior cover- ing called the shell; 2. a white, semi-opaque membrane, lining the internal sur- face of the shell; 3. the white ; and 4. the yolk. 1. The shell—testa ovi or yutamen ovi—consists, according to Yauquelin, chiefly of carbonate oTTime, witlf animal matter, and a minute proportion of phosphate of lime, carbonate of magnesia, oxide of iron, and sulphur. When exposed to a high degree of heat in the open air, the carbonic acid is driven off, the animal matter consumed, and the lime is left nearly pure. 2. The membrane lining the shell appears to be of an albuminous nature. 3. The white—albumen ovi—is a glairy viscid liquid, contained in very deli- cate membranes, without odour or taste, readily soluble in water, coagulable by the stronger acids, by alcohol, and by a heat of 160° F. Exposed in thin layers to a current of air, it becomes solid, retaining its transparency and solubility in water. By coagulation it is rendered sapid, white, opaque, and insoluble. At a temperature of 212°, one part of it renders one thousand parts of water in which it has been dissolved opaque. It contains, according to Dr. Bostock, in 100 parts, 85 of water, 12 of pure albumen, 2'7 of mucus or uncoagulable matter, and 0 3 of saline substances, including soda with traces of sulphur. The white of egg is precipitated by chloride of tin, chloride of gold, subacetate of lead, sulphate of copper, corrosive sublimate, and tannin. When kept in the fluid state it soon putrefies; but, if carefully dried without coagulation, it may be long preserved unaltered, and may be applied in solution to the same purposes as in its original condition. 4. The yolk—vitellus ovi—is inodorous, of a bland oily taste, and forms an opaque emulsion when agitated with water. By heat it is coagulated into a granular solid, which yields a fixed oil by expression. M. Gobley found 100 parts of it to contain 51486 of water, 15 760 of an albuminoid principle deno- minated vileUipr. 21 304 of margarin and olein, O'438 of cholesterin, 7 226 of oleic and'margaric acids, 1200 of phosphoglyceric acid, 0 034 of muriate of ammonia, 0 277 of chlorides of sodium and potassium and sulphate of potassa, 1 022 of phosphates of lime and magnesia, 0 400 of animal extract (extraite de viande), and 0 553 of colouring matter, traces of iron, traces of lactic acid, &c. (Journ. de Pharm.,3e ser., xii. 12.) According to MM. Valenciennes and Fremy, there are both albumen and vitellin in the yolk, the former being dissolved by cold water, the latter precipitated. They consider vitellin as closely analogous to fibrin, from which, however, it differs in not decomposing the peroxide of hydrogen. (Chem. Gaz., Nov. 1, 1855, p. 410.) It is said that the yolk may be kept for a considerable time, without observable change, by adding to it 5 per cent, of sulphate of soda, in powder or concentrated solution. Medical Properties and Uses. Eggs are applied to various purposes in medi- cine and pharmacy. The shells, powdered and levigated, may be used beneficiallv as an antacid in diarrhoea. In common with oyster-shells, they possess the ‘ad- vantage of uniting intimately animal matter with carbonate of lime, the par sides ,pf which are thus more thoroughly isolated, and prove more acceptable to the Swomach than chalk, in the finest state of division to which the latf-*r con ba PART i. Ovum.—Panax. 635 brought by mechanical means. The dose and mode of preparation are the same as those of oyster-shell. (See Testa.) The white of the egg. is used chiefly for the clarification of liquids, which it effects by involving, during its coagulation, the undissolved particles, and rising with them to the surface, or subsiding. It is highly recommended as an antidote for corrosive sublimate and sulphate of copper, with which it forms insoluble and comparatively inert compounds. It is sometimes also used for the suspension of insoluble substances in water, but is inferior for this purpose to the yolk, and even to mucilage of gum arabic. Agitated briskly with a lump of alum it coagu- lates, at the same time dissolving a portion of the alum, and thus forming an astringent poultice, which may be advantageously applied between folds of gauze over the eye, in some states of ophthalmia. The yolk in its raw state is thought to be laxative, and is a popular remedy in jaunoTceT If beneficial in this complaint, it is probably in consequence of affording a mild nutritious diet, acceptable to the stomach and easily digested. In dyspepsia it is, from this cause, highly useful. The late Dr. Jos. Parrish, of Philadelphia, found great advantage in that complaint from the habitual use of the yolk of egg, beat up with wrater and a little ginger. In pharmacy, the yolk is highly useful as an intermedium between water and insoluble substances, such as the balsams, turpentine, oils, &c. It is a mistake to employ the white, instead of the yolk of eggs, in preparing emulsions. Off. Prep. Mistura Chloroformi. W PANAX. U.S. Secondary. Ginseng. The root of Panax quinquefolium. U. S. Ginseng, i'V., Germ., Span.; Ginsen, Ifal. Panax. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia. (Polygamia Bioecia, Linn.)—Nat. Ord. Araliaceae. Gen. Oh. Flowers polygamous. Umbel simple. Calyx five-toothed. Corolla of five petals. Berry inferior, subcordate, two, sometimes three-seeded. Calyx in the male flower entire. Nuttall. Panax quinquefolium. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 1124; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 149, t. 58; Bigelow, Aim Med. Bot. ii. 82. The ginseng has a perennial root, which sends up annually a smooth round stem, about a foot high, and divided at the summit into three leafstalks, each of which supports a compound leaf, consisting of five, or more rarely of three or seven petiolate, oblong-obovate, acuminate, serrate leaflets. The flowers are small, greenish, and disposed in a simple umbel, supported by a peduncle, which rises from the top of the stem in the centre of the petioles. The fruit is a kidney-shaped, scarlet berry, crowned with the 6tyles and calyx, with two and sometimes three seeds. The plant is indigenous, growing in the hilly regions of the Northern, Mid- dle, and Western States, and preferring the shelter of thick, shady woods. The root is the part employed. This is collected in considerable quantities in Ohio and Western Virginia, and brought to Philadelphia and other cities oq. the sea- board for the purpose of exportation to China, where it is highly valued. Great quantities have recently been collected in Minnesota west of the Mississippi. Some suppose the ginseng plant of Chinese Tartary to be the same as ours; others believe it to be the Panax Schinseng of Nees Von Esenbeck; while by others, again, though acknowledged to Be a Panax, it is thought to be a differ- ent species from either of those mentioned. While supplied with this drug ex- clusively from their own native sources, which furnished the root only in small quantities, the Chinese entertained the most extravagant notions of its virtues, Panax.—Pants.—Papaver. PART I considering it as a remedy for all diseases, and as possessing almost miraculous powers in preserving health, invigorating the system, and prolonging life. It is said to have been worth its weight in gold at Pekin; and the flrst shipments made from North America to Canton yielded enormous profits. But the subse- quent abundance of supply has greatly diminished its value. The root is fleshy, somewhat spindle-shaped, from one to three inches long, about as thick as the little finger, and terminated by several slender fibres. Frequently there are two portions, sometimes three or more, connected at their upper extremity, and bearing a supposed, though very remote resemblance to the human figure, from which circumstance it is said that the Chinese name gin- seng originated. When dried, the root is yellowish-white and wrinkled exter- nally, and within consists usually of a hard central portion, surrounded by a soft whitish bark. It has a feeble odour, and a sweet, slightly aromatic taste, some- what analogous to that of liquorice root. It has not been accurately analyzed, but is said to be rich in gum and starch, and contains albumen. Mr. S. S. Gar- rigues, of Philadelphia, obtained from it a peculiar substance, which he pro- poses to call pananuilon. To prepare it he heats a cold infusion so as to sepa- rate the albumen,’filters, concentrates to a syrupy consistence, precipitates by a concentrated solution of sulphate of soda, washes the precipitate thoroughly with the saline solution, and then treats it with alcohol, which dissolves the principle in question, and yields it on evaporation. To purify it, he dissolves it in water, treats the solution with animal charcoal, again evaporates, and dissolves the residue in absolute alcohol, which is finally distilled off. Panaquilon is an amorphous yellow powder, soluble in water and alcohol, but not in ether, of a sweet bitterish taste, and has the characteristic property, that, when treated with strong acids, it is converted into a white substance, insoluble in water, with the escape of carbonic acid and water. Mr. Garrigues proposes for this white sub- stance the name of vanacon. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 511.) The root is sometimes submitted, before being dried, to a process of clarification, which ren- ders it translucent and horny, and enhances its value as an article of export. The extraordinary medical virtues formerly ascribed to ginseng had no other ex- istence than in the imaginations of the Chinese. It is little more than a demul- cent, and in this country is not employed as a medicine. Some persons, however, are in the habit of chewing it; having acquired a relish for its taste; and it is chiefly to supply the wants of these that it is kept in the shops. W. PANIS. Bread. Bread made with wheat flour. Br. Appendix. See FARINA. Off. Prep. Cataplasma Carbonis. Br. PAPAVER. U.S.,Br. Poppy. Poppy Capsules. The ripe capsules of Papaver somniferum. U. S. The nearly ripe capsules, dried and deprived of the seeds. Pr. ~ Capsules des pavots, Fr.; Kapseln des weissen Mohns, Germ.; Capidel papavero, Ital; Cabezas de amapola, Span. Papaver somniferum. See OPIUM. In England the poppy is cultivated chiefly for its capsules, which are gathered as they ripen, and taken to market enclosed in bags. The Br. Pharmacopoeia directs them to be collected before they are quite ripe, as they then contain more of the active milky juice; but, cut at this period, they are apt to lose their juice PART I. Papaver.—Pareira. 637 through the wounded surface, unless carefully kept inverted upon their crown while drying; and, even when thus treated, they are, according to the observa- tions of Buchner, less active than the capsules collected after perfect maturity, while they contain more of useless saccharine and mucilaginous matter. (Buch- ner's Bepert., 3 R., viii. 289 and 326.) M. Meurein states, as the result of his experiments, that the richest are those collected just before the maturity of the seeds, when the capsules have passed from their glaucous-green to a yellowish - green colour. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxiii. 341.) They are occasionally imported; but as no effect is produced by them which cannot be as well obtained from opium, or some one of its preparations, they are little employed. Dried poppy capsules vary in size from the dimensions of a small egg to those of the fist. They differ also in shape according to the variety of the poppy from which they are procured. On the continent two sub-varieties of the white poppy are recognised, the long, and the round or depressed. Of these, according to Aubergier, the long are richest in morphia,-and his conclusions are confirmed by Meurein, who also found the largest capsules most efficient. Those commonly kept in our shops are spheroidal, flattened below, and surmounted by a crown- like expansion—the persistent stigma—which is marked by numerous diverging rays that rise somewhat above its upper surface, and appear to be prolongations of partial septa, or partitions, proceeding along the interior circumference of the capsule from the top to the bottom. In the recent state, the seeds, which are very numerous, adhere to these septa; but in the dried capsule they are loose in its cavity.. The capsules of the black poppy are smaller and more globular than those of the white, and contain dark instead of light-coloured seeds. There ap- pears to be no essential difference in their properties. Both kinds, when fresh, are glaucous, but when dry, as directed in the Pharmacopoeias, are of a dirty- white or purplish-brown colour, of a consistence somewhat like that of paper, inodorous, and with little taste, unless long chewed, when they are decidedly bitter. They contain principles similar to those of opium, which they yield to water by decoction, and have been employed in France for obtaining morphia. Medical Properties and Uses. Dried poppy-heads, though analogous to opium in medical properties, are exceedingly feeble. They are sometimes em- ployed in decoction, as an external emollient and anodyne application; and, in emulsion, syrup, or extract, are often used internally, in Europe, to calm irrita- tion, promote rest, and produce generally the narcotic effects of opium. Off. Prep. Decoctum Papaveris, Br.; Syrupus Papaveris, Br. W PAREIRA. U. S., Br. Pareira Brava. The root of Cissampelos Pareira. U. S. The dried root. Br. Cissampelos. 'Sex. oysI"Dioecia Monadelphia.—Nat. Ord. Menispermacem. Gen.Ch. Male. Calyx four-leaved. Corolla none. Nectary rotate. Stamens four, with connate filaments. Female. Calyx one-leafed, ligulate roundish. Co- rolla none. Styles three. Berry one-seeded. Cissampelos Pareirg. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 8G1; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., p. 167, t. 65. This is a climbing plant, with numerous slender, shrubby stems, and roundish, entire leaves, indented at the top, covered with soft hair upon their under surface, and supported upon downy footstalks, inserted into the back of the leaf. The flowers are very small, and disposed in racemes, of which those in the female plant are longer than the leaves. The plant is a native of the West Indies and South America, and is supposed to be the source of the root brought from Brazil, under the name of pareira braya. According to Auguste St. Hilaire, however, true pareira is obtained from another species of the same genus, grow- 638 Pareira. PART 1. ir.g in Brazil, and denominated C. glaberrimg; while by Aublet it is referred to a species of Abuta, of the same natural family.* The root comes in pieces from the thickness of the finger to that of the arm, from a few inches to two or more feet in length, cylindrical, sometimes contorted or forked, and covered with a thin, firmly adhering, grayish-brown bark. The outer surface is marked with longitudinal and annular wrinkles, and sometimes, in the larger pieces, with knotty excrescences. The interior is ligneous, ish, very porous, marked by irregular concentric circles, inodorous, and of a sweetish, nauseous, bitter taste. The root imparts its virtues readily to water. M. Feneulle found in it a soft resin, a yellow bitter principle, a brown substance, an azotized substance, fecula, acidulous malate of lime, nitrate of potassa, and various other salts. He considers the yellow bitter substance as the active prin- ciple. It is soluble in water and alcohol, and precipitated from its solution by tincture of galls. Wiggers announced, in 1838, the existence in pareira brava of an organic alkali, for which he proposed the name of cissampelina. He pro- cured it by boiling the root with water acidulated with sulphuric acid, precipi- tating by carbonate of potassa, dissolving the precipitate again in water acidu- lated with sulphuric acid, treating the solution with animal charcoal, precipitating anew with carbonate of potassa, drying and pulverizing the precipitate, treating it repeatedly with ether, and evaporating the ethereal solution. The alkaloid thus obtained may be rendered entirely pure by dissolving it in dilute acetic acid, precipitating with carbonate of potassa, and washing and drying the precipitate. (Annal. der Pharm., xxvii. 29.) It is probably the chief ingredient of the bitter substance obtained by Feneulle. Peretti of Rome, and Pelletier afterwards, sepa- rated from the root an alkaloid, characterized by assuming a beautiful purple colour by contact with strong nitric acid. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 162.) In Christison’s Dispensatory it is stated to be uncrystallizable, insoluble in water, soluble in ether, alcohol, and the acids, and of an intensely bitter and sweetish taste. Medical Properties and Uses. Pareira brava is said to be tonic, aperient, and diuretic. It was introduced into European practice so long ago as 1688, and at one time enjoyed considerable reputation as a lithoutriptic. It has been recom- mended in calculous affections, chronic inflammation and ulceration of the kid- neys and bladder, leucorrhoea, dropsy, rheumatism, and jaundice. The purpose for which it is at present chiefly employed is for the relief of chronic diseases of the urinary passages. Sir Benjamin Brodie found it very useful in chronic in- flammation of the bladder, in allaying irritability of that organ, and correcting the disposition to profuse mucous secretion; and it has subsequently come into general use in the same affections. Advantage may often be derived from com- bining it, in this complaint, with one of the narcotics, as opium or hyoscyamus. In Brazil it is used in the cure of the bites of poisonous serpents; a vinous infu- sion of the root being taken internally, while the bruised leaves of the plant are applied to the wound. The dose of pareira brava in substance is from thirty grains to a drachm. The infusion, however, is more convenient. (See Infusum Pareirse.) A tincture, made by macerating one part of the root in five parts of alcohol, has been given in the dose of a fluidrachm. The aqueous extract may be given in the dose of from ten to thirty grains. A fluid extract has been pre- pared, of which the dose is from half a fluidrachm to a fluidrachm.f Off. Prep. Decoctum Pareirse, Br.; Extractum Pareirse Li quid um, Br.; In- f'usum Pareirse, U. S. "W. * Pareira Bark. Though the root is the officinal part, the bark is probably possessed of similar virtues. A specimen which we had the opportunity of seeing at the International Exhibition at London in 1862, was in flat pieces, from two to four inches broad, about a line thick, extremely fibrous, so tough that it could be bent without breaking, of a very light dirty-yellowish colour, and covered with a light-coloured epidermis. f Fluid Extract of Pareira. This is prepared by Prof. Procter in the following manner. Of the root, in moderately fine powder, 16 troy ounces are mixed with 4 fluidounces of Di- Pepo. 639 TART T, PEPO. U.S. Pumpkin Seed. The seed of Cucurbita Pepo. U. S. This is one of the officinals newly introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The Cucurbita Pepo, or common pumvkin. is a plant too well known to need description. Theseeds are the part used. These are oval, extended into a blunt point at one end, flattish, but somewhat swollen in the middle, with a distinct groove on both sides near the edge from one end to the other, when of full size about 9 lines long by 5 or 6 in breadth where broadest, of a light brownish-white colour, and a slightly sweetish, somewhat aromatic smell and taste. They consist of a firm brittle coating, and a white oily kernel; and contain a fixed oil, an aromatic principle, chlorophyll, sugar, gum, and an acid, soluble in water and alcohol, for which the name of citrullicacid has been proposed. Deprived oi their coating, and exhausted by etherTtlTey”yield 30 per cent, of fixed oil. (An- nuaire de Therap., A. D. 1862, p. 176.) Medical Properties. The seeds of the pumpkin have, within a few years, ob- tained in this country considerable reputation in the treatment of tapeworm. This employment of them, however, is not new. In the Dictionary of Materia Medica by Merat and De Lens (ii. 493), it is stated that Dr. Hoarau had re- ported that, in the Isle of France, the seeds of a small variety of pumpkin were used against the tapeworm, and with never-failing success. In the year 1820, M. Mongeny, a physician of Cuba, published the results of his experience with the flesh of the pumpkin in the same disease. He had discovered the remedy by accident, and found it uniformly successful. He gave to the patient, in the morn- ing, fasting, about three ounces of the fresh pumpkin in the form of a paste, and followed it at the end of an hour by about two ounces of honey, which latter was twice repeated at intervals of an hour. MM. Brunet and Lamothe, of Bordeaux, verified the statements of M. Mongeny, as to the efficacy of the remedy in taenia, employing, however, a paste made from the seeds, in the quantity of about an ounce and a half, with as much sugar. {Ann. de Therap., 1853, p. 301.) In the Boston Med. and Surg. Journ. (October 8, 1851, page 201), is a com- munication from Mr. Richard Soule, recommending the seeds in very strong terms as a remedy in toenia; and his letter is preceded by some editorial obser- vations, in which reference is made to the previous successful employment of the remedy by Dr. J. S. Jones, of Boston. Since that time various other notices of the efficacy of the seeds have appeared in the journals, and a very striking case was related to ourselves, on the best authority, in which they had proved imme- diately and completely successful, after the vain employment of all other known remedies, through a course of several years. Mr. Soule gives the preference to the seeds from the West Indies. The dose of the seeds is about two ounces; which are to be taken in the morning, fasting, and followed in an hour or two by a fluidounce of castor oil. The mode of administration is various. Sometimes the seeds, deprived of their outer covering, are beaten into a paste with sugar, and thus taken. In other instances they are formed into an emulsion, by rubbing them up thoroughly with water and a little sugar.* W. luted Alcohol, then packed in a conical percolator, and covered with a piece of cloth. Diluted alcohol is now added until three pints of tincture have passed, the tirst twelve fluidounces being set aside. The remainder is evaporated, by means of a water-bath, to 4 fluidounces, which are mixed with the reserved portion; and the mixture, having been occasionally agitated for 24 hours, is filtered; sufficient alcohol being dropped into the filter to make the product measure a pint. A fluidounce of this represents a troyounce of the root. (Proceedings of the Am. Pharrn. Assoc., A. D. 1863, p. 231.) * The following emulsion, combining the virtues of the pumpkin seeds and male fern, has been recommended in tapeworm. Take of pumpkin seeds 600 grains, sugar 100 grains, 640 Petroselinum. PART I. PETROSELINUM. TJ.S. Secondary. Parsley Root. The root of Petroselinum sativnm. U. S. Persil, Fr.; Petersilie, Germ.; Prezzemolo, Ital.; Perexil, Span. Petroselinum. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Digynia.—Nat. Ord. Apiacese or Uinbelliferm. Gen. Ch. Umbels compound. Involucres, partial of many, general of few bractes. Calyx obsolete. Fruit ovate, contracted at the sides. Ridges five, narrow, equal, the lateral on the edge. Yittae one to each furrow. Albumen plano-convex. Lindley. Petroselinum sativum. Hoffmann, Umb. i. t. 1, f. 2; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 35. — Apium Petroselinum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1475; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. 118, t. 45. Parsley has a biennial root, with an annual, round, furrowed, jointed, erect, branching stem, about two feet in height. The radical leaves are com- pound, pinnated in ternaries, with the leaflets smooth, divided into three lobes, and notched at the margin. In the cauline leaves, the segments of the leaflets are linear and entire. The flowers are small, pale-yellow, and disposed in ter- minal compound umbels, with a one or two-leaved general involucre, and partial ones composed of six or eight leaflets. The petals are five, roundish, and indexed at their apex. The seeds (half-fruits) are small, ovate, flat on one side, convex on the other, dark-green, and marked with five longitudinal ridges. They have a strong, terebinthinate odour, and a warm aromatic taste. The plant is a native of Sardinia, and other parts of Southern Europe, and is cultivated everywhere in gardens. All parts of it contain a volatile oil, to which it owes its odour and mainly its taste, as well as its use in seasoning. M. H. Braconnot obtained from the herb a peculiar gelatinous substance, resembling pectic acid in appearance, which he named apiin. It differs from pectin in being more soluble in alcohol than cold water, in not being precipitated by alcohol from its watery solution, and in being separated by acids from its alkaline solu- tions unaltered, whereas pectin is under these circumstances converted into pec- tic acid. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xix. 448.) It is procured by boiling the herb in water, straining the liquor, and allowing it to cool. The apiin then forms a gelatinous mass, which requires only to be washed with cold water. (Philos. Mag., xxiv. 155.) Though the root is the part directed by the Pharmacopoeia, the fruit is at least equally efficient. Examined by MM. Joret and Ilomolle, the seeds were found to contain a volatile oil, a crystallizable fatty matter, pectin which they believe to be the apiin of Braconnot, chlorophyll, tannin, a colour- ing matter, extractive, lignin, various salts, and, in addition to these, a pecu- liar substance to which they gave the name of OTpiol. This is a yellowish oily liquid, not volatile, heavier than water, of a peculiar and tenacious odour dis- tinct from that of the plant, and an acrid, pungent taste. It is inflammable, in- soluble in water hot or cold, very soluble in alcohol, and dissolved in all pro- portions by ether and chloroform. It is analogous to the fixed oils, but is not ethereal extract of male fern 60 grains, water five fluidonnces. Bruise the seeds in a mar- ble mortar with the sugar, add half a fluidounce of water, and, when a homogeneous paste has been obtained, add the extract of fern, and gradually mix in the rest of the water. The emulsion should be taken without straining, early in the morning, in four doses, at intervals of fifteen minutes; the bottle being well shaken each time. Oil of Pumpkin Seed. At the suggestion of the late Dr. H. S. Patterson, of Philadelphia, the expressed oil of the seeds was used in a case of tapeworm by Mr. John C. Lyons, and with success. After fasting for 24 hours, the patient took, in the morning, f;jss of the oil, which was followed in two hours by fgss more, and in two hours after the second dose by fgi of castor oil, which brought away the worm. It is probable that the oil obtained by the action of ether would be even more effective.—Notes to the twelfth edition. Petroselinum.—Phosphorus. 641 part I. chemically modified by the alkalies. It contains no nitrogen. To obtain it MM Joret and Homolle exhausted the seeds with alcohol, treated the tincture with purified animal charcoal, distilled off three-fourths of the alcohol, treated the residue with ether or chloroform, evaporated the solution thus formed, mixed the residuary liquid with an eighth of its weight of litharge, allowed the mixture to rest twenty-four hours, and then filtered through a light layer of charcoal Apiol is supposed by its discoverers to be the antiperiodic principle of parsley. The root is spindle-shaped, about as thick as the finger, externally white, and marked with close annular wrinkles, internally fleshy and white, with a yellowish central portion. It has a pleasant smell, and a sweetish, slightly aromatic taste; but loses these properties by long boiling, and by time. It should be employed in the recent state. Medical Properties and Uses. Parsley root is said to be aperient and diu- retic, and is occasionally used in nephritic and dropsical affections, in connection with more active medicines. It was highly recommended by Professor Chap- man. The usual form of administration is that of strong infusion. The juice of the fresh herb has been employed as a substitute for quinia in intermittents ; and the seeds, as well as their supposed active principle, have been employed with great asserted success in the same complaint. According to MM. Joret and Homolle, apiol acts on the system very much like quinia, producing, in the dose of about 15 grains, a slight cerebral excitation without unpleasant effects of any kind, and, in double or quadruple the quantity, giving rise to a species of in- toxication, with giddiness, morbid sights and sounds, frontal headache, and all the characteristic effects of a large dose of sulphate of quinia. They found it to cure intermittents, in temperate latitudes, in the proportion of 86 per cent, of the cases; and, though it proved less effectual in tropical regions, they seem to have shown that, in the absence of Peruvian bark or its preparations, it might be usefully resorted to as a substitute.* W. PHOSPHORUS. US. Phosphorus. Phosphore, Fr.; Phosphor, Germ.; Fosforo, Ital., Span. This non-metallic element was discovered in 1669 by Brandt, an alchemist of Hamburg, who obtained it from putrid urine by a process which remained a secret until 1731. As thus procured it was exceedingly scarce and costly. In 1769, the Swedish chemist G-ahn discovered it in bones, and shortly afterwards published a process by which it might be extracted from them. Preparation. Powdered calcined bones (bone-phosphate of lime) are digested for twenty-four hours with two-thirds of their weight of sulphuric acid, previously diluted with twelve times its weight of water. The sulphuric acid separates the gi eater part of the lime from the phosphoric acid, and precipitates as sulphate of lime; while a superphosphate of lime remains in solution. The liquid is then strained through a linen cloth to separate the sulphate of lime, and afterwards submitted to evaporation, which causes a fresh precipitation of sulphate, to be separated by a new straining. The strained solution is evaporated to a syrupy consistence, and then thoroughly mixed with half its weight of powdered charcoal, * Since the announcement of the antiperiodic properties of .apiol, it has been found to pos- sess other virtues also. By MM. Joret and Baillot and other practitioners it has been em- ployed, with much success, as an emmenagogue in amenorrhcea and dysmenorrhoea, in the dose of about four grains morning and evening; being taken in the former afl'ection in anticipation of the menstrual period, in the latter during its continuance. It is said also to have proved useful in the night-sweats of phthisis. From its unpleasant taste, it is most conveniently exhibited in capsules of gelatin. (Journ.de Pharm., Juin, 1861, p.456.) 642 Phosphorus. PART I. so as to fj-*u a mass, which is dried by being heated to dull redness. The mass when cool is quickly transferred to a coated earthenware retort, furnished with an adopter of copper, bent downwards at right angles, so as to enter a bottle with a large neck containing water, which should rise about two lines above the orifice of the adopter. The bottle is closed round the adopter with a cork, which is traversed by a small glass tube, to give exit to the gaseous products. The re- tort is heated in a furnace, furnished with a dome, in the most gradual manner, so as to occupy about four hours in bringing it to a red heat. Afterwards the heat is pushed vigorously, so long as any phosphorus drops into the water; and this takes place generally for from twenty-four to thirty hours. During this part of the process, the excess of acid in the superphosphate is decomposed; its oxygen combining with the charcoal, and the liberated phosphorus distilling over. The calcined bones of the sheep are preferred; as they contain the largest pro- portion of phosphate of lime, and are most readily acted on by the acid. M. Cari-Montrand proposes to obtain phosphorus by passing dry muriatic acid gas over a mixture of equal parts of bone-phosphate of lime and finely powdered charcoal, contained in a porcelain tube, to which a glass tube is at- tached, dipping under water. Phosphorus and water distil over, carbonic oxide is evolved, and chloride of calcium is left. The following equation explains the reaction; 3Ca0,P05and 5C and 3IIC1 = P and 3HO and 5CO and 3C&C1. The following improved process for obtaining phosphorus on a large scale is given by Hugo Fleck, of Germany. Clean, broken bones, deprived of fat, are digested in dilute muriatic acid, which gives rise to the formation of chloride of calcium, and acid phosphate of lime (CaO,2HO-f P05). The bone-cartilage, remaining undissolved by the acid, is used for preparing gelatin. The solution is evaporated in pans until its sp. gr. is about 1 4, and then run off to cool, when the acid phosphate crystallizes. This salt, having been separated from the mother- liquor by being pressed between cloths and dried, appears as a white gritty powder with a pearly lustre. The dry salt, warmed, and mixed with a fourth of its weight of charcoal, is distilled from clay cylinders, like gas retorts. Every five cylinders open into one receiver, shaped like a muffle, and contained in a channel through which water flows. The residual bone-phosphate of lime, in the cylinders, is incinerated upon iron plates to burn away the charcoal, and is thus saved to prepare fresh acid phosphate. By this process 100 lbs. of fresh bones yield from 6 to T lbs. of phosphorus, and from 10 to 20 of gelatin; while the process usually pursued gives only 4 or 5 lbs. of phosphorus. (Pharm. Journ., Sept. 1356, p. 175.) Properties. Phosphorus is a semitransparent solid, without taste, but pos- sessing an alliaceous smell. When perfectly pure it is colourless; but as usually prepared it is yellowish or reddish-yellow. It is flexible, and when cut exhibits a waxy lustre. It is said by M. Boettger to be easily pulverizable by agitation with a solution of urea. {Journ. de Pharm , Juin, 1863, p. 488.) It is insoluble in water, but dissolves sparingly in ether, anhydrous alcohol, and the oils, and abundantly in bisulphuret of carbon and chloroform. Its sp. gr. is 1‘84, and its equivalent number 32 (31‘02 Schroetter). It takes fire at 100°, melts at 108°, and boils at 550°, air being excluded. During its combustion it combines with the oxygen of the air, and forms dry phosphoric ..acid. On account of its great inflammability, it must be kept under water. When exposed to the air it under- goes a slow combustion, emitting white vapours, which are luminous in the dark. It sometimes contains arsenic, and, therefore, when used in forming medicinal preparations, should be tested for that metal. It also occasionally contains -antimony and sulphur. The latter impurity renders it brittle. Prof. Schroetter, of Vienna, discovered an allotropic form of phosphorus, which he called red or amorphous phosphorus. It is formed when ordinary phosphorus is kept Tong at a temperature between 419° and 482° F., in a‘rao- PART I. Phosphorus. 643 spheres which have no action on it, or in closed glass tubes. Red phosphorus is much more indifferent than the ordinary substance, and is denser, its sp. gr. being 211. It is not acted on by the air, and is insoluble in bisulphuret of carbon, alcohol, and ether, in which ordinary phosphorus is soluble. Solidified from the fused state, it is brittle, and breaks with a conchoidal fracture. Its hardness is considerable. Obtained by distillation in a non-acting gas, it is mixed with ordinary phosphorus, from which it may be freed by bisulphuret of carbon, which dissolves the ordinary variety, and leaves the allotropic as a deep-red amorphous powder. It may also be purified by shaking it with a solution of chloride of calcium, of a density intermediate between that of red and ordinary phosphorus, and with a little bisulphuret of carbon. The red variety will sink to the bottom, and the ordinary float on top of the solution, dissolved in the bisulphuret. (E. Nickles.) Red phosphorus is not poisonous. This has been proved beyond a doubt by the experiments of MM. Reyna] and Lassaigne, and of MM. L. Orfila and Rigaut. It is applicable to the manufacture of lucifer matches, and forms a much safer material than ordinary phosphorus. It does not take fire by friction at common temperatures, and, therefore, may be trans- ported with the greatest safety. Phosphorus forms with oxygen hypophosphorous, phosphorous, and phosphoric acids. Of the last-mentioned acid there are three varieties, distinguished by con taining, one, two, or three eqs. of water. The only officinal compounds containing phosphorus are glacial and diluted phosphoric acids, phosphate and pyrophosphate of iron, and the phosphates of ammonia, lime, and soda. Medical Properties. Phosphorus, exhibited in small doses, acts as a powerful general stimulant; in large doses, as a violent irritant poison. Its action is directed particularly to the kidneys and genital organs, producing diuresis, and excitation of the venereal appetite. From its peculiar physiological action, it is considered applicable to diseases attended with prostration of the vital powers. It has been recommended in impotency, typhoid and typhus fevers, dropsy, phthisis, marasmus, chlorosis, paralysis, amaurosis, mania, facial neuralgia, &c. Those who work in phosphorus, as the manufacturers of lucifer matches, are liable to necrosis of the jaw-bones, the consequence of periostitis. The affection is probably produced by the inhalation of air contaminated with phosphorus vapour, which has a local action on the teeth, gums, and jaws, and a general deteriorating effect on the blood. Dr. James R. Wood has recorded, in the N. Y. Journ. of Med. for May, 1856, an interesting case of a girl of sixteen, in which the entire lower jaw was removed for necrosis caused by phosphorus. The usual form for exhibiting phosphorus is in oily solution. The Oleum Phosplioralum of the Prussian Pharmacopoeia is made as follows. Take of phosphorus twelve grains; almond oil, recently prepared, an ounce. Melt the phosphorus in the oil by the heat of warm water, and agitate until it appears to be dissolved. The ounce of oil takes up about four grains of phosphorus; and the dose of the solution is from five to ten drops, mixed with some mucil- aginous liquid. An aromatic flavour may be given by the addition of a few drops of oil of bergamot. Dr. R. M. Glover has proposed to give phosphorus, dissolved in chloroform or cod-liver oil. He makes the chloroform solution, which is non- inflammable, by dissolving one part of phosphorus in four of chloroform. Of this solution he gives four or five minims, twice a day, with a drachm of ether, in a wdneglassful of port wine, in typhoid fever. The solution in cod-liver oil is effected by adding the phosphorus, in chips, to the oil contained in a bottle, in the proportion of half a grain to the ounce. The bottle is then immersed in hot water, and the solution effected by shaking. This mode of giving phos- phorus was used by Dr. Glover in strumous cases. (See Braithwaite's Retrospect, Am. ed., xxvii. 246.) Phosphorus has been given with success in intermittents, dissolved in oil of turpentine. {Trans, of the Med. Soc. of Pennsylvania, iv. 644 Phosphorus. PART L 119.) M. Tavignot gives pills made from an oleaginous solution of phosphorus. One and a half grains are dissolved, by means of a water-bath, in two drachms of almond oil; the solution is made into a pill mass by mixing it with two drachms of almond oil soap and a sufficient quantity of an inert powder; and the mass is divided into 100 pills. From two to four of the pills may be taken daily. {Journ. de Pharm., Aoiit, 1803, p. 137.) Dr. Crawcour shakes phosphorus cut fine in a bottle with boiling absolute alcohol until cold. The alcohol dissolves about two grains to the fluidounce, and from 30 to §0 drops of the solution may be given with a wineglassful or two of water. {Med. Times and Gaz., Feb. 1859, p. 222.) Great caution is necessary in the exhibition of phosphorus, and its effects should be closely watched. It ought never to be given in substance. Toxical Properties and Tests. Phosphorus, taken in a poisonous dose, pro- duces violent inflammation of the stomach and bowels, with intense pain, obsti- nate vomitings, tremblings, and, finally, convulsions on the approach of death. If swallowed in sticks on a full stomach, the poisonous symptoms are some hours in manifesting themselves. When taken in substance, two or three grains of tartar emetic should be given to dislodge it. If swallowed in the state of solu- tion, copious draughts of cold water, containing magnesia in suspension, should be administered, in order to prevent the combustion of the phosphorus, and to neutralize any acid which may have been formed. A case is related by Dr. Randerer, in which a child who had swallowed nearly a teaspoonful of phos- phorus paste,* prepared for killing rats, was saved by the free administration of magnesia, rubbed up with sugared water. Messrs. Antonielli and Borsarelli have shown, by numerous experiments on animals, that fatty matter increases the poisonous activity of phosphorus, and that the best antidote is calcined mag- nesia given largely with water. {Lancet, Feb. 5, 1859, p. 136.) Dufios has pro- posed, as an antidote, a mixture of one part of magnesia and eight of chlorine water. From experiments on rabbits, A. Bechert inferred that this mixture would prove useful; but similar experiments, made by Schrader, L. Hofmann, and Schuchai’dt, were without effect. From experiments on dogs, poisoned by phosphorus, MM. L. Orfila and Rigaut have shown that putrefaction is remark- ably retarded. In a case of chronic poisoning from the copious inhalation of phosphorus vapour, the principal results were a gradual decay of the sexual function and paralysis, terminating in death at the end of three years. E. Mitscherlich gives the following as a delicate test of phosphorus. The suspected substance is distilled with sulphuric acid and water from a flask, by means of a tube bent twice at right angles, into a vertical cooling tube, passing through the bottom of a wide glass cylinder filled with water, which is constantly kept cold by passing cold water in at the bottom, while the warm water escapes at the top. Under the cooling tube is placed a vessel to receive the distillate. If phosphorus is present, its vapour, mixed with steam, distils over, and gives rise to a distinct luminous appearance, visible in the dark, at the point where it enters the cold part of the cooling tube. The presence of alcohol and ether prevents the -occurrence of the luminous appearance until they have distilled over. Oil of turpentine has the same effect permanently, but is not likely to be present in medico-legal cases. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., July, 1856, p. 280, from the Lancet.) This test acts equally well in the presence of fatty matters, as has been shown by M.Vrij. Off. Prep. Acidum Phosphoricum Dilutum, U. S. B. * This paste is made as follows. Triturate six parts of phosphorus and one part of sul- phur with six parts of water, until they liquefy. Then mix in two parts of flour of mustard, eight parts of sugar, and twelve parts of rye flour, with the aid of ten additional i arts of water, and stir the whole so as to form a soft paste, which must be kept in pots closely stopped. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1855, p. 473.) PART I. Phytolaccse Bacca.—Phytolaccx Radix. 645 PHYTOLACCA; BACCA. U.S. Secondary. Poke Berry. The berries of Phytolacca decandra. U. S. PHYTOLACCA RADIX. U. S. Secondary. The root of Phytolacca decandra. U. S. Phytolacca. Sex. Syst. Decandria Decagynia. — Nat. Ord. Phytolaccacem Gen. Gh. Calyx none. Petals five, calycine. Berry superior, ten-celled, ten seeded. Willd. Phytolacca decandra. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 822; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i, 3b-; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 213. This is an indigenous plant, with a large peren- nial root, often five or six inches in diameter, divided into two or three prin- cipal branches, soft, fleshy, fibrous, whitish within, and covered with a brownish cuticle. The stems, which are annual, frequently grow to the height of six or eighb feet, and divide into numerous spreading branches. They are round, very smooth, green when young, but purple after the berries have ripened. The leaves are scattered, ovate-oblong, entire, pointed, smooth, ribbed beneath, and on short footstalks. The flowers are numerous, small, and in long racemes, which are sometimes erect, sometimes drooping. The corolla consists of five ovate, concave, whitish petals, folding inwards. The germ is green. There are ten stamens, and the same number of pistils. The raceme of flowers becomes a clus- ter of dark purple, almost black, shining berries, flattened above and below, and divided into ten cells, each containing one seed. The poke is abundant in all parts of the United States, flourishing along fences, by the borders of woods, and especially in newly cleared and unculti- vated fields. It also grows spontaneously in the north of Africa and the south of Europe, where, however, it is supposed to have been introduced from America. Its flowers begin to appear in July, and the fruit ripens in autumn. The magni- tude of the poke-weed, its large rich leaves, and its beautiful clusters of purple berries, often mingled upon the same branch with the green unripe fruit, and the flowers still in bloom, render it one of the most striking of our native plants. The young shoots are much used as food early in the spring, boiled in the man- ner of spinage. The ashes of the stems and leaves contain a very large propor- tion of potassa, yielding, according to Braconnot, not less than 42 peh cent, of the pure caustic alkali. In the plant the potassa is neutralized by an acid closely resembling the malic, though differing from it in some respects. The leaves, ber- ries, and root are used, but the two latter only are mentioned in the Pharma- copoeia. The root is most active. It should be dug up late in November, cut into thin transverse slices, and dried with a moderate heat. As its virtues are diminished by keeping, a new supply should be procured every year. The ber- ries should be collected when perfectly ripe, and the leaves about the middle of summer, when the footstalks begin to redden. The berries contain a succulent pulp, and yield upon pressure a large quan- tity of fine purplish-red juice. They have a sweetish, nauseous, slightly acrid taste, with little odour. The colouring principle is evanescent, and cannot be applied to useful purposes in dyeing, from the difficulty of fixing it. Alkalies render it yellow; but the original colour is restored by acids. The juice contains saccharine matter, and, after fermenting, yields alcohol by distillation. The dried root is of a light yellowish-brown colour externally, very much wrinkled, and, when in transverse slices, exhibits on the cut surface numerous concentric rings, formed by the projecting ends of fibres, between which the in- Poke Root. Phytolaecse Radix.—Pimenta. PART I. tervening matter has shrunk in drying. The structure internally in the older roots is firm and almost ligneous; the colour yellowish-white, alternating with darker circular layers. There is no smell. The taste is slightly sweetish, and at first mild, but followed by a sense of acrimony. The active matter is imparted to boiling water and alcohol. From the analysis of Mr. Edward Donnelly, the root appears to contain tannic acid, starch, gum, sugar, resin, fixed oil, and lignin, besides various inorganic substances. (Am. Journ.of Pliarm., xv. 169.) Medical Properties and Uses. Poke is emetic, purgative, and somewhat nar- cotic. As an emetic it is very slow in its operation, frequently not beginning to vomit in less than one or two hours after it has been taken, and then continuing to act for a long time upon both the stomach and bowels. The vomiting pro- duced by it is said not to be attended with much pain or spasm; but narcotic effects’ have been observed by some physicians, such as drowsiness, vertigo, and dimness of vision. In overdoses it produces excessive vomiting and purging, attended with great prostration of strength, and sometimes with convulsions. A case is recorded in the Stethoscope for March, 1852 (ii. 134), by Dr. Geo. F. Terrill, of Hanover Co., Ya., in which death was produced in a woman by eat- ing a double handful of the berries. Free purgation followed upon the first day, after which coma set it, with great prostration, though death did not occur until after the sixth day. Poke root has been proposed as a substitute for ipecacu- anha; but the slowness and long continuance of its action, and its tendency to purge, wholly unfit it for the purpose. In small doses it acts as an alterative, and has been highly recommended in the treatment of chronic rheumatism. Dr. C. S. Fenner, of Memphis, Tennessee, has found it highly useful, as an internal remedy, in granular conjunctivitis, especially in preventing the relapses to which the affection is so liable. The dose of the powdered root, as an emetic, is from ten to thirty grains; as an alterative, from one to five grains. A saturated tincture of the berries may be given in rheumatic cases, in the dose of a fluidrachm, three times a day. Dr. Fenner uses a saturated decoction, of which he gives a wine- glassful every two or three hours. A strong infusion of the leaves or root has been recommended in piles. An ointment, prepared by mixing a drachm of the powdered root or leaves with an ounce of lard, has been used with advantage in psora, tinea capitis, and some other forms of cutaneous disease. Dr. H. G. Carey, of Dayton, Ohio, has cured three cases of sycosis, and one of favus, by the local use of a decoction of the root. (Va. Med. Journ., Aug. 1856, p. 144.) It occasions at first a sense of heat and smarting in the part to which it is applied. An extract made by evaporating the expressed juice of the recent leaves has been used for the same purposes, and acquired at one time considerable repute as a remedy in cancer. W. PIMENTA. U. S., Br. Pimento. The unripe berries of Eugenia j’imenta. U. S. Eugenia Pimenta. The dried unripe berries. Br. Allspice, Jamaica pepper; Piment, Poivre de la Jamaique, Fr.; Nelkenpfeffer, Germ.; Pimenti, ItaU; Pi mien (a de Ta Jamaica, Span. Myrtus. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Myrtaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-cleft, superior. Petals five. Berry two to five-celled, many-seeded. Willd. Myrtus Pimenta. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 973; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 541, \ 194. —Eugenia Pimenta. De Cand. Prodrom. iii. 285; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 76. This is a beautiful tree, about thirty feet high, with a straight trunk, much branched above, and covered with a very smooth gray bark. Its dense and ever- verdant foliage gives it at all times a refreshing appearance. The leaves, which are petiolate, vary in shape and size; but are usually about four irihej long, part I. Pimenta.—Piper. 647 elliptical, entire, blunt or obtusely pointed, veined, and of a deep shining green colour. The flowers are small, without show, and disposed in panicles upon tri chotomous stalks, which usually terminate the branches. The fruit is a spherical berry, crowned with the persistent calyx, and when ripe is smooth, shining, and of a black or dark-purple colour. The tree exhales an aromatic fragrance, espe- cially during the summer months, when in flower. It is a native of the West Indies, Mexico, and South America, and is abun- dant in Jamaica, whence its fruit received the name of Jamaica pepper. The berries are the officinal part. They are gathered after having attained their full size, but while yet green, and are carefully dried in the sun. When sufficiently dry, they are put into bags and casks for exportation. Properties. The berries, as they reach us, are of different sizes, usually about as large as a small pea, round, wrinkled, umbilicate at the summit, of a brownish colour, and when broken present two cells, each containing a black hemispherical seed. They have a fragrant odour, thought to resemble that of a mixture of cin- namon, cloves, and nutmeg. Hence the name of allspice, by which they are best known in this country. Their taste is warm, aromatic, pungent, and slightly astringent. They impart their flavour to water, and all their virtues to alcohol. The infusion is of a brown colour, and reddens litmus paper. They yield a vola- tile oil by distillation. (See Oleum Pimentse.) Bonastre obtained from them a volatile oil, a green fixed oil, a fatty substance in yellowish flakes, tannin, gum, resin, uncrystallizable sugar, colouring matter, malic and gallic acids, saline matters, moisture, and lignin. The green oil has the burning aromatic taste of pimento, and is supposed to be the acrid principle. Upon this, therefore, to- gether with the volatile oil, the medical properties of the berries depend; and, as these two principles exist most largely in the shell or cortical portion, this part is most efficient. According to Bonastre, the shell contains 10 per cent, of the volatile, and 8 of the fixed oil, the seeds only 5 per cent, of the former, and 2 5 of the latter. Berzelius considers the green fixed oil of Bonastre as a mix- ture of volatile oil, resin, fixed oil, and perhaps a little chlorophyll. Medical Properties and Uses. Pimento is a warm, aromatic stimulant, used in medicine chiefly as an adjuvant to tonics and purgatives, the taste of which it serves to cover; while it increases, their warmth, and renders them more ac- ceptable to the stomach. It is particularly useful in cases attended with much flatulence. It is, however, much more largely employed as a condiment than as a medicine. The dose is from ten to forty grams. A tincture of pimento has been recommended as a local application in chilblains. Off. Prep. Aqua Pimentae, Br.; Oleum Pimentae. W. PIPER. U. S., Br. Black Pepper. The berries of Piper nigrum. U. S. The dried unripe berries. Br Poivre, Fr.; Schwarzer Pfeifer, Gerrn.; Gemeine peper, Dutch; Pepe nero, Ital ; Pimi- enta negra, Span.; Fifil uswud, Arab.; Lada, Malay; Maricha, Javan; Sahan, Palembang. Piper. See CUBEBA. Piper nigrum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 159; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 721, t. 246; Carson, lllust.of Med. Bot. ii. 38, pi. 83. The pepper vine is a perennial plant, with a round, smooth, woody, articulated stem, swelling near the joints, branched, and from eight to twelve feet or more in length. The leaves are entire, broad- ovate, acuminate, seven-nerved, coriaceous, very smooth, of a dark-green colour, and attached by strong sheath-like footstalks to the joints of the branches. The ‘lowers are small, whitish, sessile, covering thickly a cylindrical spadix, and suc- ceeded by g-lobular berries, which are red when ripe. The plant grows wild in Cochin China and various parts of India. It is cul- Piper. PART I. tivated on the coast of Malabar, in the peninsula of Malacca, in Siam, Sumatra, Java, Borneo, the Philippines, and many other places in the East. The best pepper is said to be produced in Malabar; but Europe and America derive their chief supplies from Sumatra and Java. It appears to have been introduced into the West Indies; as a specimen of black pepper was seen by the author, at the International Exhibition in London, in 1862, among the products of Trinidad. The plant is propagated by cuttings, and is supported by props, or trees planted for the purpose, upon which it is trained. In three or four years from the period of planting, it begins to bear fruit. The berries are gathered before they are all perfectly ripe, and, upon being dried, become black and wrinkled. White vernier is the ripe berry, deprived of its skin by maceration in water and subsequent friction, and afterwards dried iu the sun. It has less of the peculiar virtues of the spice than the black pepper, and is seldom employed. Properties. The dried berries are about as large as a small pea, externally blackish and wrinkled, internally whitish, of an aromatic smell, and a hot, pun- gent, almost fiery taste. They yield their virtues partially to water, entirely to alcohol and ether. Pelletier found them to contain a peculiar crystalline matter called piperin, an acrid concrete oil or soft resin of a green colour, a balsamic volatile oil, a coloured gummy substance, an extractive matter like that found in leguminous plants capable of being precipitated by infusion of galls, starch, a portion of bassorin, tartaric and malic acids, lignin, and various salts. Piperin was discovered by Professor (Ersted, of Copenhagen, who considered it an or- ganic alkali, and the active principle of pepper. Pelletier, however, utterly denied its alkaline nature and medical activity, and ascribed all the effects, sup- posed to have been obtained from it, to a portion of the acrid concrete oil with which it is mixed when not very carefully prepared. When perfectly pure, piperin is in colourless transparent crystals, according to Pelletier without taste, fusible at 212°, insoluble in cold water, slightly soluble in boiling water which deposits it upon cooling, soluble in alcohol, ether, and acetic acid, decomposed by the concentrated mineral acids, with the sulphuric becoming of a blood-red colour, with the nitric, first of a greenish-yellow, then orange, and ultimately red. Christisou, however, states in his Dispensatory, that the whitest crystals he had been able to obtain were still acrid, and emitted an irritating vapour when thrown on heated iron. As ordinarily procured the crystals are yellow. Piperin consists of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen; and its formula, according to Wertheim, is C70H37'N2O10.* It is obtained by treating pepper with alcohol, evaporating the tincture to the consistence of an extract, submitting the extract to the action of an alkaline solution by which the oleaginous matter is converted into soap, washing the undissolved portion with cold water, sepa- * An interesting chemical investigation into the nature of piperin has been made by Wertheim, the result of which is that it probably consists of a volatile alkaline principle (C12H7N), combined with an electro-negative compound which, however, is thus far hypothetical. The former is obtained by distilling piperin mixed with soda and hydrate of lime, at a temperature between 300° and 320°. It is considered by Wertheim as identical with pjcolin, previously obtained by Dr. Anderson from the reaction of nitric acid on piperin, and described by him in a paper presented at the meeting of the British Association, at Edinburgh in 1850. (Chem. Gaz., Aug. 1849, p. 309, from Liebig's Annalen. ) M. Cahours has since repeated the experiments of Wertheim, and obtained the same alka- line principle, which he names yiperidin, and of which he gives the formula C10HnN, since changed by Wertheim to C12H13N. According to M. Cahours, it is a colourless liquid, having a mixed odour of ammonia and pepper, a very caustic taste, and a strong alkaline action. It is soluble in water in all proportions, and forms crystallizable salts with several acids. (Ibid., May 1, 1852, p. 167.) When piperin is heated with potassa, it yields, among other products, a peculiar acid, which has received the name of pip eric acid. (Chem. Gaz., Jan. I, 1858, p. 7. In the Pharmaceutical Journal (June, 1860, p. 605) is a description by Mr. Evans of tbi microscopic structure of pepper, to which it may possibly be desirable to recur in instincts of supposed adulteration. PART I. Piper.—Pix Burgundica. 649 rating the liquid by filtration, treating the matter left on the filter with alcohol, and allowing the solution thus obtained to evaporate spontaneously, or by a gentle heat. Crystals of piperin are deposited, and may be purified by alternate solution in alcohol or ether, and crystallization. The taste and medicinal activity of pepper probably depend mainly on the concrete oil or resin, and on the vola- tile oil. The concrete oil is of a deep-green colour, very acrid, and soluble in alcohol and ether. The volatile oil is limpid, colourless, becoming yellow by age, of a strong odour, and of a taste less acrid than that of pepper itself. It consists of ten eqs. of carbon and eight of hydrogen, and forms a liquid, but not a concrete compound with muriatic acid. Medical Properties and Uses. Black pepper is a warm carminative stimu- lant, capable of producing general arterial excitement, but acting with greater proportional energy on the part to which it is applied. From the time of Hip- pocrates it has been employed as a condiment and medicine. Its chief medicinal application is to excite the languid stomach and correct flatulence. It was long since occasionally administered for the cure of intermittents; but its em- ployment for this purpose had passed from the profession to the vulgar, till a few years since revived by an Italian physician, to be again consigned to forget- fulness. Piperin has also been employed in the same complaint, and has even been thought superior to sulphate of quinia; but experience has not confirmed this favourable opinion. That, in its impure state, when mixed with a portion of the acrid principle, it will occasionally cure intermittents, there can be no doubt; but it is not comparable to the preparations of bark, and is probably less active than the alcoholic extract of pepper. In intermittent fever, when the stomach is not duly susceptible to the action of quinia, as sometimes in drunk- ards, pepper may be found a useful adjuvant to the more powerful febrifuge. The dose of -pepper is from five to twenty grains. It may be given whole or in powder; but is more energetic in the latter state. Piperin has been given in doses varying from one to six or eight grains. Piper longum, though no longer officinal, deserves a brief notice here, if for nothing else, on account of its former position in medicine. This species of Piper differs from its congeners in having its lower leaves cordate, petiolate, seven- nerved, its upper oblong-cordate, sessile, and five-nerved; its flowers in dense, short, terminal, and nearly cylindrical spikes; and its fruit, consisting of very small one-seeded berries or grains, embedded in a pulpy matter. It is a native of Southeastern Asia, and is produced abundantly in Bengal and other parts of Hindostan. The fruit is green when immature, and becomes red as it ripens. It is gathered in the former state, as it is then hotter than when perfectly ripe. The whole spike is taken from the plant, and dried in the sun. Long vewer. as the fruit is called, is cylindrical, an inch or more in length, indented on its surface, of a dark-gray colour, a weak aromatic odour, and a pungent fiery taste. M. Dulong found its chemical composition to be closely analogous to that of black pepper. Like that it contains piperin, a concrete oil or soft resin upon which its burning acrimony depends, and a volatile oil to which it probably owes its odour. Its medical virtues are essentially the same as those of black pepper; but it is considered inferior to that spice, and is seldom used. Off. Prep. Confectio Piperis, Br.; Oleoresina Piperis, U. S. W. PIX BURGUNDICA. U.S.,Br. Burgundy Pitch. The prepared concrete juice of Abies excelsa. U. S. A resinous exudation from the stem, melted and strained. Br. Poix (le Bourgogne, Poix jaune, Poix blanche, Fr.; Burgundisches Pech, Germ. Pix Burgundica. PART I. The gems Pinus of Linnaeus has been divided into three genera, viz., Pinus, Abies, and Larix; the first including the pines, the second the firs and spruces, and the third the larches; and the division is recognised in this work. Abies. Sex. Syst. Moncecia Monadelphia.—Nat. Ord. Pinaceae or Coniferae. Gen. Ch. Male flowers. Catkins solitary, not racemose; Scales staminife- rois at the apex. Stamens two, with one-celled anthers. Females. Catkins simple. Ovaries two. Stigmas glandular. Cone with imbricated scales, which are thin at the apex, and rounded. Cotyledons digitate-partite. Leaves solitary in each sheath. Be Cand. Abies excelsa. De Candolle. —A. communis. Loudon’s Encyc. of Plants. — Pwins_Allies' VYilld. Sp. Plant, iv. 5067”Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 4, t. 2. The Nor- way spruce is a very lofty tree, rising sometimes one hundred and fifty feet in height, with a trunk from three to five feet in diameter. The leaves, which stand thickly upon the branches, are short, obscurely four-cornered, often curved, of a dusky-green colour, and shining on the upper surface. The male aments are purple and axillary, the female of the same colour, but usually terminal. The fruit is in pendent, purple, nearly cylindrical strobiles, the scales of which are oval, pointed, and ragged at the edges. •This tree is a native of Europe and Northern Asia. Though designated as the source of Burgundy pitch, it furnishes but a part of the substance sold under that name by the druggists. Tingley asserts that the real Burgundy pitch is obtained from the Abies picea, or European silver fir tree. According to Geiger, who is probably correct, it is procured from both species. To obtain the pitch, portions of the bark are removed so as to lay bare the wood, and the flakes of concrete resinous matter which form upon the surface of the wound, having been detached by iron instruments, are melted with water in large boilers, and then strained through coarse cloths. It is called Burgundy pitch from the province of that name in the east of France. We are told that the greater portion is collected in the neighbourhood of Neufchatel. From various species of pine, in different parts of Europe, a similar product is obtained and sold by the same name. It is prepared by removing the juice which concretes upon the bark of the tree, or upon the surface of incisions, called galipot by the French, and purifying it by melting, and straining either througlf cloth or a layer of straw. A factitious Buxqundy pitch is made by melting together common pitch, rosin, and turpentine, and agitating the mixture with water, which gives it the requisite yellowish colour. Its odour is different from that of the genuine. As brought to this country, Burgundy pitch is generally mixed with impuri- ties, which require that it should be melted and strained before being used. In its pure state it is hard, brittle, quite opaque, of a yellowish or brownish-yellow colour, and a weak terebinthinate taste and odour. It is very fusible, and at the heat of the body softens and becomes adhesive. It differs from turpentine in containing a smaller proportion of volatile oil. Medical Properties and Uses. Applied to the skin in the shape of a.plaster, Burgundy pitch acts as a gentle rubefacient, producing a slight inflammation and 6erous effusion without separating the cuticle. Sometimes it excites a papillary or vesicular eruption; and we have known it to act upon the surface as a violent poison, giving rise to severe pain, swelling, and redness, followed by vesication and even ulceration. It is used chiefly in chronic rheumatic pains, and in chronic affections of the chest or abdomen, which call for a gentle but long-continued revulsion to the skin. A plaster of Burgundy pitch has been found very useful in malignant pustules. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1860, p. 103.) Off. Prep. Emplastrum Antimonii, 17. S.; Emplast. Ferri; Emplast. Galbaid Comp., U. S.; Emplast. Opii, U. S.; Emplast. Picis, Br.; Emplast. Picis Burgai - dicse, U. S.; Emplast. Picis cum Cantharide, U. S. "VS PART I. Pix Canadensis.—Pix Liquida. 651 PIX CANADENSIS. U.S. Canada Pitch. The prepared concrete juice of Abies Canadensis. U. S. > Abies. See PIX BURGUNDICX! " Abies Canadensis. Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. iii. 185. — Pinus Canadensis, Willd. Up. Plant. iv?505. This is the hemlock spruce of the United States and Canada. When of full growth it is often' seventy“or eighty feet high, with a trunk two or three feet in diameter, and of nearly uniform dimensions for two- thirds of its length. The branches are slender, and dependent at their extremi- ties. The leaves are very numerous, six or eight lines long, flat, denticulate, and irregularly arranged in two rows. The strobiles are ovate, little longer than the leaves, terminal, and pendulous. The tree is abundant in Canada, Nova Scotia, and the more northern parts of New England; and is found in the elevated and mountainous regions of the Middle States. Its bark abounds in the astringent principle, and is much used for tanning in the northern parts of the United States. It contains much less juice than some other of the Pinacece; and very little flows from incisions made into its trunk. But in the trees which have attained their full growth, and are about or have begun to decay, the juice exudes spontaneously, and hardens upon the bark, in consequence of the partial evaporation or oxidation of its volatile oil. The bark thus encrusted is_ stripped from the tree, broken into pieces and boiled in. water. The pitch melts, rises to the surface, is skimmed off, and is still further purified by a second boiling in water. It is brought to Philadelphia from the north of Pennsylvania, in dark-coloured brittle masses, which, on being broken, exhibit numerous minute fragments of bark interspersed through their substance. From these it is purified in the shops, by melting and straining through linen or canvas. (Ellis, Journ. of Phil. Col. of Pharm., ii. 18.) Another mode of collecting it is to make incisions into the body of the tree, and to remove the juice as it exudes. (Stearns, Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1860, p. 29.) Thus prepared it is hard, brittle, quite opaque, of a dark yellowish-brown colour, becoming still darker by exposure to the air, of a weak peculiar odour, and scarcely any taste. It softens and becomes adhesive with a moderate heat, and melts at 198° F. Its constituents are resin and a minute proportion of vola- tile oil. It is commonly known by the incorrect name of hemlock gum. Medical Properties and Uses. Canada pitch is a gentle rubefacient, closely analogous to Burgundy pitch in its properties, and employed for precisely the same purposes. It is, however, more readily softened by heat, and is sometimes almost too soft for convenient application at the temperature of the body. A volatile oil obtained from Abies Canadensis, and called oil of spruce, or oil of hemlock, has been employed to produce abortion, with the effect of endanger- ing'fhePlife of the female. (J. S. Paige, N. Y. Journ. of Med., viii. 184.) Off. Prep. Emplastrum Picis Canadensis, U. S. W. PIX LIQUIDA. U. S., Br. Tar. The impure turpentine procured by burning from the wood of Pinus palustris and of other species of Pinus. U. S. A bituminous liquid, ob tamed from The wood of Pinas sylvestris and other Pines, by destructive distillation. Br. (xouuron,"Fr.; Tlieer, Germ.; Pece liquida, Ital.; Alquitxan, S^an. Pix Liquida. PART I. The tar used in this country is prepared from the wood of various species of pine, particularly Pinus palustris of the Southern States. (See Terebinthina.) The dead wood is usually selected, because, when vegetation ceases, the resinous matter becomes concentrated in the interior layers. The wood is cut into billets of a convenient size, which are placed together so as to form a large stack or pile, and then covered with earth as in the process for making charcoal. The stack is built upon a small circular mound of earth previously prepared, the summit of which gradually declines from the circumference to the centre, where a cavity is formed, communicating by a conduit with a shallow ditch surround- ing the mound. Fire is applied through an opening in the top of the pile, and a slow combustion is maintained, so that the resinous matter may be melted by the heat. This runs into the cavity in the centre of the mound, and passes thence by the conduit into the ditch, whence it is transferred into barrels. Im- mense quantities of tar are thus prepared in North Carolina and the south- eastern parts of Virginia, sufficient, after supplying our own consumption, to afford a large surplus for exportation. Considerable quantities of tar have been prepared also in the lower parts of New Jersey, in some portions of New Eng- land, and in Pennsylvania west of the Alleghany mountains, from the Pinus rigida, or pitch pine, and perhaps from some other species. Properties. Tar has a peculiar empyreumatic odour, a bitterish, resinous, somewhat acid taste, a colour almost black, and a tenacious consistence inter- mediate between tha-t of a liquid and solid. It consists of resinous matter, united with acetic acid, oil of turpentine, and various volatile jempyreuraatic products, and coloured with charcoal. By distillation it yields an acid liquor called miroligneous acid (see Acidum Aceticum), and an empyreumatic oil called oilojiar; and what is left behind is pitch. The empyreumatic oil has been ascertained by Dr. Reichenbach, of Moravia, to contain, besides oil of tur- pentine, six distinct principles, which he has named paraffin, eupion, creasole, picamar, capnomor, and pittacal. Of these, only picamar and creasote merit particular attention; the former as the principle to which tar owes its bitterness, the latter as the one upon which it probably depends chiefly for its medical vir- tues. (See Creasotum.) Tar yields a small proportion of its constituents to water, which is thus rendered medicinal, and is employed under the name of tar water. It is dissolved by alcohol, ether, and the volatile and fixed oils. The pitch, left after the evaporation of tar, was formerly officinal, with the British Colleges, under the names of Pix nigra. Pix arida, or simply Pix but has been omitted in the present British Pharmacopoeia. It has a shining frac- ture, softens and becomes adhesive with a moderate heat, melts in boiling water, and consists of the resin of the pine unaltered, and of various empyreumatic resinous products which have received the name of nvretin. (Berzelius, Trait, de Chim., vi. 641 and 680.) It appears to be very gently stimulant or tonic, and has been used internally in ichthyosis and other cutaneous diseases, and re- cently with great advantage in piles. The dose is from ten grains to a drachm given in pills. Pitch is also used externally in the form of ointment. . Medical Properties and Uses. The medical properties of tar are similar to those of the turpentines. It is occasionally used with advantage in chronic ca- tarrhal affections, and complaints of the urinary passages. Little benefit can be expected from it in genuine phthisis, in the treatment of which it was formerly recommended. Dr. Bateman employed it advantageously as an internal remedy in ichthyosis. Its vapour, inhaled into the lungs, has been found serviceable in numerous cases of bronchial disease. Its effects in this way are most conveniently obtained by placing a cup containing tar or oil of tar in a small water-bath, over a common nurse-lamp, and thus impregnating the air of the chamber Externally applied, in the state of ointment, tar is a very efficient remedy in tinea capitis or scaldhead, and in some cases of psoriasis : and has been used PART I. Pix Liquida.—Plumbum. 653 with advantage in foul or indolent ulcers, and some other affections of the skin Some prefer for the same purpose a mixture of glycerin and tar.* It may be used in the form of tar water (see Infusum Picis Liquidse), or in substance made into pills with wheat flour, or mixed with sugar in the form of an electuary. The dose is from half a drachm to a drachm, and may be repeated so as to amount to three or four drachms daily."j* Off. Prep. Infusum Picis Liquid®, U. STJnguentum Picis Liquid®, U. S. W. PLUMBllMr Lead. Plomb, Fr.; Blei, Germ.; Lood, Dutch.; Piombo, Ital.; Plomo, Span.; Chumbo, Port. Lead is not officinal in its metallic state, but enters into a number of im- portant medicinal preparations. It occurs in nature as an oxide, as a sulphuret called galena, and in saline combination, forming the native sulphate, phos- phate, carbonate, chromate, molybdate, tungstate, and arseniate of lead. The oxide is rare, but galena is exceedingly abundant, and is the ore from which nearly all the lead of commerce is extracted. The process of extraction consists in melting the ore in contact with charcoal. The richest and most extensive mines of galena are found in this country. The lead region of the United States extends in length from the Wisconsin in the north to the Red river of Arkansas in the south, and in breadth about one hundred and fifty miles. Properties. Lead is a soft, bluish-gray, and very malleable metal, presenting a bright surface when newly melted or cut. It has a perceptible taste, and a peculiar smell when rubbed. It undergoes but little change in the air, but is acted on by the combined influence of air and water, which give rise to a hy- drated protoxide, which is afterwards changed, in part, into carbonate, by absorbing carbonic acid from the atmosphere. This chemical effect on the metal is greater in proportion as the water is purer. (See page 129.) Aqueous vapour passed through leaden pipes has a similar corroding effect, which is greater as the lead is purer. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1863, p. 507.) Its sp. gr. is lL4, melting point about 612°, and eq. lOS’S. Exposed to a stream of on ignited charcoal, it burns with a blue flame, throwing off dense yellow fumes. The best solvent of lead is nitric acid; but the presence of sulphuric acid de- stroys, and that of muriatic acid lessens its solvent power, on account of the * Glycerinated Tar. The following formula has been recommended. Take of tar and glycerin, each, six troyounces, and of starch, in powder, two drachms. Mix the starch thoroughly with the glycerin previously warmed, then add the tar, and heat quickly to ‘212°. Strain if necessary, and stir the mixture while cooling. (Pharm. Journ., Sept. 1862.) f Tar Beer or Wine of Tar. A preparation under this name has been used to some ex- tent in Philadelphia in pulmonary affections. The following is the formula recommended by Trof. Procter. Take of ground malt, honey, and tar, each, a pound; yeast half a pint. Mix the malt and honey with six pints of water in an earthen vessel; keep the mixture for three hours, with occasional stirring, at the temperature of 150° F., then allow it to cool to 80°, and add the yeast. Sustain the fermentation for 86 hours by a heat between 70° and 80°, then decant the supernanant liquid, add the tar gradually to the dregs, stir- ring constantly, so as to make a uniform mixture, and return the decanted fluid to the vessel. Stir the whole occasionally for a week, adding water to preserve the measure; then strain with strong expression, allow the expressed liquor to stand until it becomes nearly clear by subsidence, and finally filter through paper. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxii. 111.) A Syrup of Tar is prepared ,b$r Mr. Thos. A. Lancaster in the following manner. Take of tincture of tar (made in the proportion of two troyounces of tar to a pint of alcohol) f !|ij, carbonate of magnesia 3;j or q. s., white sugar Ibj avoird. Rub the tincture thoroughly with the carbonate; add half a pint of water gradually; then filter,' and, when the liquid ceases to pass, pour water into the filter till the product measures half a pint; lastly, add the sugar and dissolve it by means of a gentle heat. The syrup may be given in the dose of half an ounce or an ounce. (Ibid., Nov. 1859, p. 555.)—Note to the twelfth edition. Plumbum. PART I. insolubility of the sulphate and chloride of lead. Lead forms five oxides, a diox- ide, protoxide, sesquioxide, deutoxide, and red oxide. The dioxide consists of two equivalents of lead and one of oxygen. The protoxide, called in commerce massicot, may be obtained by calcining, in a platinum crucible, the subnitrate of lead, formed by precipitating a solution of the nitrate by ammonia. On a large scale it is manufactured by exposing melted lead to the action of the air. Its surface becomes encrusted with a gray pellicle, which, being scraped off, is quickly succeeded by another; and the whole of the metal, being in this way successively presented to the air, becomes converted into a greenish-gray pow- der, consisting of protoxide and metallic lead. This, by exposure to a moderate heat, absorbs more oxygen, and is converted wholly into protoxide. This oxide has a yellow colour, and is the only oxide of lead capable of forming salts with the acids. It consists of one eq. of lead 103 5, and one of oxygen 8 = 111*5. A variety of the protoxide, called litharge, is very much used in pharmacy, and is officinal in all the Pharmacopoeias. (See Plumbi Oxidum.) The sesquioxide, discovered by Winckelblech, is unimportant. The deutoxide, called also puce oxide from its flea-brown colour, may be obtained by treating red lead with nitric acid. The acid takes up the protoxide and leaves the deutoxide, which may be purified by washing with boiling water. A more productive process is to precipitate four parts of acetate of lead by three of carbonate of soda, and then to pass into the thin pasty mass of carbonate of lead a stream of chlorine, which converts the protoxide of the carbonate into the brown deutoxide. (F. Wohler.) Solution of chlorinated soda may be conveniently employed to fur- nish the necessary chlorine. (F. F. Mayer, Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1856, 410.) Deutoxide of lead is a tasteless powder, of a dark-brown colour. When heated to redness it loses half its oxygen and becomes protoxide. It consists of one eq. of lead 103*5, and two of oxygen 16= 119*5. The red oxide, called in commerce minium or red lead, is described under another head. (See Plumbi Oxidum Rubrum.) Lead combines with iodine, forming the officinal iodide of lead. The acetate, carbonate, and nitrate are also officinal. The best tests of lead are sulphuretted hydrogen, and a solution of iodide of potassium. The former produces a black precipitate of sulphuret of lead, the latter, a yellow one of iodide of lead. Medical Properties and Uses. The effects of lead in its various combina- tions are those of a sedative and astringent. It is used internally for reducing the action of the heart and arteries, and for restraining inordinate discharges; and externally as an abater of inflammation. When introduced into the system in a gradual manner with the food or drinks, or by working in the metal, or when taken in small and frequently repeated doses, it acts injuriously on the nervous system, producing a peculiar colic, called lead colic, sometimes apo- plectic symptoms, and occasionally palsy, which is almost always partial, and affects for the most part the upper extremities. In some instances salivation occurs; and, according to Dr. Henry Burton, the constitutional effects of the metal are indicated by a narrow lead-blue line at the edge of the gum, round two or more of the teeth, as a constant and early sign. According to Mialhe, lead gains access to the circulation by means of the chlorides of the alkalifiable metals in the alimentary canal, which form with the lead a soluble double chloride of lead and potassium, or of lead and sodium. The treatment necessary in lead colic is given under carbonate of lead. Lead palsy is usually attended with dyspepsia, constipation, tendency to colic, lassitude, and gloominess of mind, and is best treated, after the elimination of the lead; by tonics, aperients, exercise, and avoidance of the cause of the disease. The acute poisonous effects of the lead preparations are to be combated by emetics if free vomiting has not previously occurred, by purges of sulphate of magnesia or sulphate of soda, and by opium. These sulphates are supposed to act as antidotes by forming sulphate PART I. Plumbum. 655 of lead. It is probable that they lessen the poisonous effects of the soluble salts of lead; but the sulphate, though insoluble in water, may be to some extent soluble in the gastric juice; and, as to its external use in the form of ointment, it has been found by Flandin to prove poisonous to the inferior animals. For the purpose of eliminating lead from the system, warm sulphuretted baths are useful, formed by dissolving four ounces of sulphuret of potassium in thirty gallons of water, in a wooden tub. These baths cause discoloration of the skin, from the formation of sulphuret of lead, and should be repeated every few days, until this effect ceases to be produced. During each bath, the patient should be well washed with soap and water with the aid of a flesh-brush, in-order to remove the discoloration. By proceeding in this way, the lead on the skin, or in its pores, is rendered insoluble and inert, and at the same time removed. Dr. Melsens praises iodide of potassium as a means of separating lead from the tissues, acting by rendering the metal soluble, and separating it principally by the urine. (See Potassii Iodidum.) Orfila has determined, by experiments on dogs, the appearance exhibited by the mucous membrane of the stomach, after the use of small doses of the salts of lead. After the action of such doses for two hours, dull white points are visible on the membrane, sometimes in rows and sometimes disseminated, and evidently consisting of the metal, united with the organic tissue. If the animal be allowed to live for four days, the same spots may be seen with the magnifier; and if sulphuretted hydrogen be applied to the surface, they are instantly blackened. (Archives Gen., 3e serie, iv. 244.) According to M. Gendrin, sulphuric acid, prepared like lemonade, and used both internally and externally, is a prophylactic against the poisonous effects of lead, especially the lead colic. It may be supposed to act by forming the com- paratively inert sulphate of lead with the poison. Mr. Benson, a manager of white lead works at Birmingham, has tried this acid, and finds it a preventive of lead colic in his establishment, where it was exceedingly prevalent before its employment. He uses it as an addition to ginger beer, to which bicarbonate of soda is also added to render it brisk, but not in sufficient quantity to neutralize the whole of the acid. On the other hand, the powers of sulphuric acid in pre- venting the poisonous effects of lead are positively denied by Dr. A. Grisolle, Dr. Melsens, and other authorities. Dr. Grisolle recommends that workmen employed in lead manufactories should use frequent baths, avoid intemperance, and always eat before they enter upon their work in the morning. He supposes that, in a great majority of cases, the metal is introduced into the system through the stomach by means of the saliva or food. According to MM. Sandras and Bouchardat, the hydrated sesquisulphuret of iron acts as an antidote to the salts of lead; and its efficacy has been confirmed by its effects in a case reported by M. Lepage. (Ann. de Ther ap., 1857, p. 224.) After,acute poisoning by lead, the metal has been found in the liver and brain. Indeed,' it may be detected in most of the organs, a long time after the ingestion of the poison. The following table embraces all the officinal preparations of lead. Plumbi Oxidum, U. S.; Lithargyrum, Br. Oxide of Lead. Litharge. Emplastrum Plumbi, U. S.; Emplastrum Lithargvri, Br. Lead plaster. Litharge plaster. This plaster is used as the basis of several other plasters, and enters, through the soap plaster, into the soap ceratq of the U. S. Pharm. Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis, U. S., Br. Solution of Subacetate of Lead. Goulard's extract. Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis Dilutus, U. S., Br. Diluted Solution of Subacetate of Lead. Lead-water. Ceratum Plumbi Subacetatis, U. S.; Unguentum Plumbi Subace- tatis, Br. Cerate of Subacetate of Lead. Goulard's cerate. 656 Plumbum.—Plumbi Acetas. PART I. Plambi Iodidum, U.S. Iodide of Lead. Plurabi Acetas, U.S., Br. Acetate of Lead. Sugar of Lead. Pilula Plumbi cum Opio, Br. Pills of Lead and Opium. Plumbi Carbonas, U.S., Br. Carbonate of Lead. Unguentum Plumbi Carbonatis, U. S., Br. Ointment of Carbonate of Lead. Plumbi Nitras, U. S. Nitrate of Lead. B. PLUMBI ACETAS. V. S., Br. Acetate of Lead. Sugar of Lead. Saccharum Saturni, Cerussa acetata, Lot.; Acetate de plomb, Sucre de plomb, Sel de Saturne, Fr.; Essigsaures Bleioxyd, Bleizucker, Germ.; Zucchero di Saturno, Ital.; Azucar de plomo, Span. In the British Pharmacopoeia the following formula is given for preparing this salt. “Take of Litharge, in fine powder, twenty-four ounces [avoirdupois] ; Acetic Acid two pints [Imperial measure], ora sufficiency ; Distilled Water one pint [Imp. meas.]. Mix the Acetic Acid and the Water, add the Litharge, and dissolve with the aid of a gentle heat. Filter, evaporate till a pellicle forms, and set aside to crystallize, adding a little Acetic Acid should the fluid not have a distinctly acid reaction. Drain and dry the crystals on filtering paper, without heat.” Br. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia the salt is more properly placed in the catalogue of the Materia Medica. Preparation. Acetate of lead is obtained by two methods. By one method, thin plates of lead are placed in shallow vessels filled with distilled vinegar, in such a manner as to have a part of each plate rising above the vinegar; and these are turned from time to time, so as to bring different portions of the metallic surface in contact with the air. The metal, after having become protoxidized, dissolves in the vinegar to saturation, and the solution is evaporated to the point of crystallization. This process is a slow one, but furnishes a salt which is perfectly neutral. The other method consists in dissolving, by the assistance of heat, litharge, or the protoxide of lead obtained by calcination, in an excess of distilled vinegar or of purified pyroligneous acid, contained in leaden boilers. The oxide is quickly dissolved, and, when the acid has become saturated, the solution is transferred to other vessels to cool and crystallize. The crystals having formed, the mother-waters are decanted, and, by evaporation, made to yield a new crop. These are generally yellow, but may be rendered white by repeated solutions and crystallizations. Acetate of lead is extensively manufactured in Germany, Holland, France, and England, as well as in the United States. It is principally consumed in the arts of dyeing and calico-printing, in which it is employed to form with alum the acetate of alumina, to act as a mordant. Properties. Acetate of lead is a white salt, crystallized in brilliant needles, which have the shape of prisms, terminated by dihedral summits. Its taste is at first sweet and afterwards astringent. Exposed to the air it effloresces slowly. It dissolves in four times its weight of cold, and in a much smaller quantity of boiling water. It is soluble also in alcohol. Its solution in common water is turbid, in consequence of the formation of carbonate of lead with the carbonic acid which such water always contains. This turbidness may be removed by the addition of a small proportion of vinegar, or of dilute acetic acid. In pure dis- tilled water, free from carbonic acid, it ought to dissolve entirely, and form a clear solution. The commercial acetate is sometimes impure from the presence of sulphate and carbonate of lead. In purchasing it the apothecary should select large crystalline masses. Mr. John Mackay analyzed a specimen of this part I. Plumbi Acetas. 657 salt, derived from the London market, which contained nearly 30 per cent, of sulphate of lead. (Pharm. Journ,, Jan. 1856, p. 316.) Sulphuric acid, when added to a solution of acetate of lead, produces instantly a precipitate of sul phate of lead; and the disengaged acetic acid gives rise to vapours having the smell of vinegar. The salt, when heated, first fuses and parts with its water of crystallization, and afterwards is decomposed, yielding acetic acid and pyro- acetic spirit (acetone), and leaving a residue of charcoal and reduced lead. An important property of sugar of lead is its power of dissolving a large quantity of protoxide of lead. (See Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis.) It consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, one of protoxide of lead 111 *5, and three of water 27 = 189'5 ; and its formula is Pb0,C4II303-j-3H0. Incompatibles and Tests. Acetate of lead is decomposed by all acids, and by those soluble salts, the acids of which produce with protoxide of lead insoluble or sparingly soluble compounds. Acids of this character are the sulphuric, muriatic, citric, and tartaric. It is also decomposed by lime-water, and by am- monia, potassa, and soda; the last two, if added in excess, dissolving the pre- cipitate at first formed. It is decomposed by hard water, in consequence of the sulphate of lime and common salt which such water usually contains. With sulphuretted hydrogen it gives a black precipitate of sulphuret of lead; with iodide of potassium, a yellow one of iodide of lead; and with a carbonated alkali, a white one of carbonate of lead. “Thirty-eight grains dissolved in water require for complete precipitation 20 measures of the volumetric solu- tion of oxalic acidP Br. Medical Properties and Uses. Acetate of lead, in medicinal doses, is a power- ful astringent and sedative; in overdoses, an irritant poison. It has sometimes been given in pretty large doses in regular practice without bad effects; and cases are on record where a quarter of an ounce has been swallowed without proving fatal. On the other hand, it sometimes produces colica pictonum, even when given in medicinal doses. It is proper to remark, however, that the im- mediate' effects of an overdose are often escaped by prompt and spontaneous vomiting; and that the remote constitutional effects are not apt to occur so long as the evacuations from the bowels are not materially diminished. The class of diseases in which acetate of lead has been most frequently used are hemorrhages, particularly from the lungs, stomach, intestines, and uterus. Its effect in restraining the discharge of blood is admitted to be very powerful. It has been employed by Dr. Burkart with supposed benefit in pneumonia, especially in cases occurring in the aged, in which bleeding or antimony cannot be borne. It has also been used with advantage in certain forms of dysentery and diar- rhoea, and has been recommended in particular stages of cholera infantum. Combined with opium, it is well suited to the treatment of the diarrhoea occur- ring in phthisis. It sometimes proves a valuable remedy in checking vomiting. Dr. Irvine, of Charleston, recommended it to compose the instability of the stomach in yellow fever. Dr. Wood has employed it in several cases of yellow fever, at the beginning of the second stage, with apparently good effect. The dose recommended is two grains every two hours, given steadily until thirty-six grains have been taken. Dr. Wood conceives that the remedy is well suited to obviate the peculiar inflammation of the gastric mucous membrane, and to pre- vent hemorrhage, either of pure blood, or of altered blood in the form of black vomit. {Trans, of the College of Phys. of Philad., ii. 449.) Dr. Davis, of Columbia, S. C., has used acetate of lead with benefit in the irritable stomach attendant on bilious fever. It has been much extolled by the German practi- tioners, in the class of fevers attended with ulcerations of the intestines. In some of these cases it was advantageously combined with carbonate of ammonia. The same practitioners have strongly recommended it in aneurism of the aorta, and Dupuytren, on their report of its efficacy, tried it in several cases, and with 658 Plumbi Acetas.—Plumbi Carbonas. PART I. marked effect in diminishing the size of the aneurismal tumour. Dr. Wood has imitated the practice in aneurism of the aorta, and employed it in several cases of enlarged heart, with encouraging results. In the treatment of the latter dis- ease, the testimony of M. Brachet, of Lyons, is strongly in favour of the remedy. Acetate of lead has been employed by Drs. Neuhold and Ilasserbronc, with re- markable success, in strangulated hernia, used in enemata, containing ten grains of the salt dissolved in six fluidounces of tepid water, and repeated every two hours. In mercurial salivation, M. Brachet found it very efficacious, administered in grain pills, night and morning. The solution is frequently used as a collyrium; and, applied by means of cloths, or mixed with crumb of bread, it forms a good application to superficial inflammation. It is sometimes advantageous to asso- ciate opium with the solution, in which case the meconate of morphia of the opium is decomposed, with the result of forming acetate of morphia in solution, and meconate of lead which precipitates. A convenient lotion, containing an excess of acetate of lead, may be formed by adding four grains of the acetate and four of opium to a fluidounce of water. The practitioner should bear in mind that, when long continued in small doses, this medicine is apt to produce dangerous constitutional effects. These are chiefly of two kinds; 1. an affection of the alimentary canal, attended with severe pain and obstinate constipation, called colica pictonum, or lead colic; 2. a chronic affection of the muscles, especially of the extensors of the upper extremities, characterized by an excessive wasting of these organs, and denominated lead palsy. Both these affections are apt to be produced in those artisans who work in lead. The approach of these dangerous constitutional symptoms is indicated by a narrow lead-blue line at the edge of the gums. The dose of acetate of lead is from one to three grains, in the form of pill, repeated every two or three hours. It is generally given combined with opium. The solution for external use may be made by dissolving from two to three drachms in a pint of water; and, if it be wanted clear, a fluidrachra of vinegar or of dilute acetic acid maybe added, which immediately dissolves the carbonate of lead, to which its turbidness is owing. When the skin is denuded of the cuticle, the solution should be weaker. The usual strength of the solution as a collyrium is from one to two grains to the fluidounce of distilled water. Off-Prep. Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis; Pilula Plumbi cum Opio, Br.; Zinci Acetas, U. S. B. PLUMBI CARBON AS. U.S.,Br. Carbonate of Lead. White Lead. Ceruse; C6ruse, Carbonate de plomb, Blanc de plomb, Blanc de ceruse, Fr.; Bleiweiss, Germ,.; Cerussa, Lat., Ital.; Albayalde, Span. Preparation. Carbonate of lead is prepared by two principal methods. By one method it is obtained by passing a stream of carbonic acid through a solu- tion of subacetate (trisacetate) of lead. The acid combines with the excess of protoxide, and precipitates as carbonate of lead, while a neutral acetate remains in solution. This, by being boiled with a fresh portion of protoxide, is again brought to the state of subacetate, when it is treated with carbonic acid as be- fore. In this way the same portion of acetate repeatedly serves the purpose of being converted into subacetate, and of being decomposed by carbonic acid. The carbonate obtained is washed, dried with a gentle heat, and thrown into commerce. This process, which produces white lead of the first quality, was in- vented by Thenard, about the year 1802, and is that which is usually pursued iu France and Sweden. A modification of the process of Thenard is now pursued by some manufac- part I. Plumbi Carbonas. tnrers in England. It consists in mixing litharge with a hundredth part of acetate of lead, and subjecting the mixture, previously moistened with very little water, to a stream of carbonic acid. (Pelouze.) The other method, which consists in exposing lead to the vapours of vinegar, originated in Holland, and is usually pursued in England and the United States; but in England, with some modifications which are not well known. We shall describe this process as pursued by our own manufacturers. The lead is cast into thin sheets, made by pouring the melted lead over an oblong sheet-iron shovel, with a flat bottom, and raised edges on its sides, which is held in a slant- ing direction over the melting-pot. As many of these sheets are then loosely rolled up as may be sufficient to form a cylinder five or six inches in diameter, and seven or eight high, which is placed in an earthen pot containing about half a pint of vinegar, and having within, a few inches from the bottom, three equi- distant projecting portions in the earthenware, on which the cylinder of lead is supported, in order to keep it from contact with the vinegar. The pots thus prepared are placed side by side, in horizontal layers, in a building roughly constructed of boards, with interstices between them. The first layer is covered with boards, on which a stratum of tan or of refuse straw from the stables is strewed; and fresh layers of pots, boards, and tan or straw are successively placed until the building is filled. The sides are also enclosed with straw. The layers of pots contained in one building, called a stack, are allowed to remain undisturbed for about six weeks, at the end of which time they are unpacked, and the cylinder of sheet-lead in each pot, though still retaining its shape, is found almost en- tirely converted into a flaky, white, friable substance, which is the white lead. This is separated from the lead yet remaining in the metallic state, ground in water, whereby it is washed and reduced to fine powder, and finally dried in long shallow reservoirs, heated by steam. Pelouze has succeeded in explaining all these processes on the same general principles. In Thenard’s process, it is admitted that the same portion of acetate of lead repeatedly unites with protoxide, and gives it up again to carbonic acid to form the carbonate. In the modified English process, referred to above, he supposes that the one percent, of acetate of lead combines with sufficient litharge to convert it into subacetate, which immediately returns to the state of neutral acetate, by yielding up its excess of base to form the carbonate with the carbonic acid. The acetate is now ready to combine with a fresh portion of litharge, to be transferred to the carbonic acid as before; and thus this small proportion of acetate, by combining with successive portions of the litharge, finally causes the whole of the latter to unite with the carbonic acid. In the Dutch process, Pe- louze has rendered it almost certain, that none of the oxygen or carbonic acid of the carbonate is derived from the vinegar. In this process he supposes that the heat, generated by the fermentation of the tan or straw, volatilizes the vine- gar, the'acetic acid of which, with the assistance of the oxygen of the air, forms with the lead a small portion of subacetate. This, by reacting with the carbonic acid, resulting from the decomposition of the tan or straw, or derived from the atmosphere, forms carbonate of lead, and is brought to the state of neutral acetate. The neutral acetate returns again to the state of subacetate, and, by alternately combining with and yielding up the protoxide, causes the whole of the lead to be finally converted into carbonate. The temperature of the stacks of pots in the Dutch process is about 113°. If it falls below 95°, a part df the lead escapes corrosion, and if it rises above 122°, the product is yellow. The form of acetic acid usually employed in this process is vinegar; but the variable nature of that liquid as to strength and purity is an objection to its use; and, accordingly, other forms of the acid have been substituted with advantage; as, for example, the purified acetic acid from wood in a diluted state. For further information in relation to the processes 660 Plumbi Carbonas. PART I. proposed or pursued for making white lead, the reader is referred to a paper by Prof. J. 0. Booth, in the Journal of the Franklin Institute for Jan. 1842. Properties. Carbonate of lead is a heavy, opaque substance, in powder or friable lumps, insoluble in water, of a fine white colour, inodorous, and nearly insipid. Its beauty as a pigment depends in a great measure on the purity of the lead from which it is manufactured. Sulphuretted hydrogen blackens it. It is wholly soluble, with effervescence, in dilute nitric acid; and the solution is precipitated white by sulphuric acid, and yellow by iodide of potassium. Exposed to heat it becomes yellow, and with charcoal is reduced to the metallic state. It is sometimes adulterated with the sulphates of baryta, lime, and lead, particu- larly the first. M. Louyet has examined samples of French white lead, con- taining considerably more than half their weight of sulphate of baryta. These sulphates, if present, are left undissolved by nitric acid. Chalk or whiting is another adulteration. This may be detected by adding to the nitric solution of the white lead an excess of potassa, which will redissolve the protoxide of lead first thrown down, but leave a white powder of lime. Neutral carbonate of lead consists of one eq. of carbonic acid 22, and one of protoxide of lead 111-5 = 133-5. Commercial white lead is a compound of the carbonate and hydrate ot lead. Mulder and Hochstetter make its formula to be 2(Pb0,C02)-f PbO,HO. According to Stein, white lead, when submitted to simple calcination, loses 145 per cent, of its weight; and a mode of determining its purity is thus afforded. (Journ. de Pharm., Janv. 1859, p. 78.) But the fact seems to be, from the ob- servations of Mr. Wm. Baker, that commercial white lead contains variable pro- portions of the hydrated oxide, from a mere trace to the amount of 1 eq. to 3 eqs. of the neutral carbonate. (Chem. News, Aug. 10, 1861, p. 74.) Medical Properties and Uses. White lead is ranked in the materia medica as an astringent and sedative. It is employed externally only, being used, in the form of ointment, as an application to ulcers, and to inflamed and excoriated surfaces. It is recommended in scalds and burns by Prof. Gross; and Mr. Alfred Freer has found it very useful in erysipelas, eczema, carbuncle, &c. {Pharm. Journ., Aug. 1859, p. 138.) The white lead is first brought to the consistence of cream by linseed oil, as in making common white paint, and then brushed over the inflamed surface. Its external use, however, is viewed by many prac- titioners as dangerous, on account of the risk of absorption ; but the occurrence of bad effects is rare. A case, however, of colica pictonum from the white lead treatment of a severe scald is reported by Dr. G. A. Kunkler, of Madison, la. (See N. A. Medico-Chir. Rev., July, 1857, p. 605.) Of the different preparations of lead, the carbonate is considered to be the most poisonous. Being extensively manufactured for the purposes of the arts, it is that preparation which, by slow absorption, most frequently produces the peculiar spasmodic colic, called colica pictonum. This disease is characterized by pain about the. region of the navel, and by obstinate constipation attended with a frequent desire to evacuate the bowels, and is supposed to depend upon a spasmodic constriction of the intestinal tube, particularly of the colon. The principal indications in the treatment are, first to relax the spasm, and then to evacuate the bowels by the gentlest means. Opium and mild aperients, used alternately, are, accordingly, the best remedies, and among the latter castor oil and sulphate of magnesia are to be preferred. Indeed, the latter appears pecu- liarly adapted to the case; for, while it acts as an aperient, it operates to some extent as a counterpoison, by forming sulphate of lead with any soluble com- pound of the metal which it may meet with in the bowels. Calomel is often useful; and, if it happens to induce ptyalism, the complaint immediately yields. By some practitioners alum is deemed almost a specific in colica pictonum. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Liquor Gutta-perchas, U. S. Off. Prep. Unguentum Plumbi Carbonatis. B part I. Plumbi Nitras. 661 PLUMBI NITRAS. U.S. Nitrate of Lead. Plumbum nitricum, Lat.; Nitrate de plomb, Fr.; Salpetersaures Bleioxyd, Germ.; Ni- trato di piombo, ltal.; Nitrato de plomo, Span. This salt was introduced into the Materia Medica of the U. S. Pharmacopeia, chiefly as one of the substances employed in the preparation of iodide of lead. Though formerly directed by the Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges, it is not re- tained in the British Pharmacopoeia. The following is the process given in the* late Dublin Pharmacopoeia for its preparation. “ Take of Litharge, in fine powder, five ounces [avoirdupois]; Pure Nitric A.cid two fiuidounces; Distilled Water three pints [Imp. meas.] ; Dilute Nitric A.cid a sufficient quantity. To the litharge, placed in a porcelain dish, add the acid with a pint and a half of the water, and, applying a sand heat, and occasionally stirring the mixture, evaporate the whole to dryness. Upon the residue boil the remainder of the water, clear the solution by filtration, and, having acidulated it by the addition of a few drops of the dilute nitric acid, evaporate until a pel- licle begins to form. The heat being now withdrawn, crystals will form on the cooling of the solution, which should be dried on blotting paper in a warm at- mosphere, and preserved in a close bottle.” In this process the nitric acid unites directly with the protoxide of lead to form the nitrate. This is in beautiful, white, nearly opaque, tetrahedral or octo- hedral crystals, which are permanent in the air, of a sweet astringent taste, soluble in seven and a half parts of water, and in alcohol, aud composed of one eq. of acid 54, and one of protoxide 111 *5 = 165'5, without water of crystallization. “Its solution is precipitated black by hydrosulphate of ammonia, white by ferro- cyanide of potassium, and yellow by iodide of potassium. When triturated with sulphuric acid, it forms a mixture, which colours morphia red, and, on being heated, evolves nitrous fumes.” (U. S.) Medical Properties, &c. The effects of this salt upon the system are the same as those of the other soluble salts of lead; but, though formerly employed, it is now quite out of use as an internal remedy. Externally it is occasionally applied to excoriated surfaces; and a solution made in the proportion of ten grains to an ounce of water, and coloured probably with alkanet, has been used on the continent of Europe, as a secret remedy, in sore nipples, chapped hands, cracked lips, &c. It has recently been found useful in the correction of fetid odours dependent on the presence of sulphuretted hydrogen or hydrosulphate of ammonia, which it decomposes. It is employed for this purpose in solution, which may be sprinkled in apartments, or applied to putrescent ulcers, or mixed with offensive discharges, the odour of which it is desirable to correct. It will not preyent the putrefaction of animal substances; and there is no reason to suppose that it is capable of rendering contagious or marsh miasms innoxious. Ledoyeri’s disinfecting fluid is a solution of nitrate of lead in the proportion of a drachm to an ounce. Should the salt be used internally, the dose would be from the fourth to the half of a grain. Dr. OgierWard has found a solution extremely useful as an injection and lotion in cases of fetid discharges from the uterus and vagina, in gleety dis- sharges from the urethra, in sloughing and indolent ulcers, and in chronic im- petiginous affections of the He prepares the solution extemporaneously by dissolving a scruple of carbonate of lead in sufficient diluted nitric acid for solution, and adding a pint of distilled water. The application is to be made twice or three times daily. (Prov. Med. and Surg. Journ., Oct. 15, 1851.) Off. Prep. Plumbi Iodidum, XJ. S. W. Piumbi Oxidum PART I. PLUMBI OXIDUM. U.S. Oxide of Lead. Litharge. Off. Son. LITE ARGYRUM. PbO. Br. Piumbi Oxi lam Seinivitreum, Lat.; Semivitrified Oxide of Lead; Oxide de plomb fondu, Litharge, Fr.j Bleiglatte, Germ,.; Litargirio, Ilal.; Almartaga, Span. When protoxide of lead is rendered semi-crystalline by incomplete fusion, it becomes the semivitrified oxide, or litharge. Almost all the litharge of com- merce is obtained, as a secondary product, in the process for extracting silver from argentiferous galenas. After extracting the argentiferous lead from the ore, the alloy is calcined in the open air; whereby the lead becomes oxidized, and by fusion passes into the state of litharge, while the silver remains unchanged. The following is an outline of the process. The lead containing the silver is placed upon an oval slightly excavated dish, about three feet long and twenty inches wide, called a test, made by beating pulverized bone-ash, formed into a paste with water, into a mould, the sides of which consist of an elliptical band of iron, and the bottom of strips of sheet iron, placed at short distances apart. The test is of such a size as exactly to fit an opening in the floor of a reverbera- tory furnace, where it is placed and adjusted to the level of the floor. On one side of the test the fire-place is situated, and exactly opposite, the chimney; while at one extremity of it the pipe of a strong bellows is placed, and at the other a vertical hole is made, communicating with a gutter leading from the test. The furnace is now lighted, and shortly afterwards the bellows are put in motion. The lead fuses and combines with oxygen, and the resulting oxide, melting also, forms a stratum which swims on the surface, and which is driven by the blast of the bellows, along the gutter and through the vertical hole into a recipient below, where, upon solidifying, it crystallizes in small scales, which form the litharge. In proportion as the lead is oxidized and blown off the test, fresh portions are added, so as to keep it always sufficiently full. The process is continued for eight or ten days, after which no more lead is added. The operation is now confined to the metal remaining on the test; and, the oxidation proceeding, a period at last arrives when the whole of the lead has run off as litharge, and the silver, known to be pure by its brilliant appearance in the fused state, alone remains. This is then removed, and the process repeated on a fresh portion of argentiferous lead. Properties. Litharge is in the form of small, brilliant, vitrified scales, some presenting a red, and others a yellow colour. In mass it has a foliaceous struc- ture. It is devoid of taste or smell. It slowly attracts carbonic acid from the air, and contains more of this acid the longer it has been exposed. It is on this account that it commonly effervesces slightly with the dilute acids. It has the property of decolorizing wines, when agitated with them. When heated with the fats and oils, in connection with water, it saponifies them. (See Emplas- trum Piumbi.) Heated with’charcoal it is reduced to the metallic state. In dilute nitric acid it should be almost entirely soluble; and the solution is affected in the same manner as that of the carbonate. (See poge 660.) As it occurs in commerce, it usually contains iron, copper, and a little silver and silica. It may be purified from iron and copper by digestion in dilute sulphuric acid. The English litharge is most esteemed; that from Germany being generally con- taminated with iron and copper. In choosing litharge, samples should be selected which are free from copper, and from fragments of vegetable matter Copper is detected, if, upon adding ferrocyanide of potassium to a nitric solu- tion of the litharge, a brown instead of a white precipitate is produced. Two varieties of litharge are distinguished in commerce, named from Muir colour, and dependent on differences in the process employed. Sometimes it hi e a j ale- part I. Plumbi Oxidum.—Plumbi Oxidum Rubrum. 663 yellow colour and silvery appearance, and is then denominated silver litharge or yellow litharge; at other times it is of a red colour, and is known the name of gold litharge or red litharge. The latter has been said to owe its colour to the presence of a portion of red lead; but M. Leblanc has shown that the two varieties of litharge differ in colour, structure, and density only, and not in chemical composition. In composition litharge is essentially identical with the protoxide of lead. (See Plumbum.) The carbonic acid which it contains is variable; but its average amount is about 4 per cent. Peroxide of lead or red lead in litharge may be detected by heating it in a test tube with chloride of sodium and bisulphate of potassa, and introducing a slip of paper coloured blue by indigo. If either of these oxides be present, the paper will be bleached by the chloriue evolved. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1860, p. 237.) Litharge is never used internally, but is employed in several pharmaceutical operations, and forms an ingredient in various external applications, used for abating inflammation, and for other purposes. By reaction with olive oil it forms the Emplastrum Plumbi, which is the basis of many of the Plasters. (See Em- plastra.) In the arts it is employed in the glazing of pottery, in painting to render oils drying, and as an ingredient in flint glass. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Digitalinum, Br. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Lithargyri, Br.; Emplastrum Plumbi, U. S.; Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis; Plumbi Acetas, Br. B. PLUMBI OXIDUM RUBRUM. Red Oxide of Lead. Red lead, Minium; Deutoxide de plomb, Oxide rllge de plomb, Minium, Fr.; Mennig, Germ.; Minio, Ital., Span. Preparation. Red lead is prepared on the large scale in a furnace, with the floor slightly concave and the roof arched, presenting a general resemblance to a baker’s oven. The lead is placed on the floor, and gradually raised to a red heat, whereby it melts and becomes covered with a pellicle of protoxide, which is removed by means of a long iron scraper; and the pellicles, as they succes- sively form, are scraped off until the whole of the metal has been converted into them. The product is subjected to further calcination, with occasional stirring, for some time, in order to oxidize any particles of metallic lead. It is thus rendered yellow, and constitutes the protoxide of lead or massicot. This is taken out of the furnace, thrown upon a level pavement, and cooled by being sprinkled with water. It is next reduced to fine powder by trituration and levi- gation, and dried; and in this state is introduced into large, shallow, square tin boxes, which are placed in another furnace, closed from the air, and heated nearly to redness; the heat being allowed gradually to fall during a period of from twenty-four to thirty hours. At the end of that time the protoxide of lead will have combined with an additional quantity of oxygen, and become the red oxide. This is taken out, and, having been passed through a fine wire sieve, is packed in barrels for the purposes of commerce. The above is an outline of the French process for making red lead. In Eng- land and the United States, the calcination of the protoxide is not performed in tin boxes, but by returning it to the furnace in which it was first calcined. To save the first calcination, Jitharge is generally used for making the red lead of commerce, which consequently is liable to contain the impurities of that sub- stance, consisting of iron, copper, and a little silver and silica. Copper is hurtful in red lead when used for making glass, to which it communicates colour. In order to have red lead of good quality, it should be made in large quantities at a time. It is also important that it be slowdy cooled; for, as the absorption of Plumhi Oxidum Rubrum.—Podophyllum. PART I. oxygen by which it is formed takes place during a particular interval of tem- perature only, it is necessary that the heat, within that interval, should be maintained sufficiently long to allow all the protoxide to absorb its appropriate dose of oxygen. Red lead is also prepared by exposing litharge to a high tem- perature with nitrate or carbonate of potassa or soda. Properties, &c. Red lead is in the form of a heavy, scaly powder, of a bright- red colour, with a slight shade of orange. Its sp. gr. is about 9. When exposed to heat it gives off oxygen, and is reduced to the state of protoxide. It is some- times adulterated with red oxide of iron and red bole, substances which may be detected by treating the red lead with nitric acid, and testing the nitric solution with tincture of galls. This reagent will produce a black precipitate, in conse- quence of the iron being dissolved by the nitric acid. If brick-dust be present, it will be left undissolved upon boiling the suspected specimen in water, with sugar and a small quantity of nitric acid. When free from impurities it is wholly reduced on charcoal by means of the blowpipe, giving a globule of metallic lead. It is completely soluble in highly fuming nitrous acid. (Ed. Pharm.) When treated with nitric acid it is resolved into protoxide which dissolves, and deut- oxide which remains in the form of a dark-brown powder. The red lead of commerce may be considered as a mixture of what may be called the true red oxide, and variable proportions of protoxide. That this is its nature is rendered probable by the action of cold dilute acetic acid, not used in excess, which takes up a variable quantity of protoxide, leaving a portion unchanged in colour, which may be deemed the pure red oxide. This latter, when analyzed by nitric acid, has been proved, by the coincident results of Dalton, Dumas, and Phillips, to consist of three eqs. of lead, and four of oxygen, equal to 2Pb0,Pb02 (Dumas), or Pb0,Pb203 (Winckelblech). Mulder gives Pb4(X=- 3Pb0,Pb02, or 2Pb0,Pb203, as/ Pharm., JS’ov. 1861, p. 543. ✓ART I. Potassx Nitras.—Potassx Permanganas. 681 nous drinks, laudanum to allay pain and irritation, and cordials to sustain the system. No antidote is known. Notwithstanding the toxical properties of nitre when taken largely in con- centrated solution, it may be given, in divided doses, to the extent of one or two ounces in twenty-four hours, if copiously diluted with water. Administered in this way, the salt acts as a sedative on the circulation, decreasing the force and frequency of the pulse. It is chiefly in acute rheumatism that large doses have been employed; and both M. Gendrin and M. Martin-Solon bear testimony to its remarkable efficacy in that disease, when thus given. Dr. Henry Bennett, of London, also speaks highly of its efficacy in the same disease; and his favour- able report of it is confirmed by some well-conducted clinical experiments by I)r. R. Rowland, of the same city. The remedy was given by the latter in a quantity never exceeding half an ounce in twenty-four hours, dissolved in a pint of water. Thus administered, it produced no inconvenience. Large doses of this salt have also been employed with success in general dropsy, following re- mittent fever. It is best given, dissolved in sweetened barley-water, in the pro- portion of half an ounce to a pint and a half or two pints of the liquid. Dr. Mangenot recommends, for the removal of cutaneous naevi, the topical use of nitre, applied by friction with the moistened finger, dipped into the pow- dered salt. (Half-yearly Abstract, Jan. to July, 1857, p. 120.) In pharmacy nitre is employed to form crocus of antimony, to procure nitric acid, and sometimes in the preparation of sweet spirit of nitre. It enters into the composition of moxa. In the laboratory it is used to make black and whit8 flux, and to yield oxygen at a red heat. In the arts it is employed in the produc- tion of aqua fortis (common nitric acid), the manufacture of sulphuric acid, and the fabrication of guupowder. Off. Prep. Acidum Nitricum, Br.; Collodium, U. S.; Potassse Nitras, Br. POTASSiE PERMANGANAS. U.S.,Br. Permanganate of Potassa. Pfypermanganate of Potassa. This is a new officinal of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias. In the former it is placed in the Materia Medica list, as an article to be procured from the manufacturer. In the latter a process is given for its preparation. The follow- ing is the British formula. “Take of Caustic Potash five ounces [avoirdupois]; Black Oxide of Man- ganese, in fine powder, four ounces [avoird.] ; Chlorate of Potash three ounces and a half [avoird.]; Dilute Sulphuric Acid a sufficiency; Distilled Water two pints and a half [Imperial measure]. Reduce the Chlorate of Potash to fine powder, and mix it with the Oxide of Manganese; put the mixture into a porcelain basin, and add to it the Caustic Potash, previously dissolved in four [fluid]ounces of the Water. Evaporate to dryness on a sand bath, stirring dili- gently to prevent spurting. Pulverize the mass, put it into a covered Hessian or Cornish crucible, and expose it to a dull red heat for an hour, or till it has assumed the condition of a semifused mass. Let it cool, pulverize it, and boil with a pint and a half [Imp. meas.] of the Water. Let the insoluble matter sub- side, decant the fluid, boil again with half a pint [Imp. meas.] of the Water, again decant, neutralize the united liquors accurately with the Dilute Sulphuric Acid, and evaporate till a pellicle forms. Set aside to cool and crystallize. Drain the crystalline mass, boil it in six [fluid]ounces of the Water, and strain through a funnel, the throat of which is lightly"obstructed by a little asbestos. Let the Cuid cool and crystallize, drain the crystals, and dry them by placing them un- der a bell jar over a vessel containing sulphuric acid.”Rr. By this process chlorate of potassa yields oxygen to binoxide of manganese, 682 Potassse Permanganas. PART I. converting it into permanganic a<'id. which unites with the potassa to form the permanganate, chloride of potassium being formed at the same time; but as the whole of the materials, however accurately the proportions may be calculated, do not react upon each other to the desired result, portions of the binoxi-de and of the potassa remain. Hence, when exhausted by water, the solution contains with the permanganate and chloride an uncertain proportion of potassa, which requires to be neutralized by sulphuric acid. Unfortunately, it is extremely dif- ficult to get rid of the sulphate of potassa and chloride of potassium, in the crystallization, which, therefore, are apt to contaminate the permanganate. At best the product is small and uncertain in amount; and the process, therefore, which is a modification of Gregory’s, is not likely to be generally adopted. Several other processes have been employed, among the best of which, accord- ing to Dr. E. R. Squibb, is the following by M. Bechamp, of Montpellier. Ten parts of binoxide of manganese, in fine powder, are intimately mixed with 12 parts of potassa dissolved in a little water, and the mixture is thoroughly dried. This is introduced into an earthenware retort, furnished with a tube passing through the tubulure nearly to the bottom. The retort is placed in a furnace, and to the beak a bent tube is adapted, the end of which dips into mercury. Heat is then applied, and a current of oxygen, or of atmospheric air freed from carbonic acid, is made to enter into the retort through the tube in the tubulure, as long as absorption continues. The mass is then exhausted with water, and carbonic acid is passed through the solution until it acquires a red or purple colour. After standing so as to allow of the subsidence of the undis- solved matter, the liquid is decanted, evaporated without ebullition, and allowed to crystallize. The crystals are purified by a second crystallization. In this pro- cess the requisite oxygen for peroxidizing the manganese is supplied from a dis- tinct source, and the disadvantage from the presence of other salts avoided. The action of the carbonic acid is to convert into carbonate the excess of po- tassa, which, so long as allowed to remain, prevents the conversion into per- manganic acid of the manganic acid formed in the earlier stage of the process. For satisfactory results it is desirable that, while a heat sufficient in degree and sufficiently prolonged is employed, it should not be so great as to decom- pose the new acid formed, and that a long continuance of heat in the ex- traction of the salt from the mass by water, and in the subsequent evaporation of the solutions should be avoided, as it also favours decomposition. Hence the pro- priety of using a steam-heat, and of obtaining the salt with as little admixture as possible of other salts, which require repeated solution and evaporation to separate them. The latter is one of the main advantages of Bechamp’s process. Dr. Squibb, after much attention to the subject, and many experiments, proposes a method in which these difficulties are avoided, and which has the recommenda- tion of simplicity and economy. We have space only for an outline of his process, and refer for details to his article in the Am. Journ. of Pharm, for Sept. 1864. Fused hydrate of potassa is heated with a little water in a cast-iron vessel, the bottom of which is made nearly red-hot; binoxide of manganese is added, and the mixture stirred till dry. It is then powdered, and subjected repeatedly to the action of water at an elevated temperature, being stirred to dryness after each addition. This operation is repeated four times. After the last addition of water the vessel is removed from the fire, and, time being allowed for subsidence, the clear liquor is decanted. The operation is twice repeated with the residue, after which the undissolved matters are thrown away. The liquors thus obtained are mixed and evaporated, care being taken to avoid too high a heat; and the resi- due is set aside to crystallize. The crystals are then drained in a funnel, the neck of which is obstructed with pieces of glass; as it is of the utmost import- ance that the salt shall not come in contact with organic matter. A further pro- duct of crystals is obtained by a repetition of the process; the mother wator part 1. Potassse Permanganas. 683 being used, instead of pure water, for the solution of the potassa. The crystals thus obtained are washed with distilled water, then dissolved in boiling distilled water, and recrystallized. The yield of pure crystals may be from 16 to 25 per cent, of the oxide employed, according to the care used in conducting the process. The rationale of this process, which appears to us to be an excellent one, is probably as follows. When the binoxide of manganese and potassa are heated together, a portion of the binoxide, under the influence of the potassa and heat, gives up to another portion so much oxygen as to convert it into manganic acid (MnOs), which combines with potassa to form the manganate. But this salt, when dissolved in water, rapidly changes to the permanganate, probably by the sur- render of one eq. of oxygen by one eq. of the manganic acid, by which it is con- verted into deutoxide (Mn02), to two other eqs. of manganic acid, converting them into one eq. of the permanganic (Mn207). The manganic acid thus be- comes a carrier of oxygen from the deutoxide, and, though a small portion may be formed at once, yet, by its successive formation and decomposition, it at length gives a considerable proportional product. Properties. Permanganate of pbtassa (K0,Mn207) is in the form of slender prismatic crystals, of a dark-purple colour, inodorous, and 0/ a sweetish, astrin- gent taste. It is said to be soluble in 16 parts of water at 60° (Brande and Taylor); but, according to M. Reveil, it is dissolved by 5 times its weight at common temperatures. (Arch. Gen., Janv. 1864, p. 24.) Its solution, even with a minute proportion of the salt, has a beautiful lilac colour. If the solution be evaporated to dryness, the salt has the form of an intensely black powder. If suddenly heated, the crystals detonate; evolving oxygen, and leading a black residue, which yields potassa to water, recognised by its alkaline reaction, and by giving, when acidulated with muriatic acid, a yellow precipitate with bichloride of platinum. (Br.) Moderately heated, they are partially volatilized, giving out violet vapours, of a disagreeable metallic odour. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 409.) This salt, in consequence of the facility with which it parts with oxygen, is one of the most powerful oxidizing agents known. It causes the combustion of certain inflammable bodies, imparts oxygen to almost all organic substances, and in chemistry is employed to bring various compounds to a higher degree of oxidation. It has been conjectured that a part of the oxygen contained in it is in the state of ozone, and to this has been ascribed its extraordinary oxidizing power. But the readiness with which it yields oxygen in the nascent state, is sufficient to account for the phenomena. It may be kept indefinitely if pure, and carefully secured from contact with organic substances, or other de- composing agents ; but, in fact, in consequence of the almost universal presence of organic matter in the air, it is generally partially decomposed, and, when dis- solved, leaves a slight residue of hydrated binoxide of manganese. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia gives as a test, that its solution is instantly de- colorized by the solution of arsenite of potassa, with the production of a brown precipitate. The British requires that 5 grains, dissolved in water, should be completely decolorized by not less than 44 grains of granulated sulphate of iron, acidulated with two fluidrachms of officinal dilute sulphuric acid. Medical Properties and Uses. Permanganate of potassa was first brought to the notice of the profession, in 185T, by Mr. Condy as a powerful disinfectant; and, since that time, has been very extensively and satisfactorily employed, so that it now ranks among the most efficient agents, and by some is considered superior to all others. Not only has it an extraordinary power of destroying /etid odours from organic sources; but it is thought even to destroy poisonous emanations, and thus to prove useful in preventing the spread of infectious dis- eases. It is used also very successfully in the treatment of fetid and gangre- nous ulcers, abscesses, and wounds of all kinds, of fetid discharges from the mucous memDrane in ozsena, otorrhcea, and leucorrhoea, and of diphtheritic 684 Potassse Permanganas.—Potassse Sulphas. PART I. affections; and it has proved serviceable even in cancerous ulcers, as of the face, mouth, and uterus. In this country, it has been employed extensively and with extraordinary success in hospital gangrene. As a local stimulant it has also been used in chronic and indolent ulcers. In all these cases, it is applied to the dis- eased surface in solution of various strengths, according to the effect desired. In concentrated solution, it is capable of acting as a caustic, and therefore re- quires caution. With the view to its caustic action, it may be sprinkled on the diseased surface by means of a pepper-box, or applied in strong solution. As a disinfectant lotion it may be of various strengths, from one to ten grains to the fluidounce of water. M. Demarquay, who was among the first to employ it, uses for injection in cancer of the womb, and for application to gangrenous and fetid abscesses, a solution varying in strength from 5 to 20 parts of the salt to 100 of water, trying the weaker solution first. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1864, p. 251.) M. 0. Reveil recommends as a standard solution 10 parts dissolved in 90 parts of water. This may be used of its full strength in dressing cancerous, phagedenic, and atonic ulcers, and diphtheritic patches at the beginning. In consequence of its action on organic bodies, it should be applied by a pencil of amianthus, or sprinkled over a dressing of the same material upon -the surface. For dressing simple wounds, or as an injection in ozaena, leucorrhoea, &c., half a fluidounce may be used to a pint of water; in gangrenous and diphtheritic wounds and scrofulous ulcers, and as a gargle in unhealthy ulcers of the mouth and fauces, a fluidounce to the pint; as a gargle in croup and diphtheritic angina with offensive breath, and as a wash for the hands after post-mortem examina- tions, two fluidounces to the pint. Of the same normal solution M. Reveil gives from ten to thirty drops internally through the day, equivalent to from one to three grains. (Arch. Gen., Janv. 1864, p. 25.) Internally the medicine has been recommended in diabetes, by Mr. Sampson, of London; but experience has not confirmed the hopes that were at one time entertained of its efficiency. More recently we have been told that it has been used with supposed benefit, in cases of purulent infection, in the dose of half a grain or a grain repeated several times a day; and it is one of the remedies which is likely to prove useful in diphtheria, scarlatina, aud other affections in which it may be presumed that noxious organic matters have entered the circulation. Off. Prep. Liquor Potassm Permanganatis, Br. W. POTASSiE SULPHAS. U.S.,Br. Sulphate of Potassa. Vitriolated tartar; Tartarum vitriolatum, Arcanum duplicatum, Sal de dnobus, Lat.; Sulfate de potasse, Potasse vitriolde, Fr.; Scliwcfelsaures Kali, Vitriolisirtir Weinstein, Germ.; Solfato di potassa, Ital. Several chemical processes give rise to sulphate of potassa as a secondary product. Thus, it is produced in the distillation of nitric acid from a mixture of nitre and sulphuric acid; in the decomposition of sulphate of magnesia by carbonate of potassa, in one of the processes for preparing carbonate of mag- nesia ; in the manufacture of sulphuric acid; and in the decomposition of tar- trate of potassa by sulphate of lime. When nitric acid is obtained by calcining a mixture of nitre and sulphate of iron, the residue consists of sesquioxide of iron and sulphate of potassa, the latter of which, being alone soluble, is separated by means of water, and crystallized from its solution. The impure sulphate ot potassa with sulphur, forming the residue of the combustion of sulphur and nitre in making sulphuric acid, is employed in the manufacture of alum. The IT. S. Pharmacopoeia places sulphate of potassa in the list of the Materia Medica; the British, among the preparations, obtaining it from the salt which PART I. Potassse Sulphas. 685 remains after the distillation of nitric acid. This salt is a supersulphate of po- tassa, and must be so treated as to be brought to the neutral state. In the British process it is brought to that state by saturation, in boiling solution, with slaked lime. The solution is then filtered to separate the sulphate of lime, and carbonate of potassa is added at the boiling temperature to remove lime and sulphate of lime. It is again filtered, then either neutralized or rendered slightly acid with diluted sulphuric acid; and, finally, having been evaporated to a pellicle, is set aside for twenty-four hours to crystallize. The manufacturer of tartaric acid who avails himself of sulphate of lime to decompose tartrate of potassa, forms sulphate of potassa as a collateral product. For the manner in which the latter salt may be economically crystallized for use in the arts, see Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiii. 343). Properties. Sulphate of potassa is a white, anhydrous salt, in the form of small, aggregated, transparent, very hard crystals, permanent in the air, having the shape usually of short six-sided prisms, terminated by six-sided pyramids, and possessing a nauseous, somewhat bitter taste. Insoluble in alcohol, it is slowly soluble in about nine and a half times its weight of cold, and in less than four times its weight of boiling water. (Gay-Lussac.) Its solution is precipi- tated yellow by bichloride of platinum, and white by chloride of barium. Added to a solution of sulphate of alumina, it generates alum, recognised by the octo- hedral shape of its crystals. It is decomposed by tartaric acid, which forms bi- tartrate of potassa, and by the soluble salts of baryta, strontia, lime, silver, and lead, forming insoluble or sparingly soluble sulphates. This salt is not liable to adulteration. It consists of one eq. of sulphuric acid 40, and one of potassa 47-2 = 87-2. The plate-sulphate of potassa, so well-described by Prof. Penny, of Glasgow, is, when pure, the double sulphate of potassa and soda, having the formula 3(K0,S03)-f-Na0,S03. It is so called from the circumstance of being crystal- lized in hard thick cakes, or slabs, consisting of successive crops of crystals. It is a technical product from kelp, and may be formed by allowing successive quantities of concentrated kelp-ley to run into coolers, there to crystallize in successive layers; the mother-liquor being drawn off by a siphon, after the de- posit of each layer. (Philos. Mag., Dec. 1855.) Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphate of potassa is a mild purgative, operating usually without heat, pain, or other symptom of irritation. In small doses of from a scruple to half a drachm, it operates as an aperient, and is useful in removing obstructions; in larger doses, of four or five drachms, it acts slowly as a purge. Combined with rhubarb, in the proportion of about a drachm of the salt to ten grains of the root, Dr. Fordyce recommended it as an excellent alterative cathartic in the visceral obstructions of children, characterized by a tumid abdomen, and defective digestion and nutrition; and we can bear testi- mony to its efficacy in such cases. The late Dr. A. T. Thomson found it, in combination with rhubarb or aloes, “more useful than any of the other saline purgatives in jaundice and dyspeptic affections.” On the continent of Europe it is frequently given as an aperient after delivery, and for the purpose of drying up the milk. It enters into the composition of Dover’s powder. Notwithstanding the general sentiment of practitioners as to the safety of sulphate of potassa as a purgative, several cases are on record of supposed poi- soning from its use. A case has been reported (1856), in which death was at- tributed to this salt, the amount taken having been estimated at an ounce and a half. M. Moritz attributed the poisonous effects of the salt, in a case under his notice, to the presence of a notable quantity of sulphate of zinc; but this explanation cannot be admitted as adequate. In other cases, the salt, though found to be pure, seemed to act as a poison. In these cases its effects may be attributed, sometimes to the largeness of the dose, and perhaps also to the insuf- Potassii Ferrocyanidum. PART I. flciency of water used to dissolve it; at other times, where the dose used was mode- rate, to the existence of a predisposition to gastric inflammation. For further information in relation to this subject, the reader is referred to a paper by the late Dr. T. Romeyn Beck, in the Amer. Journ. of the Med. Sci. (N. S., vii. 88). Off. Prep. Pilula Colocynthidis Composita, Br.; Pilula Colocynthidis et Hyoscyami, Br.; Pulvis Ipecacuahse Compositus, U. S.; Pulvis Ipecacuanhas cum Opio, Br. B. POTASSII FERROCYANIDUM. U.S. Ferrocyanuret of potassium, Ferrocyanate of potassa, Ferroprussiate of potassa, Prus- eiate of potassa; Proto-cyanure jaune de fer et de potassium, Fr.; Cyaneisenkalium, Germ. This is placed among the substances used in preparing medicines, in the Ap- pendix of the British Pharmacopoeia, with the formula K2FeCy3-f 3IIO (Cy- anogen, Cy = C2N), and the synonyme Yellow Prussiate of Potash. It is the yellow double cyanide of potassium and iron, the salt from which cyanide of potassium is obtained by calcination at a low red heat. Ferrocyanide of potassium is prepared on the large scale by heating animal matters, such as dried blood, hoofs, chips of horn, woollen rags, old leather, the refuse of tallow-chandlers called greaves, and other substances rich in nitrogen, with the pearlash of commerce and scrap iron, in an egg-shaped iron pot called a shell, ladling out the pasty mass called the melt, and, after it has cooled suffi- ciently, dissolving it in water, and evaporating the solution so that crystals may form. The melt, while still hot, contains cyanide of potassium only, the ferro- cyanide being produced solely by the action of the water. The best temperature for making the solution is between 158° and 176°; and the conversion of the cyanide into the ferrocyanide is facilitated by the presence of finely divided amorphous sulphuret of iron, and of caustic potassa. (A. Reimann, Chem. Oaz., Jan. 1, 1855.) Some years ago this salt was manufactured by a process which dispensed with the use of animal matter; the necessary nitrogen being obtained by a current of atmospheric air. Fragments of charcoal, impregnated with 30 per cent, of car- bonate of potassa, were heated to white redness in a cylinder, through which a curreut of air was drawn by a suction pump. This process is understood to have succeeded in a chemical sense, but failed on the score of economy, chiefly from the circumstance that the necessary fire-clay tubes could not be made to resist the combined action of the alkali and heat. The process of Richard Brunnquell consists in passing ammonia through tubes, filled with charcoal and heated to redness, so as to form cyanide of ammonium, and converting this into ferrocy- anide of potassium by contact with solution of potash and suitable iron com- pounds. (Chem. Gaz., Nov. 1, 1856.) Properties. Ferrocyanide of potassium is in large, beautiful, transparent, permanent, four-sided, tabular crystals, of a lemon-yellow colour, devoid of odour, but possessing a sweetish, yet somewhat bitter, saline taste. It dissolves in between three and four times its weight of cold water, and in about its own weight of boiling water, but is insoluble in alcohol. It acts but slightly, if at all, on turmeric paper. The alkaline reaction, when it exists, is probably owing to the presence of a little free potassa. When heated to 140° it loses its water of crystallization, amounting to 12 6 per cent., and becomes white. When ignited, the insoluble residue amounts to 18-7 per cent, of sesquioxide of iron, resulting from the oxidation of the iron of the salt. It is characterized by striking a deep-blue colour with the salts of sesquioxide of iron, a deep-brown one with the salts of copper, and a white one with those of zinc, the several precipitates formed being ferrocyanides of the respective metals. Heated with Ferrocyanide of Potassium. part I. Potassii Ferroeyanidum.—Prinos. 687 eight or ten times its weight of concentrated sulphuric acid, it evolves carbonic oxide. (Fownes.) Half an ounce of the salt yields about 250 cubic inches of the gas. (G. Grimm and G. Bamdohr.) When boiled with dilute sulphuric acid, it emits the smell of hydrocyanic acid. Ferrocyanide of potassium consists of two eqs. of cyanide of potassimn 130‘4, one of cyanide of iron 54, and three of water 27 = 211*4 (2KCy,FeCy-f 3IIO). The water present is just sufficient to convert the iron and potassium into protoxides, and the cyanogen into hydro- cyanic acid. Apart from the water, it is generally considered to consist of a compound radical, called ferrocyanogen. formed of three eqs. of cyanogen and one of iron (tercyanide of iron), united with two eqs. of potassium. Hence its officinal name. The salt is remarkably pure as it occurs in commerce. Medical Properties, &c. Judging from the experiments of the German phy- sicians, this salt possesses but little activity. Callies, as quoted by Pereira, found the commercial salt slightly poisonous, but the pure salt unproductive of harm in the dose of several ounces. It should be borne in mind that it is the com- mercial salt which is used medicinally. Westrumb and Hering proved that it passed with rapidity into the blood and urine. The late Dr. Burleigh Smart, of Kennebec, Maine, found it to possess active medical properties. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xv. 362.) Its primary effect was that of a sedative, diminishing the ful- ness and frequency of the pulse, and allaying pain and irritation. It acted also, under favourable circumstances, as a diaphoretic and astringent; but, as a diapho- retic, only in cases attended with excessive vascular action and increased heat of skin. As an astringent, its power was most conspicuous in the colliquative sweats of chronic bronchitis and phthisis. The same power was evinced in several cases of leucorrhoea. It sometimes produced ptyalism, unattended, however, by swelling of the salivary glands or fetor of the breath. Its properties as an ano- dyne and sedative rendered it applicable to cases of neuralgic pains and hoop- ing cough, in which diseases, especially the latter, Dr. Smart found it useful. When given in an overdose, it occasioned vertigo, coldness, and numbness, with a sense of gastric sinking. The form of administration which Dr. Smart pre- ferred was that of solution, in the proportion of two drachms to the fluidounce of water. Of this the dose for an adult is from 30 to 45 drops, equivalent to from 10 to 15 grains of the salt, repeated every four or six hours. This salt is manufactured on a large scale, chiefly for the use of dyers and calico-printers. In pharmacy it is employed to prepare diluted hydrocyanic acid, Prussian blue, and the cyanides of potassium and silver. Off. Prep. Acidum Hydrocyanicum Dilutum; Argenti Cyanidum, TJ.S.; Ferri Ferroeyanidum, U.S.; Hydrargyri Cyanidum, U. S.; Potassii Cyanidum, U S. B. PRINOS. US. Secondary. Black Alder. The bark of verticillatus. U. S. Prinos. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Aquifoliacese. Gen. Ch. Calyx small, six-cleft. Corolla monopetalous, subrotate, six-parted. Berry six-seeded ; seeds nuciform. Nuttall. Prinos verticillatus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 225; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 141; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 203. The black alder is an indigenous shrub, with a stem six or eight feet high, furnished with alternate, spreading branches, and covered with a bluish-gray bark. The leaves, which stand alternately or irregu- larly on short petioles, are oval, pointed, tapering at the base, acutely serrate, of a dark-green colour, smooth above, but downy on the veins beneath. The flowers are small, white, nearly sessile, and grow three or four together at the axils of the leaves. They are often dioecious. The calyx is persistent; the seg- 688 Prinos.—Prunum. PART I. ments of the corolla obtuse; the stamens usually six, and furnished with oblong anthers; the germ large, green, and roundish, with a short style, terminating in an obtuse stigma. The fruit when ripe consists of glossy, scarlet, roundish ber- ries, about the size of a pea, containing six cells and six seeds. Several of these berries are clustered, so as to form little bunches at irregular intervals on the stem. In the latter part of autumn, after the leaves have fallen, they still remain attached to the stem, and render the shrub a striking object in the midst of the general nakedness of vegetation. Hence the plant is often called winterberry. It grows in all parts of the United States, from Canada to Florida, frequent- ing low wet places, such as swamps, and the borders of ponds, ditches, and streams. Its flowers appear in June. The berries, which have a bitter, sweet- ish, somewhat acrid taste, are sometimes used medicinally for the same purposes with the bark, which is the officinal portion. The dried bark is in slender pieces, more or less rolled, brittle, greenish-white internally, and covered with a smooth epidermis, easily separable, and of a whitish-ash colour, alternating or mingled with brown. It has no smell, but a bitter and slightly astringent taste. Boiling water extracts its virtues. Medical Properties and Uses. Black alder is usually considered tonic and astringent; and is among the remedies proposed as substitutes for Peruvian bark, with which, however, it has very little analogy. It has been recommended in intermittent fever, diarrhoea, and other diseases connected with debility, espe- cially gangrene and mortification. It is a popular remedy in gangrenous or flabby and ill-conditioned ulcers, and in chronic cutaneous eruptions, in which it is given internally, and applied locally in the form of a wash or poultice. It may be used in substance or decoction. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm, to be repeated several times a day. The decoction, which is usually preferred both for internal and external use, may be prepared by boiling two ounces of the bark with three pints of water to a quart, and given in the dose of two or three fluidounces. A saturated tincture, as well of the berries as of the bark, is sometimes employed. W. PRUNUM. U.S., Br. Prunes. The dried fruit of Prunus doraestica. U. S. The dried Drupe; from plants cultivated in Southern Europe. Br. Pruneaux, Fr.; Pflaumen, Germ.; Pruni, Ital.; Ciruelas secas, Span. Prunus. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Amygdaleae. Gen. Ch. Calyx inferior, bell-shaped, deciduous, with five obtuse, concave segments. Petals five, roundish, concave, spreading, larger than the segments of the calyx, into the rim of which they are inserted. Filaments awl-shaped, nearly as long as the corolla, from the rim of the calyx within the petals. An- thers short, of two round lobes. Ovary superior, roundish. Style of the length of the stamens. Stigma orbicular, peltate. Drupe roundish or elliptical. Nut, hard, somewhat compressed, of one cell, and two more or less distinct sutures with an intermediate furrow. Leaves rolled up when young. (Lindley.) Prunus domestica. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 995; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 520, t. 1ST. The cultivated prune or plum tree is so well known as to render a minute description unnecessary. We merely give the specific character. “ Peduncles subsolitary; leaves lanceolate-ovate, convolute; branches not spiny.” The varieties of the tree produced by cultivation are very numerous. Nearly one hundred are to be found in the British gardens. Though at present growing wild in various parts of Europe, it is thought to have been brought originally from Asia Minor and Syria. It is the dried fruit only that is officinal. PART I. Prunum.—Prunus Virginiana. 689 The prunes brought to our market come chiefly from the south of France, the best from Bordeaux. They are derived from the variety of the tree named Juliana by Linnaeus. The fresh fruit, called Prune de Saint Julien by the French, is of an oval shape, nearly an inch in length, and of a deep-violet colour. It is prepared by drying in the sun, after having been exposed to the heat of an oven. The finest prunes, used on the tables in France, are prepared from the larger kinds of plums, such as the Saint Catharine, and Peine-Claud* or green-gage. An inferior sort is brought from Germany. Prunes have a feeble odour, and a sweet mucilaginous taste, which is gene- rally also somewhat acid. They contain uncrystallizable sugar, malic acid, and mucilaginous matter. In Germany a kind of brandy is obtained from them, which in some districts is largely consumed. Bonneberg, a German chemist, has extracted from prunes crystallizable sugar, equal to that of the cane. Medical Properties and Uses. Prunes are laxative and nutritious, and, stewed with water, form an excellent diet in costiveness, especially during con- valescence from febrile and inflammatory diseases. Imparting their laxative property to boiling water, they serve as a pleasant and useful addition to pur- gative decoctions. Their pulp is used in the preparation of laxative confections. Too largely taken, in a debilitated state of the digestive organs, they are apt to occasion flatulence, and griping pain in the stomach and bowels. Off. Prep. Confectio Sennae. W. PRUNUS VIRGINIAN A. U.S. Wild-cherry Bark. The bark of Cerasus serotina (De Cand.). U. S. Cerasus. See LAURO-CERASUS. This genus, which is now generally admitted, includes a large number of species formerly embraced in the genus Prunus of Linnaeus. Cerasus serotina. De Candolle, Prodrom. ii. 540; Torrey and Gray, Flora of N. America, i. 410.— Cerasus Virginiana. Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. ii. 205. According to Torrey and Gray, the name Prunus Virginiana, which has been wrongly applied to this species, was given by Linnaeus to the choke-cherry, a small tree or shrub, growing in the Northern States, and bearing a dark-red, globular, astringent fruit, about as large as that of the wild-cherry. This is described in the Flora of N. America of these authors, under the name of Ce- rasus Virginiana. The officinal species, or wild-cherry tree, is, according to Michaux, one of the largest productions of the American forest. Individuals were seen by that botanist on the banks of the Ohio, from eighty to one hundred feet high, with trunks from twelve to fifteen feet in circumference, and undivided to the height of twenty-five or thirty feet. But, as usually met with in the Atlantic States, the tree is much smaller. In the open fields it is less elevated than in forests, but sends out more numerous branches, which expand into an elegant oval summit. 'The trunk is regularly shaped, and covered with a rough, blackish bark, which detaches itself semicircularly in thick narrow plates. The leaves are oval-oblong, or lanceolate-oblong, acuminate, unequally serrate, smooth on both sides, of a beautiful brilliant green, and supported alternately upon petioles, which are furnished with from two to four reddish glands. The flowers are small, white, and collected in long erect or spreading racemes. They appear in May, and are followed by globular drupes, about the size of a pea, and when ripe of a shining blackish-purple colour. This tree grows throughout the Union, flourishing most in those parts where the soil is fertile and the climate temperate, and abounding in the Middle Atlantic States, and in those which border on the Ohio. In the neighbourhood of Phila- 690 Prunus Virginiana. PART I. delphia. it affects open situations, growing solitarily in the fields and along fences, and seldom aggregated in woods or groves. It is highly valued by the cabinet-makers for its wood, which is compact, fine-grained, susceptible of polish, and of a light-red tint, which deepens with age. The leaves have been found by Prof. Procter to yield volatile oil and hydrocyanic acid on distillation, and in such proportion that a water distilled from them might with propriety be sub- stituted for the cherry-laurel water. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 325.) The fruit has a sweetish, astringent, bitter taste; and is much used in some parts of the country to impart flavour to spirituous liquors. The inner bark is the part employed in medicine, and is obtained indiscriminately from all parts of the tree, though that of the roots is thought to be most active. Mr. J. S. Perot has ascertained that it is stronger when collected in autumn than in the spring. Thus, from a portion gathered in April he obtained 0 0478 per cent, of hydrocyanic acid, and from another in October 0T436 per cent., or about three times as much. The parcels tried were taken from the same tree, and the same part of the tree. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 111.) The bark should be preferred recently dried, as it deteriorates by keeping. Properties. Wild-cherry bark, as kept in the shops, is in pieces of various sizes, more or less curved laterally, usually destitute of epidermis, of a lively reddish-cinnamon colour, brittle, and pulverizable, presenting a reddish-gray fracture, and affording a fawn-coloured powder. In the fresh state, or when treated with water, it emits an odour resembling that of peach leaves. Its taste is agreeably bitter and aromatic, with the peculiar flavour of the bitter almond. It imparts its sensible properties to water, either cold or hot, producing a clear reddish, infusion closely resembling Madeira wine in appearance. Its peculiar flavour as well as medical virtues are injured by boiling, in consequence partly of the volatilization of the principles upon which they depend, partly upon a chemical change effected by the heat. From an analysis by Dr. Stephen Procter, it appears to contain starch, resin, tannin, gallic acid, fatty matter, lignin, red colouring matter, salts of lime and potassa, and iron. He obtained also a vola- tile oil, associated with hydrocyanic acid, by distilling the same portion of water successively from several different portions of the bark. This oil was of a light- straw colour, and very analogous in its properties to the volatile oi-1 of bitter almonds. In the quantity of two drops it proved fatal to a cat in less than five minutes. (Journ. of the Philad. Col. of Pharm., vi. 8.) Prof. William Procter proved that, as in the case of bitter almonds, the volatile oil and hydrocyanic acid do not exist ready formed in the bark, but are the result of the reaction of water with amygdalin, which he ascertained to be one of its constituents. In order, however, that this change may take place, the agency of another prin- ciple, probably analogous to if not identical with emulsin or the synaptase of Itobiquet, is also essential; and, as this principle becomes inoperative at the boiling temperature, we can understand how decoction may interfere with the virtues of the bark. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., x. 197.) The conjecture was ad- vanced, in former editions of this work, that wild-cherry bark might contain also phloridzin, a bitter principle proved to exist in the bark of the apple, pear, cherry, and plum trees; but Mr. Perot sought for this principle, without suc- cess, in specimens of the bark of different ages, and taken from different parts of the tree; so that the tonic property, which is undoubtedly possessed by the bark, must reside either in the portion of amygdalin which may remain unde- composed, in the pure volatile oil resulting from its reaction with water, or in some yet undiscovered principle. (Ibid., xxiv. 111.) That the last of these in- ferences is the correct one, would seem to be proved by an experiment by Prof. Procter, who found the bitterness of an extract of the bark to remain after it had been wholly deprived of amygdalin. (See the author’s Treatise on Thera- peutics, &c., i. 291.) The sedative properties of the bark depend uuon the hydrocyanic acid which it yields. 691 PART I. Prunus Virginiana.—Pyrethrum. Medical Properties and Uses. This bark is among the most valuable of our indigenous remedies. Uniting with a tonic power the property of calming irri- tation and diminishing nervous excitability, it is admirably adapted to tne treat- ment of diseases in which debility of the stomach, or of the system, is united with general or local irritation. When largely taken it diminishes the action of the heart, an elfect ascribable to the hydrocyanic acid. Dr. Eberle found copious draughts of the cold infusion, taken several times a day, and continued for nearly two weeks, to reduce his pulse from seventy-five to fifty strokes in the minute. The remedy is highly useful, and has been much employed in this country, in the hectic fever of scrofula and consumption. In the general debility which often succeeds inflammatory diseases, it is also advantageous; and it is well adapted to many cases of dyspepsia. It has been given successfully in intermittent fever, but is much inferior to cinchona. It may be used in the form of powder, infusion, fluid extract, or syrup. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm; of the infusion, which is properly directed in the Pharmacopoeia to be prepared with cold water, two or three fluidounces; of the fluid extract, a fluidraehm ; and of the syrup, half a fluid- ounce. These preparations are all officinal, and are described in the second part of the work, under their titles respectively. Off. Prep. Extractum Pruni Virginian® Fluidum, U. S.; Infusum Pruni Vir- ginian®, U. S.; Syrupus Pruni Virginian®, U. S. W. PYRETHRUM. U. S. Secondary. Pellitory. The root of Anacyclus Pyrethrum. U. S. Pyrethre, Ft.; Bertram Wurzel, Germ.; Piretro, Ital.; Pelitre, Span. v Anacyclus. Differing from Anthemis by its winged and obcordate aclisenia. Lindley. See ANTHEMIS. Anacyclus Pyrethrum. De Cand. Prodrom. vi. 15. — Anthemis Pyrethrum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 2184; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 50, t. 20. The root of this plant is perennial, and sends up numerous stems, usually trailing at the base, erect in their upper portion, eight or ten inches high, and terminated by one large flower. The leaves are doubly pinnate, with narrow nearly linear segments of a pale-green colour. The florets of the disk are yellow; the rays white on their upper surface, and reddish or purple beneath and at their edges. The plant is a native of the Levant, Barbary, and the Mediterranean coast of Europe. The root is the part used under the name of pellitory, or pellitory of Spain. According to Hayne, the pellitory of the shops is derived from the Anacyclus officinarum, a plant cultivated in Thuryngia for medical purposes. This remarkThowever, can apply only to Germany. Properties. The dried root of A. Pyrethrum is about the size of the little finger, cylindrical, straight or but slightly curved, wrinkled longitudinally, of an ash-brown colour externally, whitish within, hard and brittle, and sometimes furnished with a few radicals. It is destitute of odour, though, when fresh, of a disagreeable smell. Its taste is peculiar, slight at first, but afterwards acidu- lous, saline, and acrid, attended with a burning and tingling sensation over the whole mouth and throat, which continues for some time, and excites a copious flow of saliva. Its analysis by Koene gives, in 100 parts, 0-59 of a brown, very acrid substance, of a resinous appearance, and insoluble in caustic potassa; L60 of a dark-brown, very acrid fixed oil, soluble in potassa; 0 35 of a yellow acrid oil. also soluble in potassa; traces of tannin; 9-40 parts of gum; inulin; 7‘60 parts of sulphate and carbonate of potassa, chloride of potassium, phosphate and carbonate of lime, alumina, silica. &c.; and 19-80 of lignin, besides loss. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., viii. 175.) Pyrethrum.— Quassia. PART I. Me dr cal Properties and Uses. Pellitory is a powerful irritant, used almost exclusively as a sialagogue in certain forms of headache, rheumatic and neu- ralgic affections of the face, toothache, &c., or as a local stimulant in palsy of the tongue or throat, and in relaxation of the uvula. For these purposes it may be chewed, or employed as a gargle in decoction or vinous tincture. The dose as a masticatory is from thirty grains to a drachm. An alcoholic extract is some- times employed by dentists as a local application to carious teeth, with a view to its benumbing effect before plugging. W. QUASSIA. U.S,Br. The wood of Simaruba excelsa. U. S. Pieraena excelsa. The Wood. Br. Bois de quassie, Fr.; Quassienliolz, Germ.; Legno della quassia, Ital.; Leno de quassia, Span. Quassia. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Simarubaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-leaved. Petals five. Nectary five-leaved. Drupes five, distant, bivalve, one-seeded, inserted into a fleshy receptacle. Willd. Of the species included by Linnaeus in this genus, some, as Quassia amara, are hermaphrodite; others, as Q. excelsa and Q. Simaruba, are monoecious or polygamous. The latter have been associated by De Candolle in a distinct genus, named Simaruba, which has been again divided by Lindley into Simaruba with monoecious, and Pieraena with polygamous flowers. To the last-mentioned genus the proper Quassia plant, Q. excelsa of Linnaeus, belongs. The medicine was formerly obtained from Quassia amara; but more than twenty years since Lamarck stated that, in consequence of the scarcity of this tree, Quassia excelsa had been resorted to as a substitute, and the Pharmaco- poeias at present agree in acknowledging the latter as the officinal plant. The genuine quassia plant, however, of Surinam is the Q. amara; and we shall, there- fore, give a brief description of both species. Quassia excelsa. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 569. — Simaruba excelsa. De Cand. Prodrom. 1.733; Hayne, Darstel. und Beschreib. &c. ix. 16. —Pieraena excelsa. Lindley, Flor. Med. 208. As its name imports, this is a lofty tree, attaining sometimes not less than one hundred feet in height, with a straight, smooth, tapering trunk, which is often three feet in diameter near its base, aud covered with a smooth, gray bark. The leaves are pinnate, with a naked petiole, and oblong pointed leaflets standing upon short footstalks, in opposite pairs, with a single leaflet at the end. The flowers are small, of a yellowish-green colour, and disposed in panicles. They are polygamous and pentandrous. The fruit is a small black drupe. This species inhabits Jamaica and the Caribbean islands, where it is called bitter ash. The wood is the officinal portion. Quassia amara. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 567 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 574, t. 204. The bitter quassia is a small branching tree or shrub, with alternate leaves, con- sisting of two pairs of opposite pinnae, with an odd one at the end. The leaflets are elliptical, pointed, sessile, smooth, of a deep-green colour on their upper surface, and paler on the under. The common footstalk is articulated, and edged on each side with a leafy membrane. The flowers, which are hermaphrodite and decandrous, have a bright-red colour, and terminate the branches in long racemes. The fruit is a two-celled capsule containing globular seeds. Quassia amara is a native of Surinam, and is said also to grow in some of the West India islands. Its root, bark, and wood were formerly officinal. They are excessively bitter, as in fact are all parts of the plant. It is uncertain whether any of the produce of this tree now reaches our markets. Quassia comes in cylindrical billets of various sizes, from an inch to near a Quassia. part I. Quassia. 693 foot in diameter, and several feet in length. These are frequently invested with a light-coloured smoothish bark, brittle, and but slightly adherent, and possess ing in at least an equal degree the virtues of the wood. Their shape and struc ture clearly evince that they are derived from the branches or trunk, and not as some have supposed, from the root of the tree. In the shops they are usually kept split into small pieces, or rasped.* Properties. The wood is at first whitish, but becomes yellow by exposure. It is inodorous, and has a purely bitter taste, surpassed by that of few other substances in intensity and permanence. It imparts its active properties, with its bitterness and yellow colour, to water and alcohol. Its virtues depend upon a peculiar bitter crystallizable principle, denominated quassin, which was first discovered by Winckler. It may be obtained pure by the following process of Wiggers. A filtered decoction of quassia is evaporated to three-quarters of the weight of the wood employed, slaked lime is added, and the mixture, having been allowed to stand for a day, with occasional agitation, is again filtered. A considerable quantity of pectin, besides other substances, is thus separated. The clear liquor is evaporated nearly to dryness, and the resulting mass exhausted by alcohol of the sp.gr. 0 835, which leaves behind gum, common salt, nitre, Ac., in large amount, and dissolves quassin with some common salt and nitre, and a brown organic substance. In order to separate the quassin from these latter principles, which are soluble in water, the solution is evaporated to dry- ness, the resulting mass is dissolved in the least possible quantity of absolute alcohol, a large proportion of ether is added, and the liquor, previously sepa- rated by filtration from the brown mass which the ether has thrown down, is evaporated to dryness; and this process is repeated till the quassin remains behind quite colourless, and affords no evidence of the presence of the above- mentioned salts. Lastly, in order to obtain it in a crystalline form, to which it is not strongly disposed, pour the alcoholic solution mixed with ether upon a little water, and allow it to evaporate spontaneously. Quassin is white, opaque, unalterable in the air, inodorous, and of an intense bitterness, which in the solu- tions of this principle is almost insupportable. The bitterness is pure, and re- sembles that of the wood. When heated, quassin melts like a resin. It is but slightly soluble in water, 100 parts of which at 54° dissolve only 0‘45, and that slowly. By the addition of salts, especially of those with which it is associated in quassia, its solubility is strikingly increased. It is also but slightly soluble in ether, but is very soluble in alcohol, more so in that liquid hot than cold, and the more so the purer it is. Quassin is perfectly neuter, though both alkalies and acids increase its solubility in water. It is precipitated by tannic acid from its aqueous solution, which is not disturbed by iodine, chlorine, corrosive subli- mate, the salts of iron, sugar of lead, or even subacetate of lead. Its ulti- mate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Among the salts con- tained in quassia, Mr. Geo. Whipple has detected a considerable proportion of sulphate of soda. {Pharm. Journ., xiii. 643.) Medical Properties and Uses. Quassia has in the highest degree all the pro- perties of the bitters. It is purely tonic, invigorating the digestive organs, with little excitement of the circulation, or increase of animal heat. It has not been very long known as a medicine. About the middle of the last cen- tury, a negro of Surinam, named Quassi, acquired considerable reputation in * Mr. Edward Parrish has called attention to a bark, known in the market under the name of quassia bark. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 104.) A specimen in our possession is vn pieces, very broad, slightly curved laterally, thin in proportion to their other dimensions, covered with a thin, greenish-brown, rough epidermis, yellowish-white and striated on their inner surface, of a feeble odour, and a quassia-like bitterness. The inner layers of the proper bark are very fibrous and tough, and, on the broken surface, of a light-yellow colour. It is uncertain whether the bark is from t*he Quassia excelsa; but there is little doubt that it is either from that or some analogous tree.—Note to the eleventh edition Quassia.— Quercus Alba.—Quercus Tinctoria. PART I. the treatment of the malignant fevers of that country, by a secret remedy, which he was induced to disclose to Mr. Rolander, a Swede, for a valuable considera- tion. Specimens were taken to Stockholm by this gentleman in the year 1756; and the medicine soon became popular in Europe. The name of the negro has been perpetuated in the generic title of the plant. But the quassia of Surinam is not now in use, having been superseded by the product of Quassia excelsa, from the West Indies. This medicine is useful whenever a simple tonic impres- sion is desirable. It is particularly adapted to dyspepsia, and to that debilitated state of the digestive organs which sometimes succeeds acute disease. It may also be given with advantage in the remission of certain fevers in which tonics are demanded. No one at present would expect from it any peculiar control- ling influence over malignant fevers. It is said to be largely employed in Eng- land by the brewers, to impart bitterness to their liquors. It is most conveniently administered in infusion or extract. (See Infusum Quassise and Extractum Quassiee.) The difficulty of reducing the wood to powder is an objection to its use in substance. It may, however, be employed in a dose varying from a scruple to a drachm, repeated three or four times a day. Some dyspeptic patients, who have become habituated to its bitterness, chew the wood occasionally with benefit. Off. Prep. Extractum Quassias; Infusum Quassiae; Tinctura Quassias, TJ. S. QUERCUS ALBA. US. White-oak Bark. The bark of Quercus alba. U. S. QUERCUS TINCTORIA. U.S. Black-oak Bark. The bark of Quercus tinctoria. U. S. Off. Syn. QUERCUS Quercus pedunculate. The dried Bark of the small branches and young stems; collected in spring, from plants growing in Britain. Br. Ecorce de chene, Ft.; Eichenrinde, Germ.; Corteccia della quercia, Ital.; Corteza de roble, Span. Quercus. Sex. Syst. Monoecia Polyandria.—Nat. Ord. Amentaceae, Juss.; Cupuliferae, Richard; Corylaceas,, Lindley. Gen.Ch. Male. Calyx commonly five-cleft. Corolla none. Stamens five to ten. Female. Calyx one-leafed, entire, rough. Corolla none. Styles two to five. Nut coriaceous, surrounded at the base by the persistent calyx. Willd. This genus comprises not less than eighty species, of which between thirty and forty are within the limits of the United States. Many of these are applied to important practical purposes. In the northern hemisphere, the oak is the most valuable, as it is the most widely diffused of all forest trees. Notwithstanding the great number of species, few, comparatively, have found a place in the offici- nal catalogues. Q. robur, or common European oak, was formerly recognised by the British Colleges; but at’ present only Q. pedunculata, or European white oak, is admitted in the Br. Pharmacopoeia. As ftiese~73o~not grow in the United States, and their products are not imported, it is unnecessary to treat of them particularly in this work. According to Michaux, they grow in the same coun- tries, frequently together, constituting the greater part of the forests of Europe, and spreading over almost the whole northern section of Asia, and the northern coast of Africa. Q. pedunculata is the common British oak, celebrated as well for its majestic growth, and the venerable age which it attains, as for the strength and durability of its timber. Our own Pharmacopoeia recognises only Q. alba or Quercus Alba.— Quercus Tinctoria. 695 part 1. white oak, and Q. tinctoria or black oak; but other species afford barks equally useful, and perhaps as much employed. Such are Q. falcata or Spanish oak, Q. prinus or white chestnut oak, and Q. montana or rock chestnut oak. The fo1 - lowing remarks in relation to white-oak bark, will apply also to that of the three last-mentioned species. The bark of Q. tinctoria is somewhat peculiar. 1. Quercus alba. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 448; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. i. IT. Of all the American species, the white oak approaches nearest, in the character oi its foliage, and the properties of its wood and bark, to Q. pedunculata of Great Britain. When allowed to expand freely in the open field, it divides at a short distance from the ground into numerous widely spreading branches, and attains favourable circumstances a magnificent size. Its trunk and large branches are covered with a whitish bark, which serves to distinguish it from most of the other species.. The leaves are regularly and obliquely divided into oblong, ob- tuse, entire lobes, which are often narrowed at their base. When full grown, they are smooth and light-green on their upper surface, and glaucous beneath. Some of the dried leaves remain on the tree during the whole winter. The acorns are large, ovate, contained in rough, shallow, grayish cups, and supported singly or in pairs upon peduncles nearly an inch in length. The white oak abounds in the Middle States, and extends also through the whole Union, though comparatively rare in the northern, southern, and western sections. It is the most highly valued for its timber of all the American oaks, except the live oak (Q. virens), which is preferred in ship-building. The bark is sometimes used for tanning, but that of the red and Spanish oaks is preferred. All parts of the tree, with the exception of the epidermis, are more or less astrin- gent, but this property predominates in the fruit and bark. White-oak bazk, deprived of its epidermis, is of a light-brown colour, of a coarse, fibrous texture, and not easily pulverized. It has a feeble odour, and a rough, astringent, and bitterish taste. Water and alcohol extract its active pro- perties. The chief soluble ingredients are tannin, gallic acid, and extractive matter. It is upon the tannin that its medical virtues, as well as its use in the preparation of leather, chiefly depend. The proportion of this ingredient varies with the size and age of the tree, the part from which the bark is derived, and even the season when it is gathered. It is most abundant in the young bark; and the English oak is said to yield four times as much in spring as in winter. Sir II. Davy found the inner bark most abundant in tannin, the middle portion or cellular integument much less so, and the epidermis almost wholly destitute as well of this principle as of extractive. Gerber discovered, in European oak bark, a peculiar bitter principle upon which he conferred the name of Quercia. It is obtained by boiling the bark with water acidulated with one hundredth of sulphuric acid, adding first milk of lime until the sulphuric acid is removed, and then a solution of carbonate of potassa so long as a white precipitate is produced, filtering the liquor, evaporating to the consistence of a thin extract, adding alcohol, and finally evaporating the spiritu- ous solution down to a small volume, and allowing it to rest for some days. Yel- low crystals form, which may be obtained colourless by repeated crystallizations. Quercin is a neuter principle, in small, white crystals, inodorous, very bitter, readily soluble in water, less so in alcohol containing water, and insoluble in absolute alcohol, ether, and oil of turpentine. (Arch, der Pharm., xxxiv. 167.) 2. Quercus tinctoria. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 444; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. i. 91. The fc/aoUofffe~rs-tme of our largest trees, frequently attaining the height of eighty or ninety feet. Its trunk is covered with a deeply furrowed bark, of a black or dark-brown colour. The leaves are ovate-oblong, pubescent, slightly sinuated, with obiong, obtuse, mucronate lobes. The fructification is biennial. The acorn is globose, flattened at top, and placed in a saucer-shaped cup. Black-oak hark has a more bitter taste than that of the other species, and Quercus Alba.—Quercus Tinctoria. PART I. may be distinguished also by staining the saliva yellow when it is chewed. Its cellular integument contains a colouring principle, capable of being extracted by boiling water, to which it imparts a brownish-yellow colour, which is deepened by alkalies and rendered brighter by acids. Under the name of quercitron, large quantities of this bark, deprived of its epidermis and reduced to coarse powder, are sent from the United States to Europe, where it is used for dyeing wool and silk of a yellow colour. The colouring principle is called quercitrin, or, from its property of combining with salifiable bases, quer citric acid. It was discovered by M. Chevreul; and its properties have been investigated by MM. Bolley and Rigaud. These chemists obtained it by forming a tincture of the bark with alco- hol of the sp. gr. 0 849, freeing this from tannin and a brown substance by gela- tin, distilling off the alcohol, and replacing it as it was evaporated by water. The quercitrin was deposited, and afterwaids purified by repeated solution in alcohol, and separation by water as before. Thus procured, it is yellow, slightly bitter, in- odorous, in microscopic crystals of the right-rhombic system, soluble in 425 parts of boiling water (Rigaud), almost insoluble in cold water, sparingly soluble in ether, and freely soluble in alcohol and alkaline solutions. Its formula is given as (Ghem. Gaz., No. 290, p. 428.)* According to Rigaud, quercitrin is a glucoside, being resolvable into glucose, and a neuter substance which he calls quercetin. (Journ. de Pharm., Janv. 1860, p. 76.) Besides this principle, the bark contains much tannin; but it is less used in tanning than the other barks, in consequence of the colour which it imparts to the leather. Medical Properties and Uses. Oak bark is astringent and somewhat tonic. It has been given with advantage in intermittent fever, obstinate chronic diar- rhoea, and certain forms of passive hemorrhage; but it is not much employed as an internal remedy. Externally applied it is often productive of benefit. The decoction may be advantageously used as a bath, particularly for children, when a combined tonic and astringent effect is desirable, and the stomach is not dis- posed to receive medicines kindly. It has been employed in this way in maras- mus, scrofula, intermittent fevers, chronic diarrhoea, and cholera infantum. As an injection in leucorrhcea, a wash in prolapsus ani and hemorrhoidal affections, and as a gargle in slight inflammation of the fauces, attended with prolapsed uvula, the decoction is often useful. It has also been recommended as an injec- tion into dropsical cysts. Reduced to powder and made into a poultice, the bark was recommended by the late Prof. Barton as an excellent application in external grangrene and mortification; and the infusion obtained from tanners’ vats has been used beneficially as a wash for flabby, ill-conditioned ulcers. The bark may be given in the form of powder, extract, or decoction. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm, of the extract about half as much, of the decoction two fluidounces. (See Decocium Quercus.) Black-oak bark is considered inferior to the white-oak bark as an internal remedy, in consequence of being more disposed to irritate the bowels. Acorns, besides the bitter and astringent principles of the bark, contain a pecu- liar saccharine matter {quercite), which is insusceptible of the vinous fermentation. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xx. 335.) They are sometimes used as a tonic or astringent; and a decoction made from roasted acorns has been long employed in Germany as a remedy in scrofula. Before roasting they should be deprived of their shells; and the cotyledons, according to Dausse, should lose, during the process, 140 parts of their weight out of 500. {Pharm. Gent. Blatt, Oct. 9, * Quercitrin Las been found also in various other plants; as in the leaves of Ruta grave- olens, and the flower-buds of Capparis spinosa, Sophora Japonica, and JEsculus Hippo- castanum or horse-chestnut. (Chevi. Gaz., May 2, 1859, p. 161.) As this principle i,«\ capa- ble of assuming various colours under various chemical influences, the idea has advanced that it might be the colouring principle of flowers. (Am. Journ. of Pharm , 51a/, I860, p. 222.) Quercus Alba.— Quercus Tinctoria.—Ranunculus. part I. 1850, p. 681.) From half an ounce to an ounce may be prepared as coffee, and the whole taken at breakfast with cream and sugar. {Richter.) Off Prep. Decoctum Quercus, Br.; Decoctum Quercus Albae, U. S. W. RANUNCULUS. U. S. Secondary. Crowfoot. The cormus and herb of Ranunculus bulbosus. U. S. Ranunculus. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Polygynia.—Nat. Ord. Ranunculaeese Gen. Gh. Calyx five-leaved. Petals five, having the inner side of each claw furnished with a melliferous pore. Seeds naked, numerous. Nuttall. Most of the plants belonging to this genus have the same acrid properties. Several of them grow together in our fields and pastures, and, from their close resemblance, are confounded under the common name of butter-cup, applied to them from the colour and shape of their flowers. Those which are most abund- ant are believed to have been introduced from Europe. Such are 1$. bulbosus. 11. acris, and R. reports, which, with R. sceleratus, may be indiscriminately used. In Europe, R. sceleratus appears to have attracted most attention; in this country, R. bulbosus. The latter is the only one designated by our Pharma- copoeia. II. acris and R. Flammula were formerly directed by the Dublin Col- lege, but have been discardedThTFe Br. Pharmacopoeia. Ranunculus bulbosus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1324; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 60. This species of crowfoot is perennial, with a solid, fleshy root (cormus). and several annual, erect, round, and branching stems, from nine to eighteen inches high. The radical leaves, which stand on long footstalks, are ternate oi quinate, with lobed and dentate leaflets. The leaves of the stem are sessile and ternate, the upper more simple. Each stem supports several solitary, bright- yellow, glossy flowers, upon furrowed, angular peduncles. The leaves of the calyx are reflexed, or bent downwards against the flowerstalk. The petals are obcordate, and arranged so as to resemble a small cup. At the inside of the claw of each petal is a small cavity, covered with a minute wedge-shaped emar- ginate scale. The fruit consists of numerous naked seeds, in a spherical head. The stem, leaves, peduncles, and calyx are hairy. In May and June our pastures are everywhere adorned with the rich yellow flowers of this species of Ranunculus. Somewhat later R. acris and R. repens begin to bloom, and a succession of similar flowers is maintained till Septem- ber. The two latter species prefer a moister ground, and are found most abund- antly in meadows. R. sceleratus frequents ponds and ditches. In all these species, the whole plant is pervaded by a volatile acrid principle, which is dissi- pated by drying or by heat, and may be separated by distillation. Dr. Bigelow found that water distilled from the fresh plant had an acrid taste, and produced when swallowed a burning sensation in the stomach ; and that it retained these properties for a long time, if kept in closely-stopped bottles. Dr. Clarus dis- covered, in R. sceleratus, besides the acrid volatile oil, a nearly inert resin, and a narcotic principle called anemoninThe volatile oil is soluble in ether, and is decomposed on standing, into a white amorphous substance having acid properties (anemonic acid), and into anemonin. Other species of Ranunculus probably have the same constituents. (B. and F. Med.-Chir. Rev., Jan. 1.859, p. 181.) The plant itself, when chewed, excites violent irritation in the mouth and throat: inflaming and even excoriating the tongue and inside of the cheeks and lips, if got quickly discharged. Both the root and herb of R. bulbosus are officinal. Medical Properties and Uses. Crowfoot, when swallowed in the fresh state, produces heat and pain in the stomach, and, if the quantity be considerable, tony excite fatal inflammation. Dr. Clarus states that it has also narcotic pro- 698 Ranunculus.—Resina. PART I perties, diminishing the frequency of the pulse and respiration, and producing palsy of the extremities. These properties he ascribes to the anemonin. It is, however, never used internally; though the juice and distilled water of some species of Ranunculus are said to act as a prompt and powerful emetic. The property for which it has attracted the attention of physicians is that of inflaming and vesicating the skin ; and, before the introduction of the Spanish fly into use, it was much employed for this purpose. But the uncertainty and occasional violence of its action have nearly banished it from regular practice. While on some individuals it appears to produce scarcely any effect; on others it acts very speedily, exciting extensive and troublesome inflammation, which sometimes ter- minates in deep, obstinate ulcers. It probably varies in strength with the sea- son ; and, in the dried state, or boiled with water, is wholly inert. The decoction, moreover, is inert in consequence of the escape of the acrid principle. Never- theless, the plant has been very properly retained in the Pharmacopoeia, in the catalogue of medicines of secondary importance; as occasions may happen, when the practitioner in the country may find advantage in having recourse to it? powerful rubefacient and epispastic operation. W. RESINA. U.S., Br. Resin. The residue after the distillation of the volatile oil from the turpentine of Pinus jialustris and other species of Pinus. U. S. The residue of the distillation of'the turpentines from various species of Pinus and Abies. Br. Resine blanclie, Resine jaune, Fr.; Fiektenkarz, Germ.; Ragea di pino, Ital.; Resina de pino, Span. After the distillation of the volatile oil from the turpentines (see Terebin- thina), a resinous matter remains, which on the continent of Europe is called colophony, but with us is commonly known by the name of rosin. It is the Resina of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias. It is sometimes called resin a tlavq or yellow resin. When this, in a state of fusion, is strongly agitated with water, lfacquires a distinct appearance, and is denominated resina alba or white resin. Before describing this officinal, it may be proper to enumerate the characteristic properties of the proximate principles denominated resins. Resins are solid, brittle, of a smooth and shining fracture, and generally of a yellowish colour and semitransparent. When perfectly pure, they are probably inodorous and often insipid; but, as usually found, they have a slight odour, and a somewhat acrid or bitterish taste. Their sp. gr. varies from 0‘92 to 1-2. They are fusible by a moderate heat, decomposed at a higher temperature, and in the open air take fire, burning with a yellow flame and much smoke. Insolu- ble in water, they are dissolved by ether and the volatile oils, and generally by alcohol; and their alcoholic and ethereal solutions afford precipitates upon the addition of water. With pure potassa and soda they unite to form soaps, which are soluble in water; and the same result takes place when they are heated with solutions of the alkaline carbonates. Concentrated sulphuric acid dissolves them with mutual decomposition ; and nitric acid converts them into artificial tannin. They readily unite by fusion with wax and the fixed oils.* * M. Losch recommends the following process for rendering the resins as white as pos- sible. Boil together 5 parts of the resin, 1 of carbonate of potassa or of soda, and 20 of water, until a perfectly homogeneous mass is obtained; allow this to cool, and pass into it sulphurous acid, which saturates the alkali, and precipitates the resin in white tiakes. Finally, wash the precipitate well with water, and dry it. (Journ. de Pharm., Join, 1850, p. 405.)—Note to the eleventh edition. part I. Resina.—Rheum. 699 Common or yellow resin, in its purest state, is beautifully clear and pellucid, but much lessso as usually found in the shops. Its odour and taste are generally in a slight degree terebinthinate; its colour yellowTish-brown with n tinge of olive, and more or less dark according to its purity, and the degree of heat to which it has been exposed in its preparation. Sometimes it. is almost black. It is rather heavier than water. At 276° F. it melts, is completely liquid at 306°. begins to emit bubbles of gas at 316°, and is entirely decomposed at a red heat Its ultimate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, in variable propor- tions. It appears, from the researches of Unverdorben, to contain three distinct resinous bodies, two of which, denominated pirns and sylvic acids, pre-existed in the turpentine, and the third, called colophonic acid, is formed by the agency of heat in the distillation. The pinic acid is dissolved by cold' spirit of the sp. gr. 0-865, and is thus separated from the sylvic acid. It is obtained pure by add- ing to the solution a spirituous solution of acetate of copper, dissolving the pre- cipitated pinate of copper in strong boiling alcohol, decomposing this salt with a little muriatic acid, and adding water, which throws down the pinic acid as a resinous powder. The sylvic acid is obtained by treating the residue of the common resin with boiling spirit of 0-865, which dissolves it, and lets it fall upon cooling. Both of these resinous acids are colourless. Pinic acid is soluble in weak cold alcohol; sylvic acid is insoluble in the same menstruum when cold, but is dissolved by it when boiling hot, and by strong alcohol at all temperatures. The salts which they form with the alkalies are soluble, those with the earths and metallic oxides, insoluble in water. Colophonic acid differs from the others in having stronger acid properties, and in being less soluble in alcohol. It is of a brown colour; and common resin is more or less coloured in proportion to the quantity of this acid which it contains. (Kane's Chemistry.) The experi- ments of Unverdorben were made with European colophony. It is somewhat uncertain whether exactly the same results would be afforded by the common resin of this country, which is obtained from a different species of pine. By the destructive distillation of resin an oleaginous product is obtained, called resin oil, which in various degrees of purity is used in currying leather, lubricating Tnachinery, preparing printers’ ink, &c. White resin differs from the preceding only in being opaque and of a whitish colour. These properties it owes to the water with which it is incorporated, and which gradually escapes upon exposure, leaving it more or less transparent. Medical Uses. Resin is important as an ingredient of ointments and plasters, but is never used internally. According to Professor Olmsted, it has the pro- perty of preventing the oxidation of fatty substances, and thus contributes to the preservation of ointments. (Am. Jonrn. of Fharm., xxii. 325.) Off. Prep. Ceratum Cantharidis, U. S.; Ceratum Extracti Cantharidis, U. S.; Ceratum Resin®, U. S.; Ceratum Resin® Compositum, U. S.; Emplastrum Cale- faciens, Br.; Emplast. Cantharidis, Br.; Emplast. Ferri; Emplast. Hydrargyri; Emplast. Picis,Br.; Emplast. Resin®; Emplast. Saponis,Br.; Unguentum Re- sin®, Br.; Unguent. Terebinthin®, Br. W. RHEUM. U.S.,Br. The root of Rheum palmatum, and of other species of Rheum. TJ S. One or more undetermined species of Rheum. The Root, deprived of the bark and dried; from Chinese Thibet and Tartary. Br. Rhabarbaruir : Fr.; Rhabarber, Germ.; Rabarbaro, Ital.; Ruibarbo, Span.; Hai-noung, Chinese; Schara-modo, Thibet. Rheum Sex. Syst. Enneandria Trigynia. — Nat. Ord. Polygonace®. Gen. Cn. Calyx petaloid, six-parted, withering. Stamens about nine, in . Rhubarb. 700 Rheum. PART I. verted into the base of the calyx. Styles three, reflexed. Stigmas peltate, entire. Achenium three-cornered, winged, with the withered calyx at the base. Embryo in the centre of the albumen. (Lindley.) Notwithstanding the length of time that rhubarb has been in use, it has not yet been determined from what precise plant the Asiatic drug is derived. The remoteness of the region where it is collected, and the jealous care with which the monopoly of the trade is guarded, have prevented any accurate information on the subject. All that we certainly know is that it is the root of one or more species of Rheum. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia refers it to R. palmatum, with other species not designated ; the British recognises no particular species. The terms rha and rheon, from the former of which were derived the names rhabarbarum and rhubarb, and from the latter the botanical title Rheum, were appTied~by the ancients to a root which came from beyond the Bosphorus, and which is supposed, though upon somewhat uncertain grounds, to have been the product of the Rheum Rhaponticum. growing on the banks of the Caspian Sea and the Wolga. This species was also at one time believed to be the source of the medicine now in use; but the true rhubarb has long been known to be wholly distinct from the Rhapontic, and derived from a different source. It was not till the year 1732 that any probable information was obtained as to its real origin. At that time plants were received from Russia by Jussieu in France, and Rand in England, which were said to be of the species affording the genuine rhubarb, and were named by Linnaeus, under this impression, Rheum Rhabarbarum, a title which has since given way to Rheum undulatum. Subsequently, Kauw Boerhaave obtained from a merchant, who dealt in the rhubarb of Tartary, some seeds which he said were those of the plant producing the root sold by him. These, having been planted, yielded two species of Rheum, R. undulatum, and another which Linnaeus named Seeds transmitted by Dr. Mounsey from St. Petersburg to Dr. Hope, and planted in the botanic garden at Edinburgh, produced the latter species; and the same was also raised at Upsal from a root received by Linnaeus from De Gorter, and was described A. D. 1767 by the younger Linnaeus, two years after the appearance of Dr. Hope’s paper in the Philosophical Transactions. Thus far the evidence appears equally in favour of R. palmatum and R. undulatum. The claims of another species were afterwards presented. Pallas, upon exhibiting the leaves of R.palmatum to some Bucharian merchants, was told that the leaves of the rhubarb plant were entirely different in shape; and the description he received of them corresponded more closely with those of R. cornpactum, than of any other known species. Seeds of this plant were, moreover, sentTfo Miller from St. Petersburg, as those of the true Tar- tarian rhubarb. A few years since the attention of naturalists was called to a fourth species, for which the same honour has been claimed. Dr. Wallich, super- intendent of the botanical garden at Calcutta, received seeds that were said to be those of the plant which yielded the Chinese rhubarb, growing on the Hi- malaya mountains and the highlands of Tartary. These produced a species not previously described, which Dr. Wallich named R. Emodi, from the native title of the plant. It is the R. australe of Mr. Don and of Colebrooke, and has been ascertained to afford a root which, though purgative, is very unlike the officinal rhubarb. Other species have been found to grow in the Himalaya mountains, from which a kind of rhubarb used by the natives is said to be procured; but none of it reaches the markets of this country or Europe. From what has been said, it is obvious that no species yet mentioned can be considered as the un- doubted source of commercial rhubarb; the plant having, in no instance, been seen and examined by naturalists in its native place. Sievers, an apothecary sent to Siberia, in the reign of Catharine II., with the view of improving the cultivation of the native rhubarb, asserts, from information given him by the Bucharians, that all the seeds procured under the name of true rhubarb are false, part I. Rheum. 701 and pronounces “all the descriptions in the Materia Medicas to be incorrect.’- This assertion, however, has no relation to R.australe which has been subse quently described ; but it is said that the roots of that plant, dried by the medical officers of the British army, differ from true rhubarb in appearance and power. All the plants of this genus are perennial and herbaceous, with large branch- ing roots, which send forth vigorous stems from four to eight feet or more in height, surrounded at their base with numerous very large petiolate leaves, and terminating in lengthened branching panicles, composed of small and very numer- ous flowers, resembling those of the Rumex or dock. There is some difficulty in arranging the species, in consequence of the tendency of the cultivated plants to form hybrids; and it is frequently impossible to ascertain to which of the wild types the several garden varieties are to be referred. The following descriptions are from the Flora Medica of I)r. Lindley. Rheum palmatum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 489 ; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 358; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 22, pi. 69. “Leaves roundish-cordate, half pal- mate ; the lobes pinnatifid, acuminate, deep dull-green, not wavy, but uneven and very much wrinkled on the upper side, hardly scabrous at the edge, minutely downy on the under side; sinus completely closed; the lobes of the leaf standing forwards beyond it. Petiole pale-green, marked with short purple lines, terete, obscurely channeled quite at the upper end. Flowering stems taller than those of any other species.” This species is said to inhabit China in the vicinity of the great wall. It has been cultivated in England and France for its root, which is admitted to approach more nearly in odour, taste, and the disposition of its colours, than that of any other known species, to the Asiatic rhubarb. R. undulatum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 489 ; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 357; Woodv. Med. Bot., 3d ed., v. 81. “ Leaves oval, obtuse, extremely wavy, deep-green, with veins purple at the base, often shorter than the petiole, distinctly and copiously downy on each side, looking as if frosted when young, scabrous at the edge; sinus open, wedge-shaped, with the lower lobes of the leaves turned upwards. Petiole downy, blood-red, semi-cylindrical, with elevated edges to the upper side, which is narrower at the upper than the lower end.” This is a native of Siberia, and probably Tartary and China. It was cultivated by the Russian government as the true rhubarb plant; but the culture has been abandoned. It contributes to the rhubarb produced in France. R. compactum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 489; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 358; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 24, pi. 71. “Leaves heart-shaped, obtuse, very wavy, deep-green, of a thick texture, scabrous at the margin, quite smooth on both sides, glossy and even on the upper side; sinus nearly closed by the parenchyma. Petiole green, hardly tinged with red except at the base, semi-cylindrical, a little compressed at the sides, with the upper side broad, flat, bordered by ele- vated edges, and of equal breadth at each end.” This plant'is said to be a native of Tartary and China. It is one of the garden rhubarbs, and has been cultivated in France for its root. R. australe. Don, Prod. Flor. Nepal, p. 75. — R. Emodi. Wallich; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 354; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 24, pi. 70. “Leaves cordate, acute, dull-green, but little wavy, flattish, very much wrinkled, distinctly rough, with coarse short hairs on each side; sinus of the base distinctly open, not wedge-shaped but diverging at an obtuse angle, with the lobes nearly turned upwards. Petioles very rough, rounded-angular, furrowed; with the upper side depressed, bordered by an elevated edge, and very much narrower at the upper than the lower end.” The root of this species was at one time conjectured to be the source of officinal Asiatic rhubarb, but has been found to have scarcely any resemblance to it. The plant has been cultivated both in Europe and this coun- try, and its petioles answer well for tarts, &c. R. Rhaponticum. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 488 ; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 357 ; Lou- 702 Rheum. PART I. don’s Encyc. of Plants, p. 335. ‘‘Leaves roundish-ovate, cordate, obtuse, pale- green, but little wavy, very concave, even, very slightly downy on the under side, especially near the edge, and on the edge itself; scabrous at the margin; sinus quite open, large, and cuneate. Petiole depressed, channeled on the upper side, with the edges regularly rounded off, pale-green, striated, scarcely scabrous. Panicles very compact and short, always rounded at the ends, and never lax us in the other garden species. Flowering stem about three feet high.” The Rhapontic rhubarb grows upon the banks of the Caspian Sea, in the deserts between the Wolga and the Oural, and in Siberia. It is said also to grow upon the borders of the Fuxine. It is cultivated as a garden plant in Europe and this country; and large quantities of the root are produced for sale in France. It is said by Royle to be the source of the English rhubarb. Besides the species above described, R. leucorrhizum, growing in the Kirghese desert in Tartary, R. Caspicum from the Altai mountains, R. Webbianum, R. speciforme, and R. Moorcraftianum, natives of the Himalaya mountains, and R. crassinervium and R. hybridum, cultivated in Europe, but of unknown origin, yield roots which have either been employed as purgatives, or possess properties more or less analogous to those of officinal rhubarb, though they have not entered into general commerce. The leafstalks of the different species of Rheum have a pleasant acid taste, and are used for making tarts and pies. It is for this purpose only that the plants are cultivated in the United States. Mr. T. A. Lancaster has shown that the acidity is owing to the presence of binoxalate of potassa. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 193.) Lindley states that R. Rhaponticum, R. hybri- dum, and R. compactum, and hybrid varieties of them, are the common garden rhubarbs. In relation to the culture and preparation of rhubarb, our information is almost as uncertain as on the subject of its natural history. The accounts received from the Bucharian merchants are very discordant, and few intelligent travellers have penetrated into the country where the medicine is collected. We shall present, however, a brief abstract of what we have been able to collect upon the subject from the authorities we have consulted. Rhubarb is produced abundantly in the elevated lands of Tartary, about the lake Ivoko Norr, and is said to be cultivated in the neighbouring Chinese pro- vince of Shen-see, and in that of Setchuen. From these sources it is generally supposed that our supplies of Russian and Chinese rhubarb are exclusively de- rived ; but the root is also collected in Boutan and Thibet, on the north of the Himalaya mountains; and it is probable that the plant pervades the whole of Chinese Tartary. It flourishes best in a light sandy soil. It is stated by Mr. Bell, who, on a journey from St. Petersburg to Pekin, had an opportunity of observing it in a growing state, that it is not cultivated by the Tartars, but springs up spontaneously, in tufts, wherever the seeds have fallen upon the heaps of loose earth thrown up by the marmots. In other places the thickness of the grass prevents their access to the soil. The root is not considered sufficiently mature for collection till it has attained the age of six years. It is dug up twice a year in Tartary, in the spring and autumn; in China not till the winter. After removal from the ground, it is cleaned, deprived of its cortical portion and the smaller branches, and then divided into pieces of a convenient size. These are bored with holes, and strung upon cords to dry; according to Mr. Bell, about the tents and on the horns of sheep; according to Sievers, under sheds, by which the rays of the sun are excluded, while the air has free access. The Chinese are said first to place the pieces on a stone slab heated by fire beneath, and after- wards to complete the drying process by exposing them to the sun and air. In Boutan the roots are hung up in a kind of drying room, in which a moderate and regular heat is maintained. Much time and attention are devoted to the Rheum. 703 part I. preparation of the root; and Sievers states that a year sometimes elapses from the period of its collection, before it is ready for exportation. A large propor- tion of its weight is lost in drying, according to some accounts four-fifths, to others not less than seven-eighths. It is probably in order to favour the drying that the bark is removed. The trade in rhubarb is said to centre in the Chinese town of Si-nin, where a Bucharian company or family is established, which pos- sesses a monopoly of this trade, in consideration of a certain tribute paid to the government. To this city the rhubarb is brought from the various places of its collection, and, having been duly assorted and undergone further preparation, is transmitted partly to Russia, partly to the coast of China; so that the drug which reaches us through St. Petersburg is procured from the same neighbour- hood with that imported from Canton. But it will soon be seen that there are differences between the Russian and Chinese rhubarb, which would seem to in- dicate a different origin, and might authorize doubts as to the entire accuracy of the above accounts. It is at least probable that the drug produced in the province of Setchuen, whence the best China rhubarb is said to be brought, takes a more direct route to the coast than that through the town of Si-nin. Besides the two commercial varieties just mentioned, a third occasionally comes to us from Europe, where the cultivation of rhubarb has been carried on for some time, especially in France, Belgium, and Great Britain. Of these three varieties we shall treat under different heads. India Rhubarb. Rheum Sinense vel Indicum. Much the largest proportion of rhubarb consumed in this country is brought from Canton. Though some- what inferior to the Russian, its comparative cheapness gives it a decided pre- ference in our markets; and, when of good quality, it does not disappoint the expectations of the physician. It is in cylindrical or roundish pieces, sometimes flattened on one or both sides, of a dirty brownish-yellow colour externally, appearing as if the cortical portion of the root had been removed by scraping, and the surface rendered smooth and somewhat powdery by attrition. The best pieces are heavier than the Russian rhubarb, have a texture rather close and compact, and, when broken, present a ragged uneven surface, variegated with intermingled shades of dull- red, yellowish, and white, which are sometimes diversified or interrupted by darker colours. The pieces are generally perforated with small holes, intended for convenience of suspension during the drying process; and portions of the suspending cord are not unfrequently found remaining in the holes. Chinese rhubarb has a peculiar somewhat aromatic smell, and a bitter astringent taste, is gritty when chewed, imparts a yellow colour to the saliva, and affords a yel- lowish powder with a reddish-brown tinge. With the pieces of good quality others often come mingled, defective from decay or improper preparation. Theso are usually lighter, and of a dark or russet colour. Like all the other varieties of rhubarb, this is liable to be attacked by worms; and in almost every large parcel pieces may be found which have suffered from this cause. The want of proper care in its selection by the Chinese merchants, and the exposure incident to a long sea-vovage, are causes which contribute to its inferiority to the Rus- sian rhubarb. As the whole contents of the chest imported are usually powdered together, including the worst as well as the best pieces, it follows that the powder is inferior in efficacy to the selected and sound pieces. In former editions of this work, we have noticed a variety of rhubarb im- ported from Canton, which was evidently prepared, before leaving China, so as to resemble the Russian, having an angular surface as if pared with a knife. The pieces were obviously selected with great care, as they were remarkably 1. Chinese Rhubarb. 704 Rheum. PART I. free from defects. But in most of those which came under our notice, the small penetrating hole was observable, which characterizes the Chinese rhubarb, though it had in some instances been filled with the powdered root, so as in some mea- sure to conceal it. Besides, the colours were not quite so bright as those of Russia rhubarb. This is undoubtedly the variety described by Pereira, under a distinct head, as the Dutch-trimmed or Batavian rhubarb, and considered by him as probably Bucharian or Russian rhubarb of inferior quality, sent by the way of Canton. A sufficient proof, we think, that this is not the case, is the presence in most pieces of the small penetrating hole, occasionally filled with remains of the cord, and in some pieces almost shaved away in the paring pro- cess. We have never seen such a hole in any piece of true Russian rhubarb, which does not appear to be strung up like the Chinese when dried. Under the title of Canton stick rhubarb, Pereira describes a variety of which small quantities have been imported from Canton into London. It closely re- sembles the English stick rhubarb, and is supposed to be derived from the branches of the root of the plant which yields the true Chinese rhubarb. 2. Russian Rhubarb. Turkey Rhubarb. Bucharian Rhubarb. Rheum Russicum vel Turcicum. The rhubarb taken to Russia from Tartary undergoes a peculiar preparation, in conformity with the stipulations of a contract with the Bucharian merchants who furnish the supply. The best is selected, and each piece perforated in order to ascertain whether it is sound in the centre. From Si-nin it is conveyed by the Bucharian merchants to the frontier town of Kiachta, wrhere it undergoes a rigid inspection by an apothecary stationed at that place by the Russian govern- ment. All the pieces which do not pass examination are committed to the flames ; and the remainder is sent to St. Petersburg. This variety is sometimes called Turkey rhubarb, from the circumstance that it was formerly derived from the Turkish ports, whither it is said to have been brought from Tartary by caravans through Persia and Natolia. The circumstance of the identity of the Russian and Turkey rhubarb, and its decided difference from the Chinese, would appear to indicate a distinct origin for the two varieties. Inferior parcels of the root, which will not pass the inspection of the Russian authorities, are said to enter Russia by Taschkent, and to be known to the druggists of that country by the name of Taschkent rhubarb. The pieces of Russian rhubarb are irregular and somewhat angular, appear- ing as if the bark had been shaved off longitudinally by successive strokes of a knife, and a portion of the interior substance removed with each shaving. They have a cleaner and fresher appearance than the Chinese, and their colour both internally and externally, though of the same general character, is somewhat more lively. They are less compact and heavy; and are cut with less facility, owing to their giving way before the knife. Another distinction is the character of the perforations, which in the Russian rhubarb are large, frequently reaching only to the centre, and evidently made for the purpose of inspection; while in the Chinese they are small, penetrate completely through the pieces, and were intended for the passage of a suspending cord. The taste and smell of the former closely resemble those of the latter, except that the Russian is rather more aro- matic. There is the same crackling under the teeth, and the same yellow stain imparted to the saliva; but the colour of the powder in this variety is a bright yellow, without the browmish tinge exhibited by the Chinese. When thin slices, previously boiled in water, are examined by the microscope, they exhibit nume- rous clusters of minute crystals of oxalate of lime. Mr. Quekett found between 35 and 40 grains of them in 100 grains of the root. They are observed both ia the Russian and Chinese rhubarb. PART I. Rlieum. 705 The care which renders the Russian rhubarb so free from defects, tends greatly to enhance its price, and consequently to limit its consumption. Its great com parative value in the market has led to frequent attempts at adulteration; and the pieces of Chinese rhubarb are sometimes cut down and prepared so as to resemble the Russian. The fraud, however, may be detected by adverting to the peculiarities in texture, colour, and weight, by which the varieties are dis tinguished, and to the occasional presence of the small penetrating hole, or ves tiges of it. We have seen a specimen in which the hole was enlarged at its two extremities, and closed by powder in the middle, with the view of imitating the larger perforations of the Russian pieces. Sometimes worm-eaten pieces are made to resemble the sound, by filling up the holes with a mixture of pulver- ized rhubarb and mucilage, and covering over the surface with the powder. By removing this, the fraud is at once revealed. 3. European Rhubarb. In various parts of Europe, particularly in England, France, Belgium, and Germany, the rhubarb plants have been cultivated for many years; and con- niderable quantities of the root are annually brought into the market. It is im- ported into this country from England and France. English Rhubarb. This formerly came in two forms. In one the root was cu1 and perforated in imitation of the Russian. The pieces were of various shape and size, sometimes cylindrical, but more commonly flat, or somewhat lenticular, and of considerable dimensions. We have for a long time seen none of this variety in our markets. In the other, the pieces are somewhat cylindrical, five or six inches long by an inch or less in thickness, and more or less irregular upon the surface, as if they had shrunk unequally in drying. This is called stick rhu- barb in England, and is still occasionally met with in our shops. English rhubarb is lighter than the Asiatic, more spongy, and often somewhat pasty under the pestle. It is of a redder colour, and when broken exhibits a more compact and regular marbling; the pinkish lines being arranged in a radiated manner from the centre towards the circumference. The powder also has a deeper red- dish tint. The odour is feeble and less aromatic thau that of the Asiatic varie- ties; the taste is astringent and mucilaginous with little bitterness; and the root, when chewed, scarcely feels gritty between the teeth, and but slightly colours the saliva. Few crystals of oxalate of lime are discoverable by means of the microscope. Most of the commercial English rhubarb is now cultivated near Banbury, and is said to be the product of R. Rhaponticum. French Rhubarb. Rhapontic Rhubarb. Krimea Rhubarb. The rhubarb produced in France is, according to Guibourt, chiefly from R. Rhaponticum, R.undulatum, and R.compactum; that of R. palmatum, which most closely resembles the Asiatic, having been found to degenerate so much as not to be a profitable object of culture. Most of the French rhubarb is produced in the neighbourhood of L’Orient, in the department of Morbihan; and the spot where it grows has, from this circumstance, received the name of Rheumpole. Two kinds are described by Guibourt, both under the name Rhapontic root. One proceeds from the R. Rhaponticum, growing in the gardens in the environs of Paris; the other, from this and the two other species above mentioned, culti- vated at Rheumpole. The former is in pieces of the size of the fist or smaller, ligneous in appearance, of a reddish-gray colour on the outside, internally marbled with red and white arranged in the form of crowded rays proceeding from the centre to the circumference, of an odour like that of Asiatic rhubarb, but more disagreeable, of a mucilaginous and very astringent taste, not crack- ling under the teeth, but tinging the saliva yellow, and affording a reddish- yellow powder. The pieces of the latter are irregularly cylindrical, three or four 706 like urn. PA RT I. inches long, and from one to two or even three inches thick, less ligneous in ap- pearance than the preceding, and externally of a pale or brownish-yellow colour less inclining to redness. In exterior aspect, this variety bears considerable resemblance to Chinese rhubarb; but may be distinguished by its more disagree- able odour, its astringent and mucilaginous taste, its want of crackling under the teeth, and its radiating fracture, in which properties it is similar to the pre- ceding variety. Considerable quantities of this drug have been imported into the United States from France, under the name of Krimea rhubarb; and it is sometimes employed to adulterate the powder of the better kinds.* It appears to have displaced in France the Rhapontic root formerly imported from the Euxine. Whether from difference in species, or from the influence of soil and climate, none of the European rhubarbs equals the Asiatic in purgative power.f Choice of Rhubarb. In selecting good rhubarb, without reference to the commercial variety, those pieces should be preferred which are moderately heavy and compact, of a lively colour, brittle, presenting when broken a fresh appear- ance, with reddish and yellowish veins intermingled with white, of an odour decidedly aromatic, of a bitter and astringent not mucilaginous taste, feeling gritty and staining the saliva yellow when chewed, and affording a powder either bright-yellow, or yellow with but a slight reddish-brown tinge. When very light, rhubarb is usually rotten or worm-eaten; when very heavy and compact, it is of inferior species, culture, or preparation. Rotten, worm-eaten, or otherwise inferior rhubarb is often powdered, and coloured yellow with turmeric; and the shavings left when Chinese rhubarb is trimmed for powdering, or to imitate the Russian, are applied to the same purpose. Chemical Properties. Rhubarb yields all its activity to water and alcohol. The infusion is of a dark reddish-yellow colour, with the taste and odour of rhubarb; and the residue, after sufficient maceration, is whitish, inodorous, and insipid. By long boiling, the virtues of the medicine are impaired. Many attempts have been made to analyze the root, with various results. Among them, are those of the two Henrys and Caventou of Paris, Brande of London, Peretti of Rome, and Hornemann, Brandes, and Schlossberger and Do'pping of Germany. Brandes found, in 100 parts of Chinese rhubarb, 2 of pure rhabarbaric acid, U5 of the same acid impure, 2 5 of gallic acid, 9 0 of tannin, 3'5 of colouring extractive, * M. E. Billot gives the following method of detecting the rhapontic root, when used in powder to adulterate Russian or Chinese rhubarb. On a little of the suspected powder, upon a plate, let fall two or three drops of oil of anise, oil of fennel, or other essential oil; then add magnesia, and rub the mixture well for three or four minutes. If the powder be pure, it will remain yellow; but if it contain the smallest quantity of the French rhapontic root, it will assume a reddish tint, varying from a salmon to a bright rose- colour, according to the quantity of the impurity present. (See Am. Journ. o/Pharm., Mav, 1860, p. 224.) f Besides the varieties of rhubarb aboVe described, others are noticed by writers. Pallas speaks of a white rhubarb, brought to Kiackta by the Bucharian merchants, who conveyed to that place theTdrugTor Russian commerce. It was white as milk, of a sweet taste, and equal to the best rhubarb in quality. It was supposed to be the product of R. leucorrhizum. At present, however, it is unknown in St. Petersburg. The Himalaya rhubarb is produced by R. australe, and other species mentioned in the text as in tLe Himalaya mountains. According to Dr. Royle, it makes its way to the lower countries in Hindostan, where it sells for one-tenth of the price of the best rhubarb. Mr. Twining tried it in the Hospital at Calcutta, and found it superior as a tonic and astringent to Russian rhubarb, and nearly equal to it in purgative power. A variety known in Russia as Bucharian rhu- barb, differing from the variety which we call Russian, and which is known in Russia as Chinese rhubarb, is imported into that country from Tartary, and reaches St. Petersburg by Niskny. Parcels of it are said also to reach Vienna, by the way of Brody in Gallicia. Still another variety is that called Siberian rhubarb, which is known in Russia by the name Siberian Rhapontic root. As these are inTerTbr kinds, and probably never reach our markets, we have not thought it necessary to swell our pages with descriptions of them. The reader who wishes further information is referred to papers by Pereira in the London Pharma- ceutical Journal, republished in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xviii. 6c and 123). PART i. Rheum. 707 11-0 of uncrystallizable sugar with tannin, 4 0 of starch, 14 4 of gummy ex tractive, 4‘0 of pectic acid, IT of malate and gailate of lime, 110 of oxalate of lime, 1'5 of sulphate of potassa and chloride of potassium, TO of silica, 05 of phosphate of lime and oxide of iron, 25'0 of lignin, and 2 0 of water. The most recent elaborate analysis which has come to our notice is that of Schloss- berger and Dopping. Besides extractive, tannic and gallic acids, sugar, starch, pectin, lignin, oxalate of lime, and various inorganic salts, they discovered three colouring principles, holding an intermediate place between resin and extractive matter, being freely soluble in alcohol, and slightly so in water. Two of these were uncrystallizable, and denominated brown resin and red resin, or yhaeoretin and f’.rythrnrefj.n- the other, crystallizable in granular crystals, and identical with the chrvsophanic acid, previously discovered by Rochleder and Heldt in the yellow lichen, or Parmelia parietina of Sprengel. Another resinous sub- stance was also obtained, which was named aporetin; but, as it was insoluble in the alcohol from which it had been precipitated by ether, and was isomeric with phseoretin, there is reason to think that it was a product of the operation. The three principles above referred to were obtained by exhausting rhubarb with alcohol, evaporating the tincture, exhausting the extract with water, dissolving the residue in the least possible quantity of alcohol, and treating this solution with ether. A precipitate was produced, a portion of which (aporetin) was in- soluble in alcohol, and the remainder was obtained separate by solution in that fluid and evaporation. This was' phseoretin. It is a yellowish-brown powder, very slightly soluble in water and ether, freely soluble in alcohol and in alkaline solutions, with which it produces an intense reddish-brown colour, and from which it is thrown down yellow by the mineral acids. The ethereal solution of the alcoholic extract, after all the aporetin and phseoretin had been separated, was allowed to evaporate spontaneously, and a large quantity of crystalline granules was obtained, of a beautiful yellow colour. These being washed with ether constituted the chrvsophanic acid. When the ethereal solution showed no longer a disposition to deposit crystals, it was evaporated, and yielded a product having all the properties of the resins, and forming beautiful purple combinations with potassa and ammonia. This was the eruthroretin. or red resin of rhubarb. The matter dissolved by water from the alcoholic extract was found to have the odour and taste of rhubarb in a high degree. In this, no doubt, was contained the peculiar active principle or principles of rhubarb; but Schlossberger and Dopping were not more successful than their predecessors in isolating them. They obtained a slightly bitter extractive matter; but it wanted the flavour of rhubarb. (Pharm. Journ., iv. 136, 232, 318, and viii. 190.) Many distinguished chemists have sought for the purgative ingredient of rhu- barb, and some not without supposed success; but scarcely has the new principle been described and named, before the fallacy of its claim has been determined. The caphopicrite of Henry, the rhabarbarin of Pfaff and others, the rheumin of Hornemann, the rhabarbaric acid of Brandes, and, lastly, the rhgin of Pro- fessor Dulk, have all been shown to be bodies more or less complex; and cer- tainly no one of them can be admitted to be the peculiar purgative principle. The astringency of rhubarb undoubtedly resides in its tannic acid. Some have supposed that the tonic and cathartic properties reside in different principles; but we are disposed to think, from the correspondence of the bitterness with the purgative property, that they reside in the same substance; and, from Ihe fact that exposure to heat diminishes the cathartic power, there is reason to believe that this substance, when isolated, will prove to be more or less volatile. Chrysophanic acid (chrysophane) is one of the most interesting constituents. Most of the hitherto supposed active principles have been mixtures of this with other substances. The rhabarbaric acid of Brandes probably approaches nearest to it in character. When pure it is beautifully yellow, without smell or taste, dis- Rheum. PART I. posed to an imperfect granular crystallization, almost insoluble in cold water, more soluble in hot water and in ether, but most freely and yet feebly so in alco- hol. Benzole appears to be its best solvent. When heated it emits yellow vapours. Alkaline solutions dissolve it with the production of a beautiful red colour; and the solution with potassa, when evaporated, changes first to violet, and then to blue. It forms definite compounds with the alkalies, but its acid properties are very feeble, and even carbonic acid separates it from its combinations. Its for- mula, according to Pilz, is C20II8OB. (Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1862, p. 254.) It is probably the chief ingredient in the fine yellow colouring matter produced by the reaction of nitric acid on rhubarb, which, in consequence of the magnifi- cent purples produced by it with the alkalies, M. Garot has proposed, under the name of erythrose, to introduce into the arts as a dye-stuff. (See Journ. de Pharm., xvii. ~5.)* There are other interesting principles in rhubarb. Some have been disposed to ascribe its odour to a volatile oil; but this has not been isolated. Tannic acid is an important constituent. It is of that variety which precipitates the salts of sesquioxide of iron of a greenish colour. The oxalate of lime is interesting from its quantity, and from the circumstance that, existing in distinct crystals, it occasions the grittiness of the rhubarb between the teeth. The proportion seems to vary exceedingly in different specimens. According to Scheele and Henry, it constitutes nearly one-third, and Quekett found, as already stated, be- tween 35 and 40 per cent.; while Brandes obtained only 11, and Schrader only 4"5 parts in the hundred. Little or no difference of composition has been found between the Russian and Chinese rhubarb. The European contains but a small proportion of oxalate of lime, and is therefore less gritty when chewed. It has, however, more tannin and starch than the Asiatic. When powdered rhubarb is heated, odorous yellow fumes rise, which are pro- bably in part the vapour of chrysophanic acid. Its infusion is reddened by the alkalies, in consequence of their union with this acid, and their reaction on the other colouring principles. It yields precipitates with gelatin, most of the acids, the salts of sesquioxide of iron, acetate of lead, nitrate of protoxide of mercury, nitrate of silver, protochloride of tin, lime-water, and solutions of quinia. Nitric acid occasions at first a turbidness, and afterwards the deposition of a yellow precipitate. The substances producing precipitates may be considered as in- compatible with the infusion. Medical Properties and Uses. The medical properties of rhubarb are peculiar and valuable. Its most remarkable singularity is the union of a cathartic with an astringent power; the latter of which, however, does not interfere with the former, as the purgative effect precedes the astringent. It is also tonic and stomachic; invigorating, in small doses, the process of digestion. It is not pro- liable that these properties reside in a single proximate principle; and, as rhu- barb owes its chief value to their combination, it is not to be expected that chemical analysis will be productive of the same practical advantages in this, as in some other medicines, the virtues of which are concentrated in one ingredient. In its purgative operation, rhubarb is moderate, producing fecal rather than watery discharges, and appearing to affect the muscular fibre more than the secretory function. It sometimes occasions griping. Its colouring principle is absorbed, and may be detected in the urine. By its long-continued use, the * Messrs. W. De la Rue and H. Muller obtain chrysopkanic acid by treating with benzole rhubarb previously deprived of soluble matter by water, distilling off most of the benzole from the solution, and allowing it to cool. The chrysopkanic acid is deposited in an im- pure state. By treating this with hot benzole, an insoluble matter is left, and more of the same is deposited when the solution cools. By filtering this is separated, and the acid is obtains 1 from the clear liquor by concentration and crystallization. The undissoived matter is a new principle, which the authors propose to name emodin. (Pharm. Journ.. xvil 676.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Rheum.—Rhoeas. perspiration, especially that of the axilla, is said to become yellow, and the milk of nurses cathartic. It gives a yellow colour to the alvine discharges. The conditions of disease to which it is applicable may be inferred from ifa peculiar properties. When the stomach is enfeebled, or the bowels relaxed, at the same time that a gentle cathartic is required, rhubarb, as a general rule, is preferable to all others. Hence its use in dyspepsia attended with constipation, in diarrhoea when purging is indicated, in the secondary stages of cholera in- fantum, in chronic dysentery, and in almost all typhous diseases when fecal matter has accumulated in the intestines, or the use of cathartic medicine is neces- sary to prevent such accumulation. "When employed in cases of habitual constipa- tion, its astringent tendency should be counteracted by combining it with soap. Magnesia is also an excellent associate in disorders of the stomach and bowels. By combination with other cathartics, rhubarb frequently acquires additional activity, while it gives increased efficiency to the associated substance. A mixture of calomel and rhubarb is a brisk and powerful cathartic, often used at the com- mencement of bilious fevers. As a general rule, rhubarb is not applicable to cases attended with much inflammatory action. Its griping effect may be coun- teracted by combining it with aromatics. The dose of rhubarb as a purgative is from twenty to thirty grains, as a laxa- tive and stomachic from five to ten grains. European rhubarb must be given in double or treble the dose to produce an equal effect. Few medicines are used in a greater variety of forms. It is most effectual in substance. It is frequently given in the shape of pill, combined with an equal proportion of soap, when its laxative effect is desired. The infusion is much used in cases of delicate stomach, and is peculiarly adapted to children. The syrup, tincture, and fluid extract are also useful preparations. They are all officinal. By the roasting of rhubarb its cathartic property is diminished, probably by the volatilization of the purgative principle, while its astringency remains unaf- fected. This mode of treatment has, therefore, been sometimes resorted to in cases of diarrhoea. By long boiling the same effect is said to be produced. Powdered rhubarb has been usefully applied to indolent and sloughing ulcers. It is said to have proved purgative when sprinkled over a large ulcerated sur- face ; and the same effect is asserted to have been produced by rubbing it, mingled with saliva, over the abdomen. Off. Prep. Extractum Rhei, Br.; Extractum Rhei Alcoholicum, U. S.; Ex- tractum Rhei Fluidum, U. S.; Infusum Rhei; Pilulse Rhei, 17. S.; Pil. Rhei. Comp.; Pulvis Rhei Comp.; Svrupus Rhei Aromaticus U. S.; Tinctura Rhei; Tinct. Rhei et Sennae, U. S.; Yinum Rhei, U. S. W RHCEAS. Br. Red-Poppy Petals. Papaver Rhoeas. The Petals dried. Br. Coquelicot, Fr.; Wilder Mokn, Klapperrose, Germ; Rosolaccio, Ital.; Amapola, Span. Papaver. See OPIUM. Papaver Rhoeas. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1146 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 387, t. 139. The red or corn poppy is distinguished by its hairy stem, which is branched and rises about a foot in height, by its incised pinnatifid leaves, by its urn-shaped capsule, and by the full, bright, scarlet colour of its petals. It is a native of Europe, where it grows wild in great abundance, adorning especially the fields of grain with its brilliant flower. It has been naturalized in this country. Its capsules contain the same kind of milky juice as that found in P. somni- ferum, and an extract has been prepared from them having the properties of opium; but the quantity is too small to repay the trouble of its preparation. 710 Rhoeas.—Rhus Glabrum. PART I. M. Tilhoi t as shown that the extract contains morphia, but in a proportion ex- ceedingly minute compared with that in which it exists in opium. (Journ. de Pharm., ii. 513.) The petals are the officinal portion. They have a narcotic smell, and a mucilaginous, slightly bitter taste. By drying, they lose their odour, and assume a violet-red colour. Chevallier detected a very minute pro- portion of morphia in an extract obtained from them; but their operation on the system is exceedingly feeble, and they are valued more for their beautiful scarlet colour, which they communicate to water, than for their medical virtues. According to Leo Meier, the colouring principles of the flowers are two acids, which he denominates rhoeadic and papaveric acids. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 211.) A syrup is prepared from them, which was formerly pre- scribed as an anodyne in catarrhal affections; but is now little esteemed, except for its colour. Off Prep. Syrupus Rhoeados, Br. W. RHUS GLABRUM. U.S. Secondary. Sumach. The fruit of Rhus glabrum. U. S. Riius. Sex.Syst. Pentandria Trigynia. — Nat. Ord. Anacardiaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted. Petals five. Berry small, with one nuciform seed. Nut-tall. Of this genus there are several species possessing poisonous properties, which should be carefully distinguished from that here described. For an account of them the reader is referred to the article Toxicodendron. Rhus glabrum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1418. This species of Rhus, called vari- ousTy'smboth sumach, Pennsylvania sumach, and upland sumach, is an indi- genous shrub from four to twelve feet or more in height, with a stem usually more or less bent, and divided into straggling branches, covered with a smooth, light-gray or somewhat reddish bark. The leaves are upon smooth petioles, and consist of many pairs of opposite leaflets, with an odd one at the extremity, all of which are lanceolate, acuminate, acutely serrate, glabrous, green on their xipper surface, and whitish beneath. In the autumn their colour changes to a beautiful red. The flowers are greenish-red, and disposed in large, erect, ter- minal, compound thyrses, which are succeeded by clusters of small crimson ber- ries, covered with a silky down. The shrub is found in almost all parts of the United States, growing in old neglected fields, along fences, and on the borders of woods. The flowers appear in July, and the fruit ripens in the early part of autumn. The bark and leaves are astringent, and are used in tanning leather and in dyeing. Mr. W. J. Wat- son found, in the bark of the root, albumen, gum, starch, tannic and gallic acids, caoutchouc, resin, colouring matter, and evidences of volatile oil. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 194.) Excrescences are produced under the leaves resembling galls in character, and containing large quantities of tannic and gallic acids. These have been used as a substitute for the imported galls by Dr. Walters, of New York, who thought them in every respect preferable. They may be col- lected at little expense; as they are produced very abundantly, especially in the Western States. From the experiments of Dr. Stenhouse, it appears that the tannic acid of sumach is identical with that of galls, being, like it, resolved under the influence of sulphuric acid, into glucose and gallic acid; and this change is supposed to take place spontaneously in sumach when long kept, {ibid., xxxiv. 252.) The only officinal part of the plant is the fruit. The berries have a sour, astringent, not unpleasant taste, and are often eaten by the country people with impunity. According to Mr. Cozzens, of New York PART I. Rhus G-labrum.—Rosa Canina.—Rosa Centifolia. 711 the acid to which they owe their sourness is the malic, and is contained in the pubescence which covers their surface; as, when it is washed away by warm water, the berries are wholly free from acidity. Professor W. B. Rogers found the acid to be combined with lime, in the state of bimalate.* Mr. W. J. Watson ascertained that free malic acid and bimalate of lime coexist in the berries, which contain also, upon the same authority, tannic and gallic acids, fixed oil, extractive; red colouring matter, and a little volatile oil. Medical Properties and Uses. Sumach berries are astringent and refrige- rant; and their infusion has been recommended as a cooling drink in febrile complaints, and a pleasant gargle in inflammation and ulceration of the throat. By I)r. Fahnestock an infusion of the inner bark of the root, employed as a gar- gle, is considered almost as a specific in the sore-mouth attending inordinate mercurial salivation. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sciences, v. 61.) W. ROSA CANINA. Br. Hips. Rosa canina. The Dog Rose; and other allied species. The ripe fruit of indigenous plants, deprived of the hairy seeds. Br. Rose sauvage, Fr.; Hundsrose, Germ. Rosa. See ROSA CENTIFOLIA. Rom canina. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1071; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 493, t. 177. The dog rose, wild brier, or lxeptree, is a native of Europe, and distinguished as a species by its glabrous ovate germs, smooth peduncles, prickly stem and petioles, and ovate, smooth, rigid leaves. It is eight or ten feet high, and bears white or pale-red flowers, having usually five obcordate fragrant petals. The plant has been introduced into this country, but is not much cultivated. The fruit is fleshy, smooth, oval, red, and of a pleasant, sweet, acidulous taste ; and contains sugar, and uncombined citric and malic acids. The pulp, separated from the seeds and the silky bristles in which they are embedded, is employed in Europe for the preparation of a confection, intended chiefly as an agreeable vehicle for other medicines. Off. Prep. Confectio Rosse Caninae, Br. W. ROSA CENTIFOLIA. U.S.,Br. Hunched-leaved Bose. Pale Rose. Cabbage-Rose Petals. Br. The petals of Rosa centifolia. U. S. The fresh petals fully expanded. Br. Roses a cent feuilles, Fr.; Hundertblatterige Rose, Germ.; Rosa pallida, Ital.; Rosa de A lexandria, Span. Rosa. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Polygynia. — Nat. Ord. Rosaceae. Gen. Ch. Petals five. Calyx urceolate, five-cleft, fleshy, contracted at the neck. Seeds numerous, hispid, attached to the inner side of the calyx. Willd. * Prof. Rogers suggested that malic acid might be advantageously procured from this source. Prof. Procter informs us that he has obtained it by the following process. Pour boiling water on the ripe berries; macerate for twelve hours; strain, evaporate to one- fourth, and again strain; resume the evaporation and continue it till the liquid assumes the consistence of thin syrup; then set it aside to crystallize. Wash the crystals of bima- late of lime with a little water, and recrystallize from a boiling solution. Dissolve the salt in hot water, and decompose it with a solution of acetate of lead. Wash the precipitated malate of lead, suspend it in water, and pass sulphuretted hydrogen through the liquid until the whole of the lead is separated. Lastly, filter, and evaporate to dryness in a porcelain vessel. Malic acid, thus obtained, may be used in preparing the malates of iron and manganese, both of which have been employed medicinally in Europe. 712 Rosa Centifolia.—Rosa Gallica. part r. R<>sa centifolia. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1071; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. 495, t. 178. This species of rose has prickly stems, usually from three to six feet high. The leaves consist of two or three pairs of leaflets, with an odd one at the end, closely attached to the common footstalk, which is rough, but without spines. The leaf- lets are ovate, broad, serrate, pointed, and hairy on the under surface. The flowers are large, with many petals, generally of a pale-red colour, and sup- ported upon peduncles beset with short bristly hairs. The germ is ovate, and the segments of the calyx semi-pinnate. The varieties of R. centifolia are very numerous, but may be indiscriminately employed. The plant is now cultivated in gardens all over the world; but its original country is not certainly known. It has sometimes been mistaken for the damask rose, which is a distinct species. The petals are the officinal portion. They are extremely fragrant, and have a sweetish, slightly acidulous, somewhat bitterish taste. Their odour is said to be increased by iodine. It depends on a volatile oil, which may be separated by distillation with water. (See Oleum Rosae.) They should be collected when the flower is fully expanded, but has not begun to fall. Their fragrance is impaired but not lost by drying. They may be preserved fresh, for a considerable time, by compressing them with alternate layers of common salt in a well-closed ves- sel, or beating them with twice their weight of that substance. The petals are slightly laxative, and are sometimes administered in the form of syrup combined with cathartic medicines; but their chief use is in the pre- paration of rose water. (See Aqua Rosae.) Off. Prep. Aqua Rosae; Syrupus Sarsaparillae Compositus, U. S. W. ROSA GALLICA. U.S., Br. Red Rose. The petals of Rosa Gallica. U. S. The unexpanded petal, fresh and dried. Br. Roses rouges, Ft.; Franzosicke Rose, Essig-rosen, Germ.; Rosa domestica, ltal.; Rosa rubra o Castillara, Span. Rosa. See ROSA CENTIFOLIA. Bosa Gallica. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 10*71; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 498, t. 179. This species is smaller than R. centifolia, but resembles it in the character of its foliage. The stem is beset with short bristly prickles. The flowers are very large, with obcordate widely spreading petals, which are of a rich crimson colour, and less numerous than in the preceding species. In the centre is a crowd of yellow anthers on thread-like filaments, and as many villose styles bearing papillary stigmas. The fruit is oval, shining, and of a firm consistence. The red rose is a native of the south of Europe, and is cultivated in gardens throughout the United States. The petals, which are the part employed, should be gathered before the flower has blown, separated from their claws, dried in a warm sun or by the fire, and kept in a dry place. Their odour, which is less fragrant than that of R. centi- folia, is improved by drying. They have a velvety appearance, a purplish-red colour, and a pleasantly astringent and bitterish taste. Their constituents, ac- cording to M. Cartier, are tannin, gallic acid, colouring matter, a volatile oil, a fixed oil, albumen, soluble salts of potassa, insoluble salts of lime, silica, and oxide of iron. (Journ. de Pliarin., vii. 531.) According to M. Filhol, the as- tringency of red roses is ascribable less to tannic acid, of which they contain but a trace, than to quercitrin, which he obtained in notable proportion, and witp which their colour is probably connected. They also contain much uncrystalli- zable sugar. (Report. de Pharm., Mai, 1863.) The sensible properties aud med- ical virtues of the flowers are extracted by boiling water. Their infusion is of a pale-reddish colour, which becomes bright red on the addition of sulphuric aciiL PART I. Rosmarinus.—Rottlera. 713 As their colour is impaired by exposure to light and air, they should be kept in opaque well-closed bottles or canisters. Medical Properties and Uses. Red roses are slightly astringent and tonic, and were formerly thought to possess peculiar virtues. They are at present chiefly employed in infusion, as an elegant vehicle for tonic and astringent medicines. Off. Prep. Confectio Rosae, 17. S.; Confect. Ros® Gallic®, Br.; Infusum Ros® Acidum, Br.; Infusum Ros® Compositum, U. S.; Mel Ros®, U. S.; Syrupus Ros® Gallic®. W. ROSMARINUS. U. S. Rosemary. The tops of Rosmarinus officinalis. U. S. ltomarin, Fr.; Rosmarin, Germ.; Rosmarino, Ital.; Romero, Span. Rosmarinus. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Lamiacese or Labiatae. Gen. Ch. Corolla unequal, with the upper lip two-parted. Filaments long, curved, simple, with a tooth. Willd. Rosmarinus officinalis. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 126; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 329, t. 117. Rosemary is an evergreen shrub, three or four feet high, with an erec* stem, divided into many long, slender, ash-coloured branches. The leaves are numerous, sessile, opposite, more than an inch long, about one-sixth of an inch broad, linear, entire, obtuse at the summit, folded backward at the edges, of a firm consistence, smooth and green on the upper surface, whitish and somewhat downy beneath. The flowers are pale-blue or white, and disposed in opposite groups, at the axils of the leaves, towards the ends of the branches. The seeds are four in number, oblong, and naked in the bottom of the calyx. The plant grows spontaneously in the countries which border on the Medi- terranean, and is cultivated in the gardens of Europe and this country. The flowering summits are the officinal portion. They have a strong balsamic odour, which is possessed, though in a less degree, by all parts of the plant. Their taste is bitter and camphorous. These properties are imparted partially to water, completely to alcohol, and depend on a volatile oil which may be obtained by distillation. (See Oleum Rosmarini.) The tops lose a portion of their sensible properties by drying, and become inodorous by age. Medical Properties and Uses. Rosemary is gently stimulant, and has been considered emmenagogue. In the practice of this country it is scarcely used; but in Europe, especially on the continent, it enters into the composition of several syrups, tinctures, &c., to which it imparts its agreeable odour and ex- citant property. It is sometimes added to sternutatory powders, and is used externally in connection with other aromatics in the form of fomentation. In some countries it is employed as a condiment; and its flowers, which are much sought after by the bees, impart their peculiar flavour to the honey of the districts In which the plant abounds. Off. Prep. Oleum Rosmarini. W. ROTTLERA. US. Secondary. Kameela. The powder and hairs obtained from the capsules of Rottlera tinctoria (Rox- burgh). U. S. Off. Syn. KAMELA. Rottlera tinctoria. The powder which adheres to the capsules. Br. This is an officinal newly introduced into the TJ. S. and Br Pharmacopoeias. 714 Rottlera. PART I. Iu ou; own, the Latin name Rottlera has been adopted from the generic title of the plant which yields the medicine, while the ordinary Indian name Kameela (often spelled Icamala) is used as the English synonyme. In the Br Pharmaco- poeia Kamela is given both as the Latin and English title. The genus Rottlera to which the plant producing the medicine belongs, was named in honour of the Rev. Dr. Rottler, a Danish Missionary, and as now re- cognised was established by Roxburgh. It belongs to the Natural Order of Euphorbiacese, and, besides the officinal R. tinctoria, includes another species having medical virtues, the Rottlera Schimveri. a large tree of Abyssinia, the bark of which, under the name of cortex musenas or musena bark, has attracted some attention from its presumed anthelmintic virtues.* Rottlera tinctoria, which is described and figured by Roxburgh in his treatise on The Plants of the Coast of Coromandel (ii. 36), is a small tree from 15 to 20 feet in height, growing throughout Hindostan, in several of the E. India islands, and it is said, in China and Australia. The fruit is a roundish three- valved, three-celled capsule, of about the size of a small cherry, marked ex- ternally with three furrows, and thickly covered with a red powder. This is the officinal part of the plant. The capsules are gathered in February and March, when full-grown, and the powder carefully brushed from them. This is largely collected in some parts of Hindostan, where it forms an important article of commerce, being extensively employed as a dye-stuff. Specimens of it, under the name of wurrus, were sent to England in 1852, and examined by Mr. D. Ilanoury, who published an account of it in the Pharmaceutical Journal for June, 1853 (xii. 405). It was not till several years afterward that it began to attract attention in Great Britain as a medicine. Properties. Kameela, as brought to our market, is a light, finely granular, and very mobile powder, of a brownish-red or madder colour, with little smell or taste, but producing a slight sense of acrimony in the mouth, and feeling gritty under the teeth. It is inflammable, and flashes almost like gunpowder when dropped into the flame of a candle. It is insoluble in cold, and but very slightly soluble in boiling water; but is dissolved by alkaline solutions, which give a resinous precipitate on the addition of an acid. Alcohol and ether dissolve a large proportion of it, forming a deep-red solution, from which water precipi- tates resinous matter. Under the microscope, Mr. Ilanbury found it to consist of “garnet-red, semi-transparent, roundish granules, from to of an inch in diameter, more or less mixed with minute stellate hairs, and the remains of stalks and leaves, the latter of which are easily removed by careful sifting.” (Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1858, p. 406.) It has been examined chemically by Dr. Thos. Anderson, of Glasgow, and by G. Leube, jun., in Germany. As given by the former, the constituents are, in 100 parts, 78T9 of resinous colouring matter, V 34 of albumen, I 14 of cellulose, &c., a trace of volatile oil and volatile colour- ing matter, 3-84 of ashes, and 3 49 of water. Of the resinous colouring substances, Dr. Anderson obtained one in a pure state by allowing a concentrated ethereal solution to stand for two days, draining and pressing in bibulous paper the result- ing mass of granular crystals, and purifying them from adhering resin by repeated solution in ether and crystallization. To the substance thus obtained he gave the name of rottlerin. It is in the form of minute crystalline plates, of a yellow * Cortex Musense. This bark is in quills several inches long, an inch or more in diameter, rough-and fissufecf externally, with a brown epidermis, and beneath this successively a thin greenish cellular coat, a thicker pale-yellow periderm, and a tough very fibrous liber It is inodorous, but has a swedtisli nauseous taste, followed by an enduring sense of acri- mony in the fauces. It was found by Mr. C. Thiel to contain an acrid substance analogous to saponin, a bitter principle, a fatty wax-like substance, yellow colouring matter, ex- tractive, and various salts. It is said to be used in Abyssinia, in connection will ko jsbo, in the treatment of the tape-worm. (Neues Jahrb.fiir Pharm., Jan. 1863, p. 374.) ■ Sote tt the twelfth edition PART I. Bottler a.—Rubia. colour and a satin-like lustre, insoluble in water, sparingly soluble in cold, but more so in boiling alcohol, and readily dissolved by ether, and by alkaline solu- tions, which assume a dark-red colour. Rottlerin melts when heated moderately, and at a higher heat is decomposed, giving off pungent vapours. Its formula, according to Dr. Anderson, is C22H10Ofi. (Ibid., p. 407.) Leube found a resin solu- ble in ether and cold alcohol, another resin soluble in ether and boiling alcohol, starch, gum, extractive, tannin, albumen, and citric acid. He failed in obtaining the rottlerin of Dr. Anderson. The ashes were in the extraordinary proportion of 25-85 per cent., and of the ashes 83-8 per cent, consisted of insoluble silica. (Ibid., Sept. 1860, p. 168.) Silica probably enters essentially into the constitu- tion of the minute granules, and its presence accounts for their grittiness under the teeth. The active constituent is supposed to be the resin extracted by ether. Medical Properties and Uses. Kameela is actively purgative in full doses, sometimes acting violently, and occasionally causing nausea, but seldom vomit- ing. It appears to have been long used in India in the treatment of tape-worm, but has been only within a few years known in Europe and this country. Its qiroperties as a vermifuge were first investigated by Dr. C. Mackiunon, a British Army Surgeon in India, who published the results of his observations in the Indian Annals of Medical Science, in 1854. He found it extraordinarily effi- cient in the treatment of taenia, having used it in 50 cases, and failed in bringing away the worm only in two. The testimony of other practitioners in India and Great Britain goes to confirm the statements of Dr. Mackinnon, and there can be little doubt of the vermifuge powers of the medicine. It is given without pre- vious preparation of the patient, in the dose of from one to three drachms, sus- pended in water, mucilage, or syrup. In the latter dose it sometimes acts vio- lently. The worm is usually expelled dead at the third or fourth stool. If the first dose fail to operate on the bowels, it may be repeated in four hours, or followed by a dose of castor oil. Dr. Anderson, British Army Surgeon in India, has em- ployed the medicine successfully in the form of tincture, made in the proportion of six ounces to sixteen fluidouuces of rectified spirit, of which the dose is from one to four fluidrachms. As an external remedy, kameela is used by the people of India in various affections of the skin, particularly scabies. Dr. Wm. Moore, of Dublin, has employed it usefully in herpetic ring-worm. (Dub. Hasp. Gaz., Nov. 15, 1857.) ‘ W. RUB I A. U.S. Secondary. Madder. The root of Rubia tinctorum. U. S. Garance, Fr.; Krappwurzel, Germ.; Robbia, Ital.; Rubia de tintoreros, Granza, Span. Rubia. Sex. Syst. Tetrandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Rubiacese. Juss. Gen.Ch. Corolla one-petaled, bell-shaped. Berries two, one-seeded. Willd. Rubia tinctorum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 603; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 173, t. 67. The root of the dyers' madder is perennial, and consists of numerous long, suc- culent fibres, varying in thickness from the size of a quill to that of the little finger, and uniting at top in a common head, from which also proceed side-roots that run near the surface of the ground, and send up many annual stems. These are slender, quadrangular, jointed, procumbent, and furnished with short prickles, by which they adhere to the neighbouring plants upon which they climb. The leaves are elliptical, pointed, rough, firm, about three inches long and nearly one inch broad, having rough points on their edges and midrib, and standing at the joints of the stem in whorls of four, five, or six together. The branches rise in pairs from the same joints, and bear small yellow flowers at the summit of each df their subdivisions. The fruit is a round, shining, black berry. The plant is a native of the south of Europe and the Levant, and is cultivated in 716 Rubia.—Rubus. PA11T I. Asia Minor, France, Holland, and the south of Italy. It is from Holland that commerce derives its chief supply. The root, which is the part used, is dug up in the third summer, and, having been deprived of its cuticle, is dried by artificial heat, and then reduced to a coarse powder. In this condition it is packed in barrels, and sent into the market. Madder from the Levant is in the state of the whole root; from the south of France, either whole or in powder. The plant is also cultivated in this country, in the States of Delaware and Ohio. The root consists of a reddish-brown bark, and a ligneous portion within. The latter is yellow in the recent state, but becomes red when dried. The powder, as kept in the shops, is reddish-brown. Madder has a weak peculiar odour, and a bitterish astringent taste; and im- parts these properties, as well as a red colour, to water and alcohol. It contains, according to M. Runge, five distinct colouring substances; a red, a purple, an orange, a yellow, and a brown. According to M. Decaisne, only yellow colouring matter is found in the recent root; and it is under the influence of atmospheric air that this changes to red. The most interesting of the colouring substances is the alizarin of Robiquet and Collin. It may be obtained from the alcoholic extract by sublimation, in the method employed by Mohr in obtaining benzoic acid. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xxxi. 267.) It is orange-red, inodorous, in- sipid, crystallizable, capable of being sublimed without change, scarcely soluble in cold water, soluble in boiling water, and very readily so in alcohol, ether, the fixed oils, and alkaline solutions. The alcoholic and watery solutions are rose- coloured ; the ethereal, golden-yellow; the alkaline, violet and blue when con- centrated, but violet-red when sufficiently diluted. A beautiful rose-coloured lake is produced by precipitating a mixture of the solutions of alizarin and alum. Rochleder finds a close analogy between alizarin and the chrysophanic acid of rhubarb. (See Cliem. Gaz., A. D. 1852, p. 243.) M. Roussin claims to have suc- ceeded in preparing alizarin from napthalin. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 558.) Madder also contains sugar; and Dobereiner succeeded in obtain- ing alcohol from it by fermentation and distillation, without affecting its colour- ing properties. It is much used by the dyers. Medical Properties and Uses. Madder was formerly thought to be emmena- gogue and diuretic; and was used in amenorrhoea, dropsy, jaundice, and vis- ceral obstructions. It is still occasionally prescribed in suppressed menstrua- tion ; but physicians generally have no confidence in its efficacy in this or any othe.r complaint. When taken into the stomach it imparts a red colour to the milk and urine, and to the bones of animals, without sensibly affecting any other tissue. The effect is observable most quickly in the bones of young animals, and in those nearest the heart. Under the impression that it might effect some change in the osseous system, it has been prescribed in rachitis, but without any favourable result. The dose is about half a drachm, repeated three or four times a day. W. - RUBUS. US. Blackberry-root. The root of Rubu3 Canadensis, and of Rubus villosus. U. S. Rubus. Sex. Syst. Icosandria Polygynia.— Nat. Ord. Rosaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-cleft. Petals five. Berry compound, with one-seeded acini. Willd. Of this extensive genus not less than twenty species are indigenous in the United States, where they are called by the various names of raspberry, black berry, dewberry, cloudberry, &c. Most of them are shrubby or suffruticose briers, with astringent roots and edible berries; some have annual stems with- out prickles. The only officinal species are R. Canadensis and R. villosus, which, PART I. Hub us. 717 so far as relates to their medical properties, are so closely alike as not to require a separate description. 1. Rubus Canadensis. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 105; Gray, Manual of Bot. do., p. 121. — R.trivialis. Pursh, Flor. Am., Sept. p. 347. The dewberry, sometimes also called low blackberry, or creeping blackberry, has a slender, somewhat prickly stem, which runs along the ground, and occasionally puts forth roots. The leaves are composed of three or five leaflets, which are ovate or ovate-lanceo- late, generally pointed, sharply serrate, thin, and nearly smooth. The flowers are large, white, and arranged in racemes, with leaf-like bractes. The plant grows abundantly in old fields and neglected grounds in the Northern and Mid- dle States. Its fruit is large, black, of a very pleasant flavour, and ripens some- what earlier than that of R. villosus. 2. R. villosus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1085; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 160; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 151. The stem of the blackberry is somewhat shrubby, from three to seven feet high, branching, more or less furrowed and angular, and armed with strong prickles. The smaller branches and young shoots are herbaceous. The leaves are ternate or quinate; the leaflets ovate, acuminate, unequally and sharply serrate, and pubescent on both sides; the footstalk and midrib usually armed with short recurved prickles. The flowers are large, white, and in erect racemes, with a hairy, prickly stalk. The calyx is short, with acu- minate segments. The fruit is first green, then red, and, when perfectly ripe, of a shining black colour and very pleasant taste. It is a compound berry, con- sisting of numerous pulpy one-seeded globules or acini attached to the receptacle. This species of Rubus is, perhaps, the most abundant of those indigenous in the United States, growing in neglected fields, along fences, on the borders of woods, in forest glades, and wherever tillage or too much shade and moisture does not interfere with it. Its flowers appear from May to July, and its fruit is ripe in August. The berries of both these species of Rubus are much used as food; and a jelly made from them is in great esteem as an article of diet, and even as a re- medy in dysenteric affections. The roots only are officinal. The blackberry root is branching, cylindrical, of various dimensions, from nearly an inch in thickness down to the size of a straw, ligneous, and covered with a thin bark, which is externally of a light-brownish or reddish-brown colour, and in the dried root is wrinkled longitudinally. The dewberry root is usually smaller, without the longitudinal wrinkles, but with transverse fissures through the epidermis, and of a dark-ash colour, without any reddish tinge. Both are inodorous. The bark in both has a bitterish strongly astringent taste, and the ligneous portion is nearly insipid, and comparatively inert. The smaller roots, therefore, should be selected for use; or, if the thicker pieces are employed, the cortical part should be separated, and the wood rejected. Their virtues are extracted by boiling water, and by diluted alcohol, and depend chiefly, if not exclusively, upon tannin, which is an abundant constituent. Medical Properties and Uses. Dewberry and blackberry roots are tonic and strongly astringent. They have long been a favourite domestic remedy in bowel affections, and from popular favour have passed into regular medical use. Given iu decoction, they are usually acceptable to the stomach, without being offensive to the taste; and may be employed with great advantage in cases of diarrhoea from relaxation of the bowels, whether iu children or adults. We can add our own decided testimony to that of others who have spoken favourably of their use in this complaint; and there is no doubt that they are applicable to all other vases in which the vegetable astringents are found serviceable. The decoction may be prepared by boiling an ounce of the smaller roots, or of the bark of the larger, in a pint and a half of water down to a pint; of which from one to two fluidounces may be given to an adult three or four times, or more frequently, Rum ex. PART I. during the tttenty-four hours. The dose of the powdered root is 20 or 30 grains. A fluid extract may be prepared from the root, in the same manner and propor- tions exactly as the officinal fluid extract of Bittersweet (see Extractum Dulca- maree Fluidum), and given in the dose of 30 minims.* The syrup is officinal. Off. Prep. Syrupus Rubi, U. S. W. RUMEX. U. S. Secondary. Yellow Dock. The root of Rumex crispus. U. S. Rumex. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Trigynia.— Nat. Ord. Polygonace®. Gen. Gh. Calyx three-leaved. Petals three, converging. Seed one, three- tided. Willd. Calyx six-parted, persistent, the three interior divisions petaloid connivent. Seed one, three-sided, superior, naked. Stigmata multifid. Nvttall. Several species of Rumex have sour leaves, and are distinguished by the com- mon name of sorrel from the others, which are called dock. Of the former, Rumex Acetosa, or common English sorrel, formerly held a place in the Lon- don and Dublin Pharmacopoeias. R. Acetosella is the common sorrel of our fields, though supposed to have beeh'“6rTgfnafly introduced from Europe. The leaves of both these plants are agreeably sour to the taste, and owe their acidity to binoxalate of potassawith a little tartaric aci’d. They quite lose this taste in drying. They are refrigerant and diuretic, and may be used advantageously as an article of diet in scurvy. For this purpose they are prepared in the form of salad. The juice of the leaves forms with water an agreeable acidulous drink, sometimes used in fevers. Taken very largely, the leaves are said to have pro- duced poisonous effects. ( See Wood's Quarterly Retrospect, \. 109.) R. scutatus also ranks among the sorrels. Of the proper docks, though one only is recognised by the Pharmacopoeia, several others have been used. The roots of R. Patientia and R. Alpinus, Eu- ropean plants, and of R. aguaticus, R. acutus, and R. sanguineus, belonging both to Europe and the United States, may be employed indiscriminately with those of the officinal species. R. Britannica and R. obtusifolius were formerly officinal, but were dismissed at the late revision of the Pharmacopoeia, and the present officinal species adopted in their place. R. Hydrolapathum (Hudson), which is the R. aguaticus of the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia, is thought to be the Herba Britannica of the ancients, celebrated for the cure of scurvy and diseases of the skin. The docks are herbaceous plants with perennial roots. Their flowers are in terminal or axillary panicles. Some of the species are dioecious; but the one here described has perfect flowers. Rumex crispus. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 251; Gray, Manual of Botany, Ac., p. 377. From a perennial, spindle-shaped, yellow root, which penetrates deeply into the ground, a stem rises annually, three or four feet high, furnished with smooth, lanceolate leaves, strongly waved at their margins, and terminating in panicled racemes of small, inconspicuous, greenish flowers. The lower leaves are truncate or cordate at the base, and those which spring from the root have long footstalks. The flowers are in crowded whorls, upon long wand-like racemes, which are leafless above. The valves or inner sepals of the calyx are roundish- cordate, entire or slightly denticulate, and one or all grain-bearing. This species * Aromatic Syrup of Blackberry. Take of Blackberry Root ; Cinnamon, Cloves, each, Mace gi; Sugar Reduce the root and spices to a powder which will pass through a sieve of 50 meshes to the square inch, moisten this with two fluidounces of alco- hol, put into a percolator, and displace with water till 17 fluidounces have passed, aui] dissolve the sugar in the filtrate. A fluidounce is equivalent to 30 grains of tl.e toot. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 552.)—Note to the twelfth edition. part I. Rumex.—Ruta. of dock is a native of Europe, but has become naturalized in this country, and is now a common weed, growing in roads and fields. Dock root, from whatever species derived, has an astringent, bitter taste, with little or no smell. It readily yields its virtues to water by decoction. According to Riegel, the root of R. obtusifolius contains a peculiar principle called rumi- cin, resin, extractive matter resembling tannin, starch, mucilage, albumen, lignin, sulphur, and various salts, among which are phosphate of lime, and different acetates and malates. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., i. 410.) Rumicin, in its pure state, has since been ascertained by Karl von Thann, to be identical with chry- sophanic acid. (See Rheum.) (Chem. Central Blatt, Nov. 10, 1858, p. 795.) The leaves of most of the species are edible when young, and are occasionally used as spinage. They are somewhat laxative, and form an excellent diet in scor- butic cases. The roots are used to dye a yellow colour. The officinal species, K crispus, has been carefully examined by Dr. J. II. Salisbury, of New York;” and the following statements are derived from his paper, published in the New York Journal of Medicine (March, 1855, p. 211) The seeds are astringent, but less bitter than the root. The leaves are bitterish, pungent, and astringent to the taste, with a smell like that of bruised sorrel. The petioles are decidedly sour, and contain nearly one per cent, of oxalic acid. The root, which is the officinal part, is spiudle-shaped, yellow, and covered with an easily separable and hearly tasteless epidermis, within which are successively the cortical layers, a ligneous' portion, and a central medulla. The cortical part, which is easily separated, fleshy, and tender, is the most active. It has a bitter and astringent taste, and yielded, on analysis, starch, a little sugar, albuminous matter, gummy matter, bitter extractive, tannic acid of the kind which gives green precipitates with the salts of iron, lignin, and various salts. The root yields its virtues to water and alcohol, but is injured by long boiling. Medical Properties and Uses. Dock root is astringent, and gently tonic, and is also supposed to possess an alterative property, which renders it useful in scor- butic disorders, and cutaneous eruptions, particularly the itch, in the cure of which it enjoyed at one time considerable reputation. It is said to have proved useful in scrofula and syphilis. Dr. Thomson found a decoction of the root of R. Patientia very efficacious in obstinate ichthyosis. R. aquaticus and R. Britan- nica are the most astringent. The roots of some species unite a laxative with the tonic and astringent property, resembling rhubarb somewhat in their opera- tion. Such are those of R. crispus and R. obtusifolius; and R. Alpinus has in some parts of Europe the name of mountain rhubarb. This resemblance is not singular, as the two genera belong to the same natural family. Dock root is given in powder or decoction. Two ounces of the fresh root bruised, or one ounce of the dried, may be boiled in a pint of water, of which two fluidounces may be given at a dose, and repeated as the stomach will bear it. The root has often been applied externally in the shape of ointment, cataplasm, and decoction, to the cutaneous eruptious and ulcerations for which it has been used internally. The powdered root is recommended as a dentifrice, especially when the gums lre spongy. W. RUTA. TJ. S. Secondary. Rue. The leaves of Ruta graveolens. U. S. — Rue odorante, Fr.; Garten-Raute, Germ.; Ruta, Ital.; Ruda, Span. Ruta. Sex. Syst. Decandria Monogynia.—Nat.Ord. Rutacese. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-parted. Petals concave. Receptacle surrounded by ten melliferous points. Capsule lobed. Willd. Ruta graveolens. Willd. Sp■ Plant, ii. 542; Woodv. Med. Rot. p. 487, t. 174. Hut a. PART I. Common rue is a perennial plant, usually two or three feet high, with several shrubby branching stems, which, near the base, are woody and covered with a rough bark, but in their ultimate ramifications are smooth, green, and herba- ceous. The leaves are doubly pinnate, glaucous, with obovate, sessile, obscurely crenate, somewhat thick and fleshy leaflets. The flowers are yellow, and dis- posed in a terminal branched corymb upon subdividing peduncles. The calyx is persistent, with four or five acute segments; the corolla consists of four or five concave petals, somewhat sinuate at the margin. There are usually ten stamens, but sometimes only eight. The plant is a native of the south of Europe, but cultivated in our gardens. It flowers from June to September. The whole herb is active; but the leaves are usually employed. These have a strong disagreeable odour, especially when rubbed. Their taste is bitter, hot, and acrid. When recent, and in full vigour, they have so much acrimony as to inflame and even blister the skin, if much handled; but the acrimony is diminished by drying. Their virtues depend chiefly on a volatile oil, which is very abundant, and is contained in glandular vesicles, apparent over the whole surface of the plant. (See Oleum Rutse.) They contain, also, accord- ing to Miihl, chlorophyll, albumen, an azotized substance, extractive, gum, starch or inulin, malic acid, and lignin; and, according to Borntrager, a peculiar acid which he calls rulinic acid. (Chem. Gazette, Sept. 1845, p. 385.) Rutinic acid is the colouring principle of rue, and has been found in'various other plants. It ■was thought, at one time, that it might be identical with quereitrin; but, though analogous to that principle, it has been shown to be distinct. Like quereitrin, it seems to play an important part in the colouring of plants. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1862, p. 165.) Both alcohol and water extract their active properties. Medical Properties and Uses. Rue is stimulant and antispasmodic, and, like most other substances which excite the circulation, occasionally increases the secretions, especially when deficient from debility. It appears to have a tend- ency to act upon the uterus; in moderate doses proving emmenagogue, and in larger, producing a degree of irritation in the organ which sometimes determines abortion. Taken very largely it acts as an acrid narcotic poison. Three cases are recorded by Dr. Helie in which it was taken by pregnant women, with the effect of producing dangerous gastro-intestinal inflammation and cerebral de- rangement, which continued for several days, but ended at length in recovery. In each instance miscarriage resulted. Great depression and slowness of the pulse attended the narcotic action of the poison. In one of these cases, three fresh roots of the size of the finger were used in the form of decoction. (Ann. d'liyg. Pub. et de Med. Leg., xx. 180.) A case is recorded by Dr. G. F. Cooper in the Nashville Journ. of Med. and Surg., in which a man, convalescent from dysentery, having added some brandy to a handful of the bruised herb, expressed it, and took the whole of the liquor, with fatal effects. The prominent symptoms were vomiting, violent tormina, tenesmus with bloody stools, abdominal disten- sion with tenderness, and severe strangury. (Med. Exam., N. S., ix. 720.) Rue is sometimes used in hysterical affections, worms, flatulent colic, and amenor- rhoea, particularly in the last complaint. It has also been highly recommended in uterine hemorrhage, especially when dependent on an atonic state of the organ. The ancients employed it as a condiment, and believed it to possess, besides other valuable properties, that of resisting the action of poisons. Its excitant and irritating properties require that it should be used with caution. The dose of the powder is from fifteen to thirty grains two or three times a day The medicine is also given in infusion and extract. W. PART I. Sabadilla. 721 SABADILLA. U. S., Br. Cevadilla. The seed of Veratrum Sabadilla. U.S. Asagraea officinalis. The dried Fruit. Br Cevadille, Fr.; Sabadillsame, Germ.; Cebadilla, Span. There has been much uncertainty in relation to the botanical origin of ceva* dilla. At one time it was generally believed to be derived from Veratrum Sabadilla, which is recognised in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. But Schiede, during his travels in Mexico, ascertained that it was, in part at least, collected from a different plant, of the same natural order of Melanthaceae, growing upon the eastern declivity of the Mexican Andes. This was considered by Schlechtendahl as another species of Veratrum, by Don as an Helouias, and by Lindley as be- longing to a new genus which he named Asagraea. Hence it has been variously denominated Veratrum officinale, Helonias officinalis, and Asagraea officinalis. The Edinburgh College recognised this plant, under Don’s title of Helonias offi- cinalis, as one of the sources of cevadilla; in the present British Pharmacopoeia it is admitted, under Lindley’s name of Asagraea officinalis, as the only source. More exact information, however, is wanted before we can determine its precise origin. It has been adopted in the Pharmacopoeias solely on account of its employment in the preparation of veratria. It is brought from Vera Cruz.* Cevadilla seeds usually occur in commerce mixed with the fruit. This con- sists of three coalescing capsules or follicles, which open above, and appear like a single capsule with three cells. It is three or four lines long and a line and a half in thickness, obtuse at the base, light-brown or yellowish, smooth, and in each capsule contains one or two seeds. A resemblance, existing or supposed, between this fruit and that of barley is said to have given rise to the Spanish name cevadilla, which is a diminutive of barley. The seeds are elongated, pointed at each end, flat on one side and convex on the other, somewhat curved, two or three lines long, wrinkled, slightly winged, black or dark-brown on the outside, whitish within, hard, inodorous, and of an exceedingly acrid, burning, and dura- ble taste. Cevadilla was found by Pelletier and Caventou to contain a peculiar organic alkali which they named veratria. combined with gallic acid; fatty mat- ter, consisting of olein, stearin, and a peculiar volatile fatty acid denominated * Until more definite information is obtained on the subject, we give in a note a brief description of the two plants above referred to. Veratrum Sabadilla. Retzius, Obs. i. 31; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 50, pi. 94. See Veratrum Album. The leaves of this plant are numerous, ovate-oblong, obtuse, with from eight to fourteen ribs, glaucous beneath, and all radical. The flower-stem is erect, simple, and round, rises three or four feet in height, and bears a spreading, simple, or but slightly branched panicle of somewhat nodding flowers, supported upon very short pedicels. The flowers, which are of a blackish-purple colour, approximate in twos and threes, the fertile turning at length to one side, and the sterile falling off. The segments of the corolla are ovate-lanceolate, and without veins. The capsules occupy only one side of the stem. This plant grows in Mexico and the West Indies, and was cultivated by Descourtilz at San Do- mingo, from seeds obtained in Mexico. Anagrsea officinalis. Lindley, Bolan. Reg., June, 1839.— Veratrum officinale. Schlechtendahl, Linnsea, vi. 45. — Ilelonias officinalis. Don, Ed. New Philos. Journ., October, 1832, p. 234. The following is the generic character given by Lindley. “Flowers polygamous, racemose, naked. Perianth six-partite, segments linear, veinless, almost equal, with a nectariferous excavation at the base, equal to the stamens. Stamens alternately shorter; anthers cordate as if unilocular, after dehiscence shield-shaped. Ovaries three, quite simple, attenuated into an obscure stigma. Follicles three, acuminate, papery; seeds scimitar-shaped, corru- gated, winged. Bulbous herbs, with grass-like leaves, and small, pale, and densely ra- cemed flowers.” A. officinalis, which is the only known species, has linear, acuminate, sub- carinate leaves, roughish at the margin, and four feet in length by three lines in breadth, \nd a round flower-stem, about six feet high, terminating in a very dense, straight, spike- Tike raceme, eighteen inches long. The flowers are white, with yellow anthers. 722 Sabadilla.—Sabbatia. PART I. eevadic or sabadillic acid; wax; yellow colouring matter; gum; lignin; and salts of potassa and of lime, with a little silica. From 100 parts of the seeds, separated from their capsules, Meissner obtained 0 58 of veratria. M. Couerbe discovered another alkaloid in the seeds which he denominated saba.dillin. Be- sides the principles above mentioned, a peculiar acid was discovered by Merck, called ve.ratric acid, which is in colourless crystals, fusible and volatilizable without decomposition, but slightly soluble in cold water, more soluble in hot water, soluble in alcohol, insoluble in ether, having the properties of reddening litmus paper, and forming soluble salts with the alkalies. For an account of the mode of preparing veratria, its properties, and remedial applications, and for a more particular notice of sabadillin (sabadillia), see Veratria in Part II. Medical Properties and Uses. Cevadilla is an acrid, drastic emeto-cathartic, operating occasionally with great violence, and in overdoses capable of produc- ing fatal effects. It was known as a medicine in Europe so early as the year 1572 ; but has never been much employed. It has been used chiefly as an anthel- mintic, especially in cases of taenia, in which it has been given in doses varying from five to thirty grains. It has also been given in different nervous affections. It is the principal ingredient of the pulvis Capucinorum, sometimes used in Europe for the destruction of vermin in the hair. It7s considered by the Mexi- cans useful in hydrophobia, and was employed by M. Fouilhoux, of Lyons, in a supposed case of that disease, in the dose of about nine grains, with asserted suc- cess. Externally applied, it is highly irritating, a..d is even said to be corrosive. Its chief employment at present is for the preparation of veratria. Off. Prep. Veratria. W. SABBATIA. U.S. Sabbatia. American Centaury. The herb of Sabbatia angularis. U. S. Sabbatia. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Gentianaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx five to twelve-parted. Corolla rotate, five to twelve-parted. Stigmas two, spiral. Anthers at length revolute. Capsule one-celled, two-valved, many-seeded. Nuttall. Sabbatia angularis. Pursh, Flor. Am. Sept. 137; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 147 ; Barton, Med. Bot. i. 255. — Chironia angularis. Linn. The American cen- taury is an annual or biennial herbaceous plant, with a fibrous root, and an erect, smooth, four-sided stem, winged at the angles, simple below, sending off opposite axillary branches above, and one or two feet in height. The leaves, which vary considerably in length and width, are ovate, entire, acute, nerved, smooth, op- posite, and sessile, embracing half the circumference of the stem at their base. The flowers are numerous, growing on the ends of the branches, and forming together a large terminal corymb. The calyx is divided into five lanceolate seg- ments, considerably shorter than the corolla. This is deeply five-parted, with obovate segments of a delicate rose-colour, which is paler and almost white in the middle of their under surface. The anthers are yellow, and, after shed- ding their pollen, become revolute. The style, which is bent downward, and is longer than the stamens, terminates in two linear stigmas, which become spirally twisted together. The plant is widely diffused through the Middle and Southern States, growing in low meadow grounds, and, in wet seasons, upon uplands, in woods, and neglected fields. It flowers in July and August. In its general aspect as well as medical properties, it bears a close resemblance to Erythrsea Cen- taurium. or European centaury, for which it was mistaken by the earlier settlers. The whole herb is employed, and should be collected when in flower. All parts of it have a strongly bitter taste, without any admixture of artrin- PA RT I. Sabbatia.—Sabina. 723 gency, or other peculiar flavour. Both alcohol and water extract its bitterness, together with its medical virtues. Medical Properties and Uses. American centaury has the tonic properties of the simple bitters, and is very analogous in its actiou to the other plants of the same natural family. It has long been popularly employed as a prophylactic and remedy in our autumnal intermittent and remittent fevers ; and was formerly much esteemed by some physicians in the latter of these complaints. The con- dition to which it was considered applicable was that existing between the parox- ysms, when the remission was such as to call for tonics, but was not deemed sufficient to justify a resort to the preparations of Peruvian bark. It is occa- sionally useful, during the progress of a slow convalescence, by promoting appe- tite and invigorating digestion; and may be employed for the same purpose in dyspepsia and diseases of debility. The most convenient form for administration is that of infusion. A pint of boiling water, poured on an ounce of the herb and allowed to cool, may be given in the dose of two fluidounces, repeated every hour or two during the remission of fevers, and less frequently in chronic affections. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm. The decoction, ex- tract, and tincture are also efficient preparations. W. SABINA. US.,Br. Savine. The tops of Juniperus Sabina. U. S. The fresh and dried Tops; collected in spring. Br. Sabine, Sevenbaum, Germ.; Sabina,Ital., Span. v Ctn* ft y a *■ ' Juniperus. See JUNIPERUS. Juniperus Sabina. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 852; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 10, t. 5. This is an evergreen shrub, from three to fifteen feet high, with numerous erect, pliant branches, much subdivided. The bark of the young branches is light-green, that of the trunk rough, and reddish-brown. The leaves, which completely in- vest the younger branches, are numerous, small, erect, firm, smooth, pointed, dark-green, glandular in the middle, opposite, and imbricated in four rows. The flowers are male and female on different trees. The fruit is a blackish-purple berry, of an ovoid shape, marked with tubercles and the remains of the calyx and petals, and containing three seeds. The savine is a native of the south of Europe and the Levant, and is said to grow wild in the neighbourhood of our north-western lakes. The ends of the branches, and the leaves by which they are invested, are collected for medical use in the spring. When dried they fade very much in colour. The tops of Juniperus Virginiana, or common red cedar, are sometimes sub- stituted in the shopsTor savine, to which they bear so close a resemblance as to be with difficulty distinguished. The two species, however, differ in their taste and smell. In J. Virginiana, moreover, the leaves are sometimes ternate. The tops and leaves of the savine plant have a strong, heavy, disagreeable odour, and a bitter, acrid taste. These properties, which are less striking in the dried than the recent leaves, are owing to a volatile oil, which is obtained by distillation with water. (See Oleum, Sabinse.) The leaves impart their virtues to alcohol and water. From an analysis by Mr. C. H. Needles, they appear to contain volatile oil, gum, tannic or gallic acid, resin, chlorophyll, fixed oil, bitter extractive, lime, and salts of potassa. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiii. 15.) Medical Properties and Uses. Savine is highly stimulant, increasing most of the secretions, especially those of the skin and uterus, to the latter of which :t is supposed to have a peculiar direction. It has been much used in amenor- rhcea. and occasionally as a remedy for worms. Dr. Chapman strongly recom- Sabina.—Saccharum.—Syrupus Fuscus. PART I. mended it in chronic rheumatism; and it is employed in Germany, botn internally and externally, in chronic gout. In overdoses it is capable of producing dan- gerous gastro-intestinal inflammation, and should therefore be used with caution. In no case should it be employed when much general or local excitement exists. In pregnancy it should always be given with great caution; though it has re- cently been recommended as an effective remedy in certain forms of menorrhagia, and is asserted to prove occasionally useful in preventing threatened abortion. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., viii. 415.) It is most conveniently admin- istered in the form of powder, of which the dose is from five to fifteen grains, three or four times a day. A fluid extract has been prepared by Mr. J. J. Gra- hame, which may be given in the same number of drops.* As an external irritant it is useful, in the form of cerate, for maintaining a discharge from blistered surfaces; but, as the preparation sold in this country under the name of savine ointment is often feeble, either from the age of the drug, or the substitution of red cedar, it has in some measure fallen into disre- pute. (See Ceratum Sabinse.) In powder or infusion, savine is used in Europe as an application to warts, indolent, carious, and gangrenous ulcers, psora, and tinea capitis; and the expressed juice of the fresh leaves, diluted with water, is sometimes applied to similar purposes. Off. Prep Ceratum Sabinse, U. S.;- Oleum Sabin®, TJ. S.; Unguentum Sabi- n®, i?r. W. SACCHARUM. U.S. Sugar. The sugar of Saccharum officinarum, refined. U. S. Off. Syn. SACCHARUM ALBUM. Refined Sugar, C12HnOn. Saccharum officinarum. The crystallized refined juice of the stem. Br. White sugar; Sucre pur, Sucre en pains,Fr.; Weisser Zucker, Germ.; Zucchero en pane, ltal.; Azucar de pilon, Azucar refinado, Span. SYRUPUS FUSCUS. U.S. Molasses. The impure, dark-coloured syrup, obtained in making sugar from Saccharum ojBcinarnm. U. S. THERIACA. Treacle. The uncrystallized residue of the refining of sugar. Br. Mdlasse, Fr.; Zuckersatz, Zuckersyrup, Germ.; Melazzo, ltal.; Melaca, Span. Among the saccharine principles distinguished by the chemist are cane sugar, or sugar properly so called, derived from the sugar cane, the beet, and the sugar maple; glucose or ..grape sugar, with which starch sugar, diabetic sugar, the crystallizable sugar of honey, and the saccharine matter of the glucosides are -identical; uncrystallizable sugar; sorbite, from the berries of the mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia); lactin, or sugar of milk; inosite, or sugar of muscular flesh; manmteTwith which mushroom sugar is identical; and glycerin. Glucose or grape-sugar is conveniently obtained by spreading crystalline honey on porous * Fluid Extract of Savine. The following is essentially the process of Mr. Grahame. Hav- ing mixed four troyounces of recently dried savine in fine powder, with sufficient alcohol (of 90 per cent.) to moisten it, pack it in a percolator, cover it with perforated paper, and pour alcohol upon it. Set aside the first six fluidounces that pass till reduced one-half by spontaneous evaporation. Continue the percolation till eight fluidounces additional are obtained, evaporate the filtered liquid, by means of a water-bath, with a moderate heat, to one fluidounce, and mix this with the residue of the portion reserved. One fluidrachin of the fluid extract represents 60 grains of the savine. {Trans, of Maryland Col of Fharm , June, 1858.)—Note to the twelfth edition. rART I. Saccharum. 725 tiles, dissolving what remains on their surface in alcohol, and crystallizing. The product is about one-fourth of the weight of the honey. Glucose, as obtained from a concentrated syrup, is in the form of crystalline grains; but, when crys- tallized from its alcoholic solution, it has the shape of square tables or cubes. It is less sweet than cane sugar. It is also less soluble in water, and much mor«* soluble in alcohol. It has the sp. gr. T386. Strong mineral acids hardly act on grape sugar, but destroy cane sugar with facility. On the other hand, grape sugar is destroyed by alkalies, with which cane sugar forms definite compounds. Dissolved in water and subjected to prolonged ebullition, grape sugar under- goes very little alteration. Its solution rotates the plane of polarization of polarized light to the right, and is capable of undergoing the vinous fermenta- tion directly, without passing through any intermediate state. It is characterized, also, in boiling solution, by reducing the potassa-tartrate of copper, and by be- coming brown by the action of the alkalies. The name of qlucosides has been given to certain organic substances which are resolvable, by the presence of acids, or other slight chemical influence, into glucose and some other proximate princi- ple, as in the instance of tannic acid, which is thus resolved into glucose and gallic acid. Uncrystallizable sugar (fruit sugar or chulariose), an isomeric form of glucose, exists in ffoney and the juice of fruits, and is generated from cane sugar by solution in water or weak acids, and long boiling. Hence it is present in molasses. An aqueous solution of this sugar turns the plane of polarization to the left, and, like grape sugar, is susceptible of the vinous fermentation without an interme- diate change. In consequence of this effect on polarized light, it has been named by the French chemists inverse sugar (sucre interverte); its rotatory power being the reverse of that of the sugar from which it is produced. Uncrystallizable sugar is transformed into grape sugar, when it is made to assume a crystalline struc- ture, but not by mere solidification. (Soubeiran.) A solution of cane sugar, like that of grape sugar, has a rotating power to the right. When it ferments, it is not, as is generally supposed, first converted into grape sugar. It is found both by Mitscherlich and Soubeiran to be first changed into uncrystallizable sugar; and, as the change proceeds, the rotating power to the right of the cane sugar gra- dually lessens and disappears, and is replaced by the rotating power to the left of the uncrystallizable sugar formed. Sorbin, discovered by M. Pelouze, is in perfectly transparent crystals, having the same taste as cane sugar, but is not susceptible of fermentation. Lactin, or sugar of milk, is now officinal. (See Saccharum Lactis.) Inositeis a sugar found in the juice of flesh. For a de- scription of mannite and glycerin, see the articles Manna and Glycerina. Besides the sugars above enumerated, chemical writers mention dulcose (dulcite or dulcin), a substance like mannite from an unknown plant of Madagascar; phy- cite, obtained from Protococcus vulgaris; quercite, obtained from acorns; rye- l am write, from Melampyrum nemorosum and other Scrophularinese; my cose or the sugar of ergot: melitose, the peculiar sugar of Australian manna, at first- thought to be grape sugar; trehalose, the crystallizable principle of Turkish manna; melizotose. in Briancoh~mianha: pinite, obtained from a sugar of'CaTF’* fornia, said to be derived from Pinus Lambertiana: and vhaseomannite. ob- tained from kidney beans before they are ripe.’ (Tf these sacchaHimsub™tances, melitose, trehalose, mycose, and melizotose, though differing in some of their properties from cane sugar, agree with it in composition, and in the property of being modified by acids, and transformed into sugars analogous to glucose •'Berthelot, Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1858, p. 292.)* In relation to melampyrite, the latest researches give reason to think that it is identical with dulcite. (Gmelin, Handbook, xv. 543.) * In relation to the fermentation of several of the sugars, in presence of chalk and cer- tain animal substances, such as cheese, &c., the reader is referred to some interesting «/bservations of M. Berthelot, contained in the Journ. de Pharm. for Oct. 1856. 726 Saccharum. PART I. Cane sugar is manufactured extensively on the continent of Europe from the beet, and in considerable quantities, in Canada and the northern and north-western parts of the United States, from the sap of the sugar maple (Acer saccharinu.nL). In the year 1850, according to the census returns, thirty-four mTITmnsoTpounds of crude maple sugar were made within the limits of the United States.* Cane sugar may alsoHbe obfhined from cornstalks, and from the Chinese sugar cane, or Sorghus saccharatus. The juice of the latter contains from 10 to 16 per cent, of sugar, crystallizable and uncrystallizable, the latter greatly predominating. Hence it is not well suited to produce crystallized sugar, but yields molasses abundantly. It also affords good grain for bread, and excellent fodder for do- mestic animals. In India sugar is made from the sap of different species of palm. In 1844 more than 6000 tons of crude yalm sugar, called jaggary, were manu- factured. It is more easily refined, and at less cost than the sugar from the cane. (Stevens.) But the supply of sugar from these sources is insignificant, when compared with that obtained from the sugar cane itself, which is extensively cultivated in the East and West Indies, Brazil, and some of our Southern States, particularly Louisiana. This plant is the Saccharum officinarum of botanists, and is the source of the officinal sugars of the Pharmacopoeias. Saccharum. Sex. Syst. Triandria Digynia. — Nat. Ord. Graminaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx two-valved, involucred, with long down. Corolla two-valved. Willd. Sagcharum officinarum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 321; Philos. Trans., lxix. 20T. The sugar cane is an herbaceous plant, possessing a jointed, succulent root, from wmcTTarise several shining, jointed, solid stems, from an inch to two inches in diameter, and from six to twelve feet high, and containing a white and juicy pith. The colour of the stem is yellow, greenish-yellow, purple, or striped. The joints are about three inches apart, and give origin to the leaves, which embrace the stem at their base, are three or four feet long and about an inch wide, flat, acuminate, longitudinally striated, furnished with a white midrib, gla- brous, finely dentate, and of a green colour inclining to yellow. The flowers are pinkish, surrounded by a long silky down, and disposed in a large, terminal, nearly pyramidal panicle, composed of subdivided spikes, and two or three feet in length. The plant has a general resemblance to the Indian corn. Four varieties are mentioned; 1. the common, with a yellow stem ; 2. the vuryle. with a purple stem and richer juice; 3. the gigantic, with a very large light- coloured stem ; and 4. the Otaheitan, which was introduced into the West Indies from the island of Tahiti (OTaHeite) by Bougainville and Bligh, and is distin- guished by its greater height, the longer intervals between its joints, and the greater length of the hairs which surround the flowers. The sugar cane is cultivated by cuttings, which are planted in rows, and which, by giving rise to successive shoots, furnish five or six crops before the plants require to be renewed. At the end of a year the plant generally flowers, and in four or five months afterwards the canes are completely ripe, at which time they have a yellowish colour, and contain a sweet viscid juice. The quantity of sugar which they yield is variable. According to Avequin, of New Orleans, the pro- portion of cane sugar in the recent stalk is about 10 per cent., of uncrystallizable sugar from 3| to 4 per cent. Cane-juice is said to contain from 17 to 23 per cent of crystallizable sugar, though scarcely 7 per cent, is extracted in practice. Preparation and Purification. The canes, when ripe, are cut down close to the earth, topped, and stripped of their leaves, and then crushed between ver- tical iron rollers in a mill. The juice, constituting 90 per cent, of the cane, though scarcely 50 per cent, is actually obtained, is of a pale-greenish colour, * In relation to the preparation of maple sugar, see a paper by Dr. Geo. D. Gibb in ti e Br. Am. Journ. of Med. Sci. (July, 1851), and another by M. J. B. Avequin in the Am f >tr%. ofPharm. (Jan. 1858, p. 72).—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Saccharum. 727 sweet taste, and balsamic odour, and has a sp. gr. varying from 1033 to 1 106 As it runs out it is received in suitable vessels, and, being quickly removed is immediately mixed with lime, in the form of milk of lime, in the proportion of about 1 part of the earth to 800 of the juice, and heated in a boiler to 14U-. The exact proportion of the lime cannot be determined, as the juice varies in quality in different seasons; but the manufacturer should aim at making the liquor neutral, or very slightly alkaline. The gluten and albumen rise to the top, and form a thick scum, from underneath which the liquid is drawn off by a cock into a copper boiler, where it is concentrated by heat, the scum being carefully skimmed off as it forms. Filtering the juice through cloth filters be- fore heating it is advantageous. When sufficiently concentrated, the juice is transferred to shallow vessels called coolers, from which, when it assumes a granular aspect, it is drawn off into wooden vessels with perforated bottoms, the holes in which are temporarily plugged. At the end of twenty-four hours, the liquid is strongly agitated with wooden stirrers, in order to accelerate the granu- lation of the sugar, which is completed in six hours. The stoppers are now re- moved, and the syrup is allowed to drain off from the sugar, which in this state is granular, of a yellowish colour, and moist. It is next dried in the sun, and, being introduced into hogsheads, forms the brown sugar of commerce. The syrup, by a new evaporation, furnishes an additional portion of sugar; and the liquid which finally remains, incapable of yielding more sugar with advantage, is called molasses. Eight pounds of the juice yield, on an average, one pound of brown sugar. In the process of extraction, it is important that the juice should be concentrated by a moderate heat; as a high temperature causes more of the cane sugar to be converted into uncrystallizable sugar, and, therefore, in- creases the amount of the molasses. This conversion takes place slowly, even in the cold, if the juice is allowed to stand ; and hence the importance of manu- facturing it at once into sugar. According to M. Maumene, the cane sugar in crude beet iuice mav be preserved without change by converting it into saccha- rate of lime; and he supposes that this is true of all vegetable juices, containing cane sugar. In the case of beet juice, he recommends the addition of an amount of slaked lime, equal to half the weight of the sugar, supposed to be present; an amount which will be about 5 per cent, of the weight of the juice. When the juice is to be manufactured, the sugar is set free by saturating nine-tenths of the lime with carbonic, phosphoric, or sulphuric acid. (Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1856.) It may be set free also by animal charcoal, which is now generally employed for the purpose. Brown sugar is sometimes partially purified by boiling it with lime-water, and, after sufficient concentration, allowing the syrup to crystallize in large inverted conical vessels, pierced at the apex and plugged. The surface of the crystalline mass being covered with a thin mixture of clay and water, the plug is removed, and the water from the clay, percolating the mass, removes the coloured syrup, which flows out at the hole. Sugar, thus prepared, approaches to the white stale, and constitutes the clayed sugar of commerce, usually called, in this country, Havana sugar. There is no doubt that a large proportion of the sugar is lost in the ordinary process of manufacture; and several plans have been proposed to prevent this loss. In December, 1847, Dr. John Scoffern, of England, took out a patent for the use of subacetate of lead as a purifying agent, added to the cane-juice in the proportion of one-sixth of 1 per cent. When applied to cane-juice, it separates the impurities completely, thus avoiding the labour of skimming, and furnishes the whole of the sugar, instead of about one-third, as by the ordinary process. When used in refining operations, it enables the refiner to work up residues, which would not furnish sufficient sugar to repay the cost of the old process, l'he lead is finallv removed from the sugar solutions in the "form of sulphite of Saccharum. PART I. lead, by the action of sulphurous acid gas, forcea through them by mechanical means. In this way Dr. Scoffern alleges that the whole of the lead may be sepa- rated ; but even if it is not, he believes that a minute proportion of sulphite of lead in the sugar would not prove injurious. In this opinion he is supported by several eminent chemists and physicians; but the position is controverted by others equally eminent, and, we think, on just grounds; as we should feel doubt of the wholesomeness of an aliment so extensively used as sugar, containing a proportion of lead, however minute. Such is the view taken in France, where the process of Dr. Scoffern is prohibited. Another patented process for the defecation of cane-juice, and of the syrups of sugar refineries, is that of R. & J. Oxland, in which acetate of alumina is used. The details of the process are given in the Ghem. Gazette for Nov. 16, 1849, to which the reader is referred. M. Melsens, of Brussels, has proposed a third process, which consists in the use of bisulphite of lime. This salt is alleged to act as an antiseptic, preventing the operation of any ferment; as an absorber of oxygen, opposing the action of that gas on the juice; as a clarifier, rendering insoluble at 212° all coagulable mat- ters; as a bleacher of pre-existiug colouring matters, and a preventive of the formation of new ones; and, lastly, as a substance furnishing a base to neu- tralize hurtful acids, which unite with the lime, displacing the weaker sulphurous acid. M. Melsens admits that he has made his experiments with cane-juice on a small scale only, and, therefore, leaves the application of the principles of his method to the intelligence of the manufacturers themselves. M. Emil Pfeiffer has proposed another refining process, which consists in the use of superphosphate of lime, an agent previously recommended by Brande. (See Ghem. Gaz., April 15, 1856.) M. Emile Rousseau proposes sulphate of lime as the best addition to saccharine juices in the manufacture of sugar. This coagulates the albuminous matters. The clear juice is then agitated with hydrated peroxide of iron, which oxidizes and destroys the colouring matters, and, besides, absorbs the alkaline and earthy salts, and removes the small quantity of sulphate of lime remaining in the solution. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 461.) The refining of brown sugar forms a distinct branch of business, and the methods pursued have undergone many improvements. By the original process, the sugar was boiled with lime-water, and clarified by heating it with bullocks’ blood. The clarified syrup was then strained through cloth filters, whereby it was rendered limpid. It was next transferred to a boiler, where it was subjected to ebullition until it was brought to a proper concentration ; when it was allowed to cool in conical moulds, and to drain for the separation of the molasses. This last boiling required to be continued so long, that the action of the fire and air frequently decomposed the sugar to such an extent as to cause a loss of 25 per cent, in molasses. This disadvantage led to the abandonment of prolonged boiling; and now the sugar refiners boil the syrup in shallow boilers, which are suspended in such a way as to admit of their being emptied with the greatest quickness, without putting out the fire. The process of refining was still further improved by Messrs. Philip Taylor and Howard. The former introduced the improvement of heating the syrup with great rapidity, by means of steam made to pass through a series of tubes travers- ing the boiler; and the latter devised the plan of causing the syrup to boil under a diminished pressure, created by a suction pump, set in motion by a steam engine, while it was heated by steam circulating round the boiler. In this way, the syrup was made to boil at a lower temperature, and with a diminished con- tact of the air; and the loss of cane sugar by its conversion into uncrystallizable sugar was in a great measure avoided. After the syrup is sufficiently concentrated by any one of these methods, it is transferred to coolers, where it is agitated to cause it to granulate. In thh state it is poured into unglazed earthenware moulds of a conical shape, with a hole 1 I. SaccJiarum. in the apex, which is stopped with a paper plug. The moulds are placed, with the apex downwards, above stone-ware pots, intended to receive the uncrystalliz- able syrup. When the mass has completely concreted, the moulds are unstopped, to allow the coloured syrup to drain off. To separate the remains of this syrup, the operation called claying is performed. This consists in removing from the base of the loaf a layer of the sugar, about an inch thick, and replacing it with pure sugar in powder, which is covered with a mixture of pipe clay and water of about the consistence of cream. The water gradually leaves the clay, dissolves the pure sugar, and percolates the mass as a pure syrup, removing in its pro- gress the coloured syrup. Sometimes the purification is performed without the use of clay, by allowing a saturated solution of pure sugar to percolate the loaf. When all the coloured syrup is removed, the loaf is taken out of the mould and placed in stoves to dry. It now constitutes white or purified sugar. The syrup which drains from the loaves contains a considerable quantity o? cane sugar, and is used in subsequent operations. The syrups of lowest quality are employed iu forming inferior white sugar, from which a syrup finally drains, containing so little cane sugar as not to repay the expense of extracting it. This constitutes sugar-house molasses. Good brown sugar, in the process of refining, yields about 70 per cent, of white sugar. Commercial History. Cane sugar was known to the ancients. It was origin- ally obtained from India, where it was extracted from the sugar cane. About the period of the Crusades, the Venetians brought it to Europe; but, at that time, it was so scarce and costly as to be used exclusively as a medicine. Upon the discovery of the Cape of Good Hope and the maritime route to the East Indies, the commerce in sugar passed into the hands of the Portuguese. Sub- sequently, the cultivation of the cane extended to Arabia, Egypt, Sicily, Spain, and the Canaries, and finally, upon the discovery of the new world, to America, where it was pursued with the greatest success, and continues to be so. In America it is produced most abundantly in the West Indies, which supply the greater part of the consumption of Europe, little comparatively being taken thither from Brazil or the East Indies. The consumption of the United States, before the existing war, was more than half supplied by Louisiana and some of the neighbouring States. The crop of sugar of Louisiana, in 1847, was estimated at 240,000 hogsheads; in 1853, at 322,000. The crop of Cuba for the latter year is supposed to have reached 600,000 hogsheads. Latterly, our planters have introduced into Louisiana the variety of cane called the Otaheitan cane, which is hardier and more productive than the common cane, and better suited to the climate of our Southern States. Properties. Sugar, in a pure state, is a solid of a peculiar grateful taste, per- manent in the air, phosphorescent by friction, and of the sp. gr. 1-6. It dissolves readily in half its weight of cold water, and to almost an unlimited extent in boiling water. The solution, when thick and ropy, is called syrup. An aqueous solution of sugar, kept in a warm place, has the property of corroding iron, par- tially immersed in it, just above the line where the surface of the liquid touches the metal; and the solution itself becomes impregnated with protoxide of iron, and of a deep red-brown colour. A similar effect is produced on lead; but zinc and copper are but slightly acted on. (Dr. J. H. Gladstone, Annals of Phar- macy, iii. 208.) A solution of sugar possesses the property also of dissolving a large quantity of hydrate of lime, forming a compound, called syrup of lime. When a concentrated syrup is gently heated, and spirit added to it, the liquid, on cooling, forms white semi-transparent crystals of hydrated sugar, having the shape of oblique four-sided prisms, and called suaar-candy. Sugar is nearly in- soluble in absolute alcohol, but dissolves in four times its weight of boiling alco- hol, of the sp. gr. 0 83. When heated to 365°, it melts into a viscid, colourless liquid, which, on being suddenly cooled, forms a transparent amorphous mass, Saccharum. PART I. called barley sugar. At a higher temperature (between 400° and 420°) it loses two cqs. of water, and is converted into a black porous mass, having a high lustre, called caramel. At a still higher heat it yields combustible gases, car- bonic acid, empyreumatic oil, and acetic acid ; and there remains one-fourth of its weight of charcoal, which burns without residue. Sugar renders the fixed and volatile oils to a certain extent miscible with water, and forms with the latter an imperfect combination, called in pharmacy oleo-saccharum. When in solution, it is not precipitated by subacetate of lead, a negative property which distinguishes it from most other organic principles. Tests. Cane sugar may be distinguished from grape sugar by Trommer’s test, which consists in the use of sulphate of copper and caustic potassa. If a solu- tion of cane sugar be mixed with a solution of sulphate of copper, and potassa be added in excess, a deep-blue liquid is obtained, which, on being heated, lets fall, after a time, a little red powder. A solution of grape sugar, similarly treated, yields, when heated, a copious greenish precipitate, which rapidly changes to scarlet, and eventually to dark-red. Prof. Bdttger finds that, when a liquid containing grape sugar is boiled with carbonate of soda and some basic nitrate of bismuth, a gray coloration or blackening of reduced bismuth is produced. Cane sugar, similarly treated, has no effect on the test. Dr. Donaldson’s test for sugar in the animal fluids is formed of 5 parts of carbonate of soda, 5 of caus- tic potassa, 6 of bitartrate of potassa, 4 of sulphate of copper, and 32 of distilled water. A few drops of this solution, being added to an animal fluid, and the mixture heated over a spirit-lamp, a yellowish-green colour is developed, if sugar be present. J. Horsley’s test for sugar in diabetic urine is an alkaline solution of chromate of potassa, a few drops of which, boiled with the urine, will make it assume a deep sap-green colour. Action of Acids and Alkalies, £c. The mineral acids act differently on cane sugar, according as they are concentrated or dilute. Strong nitric acid, with the assistance of heat, converts it into oxalic acid. (See Oxalic Acid in Part III.) The same acid, when weak, converts it into saccharic acid, confounded by Scheele with malic acid. Concentrated muriatic or sulphuric acid chars it. Di- luted muriatic acid, when boiled with cane sugar, converts it into a solid, brown, gelatinous mass. Weak sulphuric acid, by a prolonged action at a high tem- perature, converts cane sugar, first into uncrystallizable sugar, afterwards into grape sugar, and finally into two substances, analogous to ulmin and ulmic acid, called sacchulmin and sacchulmic acid, Vegetable acids are supposed to act in a similar way." Mauraene has found that cane sugar undergoes the change into uncrystallizable sugar when kept for a long time in aqueous solution, as well as when heated with acids. When the boiling with acids is prolonged for several days in open vessels, oxygen is absorbed, and, besides sacchulmin and sacchulmic acid, formic acid is generated. Soubeiran admits the change of the uncrystallizable into grape sugar, but attributes it to a molecular transformation of the sugar, independently of the action of the acid ; as, according to his ob- servation, the conversion takes place only after rest. In confirmation of his views, this chemist states that he found the same changes to be produced by boiling sugar with water alone. Cane sugar unites with the alkalies and some of the alkaline earths, forming definite combinations which render the sugar less liable to change. It also unites with protoxide of lead. Boiled for a long time with aqueous solutions of po- tassa, lime, or baryta, the liquid becomes brown, formic acid is produced, and two new acids are generated; one brown or black and insoluble in water, called vielassic acid, the other colourless and very soluble, named alucic acid. The account above given of the action of acids and alkalies on cane sugar explains the way in which lime acts in the manufacture and refining of sugar. The acids, naturally existing in the saccharine juice, have the effect o*‘ vonv irt- Saccliarum. 731 PART I. ing the cane sugar into uncrystallizable sugar, by which a loss of the former sustained. The lime, by neutralizing these acids, prevents that result. An excess of lime, however, must be carefully avoided; as it injures the product of cane sugar both in quantity and quality. The change in sugar which precedes fer- mentation, namely, the conversion of cane sugar into the uncrystallizable kind, points to the necessity of operating on the juice before that process sets in; and hence the advantage of grinding canes immediately after they are cut, and boil- ing the juice with the least possible delay. The following is a description of the several forms of sugar in common use. including the two officinal varieties. Purified or white sugar, as obtained on a large scale, is in concrete, some- what consisting of an aggregate of small crystalline grains. When carefully refined, it is brittle and pulverulent, perfectly white, inodorous, and possessed of the pure saccharine taste. Cane sugar is sometimes adulterated with starch sugar, which may be detected by adding to a concen- trated solution of the suspected sugar, first a small portion of fused potassa, and afterwards, at the boiling temperature, a few drops of nitrate of cobalt. This test, if the cane sugar be pure, will produce a violet-blue precipitate, a reaction prevented by the presence of a small proportion of starch sugar. (Dr. G. Reich.)* Unpurifjnf nr hmum pi.gn.r is in the form of a coarse powder, more or less moist and sticky, consisting of shining crystalline grains intermixed with lumps, having an orange-yellow colour more or less deep, a sweet, cloying taste, and heavy peculiar smell. It varies very much in quality. The best sort is nearly dry, in large sparkling grains of a clear yellow colour, and possesses much less smell than the inferior kinds. It consists of cane sugar, associated, according to Messrs. Alexander and Morfit, with variable quantities of hygroscopic moisture, uncrystallizable sugar, gum, albumen, extractive, saline matter, and insoluble organic and inorganic substances. (Chem. Gaz., April 15, 1858, p. 153.) Among the inorganic substances is a small proportion of lime. By keeping it becomes soft and gummy, and less sweet, a change attributed to the lime. Molasses is of two kinds, the West India and sugar-house. West India mo- ZasseFtararblack ropy liquid, of a peculiar odour, and sweet empyreumatie taste. When mixed with water and with the skiramings of the vessels used in the manu- facture of sugar, it forms a liquor, which, when fermented and distilled, yields rum. Sugar-house molasses has the same general appearance as the West India, but is thicker, and has a different flavour. Its sp.gr. is about T4, and it contains about 75 per cent, of solid matter. Both kinds of molasses consist of uncrystallizable sugar, more or less cane sugar which has escaped separation in * Estimation of Cane Sugar and Glucose. The aqueous solution of a mixture of ferridcy- anide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa) with half its weight of hydrate of potassa, has no chemical action on a solution of cane sugar, cold or hot, yet communicates to it, even in very small proportion, a decided and persistent yellowness. With a solution of glucose or grape sugar it loses its colour slowly if cold, and more rapidly as the tempera- ture is raised. If a few drops be added to a solution of glucose at 140°, the yellow colour at first produced very soon disappears, and, if the heat be raised to 170°, is immediately destroyed. If now the addition continue to be made, the colour will continue to disappear so long as any of the glucose remains. By experiment it was ascertained that 10-98 grammes of the ferridcyanide were sufficient to destroy 1 gramme of sugar converted by muriatic acid into glucose. A normal solution may be made by mixing 10-98 grammes of the ferridcyanide with 5-50 grammes of hydrate of potassa and dissolving this in 100 cubic centimetres of water. Suppose a mixture of cane sugar and glucose to be tested. Dissolve 1 gramme of it in 40 cubic centimetres of water, heat to 160° F., and add one-tenth of the normal solution. If there is much glucose the colour disappears; in which case the solu- tion is to be added by cubic centimetres till the colour ceases to disappear. As many centimetres of the normal liquid as are used, so many hundredths of the 10-98 grammes of the ferridcyanide, and of course of one gramme of glucose will have been consumed, in- dicating that quantity of the latter in the mixture. (Gentele, Journ. de Pkarm., Mars, 1860, p. 208.)—Note to the twelfth edition Saccharum.—Saccharum Lactis. PART r. tne process of manufacture or refining, and gummy and colouring matter. When the molasses from cane sugar is treated with a boiling, concentrated solution <>i bichromate of potassa, and boiled, a violent reaction takes place, and the liquid becomes green; but if it be adulterated with only an eighth of starch sugar mo- lasses, the reaction is prevented, and the colour is not changed. (Dr. G. Reich.) Composition. The following formulas express the composition of the different varieties of sugar, so far as known. Cane sugar, Of the same com- position are mycose, melitose, melizotose, and trehalose, which, as before stated, constitute a group closely analogous to cane sugar, though differing in some of their properties. The formula of glucose or grape sugar is C^II^O,,.: and crystalli.zable sugar, also named variously chulariose, inverse sugar, and levu- lose, which is characterized by a left rotatory power in reference to polarized light, has the same composition. With these also agree sprite and inosite. The formula of mgnnite and of dulcite (dulqin or dulcose) is C12Hu012. Med. and Pharm. Uses, &c. The uses of sugar as an aliment aud condiment are numerous. It is nutritious, but not capable of supporting life when taken exclusively as aliment, on account of the absence of nitrogen iu its composition. It is a powerful antiseptic, and is used for preserving meat and fish; for which purpose it possesses the advantage of acting in a much less quantity than is requisite of common salt, and of not altering the taste, nor impairing the nutritious qualities of the aliment. Prof. Marchand has ascertained that a solution of sugar has no action on the teeth out of the body. It may hence be inferred that the popular notion that sugar is injurious to the teeth is un- founded. The medical properties of sugar are those of a demulcent; and as such it is much used in catarrhal affections, in the form of candy, syrup, &c. According to M. Proven9al, it acts as a powerful antaphrodisiac, when taken in the quan- tity of a pound or more daily, dissolved in a quart of cold water. For an ac- count of the supposed therapeutic power of the vapour of boiling cane-juice, in bronchitis and incipient consumption, applied by living in a sugar-house, the reader is referred to the papers of Dr. S. A. Cartwright, of New Orleans, con- tained in the 47th and 51st volumes of the Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. In pharmacy sugar is employed to render oils miscible with water, to cover the taste of medicines, to give them consistency, to preserve them from change, and to protect certain ferruginous preparations from oxidation. Accordingly it enters into the composition of the compound infusion of roses, of several mix- tures, pills, and powders, of many fluid extracts, syrups, and confections, and of all the troches. Molasses is used for forming pills, for which it is well fitted, preserving them soft and free from mouldiness, on account of its retentiveness of moisture and antiseptic qualities. Off. Prep, of Saccharum. Ferri Carbonas Saccharata, Br.; Liquor Calcis Saccharatus, Br.; Syrupus. B. SACCHARUM LACTIS. U.S,Br. Sugar of Milk. A crystalline substance obtained from whey. TJ. S. Crystallized sugar obtained from the whey of cows’ milk by evaporation. Br. Lactose; Saci’e de la.it, Fr.; Milchzucker, Germ. Sugar ofjoilk, or lactin, is found only in milk, of which it forms about 5 per centffBoussingault.) It is manufactured largely in Switzerland and the Bava- rian Alps, as an article of food and for medicinal purposes. In preparing it, milk is first coagulated by the addition of a little dilute sulphuric acid, and the result- ing whey is evaporated to a syrupy consistence, and set aside for several weeks, PART I. Saccharum Lactis.—Sago. in a cool place, to crystallize. The crystals, which constitute the sugar of milk, are then decolorized by animal charcoal and repeated crystallizations.* Sugar of milk is a hard, somewhat gritty, white substance, crystallized in four- sided prisms, and possessing a slightly sweet taste. In commerce it sometimes occurs in cylindrical masses, in the axis of which is a cord, around which the crystals have been deposited. It dissolves slowly in six parts of cold and three of. boiling water, without forming a syrup. It is insoluble in ether, and but slightly soluble in alcohol. Its sp. gr. is l-54. It is not susceptible of the vinous fermentation by the direct influence of yeast; but, after the action of dilute acids, which first convert it into grape sugar, it is capable of furnishing a spirituous liquor. It is well known that both mares’ and cows’ milk, after becoming sour, is capable of forming an intoxicating drink by fermentation. By the action of nitric acid, sugar of milk is converted into mucic (sacchlactic) acid. When anhy- drous it consists of C12HnOwhen crystallized, of C12HuOn -f- HO. (Staedeler and Krause.) These formulas make anhydrous sugar of milk isomeric with cane sugar, and the crystallized with anhydrous grape sugar. Sugar of milk has been proposed by Dr. Turnbull, of England, as a non-nitro- geuous article of diet, in consumption and other pulmonary diseases. Dr. Rusch- enberger used it with good effect as nourishment in a case of extreme irritability of stomach, following profuse loss of blood from menorrhagia. (Trans, of the Philad. Col. of Phys., ii. 48.) B SAGO. U.S. Sago. The prepared fecula of the pith of Sagus Rumphii, and of other species of Sagus. U. S. Sagou, Ft.; Sago, Germ., Ital.; Sagu, Span. Numerous trees, inhabiting the islands and coasts of the Indian Ocean, contain a farinaceous pith, which is applied to the purposes of nutriment by the natives. Such are Sagus Rurrwhii. Sagus Isevis, Sagus Ruifia. Saguerus Rumphii, and Phoenix fariniferg,belonging to the family of palms; and Cucas circinalis. Ci/cas revolula, and Zamia lanuginosa, belonging to the Cycadacese. Of these Sagus Rumphii, Sagus Isevis, and Saguerus Rumphii probably contribute to furnish the sago of commerce. Crawford, in his History of the Indian Archi- pelago, states that it is derived exclusively from Metroxylon Sagu, identical with Sagus Rumphii; but Roxburgh ascribes the granulated sago to. S. laeyij, and one of theTmesf kinds is said by Dr. Hamilton to be produced byThe Sa- guerus Rumphii of Roxburgh. The farinaceous product of the different species of Cycas, sometimes called Japan sago, does not enter into general commerce. Sagus. Sex. Syst Moncecia Hexandria.—Nat. Ord. Palmaceae. Gen. Ch. Common spathe one-valved. Spadix branched. Male. Calyx three- leaved. Corolla none. Filaments dilated. Female. Calyx three-leaved, with two of the leaflets bifid. Corolla none. Style very short. Stigma simple. Nut tessellated-imbricated, one-seeded. Willd. Sagus Rumphii. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 404; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 44, pi. 88. The sago palm is one of the smallest trees of its family. Its extreme height seldom exceeds thirty feet. The trunk is proportionably very thick, quite erect, cylindrical, covered with the remains of the old leafstalks, and surrounded by a beautiful crown of foliage, consisting of numerous, very large, pinnate leaves, extending in all directions from the summit, and curving gracefully downwards. From the basis of the leaves proceed long, divided and subdivided flower and * For a method of estimating the proportion of lactin in milk, see an article by M Poggiale in the Journ. de Pharm., Aoht, 1858, p. 130. Sago. PART I. fruit-bearing spadices, having smooth branches. The fruit is a roundish nut, covered with a checkered imbricated coat, and containing a single seed. The tree is a native of the East India islands, growing in the Peninsula of Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo, Celebes, the Moluccas, and a part of New Guinea. It flourishes best in low and moist situations. Before attaining maturity, the stem consists of a shell, usually about two inches thick, filled with an enormous volume of spongy medullary matter like that of elder. This is gradually absorbed after the appearance of fruit, and the stem ultimately becomes hollow. The greatest age of the tree is not more than thirty years. Large quantities of a kind of sugar called jaggary are procured from its juice. At the proper period of its growth, when the medullary matter is fully developed, and has not yet begun to diminish, the tree is felled, and the trunk cut into billets six or seven feet long, which are split in order to facilitate the extraction of the pith. This is obtained in the state of a coarse powder, which is mixed with water in a trough, having a sieve at the end. The water, loaded with farina, passes through the sieve, and is received in convenient vessels, where it is allowed to stand till the insoluble matter has subsided. It is then strained off; and the farina which is left may be dried into a kind of meal, or moulded into whatever shape may be desired. For the consumption of the natives it is usually formed into cakes of various sizes, which are dried, and extensively sold in the islands. The com- mercial sago is prepared by forming the meal into a paste with water, and rub- bing it into grains. It is produced in the greatest abundance in the Moluccas, but of the finest quality on the eastern coast of Sumatra. The Chinese of Malacca refine it so as to give the grains a fine pearly lustre. Malcolm states that it is also refined in large quantities at Singapore. In this state it is called pearl sago, and is in great repute. It is said that not less than five or six hundred ' "pounds of sago are procured from a single tree. {Crawford.) Pearl, saao is that which is now generally used. It is in small grains, about the size of a pin’s head, hard, whitish, of a light-brown colour, in some instances translucent, inodorous, and with little taste. It may be rendered perfectly white by a solution of chloride of lime. Common sago is in larger and browner grains, of more unequal size, of a duller aspect, and frequently mixed with more or less of a dirty-looking powder. Sago meal is imported into England from the East Indies; but we have met with none in the markets of this country. It is in the form of a fine amylaceous powder, of a whitish colour, with a yellowish or reddish tint, and of a faint but somewhat musty odour. Common sago is insoluble in cold water, but by long boiling unites with that liquid, becoming at first soft and transparent, and ultimately forming a gelati- nous solution. Pearl sago is partially dissolved by cold water, probably owing to heat used in its preparation. Chemically considered, it has the characters of starch. Under the microscope the granules of sago meal appear oval or ovate, and often truncated so as to be more or less mullar-shaped. Many of them are broken, and in most the surface is irregular or tuberculated. They exhibit upon their surface concentric rings, which are much less distinct than in potato starch. The hilum is circular when perfect, and cracks either with a single slit or a cross, or in a stellate manner. The granules of pearl sago are of the same form, but are all ruptured, and exhibit only indistinct traces of the annular lines, having been altered in the process employed in preparing them. Those of common sago are very similar to the particles of sago meal, except that they are perhaps rather less regular and more broken. {Pereira.) Potato starch is sometimes prepared in Europe so as to resemble bleached pearl sago, for which it is sold. But, when examined under the microscope, it exhibits larger granules, which are also more regularly oval or ovate, smoother, less broken, and more distinctly marked with the annular rug® than those of sago; and the hilum often cracks with two slightly diverging slits. PART I. Sago.—Salix. 735 Sago is used exclusively as an article of diet. Being nutritive, easily digestible, and wholly destitute of irritating properties, it is frequently employed in febrile cases, and in convalescence from acute disorders, in the place of richer and less innocent food. It is given in the liquid state, and in its preparation care should be taken to boil it long in water, and stir it diligently, in order that the grains may be thoroughly dissolved. Should any portion remain undissolved, it should be separated by straining; as it might offend a delicate stomach. A tablespoon- ful to the pint of water is sufficient for ordinary purposes. The solution may be seasoned with sugar and nutmeg or other spice, and with wine, when these are not contraindicated. W. SALIX. U. S. Secondary. Willow. The bark of Salix alba. U. S. Ecorce de saule, Ft.; Weidenrinde, Germ.; Corteccia di salcio, Ital.; Corteza de sauce, Span. Salix. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Diandria.—Nat. Ord. Salicacese. Gen. Ch. Male. Amentum cylindrical. Calyx a scale. Corolla none. Glands of the base nectariferous. Female. Amentum cylindrical. Calyx a scale. Co- rolla none. Style two-cleft. Capsule one-celled, two-valved. Seeds downy. This, is an extensive genus, comprising, according to Nuttall, not less than one hundred and thirty species, which, with very few exceptions, are natives of Europe, and of the northern and temperate parts of North America. Though most of them are probably possessed of similar medical properties, only one is recognised as officinal; viz., S. alba, which has been introduced into this country. S. Russelliana. which has also been introduced from Europe, is said by Sir James Smith to be the most valuable species. S. purpurea, a European species, is said by Lindley to be the most bitter, and S. pentandra is preferred by Nees von Esenbeck. Many native species are in all probability equally active with the foreign; but they have not been sufficiently tried in regular practice to admit of a positive decision. The younger Michaux speaks of the root of S. nigra or black willow, as a strong bitter, used in the country for the pre- vention amTcure of ihtermittents. In consequence of the pliability of the young branches, the willow is well adapted for the manufacture of baskets and other kinds of wicker-work; and several species, native and introduced, are employed for this purpose in the United States. S. Babylonica, or weeping willow, is a favourite ornamental tree. The degree of bitterness in the bark is probably the best criterion of the value of the several species. • Salix alba. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 710; Smith, Flor. Brit. 1071. The common European or white willow is twenty-five or thirty feet in height, with numerous round spreading branches, the younger of which are silky. The bark of the trunk is cracked and brown, that of the smaller branches smooth and greenish. The leaves are alternate, upon short petioles, lanceolate, pointed, acutely serrate with the lower serratures glandular, pubescent on both sides, and silky beneath There are no stipules. The flowers appear at the same time with the leaves. The amenta are terminal, cylindrical, and elongated, with elliptical-lanceolate, brown, pubescent scales. The stamens are two in number, yellow, and somewhat longer than the scales; the style is short; the stigmas two-parted and thick. The capsule is nearly sessile, ovate, and smooth. The white willow is now very common in this country. It flowers in April and May ; and the bark is easily separable throughout the summer. That obtained from the branches rolls up when dried into the form of a quill, has a brown epidermis, is flexible, fibrous, and of difficult pulverization. Willow bark has a feebly aromatic odour, and a peculiar bitter astringent taste. It yields 'ts active properties to water, with which it forms a reddish-brown decoction. 736 Salix. PART I. Pelletier and Caventou found, among its ingredients, tannin, resin, a bitter yel- low colouring matter, a green fatty matter, gum, wax, lignin, and an organic acid combined with magnesia. The proportion of tannin is so considerable that the bark has been used for tanning leather. A crystalline principle has also been obtained from it, which, having the medical virtues of the willow, has received the name of salicin. When pure, it is in white, shining, slender crystals, inodor- ous, but very bitter, with the peculiar flavour of the bark. It is soluble in cold water, much more so in boiling water, soluble in alcohol, and insoluble in ether and oil of turpentine. It neutralizes neither acids nor salifiable bases, and is not precipitated by any reagent. Concentrated sulphuric acid decomposes it, re- ceiving from it an intense and permanent bright-red colour, and producing a new compound called rutulin. It ranks with the glucosides, being resolved by boiling with dilute muriatic and sulphuric acids into grape sugar, saligenin, and a white, tasteless, insoluble resinous substance named salirelin. Saligenin. is a colourless, crystallizable substance, fusible and volatilizable, soluble in water, alcohol, and ether, and if heated above 212°, giving off aqueous vapour and salicylous acid. (Omelin's Handbook.) Nitric acid produces with salicin at first two principles called respectively helicin and helicoidin and afterwards picric and oxalic acids. (Journ. de Pharm., xxx. 43.) T)istilled with bichro- mate of potassa and sulphuric acid, it yields, among other products, a volatile oleaginous liquid, identical with one of the components of oil of spiraea, and, from its acid properties, denominated salicylous acid. This is considered by Dumas as consisting of a peculiar compound radical, called salicyl, and hy- drogen. The formula of salicyl is C14II504. The discovery of salicin is claimed by Buchner, of Germany, and Fontana and Rigatelli, of Italy; but M. Leroux, of France, deserves the credit of having first accurately investigated its pro- perties. Braconnot procured it by adding subacetate of lead to a decoction of the bark, precipitating the excess of lead by sulphuric acid, evaporating the colourless liquid which remained, adding near the end of the process a little animal charcoal previously washed, and filtering the liquor while hot. Upon cooling it deposited the salicin in a crystalline form. {Journ. de Chimie Medi- care, Jan. 1831.) The following is the process of Merck. A boiling concen- trated decoction of the bark is treated with litharge until it becomes nearly colourless. Gum, tannin, and extractive matter, which would impede the crys- tallization of the salicin, are thus removed from the liquid; while a portion of the oxide is dissolved in union probably with the salicin. To separate this por- tion of oxide, sulphuric acid is first added and then sulphuret of barium, and the liquor is filtered and evaporated. Salicin is deposited, and may be purified by repeated solution and crystallization. {Turner's Chemistry.) Erdmann has given another process. Sixteen ounces of the bark are macerated for twenty-four hours in four quarts of water mixed with two ounces of lime, and the whole is then boiled for half an hour. The process is repeated with the residue. The decoctions having been mixed, and allowed to become clear by subsidence, the liquor is poured off, concentrated to a quart, then digested with eight ounces of ivory-black, filtered, and evaporated to dryness. The extract is exhausted by spirit containing 28 per cent, of alcohol, and the tincture evaporated so that the salicin may crystallize. This is purified by again dissolving, treating with ivory- black, and crystallizing. Merck obtained 251 grains from 16 ounces of the bark and young twigs of Salix helix, and Erdmann 300 grains from the same quantity of the bark of Salix pentandra. It may probably be obtained from any of the willow barks having a bitter taste. Braconnot procured it from various species of Populus, particularly P. tremula or European aspen. Medical Properties and Uses. The bark of the willow is tonic and astringent, and has been employed as a substitute for Peruvian bark, particularly in intev- mittent fever. It has attracted much attention from the asserted efficacy of sail- PART I. Salix.—Salvia. cin in the cure of this complaint. There seems to be no room to doubt, from the testimony of numerous practitioners in France, Italy, and Germany, that this principle has the property of arresting intermittents; though the ascription to it of equal efficacy with sulphate of quinia was certainly incorrect. It is asserted that, when freely taken, it is passed by the kidneys, and may be separated by alcohol from the residue left on the evaporation of the urine. The bark may be employed in substance or decoction, in the same doses and with, the same mode of preparation as cinchona. The dose of salicin is from two to eight grains, to be so repeated that from twenty to forty grains may be taken daily, or in the interval between the paroxysms of an intermittent. Magendie has seen fevers cut short in one day by three doses of six grains each. The decoction of willow h.aa been found beneficial as an external application to foul and indolent ulcers. Salicylous acid and the salicylites have been used in medicine by M. Demartis, of France, and have been found to exert a direct sedative influence on the economy without any previous excitement, which renders them useful in inflam- matory and febrile affections. He gave the salicylite of potassa in the dose of about four grains. (Ann. de Therap., 1854, p. 77.) W, SALYIA. US. Sage. The leaves of Salvia officinalis. U. S. Sauge,Fr.; Salbey, Germ ; Salvia, Ital., Span. Salvia. Sex. Syst. Diandria Monogynia. —Nat. Ord. Lamiacese or Labiatfe. Gen. Gh. Corolla unequal. Filaments affixed transversely to a pedicel. Willd. Salvia officinalis. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 129; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. 352, t. 127. Common garden sage is a perennial plant, about two feet high, with a quadrangular, pubescent, branching, shrubby stem, furnished with opposite, petiolate, ovate-lanceolate, crenulate, wrinkled leaves, of a grayish-green colour, sometimes tinged with red or purple. The flowers are blue, variegated with white and purple; and are disposed on long terminal spikes, in distant whorls, each composed of a few flowers, and accompanied with ovate, acute, deciduous bractes. The calyx is tubular and striated, with two lips, of which the upper has three acute teeth, the under two. The corolla is tubular, bilabiate, ringent, with the upper lip concave, and the lower divided into three rounded lobes, of which the middle is the largest. The filaments are supported upon short pedicels, to which they are affixed transversely at the middle. Sage grows spontaneously in the south of Europe, and is cultivated abund- antly in our gardens. There are several varieties, differing in the size and colour of their flowers, but all possessing the same medical properties. The flowering period is in June, at which time the plant should be cut, and dried in a shadv place. The leaves are the officinal portion. Both these and the flowering summits have a strong fragrant odour, and a warm, bitterish, aromatic, somewhat astringent taste. They abound in a volatile, oil, which may be obtained separate by distillation with water, and contains a considerable proportion of camphor. Sulphate of iron strikes a black colour with their infusion. Medical Properties and Uses. Sage unites a slight degree of tonic power and astringency with aromatic properties. By the ancients it was highly esteemed; but it is at present little used internally, except as a condiment. In the state of infusion it may be given in debility of the stomach with flatulence, and is said to have been useful in checking the sweats of hectic fever. But its most useful ap- plication is as a gargle in inflammation of the throat, and relaxation of the uvula, for this purpose it is usually employed in infusion, with honey and alum, or vin 738 Salvia.—Sambucus. PART I. egar. The dose of t./c powdered leaves is from twenty to thirty grains. The infusion is prepared by macerating an ounce of the leaves in a pint of boiling water, of which two fluidounces may be administered at once. When intended merely as a pleasant drink in febrile complaints, or to allay nausea, the macera- tion should continue but a very short time, so that all the bitterness of the leaves may not be extracted. Two other species of Salvia — S. pratcnsis and S. Sclarea — are ranked among officinal plants in Europe. The latter, which is commonly called clarry, has been introduced into our gardens. Their medical properties are essentially the same as those of the common sage; but they are less agreeable, and are not much used. In Europe, the leaves of S. Sclarea are said to be introduced into wine in order to impart to it a muscadel taste. Off. Prep. Infusum Salviae, U. S. W. SAMBUCUS. U.S.,Br. Elder. The flowers of Sambucus Canadensis. U. S. Sambucus nigra. The fresh Flow- ‘ ers. Br. > Sureau, Fr.; Hollunder, Germ,.; Sambuco, Ttal.; Sauco, Span. Sambucus. Sex.Syst. Pentandria Trigynia.—Nat. Ord. Caprifoliacese. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-parted. Corolla five-cleft. Berry three-seeded. Willd. Sambucus Canadensis. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1494. Our indigenous common elder is a shrub from six to ten feet high, with a branching stem, covered with a rough gray bark, and containing a large spongy pith. The small branches and leafstalks are very smooth. The leaves are opposite, pinnate, sometimes bipinnate, and composed usually of three or four pairs of oblong-oval, acumi- nate, smooth, shining, deep-green leaflets, the midribs of which are somewhat pubescent. The flowers are small, white, and disposed in loose cymes, having about five divisions. The berries are small, globular, and deep-purple when ripe. The shrub grows in low moist grounds, along fences, and on the borders of small streams, in all parts of the United States, from Canada to the Carolinas, and westward as far as Texas. It flowers from May to July, and ripens its berries early in autumn. The flowers, which are officinal, have an aromatic, though rather heavy odour. The berries as well as other parts of the plant are employed, in domestic practice, for the same purposes as the corresponding parts of the European elder, to which this species bears a close affinity. Sambucus nigra. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1495; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 596, t. 211. The common elder of Europe differs from the American most obviously in its size, which approaches to that of a small tree. The stem is much branched to- wards the top, and has a rough whitish bark. The leaves are pinnate, consist- ing usually of five oval, pointed, serrate leaflets, four of which are in opposite pairs, and the fifth terminal. The flowers are small, whitish, and in five-parted cymes. The berries are globular, and blackish-purple when ripe. The flowers have a peculiar sweetish odour, which is strong in their recent state, but becomes feeble by drying. Their taste is bitterish. They yield their active properties to water by infusion, and when distilled give over a small pro- portion of volatile oil, which on cooling assumes a butyraceous consistence. Water distilled from them contains an appreciable portion of ammonia. The berries are nearly inodorous, but have a sweetish, acidulous taste, dependent on the presence of saccharine matter and malic acid. Their expressed juice is sus- ceptible of fermentation, and forms a vinous liquid used in the north of Europe. It is coloured violet by alkalies, and bright red by acids; and the colouring matter is precipitated blue by acetate of lead. The inner bark is without smell. part r. Samhucus.—Sanguinaria. Its taste is at first sweetish, afterwards slightly bitter, acrid, and nauseous. Both water and alcohol extract its virtues, which are said to reside especially in the green layer between the liber and epidermis. According to Simon, the active principle of the inner bark of the root is a soft resin, which may be ob- tained by exhausting the powdered bark with alcohol, filtering the tincture, eva- porating to the consistence of syrup, then adding ether, which dissolves the active matter, and finally evaporating to the consistence of a thick extract. Of this, twenty grains produce brisk vomiting and purging. (Annal. der Pharm., xxxi. 262.) The bark, analyzed by Kramer, yielded an acid called by him vibur- nic acid, which has proved to be the valerianic, traces of volatile oil, albumen, resin, an acid sulphurous fat, wax, chlorophyll, tannic acid, grape sugar, gum, extractive, starch, pectin, and various alkaline and earthy salts. (Chem. Qaz., May, 1846, from Archiv. der Pharm.) Medical Properties and Uses. The flowers are gently excitant and sudorific, but are seldom used, except externally as a discutient, in the form of poultice, fomentation, or ointment. The berries are diaphoretic and aperient; and their inspissated juice has enjoyed some reputation as a remedy in rheumatic, gouty, eruptive, and syphilitic affections. Its dose as an alterative diaphoretic is one or two drachms, as a laxative half an ounce or more. The inner bark is a hydra- gogue cathartic, and in large doses emetic. It has been employed in dropsy, epilepsy, and as an alterative in various chronic diseases. An ounce may be boiled with two pints of water to a pint, and four fluidouuces of the decoction given for a dose. It is also used in vinous infusion. The leaves are not without activity, and the young leaf-buds are said to be a violent and even unsafe purga- tive. The juice of the root has been highly recommended in dropsy as a hydra- gogue cathartic, sometimes acting as an emetic, in the dose of a tablespoonful, repeated every day, or less frequently if it act with violence.* Off. Prep. Aqua Sambuci, Pr. W. SANGUINARIA. U.S. Bloodroot. The rhizoma of Sanguinaria Canadensis. U. S. Sanguinaria. Sex. Syst. Polyandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Paoaveracese. Gen. Gh. Calyx two-leaved. Petals eight. Stigma sessile, two-grooved. Capsule superior, oblong, one-celled, two-valved, apex attenuated. Receptacles two, filiform, marginal. Nuttall. Sanguinaria Canadensis. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 1140; Bigelow, Am. Med. Pot. i. 75; Barton, Med. Pot. i. 31. The bloodroot, or as it is sometimes called, puccoon, is an herbaceous perennial plant. The root (rhizoma) is horizontal, abrupt, often contorted, about as thick as the finger, two or three inches long, fleshy, of a reddish-brown colour on the outside, and brighter red within. It is furnished with numerous slender radicles, and makes offsets from the sides, which succeed the old plant. From the end of the root arise the scape and leafstalks, surrounded by the large sheaths of the bud. These spring up together, the folded leaf enveloping the flower-bud, and rolling back as the latter expands. The leaf, which stands upon a long channeled petiole, is reniform, somewhat ' * Dr. B. II. Stratton, of Mount Holly, N. J., has found a syrup prepared from the ber- ries useful as an alterative, employing it in all cases to which sarsaparilla is thought to he applicable, to prepare the syrup, he mixes the juice of the berries and sugar, in the proportion of a pint of the former to a pound of the latter, boils sufficiently, and adds to each pint of the syrup an ounce of the strongest brandy. The syrup must be kept in well- closed bottles in a cool place. The dose is from a dessertspoonful to a tablespoonful three times a day. (iV. J. Med. Reporter, vii. 446.) Sanguinaria. PART I. heart-shaped, deeply lobed, smooth, yellowish-green on the npper surface, paler or glaucous on the under, and strongly marked by orange-coloured veins. The scape is erect, round, and smooth, rising from a few inches to a foot, and ter- minating in a single flower. The calyx is two-leaved and deciduous. The petals, varying from seven to fourteen, but usually about eight in number, are spread- ing, ovate, obtuse, concave, mostly white, but sometimes slightly tinged with rose or purple. The stamens are numerous, with yellow filaments shorter than the corolla, and orange oblong anthers. The germ is oblong and compressed, with a sessile, persistent stigma. The capsule is oblong, acute at both ends, two- valved, and contains numerous oval, reddish-brown seeds. The whole plant is pervaded by an orange-coloured sap, which flows from every part when broken, but is of the deepest colour in the root. The bloodroot is one of the earliest and most beautiful spring flowers of North America. It grows abundantly throughout the whole United States, delighting in loose, rich soils, and shady situations, and flowering in March and April. After the fall of the flower, the leaves continue to grow, and, by the middle of summer, have become so large as to give the plant an entirely different aspect. Except the seeds, all parts of the plant are active; but the root only is officinal. This, when dried, is in pieces from one to three inches long, from a quarter to half an inch or more in thickness, flattened, much wrinkled and twisted, often furnished with abrupt offsets and many short fibres, of a reddish-brown colour externally, with a spongy uneven fracture, the surface of which is at first bright- orange, but becomes of a dull-brown by long exposure. The colour of the powder is a brownish orange-red. Sanguinaria has a faint narcotic odour, and a bitterish very acrid taste, the pungency of which remains long in the mouth and fauces. It yields its virtues to water and alcohol. The late Dr. Dana, of New York, obtained from it a peculiar alkaline principle, denominated by him sanguinarina, upon which the acrimony, and perhaps the medical virtues of the root depend. It may be procured, according to Dana, by infusing the finely powdered root in hot water or diluted muriatic or acetic acid, precipitating with water of ammonia, collecting the precipitated matter, boiling it in water with pure animal charcoal, filtering off the water, treating the residue left upon the filter with alcohol, and finally evaporating the alcoholic solution. (Ann. Lyc. of Nat. Hist., New York, ii. 250.) It may also be conveniently procured by a process similar to that employed by Probst for obtaining chelerythriu from celandine. This consists in forming a strong ethereal tincture of the root, passing through this muriatic acid gas, drying the precipitated muriate which is insoluble in ether, dissolving it in hot water, filtering, precipitating by ammonia, drying the precipitate, dissolving it in ether, decolorizing by animal charcoal, precipitating by means of muriatic acid gas, and decomposing the muriate as before. (Cliem. Gaz., i. 145.) Dr. James Schiel, of St. Louis, Missouri, who has determined the identity of sanguinarina with chelerythrin, gives the following as the simplest process of preparing either alkaloid. Digest the root with water strongly acidulated with sulphuric acid, precipitate with ammonia, dry the pre- cipitate, dissolve it in ether, treat with animal charcoal, filter, and precipitate with sulphuric acid dissolved in ether. A pure sulphate is thus obtained, which may be decomposed in the ordinary method, to obtain the alkaloid. (Sillimaris Journ., Sept. 1855.) Sanguinarina is a white pearly substance, of an acrid taste, very sparingly soluble in water, soluble in ether, and very soluble in alcohol. With the acids it forms salts soluble in water, all of which have some shade of red, crimson, or scarlet, and form beautiful red solutions. They are acrid and pungent to the taste, particularly the muriate and acetate. From these facts it would appear that the red colour and acrid properties of the bloodroot may b« owing to the presence of some native salt of sanguinarina, which is decomposed by ammonia in the separation of the organic alkali. The formula of sanguinarina PART I. Sanguinaria. 741 is C87II]GN08. A second alkaloid has been extracted from bloodroot by Riegeh and is considered by him as analogous to the pornhuroxin found by Merck in ' opium.* (Chem. Gaz., iv. 198.) Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, has discovered a third alkaloid, which he found in the ether after the precipitation of the sul- phate of sanguinarina in the process of Dr. Schiel. It is pale-red, tasteless, in- soluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, and unites with muriatic and sul- phuric acids to form crystallizable compounds, of a deep-red colour. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 522.) Dr. Gibb proposes for this principle the name of puc- According to that writer, bloodroot contains, besides the three alkaloid* referred to, chelidonic acid, fecula, sugar, albumen, resin, fixed oil, gum, ex- tractive, and lignin. (Pharm. Journ., March, 1860, p. 461.) The virtues of the root are said to be rapidly deteriorated by time. Medical Properties and Uses. Sanguinaria is an acrid emetic, with stimulant narcotic powers. In small doses it excites the stomach, and accelerates the circulation; more largely given, produces nausea and consequent depression of the pulse; and in the full dose occasions active vomiting. It is also expectorant, and is said to be emmenagogue. The effects of an overdose are violent emesis, a burning sensation in the stomach, tormenting thirst, faintness, vertigo, dimness of vision, and alarming prostration. Four persons lost their lives at Bellevue Hospital, New York, in consequence of drinking largely of tincture of blood- root, which they mistook for ardent spirit. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., ii. 506.) Snuffed up the nostrils, bloodroot excites much irritation, attended with sneezing. Upon fungous surfaces it acts as an escharotic. It has been given in typhoid pneumonia, catarrh, pertussis, croup, phthisis pulmonalis, hydrothorax, scarlatina, rheumatism, jaundice, dyspepsia, amenorrlioea, dysmenorrhoea, and other affections, either as an emetic, nauseant, alterative, or emmenagogue; and its virtues are highly praised by many judicious practitioners. Dr. Mothershead, of Indianapolis, speaks in the strongest terms of its efficacy as an excitant to the liver, given in alterative doses. (See Wood's Quart. Retrosp., ii. 80.) The dose with a view to its emetic operation is from ten to twenty grains, given in powder or pill. The latter form is preferable, in consequence of the great irritation of throat produced by the powder when swallowed. For other pur- poses the dose is from one to five grains, repeated more or less frequently ac- cording to the effect desired. The medicine is sometimes given in infusion or decoction, in the proportion of half an ounce to the pint. The emetic dose of this preparation is from half a fluidounce to a fluidounce. The tincture is offi- cinal. j* A fluid extract may be prepared in the same manner as the officinal * This alkaloid was obtained by treating the root with water, acidulated with acetie acid, precipitating the sanguinarina by ammonia, neutralizing the “wash-water” by acetic acid, precipitating by infusion of galls, digesting the precipitate previously washed and dried in an alcoholic solution of potassa, passing carbonic acid through the solution, and distilling off the alcohol. The residue was exhausted with water, the liquid evaporated, and what remained extracted by ether, which yielded it, on evaporation, in the form of a dirty-white crystalline mass. By dissolving this in alcohol, decolorizing with animal charcoal, and crystallizing, it was obtained in colourless tabular crystals, without taste or smell, very sparingly soluble in water, more readily soluble in alcohol, and forming with the acids colourless, bitter, crystallizable salts, soluble in water. (Chem. Gaz., iv. 198.) Dr. Geo. D. Gibb, of London, who has made a partial analysis of the root, denies the identity of this principle with porphyroxin. (Pharm. Journ., March, 1860, p. 45.) It awaits further investigation, and a proper name.—Note to the twelfth edition. f Mr. T. S. Wiegand proposes the following formula for a syrup of bloodroot. Take of 'he root in coarse powder acetic acid water Ov, sugar Ibij. Add to the powder two fluidounces of the acetic acid mixed with a pint of the water, macerate for three days, transfer to a percolator, and displace with the remainder of the water mixed with the re- mainder of the acetic acid. Evaporate the infusion obtained, by means of a water-bath, to eighteen fluidounces, then add the sugar, and form a syrup, straining if necessary. From one to two fluidrachms should operate as an emetic. CAm. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 108.)—Note ‘o the eleventh edition. Sanguinaria.—Santalum. PART I. fluid extract o! ergot. (See Extractum Ergotse Fluidum.) One fluidrachm re- presents the virtues of sixty grains of the root; and the emetic dose, therefore, would be from ten to twenty minims. An infusion in vinegar has been employed advantageously, as a local application, in obstinate cutaneous affections; and Dr. R. G. Jennings has found it more efficient as a gargle, in the sorethroat of scarlatina, than any other that he has employed. (Stethoscope, ii. 182.) It has been used also in diphtheria. Dr. Stevens, of Ceres, New York, has found the powder useful as an errhine, in coryza, combined with cloves and camphor. (N. Y. Journ. of Med., N. S., iv. 358.) Mixed with chloride of zinc, and made into a paste with flour and water, it has been used by Dr. J. W. Fell as a local remedy in cancer, with asserted success. In reference to the effects of sanguinarina, the late Dr. Wm. Tully found it, in large doses, to produce vertigo, dllafafton'of the pupil, a haggard expression of face, nausea, coldness of the extremities, cold sweats, and diminished frequency with irregularity of the pulse. The late Prof. R. P. Thomas, o'’ Philadelphia, who experimented with it on himself and others, in medicinal doses using both the alkaloid and its salts, gave the following statement of its powo1 s In doses varying from one-twelfth to one-eighth of a grain, it acted as an expectorant, without disturbing the stomach. One-sixth or one-fourth of a grain, given every two or three hours, generally produced nausea, and sometimes vomited. Half a grain in solution, given at intervals of ten minutes, almost :r variably vomited after the second or third dose. Under the influence of or one sixth of a grain, given every three hours, for two days or more, the -false was generally reduced from five to fifteen beats in the minute. He fouud no alterative effect, and none of any kind directly upon the liver. (Proceedings of the Am. Med. Assoc., A. D. 1863, p. 219.) v Off. Prep. Tinctura Sanguinariae, TJ. S. W. SANT ALUM. U.S Red Saunders. The wood of Pterocarpus santalinus. U. S. Off. Syn. PTEROCARPUS. Red Sandal-wood. Pterocarpus santalinus. The wood; from Coromandel and Ceylon. Br. Santal rouge, Fr.; Santelkolz, Germ. Pterocarpus. Sex. Syst. Diadelphia Decandria.—Nat. Ord. Fabaceae or Leguminosas. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-toothed. Legume falcated, leafy, varicose, girted by a wing, not gaping. Seeds solitary. Willd. Pterocarpus santalinus. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 906; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 430, t. 156. This is a large tree with alternate branches, and petiolate ternate leaves, each simple leaf being ovate, blunt, somewhat notched at the apex, entire, veined, smooth on the upper surface, and hoary beneath. The flowers are yellow, in axillary spikes, and have a papilionaceous corolla, of which the vexillum is obcordate, erect, somewhat reflexed at the sides, toothed and waved, the alee spreading with their edges apparently toothed, and the carina oblong, short, and somewhat inflated. The tree is a native of India, attaining the highest perfection in mountainous districts, and inhabiting especially the mountains of Coromandel and Ceylon. Its wood is the officinal red saunders, though there is reason to believe that the product of other trees is sold by the same name. The wood comes in roundish or angular billets, internally of a blood-red colour, externally brown from exposure, compact, heavy, and fibrous. It is kept in the shops in the state of small chips, raspings, or coarse powder. Red saunders has little smell or taste. It imparts a red eolou to A‘oto’., part I. Santalum.—Santonica. ether, and alkaline solutions, but not to water; and a test is thus afforded by which it may be distinguished from some other colouring woods. The alcoholic tincture produces a deep-violet precipitate with sulphate of iron, a scarlet with bichloride of mercury, and a violet with the soluble salts of lead. The colour- ing principle, which was separated by Pelletier, and called by him santalm, is, of a resinous character, scarcely soluble in cold water, more so in boiling water, very soluble in alcohol, ether, acetic acid, and alkaline solutions, but slightly in the fixed and volatile oils, with the exception of those of lavender and rosemary, which readily dissolve it. It is precipitated when acids are added to the infusion of the wood, prepared with an alkaline solution. Weyermann and Iloefferly have found it to possess acid properties. For an analysis of red sandal wood by Mr. PI. Dussance, New Lebanon, N. Y., the reader is referred to the Am. Journ. of Pliarm. (Jan. 18G0, p. 6). The wood has no medical virtues, and is employed solely for the purpose of imparting colour. Off. Prep. Spiritus Lavandulae Compositus, U. S.; Tinctura Cinchonae Com- posita, U. S.; Tinct. Lavandulae Comp., Br.; Tinct. Rhei et Sennae, U. S. W. SANTONICA. U.S.,Br. Santonica. Levant Wormseed. The unexpanded flowers and peduncles of Artemisia Contra, and of other species of Artemisia. U. S. The unexpanded flower-heads o7~an undetermined species of Artemisia. Br. European Wormseed. Santonici Semen. Semen Cyme. Semen Contra. This product, though discarded from the Dublin Pharmacopoeia of 1850, has been recognised in the British Pharmacopoeia, as well as in the late edition of our own. It was formerly ascribed by the Dublin College, in accordance with the general belief at one time, to Artemisia Santonica or Tartarian southern- ' wood; but upon insufficient groundsfTiuropean wormseed is of two kinds; one called the Aleppo, Alexandria, or Levant wormseed, the other Barbary worm- seed. The former is supposed to be the product of Artemisia Contra, which grows in Persia, Asia Minor, and other parts of the East. It consists in fact not of the seeds, but of the small globular unexpanded flowers of the plant, mixed with their broken peduncles, and with minute, obtuse, smooth leaves. It has a greenish colour, a very strong aromatic odour increased by friction, and a very bitter disagreeable taste. The Barbary wormseed is thought by some to be de- rived from Artemisia Judaica. by others from the A. alomerata of Sieber, both of which grow in Palestine and Arabia. It consists of broken peduncles, having the calyx sometimes attached to their extremity. The calyx is also sometimes separate, consisting of very small linear obtuse leaflets. The flowers are want- ing, or in the shape of minute globular buds. All these parts are covered with a whitish down, which serves to distinguish this variety from the wormseed of the Levant. It is, moreover, lighter and more coloured than .the latter. Its smell and taste are the same. It is the former variety which is recognised by the two Pharmacopoeias. The British gives the following description of the medicine. “Flower-heads rather more than a line in length and nearly half a line in breadth, fusiform, blunt at each end, pale greenish-brown, smooth; re- sembling seeds in appearance, but consisting of imbricated involucral scales with a green midrib, enclosing four or five tubular flowers.” Wormseed contains a volatile oil and a resinous extractive matter, to which )ts virtues have been ascribed. But it probably owes its efficiency, in a greater degree, to a peculiar principle called santonin. This is crystallizable, colour- less, tasteless but leaving a slight sense of acrimony iu the mouth, inodorous, soluble in ether and alcohol, and nearly insoluble in water. Its alcoholic solution 744 Santonica.—Sapo. part I. has a decided bitterness. Though neuter in its action upon test-paper, it com- bines with the alkalies to form soluble and crystaliizable salts. Having been adopted by the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, with processes for its preparation, it will be treated of more fully in the second part of the work. (See Santoninum.) The two kinds of wormseed above described have long been celebrated as a vermifuge; and the title of semen contra, by which they are designated in many works on pharmacy, originated in their anthelmintic property. Their influence on the system is not very striking. A curious effect, however, is recorded as having resulted from a large dose of wormseed, which was ascribed to the santonin. Several individuals of a family who had taken the remedy as a vermifuge, along with the expected results, were affected with a change in the perception of colours, red being converted into orange, and blue into green. (Ann. de Therap , A. I). 1852, p. 234.) Santonica may be given in powder or infusion. The dose in sub- stance is from ten to thirty grains, which should be repeated morning and evening for several days, and then followed by a brisk cathartic. It is little used in this country, having given place to the seeds of Clienopodium anthelminticum, which are universally known among us by the name of wormseed. In Europe it has been superseded, to a considerable extent, by santonin, which is much employed. Off. Prep. Santoninum. W. SAPO. U.S. Soap. Soap made with soda ana oiive oil. U. S. Off. Syn. SAPO DURUS. Hard Soap. Soap made with Olive oil and Soda, r. Savon blanc, Fr.; Oel-sodaseife, Germ,.; Sapone duro, Ital.; Xabon, Span. SAPO MOLLIS. Br. Soft Soap. Soap made with olive oil and potash. Br. Savon mou, Savon vert, Savon a base de potasse, Fr.; Schmierseife, Kaliseife, Germ. Soaps embrace all those compounds which result from the reaction of salifia- ble bases with fats and oils. Fats and oils, as has been explained under the titles Adeps and Olea, consist generally of three principles, two solid, differing in fusibility, called stearin and margarin, and one liquid, called olein, of which there are two varieties. Stearin is found most abundantly in fats which are firm and solid, as suet and tallow; margarin in human fat; and olein in the oils. When the fats and oils undergo saponification by reaction with a salifiable base, these three principles are decomposed into oily acids peculiar to each, discovered by Chevreul, and called stearic, margaric, and oleic acids, which unite with the base to form the soap, and into a sweet principle not saponifiable, called glyce- rin, which is set free. Hence it follows that stearin is a stearate, margarin a margarate, and olein an oleate of glycerin, and that the fats and oils are mix- tures of these three oily salts. Hence, also, it is obvious that soaps are mixed stearates, margarates, and oleates of various bases. Stearic acid is a firm white solid, like wax, fusible at 167°, greasy to the touch, pulverizable, soluble in alco hoi, very soluble in ether, but insoluble in water. In the impure state it is used as a substitute for wax in making caudles. Margaric acid has the appearance of fat, and is fusible at 140°. Oleic acid is an oily liquid, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, lighter than water, crystaliizable in needles a little below 32°, and having a slight smell and pungent taste. Glycerin will b“, de- scribed under a separate head. (See Glycerina.) Soaps are divided into the soluble and insoluble. The soluble soaps arc com- Sapo. 745 PART I. binations of the oily acids with soda, potassa, and ammonia; the insoluble con- sist of the same acids united with earths and metallic oxides. It is the soluble soaps only that are detergent, and to which the name soap is usually applied. Several of the insoluble soaps are employed in pharmacy; as, for example, the soap of the protoxide of lead, or lead plaster, and the soap of lime,-or lime lini- ment. (See Emplastrum Plumbi and Linimentum Calcis.) The two officinal soaps, here described, are of the soluble kind. One is a soda soap, made with olive oil (Castile soap), the other a potassa soap (soft soap). The soap of am- monia is noticed elsewhere. (See Linimentum Ammonias.) The consistency of the fixed alkaline soaps depends partly on the nature ol the oil or fat, and partly on the alkali present. Soaps are harder the more stearate and margarate they contain, and softer when the oleate predominates; and, as it respects the alkali present, they are harder when formed with soda, and softer when containing potassa. Hence it is that of pure soaps, considered as salts, stearate of soda is the hardest and least soluble, and oleate of potassa the softest and most soluble. Preparation. The following is an outline of the process for making soap. The oil or fat is boiled with a solution of caustic alkali, until the whole forms a thick mass, which can be drawn out into long clear threads. After the soap is completely formed, the next step is to separate it from the excess of alkali, the glycerin, and redundant water. This is effected by adding common salt, or a very strong alkaline lye, in either of which the soap is insoluble. The same end may be attained by boiling down the solution until the excess of alkali forms a strong alkaline solution, which acts the same part in separating the soap as the addition of a similar solution. As soon as the soap is completely separated, it rises to the surface; and, when it has ceased to froth in boiling, it is ladled out into wooden frames to congeal, after which it is cut into bars by means of a wire. The soap, as first separated, is called grain soap. It may be purified by dissolving it in an alkaline lye, and separating it by common salt. During this process the impurities subside, and the soap combines with more water; and hence it becomes weaker, although purer and whiter. If the grain soap is not purified it forms marbled soap; the coloured streaks arising princi- pally from an insoluble soap of oxidized iron. Sometimes the marbled appear- ance is produced by adding to the soap, as soon as it is completely separated, a fresh portion of lye, and immediately afterwards a solution of sulphate of iron. The black oxide of iron is precipitated, and gives rise to dark-coloured streaks, which, by exposure to the air, become red in consequence of the conversion of the black into the sesquioxide of iron. For an account of the process of Mr. It. A. Tilghman, of this city, patented in 1854, for manufacturing soap by sub- jecting a mixture of fatty matters and a solution of carbonated alkali to a high temperature under pressure, see the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxvii. 121). The officinal soap (Sapo, U. S.; Sapo Durus, Br.) is an olive oil soda soap, made on the same general plan as that just explained. Common Soap (Sapo Vulgaris, U. S., 1850) is also a soda soap; but, instead of olive oil, it contains concrete animal oil. This soap corresponds with the white soap of northern European countries and of the United States, and is formed usually from barilla and tallow. In Scotland it is manufactured from kelp and tallow. It was introduced into the list of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia as the only proper soap for making opodeldoc; but, as this preparation has been discarded in the existing edition, this variety of soap has been dismissed along with it. Soft Soap (Sapo Mollis, Br.) is prepared on the same general principles as hard soap; potash being employed as the alkali, and a fatty matter rich in olein, as the oil. The French soft soap is made with the seed oils, such as rape-seed, hemp-seed, &c.; the Scotch and Irish, with fish oil and some tallow; and our own with refuse fat and grease. A lye of wood-ashes is the form of potash 746 jSapo. PART I. usuali? employed. In forming this soap it is necessary that it should continue dissolved in the alkaline solution, instead of being separated from it. Hence soft soap is a soap of potassa, completely dissolved in the solution of its alkali, which is consequently present in excess. A soap of potassa is sometimes made with a view to its conversion into a soda soap. This is effected by the addition of an equivalent quantity of common salt, which, by double decomposition, gen- erates a soap of soda, and chloride of potassium in solution. After this change is effected, a further addition of salt separates the soda soap formed. Besides the officinal soaps of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, there are many other varieties, more or less used for medicinal or economical purposes. The officinal soap of the French Codex, called amygdaline soap (almond oil soap), is formed of caustic soda and almond oil, and is directed to be kept for two months exposed to the air, before being used. ■Starkey's soap, also offi- cinal in the Codex, is prepared by uniting, by trituration, equal parts of car- bonate of potassa, oil of turpentine, and Venice turpentine. Beef's marrow soap is a fine animal oil soap, also included in the French standard of phar- macy. Windsor soap is a scented soda soap, made of one part of olive oil and nine parts of tallow. Eau de luce (aqua Incise) is a kind of liquid soap, formed by mixing a tincture of oil of amber and balsam of Gilead with water of am- monia. Transparent soap is prepared by saponifying kidney fat with soda free from foreign salts, drying the resulting soap, dissolving it in alcohol, filtering and evaporating the solution, and running it into moulds when sufficiently con centrated. The soap is yellow or yellowish-brown, and preserves its transparency after desiccation. Balm soap is prepared from soda and palm oil, to which tal- low is added to increase its firmness. If it be wanted white, the palm oil may be bleached by heat, bichromate of potassa with sulphuric acid, chlorine, or ex- posure to the sun. This soap has a yellowish colour, and the agreeable odour of violets derived from the oil. Soap balls are prepared by dissolving soap in a little water, and then forming it with starch into a mass of the proper consist- ence. Common yellow soap (rosin soap) derives its peculiarities from an ad- mixture of rosin and a little palm oil with the tallow employed; the oil being added to improve its colour. Silicate of soda has, to some extent, been substi- tuted for rosin, as more economical. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1863, p. 466.) Large quantities of lard oil (nearly pure olein) are manufactured into soap.* All the varieties of soap, except a few of the fancy sort and the olive oil soaps, are manufactured in the United States. The latter, which are chiefly used for medicinal purposes, are imported from France. Properties. Soap, whatever may be its variety, has the same general proper- ties. Its aspect and consistence are familiar to every one. Its smell is pecu- liar, and taste slightly alkaline. It is somewhat heavier than water, and there- fore sinks in that liquid. Exposed to heat it quickly fuses, swells up, and is decomposed. It is soluble in water, and more readily in hot than in cold. Potassa soaps and those containing oleic acid are far more soluble than the soda soaps, especially those in which the stearates and margarates predominate. Acids, added to an aqueous solution of soap, combine with the alkali, and set free the oily acids, which, being diffused through the water, give it a milky appearance. Its decomposition is also produced by metallic salts, which inva- riably give rise to insoluble soaps. Soap is soluble in cold, and abundantly in boiling alcohol. This solution constitutes the tincture of soap, and forms a very convenient test for discovering lime in natural waters. The efficacy of soap as * Upon the supposition that the detergent property of soap depends exclusively on the alkali it contains, and is consequently proportionate to the quantity of that ingredient, a inode pf estimating the relative value of soaps has been suggested by It. Graeger, based on the equivalent of the fatty constituent; those soaps being the strongest, of which the fatty acid has the lowest combining number. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 18G l, p. 855.) PART I. Sapo. a detergent depends upon its power of rendering grease aud otner soiling sub- stances soluble in water, and therefore capable of being removed by washing The chief adulterations in soap are lime, gypsum, heavy spar, steatite, and pipe- clay. When adulterated with these substauces, it will not be entirely soluble in alcohol. According to Dr. Riegel, glue is an occasional adulteration in Spanish soap, discoverable also by its insolubility in alcohol. The same impurity is some times found in other soaps. Olive oil soda soap (Sapo), otherwise called Castile or Spanish soap, is a hard soap, and is presented under two principal varieties, the white and the mar- bled. White Castile soap, when good, is of a pale grayish-white colour, incapa- ble of giving an oily stain to paper, devoid of rancid odour or strong alkaline qualities, and entirely soluble both in water and alcohol. It should not feel greasy, nor grow moist, but, on the contrary, should become dry by exposure to the air, without exhibiting any saline efflorescence. This variety of soap contains about 21 per cent, of water. Sometimes it contains a larger proportion of water, with which the soap is made to combine by the manufacturer, with the fraudulent in- tention of increasing its weight. Soap, thus adulterated, is known by its unusual whiteness, and by its suffering a great loss of weight in a dry air. The propor- tion of water may be ascertained by introducing the soap into a saturated solu- tion of chloride of sodium, and boiling; when the soap, nearly free from water, concretes into a solid mass. Marbled Castile soap is harder, more alkaline, and more constant in its composition than the other variety. It contains about 14 percent, of water. Having less water than the white Castile, it is a stronger and more economical soap; but at the same time less pure. The impurity arises from the veins of marbling, consisting of ferruginous matter, as already explained. Soap made with animal fat, with the probable addition of silicate of soda, has been sold for Castile soap. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1864, p. 102.) Animal oil soda soap (Sapo Vulgaris) is a hard soap, of a white colour, in- clining to yellow. It is made from tallow and caustic soda. This soap possesses the same general properties as the olive oil soda soap. Soft soap (Sapo Mollis), as made in this country, is semi-fluid, slippery, capa- ble of being poured from one vessel to another, and of a dirty brownish-yellow colour. This soap always contains an excess of alkali, which causes it to act more powerfully as a detergent than hard soap. It also contains the glycerin of the fatty matters, which is always separated from hard soap. In the British Pharmacopoeia it is directed to be made from olive oil and potash; but Dr. Pereira states that he has not been able to meet with it in England. That made in France has a greenish colour and the consistence of soft ointment, and is com- posed of hemp-seed oil and potash. It is called, in the French Codex, savon vert. Sometimes it is manufactured from the dregs of olive oil. Incompatibles. Soap is decomposed by all the acids, earths, and earthy and metallic salts. Acids combine with the alkali, and set free the oily acids of the soap; the earths unite with the oily acids and separate the alkali; while the earthy and metallic salts give rise, by double decomposition, to an insoluble soap of their base, and a saline combination between their acid and the alkali pf the soap. Hard waters, in consequence of their containing salts of lime, de- compose and curdle soap. They may be rendered soft, and fit for washing, by adding sufficient carbonate of soda or of potassa to precipitate all the lime. Composition. It has been already explained that soap consists of certain oily acids, united with an alkali. As olive oil is a compound of margarin and olein, so the officinal “soap” is a mixed raargarate and oleate of soda. The former officinal “common soap” is principally a stearate of soda; and “soft soap,” as defined in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, is a mixed margarate and oleate of potassa. The most important soaps have the following composition in the hundred parts. Marseilles white soajo,—soda 10-24, margaric acid 9-2D, oleic acid 59'20, water Sapo.—Sarsaparilla. PART I. 21-3G. (Braconnot.) Castile soap, very dry,—soda 9 0, oily acids 76 5, water 14’5. (Ure.) Glasgow soft soap,—potassa 9’0, oily acids 43 7, water 47’3. ( Ure.) French soft soap,—potassa 9'5, oily acids 44, water 46-5. ( Thenard.) Most soaps, it is perceived, contain a large proportion of water. Medical Properties. Soap possesses the properties of a laxative, antacid, and antilithic. It is seldom given alone, but frequently in combination with rhubarb, the astringency of which it has a tendency to correct. Thus combined, it is often administered in dyspepsia, attended with constipation and torpor of the liver. As it is readily decomposed by the weakest acids, which combine with the alkali, it often proves useful in acidity of the stomach, and has been recommended as a remedy in the uric acid diathesis; but it possesses no power to dissolve cal- culi, as was once supposed. Externally, soap is a stimulating discutient, and as such has been used by friction in sprains and bruises. The late Dr. A. T. Thom- son found much benefit to result from rubbing the tumid abdomen of children in mesenteric fever, morning and evening, with a strong lather of soap. For the cure of itch Dr. Schubert recommends a mixture of soft soap and salt, in the proportion of eight ounces of the former to four of the latter, dissolved in a quart of water. With this solution, previously warmed, the patient is to be rubbed, night and morning, until the cure is effected, which generally takes place in three days. M. Theuard recommends a solution of soap as an infallible remedy against the bug (punaise, Fr.), which, as well as the egg, is destroyed by a hot solution, made by boiling together one part of soap with fifty parts of water. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxviii. 280.) In constipation of the bowels, particularly when arising from hardened feces in the rectum, a strong solution of soap, especially of soft soap, forms a useful enema. When the latter is used, two tablespoonfuls may be dissolved in a pint of warm water. In pharmacy soap is frequently em- ployed for the purpose of giving a proper consistence to pills; but care must be taken not to associate it with a substance which may be decomposed by it. It is also an ingredient in some liniments and plasters. In toxicology it is used as a counter-poison for the mineral acids, and should always be resorted to, in poi- soning by these agents, without a moment’s delay, and its use continued until magnesia, chalk, or the bicarbonate of soda or of potassa can be obtained. The mode of administration, in these cases, is to give a teacupful of a solution of soap, made by dissolving it in four times its weight of water, every three or four minutes, until the patient has taken as much as he can swallow. The dose of soap is from five grains to half a drachm, given in the form of pill. Off. Prep, of Soap. Emplastrum Resinrn, Br.; Emp. Saponis; Extractum Colocynthidis Compositum; Linimentum Saponis; Pilulte Aloes, U. S.; Pil. Aloes Barbadensis, Br.; Pil. Aloes et Assafoetidte; Pil. Aloes Soccotrinse, Br.; Pil. Assafoetidae, U. S.; Pil. Cambogiae Composita, Br.; Pil. Opii; Pil. Rhei, U. S.; Pil. Rhei Comp., Br.; Pil. Saponis Comp., U. S.; Pil. Scillse Comp. B. SARSAPARILLA. US. Sarsaparilla. The root of Smilax officinalis (Humboldt and Bonpland), and of other species of Smilax. U. S. Off. Syn. SARSA. Jamaica Sarsaparilla. Smilax officinalis. The dried root. Br. Salsepareille, Fr.; Sarsaparille, Germ.; Salsapariglia, Ital.; Zarzaparilla, Span. Smilax. Sex. Syst. Dioecia Hexandria.—Nat. Ord. Stnilace®. Gen.Ch. Male. Calyx six-leaved. Corolla none. Female. Calyx six-leaved Corolla none. Styles three. Berry three-celled. Seeds two. Willd. Formerly, Smilax Sarsaparilla was admitted by most of the standard nu PART I. Sarsaparilla. 749 thorities as the source of this drug; but it is probable that none of the sarsapa- rilla of the shops was ever obtained from it. S. Sarsaparilla is a native of the United States; and the medicine has never, within our knowledge, been col- lected in this country. It is not among the eleven species of Smilax described by Humboldt, Bonpland, and Kunth, who indicate S. officinalis, S. syphilitica, and S. Cumanensis, especially the first, as the probable sources of the drug ex ported from Mexico and the Spanish Main. In the present state of our know ledge, it is impossible to decide with certainty from what species the severa. commercial varieties of the drug are'respectively derived. This much is certain, that they do not proceed from the same plant. Of the many species belonging to this genus, few possess any medicinal power; and Hancock states that of the six or eight which he found growing in the woods of Guiana, only one presented in any degree the sensible properties of the genuine sarsaparilla, the rest being insipid and inert. The root (rhizoma) of Smilax China, a native of China and Japan, has been employed under the name*of China Root for similar purposes with the officinal sarsaparilla. As it occurs in commerce, it is in pieces from three to eight inches long and an inch or two thick, usually somewhat flattened, more or less knotty, often branched, of a brownish or grayish-brown colour ex- ternally, whitish or of a light flesh-colour internally, without odour, and of a taste flat at first, but afterwards very slightly bitterish and somewhat acrid, like that of sarsaparilla. The root of Smilax asvera is said to be employed in the south of Europe as a substitute for sarsaparilla; but it has little reputation. The East India Sarsaparilla, which was at one time referred to this species of Smilax, is the product of Hemidesmus Indicus. (See Hemidesmus.) We shall briefly describe S. Sarsaparilla, on account oFlts former officinal rank, and after- wards such other species as are believed to yield any portion of the drug. Alt of them are climbing or trailing plants, with prickly stems; a character ex- pressed in the name of the medicine, which is derived from two Spanish words (zarza and parilla), signifying a small thorny vine. Smilax Sarsaparilla, Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 176; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 161, t. 62. The stem of this plant is long, slender, shrubby, angular, and beset with prickles. The leaves are unarmed, ovate-lanceolate with about five nerves, somewhat glaucous beneath, and supported alternately upon footstalks, at the bases of which are long tendrils. The flowers usually stand, three or four together, upon a common peduncle, which is longer than the leafstalk. This species is indigenous, growing in swamps and hedges in the Middle and Southern States. S. officinalis. Humb. and Bonpl. Plant. JEquinoct. i. 271. In this species the stem is twining, angular, smooth, and prickly; the young shoots are unarmed; the leaves ovate-oblong, acute, cordiform, five or seven-nerved, coriaceous, smooth, twelve inches long and four or five broad, with footstalks an inch long, smooth, and furnished with tendrils. The young leaves are lanceolate-oblong, acuminate, and three-nerved. According to Humboldt, the plant abounds on the river Magdalena, in New Granada. Large quantities of the root are sent down the river to Mompox and Carthagena. S. syphilitica. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 780. The stem is round and smooth; armed at the joints with from two to four thick, straight prickles; and furnished with oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, three-nerved, coriaceous, shining leaves, which are a foot in length, and terminate by a long point. The plant was seen by Humboldt and Bonpland in New Granada, upon the banks of the river Cassi- quiare, and by Martius in Brazil, at Yupura and near the Ilio Negro. It has been supposed to yield the Brazilian sarsaparilla. S. papyracea. Poiret, Encyc. Meth. iv. 467. This is an under-shrub with a compressed stem, angular below, and furnished with spines at the angles. Its leaves are elliptical, acuminate, and three-nerved. It inhabits Cayenne and Brazil, chiefly upon the banks of the Amazon and its tributaries, and is thought 750 Sarsaparilla. PART I. to yield the variety of sarsaparilla denominated Brazilian. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 277.) A particular description of a specimen of Smilax, supposed to belong to this species, is given by Professor Bentley in the London Pharm. ■Journ. (x. 470). It was obtained from Guatemala, and was the source of a va- riety of commercial sarsaparilla, recently introduced into the market, which Pro- fessor Bentley proposes to name Guatemala sarsaparilla. S. medica. Schlechtendahl, Linnsea, vi. 47; Carson, Illust. of Med. Pot ii. 51, pi. 95. This species has an angular stem, armed with straight prickles at tne joints, and a few hooked ones in the intervals. The leaves are smooth, bright- green on both sides, shortly acuminate, five-nerved, with the veins prominent be- neath. They vary much in form, the lower being cordate, auriculate-hastate ; the upper cordate-ovate. In the old leaves, the petiole and midrib are armed with straight subulate prickles. The inflorescence is an umbel of from eight to twelve flowers, with a smooth axillary peduncle, and pedicels about three lines long. Schiede found this plant on the eastern declivity of the Mexican Andes, where the root is collected to be taken to Yera Cruz. The medicinal species of Smilax grow in Mexico, Guatemala, and the warm latitudes of South America. The roots are very long and slender, and origi- nate in great numbers from a common head or rhizoma, from which the stems of the plant rise. The whole root with the rhizoma is usually dug up, and as brought into market exhibits not unfrequently portions of the stems attached, sometimes several inches in length. The sarsaparilla of commerce comes from different sources, and is divided into varieties according to the place of collec- tion or shipment. Honduras Sarsaparilla is the variety most used in this country. It is brought from the bay of Honduras, and comes in bundles two or three feet long, com- posed of several roots folded lengthwise, and secured in a compact form by a few circular turns. These are packed in bales imperfectly covered with skins, each bale containing one hundred pounds or more. The roots are usually con- nected at one extremity in large numbers in a common head, to which portions of the stems are also attached. In some bundles are many small fibres either lying loose, or still adhering to the roots. The colour of the roots externally is a dirty-grayish or reddish-brown; and the cortical portion beneath the epider- mis often appears amylaceous when broken. The Jamaica or red sarsaparilla of foreign writers is little known by that name in the United States. The Island of Jamaica is merely its channel of ex- portation to Europe; and it is probably derived originally from Central America. It does not materially differ in properties from Honduras sarsaparilla; its chief peculiarity being the reddish colour of the epidermis, which is also sometimes found in that variety. It is said also to yield a larger proportion of extract, and to contain less starch. As found in commerce, it is in bundles from twelve to eighteen inches long, by four or five in thickness, consisting of long slender roots folded up, with numerous radical fibres attached. Considerable quantities of the drug are imported from the Mexican ports of Yera Cruz and Tampico. The Vera Cruz sarsaparilla comes in large, rather loose bales, weighing about two hundred pounds, bound with cords or leather thongs, and usually containing the roots folded upon themselves, and separately packed. These, as in the Honduras sarsaparilla, consist of a head or caudex with numerous long radicles, which, however, are somewhat smaller than in that variety, and have a thinner bark. They are often also much soiled with earth. This variety was formerly little esteemed; but, from the acrid taste which it possesses, it is probably not inferior in real virtues to the other kinds. It is pro- bably derived from Smilax medica. Another variety is the Caracas sarsaparilla, brought in large quantities from La Go ay r a. It is in oblong packages, of about one hundred pounds, sur- PART I. Sarsaparilla. 751 rounded with broad strips of hide, which are connected laterally with thongs of the same material, leaving much of the root exposed. The roots, as in the last variety, are separately packed, but more closely and carefully. The radicles are often very amylaceous internally, in this respect resembling the following. The Brazilian, or, as it is sometimes called in Europe, the Lisbon sarsapa- rill a. has Fee iT less used in the United States than in Europe, wherefThas com- manded a higher price. Within a few years, however, it has been imported in considerable quantities. It comes from the ports of Para and Maranham, in cylindrical bundles of from three to five feet in length, by about a foot in thick- ness, bound about by close circular turns of a very flexible stem, and consisting of unfolded roots, destitute of caudex (rhizoma) and stems, and having few ra- dical fibres. It is the variety of which Hancock speaks as celebrated through- out South America by the name of sarsa of the Rio Negro, and is considered as the most valuable variety of the drug. It is distinguished by the amylaceous character of its interior structure, and has considerable acrimony. It was said by Martius to be derived from Smilax syphilitica; but I)r. Hancock considers that portion of it which comes from the Rio Negro, and is shipped at Para, as the product of an undescribed species, certainly not S. syphilitica. According to Richard, it has been ascertained to be the product of the S. papyracea of Poiret. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 277.) The variety described by Professor Bentley under the name of Guatemala sarsaparillg^was collected in the province of Sacatepeques, about ninety miles from the sea. It is in cylindrical bundles about two feet eight inches long by four inches in diameter, composed of separate roots, arranged in parallel order, without rootstalk, and bound together by a few turns of the flexible stem of a monocotyledonous plant. The bundles resemble the Brazilian in arrangement, but are much less compact. It is amylaceous, has considerable acrimony, and is probably one of the most efficient varieties. Professor Bentley ascribes it to S. papyracea. For a particular description of the root, the reader is referred to the Pharmaceutical Journal (xii. 472). Much sarsaparilla has been imported into England from Lima, Yalparaiso, and other places on the Pacific coast of South America. It is described by Pereira as bearing a close resemblance to Jamaica sarsaparilla, but yielding a smaller proportion of extract. It is in bundles of about three feet long and nine inches thick, consisting of the roots folded with their heads or rhizomes attached. The epidermis is brown or grayish-brown. Sometimes roots of a light-clay colour are found in the bundles. In a memoir read by I)r. Berthold Seeman before the London Linnman So- ciety, the author stated that, after careful examination, he was convinced that the commercial varieties of sarsaparilla, called Brazilian, Jamaica, and Guate- mala sarsaparilla, are all the product of one species of Smilax, the S. oihcina- • lis of Humboldt and Bonpland, and moreover, that the S. medico, of Schlecht- endahl, and the & ’papyracea, of Poiret, are identical witnTE’at species. (Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1854, p. 385.) Properties. The dried sarsaparilla roots are several feet in length, about the thickness of a goose-quill, cylindrical, more or less wrinkled longitudinally, flexible, and composed of a thick exterior cortical portion, covered with a thin easily separable epidermis, of an inner layer of ligneous fibre, and of a central pith. The epidermis is of various colours, generally ash-coloured, grayish-brown, or reddish-brown, and sometimes very dark. The cortical portion is in some specimens whitish, in others brown, and not unfrequently of a pink or rosy hue It is occasionally white, brittle, and almost powdery like starch. The woody part is usually very thin, and composed of longitudinal fibres, which allow the root to be split with facility through its whole length. The central medulla ofteD abounds in starch. 752 Sarsaparilla. part t. Sarsaparilla in its ordinary state is nearly or quite inodorous, but in decoc- tion acquires a decided and peculiar smell. To the taste it is mucilaginous and very slightly bitter, and, when chewed for some time, produces a disagreeable acrid impression, which remains long in the mouth and fauces. The root is effi- cient in proportion as it possesses this acrimony, which is said by some authors to be confined to the cortical portion ; while the ligneous fibre and medullary matter are insipid and inert. Hancock avers that all parts are equally acrid and efficacious. The truth is probably between the two extremes; and, as in most medicinal roots, it must be admitted that the bark is more powerful than the interior portions, while these are not wholly inactive. The virtues of the root are communicated to water cold or hot, but are impaired by long boiling. They are extracted also by diluted alcohol. According to Hancock, the whole of the active matter is not extracted by wrater. He observes in his paper upon sarsaparilla, published in the London Medico-Botanical Transactions, when speaking of the sarsaparilla from Para and the Rio Negro, “after exhausting half a pound of this sort by two digestions, boiling, and pressure, I added to the dregs half a pint of proof spirit, and digested this with a gentle heat for a few hours in a close vessel, then affusing hot water to the amount of that taken off from the first boiling, and pressing again, I procured by the last operation about four pints of an infusion which possessed the acrid properties of the sarsa in a much higher degree even than that obtained by the first decoction with simple water.” It appears that in South America it is the custom to prepare sarsapa- rilla by digestion in wine or spirit, or by infusion in water with additions which may produce the vinous fermentation, and thus add alcohol to the menstruum. The same result, as to the superior efficacy of alcohol as a solvent of the acrid principle of sarsaparilla, has been obtained by the French experimentalists. According to M. Thubeuf, sarsaparilla contains, 1. a peculiar crystalline sub- stance, which is probably the active principle of the root, 2. a colouring substance, 3. resin, 4. starch, 5. lignin, 6. a thick, aromatic, fixed oil, 7. a waxy substance, and 8. chloride of potassium and nitrate of potassa. It is said also to contain a minute proportion of volatile oil, and Batka found gum, bassorin, albumen, gluten and gliadine, lactic and acetic acids, and various salts. The proportion of starch is large. Chatin found iodine in Honduras sarsaparilla; but Dr. Winckler, not having succeeded in detecting this principle in any one root, thinks it probable that the specimen examined by Chatin had been exposed to sea-water. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, May 7, 1852.) Sarsaparillin. (Smilacin. Pariglin. Salseparine. Parillinic acid.) The crystalline principle in which the virtues of sarsaparilla reside should be called sarsaparillin. It was first discovered by Dr. Palotta, who described it in 1824 under the haine of pariglin. Subsequently, M. Folchi supposed that he had found another principle which he called smilacin. In 1831, M. Thubeuf an- nounced the discovery of a new substance in sarsaparilla which he named salse- parine, from the French name of the root. Finally, Batka, a German chemist, towards the end of 1833, published an account of a principle which he had discovered in the root, and which, under the impression that it possessed acid properties, he called parillinic acid. M. Poggiale, however, has shown that these substances are identical, though procured by different processes. The following is the process of M. Thubeuf. The root is treated with hot alcohol till deprived of taste. The tincture is submitted to distillation, and seven- eighths of the alcohol drawn off. The remainder is treated with animal char- coal, and filtered at the end of twenty-four or forty-eight hours. The sarsapa- rilliu is deposited in the form of a granular powder. This is dissolved in a fresh portion of alcohol, and crystallized. Tbe alcoholic mother-liquors may be de- prived of that portion of the principle which they retain by evaporating to dry- ness, dissolving the product in water, filtering, again evaporating to dryness, PART l. Sarsaparilla. 753 redissolving in alcohol, and crystallizing. Sarsaparillin is white, inodorous almost tasteless in the solid state, but bitter, acrid, and nauseous when dissolved in alcohol or water. It is very slightly soluble in cold water, but more readily in boiling water, which deposits it on cooling. It is very soluble in alcohol, especially at the boiling temperature. Ether and the volatile oils also dissolve it. Its aqueous solution has the property of frothing very much by agitation. M. Beral states that be has procured it pure by distilling, by means of a salt- water bath, a tincture of sarsaparilla prepared with very dilute alcohol. In that case it must be volatile, and we can understand why sarsaparilla suffers in de- coction. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xii. 245.) The solutions of sarsaparillin are without acid or alkaline reaction. Batka erred in considering it an acid. M. Poggiale found it both in the cortical and medullary part of the root, but most largely in the former. Palotta gave it internally in doses varying from two to thirteen grains, and found it to produce nausea, and to diminish the force of the circulation. It is pi'obably the principle upon which sarsaparilla depends chiefly, if not exclusively, for its remedial powers. The sarsaparilla of the shops is apt to be nearly if not quite inert, either from age, or from having been obtained from inferior species of Smilax. This ine- quality of the medicine, with the improper modes of preparing it long in vogue, has probably contributed to its variable reputation. The only criterion of good sarsaparilla to be relied on is the taste. If it leave a decidedly acrid impression in the mouth after having been chewed for a short time, it may be considered efficient; if otherwise, it is probably inert. Medical Properties and Uses. Few medicines have undergone greater changes of reputation. About the middle of the sixteenth century it was introduced into Europe as a remedy for the venereal complaint, in which it had been found very useful in the recent Spanish settlements in the West Indies. After a time it fell into disrepute, and was little employed till about a century ago, when it was again brought into notice by Sir William Fordyce and others, as a useful adjuvant and corrigent of mercury in lues venerea. Since that period very dif- ferent opinions have been entertained of it. Some, among w'hom was Dr. Cullen, considered it wholly inert; others, on the contrary, have had the most unbounded confidence in its powers. The probable cause of much of this discrepancy has been already mentioned. Experience, both among regular practitioners and empirics, would seem to have placed its efficacy beyond reasonable doubt. Its most extensive and useful application is to the treatment of secondary syphilis and syphiloid diseases, and that shattered state of the system which sometimes follows the imprudent use of mercury in these affections. It is also employed, though with less obvious benefit, in chronic rheumatism, scrofulous affections, certain cutaneous diseases, and other depraved conditions of health. Its mode of action is less evident than its ultimate effects. It is said to increase the per- spiration and urine; but, allowing it to do so, the effect is too slight to explain its remedial influence; and even that which is produced has been ascribed by some to the medicines with which it is generally associated, or the liquid in which it is exhibited. In this ignorance of its precise modus operandi we call it an alterative, as those medicines are named which change existing morbid actions, without obvious influence over any of the functions. Sarsaparilla may be given in pow'der, in the dose of half a drachm three or four times a day. It is, however, more conveniently administered in the form of infusion, decoction, syrup, or fluid extract. (See these preparations in Part II.) A beer, made by fermenting an infusion of the drug with molasses, is said to be a popular remedy in South America.* The smoke of sarsaparilla has been highly recommended in asthma. (Journ. de Pharm., xviii. 221.) * The following is a formula recommended by Hancock. “Take of Rio Negro sarsa, bruised, 21b.; bark of guaiac, powdered, 8oz.; raspings of guaiac wood, anise seeds, and Sassafras Medulla.—Sassafras Radicis Cortex. Fart I. Off. Prep Decoctum Sarsae, Br.; Decoct. Sarsae Compositum, Br ; Decoct Sarsaparillae Comp., U. S.; Extractum Sarsaparillae Fluidum, U. S.; Extract. Sarsaparilloe Fluid. Corap., U. S.; Extract. Sarsae Liquidum, Br.; Syrupus Sar- saparilloe Comp., U. S. W- SASSAFRAS MEDULLA. U.S. Sassafras Pith. The pith of the stems of Sassafras officinale. U. S. SASSAFRAS RADICIS CORTEX. U.S. Bark of Sassafras Root. The bark of the root of Sassafras officinale. U. S. , Off. Syn. SASSAFRAS. """Sassafras officinale. The dried root. Br. Sassafras, Fr.,Germ.; Sassafras, Sassafrasso, Ital.; Sasafras, Span. In the new distribution of the species composing the genus Laurus of Linnaeus, the sassafras tree has been made the type of a distinct genus, denominated Sas- safras, which is recognised by the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias. Sassafras. Sex. Syst. Enneandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Lauraeom— Gen. Gh. Dioecious. Calyx six-parted, membranous; segments equal, per- manent at the base. Males. Fertile stamens nine, in three rows, the three inner with double stalked distinct glands at the base. Anthers linear, four-celled, all looking inwards. Females, with as many sterile stamens as the males or fewer; the inner often confluent. Fruit succulent, placed on the thick fleshy apex of the peduncle, and seated in the torn unchanged calyx. (Bindley.) Sassafras officinale. Nees, Laurin. 488. — Laurus Sassafras. Willd. Sp. Flanifi1. 485; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. iii. 142 ; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. ii. 144. This is an indigenous tree of middling size, rising in favourable situations from thirty to fifty feet, with a trunk about a foot in diameter. In the Southern States it is sometimes larger, and in the northern parts of New England is little more than a shrub. The bark of the stem and large branches is rough, deeply furrowed, and grayish; that of the extreme branches or twigs is smooth and beautifully green. The leaves, which are alternate, petiolate, and downy when young, vary much in their form and size even upon the same tree. Some are oval and entire, others have a lobe on one side; but the greater number are three-lobed. Their mean length is four or five inches. The flowers, which are frequently dioecious, and appear before the leaves, are small, of a pale greenish- yellow colour, and disposed in racemes which arise from the branches below the leaves, and have linear bractes at their base. The corolla is divided into six oblong segments. The male flowers have nine stamens; the hermaphrodite, which are on a different plant, have only six, with a simple style. The fruit is an oval drupe, about as large as a pea, of a deep-blue colour when ripe, and supported on a red pedicel, enlarged at the extremity into a cup for its reception. The sassafras is common throughout the United States, and extends into Mexico. It iS said also to grow in Brazil and Cochin China; bat the plants observed in these countries are probably not of the same species. In the United States the sassafras is found both in woods and open places, and is apt to spring up in the neighbourhood of cultivation, and in neglected or abandoned fields. liquorice root, each 4oz.; mezereon, bark of the root, 2oz.; treacle [molasses] 21b.; and a dozen bruised cloves; pour upon these ingredients about four gallons of bcilirg water, and shake the vessel thrice a day. When fermentation has well begun, it is tit fo'„ use, and may be taken in the dose of a small tumblerful twice or thrice a day.” This formula is worthy of attention; but the bark of guaiacum, which is not kept in the shops, might ba omitted, or replaced by the wood. PART I. Scammonise Radix.—Scammonium. In Pennsylvania and New York, it blooms in the beginning of May, but much earlier at the South. The fresh flowers have a slightly fragrant odour, and almost all parts of the plant are more or less aromatic. The root is directed by the British Pharmacopoeia; the bark of the root, and the pith of the twigs or ex treme branches, by that of the U. States. The best time for collecting the pith is after the occurrence of frost in autumn. The root is exported, and is the part chiefly used in British pharmacy. It consists of a brownish-white wood, covered with a spongy bark divisible into layers. The latter portion is by far the most active, and is usually kept separate in our shops. 1. Sassafras Pith. This is in slender cylindrical pieces, very light and spongy, with a muciTaginous taste, and in a slight degree the characteristic flavour of the sassafras. It abounds in a gummy matter, which it readily imparts to water, forming a limpid mucilage, which, though ropy and viscid, has much less tena- city than that of gum arabic, and will not answer as a substitute in the suspen- sion of insoluble substances. It differs also from solutions of ordinary gum, in remaining limpid when added to alcohol. This mucilage is much employed as a soothing application in inflammation of the eyes; and forms an agreeable and useful drink in dysenteric, catarrhal, and nephritic diseases. It may be prepared by adding a drachm of the pith to a pint of boiling water. 2. Bark of Sassafras Boot. As found in the shops, this is usually in small irregular"-fragments, sometimes invested with a brownish epidermis, sometimes partially or wholly freed from it, of a reddish or rusty cinnamon hue, very brittle, and presenting when freshly broken a lighter colour than that of the exposed surfaces. Its odour is highly fragrant, its taste sweetish and gratefully aromatic. These properties are extracted by water and alcohol. They reside in a volatile oil, which is obtained by distillation. (See Oleum Sassafras.) According to Dr. Reinsch, the bark contains a heavy and light volatile oil, camphorous matter, fatty matter, resin, wax, a peculiar principle resembling tannic acid called sas- safrid, tannic acid, gum, albumen, starch, red colouring matter, lignin, and salts. Medical Properties and Uses. The bark of sassafras root is stimulant, and perhaps diaphoretic; though its possession of any peculiar tendency to the skin, independently of its mere excitant property, is very doubtful. It is used almost exclusively as an adjuvant to other more efficient medicines, the flavour of which it improves; while it renders them more cordial to the stomach. The complaints for which it has been particularly recommended are chronic rheumatism, cuta- neous eruptions, and scorbutic and syphiloid affections. As a remedy in lues venerea, in which it formerly had a high reputation, it is now considered as in itself wholly inefficient. It is most conveniently administered in the form of in- fusion. The oil may also be given. Of. Prep, of the Pith. Mucilago Sassafras, U. S. Of. Prep, of the Bark of the Boot, or of the Root. Decoctum Sarsae Com- positum, Br.; Decoct. Sarsaparill® Comp., U. S.; Extractum Sarsaparillae Fluidum Comp., U. S.; Oleum Sassafras, U. S. W. SCAMMONIiE RADIX. Br. Scamm rm/ Boot. Convolvulus Scammonia. The driej Root. Br. SC AMMONIUM. U.S., Br. Scammony. The concrete juice of the root of Convolvulus Scammonia. U. S. A gum- tesm obtained by incision from the living root. Br. 756 Scammonium. part r. SftammonJe, Fr.; Scamm tuum, Germ.; Scamonea, TtaL; Escamonea, Span. Cots volvulus. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.— Nat. Ord. Convolvu- lacese. Gen. Ch. Corolla carapanulate. Style one. Stigmas two, linear-cylindrical, often revolute. Ovary two-celled, four-seeded. Capsule two-celled. (Lindley.) Convolvulus Scammonia. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 845 ; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. ‘243, t. 86; Carson, Illust. of Med. Pot. ii. 14, pi. 62. This species of Con- volvulus has a perennial, tapering root, from three to four feet long, from nino to twelve inches in circumference, branching towards its lower extremity, covered with a light-gray bark, and containing a milky juice. The stems are numerous, slender, and twining, extending sometimes fifteen or twenty feet upon the ground, or on neighbouring plants, and furnished with smooth, bright-green, arrow-shaped leaves, which stand alternately upon long footstalks. The flowers are placed in pairs, or three together, upon the peduncles, which are round, axillary, solitary, and of nearly twice the length of the leaf. The plant is a native of Syria, Ana- tolia, and certain islands of the Archipelago. No part is medicinal except the root, which was found by Dr. Russel to be a mild cathartic. It is recognised in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, being used for the extraction of resin. (See Scammonia? Pesina in Part II.) Scammony is the concrete juice of the fresh root. Scammony is collected, according to Russel, in the following manner. In the month of June, the earth is cleared away from about the root, the top of which is cut oif obliquely about two inches from the origin of the stems. The milky juice which exudes is collected in shells, or other convenient receptacle, placed at the most depending part of the cut surface. A few drachms only are collected from each root. The juice from several plants is put into any convenient vessel, and concretes by time. In this state it constitutes genuine scammony, but is very seldom exported. It is generally prepared for the market by admixture, while it is yet soft, with the expressed juice of the stalks and leaves, with wheat flour, chalk, ashes, fine sand, &c.; and it has been supposed that scammony sometimes consists wholly or in great part of the expressed juice of the root, evaporated to dryness by exposure to the sun, or by artificial heat. According to Landerer, the roots from which the juice lias been collected are in some places boiled with water in copper vessels, and the extract added to the juice, not so much with the purpose of adulteration, as under the impression that it favour- ably modifies the action of the drug. Scammony is exported chiefly from Smyrna, though small quantities are said to be sent out of the country at Alexandretta, the seaport of Aleppo. Dr. Pereira was informed by a merchant who had re- sided in Smyrna, that it is brought upon camels in a soft state into that city, and afterwards adulterated by individuals called scammony makers. The adulteration appears to be conducted in conformity with a certain understood scale, more or less foreign matter being added according to the price. The materials employed are chiefly chalk and some kind of flour or meal. Very little comparatively is exported perfectly pure. We obtain scammony either directly from Smyrna, or indirectly through some of the Mediterranean ports.* * An interesting account of the collection and preparation of scammony in Anatolia, in the vicinity of Smyrna, has been communicated by Mr. S. II. Maltass to the London Pharma- cmtical Journ. and Trans, (xiii. 204). The juice is collected in the same manner as described by Russel in reference to Syria. The product, however, of each plant is somewhat less. In some districts, according to Maltass, ten plants produce only a drachm of scammony; in others the average from each root is a drachm; and in a good soil a plant four years old will yield two drachms. The juice received in the shells is mixed with another portion scraped from the cut surface of the root; and this mixture is the pure or lachryma scam- mony. Only a small quantity of this is taken to Smyrna; the greater part being adulterated by the peasants before it reaches the market. Sometimes the juiie is worked up with a decoction of the roots, in which case it is black, heavier than the preceding, and not so easily broken. Sometimes they add a calcareous earth, in a proportion varying from 10 to 150 per cent. The kind thus prepared is usually kept for some time in Smyrm, and is PART i. Scammonium. The name of Aleppo scammony was formerly given to the better kinds of th* drug, aud of Smyrna scammony to those of inferior quality; the distinction having probably originated in some difference in the character of the scammonv obtained at these two places. But no such difference now exists; as scammony is brought from Smyrna of every degree of purity. It has been customary in this country to designate the genuine drug of whatever quality as Aleppo scam- mony ; while the name of Smyrna scammony has been given to a spurious article manufactured in the south of France, and to other factitious substitutes. It is quite time that these terms should be altogether abandoned. We shall treat of the drug under the heads of genuine and factitious scammony. Genuine Scammony. This is sent into commerce in drums or boxes, and ia either in irregular lumps, in large solid masses of the shape of the containing vessel into which it appears to have been introduced while yet soft, or in circu- lar, flattish or plano-convex cakes. It seldom reaches us in an unmixed state. Formerly small portions of pure scammony were occasionally to be met with in Europe, contained in the shells in which the juice was collected and dried. This variety, denominated scammony in shells, is now scarcely to be found. The pure drug is called virgin scammony. It is in irregular pieces, often covered with a whitish-gray powder, friable and easily broken into small fragments be- tween the fingers, with a shining grayish-green fracture soon passing into green- ish-black, and exhibiting under the microscope minute air-cells, and numerous gray semi-transparent splinters.* It is easily pulverized, affording a pale ash- gray powder. When rubbed with water it readily forms a milky emulsion. It has a rather strong, peculiar odour, compared to that of old cheese. The taste is feeble at first, and afterwards somewhat acrid, but without bitterness. It gives apt to ferment, so as to become porous and lose its gloss. It is in irregular lumps, and is the kind usually sold in London as lachryma scammony. Another kind sold in London in rough lumps, and probably under the same name, is prepared in the interior of the country by mixing the juice with wheat starch, ashes, earthy matters, gum arabic or tragacanth, and sometimes wax, yolk of egg, pounded scammony roots and leaves, flour, or resin. A kind much used in Great Britain is prepared by the Jews in Smyrna, and is in the form of cakes as described in the text. It is of two qualities. The first quality is prepared by mixing skilip (which is an inferior kind of scammony prepared at Anjora, and consists of from 30 to 40 per cent, of juice and 60 to 70 of starch) with 60 per cent, of inferior scam- mony from the neighbourhood of Smyrna; the second quality, by mixing skilip with about 30 per cent, of the latter kind, and adding about 10 per cent, of gum arabic and black- lead. The first quality contains about 50 per cent, of resin, the second about 30 per cent. For an account of specimens of scammony sent by Mr. Maltass from Smyrna, see a paper by Mr. D. Hanbury in the Pharm. Journ. (xiii. 268).—Note to the tenth edition. Prof. Ch. Boulier, of Algiers, gives the following account of the collection of scam- mony in the north-western parts of Anatolia. The plant is not cultivated, but grows wild in rocky places covered with brushwood. At the flowering period, about the end of June and beginning of July, the peasants go forth in search of localities among the mountains where it is most abundant, and, having satisfied themselves on this point, return home, provide themselves with the requisite implements, and set out for the place of collection. Clearing away the brushwood and stems, the peasant digs deeply around the root, then cuts off the top obliquely, and affixes a muscle shell to the root so as to receive the juice as it flows from the dependent part. He then passes on to other plants upon which he operates in like manner. After a time he returns upon his steps, and empties the shells successively into a tinned copper vessel. Next day he goes over the same ground, and 6crapes by a knife from the cut surface the juice which has in the mean time flowed out, and partially concreted. This he mixes with that previously collected, and, when his ves- sel is full, takes it to some neighbouring market, where it is bought up, and sent to the wholesale druggists at Constantinople and Smyrna. The juice reaches the market in a pasty state, and whitish like cheese except where exposed to the air. It is in these centres of trade, or on its way from the collectors, that the drug undergoes the various sophistica- tions to which it is subjected; the peasant himself being honest., and seldom disposed to adulterate. [Ibid., April, 1860, p. 521.)—Note to the twelfth edition. * According to Maltass, the purest scammony has a reddish-black fracture, unless it has been mixed with water in its preparation, in which case it is black and "very glossy, yPharm. Journ., xiii. 266.) Scammonium. PART r. no evidence, when toe requisite tests are applied, of the presence of starch or carbonate of lime, leaves but a slight residue when burned, and yields about 80 per cent, of its weight to ether. Considerable quantities of what is called virgin scammony have been imported into this country since the drug-law went into operation; but, though some specimens are tolerably pure, on the whole the drug falls far short of the proper standard. Dr. E. R. Squibb examined many specimens, and found the proportion of resin to vary from 25 to T9'7 per cent.; only two or three, out of more than 30 examined, approaching the latter degree of purity within 10 per cent. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1863, p. 51.)* The form of scammony chiefly found in our markets is that in circular cakes. These are sometimes flattish on both sides, but generally somewhat convex on one side and flat on the other, as if dried in a saucer, or other shallow vessel. They are from four to six inches in diameter, and from half an inch to an inch and a half, or even two inches thick in the centre. As found in the retail shops, they are often in fragments. They are hard and heavy, with a faintly shining roughish fracture; and when broken exhibit in general a structure very finely porous, sometimes almost compact, and in a very few instances cavernous. Their colour externally is a dark-ash or dark-olive, or slate colour approaching to black; internally somewhat lighter and grayish, with an occasional tinge of green or yellow, but deepening by exposure. The small fragments are some- times slightly translucent at the edges. The mass, though hard, is pulverizable without great difficulty, and affords a light-gray powder. It imparts to water with which it is triturated a greenish milky appearance. The smell is rather disagreeable, and similar to that of the pure drug. The taste, very slight at first, becomes feebly bitterish and acrid. This kind of scammony is never quite pure, and much of it is considerably adulterated. In some of the cakes carbon- ate of lime is the chief impurity; in others the adulterating substance is prob- ably meal, as evidences of the presence of starch arid lignin are afforded; and in others again both these substances are found. Christison discovered in the chalky specimens from 15 to 38 per cent, of carbonate of lime; in the amylaceous, from 13 to 42 per cent, of impurity. It was probably to the flat, dark-coloured, compact, difficultly pulverizable, and more impure cakes that the name of Smyrna scammony was formerly given. These have been erroneously ascribed by some to Periploca Secamone, a plant growing in Egypt, f * Dr. Squibb gives the following description of the drug recently imported as virgin scammony. “It generally occurs in soldered square tin boxes, containing 25 to 28 pounds each. Occasionally, however, it is in round wooden boxes or drums of a similar capacity. The scammony is in irregular, rough and fissured masses of various sizes, sometimes porous, but commonly solid, hard, and semi-resinous, having a tough, dull fracture. It is of a very dark grayish-green colour internally, often nearly black, but more of an ash colour externally. It is rarely dry enough to be pulverulent, yet still more rarely too moist to be rubbed into coarse powder, and it generally loses 6 per cent, in drying suffi- ciently to make a fine powder.” (Am. Journ. o/Pharm., Jan. 1863, p. 49.) -j- Dr. Pereira, in his work on Materia Medica, describes as follows the varieties of scam- mony as they exist in the London market. 1. Virgin Scammony. Pure Scammony. Lachryma Scammony. The description of this cor- responds with that of pure scammony given in the text. In addition, the following par- ticulars may be mentioned. The whitish powder often found upon the surface effervesces with muriatic acid, and consists of chalk, in which the lumps have probably been rolled. The sp. gr. of the masses is 1-210. In the same pieces it sometimes happens that certain portions are shining and black, while others are dull-grayish. Virgin scammony readily takes fire, and burns with a yellowish flame. This variety is now much more abundant in the shops of London than formerly. 2. Scammony of second quality. This is called seconds in commerce. It is in t vo forms. 1. In irregular pieces. This, in external appearance, brittleness, odour, and taste, i esem- bles virgin scammony; but is distinguished by its greater sp. gr., which is J 463, by its dull, very slightly shining fracture, and its grayish colour. The freshly surface effervesces with muriatic acid, but the cold decoction does not give a blue mom with iodine. It.therefore contains chalk, but not fecula. 2. In large regular rtassrj This has Scammonium PART i. Scammony is ranked among the gum-resins. It is partially dissolved ov water, much more largely by alcohol and ether, and almost entirely, when pure, by boiling diluted alcohol. Its active ingredient is resin, which constitutes from 80 to 90 per cent, of pure dry scammony. (See Resina Scammonii.) The gum-resin has been analyzed by various chemists, but the results are uncertain ; as the character of the specimens examined is insufficiently determined by the terms Aleppo and Smyrna scammony, employed to designate them. Thus, Bouillon-Lagrange and Vogel obtained, from 100 parts of Aleppo scammony, 60 of resin, 3 of gum, 2 of extractive, and 35 of insoluble matter; from the same quantity of Smyrna scammony, 29 parts of resin, 8 of gum,, 5 of extractive, and 58 of vegetable remains and earthy substances. It is obvious that both the specimens upon which they operated were very impure. Marquart found in pure scammony (scammony in shells) 81 25 per cent, of resin, 3'00 of gum with salts, 0T5 of wax, 450 of extractive, 175 of starchy envelopes, bassorin, and gluten, 1-50 of albumen and lignin, 3 75 of ferruginous alumina, chalk, and carbonate of magnesia, and 350 of sand. Christison found different spe- cimens of pure scammony to contain, in 100 parts, from 77 to 83 parts of resin, from 6 to 8 of gum, from 3'2 to 5 of lignin and sand, and from 7'2 to 12-6 of water, with occasionally a little starch, probably derived accidentally from the root, and not in sufficient quantity to cause a cold decoction of the gum-resin to give a blue colour with iodine. Mr. Hanbury, of London, found 91T per cent, of resin in the purest scammony in shells; and Mr. B. W. Bull, of New York, 86‘88 per cent, in a specimen in irregular lumps, received from Constantinople as Aleppo Scammony. (N'. Y. Journ. of Pharm., June, 1852.) As already stated, scammony is seldom quite pure as found in our shops. Much of it contains not more than 50 per cent, of the resin, some not more than 42 per cent., and the worst varieties as little as 10 per cent., or even less.* Sometimes the cakes the form of the drum or box in which it was imported, and into which it was probably in- troduced while soft. It has a dull grayish fracture, and the sp. gr. 1 359. It exhibits, with the appropriate tests, evidence of the presence both of chalk and fecula. It. is some- times found of a soft or cheesy consistence. 3. Scammony of third quality. This is called thirds in commerce. It is in circular, flat cakes, about five inches in diameter and one inch thick. The cakes are dense, heavy, and more difficult to break than the preceding varieties. The fracture is sometimes resinous and shining, sometimes dull, and exhibits air cavities, and numerous white specks, which consist of chalk. The colour is grayish or grayish-black. The sp. gr. varies from 1-276 to 1*543. Both chalk and flour are detected by tests. In five different cakes, the quantity of chalk employed in the adulteration was stated by the importer to be, in 100 parts of the cakes respectively, 13 07, 23-1, 25-0, 31-05, and 37-54, numbers which correspond very closely, in the two extremes, with the results obtained by Christison. This is the variety of scammony referred to in the text as the one chiefly used in the United States. A valuable paper by Dr. Carson, on the varieties of scammony imported into this coun- try, was published in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xx. i.), to which the reader is referred. Besides the kinds described in the text, namely the virgin scammony, and those which are adulterated with chalk or meal or both, Dr. Carson describes two, under the names of yummy and black gummy scammony, in which the chief adulteration appears to be traga- eanth, or some analogous substance, which is associated in the dark variety with bone- black. They afforded from 6 to 13 per cent, of resin. They are in circular cakes, hard, compact, of difficult pulverization, and viscid when moistened.—Note, to the eighth edition. * The following table is given by Dr. Christison as the result of his examination of liflerem specimens of impure commercial scammony. Resin Calcareous. 64-G 5(5-6 43-3 Amylaceous. 37 0 fr'2-0 Culcareo-amylaceous. 42-4 Gum 6-8 5 0 8-2 9-0 7-2 7-8 Chalk 25-0 31-6 — 18-6 Fecula — 1-4 4-0 20-0 10-4 13-2 Lignin and sand 5-2 7-1 7-8 9»> ,\> 13-4 9-4 Water 5-2 6-4 12-0 7-5 10-4 100 0 100 3 101 S 100-2 100 5 101-8 Scammon i um.—Scilla. PART r. are of good quality on the outside, and inferior within. (Bull, N. Y. Joura. of Pharm., i. 7.) It has been suggested, in this uncertainty as to the strength of the scammony of the shops, whether it might not be best to abandon its inter- nal nse altogether, and to employ only the resin, which is of uniform strength. Indeed, the resin has been officinally substituted for the gum-resin in that im- portant preparation, the compound extract of colocynth. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia it is directed that 75 percent, of the drug should be soluble in ether, in the British from 80 to 90 per cent. Both require that it should not effervesce with muriatic acid, and that water heated with it should i) it give a blue colour with tincture of iodine; the former test indicating the absence of chalk, the latter of farinaceous matters. Factitious Scammony. Montpellier Scammony. Much spurious scammony is manufactured in the south of France, said by Guibourt to be made from the expressed juice of Cynanchum Monspeliacum, incorporated with various resins, and other purgative substances. M. Thorel, however, a pharmaceutist of Aval- Ion, denies that this plant is employed in its preparation. (Journ. de Pharm., xx. 107.) It has been occasionally imported into the United States, and sold as Smyrna scammony. It is usually in flat semicircular cakes, four or five inches in diameter, and six or eight lines thick, blackish both externally and within, very hard, compact, rather heavy, of a somewhat shining and resinous fracture, a feeble balsamic odour wholly different from that of genuine scammony, and a very bitter nauseous taste. When rubbed with the moistened finger it becomes dark- gray, unctuous, and tenacious. We have seen another substance sold as Smyrna scammony, which was obviously spurious, consisting of blackish, circular, flat cakes, or fragments of such cakes, rather more than half an inch thick, very light, penetrated with small holes, as if worm-eaten, and when broken exhibiting an irregular, cellular, spongy texture. Dr. Pereira described a factitious substance sold as Smyrna scammony, which was in circular flat cakes about half an inch thick, blackish, and of a slaty aspect, breaking with difficulty, of a dull black fracture, and of the sp. gr. 1412. Moistened and rubbed it had the smell of guaiac, which could also be detected by chemical tests. Medical Properties and Uses. Scammony is an energetic cathartic, apt to occasion griping, and sometimes operating with harshness. It was known to the ancient Greek physicians, and was much employed by the Arabians, who not only gave it as a purgative, but also applied it externally for the cure of various cutaneous diseases. It may be used in all cases of torpid bowels, when a powerful impression is desired; but, on account of its occasional violence, it is seldom administered, except in combination with other cathartics, the action of which it promotes, while its own harshness is mitigated. It should be given in emulsion with mucilage, sugar, almonds, liquorice, or other demulcent; and its disposition to gripe may be counteracted by the addition of an aromatic. The dose is from five to fifteen grains of pure scammony, from ten to thirty of that commonly found in the market. Off. Prep, of the Root. Scammonioe Resina, Br. Off. Prep, of Scammony. Confectio Scammonii, Br.; Extractum Colocynthi- dis Composition, Br.; Pilula Colocynthidis Comp., Br.; Pilula Colocynthidis et Hyoscyami, Br.; Pulvis Scammonii Comp., Br.: Resina Scammonii, U. S SCILLA. U. S., Br. /Squill. The bulb of Scilla maritima. U. S. Urginea Scilla, Steinheil. The Bulb, sliced and dried. Br. Scille, Fr.; Meerzwiebel, Germ.; Scilla, Ilal.; Cebolla albarrana, Span. Scilla. Sex. Syst. Hexandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Liliaceaj. Scilla. 761 PART I. Gen. Ch. Corolla six-petaled, spreading, deciduous. Filaments thread-like Willd. Scilla maritima.. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 125; Woodv. Med.Bot. p. 45, t. 255 ■— Squjlla maritima. Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 591; Carson, Illnst. of Med. Bot. ii. 46, pi. 89. ~TKIs"Ts a perennial plant, with fibrous roots proceeding from the bottom of a large bulb, which sends forth several long, lanceolate, pointed, some- what undulated, shining, deep-green leaves. From the midst of the leaves a round, smooth, succulent flower-stem rises, from one to three feet high, termi- nating in a long, close spike of whitish flowers. These are destitute of calyx, and stancTon purplish peduncles, at the base of each of which is a linear, twisted, deciduous floral leaf. The squill grows on the sea-coast of Spain, France, Italy. Greece, and the other countries bordering on the Mediterranean. The bulb is the officinal portion. It is generally dried for use; but is sometimes imported into this country in the recent state packed in sand. Properties. The fresh bulb is pear-shaped, usually larger than a man’s fist, sometimes as large as the head of a child, and consists of fleshy scales attenu- ated at their edges, closely applied over each other, and invested by exterior scales so thin and dry as to appear to constitute a membranous coat. There are two varieties, distinguished as the red and white squill. In the former, the ex- terior coating is of a deep reddish-brown "colour, and the inner scales have a whitish rosy or very light pink epidermis, with a yellowish-white parenchyma; in the latter, the whole bulb is white. They do not differ in medicinal virtue The bulb abounds in a viscid, very acrid juice, which causes it to inflame and even excoriate the skin when much handled. By drying, this acrimony is very much diminished, with little loss of medicinal power. The bulb loses about four- fifths of its weight in the process. Yogel found 100 parts of fresh squill to be reduced to 18 by desiccation. The process is somewhat difficult, in consequence of the abundance and viscidity of the juice. The bulb is cut into thin transverse slices, and the pieces dried separately by artificial or solar heat. The outer and central scales are rejected, the former being dry and destitute of activity, the latter too fleshy and mucilaginous. Dried squill, as found in our shops, is in irregular oblong pieces, often more or less contorted, of a dull yellowish-white colour with a reddish or rosy tint, sometimes entirely white, slightly diaphanous, brittle and pulverizable when per- fectly dry, but often flexible from the presence of moisture, for which they have a great affinity. Occasionally a parcel will be found consisting of vertical slices, some of which adhere together at the base. The odour is very feeble, the taste bitter, nauseous, and acrid. The virtues of squill are extracted by water, alcohol, and vinegar. It was analyzed by Yogel; and, more recently (A.D. 1856), by M. J. H. Marais, who found, in 100 parts, 30 of mucilage, 15 of sugar, 8 of tannin, 10 of a red, acid colouring matter, 2 of a yellow, acid, odorous colouring matter, 1 of fatty mat- ter, 1 of scillitin, 5 of salts, and traces of iodine. (Journ. de Pharm., Fev. 1857, p. 12F)~Examined by the microscope, the bulb is seen to be pervaded by innumerable minute acicular crystals, consisting of the salts of squill, chiefly, according to M. Marais, carbonate of lime, with a little chloride of calcium. (Ibid.) Water distilled from it had neither taste nor smell, and was drunk by Vogel to the amount of six ounces without effect. The acrid principle, there- fore, is not volatile. The substance named scillitin by Yogel was soluble in water, alcohol, and vinegar; but was considerecTYy M. Tillov, of Dijon, to be a compound of the proper active principle of squill with gum and uncrystalliza- ble sugar. The scillitin, obtained by the latter experimenter, was insoluble in water and dilute acids, soluble in alcohol, exceedingly acrid and bitter, and very powerful in its influence on the system. A single grain produced the death of a strong dog. The process of Tilloy may be seen in former editions Scilla. PART I, of this work. The scillitin obtained by him was still impure. Labourdais be- lieved vhat he had obtained it in an isolated state by means of animal charcoal. A decoction of squill was first treated with acetate of lead to separate the viscid matters, was then filtered and agitated in the cold with purified animal charcoal in fine powder, and afterwards allowed to rest. The charcoal gradually subsided, carrying with it the bitter and colouring principles. The liquid being decanted, the solid matter was dried, and treated with hot alcohol, which ac- quired an insupportable bitterness. The alcohol, being distilled off, left a milky liquid, which was allowed to evaporate spontaneously. The scillitin thus pro- cured was solid, uncrystallized, easily decomposable by heat, almost caustic to the taste, not deliquescent, neuter, but slightly soluble in water, to which, how- ever, it imparted a very great bitterness, very soluble in alcohol, and dissolved, but at the same time decomposed by concentrated sulphuric and nitric acids, imparting to the former a purple colour, instantly becoming black. (Ann. de Therap., 1849, p. 145.) L. F. Bley succeeded in obtaining scillitin, by the pro- cess of Labourdais, in long flexible needle-shaped crystals, by simply allowing the last alcoholic solution to evaporate spontaneously. (Arch, der Pharm., lxi. 141.) Landerer obtained a crystalline principle from fresh squill, by treating the bruised bulb with dilute sulphuric acid, concentrating the solution, neutral- izing it with lime, drying the precipitate, exhausting this with alcohol, and evaporating the tincture, which, on cooling, deposited the substance in question in prismatic crystals. It was bitter, but not acrid, insoluble in water or the volatile oils, slightly soluble in alcohol, and, according to Landerer, capable of neutralizing the acids. (Cht'islison',s Dispensatory.) Wittstein inferred from his experiments that the bitterness and acrimony of squill reside in distinct principles. (See Pharm. Journ., x. 359.) By a more recent analysis, Tilloy was induced to believe that there were two active principles in squill; one a resin- oid substance very acrid and poisonous, soluble in alcohol and not in ether, the other a very bitter principle, yellow, and soluble in water and alcohol. The acrid principle, in the dose of about three-quarters of a grain, killed a dog. The bitter principle is much less powerful. Both are contained in the matters ex- tracted from squill by means of animal charcoal. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiii. 410.1 M. Marais obtained results somewhat different from those of his predecessors. The scillitin procured by him is uncrystallizable, hvgrometric but not deli- quescent, insoluble in water, and very soluble in alcohol and ether, even cold. It is in minute semitransparent spangles, of a pale-yellow colour, and of an intense, pungent bitterness, which is increased by the presence of water. Sul- phuric acid dissolves it, producing a colour precisely similar to that which the same acid causes with cod-liver oil. Nitric acid also dissolves it, causing a bright-red colour, which rapidly disappears. Muriatic acid has no effect on it. The hydrated alkalies disengage ammonia, showing that it contains nitrogen. Ammonia and potassa do not dissolve it, but remove its bitterness. Tannic acid gives with it a pale-yellow precipitate. It approaches the alkaloids in character; as it has an alkaline reaction, combines with acetic acid, and con- tains nitrogen. In its effects on the system, it resembles the acrid narcotics, proving fatal in the dose of three-quarters of a grain. It first vomits and purges violently, then acts as a narcotic, and finally paralyzes the heart. In fatal doses it occasions violent inflammation of the alimentary canal. Applied endermically, it acts much more rapidly than by the mouth, and now almost exclusively as a narcotic. A vigorous dog was killed in twenty-two minutes by six-tenths of a grain applied in this way. M. Marais obtains it by making a concentrated tincture of dry squill with alcohol of 0 56, precipitating with milk of lime, shaking the whole with ether, decanting the supernatant liquid, washing the magma with a fresh portion of ether till wholly deprived of bitterness, uniting the liquors, and distilling until there remains in the retort only a^eAill PART I. Sc ilia—Scoparius. 763 with the scillitin and a little fatty matter. This is then evaporated as quickly as possible with a gentle heat, and the residue treated with alcohol of 0 90, which dissolves the scillitin, and leaves the fatty matter The alcoholic solution evaporated to dryness, yields the scillitin, which is to be immediately enclosed in a well-stopped bottle. [ILid., xxi. 128. Fev. 1857. When kept in a dry place, squill retains its virtues for a long time: hut if exposed to moisture it soon becomes mouldy. Medical Properties and Uses. Squill is expectorant, diuretic, and in large doses emetic and purgative. In overdoses it has been known to occasion hyper- catharsis, strangury, bloody urine, and fatal inflammation of the stomach and bowels. The Greek physicians employed it as a medicine; and it has retained to the present period a deserved popularity. As an expectorant, it is used both in cases of deficient and of superabundant secretion from the bronchial mu- cous membrane; in the former case usually combined with tartar emetic or ipe- cacuahna, in the latter frequently with the stimulant expectorants. In both instances, it operates by stimulating the vessels of the lungs; and, where the inflammatory action in this organ is considerable, as in pneumonia and severe catarrh, the use of squill should be preceded by depletory measures. In drop- sical diseases it is very much employed, especially in connection with calomel, which is supposed to excite absorption, while the squill increases the secretory action of the kidneys. It is thought to succeed best in these complaints, in the absence of general inflammatory excitement. On account of its great uncer- tainty and occasional harshness, is is very seldom prescribed as an emetic, except in infantile croup or catarrh, in which it is usually given in the form of syrup or oxymel. AVhen given in substance it is most conveniently administered in the form of pill. The dose, as a diuretic or expectorant, is one or two grains repeated two or three times a day, and gradually increased till it produces slight nausea, or evinces its action upon the kidneys or lungs. From six to twelve grains will generally vomit. The vinegar and syrup of squill are officinal, and much used. An acetic extract has been prepared by Mr. F. D. Niblett, by digesting a pound of squill with three fluidounces of acetic acid and a pint of distilled water, with a gentle heat, for forty-eight hours, then expressing, and. without filtration, evaporating to a proper consistence. One grain is equal to about three of the powder. (Pharm. Jourv., xii. 133.) Off. Prep. Acetum Scillae, U. S.; Pilulae Scillae Composite; Syrupus Scillae, Br.; Syrupus Scillae Comp., U. S.; Tinctura Scillae. W. SCOPARIUS. U.S.,Br. Broom. Broom- Tops. Br. The tops of Cytisus Seoparius. U. S. Sarothamnus Scoparins, Wimmer. The Tops, fresh and drfeUfr. Genet a balais, Fr.; Gemeine Besenginster, Germ.; Scoparia, Ital.; Retama, Span. Cytisus. Sex. Syst. Diadelphia Decandria. — Nat. Ord. Fabacem or Legu- »minos®. ~7}m. Gh. Calyx bilabiate, upper lip generally entire, lower somewhat three- toothed. Vexillum ovate, broad. Carina very obtuse, enclosing the stamens and pistils. Stamens monadelphous. Legume piano-compressed, many-seeded, not glandular. (De Cand.) Cytisus Seoparius. De Cand. Prodrom. ii. 154. — Spartium Scopamum. WTld. Sp>. PlanCili. 933; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 413, t. 150. This is a common Euiopean shrub, cultivated in our gardens, from three to eight feet high, with numerous straight, pentangular, bright-green, very flexible branches, and small, oblong, downy leaves, usually ternate, but on the upper part of the plant some- Scoparius.—Scutellaria. TART I. times simple. The flowers are numerous, papilionaceous, large, showy, of a golden-yellow colour, and solitary upon short axillary peduncles. The seeds are contained in a compressed legume, which is hairy at the sutures. The whole plant has a bitter nauseous taste, and, when bruised, a strong pe- culiar odour. The tops of the branches are the officinal portion; but the seeds also are used, and, while they possess similar virtues, have the advantage of keeping better. Water and alcohol extract their active properties. According to Cadet de Gassicourt, the flowers contain volatile oil, fatty matter, wrax, chlo- rophyll, yellow colouring matter, tannin, a sweet substance, mucilage, osmazome, albumen, and lignin. Dr. Stenhouse has separated from them two principles, one of which called scoyarin he believes to be the diuretic principle, and the other, named syartein, to be narcotic. The former is in stellate crystals, easily dissolved by boiling water and alcohol, and is obtained by purifying a yellow gelatinous substance deposited upon the evaporation of the decoction. It may be given in the dose of four or five grains. The latter was obtained by distilla- tion from the mother-waters of the scoparin. It is a colourless liquid, having a peculiar bitter taste, and all the properties of a volatile organic base. It ap- pears to have narcotic properties. But we need more definite information on the subject. (Annuaire de Therap., 1853, p. 153.) Medical Properties and Uses. Broom is diuretic and cathartic, and in large doses emetic, and has been employed with great advantage in dropsical com- plaints, in which it was recommended by Mead, Cullen, and others. Cullen pre- scribed it in the form of decoction, made by boiling half an ounce of the fresh tops in a pint of w7ater down to half a pint, of which he gave a fluidounce every hour till it operated by stool or urine. It is a domestic remedy in Great Britain, but is seldom used in this country. The seeds may be given in pow'der, in the dose of ten or fifteen grains. Of'. Prepi. Decoctum Scoparii, Br.; Succus Scoparii, Br. W. SCUTELLARIA. U.S. Secondary. /Scullcap. The herb of Scutellaria lateriflora. U. S. Scutellaria. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Gymnospermia.—Nat. Ord. Labiatae. Gen. Ch. Calyx bilabiate; lips entire; mouth closed by a helmet-shaped lid after the corolla falls. Corolla bilabiate, upper lip vaulted, lower dilated, con- vex; tube of the corolla bent. Several species of Scutellaria have attracted attention. Scutellaria qalericu- conujuxclEuropean scullcap. which also grows wild in this country, has a feeble, somewhat alliaceous odour, and a bitterish taste. It has been employed in intermittents, and externally in old ulcers. Dr. R. W. Evans, of Canada West, has found it useful in epilepsy; but to effect a cure it must be continued, he says, for five or six months. He makes an infusion with two ounces of the herb and eight ounces of water, and gives a fluidounce every eight hours, doubling the quantity after a week. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xvii. 495.) Another indi- genous species, the S inteqri folia. of which S. hi/ssoyifolia, Linn., is considered by some as a variety, is intensely bitter, and might probably be found useful as a tonic. S. lateriflora is the only officinal species. Scutellaria lateriflora. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 172; Gray, Manual of the Bot. of North. U. S., p. 315. This is an indigenous perennial herb, with a stem erect, much branched, quadrangular, smooth, and one or two feet high. The leaves are ovate, acute, dentate, subcordate upon the stem, opposite, and supported upon long petioles. The flowers are small, of a pale-blue colour, and disposed in long, lateral, leafy racemes. The tube of the corolla is elongated, the upper PART L Scutellaria.—Senega. lip concave and entire, the lower three-lobed. The plant grows in moist places, by the sides of ditches and ponds, in all parts of the Union. To the senses scullcap does not indicate, by any peculiar taste or smell, the possession of medicinal virtues.. It is even destitute of the aromatic properties which are found in many of the labiate plants. When taken internally, it pro- duces no very obvious effects. Notwithstanding this apparent inertness, it ob tained, at one period, extraordinary credit throughout the United States, as a preventive of hydrophobia, and was even thought to be useful in the disease itself. A strong infusion of the plant was given in the dose of a teacupful, re- peated several times a day, and continued for three or four months after the bite was received; while the herb itself wras applied to the wound. Strong tes- timony was adduced in favour of its prophylactic powers; but it has already shared the fate, which in this case is no doubt deserved, of numerous other specifics against hydrophobia, which have been brought into temporary popu- larity, only to be speedily abandoned. Nevertheless, it is thought by some prac- titioners to have valuable therapeutic properties; and Drs. Ariel Hunton and C. II. Cleaveland, of Vermont, speak in strong terms of its efficacy as a nervine. They have employed it in neuralgic and convulsive affections, chorea, delirium tremens, and nervous exhaustion from fatigue or over-excitement, and have found it highly advantageous. Dr. Cleaveland says that he prefers it to all other nervines or antispasmodics, except where an immediate effect is desirable. He prefers the form of infusion, which he prepares by adding half an ounce of tho dried leaves to a teacupful of water, and allows the patient to drink ad libitum. (Am. Journ.of Pharm., xxiii. 370, also N. J. Med. Reporter, v. 13.) Two preparations are now used; one called scutellarine, though erroneously, as it has no claim to be considered a pure proximate principle, the other a fluid extract. The so-called scutellarine is prepared by mixing a concentrated tinc- ture with water, precipitating by alum, and then washing and drying. Dr. Cleaveland gives it in a dose varying from one to three or four grains, and finds very happy effects from it in quieting nervous disorders. (N. J. Med. Reporter, viii. 121.) The fluid extract, prepared by the Messrs. Tilden, is used in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. Dr. Joseph Bates, of New Lebanon, N. Y., speaks highly of is as a nervine. (Post. Med. and S. Journ., Iii. 337.) W. SENEGA. U.S.,Br Seneha. The root of Polvgala Senega. U. S. The dried Root. Br. Polygale de Virginie, Fr.; Klapperschlangenwurzel, Germ.; Poligala. Virginiana, ltal. I’olygala. Sex. Si/st. Diadelphia Octandria.— Nat. Ord. Polygalacem. Gen. Ch. Calyx five-leaved, with two leaflets wing-shaped and coloured. Legume obcordate, twro-celled. Willd. Besides F. Senega, two other species have attracted some attention in Europe —P. amara and P. vulgaris—as remedies in chronic pectoral affections; but as they are not natives oTtliTs country, and are never used by practitioners here, they do not merit particular notice. Polygala Senega. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 894 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Pot. ii. 97 ; Barton, Med. Bot. ii. 111. This unostentatious plant has a perennial branching root, from which several erect, simple, smooth, round, leafy stems annually rise, from nine inches to a foot in height. The stems are occasionally tinged with red or purple below, but are green near the top. The leaves are alternate or scattered, lanceolate, pointed, smooth, bright-green on the upper surface, palei beneath, and sessile or supported on very short footstalks. The flowers are small and white, and form a close spike at the summit of the stem. The calyx 766 Senega. PART I. is their most conspicuous part. It consists of five leaflets, two of which are wing-shaped, white, and larger than the others. The corolla is small and closed. '1 he capsules are small, much compressed, obcordate, two-valved and two-celled, with two oblong-ovate, blackish seeds, pointed at one end. This species of Polygala, commonly called Seneka snakeroot. grows wild in all parts of the United States, but most abundantly in the southern .and western sections, where the root is collected for sale. It is brought into market in bales weighing from fifty to four hundred pounds. Properties. As the root occurs in commerce, it is of various sizes, from that of a straw to that of the little finger, presenting a thick knotty head, which ex- hibits traces of the numerous stems. It is tapering, branched, variously twisted, often.marked with crowded annular protuberances, and with a projecting keel- like line, extending along its whole length. The epidermis is corrugated, trans- versely cracked, of a yellowish-brown colour in the young roots, and brownish- gray in the old. In the smaller branches the colour is a lighter yellow. The bark is hard and resinous, and contains the active principles of the root. The central portion is ligneous, white, and quite inert, and should be rejected in the preparation of the powder. The colour of this is gray. The odour of seneka is peculiar, strong in the fresh root, but faint in the dried. The taste is at first sweetish and mucilaginous, but after chewing becomes somewhat pungent and acrid, leaving a peculiar irritating sensation in the fauces. These properties, as well as the medical virtues of the root, are extracted by boiling water and by alcohol. Diluted alcohol is an excellent solvent. The root has been analyzed by Gehlen, Peschier of Geneva, Feneulle of Cambray, Dulong D’Astafort, Folchi, and Trommsdorff, and more recently by M. Quevenne. The senegin of Gehlen, though supposed at one time to be the active principle, has been ascer- tained to be a complex substance, and to have no just claim to the rank assigned to it. From a comparison of the results obtained by the above-mentioned chemists, it would appear that seneka contains, 1. a peculiar acrid principle, which M. Quevenne considers to be an acid, and has named polygalic acid; 2. a yellow colouring matter, of a bitter taste, insoluble or nearly so in water, but soluble in ether and alcohol; 3. a volatile principle considered by some as an essential oil, but thought by Quevenne to possess acid properties, and named by him virgineic acid; 4. pectic acid or pectin; 5. tannic acid of the variety which precipitates iron green; 6. gum; 7. albumen; 8. cerin; 9. fixed oil; 10. woody fibre; and 11. saline and earthy substances, as the carbonates, sulphates, and phosphates of lime and potassa, chloride of potassium, alumina, magnesia, silica, and iron. The virtues of seneka appear to reside chiefly, if not exclusively, in the acrid principle which M. Quevenne called polygalic acid, and which he considered closely analogous to saponin. He obtained it pure by the following process. Powdered seneka is exhausted by alcohol of 33°, and so much of the alcohol is distilled off as to bring the resulting tincture to the consistence of syrup. The residue is treated with ether, in order to remove the fatty matter. The liquid upon standing deposits a precipitate, which is separated by filtration, and is then mixed with water. To the turbid solution thus formed alcohol is added, which facilitates the production of a white precipitate, consisting chiefly of polygalic acid. The liquid is allowed to stand for several days, that the pre- cipitate may be fully formed. The supernatant liquid being decanted, the pre- cipitate is drained upon a filter, and, being removed while yet moist, is dissolved by the aid of heat in alcohol of 36°. The solution is boiled with purified animal charcoal, and filtered while hot. Upon cooling it deposits the principle in ques- tion in a state of purity. Thus obtained, polygalic acid is a white powder, in- odorous, and of a taste at first slight, but soon becoming pungent and acrid, and producing a very painful sensation in the throat. It is fixed, unalterable in the air, inflammable, soluble in water slowly when cold and rapidly with the aid PART I. Senega. 767 of heat, soluble in all proportions in boiling absolute alcohol, which deposits most of it on cooling, quite insoluble in ether and in the fixed and volatile oils, and possessed of the properties of reddening litmus and neutralizing the alka- lies. Its constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. M. Quevenne founu it, when given to dogs, to occasion vomiting, and much embarrassment in respi- ration, and in large quantities to destroy life. Dissection exhibited evidences of inflammation of the lungs; and frothy mucus was found in the stomach, oesopha- gus, and superior portion of the trachea, showing the tendency of this substance to increase the mucous secretion, and explaining in part the beneficial influence of seneka in croup. (Journ. de Pharm., xxii. 449, and xxiii. 227.) M. Bolley confirms the opinion of Quevenne as to the strong analogy between polygalic acid or senegin and saponin, if not their absolute identity, and considers them boflTas glucosides, resolvable by muriatic acid into glucose and a peculiar sub- stance called sopogenin. He represents the composition of senegin by the for- mula C3(.H.2tO30T( Seesfm. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 45.) From the experiments of M. Quevenne it also appears that seneka yields its virtues to water, cold or hot, and to boiling alcohol; and that the extracts ob- tained by means of these liquids have the sensible properties of the root. But, under the influence of heat, a portion of the acrid principle unites with the colouring matter and coagulated albumen, and thus becomes insoluble in water; and the decoction, therefore, is not so strong as the infusion, if time is allowed, in the formation of the latter, for the full action of the menstruum. If it be de- sirable to obtain the virtues of the root in the form of an aqueous extract, the infusion should be prepared on the principle of displacement; as it is thus most concentrated, and consequently requires less heat in its evaporation. In forming an infusion of seneka, the temperature of the water, according to M. Quevenne, should not exceed 104° F. The roots of Panax quinquefolium or ginseng are frequently mixed with the seneka, but are easily distinguishable by their shape and taste. Another root has been occasionally observed in parcels of seneka, supposed to be that of Gril- lenia trifoliata. This would be readily distinguished by its colour and shape (see Gillenia), and by its bitter taste without acrimony. One of the most char- acteristic marks of seneka is the projecting line running the whole length of the root, and appearing as though a thread were placed beneath the bark, and, being attached at the upper end, were drawn at the lower, so as to give the root a contorted shape. Medical Properties and Uses. Seneka is a stimulating expectorant and di- uretic, and in large doses emetic and cathartic. It appears indeed to excite more or less all the secretions, proving occasionally diaphoretic and emmena- gogue, and increasing the flow of saliva. Its action, however, is especially di- rected to the lungs; and its expectorant virtues are those for which it is chiefly employed. It was introduced into practice about a century ago-by Dr. Tennant, of Virginia., who recommended it as a cure for the bite of the rattlesnake, and in various pectoral complaints. As an expectorant it is employed in cases not attended with acute inflammatory action, or in which the inflammation has been in great measure subdued. It is peculiarly useful in chronic catarrhal affections, the secondary stages of croup, and in peripneumonia notha after sufficient de- pletion. By Dr. Archer, of Maryland, it was recommended in the early stages of croup; but is now seldom given, unless in combination with squill and an antimoniaf as in the Syrupus Scillee Compositus. Employed so as to purge and vomit, it has proved useful in rheumatism; and some cases of dropsy are said to have been cured by it. It has also been recommended in amenorrhoea. The dose of powdered seneka is from ten to twenty grains; but the medicine is more frequently administered in decoction. (See Decoctum Senegee.) A syrup and alcoholic extract are officinal. The dose of the former is one or two fiui- Senega.—Senna. PAKT r. drachms, of the latter from one to three grains. A tincture is directed in the Br. Pharmacopoeia. Polygalic acid may be employed in the dose of from the fourth of a grain to a grain, and may be administered either in pill or powder, or dissolved in hot water, with the addition, in any of its forms, of gum and sugar to obtund its acrimony. A formula for its preparation, by Professor Procter, has been published in the Am. Journ. of Pliarm., March, 1860, p. 150. Off. Prep. Decoctum Senegas, TJ. S.; Extractum Senegas Alcoholicum, U. S.; Infusum Senegae, Br.; Syrupus Scillas Compositus, U. S.; Syrupus Senegse, U. S.; Tinctura Senegae, Br. W. SENNA. U.S. Senna. The leaflets of Cassia acutifolia (Delile), of Cassia obovata (De Candolle), und of Cassia elongata (Lemaire). U.S. Off. Syn. SENNA ALEXANDRINA. Alexandrian Senna. Cassia lan- ceolata, Lamarck; and Cassia obovata. The Leaves. Br. SENNA INDICA. Tinnivelly Senna. Cassia elongata. The Leaves, from plants cultivated in Southern India. Br. S6n<;, Fr.; Germ.; Senna, Ilal., Fort.; Sen, Span. Cassia. See CASSTA FISTULA. The plants which yield senna belong to the genus Cassia, of which several species contribute to furnish the drug. These were confounded together by Linnaeus in a single species, which he named Cassia Senna. Since his time the subject has been more thoroughly investigated, especially by Delile, who accom- panied the French expedition to Egypt, and had an opportunity of examining the plant in its native country. Botanists at present distinguish at least three species, C. acutifolia, C. obovata, and C. elongata, as the source of commercial senna; and it is probable that two others, C. lanceolata of Forskhal and C. /Elhiopica of Guibourt, contribute towards it. The first three are recognised by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. 1. Cassia acutifolia. Delile, Flore d'Egypte, Ixxv. tab. 27, f. 1. — C. lanceo- lala. De Candolle; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 34, pi. 27. This is described as a small undershrub, two or three feet high, with a straight, woody, branching, whitish stem ; but, according to Landerer, the senna plant attains the height of eight or ten feet in the African deserts. The leaves are alternate and pinnate, with glandless footstalks, and two small narrow pointed stipules at the base. The leaflets, of which from four to six pairs belong to each leaf, are almost ses- sile, oval-lanceolate, acute, oblique at their base, nerved, from half an inch to an inch long, and of a yellowish-green colour. The flowers are yellow, and in axil- lary spikes. The fruit is a flat, elliptical, obtuse, membranous, smooth, grayish- brown, bivalvular legume, about an inch long and half an inch broad, scarcely if at all curved, and divided into six or seven cells, each containing a hard, heart- shaped, ash-coloured seed. C. acutifolia growTs wild in great abundance in Upper Egypt, Nubia, Seunaar, and other parts of Africa. This species furnishes the greater part of the variety known in commerce by the name of Alexandria senna. 2. Cassia obovata. Colladon, Monographic des Casses; De Cand. Prodrom. ii. 492; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 35, pi. 28. The stem of this species is rather shorter than that of C. acutifolia, rising to the height of only a foot and a half. The leaves have from five to seven pairs of leaflets, which are obovate, very obtuse, sometimes raucronate, in other respects similar to those of the pre- ceding species. The flowers are in axillary spikes, of which the peduncles are longer than the leaves of the plant. The legumes are very much compressed, curved almost into the kidney form, of a greenish-brown colour, and covered with a very short down, which is perceptible only by the aid of a magnifying PART I. Senna. 769 glass. They contain from eight to ten seeds. The C. oblusata of Hayne, with obovate, truncated, emargiuate leaflets, is probably a mere variety of this spe- cies. The plant, which according to Merat is annual, grows wild in Syria, Egypt, and Senegambia; and is said to have been cultivated successfully in Italy, Spain, and the West Indies. It yields the variety of senna called in Europe Aleppo senna, and contributes to the Alexandrian. 3. Cassia elongata. Lemaire, Journ. de Pharm. vii. 345; Fee, Journ. de Chim. Med. vi. 232; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. i. 36, pi. 29. This name was conferred by M. Lemaire upon the plant from which the India senna of com- merce is derived. The botanical description was completed by M. Fee, from dried specimens of the leaves and fruit found by him in unassorted parcels of this variety of senna. Dr. Wallieh afterwards succeeded in raising the plant from seeds found in a parcel of senna taken to Calcutta from Arabia; and it has been described by Dr. Royle, Wight & Arnott, and Dr. Lindley. As usually grown, it is annual; but with care it may be made to live through the year, and then assumes the character of an undershrub. It has an erect, smooth stem, and pin- nate leaves, with from four to eight pairs of leaflets. These are nearly sessile, lanceolate, obscurely mucronate, oblique at the base, smooth above and some- what downy beneath, with the veins turned inwards so as to form a wavy line immediately within the edge of the leaflet. The most striking character of the leaflet is its length, which varies from an inch to twenty lines. The petioles are without glands; the stipules minute, spreading, and semi-hastate. The flowers are bright-yellow, and arranged in axillary and terminal racemes, rather longer than the leaves. The legume is oblong, membranous, tapering abruptly at the base, rounded at the apex, and an inch and a half long by somewhat more than half an inch broad. This plant is a native of the southern parts of Arabia. It has been said also to grow in the interior of India, and is at present cultivated at Tinnevelly for medical use. Besides the three officinal species above described, the C. lanceolate of Forskhal, found by that author growing in the deserts of Arabia, is admitted by Lindley and others as a distinct species. Some difference, however, of opinion exists upon this point. De Candolle considered it a variety of the C. acutifolia of Delile, from which it differs chiefly in having leaflets with glandular petioles; and, as Forskhal’s description preceded that of Delile, he designated the species by the name of C. lanceolata. Forskhal’s plant has been supposed by some to be tbe source of the India or Mocha senna; but the leaflets in this va- riety are much longer than those of C. lanceolata, from which the plant differs also in having no gland on the petiole. Niebuhr informs us that he found the Alexandria senna growing in the Arabian territory of Abuarish, whence it is taken by the Arabs to Mecca and Jedda. This is probably the C. lanceolata of Forskhal. It is highly probable that this species is the source of a variety of senna which has been brought to this market under the name of Mecca senna.* Cassia JEthiopica of Guibourt (C. ovata of Merat), formerly confounded with * The following are the botanical characters of this and the next-mentioned species. 1. C. lanceolata. Eorskhal; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 259. “Leaflets in four or live pairs, never more; oblong, and either acute or obtuse, not at all ovate or lanceolate, and per- fectly free from downiness even when young; the petioles have constantly a small round brown gland, a little above the base. The pods are erect, oblong, tapering to the base, obtuse, turgid, mucronate, rather falcate, especially when young, at which time they are sparingly covered with coarse scattered hairs.” [Lindley.) 2. C. JEthiovica. Guibourt, Hist. Ab. des Drogues, $c. ii. 219; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 259. The plant is about eighteen inches high. The footstalks have a gland at the base, and another between each pair of leaflets. There are from three to five pairs of leaflets, which are pubescent, oval-lanceolate, from seven to nine lines in length, and three or four in breadth, rather shorter and less acute than those of C. acutifolia. The legume is flat, imootli, not reniform, rounded, about an inch long, with from three to five seeds. 770 Senna. PART I. C. acutifolia, is considered by Dr. Lindley as undoubtedly a distinct species. It /rows in Nubia, Fezzan to the south of Tripoli, and probably, according to Guibourt, throughout Ethiopia. It is from this plant that the Tripoli senna of commerce is derived. Commercial History. Several varieties of this valuable drug are known in commerce. Of these, four have been received in America, the Alexandria, the Tripoli, the India, and the Mecca senna. 1. Alexandria Senna. Though the name of this variety is derived from the Egyptian port at which it is shipped, it is in fact gathered very far in the inte- rior. The Alexandria senna does not consist exclusively of the product of one species of Cassia. The history of its preparation is not destitute of interest. The senna plants of Upper Egypt yield two crops annually, one in spring and the other in autumn. They are gathered chiefly in the country beyond Sienne. The natives cut the plants, and, having dried them in the sun, strip off the leaves and pods, which they pack in bales, and send to Boulac, in the vicinity of Cairo, the great entrepot for this article of Egyptian commerce. This senna from Upper Egypt, consisting chiefly though not exclusively of the product of C. fojla, was here formerly mixed with the leaflets of C. obovata, brought from other parts of Egypt, and even from Syria, with the leaves of Cynanchum olesefolium (C. Argel of Delile), known commonly by the name oiargel or orguel, and sometimes with those of Teyhrosia Avollinea of De Candolle, a leguminous plant growing in Egypt and Nubia According to M. Royer, the proportions in which the three chief constituents of this mixture were added together, were five parts of C. acutifolia, three of C. obovata, and two of Cynanchum. Thus prepared, the senna was again packed in bales, and transmitted to Alexandria. Rut at present there is no such uniformity in the constitution of Alexandria senna; and, though the three chief ingredients may still sometimes be found in it, they are not in the same fixed proportions; and not unfrequently the Cynan- chum leaves are wholly wanting. This variety of senna is often called in French pharmaceutic works sene de la palthe, a name derived from an impost formerly laid upon it by the Ottoman Porte. A parcel of Alexandria senna, as it was formerly brought to market, consisted of the following ingredients: — 1. The leaflets of C. acutifolia, characterized by their acute form, and their length almost always less than an inch; 2. the leaf- lets of C. obovata, known by their rounded very obtuse summit, which is some- times furnished with a small projecting point, and by their gradual diminution in breadth towards their base; 3. the pods, broken leafstalks, flowers, and fine fragments of other parts of one or both of these species; 4. the leaves of Cynan- chum olesefolium, which are distinguishable by their length, almost always more than an inch, their greater thickness and firmness, the absence of any visible lateral nerves on their under surface, their somewhat lighter colour, and the regularity uf their base. In this last character they strikingly differ from the genuine senna leaflets, which, from whatever species derived, are always marked by obliquity at their base, one side being inserted in the petiole at a point somewhat lower than the other, and at a different angle. Discrimination between this and the other ingredients is of some importance, as the cynanchum must be considered an adulteration. It is said by the French writers to produce hypercatharsis and much irritation of the bowels; but was found by Christison and Mayer to occa- sion griping and protracted nausea, with little purgation. The flowers and fruit of the Cynanchum were also often present, the former white, and in small corymbs, the latter an ovoid follicle rather larger than an orange seed. Besides the above constituents of Alexandria senna, it occasionally contained leaflets of genuine senna, much longer than those of the acutifolia or obovata, equalling in this re- spect the Cynanchum, which they also somewhat resembled in form. They were distinguishable, however, by their greater thinness, the distinctness of their part I. Senna. 771 lateral nerves, and the irregularity of their base. The leaflets and fruit of Te* plirosia Apollinea, which have been an occasional impurity in this variety'of sennfq may be" distinguished, the former by their downy surface, their obovate- oblong, emarginate shape, their parallel unbranched lateral nerves, and by being usually folded longitudinally; the latter, by its dimensions, being from an inch to an inch and a half long, and only two lines broad. As now imported, Alex- andria senna is often quite free from the leaves of Cynanchum, and may have few or none of the leaflets of obovate senna. It is probably brought directly to Alexandria from Upper Egypt, without having undergone intermixture at Boulac or other intervening place. In Europe, this senna is said to have been sometimes adulterated with the leaflets of Gollutea arborescens or bladder senna, and the leaves of Goriaria murt\folia. a plant of Southern Europe; sai3 to be astringent and even poisonous. An account of the former of these plants is given in Part III. The leaflets of the Coriaria are ovate-lanceolate, grayish-green with a bluish tint, and are readily known, when not too much broken up, by their strongly marked midrib, and two lateral nerves running from the base nearly to the summit. They are chemically distinguished by giving a whitish precipitate with solution of gelatin, and a bluish-black one with the salts of sesquioxide of iron, proving the presence of tannin. Their poisonous properties are denied by Peschier. Accord- ing to Bouchardat, they are closely analogous to strychnia in their elfects. Ac- cording to Prof. Bentley, the adulteration of Alexandria senna with argel, though for some time suspended, has of late years been resumed, and is now practised to a considerable extent, at least in relation to the drug as it reaches the English market. (Pharm. Journ., April, 1861, p. 497.) 2. Tripoli Genuine Tripoli senna consists in general exclusively of the leaflets of one species of Cassia, formerly considered as a variety of G. acu- tifolia, but now admitted to be distinct, and named G. MtMopj.ca.^The leaflets, however, are much broken up; and it is probably on this account that the va- riety is usually less esteemed than the Alexandrian. The aspect given to it by this state of comminution, and by the uniformity of its constitution, enables the eye at once to distinguish it from the other varieties of senna. The leaflets, moreover, are shorter, less acute, thinner, and more fragile than those of C. acu- tifolia in Alexandria senna; and their nerves are much less distinct. The gen- eral opinion at one time was, that it was brought from Sennaar and Nubia to Tripoli jn caravans; but it is reasonably asked by M. Fee, how it could be af- forded at a cheaper price than the Alexandrian, if thus brought on the backs of camels a distance of eight hundred leagues through the desert. It is probably collected in Fezzan, immediately south of Tripoli. 8. India Senna. This variety is in Europe sometimes called Mocha senna, probablybecau?STrt)tained originally from that port. It derives its name of IncUa senna from the route by which it reaches us. Though produced in Arabia, it is brought to this country and Europe from Calcutta, Bombay, and possibly other ports of Hindostan. It consists of the leaflets of Cassia elongata, with some of the leafstalks and pods intermixed. The eye is at once struck by the great length and comparative narrowness of the leaflets, so that the variety may be readily distinguished. The pike-like shape of the leaflet has given rise to the name of sene de la pique, by which it is known in French pharmacy. Many of the leaf- lets have a yellowish, dark-brown, or blackish colour, probably from exposure after collection; and the variety has commonly in mass a characteristic dull tawny hue. It is generally considered inferior in purgative power. Leaflets of a senna resembling the Indian were brought by Dr. Livingstone from Southern Africa, where the plant grows abundantly. (Bentley, Pharm. Journ., xvii. 499.) A variety of India senna has reached this country, which is the produce of Uindostan, being cultivated at Tinnevelly, and probably other places in the south of the Peninsula. The plant was originally raised from seeds obtained 772 Senna PART L from the Red Sea, and is the same as that from which the common India senna is derived. The drug is exported from Madras to England, where it is known by the name of Tinnevelly senna. It is a fine unmixed variety, consisting of unbroken leaflets, from one to two or more inches long, and sometimes half an inch in their greatest breadth, thin, flexible, and of a fine green colour. 4. Mecca Senna. Since the publication of the fifth edition of this Dispensa- tory, a variety of senna has been imported under the name of Mecca senna, consisting of the leaflets, pods, broken stems, and petioles of a single species of Cassia. The leaflets are oblong-lanceolate, on the average longer and narrower than those of C. acutifolia, and shorter than those of C. elongata. The variety in mass has a yellowish or tawny hue, more like that of India than that of Alex- andria senna. May it not be the product of the C. lanceolata of Forskhal ? Landerer, however, speaks of a valuable variety of senna, characterized by the large size of the leaflets, and sold under the name of Mecca senna, which he says comes from the interior of Africa. Commercial senna is prepared for use by picking out the leaflets, and reject- ing the leafstalks, the small fragments, and the leaves of other plants. The pods are also rejected by some apothecaries; but they possess considerable cathartic power, though said to be milder than the leaves. Properties. The odour of senna is faint and sickly; the taste slightly bitter, sweetish, and nauseous. Water and diluted alcohol extract its active principles. Pure alcohol extracts them but imperfectly. (Bley and Diesel, Pharm. Central Platt, Feb. 1849, p. 126.) The leaves are said to yield about one-third of their weight to boiling water. The infusion is of a deep reddish-brown colour, and has the odour and taste of the leaves. When exposed to the air for a short time, it deposits a yellowish insoluble precipitate, supposed to result from the union of extractive matter with oxygen. The nature of this precipitate, however, is not well understood. Decoction also produces some change in the principles of senna, by which its medicinal virtues have been supposed to be impaired; but some experiments of B. Heerlein would seem to show that this opinion is incor- rect. An extract prepared by boiling down an infusion, redissolving the residue, and again boiling down to a solid consistence, was found to operate actively in a dose equivalent to a drachm of the leaves. (Pharm. Cent. Platt, A. D. 1851, p. 909.) To diluted alcohol it imparts the same reddish-brown colour as to water; but rectified alcohol and ether, digested upon the powdered leaves, become of a deep olive-green. The analysis of senna by MM. Lassaigne and Feneulle fur- nished the following results. The leaves contain — 1. a peculiar principle called cathartin; 2. chlorophyll, or the green colouring matter of leaves; 3. a fixed oil -■- ■ small quantity of volatile oil; 5. albumen; 6. a yellow colouring mat- ter; 1. mucilage; 8. salts of the vegetable acids, viz., malate and tartrate of lime and acetate of potassa; and 9. mineral salts. The pods are composed of the same principles, with the exception of chlorophyll, the place of which is supplied by a peculiar colouring matter. (Journ. de Pharm., vii. 548, and ix. 58.) Ca-, Jhartin was thought to be the active principle of senna; but upon trial it has proved to possess little power; and it is now believed to be a complex body, consisting, according to Bley and Diesel, of a mixture of resinous and extractive. matter. It is an uncrystallizable substance, having a peculiar smell, a bitter, nau- seous taste, and a reddish-yellow colour; is soluble in every proportion in water and alcohol, but insoluble in ether; and in its dry state attracts moisture from the air. It is prepared in the following manner. To a filtered decoction of senna the solution of acetate of lead is added; and the precipitate which forms is sepa- rated. A stream of hydrosulphuric acid is then made to pass through the liquor in order to precipitate the lead, and the sulphuret produced is removed by filtra- tion. The liquid is now evaporated to the consistence of an extract; the product is treated with rectified alcohol; and the alcoholic solution is evaporated. To part I. Senna.—Serpentaria. 773 the extract thus obtained sulphuric acid diluted with alcohol is added, in order to decompose the acetate of potassa which it contains; the sulphate of potassa is separated by filtration; the excess of sulphuric acid by acetate of lead; the excess of acetate of lead by hydrosulphuric acid; and the sulphuret of lead by another filtration. The liquid being now evaporated yields cathartin. This sub- stance must not be confounded with a purgative principle, also called cathartin, which exists in Rhamnus catharticus. Bley and Diesel found in senna a peculiar yellow resin which they name chrusoretin, a brown resin and brown extractive which they could not fully separate, pectin, gummy extractive, chlorophyll, fatty matter, and various salts. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, Feb. 1849, p. 126.) Incompatibles. Many substances produce precipitates with the infusion of senna; but it does not follow that they are all medicinally incompatible; as they may remove ingredients which have no therapeutical effect, and leave the active principles untouched. Cathartin is precipitated by infusion of galls and solution of subacetate of lead. Acetate of lead and tartarized antimony, which disturb the infusion, have no effect upon the solution of this substance. Medical Properties and Uses. Senna was first used as a medicine by the Arabians. It was noticed in their writings so early as the ninth century; and the name itself is Arabic. It is a prompt, efficient, and very safe purgative, well calculated for fevers and febrile complaints, and other cases in which a decided but not violent impression is desired. A disadvantage is that it is apt to pro- duce severe griping. This effect, however, may be obviated by combining with the senna some aromatic, and some one of the alkaline salts, especially bitartrate of potassa, tartrate of potassa, or sulphate of magnesia. The explanation which attributes the griping property to the oxidized extractive, and its prevention by the saline substances to their influence in promoting the solubility of that principle, is not satisfactory. The purgative effect of senna is considerably in- creased by combination with bitters; a fact noticed by Cullen, and abundantly confirmed by subsequent experience. The decoction of guaiac is said to exert a similar influence. Senna yields one or more of its principles to the urine; as, from twenty to thirty minutes after it has been taken, this secretion acquires the property of being reddened by ammonia. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1863, p. 161.) The dose of senna in powder is from half a drachm to two drachms; but its bulk renders it of inconvenient administration; and it is not often prescribed in this state. Besides, the powder is said to undergo decomposition, and to become mouldy on exposure to a damp air. The form of infusion is almost universally preferred. (See Infusum Sennse.) The medicine is also used in the forms of con- fection, fluid extract, syrup, and tincture, all of which are officinal. Senna taken by nurses is said to purge sucking infants, and an infusion in- jected into the veins operates as a cathartic. Off. Prep. Confectio Sennse; Extractum Sennse Fluidura, U.S.; Infusum Sennse; Syrupus Sarsaparillse Compositus, U. S.; Syrupus Sennse, Br.; Tinc- tura Rhei et Sennae, U.S.; Tinctura Sennse, Br W. SERPENTARIA. U.S,Br. Serpentaria. Virginia Snakeroot. The root of Arisfcolochia Serpentaria, of Aristolochia reticulata, and of other species of Aristolochia. U. S. Aristolochia Serpentaria. Serpentary. The dried root. Br. Serpentaire de Virginie, Fr.; Yirginianische Schlangenwurzel, Germ.; Serpentaria Vir- giniana, Ital., Span. Aristolochia. Sex. Syst. GiynandriaHexandria. — Nat.Ord. Aristolochiaceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Corolla one-petaled, ligulate, ventricose at the base. Capsules six-celled, many-seeded, inferior. Willd. 774 Serpentaria. PART I. Many species of Aristolochia have been employed in medicine The roots of all of them are tonic and stimulant; and their supposed possession of em- menagogue properties has given origin to the name of the genus. A. Glema- iilis, A. lonya, A. rotunda, and A. Pistolochia are still retained in many officinal catalogues of the continent of Europe, where they are indigenous. The root of A. Clematitis is very long, cylindrical, as thick as a goosequill or thicker, va- riously contorted, beset with the remains of the stems and radicles, of a grayish- brown colour, a strong peculiar odour, and an acrid bitter taste; that of A. longa is spindle-shaped, from a few inches to a foot in length, of the thickness of the thumb or thicker, fleshy, very brittle, grayish externally, brownish-yellow within, bitter, and of a strong disagreeable odour when fresh ; that of A. rotunda is tuberous, roundish, heavy, fleshy, brownish on the exterior, grayish-yellc v internally, and similar to the preceding in odour and taste; that of A. Pistolo- chia consists of numerous slender yellowish or brownish fibres, attached to a common head, and possessed of an agreeable aromatic odour, with a taste bitter and somewhat acrid. Many species of Aristolochia growing in the West Indies, Mexico, and South America, have attracted attention for their medicinal proper- ties ; and some, like our own snakeroot, have acquired the reputation of antidotes for the bites of serpents. In the East Indies, A. In die a is employed for similar purposes with the European and American species; and the Arabians are said by Forskhal to use the leaves of A. somyervirens as a counter-poison. We have in the United States six species, of which four — A. Serpentaria, A. hirsuta, A. hastata. and A. reticulata — contribute to furnish the snakeroot of the shops. Azistolochia Serpentaria. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 159 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Pot. /in. 82 ; Barton, Med. Pot. ii. 41. This species of Aristolochia is an herbaceous plant, with a perennial root, which consists of numerous slender fibres proceed- ing from a short horizontal caudex. Several stems often rise from the same root. They are about eight or ten inches in height, slender, round, flexuose, jointed at irregular distances, and frequently reddish or purple at the base. The leaves are oblong-cordate, acuminate, entire, of a pale yellowish-green colour, and supported on short petioles at the joints of the stem. The flowers proceed from the joints near the root, and stand singly on long, slender, round, jointed peduncles, which are sometimes furnished with one or two small scales, and bend downwards so as nearly to bury the flower in the earth or decayed leaves. There is no calyx. The corolla is purple, monopetalous, tubular, swelling at the base, contracted and curved in the middle, and terminating in a labiate border with lanceolate lips. The anthers—six or twelve in number—are sessile, attached to the under part of the stigma, which is roundish, divided into six parts, and sup- ported by a short fleshy style upon an oblong, angular, hairy, inferior germ. The fruit is a hexangular, six-celled capsule, containing several small flat seeds. The plant grows in rich shady woods, throughout the Middle, Southern, and Western States, abounding in the valley of the Ohio, and in the mountainous regions of our interior. It flowers in May and June. The root is collected in Western Pennsylvania and Virginia, in Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, and is brought eastward chiefly by the routes of Wheeling and Pittsburg. As it reaches Philadelphia, it is usually in bales containing about one hundred pounds, and is often mixed with the leaves and stems of the plant, and with dirt from which it has not been properly cleansed at the time of collection. A. hirsuta. Muhlenberg, Catalogue, p. 81; Bridges, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 121. In Muhlenberg’s Catalogue this species was named without being described; and botanists, supposing from the name that it was identical with A. tomentosa, generally confounded the two plants. But they are entirely distinct. A description of A. hirsuta in the handwriting of Muhlenberg, and a labelled specimen of the plant, in the possession of the Academy of Natural Sciences of this city, have been found to correspond with a dried specimen iecei\ed ly PART I. Serpentaria. 775 the author from Virginia. A. tomentosa is a climbing plant, growing in Louisi- ana on the banks of the Mississippi, and ascending to the summit of the highest trees. A plant in the garden of the author has a thick, creeping root, entirely different in shape from that of the officinal species, though possessed of an analo- gous odour. A. hirsuta has a root like that of A. Serpentaria, consisting of a knotty caudex, sending out numerous slender simple fibres, sometimes as much as six inches in length. From this arise several jointed, flexuose, pubescent sterna, less than a foot high, with one or two pubescent bractes, and several large round- ish-cordate leaves, of which the lower are obtuse, the upper abruptly acuminate, and all pubescent on both sides and at the margin. From the joints near the root originate from one to three solitary peduncles, each bearing three or four leafy bractes and one flower. The peduncles, bractes, and corolla are all hairy. This species grows in Virginia, and perhaps other parts of the Western and Southern States. It probably contributes to afford the serpentaria of commerce; as its leaves have been found in bales of the drug. A. hastata. Nuttall, (?en. of N. Am. Plants, p. 200.—A. sagitlata. Muhl. Catal. This species, if indeed it can be considered a distinct species, differs from A. Serpentaria in having hastate, acute, somewhat cordate leaves, and the lip of the corolla ovate. It flourishes on the banks of the Mississippi, in the Carolinas, and elsewhere. Its root scarcely differs from that of the officinal plant, and is frequently mixed with it, as proved by the presence of the characteristic leaves of A. hastata in the parcels brought into market. A. reticulata. Nuttall; Bridges, Am. Journ. of Phann., xvi. 118; Carson, Illust. of Med. Bot. ii. 32, pi. 77. This plant was probably first observed by Mr. Nuttall; as a specimen labelled “A. reticulata, Bed river,” in the handwriting of that botanist, is contained in the Herbarium of the Academy of Natural Sci- ences of Philadelphia. From this specimen, as well as from others found in par- cels of the drug brought into market, a description was drawn up by Dr. Robert Bridges, and published in the Am. Journ. of Pharmacy. From a root, similar to that of A. Serpentaria, numerous short, slender, round, flexuose, jointed stems arise, usually simple, but sometimes branched near the root. The older stems are slightly villous, the young densely pubescent. The leaves, which stand on very short villous petioles, are round or oblong-cordate, obtuse, reticulate, very promi- nently veined, and villous on both sides, especially upon the veins. From the lower joints of the stem four or five hairy, jointed peduncles proceed, which bear small leafy villous bractes at the joints, and several flowers on short pedicels. The flowers are small, purplish, and densely pubescent, especially at the base and on the germ. The hexangular capsule is deeply sulcate. This species grows in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and the Indian Territory west of that State. Bales of a new variety of serpentaria were some years since brought to Phila- delphia, which is certainly the product of this species; as specimens of all parts of the plant have been found in the bales, and the roots, which differ somewhat from those before known, are homogeneous in character. One of these bales wras brought from New Orleans, and was said to have come down the Red river, and to have been collected by the Indians. The chief difference between this and ordinary Virginia snakeroot is in the size of the radicles, which are much thicker and less interlaced in the new variety. Each root has usually a considerable por- tion of one or more stems attached to the caudex. The colour is yellowish. The odour and taste are scarcely if at all distinguishable from those of common ser- pontaria; and there is no doubt that the root is equally effectual as a medicine. From a chemical examination by Mr. Thomas S. Wiegand, it appears to have the same constituents, and to differ only in containing a somewhat larger pro- portion of gum, extractive, and volatile oil. Properties. Virginia snakeroot, as found in the shops, is in tufts of long, blender, frequently interlaced, and brittle fibres, attached to a short, contorted. Serpentaria.—Sesami Folium.—Oleum Sesami. PART i. knotty head or caudex. The colour, which in the recent root is yellowish, oecomes brown by time. That of the powder is grayish. The smell is strong, aromatic, and camphorous; the taste warm, very bitter, and also camphorous. The root yields all its virtues to water and alcohol, producing with the former a yellowish-brown infusion, with the latter a bright-greenish tincture, rendered turbid by the addition of water. Chevallier found in the root volatile oil, a yellow bitter principle soluble in water and alcohol, resin, gum, starch, albumen, lignin, and various salts. Bucholz obtained from 1000 parts, 5 of a green, fragrant volatile oil, 28'5 of a yellowish-green resin, 17 of extractive matter, 181 of gummy extract, 624 of lignin, and 1445 of water. The active ingredients are probably the volatile oil, and the yellow bitter principle of Chevallier, which that chemist considers analogous to the bitter principle of quassia. The volatile oil passes over with water in distillation, rendering the liquid milky, and im- pregnating it with the odour of the root. Dr, Bigelow states that the liquid, on standing, deposits small crystals of camphor. The roots of Spigelia Marilandica are sometimes found associated with ser- pentaria. They may be distinguished by the absence of the bitter taste, and, when the stem and foliage are attached, by the peculiar character of these parts of the plant. (See Spigelia.) We have occasionally seen the young roots of Polygala Senega mixed with serpentaria. Independently of their difference in odour and taste, they may be readily distinguished by being simple, and by a projecting line running from one end to the other of the root. Medical Properties and Uses. Serpentaria is a stimulant tonic, acting also as a diaphoretic or diuretic, according to the mode of its application. Too largely taken, it occasions nausea, griping pains in the bowels, sometimes vomiting and dysenteric tenesmus. It is adapted to the treatment of typhoid fevers, whether idiopathic or symptomatic, when the system begins to feel the necessity for sup- port, but is unable to bear active stimulation. In exanthematous diseases in which the eruption is tardy or has receded, and the grade of action is low, it is thought to be useful by promoting the cutaneous affection. It has also been highly recommended in intermittent fevers; and, though itself generally inade- quate to the cure of the complaint, often proves serviceable as an adjunct to Peruvian bark or sulphate of quinia. With the same remedies it is frequently associated in the treatment of typhous diseases. It is sometimes given in dys- pepsia, and is employed as a gargle in malignant sorethroat. The dose of the powdered root is from ten to thirty grains; but the infusion is almost always preferred. (See Infusum Serpentariae.) The decoction or ex- tract would be an improper form; as the volatile oil, upon which the virtues of the medicine partly depend, is dissipated by boiling. There is, however, an officinal fluid extract, which is an efficient preparation. Off. Prep. Extractum Serpentariae Fluidum, U.S.; Infusum Serpentariae; Tinctura Cinchonae Composita; Tinctura Serpentariae. W SESAMI FOLIUM. U.S. Secondary. The leaves of Sesamum Indicum, and of Sesamum orientale. U. S. Benne Leaf. OLEUM SESAMI. US. Secondary. Benne Oil. The oil of the seeds of Sesamura Indicum, and of Sesaraum orientale. U. S. Sesame, Fr.; Sesam, Germ.; Sesamo, Ital.; Anjonjoli, Span. Sesamum. Sex. Syst. Didynamia Angiospermia.—Nat.Ord. Bignoniae, Juss. Pedaliaceae R. Broum, Bindley. PART I. Sesami Folium.—Oleum Sesami.—Sevum. 777 Gen. Ch. Calyx five-parted. Corolla bell-shaped, five-cleft, with the lower lobe largest. Stamens five, the fifth a rudiment. Stigma lanceolate. Capsule four-celled. Willd. ■Sesamum orientale. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 358; Rheed. Hort. Malab. ix. 54 “Leaves ovate-oblong, entire.” Sesamum Indicum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 359; Curtis, Bot. Mag. vol. xli. t 1688. “ Leaves ovate-lanceolate, the inferior three-lobed, the superior undivided Stem erect.” There is reason to believe that this species is the one chiefly cul- tivated in our Southern States. At least we have found plants, raised in Phila- delphia from seeds obtained from Georgia, to have its specific character, as given by Willdenow. The benne plant of our Southern States is annual, with a branching stem four or five feet high, and bearing opposite, petiolate leaves, varying considerably in their shape. Those on the upper part of the plant are ovate-lanceolate, irregu- larly serrate, and pointed; those near the base three-lobed and sometimes ternate; and lobed leaves are not uncommon at all distances from the ground. The flowers are reddish-white, and stand solitarily upon short peduncles in the axils of the leaves. The fruit is an oblong capsule, with small, oval, yellowish seeds. These two species of Sesamum are natives of the East Indies, and have been cultivated from time immemorial in various parts of Asia and Africa. From the latter continent it is supposed that seeds were brought by the negroes to the United States, where, as well as in the West Indies, one or both species are now cultivated to a considerable extent. The plant above described will grow vigorously in the gardens so far north as Philadelphia, though it does not usually ripen its seeds in this vicinity. The seeds are employed as food by the negroes, who parch them over the fire, boil them in broths, make them into puddings, and prepare them in various other modes. By expression they yield a fixed oil, which, as well as the leaves, lias been introduced into the secondary catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. M. Berjot obtained 53 per cent, of the oil by means of bisulphuret of carbon. 1. Benne Leaves. These abound in a gummy matter, which they readily im- part to water, forming a rich, bland mucilage, much used in the Southern States as a drink in various complaints, to which demulcents are applicable; as in cholera infantum, diarrhoea, dysentery, catarrh, and affections of the urinary passages. The remedy has attracted attention also in the North, and has been employed with favourable results in Philadelphia. One or two fresh leaves of full size, stirred about in half a pint of cool water, will soon render it sufficiently viscid. If dried, they should be introduced into hot water. The leaves also serve for the preparation of emollient cataplasms. 2. Benne Oil. This is inodorous, of a bland, sweetish taste, and will keep long without becoming rancid. It bears some resemblance to olive oil in its proper- ties, and may be used for similar purposes. It was known to the ancient Persians and Egyptians, and is highly esteemed by the modern Arabs aud other people of the East, both as food, and as an external application to promote softness of the skin. Like olive oil, it is laxative in large doses. W. SEVUM. U.S. /Suet. The prepared suet of Ovis Aries. U.S. Off. Syn. SEVUM PRJ3PARATUM. Prepared Suet. Ovis Aries. The Sheep. The internal Fat of the abdomen purified by melting and straining Br. Suif, Graisse de mouton, Fr.; Hammelstalg, Germ.; Grasse duro, Ital.; Sebo, Span. Suet is the fat of the sheep, taken chiefly from about the kidneys. It is pre pared by cutting the fat into pieces, melting it with a moderate heat, and strain- 778 Sevu m.—Simaruba. PART I. ing it through linen or flannel. In order to avoid too great a heat, the crude suet is sometimes purified by boiling it in a little water. Mutton suet is of a firmer consistence, and requires a higher temperature for its fusion than any other animal fat. It is very white, sometimes brittle, inodor- ous, of a bland taste, insoluble in water, and nearly so in alcohol. Boiling alco- hol, however, dissolves it, and deposits it upon cooling. It consists, according to Chevreul, of stearin, olein, and a small proportion of hircin. Tiie two first- mentioned principles are described under the Fixed Oils (page 567). Hircin. is a liquid like olein, from which it differs in being much more soluble in alcohol, and in yielding hircic acid by saponification. Suet acquiresTiyTime an unpleasant smell, and becomes unfit fyr pharma- ceutic purposes. It is employed to give a proper consistence to ointments, cerates, and plasters, and sometimes as a dressing to blisters. Off. Prep. Ceratum Resin® Compositum, U.S.; Emplastrum Cantharidis, Br.; Unguentum llydrargyri, U. S.; Unguentum Picis Liquid®, U. S. W. SIMARUBA. U.S. Secondary Simaruba. The bark of the root of Simaruba officinalis. U. S. Ecoroe de simarouba, Fr.; Simarubarinde, Germ.; Corteccia di simaruba, Ital.; Corteza de simaruba, Span. Quassia. See QUASSIA. Quassia Simaruba. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 568 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 569, t. 203. PPBimaruba officinalis. De Cand. Prodrom. i. 733. — S. aniara. Aublet; Lindley, Flor. Med. p. 2(R. As this plant is unisexual, it belongs to the genus Simaruba of De Candolle and Lindley, those only being placed by these bota- nists in the genus Quassia which are hermaphrodite. But, as the Liunaean arrangement was adhered to in the case of Quassia excelsa, we continue to ad- here to it in relation to this plant. (See Quassia.) It is a tree of considerable height and thickness, having alternate branches, with a bark which in the old tree is black and somewhat furrowed, in the young is smooth, gray, and marked here and there with broad yellow spots. The leaves are alternate and abruptly pinnate, with a naked petiole, to which the leaflets are alternately attached by short footstalks. The leaflets are nearly elliptical, on the upper surface smooth and deep-green, on the under whitish. The flowers are yellow, and in long axil- lary panicles. In some descriptions they are stated to be monoecious, in others dioecious. According to Dr. Wright, the female flowers are never found in Jamaica on the same tree with the male. The number of stamens is ten. The tree is found in the West Indies and Guyana. In Jamaica it is called the mountain damson. The Simaruba amara of Aublet, which grows in Guyana, and has generally been considered identical with Q. Simaruba, is believed by Hayne to be a distinct species; the Jamaica plant having dioecious, while this has monoecious flowers. The bark of the root is the part employed; the wood itself being nearly tasteless and inert. Simaruba bark is in long pieces, some inches in breadth, folded lengthwise, light, flexible, tenacious, very fibrous, externally of a light brownish-yellow colour, rough, warty, and marked with transverse ridges, internally of a pale- yellow. It is without smell, and of a bitter taste. It readily imparts its virtues, at ordinary temperatures, to water and alcohol. The infusion is at least equally bitter with the decoction, which becomes turbid as it cools. Its constituents, according to M. Morin, are a bitter principle identical with quassin, a resinous matter, a volatile oil having the odour of benzoin, malic acid, gallic acid in very minute proportion, an ammoniacal salt, malate and cr.al'ite of lime, some in *>- eral salts, oxide of iron, silica, ulmin, and lignin. PART I. Simaruba.—Sinapis Alba.—Sinapis Nigra. 779 Medical Properties and Uses. Simaruba possesses the same tonic properties as other simple bitters, and may be employed for the same purposes. In large doses it is said to purge and vomit. It was introduced into France in 1713 from Guyana, where it had previously been used as a remedy for dysentery. In the treatment of this disease and of obstinate diarrhoea, it afterwards obtained much credit in Europe; but Cullen was right in denying to it any specific con- trol over these complaints. It operates simply as a tonic; and, though occa- sionally beneficial in relaxed and debilitated states of the alimentary canal, would do much harm if indiscriminately prescribed in dysenteric cases. On ac- count of its difficult pulverization, it is seldom given in substance. The best mode of administration is by infusion. The dose is from a scruple to a drachm. SINAPIS ALBA. U.S. White Mustard. The seed of Sinapis alba. U. S. SINAPIS NIGRA. U. S. The seed of Sipapis nigra. U. S. Off. Syn. SINAPIS Mustard. Sinapis nigra and Sinapis alba. Black mus- tard, White mustard. The seeds reduced to powder, mixed. Br. Moutarde, Fr.; Senfsamen, Germ.; Senapa, Ital.; Mostaza, Span. Sinapis. Sex. Syst. Tetradynamia Siliquosa.— Nat. Ord. Brasicaceae or Cru- cifer®. Gen. Ch. Calyx spreading. Corolla with straight claws. Glands between the shorter stamens and pistil, and between the longer stamens and calyx. Willd. Sinapis nigra. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 555; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 403, t. 146. Common or black mustard is an annual plant, with a stem three or four feet in height, divided and subdivided into numerous spreading branches. The leaves are petiolate and variously shaped. Those near the root are large, rough, lyrate- pinnate, and unequally toothed; those higher on the stem are smooth and less lobed; and the uppermost are entire, narrow, smooth, and dependent. The flowers are small, yellow, with a coloured calyx, and stand closely together upon peduncles at the upper part of the branches. The pods are smooth, erect, nearly parallel with the branches, quadrangular, furnished with a short beak, and oc- cupied by numerous seeds. Sinapis alba. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 555; Smith, Flor. Brit. 721. The white mustard is also annual. It is rather smaller than the preceding species. The lower leaves are deeply pinnatifid, the upper sublyrate, and all irregularly toothed, rugged, with stiff hairs on both sides, and pale-green. The flowers are in racemes, with yellow petals, and linear, green calycine leaflets. The pods are spreading, bristly, rugged, roundish, swelling in the position of the seeds, ribbed, and provided with a very long ensiform beak. Both plants are natives of Europe and cultivated in our gardens; and S. nigra has become naturalized in some parts of this country. Their flowers ap- pear in June. The seeds are kept in the shops, both whole and in the state of very fine powder, as prepared by the manufacturers for the table. Black mustard seeds are small, globular, of a deep-brown colour, slightly rugose on the surface, and internally yellow. In the entire state they are in- odorous, but have a distinct smell in powder, and, when rubbed with water or vinegar, exhale a strong pungent odour, sufficient in some instances to excite a flow of tears. Their taste is bitterish, hot, and pungent, but not permanent. Wnue mustard seeds are much larger, of a yellowish colour, and less pungent Black Mustard. 780 Sinapis Alba.—Sin apis Nigra. PART I. taste. Both afford a yellow powder, which has a somewhat unctuous appear- ance, and cakes when compressed. This is commonly called flour of mustard.. or simply mustard, and is prepared by crushing and pounding the seeds, and then sifting them ; the purest flour being obtained by a second sifting. Both the black and the white seeds are used in its preparation. It is often adulterated with wheat flour coloured by turmeric, to which red pepper is added to render the mixture sufficiently hot. The skin of white mustard seeds contains a muci- laginous substance, which is extracted by boiling water. When bruised or pow- dered, both kinds impart their active properties wholly to water, but in a very slight degree to alcohol. They yield upon pressure a fixed oil, called off of mus- tard, of a greenish-yellow colour, little smell, and a mild not unpleasant taste; and the portion which remains is even more pungent than the unpressed seeds. The fixed oil of mustard yields, upon saponification, a peculiar acid, for which the name of erucic acid has been proposed. (Ghem. Gaz., vii. 168.) It has been long known that black mustard seeds yield by distillation with water a very pungent volatile oil, containing sulphur. Guibourt conjectured, and Ilobiquet and Boutron proved, that this oil does not pre-exist in the seeds, but is produced by the action of water. Hence the absence or very slight degree of odour in the seeds when bruised in a dry state, and their pungency when water is added. It seemed reasonable to suppose that the reaction in this case was similar to that exercised by water upon bitter almonds (see Amygdala Amara); and this has been proved to be the fact by the experiments of Simon, Bussy, Boutron, and Fremy. According to M. Bussy, there are two peculiar principles in black mustard seeds, one named by him mvronic acid, existing in the seeds in the state of myronate of potassa; the other my rosy ne. closely analogous in character to the albuminous constituent of almonds called emulsin. When water is added to black mustard seed, the myrosyne, acting the part of a ferment, determines a reaction between the water and myronate of potassa, which results in the production of the volatile oil. The same thing happens wrhen any one of the myronates is brought into contact with water and myrosyne. The presence of the last-mentioned principle is essential. Like emulsin, it becomes inoperative when coagulated by heat, alcohol, or the acids; and, if black mustard seeds be subjected to either of these agencies previously to the addition of water, they will yield no volatile oil. The myrosyne, however, sometimes partially recovers its power by continued contact with water. This substance is found also in white mustard seeds, but without myronate of potassa. If, therefore, white mustard seeds be added to the black in which the myrosyne has been coagulated, the volatile oil will be generated on the application of water. Though closely analogous to emulsin, myrosyne is yet distinct, as its place cannot be supplied by emulsin with the same effect. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 39.) Simon obtained results somewhat different from those of M. Bussy. The former chemist succeeded in procuring a peculiar crystalline principle from the seeds which he called sinapisin, and which, upon contact with water and the albuminous principle of theseeHs, emitted the odour of the oil of mustard. Dr. S. von Thielau asserts that, though the volatile oil is produced by the re- action between myrosyne and some principle existing in black mustard, yet this principle is not myronate of potassa, the existence of the so-called myronic acid being fabulous. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1858, p. 540.) MM. Ludgwig and Lange, however, have found myronic acid in abundance in black mustard seeds. They have also found along with it another substance, apparently the acid salt of a nitrogeno-sulphur alkaloid, which likewise yields the volatile oil of mustard with myrosyne. {Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1861, p. 236.) The volatile oil of mustard is usually obtained from seeds which have been deprived of their fixed oil by pressure. It is a colourless or pale-yellow liquid, rather heavier tliau water of an exceedingly pungent odour, and an acrid burn- PART I. Sinapis Alba.—Sinapis Nigra. 781 ing taste. It boils at about 298°; is slightly soluble in water, and readily so in alcohol and ether; with alkaline solutions yields sulphocyanides; and consists, aecording to M. Lowig and Dr. Will, of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and sul- phur; its formula being NC8H.S2. Dr. Will considers it a snlphocvanide pf a/^(C6H5), the compound radical of oil of garlic, which is considered asul- phuret of allyl.* (Chem. Gaz., Nos. 62 and 64.) It is the principle upon which black mustard seeds depend for their activity. According to Zeller, the seeds yield from 0‘33 to 063 per cent, of the oil. White mustard seeds do not yield volatile oil when treated with water; but au acrid fixed principle is developed, which renders these seeds applicable to the same purposes as the other variety. MM. Hobiquet and Boutron, who ascer- tained this fact, concluded that the acrid principle resulted from the reaction of water upon sulpho-sinapisin, discovered in the seeds by MM. Henry, jun., and Garot. Their reason for this belief was that mustard, which had been deprived of this ingredient, was incapable of developing the acrid principle. The myro- syne is equally essential to the change here, as to that which occurs in black mustard; and the reaction equally fails, if this principle be previously rendered inert by heat, alcohol, or the acids. MM. Boutron and Fremy state that not only the acrid principle of white mustard, but hydrosulphoeyanic acid also re- sults from the reaction above explained; and this observation renders still closer the analogy between the changes that take place, upon contact with water, in mustard seeds and bitter almonds. {Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 50.)f * Volatile oil of mustard has been produced artificially, by MM. Berthelot and S. de Luca, by treating iodide of propionyl (identical with allyl) (CfiH5I) with sulphocyanuret of potassium. The iodine unites with potassium, aud the liberated radical (C01I3) com- bines with the sulphocyanogen (NC2S2) to form volatile oil of mustard (NC8H5S2). Iodide of propionyl is procured by treating glycerin with iodide of phosphorus, and differs from volatile oil of garlic (sulphuret of allyl), only in containing iodine instead of sulphur (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1855, p. 124.) f As some may desire to push these investigations further, we give the properties of these peculiar principles, and the modes of procuring them. Moronic acid is a fixed inodorous substance, of a bitter and sour taste, and acid re- action. When obtained separate from its bases, it forms a colourless solution, which by evaporation becomes of a thick consistence like molasses, without crystallizing. It is soluble in water and alcohol, but not in ether; and forms soluble salts with the alkalies, baryta, lime, and the oxides of lead and silver, all of which yield volatile oil of mustard, when mixed with an aqueous solution of myrosyne. It contains sulphur, besides nitro- gen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It is obtained from the myronate of potassa by adding to 100 parts of that salt 38 parts of crystallized tartaric acid, concentrating the solution by evaporation, and then adding weak alcohol, which precipitates the bitartrate of potassa, and retains the myronic acid in solution. To obtain myronate of potassa from black mustard seeds, the powder, having been dried at 212°, and deprived of its fixed oil 1 y pressure, is treated with strong alcohol in a displacement apparatus, and, when thus nearly exhausted of everything soluble in that liquid, is pressed and treated with water. The aqueous solution is evaporated, and, before it is too much concentrated, weak alcohol is added, which precipitates a glutinous matter. The solution, being then carefully evaporated, deposits crystals of myronate of potassa, which may be obtained very pure and white by washing the mass with diluted alcohol. This salt is easily crystallizable in fine, large, transparent crystals, is unalterable in the air, very soluble in water, insoluble in pure alcohol, and of a bitter taste. MM. Ludgwig and Lange, who procured the myronate of potassa, by a process essentially the same as that of M. Bussy, in the quantity of 1 part from 500 parts of black mustard, give its composition as represented by the formula KO,NC20HigS/)18. (Journ. de Pharm., June, 1861, p. 432.) 3/i/ro.vyng, when dry, has the character of an albuminous substance. It is soluble in water, forming a viscid solution which froths when agitated, and is coagulated by heat, alcohol, and the acids. It is obtained by treating white mustard seed with cold water, filtering the solution, evaporating it by a heat not exceeding 100°, and, when it is of the consistence of syrup, carefully adding alcohol, which causes a precipitate easily separable by decantation. If this be dissolved in water, and the solution evaporated as before, my- rosyne is obtained, though not entirely pure. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 39.) The sinapisin of Simon is in brilliant, white, scaly crystals, sublimable by heat, soluble 782 Sinapis Alba.—Sinapis Nigra. PART I. From the above account of the chemical relations of mustard, it is obvious that admixture with alcohol or the acids, or the application of a boiling heat, can only have the effect of impairing its medical virtues, and that the best ve- hicle, whether for external or internal use, is water at common temperatures. Medical Properties and Uses. Mustard seeds swallowed whole operate as a laxative, and have acquired some reputation as a remedy in dyspepsia, and other complaints attended with torpid bowels and deficient excitement. The white seeds are preferred, and are taken in the dose of a tablespoonful once or twice a day, mixed with molasses, or previously softened and rendered mucilaginous by immersion in hot water. They probably act in some measure by mechanically stimulating the bowels. The bruised seeds or powder, in the quantity of a large teaspoonful, operate as an emetic. Mustard in this state is applicable to cases of great torpor of stomach, especially that resulting from narcotic poisons. It rouses the gastric susceptibility, and facilitates the action of other emetics. In smaller quantities it is useful as a safe stimulant of the digestive organs; and, as it is frequently determined to the kidneys, has been beneficially employed in dropsy. Whey, made by boiling half an ounce of the bruised seeds or powder in a pint of milk and straining, is a convenient form for administration. It may be given in the dose of a wineglassful repeated several times a day. But mus- tard is most valuable as a rubefacient. Mixed with water in the form of a cata- plasm, and applied to the skin, it very soon produces redness with burning pain, which in less than an hour usually becomes insupportable. When a speedy im- pression is not desired, especially when the sinapism is applied to the extremi- ties, the powder should be diluted with an equal portion of rye meal or wheat flour. Care should be taken not to allow the application to continue too long, as vesication with obstinate ulceration, and even sphacelus may result. This caution is particularly necessary when the patient is insensible, and the degree of pain can afford no criterion of the sufficiency of the action. The volatile oil, in alcohol, ether, and the fixed and volatile oils, but insoluble in acids and alkalies. To obtain it he exhausted black mustard seed with strong alcohol, distilled off the greater part of the alcohol, treated the residue several times with four or five times its weight of ether, from the ethereal solutions distilled off all the ether, treated the extract again with a smaller quantity of ether so as to leave behind insoluble substances, and repeated this process until the extract formed a perfectly clear solution without residue. The extract was then dissolved in cold strong alcohol, and the solution, having been decolorized with animal charcoal, was allowed to evaporate in the air. Simon obtained from 55 pounds of the seeds only 80 grains of crystallized sinapisin. (Annal. der Pharm., xxvi. 291.) Sudpho-sinapisin, the peculiar ingredient of white mustard seed, is white, crystallizable, inodorous, Tmtei% and soluble in alcohol and water, forming a yellow solution. It was at first thought by MM. Henry and Garot to be an acid, but they afterwards ascertained that it was neuter. It consists of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, sulphur, and oxygen. It may be obtained from white mustard seeds, previously deprived of the fixed oil by expression, by boiling them in water, evaporating the decoction to the consistence of honey, mixing the residue with 6 or 8 times its volume of anhydrous alcohol whmh precipitates various sub- stances, then distilling off the alcohol, and setting aside the syrupy residue to crystallize. The crystals maybe purified by repeated solution and crystallization in alcohol. (Ber- zelius, Traite de Chimie.) This principle, which has also been calltd sinapin, is considered by L. von Babo and Ilirschbrunn to be the sulphocyanide of an alkaloid, to which they propose to confine the name of sinapin, and for which they give the formula C82H26NOr,. The sulphocyanide of sinapin is obtained from seeds, already so far exhausted by cold alcohol as to yield only a pale yellow colour to that liquid by boiling them in alcohol of the sp. gr. 0-833, evaporating the liquor, and crystallizing. It has an appearance like that of crystallized sulphate of quinia, is soluble with difficulty in cold water and alcohol, but readily in both liquids when hot, and is nearly insoluble in ether. When boiled with alkalies, it yields an acid called sinapic acid. It is difficult to separate the organic base sinapin from it, because this is decomposed by alkalies. It does not appear that sulpho- cyanidc. of sinapin yields with synaptase the acrid principle developed in white mustard 6eeds by water; but the authors state that another substance rich in sulphur has been ascertained by Simon to exist in white mustard seeds, which plays an important part in the production of the pungent matter. (See Chcm. Gaz., March 1, 1853, p. 81.) part I. Sinapis Alba.—Sinapis Nigra.—Sodium. which is powerfully rubefacient, and capable of producing speedy vesication, has been considerably used in Germany. For external application as a rubefacient, 30 drops may be dissolved in a fluidounce of alcohol, or 6 or 8 drops in a flui- drachm of almond or olive oil. To form a sinapism it has been recommended to mix 20 drops of the volatile oil with 3 5 drachms of glycerin and 5 drachms of starch. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., Nov. 1861, p. 569.) It has been given inter- nally in colic, two drops being incorporated with a six-ounce mixture, and half a fluidounce given for a dose. (Ibid,, xi. 9.) In overdoses it is highly poison- ous, producing gastro-enteric inflammation, and probably perverting the vital processes by pervading the whole system. Its odour is perceptible in the blood, and it is said to impart the smell of horseradish to the urine. A spirit of mus- tard may be prepared by macerating, for two hours, 250 parts of powdered black mustard with 500 parts of cold water, then adding 120 parts of alcohol of 86 per cent., and distilling over 120 parts of spirit. Though not so precise in com- position as the alcoholic solution of the oil, it is more economical. (Ann. de Therap., 1864, p. 126.) Off. Prep. Cataplasma Sinapis, Br W. SODIUM. Sodium. Sodium, Fr.; Natrium, Natronmetall, Germ.; Sodio, Ital., Span. Sodium is a peculiar metal, forming the radical of the alkali soda. It was discovered by Sir H. Davy in 1807, who obtained it in small quantity by decom- posing the alkali by the agency of galvanic electricity. It was afterwards pro- cured in much larger quantities by Gay-Lussac and Thenard, by bringing the alkali in contact with iron turnings heated to whiteness. The iron became oxi- dized, and the metallic radical of the soda was liberated. Since the discovery of a mode for obtaining aluminium in bars, by Deville, in 1854, the process for procuring sodium, which is the decomposing agent, has been very much improved and cheapened. (See page 93.) Sodium is now obtained on a large scale by igniting an intimate mixture of dry carbonate of soda, coal, and chalk. Sodium is a soft, malleable, sectile solid, of a silver-white colour. It possesses the metallic lustre in a high degree, when protected from the action of the air, by which it is quickly tarnished and oxidized. Its sp. gr. is 0-97, fusing point about 200°, equivalent number 23 3, and symbol Na. Its chemical affinities re- semble those of potassium, but are less energetic. Like potassium it has a strong attraction for oxygen. When thrown upon cold water it instantly fuses into a globule without inflaming, and traverses the surface in different directions with rapidity; on hot water it inflames. In both cases the water is decomposed, hydrogen is liberated, and a solution of soda generated. It combines also with a larger proportion of oxygen than exists in soda, forming a teroxide. This oxide is always formed when the metal is burnt in the open air. Sodium is a constituent of a number of important medicinal preparations, and is briefly described in this place as an introduction to these compounds. Its pro- toxide only is salifiable, constituting the alkali soda, which, united to acids, gives rise to a numerous class of compounds, called salts of soda. These are charac- terized by communicating to the blowpipe flame a rich yellow colour, and by not being precipitable by any reagent, except the metantimoniate of potassa. (See page 673.) Protoxide of sodium (dry soda) consists of one eq. of sodium 23 3, and one of oxygen 8 = 31 '3. United with one eq. of water 9, it forms hydrate of soda (caustic soda), weighing 40 3. The officinal combinations containing sodium are caustic soda, chloride of sodium, the solutions of soda and chlorinated soda, the acetate, arseniate, borate, 784 Sodium.—Sodse Acetas.—Sodse Boras. PART I. carbonate, bicarbonate, phosphate, sulphate, sulphite, and valerianate of soda, and the tartrate of potassa and soda. The description of some of these combi- nations will immediately follow; and the remainder will be noticed, under their respective titles, in Part II. B. SODiE ACETAS. U. S., Br. Appendix. Acetate of Soda. Terra foliata tartari, Lat.; Acetate de soude, Fr.; Essigsaures Natron, Germ.; Acetate tli soda,77HT Acetate of soda, being obtained on a large scale from the manufacturing chemist, is properly placed in the catalogue of the Materia Medica in the United States Pharmacopoeia. In the British, it was introduced into the Appendix, because used only in the preparation of other medicines. Acetate of soda is prepared by the manufacturer of crude pyroligneous acid, for the purpose of being decomposed, so as to yield the officinal acetic acid, by the action of sulphuric acid. The steps of the process by which it is made from the crude acid have been given under the head of Acidum Aceticum (page 19). Properties, &c. Acetate of soda is a white salt, crystallizing in long striated prisms, and possessing a sharp, bitterish, not disagreeable taste. Exposed to a dry air it effloresces slowly, and loses about 40 per cent, of its weight. It is soluble in about 3 parts of cold water, and in 24 of alcohol. Subjected to heat it undergoes first the aqueous and then the igneous fusion, and is finally decom- posed ; the residue being a mixture of carbonate of soda and charcoal. By the addition of sulphuric acid it is decomposed, the acetic acid .being liberated, known by its acetous odour, and sulphate of soda formed. The salt should be perfectly neutral to test paper, and not precipitated by chloride of barium, nitrate of silver, or bichloride of platinum. The non-action of these tests shows the ab- sence of sulphates, chlorides, and the salts of potassa. For the proper action of the nitrate of silver test, the solution should be dilute; as, if it be strong, there will be a crystalline precipitate of acetate of silver, which dissolves on the addi- tion of water. Acetate of soda, when crystallized, consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, one of soda 31 3, and six of water 54 = 136-3. Medical Properties and Uses. Acetate of soda is diuretic, and possesses gen- erally the same medical properties as acetate of potassa, to which article the reader is referred. It is, however, more convenient for exhibition than the lat- ter salt, as it is not deliquescent. The dose is from a scruple to two drachms. It is employed principally to yield acetic acid by the action of sulphuric acid. Pharm.Uses. In preparing Ferri Arsenias, 7?r.; Ferri Phosphas, Br.; Syrupus Ferri Phosphatis, Br. Off. Prep. Acidum Aceticum Glaciale, Br SODiE BORAS. U.S. Borate of Soda. Off. Syn. BORAX. Biborate of Soda, NaO,2BOs + 10HO. Br Borate de soude7Borax, Fr.; Boraxsaures Natron, Borax, Germ,; Borace, Ital.; Borax Span.; Boorak, Arab. Borax was known to the ancients, but its chemical nature was first ascertained by Geofi'roy in 1732. It exists native, and may be obtained by artificial means. It occurs in several localities in Europe, in Peru, and in beds, associated with borate of lime, in the district of Iquique, in the Republic of Ecuador. This mineral (tinkalzite) which has become an article of commerce, and is consider- ably used as a substitute for borax, contains, According to T. L. Phillipson, 84 PART I. Sodse Boras. 785 per cent, of water, 11 95 of soda, 14 45 of lime, 34 T1 of boracic acid, 1 34 of chlorine, 110 of sulphuric acid, 0-60 of silica, and 2 of sand; and may be considered as a compound essentially of one eq. of crystallized borate of soda and two of borate of lime, more two eqs. of water. (Chem. News, Oct. 5, 1861, p. 183.) It is said also to contain usually some iodine and bromine. (G. Sims.) Borax is found abundantly in certain lakes of Thibet and Persia, from which ii is obtained by spontaneous evaporation. The impure borax, called in commerce lineal or crude borax, concretes on the borders of these lakes. As thus obtained it isTn the'form of crystalline masses, which are sometimes colourless, sometimes yellowish or greenish, and always covered with an earthy coating, greasy to the touch, and having the odour of soap. The greasy appearance is derived from a fatty matter, saponified by soda, The tincal is transferred to the seaports of India, especially Calcutta, from which it is exported to this country in chests. Besides Indian tincal, there is another commercial variety of borax which comes from China, and which is partially refined. Both varieties require to be purified before being used in medicine or the arts. Borax is said to exist in many of the mineral springs of California, and in one locality is so abundant that large crys- tals are formed at the bottom of a shallow lake, one or two hundred acres in extent. (Dr. J. A. Yeatch, Journ. of Frank. Instit., Feb. 1860.) Purification. The method of refining borax was originally possessed as a secret by the Yenetians and Dutch, but is now practised in several European countries. The process pursued in France, as reported by Robiquet and Mar- chand, is as follows. The tincal is placed in a large wooden vessel, and covered to the depth of three or four inches with water; in which state it is allowed to remain for five or six hours, being agitated from time to time. Slaked lime is now added, in the proportion of 1 part to 400 of the impure salt; and the whole, being thoroughly mixed, is allowed to remain at rest till the succeeding day. The salt is next separated by means of a sieve, the crystals being crumbled be- tween the hands, and placed so as to drain. The object of this treatment is to separate the soapy matter, with which the lime forms an insoluble soap; and at the same time sulphate of soda and chloride of sodium are removed, with only a minute loss of the borax. The borax being drained is next dissolved, by the assistance of heat, in two and a half times its weight of water, and the solution treated with one-fiftieth of its weight of chloride of calcium, in order to com- plete the separation of the soapy matter; after which it is strained through a coarse bag. The liquor is then concentrated by heat, and run into wooden ves- sels, lined with lead, having the shape of an inverted quadrangular pyramid. Ir care be taken that the cooling proceed very gradually, distinct crystals will be obtained, such as are found in commerce; otherwise, crystalline crusts will be formed. The Chinese borax is purified in a similar manner; but, being less im- pure than the common tincal, does not require to be washed. Preparation of Artificial Borax.. Large quantities of borax are now made by the direct combination of native boracic acid, with soda. The acid is found abundantly in the crater of Yulcano, one of the Lipari Islands; but principally in a volcanic region of Tuscany, occupying a space of ten or twelve miles. Within this region are found numerous hillocks and fissures, the latter of which emit hot aqueous vapour, containing boracic acid and certain gases. Around one or several of these fissures, a circular basin of masonry is built, which is filled with water, and called a lagoon. By the jets of vapour, constantly breaking through it, the water becomes gradually impregnated with boracic acid, and heated. A series of such lagoons are made to communicate with each other on the declivity of a hill, and the lowest to discharge itself into a reservoir, where t5e solution is allowed to rest, and deposit mechanical impurities. From this reservoir the solution is made to pass into leaden evaporating pans, heated by the natural vapour, where it receives sufficient concentration to fit it for being 786 Sodse Boras. PART I. conducted into wooden tubs, where it is allowed to cool and crystallize. The crude acid, thus obtained, contains, on an average, 84 per cent, of boracic acid; the impurities consisting chiefly of alum, the double sulphate of ammonia and magnesia, and sulphate of lime. The product of the Tuscany lagoons in 1855 was over 1800 tons. (A. Pechiney-Rangot, Journ. de Pharm., xxviii. 358.) The crude acid is converted into borax by dissolving it to saturation in a solution of carbonate of soda, heated by steam; and the liquor, after boiling, is allowed to stand for ten or twelve hours. It is then drawn off into wooden vessels lined with lead, where it crystallizes. The impure crystals, thus obtained, are refined by dissolving them in water heated by steam, adding carbonate of soda to the solution, and crystallizing. The merit of introducing the process for obtaining artificial borax belongs to Cartier and Payen, who succeeded in establishing its manufacture in France. According to Dr. Yeatch, boracic acid exists in the sea-water on the coast of California. Properties. Borax is a white salt, generally crystallized in flattened hexahe- dral prisms, terminated by triangular pyramids, and possessing a sweetish, feebly alkaline taste, and an alkaline reaction. It dissolves in twelve times its weight of cold, and twice its weight of boiling water. Exposed to the air it effloresces slowly, and the surface of the crystals becomes covered with a white powder. Subjected to a moderate heat it undergoes the aqueous fusion, swells consider- ably, and finally becomes a dry porous mass, with loss of half its weight. Above a red heat it melts into a limpid liquid, which, after cooling, concretes into a transparent solid, called glass of borax, much used as a flux in assays with the blowpipe. Borax has been" Found, Tn the English market, adulterated to the ex- tent of 20 per cent, with phosphate of soda. This may be detected by exposing the suspected borax to the heat of a drying room for a few hours, when the phosphate, if present, will effloresce, and may be picked out. Borax has the property of rendering cream of tartar very soluble in water, and forms a combination with it called soluble cream of tartar, which is sometimes used in medicine. This preparation is made by boiling 6 parts of cream of tartar and 2 of borax in 16 of water for five minutes, allowing the solution to cool, and then filtering to separate some tartrate of lime. Soluble cream of tartar attracts moisture from the air, and is soluble in its own weight of cold, and half its weight of boiling water. A similar preparation may be made by substituting boracic acid for the borax. Boracic acid soluble cream of tartar is directed by the French Codex, and is madlHrythe following formula. Four hundred parts of cream of tartar and 100 of the acid are dissolved in a silver basin, at the boiling temperature, in 2400 parts of water. The solution is kept boiling until the greater part of the water is consumed. The fire is then moderated, and the solution continually stirred while the evaporation proceeds. When the matter has become very thick, it is removed by portions, which are flattened in the hand, completely dried by the heat of a stove, powdered, and kept in wTell-stop- ped bottles. This form of soluble cream of tartar is more soluble than that made with borax. According to M. E. Robiquet, in order to obtain soluble cream of tartar, made with boracic acid, of good quality, it is necessary to use a large quantity of water, and to boil for a long time. By proceeding thus, the boracic acid undergoes a molecular modification, equivalent to a change from the crys- tallized to the vitreous condition, and a preparation, readily and totally soluble in cold water, is ensured. The product should not be powdered, but kept in large grains. {Journ. de Pharm., xxi. 197.) Composition. Borax consists of two eqs. of boracic acid 69 8, and one of soda 31‘3=101T. It ordinarily crystallizes in prisms, and contains ten eqs. ot water (prismatic borax); but a variety of the salt exists, which crystallizes in octohedrons, and contains only five eqs. of water (ociohedral borax). The latter is obtained in the artificial production of borax, by crystallizing from a eoucen- PART I. Sodse Boras. 787 trated solution at a temperature between 174° and 133°. When a solution of borax is evaporated at 212°, the salt is left as a transparent, amorphous, brittle mass, containing four eqs. of water. (Schweitzer.) In composition borax is a biboratethough sometimes called a subborate on account of its possessing an alkaline reaction. Boracic acid may be obtained artificially by decomposing a hot saturated solution of borax with sulphuric acid, wdiich unites with the soda to form sul- phate of soda, and sets free the acid. As thus obtained it is in white, shining, •scaly crystals, characterized by the property of imparting a light-green colour to the flame of burning alcohol. Boracic acid consists of one eq. of boron 10 9, and three of oxygen 24 = 34 9.* Bor.o& is a non-metallic element, which, like carbon, exists in three allotropic states, called amorphous, graphitoidal, and crystallized boron, representing severally charcoal, graphite, and diamond. Crystallized boron is very brilliant, and of different colours, from garnet-red to a nearly colourless honey-yellow. Its density is 2-68, and hardness very great. Wohler and Deville distinguish three varieties of crystals, containing from 2 to 4 per cent, of carbon; and one specimen, in addition to carbon, about 7 per cent, of aluminium. The hardest variety was as hard as diamond. (See Ghem. Gaz., Aug. 1, 1857, p. 281.) Medical Properties. Borax is a mild refrigerant and diuretic. It is supposed also to exercise a specific influence over the uterus, promoting menstruation, facilitating parturition, and favouring the expulsion of the placenta. Dr. Bins- wanger denies its specific power of exciting uterine contractions, or promoting menstruation. Nevertheless, Dr. Daniel Stahl, of Indiana, has found it useful in dysmenorrhoea, occurring in sanguineous constitutions, venesection being premised. He gives it in doses of about nine grains every two hours, in a table- spoonful of flaxseed tea, for two days before the time of the expected return of the menses. Yirey deemed it aphrodisiac; and, according to Dr. J. C. Hubbard, it is eminently so when used in the form of enema. Binswanger considers borax as the best remedy that can be used in nephritic and calculous com- plaints, dependent on an excess of uric acid. It probably acts in such cases as an alkali, the soda of the salt neutralizing the uric acid occurring in the urinary passages, and the boracic acid being set free. The dose is from thirty to forty grains. In infantile diarrhoea, unattended by lesions of the intestinal mucous membrane, M. Bouchut has found borax peculiarly efficacious, given in the form of enema, made by dissolving from two to five drachms in four fluidounces of water. Cream of tartar is conveniently rendered more soluble by borax or boracic acid, when it is desirable to administer it in large quantities., Externally the solution of borax is used as a wash in scaly eruptions. A solution, formed by dissolving a drachm of the salt in two fluidounces of distilled vinegar, has been found, both by Dr. Abercrombie and Dr. Christison, an excellent lotion for ringworm of the scalp. Borax has been employed with good effect by Dr. Brinton in an inveterate case of cracked tongue, applied as a lotion, made by dissolving two scruples of borax in an ounce of glycerin, and four fluidounces of water. This salt is very much used as a detergent in aphthous affections of the mouth in children. When employed for this purpose, it is generally ap- plied in powder, either mixed with sugar in the proportion of one part to seven, or rubbed up with honey. (See Mel Boracis.) * Reactions of Boracic Acid. From the researches of M. C. Tissier, it appears that boracic acid, in boiling solution, is capable of dissolving the protoxides of calcium, magnesium, manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, zinc, and cadmium, but not those of copper, lead, or tin, nor the sesquioxides of aluminium, chrome, or iron. In other words, it dissolves the protox- ides of all the metals which decompose water in the presence of acids, and is without action AAT I. Styrax.—Sulphur. 813 hoiic extract. Containing volatile oil and resin, and yielding benzoic or cinna- mic acid by distillation, it is entitled to be ranked as a balsam. Besides oil, resin, and benzoic acid, Reinsch found in styrax calamita, gum, extractive, lig- nin, a matter extracted by potassa, water, and traces of ammonia. Simon found in liquid storax cinnamic acid, and a resinous substance, which he considered identical with the styracin of Bonastre. According to Toel, styracin is a com- pound of cinnamic acidTwith a peculiar substance which he calls sty rone, and is in composition perfectly analogous to the natural fats. (Ghem. Gaz., July 2, 1849.) Strecker gives the name of styrone to a substance resulting from the action of caustic potassa on liquid storax. He states that, if this be oxidized by exposing spongy platinum moistened with it in the liquid state to the air, the odour of oil of cinnamon is perceived, evincing the production of a portioL of that oil. (See Pharm. Journ., xv. 180.) The volatile oil of storax, denomi- nated styrol, is obtained by distilling the liquid balsam with water and carbo- nate of soda, this salt being added to retain the cinnamic acid. It is a mobile, limpid fluid, with the odour of liquid storax, and a burning taste. It has the sp. gr. 0 924, and boils at 294° F. {Gmelin's Handbook, xiii. 2.) Medical Properties and Uses. This balsam is a stimulating expectorant, and was formerly recommended in phthisis, chronic catarrh, asthma, and amenorrhoea; but it is very seldom used at present, except as a constituent of the compound tincture of benzoin. It has been highly praised as a remedy in diphtheria and pseudomembranous croup. Liquid storax has been recommended in gonorrhoea and leucorrhoea as equally effectual with copaiba, and less disagreeable. From ten to twenty grains may be given twice a day, and the dose gradually increased. Off. Prep. Tinctura Benzoini Composita. W. SULPHUR LOTUM. U.S. Washed Sulphur. Sublimed sulphur, thoroughly washed with water. U. S. SULPHUR SUBLIMATUM. U.S., Br. Sublimed Sulphur. Brimstone; Soufre, Fr.; Schwefel, Germ.; Zolfo, Ital.; Azufre, Span. The officinal forms of sulphur are the sublimed, the washed, and the precipi- tated. The sublimed and washed sulphur will be noticed in this place; the pre- cipitated, in Part 11. among the Preparations. Natural States. Sulphur is very generally disseminated throughout the min- eral kingdom, and is almost always present, in minute quantity, in animal and vegetable matter. Among vegetables, it is particularly abundant in mustard and other cruciform plants. It occurs in the earth, either native or in combination. When native it is found in masses, translucent or opaque, or in the powdery form mixed with various earthy impurities. In combination it is usually united with certain metals, as iron, lead, mercury, antimony, copper, and zinc, forming compounds called sulphurets. Native., sulphur is most abundant in volcanic countries, and is hence called volcanic sulphur. The most productive mines of sulphur are found in Sicily, at Solfatara in the kingdom of Naples,* and in the Roman States. A large mine of native sulphur has been opened in California, about twenty miles from Santa Barbara, and seven from the sea-coast. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1862, p. 176.) * On a recent visit (A. D. 18G1) to Solfatara, one of the authors was informed that sul- phur was no longer obtained from this extinct volcano; and certainly no works for its extraction were then in operation.—Note to the twelfth edition. 814 Sulphur. PART I. Extraction, dec. Sulphur is obtained either from sulphur earths, or from the native sulphurets of iron and copper, called iron and copper pyrites. The sul- phur earths are placed in earthen pots, set in oblong furnaces of brickwork. From the upper and lateral part of each pot, a tube proceeds obliquely down- wards, which communicates with the upper part of a similar pot, situated out- side the furnace, and perforated near its bottom, to allow the melted sulphur to flow into a vessel containing water, conveniently placed to receive it. Fire being applied, the sulphur rises in vapour, leaving the imparities behind, and, being condensed again, flows from the perforated pot into the vessel containing the water. Sulphur, as thus obtained, is called crude sulphur, and contains about one-twelfth of its weight of earthy matter. For purification it is generally melted in a cast iron vessel When the fusion is complete, the impurities sub- side, and the purer sulphur is dipped out and poured into cylindrical woodeu moulds, which give it the form of solid cylinders, about an inch in diameter, called in commerce roll sulgliur or cane brimstone. The dregs of this process, ground to powder, constitute a very impure kind of sulphur, of a gray colour, called in the shops sulphur vivum or horse brimstone. The above process purifies the sulpfiuFbut imperfectly. At the same time it causes a considerable loss; as the dregs just mentioned contain a large propor- tion of sulphur. A more eligible mode of purification consists in distilling the crude sulphur from a large cast iron still, set in brickwork over a furnace, and furnished with an iron head. The head has two lateral communications, one with a chamber of brickwork, the other with an iron receiver, immersed in water, which is constantly renewed to cool it sufficiently to cause the sulphur to con- dense in the liquid form. When the tube between the still and receiver is shut, and that communicating with the chamber is open, the sulphur condenses on its walls in the form of an impalpable powder, and constitutes sublimed sulphur or flowers of sulphur. If, on the other hand, the communication with the chamber~tTTfiosecqand that with the receiver opened, the sulphur condenses in the latter in the fused state, and, when cast in cylindrical moulds, forms the roll sulphur of commerce. The extraction of sulphur from the bisulphuret of iron (iron pyrites) is per- formed by distilling it in stone-ware cylinders. Half the sulphur contained in the bisulphuret is volatilized by the heat, and conducted, by means of an adopter, into vessels containing water, where it condenses. The residue of the mineral is employed for making sulphate of iron, or green vitriol. In the island of An- glesea, large quantities of sulphur are obtained from copper pyrites in the pro- cess for extracting that metal. The furnaces in which the ore is roasted are connected by horizontal flues with chambers, in which the volatilized sulphur is condensed. Each chamber is furnished with a door, through which the sul- phur is withdrawn once in six weeks. Crude sulphur comes to this country principally from Messina, in Sicily, and the ports of Italy. Roll sulphur and the flowers are usually brought from Mar- seilles. Good Sicilian sulphur does not contain more than 3 per cent, of impurity, consisting chiefly of earths. Crude sulphur is employed by the manufacturers of sulphuric acid; and, as it is very variable in quality, it becomes important to ascertain its exact value. This may be done by drying a given weight of it, and submitting it to combustion. The weight of the incombustible residue, added to that lost in drying, gives the amount of impurity. Properties. Sulphur is a non-metallic element, susceptible of several allotro- pic states. In its ordinary state it is a brittle solid, of a pale yellow-colour, permanent in the air, and exhibiting a crystalline texture and shining fracture. It nas a slight taste, and a perceptible smell when rubbed. "When pure its sp. gr. is about 2; but it varies a little in density in its different allotropic states. Oc- casionally, from impurity, its sp. gr. is as high as 2’35. Its eq. number is 16, and PART I. Sulphur. 815 its symbol S. It is a bad conductor of heat, and becomes negatively electric by friction. The melting point of sulphur varies with its allotropic state, which is readily altered by heat. In ordinary sulphur, which is a mixture of the element in different allotropic states, this point varies from 232° to 248°. If heated above its melting point, it undergoes, in proportion to the heat applied, a pro- gressive change, which will cause it, upon slow cooling, to solidify at a tempera- ture lower than that at which it was melted; and, if it be remelted, it will bo found to have a higher melting point than before. Melted sulphur is perfectly limpid, and of a bright-yellow colour. When sulphur is melted, and, after par- tial cooling, the crust formed on its surface is pierced, and the fluid portion poured out, it maybe obtained in slender prismatic crystals, called prismatic sulphur. When sulphur is heated above its melting point, it becomes deeper- coloured and less fluid. At 392°, it has a deep-brown colour, and is so viscid that it cannot be poured from the containing vessel. If the temperature be still further increased, the sulphur resumes its fluidity, but retains its brown colour Finally, when the temperature reaches 752°, it boils in close vessels, forming a, yellow vapour, and may be distilled. If melted sulphur, heated above 392°, is suddenly cooled by being poured out into water, it becomes a reddish-brown plastic mass, with alteration of properties, called soft sulphur (viscid sulphur), which is employed in taking impressions of medals, &c. This form of sulphur resumes the hard state, but not its original colour, after the lapse of a few days, or suddenly if heated to about 212°. Sulphur is insoluble in water, but soluble in alkaline solutions, petroleum, rectified coal naphtha, the fixed oils, oil of tur- pentine and other volatile oils, alcohol and ether, chloroform, and bisulphuret of carbon. Its best solvent is bisulphuret of carbon, from solution in which it crystallizes generally in octohedrons, a form belonging to a different system from the prism, obtained by crystallizing melted sulphur by cooling. Hence sulphur is said to be dimorphous. The allotropic states of sulphur have been studied chiefly by Brodie, Magnus and Weber, and Berthelot. These states are induced, for the most part, by heat, and are distinguished by the crystalline form of the sulphur, and by its solubility or non-solubility in bisulphuret of carbon. According to the corrected deter- minations of Magnus and Weber, there are four allotropic states of sulphur, which they distinguish by the names of prismatic, octohedral, crummy, and in- soluble sulphur. Prismatic sulphur forms the greater part of ordinary sulphur. It is soluble in bisulphuret of carbon. If heated just to its point of fusion, it will have a coinciding melting and solidifying point at 248°. ( B. C. Brodie.) Octohedral sulphur may be obtained from freshly made soft sulphur, by acting on it with bisulphuret of carbon, which dissolves it in part. This solution, by distilling off a portion of the bisulphuret, yields, on cooling, octohedral sulphur. The melting point of this sulphur is 238°; but it is difficult to get it correctly, owing to the facility with which octohedral sulphur is changed by heat into the prismatic, with the effect of raising the melting point. (B. C. Brodie.) The solution, when no more crystals can be obtained from it, still contains sulphur, which may be separated as a cellular amorphous mass, called crummy sulphur, by the spontaneous evaporation of the solvent. Crummy sulphur forms from 2 to 5 per cent, of the soft sulphur; and, though obtained from its solution in bisulphuret of carbon, cannot be redissolved in it, even at the boiling tempera- ture. Insoluble sulphur is the name given to that part of the soft sulphur which is left undissolved by the bisulphuret, amounting to between one-third and nearly one-half of the former. Mr. Brodie was unable to determine the melting point of this sulphur, but found it considerably above 248°, or the melt- ing point of prismatic sulphur. Flowers of sulphur contain about one-third of their weight of insoluble sulphur. Crummy sulphur is either yellow or red, ac- cording as it is obtained from a soft sulphur which has been once or several 816 Sulphur. PART I. times melted and poured out into water. What Magnus formerly called red sulphur is a red modification of crummy sulphur. Red and black sulphur are no longer considered by Magnus as allotropic states of sulphur; but rather as sulphur modified by the presence of a minute proportion of foreign matter. This opinion is founded on the recent discovery of Mitscherlich, confirmed by Magnus, that a number of substances, especially the fats and oils, when heated with sulphur, give it a red or black colour. Thus, one part of tallow, heated with 3000 parts of sulphur, imparts to it an intensely red colour; and the same proportion of paraffin changes it to red or black. So minute is the quantity of foreign matter, capable of producing this change, that Magnus asserts that sul- phur, touched by the hands, will be coloured red by the greasy matter thereby imparted, upon being heated to 572°. Black sulphur forms a soft, greasy, duc- tile mass, which after a time solidifies, when it assumes a glassy appearance. (See Chem. Gaz., May 15, 1854, and Philos. Mag., Supplement, Jan. 1857.) The physical properties of sulphur are remarkably modified by heating it in contact with a minute proportion of iodine, bromine, or chlorine. It becomes soft and malleable, and at the same time is rendered insoluble in bisulphuret of carbon. (Chem. News, March 7, 1863, p. 115.) Sulphur takes fire at about the temperature of 300°, and burns with a blue flame, combining with the oxygen of the air, and giving rise to a peculiar gaseous acid, called sulphurous acid. The combinations of sulphur are nume- rous, and among the most powerful agents of chemistry. It forms with oxygen four principal acids, the hyposulphurous, sulphurous, hyposulphuric, and sulphuric; with hydrogen, sulphohydric acid (hvdrosulphuric acid or sul- phuretted hydrogen); and with the metals," various sulphurets. Some of the sulphurets are analogous to acids, others to bases; and these different sulphu- rets, by combining with each other, form compounds which, from their analogy to salts, are called by Berzelius sulpho-salts. An extremely sensitive test of this element is a solution of molybdate of am- monia in muriatic acid, diluted with water, which is rendered blue by contact with even a trace of sulphur. (Journ. de Pliarm., Mai, 1862, p. 367.) Sulphur, when obtained by roasting the native sulphurets, sometimes con- tains arsenic, and is thereby rendered poisonous. Sicilian sulphur, being vol- canic, is not subject to this impurity. The common English roll sulphur is sometimes made from iron pyrites, and is then apt to contain orpiment (ler- sulphuret of arsenic). This impurity may be detected by heating the sus- pected sulphur with nitric acid. The arsenic, if present, will be converted into arsenic acid; and the nitric solution, diluted with water, neutralized with car- bonate of soda, and acidulated with muriatic acid, will give a yellow precipi- tate of quintosulphuret of arsenic with a stream of sulphuretted hydrogen. A precipitate may be more readily obtained from the nitric solution, if, after neu- tralization, sulphurous acid be added, which will convert the arsenic acid into the arsenious. This is more easily decomposed by the sulphuretted hydrogen; but the precipitate obtained will now be the tersulphuret. Sulphur, when per- fectly pure, is wholly volatilized by heat, and soluble without residue in oil of turpentine. According to Dr. Playfair, a solution of'nitroprusside of sodium is a delicate test for the alkaline sulphurets, producing with them a violet tint. The late Prof. Bailey, of West Point, employed the same test for detecting sul- phur in any compound. The substance suspected to contain it is fused with car- bonate of soda, with the addition of carbonaceous matter if necessary. If sulphur be present it will be converted into sulphuret of sodium ; and, upon the addition of a small portion of the fused mass to a drop of the nitroprusside, the charac- teristic violet tint will be produced. Sublimed sulphur, usually called flowers of sulphur (fores sulphuris), i» in the form of a crystalline powder of a fine yellow colour. It is always con- PART I. Sulphur.—Tabacum. 817 taminated with a little sulphuric acid, which is formed at the expense of the oxygen of the air contained in the subliming chambers. Accordingly, it always reddens litmus; and, if the acid is.present in considerable quantity, sometimes cakes. It may be freed from acidity by careful ablution with hot water, when it becomes the officinal washed sulphur. Washed sulphur is placed in the list of Materia Medica of the IT. S. Phar macopoeia, with an explanatory note, that it is sublimed sulphur, thoroughly washed with water. Washed sulphur has the general appearance of sublimed sulphur, and is wholly volatilized by heat. When properly prepared it does not affect litmus, and undergoes no change by exposure to the air. Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphur is laxative, diaphoretic, and resolvent. It is supposed to be rendered soluble by the soda of the bile. It evidently passes off by the pores of the skin ; as is shown by the fact that silver, worn in the pockets of patients under a course of it, becomes blackened with a coating of sulphuret. The stools which it occasions are usually solid, and it is gentle in its operation, unless it contain a good deal of acid, when it may cause griping: and the liability of the sublimed sulphur to contain acid, renders it less eligible for exhibition than the washed sulphur, from which all acidity is removed. The diseases in which sulphur is principally used are hemorrhoidal affections, atonic gout, chronic rheumatism, chronic catarrh, and asthma. It has also been given as an antiperiodic, being considered as particularly applicable to cases in which the apyrexia is incomplete. It is also much employed, both internally and ex- ternally, in cutaneous affections, especially scabies, for the cure of which it is considered a specific. In these affections, as well as in chronic rheumatism, it is sometimes applied as an air bath, in the form of sulphurous acid gas, the head being protected from its effects. The external use of sulphur is strongly recom- mended by Dr. O’Connor, of London, in sciatica, and chronic articular rheu- matism. The limb affected is covered with sulphur, and bandaged with new flannel, over which sheets of wadding are wrapped. The dressing should not be taken off for several days; as its earlier removal would interfere with the absorption of the sulphur, on which its curative effect depends. (Lancet, Am. ed., June, 1857, p. 507.) The dose of sulphur is from one to three drachms, mixed with syrup or molasses, or taken in milk. It is often combined with bitartrate of potassa, or with magnesia. According to M. Hannon, of Brussels, soft sulphur, recently prepared, pos- sesses valuable therapeutic properties, not as a laxative, but as a stimulant to the circulation, lungs, and skin, far more active than ordinary sulphur. The dose of soft sulphur is from twenty to fifty grains, given in the form of pill. It has also been successfully employed for filling the hollows of carious teeth. (Pharm. Journ., xvii. 330.) Sulphur is consumed in the arts, principally in the manufacture of gunpowder and sulphuric acid. Off. Prep, of Sulphur Sublimatum. Confectio Sulphuris, Br.; Emplastrum Ammoniaci cum Hydrargyro; Hydrargyri Sulphuretum Rubrum, U. S.; Potassa Sulphurata, Br.; Potassii Sulphuretum, U. S.; Sulphur Prsecipitatum ; Sulphuris lodidum, U. S.; TTnguentum Sulphuris. B. TABACUM. U.S.,Br. Tobacco. The commercial dried leaves of Nicotiana Tabacum. U. S. Leaf Tobacco. Virginian Tobacco. The dried Leaves. Br. Tabac, Fr.; Tabak, Germ.; Tobacco, Ital.; Tobaco, Span. Nicotiana. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Solanacesc. 818 Tabacum. IMRT I. Gen.Oi. Corolla funnel-shaped, with the border plaited. Stamens inclined. Capsules two-valved, two-celled. Willd. Nicotiana, Tabacum. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1014; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 171; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 208, t. 77. The tobacco is an annual plant, with a large fibrous root, and an erect, round, hairy, viscid stem, which branches near the top, and rises from three to six feet in height. The leaves are numerous, alternate, sessile, and somewhat decurrent, very large, ovate-lanceolate, pointed, entire, slightly viscid, and of a pale-green colour. The lowest are often two feet tong, and six inches broad. The flowers are disposed in loose terminal panicles, and are furnished with long, linear, pointed bractes at the divisions of the pedun- cle. The calyx is bell-shaped, hairy, somewhat viscid, and divided at its summit into five pointed segments. The tube of the corolla is twice as long as the calyx, of a greenish hue, swelling at top into an oblong cup, and ultimately expanding into a five-lobed, plaited, rose-coloured border’. The whole corolla is very viscid. The filaments incline to one side, and support oblong anthers. The pistil con- sists of an oval germ, a slender style longer than the stamens, and a cleft stigma. The fruit is an ovate, two-valved, two-celled capsule, containing numerous reni- form seeds, and opening at the summit. The leaves are the part employed. The seeds, examined by F. M. Brandt, yielded no narcotic principle, though a protean- like substance contained in them was thought, by its decomposition, to produce nicotia. (Neues Jalirb.fur Pharm., xxi. 42.) Prof. Procter also failed to find nicotia in the seeds. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 296.) There is good reason to believe that this plant is a native of tropical America, where it was found by the Spaniards upon their arrival. It is at present culti- vated in most parts of the world, and nowhere more abundantly than within the limits of the United States. Virginia is, perhaps, the region most celebrated for its culture. The young shoots, produced from seeds thickly sown in beds, are transplanted into the fields during the month of May, and set in rows with an interval of three or four feet between the plants. Through the whole period of its growth, the crop requires constant attention. The development of the leaves is promoted by removing the top of each plant, and thus preventing it from running into flower and seed. The harvest is in August. The ripe plants, having been cut off above their roots, are dried under cover, and then stripped of their leaves, which are tied in bundles, and packed in hogsheads. While hung up in the drying houses, they undergo a curing process, consisting in exposure to a considerable degree of heat, through which they become moist, or in other words are said to sweat, after which they are dried for packing. Two varieties of this species are mentioned by authors, one with narrow, the other with broad leaves; but they do not differ materially in properties. Great diversity in the quality of tobacco is produced by difference of soil and mode of cultivation ; and several varieties are recognised in commerce. Other species also of Nicotiana are cultivated, especially N. rustica and Npaniculata, the for- mer of which is said to have been the first introduced into Europe, and is thought to have been cultivated by the aborigines of this country, as it is naturalized near the borders of some of our small northern lakes. The N. quadrivalvis of Pursh affords tobacco to the Indians of the Missouri and Columbia rivers; and N. fruticosa, a native of China, was probably cultivated in Asia before the dis- covery of this continent by Columbus. The latter species is said by Mr. John Le Conte to be that from which the best Cuba tobacco is obtained. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1859, from Proceed, of Acad, of Nat. Sci.) Properties. Tobacco, as it occurs in commerce, is of a yellowish-brown colour, a strong narcotic penetrating odour which is wanting in the fresh leaves, and a bitter, nauseous, and acrid taste. These properties are imparted to water and alcohol. They are injured by long boiling; and the extract is, therefore, rela- tively feeble. An elaborate analysis of tobacco was made by Vauquelin, who part I. Tabacum. 819 discovered in it, among other ingredients, an acrid, volatile, colourless liquid, slightly soluble in water, very soluble in alcohol, and supposed to be the active principle. It was separated by a complicated process, of which, however, the most important step was the distillation of tobacco juice with potassa. In tbv results of this distillation, Vauquelin recognised alkaline properties, whijh he ascribed to ammonia, but which were, in part at least, dependent upon the acrid principle alluded to. To this principle the name of nicotin was given; but its alkalinity was not ascertained till a subsequent period. Another substance was obtained by Hermstadt by simply distilling water from tobacco, and allowing the liquid to stand for several days. A white crystalline matter rose to the surface, which, upon being removed, was found to have the odour of tobacco, and to resemble it in effects. It was fusible, volatilizable, similar to the nicotin of Vau- quelin in solubility, and without alkaline or acid properties. It was called nico- tianin by Hermstadt, and appears to partake of the nature of volatile oils. Two German chemists, Posselt and Reimann, subsequently analyzed tobacco, and ascertained the alkaline nature of its active principle, which, however, neither they nor Vauquelin obtained in a state of purity. According to these chemists, 10,000 parts of the fresh leaves contain 6 parts of an alkaline substance, which they call nicotin, 1 of the nicotianin of Hermstadt, 281 of slightly bitter ex- tractive, lTT'of gum mixed with a little malate of lime, 26*7 of green resin, 26 of albumen, 104-8 of a substance analogous to gluten, 51 of malic acid, 12 of malate of ammonia, 4-8 of sulphate of potassa, 6‘3 of chloride of potassium, 95 of potassa, which was combined in the leaves with malic and nitric acids, 16'6 of phosphate of lime, 24'2 of lime which had been combined with malic acid, 8-8 of silica, 496 9 of lignin, traces of starch, and 8828 parts of water. (Ber- zelius, Traits de Ghimie.) According to M. E. Gonpet, tobacco contains also a little citric acid. (Chem. Gaz., Aug. 1846, p. 319.) The nicotin obtained by Vauquelin, and by Posselt and Reimann, was a colourless, volatile liquid, and, as subsequently ascertained by Henry and Boutron, was in fact an aqueous solu- tion of the alkaline principle in connection with ammonia. It was reserved for these chemists to obtain nicotin, or nicotia, as it should now be called, in a state of purity. It exists in tobacco combined with an acid in excess, and in this state is not volatile. The following was the process employed by the Messrs. Henry and Boutron. Five hundred parts of smoking tobacco were exposed to distillation, in connec- tion with about 6000 parts of water and 200 parts of caustic soda; the heat applied being at first very moderate, and afterwards increased to the boiling point. The product of the distillation was received in a vessel containing about 30 or 40 parts of sulphuric acid, diluted with 3 times its weight of water; and the process was continued till nearly one-half of the liquid had come over. The product, in which care was taken to preserve a slight excess of acid, was evapo- rated to about 100 parts, and then allowed to cool. A slight deposit which had formed was separated by filtration, an excess of caustic soda was added, and the liquor again distilled. A colourless, very volatile, acrid liquor now came over, which, being concentrated under the receiver of an air-pump, lost the ammonia which accompanied it, and assumed a syrupy consistence, and more or less of the colour of amber. In the liquid, after a few days, minute crystalline plates formed; but, in consequence of their affinity for moisture, it was difficult to iso- late them. This liquid was pure nicotia. M. Debize obtains it by passing a cur- rent of steam through a mixture of tobacco and lime, contained in a cylinder, and condensing the vapour by a worm (Connected with the opposite extremity of the cylinder from that at which the steam enters. The resulting liquid, which contains the nicotia, together with ammonia and some undetermined bases, is neutralized with sulphuric acid, then concentrated, and treated with ammonia and ether, by means of which an ethereal solution of nicotia is obtained. A s 820 Tahacum. PART I. this btirie is insoluble in solution of sulphate of ammonia, the solution of nicotia separates, and, rising to the surface, may be removed. The alkaloid may after- wards be obtained pure by rectification. {Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 18G0, p. 281.) Nicotia. (Nicotina. Nicotin.) This is a colourless or nearly colourless fluid ; of the sp. gr. 1 048; remaining liquid at 22° F.; of little smell when cold ; of an exceedingly acrid burning taste, even when largely diluted ; entirely vola tilizable, and, in the state of vapour, very irritant to the nostfils, with an odour lecalling that of tobacco; inflammable; very soluble in water, alcohol, ether, the fixed oils, and oil of turpentine ; strongly alkaline in its reaction ; and capa- ble of forming crystallizable salts with the acids. These salts are deliquescent, have a burning and acrid taste, and, like the salts of ammonia, lose a portion of their base by heat. Nicotia contains a much larger proportion of nitrogen than most of the other organic alkalies. Its formula is and combining number consequently 162. In its action on the animal system, it is one of the most virulent poisons known. A drop of it, in the state of concentrated solution, was sufficient to destroy a dog; and small birds perished at the approach of a tube containing it. In man, it is said to destroy life, in poisonous doses, in from two to five minutes. Tannin forms with it a compound of but slight solubility, and might be employed as a counter-poison. It exists in tobacco in small pro- portion. Henry and Boutron found different varieties of tobacco to give pro- ducts varying from 3‘8 to 11 28 parts in 1000. It has been found in the seeds, and in very small proportion in the root. (See Journ. de Pharm., xxii. 689.) There can be little doubt that tobacco owes its activity to this alkaloid.* It has been employed as a poison. For a very interesting account of it in all its toxi- cological relations, the reader is referred to a memoir by Orfila, translated by Dr. Lee, and published in the N. Y. Journ. of Med. (N. S., ix. 112, 219, and 369). A more recent paper on the same subject, by Dr. A. S. Taylor, is con- tained in the Pharmaceutical Journal for June, 1859 (p. 620). Nicotia has the remarkable property of resisting decomposition amid the decaying tissues of the body, and was detected by Orfila in the bodies of animals destroyed by it two or three months after their death. Nicotianin is probably the odorous principle of tobacco. Posselt and Rei- mann prepared it by distilling six pounds of the fresh leaves with twelve pounds of water, till one-half of the liquid passed over, then adding six pounds more of water, and again distilling, and repeating this process three times. The nico- tianin was obtained to the amount of eleven grains, floating on the surface of the water. It was a fatty substance, having the smell of tobacco-smoke, and an aromatic somewhat bitter taste. It was volatilizable by heat, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, and not affected by the dilute acids, but dissolved by solution of potassa. This was not obtained by Henry and Boutron. It pro- duces sneezing when applied to the nostrils, and a grain of it swallowed by Hermstadt occasioned giddiness and nausea. The presence of sulphuretted hydrogen and hydrocyanic acid in tobacco- smoke has been demonstrated by Dr. A. Yogel and C. Reischauer. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1859, p. 76.) * M. Schloesing obtained a much larger proportion than that stated above by the fol- lowing process. Tobacco is exhausted by boiling water, the infusion evaporated to a semi- solid consistence, and the extract shaken with twice its volume of alcohol of 36°. Two layers form, of which the upper contains all the nicotia. This is decanted, most of the alcohol evaporated, and alcohol anew added in order to precipitate certain matters. The extract is treated with a concentrated solution of potassa, and, after cooling, is shaken with ether, which dissolves the nicotia. To the ethereal solution powdered oxalic acid is added, which unites with the nicotia, and separates in the form of a syrupy mass. This, being washed with ether, treated with potassa. taken up by water, and distilled in a water bath, yields the nicotia, which may be obtained pure by rectification in a current of hydro gen. (Journ. de Pharm., Se s€r., xii. 157.) Orfila, in his memoir on nicotia, states that Havana tobacco yields 2 per cent, of this alkaloid, Maryland 2-3 per cent., and V ’.rginia 6-9 per etui. PART I. Tahacum. 821 When distilled at a temperature above that of boiling water, tobacco afford? an empyreumatic oil, which Mr. Brodie proved to be a most virulent poison. A single drop, injected into the rectum of a cat, occasioned death in about fivs minutes, and double the quantity, administered in the same manner to a dog, was followed by the same result. This oil is of a dark-brown colour, and an acrid taste, and has a very peculiar smell, exactly resembling that of tobacco pipes which have been much used. It has been shown to contain nicotia. {Ann. de Chim. et de Phys., 3e ser., ix. 465.) It is quite certain that tobacco leaves undergo considerable chemical changes during the processes of curing, and preparation for use. Thus, the characteristic odour of ordinary tobacco is entirely different from that of the fresh leaves, and must be owing to the generation of a new volatile principle. The propor- tion, too, of nicotia contained in prepared tobacco is asserted to be much greater than in the fresh. It appears that a kind of fermentation takes place in the leaves, by which certain pre-existing principles are converted into nicotianin and probably nicotia. A similar change is probably produced during the com- bustion of tobacco; for M. Malapert obtained, from the condensed products of a portion of common French smoking tobacco which he burned, as much as 9 per cent, of nicotia, while the proportion obtained by the ordinary process seldom exceeds 2 per cent., and the highest proportion of which we have seen any account is 6'9 per cent. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 119.) It has even been made a question, whether nicotia existed at all in the fresh growing leaves; but this question has been experimentally decided in the affirmative by Prof. Procter. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 300.) The distinguishing character of tobacco, as given in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, is that, when distilled with solution of potassa, it yields an alkaline fluid, having the peculiar odour of nicotia, and giving precipitates with bichloride of platinum and tincture of galls. Medical Properties and Uses. Tobacco unites, with the powers of a sedative narcotic, those of an emetic and diuretic; and produces these effects to a greater or less extent to whatever surface it may be applied. In addition, when snuffed up the nostrils, it excites violent sneezing and a copious secretion of mucus; when chewed, it irritates the mucous membrane of the mouth, and increases the flow of saliva; and, when injected into the rectum, it sometimes operates as a cathartic. Moderately taken, it quiets restlessness, calms mental and corporeal inquietude, and produces a state of general languor or repose, which has great charms for those habituated to the impression. In larger quantities, it gives rise to confusion of the head, vertigo, stupor, faintness, nausea, vomiting, and general debility of the nervous and circulatory functions, which, if increased, eventuates in alarming and even fatal prostration. The symptoms of its exces- sive action are severe retching, with the most distressing and continued nausea, great feebleness of pulse, coolness of the skin, fainting, and sometimes convul- sions. It probably operates both through the medium of the nervous system, and by entering the circulation. As its local action is stimulant, we can thus account for the fact, that it excites the function of the kidneys, at the same time that it reduces the nervous and secondarily the arterial power. The experi- ments of Brodie lead to the inference that the function of the heart is affected by tobacco, through the medium of the nervous system; for, in a decapitated animal in which the circulation was sustained by artificial respiration, the infu- sion injected into the rectum did not diminish the action of the heart; while, on the contrary, this organ almost immediately ceased to contract, when an equal dose of the poison was administered to a healthy animal. Mr. Brodie observed a remarkable difference between the operation of the infusion and that of the empyreumatic oil. After death from the former the heart was found completely quiescent, while it continued to act with regularity for a considerable time after Tabacum. PART I. apparent deata from the latter. We may infer from this fact, either that there are two poisonous principles in tobacco, or that a new narcotic product is formed during its destructive distillation. In cases of poisoning from tobacco, the indi- cations are, after the evacuation of the poison, to support the system by external and internal stimulants, and to allay irritation of stomach by opiates. The use of tobacco was adopted by the Spaniards from the American Indians. In the year 1560, it was introduced into France by the Ambassador uf that country at the court of Lisbon, whose name—Nicot—has been perpetuated in the generic title of the plant. Sir Walter Raleigh is said to have intioduced the practice of smoking into England. In the various modes of smoking, chew- ing, and snuffing, the drug is now largely consumed in every country on the globe. It must have properties peculiarly adapted to the propensities of our nature, to have thus surmounted the first repugnance to its odour and taste, and to have become the passion of so many millions. When employed in ex- cess, it enfeebles digestion, produces emaciation and general debility, and lays the foundation of serious nervous disorders. The late Dr. Chapman informed us that he had met with several instances of mental disorder, closely resembling delirium tremens, which resulted from its abuse, and which subsided in a few days after it had been abandoned; and Dr. Kirkbride, in the Annual Report of the Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane for 1850, refers to four cases of insanity, the origin of which was ascribed to the abuse of tobacco. In the form of snuff, tobacco is sometimes so much contaminated with lead, in consequence of being kept in leaden boxes, as to endanger the poisonous effects of that metal. In different kinds of snuff, Dr. A. Vogel has found from 0‘014 to 1 025 per cent, of lead. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1864, p. 422.) Its remedial employment is less extensive than might be inferred from the variety of its powers. The excessive and distressing nausea which it is apt to occasion, interferes with its internal use; and it is very seldom administered by the stomach. As a narcotic it is employed chiefly to produce relaxation in spas- modic affections. For this purpose, the infusion or smoke of tobacco, or the leaf in substance in the shape of a suppository, is introduced into the rectum in cases of strangulated hernia, obstinate constipation from spasm of the bowels, and retention of urine from a spasmodic stricture of the urethra. For a similar purpose, the powdered tobacco, or common snuff, mixed with simple cerate, as recommended by the late Dr. Godman, is sometimes applied to the throat and breast in cases of croup; and Dr. Chapman directed the smoking of a cigar in the same complaint, with decided benefit. One of the worst cases of spasm of the rima. glottidis which we have seen, and which resisted powerful depletion by the lancet, yielded to the application of a tobacco cataplasm to the throat. A similar application to the abdomen is highly recommended in painters’ colic, and has proved useful in hysterical convulsions. Tetanus is said to have been cured by baths made with the decoction of the fresh leaves; and an infusion of the leaves has been given internally with success in a case of poisoning by strychnia. (Dub. Med. Press, June 23, 1858.) The relaxation produced by smoking, in a person unaccustomed to it, was very happily resorted to by Dr. Physick, in a case of obstinate and long-continued dislocation of the jaw; and the same remedy has frequently been found useful in the paroxysm of spasmodic asthma. Tobacco has been highly recommended, in the form of cataplasm, in articular gout and rheumatism ; and has been employed in the same wav, as well as by injection, in cases of obstinate verminose affections. As an emetic it is seldom employed, unless in the shape of a cataplasm to the epigastrium, to assist the action of in- ternal medicines, in cases of great insensibility of stomach. As a diuretic it was used by Fowler in dropsy and dysury; but the practice is not often imitated. There is no better errhine than tobacco, for the ordinary purposes for which this class of medicines is employed. As a sialagogue, it is beneficial ir rheumatism PART I. Tabacum.— Tamarindus. 823 of the jaws, and often relieves toothache by its anodyne action. It is also used externally, in the shape of cataplasm, infusion, or oiutment, in cases of tinea capitis, psora, and some other cutaneous affections. The empyreumatic oil mixed with simple ointment, in the proportion of twenty drops to the ounce, has been applied with advantage, by American practitioners, to indolent tumours and ulcers; but, in consequence of its liability to be absorbed, and to produce un- pleasant effects on the system, it should be used with great caution. (See Oleum Tabaci.) This remark is applicable to all the modes of employing tobacco; particularly to the injection of the infusion into the rectum, which has caused death in several instances. It is even more dangerous than a proportionate quantity introduced into the stomach; as, in the latter case, the poison is more apt to be rejected. Even the external application of the leaves or powder is not without danger, especially when the cuticle is removed. A case of death is on record, occurring in a child eight years old, in consequence of the application of the expressed juice of the leaves to the head, for the cure of tinea capitis. Death has also been produced by the inhalation of the smoke. Five or six grains of powdered tobacco will generally act as an emetic; but the remedy is not given in this shape. The infusion used in dropsy by Fowler was made in the proportion of an ounce to a pint of boiling water, and given in the dose of sixty or eighty drops. The officinal infusion, which is employed for injection, is much weaker. (See Infusum Tabaci.) A wine and an ointment of tobacco are directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Off. Prep. Enema Tabaci, Br.; Infusum Tabaci, U. S.; Oleum Tabaci, U. S+ Unguentum Tabaci, U. S.; Vinum Tabaci, U. S. W. TAMARINDUS. U.S.,Br. Tamarind. The preserved fruit of Tamarindus Indica. U. S. The preserved Pulp of the fruit. Br. Tamarins, Fr.; Tamarindcn, Germ.; Tamarindi, Ital.; Tamarindos, Span. Tamarindus. Sex. Syst. Monadelphia Triandria. — Nat. Ord. Fabaceae or Leguminosas. Gen. Gh. Calyx four-parted. Petals three. Nectary with two short bristles under the filaments. Legume filled with pulp. Willd. Tamarindus Indica. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 5*17 ; Woodv. lied. Bot. p. 448, t. 161. The tamarind tree is the only species of this genus. It rises to a great height, sends off numerous spreading branches, and has a beautiful appearance. The trunk is erect, thick, and covered with a rough, ash-coloured bark. The leaves are alternate and pinnate, composed of many pairs of opposite leaflets, which are almost sessile, entire, oblong, obtuse, unequal at their base, about half an inch long by a sixth of an inch broad, and of a yellowish-green colour. The flowers, which are in small lateral racemes, have a yellowish calyx, and yel- low petals beautifully variegated with red veins. The fruit is a broad, com- pressed, reddish ash-coloured pod, much curved, from two to six inches long, with numerous brown, flat, quadrangular seeds, contained in cells formed by a tough membrane. Exterior to this membrane is a light-coloured acid pulpy matter, between which and the shell are several tough ligneous strings, running f"om the stem to the extremity of the pod, the attachment of which they serve »o strengthen. The shells are fragile and easily separated. Tamarindus Indica appears to be a native of the East and West Indies, Egypt, and Arabia, though believed by some to have been imported into America. Dr. Barth, the African traveller, found it abundant in the interior of Africa, and one of the greatest ornaments of Negroland. (Travels in Africa, Am. ed., 1817, i. 824 Tamarindus.—Tanacetum. PART I. (18.) De Candolle is doubtful whether the East and West India trees are of the same species. It is stated by writers that the pods of the former are much larger than those of the latter, and have a greater number of seeds; the East India tamarinds containing six or seven, those from the West Indies rarely more than three or four. We found, however, in a parcel of the latter in our posses- sion, numerous pods with from eight to ten seeds, and the number generally exceeded four. The fruit is the officinal portion. Tamarinds are brought to us chiefly, if not exclusively, from the West Indies, where they are prepared by placing the pods, previously deprived of their shell, in layers in a cask, and pouring boiling syrup over them. A better mode, some- times practised, is to place them in stone jars, with alternate layers of powdered sugar. They are said to be occasionally prepared in copper boilers. Properties. Fresh tamarinds, which are sometimes, though rarely, brought to this country, have an agreeable sour taste, without any mixture of sweetness. As we usually find them, in the preserved state, they form a dark-coloured ad- hesive mass, consisting of syrup mixed with the pulp, membrane, strings, and seeds of the pod, and of a sweet acidulous taste. The seeds should be hard, clean, and not swollen, the strings tough and entire, and the smell without musti- ness. From the analysis of Yauquelin, it appears that in 100 parts of the pulp of tamarinds, independently of the sugar added to them, there are 9-40 parts of citric acid, 155 of tartaric acid, 0 45 of malic acid, 3 25 of bitartrate of potassa, 4-70 of gum, 625 of jelly, 34 35 of parenchymatous matter, and 27 '55 of water; so that the acidity is owing chiefly to citric acid. It is said that copper may some- times be detected in preserved tamarinds, derived from the boilers in which they are occasionally prepared. Its presence may be ascertained by the reddish coat which it imparts to the blade of a knife immersed in the tamarinds. Medical Properties and Uses. Tamarinds are laxative and refrigerant, and infused in water form a highly grateful drink in febrile diseases. Convalescents often find the pulp a pleasant addition to their diet, and useful by preserving the bowels in a loose condition. It is sometimes prescribed in connection with other mild cathartics, and is one of the ingredients in the confection of senna. Though frequently given with infusion of senna to cover its taste, it is said to weaken its purgative power; and the same observation has been made of its influence upon the resinous cathartics in general. From a drachm to an ounce or more may be taken at a dose. Off- Prep. Confectio Sennas. W. TANACETUM. U. S. Secondary. Tansy. The herb of Tanacetum vulgare. U. S. Tanaisie, Fr.; Gemeiner Rlieinf'arrn, Wurmkraut, Germ.; Tanaceto, Ital., Span. Tanacetum. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia Superflua.—Nat. Ord. Compositae- Seneciouideae, De Candolle; Asteraceae, Lindley. Gen. Ch. Receptacle naked. Pappus somewhat emarginate. Calyx imbri- cate, hemispherical. Corolla rays obsolete, trifid. Willd. Tanacetum vulgare. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1814; Woodv. Med. Pot. p. 66, t. 27. This is a perennial herbaceous plant, rising two or three feet in height. The stems are strong, erect, obscurely hexagonal, striated, often reddish, branched towards the summit, and furnished with alternate, doubly pinnatifid leaves, the divisions cf which are notched or deeply serrate. The flowers are yellow, and in dense terminal corymbs. Each flower is composed of numerous florets, of which those constituting the disk are perfect and five-cleft, those of the ray very few, pistillate, and trifid. The calyx consists of small, imbricated, lanceolate part I. Tanacetum.— Tapioca. 825 leaflets, having a dry, scaly margin. The seeds are small, oblong, with fivQ or six ribs, and crowned with a membranous pappus. Tansy is cultivated in our gardens, and grows wild in the roads and in old fields; but was introduced from Europe, where it is indigenous. It is in flower from July to September. There is a variety of the plant with curled leaves, which is said to be more grateful to the stomach than that above described, but has less of the peculiat sensible properties of the herb, and is probably less active. The odour of tansy is strong, peculiar, and fragrant, but much diminished by drying; the taste is warm, bitter, somewhat acrid, and aromatic. These pro- perties are imparted to water and alcohol. According to Peschier, the leaves contain volatile oil, fixed oil, wax or stearin, chlorophyll, yellow resin, yellow colouring matter, tannic and gallic acids, bitter extractive, gum, lignin, and a peculiar acid which he calls tanacetic, and which precipitates limp, baryta, oxide of lead, and oxide of copper. The medical virtues of the plant depend on the bitter extractive and volatile oil. The latter, when separated by distillation, has a greenish-yellow colour, with the flavour of the plant, is lighter than water, and deposits camphor upon standing. The seeds contain the largest proportion of the bitter principle, and the least of volatile oil. According to Zeller, one pound of the fresh herb, in flower, yields upon an average twenty-four grains' of oil. {Cent. Blatt, 1855, p. 206.) Medical Properties and Uses. Tansy has the medical properties of the aro- matic bitters. It has been recommended in intermittents, hysteria, amenorrbcea, and as a preventive of arthritic paroxysms; but at present it is chiefly used as an anthelmintic, and in this country is little employed, for any purpose, in regu- lar practice. The seeds are said to be most effectual as a vermifuge. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm two or three times a day; but the infusion is more frequently administered. A fatal case of poisoning with half an ounce of oil of tansy is recorded in the Medical Magazine for November, 1834. Frequent and violent clonic spasms were experienced, with much disturb- ance of respiration ; and the action of the heart gradually became weaker till death took place from its entire suspension. No inflammation of the stomach or bowels was discovered upon dissection. {Am. Journ. of the Med. Sci., xvi. 256.) Two other fatal cases have since been recorded, one in which more than a fluidounce was taken, the other only a fluidrachm. In both death followed speedily, preceded by coma and violent convulsions. In two of the three cases above referred to, the oil'seems to have been taken to produce abortion, but no such effect followed in either. {Ibid., xxiii. 136, and xxiv. 219.) Dr. Pendleton records a case, in which death resulted to a negress of twenty-one from a con- siderable quantity of strong decoction of tansy taken internally. W. TAPIOCA. U.S. The fecula of the root of Janipha Manihot. XJ. S. Janipha. Sex. Syst. Moncecia Monadelphia.—Nat. Ord. Euphorbiaceae. Gen. Gh. Calyx campanulate, five-parted. Stamens ten, distinct, alternately shorter. Stigmas three, many-lobed. Fruit three-celled, with solitary seeds. (Lindley, Med. and (Econom. Bot., 82.) Botanists have generally followed Kunth in separating this genus from Ja- tropha. Its name was derived from the Indian designation of another species. Janipha Manihot.. Curtis’s Bot. Mag. 3011. —Jatropha Manihot. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 562. This is the cassava plant of the West Indies, the mandioca^or tajpioca of Brazil. It is a shfub"about six or eight feet high, with a very large, white, fleshy, tuberous root, which often weighs thirty pounds. The stem is Tapioca. Tapioca.—Taraxacum. round, jointed, and furnished at its upper part with alternate petiolate leaves, deeply divided into three, five, or seven oval-lanceolate, very acute lobes, which are somewhat wavy upon their borders, deep-green on their upper surface, glau- cous and whitish beneath. The flowers are in axillary racemes. Janipha Manihot is a native of South America, and is cultivated extensively in the West Indies, Brazil and other parts of tropical America, and in Liberia, for the sake of its root, which is much employed as an article of food. The plant is of quick growth, and the root arrives at perfection in about eight months. There are two varieties, distinguished by the names of sweet and bitter. The root of the former may be eaten with impunity; that of the latter, which is most extensively cultivated, abounds in an acrid milky juice, which renders it highly poisonous it eaten in the recent state. By MM. Henry and Boutron-Charlard it has been ascertained that the bitter cassava owes its poisonous properties to the presence of hydrocyanic acid. {Journ.de Pharm.,xxii. 119.) Both varieties contain a large proportion of starch. The root is prepared for use by washing, scraping, and grating or grinding it into a pulp, which, in the bitter variety, is submitted to pressure so as to separate the deleterious juice. It is now in the state of meal or powder, which is made into bread, cakes, or puddings. As the poisonous principle is volatile, the portion which may have remained in the meal is entirely dissipated by the heat employed in cooking. The preparation denominated tapioca among us is obtained from the expressed juice. This, upon standing, deposits a powder, which, after repeated washings with cold water, is nearly pure starch. It is dried by exposure to heat, which renders it partly soluble in cold water, and enables it to assume its characteristic consistence. When dried without heat, it is pulverulent, and closely resembles the fecula of arrow-root. Tapioca is in irregular, hard, white, rough grains, possessing little taste, par- tially soluble in cold water, and affording a fine blue colour when iodine is added to its filtered solution. The partial solubility in cold water is owing to the rupture of the starch-granules by heat. Examined under the microscope, the granules appear partly broken, partly entire. The latter are muller-shaped, about the two-thousandth of an inch in diameter, more uniform in size than the granules of most other varieties of fecula, with a distinct hilum, which is sur- rounded by rings, and cracks in a stellate manner. Tapioca meal, called some- times Brazilian arrow-root, and by the French moussache, is the fecula dried without heat. Its granules are identical with those already described. Being nutritious, and at the same time easy of digestion, and destitute ot irritating properties, tapioca forms an excellent diet for the sick and convalescent. It is prepared for use by boiling it in water. Lemon-juice and sugar are usually grateful additions; and in low states of disease or cases of debility, it may be advantageously impregnated with wine and nutmeg or other aromatic. A factitious tapioca is found in the shops, consisting of very small, smooth, spherical grains, and supposed to be prepared from potato starch. It is sold under the name of pearl tapioca. W. PART I. TARAXACUM. U.S.,Br. Dandelion. The root, gathered in the autumn, of Taraxacum Dens-leonis. U. 8 The fresn Roots, gathered between September and February. Br. Pissenlit, Dent de lion, Fr.; Lowenzahn, Germ,.; Tarassaco, Ital.; Diente de leon. S/ an. Leontodon. Sex. Syst. Syngenesia JEqualis.— Nat. Ord. Composite-Cicl o raceae, De Candolle; Cichoraceas, Bindley. Gen. Ch. Receptacle naked. Calyx double. Seed-down stipitate, hairy. Willd. Leontodon 'Taraxacum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iii. 1544; Woodv. Med. Bot. p .19. part I. Taraxacum. 827 t. 16.—Taraxacum Dens-leonis. De Cand. Proarom. vii. 145. The dandelion is an herbaceous plant, with a perennial fusiform root. The leaves, which spring immediately from the root, are long, pinnatifid, generally runcinate, with the di- visions toothed, smooth, and of a fine green colour. The common name of the plant was derived from the fancied resemblance of its leaves to the teeth of a lion. The flower-stem rises from the midst of the leaves, six inches or more in height. It is erect, simple, naked, smooth, hollow, fragile, and terminated by a large golden-coloured flower, which closes in the evening, and expands with the returning light of the sun. The calyx is smooth and double, with the outer scales bent downwards. The florets are very numerous, ligulate, and toothed at their extremities. The receptacle is convex and punctured. The seed-down is stipitate, and at the period of maturity is disposed in a spherical form, and is so light and feathery as to be easily borne away by the wind, with the seeds attached. This species of Leontodon grows spontaneously in most parts of the globe. It is abundant in this country, adorning our grass-plats and pasture-grounds with its bright-yellow flowers, which, in moist places, show themselves with the first opening of spring, and continue to appear till near the close of summer. All parts of the plant contain a milky bitterish juice, which exudes when they are broken or wounded. The leaves, when very young, and blanched by the ab- sence of light during their growth, are tender and not unpleasant to the taste, and on the continent of Europe are sometimes used as a salad. When older and of their natural colour they are medicinal. The Pharmacopoeias recognise only the root, which is by far the most efficacious part. It should be full grown when collected, and should be employed in the recent state, as it is then most active. It does not, however, as stated by Duncan, lose nearly all its bitterness by dry- ing; and the root dug up in the warmer seasons might, if dried with care, be employed with propriety in the succeeding winter. The juice of the root is thin and watery in the spring; milky, bitter, and spontaneously coagulable in the latter part of summer and autumn ; and sweet and less bitter in the winter, when affected by the frost. The months of July, August, and September are, there- fore, the proper periods for collecting it. The fresh full-grown root of the dandelion is several inches in length, as thick as the little finger or thicker, round and tapering, somewhat branched, of a light-brown colour externally, whitish within, having a yellowish ligneous cord running through its centre, and abounding in a milky juice. In the dried state it is dark-brown, much shrunk, vrinkled longitudinally, brittle, and when broken presents a shining somewhat resinous fracture. A transverse section exhibits an exterior cortical portion, thick, spongy, whitish, and marked with concentric rings, and a smaller central portion, ligneous and yellow; though in very old roots the latter is sometimes wanting. It is without smell, but has a sweetish, mucilaginous, bitterish, herbaceous taste. Its active properties are yielded to water by boiling, and do not appear to be injured in the process. The milky juice, examined by John, was found to contain bitter extractive, gum, caoutchouc, saline matters, a trace of resin, and a free acid. Besides these ingredients, starch or inulin, and saccharine matter exist in the root. Mannite, which has been found in the infusion of the root, has been demonstrated by the Messrs. Smith, of Edinburgh, not to pre-exist in the root, but to be formed by spontaneous changes consequent on exposure. A crystallizable principle has been extracted from the juice of the root by M. Pollex, who has named it taraxaejn. It is bitter and somewhat acrid, fusible but not volatile, sparingly soluble in cold water, but very soluble in boiling water, alcohol, and ether. It is obtained by boiling the milky juice in distilled water, filtering the concentrated liquor, and allowing it to evaporate spontaneously in a warm place. The taraxacin crystal- lizes, and may be purified by repeated solution and crystallization in alcohol or water. According to Vogel, the intra-cellular substance of the root consists Taraxacum.— TerelintJnna. PART I. chiefly of pectose, which is the result of a metamorphosis of the substance con- stituting the membrane of the cells. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1864, p. 362.) The root of Aspargia hispida has been largely substituted for dandelion in England by the herb gatherers (Pharm. Journ., xi. 107) ; and we are informed that a similar fraudulent substitution is not unfrequent, in this country, of the root of Cichorium Intibus, or chicory. This is distinguishable from the genu- ine root by its lighter colour, and greater bitterness. For a particular account of the characteristic properties of the root, by which it may be distinguished from all others, the reader is referred to an article by Mr. K. Bentley, in the Pharmaceutical Journal (xvi. 304). Medical Properties and Uses. Taraxacum is slightly tonic, diuretic, and aperient, and is thought to have a specific action upon the liver, exciting it when languid to secretion, and resolving its chronic engorgements. It has been much employed in Germany, and is a popular remedy with many practitioners in this country. The diseases to which it appears to be especially applicable, are those connected with derangement of the hepatic apparatus, and of the digestive organs generally. In congestion and chronic inflammation of the liver and spleen, in cases of suspended or deficient biliary secretion, and in dropsical affections de- pendent on obstruction of the abdominal viscera, it appears to be capable of doing good, if employed with a due regard to the degree of excitement. Our own experience is in its favour. An irritable condition of the stomach and bowels, and the existence of acute inflammation contraindicate its employment. It is usually given in the form of extract or decoction, though some prefer the infusion. (See these preparations in Part II.) Bitartrate of potassa is sometimes added to the decoction when an aperient effect is desired ; and aromatics will occasionally be found useful in correcting a tendency to griping or flatulence. The dried root is sometimes mixed, in powder, with ground coffee, the taste of which covers that of the dandelion. It is also used as a substitute for coffee, being powdered and roasted, and then prepared in the same manner. Off. Prep. Decoctum Taraxaci, Br.; Extractum Taraxaci; Extractum Tar- axaci Fluidum, U. S.; Infusum Taraxaci, U. S.; Succus Taraxaci, Br. W TEREBINTHINA. U.S. Turpentine. The concrete juice of Pinus palustris, and of other species of Pinus. U. S. Off. Syn. THUS AMEKIC ANUM. Common Frankincense. Pinus Taeda, the Frankincense Pine, and Pinus palustris, the Swamp Pine. The concrete turpentine from the Southern States of North America. Br. TEREBINTHINA CANADENSIS. U.S.,Br. Canada Turpentine. Balsam of Fir. The juice of Abies balsamea. U. S. Canada Balsam. The turpentine obtained from the stem by incision. Br. T6r6bentliine, Fr.; Terpentin, Germ.; Trementina, ItalSpan. The term turpentine is usually applied to certain vegetable juices, liquid or concrete, which consist of resin combined with a peculiar essential oil, called oil of turpentine. They are generally procured from different species of pine, fir, or larch; though other trees afford products which are known by the same general title, as for instance Pistaeia Terebinthus, which yields the Chian turpentine. Some French writers extend the name of turpentine to other juices consisting of resin and essential oil, without benzoic or cinnamic acid, as copaiba, balm of Gilead, &c. We shall describe particularly, in this place, only the turpentines PART I. Terebintliina. 829 ivhich are either now officinal, or have but recently ceased to be so. A brief botanical view of the plants from which they are respectively derived, will be in accordance with the plan of this work. It is proper first to observe that the original genus Piuus of Linnaeus has been divided into the three genera, Pinus, Abies, and Larix, which are now very generally recognised, though Lindlev unites the two latter in his Flora Medica. Pinus. Sex. Syst. Moncecia Monadelphia. — Nat. Ord. Pinaceae or Coniferae. Gen.Ch. Flowers monoecious. Males. Catkins racemose, compact, and ter- minal ; squamose ; the scales staminiferous at the apex. Stamens two; the anthers oue-celled. Females. Catkins or cones simple, imbricated with acuminate scales. Ovaries two. Stigmas glandular Scales of the cone oblong, club-shaped, woody; umbilicato-angular at the apex. Seeds in pairs, covered with a sharp-pointed membrane. Cotyledons digitato-partite. Leaves two or many, in the same sheath. ( Pereira's Mat. Med. from Bot. Gall.) 1. Pinus palustris. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 499.—P. Australis. Michaux, N. Am. Sylv.TIT 133. “Leaves in threes, very long; stipules pinuatitid ramentace- ous, persistent; strobiles subcylindrical, armed with sharp prickles.” This is a very large indigenous tree, growing in dry, sandy soils, from the southern part of Virginia to the Gulf of Mexico. Its mean elevation is sixty or seventy feet, and the diameter of its trunk about fifteen or eighteen inches for two-thirds of this height. The leaves are about a foot in length, of a brilliant green colour, and united in bunches at the ends of the branches. The names by which the tree is known in the Southern States are long-leaved pine, yellow pine, and pitchpine; but the first is most appropriate, as the last two are ap- plied also to other species. This tree furnishes by far the greater proportion of the turpentine, tar, &c. consumed in the United States, or sent from this to other countries. (See Pix Liquida.) 2. Pinus Tseda. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 498; Michaux, N. Am. Sylv. iii. 156. “ Leaves in threes, elongated, with elongated sheaths; strobiles oblong-conical, deflexed, shorter than the leaf; spines indexed.” This is the loblolly, or old field, pine of the Southern States. It is abundant in Virginia, where it occupies the lands exhausted by cultivation. It exceeds eighty feet in height, has a trunk two or three feet in diameter, and expands into a wide spreading top. The leaves are about six inches long, and of a light green colour. It yields turpentine in abundance, but less fluid than that which, flows from the preceding species. 3. Pinus sylvestris. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 494; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 1, t. 1; Michaux,''~NTAm7Sylv. iii. p. 125. “Leaves in pairs, rigid; strobiles ovate- conical, of the length of the leaves; scales echinate.” This tree, when of full size, is eighty feet high, with a trunk four or five feet in diameter. It inhabits the northern and mountainous parts of Europe. In Great Britain it is called the wild pine or Scotch fir; the latter name having been given to it from its abundance in the mountains of Scotland. It yields a considerable proportion of the common European turpentine. In Germany a fibrous substance is prepared from the leaves, called fir-wool, and a volatile oil is distilled from them called fir-ivool oil, which is said to be considerably used, both internally and locally, as a remedy for rheumatism, palsy, chronic catarrh, &c., indeed for the same purposes generally as the oil of turpentine. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1863, p. 274.) Besides the pines above described, various others yield medicinal products. Pinus maritima (P. Pinaster of Aiton and Lambert), growing in the southern and maritime parts of Europe, yields much of the turpentine, pitch, and tar con- sumed in France, and is admitted among the officinal plants in the French Codex. From the branches of Pinus Pumilio, which inhabits the mountains of eastern and south-eastern Europe, a terebinthinate juice exudes spontaneously, called Terebinthina. PART T. Hungarian balsam. Pinus Cembra, or the Siberian stone-pine of the Alps and Carpathian mountains, is'said to afford the product called Carpathian balsam; and the seeds both of that species, and of Pinus Pinea. or stone-pine of the south of Europe and north of Africa, are used in Europe in desserts, under the name of pine nuts. Pinus Lambertiana, of California, produces by exudation a saccharine matter, which has been found to contain a peculiar sweet principle called pinite. (Comptes Bendus, Sept. 1855.) The Pinus rigida. or pitch pine of this country, and probably others besides those mentioned, are sometimes employed in the preparation of tar. Abies. See PIX BURGUNDICA. (' :u tl e mountains.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART I. Uva Bassa.— Uva Ursi. 845 Medical Properties and Uses. The chief medical use of raisins is to flavour demulcent beverages. Taken in substance they are gently laxative; but are also flatulent and difficult of digestion, and, when largely eaten, sometimes produce unpleasant effects, especially in children. Off- Prep. Tinctura Rhei et Sennae, U. S.; Tinctura Senme, Br. W. UVA URSI. U. S., Br. Uva Ursi. Bearberry Leaves. Br. The leaves of Arctostaphylos Uva Ursi. U. S. The dried Leaves from indi genous plants. Br. Busserole, Raisin d’ours, Fr.; Biirentraube, Germ.; Corbezzolo, Uva Ursina, Ital.; Ga yuba, Span. Arctostaphylos. Sex. Syst. Pecandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Ericaceae. Gen. Gh. Drupe with five distinct, one-seeded stones. Corolla urceolate with a revolute limb. Stamens included. Anthers with two spurs at the back. (Lindley, Med. and (Boon. Bot. 106.) Arctostaphylos Uva Ursi. Sprengel, Syst. ii. 287 ; Carson, 111ust. of Med. Bot. i. 61, pi. 52. —Arbutus Uva Ursi. Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 618; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. i. 66. The uva ursi, or bearberry, is a low evergreen shrub, with trailing stems, the young branches of which rise obliquely upwards for a few inches. The leaves are scattered, upon short petioles, from half an inch to an inch long, obovate, acute at the base, entire, with a rounded margin, thick, co- riaceous, smooth, shining, deep-green on their upper surface, paler and covered with a network of veins beneath. The flowers, which stand on short reflexed peduncles, are in small clusters at the ends of the branches. The caylx is small, five-parted, reddish, and persistent. The corolla is ovate or urceolate, reddish- white, or white with a red lip, transparent at the base, contracted at the mouth, and divided at the margin into five short reflexed segments. The stamens are ten, with short filaments and bifid anthers; the germ round, with a style longer than the stamens, and a simple stigma. The fruit is a small, round, depressed, smooth, glossy, red berry, with an insipid mealy pulp, and five cohering seeds. This humble but hardy shrub inhabits the northern latitudes of Europe, Asia, and America. It is also found in the lofty mountains of Southern Europe, as the Pyrenees and the Alps; and, on the American continent, extends from Hud- son’s Bay as far southward as New Jersey, in soRie parts of which it grows in abundance. It prefers a barren soil, flourishing on gravelly hills, and elevated sandy plains. The leaves are the only part used in medicine. They are imported from Europe; but are also collected within our own limits; and the market of Philadelphia is supplied to a considerable extent from New Jersey. They should be gathered in autumn, and the green leaves only selected. In Europe the uva ursi is often adulterated with the leaves of Vaccinium Vitis Idsea, which are wholly destitute of its peculiar properties, and may be distinguished by their rounder shape, their revolute edges which are sometimes slightly toothed, and the appearance of their under surface, which is dotted, in- stead of being reticulated like the genuine leaf. Leaves of the Chimaphila umbellata are sometimes found among the uva ursi as it exists in our markets. They may be readily detected by their greater length, their cuneiform-lanceolate shape, and their serrate edges. Properties. Uva ursi is inodorous when fresh, but acquires a smell not unlike that of hay when dried and powdered. Its taste is bitterish, strongly astringent, aud ultimately sweetish. It affords a light-brown, greenish-yellow powder. Wa- ter extracts its active principles, which are also soluble in officinal alcohol. Among its ingredients are tannic and gallic acids, bitter extractive, resin, gum, fatty mat- Uva Ursi. PART I. ter, a volatile oil, and salts of potassa and lime. The tannic acid is so abundant that the leaves are used for tanning in Russia. Neither this principle nor gallic acid exists in the leaves of the Vaccinium Vilis Idsea. A crystallizable principle was extracted from uva ursi by Mr. J. C. C. Huglm» by the following process. An aqueous extract of the leaves was treated wi<-i strong alcohol, and submitted for twenty-four hours to the action of purified animal charcoal. The tincture was filtered and evaporated, and the residue re- dissolved in alcohol, and treated with animal charcoal as before. After filtra- tion, the liquid was allowed to evaporate spontaneously, and yielded colourless, transparent, needle-shaped crystals, soluble in water, alcohol, ether, and dilute acids, insoluble in the fixed and volatile oils, neutral to test-paper, and combus- tible. The watery solution was precipitated by subacetate of lead and carbonate of potassa, but not by lime-water or tincture of chloride of iron. One grain of it acted as a powerful diuretic. Mr. Hughes proposed for this substance the name of ursin. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xix. 90.) Kawalier obtained a crystalline substance, named arbutin, by precipitating the decoction with acetate of lead, filtering, treating ttnT liquid with sulphuretted hydrogen, again filtering, evaporating to the consistence of syrup, and allowing the product to stand for several days. This gradually assumed the form of a crystalline jelly, which, being placed upon linen so as to allow the mother-liquor to drain otf, and then pressed, yielded nearly colourless crystals, which were purified by solution in boiling water, and treatment with animal charcoal. Ar- butin thus obtained is in long, acicular, colourless crystals, united in tufts, and of a bitter taste. It is soluble in water, alcohol, and ether, unchanged appa- rently by a heat of 212°, but fusible at a high temperature, without action on vegetable colours, and not precipitated by the salts of sesquioxide of iron, or by acetate or subacetate of lead. It is a glucoside, being resolvable by boiling with sulphuric acid into glucose and a peculiar substance named qrctuvine. Its for- mula is C32H24021. (Chem. Gaz., Feb. 15,1853, p. 61.) Strecker, however, gives a different formula, C24H16014-4-2H0, and considers the arctuviue of Kawalier as identical with hydrochinone prepared by Wohler from kinic acid. {Ibid., Feb. 1, 1859, p. 48.) Another crystallizable principle has been discovered by Trommsdorff, who calls it ursone. It appears to be of a resinous character, being tasteless and inodor- ous, insoluble in water, difficultly soluble in alcohol and ether, fusible, at a higher temperature volatilizable, and inflammable in the air. It is obtained by treating uva ursi with a very small quantity of ether by percolation, allowing the ether to evaporate, washing the crystalline extract with ether, and recrystallizing from alcohol. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 334.) Medical Properties and Uses. Uva ursi is astringent and tonic, and is thought by some to have a specific direction to the urinary organs, for the complaints of which it is chiefly used. Others deny that it possesses a peculiar tendency ol this kind, and ascribe its effects to its astringent and tonic action. It alters the colour of the urine, and its astringent principle has been detected in that secre- tion. It probably, therefore, exerts a direct influence on the kidneys and urinary passages. Though known to the ancients, it had passed into almost entire neglect, till its use was revived by De Haen about the middle of the last cen- tury. It has acquired some reputation as an antilithic, and has undoubtedly been serviceable in gravel, partly, perhaps, by a direct action on the kidneys, partly by giving tone to the digestive organs, and preventing the accumulation of principles calculated to produce a secretion or precipitation of calculous mat- ter. In chronic nephritis it is also a popular remedy, and is particularly recom- mended when there is reason to conjecture the existence of ulceration in the kidneys, bladder, or urinary passages. Diabetes, catarrh of the bladder, incon- tinence of urine, gleet, leucorrhcea, and menorrhagia are also among the disease PART I. Uva Ursi. — Valeriana. 847 in which it has occasionally proved serviceable; and testimony is not wantins: to its beneficial effects in phthisis pulmonalis. Dr. E. Gr. Harris, of Fayette. Alabama, believes it to have the property of promoting uterine contraction, and has employed it with supposed advantage as a substitute for ergot in tedious labours. (See Med. Exam., N. S., ix. 727.) The dose of the powder is from a scruple to a drachm, to be repeated three or four times a day; but the decoction or fluid extract is usually preferred. (See Part II.) Off. Prep. Decoctum Uvse Ursi, U.S.; Extractum Uva3 TTrsi Fluidum, U.S j Infusum Uv® Ursi, Br. W. VALERIANA. U.S.,Br. Valerian. The root of Valeriana officinalis. U. S. The Root, of plants indigenous to and also cultivated in Britain, collected in autumn and dried; that from wild plants growing on dry soil being preferred. Br. Val6riane, Fr.; Wilde Baldrianwurzel, Germ.; Valeriana silvestre, Ital.; Valerian sil- vestre, Span. Valeriana. Sex. Syst. Triandria Monogynia. — Nat. Ord. Valerianacem. Gen. Ch. Calyx very small, finally enlarged into a feathery pappus. Corolla raonopetalous, five-lobed, regular, gibbous at the base. Capsule one-celled. {Loudon's Enc. of PI.) Stamens exserted, one, two, three, and four. (Nuttall.) Valeriana officinalis. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 177; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 77, t. 32. The officinal, or great wild valerian, is a large handsome herbaceous plant, with a perennial root, and an erect, round, channeled stein, from two to four feet high, furnished with opposite pinnate leaves, and terminating in flowering branches. The leaves of the stem are attached by short, broad sheaths; the radical leaves are larger and stand on long footstalks. In the former the leaflets are lanceolate and partially dentate, in the latter elliptical and deeply serrate. The flowers are small, white or rose-coloured, agreeably odorous, and disposed in terminal corymbs, interspersed with pear-shaped pointed bractes. The number of stamens is three. The fruit is a capsule containing one oblong-ovate, com- pressed seed. The plant is a natfyajif Europe. where it grows either in damp woods and meadows, or on dry elevated grounds. As found in these different situations, it presents characters so distinct as to have induced some botanists to make two varieties. JDufresne makes four, of which three prefer marshy situa- tions. The variety which affects a dry soil (sylvestris, L. Ph.) is not more than two feet high, and is distinguished by its narrow leaves. It has been generally believed to be superior to the others in medicinal virtue; but. from experiments of A. Buchner, it appears that the dried roots of the variety which grows in low moist grounds are in no respect inferior, and that the general opinion to the con- trary is a prejudice. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, June, 1852, p. 429.) The root, which is the officinal portion, is collected in spring before the stem begins to shoot, or in the autumn when the leaves decay. It should be dried quickly, and kept in a dry place. It consists of numerous long, slender, cylin- drical fibres, issuing from a tuberculated head or rhizoma. As brought to this country, it frequently has portions of the stem attached. The English is superior to that from the continent of Europe. Valerian of good quality has been pro- luced by the Shakers at Enfield, New Hampshire. From our own observation, we know that the plant grows luxuriantly under culture in this country. Properties. The colour of the root is externally yellowish or brown, internally white. The powder is yellowish-gray. The odour, which in the fresh root is slight, in the dried is strong and highly characteristic, and, though rather plea- sant to many persons, is very disagreeable to others. Cats are said to be strongly Valeriana. PART 1. attracted by it. The taste is at first sweetish, afterwards bitter and aromatic. Valerian yields its active properties to water and alcohol. Trommsdorff found it to consist of l-2 parts of volatile oil; 12 5 of a peculiar extractive matter, soluble in water, insoluble in ether and alcohol, and precipitated by metallic solutions; 18 75 of gum; 6‘25of a soft odorous resin; and 63 of lignin. Runge found in it a peculiar fixed acid, which produced with bases white salts, becom- ing green on exposure to the air. (Chem. Gaz., No. 170, p. 452.) Of these con- stituents the most important is the volatile oil. It is of a pale-greenish colour, of the sp.gr. 0 934, with the pungentTodour of valerian, and an aromatic taste. It becomes yellow and viscid by exposure. Trommsdorff ascertained the existence in the oil of a peculiar volatile acid, upon which the name of valerianic acid or valeric acid has been conferred. This, when separated from theoil, is a colourless liquid, of an oleaginous con- sistence, having an odour analogous to that of valerian, and a very strong, sour, disagreeable taste. It is soluble in thirty parts of water, and in all proportions in ether and alcohol. It combines with salifiable bases, forming soluble salts, which retain, in a diminished degree, the odour of the acid. (Journ. de Pharm., xx. 316.) From the experiments of MM. Cozzi and Thirault, it would appear that this acid does not pre-exist in the root, but results from the oxidation of the volatile oil. {Ibid., 8e ser., xii. 162.) Valerianic acid is obtained by distill- ing the impure oil from carbonate of magnesia, decomposing by sulphuric acid the valerianate of magnesia which remains, and again distilling. M. Rabourdin, of Orleans, believing that a large proportion of the valerianic acid remains fixed in the root by union with a base, and does not come over by distillation alone, procures it by adding sulphuric acid to the root with a sufficient quantity of water, distilling, separating the oil, saturating the liquor with carbonate of soda, evaporating, adding a slight excess of sulphuric acid, and again distilling. {Ibid., vi. 310.) The following process by Messrs. T. and H. Smith, of Edin- burgh, avoids the inconvenience of distilling so bulky a root as valerian, while it answers the same purpose as that of M. Rabourdin. Boil the root for three or four hours with rather more than its bulk of water, in which an ounce of car- bonate of soda is dissolved for every pound of the root, replacing the water as it evaporates. Express strongly, and boil the residuum twice with the same quantity of water, expressing each time as before. Mix the liquids, add two fluidrachms of strong sulphuric acid for every pound of the root, and distil till three-fourths of the liquid have passed over. Neutralize this with carbonate of soda, concentrate the liquid, decompose the valerianate of soda contained in it by sulphuric acid, and separate the valerianic acid set free, either by a separa- tory, or by distillation. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xvii. 253.) M. Lefort obtains the acid by the rapid oxidation of the volatile oil. He distils 100 parts of the root with 500 of water, 10 of sulphuric acid, and 6 of bichromate of potassa. In this way he has procured a larger proportion of acid than by any other pro- cess. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., x. 194.) The roots of Valeriana Phu and V. dioica are said to be sometimes mingled with those of the officThaTpTant; but the adulteration is attended with no serious consequences; as, though much weaker than the genuine valerian, they possess similar properties. The same cannot be said of the roots of several of the Ra- nunculacese, which, according to Ebermayer, are sometimes fraudulently sub- stituted in Germany. They may be readily detected by their want of the pecu- liar odour of the officinal root. According to M. O. Raveil, the valerian in the markets of Paris is largely adulterated with the roots of scabious (Scabiosa succisa and S. arvensis, Linn.). They are shorter than the genuine root, with larger radicles,less rough, little or not at all striated, very brittle, with a white amylaceous fracture. The roots are inodorous in themselves, but acquire smell from contact with the valerian. {Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 209.) Valeriana. — Vanilla. 849 PART I. 3fedical Properties and Uses. Valerian is gently stimulant, with an especial direction to the nervous system, but without narcotic effects. In large doses it produces a sense of heaviness and dull pain in the head, with various other effects indicating nervous disturbance. The oil, largely taken, is said by M Barailer, from his own observation, to produce dulness of intellect, drowsiness* ending in deep sleep, reduced frequency of pulse, and increased flow of urine. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1861, p. 239.) It is useful in cases of irregu- lar nervous action, when not connected with inflammation, or an excited condi- tion of the system. Among the complaints in which it has been particularly recommended are hysteria, hypochondriasis, epilepsy, hemicrania, and low forms of fever attended with restlessness, morbid vigilance, or other nervous disorder. It has also been used in intermittents, combined with Peruvian bark. At best, however, it is an uncertain remedy. It may be given in powder or infusion. In the latter form, it is said by Professor Joerg, of Leipsic, who has experimented with it, to be less apt to irritate the alimentary canal than when administered in substance. The dose of the powder is from thirty to ninety grains, repeated three or four times a day. The tincture also is officinal. As the virtues of vale- rian reside chiefly in the volatile oil, the medicine should not be giveu in decoc- tion or extract. The distilled water is used on the continent of Europe; and the volatile oil is occasionally substituted with advantage for the root. The dose of the oil is four or five drops. Valerianic acid also has been used inter- nally; and a process is given in the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia for its preparation. (See Acidum Valerianicum.) Landerer says that, in his experience, the acid prepared from the root is preferable therapeutically to the artificial acid. Off. Prep. Extractum Valerianae Alcoholicum, U. S.; Extractum Valeriana! Flnidum, U. S.; Infusum Valerianae; Oleum Valerianae, U. S.; Tinctura Valeri- anae; Tinct. Valerianae Ammoniata. W. VANILLA. TJ.S. Vanilla. The prepared, unripe capsules of Vanilla aromatica. XJ. S. Vanilla. Sex. Syst. Gynandria Monandria.—Nat. Ord. Orchidaceoe. Gen. Gh. Sepals spreading or erect, distinct. Petals of a similar form and texture. Labellum connate with the columna, crested, membranous, convolute, undivided. Anther terminal, opercular; pollen granular. Fruit a fleshy pod; seeds round, destitute of loose tunic. Lindley. Vanilla aromatica. Schwartz, Flor. Ind. Occid.—Epidendrum Vanilla. Linn. This is a climbing plant, characterized, as a species, by its ovate, oblong, nerved leaves, its wavy sepals, its acute lip, and very long cylindrical capsules. It is a native of the West Indies, Mexico, and South America; and is said to be culti- vated in the Isles of France and Bourbon. Doubts, however, exist whether the best commercial vanilla is derived from this species, and some ascribe it to nilla fjlanifolia. (Journ. de Pharm.,x\i. 274.) It is probable that different varieties ofthe vanilla of commerce are obtained from different species, of which several, besides the two mentioned, have been described as yielding an aromatic fruit, as V. Gmanensis, V.jpalmarum, and V. ponrpona. The pods are collected beforeTThey-are quite ripe, dried in the shade, covered with a coating of fixed oil, and then tied in bundles, which are surrounded with sheet lead, or enclosed in small metallic boxes, and sent into the market. Several varieties of vanilla exist in commerce. The most valuable, called ley by the Spaniards, consists of cylindrical, somewhat flattened pods, six or eight inches long, three or four lines thick, nearly straight, narrowing towards the extremi- ties, bent at the base, shining and dark-brown externally, wrinkled longitudi- nally, soft and flexible, and containing within their tough shell a soft black pulp, 850 Vanilla. — Veratrum Album. PART I. in which numerous minute, black, glossy seeds are embedded. It has a peculiar, strong, agreeable odour, and a warm, aromatic, sweetish taste. The interior pulpy portion is most aromatic. Another variety, called simarona by the Span- iards, is smaller, of a lighter colour, and less aromatic. A third variety is the pompona of the Spaniards. In this, the pods are from five to seven inches long, from six to nine lines broad, almost always open, brown, soft, viscid, and of a strong odour, but less pleasant than that of the ley, to which it is con- sidered inferior. According to Bucholz, vanilla does not yield volatile oil when distilled with water; and the aroma appears to depend on chemical changes which take place during and after the curing of the fruit. Medical Properties and Uses. Yanilla has the properties of the aromatics generally, but is probably more diffusibly stimulant, with some influence on the nervous system. It is employed more as a perfume, and to flavour chocolate, ice-cream, &c. than as a medicine. It has, however, been recommended as a remedy in hysteria and low fevers, in the form of an infusion made in the pro- portion of about half an ounce to a pint of boiling water, and given in table- spoonful doses. A fluid extract would be a convenient form for exhibition.* * Off. Prep. Trochisci Ferri Subcarbonatis, U. S. W. YERATRUM ALBUM. US. White Hellebore. The rhizoma of Yeratrum album. U. S. Ellebore blanc, Fr.; Weisse Niesswurzel, Germ.; Eleboro bianco, Ital.; Veratro bianco, Span. Yeratrum. Sex. Syst. Polygamia Monoecia. — Nat. Ord. Melanthaceae. Gen. Gh. Hermaphrodite. Calyx none. Corolla six-petaled. Stamens six. Pistils three. Capsules three, many-seeded. Male. Calyx none. Corolla six- petaled. Stamens six. Pistils a rudiment. Willd. Botanists who reject the class Polygamia of Linnaeus, place this genus in the class and order Hexandria Trigynia, with the following character. “Polyga- mous. Corolla six-parted, spreading, segments sessile without glands. Stamens inserted upon the receptacle. Capsules three, united, many-seeded.” Nuttall. Yeratrum album. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 895 ; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 754, t. 257. This is an herbaceous plant, with a perennial, fleshy, fusiform root or rhizoma, yellowish-white externally, pale yellowish-gray within, and beset with long cylin- drical fibres of a grayish colour, which constitute the true root. The stem is three or four feet high, thick, round, erect, and furnished with alternate leaves, which are oval, acute, entire, plaited longitudinally, about ten inches long by five in breadth, of a yellowish-green colour, and embrace the stem at their base. The flowers are greenish, and arranged in a terminal panicle. White hellebore is a native of the mountainous regions of continental Europe, * Fluid Extract of Vanilla. This is prepared by Prof. Procter in the following manner. An ounce of vanilla, cut transversely into short pieces, is beaten with two ounces of sugar and a little alcohol into a pulp, and then submitted to percolation, first with four fluid- ounces of deodorized alcohol, and afterwards with diluted alcohol, until twelve fluidounces of tincture are obtained. Two ounces of sugar are added to the tincture, which is then evaporated with a gentle heat to six fluidounces. Lastly, ten ounces of sugar are added, and sufficient water to make the whole measure a pint. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 300.) This fluid extract may be given in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. It is a very con- venient form for the use of vanilla as a flavouring substance. A Syrup of Vanilla may be prepared by mixing two fluidounces of this fluid extract with two pints of simple syrup. If a perfectly transparent syrup is wanted, rub two ounces of the fluid extract with two drachms of carbonate of magnesia, and half a pint of water gradually added; filter the mixture; then add another half pint of water; and two and a half pounds of sugar; dissolve the sugar with the aid of heat; and, lastly, strain the syrup. 'The syrup is fitted rather for giving flavour to mixtures, either medicinal or dietetic, than for remedial effect. PART i. Veratrum Album. — Veratrum Viride. 851 and abounds in the Alps and Pyrenees. All parts of the plant are said to De acrid a,nd poisonous; but the root (rhizoma) only is officinal. This is brought from~tjr€rmany in the dried state,An pieces from one to three inches long by an inch or less in mean diameter, cylindrical or in the shape of a truncated cone, internally whitish, externally blackish, wrinkled, and rough with the remains of the fibres which have been cut off near their origin. Sometimes the fibres con- tinue attached to the root. They are numerous, yellowish, and of the size of a crow’s quill. White hellebore deteriorates by keeping. Properties. The fresh root has a disagreeable odour, which is lost by drying. The taste is at first sweetish, and afterwards bitterish, acrid, burning, and dura- ble. The powdered root is grayish. Analyzed by Pelletier and Caventou, white hellebore was found to contain an oily matter consisting of olein, stearin, and a volatile acid; supergallate of veratria ; a yellow colouring matter; starch, gum, and lignin; silica, and various saltTof lime and potassa. The medicinal properties of the root reside in the veratria, which was first discovered in the seeds of Ve- ratrum Sabadilla, and proEably exists in other plants belonging to the same family. (See Veratria in Part II.) Simon believed that he had found two new vegetable alkalies in white hellebore, one of which was named barytina, from being precipitated, like baryta, from its solution in acetic or phosphoric acid by sul- phuric acid or the sulphates; the other jervina, from the Spanish name for a poi- son obtained from the root of white hellebore. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, 1837, p. 191.) Medical Properties and Uses. White hellebore is a violent emetic and ca- thartic, capable of producing dangerous and fatal effects if incautiously adminis- tered. Even in small doses it has occasioned severe vomiting, hypercatharsis with bloody stools, and alarming general prostration. Like many other acrid substances, it appears, in small doses, to be a general stimulant to the secretions. Applied externally upon a portion of the surface denuded of the cuticle, as upon ulcers, for example, it gives rise to griping pain in the bowels, and sometimes violent purging. When snuffed up the nostrils, it occasions great irritation with violent sneezing, and its use in this way is not free from danger. It was em- ployed by the ancients in dropsy, mania, epilepsy, leprosy, elephantiasis, and other obstinate disorders, not without occasional advantage; but the severity of its action has led to its general abandonment. It is sometimes used as an errhine, diluted with some mild powder, in cases of gutta serena and lethargic affections; and the decoction, and an ointment prepared by mixing the pulverized root with lard, have been found beneficial as external applications in the itch, and other cutaneous eruptions. From the resemblance of its operation to that of the eau medicinale d’Husson, so celebrated for the cure of gout, it was at one time, though erroneously, conjectured to be the chief constituent of that remedy. A mixture of the wine of white hellebore and the wine of opium, in the proportion of three parts of the former to one of the latter, was introduced into use by Mr. Moore, of London, as a substitute for the eau medicinale. In whatever way white hellebore is used, it requires cautious management. It has been given in doses varying from one grain to a scruple. Not more than two grains should be administered at first. When employed as an errhine, it should be mixed with five or six parts of pulverized liquorice root, or other in- active powder. Ten or twelve grains of the mixture may be snuffed up the nostrils at one time. W. VERATRUM VIRIDE. U.S. American Hellebore. The rhizoma of Veratrum viride. U. S. Veratrum. See VERATRUM ALBUM. Veratrum viride Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 896 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot. ii. 121. 852 Veratrum Viride. PAitT I. The American nelleborc, known also by the names of Indian pole, poke, rant, and swamp hellebore, has a perennial, thick, fleshy root or rhizoma, the upper portion of which is tunicated, the lower solid, and beset with numerous whitish fibres or radicles. The stem is annual, round, striated, pubescent, and solid, from three to six feet in height, furnished with bright green leaves, and termi- nating in a panicle of greenish-yellow flowers. The leaves gradually decrease in size as they ascend. The lower are from six inches to a foot long, oval, acu- minate, plaited, nerved, and pubescent; and embrhce the stem at their base, thus affording it a sheath for a considerable portion of its length. Those on the upper part of the stem, at the origin of the flowering branches, are oblong- lanceolate. The panicle consists of numerous flowers, distributed in racemes with downy peduncles. Each flower is accompanied with a downy, pointed bracte, much longer than its pedicel. There is no calyx, and the corolla is divided into six oval acute segments, thickened on the inside at their base, with the three alternate segments longer than the others. The six stamens have recurved fila- ments, and roundish two-lobed anthers. The germs are three, with recurved styles as long as the stamens. Some of the flowers have only the rudiments of pistils. Those on the upper end of the branchlets are barren, those on the lower portion fruitful. The fruit consists of three cohering capsules, separating at top, opening on the inner side, and containing flat imbricated seeds. This indigenous species of Veratrum is found from Canada to the Carolinas, inhabiting swamps, wet meadows, and the banks of mountain streamlets. Early in the spring, before the stem rises, it bears a slight resemblance to the Sym- jplocarnus foetid us, with which it is very frequently associated; but the latter sends forth no stem. From May to July is the season for flowering. The root should be collected in autumn, and should not be kept longer than one year, as it deteriorates by time. Properties. As found in the shops, it is usually in small pieces or fragments; but sometimes it comes whole or merely sliced, so that its characteristic form may be observed. In this condition it is seen to consist of a rhizoma an inch or two in length by somewhat less than an inch in thickness where broadest, taper- ing to a very obtuse or truncated extremity, compact but light, of a dark-brown colour externally, and either closely invested with numerous yellowish rootlets often several inches long, or exhibiting marks on the surface whence they have been removed. When sliced, the cut surface is of a dingy-white colour. The rootlets are about as thick as a large knitting-needle, or somewhat thicker, obviously much shrunk in drying, and marked by numerous close-set indenta- tions, which give them a characteristic appearance. Not unfrequently portions of the dried stem or leaf-stalks remain attached to the rhizoma, which should always be rejected, as they have been ascertained by Prof. Procter to be inert. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1864, p. 99.) The root has a bitter, acrid taste, leaving a permanent impression in the mouth and fauces. In sensible pro- perties it bears a close resemblance to white hellebore; and has been shown by the experiments of Mr. J. G. Richardson, of Philadelphia, to contain veratrhj. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 204.) Mr. J. C. Scattergood, by adding water to a saturated tincture of the root, and afterwards evaporating the alcohol, ob- tained a resinous precipitate, while from the residuary liquid he succeeded in separating veratria. By experimenting separately with the alkaloid and the resin thus procured, Dr. S. R. Percy, of New York, obtained effects to a certain ex- tent similar, and such as characterize the operation of the root, with this remark- able difference, however, that while both substances produced vomiting and pros- tration, the resin had a much more powerful influence in reducing the frequency of the pulse. Thus while, in one dog, under the action of the veratria, the pulse was reduced from 148 to 112; in another, under that of the resin, with no greater effect in other respects, it fell from 144 to 40; and this teiult ivas no constant PART I. Veratrum Viride. that it could not be ascribed to accident. A very important inference is that there is a principle in the American hellebore distinct from veratria, upon which its remarkable powers over the circulation mainly depend. There can be little doubt that the so-called resin will be found to be a complex body, possibly con- taining a distinct alkaloid. (Ibid., Jan. 1863, p. 74.) Medical Properties and Uses. American hellebore has been thought to re- semble its European congener in its effects upon the system, though asserted by Dr. Osgood to be wholly destitute of cathartic properties. In addition to its emetic action, which is often violent and long continued, it is said to increase most of the secretions, and, when freely taken, to exercise a powerful influence over the nervous system, indicated by faintness, somnolency, vertigo, headache, dimness of vision, and dilated pupils. According to Dr. Osgood, it reduces the frequency and force of the pulse, sometimes, when taken in full doses, as low as thirty-five strokes in the minute. It may be safely substituted for the European root in most cases in which the latter is employed, and is highly recommended as a substitute for colchicum by Dr. Tully, of New Haven. Gouty, rheumatic, and neuralgic affections are those to which it appeared best adapted. For an account of its medical properties and applications, the reader is referred to a paper by Dr. Charles Osgood, of Providence, in the American Journal of the Medical Sciences (xvi. 296). It may be used in substance, tincture, or extract. Dr. Osgood states the dose in which it will generally prove emetic at from four to six grains of the powder, one or two fluidrachms of a tincture made of six ounces of the fresh root and a pint of alcohol, and one or two grains of an ex- tract made by inspissating the juice of the root. The medicine, however, should, in most cases, be given in doses insufficient to vomit. After the publication of Dr. Osgood’s paper, little attention was paid to the subject until a few years since, when various communications appeared in our southern medical journals, tending to prove that American hellebore is appli- cable to the treatment of numerous febrile and inflammatory affections, in which an indication is offered for reducing the frequency of the pulse. The credit of calling public attention to it is due more especially to Dr. W. C. Norwood, of Cokesbury, South Carolina, who employed it with great success in pulmonary inflammation, typhoid fever, &c., and believed that it afforded the means of re- ducing the frequency of the pulse at will. He used a saturated tincture, made by macerating eight ounces of the dried root in sixteen ounces of alcohol for at least two weeks. Of this he gave to an adult man eight drops, and repeated the dose every three hours, increasing by one drop at each dose, until the pulse was reduced, or nausea and vomiting were occasioned, when it was to be diminished one-half, and continued so long as might be necessary to prevent a return of the symptoms. (Charleston Med. Journ. and Rev.,\\\. 768.) From numerous com- munications subsequently made to the journals, there can be no doubt of the great efficiency of this remedy in reducing the circulation; and many practi- tioners speak with great confidence of its usefulness in pneumonia, diseases of the heart with excessive action, inflammatory rheumatism, and other inflammatory and febrile diseases with a greatly excited circulation. The author has used it with decided effect in reducing the frequency of the pulse in cardiac affections, and without materially deranging the stomach. Some have found the commene- kg dose of Dr. Norwood too large; but from six to eight drops of the saturated tincture, repeated every three hours, and gradually increased, if necessary, until its effects are experienced, may be given with safety. From its powerful emetic properties, and the prostration resulting from excessive doses, it should always be used with great caution, and its effects carefully observed.* Its nauseating * For an elaborate article on the remedial properties and uses of American hellebore, by Pr. John Bell, the reader is referred to JV. Am. Med.-Chir. Rev., ii. 914. Vinum. PART I. and depressing effects are best counteracted by opiates and alcoholic stimulants. A tincture and fluid extract have been introduced into the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia. (See these preparations in Part II.) Off. Prep. Extractum Veratri Viridis Fluidum, U. S.; Tinctura Veratri Viri- dis, U. S. W. YINUM XERICUM. U.S.,Br. Sherry Wine. Vinum Album, U. S. 1850. Yia'bTancTTTrrTVeisser AVein, Germ ; Vino bianco, lial.; Vino bianco, Span. VINUM PORTENSE. US. Port Wine. Vinum Rubrum, U. S. 1850. Vin rouge, Pr.; Rotlier Wein, Germ,.; Vino vermiglio, Ttal.; Vino tinto, Span. Wine is the fermented juice of the grape, the fruit of Vitis vinifera of bota- nists? (See Uva Passa.) The juice of sweet grapes consists of a considerable quantity of grape sugar, a peculiar matter of the nature of ferment or yeast, and a small portion of extractive, tannic acid, bitartrate of potassa, tartrate of lime, common salt, and sulphate of potassa; the whole dissolved or suspended in a large quantity of water. Sour grapes contain, in addition, a peculiar acid isomeric with the tartaric, called paratartaric acid. (See page 62.) Grape juice, therefore, embraces all the ingredients esseERal to the production of the vinous fermentation, and requires only the influence of the atmosphere and a proper temperature to convert it into wine. (See page 10.) Preparation. When the grapes are ripe, they are gathered, and trodden in wooden vessels with perforated bottoms, through which the juice, called the must, runs into a vat placed beneath. The temperature of the air being about 60°, the fermentation gradually takes place in the must, and becomes fully es- tablished after a longer or shorter period. In the mean time, the must becomes sensibly warmer, and emits a large quantity of carbonic acid, which causes the more solid parts to be thrown to the surface in a mass of froth, having a hemi- spherical shape, called the head. The liquor from being sweet becomes vinous, and assumes a deep-red colour if the product of red grapes. After a while the fermentation slackens, when it becomes necessary to accelerate it by thoroughly mixing the contents of the vat. When the liquor has acquired a strong vinous taste, and become perfectly clear, the wine is considered formed, and is racked off into casks. But even at this stage of the process, the fermentation continues for several months longer. During the whole of this period, a frothy matter is formed, which for the first few days collects round the bung, but afterwards pre- cipitates along with colouring matter and tartar, forming a deposit which con- stitutes the wine-lees. Division and Nomencladure. Wines, according to their colour, are divided into the red and white; and, according to their taste and other qualities, are either spirituous, sweet, dry, light, sparkling, still, rough, or acidulous. Red wines are derived from the must of black grapes, fermented with their husks; white ivines, from white grapes, or from the juice of black grapes, fermented apart from their husks. The other qualities of wines, above enumerated, depend on the relative proportions of the constituents of the must, and on the mode in which the fermentation is conducted. The essential ingredients of the must as a fermentable liquid are water, sugar, and a ferment. If the juice be very sac- charine, and contain sufficient ferment to sustain the fermentation, the conversion of the sugar into alcohol will proceed until checked by the production of a cer- tain amount of the latter, and there will be formed a spirituous or generous PART I. Vinum. 855 wine. If, while the juice is highly saccharine, the ferment be deficient in quan t.ity, the production of alcohol will be less, and the redundancy of sugar propor- tionably greater, and a sweet wine will be formed. When the sugar and ferment, are in considerable amount, and in the proper relative proportions for mutual decomposition, the wine will be strong-bodied and sound, without marked sweet- ness or acidity, and of the kind called dry. A small proportion of sugar can give rise only to a small proportion of alcohol, and consequently the less sac- charine grapes will generate a comparatively weak, or light wine, which will be sound and stable in its constitution, in case the ferment is not in excess, but otherwise liable to pass into the acetous fermentation and become acescent. In case the wine is bottled before the fermentation is fully completed, the process will go on slowly in the bottles, and the carbonic acid generated, not having vent, will impregnate the wine, and render it effervescing and sparkling. The rough or astringent wines owe their flavour to a portion of tannic acid derived from the husks of the grape; and the acidulous wines to the presence of carbonic acid, or of an unusual proportion of tartar. Several of the above qualities often coexist. Thus a wine may be spirituous and sweet, spirituous and rough, sweet and rough, light and sparkling, &c. Wines are made in many countries, and are known in commerce by various names, according to their source. Thus, Portu- gal produces port and lisbon; Spain, sherry, saint lucar, malaga, and tent; France, champagne, burgundy, hermitage, vin de grave, sauterne, and claret; Germany, hock and moselle; Hungary, tokay; Sicily, marsala or Sicily ma- deira, and lisa; the Cape of Good Hope, constantia; Madeira and the Canaries, madeira and teneriffe. In the United States the first attempt to manufacture wine, on an extended scale, was made towards the close of the last century, at Spring Mill, near Phi- ladelphia, by Peter Legaux, agent of the Pennsylvania Vine Company, and proved unsuccessful. The native grape found most suitable by the Company, after the foreign had failed on account of the climate, was the Schuylkill mus- cadel grape. The next attempt was made by the Swiss at Yevay, Indiana, with the Schuylkill grape, and was partially successful; a rough red wine being manufactured which met with a ready.sale in the neighbouring States. In a few years the manufacture of this wine languished; foreign wines superseding it. The foreign grape, after numerous trials, not succeeding as a wine grape, in- vestigations were undertaken to determine the adaptation of our various native grapes for making wine. Among these the Catawba grape, a native of North Carolina, introduced to public notice by Major Adlum, of Washington City, about the year 1825, is the most esteemed; being largely cultivated in southern Ohio as a wine grape. The chief objection to it is its liability to the rot. The Isabella grape is also cultivated, but more for the table than for wine. It is claimed by some to be a native; but the evidence preponderates in favour of its foreign origin. The wine produced by the Catawba grape, called catawba wine, is of three kinds; the still, the sparkling, and the sweet. Still catawba, the result of a completed fermentation, is a light, dry, acidulous wineTTrTrhese'particulars like hock, but entirely different in flavour. It has a pinkish or straw colour. Spn.rkljrig nn.t.mnhnAs. made by letting the wine undergo the secondary fermenta- tion in the bottle. It looks like champagne, but has a different and peculiar taste. Sweet catawba resembles the lighter sweet wines of Europe, and is prepared by idding sugar to the grape juice before fermentation. These native wines are gradually coming into use, and constantly improving in quality. They are largely manufactured by Mr. N. Longworth, of Cincinnati. The average product of ca- tawba wine is 400 gallons to the acre, and the amount produced in Ohio in 1855 was estimated at 400,000 gallons. (See the remarks of E. S. Wayne, of Cincin- nati, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1855, p. 494.) The, Her be mont and Missouri grapes are also used for making wine; the latter producing a wine Vinum. PART I. said to resemble madeira. The Scuppernong grape, indigenous to North Caro- lina, yields a hard dry wine; and the vine Is said to be a very abundant bearer. According to Mr. R. Buchanan, this grape produces from two to three thousand gallons of wine per acre. ( Treatise on the Cultivation of the Grape. Cincinnati, 1850.) The climate of Texas is peculiarly favourable to the growth of the grape vine. The El Paso grape is found in the vicinity of the falls of the Rio Grande; and the grqwt musiarig grows luxuriantly in every part of the State, and yields a superior recTwine. California is rich in native grapes, and produces a consid- erable quantity of wine, which is now coming into general use. Considering its advantages of soil and climate, there is good reason to believe that it may, at no very distant time, rank among the most productive wine-regions of the globe. At present the grape, for wine making, is successfully cultivated in eighteen States of the Union. The wine crop of the whole United States for the year 1851 was estimated at three millions of gallons. (Stearns, Penins. Journ., July, 1858, p. 203.) A misfortune in reference to our domestic wines is that, to sup- ply the demand, they are too often sold soon after being made, so that they have not had the opportunity of ripening with age. {Ibid.) Properties. Wine, considered as the name of a class, may be characterized as a spirituous liquid, resulting from the fermentation of grape juice, and contain- ing colouring matter, and other substances, either combined or intimately blended with the spirit. It always contains a small proportion of aldehyd. (Magnes Lahens.) All its other qualities vary with the nature of each particular wine. The principal wines used for medicinal purposes are the officinal wines, sherry and port, together with madeira, teneriffe, claret, and champagne. Sherry (Yinum Xericum) is of a deep-amber colour, and when good possesses a dry aromatic flavour and fragrancy, with very little acidity. It ranks among the stronger white wines, and contains, on an average, 19 per cent, by measure of alcohol. The U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias agree in indicating it as the officinal white wine. It is prepared in the vicinity of Xeres, in Spain, and hence its English name sherry. This wine is supposed to have been the sack of Shak- speare, so called from the word see (dry). Port (Yinum Portense) is of a deep-purple colour, and, in its new state, is a rough,"strong, and moderately sweet wine. When kept a certain time in bottles, it deposits a considerable portion of its astringent matter, loses the greater part of its sweetness, acquires more flavour, and retains its strength. If too long kept, it deposits the whole of its astringent and colouring matter, and becomes deterio- rated. Considerable quantities of brandy are usually added to it, which causes its heating quality on the palate. It is one of the strongest wines iu common use. According to Dr. Muspratt, of Liverpool, the alcohol in genuine port never exceeds 19 per cent. {Med. Times and Gaz., Oct. 1856, p. 355.) Madeira is the strongest of the white wines in general use. It is somewhat acid,"and, when of proper age and in good condition, has a rich, nutty, aromatic flavour. As it occurs in the market, however, it is of very variable quality, on account of the adulterations and mixtures to which it is subjected after importa- tion. The madeira consumed in this country is generally better than that used in England; its adulteration being practised to a less extent with us, and our climate being more favourable to the improvement of the wine. At present, however, little genuine is to be found, in consequence of the destruction of the vine in the island of Madeira. Teneriffe is a white wine, of a somewhat acid taste, and, when of good quality, of a fine aromatic flavour. Its average strength is about the same as that of sherry. It is made from the same grape as madeira, to which it bears a close resemblance. Claret, called in France yin de Bordeaux, from its being produced near that city, in the district of Medoc, is a red wine, and from its moderate strength is Vinum. part i. 857 ranked as a light wine. It has a deep-purple colour, and, when good, a delicate taste, in which the vinous flavour is blended with some acidity and The most esteemed kinds are the clarets called Chateau-Margaux, Chateau- Lafite, and Chateau-Latour. Another celebrated variety is the Chateau-Haut Brion of the Pays de Grave. Claret is the French wine most extensively con sumed in the United States. Dr. H. Bence Jones has ascertained the acidity of equal bulks of the above wines, except teneriffe, expressed in grains of caustic soda. The bulk taken was that of 1000 grs. of water at 60°, and the numbers express the extremes of acid : sherry, 1-95-2-85; port, 2T0-255 ; inadeira, 2-70-3-60; claret, 2 55-3'45. The same authority has determined the proportion of sugar to the ounce in sherry, port, and madeira, expressed in grains: sherry, 4-18; port, 16-34; madeira, 6-20. Claret contains no sugar. Assuming that the sugar becomes acid in the system, the order of acidity of these wines, beginning with the least acid, is claret, sherry, madeira, port. (Chevi. Gaz., Jan. 16, 1854, p. 35.) Dr. Christison considers it a mistake to suppose that wines become stronger by being kept a long time in cask. His experiments appear to prove the reverse. VYhile, however, the wine is not rendered more alcoholic by age, its flavour is improved, and apparent strength increased. It becomes less acid partly by the deposition of tartar, and probably also by the reaction between the acids and alcohol resulting in the production of ether. Composition. Wines consist mainly of water and alcohol. They contain also volatile oil, cenanthic ether, grape sugar, sometimes glycerin in minute propor- tion (Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1859, p. 292), gum, extractive, colouring matter, tannic, malic, phosphoric, carbonic, and acetic acids, bitartrate of potassa (tartar), and tartrate of lime. The volatile oil has never been isolated, but is supposed to be the cause of the delicate flavour and odour of wine, called the bouquet. According to Dr. F. L. Winckler, the bouquet depends upon the presence of a nitrogenous compound of a volatile organic acid with a volatile base, which has a different smell in different wines. (Enanthic ether (aenanthate of oxide of ethyl) was discovered in wine by Pelouze and Liebig. It is obtained towards tEe end of the distillation of wine, on the great scale, for making brandy. It forms only about one part in ten thousand of the wine. It is a colourless liquid, having a peculiar vinous odour, and a taste, at first slight, but afterwards acrid. It is considered to be identical with pelargonic ether, under which head, in Part III., it is more fully described. (Enanthic ether must not be confounded with the substance which gives rise to the bouquet of wine. The other ingredients of wine, above enumerated, are sometimes present and sometimes absent. Thus, sugar is present in sweet wines, tannic acid in rough wines, and carbonic acid in those that effervesce. The different kinds of wine derive their various qualities from the mode of fermentation, the nature of the grape, and the soil and climate in which it may have grown. The alcohol in pure wine is that which results from the vinous fermentation, and is intimately united with the other ingredients of the liquid; but with almost all the wines of commerce a portion of brandy is mixed, the state of union of which is probably different from that of the natural alcohol of the wine. By the British custom-house regulations, 10 per cent, of brandy may be added to wines after importation; but to good wines not more than 4 or 5 per cent, is added. The intoxicating ingredient in all wines is the alcohol which they contain; and hence their relative strength depends upon the quantity of that substance entering into their composition. The alcohol, however, naturally in wine, is so blended with its other constituents as to be in a modified state, which renders it less intoxicating and injurious than the same quantity of alcohol, separated by dis- tillation and diluted with water. Mr. Brande published in 1811 a very interesting table, giving the percentage by measure of alcohol of the sp. gr. 0-825 in different Vinum. PART I. kind.) of v hie. Similar tables have since been published by M. Julia-Fontenelle, Dr. Ohristison, and Dr. II. Bence Jones. An abstract of their results is given in a table below; the results of Julia-Fontenelle being distinguished by F., those of Dr. Ohristison by C., and those of Dr. Jones by J. The rest are Mr. Braude’s.* Adulterations. Wines are very frequently adulterated, and counterfeit mix- tures are often palmed upon the public as genuine wine. Free sulphuric acid in red wines cannot be detected by barytic salts; for all wines contain a small quantity of the soluble sulphates. It may be discovered, however, by dropping the suspected red wine on a piece of common glazed paper, containing starch. * Table of the Proportion by Measure of Alcohol (sp.gr. 0-825) contained in 100 parts of different Wines. Lisa (mean) 25-41 Raisin wine (mean)... 25-12 Marsala [Sicily ma- deira] (mean) 25-09 strongest (J.) 21-10 weakest (J.) 19-90 Port, strongest 25-83 mean 22-96 weakest 19-00 strongest (C.) 20-49 mean (C.) 18-68 weakest (C.) 16-80 strongest (J.) 23-20 weakest (J.) 20-70 White port (C.) 17-22 Madeira, strongest 24-42 mean 22-27 weakest 19-24 strongest (C.) 20-35 strongest (J.) 19-70 weakest (J.) 19-00 Sereial madeira 21-40 Ditto (C.) 18-50 Sherry, strongest 19-81 mean 19-17 weakest 18-25 strongest (C.) 19-31 mean (C.) 18-47 weakest (C.) 16-96 Amontillado (C.).. 15-18 strongest (J.) 24-70 weakest (J.) 15-40 Teneriffe 19-79 Teneriffe (C.) 16-61 Colares 19-75 Lachryma Christi 19-70 White constantia 19-75 Red constantia 18-92 Lisbon 18-94 Ditto (C.) 19-09 Bucellas 18-49 Red madeira (mean).. 20-35 Cape muschat 18-25 Cape madeira (mean).. 20-51 Grape wine 18-11 Calcavella (mean) 18-65 Vidonia 19-25 Alba flora 17-26 Zante 17-05 Malaga 17-26 White hermitage 17-43 Rousillon (mean) 18 13 Claret, strongest 17-11 mean 15-10 weakest 12-91 ditto (F.) 14-73 vin ordinare (C.).. 10-42 Chat eau-Lat our, 1825, (C.) 9-38 first growth, 1811, (C.) 9-32 strongest (J.) 11-10 weakest (J.) 9-10 Malmsey madeira 16-40 Ditto (C.) 15-60 Lunel 15-52 Ditto (F.) 18-10 Sheraaz 15-52 Ditto (C.) 15-56 Syracuse 15-28 Sauterne 14-22 Burgundy (mean) 14-57 strongest (J.) 13-20 weakest (J.) 10-10 Hock (mean) 12-08 strongest (J.) 13-00 weakest (J.) 9-50 Nice 14-63 Barsac 13-86 Tent 13-30 Champagne (mean).... 12-61 Ditto (F.) 12-20 Ditto, strongest (J.)... 14-80 weakest (J.) 14-10 Red hermitage 12-32 Vin de Grave (mean).. 13-37 Frontignac (Rives Altes) 12-79 Ditto (C.) 12-20 Cote rotie 12-32 Tokay / 9-88 Rudesheimer, first quality, (C.).... 10-14 inferior (C.) 8-35 Hambacher, first qual., (C.) 8-88 Catawba (Stearns).... Stoll Prof. Diez, of Madrid, lias ascertained, among other points, the percentage in volume of alcohol, and the percentage of acid, determined by potassa, in forty Rhenish wines. He found these constituents to vary, the former from 12-2 to 9-5 per cent.; the latter from 0-779 to 0-332. (Central Platt, 26 Aug. 1854, p. 651.) Estimation of the Alcoholic Strength of Wines. Mr. Horsley, of London, gives the following mode of ascertaining the percentage of alcohol in wines. Note the sp. gr. of the wine. 1 hen take 5 fluidounces of it, boil it down in a flask to 2 fluidounces, and allow it to cool. All the alcohol is thus driven off. Add to the residuary liquid sufficient, distilled water to bring it to the original measure of 5 fluidounces, and ascertain the sp. gr. of the mixture. Deduct the excess of its sp. gr. over 1-000, which is the sp. gr. of distilled water, from the sp.gr. of the wine as at first noted, and the difference will be the sp. gr. of the alcohol and water in the wine. Then by consulting the tables giving the percentage in alcohol of liquids containing alcohol and water, the percentage of alcohol in the wine will be ob- tained. Thus, suppose the sp. gr. of the wine to be 0-997, and that of the liquid, after treatment as directed, 1-020. Then -020, the excess of the latter sp. gr. over that of water or 1-000, deducted from 0-997, give 0-977 as the sp. gr. of the mixed alcohol and v ater in the wine, which, by referring to the table on page 72, will be found to indicate a per tentage by weight of 18 of absolute alcohol. (Chem. Xews, Oct. 19, 1861.)—Xote to the iwelftl td.lwu. PART i. Vinum. 859 If the wine be pure, the spot, when dry, will be violet-blue, and the paper un- altered in texture; but, if the wine contain even a thousandth part of sulphuric acid, the paper will be spotted rose-red, and prove brittle and friable when slightly rubbed between the fingers. (Lassaigne, 0. Henri, and Bayard.) For- merly the wine dealers were in the habit of putting litharge into wines that had become acescent. The oxide of lead formed with the acetic acid acetate of lead, which, being sweet, corrected the defect of the wine, but at the same time rendered it poisonous. At the present day, this criminal practice is wholly abandoned. The adulteration is readily detected by sulphuretted hydrogen, which causes a black and flocculent precipitate. Mr. Brande, among the nu- merous samples of wine of suspected purity which he examined, did not find one containing any poisonous ingredient fraudulently introduced. Lead, in mi- nute quantity, may sometimes be detected; but is derived invariably from shot in the bottle, or from some analogous source. Rhenish wines, when acid from the presence of free tartaric or acetic acid, may be restored by the addition of neutral tartrate of potassa, which gives rise to the formation of cream of tartar. {Andrew Ure.) Spurious mixtures, frequently containing very little of the fer- mented juice of the grape, and which are sold as particular wines, may not be poisonous; but they are, notwithstanding, highly pernicious in their effects upon the stomach, and always produce mischief and disappointment, when depended on as therapeutic agents. The wines most frequently imitated are port and madeira; and cider is the chief ingredient in the spurious mixtures. English port is sometimes made of a small portion of real port, mixed with cider, juice of elder berries, and brandy, and rendered astringent with logwood and alum. According to Stracke, genuine wines do not contain salts of potassa in quantity sufficient to yield a precipitate with bichloride of platinum. If, therefore, a sus- pected wine be evaporated to dryness, and the extract, after being washed with alcohol so long as this is coloured by it, and then dissolved in water, give a precipitate with the bichloride, the presence of cider may be suspected. {Journ. de Pliarm., Mai, 1862, p. 442.) By most dealers in wine, colouring is employed, made usually of elder berries and alum. The practice of colouring wines is very reprehensible. In France colouring is openly sold with impunity, and exten- sively employed; although the wine dealer who uses it is liable to fine and im- prisonment. {A. Chevallier.) Alum may be detected in red wine by boiling it for a few minutes. If alum be present, even in part, the wine gradually becomes turbid, and furnishes a flocculent precipitate; while a pure red wine is not rendered turbid, even by long boiling. (J. L. Lassaigne.) The weaker wines often spoil by keeping. In this case they are apt to dis- solve any tartar that may have been deposited, and have been found to contain propionic acid. The result is ascribed by M. Nickles to a fermentative decom- position of the tartar. Of course, in this state the wine contains potassa, and would not respond favourably to the test of bichloride of platinum above given. {Journ. de Pharm., Aoiit, 1862, p. 90.) Lactic acid is one of the products of the changes which take place in the spontaneous deterioration of wine; and M. Ba- lard has succeeded in discovering the peculiar lactic acid ferment in spoiled wines. The appearance of this is preceded by that of globules similar to those of yeast; and, after the completion of the lactic acid fermentation, and the com- mencement of the putrefactive, a throng of vibrions is observable. After cessation of the vinous fermentation, and during the progress of that of lactic acid, all disengagement of gas ceases. {Ibid., Juillet, 1862, p. 9.) Besides the grape, a number of other fruits yield a juice susceptible of the vinous fermentation. The infusion of malt, also, is capable of undergoing this process, and becomes converted into the different kinds of porter and ale. The product in ah these cases, though not commonly called a wine, is nevertheless a vinous liquor, and may be classed among the wines properly so called. 7 he Vin-um. 860 PART I. following is a list of these vinous liquors, together with the percentage of al- cohol which they contain, as ascertained by Mr. Brande: currant wine, 20 55; gooseberry wine, 11-84; orange wine, 11‘26 ; elder wine, 8-79; cider, from 5 21 to 9-87; perry, 7-26; mead, 7*32; Burton ale, 8-88 ; Edinburgh ale, 6'20; brown stout, 6-80; London porter, 4*20; small beer, L28. Dr. H. Bence Jones gives the following percentages of alcohol in the under-named liquors: cider, from 54 to 7-5; bitter ale, from 6-6 to 12*3; porter, from 6'5 to 7-0; brown stout, from 6-5 to 7'9. According to L. Hoffmann, Burton ale consists, in the 100 parts, of carbonic acid 0 04, absolute alcohol 6 62, extract of malt 14 97, and water 78-37 ; and pale ale, of carbonic acid 0 07, absolute alcohol 5 57, extract of malt 4'62, and water 89'74. None of these liquors should be kept in leaden vessels, for fear of being rendered poisonous. Medical Properties and Uses. Wine is consumed in most civilized countries ; but in a state of health is at least useless, if not absolutely pernicious. The de- gree of mischief which it produces depends on the character of the wine. Thus, the light wines of France are comparatively harmless; while the habitual use of the stronger wines, such as sherry, port, madeira, &c., even though taken in mod- eration, is always injurious, as having a tendency to induce gout and apoplexy, and other diseases dependent on plethora and over-stimulation. All wines, how- ever, when used habitually in excess, are productive of bad consequences. They weaken the stomach, produce disease of the liver, and give rise to gout, dropsy, apoplexy, tremors, and not unfrequently mania. Nevertheless, wine is an import- ant medicine, productive of the best effects in certain diseases. As an article of the materia medica, it ranks as a stimulant and antispasmodic. In the convales- cence from protracted fever, it is frequently the best remedy that can be employed. In certain stages of fever, and in extensive ulceration and gangrene, this remedy, either alone, or conjoined with bark and opium, is often our main dependence. According to Dr. Stokes, of Dublin, the weakness or absence of the first sound of the heart is an indication for the use of wine in typhus fever. When given in low febrile affections, if it increase the fulness and lessen the frequency of the pulse, mitigate delirium, and produce a tendency to sleep, its further use may be deemed proper; but, if it render the pulse quicker, augment the heat and thirst, produce restlessness, or increase delirium, it should be immediately laid aside as injurious. In some convulsive diseases, as for example tetanus, wine, liberally given, has often proved useful. Wine, when used medicinally, should be good of its kind ; for otherwise it will disagree with the stomach, and prove rather detrimental than useful. The indi- vidual wine selected for internal exhibition must be determined by the nature of the disease, and the particular object in view. Sherry, when in good condition, is a fine wine, and, as it contains very little acid, is to be preferred whenever the stomach is delicate, or has a tendency to dyspeptic acidity. Good madeira is the most generous of the white wines, particularly adapted to the purpose of resus- citating debilitated constitutions, and of sustaining the sinking energies of the system in old age. The acidity, however, of pure madeira causes it to disarree with some stomachs, and renders it an improper wine for gouty persons. T me- riffe is a good variety of white wine for medicinal use, being of about the medium strength, and agreeing very well with most stomachs. Port is generally used in cases of pure debility, especially when attended with a loose state of the bowels, unaccompanied with inflammation. In such cases it often acts as a powerful tonic as well as stimulant, giving increased activity to all the functions, especially diges- tion. Claret is much less heating, and is often useful on account of its aperient and diuretic qualities. Champagne is applicable to the sinking stage of low fevers with irritable stomach, and is often useful in the debility of the aged. All the acidulous wines are contraindicated in the gouty and uric acid diathe- sis; as they are apt to convert the existing predisposition into disease. PART I. Vinum.— Viola. 861 The quantity of wine which may be given with advantage in disease is very variable. In low fevers it may be administered to the extent of a bottle or more in twenty-four hours, either pure, or in the form of wiue-whev. This is made by adding to a pint of boiling milk, removed from the fire, from a gill to half a pim of white wine, straining without pressure to separate the curd, and sweetening the clear whey with loaf sugar. Wine-whey often forms a safe and grateful stimu- lus in typhoid fevers, and other febrile affections, which, after depletion, may tend to a state of deficient action, and be accompanied with a dry skin. Under these circumstances, it generally acts as a diaphoretic, and, when used of moderate strength, does not stimulate the system injuriously. M. Aran, of Paris, has found enemata of wine highly useful in the convales- cence from severe diseases. He has also derived benefit from them in chlorosis, dyspepsia, gastralgia attended with debility and gastric irritability, vomiting of food, and obstinate diarrhoea, especially that of phthisis. The rectum should bf emptied by a laxative enema, immediately before giving the vinous, which ma) consist of from five to eight fluidounces of tepid wine, generally diluted witL water. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., July, 1855, p. 208.) Pharmaceutical Uses. White wine is employed as a menstruum to extract the virtues of several plants; and the preparations formed are called vinous tinctures or medicated wines. Tartar emetic and iron are the only mineral sub- stances prepared in a similar manner. (See Vinum Antimonii and Vinum Ferri.) For the peculiar powers of wine as a menstruum, see Vina Medicata. B. VIOLA. TJ.S. Secondary. Violet. The herb of Yiola pedata. TJ. S. Violette odorante, Ft.; Wohlriechendes Veilclien, Germ.; Violetta, Ital.; Violeta, Span, Yiola. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Yiolacese. Gen. Gh. Calyx five-leaved. Corolla five-petaled, irregular, horned at the back. Anthers cohering. Capsule superior, three-valved, one-celled. This genus includes numerous species, of which, though perhaps all or nearly all are possessed of analogous properties, one only, the V. pedata, is now offici- nal ; the Viola odorata, formerly recognised by the London and Edinburgh Col- leges, having been rejected by the British Council. Violayvata, an indigenous species, has been recommended as a remedy for the bite'of tile rattlesnake. (See a paper by Dr. Williams in the Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xiii. 310.) As V. odo- rata has long held the most conspicuous place in the genus, medically considered, we shall treat of it together with the officinal species. Viola pedata. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1160; Curtis, Bot. Mag. 89. This is an in- digenous species, without stems, glabrous, with many-parted, often pedate leaves, the segments of which are linear-lanceolate, obtuse, and nearly entire. The flow- ers are large and of a beautiful blue colour, often more or less variegated. The divisions of the calyx are linear and acute. The stigma is large, compressed at the sides, obliquely truncate, and perforate at the apex. The plant grows in dry sandy hills and fields, and rocky woods, from New England to Carolina, and flowers in May and June. Viola odorata. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1163; Woodv. Med. Bot. p. 251, t. 89. This is a small, pretty, creeping plant, the runners of which are furnished with fibrous roots, and send up annually tufts of leaves and flowers. The ’eaves are heart-shaped, crenate, and supported on long petioles. The flowers are at the summit of delicate, quadrangular, channeled, radical peduncles. The leaves of the calyx are shorter than the petals, which are obovate, obtuse, unequal, and of a bluish-purple or deep-violet colour, except at the claws, which are whitish The two lateral petals are spreading aud bearded towards the base, the inferior Viola. PART I. furnished with a large spur, and the two upper reflected. In the centre are the stamens with very short filaments, and anthers slightly cohering by an orange- coloured membranous expansion. The sweet violet is a native of Europe, growing in woods, hedges, and other shady places. It is cultivated in gardens both for its beauty and for medical use, and has been introduced into this country. It is valued chiefly for its flowers, which appear in April and May. The flowers of this species of yrolet, besides their beautiful colour, have a peculiar agreeable odour, and a very slightly bitter taste. These properties they yield to boiling water; and their infusion affords a very delicate test for acids and alkalies, being reddened by the former, and rendered green by the latter. Their odour is destroyed by desiccation; and the degree to which they retain their fine colour depends upon the care used in collecting and drying them. They should be gathered before being fully blown, deprived of their calyx, and rapidly dried, either in a heated room, or by exposing them to a current of very dry air. The flowers of other species are often mingled with them, and, if of the same colour, are equally useful as a chemical test. In the root, leaves, flowers, and seeds of Viola odorata, M. Boullay discovered a peculiar alkaline principle, bearing some resemblance to emetia, but possessing distinct properties. He called it violine (violia). It is white, soluble in alco- hol, scarcely soluble in water, and forms salts with the acids. It exists in the plant combined with malic acid, and may be obtained by treating with distilled water the alcoholic extract of the dried root, decomposing by means of magnesia the malate of violia contained in the solution, and extracting the alkali from the precipitated matters by alcohol, which yields it on evaporation. To obtain it entirely pure, a more complicated process is necessary. Orfila has ascertained that it is exceedingly active and even poisonous. It is probably contained in most of the other species of Viola. Medical Properties, &c. of the Violets. The herbaceous parts of different species of violet are mucilaginous, emollient, and slightly laxative; and have been used in pectoral, nephritic, and cutaneous affections. Much was formerly thought of the Violajricolor, or pansy, as a remedy in crusta lactea. A de- coction in milk of a handful of the fresh herb was taken morning and evening, and a poultice made with the same decoction was applied to the affected part. Cures in numerous instances are said to have been effected by this treatment, persevered in for some time. Our own Viola pedata is considered a useful ex- pectorant and demulcent in pectoral complaints. (Bigeloic.) In Europe, a syrup prepared from the fresh flowers of Viola odorata is em- ployed as an addition to demulcent drinks, and as a laxative for infants. The seeds were formerly considered beneficial in gravel, but are not now used. The root, which has a bitter, nauseous, slightly acrid taste, acts in the dose of from thirty grains to a drachm as an emetic and cathartic. It is probable that the same property is possessed by the roots of all the violets; as it is known to be by several species of Ionidium, which belongs to the same natural family. The existence in small proportion of the emetic principle, upon which the powers of the root probably depend, in the leaves and flowers, accounts for the expecto- rant properties attributed to these parts of the plant.* W * Syrup of Violet. This was officinal with the Lond. and Ed. Colleges; and, though it has been discai'ded in the British Pharmacopoeia, yet, as it may sometimes prove useful, we give the London formula for its preparation, with the remarks upon it contained in the eleventh edition of the Dispensatory. “Take of Violets [recent petals] nine ounces; boiling Distilled Water a pint [Imperial measure]; Sugar [refined] a sufficient quantity; Rectified Spirit a sufficient quantity. Macer- ate the Violets in the Water for twelve hours; then express, and fiiter. Set apart that the dregs may subside; then add a weight of the Sugar double that of the liquid, ai.d di solva PART I. Xanthorrhiza. 863 XANTHORRHIZA. U. S. Secondary. Yelloic-root. The root of Xanthorrhiza apiifolia. U. S. Xanthorrhiza. Sex. Syst. Pentandria Polygynia. — Nat. Ord. Ranuncu- laceae. Gen. Ch. Calyx none. Petals five. Nectaries five, pedicelled. Capsules five to eight, one-seeded, seraibivalve. Nuttall. Xanthorrhiza apiifolia. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1568; Barton, Med. Bot. ii 203.—X. tinctoria. Woodhouse, N. Y. Med. Repos, vol. v. This is an indige- nous shrub, two or three feet in height, with a horizontal root, which sends off numerous suckers. The stem is simple, rather thicker than a goose-quill, with a smooth bark, and bright-yellow wood. The leaves, which stand thickly at the upper part of the stem, are compound, consisting of several ovate-lanceolate, acute, doubly serrate leaflets, sessile upon a long petiole, which embraces the stem at its base. The flowers are small, purple, and disposed in long, drooping, divided racemes, placed immediately below the first leaves. The nectaries are obovate and bilobed, the styles usually about six or eight in number. The yellow-root grows in the interior of the Southern, and in the Western States. Xuttall says that it is abundant on the banks of the Ohio. It flowers in April. The root is the part directed by the Pharmacopoeia; but the bark of the stem possesses the same virtues. The root is from three inches to a foot or more in length, and about half an inch in thickness near the stem. It shrinks somewhat in drying, and, as found in the shops, is in slender pieces of various lengths, diminishing from three or four lines in thickness to the dimensions of a knitting-needle, wrinkled longitu- dinally, with a light yellowish-brown, easily separable epidermis, a thick, hard, bright-yellow woody portion, and a very slender central pith. It is inodorous, and of a simple but extremely bitter taste. It imparts its colour and taste to water. The infusion is not affected by a solution of sulphate of iron. By the late Professor Barton the bark of the root was considered more bitter than its ligneous portion. Dr. J. Dyson Perrins extracted from it an alkaloid which, both in its reactions and composition, so closely resembled berberina that there can scarcely be a doubt of their identity. (Pharm. Journ., May, 1862.) Medical Properties and Uses. Xanthorrhiza possesses properties closely analogous to those of columbo, quassia, and the other simple tonic bitters; and may be used for the same purposes, and in the same manner. Dr. Woodhouse employed it in the dose of two scruples, and found it to lie easily upon the stomach. W. with a gentle heat. Finally, when the syrup has cooled, mix with each fluidounce of it half a fluidrachm of the Spirit.” Lond. This syrup has a deep-blue colour and an agreeable flavour. It is said that its colour is most beautiful when it is prepared in well-cleaned pewter vessels; and the influence of the metal is ascribed by M. Augillis, of Ypres, to the attraction of the tin for nascent acetie acid, which he thinks is produced in the flower by fermentation, and has the effect, if not neutralized, of impairing its colour. (Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1856, p. 194.) As it is apt to fade by time, it is sometimes counterfeited with materials the colour of which is more per- manent. The fraud may usually be detected by the addition of an acid or alkali, the for- mer of which reddens the syrup of violets, the latter renders it green, while they produce no such change upon the counterfeit. It should not have the smell or taste of red cabbage, a syrup of which acts in the same way with acids and alkalies. This syrup acts as a gentle laxative when given to infants in the dose of one or two fluidrachms; but it is used chiefly as a test of acids and alkalies. For the latter purpose, a syrup prepared from the juice of the red cabbage may be substituted. It is very seldom 1< ept in our shops. 864 Xanthoxylum. PART I. XANTHOXYLUM. U. S. Secondary. Prickly Ash. The bark of Xanthoxylum fraxineum. U. S. Xanthoxylum. Sex. Syst. Pioecia Pentandria.—Nat. Ord. Terebintaceae, Juss.; Xanthoxylaceae, IAndley. Gen. Gh. Male. Calyx five-parted. Corolla none. Female. Calyx five- parted. Corolla none. Pistils five. Capsules five, one-seeded. Willd.* Xanthoxylum fraxineum. Willd. Sp. Plant, iv. 757 ; Bigelow, Am. Med. Pot. iii. 156.—X. Americanum, Miller; Torrey and Gray, FI. of N. Am. i. 214. The prickly ash is a shrub from five to ten feet in height, with alter- nate branches, which are covered with strong, sharp, scattered prickles. The leaves are alternate and pinnate, consisting of four or five pairs of leaflets, and an odd terminal one, with a common footstalk, which is sometimes prickly on the back, and sometimes unarmed.’ The leaflets are nearly sessile, ovate, acute, slightly serrate, and somewhat downy on their under surface. The flowers, which are small and greenish, are disposed in sessile umbels near the origin of the young shoots. The plant is polygamous; some shrubs bearing both male and perfect flowers, others only female. The number of stamens is five, of the pis- tils three or four in the perfect flowers, about five in the pistillate. Each fruit- ful flower is followed by as many capsules as it had germs. These capsules are stipitate, oval, punctate, of a greenish-red colour, with two valves, and one oval blackish seed. This species of Xanthoxylum is indigenous, growing in woods and in moist shady places throughout the Northern, Middle, and Western States. The flowers appear in April and May, before the foliage. The leaves and capsules have an aromatic odour recalling that of the oil of lemons. The bark is the officinal portion. Properties. This, as found in the shops, is in quills, from one or two lines to nearly an inch in diameter, thin, externally of a darkish-gray colour diver- sified by whitish patches, with the epidermis in many pieces marked by closely set transverse cracks, internally finely striated longitudinally and somewhat shining, and, whea derived from the smaller branches, exhibiting occasionally remains of the prickles. The bark is very light, brittle, nearly or quite inodorous, and of a taste which is at first sweetish and slightly aromatic, then bitterish, and ultimately acrid. The acrimony is imparted to boiling water and alcohol, which extract the virtues of the bark. Its constituents, according to Dr. Staples, be- sides fibrous substance, are volatile oil, a greenish fixed oil, resin, gum, colour- ing matter, and a peculiar crystallizable principle which he calls xanthoxylin, but of wdiich the properties are not designated. {Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., i. 165.) It is probably identical with the bitter crystalline principle found by MM. Chevallier and Pelletan in the bark of Xanthoxylum Clava Her- culis, and named by them xanthopicrite; and this has been found by Mr. Perrins to be identical with berberina; so that the prickly ash is to be added to the * The fruit of Xanthoxylum nhdu.m. growing in Northern India and China, is known by the name of Japanese pepper, being used as a condiment in Japan and China. It is in small roundish capsules,'"of which one or more stand upon a peduncle, of a reddish-brown colour, and beset externally with numerous little prominences, which appear to enclose the oil to which the fruit owes its pungency. The flavour of the capsule is aromatic, pungent, and agreeable. The seeds are black, shining, and destitute of pungency. Dr. Stenhouse has obtained from the fruit by distillation a liquid volatile oil, isomeric with oil of turpentine, which he calls xanthoxylene, colourless, and of an extremety agreeable odour; and a crys- talline stearoptene, which separates from the liquid on cooling. This he calls ranthoxylin. It is slightly aromatic, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, fusible, and volatili- zable unchanged. (Pharm. Journ., xvii. 19, and N. S. ii. 554.)—Note to the eleventh and twelfth editions PART i. Xanthoxylum.—Zincum. list of medical substances, already large, in which this widely diffused alkaloid is contained. {Pharm. Journ., March, 1863, p. 403.) A specimen of bark has been shown to us, collected on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay, and said to be the product of Xanthoxylum Clava Her culls, though probably derived from the trunk of the XJCarolini'anum, as tEe X. Clava Herculis is a native of the West Indies, and not of the United States, ana the X. Carolinianum grows in Virginia. Prof. Bentley first indicated this pro bable origin of the bark, which, in the last edition of the Dispensatory, was con- jecturally referred to the trunk of the officinal species. The specimen referred to resembles the bark above described considerably in its general characters, but differs in consisting of irregular fragments of a bark of larger dimensions, flat or but slightly rolled, and exhibiting, on the outer surface of some of the fragments, large conical, corky eminences, which serve as the bases of the spines, and no doubt give to the trunk of the tree the rough, knotty appearance, which obtained for its congener the name of the club of Hercules. Dr. Bigelow states that the Aralia spinosa, or angelica tree, which grows in the Southern States, is occasionally confounded with X. fruxineum, in conse- quence partly of being sometimes called, like the latter, prickly ash. Its bark, however, in appearance and flavour, is entirely different from xanthoxylum. Medical Properties and Uses. Xanthoxylum is stimulant, producing, when swallowed, a sense of heat in the stomach, with more or less general arterial excitement, and a tendency to diaphoresis. It is thought to resemble mezereon and guaiac in its remedial action, and is given in the same complaints. As a remedy in chronic rheumatism, it enjoys considerable reputation in this country. The dose of the powder is from ten grains to half a drachm, to be repeated three or four times a day. A decoction, prepared by boiling an ounce in three pints of water down to a quart, may be given in the quantity of a pint, in divided doses, during the twenty-four hours. The powder has sometimes been employed as a topical irritant; and the bark, used as a masticatory, is a popular remedy for toothache, and has been recommended in palsy of the tongue. W. ZINCUM. JJ.S. Zinc. Off. Syn. Zinc of Commerce. Granulated Zinc. Zinc granulated by fusing and pouring it into cold water. Br. Appendix. Speltre; Zinc, AV\; Zink, Germ.; Zinco, Ital., Span. Zinc occurs native in two principal states; as a sulphuret, called blende, and as a carbonate and silicate, to which the name of calaniine is applied indis- criminately.* It has been detected, in the vegetable kingdom, in*a peculiar violet growing on the calamine hills of Rhenish Prussia. It is found most abundantly in Germany, whence the United States have, until recently, been chiefly supplied, f The metal is extracted generally from calamine. This is roasted and mixed with charcoal powder, and the mixture heated in iron cylinders, placed horizontally over a furnace. When the reduction of the zinc commences, iron receivers are adapt- ed to the opening of the cylinder to condense the volatilized metal. The metal is * A small piece of native zinc was exhibited at the International Exhibition at London, In 1862, among the products of Australia, being the first specimen that had been seen of the metal in this state. (Chem. News, July 26,1862.) -j- Zinc is now largely manufactured near Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, at the zinc works of the Lehigh Zinc Company. The ore worked is the silicate or electric calamine. Sulphuret of zinc (blende) and sulphuret of cadmium are also found in the same locality. From picked specimens of the ore nearly pure zinc has been obtained. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1860, p. 407.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 866 Zincum. PART I. then melted and run into moulds, and forms speltre, or the zinc of commerce. In this state it contains iron, and traces of lead, cadmium, arsenic, copper, sulphur, and charcoal. To purify it from these substances, it must be subjected to a second distillation in a crucible, furnished with a tube passing through its bot- tom, and open at both ends; its upper extremity reaching a little more than half way up the interior of the crucible, and its lower end terminating above a vessel of water. The impure zinc being placed in the crucible, the cover luted on, and the fire applied, the pure zinc is volatilized, and, passing down the tube by a descending distillation, condenses in the water below. Properties. Zinc has a bluish-white colour, a peculiar taste, and a percepti- ble smell when rubbed. Its texture is laminated, and its fracture crystalline. Its malleability and ductility are not very great. When perfectly pure, it may be reduced to thin leaves at ordinary temperatures; but the zinc of commerce re- quires to be heated to a temperature between 212° and 300° to render it suffi- ciently malleable to be rolled into sheets. The softness of zinc is peculiar, as is shown by the circumstance that it clogs the file, when the attempt is made to reduce it to filings; and hence to have it in the divided form, it is necessary to melt it, and triturate it at the moment of solidification. Its sp. gr. is about 6-8, its equivalent 323, and symbol Zn. Favre makes its equivalent 32-99, and Erd- mann, 32-521. Subjected to heat it fuses at 713°. At full redness it boils, and in close vessels maybe distilled over; but in open vessels it takes fire, and burns with a dazzling white flame, giving off dense white fumes. It dissolves in most of the acids with disengagement of hydrogen, and precipitates all the metals either in the metallic state, or in that of oxide. It forms but one well-charac- terized oxide (a protoxide), and but one sulphuret. The protoxide is officinal, and will be described under another head. (See Zinci Oxidum.) Zinc of good quality dissolves in dilute sulphuric acid, with the exception of a scanty grayish-black residue. If absolutely pure, it would be wholly dissolved. The solution is colourless, and yields white precipitates with ferrocyanide of potassium and hydrosulphate of ammonia. Ammonia throws down from this solu- tion a white precipitate, which is wholly dissolved when the alkali is added in excess. If copper be present, the solution will be rendered blue by the ammo nia; if iron, it will be thrown down by this alkali, but not redissolved by its ex- cess. Arsenic may be detected, unless present in very minute proportion, by dissolving the zinc in pure dilute sulphuric acid in a self-regulating reservoir for hydrogen, when arseniuretted hydrogen will be formed, recognisable by its flame producing a dark stain on a white plate. Zinc is extensively employed in the arts. It is the best metal that can be used, in conjunction with copper, for galvanic combinations. Combined with tin and mercury, it forms the amalgam for electrical machines. Its solution in dilute sulphuric acid furnishes the readiest method for obtaining hydrogen. With cop- per it forms brass, and, in the form of sheet zinc, it is employed to cover the roofs of houses, and for other purposes. It is also applied to the covering of iron, to protect it from oxidizement, in the same manner as tin. It should, however, never be used for culinary vessels, as it is soluble in the weakest acids. The compounds of zinc are poisonous, but not to the same extent as those of lead. The oxide of zinc, used in painting as a substitute for white lead, is said to be capable of producing a colic, resembling that caused by lead, and called zinc colic. It attacks workmen, exposed to the dust of the oxide while engaged in packing it in barrels, and yields to the remedies appropriate to the treatment of lead colic. (See Chem. Gaz., Sept. 16, 1850.) This statement, however, is, to say the least, very questionable. Pharmaceutical Uses. Zinc is never used as a medicine in the metallic state; PART I. Zincum.—Zinci Sulphas. 867 but is employed in this state to prepare the officinal Acetate, Sulphate, and Chloride of Zinc, and the Reduced Iron of the Br. Pharmacopoeia. In combi nation it forms a number of important preparations, a list of which with their synonvmes, is subjoined. Zinc is employed medicinally, I. Oxidized. Zinci Oxidum, U. S., Br. — Oxide of Zinc. TJnguentum Zinci Oxidi, U. S.,Br. — Ointment of Oxide of Zinc. II. Combined with chlorine. Zinci Chloridum, U. S., Br. — Chloride of Zinc. III. Oxidized and combined with acids. Zinci Acetas, U. S.,Br.—Acetate of Zinc. Zinci Carbonas Prcecipitata, U. S.; Zinci Carbonas, Br. — Precipitated Carbonate of Zinc. Ceratum Zinci Carbonatis, U. S.— Cerate of Carbonate of Zinc. Zinci Sulphas, U. S., Br. — Sulphate of Zinc. White Vitriol. Zinci Yalerianas, U. S., Br. — Valerianate of Zinc. ZINCI SULPHAS. U.S.,Br. Sulphate of Zinc. White Vitriol. This salt was, at the late revision of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, transferred from the Preparations to the Materia Medica Catalogue, as an article to be purchased of the manufacturer. The British Pharmacopoeia gives the following process for its preparation. “Take of Granulated Zinc sixteen ounces [avoirdupois]; Sulphuric Acid twelve Jluidounces [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water four pints [Imp. meas.] ; So- lution of Chlorine a sufficiency; Carbonate of Zinc half an ounce [avoird.], or a sufficiency. Pour the Acid previously mixed with the Water on the Zinc con- tained in a porcelain basin, and, when effervescence has nearly ceased, aid the action by a gentle heat. Filter the fluid into a gallon bottle, and add gradually with constant agitation the Solution of Chlorine until the fluid acquires a per- manent odour of chlorine. Add now with continued agitation the Carbonate of Zinc until a brown precipitate appears; let it settle, filter the solution, evaporate until a pellicle forms on the surface, and set aside to crystallize. Dry the crys- tals by exposure to the air on filtering paper, placed on porous bricks. More crystals may be obtained by again evaporating the mother liquor.” Strong sulphuric acid has very little action on zinc; but, when it is diluted, water is instantly decomposed, and, while its hydrogen escapes with rapid efferves- cence, its oxygen combines with the zinc; and the oxide formed, uniting with the acid, generates the sulphate of the oxide of zinc. Thus it is perceived that hydrogen is a collateral product of the process. The proportion of the zinc to the strong acid in the process is as 4 to 5 53. The equivalent numbers give the ratio of 4 to 6 06; which indicates that the metal is somewhat in excess. If the materials are mixed at once, without any precaution, the effervescence of hydro- gen is apt to be excessive, and to cause the overflowing of the liquid. This may be avoided by commencing the solution of zinc with a very dilute acid, which, as the action slackens, is made by degrees stronger and stronger, by the addition, at intervals, of small portions of fresh acid. As the zinc of commerce generally contains iron, this would contaminate the product, unless precautions were taken to prevent it. Hence the addition of chlorine, which reacts with the sulphate of iron to form tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron and sesquichloride of iron, which, Zinci Sulphas. PART I. upon the addition of the carbonate of zinc, yield the sulphuric acid and chlorine to the zinc; the sesquioxide of iron being deposited, and the carbonic acid set free. The former is separated by filtration, the latter escapes during the evapo- ration, the addilional sulphate of zinc crystallizes with that first formed, and the chloride of zinc remains in the mother-waters. Preparation on the Large Scale. Impure sulphate of zinc, as it occurs in commerce, is called white vitriol. It is manufactured by roasting blende (native sulphuret of zinc) in a reverberatory furnace. This mineral, besides sulphuret of zinc, contains small quantities of the sulphurets of iron, copper, and lead ; and by roasting is converted, in consequence of the oxidation of its constituents, into sulphate of zinc, mixed with the sulphates of iron, copper, and lead. The roasted matter is then lixiviated; and the solution obtained, after having been allowed to settle, is concentrated by evaporation; so that, on cooling, it may concrete into a white crystalline mass, resembling lump sugar. In this state it always contains sulphate of iron, and sometimes a small proportion of sulphate of cop- per. It may be purified from these metals by dissolving it in water, and boiling the solution with oxide of zinc, which converts the sulphates of iron and copper, by precipitating their into sulphate of zinc. The purified solution is then decanted or filtered, and, after due evaporation, allowed to crystallize. It has generally been proposed to purify the white vitriol of commerce by digesting its solution with metallic zinc, under the impression that this is capable of precipi- tating all the foreign metals; but, according to Berzelius, though it will preci- pitate copper readily, it has no action on iron. Properties, &c. Sulphate of zinc is a transparent, colourless salt, having a disagreeable, metallic, styptic taste, and crystallizing usually in small four-sided prisms. Its crystals have considerable resemblance to those of sulphate of mag- nesia. It effloresces slightly in dry air, and, though neutral in composition, reddens vegetable blues. It dissolves in two and a half times its weight of cold water, and in less than its weight of boiling water, and is insoluble in alcohol. When heated it dissolves in its water of crystallization, which gradually evapo- rates; and, by a prolonged ignition, the whole of the acid is expelled, and the oxide of zinc left. Potassa, soda, and ammonia throw down a white precipitate of mixed oxide and subsulphate, which is redissolved by the alkali in excess. If iron be present it is precipitated also, but not redissolved. The alkaline car- bonates precipitate the metal in the state of white carbonate. Pure sulphate of zinc is precipitated white by ferrocyanide of potassium and hydrosulphuret of ammonia. What is thrown down by chloride of barium or acetate of lead (sul- phate of baryta or sulphate of lead) is not dissolved by nitric acid. If copper be present, ammonia will produce a blue tinge; if iron, the ferrocyanide of potas- sium will cause a bluish-white precipitate instead of a white one, and tiucture of galls a purple colour. Cadmium and arsenic may be detected by acidulating the solution with sulphuric acid, and passing a stream of sulphuretted hydrogen through it; when, if either of these metals be present, it will be thrown down as a yellow sulphuret. Sulphate of zinc is incompatible with alkalies and alkaline carbonates, hydrosulphates, lime-water, the soluble salts of lead, and astringent infusions. The impure commercial variety of sulphate of zinc, called white vitriol, is in the form of irregular white masses, having some resemblance to lump sugar. The lumps usually exhibit, here and there on the surface, yellow stains, produced by sesquioxide of iron. It is less soluble than the pure salt, on account of its containing less water of crystallization. Composition. Crystallized sulphate of zinc consists of one eq. of sulphuric acid 40, one of oxide of zinc 40 3, and seven of water 63= 143 3. The white vitriol of commerce contains but three eqs. of water. Zinci Sulphas. PART I. Medical Properties and Uses. This salt is tonic, astringent, and, in large doses, a prompt emetic. Before the discovery of tartar emetic, it was much em- ployed to produce vomiting; but at present its use as an emetic is restricted prin- cipally to the dislodging of poisons, for which purpose its property of operating promptly renders it particularly suitable. As a tonic, it is supposed to be well suited to cases of debility, attended with irritation, being less heating than sul- phate of iron. In dyspepsia it has been used with advantage in very minute doses, as, for instance, a quarter of a grain, repeated several times a day; but, if good effects are not soon apparent, it should be laid aside. In the night-sweats of consumption it acts with singular efficacy, combined with extract of hyoscy- annis, given at bedtime in the form of pill, composed of one grain of the salt to four of the extract. The combination has been used in these sweats, with the effect of arresting them in about thirty cases, by Dr. E. J. Coxe, of New Orleans. In obstinate intermittents, it is a valuable resource, and may be given alone, or conjoined with cinchona or sulphate of quinia. But it is in spasmodic diseases, such as epilepsy, chorea, pertussis, &c., that it has been principally employed. Dr. Paris speaks of its efficacy in high terms, in spasmodic cough, especially when combined with camphor or myrrh, and “ in affections of the chest attended with inordinate secretion.” As an astringent it is chiefly employed externally. Its solution constitutes a good styptic to bleeding surfaces, and is frequently re- sorted to as an injection in fluor albus and gonorrhoea, and as a collyrium in oph- thalmia. In some conditions of ulcerated sorethroat, it forms a useful gargle. It has been employed also in solution with success as a remedy for nasal polypi, in the proportion of two scruples, gradually increased to an ounce of the salt, to seven fluidounces of water, applied by means of lint and by injection. The dose, as a tonic, is from one to two grains; as an emetic, from ten to thirty grains. To children affected with hooping-cough, it may be given in doses of from an eighth to a quarter of a grain two or three times a day. When used as a collyrium, in- jection, or gargle, or as a wash for indolent ulcers, from one to three grains or more may be dissolved in a fluidounce of water. For medicinal purposes the crystallized salt should be used, and in no case the impure white vitriol of com- merce. Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, has recently (1857) called attention to the value of dried sulphate of zinc, in the form of powder, paste, or ointment, as a caustic. He attributes to it the advantages of being powerful, rapid, manageable, safe, and not deliquescent. In a recent paper he reports his successful use of it as a caustic in indurated inflammatory ulcers of the cervix uteri; in lupus; in ulcer- ous forms of skiu diseases; in removing the small red sensitive tumours which form at the orifice of the female urethra, and in destroying ulcerated condylo- mata and warty excrescences. The dried salt should be finely levigated. The caustic paste is made by incorporating au ounce of the powder with a drachm of glycerin; and the caustic ointment, by thoroughly mixing the same quantity of the powder with two drachms of lard. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1857, p. 485.) Dr. Eben Watson, Surgeon to the Royal Infirmary of Glasgow, also bears testimony to the utility of dried sulphate of zinc as an escharotic. He particularly insists upon its advantages as a caustic application to callous ulcers, for the purpose of destroying their surface, exciting a new action, and disposing them to heal. The application causes severe pain, which should be relieved by opiates freely given, and continued until the sloughs separate, about the fifth day. Sulphate of zinc, in an overdose, acts as an irritant poison. Besides vomiting ind incessant retching, it produces anxiety, distressing restlessness, and extreme prostration. Few cases are on record of fatal poisoning by this salt; the patient being generally relieved by its prompt expulsion in vomiting. Four cases, how- 870 Zingiber. PART I. eve-i, have been reported in an Italian journal, two of which proved fatal. In one or the fatal cases, an ounce and a half had been swallowed by mistake for Epsom salt. The treatment consists in the free administration of bland drinks, the use of opium to allay irritation, and the employment of the usual antiphlo- gistic remedies, should symptoms of inflammation arise. Off. Prep. Zinci Carbonas, Br.; Zinci Carbonas Prsecipitata, XJ. S.; Zinci Ohloridum, U. S.; Zinci Valerianas. B. ZINGIBER. U.S.,Br. Ginger. The rhizoma of Zingiber officinale. U. S. The rhizome scraped and dried. Br. Gingembre, Fr.; Ingwer, Germ.; Zenzero, Ital.; Gengibre, Span. Zingiber. Sex. Syst. Monandria Monogynia.—Nat. Ord. Scitamineae, R. Brown; Zir. gibe race®, Bindley. Gen. Ch. Blowers spathaceous. Inner limb of the corolla with one lip. An- ther double, with a simple recurved horn at the end. Germen inferior. Style enclosed in the furrow formed by the anther. Loudon’s Encyc. of Plants. Zingiber officinale. Roscoe, Trans. Linn. Soc. viii. 348; Carson, Illust. of Meo!utio*i on the addition of muriatic acid in excess.” (U. S.) This shows the absence of sulphuric acid. It decolorizes iodine by forming with it hydriodic acid, and on this fact is based the test of the Br. Pharmacopoeia before given. Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphurous acid has been introduced into use in consequence of its fatal influence upon the lower forms of animal and vege- table life. It is supposed to be thus destructive by its anti-oxygenizing influ- ence ; suffocating organic beings by denying them the oxygen necessary to their existence; but it probably acts also by a physiological property independently of its mere chemical effect. It is perhaps by the same property that it prevents fermentation, destroying the microscopic organisms essential to that process. In reference to its parasiticide property, it was brought before the notice of the pro- fession by Dr. Jenner of London; though to Prof. Graham, we believe, belongs the first suggestion of its applicability to such purposes. In cases of sarcinse ventriculi it may be taken internally; but one of the sulphites, as sulphite of soda, is perhaps preferable for the purpose, as it yields the acid always by de- composition in the stomach. It is more used as an external application, in psora, the different forms of porrigo, trichosis of the scalp, pityriasis versicolor, and the thrush of children; all parasitic affections, either animalcular or cryptogamous. and all of which generally yield to it, if proper care be taken, by previous removal of the scabs or scales, to bring it into contact with the morbific cause. The dose for internal use is a fiuidrachm, largely diluted with water. When locally used, it should be diluted with two or three measures of water or of glycerin, and ap- plied as a lotion, or by cloths wet with it, or in the form of cataplasm. W. ACIDUM TANNICUM. U.S.,Br. Tannic Acid. “Take of Nutgall, in fine powder, Ether, each, a sufficient quantity. Expose the Nutgall to a damp atmosphere for twenty-four hours, and then mix it with sufficient Ether, previously washed with water, to form a soft paste. Set this aside, covered closely, for six hours; then, having quickly enveloped it in a close canvas cloth, express it powerfully between tinned plates, so as to obtain the liquid portion. Reduce the resulting cake to powder, and mix it with suffi- cient Ether, shaken with one-sixteenth of its bulk of water, to form again a soft paste, and express as before. Mix the liquids, and expose the mixture to spon- taneous evaporation, until it assumes a syrupy consistence; then spread it on glass or tinned plates, and dry it quickly in a drying closet. Lastly, remove tho dry residue from the plates with a spatula, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “ Take of Galls, in coarse powder, eight ounces [avoirdupois] ; Ether three pints [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water five fiuidounces. Mix the Water and Ether by agitation, and after a few minutes pour the ethereal solution in suc- cessive portions upon the Galls, previously introduced into a glass or porcelain percolator, with a receiver so attached as to prevent loss of ether from evapora- tion. The liquid which accumulates in the receiver consists of two distinct strata; separate the heavier liquid, evaporate it to dryness on a water-bath, and com- plete the drying in a hot-air chamber, the temperature of which should not exceed 212°. From the lighter liquid the ether may be recovered by distilla- tion.” Br. The present IT. S. process, which is-that of Leconnet, was substituted, at the late revision of the Pharmacopoeia, for that of M. Pelouze, which had been adopted in the former edition, and is still retained by the British Pharmacopoeia, copying that of the Dublin College. While the discarded process yields the tan- nic acid probably in a somewhat purer state than the present, it is less easy of performance, and much less productive, while the product of the existing formula is sufficiently pure for all practical purposes. The addition of a little alcohol, 8 per cent, for example, to the ethereal menstruum still further increases the pro- duct, and, we are informed, is practised to a considerable extent; but w< douot PARTIL Adda. 939 the propriety of this deviation from the officinal directions, as the resulting pro- duct may not be in all respects identical with the officinal. There appear to be two colouring principles in galls, one soluble in ether and not in alcohol, the other in alcohol and not in ether. Hence, while the tannic acid, in whichever way procured, is yellowish, that obtained by ether has a greenish tint, while that by the addition of alcohol is slightly brownish. The U. S. process is the same with that proposed by a commission of distinguished French pharmaceutists for the edition of the Codex now in the course of preparation. In consequence of the mode in which the acid is dried, in thin layers, on tinned or glass plates, and equably exposed to heat above and below, it froths up on the escape of the ether, and concretes in a soft, cellular, friable form, which is strikingly characteristic of the preparation made in strict accordance with the formula. From a superficial examination of this process, it might appear that the re- sult can be nothing more than an ethereal extract; but it is necessary that tho ether employed should contain water, as it is directed to be washed; and yet the quantity of water is so small that it can hardly operate by its mere solvent power. The circumstances attendant upon the process of Pelouze afford the means of a satisfactory explanation, which was first suggested by M. Beral. In this, the powdered galls are submitted to percolation by watered ether, and the liquid which passes divides itself into two layers, a heavier which sinks to the bottom and a lighter which floats upon the surface. It is the heavier which con- tains the tannic acid, and from which it is obtained by evaporation. The most probable explanation is that ether, water, and tannic acid unite to form a definite compound, in which the affinities are too feeble to resist the tendency of the ether to rise in vapour, and which is, therefore, decomposed by its evaporation. The proportion of the menstruum to the galls is very small, much smaller than would be employed to obtain an extract; and the whole or nearly the whole of both liquids is probably occupied in the formation of the definite compound referred to, thus leaving little or none to act merely as solvents. Hence the exclusion from the resulting acid, in great measure, of the other soluble constituents of the galls; and the slight amount of impurity really present in the acid is probably owing to the action of that small quantity of the menstruum not occupied in forming the liquid compound. Opinion is not altogether united in this explana- tion ; but it is that which appears to the author best to account for the pheno- mena of the case. It has been stated that the tannic acid, obtained by either of the officinal processes, has a more or less yellowish tint. From this, according to F. Kummel, it may be freed by the percolation, through recently ignited ani- mal charcoal, of its solution in a mixture of ether and alcohol. It has, too, a slight odour, which, according to Prof. Procter, is derived from a volatile odorous prin- ciple existing in galls, which he has succeeded in separating from the acid by the action of benzole. From 30 to 35 per cent, of tannic acid is obtained from galls by Pelouze’s method; while that of Leconnet is said to yield 60 per cent. The terra tannin was originally applied to a principle or principles existing in many vegetables, having a very astringent taste, and the properties of producing a white flocculent precipitate with solution of gelatin, and a black precipitate with the salts of sesquioxide of iron. As obtained, however, from different plants, it was found to exhibit some difference of properties; and chemists have recog- nised two kinds, one existing in oak bark, galls, &c., distinguished by producing a bluish-black precipitate with the salts of sesquioxide of iron, and the other ex- isting in Peruvian bark, catechu, &c., and characterized by producing a greenish- black or dark-olive precipitate with the same salts. The former is the one which has received most attention, and from an examination of which the characters of tannin have generally been given. It is the substance described in this article, it will probably be found that the latter is essentially distinct from the tannin of galls, and different in different vegetables. One striking peculiarity of the Adda. PART IL tannin of galls is its facility of conversion into gallic acid, which is wanting in the other varieties. Since the publication of the experiments of M. Pelouze in relation to tannin, this substance has been universally admitted to rank with the acids, and is now, therefore, denominated tannic acid. The ordinary variety pro- cured from galls is called, for the sake of distinction, by some gallolannic acid, and by others quercitannic acid. According to Pettenkofer, it is found only in perennial plants, indicating some relation to the production of woody fibre. (Buchner's Neues Repert., iii. 74-76.) Properties. Pure tannic acid is solid, uncrystallizable, white or slightly yel- lowish, inodorous, strongly astringent to the taste without bitterness, very soluble in water, much less soluble in alcohol and ether, especially when anhydrous, and insoluble in the fixed and volatile oils. It may be kept unchanged in the solid state; but its aqueous solution, when exposed to the air, gradually becomes turbid, and deposits a crystalline matter, consisting chiefly of gallic acid. During the change, oxygen is absorbed, and an equal volume of carbonic acid disen- gaged. But, according to M. E. Robiquet, this change does not always take place, and, when it does happen, is ascribable to the presence of pectase in the tannin. (See page 920.) If the solution of tannic acid be boiled for a long time, the pectase loses its property of acting as a ferment, and the solution may be kept indefinitely without change. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1853, p. 246.) Exposed to heat, tannic acid partly melts, swells up, blackens, takes fire, and burns with a brilliant flame. Thrown on red-hot iron, it is entirely dissipated. Its solution reddens litmus, and it combines with most of the salifiable bases. It forms with potassa a compound but slightly soluble, and is, therefore, precipi- tated by this alkali or its carbonates from a solution which is not too dilute, though a certain excess of alkali will cause the precipitate to be redissolved. Its combination with soda is much more soluble; and this alkali affords no pre- cipitate, unless with a very concentrated solution of tannic acid. With ammonia its relations are similar to those with potassa. Baryta, strontia, lime, and mag- nesia, added in the state of hydrates, form with it compounds of little solubility. The same is the case with most of the metallic oxides, when presented, in the state of salts, to a solution of the tannate of potassa. Many of the metallic salts are precipitated by tannic acid even in the uncombined state, especially those of lead, copper, silver, uranium, chromium, mercury, teroxide of antimony, and protoxide of tin. With the salts of sesquioxide of iron it forms a black preci- pitate, which is a compound of tannic acid and the sesquioxide, and is the basis of ink. It does not disturb the solutions of the pure salts of protoxide of iron. Several of the alkaline salts precipitate it from its aqueous solution, either by the formation of insoluble compounds, or by simply abstracting the sol- vent. Tannic acid unites with all the vegetable organic alkalies, forming compounds which are for the most part of a whitish colour, and but very slightly soluble in water; though they are soluble in the vegetable acids, especially the acetic, and in alcohol, and in this latter respect differ from most of the compounds which tannic acid forms with other vegetable principles. On account of this property of tannic acid, it has been employed as a test of the vegetable alkalies; and it is so delicate, that it will throw down a precipitate from their solution, even when too feeble to be disturbed by ammonia. It has an affinity for several acids, and when in solution affords precipitates with the sulphuric, nitric, muriatic, phosphoric, and arsenic acids, but not with the oxalic, tartaric, lactic, acetic, or citric. The precipitates are considered as compounds of tannic acid with the respective acids mentioned, and are soluble in pure water, but insoluble in water with an excess of acid. Hence, in order to insure precipitation, it is necessary to add the acid in excess to the solution ot tannic acid. Strecker, however, denies that the precipitates are compounds of PART II. Adda. 941 the tannin with the acid, and maintains that they are merely tannin imbued with free acid. (Chem. Gaz., No. 287, p. 370.) When tannic acid, iodine, and water are mixed, a reaction takes place, by which the water is decomposed ; its hydrogen forming with the iodine hydriodic acid, which combines with a portion of the tannic acid and remains in solution while the oxygen of the water combines with another portion of the tannic acid, to form a compound, which, being insoluble, is precipitated. The iodized solu- tion thus obtained is capable of dissolving more iodine, and holding it in per- manent solution, however much diluted. (Socquet and Guillierraond, Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 280.) Tannic acid precipitates solutions of starch, albumen, and gluten, and forms with gelatin an insoluble compound, which is the basis of leather. Its ultimate constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; and its formula, according to Liebig, is C18H8012 or C18ll509-f 3HO. Mulder, however, from re- cent investigations, considers it isomeric with gallic acid, and gives its formula C2SHtfOn + HO. Strecker looks upon it as a compound of gallic acid and grape sugar, the latter of which is destroyed in the spontaneous change that mois- tened galls undergo by time. (See Acidum Gallicum, page 920.) He gives as its formula C64H19031 for the anhydrous acid, which, by the addition of 3 eqs. of water, becomes the hydrated acid C541I22034, differing from Liebig’s by 2 eqs. of wrater. (Chem. Gaz., No. 287, p. 370.) M. E. Robiquet denies the complex na- ture ascribed to tannic acid by Strecker, and maintains that, when transformed into gallic acid by the pectic ferment or by sulphuric acid, it is simply by a molecular change, and not by the destruction of one of its constituents. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 31.) But, whether consisting of glucose and gallic acid, or sim- ply resolvable by certain agencies, through a new arrangement of its molecules, into these substances, it will equally rank among the glucosides ; differing in this respect essentially from the varieties of tannic acid which precipitate the salts of iron greenish-black, as the tannin of rhatany and catechu.* Medical Properties and Uses. Tannic acid, being the chief principle of vegetable astringents, is capable of exerting on the system the same effects with this class of medicines, and may be given in the same complaints. It has an advantage over the astringent extracts in the comparative smallness of its dose, which renders it less apt to offend an irritable stomach. In most of the vege- table astringents, it is associated with more or less bitter extractive, or other principle which modifies its operation, and renders the medicine less applicable than it otherwise would be to certain cases, in which there is an indication for pure astringency without any tonic power. Such is particularly the case in the active hemorrhages; and tannic acid, in its separate state, is in these cases pre- ferable to the native combinations in which it ordinarily exists. Hr. Porta, an Italian physician, employed it with great success in the treatment of uterine hemorrhage, and published the results of his experience in 1827. M. Cavalier afterwards used it successfully in the same complaint, and found it effectual also m a case of bleeding from the rectum. It is, without doubt, a useful remedy in most forms of hemorrhage, after a sufficient reduction of arterial action by depletory measures. In diarrhoea it is probably more beneficial than ordinary astringents, as less liable to irritate the stomach and bowels. It has been found beneficial in colliquative sweats, in cases of chronic catarrh with excessive and debilitating expectoration, in the advanced stages of hooping-cough, and in evstirrhcea. The dose for ordinary purposes is from two to five grains, but in * Various plans have been proposed of estimating the quantity of tannic acid, which is an object of importance to tanners, as enabling them to judge of the value of their tan- ning materials; but on this point we must content ourselves, from want of space, with re- ferring to the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (Sept. 1859, p. 427; March, 1861, p. 164; Nov. 1863, p. 519; and July, 1864, p. 314). 942 Adda. PART II. argent cases it may be increased to ten grains. The only disadvantage which has been experienced from it, when taken in excess, is obstinate constipation. It has been used with advantage, by Dr. P. Gamier, in very large doses, in the dropsy of Bright’s disease. He gave from half a drachm to a drachm, in divided doses, through the day, and found its curative influence, beginning on the second day, to be manifested by copious diuresis with a return of the urine to a healthy state, by perspiration, ready alvine evacuation, and a restoration of appetite, with- out any unpleasant effect. {Arch. Gen., Janv. 1859, p. 36.) Locally, it may bi used for all the purposes to which galls or other vegetable astringents are appli- cable ; as for hemorrhages, relaxation of the uvula, chronic inflammation of the fauces, diphtheria, toothache, aphthae, excessive salivation, leucorrhoea, gleet, gonorrhoea, flabby and phagedenic ulcers, piles, chilblains, &c. As a wash it may be used in solution, in the proportion of five grains to a fluidounce of water. A Belgian surgeon, M. Hairion, recommends a strong solution, made in the proportion of one part of tannic acid to three of distilled water, for ap- plication to various ophthalmic affections; as acute and chronic inflammation, ulcers and specks on the cornea, swelling of the conjunctiva, &c. (Journ. de Pharm., xviii. 449.) An ointment may be made from it by rubbing two scruples first with twenty minims of water into a paste, and then with an ounce of lard. A solution in glycerin, which dissolves it freely, has been recommended by Dr. Wm. Bayes, of Brighton, England, as a powerful styptic, and an excellent local application in diseases of the mucous surfaces requiring an astringent impres- sion. In affections of the rectum it may be used in the form of a suppository. In diseases of the uterus it has been recommended in the form of a cylindrical pencil about an inch long and two lines thick, made with 4 parts of the acid to 1 part of tragacanth, with a little crumb of bread to give the mixture due flexi- bility. {Pharm. Journ., Fev. 1, 1860, p. 128.) Given largely to a dog, tannic acid caused the urine to become dark-brown and opaque; and the secretion gave evidences of the presence of gallic and pyrogallic acids. {Chem. Gaz., No. 136, p. 231.) Hence it is probable that, when absorbed, it undergoes a change into one or both these acids, and that it is through these that it produces its effects on the system. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Digitalinum, Br. Off. Prep. Suppositoria Acidi Tannici, Br.; Trochisci Acidi Tannici, Br.; Unguentum Acidi Tannici, U. S. W. ACIDUM VALERIANICUM. U. S. Valerianic Acid. “Take of Valerianate of Soda, in coarse powder, eight troyounces; Sulphuric Acid, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. To the Valerianate of Soda add, first, three fluidounces of Water, and then three troyounces and a half of Sulphuric Acid. Mix them thoroughly, and from the mixture, after standing, separate the oily acid liquid which rises to the surface. Agitate this repeatedly with small portions of Sulphuric Acid until its specific gravity is reduced below 0-950. Then introduce it into a retort, and distil nearly to dryness, rejecting the distil- late so long as it has a specific gravity above 0'940, and keeping the remainder for use. The rejected portion of the distillate, after agitation with Sulphuric Acid, may be returned to the retort during the progress of the distillation. ” U. S. The object of this process is merely to procure valerianic acid in a stare adapted for the preparation of valerianate of ammonia. The sulphuric acid, uniting with the soda of the valerianate of soda, separates the valerianic acid, which rises to the surface with the appearauce of an oil. In this state it is com- bined with more than one eq. of water, and as it is the monohydrated acid that is wanted, the direction is given to agitate it with sulphuric acid which deprives it of the excess of water. It is now distilled in order to separate any sulphuric acid and water that may be mixed with it. The process is that of Mi B J. Crew, published in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for March, 1860 (p. 109) PART II. Acida. 943 For modes of preparing valerianic acid from the oil and roots of valerian, the reader is referred to the article on Valerian at page 848. It is prepared also from fusel oil (amylic alcohol) by reaction with a mixture of bichromate of potassa and sulphuric acid, as the first step in the preparation of valerianate of soda. (See Sodse Valerianas, Part II.) Valerianic acid received its name from having been found in the oil distilled from the root of Valeriana officinalis. It is sometimes called also valeric acid. It was first obtained in 1817 by Chevreul from the oil of the dolphin, and re- ceived the name of delphinic acid, which, however, upon the discovery of its identity with the acid afterwards obtained by Pentz from valerian, was super- seded by its present title. It has been obtained also from the bark and fruit of Viburnum opulus, the sap-wood of the European elder (Sambucus nigra), the root of Angelica Archangelica, and from various organic products whether of the vegetable or animal kingdom. Properties. Valerianic acid is a colourless liquid, of an oily consistence, a re- pulsive odour, recalling, however, that of valerian, and a pungent, sour, acrid, dis- agreeable taste. Its sp. gr. is variously given from 0'930 at 55° to 0944 at 50°. (Gmelin.) As stated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, it is 0‘933. It remains liquid at 8° below zero, and boils at 270° F. ( Trommsdorff.) It is soluble in 30 parts of cold water, and when agitated with water takes up about 20 per cent., without losing its oily consistence, and rises to the surface of the liquid. Alcohol and ether mix with it in all proportions. It is very soluble in strong acetic acid, and dissolves camphor and some resins. ( Trommsdorff.') It forms salts with the al- kalies, and reddens litmus paper strongly, but the blue colour gradually returns in a warm place. Its composition is represented by C10H10O4; but it is supposed to bear to fusel oil a similar relation with that between acetic acid and alcohol. Thus, the compound radical amyl (C10Hn) uniting with one eq. of oxygen and one of water forms fusel oil (C10HuO-f 110), which, by the loss of two eqs. of hydrogen and the gain of two of oxygen, becomes monohydrated valerianic acid (C10II9O3-l-HO). In this state the acid is capable of uniting with two additional eqs. of water, forming the terhydrated acid (C10H9O3-f-3HO), or, if the eq. of water in the dry acid be considered as constitutional, the bihydrated acid (C1(t II10O4-p2IIO). This has a much milder taste than the dry or monohydrated acid, and at the same time ♦somewhat saccharine. According to Chiozza, the anhydrous acid (C10H9O3) may be prepared by treating valerianate of potash with oxychloride of phosphorus. (Gmelin’s Handbook, xi. 37.) The U. S. Pharmacopoeia gives the following tests of the officinal acid. “A solution of Valerianic Acid in 50 parts of hot water, saturated with hydrated carbonate of zinc, yields a liquid, which, when filtered and evaporated to 10 parts and cooled, affords white pearly crystals of valerianate of zinc. The mother-water, drained from these crystals, should not yield, by further evaporation and cooling, a salt crystallizing in six-sided tables, and very soluble in water. When the Acid is added to a concentrated solution of acetate of copper, the transparency of the solution is not disturbed.” The former of the last two tests indicates the ab- sence of acetic, the latter of butyric acid. Medical Properties and Uses. In the state in which it is obtained by this process, valerianic acid has not been used as a medicine. The acid distilled from the oil or root of valerian has been employed in nervous affections, and possesses properties similar to those of valerian. According to Landerer, the acid artificially produced does not operate therapeutically so satisfactorily as the native product. The dose would probably be about the same as that of the oil of valerian. It may be given in sweetened water. Off. Prep. Ammonite Valerianas, U. S.; Quiniae Valerianas, U. S. W. 944 Aconitia. PART IT. ACONITIA. U.S., Br. Aconitia. “Take of Aconite Root, in moderately fine powder, forty-eight troyounces; Diluted Sulphuric Acid a fuidounce and a half; Alcohol, Stronger Water of Ammonia, Stronger Ether, Distilled Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Digest the powder in eight pints of Alcohol, in a close vessel, at the temperature of 120°, for twenty-four hours. Introduce the mixture into a cylindrical perco- lator, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until twenty-four pints of liquid have slowly passed. Distil off the alcohol from the filtered liquid until this is reduced to the measure of a pint. Then add to the concentrated liquid a pint of Dis- tilled Water, to which has been added the Diluted Sulphuric Acid, and mix thoroughly. Remove from the liquid the fixed oil and resin which separate on standing, and evaporate it to four fluidounces. When the liquid has cooled, pour it into a glass-stoppered pint bottle, and wash it, by agitation and de- cantation, with six fluidounces of Stronger Ether, to remove the remainder of the fixed oil and resin. Row add Stronger Water of Ammonia until, after agita- tion, it remains in slight excess. Next, treat the resulting mixture with six fluidounces of Stronger Ether, and, having closed the bottle, agitate briskly for a few minutes. Allow the liquid to stand until it separates into two layers, the lighter being an ethereal solution of Aconitia. Decant this carefully, and treat what remains, twice successively, with the same quantity of Stronger Ether, decanting each time as before. Mix the several ethereal solutions in a porcelain capsule, and allow the mixture to evaporate spontaneously to dryness. Lastly, reduce the dry residue to powder, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Aconite Root, in coarse powder, fourteen pounds (avoird.); Rec- tified Spirit, Distilled Water, Solution of Ammonia, Pure Ether, Dilute Sul- phuric Acid, each, a sufficiency. Pour upon the Aconite Root three gallons of the Spirit, mix them well, and heat until ebullition commences; then cool, and macerate for four days. Transfer the whole to a displacement apparatus, and percolate, adding more Spirit, wrhen requisite, until the root is exhausted. Distil off the greater part of the spirit from the tincture, and evaporate the re- mainder over a water-bath until the whole of the alcohol has been dissipated. Mix the residual extract thoroughly with twice its weight of boiling Distilled Water, and, when it has cooled to the temperature of the atmosphere, filter through paper. To the filtered liquid add Solution of Ammonia in slight ex- cess, and heat them gently over a water-bath. Separate the precipitate on a filter, and dry it. Reduce this to coarse powder, and macerate it in successive portions of the Ether with frequent agitation. Decant the several products, mix, and distil off the ether until the extract is dry. Dissolve the dry extract in warm Distilled Water acidulated with the Sulphuric Acid; and, when the solution is cold, precipitate it by the cautious addition of Solution of Ammonia diluted with four times its bulk of Distilled Water. Wash the precipitate on a filter with a small quantity of cold Distilled Water, and dry it by slight pressure between folds of filtering paper.” Br. The process of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, which is a modification of that of Headland, published in a note in the preceding edition of the U. S Dispensa- tory, was substituted for the former U. S. process, because, in consequence of the amount of water employed, and the use of animal charcoal, which absorbed much of the alkaloid, that formula had proved unproductive. In the present, the pow- dered root is exhausted with alcohol by percolation, most of the alcohol distilled off, and the residue treated with very dilute sulphuric acid, by which the native salt is converted into the sulphate. After the removal of the resinous and oily matters that separate, the solution of the sulphate is concentrated, and washed PART II. Aconitia. 945 with ether, which, without dissolving the sulphate, which is insoluble in that menstruum, removes the remaining oil and resin. The addition of ammonia now decomposes the sulphate, separating the alkaloid, which in this state is dissolved out by repeated agitation with ether; and the process is completed by mixing the ethereal solutions, and allowing them to evaporate spontaneously. The points in which this process dilfers from that of Headland, are the use of perco- lation to exhaust the root instead of boiling with alcohol, and the washing with ether before the addition of ammonia, by which the resin and colouring matter are removed. The latter modification originated in a suggestion of Prof. Procter in a communication to the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (March, 1861, p. 102). In the British process, the root is exhausted with alcohol by a combination of maceration and percolation, which experience has shown to be unnecessary; the resulting tincture is wholly deprived of its alcohol by distillation and evapora- tion; and the residue thoroughly exhausted by boiling water. The solution thus obtained is treated with ammonia; and the precipitate, which contains the alka- loid, having been dried and powdered, is exhausted by ether. Lastly, the im- pure aconitia obtained by distilling off the ether, is purified by solution in water acidulated with sulphuric acid, and precipitation by ammonia. This process was given to the Pharmacopoeia Committee of the British Council by a manu- facturer who had been in the habit of preparing the alkaloid. (Garrod.)* It is highly probable that more or less of the aconella discovered by the Messrs. Smith of Edinburgh in aconite root, and now believed to be identical with nar- cotina, is contained in most of the aconitia of commerce. It appears to us that it must contaminate the product of the British process, and, if not present in the U. S. aconitia, must have been removed by the preliminary washing with ether. If great care is taken, in the preparation of aconitia, to avoid the slightest ex- cess of sulphuric acid, beyond what is necessary for the solution of this alkaloid, the aconella will be left behind; and on the same principle it may be separated from aconitia when existing in it. Should a mixture of the twro be decolorized by animal charcoal, the aconitia would be liable to be absorbed, and the aco- nella to be left. (Messrs. Smith, Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1864, p. 319.) Whichever process is used, care should be taken not to employ the ammonia in great excess, as it diminishes the product probably by dissolving the aconitia.f * A process has recently been published by M. E. Ilottot, of France, which is believed by the author to yield the alkaloid pure. The powdered root is macerated for eight days in alcohol of 85°; the liquid is separated by percolation; slaked lime is added, and the mixture shaken from time to time; the liquid is filtered, precipitated by a slight excess of sulphuric acid, and evaporated to a syrupy consistence; twice or three times its weight of water is added to the residue, the mixture allowed to rest, and the green oil which rises to the surface and solidifies at 68° F. removed; the liquid having been passed through a moist filter to separate the last portion of oil, is treated with ammonia, and raised to the boiling point; the aconitia, which is deposited in a compact mass, and contains much resin, is washed, and treated with pure ether, and the ethereal solution allowed to evapo- rate; the residue is dissolved in water acidulated with sulphuric acid, and precipitated by ammonia; the coagulum which forms is collected on a filter, dried, and dissolved in ether; the ethereal solution is evaporated to dryness, the residue treated with a very little dilute sulphuric acid, and the solution precipitated by dilute solution of ammonia added drop by drop. The first portion deposited, being coloured, is separated, and the precipitation con- tinued till the ammonia is in slight excess. The precipitate now formed is washed until freed from ammoniacal odour, and dried at a low temperature. Ten kilogrammes (about 26 lbs. troy) of the root yield a mean product of from 4 to 6 grammes (gi to giss) of the alkaloid, which is perfectly white. (Ann. de Therap., 1864, p. 46.)—Note to the twelfth edition. f The root of Aconitum ferox, from the E. Indies, is preferable for procuring the alka- loid, in consequence of its greater yield. A specimen of this, which we have had the oppor- tunity of examining, was in single roots, fusiform, from two and a half to three and a half inches long, from half an inch to an inch and a half thick at the thickest part near the top, gradually tapering to a point, unequally wrinkled from drying, of a dark-brown colour externally, yellowish internally, hard, with a shining wax-like fracture, and the charac- teristic taste of the aconites in a high degree.—Note to the tenth edition. Aconitia. PART II. Properties. As procured by either of the officind processes aconitia is slightly c doured; but when pure it is perfectly white. As hitherto obtained it is amor- phous; and, though products have been sold as aconitia having a crystalline form, there can be little doubt of their impurity. When obtained by precipita- tion from a watery solution of it's salts, it is in the form of a hydrate, containing 25 per cent, of water; but it yields its water when heated, and may be obtained anhydrous by the spontaneous evaporation of its solution in ether, or by precipi- tation by the alkalies from a boiling solution of its salts. In this case it forms a compact coagulum. (Hottot.) Aconitia probably exists in the plant combined with a vegetable acid, form- ing a soluble salt. It is inodorous, and of a bitter and acrid taste, producing a benumbing impression on the tongue. It is unalterable in the air, and fusible by a gentle heat. It is not volatile; but at a high temperature is decomposed, with the escape of ammonia, and by a continuance of the heat is entirely dis- sipated. It is sparingly soluble in water, requiring for solution 150 parts of cold and 50 of boiling water. (Phillips.) Alcohol, ether, and chloroform dissolve it readily. It restores the blue colour of litmus reddened by acids, and neutralizes the acids, forming crystallizable salts. The solution of these salts produces a white precipitate with bichloride of platinum, a yellowish writh terchloride of gold, and a yellowish-brown with free iodine. Aconitia is precipitated from the solution by the caustic alkalies, but not by carbonate of ammonia, or the bicar- bonates of potassa and soda. (Br.) Its received formula is A spu- rious substance has sometimes been sold under the same name, which is nearly or quite inert; and at best the alkaloid is apt to be of uncertain strength, as found in the shops. This can be accounted for, now that it is known that aconejja must have largely contaminated the alkaloid as procured by the processes used, and sometimes may have been the chief ingredient. Medical Properties and Uses. This vegetable principle exercises a powerful influence over the animal economy. One-fiftieth of a grain dissolved in alcohol destroyed a sparrow in a few minutes; and the same quantity, administered to an elderly female, is said to have nearly proved fatal. Dr. Garrod has repeat- edly known large dogs to be killed by the 50th of a grain; more than half an hour usually elapsing before death. (Med, Times and Gaz., Feb. 1864, p. 146.) In a case of poisoning by aconitia, recorded by Dr. Golding Bird, though two grains and a half were taken, the patient ultimately recovered. But, as vomit- ing almost immediately ensued, there is reason to believe that much of the poi- son was thus discharged from the stomach. Besides extreme general prostration, indicated by a cold pale surface, and a scarcely perceptible action of the heart, the prominent symptoms were convulsive vomiting, recurring every minute or two, and fearful spasms of the throat, resembling those of hydrophobia, upon any attempt at swallowing. There was no paralysis, the pupils were sensible to light, and the intellect remained perfectly clear. The remedies were the hot bath, mustard to the epigastrium, and enemata of oil of turpentine, laudanum, and nutriment. (Lond. Med. Gaz., Jan. 1841.) Dr. Yan Praag found, in his experiments with aconitia on the lower animals, that it lessens cerebral power, paralyzes the nerves of voluntary motion, dilates the pupil, retards respiration, is uncertain in its influence on the pulse, and destroys life either suddenly by asphyxia, or more slowly by exhaustion. The observations of M. Hottot, from experiments on himself, are deseiving of notice, from the great care with which they appear to have been made. From doses gradually increased to 3 milligrammes (-046 gr.), M. Hottot experienced, immediately, over the whole mucous membrane of the month, a sensation of acri- mony and heat, which rapidly extended to the throat, and somewhat later to the stomach. This feeling became more and more intense, with burning and numb- ness of the lips, tongue, pharynx, and a profuse salivation. To these local effects PART II. Aconitia.—AEtherea. were soon added general phenomena, at first uneasiiess, weakness, heaviness o. head, then nausea aud frequent yawning, oppression, marked muscular debility, tingling over different parts of the body, but especially in the face and limbs, and a slightly excited pulse. After a time the weakness increased, headache anc often lancinating pains of the face supervened, and the nausea was attended with vomiting. These were followed by increased muscular prostration, still more manifest tinglings, numbness of the limbs, swollen features, reduced pulse, diffi- cult breathing, painful burning in the throat, and copious sweats. Later still, general prostration came on, the least effort produced exhaustion, the breathing became deep and slow, and the pulse was sensibly lowered. There was no sleep, and the pupil was moderately dilated; but the intelligence remained sound. These symptoms continued from ten to sixteen hours, and were then gradually relieved, the most persistent being irritation of the throat, heaviness of head, and general lassitude. The effects were precisely those of aconite itself. Aconitia is little used internally as a remedy. M. Hottot, however, has employed it to obtain the effects of aconite, giving it in the form of pills, each containing the fifth of a milligramme of a grain), or in a tincture containing one-sixteenth of a grain in the drachm. The quantity taken daily was of the pills from 2 to 10, of the tincture from 10 to 4 0 drops, in divided doses. But the internal use of so powerful a medicine is hazardous, and should not, we think, be encouraged, as very slight errors might lead to the most serious effects; and we can quite as conveniently use the tincture. Dr. Turnbull was the first to recommend the external use of aconitia; and his favourable report has been abundantly confirmed by others. By this writer it is said to produce in the skin a sensation of heat and prickling, followed by numb- ness; and the effect continues, according to the quantity applied, from two to twelve hours or more. He found it not to act as a rubefacient, or at least but slightly so. Applied much diluted and in minute quantity to the eye, it causes contraction of the pupil, with an almost intolerable sense of heat and tingling. Dr. Turnbull employed it with benefit in neuralgia, gout, and rheumatism. He recommends it either in alcoholic solution, in the proportion of a grain to a fluidrachm, or in the form of an ointment, made by rubbing two grains of the alkaloid first with six drops of alcohol, and then with a drachm of lard. These proportions are sufficiently large to begin with, but may be gradually increased to four or five, or even eight grains to the drachm. The application should be made by friction over the part affected, to be continued till the peculiar sensation above described is produced, and may be repeated three or four times, or more frequently, during the day. No good can be expected unless the sensation alluded to be experienced in a geater or less degree. Care should be taken not to apply the medicine to an abraded surface, or to a mucous membrane, for fear of dangerous constitutional effects. It has gradually come into extensive use, and has the advantages, as an external remedy, over other preparations of aconite, of greater neatness and precision. Off. Prep. U/ guentum Aconitise, Br. W. Ethers. Ethers are peculiar, fragrant, sweetish, very volatile, and inflammable sub- stances, generated for the most part by the action of acids on alcohol. Their composition varies with the acid employed in there formation. Sometimes this merely acts as a chemical agent on the alcohol, without entering into the com- position of the ether generated; in which case the ether may be supposed to consist, according to the views that may be adopted of its constitution, either of etnyien (etherine), C4H4, and water, or of ethyl, C4H5, and oxygen. In other 948 jEtherea. PART II. instances, the ethylen theory being admitted for the present, the acid employed unites with ethylen and water (the ether just mentioned), or with ethylen only. On the basis of these differences of composition, the medicinal ethers may be divided into three kinds: 1. those consisting of ethylen and water; 2. those consisting of an acid, ethylen, and water; and 3. those composed of an acid and ethylen only. Hydric ether is the only medicinal ether of the first kind, nitrous ether is an exampTsfof the second, and muriatic ether of the third. In medicine, the hydric and nitrous ethers, and their modifications, are those most commonly employed ; though occasionally the muriatic arid acetic have been used. In con- formity with the new arrangement of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, we shall consider under this heading only the ethers themselves, transferring to the Spirits those Preparations which are formed by a mixture of the ethers and alcohol, and offi- cinally denominated Spirits ; as the Spirit and Compound Spirit of Ether, and the Spirit of Nitrous Ether. Ethers, from their extreme inflammability, should never be decanted in the vicinity of flame. Hence it is prudent not to pour them out near a lighted candle. They should be kept in accurately stopped bottles, in a cool place; otherwise they are liable to considerable loss by evaporation. B. .ZETHER. U. S., Br. JEtiier Sulphuricus. Ed., Dub. Ether. Sul- phuric Ether. Ilydric Ether. Hydrate of Ethylen. Oxide of Ethyl. “ Take of Stronger Alcohol six pints; Sulphuric Acid thirty-six troyounces; Potassa three hundred and sixty grains; Distilled Water three fluidounces. To two pints of the Alcohol, contained in a six-pint tubulated retort, gradually add the Acid, stirring constantly during the addition. By means of a cork fitted to the tubulure, adapt a long funnel-shaped tube, with the lower end drawn out so as to form a narrow orifice, and reaching nearly to the bottom of the retort, and also a thermometer tube, graduated from 260° to 300°, with its bulb reaching to the middle of the liquid. Having placed the retort on a sand-bath, connect it with a Liebig’s condenser, and this with a well-cooled receiver. Then raise the heat quickly until the liquid boils, and attains a temperature between 266° and 280°. By means of a flexible tube, connected with the stop-cock of an ele- vated vessel containing the remainder of the Alcohol, introduce that liquid into the retort, through the funnel-shaped tube, in a continuous stream ; the quantity supplied being so regulated, that the temperature of the boiling liquid shall continue between the degrees mentioned. After all the Alcohol has been added, proceed with the distillation until the temperature rises to 286°, when the pro- cess should be discontinued. To the distilled liquid add the Potassa, previously dissolved in the Distilled Water, and shake them occasionally together. At the end of twenty-four hours, pour off the supernatant liquid, introduce it into a retort, and, with a gentle heat, distil into a well-cooled receiver three pints, or until the liquid attains the specific gravity 0-750. Lastly, keep the Ether in a well-stopped bottle.” U.S. “Take of Rectified Spirit fifty fluidounces; Sulphuric Acid ten fluidounces ; Chloride of Calcium ten ounces [avoirdupois]; Slaked Lime half an ounce [avoird.]; Distilled Water thirteen fluidounces. Mix the Sulphuric Acid and twelve [fluidjounces of the Spirit in a glass matrass capable of containing at least two pints [Imperial measure], and, without allowing the mixture to cool, connect the matrass by means of a bent glass tube with a Liebig’s condenser, and distil with a heat sufficient to maintain the liquid in brisk ebullition. As soon as the ethereal fluid begins to pass over, supply fresh Spirit through a tube into the matrass in a continuous stream, and in such quantity as to equal the volume of the fluid which distils over. This is best done by using a tube fur- nished with a stop-cock to regulate the supply, connecting one end of the tube with a vessel containing the Spirit raised above the level of the matrass, and passing the other end through a cork fitted into the matrass. When the w/ole PART II. JEtherea. 949 of the Spirit has Deen added, and forty-two fluidounces have distilled over, thr process may be stopped. Dissolve the Chloride of Calcium in the Water, adc the Lime, and agitate the mixture in a bottle with the impure ether. Leave the mixture at rest for ten minutes, pour olf the light supernatant fluid, and disti. it with a gentle heat until a glass bead of specific gravity 0-735 placed in the receiver begins to float. The ether and spirit retained by the chloride of cal- cium, and by the residue of each distillation, may be recovered by distillation and used in a subsequent operation.” Br. The preparation of ether embraces two stages; its generation, and its sub- sequent rectification to remove impurities. The formulas agree in obtaining it by the action of sulphuric acid on alcohol. In the United States process, which is adopted, with modifications, from that of the French Codex, one-third of the alcohol taken is mixed with the acid, and, while still hot from the reaction, dis- tilled from a glass retort, by a heat quickly applied, into a refrigerated receiver. When the heat of the mixture has risen to between 266° and 280°, the re- mainder of the alcohol is allowed to enter the retort in a continuous stream, the supply being so regulated that the heat shall be maintained between the degrees mentioned. By a complicated reaction which will be explained presently, the acid converts the alcohol into ether; and, were it not that the acid becomes more and more dilute as the process proceeds, it would be able to etherize an unlimited quantity of alcohol. Although the acid, before it becomes too dilute, is capable of determining the decomposition of a certain amount of alcohol, yet it is not expedient to add this amount at once; as a considerable portion of it would distil over undecomposed with the ether. The proper way of proceeding, therefore, is that indicated in the formula; namely, to commence the process with the use of part of the alcohol, and, when the decomposition is fully estab- lished, and a portion of ether has distilled, to add the remainder in a gradual manner, so as to replace that which, every moment of the progress of the dis- tillation, is disappearing by its conversion into ether. In the U. S. process of 1850, the point at which the distillation should cease was determined by the proportion of the ether distilled to that of the alcohol employed, or by the appearance of white vapours in the retort, which indicate the generation of other products beside the ether; but, in the present plan, ar- rangements having been made by which the temperature can be determined, the degree of heat has been adopted as a better criterion; as it is only when the temperature exceeds the point of 286° indicated, that the production of injurious impurities is to be apprehended. The modifications of the old process were made in conformity with suggestions by Dr. Squibb, contained in a paper published in the Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association for the year 1858 (p. 390). The direction in the former process to reserve a small portion of acid, to be added gradually with the reserved alcohol, upon the supposition that the acid in the retort might be too much weakened to perform its part duly, has been found upon trial to result in no practical advantage. As the proper proportion between the acid and alcohol is that which requires for ebul- lition a temperature somewhat above 266°, or that at which the ether is formed, there is an obvious propriety in supplying the alcohol just so rapidly as may be sufficient to maintain this temperature in the liquid of the retort. If the alcohol be supplied so rapidly as to reduce the temperature below the point mentioned, alcohol will distil over in undue proportion; if too slowly supplied, the tempera- ture will rise so high as to produce other reactions in the materials than that required for etherification, and various other products will result. The rising of ihe temperature to 286°, after all the alcohol has been added, is, therefore, an in- dication that the process should be suspended. Nevertheless, the caution to check the process when white vapours appear in the retort is not amiss, as affording an additional security that it shall not be carried too far. At the temperature 950 JEtlierea. PART II. of 320° thete *ould be generated sulphurous acid, heavy oil of wine, olefiant gas, and a large quantity of resino-carbonaceous matter, blackening and render- ing thick the residuary liquid; all of them products arising from the decompo- sition of a portion of sulphuric acid, alcohol, and ether. The British process is that of the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia slightly modified. The principles are the same as those of the U. S. process; but the directions about temperature are wanting; and the regulation of the supply of alcohol, and the cessation of the operation are made to depend on the less reliable method of determining the measure of liquid, in the first place in the retort, and in the second place in the receiver; as in the U. S. process of 1850. In both processes, whatever care may be taken in conducting them, and to stop them in due time, yet the ether obtained is contaminated with sulphurous acid, heavy oil of wine, alcohol, and water; and hence its purification becomes neces- sary. This is conducted in different ways, according to the two Pharmacopoeias. The IT. S. Pharmacopoeia directs for this purpose an aqueous solution of po- tassa, the British a saturated solution of chloride of calcium (muriate of lime), to which a portion of recently slaked lime has been added. In both cases, the crude ether is agitated with the purifying agent, and submitted to a new distil- lation at a gentle heat, called the rectification. The purifying substances are potassa for sulphurous acid and water, and water for alcohol in the U. S. formula; lime for acid, and a saturated solution of chlo- ride of calcium for alcohol and water, in the British. The British substances for purifying are stated by Dr. Christison to be convenient, and to act perfectly and promptly. The chloride of calcium solution, after having been used, yields on distillation a further portion of ether of the officinal density; and, by con- centrating it, filtering while hot, and separating the crystals of sulphite of lime which form on cooling, the chloride may be recovered for future operations. The process for forming ether is conducted with most advantage on a large scale. At Apothecaries’ Hall, where the operation is performed in this way, the apparatus employed is thus described by Mr. Brande. It “consists of a leaden still, heated by means of high pressure steam carried through it in a contorted leaden pipe. A tube enters the upper part of the still for the purpose of suffer- ing alcohol gradually to run into the acid. The still-head is of pewter, and is connected, by about six feet of tin pipe, with a very capacious condensing appa- ratus, duly cooled by a current of water. The receivers are of pewter, with glass lids, and have a side tube to connect them with the delivering end of the con- densing pipe.” (Manual of Chemistry, edition of 1848.) For an account of the apparatus, used in the IT. S. Naval Laboratory for obtaining ether by steam on a large scale, see an article by E. 11. Squibb, M. D., IT. S. Navy, contained in the Am. Journ. of Pharm, for Sept. 1856. Properties of OJficinal Ether. Notwithstanding the officinal directions for purifying ether, it is not absolutely pure as obtained by either of the formulas here given. Both contain a considerable proportion of alcohol, the IT. S., ac- cording to Dr. Squibb, 25 per cent, of 88 per cent, alcohol, the British, accord- ing to the Pharmacopoeia, 8 per cent, of alcohol by measure. In both there is a little of the light oil of wine. They should, however, be free from various impu- rities which are too often found in commercial ether, the result of careless ope- ration, or the employment of imperfect processes. As both Pharmacopoeias give special directions for the purification of ether, we shall postpone an account of the chemical and remedial properties of the medicine till the pure preparation is treated of. (See Mther Fortior.) In the mean time, it will be proper to indi- cate the means of determining the genuineness and purity of the proper officinal ethers. Commercial ether varies in sp. gr. from 0T33 to 0-165. The imp'iriUe0 found in it are excess of alcohol, water, sulphurous and other acids, heavy oi.'of wine, and various fixed substances. PART II. AEtherea. The TJ. S. ether should have the sp. gr. 0 750, and, if heavier than this, must contain too much alcohol or water. When shaken with an equal bulk of water it should not lose more than from one-fifth to one-fourth of its volume. The statement that water takes up only one-tenth has been shown by Dr. Squibb to be erroneous. If it take up more than one-fourth, the ether must contain too much of alcohol or of water, or both. If the alcohol be in excess, it may be re- moved by agitating the liquid with twice its bulk of water, which unites with the alcohol, forming a heavier stratum, from which the ether may be poured off. The ether, however, takes up about one-tenth of water, which may be removed by agitation with fresh-burned lime, and subsequent distillation. An easy method for detecting and measuring any alcohol present in ether, was given by the Edinburgh College; namely, to agitate it, in a minim measure, with half its volume of a concentrated solution of chloride of calcium. This will remove the alcohol; and the reduction of the volume of the ether, when it rises to the sur- face, will indicate the amount. Heavy oil of wine may be discovered by the ether becoming milky upon being mixed with water. If the ether is pure, it wholly evaporates in the air, leaving no solid residue. All non-volatile impurities are thus detected. It should not redden litmus, showing the absence of acids. The point of ebullition is also an indication of the strength of the ether. A test tube, full of ether, should, when held in the closed hand, begin to boil on the addi- tion of a piece of broken glass. (Squibb.) When evaporating from bibulous paper, it should offer only a slight degree of foreign odour, aromatic and free from pungency, and should leave the paper, when dry, nearly or quite odourless. This test proves the absence of volatile impurities, except a slight and not inad- missible proportion of light oil of wine. (Squibb.) The British ether should have the sp. gr. 0 735, and, if agitated with an equal bulk of water, should not lose more than 18 per cent. It boils below 105°. It is, therefore, considerably stronger than the U. S. ether. In other respects, it should answer to the tests above given. In the impure state in which ether is afforded by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, though it may answer for external application, and may even be given by the mouth, yet for purposes of inhalation, which is now the chief use of ether, it is scarcely fitted without further purification; and the same is true, though in a less degree, of the English preparation. Hence the propriety of the adoption, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, of the Stronger Ether. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Acidum Tannicum ; Ceratum Sabinse, TJ. S.; Ex- tractum Ergotae Liquidum, Br.; Extract. Fiiicis Liquid., Br.; Morphias Acetas, TJ. S.; Oleoresina Capsici, TJ. S.; Oleoresina Cubebae, TJ. S.; Oleoresina Lupu- linae, TJ. S.; Oleoresina Piperis, TJ. S.; Tinctura Opii Deodorata, TJ. S. Off. Prep. ./Ether Fortior, TJ. S.; Collodium, Br.; Linimentum Cantharidis, Br.; Spiritus JEtheris, Br.; Spiritus JEtheris Compositus, TJ. S. B. iETHER FORTIOR. TJ. S. Stronger Ether. Pure Ether. (Br. Ap- pendix.) “ Take of Ether, Water, each, three pints; Chloride of Calcium, in fine powder, Lime, in fine powder, each, a troyounce. Shake the Ether and the Water thoroughly together, and, when the Water has subsided, separate the supernatant ether. Agitate this well with the Chloride of Calcium and the Lime in a well- stopped bottle, and allow the mixture to stand for twenty-four hours. Then de- cant the ether into a retort, and, having adapted thereto a Liebig’s condenser, distil a pint and a half of Stronger Ether into a receiver refrigerated with ice- *old vvater. Lastly, keep the liquid in a well-stopped bottle. By continuing the -distillation, a portion of weaker ether may be obtained.” TJ. S. “Take of Ether, Distilled Water, each, two jnnts [Imperial measure] ; Lime, recently burned, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Chloride of Calcium, per- fectly dry, four ounces [avoird.]. Shake the Ether with one pint [Imp. meas.] FEtherea. PART II. ot the Water, and, after separation, decant the ether, and again shake it with the remainder of the Water. Decant again, and put the washed ether into a re- tort with the Lime and Chloride of Calcium, and, after digestion for 24 hours, distil with the aid of a gentle heat. Sp. gr. not exceeding 0 720.” Br. Appendix. These formulas are essentially the same; the U. S. limiting the amount dis- tilled by the measure, the British by the sp. gr. The ether is first shaken with the water, in order that the latter, by its superior affinity for alcohol, may take it from the former; and afterwards with the chloride of calcium and lime, to separate from the ether the water with which it has itself united in the first step of the process. Of course, the lime, for this purpose, must be in its freshly cal- cined state, so that it may have had no opportunity to absorb water from the air. The subsequent distillation is intended still further to strengthen the ether, the less volatile liquids, being left in the retort. The lime answers the further pur- pose of neutralizing any sulphurous or other acid which the ether may have happened to contain. The weaker ether obtained at the end of the process may be kept for subsequent purification. It will be noticed that this separate process accomplishes more perfectly what is effected by the British formula for ether. Even thus prepared, however, the ether, though sufficiently pure for all phar- maceutical or remedial purposes, is not absolutely pure, still containing a little alcohol. To meet the intentions of the process, it must have the sp. gr. 0-728 (U. S.), 0-720 (Br.), must lose not more than from one-tenth to one-eighth of its bulk by agitation with water, and must boil actively when a test-tube, half- filled with it, is held enclosed in the hand, and a small fragment of glass is drop- ped into it. “ Half a fiuidounce of it, evaporated from a porcelain plate by caus- ing it to flow to and fro over the surface, yields a faintly aromatic odour as the last portions pass off, and leaves the surface without taste or smell, but covered with a deposit of moisture.” ( U. S.) This last is Dr. Squibb’s test to indicate the very minute proportion of light oil of wine that is still contained in the ether, and the absence of all other contaminating volatile impurities. The ether must not redden litmus; as the presence of acid matter would indicate that it had been badly prepared, or had been too long kept. Properties. Ether is a colourless, very limpid liquid, of a strong and sweet odour, and hot pungent taste. When perfectly pure it has the sp.gr. 0*713, boils at 95°, and forms a vapour which has the density of 2 586. It is not frozen by a cold of 166° below zero. {Faraday.) It is a very volatile liquid, and, when of the sp. gr. O'720, boils at about 98°. Its extreme volatility causes it to evapo- rate speedily in the open air, with the production of considerable cold. Its in- flammability is very great, and the products of its combustion are water and car- bonic acid. In consequence of this property, the greatest care should be used not to bring it in the vicinity of flame, as, for example, a lighted candle. One of the great advantages of using steam as the source of heat is that it obvi- ates, in a great measure, the danger of its accidental inflammation. When too long kept it undergoes decomposition, and is converted in part into acetic acid. It dissolves iodine and bromine freely, and sulphur and phosphorus sparingly. Its power to dissolve corrosive sublimate makes it a useful agent in the manipu- lations for detecting that poison. It is also a solvent of volatile and fixed oils, many resins and balsams, tannic acid, caoutchouc, and most of the organic vege- table alkalier. It does not dissolve potassa and soda, in which respect it differs from alcohol. Water dissolves a tenth of its volume of ether, and reciprocally ether takes up about the same proportion of water. When water dissolves more than a tenth of its volume, the ether is shown to contain an undue quantity of water or alcohol, or of both. Ether unites in all proportions with alcohol. Composition and Theory of its Production. Ether consists of fou: eqs. of carbon, five of hydrogen, and one of oxygen, and its empirical formula is 041IR0. In volumes it consists of four volumes of carbon vapour, five volume* of hydro- PART II. JEtherea. gen, and half a volume of oxygen, condensed into one volume. Its proximate constituents may be considered to be one eq. of ethylen (etherine) and one of water; or, in volumes, one volume of ethylen vapour and one volume of aqueous vapour, condensed into one volume. This view makes it a hydrate of ethylen (C^H4-fHO). The sp. gr. of its vapour, calculated on this constitution in vo- lume, is 2-5817, which is very near 2-586, the number obtained by experiment. By most chemists, however, the constituents of the ethylen, together with the hydrogen of the alleged water, are supposed to form a peculiar radical, consist- ing of C4II3, to which the name of ethyl has been given. On this view, ether is an oxide of ethyl (C4H5-fO). The view is confirmed by Dr. E. Frankland, who has isolated ethyl by acting on iodide of ethyl with zinc. As described by him, ethyl is a colourless, inflammable gas, of the sp. gr. 2, incondensible at zero, but condensible, under a pressure of 2-25 atmospheres at 37 5°, into a colourless, mobile liquid. Ether was formerly called sulphuric ether, in allusion to the sul- phuric acid employed in its preparation ; but it contains no sulphuric acid, and an identical ether may be obtained by the action of other substances on alcohol. Hence the epithet sulphuric is improperly applied to it; and, accordingly, its name was changed from JEther Sulphuricus to JEther in the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias of 1850 and 1851. Those who consider ether as a compound of ethylen and water, call it hydric ether, or hydrate of ethylen; but its more probable constitution is expressed by the name, oxide of ethyl; and this view of its nature will be adopted in our subsequent remarks. With a view to determine in what manner sulphuric acid acts upon alcohol in order to convert it into ether, it is necessary that a comparison should be'insti- tuted between the composition of the two latter fluids. Now alcohol is a hydrated oxide of ethyl, and ether is oxide of ethyl without water. It follows, therefore, that, to convert alcohol into ether, it is only necessary to abstract the water of the former. The agent in effecting this abstraction is evidently the sulphuric acid, which is known to have a strong affinity for water; but its action is not direct as originally supposed, but intermediate, as was first pointed out by the late Mr. Ilennell. This chemist found that, when two eqs. of sulphuric acid and one of alcohol were merely mixed, the acid lost a portion of its saturating power, and a new acid was formed, to which he gave the name of sulphovinic acid (the etherosulyhuric acid of Liebig). In view of its composition it may be called aTlnsulpTiate" of alcohol, or, which is the same thing, a bisulphate of ether with one eq. of water, that is, a double sulphate of ether and water. When one eq. of this compound is heated it is decomposed; two eqs. of sulphuric acid with one eq. of water remain in the retort, while one eq. of ether distils over. If the original proportion of acid and alcohol continued the same throughout the whole of the distillation, all the alcohol would be resolved into ether and water; but, during the progress of the process, the alcohol is constantly di- minishing, and of course the relative excess of the acid becoming greater; and at last a point of time arrives when 'the excess of acid is so great that the generation of ether ceases. As these results depend upon the relative deficiency of the Alcohol, while the acid remains unchanged in amount, it is easy to under- stand why it is advantageous to introduce alcohol gradually into the distilling vessel during the progress of the distillation; for, by this addition, the proper proportion of the alcohol to the acid is maintained. But the decomposing power of the acid has its limit; as it becomes at last too dilute to act upon the alcohol, notwithstanding a considerable portion of water, towards the close of the dis- tillation, passes over with the ether. The above theory of etherification was called in question, in 1851, by Prof. Graham, of London, who succeeded in producing ether without distillation, or the formation of sulphovinic acid, by using a larger proportion of alcohol than is ordinarily employed. The reaction was made to take place in sealed glass 954 JEtherea. PART II. tubes heated for a short time to a temperature between 284°'and 352°. The sulphuric acid appeared to act by mere contact with the alcohol, in determining the production of ether, without combining with anything. For a new theory of etherification see an article by M. E. llobiquet, in the Journal de Pharmacie et de Chimie for Sept. 1854. Medical Properties and Uses. Ether is a powerful diffusible stimulant, pos- sessed also of expectorant, antispasmodic, and narcotic properties. In low fevers attended with subsultus tendinum, it proves beneficial as a stimulant and anti- spasmodic. In these cases it is frequently conjoined with laudanum. It is useful also in nervous headache unattended with vascular fulness, and generally in ner- vous and painful diseases which are unaccompanied by inflammation. In nausea it is given as a cordial; and in cramp of the stomach and flatulent colic it some- times yields prompt relief. Given alone, or mixed with oil of turpentine, it re- lieves the pain and spasm caused by the passage of biliary calculi. According to Mr. Brande, a small teaspoonful of ether, mixed with a glass of white wine, is often an effectual remedy in sea-sickness. In a case of chronic functional vo- miting, Dr. Galante, of Arpino, found ether, given in capsules, of singular efficacy. When externally applied it may act either as a stimulant or refrigerant. Thus, it operates as a powerful rubefacient, and may even vesicate, when its evapora- tion is repressed; but, when this is allowed to take place freely, it is refrigerant in consequence of the cold which it produces. In the latter way it has been em- ployed in strangulated hernia, dropped on the tumour and allowed to evaporate. Dr. J. Nunn, of Savannah, Ga., praises its effect as a local anaesthetic in recent burns, applied, guttatim, from a bottle, while the part is subjected to a stream of air. {Charleston Med. Journ., Sept. 1855.) It sometimes produces immediate relief when dropped into the ear in earache. For external use, the unrectified ether is sufficiently pure. The dose of ether is from fifty drops to a teaspoonful, to be repeated frequently when the full effect of the remedy is desired. When used habitually, the dose must be much increased to produce a given effect. It may be perfectly incorporated with water or any aqueous mixture, by first rubbing it up with spermaceti, employed in the proportion of two grains for each fluidrachra of the ether. {Durand.) Ether is conveniently administered in capsules, each containing four or five minims of pure ether, according to the plan of M. Clertan, of Dijon. These capsules are made of sugared gum. (See Capsules of Gelatin in Part III.) Cap- sules of ether, also called pearls of ether, are inodorous, will keep for a year" at least without loss, and furnish the mean? of introducing ether into the stomach, without irritating the mouth and throat. In a few seconds after they arrive in the stomach, they burst and diffuse their effects with singular rapidity. Analo- gous effects are produced when they are introduced into the rectum or vagina. Ether may be gelatinized by the process of M. Grimault. This consists in briskly shaking, in a stoppered bottle, four measures of ether, free from alcohol and acid, with one measure of white of egg.’ Gelatinized ether is an opaline trem- bling jelly, which may be spread with the greatest facility. It may be used as a local anaesthetic, applied to the seat of pain, spread on linen, and covered with a piece of cloth or of sheet caoutchouc. Gelatinized ether will not keep, but must be prepared at the time it is wanted. Etherization. Ether may be exhibited by inhalation. Many years ago, its use in this way wras proposed by Drs. Beddoes, Pearson, and Thornton, of Eng- land, in certain diseases of the lungs. As early as 1805, the late Dr. Warren, of Boston, employed ethereal inhalation to relieve the distress attending the last stage of pulmonary inflammation. About the year 1812, in Philadelphia, at a time when the nitrons oxide the subject of popular lectures, the vapour of ether was frequently breathed from a bladder for experiment or diversion ; aud its effects in producing transient intoxication, analogous to that caused /*| t\« part n. JEtherea. 955 nitrous oxide, were observed. It was not, however, until October, 1846, that attention was particularly drawn to ethereal inhalation as a remedy for pain. In that month, Dr. Warren, of Boston, was applied to by Dr. W. T. G. Morton, dentist of that city, to ascertain by trial whether an agent which he had suc- cessfully employed to render painless the extracting of teeth, would be equally successful in preventing the pain of surgical operations. This agent was the vapour of ether. Dr. Warren acceded to this request, and shortly afterwards at the Massachusetts General Hospital, performed a severe operation, without pain to the patient, under the influence of ether, administered by Dr. Morton. A few days subsequently, Dr. C. T. Jackson, of Boston, in conversation with Dr. War- ren, claimed to have first made known to Dr. Morton the use of ethereal vapour for the prevention of pain in dental operations. From this beginning, the employment of ether by inhalation for the prevention and removal of pain, has spread throughout the civilized world. The effect pro- duced, called etherization, probably takes place through the medium of the blood. It is sometimes partial, suspending sensibility, without abolishing consciousness; so that the patient, without feeling pain, is aware of everything that is passing around him. At other times, a perfect unconsciousness is produced. Etherization is usefully resorted to in all severe operations, not merely as a remedy for pain, but as a means of preventing the shock which the system would otherwise suffer as a consequence of pain. Under full etherization, even the actual cautery may be extensively applied, without causing the least suffering. In many cases, the incidental power of ethereal vapour as a relaxing agent is usefully brought into play; as in the treatment of strictures of the urethra and oesophagus, strangulated hernia, retention of urine, dislocations, fractures, an- chylosis, &c. In all these cases, the necessary surgical manipulations are very much interfered with by the muscular contractions excited by pain. This is par- ticularly the case in dislocations, and in fractures attended with shortening of the limb. In partial anchylosis, etherization enables the surgeon in many cases to break up the adhesions, without pain to the patient, or resistance from the muscles. In lithotomy and lithotrity, the inordinate contraction of the muscular coat of the bladder is prevented or diminished. In short, in most cases in which the necessary surgical measures are likely to involve severe pain, or to encounter resistance, as in children, etherization may be usefully employed. Etherization has been employed for the detection of feigned diseases, by sus- pending the operation of the will; in neuralgia, as a palliative; in tetanus, and in the spasms produced by an overdose of strychnia, as an antispasmodic; in asthma and chronic bronchitis, as an expectorant; and in dysmenorrhcea, as an anodyne and relaxing remedy. Dr. Warren found it useful in relieving the ago- nizing sufferings which often attend the latter complaint. In midwifery it is extensively employed as a safe agent; and, while it does not seem materially to interfere with the due contraction of the uterus, it promotes the relaxation and lubricating secretions of the soft parts. In vivisections, humanity calls for the use of ether vapour, or other anaesthetic agent. Ethereal vapour is most conveniently inhaled through a soft sponge, hollowed out on one side to receive the projection of the nose, and saturated with ether of the purest quality. The sponge, thus prepared, is applied over the nostrils, through which the inhalation should be made in preference to the mouth. When the inhalation is thus conducted through a sponge, the ethereal vapour is copi- ously mixed with air, and there is no fear of inducing asphyxia. At first a short cough is generally produced, but this soon disappears; and, after the lapse of 'Vom two to five minutes, and the expenditure of about two fluidounces of ether, *ne quantity being very variable in different cases, the patient becomes insensi- ble, and appears as if in a deep, almost apoplectic sleep. The usual signs of the full effect of the ether are the closure of the eyelids, muscular relaxation, 956 JEtlierea. PART II. and inability to answer questions. During the whole process of etherization, the fingers should be kept on the pulse; and, if it become feeble and very slow, the sponge should be removed until the circulation becomes more free. At first there is redness, afterwards paleness of the face and neck, succeeded by cold perspirations. Should the etherization prove excessive, or convulsions supervene, an event which rarely happens, the ether must be immediately withdrawn, and cold water freely applied. This is the mode of proceeding in surgical operations; in midwifery cases, partial etherization is often sufficient. In a few cases per- sons become unmanageable under the influence of the ethereal vapour; and hence the propriety of a preliminary trial of its effects on a patient, before sub- jecting him to a surgical operation. In a few instances etherization has produced alarming remote effects. Dr. F. D. Lente has reported three cases of this kind. (New York Journ. of Med., Nov. 1856.) Sometimes death has ensued; but the instances are extremely rare, in which a fatal result could be clearly traced to the direct influence of the ether. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Aconitia; Atropiae Sulphas, U. S.; Digitalinum, Br.; Oleoresina Zingiberis, U. S. Off. Prep. Collodium, U. S.; Collodium cum Cantharide, U. S.; Oleum JEthereum, 17. S. B. CHLOROFORMUM PURIFICATUM. U. S. Chloroformum. Br., U. S., 1850. Purified Chloroform. “Take of Commercial Chloroform one hundred and two troyounces; Sul- phuric Acid seventeen troyounces; Stronger Alcohol six fluidrachms; Carbo- nate of Potassa two troyounces. Add the Acid to the Chloroform, and shake them together occasionally during twenty-four hours. Separate the lighter liquid from the heavier, and mix it with the Stronger Alcohol. Then add the Carbonate of Potassa, previously heated to redness, and rubbed, while warm, into powder. Agitate the mixture thoroughly, and, by means of a water-bath, distil to dryness from a retort furnished with a condenser. Lastly, keep the dis- tilled liquid in well-stopped bottles.” U. S. “ Take of Chlorinated Lime ten pounds [avoirdupois] ; Rectified Spirit thirty ffuidounces [Imperial measure] ; Slaked Lime a sufficiency; Water three gal- lons [Imp. meas.] ; Sulphuric Acid a sufficiency; Chloride of Calcium, in small fragments, tivo ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water nine ffuidounces [Imp. meas.]. Place the Water and the Spirit in a capacious still, and raise the mixture to the temperature of 100°. Add the Chlorinated Lime and five pounds [avoird.] of the Slaked Lime, mixing thoroughly. Connect the still with a condensing worm encompassed by cold water, and terminating in a narrow-necked receiver; and apply heat so as to cause distillation, taking care to withdraw the fire the moment the process is well established. When the distilled product measures fifty ounces, the receiver is to be withdrawn. Pour its contents into a gallon [Imp. meas.] bottle half filled with Water, mix well by shaking, and set at rest for a few minutes, when the mixture will separate into two strata of different densities. Let the lower stratum, which constitutes crude chloroform, be washed by agitating it in a bottle with three [fluid]ounces of the Distilled Water. Allow the Chloroform to subside, withdraw the water, and repeat the washing with the rest of the Distilled Water, in successive quantities of three [fluid]ounces at a time. Agitate the washed Chloroform for five minutes in a bottle with an equal volume of Sulphuric Acid, allow the mixture to settle, and transfer the upper stratum of liquid to a flask containing the Chloride of Calcium mixed with half an oqnce of Slaked Lime, which should be perfectly dry. Mix well by agita- tion. After the lapse of an hour connect the flask with a Liebig’s condenser, and distil over the pure Chloroform by means of a water-bath. Preserve the product in a cool place, in a bottle furnished with an accurately ground stopper. The lighter liquid which floats ou the crude Chloroform after its agitation with JEtherea. PART II. water, and the washings with Distilled Water, should be preserved, and employed in a subsequent operation.” Br. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850 a process was given for preparing chlo- roform ; but as this is never made on a small scale by the apothecary, but pur- chased of the manufacturer, it was very properly transferred, at the late revision, to the Materia Medica Catalogue. But, as the chloroform of commerce is ofter, impure, and, though fitted for external use, and for various pharmaceutical pur- poses, is, in this impure state, unfit for use as a respiratory anaesthetic agent, ii was deemed advisable to introduce a formula by which its purification, if re- quired, might be readily effected. This process is the first of those above given The process of the British Pharmacopoeia is for the preparation of the chloro- form ah initio, with directions which secure its purity if complied with. In this process, the reaction by which the chloroform is produced takes place between the chlorinated lime and the alcohol; the slaked lime, which is added in accord- ance with the directions in the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia, being intended pro- bably to lessen the production of the chlorinated pyrogenous oil, the amount of which is greater, according to Soubeiran and Mialhe, in proportion to the rela- tive excess of the chlorine to the lime employed. The use of this earth is stated by some chemists to give rise to Dutch liquid, C4II4C12, and to increase the pro- duct at the expense of its purity. As first distilled, the chloroform is very impure and is directed to be washed first with ordinary water, and afterwards with dis- tilled water, which separates alcohol, chlorine, and probably other contaminating substances. In consequence of the density of the chloroform and its insolubility in water, it readily subsides, forming a distinct layer, which may be easily sepa- rated. The crude product, after having been freed from alcohol by the wash- ing with water, is purified from the chlorinated pyrogenous oil, which comes over with the chloroform, by agitation with an equal volume of sulphuric acid, which ought to be pure and colourless, and at least of the density I-840. The oil is charred and destroyed by the acid, which becomes yellow or reddish-brown, and is partially changed into sulphurous acid. To remove the latter acid, as well as any water present, the chloroform, which floats on the surface of the acid, is removed and agitated well with chloride of calcium and slaked lime, and then again submitted to distillation. According to Gregory and Kemp, of Edinburgh, by whom the use of sulphuric acid for this purpose was proposed, chloroform is effectually purified from the pyrogenous oil by agitation with this acid if strong and pure. So long as a riDg, darker than the rest of the acid, appears, after rest, at the line of contact between the acid and the chloroform, the agita- tion must be repeated; and the oil is known to be fully separated when the acid remains colourless. Deutoxide of manganese has been employed to separate the sulphurous acid; but, in this case, the chloroform is apt to become, after the lapse of a few weeks, of a delicate pink colour, which sometimes disappears and then returns. This coloration depends upon the presence of manganese, and forms an objection to the use of the deutoxide as a purifier. In the U. S. process the method of purification is somewhat different. Instead of equal measures of the impure chloroform and sulphuric acid and an agitation for only 5 minutes, the commercial chloroform is shaken occasionally for 24 hours with but one-sixth of its weight of the acid. To remove any water and acid that may be present, instead of chloride of calcium and lime, a little stronger alcohol is mixed with the chloroform, and then carbonate of potassa previously heated to redness, and the mixture is distilled to dryness. It sometimes happens that the chloroform purified with sulphuric acid, though apparently pure at first, will not keep; but, after some time, becomes so loaded with chlorine and muriatic acid as to be altogether unfit for respiration. Dr. Christison ascertained that, if the sulphuric acid employed contains liyponi- tric acid, the chloroform changes in less than 24 hours. The idea has been enter- JEtherea. PART II. tained that it would be necessary to abandon sulphuric acid as a purifying agent; but experience has shown that, with certain precautions, it may be safely used ; and its efficiency in getting rid of the empyreumatic impurity is so great that it is still much employed for the purpose. The British Council endeavours to escape the difficulty by using a large quantity of the acid, and allowing but very brief contact; while, in the U. S. process, the same end is arrived at by employing a comparatively small quantity of the acid, with a much longer period for its ope- ration. In any case, however, the acid should be strong and pure, and especially free from any of the nitrogen acids; and care should afterwards be taken to remove every particle of the sulphuric or sulphurous acid, as is done in the officinal processes, in one by lime, and in the other by carbonate of potassa. Dr. Squibb attributes the fact, that chloroform purified by concentrated sulphu- ric acid does not keep well, to the very purity attained. He believes that per- fectly pure chloroform is prone to decomposition, and is rendered more stable by the addition of a small proportion of alcohol, so as to reduce its density to the officinal standard, 1'49. This he effects by adding alcohol in the proportion of ten drops to each fiuidounce of good chloroform of maximum density. (See his paper on Chloroform in the New York American Medical Monthly for July, 1857.) This recommendation is carried into effect in the U. S. process, and explains the addition of alcohol before distillation. Dr. Gregory also at- tributes the tendency to decomposition to its purity, and to the action of sun- light; having found that those portions which he had purified with the greatest care were soonest decomposed under the influence of light. As chloroform of great purity is often to be purchased in the market, it is not necessary for the apothecary to apply the officinal process of purification to every parcel that he may meet; but it is in the highest degree incumbent on him to sell none for inhalation which is not so pure as to stand the tests given in the Pharmacopoeia, and if he can obtain none so pure, then to purify it him- self. All pure specimens, moreover, should be kept distinct, and labelled with the officinal title of Purified Chloroform, for the sake of distinction. Chloroform maybe made by the action of chlorinated lime on pyroxylic spirit (wood spirit); but when thus prepared it is largely contaminated with a chlo- rinated pyrogenous oil, analogous to that already mentioned as being found in small proportion in chloroform prepared from alcohol. Chloroform, thus pre- pared, called methylic chloroform, is purified with too much difficulty to be advantageously substituted for that made with alcohol, called by Soubeiran normal chloroform. In Great Britain chloroform is now obtained by the use of methylated spirit; and the preparation, when properly purified, is stated to answer every purpose to which it is applied equally well with that obtained by the use of alcohol. (See page 805.) Messrs. Duncan and Flockhart, druggists of Edinburgh, manufacture chloro- form on a large scale, in a peculiar apparatus, using the proportions of 20 parts of chlorinated lime, about 3’75 parts of rectified spirit, and 60 parts of water. They employ two large wooden barrels as a still, and a third as a receiver, and into the former throw steam, which furnishes both sufficient heat and water for the process. Sixty pounds of chlorinated lime are used by them at each distilla- tion ; and they are able to manufacture three hundred ounces of chloroform a day. The heavy layer of the distillate, constituting the impure chloroform, is purified by them by mixing it with half its measure of strong sulphuric acid, gradually added, and distilling the mixture, when cool, in a leaden retort, from as much carbonate of baryta by weight as of acid used by measure. The product is finally distilled from quicklime, after having stood over the earth, and been repeatedly shaken with it, for a day or two. Though sulphuric acid is used in this long-tried process, it may be presumed that the chloroform made by it is not liable to undergo the change which takes place in that prepared by Gre PART II. JEtherea. 959 gory’s process. It will be observed, however, that the product, after the action of the sulphuric acid, is successively distilled from baryta and lime.* Pettenkofer inferred, from numerous experiments on the manufacture of chloroform, that very different quantities are obtained, on different occasions, from the same amount of materials, and the same process. The yield is less, tne longer the mixture is allowed to stand before distillation, and is greater when the heat of the mixture is between 135° and 161° F. than at either a lower or higher temperature. When the latter degree is exceeded, the chloroform con- tains more chlorine. (Buchner's Neues Bepert., x. 103.) Discovery and History. Chloroform was discovered by Mr. Samuel Guthrie, of Sackett’s Harbor, ICY., in 1831, and about the same time by Soubeiran in France, and Liebig in Germany. Guthrie obtained it by distilling a gallon from a mixture of three pounds of chlorinated lime and two gallon's of alcohol of the sp. gr. 0 844, and rectifying the product by redistillation, first from a great ex- cess of chlorinated lime, and afterwards from carbonate of potassa. {Silliman's Journal, vol. xxi., Jan. 1832, p. 64.) In a subsequent letter to Professor Silli- man, dated Feb. 15th, 1832, Mr. Guthrie states that the substance which he had obtained, “distilled off sulphuric acid, has the specific gravity of I 486, or a little greater, and may then be regarded as free from alcohol; and if a little sulphuric acid which sometimes contaminates it be removed by washing it with a strong solution of carbonate of potassa, it may then be regarded as absolutely pure.” {Ibid., vol. xxii., July, 1832, p. 105.) It is thus evident that Mr. Guthrie obtained, in a pure state, the substance now called chloroform; but he erroneously supposed his product to be the well-known oily liquid of the Dutch chemists, which it greatly resembles, and for the preparation of which he believed he had fallen on a cheap and easy process. Under this impression, he called the sub- stance, in his communications, chloric ether, one of the names by which the Dutch liquid, or bichloride of ethylen, is designated. He was induced to make the preparation from noticing, in Professor Silliman’s Elements of Chemistry, a reference to the Dutch liquid as a grateful diffusible stimulant, when properly diluted with alcohol and water. In relation to the anticipated importance of chloroform, Mr. Daniel B. Smith, of this city, held the following language in July, 1832. “The action of this ether on the living system is interesting, and may hereafter render it an object of importance in commerce. Its flavour is de- licious, and its intoxicating qualities equal to or surpassing those of alcohol. It is a strong diffusible stimulus, similar to the hydrated ether, but more grate- ful to the taste.” {Journ. of the Philad. Col. of Pharm., iv. 118.) Properties. Chloroform is a limpid, colourless, volatile, neuter liquid, having a bland ethereal odour, and hot, aromatic, saccharine taste. It neither reddens nor bleaches litmus paper. It is but slightly soluble in water; one hundred parts of that liquid taking up but one part of chloroform. Its sp. gr. is from l-49 to 1'494 {U. S.), l-496 {Br.)\ but when of this density it contains a small proportion of alcohol. Gregory has obtained it of the density 1'5 at 60°. It boils at 140°. It is not inflammable, but renders the flame of an alcohol lamp yellow and fuliginous. It burns, however, with a smoky flame, when mixed with an equal volume of alcohol. When pure, it has no action on potassium, except to cover the surface of the metal with small bubbles of gas. Chloroform is a powerful antiseptic. It does not, like creasote, coagulate albumen. It is scarcely acted on by sulphuric acid in the cold, but dissolves readily in alcohol and ether. The alcoholic solution, when moderately diluted with water, forms an aromatic, saccharine liquid of a very grateful taste. A strong alcoholic solution is decom- posed by abundance of water, the chloroform separating and subsiding, and the * In the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for Jan. 1862 (p. 25), is an account by Prof. Procter of the method employed by Messrs. Rogers and Crew, of Philadelphia, wholesale manufac- turers of chloroform, and the apparatus used by them. 960 JEtherea. PAET II. alcohol uniting with the water. It is liable to decomposition by sunlight, or even diffused daylight; and hence the propriety of keeping it in bottles, covered with dark paper, in a rather dark place. Chloroform has extensive solvent powers, being capable of dissolving caoutchouc, gutta percha, mastic, elemi, tolu, benzoin, and copal. Amber, sandarac, lac, and wax are only partially soluble. It also dissolves iodine, bromine, the organic alkalies, the fixed and volatile oils, most resins, and fats. It dissolves sulphur and phosphorus spar- ingly. It possesses the power of dissolving a large quautity of camphor, and furnishes the means of administering that medicine in an elegant form. As a general solvent, it has the advantage over ether of not being inflammable; the inflammability of the latter being the cause of frequent accidents. For an ex- tensive list of substances, soluble, insoluble, and partly soluble in chloroform, see a paper by M. Lepage, of Gisors, France, copied into the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for April, 1852, p. 147.* Composition. Chloroform is composed of three eqs. of chlorine and one of formyl, and is, therefore, the terchloride of formyl. As formyl is a bicarburet of hydrogen, the formula of chloroform is C2HC13. Its composition was first accu- rately determined by Dumas in 1835, by whom it was called chloroform from its relation to formic acid (C2II03), being formic acid with its three eqs. of oxygen replaced by three of chlorine. When first obtained by Liebig, he supposed it to consist exclusively of chlorine and carbon; and hence the origin of the erroneous name, sometimes applied to it, of perchloride o f carbon. The rationale of the formation of chloroform has not been well made out. If alcohol be considered a bihydrate of ethylen, C4II4-}-2HO, it may foe presumed to be generated by the removal from the ethylen of two eqs. of carbon, and the substitution of’ three eqs. of chlorine for three of hydrogen. Thus C4H4— C2H3 + C13=C2IIC13. Impurities and Tests. Chloroform is liable to contain alcohol and ether, both of which lower its specific gravity. If it have a less density than 138, it will float instead of sinking in a mixture of equal weights of concentrated sulphuric acid and water, after it has cooled. M. Mialhe has proposed the following tests for the presence of alcohol. Drop into distilled water a small quantity of the chloroform. If pure, it will remain transparent at the bottom of the glass; but, if it contain even a small proportion of alcohol, the globules will acquire a milky appearance. Soubeiran’s method was to agitate almond oil and chloroform together in a tube. If the chloroform is pure it remains clear, if it contains as much as 5 or 8 per cent, of alcohol, it becomes milky. {Journ. de Pharm., Aoiit, 1860, p. 95.) Prof. Procter detects alcohol by adding the suspected chloroform to an oxidizing mixture of bichromate of potassa and sulphuric acid. (18ee page 667.) If alcohol be present, the deep-orange colour of the chromic mixture will gradually become green; if absent, no change of colour will take place. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1856, p. 213.) Alcohol is detected also by potassium or sodium, which colours the chloroform containing this impurity, and gives rise to sharp acid fumes. But the most sensitive test is probably a compound newly dis- covered by M. Roussin, the binitrosulphuret of iron, a little of which agitated with * The following table of the solubility of the several alkaloids and their salts in chloro- form, prepared with great care by A. Schlimpert, may be of some practical use. At 64° P. 100 parts of chloroform dissolve Morphia 1-66 Acetate of morphia 1-66 Quinia 15-00 Sulphate of quinia 0 00 Muriate of quinia 11-10 Cinchonia 2-50 Sulphate of cinchonia. 3-00 Quinoidin 25-30 Ver atria 11-60 Atropia 33-00 Strychnia 14-10 Nitrate of strychnia... 6-60 Caffeina 11-00 Digitaline 1-25 Brucia 14-00 Aconitia 22-00 Santonin, pure 23-00 Santonin, impure 33-30 (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1860, p. 160; from Archiv. der Pharm., Nov. 185q, p. 151.) — Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. JEtherea. 961 chloroform and then allowed to stand, if there be the least proportion of alcohol, will produce a brown tint, deeper in proportion to the quautity, while the chlo- roform if pure will remain unchanged. To obtain this compound it is sufficient to mix nitrate of potassa and hydrosulphate of ammonia in solution, and to add a solution of protosulphate of iron, stirring constantly, until the liquid has but a slightly alkaline reaction, then evaporating to dryness, treating the residue with etherized alcohol on a filter, and evaporating the liquor so that it may crystallize. {Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1858, p. 208.) The most injurious impurities are the chlorinated pyrogenous oils, already alluded to. These are different as obtained from methylic or normal chloroform. The oil, obtained by Soubeiran and Mialhe from methylic chloroform, is an oleaginous, yellow liquid, lighter than water, and of a peculiar nauseous empyreumatic odour, perceptible in the methylic chloroform itself. In commercial chloroform it is sometimes present to the amount of 6 per cent. It is easily set on fire, and burns with a smoky flame, chlorine being among the products of its combustion. The oil procured from normal chloroform, which contains it in the amount of about one-fifth of 1 per cent, only, is essentially different from the methylic chloroform oil. It is heavier than water, and has an acrid, penetrating odour, unlike that of the other oil. When the vapour of these oils is inspired or even smelt, it causes, according to Dr. Gregory, distressing sickness and headache. These pyrogenous oils are de- tected and removed by pure and strong sulphuric acid. Chloroform, when pure, upon being mixed with an equal volume of this acid* does not colour it; but, when contaminated with these oils, gives the acid a colour, varying from yellow to reddish-brown, according to the amount of impurity. Alcohol also is detected and removed by sulphuric acid. In applying this test, several fluidounces of chloroform should be used; as a slight change of colour cannot be easily seen in a test tube. A still more delicate test of the oily impurities, according to Dr. Gregory, is the smell which they leave. If chloroform, thus contaminated, be poured upon the hand, it quickly evaporates, leaving the oily impurities, recog- nisable by their offensive odour, now' no longer covered by that of the chloro- form. The pure substance, rubbed on the skin, quickly evaporates, and scarcely leaves any smell. Chloroform sometimes contains Dutch liquid, which may be discovered by adding an alcoholic solution of potassa; when the mixture, if this impurity be present, will heat, and give off a permanent gas, which is chloride of acetyl, C4HjCl. (Geuther.)* Officinal Tests. The TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia directs that purified chloroform should have a sp.gr. not less than 1490 nor exceeding 1 494; should boil at 140° ; when dropped into water should sink in the form of transparent globules without milkiness; should produce no wrnrmth, sensible to the hand at the mo- ment when mixed, in a bottle closed by a glass stopper, with an equal measure of officinal sulphuric acid, and that, when the liquids have separated on stand- ing, and have been allowed to remain in contact for 24 hours, no colour should be imparted to either, or but a faint yellowish tinge to the acid, forming the lower layer. The Pharmacopoeia directs, moreover, that when 3 or 4 fluidrachms are evaporated from a porcelain plate, by causing them to flow to and fro over the surface, the last portions should have a slightly aromatic odour, without pungency or empyreuma, while the plate is covered with a film of moisture, with- out odour or taste. These tests imply the presence of but a minute proportion of alcohol, and the total absence of chlorine and those volatile and empyreumatic substances which constitute the most injurious impurities of chloroform. A heat that would be felt through the bottle, on the admixture of sulphuric acid with •hloroform, would evince the presence of .too much alcohol or water. The want * In relation to chloroform, see the paper of Soubeiran and Mialhe, Journ. de Pharm., July, 1849, copied into the Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 313; also the paper of Dr. Gregory, Chem. Gaz., May 15, 1850. JEtlierea. PART II. of discoloration from the contact of the two liquids shows the absence of empy- reumatlc oily matter; but a very slight discoloration might proceed from the alcohol present, and would not, therefore, be a material objection. A colour bordering on that of madeira wine would imply an objectionable amount of im- purities. The volatile impurities are less volatile than chloroform, and would therefore be the last to escape on the evaporation of the liquid. Chloroform, therefore, leaves a foreign odour behind it when allowed to evaporate from the hand, and especially when from a porcelain plate, in the amount and manner in- dicated ; and if it stand this test well, it may be considered as free from any noxious volatile impurity. The slight foreign aroma without pungency, which is given out under these circumstances, is of no injurious significance.* Medical Properties, &c. When taken internally, chloroform acts as a seda- tive narcotic, probably operating through the nervous system, independently of vascular action or congestion. It has been detected by Ragsky in the blood, and by Dr. Snow, of London, in different parts of the body after death.f In 1848 Dr. H. Hartshorne tried its physiological effects in the dose of seventy- five drops on himself, and found it to produce drowsiness and a general dimi- nution of sensorial power, without exhilaration, or acceleration of the pulse. Since then he has used it internally in a number of cases, and finds it a safe ano- dyne and soporific, altogether free from the dangerous effects which sometimes follow the inhalation of its vapour. In the dose of a fluidrachm, its soporific effect is about equal to that of thirty-five drops of laudanum. Dr. Hartshorne has given it in doses of from fifty to seventy-five drops every half hour for several hours together. The vehicle used by him is orgeat syrup, in the proportion of two fluidounces to each fluidrachm of the chloroform. When mixed with muci- lage of gum arabic, the mixture requires agitation immediately before swallow- ing each dose.| Chloroform, as prepared by Mr. Guthrie, was used internally as early as 1832 by Professor Ives and Dr. Nathan B. Ives, of New Haven, in asthma, spasmodic cough, scarlet fever, and atonic quinsy, with favourable results. (Silliman’s Journ., xxi. 406, 407.) It was employed by Dr. Formby, of Liverpool, in hysteria, in 1838; by Mr. Tuson, of London, in cancer and neuralgic affections, in 1843; and by M. Guillot, of Paris, in asthma, in 1844. Dr. L. Dalton, of Logan, Ohio, has found it to possess antiperiodic powers, and employed it successfully in in- termittent diseases. Dr. Delioux, of Rochefort, has also proposed it as a remedy in intermittents, given, during the apyrexia, in cases in which the bark and quinia fail to effect a cure. Dr. Aran has employed it for four years with suc- cess in lead colic, administered by the mouth and rectum, and applied to the abdomen. In these cases it probably acts by relaxing the intestinal spasm. One of the authors of this work has frequently used it with advantage for the relief of neuralgic and other painful affections, in the dose of from forty to eighty drops, suspended in water by means of gum arabic or yolk of egg. This dose may be repeated, if necessary, at intervals of one or two hours, until some effect on the system is produced. Chloroform has been used internally, with benefit, by Dr. Osburn, of Dublin, in hypochondriasis, and by Dr. Gordon, physician to the llardwieke Fever Hospital, to allay nervous irritation and procure sleep. * Much is due to Dr. Squibb for the precision given to the tests for chloroform; and the reader may profitably consult his remarks on the subject in a paper in the Proceedings oj the Pharmaceutical Association, A. D. 1858, p. 402. •j- In relation to the detection of chloroform in the body after death, see the paper of M. Duroy, of Paris, in the Journ. de. Pharm., Avril, 1851. J The Society of Pharmacy, of Paris, has given its sanction to the following formula; the French weights being turned into the nearest English weights and measures. Take of chloroform gss to gj ; sugar giij; gum arabic gj to gij ; water Rub the chloro- form with the sugar in a mortar, then add the gum, and, lastly, ty degrees, the water. la this recipe alcohol, which is often inadmissible, is avoided. PART II. JEtheroa. A disadvantage connected with the internal use of chloroform is its liability to sicken the stomach, an effect which may sometimes arise from the presence o' pyrogenous oil. An incidental advantage is said to be, that it entirely covers the bitterness of other medicines. Externally, chloroform has been used by Mr. Tuson in cancer, senile gangrene and sloughing ulcers, and, as an injection and gargle, in discharges from the uterus and foul ulcers of the throat, with the effect of relieving pain, destroying fetor, and promoting the separation of diseased parts. It has also been employed externally, with benefit, in a painful wound of the forearm implicating the radial nerve; by Dr. Legroux in a painful affection of one of the lower extremities, consequent to a cancerous tumour of the pelvis; by Mr. Higginson in labour, applied to the perineum when painfully stretched, and in dysmenorrhoea, brought in contact with the os uteri by means of a sponge; by Dr. Watson in swelled testicle and acute spinal tenderness; by Dr. Hays and Dr. Bond in neuralgia; by the late Dr. I. Parrish in the supra-orbitar pain of rheumatic ophthalmia, and in syphilitic ulceration at the root of the nail; by M. Devergie in papulous eruptions, made into an ointment in the proportion of afluidrachin to ten drachms of lard; by Prof. Back in the itch ; and by M. Chapell in fissure of the anus. It has also been used with success by Dr. Yenat, of Bordeaux, in the form of injection, in the commencement of acute gonorrhoea, as an abortive treatment. Dr. Bauch, of Iowa, has employed chloroform topically with decided benefit in neuralgia, colic, and other painful affections. For some purposes he found it useful to incorporate it with olive oil and solution of ammonia, which formed a mixture having effects less transient than those of the uncombined substance. Incorporated in equal measure with the white of eggs, and applied on lint to the gums, it is said to afford great relief in toothache. As a wash, injection, and gargle, Mr. Tuson prepared chloroform diluted with water, in the proportion of one or two drachms to the pint; but, for application to the sound skin, it is generally used undiluted, by means of soft linen, covered with oiled silk to pre- vent evaporation. "When employed in this state it should be pure; as, accord- ing to Mialhe, when mixed with absolute alcohol, it acquires caustic properties. M. Fournie has found that the vapour from a mixture of equal measures of glacial acetic acid and chloroform is even more effectual, as a local anaesthetic, than that of pure chloroform ; producing complete insensibility of the skin in five minutes, if applied from a bottle heated simply by the hand. (Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1862, p. 385, from Comptes Rendus.) Chloroform may be gelatinized by agitating it with an equal weight of white of egg in the cold. In three hours it takes the gelatinous form. A stronger preparation may be made by shaking together, in a bottle, four parts of chloro- form and one of white of egg, and placing the mixture in water at 140°. In four minutes the gelatinization is completed. Gelatinized chloroform may be applied to the skin, spread on linen, or by frictions. Chloroform, in vapour, may be used as a topical application to the rectum. M. Ehrenreich employed it with success in tenesmus. A drachm may be vapor- ized by the heat of warm water from a bottle, fitted with a flexible tube, inserted into the bowel. It may be applied to the skin in the form of a vapour douche, according to the method of Dr. Hardy, of Dublin. (See Ranking’s Abstract, No. 19, 281.) Prof. Langenbeck, of Berlin, prefers chloroform to tincture of iodine, as an injection for the radical cure of hydrocele. A third method of using chloroform is by inhalation. The first case we have met with in which it was thus employed is related by Professor Ives, of New Haven, under date of the 2d of Jan. 1832. The case was one of pulmonic dis- ease, attended with general debility and difficult respiration, and was effectually relieved. (SilUman’s Journ., vol. xxi., Jan. 1832, p. 406.) In March, 1847, the av tion of the pure substance by inhalation was tried on the lower animals, by JEtherea. PART II. M. Flourens, and its effects on the spinal marrow described. In November of the same year, Dr. Simpson, of Edinburgh, after experimenting with a number of anaesthetic agents in order to discover a substitute for ether, tried chloroform at the suggestion of Mr. Waldie, and, having found its effects favourable, brought it forward as a new remedy for pain, by inhalation, in surgery and mid- wifery. The advantages which he conceived it to possess over ether were the smallness of the dose, its more prompt action, more agreeable effects, less tena- cious odour, greater cheapness, and greater facility of exhibition. The usual effects produced by a full dose of chloroform, administered by in- halation, are the rapid production of coma, relaxation of the muscles, slow and often stertorous breathing, upturning of the eyes, and total insensibility to agents which ordinarily produce acute pain. The effect on the heart’s action is varia- ble. Sometimes frothing of the mouth takes place, and, more rarely, convulsive twitches of the face and limbs. The insensibility is generally produced in one or two minutes, and usually continues for five or ten minutes ; but the effect may be kept up for many hours, provided the inhalation be cautiously renewed from time to time. The immediate effects of the agent are followed by a drowsy state, sometimes by quiet sleep. As a general rule, no recollection is retained of anything that occurred during the state of insensibility. Experience has Hshown that the effects, here described as those of a full dose of chloroform by inhalation, cannot be induced without danger to life. Hence all prudent sur- geons will be content with an impression short of the abolition of all conscious- ness. It is generally admitted that, at a certain stage of anaesthesia, there is insensibility to pain, while consciousness to a certain extent remains; and it is this condition that the surgeon should aim to produce. According to Mr. Skey, chloroform had been administered up to 1854, in 9000 cases in St. Bartholo- mew’s Hospital, without a single accident, a fact which must be taken as proof of its careful employment in that institution. The delicate operation of extract- ing the cataract has been facilitated by its use, in the hands of Mr. Bowman, of London; and, in general, the performance of operations on the eyeball is greatly assisted by the insensibility produced, especially in children. In partial auchylosis, in which the surgeon proposes to break up the adhesions by force, chloroform, like ether, takes off the muscular resistance, and renders the mani- pulations painless. It is asserted to be an advantage of chloroform in surgical operations, that less blood is lost. If this assertion should prove to be true, there will be greater necessity of delaying the dressings until reaction shall have taken place. The question whether the use of chloroform in the major operations of surgery is favourable or otherwise to recovery, has been examined by an appeal to statistics. Dr. Simpson, of Edinburgh, thinks the percentage of recoveries has been increased by its use; while Dr. Arnott, basing his opinions on the re- sults of operations in the London hospitals, holds the contrary opinion. The advantages and disadvantages of chloroform, when compared with ether as an anaesthetic in operative surgery, have not been satisfactorily determined ; but on one point the evidence appears to be conclusive, namely, that it is far more dangerous to life than ether. According to Dr. Snow, of London, the vapour in the air breathed by the patient should not exceed 6 per cent. Dr. Gil- man, of New York, thinks that chloroform has a more sudden and powerful effect than under ordinary circumstances, when inhaled immediately after bleeding; a fact which he explains by the increased power of absorption produced by the loss of blood. (N,Y. Med. Times, Oct. 1852.) Sometimes chloroform produces unpleasant remote effects; such as abolition of smell, perversion of taste, and loss of tonicity in the bladder and rectum. Two cases, illustrative of these effects, in which chloroform was inhaled in excess, are related by Dr. Happoldt in the Charleston Med. Journ. for Jan. 1856. In midwifery, chloroform has been extensively employed to relieve pain and PART II. JEtherea. facilitate labour, since it was first recommended by Dr. Simpson. Its effects are similar to those of ether; and each agent has its exclusive advocates among those practitioners of midwifery who are willing to use anaesthetics. According to Dr. Atthill, of Dublin, the use of chloroform produces a tendency to post-partum hemorrhage. Dr. Robert Lee, of London, has cited seventeen cases, in which it was supposed to produce various pernicious effects in labour. (Lancet, Dec. 24, 1853.) Notwithstanding exceptional cases of injury, it is every year growing in favour as an anaesthetic in parturition. The profession is unanimous as to its great utility in instrumental labours. The dose of chloroform for inhalation is a fluidrachm, equivalent to 220 drops or more, to be repeated in two minutes, if the desired effect should fail to be produced. The most convenient inhaler is a handkerchief, loosely twisted into the form of a bird’s nest, which, after having been imbued with the chloroform, is held to the mouth and nose. The use of this simple inhaler ensures a due ad- mixture of atmospheric air with the vapour of the chloroform. The moment insensibility is produced, which should be brought on gradually, the inhalation should be suspended; and, if consciousness return too soon, it should be cau- tiously renewed. In all cases an experienced assistant should attend to the ad- ministration of the chloroform and to nothing else, watching the state of the respiration and pulse. The moment there is the least snoring or failure of the pulse, the vapour should be withdrawn. Chloroform should not be administered to persons subject to epilepsy, affected with organic disease of the heart, or pre- disposed to syncope.* Chloroform, as ordinarily prepared, is apt to produce, when inhaled, headache, nausea, and even vomiting. Perfectly pure chloroform, according to Soubeiran and Mialhe, does not produce these disagreeable effects, which are plausibly attributed to the presence of the pyrogenous oils. Dr. Simpson, however, finds that the purest chloroform that he uses not unfrequently causes vomiting; but Dr. Gregory attributes this effect, when following the use of the pure substance, to its administration after a full meal, which should always be avoided. Chloroform having proved to be a relaxing agent and remedy for pain, when used by inhalation in surgery and midwifery, it was natural that its effects should be tried in the same way in spasmodic and painful diseases. Accordingly, it has been inhaled in hiccough, chorea, hooping-cough, hysteria, the paroxysm of asthma, angina pectoris, nephritic colic, tetanus, poisoning from strychnia, hydrophobia, and the paroxysm of tic douloureux, and generally with decided advantage. In Germany it has been praised in bronchitis and pneumonia as an expectorant and calming remedy. It has been employed also with success for the reduction of strangulated hernia. Mr. R. J. Mackenzie, of Edinburgh, bears testimony to its goods effects, used by inhalation, in spasmodic stricture of the urethra, attended with retention of urine. Sometimes the urine is caused to flow at once; and, when this is not the case, the passage of the catheter is facilitated. Dr. Cain, of Charleston, found it very useful in spasmodic obstruction of the bowels, promptly relieving pain, and favouring the action of enemata. As a soporific it has been given beneficially in delirium tremens, and in the noisy forms of chronic insanity. Much has been said in relation to the dangers attendant upon the inhalation of chloroform, and, certainly, many more deaths have been reported from its use than from that of ether. The late Dr. Warren, of Boston, published, in 1849, the details of ten cases, in which death was caused by chloroform, all occurring in little more than a year, and many other fatal eases have since occurred; and he declared that, if he were compelled to substitute chloroform for ether in inha- * For rules laid down by M. Baudens for the administration of chloroform, see the Am. Joum. of Med. Sci. for Jan. 1854, p. 208; and for those given by M. Robert, surgeon to the Jlosp/al Beaujon, see Ranking's Abstract, No. 19, p. lib. 966 uEtherea. PART II. lation, h'. would do it with much anxiety. Chloroform is unquestionably a more powerful Agent than ether, and acts not only differently, but in a much smaller dose. The comparative smallness of its dose is certainly a ground of danger, when its administration falls into reckless or incompetent hands. In view of the greater danger from the use of chloroform as an anaesthetic, the governors of the Massachusetts General Hospital have prohibited the use of any other agent than ether in surgical operations. When the effects of chloroform inhalation proceed too far, the remedies are a horizontal posture, cold air fanned upon the face, cold water poured upon the head, sinapisms to the feet, frictions and heat to the body and extremities, and ammonia to the nostrils. If respiration ceases, the tongue should be seized with the artery-forceps, and pulled forward from off the glottis, and artificial respira- tion attempted by blowing into the mouth, and by other appropriate measures. When the patient can swallow, strong coffee may be given with advantage. Gal- vanic electricity, passed through needles inserted in different parts of the body, is recommended by M. Abeille, of Ajaccio, as a powerful means of recalling sen- sibility; and it is highly probable that the electro-magnetic battery would prove useful. When an overdose is taken by the mouth, the same remedies may be employed, with the addition of the stomach-pump, when vomiting cannot be pro- duced. In a case of suicide by swallowing chloroform, in which death took place in about thirty-four hours, the lining membrane of the larynx and trachea were found inflamed, the bronchi were loaded with a dirty-gray purulent fluid, the lungs were inflamed as in the first stage of pneumonia, and the brain and its membranes congested. In another fatal case, reported by Dr. J. Williams, of the Philadelphia Hospital, Blockley, in which the patient survived thirty-seven hours, no morbid appearances were observed worthy of note. In relation to the preparations, consisting of chloroform and alcohol, which have been used under the name of “chloric ether,” the reader is referred to Spi- ritus Chloroformi in Part II* Pharm. Uses. In preparing Atropia. Off. Prep. Linimentum Chloroformi; Liquor Gutta-perchas, U. S.; Mistura Chloroformi, U. S.; Spiritus Chloroformi. B. OLEUM iETHEREUM. U. S. Ethereal Oil. “Take of Stronger Alcohol two pints; Sulphuric Acid sixty-one troyounees; Distilled Water a Jluidounce; Stronger Ether a sufficient quantity. Add the Acid slowly to the Alcohol, mix them thoroughly, and allow the mixture to stand for twelve hours. Decant the clear liquid from the sediment into a tubulated re- tort, of such capacity that the mixture shall nearly fill it. Adapt a thermometer tube to the tubulure by means of a cork, so that the bulb shall be deeply im- mersed in the liquid, and, having attached a Liebig’s condenser, distil, by means of a sand-bath, at a temperature between 312° and 322°, until the liquid ceases to come over, or until a black froth begins to arise in the retort. Separate the yellow ethereal liquid from the distillate, and expose it for twenty-four hours, in a shallow capsule, to evaporate spontaneously. Then transfer the remaining liquid to a wet filter ; and, when the watery portion has drained off, wash the oil which is left, while on the filter, with the Distilled Water. When this also has drained off, transfer the oil to a graduated measure, by perforating the point * Chlorodm. An empirical preparation under this name has been extensively used in London, and' has recently acquired some general notoriety from having been the leputed cause of death in a recent case of accidental poisoning in England, and as having pi oduced very threatening symptoms in another case, in which the patient was saved. From a for- mula published in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1860 (p. 181), it would appear to con- sist of chloroform, chloric ether (so called), tincture of capsicum, oil of peppermint, mu- riate of morphia, hydrocyanic acid (Scheele’s), perchloric acid, tincture of Indian hemp, and molasses; and of these powerful medicines, moreover, in such proportions as t j n ak« one shudder at the idea of its unregulated use.—Note to the twelfth edition. JEtherea. 967 PART II. of the filter, and add to it an equal volume of Stronger Ether The Etherea. Oil, obtained by this formula, measures about six fiuidrachms.” U. 8. In the late consolidation of the British Pharmacopoeias, this valuable remedy was omitted, partly on account of the uncertainty as to its special antispasmodio virtues, partly from its expensiveness when properly made and its liability to spontaneous change, and partly, moreover, because not only is it often adulte- rated, but other compounds are substituted for it. (Med. Times and Gaz., March, 1864, p. 248.) It is, however, retained in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, with certain modifications in the process, which, it is hoped, may enable it to yield a larger and more reliable product. In the existing U. S. formula, the first change to be noticed is the direction, after the mixture of the acid and alcohol, to decant the clear liquid from the sediment, which is sulphate of lead, deposited by the acid on account of its dilu- tion. According to Dr. Squibb, the presence of the sulphate of lead in the retort causes the mixture to froth over, and thus necessitate a suspension of the process so much sooner, as greatly to lessen the amount of product the materials are capable of affording. The increase of oil resulting from this simple modification of the process is said to be one-third. Another new feature is the introduction of a thermometer into the retort, whereby the important point is obtained of properly regulating the temperature, which, in order to the due reaction of the materials, should not fall below 312° nor rise above 322°. Again, the washing of the oil with solution of potassa has been omitted, because the alkali was found to decompose a portion of the oil, and the sulphurous acid, which it was intended to neutralize, can be separated by the washing with distilled water now directed. By wetting the filter, the oil is prevented from passing along with the water. Finally, the oil is now ordered to be diluted with an equal measure of stronger ether, as this has been found to contribute greatly to its preservation. When alcohol is distilled with a large excess of sulphuric acid, the same pro- ducts are generated as those mentioned, in the article upon ether, as being formed towards the close of the distillation of that liquid. (See page 949.) These were stated to be sulphurous acid, heavy oil of wine, olefiant gas, and resino-carbonace- ous matter. In the U. S. process such an excess of sulphuric acid is employed for the purpose of obtaining the oil. The product of the distillation is generally in two layers, one, consisting of water holding sulphurous acid in solution, and the other, of ether containing the heavy oil of wine. According to the experience of Dr. Squibb, the sp. gr. of these two layers is so nearly equal, that sometimes one and sometimes the other is uppermost; so that the direction in the old formula to separate the supernatant liquor is incorrect, and has been superseded by the present, to separate the yellow ethereal liquid; the colour and other sensible properties being considered sufficiently distinctive. After separation, the liquid is exposed for twenty-four hours to the air, in order to dissipate the ether by evaporation; and the oil which is left is washed with water to deprive it of all traces of sulphurous acid. The nature and mode of formation of heavy oil of wine are not well under- stood. It has been explained, in a preceding article, that, in the early stage of the distillation of a mixture of sulphuric acid and alcohol, sulphovinic acid, or the double sulphate of ether and water, is formed. During its progress this is decomposed so as to yield ether. When, however, the alcohol is distilled with a large excess of sulphuric acid, the sulphovinic acid is decomposed so as tc form a small quantity of the heavy oil of wine, now considered to be a double sulphate of ether and ethylen, having the formula C4H50,S03-fC4H4,S03. It is conceived to be generated from two eqs. of sulphovinic acid (double sulphate of ether and water), which are resolved into one eq. of heavy oil of wine, two of sulphuric acid, and three of water. When the heavy oil is gently heated with four parts of water, sulphovinic acid is reproduced, and the separated ethylen AEtherea. PART II. floats Oil /he surface as an oily substance, called, when thus isolated, light oil of wine. Light oil of wine, as thus obtained, is a pale-yellow oil, supposed to have the formula C4H4. As ordinarily procured in the process for preparing ether, it contains a portion of that substance. When the pure light oil of wine is kept, it deposits a stearoptene, isomeric with itself, called concrete oil of wine, or oil of wine camphor; after which the oil is changed, and takes the name of etheroic. Etherole is a pale-yellow oily liquid, having an aromatic odour. Its sp. gr. is 0 921, boiling point 536°, and freezing point 31° below zero. It communicates a greasy stain to paper. Concrete oil of wine, sometimes called etherine, crys- tallizes in long, transparent, brilliant, tasteless prisms, soluble in alcohol and ether, insoluble in water, fusible at 230°, boiling at 500°, and having the sp. gr. 0‘980. Dr. Squibb takes a different view of the composition of ethereal oil, and believes it, instead of a sulphate or double sulphate, to be a sulphovinate of a carbohydrogen base; and for this reason, that it fails, especially when pure and recent, to give any of the characteristic reactions of sulphuric acid or the sul- phates. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 18G1, p. 58.) Properties. The undiluted ethereal oil (heavy oil of wine) is a yellowish neu- tral liquid, possessing an oleaginous consistency, a penetrating aromatic odour, and rather sharp and bitter taste. It boils at 536°. Its sp. gr. is, according to the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, 1 096; according to the London College, after Mr. Hennell’s results, L05. The density obtained by Dr. Squibb, U. S. Navy, by following the old formula of the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia exactly, was IT29. By Dumas and Serullas its density is stated to be as high as IT33, which is pro- bably the more correct number for the pure oil. When dropped into water it sinks, assuming the form of a globule. It dissolves sparingly in cold water, moderately in hot water, and readily in alcohol and ether. It is devoid of acid reaction, the sulphuric acid present iri it being completely neutralized by the ether and ethylen united with it. The sulphuric acid present is not precipitated by the usual reagents for this acid ; because they furnish a base, which, replacing the ethylen, gives rise to one of the salts of sulphovinic acid, all of which are soluble in water and hydrous alcohol. The U. S. ethereal oil of the existing Pharmacopoeia is the proper oil diluted with an equal volume of stronger ether. This gives it an ethereal odour in addition to that characteristic of the pure oil, and considerably reduces its sp. gr., which is now stated at 0'91. The process by which the officinal oil of wine is formed yields but a small product, being, according to the Pharmacopoeia, only about six fluidrachms, or somewhat more than a fortieth, by measure, of the alcohol employed. In the officinal ethereal oil, the heavy oil of wine, that is, the double sulphate of ether and ethylen is not only diluted with an equal measure of ether, but is mixed also with variable proportions of free light oil of wine (ethylen), in addi- tion to that present in it as one of the essential constituents of the heavy oil. This fact accounts for the different densities assigned to the heavy oil. The heavy oil undiluted is liable to spontaneous change by time, being not only rendered brown, but chemically altered so as to separate into two layers. But this tendency is in great measure obviated, in the officinal ethereal oil, by the preservative influence of the ether. It may be kept long without other ap- preciable change than the acquisition of a brown hue, which does not interfere with its medical virtues. It should not, when tested by dry litmus paper, evince the presence of any free acid. The article, sold in our shops as ethereal oil, is too often a mixture of alcohol and ether, containing but a trace of the oil. Four samples of so-called ethereal oil, as imported from England, were examined by Mr. E. N. Kent, of New York, and found to have the composition above stated. (N. Y. Journ. of Pharm., i. 65.) The ethereal oil is used only for the preparation of the Compound Spirit of Ether or Hoffmann’s anodyne, which, when properly made, is a very valustbu PART II. Aloe.—Alumen. medicine ; and it is much to be regretted that due attention has not been paid by the manufacturing chemists to the furnishing of a good ethereal oil to the apothe- cary. It is necessarily an expensive preparation; but this does not'justify the substitution for it of a cheaper and nearly worthless article under the same name. Off. Prep. Spiritus iEtheris Compositus, U. S. B. ALOE. Preparation of Aloes. ALOE PURIFICATA. U.S. Purified Aloes. “Take of Socotrine Aloes twenty-four troyounces; Stronger Alcohol four Jluidounces. Heat the aloes, by mea«is of a water-bath, until it is completely melted. Then add the Alcohol, and, having stirred the mixture thoroughly, strain it through a fine sieve, which has just been dipped into boiling water. Evaporate the strained mixture by means of a water-bath, constantly stirring, until a thread of the liquid becomes brittle on cooling. Lastly, break the pro- duct when cold into pieces of a convenient size, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. Aloes, even of good quality, is so often mixed as found in the market with various accidental impurities, such as fragments of wood, vegetable remains, pieces of leather, and earthy matter, that it has been thought advisable to have an officinal process by which it may be freed from these, should its purification be found necessary in any particular instance. This is especially the case with Socotrine aloes, which, from the want of proper supervision in its preparation, is probably more liable to these impurities than the Cape or Barbadoes aloes; but, as these are also sometimes impure, there seems to be no good reason why they should have been officinally excluded from the benefits of the process. The use of alcohol in the formula is simply to render the melted aloes more liquid, and thus facilitate the straining; and it is subsequently got rid of by evaporation : but care should be taken not to use too great a heat, or to con- tinue it too long, for fear of impairing the virtue of the drug. Thus prepared, aloes is in angular fragments, brittle, of a brownish or red- dish-brown colour, and of the agreeable aromatic odour of Socotrine aloes. It is nearly all soluble in alcohol. W ALUMEN. Preparations of Alum. ALUMEN EXSICCATUM. U.S., Br. Dried Alum. “ Take of Alum, in coarse powder, four troyounces. Expose it, in a suitable vessel, to a temperature not exceeding 450° until the residue weighs two troy- ounces and one hundred and twenty grains ; then reduce it when cold to fine powder.” U. S. “Take of Alum four ounces. Heat the Alum in a porcelain capsule till it liquefies, raise and continue the heat till aqueous vapour ceases to be disengaged, and then reduce the residue to powder.” Br. The object of these processes is to obtain the alum free from its water of crystallization, without otherwise in the least decomposing it. For this purpose a certain degree of heat is necessary; and yet, if the heat be too great, the salt itself is decomposed, and the desired end is not attained. If the alum employed be the potassa-alum, the old indefinite directions will generally be sufficient to secure the requisite result, as this salt will resist a heat short of redness; but ihis is not the case with the ammonia-alum, which, on account of its greater cheapness, has almost excluded the former salt from the market, and, there is 970 Alumen. PART II. reason to apprehend, may sometimes be substituted for the potassa-alum, though this is the one officinally directed. To guard against failure from this cause, the present U. S. Pharmacopoeia prescribes 450° as the highest heat to be employed, and checks the operation when nearly all the water has been driven olf, as indicated by the weight of the residue. Mr. John M. Maisch has satisfactorily determined by experiment that, whichever alum may be used, this temperature is quite high enough ; and the direction of the Pharmacopoeia, as to the weight of the residue, ensures that a sufficient heat will be employed. By the officinal process half a drachm or about 4 per cent, of the water of crystallization, supposing the salt employed to be the potassa-alum, is left behind ; and Mr. Maisch has ascertained that this in no degree injures the properties of the dried salt. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1860, p. 21.) In the case of the ammonia-alum, as this salt con- tains a somewhat larger proportion of water, the limitation as to the quantity expelled still further secures against the employment of too great a heat. Properties. Dried alum, sometimes called alumen ustum or burnt alum, is in the form of an opaque white powder, possessing a more astringent taste than the crystallized salt. Before pulverization, it is a light, white, opaque, porous mass. During the exsiccation, alum loses from 41 to 46 per cent, of its weight in dissipated water. Dried alum resists the action of water fur a long time, showing its altered aggregation. It is, however, if properly prepared, at length wholly dissolved by cold water, while 6 parts of boiling water dissolve it in a short time; and this may be considered as a sufficient test that the salt has not been decomposed. {Maisch.) In composition it differs from crystallized alum merely in the absence of water. Medical Properties and Uses. Dried alum has been given in obstinate con- stipation, with the effect of gently moving the bowels, and affording great relief from pain. (See Alumen.) The dose is from five to ten grains or more. Its principal medical use is as an escharotic for destroying fungous flesh. B. ALUMINiE SULPHAS U.S. Sulphate of Alumina. “Take of Sulphate of Alumina and Ammonia, Carbonate of Soda, each,/otzr troyounces; Sulphuric Acid a troyounce and one hundred and fifty grains; Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the salts separately, each in six fluid- ounces of boiling Water, and pour the solution of the Sulphate gradually into that of the Carbonate; then digest with a gentle heat until the evolution of carbonic acid ceases. Collect upon a filter the precipitate formed, and wash it with water until the washings are no longer affected by chloride of barium. Next, with the aid of heat, dissolve the precipitate in the Sulphuric Acid, pre- viously diluted with half a pint of Water, and, having filtered the solution, eva- porate it until a pellicle begins to form. Then remove it to a water-bath, and continue the evaporation, with constant stirring, until a dry salt remains. Lastly, preserve this in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. In the above process it is the ammonia-alum that is used. The soda of the carbonate unites with the sulphuric acid of the tersulphate of alumina, with the escape of the carbonic acid, and the precipitation of the alumina in the form of a hydrate; while the undecomposed sulphate of ammonia of the alum, and the newly formed sulphate of soda remain in solution. The alumina is then washed in order to separate any portion of the sulphates adhering to it, the absence of which is shown by the non-action of chloride of barium on the washings. It now remains to unite the hydrate of alumina and sulphuric acid, which is effected by heating them with water ; and the salt, which is formed in solution, is ob- tained by evaporating the solution to dryness. It may also be obtained from the solution by the addition of alcohol, which precipitates it. In the process the several substances are used in very nearly saturating proportions. Sulphate of alumina may be prepared also by the process of MM. Huria and Brunei, which consists in exposing, in an iron cylinder, sulphate of alumina and PART II. Alumen. 971 ammonia (ammonia-alum), first dried to separate its water of crystallization, to a clierry-red heat. Sulphate of alumina remains in the cylinder, and the vola- tilized products are collected in water. The chief of these is sulphite of ammo- nia, which serves for the preparation of a fresh portion of alum, after having been changed into the sulphate by oxidation in the air. (Ghem. Gaz., Sent 15. 1852, p. 359.) Properties. As procured by the officinal process, sulphate of alumina is in the form of a white powder. It may, however, be obtained in lamellar crystals. As seen in commerce, it is usually in flattened crystalline cakes, which appear as though formed by the cooling of soft masses of minute crystals. It has a sour, as well as sweet and very astringent taste, is soluble in twice its weight of water, and has an acid reaction. It consists of one eq. of alumina, which is a sesqui- oxide of aluminium, and three eqs. of sulphuric acid (A1203,3S03), and, when crystallized, contains 18 eqs. of water. The salt is, therefore, a tersulphate of alumina. It is known to be a sulphate by giving a precipitate with chloride of barium insoluble in nitric acid, and a salt of alumina by forming octohedral crys- tals of alum when its solution is evaporated with sulphate of potassa or ammonia. In consequence of its strong affinity for potassa, it is coming into use in the arts as a means of separating that alkali. ( Waltl.) Medical Properties and Uses. This salt is used only externally, as an astrin- gent and antiseptic. The salts of alumina generally have the property of op- posing animal putrefaction; but the sulphate is practically preferred. It has been used extensively in the Philadelphia Hospital, Blockley, at the suggestion of Dr. Dunglison, as an antiseptic and detergent application to ulcers, and with favourable results. The late Dr. Pennypacker reported several cases in which it proved useful. The strength of the solution employed varied from 3ijss to Jjiij of the salt to of water, according to the state of the ulcer. Dr. G. Johnson, of Georgia, found the solution attended with the happiest effects, used as an injec- tion in fetid discharges from the vagina. (Med. Exam., yi. 63 and 112.) M. Homolle employs a saturated solution with much advantage as a mild caustic in enlarged tonsils, nasal polypi, naevi, scrofulous and cancerous ulcers, diseases of the os uteri, and various chronic enlargements. He applies it daily by means of a hair pencil. He has sometimes found the solution to answer still better by the addition of oxide of zinc. Solution of sulphate of alumina is capable of dissolving a considerable quantity of recently precipitated gelatinous alumina. Such a solution, impregnated with benzoin, has been proposed by M. Mentel as a hemostatic, under the name of benzinated solution of alumina. It resembles the styptic liquid of Pagliari. (See page 166.) It is prepared by saturating, with gelatinous alumina, a solution made of eight ounces of sulphate of alumina dissolved in a pint of water. To the saturated solution six drachms of bruised amygdaloid benzoin are added, and the whole is kept at a temperature of about 150° for six hours, with occasional agitation; so that the liquid, after filtration, may have about the density D26. This liquid, put in a cool place for several days, so as to deposit some crystals of alum, forms the benzinated solution, re- markable for its very sweet odour, and astringent balsamic taste. Benzinated solution of alumina, diluted in the proportion of from two to five fluidrachms to the pint of water, has been found useful as an injection in leucorrhoea, and in ulcerations of the neck of the uterus, accompanied by fetid discharges. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1857, p. 128.) The aqueous solution of sulphate of alumina was found by M. Gannal to be effectual in preserving bodies for dissection, when injected into the blood-vessels. In summer the bodies were preserved fresh for twenty days or more; in winter, for three months. For use in winter, a quantity of the solution, sufficient for injecting one body, may be made by adding a pound, avoirdupois, of the salt to a quart of water; in warm weather, the solution must be stronger. B Ammonia PART II. AMMONIA. Preparations of Ammonia. In the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, all the liquid preparations of ammonia are arranged under other heads; and we follow the example of that work in making a similar disposition of them here. Hence, the reader will find the Water of Ammonia (Solution of Ammonia, U. S. 1850) under the or Waters; Solution of Acetate of Ammonia under the Liquores or Solutions; and the Spirit and Aromatic Spirit of Ammonia under the Spiritus or Spirits. AMMONIiE BENZOAS. Br. Benzoate of Ammonia. “Take of Solution of Ammonia three jluidounces [Imperial measure] ; Ben- zoic Acid two ounces [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water eight fuidounces. Dis- solve the Benzoic Acid in the Solution of Ammonia previously mixed with the Water; evaporate at a gentle heat; and set aside that crystals may form.” Br. Although the amount of ammonia ordered in the formula is in excess, yet, from the feeble affinity between the constituents, and the consequent escape of ammonia during the evaporation, a portion of the acid benzoate is formed, if the officinal directions are strictly complied with. This result, however, may be obviated by adding a little solution of ammonia from time to time during or near the close of the evaporation, so as to maintain the alkali in slight excess. The crystals, moreover, should be dried without heat. Professor Procter informs us that half the quantity of water directed in the formula, moderately heated, readily dissolves the acid after the addition of ammonia, and, on cooling, de- posits crystals of the benzoate. If slightly evaporated, and then allowed to cool, the solution becomes a mass of crystals, retaining so much water as to render it necessary to dry them by bibulous paper. Properties. A specimen of this salt, prepared at our request by Prof. Proc- ter, precisely in accordance with the directions of the Br. Pharmacopoeia, is in minute white, glistening, extremely thin four-sided laminae, having a slight odour of officinal benzoic acid, and a bitter, saline, somewhat balsamic taste, leaving a slight but persistent sense of acrimony on the tongue. The salt is soluble in water and alcohol, and when heated sublimes without residue; but is probably changed into the acid benzoate. Gmelin states that, if the solution be boiled, the salt is converted into the acid benzoate, which crystallizes in feathery tufts of needles. (Handbook, xii. 38.) According to Lichtenstein, it deliquesces in the air. It consists of one eq. of ammonia, one of benzoic acid, and two eqs. of water; one of the eqs. of water being derived from the acid and the other from the base, so that its formula is NH3,CUH503+2H0. But the Br. Pharmacopoeia considering hydrated ammonia as oxide of ammonium, gives the formula NH40, C14H503-|-H0. It gives a copious yellow precipitate with the salts of sesqui- oxide of iron; and is known to contain benzoic acid and ammonia, by deposit- ing the former when the solution is acidulated with muriatic acid, and giving off the latter when it is heated with potassa. (Br.) According to Mr. Squire, it is the acid salt that is commonly met with in the shops, which is less soluble than the officinal salt, requiring 60 parts of water and 12 of alcohol for solution. This is a decided objection to it. Medical Properties and Uses. Benzoate of ammonia is a slightly stimulant diuretic, but acts chiefly through its benzoic acid, being decomposed by the gastric acids, which combine with the ammonia, while the benzoic acid is ab- sorbed, and passes out through the kidneys in the form of hippuric acid. Under benzoic acid, it has been stated that the proportion of urea is diminished at the same time, giving rise to the supposition that the nitrogen of the hippuric acid is derived from that source. Dr. Garrod suggests that, as the elements of hip- puric acid are the same as those of benzoic acid and glycoeoll the hippuric PART II. Ammonia. 973 acid may be formed by a direct combination of these substances. The salt has been found useful as a diuretic in defective action of the kidneys, as an altera- tive to the mucous membrane of the urinary passages in chronic inflammation of that tissue, and as a solvent of the phosphatic deposits, through the hippuric acid into which it is converted. It has been employed in gouty affections with a view to the removal of the deposits of urate of soda about the joints; but it has been shown to have no effect on the elimination of uric acid. The salt does not appear to produce any injurious effects even in considerable quantities. (Garrod, Med. Times and Gaz., Feb. 1864, p. 146.) The dose is from 10 to 3C grains, which may be taken dissolved in water. W. AMMONITE PHOSPHAS. Br. Phosphate of Ammonia. “Take of Strong Solution of Ammonia eight jluidounces; Diluted Phos- phoric Acid twenty Jluidounces. Add the Solution of Ammonia to the Phos- phoric Acid; dissolve by a gentle heat the crystalline precipitate which forms; aud set the solution aside that crystals may again form. Remove the crystals, and, having dried them quickly on filtering paper placed on a porous brick, pre- serve them in a stoppered bottle. The mother liquor, if evaporated to half its bulk, will, upon being mixed with two fluidounces of Strong Solution of Am- monia, give additional crystals.” Br. This, like the preceding salt of ammonia, is a new officinal of the Br. Pharma- copoeia. According to the above process it is formed by a direct union of its constituents. The amount of water in the materials employed not being suffi- cient to hold in solution the whole of the phosphate formed, a portion of tho salt crystallizes. This is redissolved by a gentle heat, which is probably intended to produce a more thorough union of the ingredients. Upon cooling, there is a copious deposition of crystals; but, as much of the salt remains in the mother- liquor, a new crop of crystals is obtained by concentrating the liquid, and add- ing a further quantity of solution of ammonia. This is necessary in order to supply the place of the ammonia lost by volatilization, and to secure the par- ticular salt intended. The variety of phosphoric acid employed in this formula is the tribasic, which forms three salts with ammonia, one containing 3 eqs. of ammonia without basic water, which may be called the subphosphate, the second, two eqs. of ammonia and one of basic water, forming the neutral phosphate, and the third, one eq. of ammonia and two of basic water, forming the acid phos- phate. The first of these is the one intended by the British Council, and is re- presented by the formula 3NH40,P05-|-5H0. To prepare it, a constant excess of ammonia must be maintained, and this is done by compliance with the pro- cess, if the materials are of due strength. Without such a precaution, more or less of one of the other salts would be generated, in consequence of the escape of the alkali. For the same reason, it is necessary to avoid heat in the concen- tration; and hence the solutions of the acid and alkali employed are of such strength that the water they contain is insufficient to hold the resulting salt in solution, which, therefore, crystallizes without evaporation. Nevertheless, from the want of this precaution or from other cause, phosphate of ammonia of the shops is generally either the neutral or acid phosphate, or a mixture of the two. Properties. The officinal salt of the Br. Pharmacopoeia (3NH40,P05-J-5H0, or phosphate of the oxide of ammonium with 5 eqs. of water) is in large colour- less, transparent prisms, which have a slight ammoniacal odour, and, on expo- sure to the air, lose both ammonia and water, and become opaque. The salt is soluble in two parts of water {Squire), and its solution, if dilute, is not disagree- able to the taste. {Garrod.) It is insoluble in alcohol. When treated with caustic potassa it evolves ammonia, and with nitrate of silver gives a canary-yellow pre- cipitate, indicating that the acid is the tribasic phosphoric acid. “ If 20 grains be dissolved in water, and the solution of ammonio-sulphate of magnesia be added, a crystalline precipitate falls, which, when well washed on a filter with solution of 974 Ammonia. PART II. ammonia, diluted with an equal volume of water, dried, and heated to redness, leaves 1144 grains.” (Br.) The residue is pyrophosphate of magnesia, and its amount indicates the quantity of phosphoric acid contained in the salt. But, as before stated, this is not the salt usually found in the shops, which is either the neutral or acid phosphate, or a mixture of the two. The neutral salt (2NH40,H0,P06+H0) may be made by saturating the excess of acid in super- phosphate of lime by means of carbonate of ammonia. Phosphate of lime is precipitated, and phosphate of ammonia obtained in solution, which, being duly concentrated by a gentle heat, affords the salt in crystals upon cooling. The method of obtaining the superphosphate of lime is given under the head of phosphate of soda. (See Sodse Phosphas.) This variety of phosphate of ammonia is a white salt, crystallizing in six-sided tables, derived from oblique quadrangular prisms, efflorescent, soluble in alcohol, and in 4 parts of cold water. The solution has an alkaline somewhat saline taste, and an alkaline reaction, and gives out ammonia when heated. (Bridges, Fownes’ Chem., Am. ed., p. 234.) The acid phosphate (NH40,2II0,P05+4H0) is obtained by boiling a solu- tion of either of the other salts so long as ammonia escapes, and then crystalli- zing. Its crystals are four-sided prisms, permanent in the air, of an acid taste and reaction, and soluble in 5 parts of cold water. {Bridges.) In a specimen of the common phosphate of ammonia of the shops which came under our notice, we recognised both the tabular crystals of the neutral phosphate with two eqs. of am- monia, having a saline slightly acrid taste, and neutral in reaction, and the prism of the acid salt, with a sour and saline taste and decided acid reaction. W. Medical Properties and Uses. This salt was first brought to the notice of the profession, as a remedy for gout and rheumatism, by Dr. T. II. Buckler, of Balti- more, in a paper published in the Am. Journal of the Medical Sciences for Jan. 1846. In this paper a number of cases of these diseases are reported, which were treated mainly by this remedy by Dr. Buckler and several of his medical friends, and with apparently good effects. Dr. Buckler was led to employ the salt on theoretical grounds. He conceived that the “matter of gout” consisted of two salts, the urates of soda and lime, existing in the blood ; and that the phosphate of ammonia, by reacting with them, would give rise to soluble salts. The new salts formed, if the double decomposition should take place, would be urate of ammonia, and the phosphates of soda and lime. Unfortunately for this theory, as furnishing the means of eliminating uric acid, urate of ammonia is not more soluble than urate of soda. Nevertheless, apart from all theory, the therapeutic powers of phosphate of ammonia deserve to be investigated. Since the publi- cation of Dr. Buckler’s paper, several practitioners, both in this country and in Europe, have employed the remedy with apparently useful results in chronic- gout, and certain urinary diseases. The dose of the salt is from ten to forty grains, three or four times a day, dissolved in a tablespoouful of water. B. AMMONITE VALERIANAS. U.S. Valerianate of Ammonia. “Take of Valerianic Acid four fluidounces. From a mixture, placed in a suitable vessel, of Muriate of Ammonia, in coarse powder, and an equal weight of Lime, previously slaked and in powder, obtain gaseous ammonia, and cause it to pass, first through a bottle filled with pieces of Lime, and afterwards into the Valerianic Acid, contained in a tall, narrow, glass vessel, until the Acid is neutralized. Then discontinue the process, and set the vessel aside that the Va- lerianate of Ammonia may crystallize. Lastly, break the salt into pieces, drain it in a glass funnel, dry it on bibulous paper, and keep it in a well-stopped bot- tle.” U. S. This is a new officinal of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Much difficulty was ex- perienced by manufacturing chemists in procuring crystallized valerianate of am- monia, until, after a series of experiments, Mr. B. J. Crew, of Philadelphia, ascertained that it was necessary to employ the monohydrated valerianic acid, PART II. Ammonia. 975 as the ordinary acid with three eqs. of water could not be successfully employed for the purpose. The officinal formula is based upon that of Mr. Crew, pub- lished in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (March, 1860, p. 109). In this formula the monohydrated valerianic acid, procured by a special process (see Acidurn Vale- rianicum, page 942), is saturated with gaseous ammonia obtained in the usual manner from a mixture of muriate of ammonia and lime. The saturation is known to have been effected when litmus paper is no longer acted on. During the ope- ration heat is developed sufficient to prevent premature crystallization, and, when the saturation is completed, nothing more is necessary than to allow the solu- tion to cool. Crystallization soon begins, and in a few hours the contents of the vessel become a nearly solid mass of crystals. Properties. Thus prepared, valerianate of ammonia is in snow-white, pearly, four-sided, tabular crystals, perfectly dry, of an offensive odour like that of va- lerianic acid, and a sharp sweetish taste. Instead of deliquescing, whenever exposed to the air, as happened to the salt formerly procured, it undergoes this change only in a moist atmosphere, and effloresces when the air is dry. It is very soluble both in water and alcohol. Exposed to heat it is in great measure volatilized unchanged; but a small portion, by giving off a part of its ammonia, is converted into the acid valerianate. Its formula, viewed as a salt of hydrated ammonia, is NIT3HO,C]0H9O3, as a salt of oxide of ammonium C10H9O3. It is known to be a salt of ammonia by giving off this gas when treated with potassa, and of valerianic acid by the separation of this acid, and its ap- pearance on the surface in the form of an oil, when the salt is decomposed in solution by a mineral acid. W. Medical Properties. Valerianate of ammonia is not poisonous. Given to dogs in the dose of 150 grains, it produced no inconvenience. As a therapeutic agent it was first brought to the notice of the profession, in 1856, by M. Declat, of Paris, who published a paper in that year, going to show its remarkable efficacy in the treatment of neuralgia. The preparation which he used was a solution of valerianate of ammonia of uniform strength, made according to the recipe of M. Pierlot, an apothecary of Paris, which had been extensively given to the epileptics of the Salpetriere and the Bicetre. Since then it has been used in va- rious diseases, principally of the nervous system; such as hysteria, epilepsy, chorea, &c. The favourable report of its efficacy in neuralgia, made by M. De- clat, has been confirmed by practitioners in Paris, London, and Dublin. The dose of the salt is from two to eight grains, dissolved in water. As now pre- pared, it may be made into pills without inconvenience; and, properly coated so as to conceal their disagreeable odour, they are probably the best form for the administration of the salt. M. Pierlot made his solution, mentioned above, by dissolving a drachm of valerianic acid in thirty-two drachms of distilled water, saturating the solution with carbonate of ammonia, and adding to the salt formed, two scruples of the alcoholic extract of valerian. According to M. Pier- lot, the latter addition is necessary in order to preserve the preparation from change; for a simple solution of the ammoniacal salt is rapidly decomposed. It will keep still better if the extract, when added to the solution, be mixed with a fluidounce of diluted alcohol, while but 24 drachms of distilled water are used, so as to preserve the measure. The solution of M. Pierlot is neutral, of a brown colour, and a strong odour of valerian. It contains l-25th of its weight of the pure salt. The dose is from six to thirty drops, given in water or on a lump of sugar. (Ann. de Therap., 1857, p. 55.)* 13. * Elixir of Valerianate of Ammonia. Various attempts have been made to prepare a for- mula for the exhibition of valerianate of ammonia, which shall in some measure cover its offensiveness. The following, which has been considerably used in this city, under the name above given, is perhaps as suitable as any that has been proposed. Take of Vale- rianate of Ammonia gi; Fluid Extract of Vanilla Compound Tincture of Cardamom I'gvi, Curajoa Water fjiv. Mix. Dose, a teaspoonful three times a day. 976 Antimonium. PART II. ANTIMONIUM. Preparations of Antimony. In arranging the Preparations of Antimony, it has been deemed expedient to follow the example of the Pharmacopoeias, in placing them in a strictly alpha- betical order; and, as relates to the Solution of Terchloride of Antimony and the Wine of Antimony, to obey the same authority in transferring them, the one to the Solutions, the other to the Wines, where they properly belong through the character of their menstrua. ANTIMONII ET POTASSiE TARTRAS. U.S. Antimonium Tar- taratum. Br. Antimonium Tartarizatum . Ed., Dub. Tartrate of Anti- mony and Potassa. Tartarated Antimony. Tartarized Antimony. Tartar Emetic. “Take of Oxide of Antimony, in very fine powder, two troyounces; Bitar- trate of Potassa, in very fine powder, tico troyounces and a half; Distilled Water eighteen fiuidounces. To the Water, heated to the boiling point in a glass vessel, add the powders, previously mixed, and boil for an hour; then fil- ter the liquid while hot, and set it aside that crystals may form. Lastly, dry the crystals, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle. By further evaporation the mother-water may be made to yield more crystals, which should be purified by a second crystallization.” U. S. “ Take of Oxide of Antimony five ounces [avoirdupois]; Acid Tartrate of Pot- ash, in fine powder, six ounces [avoird.] ; Distilled Water two pints [Imperial measure]. Mix the Oxide of Antimony and Tartrate of Potash with sufficient Distilled Water to form a paste, and set aside for twenty-four hours. Then add the remainder of the Water and boil for a quarter of an hour, stirring frequently. Filter, and set aside the clear filtrate to crystallize. Pour off the mother-liquor, evaporate to one-third, and set aside that more crystals may form. Dry the crystals on filtering paper at the temperature of the air.” Br. This preparation is a double salt, consisting of tartrate of potassa, united with tartrate of teroxide of antimony. The principle of its formation is exceedingly simple, being merely the saturation of the excess of acid in the bitartrate (cream of tartar) with the teroxide. The officinal processes consist in boiling a mixture of cream of tartar and of pure teroxide obtained by a distinct process. (See An- timonii Oxidum.) This conforms with the formula of the late Dublin Pharma- copoeia, and is an improvement of the U. S. formula of 1850, in which the oxy- chloride of antimony, or powder of Algaroth, was the form of oxide used, and was prepared from the sulphuret as the first step of the process. In the late London formula the teroxide used was in the form of disulphate of antimony, which was originally proposed by the late Mr. Phillips, so early as 1811. It was prepared in the following manner. By gently heating sulphuric acid with tersulphuret of antimony, the metal was teroxidized at the expense of part of the acid, sulphurous acid was evolved, and sulphur set free. By gradu- ally increasing the heat until dryness was produced, the whole of the sulphurous acid was driven off, the free sulphur was burnt out, and nothing remained but the teroxide, united with sulphuric acid in the form of tersulphate of teroxide of antimony. This, by continued washing, was converted into the anhydrous disulphate of the teroxide (2Sb03,S03). (Phillips.) The disulphate was then mixed with cream of tartar in the proportion of nine parts by weight to ten, and the mixture boiled with water in the usual manner. This process is an eligible one, and has the merit of being economical. According to Mr. Phillips, it affords “a very pure and beautiful salt.” In the preparation of tartar emetic several circumstances should be taken into view. The cream of tartar should not be in excess; as in that case it is apt to Antimonium. 977 PART II. crystallize, upon cooling, with the tartar emetic. To avoid such a result it is better to have a slight excess of antimonial oxide. No rule is applicable to the determination of the proper proportion of water, except that it should be suffi- cient to dissolve the tartar emetic formed. The hot filtration, directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, may be conveniently performed by means of the tin appa- ratus, devised by Dr. Hare for filtering liquids at the point of ebullition. (See pp. 881, 882.) The U. S. Pharmacopoeia boils for an hour; the British for fifteen minutes. In all cases the salt should be obtained in well defined crystals, un- mixed with those of cream of tartar, as the best index of its purity. The prac- tice of some manufacturing chemists of boiling the filtered liquor to dryness, whereby an impure mass is obtained, consisting in part only of the antimonial salt, is very reprehensible. It is not easy to decide as to the relative eligibility of the different forms of antimonial oxide, used for preparing tartar emetic. The preference, however, was given to the oxychloride (powder of Algaroth) by Berzelius ; and M. Henry, an eminent pharmaceutist of Paris, after a careful comparison of the different processes, declared also in its favour. This testimony in favour of the oxychloride induced the revisers of our national Pharmacopoeia, in 1830, to adopt it for making tartar emetic; but it was abandoned at the late revision, and the pure oxide was adopted in its place, in conformity with the Dublin formula, which is that of the Br. Pharmacopoeia; so that the two Pharmacopoeias are in accord- ance in the mode of preparing this important salt. M. Henry has given a process for preparing tartar emetic with the oxy- chloride on a large scale; and, as his formula may be useful to the manufacturing chemist, we subjoin it, turning the French weights into the nearest apothecaries' weights and measures. Take of prepared sulphuret of antimony, in very fine powder, three pounds four ounces; muriatic acid, marking 22° (sp. gr. 1-178), eighteen pounds and a half; nitric acid, two ounces and a half. Introduce the sulphuret into a glass matrass, of a capacity double the volume of the mixture to be formed; and add to it from three to five pounds of the acids previously mixed, so that the sulphuret may be thoroughly penetrated by them; then add the remainder of the acids. Place the matrass on a sand-bath, and heat the mixture gradually to ebullition, avoiding the vapours, which are disengaged in large quantity. Continue the heat until the vapours given off are so far deprived of sulphuretted hydrogen as not to blacken white paper moistened with solution of acetate of lead; after which allow the liquor to cool, and to remain at rest until it has become clear. Decant the clear liquor, and, in order to procure the portion of liquid which may be retained by the moist residue, add to this a small portion of muriatic acid, and again decant. Mix the decanted liquids, which consist of a solution of terchloride of antimony, and add them to a large quan- tity of water, in order that the oxychloride may be precipitated; taking care, during their addition, to stir constantly in order that the precipitated powder may be more minutely divided, to facilitate its subsequent washing. To deter- mine whether the water has been sufficient to decompose the whole of the ter- chloride, a part of the supernatant liquid, after the subsidence of the powder, is to be added to a fresh portion of water; and, if a precipitate take place, more water must be added to the mixture, so as to obtain the largest possible product of oxychloride. The precipitation being completely effected, wash the powder repeatedly with water, until this no longer affects litmus, and place it on linen to drain for twenty-four hours. The quantity of oxychloride thus obtained will be about three pounds and a half in the moist state, or two pounds nine ounces when dry. Assuming it to be this quantity, mix it with three pounds eleven ounces of cream of tartar, in fine powder, and add the mixture to two gallons and five pints of boiling water, contained in an iron kettle. Concentrate the iquor rapidly until it marks 25° of Baume’s hvdrometer for salts, and then fil- Antimonium. PART ll. ter. By rppose the liquor furnishes a crop of very pure crystals, which require only to be dried. The mother-waters are treated in the following manner. Satu- rate the excess of acid with chalk, filter, and concentrate to 25°. By cooling a second crop of crystals will be obtained; and, by proceeding in a similar manner, even a third crop. But these crystals are somewhat coloured, and must be puri- fied by recrystallization. In relation to the above process, it may be observed that the proportion of oxychloride and cream of tartar must be adjusted according to the numbers given, on the assumption that the former is dry; but it by no means follows that the whole of the oxide should be dried. To proceed thus would be a waste of time. The mode of proceeding is to weigh the whole of the moist oxide, and afterwards to weigh a small part of it, and ascertain how much this loses in drying. Then, by a calculation, it is easy to determine how much the whole of the moist oxide would weigh in the dry state. Tartar emetic is not usually prepared by the apothecary, but made on a large scale by the manufacturing chemist. Different processes are pursued in different manufactories; and it is not material what plan is adopted, provided the crys- tals of the antimonial salt are carefully purified. In an extensive manufactory in London, antimony ash (see page 122) is employed for boiling with the cream of tartar, and it is stated to form the cheapest material for making tartar emetic. (Pereira's Mat. Med.) Mohr prefers the use of a moist oxide, prepared by add- ing gradually an intimate mixture of one part, each, of tersulphuret of antimony and nitrate of potassa, to a boiling mixture of one part of sulphuric acid and two of water. The liquid is boiled down nearly to dryness and allowed to cool. The grayish-white mass, thus formed, is then washed thoroughly with water. The details of this process are given by Soubeiran, by whom it is praised, in the Journ. de Pliarm., 3e ser., iii. 327. Properties, &c. Tartrate of antimony and potassa was discovered in 1031 by Adrian de Mynsicht. It is in the form of transparent, colourless crystals, which possess a nauseous, metallic, styptic taste, and have usually the form of rhombic octohedrons. When prepared from the oxychloride it crystallizes in tetrahedrons. As it occurs in the shops, it is in the form of a white powder, re- sulting from the pulverization of the crystals. The crystals, when exposed to the air, effloresce slightly, and become white and opaque. They are insoluble in alcohol, but dissolve in proof spirit or wiue.* (See Vinum Antimonii.) They are soluble in about 15 parts of water at 60° (in 20 parts, U. S., Br.), and in between 2 and 3 parts of boiling water. The late Dr. Perceval, of Dublin, alleged that good tartar emetic dissolves in twelve parts of water, and this state- ment agrees nearly with the results of Brandes, who found it to be soluble in 12 65 parts of water at 70°. Its aqueous solution slightly reddens litmus, and undergoes decomposition by keeping. If one-fifth of its bulk of alcohol be added to the water, the decomposition is prevented. It is incompatible with acids, al- kalies and their carbonates, some of the earths and metals, chloride of calcium, and acetate and subacetate of lead. It is incompatible also with astringent infu- sions and decoctions, as of rhubarb, cinchona, catechu, galls, &c.; but these sub- stances, unless galls be an exception, do not render it inert, though they lessen its activity to a greater or less extent. Characteristics and Tests of Purity. Tartar emetic, when pure, exhibits its appropriate crystalline form. A crystal or two, dropped into a solution of hydro- sulphuric acid, will be covered with an orange-coloured deposit of tersulphuret of antimony; and hydrosulphurie acid gas causes an orange-red precipitate with * Alcohol precipitates it from its aqueous solution, and Mr. T. S. Wiegand proposes as a convenient method of obtaining it in fine powder, to boil an ounce of it in four times its weight of water, and to pour the solution into a pint an! a half of 95 per cent, alcohol. (Aw. Journ. of Fliarm., Sept. 1858, p. 407.) PART II Antimonium. its solution. One hundred grains of the salt, dissolved in water, Yield forty-nine grains of tersulphuret with this test. (Lond. Pharm., 1851.) “An Imperial fluid ounce of distilled water (437 5 grains) dissolves 20 grains at 60° without resi- due; and the solution gives with sulphuretted hydrogen an orange precipitate, which, when washed and dried at 212°, weighs 9 91 grains.” (Br.) Entire solu bility in water is not a character belonging exclusively to the pure salt, for according to the late Mr. Hennell, tartar emetic may contain 10 per cent, oi uncombined cream of tartar, and yet be wholly soluble in the proper proportion of water. (Phillips.) This being the case, the character, given in the U. S. and Edinburgh Pharmacopoeias, of entire solubility in twenty parts of water, is not to be depended upon. A dilute solution is not precipitated by chloride of barium or nitrate of silver, nor rendered blue by ferrocyanide of potassium. A solution, containing one part of the salt in forty of water, is not disturbed by an equal volume of a solution of eight parts of acetate of lead in thirty-two of water and fifteen of acetic acid. This test is adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia from the Edinburgh, and is intended to show the absence of uncombined bitartrate of po- tassa; for, when the acidulated acetate is used as here directed, it does not form the white tartrate of lead with the pure antimonial salt, but only with the bitar- trate, when this happens to be present. The acidulated acetate is said to be capable of detecting 1 per cent, of this impurity in tartar emetic; but Dr. Chris- tison finds difficulties in using this test which render it too precarious for prac- tice. Mr. Hennell’s method of detecting uncombined bitartrate, is to add a few drops of a solution of carbonate of soda to a boiling solution of the antimonial salt. If the precipitate formed is not redissolved, no bitartrate is present. The impurities found in tartar emetic are uncombined cream of tartar from faulty preparation or fraudulent admixture, tartrate of lime, iron, sulphates, and chlorides. The mode of detecting cream of tartar has been indicated above. Tartrate of lime is derived from the cream of tartar, which always contains this impurity. It is apt to form on the surface of the crystals of tartar emetic in crys- talline tufts, which are easily brushed off. Iron is sometimes present, especially when the antimonial salt has been prepared from glass of antimony. It is de- tected by a blue colour being immediately produced by ferrocyanide of potas- sium, added after a little acetic acid. If the blue colour be slowly produced, it may arise from reactions on the iron of the ferrocyanide itself. If much iron be present, the solution of the tartar emetic will be yeliow instead of colourless. Sulphates are detected by chloride of barium. The presence of a chloride is shown by a precipitate being produced by nitrate of silver, added to a dilute solution. According to Serullas, tartar emetic, except when well crystallized, and all the other antimonial preparations usually contain a minute proportion of arsenic, derived from the native tersulphuret of antimony, which almost always contains this dangerous metal. For the mode of detecting it, see Acidum Arse- niosum. Tartar emetic should always be bought by the apothecary in good crystals, in which state the salt is pure, or very nearly so, and entirely free from arsenic. Its powder is perfectly white; and, when it is yellowish-white, iron is probably present. It is said that some druggists ignorantly prefer a tartar emetic which is yellowish-white in powder. It has been already stated, in general terms, that tartar emetic in solution is incompatible with acids and alkalies, and with some of the earths; but this salt ;s so important, that some details in regard to the effects of particular reagents, included under these titles, seem to be necessary. Muriatic and sulphuric acids, added to a solution of the antimonial salt, not too dilute, throw down a white precipitate of terchloride or subsulphate of antimony, mixed with cream of tartar, which is redissolved by an excess of the precipitant. Nitric acid throws down a subuitrate. which is taken up by an excess of it. When caustic potassa is added to a tolerably concentrated solution, it produces at first no effect, then a precipi- Antimonium. PART II. tate of teioxicfe, and afterwards the solution of this precipitate, if the addition of the alkali be continued. Lime-water acts in a weaker solution, and throws down a white precipitate, consisting of the mixed tartrates of lime and antimony. Car- bonate of potassa affects still weaker solutions, throwing down a white precipi- tate of teroxide; but this test does not act in solutions containing less than a quarter of a grain to the fluidounce. Ammonia, both pure and carbonated, pre- cipitates a solution of tartar emetic, throwing down the pure teroxide. To these reagents may be added infusion of galls, which, when fresh and strong, causes a dirty, yellowish-white precipitate of tannate of teroxide of antimony. Composition. Tartar emetic consists of two eqs. of tartaric acid 132, one of potassa 47-2, one of teroxide of antimony 153, and two of water 18 = 350 2. It is evident that it contains tartaric acid and potassa in the proportion to form bitartrate of potassa or cream of tartar; and, accordingly, it may be viewed as a compound of one eq. of cream of tartar, and one of antimonial teroxide. The excess of acid in the bitartrate may be considered as united with the teroxide; and on that view it is a double salt, composed of tartrate of potassa, with tar- trate of teroxide of antimony. The U. S. name assumes it to be a double salt. According to the view of the bibasic character of tartaric acid, which now begins to prevail, tartar emetic consists of one eq., each, of teroxide of antimony, po- tassa, and tartaric acid, with two eqs. of water (SbO3.KO,C8H4O10 -f- 2HO) ; the equivalent number of the acid being doubled. Medical Properties and Uses. Tartrate of antimony and potassa is the most important of the antimonials, and is capable of fulfilling numerous indications in disease. Its general action is that of a sedative to the circulation; while, on the contrary, it excites most of the secretions. According to the dose, and the peculiar circumstances under which it is administered, it acts variously as an alterative, diaphoretic, diuretic, expectorant, purgative, and emetic. In minute doses it is employed with a view to its alterative effects, and has been found use- ful in diseases of the skin. In such doses it has been given with alleged benefit in various chronic pulmonary affections, but especially in phthisis. In phthisical cases it was prescribed in this way, in 1818, by Lanthois, of Montpellier, and sometimes with advantage; and afterwards, with encouraging results, by others. In the beginning of phthisis, the remedy, in these minute doses, may have exer- cised a meliorating effect by its influence on the bronchial inflammation which so constantly attends this disease. In small doses, mostly associated with saline remedies, such as nitre or sulphate of magnesia, and assisted by copious dilution, it is frequently resorted to in febrile complaints, for the purpose of producing perspiration, which is often freely induced, especially if the remedy gives rise to nausea. If the surface be exposed to cool air, so as to constrict the pores, the tendency will be to the kidneys, with the effect of producing an increased flow of urine. It also proves useful, on many occasions, in pulmonary and bronchial dis- ease as an expectorant; and with a view to its action in this way, it is conjoined with squill, ammoniac, and similar remedies. In full doses it acts as an emetic, and is characterized by certainty, strength, and permanency of operation. It re- mains longer in the stomach than ipecacuanha, produces more frequent and longer continued efforts to vomit, and exerts a more powerful impression on the system. The nausea and attendant prostration are often very considerable. As an emetic its use is indicated where the object is not merely to evacuate the stomach, but to agitate and compress the liver and other abdominal viscera. By the extension of its action to the duodenum, it often causes copious discharges of bile, and may thus prove useful when there is a morbid excess of that secretion. It is employed as an emetic in jaundice, hooping-cough, and croup, and in several diseases of the nervous system, such as mania, amaurosis, tic douloureux, &c. In efforts t-* reduce old dislocations, its relaxing power over the muscles when it nauseates, is taken advantage of, to facilitate the operation. Tartar emetic often incident PART II. Antimonium. 981 ally produces purging. In reference to this tendency, practitioners are in the habit of adding it to purgatives, the operation of which it promotes in a remark able degree. It is contraindicated in diseases of great debility, in the advanced stages of febrile affections, and in fevers with irritability of stomach. Of late years, on the continent of Europe, and to some extent in Great Britain and this country, tartar emetic has been given in large doses, with a view to its sedative, or, as it is usually termed, contrastimulant operation. This practice originated with Rasori, professor of clinical medicine at Milan, who published his views in 1800. The principal diseases in which it has been thus used are pneumonia, pleurisy, bronchitis, acute rheumatism, especially of the joints, arti- cular dropsies, chorea, hydrocephalus, and apoplexy. The medicine is directed in doses, varying from a grain to two grains or more, every two hours, dissolved in a small quantity of water; the patient being restricted in the use of drinks whilst under its operation. It is stated that, when the remedy is thus given in diseases of high action, it seldom produces vomiting, an effect which the author of the practice wished to avoid. The power of the system to bear large doses of tartar emetic, during the existence of acute diseases, was considered by Rasori to depend upon the coexisting morbid excitement, and the capability of bearing them was expressed by the term tolerance. It is in pneumonia especially that the contrastimulant practice has most advocates. It is admitted to have the effect of lowering the force and frequency of the pulse, and the rapidity of the respirations; and, in not a few instances, produces marked remedial effects. In pleurisy and bronchitis, the advantages of the same practice are less decided. Though we are disposed to admit the controlling influence of tartar emetic, when thus exhibited, in the diseases named; yet we by no means think that its use should supersede blood-letting, or even form our chief reliance. In cases, how- ever, in which blood-letting, both general and local, has no effect, or has been carried as far as the circumstances of the case will warrant, tartar emetic, ad- ministered on the contrastimulant plan, may be found useful. In croup the remedy proves efficacious not merely by the free vomiting which it produces, but, if given in large doses, on the contrastimulant principle. If the tolerance cannot be otherwise established, laudanum may be conjoined with the antimonial, in order to bring it about. In the treatment of articular dropsies, the decided benefit derived from large doses of tartar emetic is fully shown by M. Gimelle, who has reported twenty-eight successful cases. The medicine was gradually increased from four grains to sixteen or twenty daily, and, generally, the toler- ance was established on the first day. The effusion was absorbed in a space of time varying from eight to sixteen days. Tartar emetic has been used with suc- cess in delirium tremens; the antimonial being sometimes given alone, at other times conjoined with opium or laudanum. This practice originated with the late Dr. Joseph Klapp, of this city. Tartar emetic, in the form of enema, has been used with great benefit, in rigidity of the os uteri, by Dr. James Young, and by Dr. H. R. Storer, of Boston. The formula employed by Dr. Young was one grain of the antimonial salt to six fiuidounces of warm water. Externally, tartar emetic is often employed as a counter-irritant, mixed with lard or cerate, or in the form of a plaster. (See Unguentum Antimonii and Emplastrum Antimonii.) It causes, after a longer or shorter interval, a burning sensation, accompanied by a peculiar and painful pustular eruption. This mode of producing counter-irritation is serviceable in a number of diseases; but par- ticularly in deep-seated pains, spinal irritation, hooping-cough, and chronic in- flammation of the chest threatening consumption. Care must be taken, when the salt is applied by means of a plaster, that the pustular inflammation does not oroceed too far; as, in that event, it produces deep and very painful ulcerations, difficult to heal. According to M. Guerin, inflamed parts exhibit a condition of 982 Antimonium. PAltT II. toleram j to the local effects of tartar emetic, evinced by the absence of postula- tion. In support of this view, he asserts that he has treated hundreds of cases of acuta arthralgia with tartar emetic ointment with the best effects, mostly without the production of any eruption; and, when the pustules were produced, the benefit accrued before they appeared. When no pustulation follows, M. Guerin supposes that the antimony acts by absorption. Tartar emetic is generally given in solution, and in an amount which varies with the object in view in its administration. Its dose as an alterative is from the thirty-second to the sixteenth of a grain; as a diaphoretic or expectorant, from the twelfth to the sixth of a grain; and as a nauseating sudorific, from a quarter to half a grain ; repeated, according to circumstances, every hour, two, or four hours. With a view to its alterative effect, a pint of water, containing from one-quarter to half a grain, may be taken daily as drink. If required to act as a purgative, a grain may be dissolved in half a pint of water with an ounce of Epsom salt, and two tablespoonfuls of the solution given every two or three hours. As an emetic the full dose is from two to three grains; though it is usually given in the dose of a grain, dissolved in a tablespoonful of water, re- peated every ten or fifteen minutes till it vomits; the operation being aided by warm water or chamomile tea. It is often conjoined with ipecacuanha, in the proportion of one or two grains to twenty of that emetic. For convenient ad- ministration in small doses, the Pharmacopoeias direct it dissolved in wine. It is given very conveniently to children in dilute aqueous solution, which, being nearly tasteless, is readily taken by them. In all cases it should be used with caution; as it sometimes acts even in small doses with unexpected violence. Effects as a Poison. The symptoms of acute poisoning by tartar emetic are an austere metallic taste; nausea; copious vomiting; frequent hiccough; burn- ing pain in the stomach; colic; frequent stools and tenesmus; fainting; small, contracted, and accelerated pulse; coldness of the skin ; sometimes intense heat; difficult respiration ; loss of sense ; convulsive movements; very painful cramps in the legs; prostration, and death. Ten grains is the smallest dose reported to have proved fatal. To the above effects is sometimes added difficulty of de- glutition. Occasionally vomiting and purging do not take place; and, when they are absent, the other symptoms are aggravated. Sometimes a pustular eruption is produced, like that caused by the external application of the antimonial; as in a case reported by Dr. J. T. Gleaves, of Tennessee. These are the effects, observed in different cases, on the healthy economy; but doses which, taken in health, would prove fatal, are sometimes borne with safety in certain morbid states of the system, attended with acute inflammation. The effects of slow poisoning by tartar emetic on inferior animals have been carefully studied by Dr. B. W. Richardson, of London, and Dr. Nevins, of Liver- pool. All the surfaces absorb the solution of the salt, and the metal is found in all the tissues after death, except that of the brain ; but most abundantly in that of the liver. The elimination of the poison is effected by all the secreting organs, but especially by the kidneys. The tolerance of antimony is attributed by Dr. Richardson to the eliminating action of these glands. The pathological appear auces are general congestion, marked fluidity of the blood, and intense vascu larity of the stomach and sometimes of the rectum, but without ulceration. Nr other pulmonary lesion occurs but simple congestion. (See Am. Journ. of Med Sci., Jan. 1851, p. 266.) The general results obtained by Dr. Richardson are con- firmed by the experiments of Dr. Nevins. (Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1857, p. 415.) In treating a case of poisoning by tartar emetic, if it is found that the patient has not vomited, immediate recourse must be had to tickling the throat with a feather, and the use of abundance of warm water. Usually, however, the vomit- ing is excessive and distressing; and here it is necessary to dse remedies calc it lated to decompose the poison, and to allay the pain and irritation. To < ffec*i the PAET II. Antimonium. former object, astringent decoctions and infusions, such as of Peruvian bark and common tea, are recommended as antidotes. These, however, act but im- perfectly, according to M. Toulmouche, who found that a decoction of cinchona had usually no power in lessening the emetic effect of this antimonial. Similar observations had been made by Dr. Clutterbuck. {Pereira.) The decoction of galls acts more decidedly; but M. Toulmouche accords the preference to the galls in substance. A case of poisoning with half an ounce of tartar emetic, suc- cessfully treated with copious draughts of green tea and large doses of tannin, is reported by Dr. S. A. McCreery, of the U. S. Navy. {Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1853, p. 131.) Galls no doubt act by their tannin, which forms, with the antimonial part of the salt, the insoluble and probably inert tannate of antimony. To stop the vomiting and relieve pain, laudanum should be given, either by the mouth or by injection, and to combat consecutive inflammation, leeches to the epigastrium and other antiphlogistic measures may be resorted to. After death from suspected poisoning by tartar emetic, it is necessary to search for the poison in the body. The contents of the stomach should be digested in water, acidulated with muriatic and tartaric acids. The former acid will serve to coagulate organic matter; the latter to give complete solubility to the antimony. The solution obtained, after having been filtered, should be subjected to a stream of sulphuretted hydrogen, which, if tartar emetic be present, will throw down the orange-red tersulphuret of antimony, distinguished from tersulphuret of arsenic and all other precipitates by forming with hot muriatic acid a solution, from which, when added to water, a white curdy precipitate of oxychloride of antimony (powder of Algaroth) is thrown down. Sulphuretted hydrogen is by far the most delicate test for tartar emetic. Sometimes the antimony cannot be found in the stomach and bowels, and yet may exist in other parts. When it leaves the alimentary canal, it has been found by Orfila especially in the liver and kidneys, and their secretions. The mode of extracting the antimony, recommended by Orfila, is to carbonize the dried vis- cera with pure concentrated nitric acid in a porcelain capsule, to boil the char- red mass obtained for half an hour with muriatic acid, assisted with a little nitric acid, to filter the liquor, and introduce it into Marsh’s apparatus. Anti- moniuretted hydrogen will be formed, which, being inflamed, will deposit the antimony on a cold surface of porcelain as a black stain, distinguishable from the similar stain produced by arsenic by its less volatility, and by its forming, with hot muriatic acid, a solution which affords a white precipitate of oxychlo- "ide of antimony when added to water. Reinsch’s process is a good one for separating antimony from the tissues, and was first used for that purpose by Dr. Alfred Taylor, of London. (See page 34.) The tissues are boiled in muriatic acid, and a bright slip of copper is immersed iu the hot solution. The metallic film, deposited on the copper, must be proved to be antimony. This is done by Dr. Odling by first boiling the coated copper in a solution of permanganate of potassa, with a little excess of potassa, for a few minutes, whereby the antimony becomes oxidized and dissolved, and then passing sulphuretted hydrogen through the filtered and acidulated solution. The characteristic orange-red precipitate of tersulphuret of antimony is pro- duced, which may be tested for antimony as above mentioned. Mr. H. H. Wat- son has simplified Dr. Odling’s process by dispensing with the use of the per- manganate of potassa. He subjects the coated copper slip, in a tube, to a boiling very dilute solution of caustic potassa, the metal being alternately drawn out of and immersed in the solution, by the aid of a copper wire, until the whole of Tie coating is oxidized and dissolved. The solution is then treated as directed 5y Dr. Odling. {Med. Times and Gaz., July, 1857,‘page 613.) Off Prep. Eraplastrum Antimonii, U. S.; Syrupus Scillse- Compositus, U. S.; Unguentum Antimonii; Yinum Antimonii. B. Antimonium. PART II. ANTlMONII OXIDUM. U.S.,Br. Oxide of Antimony. “Take of Sulphuret of Antimony, in very fine powder, four troyounces; Muriatic Acid eighteen troyounces; Nitric Acid a troyounce and one hundred and twenty grains; Water of Ammonia a Jluidounce and a half; Water, Dis- tilled Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Introduce the Sulphuret into a flask, of the capacity of two pints, and, having added the Muriatic Acid, digest, by means of a sand-bath, until effervescence ceases. Then, having removed the flask from the sand-bath, add the Nitric Acid gradually; and, when nitrous acid vapours cease to be given off, and the liquid has grown cold, add to it half a pint of Water, and filter. Pour the filtered liquid gradually into twelve pints of Water, constantly stirring, and allow the precipitate to subside. Decant the supernatant liquid, and wash the precipitate twice by decantation, using, each time, eight pints of Water. Then transfer it to a muslin filter to drain, and, after the draining is completed, wash it with Water until the washings cease to have an acid reaction. Next introduce it into a suitable vessel, and subject it to the action of the Water of Ammonia for two hours; at the end of which time, transfer it to a moistened muslin filter, and wash it with Distilled Water as long as the washings produce a precipitate with nitrate of silver. Lastly, dry the precipitate upon bibulous paper with the aid of a gentle heat.” U.S. “Take of Solution of Terchloride of Antimony sixteen Jluidounces; Carbo- nate of Soda five ounces [avoirdupois] ; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Pour the Antimonial Solution into the Water, mix thoroughly, and set aside until the precipitate which forms shall have sub- sided. Ilernovethe supernatant liquid by a siphon, add one gallon [Imp.meas.] of Distilled Water, agitate well, let the precipitate subside, again withdraw the fluid, and repeat the process of affusion of Distilled Water, agitation, and sub- sidence, until the fluid has only a feeble acid reaction on litmus paper. To the precipitate add the Carbonate of Soda previously dissolved in two pints [Imp. meas.] of Distilled Water, leave them in contact for half an hour, stirring fre- quently, collect the deposit on a calico filter, and wash with boiling distilled water until the washings cease to give a precipitate with a solution of nitrate of silver acidulated by nitric acid. Lastly, dry the product at a heat not exceeding 212 °.”Br. In the IT. S. formula the solution of terchloride is prepared as the first step of the proceedings; in the British is taken already formed, as the result of a distinct process. When tersulphuret of antimony is digested with muriatic acid, an interchange of principles takes place; the hydrogen of the acid uniting with the sulphur of the antimonial, and escaping as sulphuretted hydrogen, while the chlorine and antimony combine to form terchloride of antimony which is held in solution. The effect of the nitric acid is supposed to be to render the oxide whiter, by decomposing any remaining sulphuretted hydrogen, and thus preventing it from contaminating the product. Though the result thus far is an aqueous solution of the terchloride, this cannot be diluted beyond a certain de- gree without decomposition. Hence, if largely diluted, as when poured into an excess of water, decomposition takes place, and a white powder is precipitated, formerly called powder of Algaroth (see Part III.), which is an oxychloride, hav- ing usually the formula 2SbOvSbCl34-IIO. The terchloride is in part decomposed by the water, the elements of which convert it into muriatic acid and teroxide. The muriatic acid remains in solution, while two eqs. of teroxide fall in union with one eq. of terchloride, forming the oxychloride of the above formula. The composition of the powder, however, is not uniform; as it contains more ter- oxide, the greater the proportion of water used in the decomposition. (E. Bau- drimont, Journ. de Pharm., Juin, 1856, p. 438.) The oxychloride is first washed with abundance of water to separate adhering muriatic acid, and then acted upon by a solution of alkali (ammouia, U. S., carbonate of soda, Br.) to decern- PART II. Antimonium. pose the terchloride, with the effect of adding to the amount of teroxide; after which the teroxide only requires to be washed with water in order to render it pure. The last washing separates the muriate of ammonia or chloride of so- dium, resulting from the decomposition of the terchloride; and the water of this washing is tested, in both formulas, by nitrate of silver, until the presence of a chloride ceases to be indicated. Properties. Teroxide of antimony is a heavy, grayish-white powder, perma- nent in the air, insoluble in water, but readily soluble in muriatic or tartaric acid, or in a boiling solution of bitartrate of potassa. Heated in close vessels it becomes yellow, fuses at a full red heat, and finally sublimes in crystalline needles. When cooled from a state of fusion it forms a fibrous crystalline mass. Heated in open vessels it suddenly becomes red-hot, and, by the absorption of oxygen, changes into antimonious acid, which differs from the teroxide in being insoluble in muriatic acid, less fusible, and not volatile. This oxide is the active ingredient of all the medicinal preparations of antimony. It is frequently impure from the presence of antimonious acid, in which case it is not entirely soluble in muriatic acid. If it contain terchloride, which it is apt to do from the imperfect action of the alkaline solutions employed in its purification, its solution in tar- taric acid will be precipitated by nitrate of silver. When antimonious acid is substituted for it, the fraud may be detected by the spurious preparation being entirely insoluble in muriatic acid. Teroxide of antimony consists of one eq. of antimony 129, and three of oxygen 24 = 153. Medical Properties. This oxide, which must not be confounded with the powT- der of Algaroth, has the general therapeutic properties of the antimonials. It deserves more attention than has been paid to it; and its effects, comparatively with those of tartar emetic, should be carefully studied. It is probable that its sedative operation would be found to be the same, with less nausea and disturb- ance of the stomach. Like antimonial powder, it is unequal in its effects, some- times vomiting, at other times being apparently inert. This inequality of-action is plausibly explained by the state of the stomach as to acidity, the presence of acids giving the medicine activity; and this explanation is confirmed by the ex- periments of Dr. Osborne, of Dublin, with the Dublin oxide. As to the French Codex oxide, prepared by boiling the oxychloride with a solution of bicarbonate of potassa, the inequality is attributed by M. Durand, of Caen, to the presence of more or less terchloride, which is separated with difficulty. Objecting to the Codex oxide, M. Durand proposes to prepare the teroxide by precipitating tartar emetic with ammonia in excess. Thus obtained it contains no terchloride, and does not vomit. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ii. 364.) The dose of teroxide ot antimony is three grains, every two or three hours, given in powder with syrup or molasses, or in pill made with confection of roses or other suitable excipient. It was introduced into the existing edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, to be used in the preparation of tartar emetic. Off. Prep. Antimonii et Potass® Tartras, U.S.; Antimonium Tartaratum, Br.; Pulvis Autimonialis, Br. B. ANTIMONII OXYSULPHURETUM. U.S. Oxy sulphur et of Anti- mony. Kerrnes Mineral. “ Take of Sulphuret of Antimony, in very fine powder, a troyounce; Carbon- ate of Soda twenty-three troyounces; Water sixteen pints. Dissolve the Car- bonate of Soda in the Water previously heated to the boiling point, and, having added the Sulphuret of Antimony, boil for an hour. Then filter rapidly into a warm earthen vessel, cover this closely, and allow the liquid to cool slowly. At the end of twenty-four hours, decant the supernatant liquid, drain the precipitate on a filter, wash it with boiled water previously allowed to become cold, and dry it without heat. Lastly, preserve the powder in a well-stopped bottle, protected from the light.” U. S. 986 Antimonium. PARI II. Though very long in use as a medicine, and much employed on the Continent of Europe, it was only at the late revision that this preparation was admitted into the B. S. Pharmacopoeia, having been superseded by the precipitated sul- phuret, which was supposed to have very similar if not identical properties. Kerm.es mineral, according to Thenard, may be obtained by treating the ter- sulphuret of antimony in three ways; 1st with a boiling solution of the carbon- ated alkalies, 2d with a boiling solution of the caustic alkalies, and 3d with the carbonated alkalies at a red heat. These several processes give brown powders, which vary in their shade of colour, and which, though usually considered as identical, differ in composition. The kermes obtained by means of the carbonated alkalies in solution is an oxysulphuret, that is, a compound of hydrated tersul- phuret of antimony with the teroxide ; while the product, when either the caustic alkalies in solution, or the carbonated alkalies at a red heat are used, is essen- tially a hydrated tersulphuret, though containing occasionally a little oxysul- phuret. It is the first of these methods that has been adopted in the U. S. pro- cess. It is in fact the formula of Cluzel, as published in former editions of the U. S. Dispensatory (see II ed. p. 926), and is substantially the same with that given in the French Codex of 1837. The rationale of the formation of kermes by this process is as follows. A portion of the carbonate of soda is converted, by a transfer of carbonic acid into caustic soda and sesquicarbonate. By a double decomposition taking place be- tween a part of the tersulphuret of antimony and the caustic soda, sulphuret of sodium and teroxide of antimony are formed. The undecomposed portion of the tersulphuret then dissolves in the solution of sulphuret of sodium, and the teroxide in that of the remaining carbonate of soda. The tersulphuret and ter- oxide, being both more soluble in these menstrua hot than cold, precipitate together as the liquid cools, and constitute this variety of kermes. Thus ob- tained it is light, velvety, of a dark reddish-purple colour, brilliant in the sun, and of-a crystalline appearance. It consists, according to M. Henry, jun., of tersulphuret of antimony 62 5, teroxide 27‘4, water 10, and soda a trace; pro- portions which correspond most nearly with two eqs. of tersulphuret, one of teroxide, and six of water. From the presence of so large a proportion of teroxide of antimony in this variety of kermes, it must be far more active than the other kinds, and ought, therefore, to be preferred for medical use. Kermes, when obtained by means of the caustic alkalies, may be formed by the use of either potassa or soda. When the former alkali is selected, it may be pre- pared by boiling, for a quarter of an hour, two parts of the tersulphuret of anti- mony with one part of caustic potassa dissolved in twenty-five or thirty parts of water, filtering the liquor, and allowing it to cool; whereupon the kermes pre- cipitates. In this process one portion of the tersulphuret, by reacting with a part of the potassa, gives rise to teroxide of antimony and sulphuret of potassium. A second portion dissolves in the solution of sulphuret of potassium formed, and a third forms an insoluble compound with a part of the teroxide. The remain- der of the teroxide unites with the undecomposed potassa, forming a compound, which, being but sparingly soluble, is only in part dissolved. The hot filtered liquor, therefore, contains this compound dissolved in water, and tersulphuret of antimony dissolved in the solution of sulphuret of potassium. By refrigeration, the tersulphuret in a hydrated state falls down, free or nearly free from teroxide, this latter being still held in solution by means of the caustic alkali. Kermes may be obtained by the third method, that is, in the dry way, by the use of the carbonated alkalies at a red heat. If carbonate of potassa is selected, the process is as follows. Rub together two parts of tersulphuret of antimony and one of carbonate of potassa, fuse the mixture in a crucible by a red heat, reduce the fused mass to powder, boil it with water, and strain. As the strained liquor cools the kermes is deposited. The rationale of its formation is nearly th« PART II. Antimonium. 987 same with that of the formation of the second variety of kermes. An i aferior kermes, prepared in the dry way, and intended for use in veterinary medicine, is directed in the French Codex to be prepared by fusing together, well mixed, 500 parts of tersulphuret of antimony, 1000 of carbonate of potassa, and 30 or washed sulphur, reducing the fused mass to powder, and boiling it with 10,000 parts of water. The liquor, upon cooling, lets fall the kermes, which must be washed with care and dried. The officinal oxysulphuret is au insipid, inodorous powder, of a purplish-brown colour, and soft and velvety to the touch. By the action of air and light it gradu- ally becomes lighter coloured, and at last yellowish-white. It is readily and wholly dissolved by muriatic acid, with escape of hydrosulphuric acid gas, and is partly soluble in a hot solution of potassa, leaving a residue soluble in tartaric acid. It is sometimes adulterated with sesquioxide of iron. In Paris, in 1849, a number of the shops contained a spurious kermes of very handsome appear- ance, which was little else than this oxide. Kermes mineral first came into use as a remedy in France about the beginning of the last century. Its mode of pre- paration was possessed as a secret by a French surgeon named La Ligerie. In 1720, the recipe was purchased by the French government and made public. Its remedial properties will be considered uuder the following head. B. ANTIMONIUM SULPHURATUM. U. S., Br. Antimonii Sulphu- retum Prjecipitatum. TJ. S. 1850, Bub. Antimonii Oxysulphuretum. Bond. Antimonii Sulphuretum Aureum. Ed. Sulphurated Antimony. Precipitated Sulphuret of Antimony. “Take of Sulphuret of Antimony, in very fine powder, six tr oy ounces ; Solu- tion of Potassa four pints; Distilled Water, Diluted Sulphuric Acid, each, a sufficient quantity. Mix the Sulphuret of Antimony with the Solution of Po- tassa and twelve pints of Distilled Water, and boil the mixture over a gentle fire for two hours, constantly stirring, and occasionally adding Distilled Water so as to preserve the same measure. Strain the liquid immediately through a double muslin strainer, and drop into it, while yet hot, Diluted Sulphuric Acid so long as it produces a precipitate. Then wash the precipitate with hot water to remove the sulphate of potassa, dry it,'and rub it into a fine powder.” U. S. “ Take of Prepared Sulphuret of Antimony ten ounces [avoirdupois]; Solu- tion of Soda four pints and a half [Imperial measure]; Diluted Sulphuric Acid, Distilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Mix the Sulphuret of Antimony with the Solution of Soda, and boil for two hours with frequent stirring, adding Dis- tilled Water occasionally to maintain the same volume. Strain the liquor through calico, and, before it cools, add to it by degrees the Diluted Sulphuric Acid till the latter is in slight excess. Collect the precipitate on a calico filter, wash with Distilled Water till the washings no longer precipitate with chloride of barium, and dry at a temperature not exceeding 212°.” Br. There are three forms of tersulphuret of antimony containing more or less ter- oxide ; the kermes mineral already described; the golden sulphur, which is pro- duced when, after the spontaneous subsidence of kermes mineral in the process for obtaining it, an acid is added to the liquid; and the precipitated sulphuret, which is made by precipitating the liquid before it has begun to deposit the kermes, and may be considered as consisting of the other two combined in one. Golden sulphur (sulphur auratum antimonii) is prepared, according to the F rench Codex, by precipitating the solution remaining after the deposition of the kermes, in the formula in which one of the caustic alkalies is employed in the first stage of the process, as in the above formula, instead of a carbonate as in the one preceding it. The liquor, when caustic potassa has been used, consists at first chiefly of tersulphuret of antimony, dissolved in solution of sulphuret of potassium, but in part also of teroxide, dissolved in solution of potassa. By the action of the Antimonium. PART II. oxygen oi Ene air on the liquor, however, the sulphuret of potassium has part of its potassium gradually converted into potassa, and thus passes to a higher state of sulphuration ; and, consequently, the addition of an acid, while it throws down the tersulphuret and teroxide of antimony with disengagement of sulphuretted nydrogen, will separate at the same time the excess of sulphur which the sul- phuret of potassium has gained. This excess of sulphur, combining with a por- tion of the tersulphuret of antimony, produces the pentasulphuret of that metal (Omelin); and the resulting golden sulphur is a mixture of tersulphuret and teroxide of antimony, with more or less of the pentasulphuret. It is in the form of a powder of a golden-yellow colour. As it is partially decomposed by light, it should be kept in opaque vessels. It may be worth while to mention that the so-called kermes liquor, left after the use of the carbonated alkalies in solution, gives but little golden sulphur; while the liquors resulting from the two other processes yield it in abundance. From the explanations above given, the reader is prepared to understand that the method of preparing sulphurated antimony of the U. S. and Br. Pharmaco- poeias, combines the process for forming kermes mineral by means of a caustic alkali, with that for obtaining golden sulphur; for, while the refrigeration of the solution acting alone would cause the precipitation of the variety of kermes, which contains little or no antimonial oxide, the sulphuric acid added would throw down more or less of the golden sulphur. But the question here arises, how far this golden sulphur would be identical with that obtained from the kermes liquor which has been kept for some time. From the explanations above given in relation to golden sulphur, it may be inferred as probable that the pre- cipitate by acids, if thrown down immediately, while the solution is hot, as di- rected by the Pharmacopoeias, and before the air has had time to act, would con- sist exclusively of tersulphuret and teroxide ; but, if thrown down from kermes liquor which had been kept, would contain more or less of the pentasulphuret, according to the length of time which had elapsed. If these views be admitted, it follows that the so-called golden sulphur must be variable as to the pentasul- phuret it contains, according to the greater or less change which the kermes liquor may have undergone by time, before being used for furnishing the precipitate. Formerly, all the Pharmacopoeias noticed in this work used a solution of caus- tic potassa in preparing precipitated sulphuret of antimony; but at present the British Council, following the London College, employs a solution of caustic soda. The use of soda, however, does not alter the theory of the process. Properties of the Precipitated Sulphuret of Antimony. This substance is a reddish-brown insoluble powder, tasteless when pure, but having usually a slightly styptic taste. When treated with twelve times its weight of muriatic acid of the sp. gr. IT6, with the aid of heat, it is nearly all dissolved, with effer- vescence of sulphuretted hydrogen. The residue burns with the characters of sulphur, and leaves a scanty ash. The solution obtained, when added to water, is decomposed, giving rise to a white powder of oxychloride of antimony (pow- der of Algaroth). The solution, filtered from the powder, yields an orange-red precipitate with bihydrosulphate of ammonia, proving the presence of a portion of antimony, not thrown down by the water. A dark-coloured precipitate, pro- duced by this test, shows the presence of contaminating metals, probably lead and copper. Water in which this preparation has been boiled, should not yield a white precipitate with chloride of barium or oxalate of ammonia. The non- action of these tests shows the absence of sulphuric acid and lime. When pure, precipitated sulphuret of antimony is completely soluble in a hot solution of po- tassa; but, as it is found in the shops, a white matter is usually left undissolved. When boiled with a solution of cream of tartar, about 12 per cent, of teroxide is dissolved ; but, according to H. Rose, this method of determining the piopor- tion of the teroxide cannot be relied on. Exposed to heat it takes fire, and burns PART II. Antimonium.—Aqua. 989 with a greenish-blue flame, giving off sulphurous acid; while the metal remains behind in the state of a grayish oxide. The London (British) precipitated sulphuret of antimony, as analyzed by Mr. Phillips, consists, in the 100 parts, of tersulphuret 76 5, teroxide 12, and water 115; proportions corresponding nearly with five eqs. of tersulphuret, one ot teroxide, and fifteen of water. It usually contains a portion of pentasulphuret, as shown by the action of muriatic acid, which, when heated with this antimo- nial, forms the terchloride with disengagement of sulphur. (Gmelin’s Handbook, iv. 989.) Its active ingredient is the teroxide; and, in reference to its presence, the London College called the preparation oxysulphuret of antimony. The Edinburgh College named it incorrectly golden sulphuret of antimony; this name being properly applicable to the precipitate produced by the sole action of acids, and not to that obtained by the action of acids and refrigeration conjointly. Medical Properties. Precipitated sulphuret of antimony is alterative, dia- phoretic, and emetic. It is, however, an uncertain medicine, as well from the want of uniformity in its composition, as from its liability to vary in its action with the state of the stomach. It is seldom given alone, but generally in com- bination with calomel and guaiac, in the form of Plummer’s pill, as an altera tive in secondary syphilis and cutaneous eruptions, or with henbane or hemlock in chronic rheumatism. (See Pilulse Antimonii Compositse.) During its use the patient should abstain from acidulous drinks. Its dose as an alterative is from one to two grains twice a day, in the form of pill; as an emetic, from five grains to a scruple. Kermes mineral, when prepared by means of the carbonated alkalies in the moist way, as it contains between two and three times as much teroxide as the precipitated sulphuret, is a more active preparation, and must be used iu a smaller dose. It is sometimes given in large doses as an antiphlogistic remedy in peripneuraony and other inflammations of the chest. Prof. Meigs recommends it as an invaluable medicine in childbed fevers, to promote diaphoresis, and to reduce the force of the circulation. Golden sulphur acts like kermes mineral, but is much weaker, and must be given in a larger dose. Off. Prep. Pilulse Antimonii Compositse, TJ. S.; Pilulse Calomelanos Com- positse, Br. B AQUA. Water. AQUA DESTILLATA. U.S.,Br. Distilled Water. “Take of Water eighty pints. Distil two pints, using a tin or glass condenser, and throw them away; then distil sixty-four pints, and keep them in glass bot- tles.” U. S. “Take of Water, free from taste and odour, ten gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil from a copper still, connected with a block-tin worm; reject the first half gallon, and preserve the next eight gallons.” Br. No natural water is sufficiently pure for certain pharmaceutical purposes; and hence the necessity of the above processes for its distillation. It is best to reject the first portion which comes over, as this may contain carbonic acid and other volatile impurities; and the last portion of the water ought not to be distilled, lest it should pass over with an empyreumatic taste. The distillation is usually performed with the ordinary still and worm; but, to avoid any impurity from the worm or the receiver, the condenser is directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia to be of tin or glass. In the British formula the worm is ordered to be of block-tin ; and the same is undoubtedly contemplated in our officinal process; as the ordi- nary tin-coated sheet-iron, commonly called tin, would be wholly unfit for the Aqua.—Aquae. PART II. purpose. Mr. Brande states that distilled water often derives from the still a foreign flavour, which it is difficult to avoid. He, therefore, recommends that a still and condenser be kept exclusively for distilling water; or, where this cannot be done, that steam be driven through the worm for half an hour, for the pur- pose of washing it out before it is used, the worm-tub having been previously emptied. Mr. Mackay, of Edinburgh, cautions against distilling water in a still with a leaden head or leaden worm, for fear of contaminating the water with lead. Even the use of pure tin, which is generally considered unexceptionable, does not give perfect security against impurity; as water distilled from metallic alem- bics, with the head and worm of this metal, has a peculiar odour which it retains for some time. A portion of distilled water thus prepared, after having been kept for four months in a well-stopped bottle, was found by M. Flech, an apo- thecary of Kevelaer, to have deposited white flocculi, which proved on examina- tion to consist of oxidized tin ; and the water, besides, contained tin in solution and a little ammonia. M. Flech supposes that a part of the water was decom- posed ; its oxygen uniting with the tin, and its hydrogen in the nascent state with the nitrogen of the air to form ammonia; and he is disposed, moreover, to ascribe to this cause the peculiar odour referred to, which is never perceived when the distillation is performed in glass vessels. (Journ. de Pharm., Fev. 1860, p, 125.) Properties, &c. Distilled water, as usually obtained, has a vapid and dis- agreeable taste, and is not perfectly pure; water, to be rendered so, requiring to be distilled in silver vessels. The properties of pure water have already been given under the head of Aqua. Distilled water should undergo no change by sulphuretted hydrogen, or on the addition of tincture of soap, subacetate of lead, chloride of barium, oxalate of ammonia, nitrate of silver, or lime-water, and should evaporate without residue. It is uselessly employed in some formulas, but is essential in others. As a general rule, when small quantities of active medicines are to be given in solution, and in the preparation of collyria, distilled water should be directed. The following list contains the chief substances which require distilled water as a solvent: tartar emetic, corrosive sublimate, nitrate of silver, the chlorides of barium and calcium, acetate and subacetate of lead, permanganate of potassa, the sulphates of iron and zinc, sulphate of quinia, sul- phate, muriate, and acetate of morphia, and, in general terms, all the alkaloids and their salts. Distilled water is used in preparing the officinal diluted acids for absorbing gaseous ammonia, and for forming nearly all the officinal aqueous solutions. ' B. AQUiE. US. Under this head are included, in the United States Pharmacopoeia, all prepa- rations, consisting of water holding volatile or gaseous substances in solution, many of which were formerly obtained by distillation, and some still continue to be so. They include the preparations formerly specially designated as “Distilled Waters,” having been made by distilling water from plants or parts of plants containing volatile oil. Distilled water is now placed in the .Pharmacopoeia undei the same head; but we have given it the distinct position which it held in the edition of 1850, and which it might very properly, we think, have continued to hold in the present. The Distilled Waters, as thus defined, hold a much more prominent position in the pharmacy of Europe, particularly of continental Europe, than in that of the United States; and a great deal of thought and elaborate investigation have been bestowed upon the various conditions calculated to furnish the best products in the most convenient method. It would be doing injustice to the subject not Medicated Waters. Aquae. 991 PART II. to give it a distinct consideration in a work like the present, tnougli its relative want of importance with us will render our remarks comparatively brief. Many vegetables impart to water distilled from them their peculiar flavour, and more or less of their medical properties. The Distilled Waters chiefly used are those prepared from aromatic plants, the volatile oils of which rise with the aqueous vapour, and are condensed with it in the receiver. But, as water is capa- ble of holding but a small proportion of the oil in solution, these preparations are generally feeble, and are employed chiefly as pleasant vehicles or corrigents of other medicines. In the preparation of the Distilled Waters, dried plants are sometimes used, because the fresh are not to be had at all seasons; but the latter, at least in the instance of herbs and flowers, should be preferred if attainable. Flowers which lose their odour by desiccation may be preserved by incorporating them inti- mately with one-third of their weight of common salt, and in this state afford Distilled Waters of delicate flavour. Indeed, some pharmaceutists prefer the salted flowers in certain instances, believing that the Waters distilled from them keep better than when prepared from the fresh flowers. The idea at one time prevailed, to a considerable extent, that Waters kept better distilled from dried herbs than from fresh; and the opinion was true in regard to those prepared with the defective alembics of former times, and by a naked fire ; but experiment has sufficiently established the fact, that, with a suit- able apparatus, and a regulated heat, the fresh herbs yield products which, while they have a more agreeable odour of the plant, keep quite as well as those from dried herbs. (Journ. de Pharvx., Mai, 1861, p. 359.) It is necessary to observe certain practical rules in conducting the process of distillation. When the substance employed is dry, hard, and fibrous, it should be mechanically divided, and macerated in water for a short time previously to the operation. The quantity of materials should not bear too large a proportion to the capacity of the alembic, as the water might otherwise boil over into the receiver. The water should be brought quickly to the state of ebullition, and continued in that state till the end of the process. Care should be taken to leave sufficient water undistilled to cover the whole of the vegetable matter; lest a portion of the latter, coming in contact with the sides of the vessel, might be decomposed by the heat, and yield empyreumatic products. Besides, wdien the operation is urged too vigorously, or carried too far, a slimy matter is apt to form, which adheres to the sides of the alembic above the water, and is thus exposed to igneous decomposition. To obviate these disadvantages, the heat may be applied by means of an oil-bath, regulated by a thermometer, or of a bath of solution of chloride of calcium, by which any temperature may be obtained be- tween 212° and 270°, according to the strength of the solution; or, when the process is conducted upon a large scale, by means of steam introduced under pressure into a space around the still. A convenient mode of applying heat by steam, is by means of a coil of leaden tube placed in the bottom of the still, having one end connected with a boiler, and the other passing out beneath or at the side, and furnished with a stop-cock, by which the pressure may be in- creased, or the condensed water drawn off at will. If any volatile oil float upon the surface of the Distilled Water, it may be separated.* * This direction is generally given; but, in a communication to the Pharmaceutical Society of England, Mr. Haselden recommends the excess of oil to be well shaken with the water, and the whole to be transferred to the stock vessel, where it may be allowed to rest, and the oil to separate. He thinks the water keeps better when thus treated; and the lull strength is always ensured. The stock vessel he prefers made of stone-ware, and furnished with a tap placed two inches from the bottom, whereby the water may be drawn off clear when wanted for the ordinary shop bottles; the oil either rising to the top, or sinking to the bottom of the vessel, according to its specific gravity. {Pham, Journ., xvi. 14, 15.)—Note to the eleventh edition. Aquse. PART II. From a series of experiments made in Paris in reference to the best mode of applying heat, it was concluded that, as regards the great majority of aromatics, the direct application of steam was preferable, because the Distilled Waters pre- pared by means of it have a freshness of aroma that is wanting in the others, are always free from the odour of the still, are much more limpid, are less apt to de- posit mucilaginous matter, and keep better; but that exceptions to the general rule are afforded by bitter almonds, cherry-laurel leaves, mustard, and horserad- ish, in all which the oil does not pre-exist in the plant, but is formed upon con- tact with water, by woods, barks, and roots, the tissue of which cannot be suffi- ciently penetrated by steam, and by roses. (Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1861, p. 364.) Later experiments have led to the conclusion that even these substances are most advantageously treated by distillation with steam; and that, in fact, there is no exception to the general rule. All inconvenience and danger in this process are avoided by care to have tubes of large diameter for the supply of the steam, which should be received into a free space reserved, at the bottom of the alem- bic, by means of a diaphragm pierced with holes. To prevent the loss of vapour, it is sufficient to lute the apparatus by strips of linen or muslin covered with glue or dextrin paste, making two or three turns around the alembic. {Ibid., Juin, 1864, p. 520.)* But, however carefully the process may be conducted, the Distilled Waters pre- pared from plants always have at first an unpleasant smoky odour. They may be freed from this by exposure for a short time to the air, before being enclosed in well-stopped bottles, in which they should be preserved. When long kept, they are apt to form a viscid ropy matter, and to become sour. This result has been ascribed to other principles, wThich rise with the oil in distillation, and pro- mote its decomposition. To prevent this decomposition, the Edinburgh College ordered rectified spirit to be added to the water employed in the process of dis- * Distillation by steam having been demonstrated, in France, to be the best method of preparing the Distilled Waters in all instances, we present, in the margin, the figure of a vertical section of Soubeiran’s apparatus for this purpose, somewhat modified. A cylin- drical tinned copper or iron boiler (A), three and a half feet high and two in diameter, is surmounted by an expanded head or capital (B) which is furnished with an inner ledge, forming a kind of gutter, intended to receive the liquid condensed on the inner surface of the capital, and opening into the exit tube (e). Across the boiler, about six inches from the bottom, is placed a horizontal septum or dia- phragm, pierced with numerous small holes. Through the side of the boiler, near the top, a steam pipe (a d), provided with a stop-cock (a), enters, and, turning immediately down- wards, runs along the side of the boiler to the bottom, where it makes a horizontal bend, and, extending to the middle of the base, turns upwards, and opening by a per- forated expansion, like the end of the spout of a watering pot, terminates a little beneath the centre of the diaphragm. The material to be distilled, having been previously properly comminuted, and macerated when neces- sary, is introduced into the boiler, and rests on the diaphragm. The capital, having then been applied, and secured by a luting of linen bands coated with dextrin paste, steam from any convenient generator is admitted through the tube at its upper extremity, and passing down, escapes through the expanded termination (6) beneath the diaphragm, through the small openings of which it passes, and thus penetrates equably all parts of the material. Loaded with the volatile matters, it then rises into the capital, where a portion being con- densed falls into the gutter, and the remainder passes out, with the liquid condensed in th capital, through the exit pipe (/), whence it enters into a worm or other suitable condens- ing apparatus.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Aquae. 993 tillation. But this addition is inadequate to the intended object, and is in fact injurious, as the alcohol by long exposure to the air appears to undergo the acetous fermentation. The London College, which had previously directed s spirituous addition, abandoned it in the last edition of their Pharmacopoeia; and it is not directed in any of the present U. S. or British formulas in which distillation is performed. A better plan is to redistil the Waters. When thus purified, it is said that they may be kept for several years unchanged. Robiquet considers the mucosity which forms in Distilled Waters as the result of a vegetative process, to which the presence of air is essential. He has found that, so long as the water is covered with a layer of essential oil, it undergoes no change; but that the oil is gradually altered by exposure to the air, and, as soon as it disappears, the water begins to be decomposed. He states that cam- phor exercises the same preservative influence over the Distilled Waters by resist- ing the vegetation, and that those in which the odour of camphor is developed keep better on that account. Finally, he has observed that the more Distilled Water is charged with volatile oil, the more abundant is the mucosity when it has begun to form. Robiquet unites with Henry and Guibourt, and with Virey, in recommending that all these WAters, when intended to be kept for a consid- erable time, should be introduced, immediately after distillation, into bottles of a size proportionate to the probable consumption of the wrater when brought into use; and that the bottles should be quite filled, and then sealed or otherwise well stopped, so as entirely to exclude the air. It is best that they should be small, and be closed with well-fitting glass stoppers. Thus treated, the Waters may be preserved without change for many years. (Journ. de Pharm., xxi. 402.) If this plan be not put into operation immediately, the Water should, after intro- duction into the bottle, be heated to about 212° by placing the bottle in boiling water, and, when it begins to run over, should be carefully enclosed.* Another mode of preparing the Distilled Waters is to substitute the volatile oil, previously separated from the plant, for the plant itself in the process. This mode is directed in the British Pharmacopoeia, in several instances. It is said to afford a more permanent product than the preceding; but does not always pre- serve the flavour of the plant. In relation to most of the aromatics, the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia discards alto- gether the process by distillation, and directs that water should be impregnated with the volatile oil by trituration with carbonate of magnesia, and subsequently filtered. This is by far the most simple and easy process. The resulting solution is pure and permanent, and is perfectly transparent, the carbonate of magnesia being separated by the filtration. Carbonate of magnesia is preferable to the pure earth; as the latter sometimes gives a brownish colour to the liquid, and requires to be used in larger proportion. But both these substances are dissolved in minute quantities, and are apt to occasion a slight flocculent precipitate. They may also possibly prove injurious by decomposing certain substances given in very small doses, as sulphate of morphia, bichloride of mercury, and nitrate of silver. The object of the magnesia or its carbonate is simply to enable the oil to be brought to a state of minute division, and thus presented with a larger surface to the action of the solvent. According to Mr. Robert Warington, this * It is of some importance to know the proportion which the aromatic submitted to dis- tillation ought to bear to the amount of distilled water obtained. The following statement upon this point, based upon experiments, is contained in the Journal de Pharmacie (Mai, 1861, p. 367). Fresh aromatic plants requiring one part of the plant for one of product; wormwood, black cherry, scurvy-grass, hyssop, cherry-laurel, lavender, balm, mint, peach- leaves, roses, and sage;—fresh and dry aromatics requiring one part of the plant to two ■>f product; bitter almonds, orange-flowers, melilot, horseradish, elder, and tansy;—dry *nd very aromatic plants requiring one part to four of product; angelica, green anise, juni- per berries, chamomile, canella, cascarilla, fennel, sassafras, linden flowers, and valerian. .—Note to the twelfth edition. Aquae. PART It. object may be better accomplished by porcelain clay, finely powdered glass, or pumice stone, which are wholly insoluble (Chem. Gaz., March, 1845, p. 113); and the London College employed finely powdered silica for the purpose. Chalk and sugar answer the same end; but the latter, by being dissolved with the oil, renders the preparation impure. The Dublin College prepared its Waters by agitating an alcoholic solution of the oil with distilled water, and filtering. They consequently contained alcohol, and were liable to the objection, already mentioned, against the medicated waters thus impregnated. They were besides feeble in the properties of their respective oils. In the preparation of the aro- matic waters by these processes, it is very important that the water should be pure. The presence of a sulphate causes a decomposition of the oil, resulting in the production of sulphuretted hydrogen and a carbonate; and the aromatic properties are quite lost. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xix. 303.) Hence the propriety of the officinal direction to employ distilled water.* The Distilled Waters are liable to contain various metallic impurities, derived from the vessels in which they are prepared or preserved. The metallic salts which have been found in them are those of iron, zinc, copper, and lead. With ferrocyanide of potassium iron will give a blue colour, zinc and lead white precipitates, and copper a rose-colour followed by chestnut-brown. Sulphuret of sodium causes with the salts of iron, copper, and lead, a brown discolora- tion more or less deep, followed by precipitates varying from brown to black; with those of zinc, a white precipitate. The Distilled Waters may be freed from these impurities by animal charcoal, previously well purified. The charcoal should be strongly shaken, eight or ten times in the course of a day, with the im- pure Water, which should then be allowed to rest, and the next day be filtered. Five grains of the charcoal will be sufficient for a gallon of the Distilled Water. {Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1862, p. 416.) The volatile oils may be recovered frotn the Waters containing them, or at least may be transferred to a spirituous men- struum, by mixing olive oil with the water, adding a little solution of potassa so as to form a soap, and a consequent emulsion with the liquid, and then neutraliz- ing by an acid. The fixed oil will rise to the surface, bringing the volatile oil along with it. The latter may then be separated from the former by agitation with alcohol. (T. B. Groves, Pharm. Journ., Feb. 1864.) W. AQUA ACIDI CARBONICI. TJ.S. Carbonic Acid Water. Artificial Seltzer Water. “By means of a proper apparatus, impregnate Water, contained in a suitable receiver, with a quantity of carbonic acid, equal to five times the bulk of the Water. Carbonic acid may be obtained from Bicarbonate of Soda or from Mar- ble by means of dilute sulphuric acid.” U. S. This preparation, which is peculiar to the United States Pharmacopoeia, con- sists of water highly charged with carbonic acid. Water is found to take up its volume of this acid under the pressure of the atmosphere; and Dr. Henry ascer- * Mr. Haselden prefers the process of distillation from the aromatic itself in the in- stances of dill, caraway, fennel, cinnamon, and pimento, which are not apt to afford to the distilled water such matter as may cause it to become sour; hut he thinks that pep- permint, spearmint, and pennyroyal waters may be advantageously prepared by tritura- tion. He advises, however, that these waters should not be filtered, but prepared in quan- tity, allowed to settle, and drawn off as wanted. (Pharrn. Journ., xvi. 14, 15.)—Note to the eleventh edition. Glycerin as a preservative of fresh plants. We have just seen, as this proof was about going to the press, in the London Pharmaceutical Journal for October, 1864 (p. 150), a notice by Mr. C. B. C. Tichborne, of Dublin, of a new method of preserving fresh plants for distilla- tion, which promises excellent results. If aromatic flowers are packed in jars with glycerin, their odorous principles are extracted by the glycerin, which, when expressed, aff< rds by distillation Waters in all instances superior to those obtained from the same flowers pre served by means of salt. Mr. Tichborne has thus preserved flowers for two years. — Noli to the twelfth edition. PART II. Aquae. 995 tained that precisely the same volume of the compressed gas is absorbed under a higher pressure. From this law, the bulk taken up is constant, the quantity being different in proportion as there is more or less driven into a given space. As the space occupied by a gas is inversely as the compressing force, it follows that the quantity of the acid forced into the water will be directly as the pres- sure. A double pressure will force a double quantity into a given space, and, therefore, cause a double quantity to be absorbed; a treble pressure will drive a treble quantity into the same space, and-cause its absorption; and so on for higher pressures, the bulk of the compressed gas absorbed always remaining the same. From the principles above laid down it follows that, to saturate water with live times its volume of carbonic acid, as directed in the formula, it must be subjected to a pressure of five atmospheres. Carbonic acid water is familiarly called in this country “mineral water,” and “soda water;” the latter name, originally applied to the preparation when it contained a small portion of carbonate of soda, being from habit continued since the alkali has been omitted. As it is largely consumed both as an agreeable beverage and as a medicine, we give, in a note below, a sketch of an approved apparatus employed in this city for its preparation.* * The apparatus referred to in the text consists of a strong egg-shaped copper vessel, tinned on the inside, about eighteen inches long, called a generator, fixed upright in a wooden frame, and surmounted by another upright vessel of similar shape, about nine inches long, communicating with the generator by a short neck, and intended to contain the sulphuric acid. Connected with the generator by a copper tube, and placed by its side, is a strong cylindrical vessel for washing the gas, about fifteen inches long and three and a half in diameter, two-thirds filled with water, and to near the bottom of which the con- necting tube passes. Severally communicating with the washing vessel are a mercurial gauge to indicate the pressure, and a strong vessel, called the reservoir or fountain, of about the capacity of eighteen gallons, three-fourths filled with water, the connection of the latter being by a lead or gutta percha tube, commanded by a stop-cock. The charge of whiting or marble dust, say eight pounds, and the requisite water are added through an opening in the generator, in front of the sulphuric acid vessel, and closed by a screw stop- per. The communication between the acid vessel and generator is commanded by a verti- cal square rod, reaching within the vessel to about two-thirds of its height, and termina- ting at its lower end in a screw. This rod, when unscrewed, opens a communication between the acid vessel and the generator. The requisite sulphuric acid is added to the acid vessel through an opening at its top, capable of being closed by a screw stopper. Through the axis of this stopper, and revolving within it, but without having any vertical motion, passes the key, in the lower end of which there is a square hole to fit on the square rod. When the acid vessel is to be closed, the screw stopper, with its key, is placed over the opening, in which situation the lower end of the key reaches down a sufficient distance to embrace loosely the square rod. The stopper is now screwed in, and the key, without revolving with the stopper, descends so as duly to embrace the square rod. By turning the handle of the key in the proper direction, the rod is partially unscrewed, the passage to the gene- rator opened, and the acid gradually flows in. From time to time, when the acid is allowed to enter the generator, its contents are briskly mixed by means of an agitator, attached to a horizontal axis, passing air-tight through the short diameter of the generator, and turned by a crank. The stop-cock between the washing vessel and fountain is now par- tially opened, and the impregnation of the water with the gas begins. As it proceeds, the sulphuric acid is gradually allowed to enter the generator until it is expended, and the stop-cock is from time to time turned, until it is entirely opened. Finally, after the water vs fully charged with gas, and the whiting wholly decomposed, the fountain is detached, and the generator freed from the pulpy sulphate of lime by the assistance of water and the agitator, and its contents allowed to escape through an opening in its most depending part. In the apparatus of the size above described, a single fountain only is charged by one operation, and the carbonic acid water formed contains between nine and ten times its volume of the gas. In this mode of making carbonic acid water, it is perceived that the requisite pressure is obtained by generating the carbonic acid in a confined space. Numerous other forms of apparatus have been invented for making carbonic acid water. That of Bernhard is figured in the Am. Journ. of Pharmacy for Jan. 1856; the figure being taken from Parrish’s Pharmacy. In this apparatus, the generators and washing vessels are of thickly tinned copper, and the fountains, of cast iron lined with enamel. These foun- tains are free from objection except for their weight; as also are the stoneware fountains, 996 Aquae. PART II. Carb' me acid water is dispensed in many of the apothecary shops in this country. The fountain is usually placed in the cellar, and the tube proceeding from the fountain is made to pass through the floor and counter of the shops, and to terminate in a stop-cock, by means of which the carbonic acid water may be drawn off at pleasure. In order to have the liquid cool in summer, the tube from the cellar generally terminates in a strong metallic vessel of convenient shape, placed under the counter and surrounded with ice, and from this vessel a sepa- rate tube penetrating the counter proceeds. Properties. Carbonic acid water is a sparkling liquid, possessing an agree- able, pungent, acidulous taste. It reddens litmus deeply from its state of con- centration, and is precipitated by lime-water. Being impregnated with a large quantity of the acid gas under the influence of pressure, it effervesces strongly when freed from restraint. Hence, to preserve its briskness, it should be kept in strong well-corked bottles, placed inverted in a cool place. Several natural waters are of a similar nature; such as those of Seltzer, Spa, and Pyrmont; but the artificial water has the advantage of a stronger impregnation with the acid gas. Carbonic acid water should be made with every precaution to avoid metallic impurity. Hence the necessity of having the fountain well tinned on the inner surface. Even with this precaution, a slight metallic impregnation is not always avoided, especially in the winter season, when the water is less con- sumed as a drink, and, therefore, allowed to remain longer in the tubes and stop-cocks. Glass fountains are sometimes used with advantage at this season; and a patent has been taken out for a stoneware fountain, enclosed in tinned copper, which is said to answer a good purpose. When leaden tubes are em- ployed to convey the water, it is liable to be contaminated with this metal, which renders it deleterious. A case of colica pictonura was treated by one of the authors, arising from the daily use of the first draught of carbonic acid water from a fountain furnished with tubes of lead. Tubes of pure tin, enclosed in lead ones to give them strength, are free from objection. Copper fountains, well tinned, are liable to the objections that the tin lining wears away by use, and that there is no convenient means of inspecting their interior, owing to the solder joint, which permanently unites the two sections of the fountain. To remove the latter objection, the improvement has been proposed by Dr. R. 0. Doremus, of New York, to have the two sections with flanges, se- curely bolted together, with intervening gutta-percha packing, in order to fur- nish facilities for examining the interior, to determine whether re-tinning is neces- sary. Sometimes drops of solder, and chips of copper are carelessly left in the fountain, and form an additional source of danger. There can be no doubt that carbonic acid water is not unfrequently rendered poisonous by metallic impreg- nation. Dr. Doremus has proved, by a chemical examination, that lead and cop- per are sometimes present. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1854, p. 422, from the Am. Med. Monthly.) Dr. John T. Plummer, of Richmond, Ind., has found lead. The latter metal is detected by sulphuretted hydrogen, which gives with it a black precipitate, and copper by ferrocyanide of potassium, which causes a brown precipitate. In testing for copper, a few drops of the reagent should be added to a glass of the suspected water, placed on a sheet of white paper; when, if even a minute proportion of copper be present, a brownish discolora- tion will be seen, upon looking down through the liquid. Carbonic acid, formerly called fixed air, is a colourless gas, of a slightly pun- gent odour and acid taste. It reddens litmus feebly, and combines with salifiable bases, forming salts called carbonates, from which it is expelled by all the strong strengthened with iron bands, which are used in Boston. A less costly apparatus than the above is Nichol’s patent combination fountain, figured in the same Journal for March, 185t> In this, bicarbonate of soda is used instead of whiting, and the salt is added to the acid, instead of the acid to the salt. For an account of the small apparatus of Mr. R. Knighi, which is made of tin and silver exclusively, see the Pham. Journal for May, 1857. PART II. Aquse. acids. It extinguishes flame, and is quickly fatal to animals when respired. All kinds of fermented liquors which are brisk or sparkling, such as champagne cider, porter, &c., owe these properties to its presence. Its sp. gr. is 1 52. Iu 1823 it was liquefied by Faraday by a pressure of 36 atmospheres, and in 1836 solidified by Thilorier, by taking advantage of the cold generated by the sudden gasefaction of the liquid acid, when freed from pressure. It is composed of one eq. of carbon 6, and two of oxygen 16 = 22 (C02). Medical Properties and Uses. Carbonic acid water is diaphoretic, diuretic, and anti emetic. It forms a grateful drink to febrile patients, allaying thirst, lessening nausea and gastric distress, and promoting the secretion of urine. The quantity taken need only be regulated by the reasonable wishes of the patient. It also forms a very convenient vehicle for the administration of magnesia, the carbonated alkalies, sulphate of magnesia, and the saline cathartics generally; rendering these medicines less unpleasant to the palate, and, in irritable states of the stomach, increasing the chances of their being retained. When used for this purpose, six or eight fiuidounces will be sufficient. Carbonic acid gas was observed to act as a local anaesthetic in ulcerated can- cer, so early as 1794, by Dr. John Evart, of Bath. In 1834 it was first used by Prof. Mojon, of Geneva, in dysmenorrhoea, and with the most soothing effect. Since then it has been employed with good effect, in certain painful affections of the uterus, by Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, and M. Follin, of Paris. M. Follin, M. Demarquay, and M. Monod have found it particularly useful in re- lieving the pain in cancer of the uterus and vagina. The first effect of the gas is a sensation of pricking and heat. Another application of carbonic acid by in- jection is for the production of premature labour. For this purpose it has been successfully employed by Prof. Scanzoni, of Wurzburg, and Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh. According to Prof. Simpson, the gas is most conveniently generated by mixing, in a bottle, six drachms of crystallized tartaric acid with eight drachms of bicarbonate of soda, dissolved in six fiuidounces of water. B. AQUA AMMONLZE. U. S. Liquor Ammonia. Br., U.S. 1850. Water of Ammonia. Solution of Ammonia. “ Take of Muriate of Ammonia, in small pieces, Lime, each, twelve troyounces; Water six pints; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Pour a pint of the Water upon the Lime, in a convenient vessel; and, after it has slaked, stir the mixture so as to bring it to the consistence of a smooth paste. Then add the remainder of the Water, and mix the whole thoroughly together. Decant the milky liquid from the gritty sediment into a glass retort, of the capacity of six- teen pints, and add the Muriate of Ammonia. Place the retort on a sand-bath, and adapt to it a receiver, previously connected with a two-pint bottle, contain- ing a pint of Distilled Water, by means of a glass tube, reaching nearly to the bottom of the bottle. Surround the bottle with ice-cold water; and apply heat, gradually increased, until ammonia ceases to come over. Remove the liquid from the bottle, and add to it sufficient Distilled Water to raise its specific gra- vity to 0‘960. Lastly, keep the liquid in small bottles, well stopped.” U. S. “Take of Strong Solution of Ammonia one pint [Imperial, measure]; Dis- tilled Water two pints [Imp. meas.]. Mix, and preserve in a stoppered bottle. Sp. gr. 0 959.” Br. The title of this preparation was changed, at the late revision of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, from Liquor Ammonim to Aqua Ammoniae, that it might con- form in name as well as character with the Waters, among which all the officinal consisting of aqueous solutions of gaseous bodies are included. The object of the above processes is to obtain a weak aqueous solution of the alkaline gas ammonia. In the U. S. process, the muriate of ammonia is decom- posed bv the superior affinity of the lime for its acid, ammonia is disengaged, 998 Aquae. PART II, and the irne, ,ombining with the acid, forms chloride of calcium and water. The process differs from that of 1850 in introducing the materials into the retort wdth a large quantity of water, instead of in the dry state. In both cases the gas is driven >ver by heat, but in the moist plan is accompanied with more watery vapour than in the dry. If the object were to obtain the water of ammonia in the highest possible state of concentration, there might be some advantage in the dry method; but, as a weak solution is contemplated, the wet method is equally efficient, while in all respects more convenient, and productive of better results; for, according to Dr. Squibb, the water of ammonia made by the former officinal process has invariably an empyreumatic odour, from which that made by the present process is free. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 407.) The receiver is intended to retain any water holding in solution undecora- posed muriate, or the oily matter sometimes contained in the salt, as well as other impurities, which may be driven over by the heat; while the pure gas passes forward into the bottle containing the distilled water, which should not fill it, on account of the increase in the bulk of the water during the absorption of the gas. The tube should extend to near the bottom of the bottle, and pass through a cork, loosely fitting its mouth. To prevent the regurgitation of the water from the bottle into the intermediate vessel, the latter should be furnished with a Welter’s safety tube. Large bottles are improper for keeping the water of ammonia; as, when they are partially empty, the atmospheric air within them may furnish a little carbonic acid to the ammonia. In preparing solution of ammonia, equal weights of muriate of ammonia and lime are used for generating the gaseous ammonia. This proportion gives a great excess of lime, compared with the quantity required if determined by the equivalents; but in practice it is found advantageous to have an excess, as well to ensure the full decomposition of the muriate of ammonia, as to make up for accidental impurities in the lime. The British Pharmacopoeia gives directions for diluting Liquor Ammonias Fortior, so as to reduce it to the strength of Liquor Ammonias. This is effected by mixing one measure of the stronger preparation with two measures of dis- tilled water. By dilution to this extent the stronger solution (Br.) is brought to the sp. gr. 0-959. Properties. The properties of Liquor Ammoniae Fortior have already been given. (See page 98.) Those of the officinal solution of ammonia, described in this place, are the same in kind, but weaker in degree. It should be quite free from empyreuma. Its sp. gr. in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is said to be 0 960 ; in the British, 0 959. When of the density 0-960, 100 grains of it saturate 30 grains of officinal sulphuric acid, and contain nearly 10 grains of ammonia. Of the British preparation “one fluidrachm requires for neutralization 30-8 mea- sures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” It is incompatible with acids, and with acidulous and many earthy and metallic salts; but it does not decom- pose the salts of lime, baryta, or strontia and only partially decomposes those of magnesia. If precipitated by lime-water, the ammonia is partly carbonated. When saturated with nitric acid, it should give no precipitate with carbonate of ammonia, nitrate of silver, or chloride of barium. A precipitate with the first indicates earthy matter; with the second, muriatic acid or a chloride; with the third, sulphuric acid or a sulphate. Commercial solution of ammonia sometimes contains pyrrol, naphthalin, and other soluble impurities. These may be de- tected by the solution being reddened by nitric acid, and, after having been supersaturated with muriatic acid, by its tinging a slip of fir wood of a ri< h pur- ple colour, characteristic of pyrrol. (Maclagan.) The source of these impurities is coal-gas liquor, from which the ammoniacal compounds are largely obtained. Composition. Water is capable of absorbing 670 times its volume of ammo- niacal gas at 50°, and increases in bulk about two-thirds. But the officinal sAu- PART II. Aquse. 999 tion of ammonia is by no means a saturated one. Thus, the ammonia contained in the IT. S. preparation is about 10 per cent. The following table gives the per- centage of ainmoniacal gas in aqueous solutions of different densities. Spocific (Gravity. Ammonia per cent. Specific Gravity. Ammonia pi r cent. Specific Gravity. Ammonia per cent. 0-8750 32-50 0-9326 17-52 0-9545 11-56 0 8875 29-25 i 0-9385 15-88 0-9573 10-82 0-9000 26-00 0-9435 14-53 0-9597 10-17 0-9054 25*3/ 1 0-9476 13-46 0-9619 9-60 0-9166 0-9255 22-07 19-54 0-9513 12-40 0-9692 9-50 Medical Properties and Uses. Water of ammonia is stimulant, sudorific, antacid, and rubefacient. It stimulates more particularly the heart and arteries, without unduly exciting the brain. As a stimulant it is occasionally employed in paralysis, hysteria, syncope, asphyxia, and similar affections. In the same complaints it is often applied to the nostrils with advantage; but, in cases of insensibility, care must be taken not to carry the application too far, for fear ol inducing dangerous and even fatal bronchitis. As an antacid, it is one of the best remedies in heartburn, and for the relief of sick headache when dependent on gastric acidity. In these cases it acts usefully also by stimulating the stomach. In the bites of poisonous serpents, it has long been deemed a powerful antidote. A case, caused by the bite of a cobra de capello, was successfully treated by Dr. W. Chalmers, formerly of Bengal, in which solution of ammonia was chiefly relied on. A dose of this solution, given in drunkenness, is said to remove the intoxication in a short time. It has been recommended by Dr. Guerard as an application to burns, attended with rubefaction or vesication, in order to relieve the pain and hasten the cure. (Journ. de Pharm., Jan. 1849.) As a rubefacient it is employed united with oils in the form of volatile liniment. (See Linimentum Ammoniae.) The dose is from ten to thirty drops, largely diluted with water to prevent its caustic effect on the mouth and throat. When swallowed in an over- dose, its effects are those of a corrosive poison. A case is recorded in the Jour- nal de Pharmacie (Avril, 1862, p. 324), in which about three fluidounees were swallowed, with a fatal result in eight days, after great suffering, and various local and systemic disorder. Dissection exhibited signs of inflammation and corrosion of the oesophagus and stomach, with great enlargement and softening of the mesenteric glands and kidneys. The best antidotes are vinegar and lemon juice, which act by neutralizing the ammonia, and must be promptly applied to be useful. The consecutive inflammation must be treated on general principles. Pharm. Uses. To prepare Aconitia, Br.; Antimonii Oxidum, US.; Beberias Sulphas, Br.; Bismuthi Subcarbonas, U. S.; Bismuthi Subnitras, U. S.; Calcis Phosphas Prsecipitata; Digitalinum, Br.; Ferri et Quiniae Citras; Ferri Oxi- dum Hydratum, U. S.; Ferri Pyrophosphas, U. S.; Liquor Ferri Citratis, U. S.; Morphia, U. S.; Morphiae Hydrochloras, Br.; Quiniae Valerianas, U. S.; Santo- ninum, Br.; Strychnia; Yeratria. Off. Prep. Ammonias Benzoas, Br.; Ferri et Ammoniae Citras; Hydrargyrum Ammoniatum; Linimentum Ammoniae; Linimentum Hydrargyri, Br.; Spiritus Ammoniae Aromaticus, Br. B. AQUA AMYGDALiE AMARiE. U.S. Bitter Almond Water. “Take of Oil of Bitter Almonds sixteen minims; Carbonate of Magnesia sixty grains; Water two pints. Rub the Oil, first with the Carbonate of Mag- nesia, men with the Water, gradually added, and filter through paper.” U. S. This preparation has the effects of hydrocyanic acid on the system, and may be used as a vehicle of other medicines in nervous coughs, and various spasmodic 1000 Aquae. PART II. affections. It is, however, liable to spontaneous change, and is consequently more or less uncertain. A drop of sulphuric acid added to a pint of it will con- tribute to its preservation; as will also complete exclusion from the light and air. But the better plan is to prepare it in small quantities, as wanted for use. The dose of it, to begin with, when of full strength, should not exceed half a fluid- ounce. Under the same name, a preparation has been much used on the conti- nent of Europe, prepared by distilling bitter almonds with water. This when fresh is much stronger than the preparation of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, con- taining, according to an analysis of Geiger, in 1000 parts, 1 2 parts of anhydrous hydrocyanic acid. But, in consequence either of circumstances in the manner of its preparation, or of changes upon being kept, it is of variable and uncertain strength, and cannot be relied on. It has been prescribed with fatal effects; and the greatest caution, therefore, should be observed by the apothecary not to put up the-distilled water instead of the officinal.* W. AQUA ANETHI. Br. Bill Water. "Take of Dill [fruit], bruised, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon.” Br. This is seldom if ever used in the United States. W. AQUA AURANTII FLORUM. U.S. Aurantii Aqua. Br. Orange Flower Water. "Take of Orange Flowers forty-eight troyounces; Water sixteen pints. Mix them, and distil eight pints.” U. S. This preparation is placed in the Materia Medica Catalogue of the British Pharmacopoeia, as an object of importation. According to this authority, it is obtained indiscriminately from the flowers of the bitter and those of the sweet orange tree; and the same is the case with our own officinal standard; though, in italy and France, where it is largely made, the flowers of the bitter orange are preferred, as yielding the most fragrant product. It may be prepared in the most Southern districts of our country from the fresh flowers; and these might be brought to the North for the same purpose, if previously incorporated with one- third or one-quarter of their weight of common salt. The proper method is to arrange the flowers and salt in successive layers in jars of stonewmre or glass. Notwithstanding, however, the facility of its preparation here, it is generally imported from the South of France, whence it often comes in cans of tinned copper. Orange flower water is nearly colourless, though usually of a pale yellowish * In an experiment, performed by M. Mayet, one kilogramme (about two avoirdupois pounds) of bitter almond cake from which the fixed oil had been separated, having been finely powdered, and mixed with enough water to form a thin paste, was kept for a day at the temperature of 86° F., and then submitted to distillation by means of steam, with the following results. The products of distillation were collected in separate portions suc- cessively, each of 500 grammes (about a pint). The first portion was milky, immediately after distillation, but in two hours became clear, without the separation of oil; the others were limpid from the beginning. The first contained 0-250 per cent, of hydrocyanic acid, the second 0-070 per cent., the third 0-030, and the fourth 0 024 per cent. The mean of these (0-093) exceeded the percentage obtained by testing a mixture of the four in equal parts, which was only 0-088, owing to the necessity, in each examination, of slightly pass- ing the point of saturation before catching with the eye the blue tint that indicates it. M. Mayet thinks, from these premises, that 0-08 per cent.* or 80 milligrammes for 100 grammes, would be the proper mean to establish in regulating the strength of the bitter-almond water, if two parts of product are to be obtained from one of the dry material employed. He w-ould, however, prefer stopping the process when one and a half parts had been ob- tained, in which case a 0-110 per cent, product might be procured, and it would be easy to fix the mean at 0-100 per cent. M. Mayet also satisfied himself that distillation by steam is decidedly preferable in this process to that by the naked fire, provided that liner coated with dextrin be employed for luting the apparatus, instead of common paper leting, Hindi does not sufficiently resist steam. (Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1801, p. 13 )— Arat* (a tht twelfth edition. PART II. Aquse. tint. From being kept in copper bottles, it sometimes contains metallic imparity which is said to be chiefly carbonate of lead, derived from the lead used as a solder in making the bottles. The means of detecting metallic impurity are mentioned under the general observations on distilled waters, page 994. If it contain lead, sulphuretted hydrogen will produce with it a dark precipitate Much colour, offensive odour, or mouldiness indicates impurity derived from the flowers in distillation. Orange flower water is used exclusively on account of its agreeable odour, though it may possess slight powers as a nervous stimulant. Off. Prep. Syrupus Aurantii Florum, U. S.; Syrnpus Aurantii Floris, Br. W. AQUA CAMPIIORAE. U.S., Br. Camphor Water. “Take of Camphor one hundred and twenty grains; Alcohol forty minims. Carbonate of Magnesia half a troyounce; Distilled Water two pints. Rub th6 Camphor, first with the Alcohol, then with the Carbonate of Magnesia, ana lastly with the Water gradually added; then filter through paper.” U. S. “ Take of Camphor, broken into pieces, half an ounce [avoirdupois] ; Dis- tilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Enclose the camphor in a muslin bag, and attach this to the stopper of ajar containing the Distilled Water. In- vert the jar; allow it to stand for at least two days ; and pour off the solution when required.” Br. In these processes the object is to effect a solution of the camphor. Water is capable of dissolving but a small proportion of this principle; but the quantity varies with the method employed. The present British process is still more in- efficient than the old formulas of the different Colleges for their Mistura Cam- phorse, which has received in the late revision a much more appropriate name. In the London process the camphor was first rubbed with a little spirit to pow- der it, and then with water; in the Edinburgh, sugar and almonds were used as an intermedium by which the water might be induced to take up the camphor; in the Dublin, the spirit of camphor was shaken with water. All of them produced very weak preparations. In the present British process no trouble is taken even to comminute the camphor, or to shake it with the water, which is thus allowed to take up what it may be disposed to do by coutact with the camphor contained in a bag ; though some ingenuity is exhibited in retaining the latter, which is lighter than water, beneath the surface of the liquid, by fastening it in a bag to the stopper, and inverting the vessel after introducing the water. The solution thus effected must be extremely feeble, containing probably less than one part in a thousand, which, according to Berzelius, is taken up by water when triturated with camphor. Our own officinal preparation, when properly made, contains about 50 grains to the pint, or more than 3 grains in each fluidounce. (Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., iv. 13.) Care should be taken to rub all the water, in successive portions, with the mixture of camphor and carbonate of magnesia. The comparative strength of the U. S. preparation is attributable, at least ic part, to the minute division effected in the camphor by trituration with the t*n bonate of magnesia, which is afterwards separated by filtration. The the alcohol is simply to break down the cohesion of the camphor, and enable it to be more easily pulverized. This process is much preferable to the Bflph, as it affords a permanent solution, of sufficient strength to be employed with a view to the influence of the camphor on the system ; while the other has little more than the flavour of the narcotic, and is fit only for a vehicle of other medicines. The camphor is separated by a solution of pure potassa, and, according to Dr. Paris, by sulphate of magnesia and several other salts. Sir J. Murray proposes a solution of camphor and bicarbonate of magnesia, which contains three grains of the former and six grains of the latter in each fluidounce. Camphor water is employed chiefly in low fevers and typhoid diseases, at- 1002 Aquae. PART II. tended vith restlessness, slight delirium, or other symptoms of nervous derange- ment or debility. It is used also to allay uterine after-pains. It has this advan- tage over camphor in substance, that the latter is with difficulty dissolved by the liquors of the stomach; but it is not applicable to cases where very large doses of the medicine are required. It is usually given in the dose of one or two tablespoonfuls repeated every hour or two hours. W. AQUA CARUI. Br. Caraway Water. “ Take of Caraway, bruised, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon [Imp. meas.].” Br. Distilled caraway water has the flavour and pungency of the seeds, but is seldom used in this country. The preparation employed here is usually made from the vo- latile oil, in the same manner as cinnamon water. (See Aqua Ginnamomi.) W. AQUA CHLORINII. U. S. Liquor Chlori. Br. Chlorine Water. Solution of Chlorine. “Take of Black Oxide of Manganese, in fine powder, half a troyounce; Muriatic Acid three troyounces; Water four fluidounces; Distilled Water twenty fluidounces. Introduce the Oxide into a flask, add the Acid previously diluted with two fluidounces of the Water, and apply a gentle heat. Conduct the generated chlorine, by suitable tubes, through the remainder of the Water contained in a small intermediate vessel, to the bottom of a four-pint bottle con- taining the Distilled Water, and loosely stopped with cotton. When the air has been entirely displaced by the gas, disconnect the bottle from the apparatus, and, having inserted the stopper, agitate the contents, loosening the stopper from time to time, until the gas ceases to be absorbed. Lastly, pour the Chlorine Water into a bottle, of just sufficient capacity to hold it, stop it securely, and keep it in a cool place, protected from the light.” U. S. “Take of Hydrochloric Acid six fluidounces [Imperial measure]; Black Oxide of Manganese, in line powder, one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Water thirty-four fluidounces [Imp. meas.]. Introduce the Oxide of Manganese into a gas-bottle, and, having poured upon it the Hydrochloric Acid diluted with two [fluid]ounces of the Water, apply a gentle heat, and, by suitable tubes, cause the gas, as it is developed, to pass through two [fluid]ounces of the Water placed in an intermediate small phial, and thence to the bottom of a three-pint bottle containing the remainder of the Water, the mouth of which is loosely plugged with tow. As soon as the chlorine ceases to be developed, let the bottle be disconnected from the apparatus in which the gas has been generated, corked loosely, and shaken until the chlorine is absorbed. Lastly, introduce the solu- tion into a green glass bottle furnished with a well-fitting stopper, and keep it in a cool and dark place.” Br. The U. S. and Br. processes are essentially the same; and both were copied from the late Dublin process. The only material variation in the British formula is the somewhat larger proportion of the black oxide of manganese and muriatic acid, to the distilled water; an avoirdupois ounce of the oxide and six fluid- ounces of the acid having been substituted for half the quantity of each as di- rected by the Dublin College, while the distilled water used by the former is only thirty-four fluidounces to twenty-four by the latter, of which quantities four fluidounces are taken by each in the preliminary steps of the process, and the remainder used for the absorption of the chlorine. In the U. S. formula, the proportions differ from those of the Dublin, in the use of the troyounce botl for the oxide of manganese and the acid, instead of the avoirdupois ounce for the former and the fluidounce for the latter. The British process differs from both in directing the disconnection of the apparatus for generating the gas, as soon as it ceases to be produced, instead of after the air in the receiving bottle has been displaced by it. Should there be any danger of deficiency of chlorine in PART II. Aquse. 1003 , • the resulting chlorine water, the British process would have the advantage, as it uses not only a larger proportion of the materials for making the gas, but ex- hausts them. In the U. S. process, four fluidounces of common water are used in the dilution of the muriatic acid, and for absorbing the impurities in the intermediate vial. The twenty fluidounces of distilled water are placed in a four-pint bottle, which it about one-third fills. In both processes, the chlorine gas is extricated from the muriatic acid by the deutoxide of manganese separating the hydrogen, and is passed, through an intermediate vessel containing a little water for purifying it, into the four-pint bottle, loosely stopped, until the vacant part of the bottle is filled with it to the exclusion of the atmospheric air. The bottle being then corked, is shaken so as to cause the absorption of the gas by the water. Of course the stopper must be from time to time loosened, in order to allow the entrance of air to supply the partial vacuum created by the absorption of the chlorine. The product is about a pint and a quarter of the chlorine water, which is transferred to a bottle just sufficient in capacity to hold it. The chlorine water is directed to be kept secluded from the light, because otherwise it would be apt to be converted partially into muriatic acid, through the union of the chlorine with the hydrogen of the water. In the Br. Pharmacopoeia it is ordered to be kept in a green glass bottle, for the purpose, probably, of protecting it from the light; but recent experiments have shown that it is an orange, and not a green colour, which appears to prevent the passage of the chemical rays. Properties. Chlorine water has a pale yellowish-green colour, an astringent taste, and the peculiar odour of the gas. Like gaseous chlorine it destroys vegetable colours. When cooled to about the freezing point, it forms deep-yellow crystalline plates, consisting of hydrate of chlorine. It is intended to contain at least twice its volume of the gas. It is decomposed by light, with the produc- tion of muriatic acid, and the evolution of oxygen, and hence must be kept in a dark place. According to MM. Riegel and Walz, chlorine water, containing two and a half volumes of the gas at 54°, keeps best. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia gives as a test of its strength in chlorine, that “ when a fluidounce of it is mixed with a solution of 10 grains of pure sulphate of protoxide of iron in two flui- drachms of water, the mixture does not produce a blue precipitate with ferrid- eyanide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa).” This shows that there is suf- ficient chlorine in the Water to peroxidize the protoxide of iron of the proto- sulphate; as, though the protosalts of iron do, the persalts do not produce a blue precipitate with the ferridcyanide. The British solution consists of “chlo- rine gas dissolved in half its volume of water, and constituting 0 006 of the weight of the solution. It immediately discharges the blue colour of a dilute solution of indigo. Its sp. gr. is 1 003, and when evaporated it leaves no resi- due. When 20 grains of iodide of potassium, dissolved in a [fluidjounce of dis- tilled water, are added to a fluidounce of this preparation, the mixed solution acquires a deep-red colour, which requires for its discharge 75 measures of the volumetric solution of the hyposulphite of soda.” This indicates the quantity of chlorine in the solution, by the amount of the hyposulphite required to de- colorize an equivalent quantity of iodine, liberated from the iodide of potassium. Chlorine is an elementary gaseous fluid, of a greenish-yellow colour, and characteristic smell and taste. It is a supporter of combustion. Its specific gravity is 2 47, and equivalent number 355. When the attempt is made to breathe it, even much diluted, it excites cough and a sense of suffocation, and causes a discharge from the mucous membrane of the nostrils and bronchial tnbe.a Breathed in considerable quantities, it produces spitting of blood, vio- lent pains, and sometimes death. Medical Properties and Uses. Chlorine water is stimulant and antiseptic. Internally it has been used in typhus, and chronic affections of the liver; but 1004 Aquse. PART II. the diseases in which it has been most extolled are scarlatina and malignant sorethroat. Externally it is employed, duly diluted, as a gargle in smallpox, scarlatina, and putrid sorethroat, as a wash for ill-conditioned ulcers and can- cerous sores, and as a local bath in diseases of the liver. It has been used with advantage as an application to buboes and large abscesses, to promote the ab- sorption of the matter. As it depends upon chlorine for its activity, its medical properties coincide with those of chlorinated lime, chlorinated soda, and nitro- muriatic acid, under which heads they are more particularly given. The dose of chlorine water is from one to four fluidrachms, properly diluted. Gaseous chlorine has been recommended by Gannal in chronic bronchitis and pulmonary consumption, exhibited by inhalation, in minute quantities, four or six times a day. Its first effect is to produce some dryness of the fauces, with increased expectoration for a time, followed ultimately with diminution of the sputa and amendment. Dr. Christison states that he has repeatedly observed these results in chronic catarrh; and both he and Dr. Elliotson have obtained, in consumption, a more decided improvement of the symptoms by the use of chlorine inhalations than by any other means. The liquid in the inhaler maybe formed either of water containing from ten to thirty drops of chlorine water, or of chlorinated lime dissolved in forty parts of water, to which a drop or two of sulphuric acid must be added, each time the inhalation is practised. The inhaler should be placed in water, heated to about 100° B. AQUA CINNAMOMI. U.S.,Br. Cinnamon Water. “ Take of Oil of Cinnamon half a Jiuidrach m; Carbonate of Magnesia sixty grains; Distilled Water two pints. Rub the Oil first with the Carbonate of Magnesia, then with the Water, gradually added, and filter through paper. “Cinnamon Water may also be prepared by mixing eighteen troyounces of Cinnamon, in coarse powder, with sixteen pints of Water, and. distilling eight pints.” U. S. “ Take of Cinnamon, bruised, twenty ounces [avoirdupois] ; Water two gal- lons [Imperial measure]. Distil a gallon. ” Br. Of these processes, the first one of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is the easier, though the second, which corresponds with the British, may yield a sweeter product. Cinnamon water is much used as a vehicle for other less agreeable medicines; but should be given cautiously in inflammatory affections. For ordi- nary purposes the U. S. preparation is sufficiently strong when diluted with an equal measure of water. Off. Prep. Mistura Crette; Mistura Guaiaci, Br. W. AQUA CREASOTI. U.S. Creasote Water. “Take of Creasote a Jiuidrachm; Distilled Water a pint. Mix them, and agitate the mixture until the Creasote is dissolved.” U. S. This preparation contains 3T2 minims of creasote in each fluidounce, and affords a convenient method of administering that medicine. The dose is from one to four fluidrachms. It may also be used with advantage as a gatgle, lo- tion, or mixed with cataplasms, to correct fetor, and gently stimulate indolent surfaces. W. AQUA FGENICULI. U.S.,Br. Fennel Water. “Take of Oil of Fennel half a Jiuidrachm; Carbonate of Magnesia sixty grains; Distilled Water two pints. Rub the Oil, first with the Carbonate of Magnesia, then with the Water, gradually added, and filter through paper. “ Fennel Water may be prepared by mixing eighteen troyounces of Fennel, in coarse powder, with sixteen pints of Water, and distilling eight pints.” U. S “Take of Sweet Fennel Fruit, bruised, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon.” Br. PART II. Aquve. 1005 Fennel water is an agreeable vehicle for other medicines, and useful when a mild aromatic is indicated. W. AQUA LAURO-CERASI. Br. Cherry-laurel Water. “ Take of Fresh Leaves of Common Laurel [cherry-laurel] one pound [avoir- dupois]; Water two pints and a half [Imperial measure]. Chop the Leaves, crush them in a mortar, and macerate them in the Water for twenty-four hours. Distil one pint [Imp. meas.] of liquid, using a chloride of zinc bath and a Lie- big’s condenser; shake the product, filter through paper, and preserve in a stop- pered bottle. ” Br. As the cherry-laurel is little cultivated in the United States, we have no officinal formula for the Water; but, from experiments by Prof. Procter, there is little or no room to doubt that a preparation, identical in its effects, might be made from the leaves of our common wild cherry, Cerasus Serotina, were a demand for the medicine to spring up among us. The imported cherry-laurel water, as found in our shops, is generally more or less impaired by age, and can- not, therefore, be relied on. The leaves yield a larger product of hydrocyanic acid when cut and bruised than when distilled whole. According to M. Garot, the proportion of the acid in cherry-laurel water depends upon the time of year at which the distillation is performed; the leaves yielding not more than half as much in April as in the middle of July. (Annuaire de Therap., 1843, p. 45.) In preparing this water, the best plan is to thoroughly bruise the leaves, and, having mixed them with at least three times their weight of water, to allow the mixture to stand at a tem- perature of about 86° F. for at least twelve hours, so that opportunity may be given for those reactions by which the hydrocyanic acid is produced, and then to distil them by means of a current of .steam. Without the preliminary mace- ration the distillation by steam does not afford a satisfactory result; but properly performed, it yields the largest possible product. (Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1861, p. 15; and Juin, 1864, p. 523.) The proportion of hydrocyanic acid in the water diminishes with time. It has been ascertained by M. Deschamps that, if a drop of sulphuric acid be added to a pint of the preparation, it will keep unchanged for at least a year. It is best preserved by the entire exclusion of air and light. M. Lepage found that, preserved in full and perfectly air-tight bottles, both this and bitter almond water remained unchanged at the end of a year; while, if freely exposed to the air, they lost all their hydrocyanic acid and essential oil in two or three months. {Ibid., xvi. 346.) In view of the uncertain strength of the Water as obtained from the leaves, it is proposed in France, in reference to the forthcoming Codex, to fix upon a definite proportion of hydrocy- anic acid ; and the percentage generally adopted is from 0-04 to 0 05.* Cherry- laurel water is employed in Europe as a sedative narcotic, identical in its pro- * The following conclusions, in reference to Cherry-laurel water, have been arrived at by a committee of pharmaceutists in Paris, appointed to examine the subject of the dis- tilled water Avith a view to the revision of the Codex. 1. The whole of the volatile oil and hydrocyanic acid furnished by cherry-laurel leaves, results from a reaction between two substances analogous to the emulsin and amygdalin of bitter almonds, Avliich can take place only in the presence of water. 2. The quantity of volatile oil furnished by the leaves is always in direct relation to that of hydrocyanic acid. 3. The leaves furnish, by mere contact for 24 hours with cold water, only one-third of the quantity which they can be made to yield. 4. The fermentable matter of the leaves is liable to change, so that the leaves, after being picked, afford less and less of the acid the longer they are kept; and a moist heat favours change; so that complete decomposition takes place in a few hours. 6. Difference in climate, soil, exposure to the sun, and age of the tree, have but a second- ary influence on the productiveness of the leaves. 6. The season of the year, however, has a great influence. The younger the leaf, the greater is its yield; so that, while 0-150 per cent, of the acid was obtained from the forming leaves in spring, those of the autumn yielded 0132, and those of the winter 0-120, Avhile leaves two years old gave only 0-112. 7. Different plants, under apparently the same circumstances, differ greatly in productive* 1006 Aquae. PART II. perties with a dilute solution of hydrocyanic acid; but it is of uncertain strength, and should not be allowed to supersede the more definite preparation of the acid now in use. The dose is from thirty minims to a fiuidrachm. W. AQUA MENTIIiE PIPERITiE. U.S., Br. Peppermint Water. Take of Oil of Peppermint half a fiuidrachm; Carbonate of Magnesia sixty grains'; Distilled Water two pints. Rub the Oil, first with the Carbonate of Magnesia, then with the Water, gradually added, and filter through paper. “Peppermint Water may also be prepared by mixing eighteen troyounces of Peppermint with sixteen pints of Water, and distilling eight pints.” U. S. “Take of English Oil of Peppermint one fiuidrachm and a half; Water one gallon and a half [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon.” Br. W. AQUA MENTHiE YIRIDIS. U. S., Br. Spearmint Water. Both in the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, this is prepared precisely as Pep- permint Water, the oil and herb of M. viridis being substituted in the processes for those of M. piperita. The two mint waters are among the most grateful and most employed of this class of preparations. Together with cinnamon water, they are used in this country, almost to the exclusion of all others, as the vehicle of medicines given in the form of mixture. They serve not only to conceal or qualify the taste of other medicines, but also to counteract their nauseating properties. Peppermint water is generally thought to have a more agreeable flavour than that of spear- mint, but some prefer the latter. Their effects are the same. W. AQUA PIMENTOS. Br. Pimento Water. “Take of Pimento, bruised, fourteen ounces [avoirdupois]; Water two gal- lons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon [Imp. meas.].” Br. Pimento water is brownish when first distilled, and upon standing deposits a brown resinous sediment. It is used as a carminative in the dose of one or two fluidounces. W. AQUA ROSiE. U.S.,Br. Rose Water. “Take of Pale Rose forty-eight troyounces; Water sixteen pints. Mix them and distil eight pints. “When it is desirable to keep the Rose for some time before distilling, it may be preserved by being well mixed with half its weight of Chloride of Sodium.” U.S. “Take of Fresh Petals of the Hundred-leaved Rose ten pounds [avoirdu- pois] ; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon [Imp. meas.].” Br. It should be observed that, in the nomenclature of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, ness, so that 0-176 per cent, was obtained from the most productive, only 0-092 from the least so. 8. The distillation by steam yields the greatest possible product. The committee, therefore, propose the adoption of this method; the bruised leaves being preliminarily mixed with at least three times their weight of water, and exposed to a gradually in- creasing heat, not to exceed 140° F., when all reaction ceases. 9. Bruising is the best method of comminuting the leaves. 10. As it is impossible to obtain a Water always iden- tical from the leaves, the committee propose to fix a definite strength, and state that the proportion generally adopted is from 0-040 per cent, of acid as the minimum, to 0-050, or one-twentieth of one per cent, as the maximum, which is only one-half the strength pro- posed for bitter-almond water. 11. Though a change rapidly takes place in this and bitter- almond water exposed to the air, yet in bottles full, and perfectly closed by glass stoppers, the change at the end of a year is scarcely perceptible; and this observation applies to the distilled waters in general. (Journ. de Pharm., Juin, 1864, p. 520.) For some remarks as to an easy volumetric method of estimating the hydrocyanic acid strength of cherry-laurel and bitter-almond waters, as well as other liquids containing this acid, together with the figure of a simple instrument for the purpose, see a paper by i>r. W. 11. Pile, in the American Journal of Pharmacy, March, 1862, p. 130.—Note to the tv>*lfik edition. PART II. Aquse.—Argentum. 1007 the term “Rose” implies only the petals of the flower. These are usually pre- ferred in the recent state; but it is said that, when preserved by being incorpo- rated with one-third of their weight of common salt, they retain their odour, and afford a water equally fragrant with that prepared from the fresh flower. Indeed, Mr. Haselden prefers the salted roses, believing that the water prepared from them is less mucilaginous, less apt to become sour, and preserves its odour better than that prepared from the fresh flowers. (Pliarm. Journ., xvi. 15.) Hence the direction for preserving them in the present U. S. Pharmacopoeia. It is not uncommon to employ the whole flower including the calyx; but the pro- duct is less fragrant than when the petals only are used, as officinally directed.* Rose water is sometimes made by distilling together water and the oil of roses. When properly prepared, it has the delightful perfume of the rose in great perfection. It is most successfully made on a large scale. Like the other distilled waters it is liable to spoil when kept; and the alcohol which is sometimes added to preserve it is incompatible with some of the purposes to which the water is applied, and is even said to render it sour through acetous fermentation. It is best, therefore, to avoid this addition, and to substitute a second distillation. This distilled water is chiefly employed, on account of its agreeable odour, in collyria and other lotions. It is wholly destitute of irritating properties, unless when it contains alcohol.f Off. Prep. Confectio Rosae, U. S.; Mistura Ferri Composita; TJnguentum Aquae Rosae, U. S. W AQUA SAMBUCI. Br. Elder-flower Water. “Take of Fresh Elder Flowers, separated from the stalks, ten pounds [avoir- dupois] ; Water two gallons [Imperial measure]. Distil one gallon [Imp. meas.].” Br. Elder flowers yield very little oil upon distillation; and, if the water be needed,% it may be best prepared from the flowers. Mr. Haselden prefers the salted flowers to the fresh, for the reason stated above under Rose Water. The preparation is little used in this country. W. ARGENTUM. Preparations of Silver. ARGENTI CYANIDUM. TJ. S. Argenti Cyanurettjm. U.S. 1850. Cyanide of Silver. Oyanuret of Silver. “Take of Nitrate of Silver, Ferrocyanide of Potassium, each, two troy- ounces; Sulphuric Acid a troyounce and a half; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Nitrate of Silver in a pint of Distilled Water, and pour the solution into a tubulated glass receiver. Dissolve the Ferrocyanide of Potas- sium in ten fluidounces of Distilled Water, and pour the solution into a tubu- lated retort, previously adapted to the receiver. Having mixed the Sulphuric * A. Monthus states that the petals of the hundred-leaved rose are more odorous, the nearer they are to the centre of the flower, and, contrary to what is said in the text, thinks that the calyx should not he rejected in preparing the distilled water. He maintains that, so far from injuring the product, it in fact contributes to its preservation, and that the water obtained from the whole flower is less liable to that mucosity, which is the com- mencement of decomposition. This effect he ascribes to the astringent matter of the calyx, which coagulates the mucilaginous matter of the petals, and thus prevents it from passing over in the distillation. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1863, p. 497.)—Note to the twelfth edition. | Artificial Rose Water. Prof. Wagner, of Germany, prepares a distilled water from the oil of gaultheria, with an odour so closely resembling that of the rose as to be entitled to this designation. He boils the oil with solution of potassa, thereby obtaining salicylate of potassa, the mother liquor of which, when distilled with water, yields the preparation in question. (Chem. Gaz., JSTo 382, p. 352, from Wagner’s Jakresbericht, A. D. 1856, p. 260.)— Note to the twelfth edition. 1008 Argentum. PART II. Acid with four fiuidounces of Distilled Water, add the mixture to the solution in the retort, and distil, by means of a sand-bath, with a moderate heat, until six fiuidounces have passed over, or until the distillate no longer produces a pre- cipitate in the receiver. Lastly, wash the precipitate with Distilled Water, and dry it.” U. S. This preparation was introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia for the pur- pose of being used in the extemporaneous preparation of diluted hydrocyanic acid. (See page 923.) By the formula adopted in the Pharmacopoeia of 1840, the officinal hydrocyanic acid was added to a solution of nitrate of silver. The expenditure in this way of the officinal acid, which is very weak, and at the same time nicely adjusted to a given strength, was injudiciously directed; and, accord- ingly, that formula was abandoned, and a new process adopted in the Pharma- copoeia of 1850, and continued in the present, in which all the silver contained in a given weight of nitrate of silver, placed in a receiver in solution, is converted into cyanide by hydrocyanic acid, extricated from ferrocyanide of potassium by the action of sulphuric acid. By a double decomposition between the oxide of silver of the nitrate and the hydrocyanic acid, water and cyanide of silver are formed in the receiver, the latter of which precipitates. The materials in the retort are sufficient to produce a little more hydrocyanic acid than is necessary to convert the whole of the silver in the receiver into cyanide; so that the com- plete decomposition of the nitrate of silver is ensured. According to Messrs. Glassford and Napier, the best way of obtaining cyanide of silver is to add cyanide of potassium to a solution of nitrate of silver so long as a precipitate is formed. Properties. Cyanide of silver is a tasteless white powder, insoluble in water and cold nitric acid, but readily soluble, with decomposition, in that acid when foiling hot. It is decomposed by muriatic acid, exhaling the odour of hydro- cyanic acid. It is not soluble in potassa or soda, but readily so in ammonia. Its best solvent is cyanide of potassium. When heated it is decomposed, cyan- ogen being evolved, and metallic silver left. It consists of one eq. of cyanogen 26, and one of silver 108=134. It has no medical uses. Off. Prep. Acidum Ilydrocyanicum Dilutum, U. S. B. ARGENT! NITRAS. U.S.,Br. Nitrate of Silver. Nitrate of Silver in Crystals. “ Take of Silver, in small pieces, two troyounces; Nitric Acid two troy ounces and a half; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acid with a fluid- ounce of Distilled Water in a porcelain capsule, add the Silver to the mixture, cover it with an inverted glass funnel, resting within the edge of the capsule, and apply a gentle heat until the metal is dissolved, and red vapours cease to be pro- duced; then remove the funnel, and, increasing the heat, evaporate the solution to dryness. Melt the dry mass, and continue the heat, stirring constantly with a glass rod, until free nitric acid is entirely dissipated. Dissolve the melted salt, when cold, in six fiuidounces of Distilled Water, allow the insoluble matter to subside, and decant the clear solution. Mix the residue with a fluidounce of Distilled Water, filter through paper, and, having added the filtrate to the de- canted solution, evaporate the liquid until a pellicle begins to form, and set it aside in a warm place to crystallize. Lastly, drain the crystals in a glass fun- nel until dry, and preserve them in a well-stopped bottle. By evaporating the mother-water, more crystals may be obtained.” U. S. “Take of Refined Silver three ounces [avoirdupois] ; Nitric Acid one fluid- ounce and three-quarters [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water five fiuidounces [Imp. meas.]. Add the Nitric Acid and the Water to the Silver in a flask, and apply a gentle heat till the metal is dissolved. Decant the clear liquor from any black powder which may be present, into a porcelain dish, evaporate, and set aside to crystallize. Let the crystals drain in a glass funnel, and dry them Oy PART II. Argentum. 1009 exposure to the air, carefully avoiding the contact of all organic substances Nitrate of Silver must be preserved in bottles furnished with accurately ground stoppers.” Br. The two formulas are essentially the same; but that of the U. S. Fharmaco poeia is more detailed and precise, with two peculiarities which deserve notice One of these is the direction to cover the materials in the capsule, during the continuance of the reaction, with a glass funnel. This is in order to economize the nitric acid, a portion of which rises in vapour, and, being condensed on the inner surface of the funnel, falls again into the capsule. The second peculiarity is the fusion of the salt before being dissolved. This would, from the phrase- ology of the directions, appear to have been intended to get rid of any uncom- bined nitric acid which might remain in the dry salt. But the effect is probably rather to decompose any nitrate of copper that might have been derived from the silver, which, if coin be employed, always contains it. This accounts for the escape of hyponitric acid vapour. The oxide of copper is got rid of in the sub- sequent solution. During the solution of silver in nitric acid, part of the acid is decomposed into nitric oxide which is given off and becomes red fumes by contact with the atmo- sphere, and oxygen which oxidizes the silver. The oxide formed then combines with the remainder of the acid, and generates the nitrate of silver in solution, which, by due evaporation, furnishes crystals of the salt. The silver should be pure, and the acid diluted for the purpose of promoting its action. If the silver contain copper, the solution will have a greenish tint, not disappearing on the application of heat; and if a minute portion of gold be present, it will be left undissolved as a black powder. The acid also should be pure. The commercial nitric acid, as it frequently contains both muriatic and sulphuric acids, should never be used in this process. The muriatic acid gives rise to an insoluble chlo- ride, and the sulphuric, to the sparingly soluble sulphate of silver.* Properties. Nitrate of silver is in colourless transparent shining crystals, hav- ing the form of rhomboidal plates, sometimes of considerable size. Its taste is bitter and intensely metallic. It is soluble in its own weight of cold water, and in four parts of boiling alcohol. When perfectly pure, it is wholly soluble in dis- tilled water. The solution stains the skin of an indelible- black colour, and is itself discoloured by the most minute portion of organic matter, of which it forms a delicate test. The affinity of this salt for animal matter is evinced by its form- ing definite compounds with albumen and fibrin. The solution also stains linen and muslin in a similar manner; and hence its use in making the so-called in- delible ink. To remove these stains, Mr. W. B. Herapath advises to let fall on the moistened spots a few drops of tincture of iodine, which converts the silver into iodide of silver. The iodide is then dissolved by a solution of hyposulphite of soda, made with half a drachm to a fluidounce of water, or by a moderately dilute solution of caustic potassa, and the spots are washed out with warm water. They are taken out also by a solution of two and a half drachms of cyanide of potassium, and fifteen grains of iodine, in three fluidounces of water. Stains on the skin may be removed by the same reagents. Nitrate of silver melts at 426°, aud on concreting forms the fused nitrate, which is officinal under the name of Argenti Nitras Fusa. At about 600° it is decomposed, with evolution of oxy- gen and hyponitric acid, and the metal is revived. This#explains the necessity of * It is desirable that pure silver, free from copper, should be used in this process. As silver coin always contains copper, it should be purified before being employed. For this purpose, according to the method of M. Lienau, it should be dissolved in nitric acid, and :he solution precipitated by chlorine water, which throws down the silver only in the form of chloride. The precipitate is to be well washed with chlorine water, then dissolved in solution of ammonia, and precipitated by clean copper wire. The silver is deposited as a black powder, which when washed with solution of ammonia, is perfectly pure. (See Am. Tuurn. of Pharm , July, 18G2, p. 368.) 1010 Argentum. PART II. guarding /gainst too high a heat during the fusion of the salt. Nitrate of silver is incompatible with almost all spring and river water, on account of a little common salt usually contained in it; with soluble chlorides; with sulphuric, hydrosulphuric, muriatic, and tartaric acids, and their salts; with the alkalies and their carbonates; with lime-water; and with astringent infusions. It is sometimes improperly prescribed in pill with tannic acid, by which it is decom- posed. Nitrate of silver is an anhydrous salt, consisting of one eq. of nitric acid 54, and one of protoxide of silver 116=170 (AgO,NOs). Impurities and Tests. Muriatic acid or a solution of chloride of sodium, added in excess to one of nitrate of silver, should throw down the whole of the silver as a white curdy precipitate darkening on exposure to light, and nothing besides. This precipitate should be entirely soluble in ammonia. If not so, the insoluble part is probably chloride of lead. If the supernatant liquid, after the removal of the precipitate, be discoloured or precipitated by sulphuretted hydrogen, the fact shows the presence of metallic matter, which is probably copper or some remains of lead, or both. The solution, after precipitation by muriatic acid and filtration, should leave no residue when evaporated. A piece of the salt, heated on charcoal by the blowpipe, melts, deflagrates, and leaves behind a whitish metallic coating. After all, the best sign of the purity of nitrate of silver is the characteristic ap- pearance of the crystals. For other tests, see Argenti Nilras Fusa. Medical Properties. Nitrate of silver, as an internal remedy, is deemed tonic and antispasmodic. The principal diseases in which it has been employed are epilepsy, chorea, angina pectoris, and other spasmodic affections. In epilepsy it forms our most reliable remedy; but the kind of cases to which it is particularly applicable, and its modus operandi are not understood. It is said to produce most good in this disease wdien it acts upon the bowels. Wunderlich has found it specially useful in the affection named progressive locomotive ataxia. {Ann. de Therap., 1863, p. 210.) It is among our most efficient remedies in chronic gas- tritis, attended with pain and vomiting. I)r. J. F. Peebles, of Petersburg, Ya., bore testimony to its efficacy in jaundice connected with gastric irritation, given preferably on-an empty stomach. {Am. Journ. of the Med. Sciences, July, 1849.) Dr. Boudin, of Marseilles, employed it in typhoid fever as a remedy for the in- flammation and ulceration of the ileum, which constitute the most constant lesion in that disease. M. Delioux, of Rochefort, has proposed albuminous injections of nitrate of silver in diarrhoea, formed of half a pint of water, containing the white of one egg, from twro to four grains of the nitrate, and an equal weight of common salt. Nitrate of silver is soluble in an excess of an albuminous solution, and when thus prepared is more readily absorbed than wdien dissolved in water. The com- mon salt promotes its solution without decomposing it. {Journ. de Pharm., xx. 1 49.) In chronic diarrhoea, especially in that kind attendant on phthisis, Dr. Mac- greggor, of Dublin, has found the nitrate of silver, conjoined with opium, a valu- able remedy. It has also been used with supposed advantage in cholera infantum, m doses varying from one-sixteenth to one-fourth of a grain, at intervals of twro, four, or six hours. Whatever may be the remedial value of this salt iuternally administered, its occasional effect of producing a slate-coloured discoloration of the skin, which is seldom removed, is a great objection to its use. This effect proves the absorption of the medicine, and is stated to show itself first on the tongue and fauces. According to Dr. Branson, an indication of the approach of discoloration is furnished by the occurrence of a dark-blue line on the edges of the gums, very similar to that produced by lead, but somewhat darker. For this discoloration of the skin a steady course of cream of tartar has been recom- mended. Externally, nitrate of silver is occasionally employed in solution as a stimu- lant and escharotic ; but the fused nitrate, which is not so pure as the officinal nitrate (pure salt in crystals), is generally selected for making solutions In PART II. Argentum. 1011 cases requiring nicety, the officinal nitrate (crystals) should be directed to be dissolved, and distilled water should be selected as the solvent. A solution, made in the proportion of half a grain of the crystals to a fluidounce of distilled water, forms a good mouth-wash for healing ulcers produced by mercury. In tne in flammation of the mouth from mercurial salivation, M. Bouehacourt found a concentrated solution of the salt, applied to the gums, base of the tongue, &c., with a camel’s hair brush, very useful. A solution, containing from two to ten grains of the crystals to a fluidounce of distilled water, is an excellent applica- tion in ophthalmia with ulcers of the cornea, in fetid discharges from the ear. aphthous affections of the mouth, and spongy gums. The dose of nitrate of silver (crystals) is the fourth of a grain, gradually in- creased to four or five grains, three times a day. For internal exhibition, the physician should always prescribe the crystals, which are meant by the name Argenti Nitras in the revised nomenclature of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, and never direct the fused nitrate (Argenti Nitras Fusa), which is often impure. Nitrate of silver should always be given in pill, in which form, according to Dr. Powell, the system bears a dose three times as large as when given in solution. In the treatment of epilepsy, this physician recommends the exhibition at first of grain doses, to be gradually increased to six grains, three times a day. Its effects vary very much, owing no doubt to the salt being more or less decom- posed by the substances used in preparing it in pill, or with which it comes in contact in the stomach. It should not be made up into pill with crumb of bread, as this contains common salt, but with some vegetable powder and mucilage. But, as all organic substances more or less decompose it, M. Vee proposes the use of inorganic matter, such as nitre, or preferably pure silica obtained by pre- cipitating one of the silicates by an acid, and washing it. The least possible proportion of tragacanth may be used to give adhesiveness to the mass. (Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1861, p. 408.) In view of the fact that chloride of sodium is used with food, and exists, together with phosphates, in the secretions, and that free muriatic acid and albuminous fluids are present in the stomach, it is almost certain that, sooner or later, the whole of the nitrate of silver will be converted into the chloride, phosphate, and albuminate, compounds far less active than the original salt. The experiments of Keller, who analyzed the feces of patients under the use of this salt, confirm this view. Such being the inevitable result when the nitrate is given, the question arises how far it would be expedient to anticipate the change, and give the silver as a chloride ready formed. One of the authors of this work has tried the chloride in large doses, in two cases of epilepsy, but without advantage. According to Mialhe, nitrate of silver upon entering the stomach is immediately changed into the chloride, and this is quickly converted into a soluble and readily absorbable double chloride, by combining with chloride of sodium or of potassium. Nitrate of silver, in an overdose, produces the effects of the corrosive poisons. The proper antidote is common salt, which acts by converting the poison into the insoluble chloride of silver. Off. Prep. Argenti Cyanidum, U. S.; Argenti Nitras Fusa, U. S.; Argenti Oxidum. B. ARGENTI NITRAS FUSA. U.S. Argenti Nitras. Br. Lapis In- FERNALis. Fused Nitrate of Silver. Lunar Caustic. “ Take of Nitrate of Silver a convenient quantity. Melt it in a porcelain cap- sule, and continue the heat cautiously until frothing ceases ; then pour the melted salt into suitable silver moulds.” U. S. “To obtain the Nitrate in rods, fuse the crystals in a dark room in a capsule of platinum or thin porcelain, and pour the melted salt into proper moulds.” Br. Instead of forming the nitrate of silver, as in the process of 1850, the present U. S. Pharmacopoeia takes the salt already formed, and simply melts it with cer- 1012 Argentum. PART II. tain precautions. The British process is merely the continuation of that by which the nitrate is obtained in crystals. As the salt while melting sinks into a com- mon crucible, the fusion is performed in one of porcelain or platinum, the size of which should be sufficient to hold five or six times the quantity of the salt operated on, in order to prevent its overflowing in consequence of the ebullition. Sometimes small portions of the liquid are spirted out, and the operator should be on his guard against this occurrence. When the mass flows like oil, it is com- plete’y fused, and ready to be poured into the moulds. These should be warmed, but tot greased, as organic matter would thus be furnished, which would par- tially decompose the fused salt.* Properties. Fused nitrate of silver, as prepared by the above process, is in the form of hard brittle sticks, of the size of a goose quill, at first translucent, but quickly becoming gray or more or less dark under the influence of light, owing to the reduction of the silver, effected probably by organic matter, or sul- phuretted hydrogen contained in the atmosphere. That the change does not de- pend on the sole action of light has been proved by Mr. Scanlan, who finds that nitrate of silver, in a clean glass tube hermetically sealed, undergoes no change by exposure to light. The sticks often become dark-coloured and nearly black on the surface, and, when broken across, exhibit a crystalline fracture with a radiated surface. Fused nitrate of silver, when pure, is ivholly soluble in dis- tilled water; but even fair samples of the fused salt will not totally dissolve, a very scanty black powder being left of reduced silver, arising probably from the salt having been exposed to too high a heat in fusion. Impurities and Tests. Fused nitrate of silver is liable to contain free silver from having been exposed to too high a heat, the nitrates of lead and copper from the impurity of the silver dissolved in the acid, and nitrate of potassa from fraudulent admixture. Free silver will be left undissolved as a black powder, after the action of distilled water. A very slight residue of this kind is hardly avoidable; but, if there be much free silver, it will be shown by the surface of a fresh fracture of one of the sticks presenting an unusually dark-gray colour. (Ghristison.) The mode of detecting lead and copper is explained under nitrate of silver. (See Argenti Nitras.) In order to detect nitre, a solution of the sus- pected salt should be treated with muriatic acid in excess, to remove silver, and with sulphuretted hydrogen, to throw down other metals if they happen to be present. The filtered liquid, if the salt be pure, will entirely evaporate by heat; if it contain nitre, this will be left, easily known by its properties as a nitrate. This impurity sometimes exists in fused nitrate of silver in large amount, vary- ing, according to different statements, from 10 to 75 per cent. According to Dr. Christison, it may be suspected if the sticks present a colourless fracture. In the Br. Pharmacopoeia the following method is given for testing fused nitrate of silver for impurity, without determining its nature. “ Ten grains dissolved in two fluidrachms of distilled water give with hydrochloric acid a precipitate, which, when washed and thoroughly dried, weighs 8'44 grains; and the filtrate when evaporated by a water bath leaves no residue.” If the weight of the pre- cipitate be greater or less than here stated there must be some impurity in the nitrate; and any non-precipitable matter, if solid at the temperature of the water-bath, will be left behind when the filtrate is evaporated. In the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia, the following test, suggested by Dr. Squibb, is given to detect nitre or other saline impurity. “A small portion, rubbed into fine powder with * For certain purposes it is desirable to have the nitrate of silver less brittle than in its pure state. Prof. J. L. Smith, of Louisville, Ky., has found that this may be effected by adding a little chloride of silver, which renders the stick tough, without materially impair- ing its efficiency. Dr. Squibb proposes to accomplish the object by adding 4') grains of muriatic acid, with half a fluidounce of distilled water, to two ounces of nitrate of silvsi heating the mixture by means of a sand-bath to dryness, and then melting an 1 casing into moulds. (Proceedings of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858.)—Note to the twelfth edition Argentum. PART II. twice its weight of sugar, forms a mixture, which, when burned upon a surface of glass or porcelain, leaves a tasteless residue.” If the nitrate is pure, only the reduced metal is left, which is without taste. If it contain only as much as 1 pe* cent, of nitre, or other saline impurity, the residue will have the sharp alkaline taste of the base of the salt. (Am. Journ. of Pharm, Jan. 1859, p. 50.) Medical Properties. Fused nitrate of silver should be restricted to external use. The medical properties of the salt, as an internal remedy, are given under the head of the crystallized nitrate. (See Argenti Nitras.) Externally applied the fused nitrate acts variously as a stimulant, vesicant, and escharotic, and may be employed either dissolved in water, or in the solid state. Dissolved to the extent of from one to five grains in a fluidounce of water, it is used for the pur- pose of stimulating indolent ulcers, and as an injection for fistulous sores. A drachm of the fused salt, dissolved in a fluidounce of water, forms an escharotic solution, which may often be resorted to with advantage. When used in solution it is most conveniently applied by means of a camel’s hair brush. But fused nitrate of silver is most frequently employed in the solid state; and, as it is not deliquescent nor apt to spread, it forms the most manageable caustic that can be used. When thus employed, it is useful to coat the caustic, as recommended by M. Dumeril, by dipping it into melted engravers’ sealing-wax, which strengthens the stick, protects it from change, prevents it from staining the fingers, and af- fords facilities for limiting the action of the caustic to particular spots. If it is desired, for example, to touch a part of the throat with the caustic, it is pre- pared by scraping oft' the sealing-wax with a penknife, to a suitable extent from one end. Another way to strengthen the stick is to cast it around a plati- num wire, as recommended by M. Chassaignac; or around a wick of cotton, according to the plan of M. Blatin. By the latter plan, when the stick is broken, the fragments remain attached. If the fused nitrate be rubbed gently over the moistened skin until this becomes gray, it generally vesicates, causing usually less pain than is produced by cantharides. The fused nitrate is also employed to de- stroy strictures of the urethra, warts and excrescences, fungous flesh, incipient chancres, and the surface of other ulcers. Mr. Iligginbottom considers its free application to ulcers, so as to cover them with an eschar, as an excellent means of expediting their cicatrization. He alleges that, if an adherent eschar be formed, the parts underneath heal before it falls off. It has also been used with good effect in the solid state, by Dr. Jewell in leucorrhoea, and by Ricord, Han- nay, and others in the gonorrhoea of women. In these cases the pain produced is much less than would be expected. Lunar caustic is frequently used in aque- ous solution as a topical remedy in various low forms of inflammation, but par- ticularly in erysipelas, applied both to the inflamed and to the surrounding nealthy parts. In some cases it is sufficient to blacken the cuticle; in others it is best to produce vesication. In the treatment of these inflammations, Mr. Ward, of Londou, finds an ethereal solution, formed by dissolving eight grains of \he salt in a fluidounce of common nitric ether, much more convenient and man- ageable than an aqueous solution. The ethereal solution is readily applied, and quickly dries. Dr. J. Wiltbank, of this city, uses an aqueous solution of nitrate of silver (from twenty to forty grains to the fluidounce) in the treatment of su- perficial burns and scalds, applied with a camel’s hair brush over the whole sur- face, first wiped dry, after opening the vesications. If the burn be deep, the en- tire surface of the ulcer should be touched with the stick. (Med. Exam., March, 1856, p. 144.) In cases of prolapsus ani, Mr. Lloyd, of London, smears the whole surface of the protruded bowel with the solid caustic, and then returns it. Three or four applications, at intervals of a week or fortnight, are generally sufficient to effect a cure. Mr. Lloyd never knew this practice to be attended with bad consequences. Prof. Parker, of New York, uses nitrate of silver for the radical ’ure of hydrocele. After drawing off the liquid, he introduces, through the can- 1014 Argentum. part rr. :mla, a common probe, the end of which is coated, for half an inch or more, with he caustic. The probe is then carried lightly over the serous surface of the tunica vaginalis, and withdrawn. In smallpox it has been proposed by Breton- neau and Serres to cauterize each pustule, after its top has been removed, on the first or second day of the eruption, in order to arrest its development, and pre- vent pitting. The fused nitrate also forms an efficacious application to certain ulcerations of the throat, to different forms of porrigo of the scalp and other skin diseases, to punctured and poisoned wounds, and to chilblains, slowly rub- bed over the moistened part. If, unexpectedly, the pain produced by its exter- nal use should be excessive, it may be immediately allayed by washing the parts with a solution of common salt, which acts by decomposing the caustic. In the form of ointment, made by mixing one part of the caustic, in powder, with thirty of lard, it has been used in ozaena; a piece of lint, smeared with the ointment being introduced into the nasal fossa. Nitrate of silver, in impalpable powder, mixed with an equal weight of lyco- podium, and used by inhalation, has been found beneficial in ulcerated sorethroat, laryngitis, bronchitis, and incipient phthisis, by Dr. W. M. Cornell, of Boston (Bos- ton Med. and Surg. Journ., Sept. 25, 1850.) The salt, used in this way, has since been successfully employed in the treatment of chronic laryngitis by M. Trous- seau, of Paris, and others. The mixture employed consisted of three grains of the nitrate and a drachm of sugar of milk, intimately mixed in fine powder, of which as much as would fill the barrel of a steel pen was inhaled daily. The steel pen, charged with the powder, and attached to the barrel of a quill, is placed on the root of the tongue, and the patient compresses his lips around the quill. Then holding his nose, he makes a deep inspiration, which draws the powder into the larynx. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1855, p. 515.) This plan of applying nitrate of silver to the larynx is much more sure and safe than that of introducing the solution by injection, or by means of a sponge. B. ARGENTI OXIDUM. U. S., Br. Oxide of Silver. “Take of Nitrate of Silver four troyounces; Distilled Water half a pint; Solution of Potassa a pint and a half, or a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Nitrate of Silver in the Water, and to the solution add Solution of Potassa so long as it produces a precipitate. Wash this repeatedly with water until the washings are nearly tasteless. Lastly, dry the precipitate and keep it in a well stopped bottle, protected from the light.” U. S. “Take of Nitrate of Silver, in crystals, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Solu- tion of Lime three pints and a half [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Dissolve the Nitrate of Silver in four [fluidjounces of the Dis- tilled Water, and, having poured the solution into a bottle containing the So- lution of Lime, shake the mixture well, and set it aside to allow the deposit to settle. Draw off the supernatant liquid, collect the deposit on a filter, wash it with the remainder of the Distilled Water, and dry it at a heat not exceeding 212°. Keep it in a stoppered bottle.” Br. Oxide of silver was introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, and was adopted in the Br. Pharmacopoeia from the Dublin. In the processes for making it, nitrate of oxide of silver is decomposed by potassa or lime, the oxide being pre- cipitated, and nitrate of potassa or nitrate of lime, as the case may be, remaining in solution. When thus obtained the oxide is an olive-brown powder. If the potassa used be not wholly free from carbonic acid, the precipitated oxide will be contaminated with some carbonate of silver. According to Mr. Borland, of Lon- don, the carbonate is sometimes sold for the oxide. A third process for obtaining this oxide is that of Gregory, which consists in boiling the moist, recently pre- pared chloride of silver with a very strong solution of caustic potassa (sp gr. l-25 to 130). In this case, by double decomposition, oxide of silver and chlo- ride of potassium are formed. When thus prepared it is a very dense pure bla'k Part ii. Argentum. —A r sen ic u m. 1015 powder. Oxide of silver is very slightly soluble in water. Exposed to heat it gives out oxygen, and is wholly converted into metallic silver; 29 grains of lr yielding 27 of the metal. (Br.) It should not effervesce with acids. When its solution in nitric acid is precipitated by chloride of sodium in excess, the super- natant liquid is not discoloured by bihydrosulphate of ammonia. The non-action of this test shows the absence of most foreign metals, especially copper and lead. It parts with its oxygen with great facility, being decomposed by many organic substances, and even causing sulphur to take fire when the two are rubbed together, quite dry, in a mortar. (Chem. News, May 7, 1864, p. 217.) Oxide of silver consists of one eq. of silver 108, and one of oxygen 8 = 116. Medical Properties. This oxide has been proposed as a substitute for nitrate of silver, as having the general therapeutic virtues of the latter, without its escharotic effect, and objectionable property of discolouring the skin. It was first tried as a medicine by Van Mons and Seraentini. In 1840 it was employed by Dr. Butler Lane, who considered it to act as a sedative. In 1845 the late Sir James Eyre strongly recommended it in his work on exhausting diseases. Dr. Lane used it with more or less success in nausea, cardialgia, pyrosis, various painful affections of the stomach without organic lesion, dysentery, diarrhoea, night-sweats without other obvious affection, dysmenorrhcea, menorrhagia, leucor- rhoea, chronic enlargements of the uterus attended with flooding, &c. The oxide appeared to exert a peculiar control over uterine fluxes. Some of the cases treated required the use of tonics, after the curative influence of the oxide had been exerted. The late Dr. Golding Bird also obtained favourable effects from the use of oxide of silver, and confirmed to a certain extent the results of Dr Lane, especially as to its valuable powers in menorrhagia. Thus far no case of cutaneous discoloration is known to have occurred; though Dr. Lane gave the oxide repeatedly for two months, and Dr. Bird in more than a hundred cases, in one for four months. Dr. Lane observed one case in which repeated saliva- tion occurred, and Dr. Bird several in which the gums were affected. But, in order to draw any inference from these results, the preseriber should be certain that the medicine is not contaminated with black oxide of mercury. In stomach disease, characterized by a glairy instead of a watery discharge, Dr. Bird derived not the slightest benefit from the oxide, though he used it in thirty cases. In epilepsy it is supposed by some that the oxide will accomplish all that can be expected from the nitrate, with less risk to the stomach, and without incurring the danger of discolouring the skin. In tmnia it has been used successfully in two cases by Mr. Whittel. The dose of oxide of silver is a grain, twice or thrice a day, given in pill. In no case did Dr. Lane carry the dose beyond six grains in the twenty-four hours. The pills should not be made with honey, conserve of roses, or other excipient containing glucose; and, indeed,, most organic sub- stances, especially in a moist state, deoxidize the oxide, reviving the silver. Mr. Ambrose Smith recommends, as among the best excipients, gum arabic, or this with a little syrup. (Proceed. of Ain. Pharm. Assoc., 1859, p. 308.) Oxide of silver has been used in the form of ointment, composed of from five to ten grains to the drachm of lard, as an application to venereal sores, and to the urethral membrane in gonorrhcea, smeared on a bougie. B ARSENICUM. Preparation of Arsenic. The officinal liquid preparations of arsenic are, in compliance with the Phar- macopoeias, considered under the head of Liquores or Solutions. (See Liquor Arsenici et Hudrargyri Iodidi, Liquor Potassse Arsenitis, and Liquor Sodfa Arsenitis, in Part II.) It is only the Iodide of Arsenic that is treated of in this place. Arsenicum.—Atropia. PART II, ARSRNICI IODIDUM. U.S. Iodide of Arsenic. “ Take of Arsenic sixty grains; Iodine three hundred grains. Rub the Ar- senic in a mortar until reduced to a fine powder; then add the Iodine, and rub them together until they are thoroughly mixed. Put the mixture into a.small flask or a test-tube, loosely stopped, and heat it very gently until liquefaction occurs. Then incline the vessel in different directions, in order that any portion of the 1 odine, which may have condensed on its surface, may be returned into the melted mass. Lastly, pour the melted Iodide on a porcelain slab, and, when it is cold, break it into pieces, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This iodide was introduced into the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia for the purpose of being used in preparing the solution of iodide of arsenic and mercury. It is made by the direct combination of its constituents, with the aid of a gentle heat. Properties, &c. Iodide of arsenic is an orange-red, crystalline solid, entirely soluble in water, and wholly volatilized by heat. In composition it is con- sidered to be a teriodide, consisting of one eq. of arsenic 75, and three of iodine o78’9 = 453‘9. It has been used by Biett as an external application in corrod- ing tubercular skin diseases. By the late Dr. A. T. Thomson it was given inter- nally with advantage in lepra, impetigo, and diseases resembling cancer. Dr. F. C. Crane cured a case of what he considered cancer of the breast by its use for nearly eight months. The ointment used by Biett was composed of three grains of the iodide to an ounce of lard. The dose for internal exhibition is an eighth of a grain three times a day, given in pill or solution. Off. Prep. Liquor Arsenici et Hydrargyri Iodidi. B. ATROPIA. Preparations of Atropia. ATROPIA. U. S., Br. Atropia. “Take of Belladonna Root, in fine powder, forty-eight troyounces ; Purified Chloroform four troyounces and a half; Diluted Sulphuric Acid, Solution of Potassa, Alcohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Mix the powder with a pint of Alcohol, and, having introduced the mixture into a cylindrical percolator, pour Alcohol gradually upon it until sixteen pints have passed. From the liquid, thus obtained, distil off twelve pints of alcohol. To the residue add sufficient Diluted Sulphuric Acid to give it an acid reaction, and, having evaporated the liquid to half a pint, add an equal bulk of Water, and filter through paper. To the filtered liquid add, first a troyounce and a half of the Chloroform, and then Solution of Potassa in slight excess, and shake the whole together, at intervals, for half an hour. When the heavier liquid has subsided, separate it, and, having added a troyounce and a half of the Chloroform to the lighter liquid, again shake them together, and separate the heavier from the lighter liquid as before. Add to this lighter liquid the remainder of the Chloroform, and, after agitation, separate the heavier liquid for the third time. Mix the heavier liquids in a cap- sule, and set the mixture aside until, by spontaneous evaporation, the Atropia is left dry.” U. S. “ Take of Belladonna Root, recently dried and in coarse powder, two pounds [avoirdupois]; Rectified Spirit ten pints [Imperial measure]; Slaked lame one ounce [avoird.]; Water half a fluidounce; Distilled Water ten fluid- ounces; Chloroform three fluidounces; Dilute Sulphuric Acid, Carbonate of Potash, and Purified Animal Charcoal, each, a sufficiency. Macerate the Root in two quarts [Imp. meas.] of the Spirit, for twenty-four hours, with frequent stirring. Transfer to a displacement apparatus, and exhaust with the remainder of the Spirit by slow percolation. Add the Lime to the tincture placed in a bottle, and shake occasionally several times. Filter, add the Dilute Sulphuric PART II. Atropia. 1017 Acid in very feeble excess, and filter again. Distil off three-fourths of the Spirit, add to the residue the Distilled Water, evaporate at a gentle heat, but as ra pidly as possible, until the liquid is reduced to one-third of its volume and nr- PART II, BismutJium. oughly washing the residue, which will be yellow oxide of bismuth, dissolving it again in nitric acid, and precipitating by water as before. (Chem. News, Feb. 14 18G3, p. 77.) In the washing of subnitrate of bismuth, the salt is asserted to lose a portion of its nitric acid; and the change may be considerable, if the wasning be persevered with so long as the liquid comes away in any degree acidulous. It has been ascertained by Julius Lowe that this effect may be avoided by wash- ing with a very dilute solution of nitrate of ammonia, containing one part in 500 parts of water. (Chem. Gaz., March 15,1859, p. 119.) Properties. Subnitrate of bismuth is a heavy powder, of a pure-white co- lour, a faintly sour smell and taste, and the property of reddening moistened litmus paper. It is slightly soluble in water, and readily so in the strong acids, from which it is precipitated by water. The fixed alkalies dissolve it sparingly, and ammonia more readily. It is darkened by hydrosulphuric acid gas, but not by exposure to light, unless it contains a little silver, or is subjected to the influence of organic matter. If it dissolves in nitric acid without effer- vescence, it contains no carbonate, and, if the nitric solution is not precipitated by dilute sulphuric acid, it is free from lead. It sometimes contains arsenic, which may be detected by acting on it with pure sulphuric acid, evaporating to dryness, dissolving in hot distilled water, and testing a part of the solution by Marsh’s apparatus. By this method M. Lassaigne detected one-sixth of 1 per cent, of arsenic in a sample of subnitrate sold in Paris. The same chemist has found as much as 27 per cent, of chloride of bismuth in this preparation, when obtained by precipitating, with water, a solution of bismuth in a mixture- of nitric and muriatic acids. The same impurity is introduced, to a small extent, by using common water containing chlorides; and subsulphate of bismuth renders the preparation impure, when the water used contains sulphate of lime. (Journ. de Chun. Med., Mai, 1855, p. 276.) These facts show the necessity of using dis- tilled water. As regards the origin of the chlorine sometimes existing in commer- cial subnitrate of bismuth, it is asserted by Mr. R. C. Tichborne to be a common practice with the manufacturer, in order to save the bismuth existing in the mother-liquor, after the deposition of the subnitrate, to precipitate it with chloride of sodium, thus obtaining an insoluble oxychloride of bismuth, which is then added to the previous product. (Pharm. Journ., Feb. I860, p. 413.) The new metal thallium is said to be present in most specimens of the pharmaceutical pre- parations of bismuth. For the modes of detecting and separating it, the reader is referred to the Chemical News (March 7,1863, p. 109). Subnitrate of bismuth was called, by the earlier chemists, magistery of bismuth. It consists of one eq. of nitric acid 54, one of teroxide of bismuth 237, and one of water 9 = 300. When heated to redness it loses 20 per cent, of its weight. U. S. Medical Properties. Subnitrate of bismuth is antispasmodic, absorbent, and slightly sedative and astringent. When its use is too long continued it produces scorbutic symptoms, a proof that it is absorbed. It was first used as a medicine by Dr. Odier, of Geneva. It is principally employed in painful affections of the stomach, such as cardialgia, pyrosis, and gastrodynia, in spasmodic diseases, and in dysentery and diarrhoea. Rayer employed it with advantage in the diar- rhoea of phthisis and typhus, and Aran recommended it in the obstinate form of the complaint which sometimes follows typhoid fever. It has been used also in dysentery. M. Monneret particularly insists upon the remarkable efficacy of the medicine, given in very large doses, in chronic gastro-intestinal affections, attended with diarrhoea; a plan of treatment which has been followed by several practitioners with advantage. M. Trousseau has successfully employed subnitrate of bismuth in the diarrhoea of children in the form of enema, in the dose of two scruples, mixed with thick flaxseed tea. M. Monneret uses it thus in much larger doses. He thiuks that in diarrhoea its action is entirely local; but this view is combated by Dr. Lussanna, who believes that a part of the medicine enters the 1028 Bismuthum. PART II. circulation, though it never passes into the urine. Its use ..Ways blackens the stools. The dose of subnitrate of bismuth, usually prescribed, is five grains, gradually increased to fifteen, twice or thrice a day, given in pill, or mixed with sweetened water. Upon the plan of large doses, recommended by M. Monneret. from half an ounce to an ounce is given daily, in divided doses, in the diarrhoea of adults; from half a drachm to a drachm in that of infants; and from a drachm to two drachms in painful affections of the stomach. In these large doses the medicine is said to be perfectly safe; and yet Orfila mentions, as resulting from an overdose, gastric distress, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea or constipation, colic, heat in the breast, slight rigors, vertigo, and drowsiness. These effects are to be combated by mucilaginous drinks, enemata, and emollient fomentations, and, in case of inflammation, by bleeding, both general and local. The contradictory statements as to the safety of the preparation can be explained only on the sup- position that it is sometimes rendered poisonous by the presence of arsenic, chloride of bismuth, or free nitric acid; and a strong motive is thus furnished to the apothecary to prepare the medicine with the greatest care. M. Monneret recommends the external use of subnitrate of bismuth as a dry- ing application. In the treatment of ulcers, especially scrofulous ones, provided no risk would be incurred by stopping the discharge, he sprinkles the powder over the whole ulcerated surface. M. E. Caby has used it as a topical applica- tion in leucorrhcea, gonorrhoea, and gleet. When used in leucorrhoea, the entire surface of the vagina is dusted with the powder. The injection for gonorrhoea or gleet is made by mixing with water as much of the subnitrate as can be con- veniently suspended. Three parts of the salt to twenty of water have been re- commended. A portion of the mixture is injected thrice daily, and, each time, retained five minutes. The external use of subnitrate of bismuth is attended with no pain. (Ranking's Abstract, xx. 188.)* B. * Citrate of Bismuth and Ammonia. Liquor Bismuthi. Though the insolubility of the offici- nal preparations of bismuth is probably one of the causes of their efficiency in certain dis- eases of the alimentary mucous membrane, enabling them by deposition on the surface to protect it against irritation from the contents of the stomach and bowels, yet a soluble form of the metal has been sought for, in the hope that it might, in this condition, operate on the system in smaller doses, and with greater certainty and efficiency. This want has been to some extent supplied by a secret preparation, made and sold by Mr. Schacht, of Clifton, England, which, under the name of Liquor Bismuthi, has, for the last five or six years, been used to a considerable extent in Great Britain. Mr. Ch. R. C. Tichborne, hav- ing analyzed the liquid, and found it to contain oxide of bismuth, ammonia, and citric acid, announced the discovery at a meeting of the Pharmaceutical Society, when Mr. Schacht, being present, acknowledged the correctness of the analysis, stating, at the same time, that he had never made a secret of the composition of his solution to medical practitioners, and that a fluidrachm of his liquid contained one grain of the teroxide. (Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1864, p. 301.) A formula for the preparation was given by Mr. Tichborne, which, however, on repeated trial by Mr. N. Gray Bartlett, of Chicago, proved to be impracticable. After numerous experiments, Mr. Bartlett has succeeded in making a solution which has all the desired qualities, and a formula for which he has published in the American Journal of Pharmacy for January, 1865. He first prepares a citrate of bismuth by dissolving a troy- ounce of the subcarbonate of bismuth in 1‘ID grains of nitric acid, diluting the solution after effervescence has ceased with a fluidounce and a half of distilled water gradually introduced, and then adding this solution, slowly and with constant stirring, to another solution made by dissolving 600 grains of citrate of potassa in two pints of distilled water. By an inter- change of principles, nitrate of potassa and citrate of bismuth are foimied, the latter of which, being insoluble, is precipitated, and is obtained by throwing the whole upon a filter, thoroughly washing the salt with distilled water, and then drying it on bibulous paper with a gentle heat. The next step is to prepare the citrate of bismuth and ammonia. This is done by rubbing the citrate of bismuth with sufficient distilled water to make a paste, and add- ing to this gradually, and ,with constant trituration, stronger water of ammonia until the citrate is dissolved, care being taken to avoid an excess of ammonia. The solution is now filtered, and spread on glass to dry. Citrate of bismuth and ammonia, thus obtained, is in fine, glossy, translucent, colourless scales, of a slightly acidulous, somewhat metallic, not disagreeable taste, very soluble in water, but not deliquescent, and of an acid reaction PART II. Cadmium. 1029 CADMIUM. Preparation of Cadmium. CADMII SULPHAS. U.S. Sulphate of Cadmium. “ Take of Cadmium, in small pieces, a troyounce; Nitric Acid two troyounces Carbonate of troyounces; Sulphuric Acid four hundred and twenty grains; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. To the Cadmium and two fluid- ounces of Distilled Water, introduced into a glass vessel, add by degrees the Nitric Acid, and, when the action slackens, apply a gentle heat until the metal is dissolved. Filter the solution, and, having dissolved the Carbonate of Soda in six fluidounces of Distilled Water, mix the solutions thoroughly. Wash the precipitate obtained until the water passes tasteless, and dissolve it in the Sul- phuric Acid, diluted with four fluidounces of Distilled Water. Then evaporate the solution to one-third, and set it aside to crystallize. Lastly, dry the crystals on bibulous paper.” U. S. A nitrate of cadmium is first formed, in consequence of the greater facility with which nitric acid acts upon that metal than sulphuric acid. The cadmium is oxidized at the expense of a part of the acid, with the production of hypo- nitric acid fumes, and the resulting oxide unites with the undecomposed part of the acid to form the nitrate. This is then decomposed in solution by carbonate of soda, with a mutual interchange of principles; the nitric acid of the nitrate of cadmium taking the soda of the carbonate, and forming nitrate of soda which is retained in solution, while the carbonic acid and oxide of cadmium combine to produce the insoluble carbonate of that metal, which is deposited. This, having been washed, is treated with dilute sulphuric acid, by which the carbonic acid is expelled, and the sulphate of cadmium generated in solution, from which it is obtained by concentration and crystallization. Properties. Sulphate of cadmium crystallizes in oblique prisms with rhom- boidal bases, which are transparent and colourless, and said to resemble those of sulphate of zinc. They have an astringent, slightly acidulous, and austere taste, effloresce on exposure to the air, and are very soluble in water. The solution, even though acidulated, gives with hydrosulphuric acid a yellow precipitate, be- coming orange-yellow, of sulphuret of cadmium, which is dissolved by strong muriatic acid, but is insoluble in solutions of potassa or ammonia, and is thus readily distinguished from the sulphuret of arsenic. With hydrosulphate of am- monia it gives a yellow precipitate insoluble in an excess of the hydrosulphate. Ammonia produces a white precipitate, soluble in an excess of the precipitant; carbonate of ammonia a white one insoluble in an excess; ferrocyanide of potas- sium a white precipitate not dissolved by muriatic acid; and the ferridcyanide a brownish-yellow one soluble in a large excess of that acid. (Brande & Taylor.) By these tests sulphate of cadmium is distinguished as a salt of that metal. As a sulphate it is known by yielding a precipitate with chloride of barium not From an analysis by Mr. Bartlett, it appears to consist of one eq. of teroxide of bismuth 237, one of ammonia 26, and one of citric acid 165, with 5 eqs. of water 45 = 473; and its formula is Bi03,NH^0,Cj2H50u-f- 5HO. There is no occasion for a permanent solution of this salt, as it may at any time be dis- solved when wanted for use. But, as it is in the liquid form that it has obtained its present reputation, we give a formula for a permanent solution prepared by Mr. Bartlett. Dissolve 26U grains of citrate of bismuth and ammonia in fourteen fluidounces of distilled water, neu- tralize the solution with water of ammonia, and add two fluidounces of alcohol. The solu- tion of the salt without addition is liable to spontaneous decomposition; but, in the opinion of Mr. Bartlett, it is completely protected by the ammonia and alcohol, so that in this state it will keep indefinitely. The dose of the solid citrate is two grains, that of the solution a fluidrachm. For further particulars in regard to the preparation of the salt and its solu- tion, the reader is referred to Mr. Bartlett’s paper in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (Jan. 1865) already noticed.—Note to the twelfth edition. Cadmium.—Calx. PART II. soluble in nitric acid. Zinc precipitates cadmium in the metallic state from the solution. Cadmium suspended in a solution of sulphate of copper precipitates that metal, leaving sulphate of cadmium in solution; and this has been proposed as a method >f obtaining the salt. The formula of sulphate of cadmium as com- monly given is CdO,S03-f 4HO; but, according to M. de Hauer, it is said to have eight eqs. of water for every three of the salt, and its formula is 3(CdO, SO.,) + 8HO. (Chem. News, Nov. 29, 1862, p. 268.) W. Medical Uses. Sulphate of cadmium is said to resemble sulphate of zinc as an astringent and emetic. Besides these properties, it possesses, according to M. Grimaud, valuable powers as a remedy in syphilis, rheumatism, and gout. As yet it has been used almost exclusively as an astringent and stimulating remedy in diseases of the eyes. In specks and opacities of the cornea, it has been em- ployed successfully by both American and European surgeons. It is used either in solution, in the proportion of from half a grain to four grains to the fluid- ounce of distilled water, or in the form of ointment, made by mixing two grains with four scruples of fresh lard. M. Fronmiiller has employed it, with excellent results, in specks of the cornea, dissolved in rose-water in the proportion of three grains to two fluidounces, conjoined with from half a fluidrachm to a fluidrachm and a half of wine of opium. We have had no experience with sulphate of cad- mium as an internal remedy, and can give no authoritative statement as to the proper dose. Nor does this appear to have been well determined; for, while on the one hand we are told that it is ten times as strong as sulphate of zinc, on the other it is said to be used for the same purposes and in the same doses as that salt. (Bouchardat, Ann. de Therap., 1857, p. 281.) B. CALX. Preparations of Lime. The liquid preparations of lime, Liquor Calcis and Liquor Calcii Chloridi, have, in conformity with the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, been transferred to the Solutions. (See Liquores.) CALCIS CARBONAS PRiECIPITATA. U.S., Br. Precipitated Carbonate of Lime. “Take of Solution of Chloride of Calcium five pints and a half; Carbonate of Soda seventy-two troyounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Dis- solve the Carbonate of Soda in six pints of Distilled Water. Heat this solution and the Solution of Chloride of Calcium, separately, to the boiling point, and mix them. After the precipitate has subsided, separate it from the supernatant liquid by decantation, and wash it with boiling Distilled Water until the wash- ings cease to be affected by a solution of nitrate of silver. Lastly, dry the pre- cipitate on bibulous paper.” U. S. “Take of Chloride of Calcium five ounces [avoirdupois]; Carbonate of Soda thirteen ounces [avoird.]; Boiling Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dissolve the Chloride of Calcium and the Carbonate of Soda each in two pints [Imperial mea- sure] of the Water; mix the two Solutions; and allow the precipitate to subside. Collect this on a calico filter, wash it with boiling Distilled Water, until the washings cease to give a precipitate with nitrate of silver, and dry the product at the temperature of 212°.” Br. These processes do not essentially differ. In each a mutual interchange ot principles takes place, resulting in the production of chloride of sodium which remains in solution, and carbonate of lime which is deposited. Any peculiar advantage of the preparation must depend on the minute division of i'.s parti- cles. According to Dr. Bridges, this effect is best obtained by employing the solutions at the boiling temperature, a precaution which is observed in l-cth th« FART II. Calx. 1031 present officinal processes. (Amer. Journ. of Pharm., xvi. 163.) When pro- perly made, it is a very pure carbonate of lime, in the form of a fine white pow der, free from grittiness, insoluble in water, but wholly soluble in dilute nmri atic acid with copious effervescence. These properties serve Lo distinguish it from sulphate of lime, with which it is sometimes adulterated, and which has even been sold for it. It is known to be a salt of lime by giving a copious white precipitate with oxalate of ammonia, when this is added to its solution in muri- atic acid, previously neutralized by ammonia. It is dissolved by nitric acid, giv- ing a clear solution, which if perfectly neutral, and boiled to drive off carbonic acid, gives no precipitate with saccharated solution of lime in excess, or with nitrate of silver, showing the absence of phosphates and chlorides. Its formula is and equivalent number 50. For ordinary use, it probably has no such ■superiority over prepared chalk as to counterbalance its greater expensiveness. It is preferred by some to chalk in the preparation of tooth-powders. It is fre- quently sold in the shops under the name of creta prsecipitata. The dose is from 10 to 40 grains or more. W. CALCIS HYDRAS. Br. Slaked Lime. “Take of Lime, recently burned, two pounds [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Wrater one pint [Imperial measure]. Place the Lime in a metal pot, pour the Water upon it, and when vapour ceases to be disengaged cover the pot with its lid, and set it aside to cool. When its temperature has fallen to that of the atmos- phere, remove its contents, pass the powder through an iron-wire sieve, and put it into a wide-mouthed bottle, which should be accurately closed with a well- fitted cork. Slaked Lime should be recently prepared.”Br. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia has no separate formula for this preparation, but directs it to be made when at any time it may be wanted. In the process of slak- ing, water combines with lime to form a solid hydrate, with the evolution of much heat and the escape of white vapours, which consist of steam holding particles of lime in suspension. By union with water the lime acquires a whiter colour, and if previously in masses, becomes much softer, swelling up, and breaking into a coarse soft powder or friable lumps. When perfectly dry, it consists of one eq. of each of its constituents, with the formula Ca0,110. For the properties of lime the reader is referred to the head of Calx, in Part I. Hydrate of lime is used exclusively as a pharmaceutical agent. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Aether, Br.; Atropia, Br.; Beberi® Sulphas, Br.; Chloroformum, Br.; Liquor Anamoni® Fortior, Br.; Liquor Potass®, Br.; Liquor Sod®, Br.; Potass® Chloras, Br.; Potass® Sulphas, Br.; Santoninum, Br. Off. Prep. Liquor Calcis, Br.; Liquor Calcis Saccharatus, Br. W. CALCIS PHOSPHAS PR2ECIPITATA. U. S., Br. Precipitated Phosphate of Lime. “ Take of Bone, calcined to whiteness, and in fine powder, four troyounces; Muriatic Acid eight troyounces; Water of Ammonia twelve ffuidounces, or a sufficient quantity; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Macerate the Bone with the Acid, diluted with a pint of Distilled Water, until it is dissolved, and filter the solution. Add another pint of Distilled Water, and then, gradually, Water of Ammonia until the liquid acquires an alkaline reaction. Mix the pre- cipitate obtained, while yet in the state of magma, with twice its bulk of boiling Distilled Water, and pour the whole upon a strainer. Wash the precipitate with boding Distilled W'ater until the washings cease to be affected by a solution of nitrate of silver, acidulated with nitric acid. Lastly, dry the precipitate with a gentle heat.” U. S. Take of Bone Ash four ounces [avoirdupois] ; Hydrochloric Acid sixffuid- '•unces; Distilled Water two pints [Imperial measure]; Solution of Ammonia twelve ffuidounces, or a sufficiency. Digest the Bone Ash in the Hydrochloric 1032 Calx. PART II. Acid diluted with a pint of Water, until it is dissolved. Filter the solution, if necessary; add the remainder of the Water, and afterwards the solution of Am- monia, until the mixture acquires an alkaline reaction ; and, having collected the precipitate on a calico filter, wash it with boiling Distilled Water as long as the liquid which passes through occasions a precipitate, when dropped into the solu- tion of nitrate of silver acidulated with nitric acid. Dry the washed product at a temperature not exceeding 212?.” Br. This preparation, whatever opinion may be entertained of its real powers, has been very properly introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, as it is considera- bly used, and is by some much esteemed. The muriatic acid dissolves the phosphate of lime of the bones, and lets it fall, on the addition of ammonia, in a state of minute division. The ablution is in- tended to free it from adhering muriate of ammonia. The salt thus obtained is, for the sake of distinction, called bone phosphate of lime. It is a white powder, without taste or smell, insoluble in water, but very soluble in nitric, muriatic, and acetic acids, from which it is precipitated unchanged by ammonia. By an intense heat it is fused, but is not otherwise changed. It consists, according to Mitscherlich, of one equivalent of phosphoric acid and three of lime. The chemical characteristics of bone phosphate of lime, besides those men- tioned, are that with its solution in dilute nitric acid, oxalate of ammonia pro- duces a white precipitate of oxalate of lime, and acetate of lead a white pre- cipitate of phosphate of lead; and, if the nitric solution be neutralized as far as possible without causing a permanent precipitate of phosphate of lime, am- moniacal nitrate of silver throws down from it a lemon-yellow precipitate of phosphate of silver. ( Christison',s Dispensatoi'y.) Medical Uses. In the form of burnt hartshorn, phosphate of lime formerly enjoyed a brief popularity in the treatment of rickets and mollities ossium, in which its use seemed to be indicated upon obvious chemical grounds. It has recently been again brought into notice in consequence of the suggestion by Benecke (London Lancet, July, 1851), that, as it is essential in animals as well as plants to the formation of cells, it might be found useful in certain patholo- gical states of the system characterized by defective nutrition, such as the scro- fulous affections. Upon considerations of this kind, the late Dr. W. Stone, of New Orleans, was induced to employ it in cases of scrofulous ulceration, phthisis, &c., and with considerable supposed advantage. (See St. Louis Med. and Surg. Journ., x. 38.) Subsequently, it has been used by other practitioners, and, in connection with other phosphates, as those of iron, soda, and potassa, has ac- quired no little reputation in different forms of scrofula and phthisis. When, however, it is considered that, in ordinary food, there is more of the phosphates than the system has need of, so that they are constantly escaping with the stools; and that in those very disorders in which they are supposed to be indicated they are not unfrequently in excess in the blood and urine, in consequence, probably, of the rapid disintegration of the tissues, it would seem doubtful whether the want, in scrofulous cases, is so much that of materials for cells as of due power to appropriate those materials. In the reported cases, the phosphate of lime has generally been administered in connection with cod-liver oil or other tonics; to which, there is reason to believe, any benefit experienced is more truly ascri- bable than to the phosphate. In two of Dr. Stone’s cases the good effects began to be experienced at the period when they might have been expected from the oil alone. Phosphate of lime is thought to have proved useful by hastening the union of fractured bones; and M. Alphonse Milne-Edwards is said to have shown, by experiments upon dogs and rabbits, that, in these animals, the callus in fractured bones forms more quickly under its use than without it. (Med. Times and Gaz., May, 1856, p. 489.) Its use in curvature of the spine and rickety a,, fections in general has also been revived by M. Piorry and others. 'Though PART II. Calx. 1033 insoluble in water, it is probably in general dissolved by the gastric liquids, in consequence of the acid present in them; and, if desirable, it may readily be ad- ministered in solution by the addition of one of the acids mentioned in the above account of its chemical properties. The dose is from ten to thirty grains.* Off. Prep. Pulvis Antimonialis, Br. W. CRETA PRiEPARATA. U. S., Br. Prepared Chalk. “ Take of Chalk a convenient quantity. Add a little water to the Chalk, ana rub it into fine powder. Throw this into a large vessel nearly full of water, stir briskly, and, after a short interval, decant the supernatant liquor, while yet turbid, into another vessel. Treat the coarser particles of the Chalk, remaining in the first vessel, in a similar manner, and add the turbid liquid to that previously de- canted. Lastly, set the liquid by that the powder may subside, and, having poured off the water, dry the powder.” U. S. “Take of Chalk one pound [avoirdupois]; "Water a sufficiency. Reduce the Chalk to powder, and, having rubbed this in a mortar with as much Water as will give it the consistence of cream, fill the mortar with more Water, and stir well, giving the whole a circular motion. Allow the mixture to stand for fifteen seconds, and then decant the milky liquid into a large vessel. Rub what remains in the mortar, adding as much Water as was previously used, and, after allow- ing it to settle for fifteen seconds, again decant, and let this process be repeated several times, using, if necessary, additional Chalk. Transfer the fine sediment which subsides from the decanted liquids to a filter, and dry it at a temperature of 212°.” Br. The object of these processes is to reduce chalk to a very fine powder. The min- eral, previously pulverized, should be rubbed with a little water upon a porphyry slab, by means of a muller of the same material. Having been thus very minutely divided, it is agitated with water, which upon standing a short time deposits the coarser particles, and, being then poured off, slowly lets fall the remainder in an impalpable state. The former part of the process is called levigation, the latter elutriation. The soft mass which remains after the decanting of the clear liquor, is made to fall upon an absorbent surface in small portions, which when dried have a conical shape.f Practically, prepared chalk is generally made on the large scale from whiting by the manufacturer. For the particulars of the process the reader is referred to the Pharm. Journ. (viii. 416). * Syrup of Phosphate of Lime. Mr. T. S. Wiegand has proposed a syrup of phosphate of lime, to be made in the following manner. Take of the precipitated phosphate muriatic acid f5ss, water sugar q. s. Mix the phosphate with a fluidounce of the water; add the acid; filter the resulting solution; then add the remainder of the -water, and enough sugar to make twelve fluidounces of syrup; and, finally, strain. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 297.)—Note to the eleventh edition. f Several insoluble substances, besides chalk, are brought habitually into the form of small cones, such as prepared oyster-shell, phosphate of lime, rust of iron, subnitrate of bismuth, &c. The mode by which this is effected is by the use of a simple implement, con- sisting of a funnel of tinned-iron, with the neck removed (a), fixed at the expanded extremity (b) of a piece of wood about a foot long (c), having its other end in the form of a handle (V. This is carminative and antispasmodic as well as laxative. We should, how- ever, prefer a preparation consisting of the gum-resin rubbed up with water; as the alcohol of the tincture might in some instances prove injurious. The whole quantity directed may be administered at once. W. ENEMA MAGNESIiE SULPIIATIS. Br. Enema of Sulphate of Magnesia. Enema Catiiarticum. EdDub. Cathartic Clyster. “ Take of Sulphate of Magnesia one ounce [avoirdupois]; Olive Oil one fluidounce; Mucilage of Starch fifteen fluidounces. Dissolve the Sulphate of Magnesia in the Mucilage, add the Oil, and mix.” Br. The laxative enema, most commonly employed in this country, consists of a tablespoonful of common salt, two tablespoonfuls of lard or olive oil, the same quantity of molasses, and a pint of warm water. It has the advantage of con- sisting of materials which are always at hand in families, and is in all respects equal to the officinal preparation. W- ENEMA OPII. Br. Enema of Opium. Enema Opii vel Anodynum. Ed. Anodyne Enema. “Take of Tincture of Opium half a fluidrachm; Mucilage of Starch two fluidounces. Mix.”.Z>/\ . This formula is unobjectionable. It must have happened to every one in the habit of prescribing opium in this way, to have seen a much greater effect pro- duced by a certain amount of laudanum injected into the rectum than by one- third of the quantity swallowed. The fluidrachm contains at least one hundred drops of laudanum of the ordinary size, and not less than one hundred and twenty as they are often formed. From twenty to twenty-five drops are usually consi- dered as a medium dose by the mouth; so that sixty drops, equivalent to about thirty minims, are abundantly sufficient by enema. As the object is that the enema should remain in the rectum, the smaller the quantity of the vehicle the better; and a mucilaginous fluid is preferable to water, as it involves the tinc- ture, and prevents the irritation of the alcohol before the opium begins to take effect. The ordinary anodyne enema, employed in this country, consists of about sixty drops of laudanum and one or two fluidounces of flaxseed tea or solution of starch, conforming precisely with the present British formula. This is an admirable remedy in obstinate vomiting, strangury from blisters, painful affections of the kidneys, bladder, and uterus, and in the tenesmus of dysentery. It may also frequently be employed to produce the effects of opium upon the system, when circumstances prevent the administration of that medi- cine by the mouth. " ’ 1077 PART II. Enemata.—Extracta. ENEMA TABACI. Br. Enema of Tobacco. “Take of Leaf Tobacco twenty grains; Boiling Water eight fluidounces Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. The whole quantity is to be given at once. The dose is somewhat less than that usually employed in this country. (See Infusum Tabaci.) W. ENEMA TEREBINTHINiE. Br. Enema of Turpentine. “Take of Oil of Turpentine one Jluidounce; Mucilage of Starch fifteen fluidounces. Mix.” Br. For the dose of this preparation, see Oleum Terebinthinse. W. EXTRACTA. Extracts. Extracts, as the term is employed in the Pharmacopoeias, are solid substances, resulting from the evaporation of the solutions of vegetable principles, obtained either by exposing the vegetable to the action of a solvent, or by expressing its juice in the recent state. A distinction was formerly made between those pre- pared from the infusions, decoctions, or tinctures, and those from the expressed juices of plants, the former being called Extracta, the latter Sued Spissati; but the distinction has been generally abandoned. There is no such essential difference between these two sets of preparations as to require that they should be sepa- rately classed; and something is gained in the simplicity of nomenclature, as well as of arrangement, which results from their union. We shall consider them under the same head, taking care, however, to detail distinctly whatever is pecu- liar in the mode of preparing each. The composition of extracts varies with the nature of the vegetable, the cha- racter of the solvent, and the mode of preparation. The object is generally to obtain as much of the active principle of the plant, with as little of the inert matter as possible; though sometimes it may be desirable to separate two active ingredients from each other, when their effects upon the system are materially different; and this may be accomplished by employing a menstruum which, while it dissolves one, leaves the other untouched. The proximate principles most cpmmonly present in extracts are gum, sugar, starch, tannin, extractive, colouring matter, salts, and the peculiar principles of plants; to which, when a spirituous solvent is employed, may usually be added resinous substances, fatty matter, and frequently more or less essential oil; gum and starch being excluded when the menstruum is pure alcohol. Of these substances, as well as of others which, being soluble, are sometimes necessarily present in extracts, we have taken occasion to treat under various heads in the Materia Medica. There is one, however, which, from its supposed almost uniform presence in this class of preparations, and from the influence it is thought to exert upon their character, deserves particular consideration in this place. We allude to extractive, or, as it is sometimes called, extractive matter. It has long been observed that in most vegetables there is a substance, soluble both in water and alcohol, which, in the preparation of extracts, undergoes che- mical change during the process of evaporation, imparting to the liquid, even if originally limpid, first a greenish, then a yellowish-brown, and ultimately a deep- brown colour, and becoming itself insoluble. This substance, originally called saponaceous matter by Scheele, afterwards received the more expressive name of extractive, derived from its frequent presence in extracts. Its existence as a distinct principle is denied, or at least doubted by some chemists, who consider the phenomena supposed to result from its presence, as depending upon the mu- tual reaction of other principles; and, in relation to Peruvian bark, it appears to have been proved that the insoluble matter which forms during its decoction 1078 Extract a. part ii. in wate1 .* a compound of starch and tannin. A similar compound must also be formed in other cases when these two principles coexist; but they are not always present in the same vegetable, nor can all the changes which have been attri- buted to extractive be accounted for by their union, even when they are present; so that, till further light is shed on the subject, it is best to admit the existence of a distinct substance, which, though not the same in all plants, possesses suf- licieut identity of character to be entitled, like sugar, resin, &c., to a distinctive name. The most interesting property of extractive is its disposition to pass, by the influence of atmospheric air at a high temperature, into an insoluble sub- stance. If a vegetable infusion or decoction be evaporated in the open air to the consistence of an extract, then diluted, filtered, and again evaporated, and the process repeated so long as any insoluble matter is formed, the whole of the extractive will be separated from the liquid, while the other ingredients may re- main. If chlorine be passed through an infusion or decoction, a similar precipi- tate is formed with much greater rapidity. The change is usually ascribed to the absorption of oxygen by the extractive, which has, therefore, been called, in its altered condition, oxidized extractive; but De Saussure ascertained that, though oxygen is absorbed during the process, an equal measure of carbonic acid gas is given out, and the oxygen and hydrogen of the extractive unite to form water in such a manner as to leave the principle richer in carbon than it was originally. The name of oxidized extractive is, therefore, obviously incorrect; and Berzelius proposed to substitute for it that of apotheme, synonymous with deposit. According to Berzelius, apotheme is not completely insoluble in water, but imparts a slight colour to that liquid when cold, and is rather more soluble in boiling water, which becomes turbid upon cooling. It is still more soluble in alcohol, and is freely dissolved by solutions of the alkalies and alkaline carbon- ates, from which it is precipitated by acids. It has a great tendency, when pre- cipitated from solutions, to unite with other principles, and to carry them along with it; thus acquiring properties somewhat different according to the source from which it is obtained. In this way, also, even when the extractive of a plant is itself medicinally inert, its conversion into apotheme may be injurious by caus- ing a precipitation of a portion of the active principle; and, in practical phar- maceutic operations, this change should always, if possible, be avoided. With these preliminary views, we shall proceed to the consideration of the practical rules necessary to be observed in the preparation of extracts. We shall treat of the subject under the several heads of, 1. the extraction of the soluble principles from the plant; 2. the method of conducting the evaporation; 3. the proper condition of extracts, the changes they are liable to undergo, and the best me- thod of preserving them; and 4. the general directions of the several Pharma- copoeias in relation to them. 1. Extraction of the Soluble Principles. There are two distinct modes of obtaining, in a liquid state, the principles which we wish to extract; 1. by expression aloue; 2. by the agency of a sol- vent, with or without expression. 1. By Expression. This method is applicable to recent vegetables. All plants cannot be usefully treated in this way, as many have too little juice to afford an appreciable quantity upon pressure, and of the succulent a considerable portion do not yield all their active principles with their juice. Succulent fruits, and various acrid and narcotic plants, are proper subjects for this treatment. The plants should be operated upon, if possible, immediately after collection. Mr Battley, of London, recommends that, if not entirely fresh, they should be re- vived by the immersion of the stalks in water for twelve or eighteen hours, and those only used which recover their freshness by this management. Tboy nhould PART II. Extracta. 1079 then be cut into pieces, and bruised in a stone mortar till brought to a pulpy consistence. When the plant is not very succulent, it is necessary to add a little water during this part of the process, in order to dilute the juice. After sufficient contusion, the pulp is introduced into a linen or canvas bag, and the liquid parts expressed. Mr. Brande states that light pressure only should be employed; as the extract is thus procured greener, of a less glutinous or viscid consistence and, in his opinion, more active than when considerable force is used in the ex- pression. (Manual of Pharmacy.) The juice thus obtained is opaque and usu- ally green, in consequence of the presence of green wax or chlorophyll, and of a portion of the undissolved vegetable fibre in minute division. By heating the juice to about 160°, the albumen contained in it coagulates, and, involving the chlorophyll and vegetable fibre, forms a greenish precipitate. If the liquid is now filtered, it becomes limpid and nearly colourless, and is prepared for eva- poration. The clarification, however, is not absolutely necessary, and is gene- rally neglected. Sometimes the precipitate carries with it a considerable portion of the active principle; in which case it should be subsequently incorporated with the juice, when reduced by evaporation to the consistence of syrup. Ether added to the expressed juices of jdants enables them to be kept long without in- jurious change. M. Lepage, of Gisors, France, has kept the juice of belladonna in this way more than 10 years, and found it, at the end of that time, to yield an extract, identical in physical, chemical, and physiological properties with that obtained from the fresh juice. If this fact is found to be of general applicability, it will be of considerable importance, as enabling the pharmaceutist to supply himself, at pleasure, with extracts to be relied on, without reference to the season. (Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1863, p. 361.) 2. By Solution. The active principles of dried vegetables can be extracted only by means of a liquid solvent. The menstruum usually employed is either water or alcohol, or a mixture of the two. Water, on account of its cheapness, is always preferred, when circumstances do not strongly call for the use of alco- hol. It has the advantage, moreover, that it may be assisted in its action, if necessary, by a higher degree of heat than the latter. Pump water is often unfit for the purpose, in consequence of the quantity of its saline matter, which, in some instances, may exert an unfavourable influence on the active principle, and must always be left in the extract. Bain, river, or distilled water should be pre- ferred. Alcohol is employed when the principles to be extracted are insoluble, or but slightly soluble in water, as in the case of the resins; when it is desirable to avoid in the extract inert substances, such as gum and starch, which are dis- solved by water and not by alcohol; when the heat required to evaporate the aqueous solution would dissipate or decompose the active ingredients of the plant, as the volatile oils and the active principle of sarsaparilla; when the reaction of tne water itself upon the vegetable principles is injurious; and, finally, when the nature of the substance to be exhausted requires so long a maceration in water as to endanger spontaneous decomposition. The watery solution requires to be soon evaporated, as this fluid rather promotes than counteracts chemical changes; while an alcoholic tincture may be preserved unaltered for an indefi- nite period. An addition of alcohol to water is sufficient to answer some of the purposes for which the former is preferable; and tke employment of both fluids is essential, when the virtues of the plant reside in two or more principles, all of which are not soluble in either of these menstrua. In this case it is usually better to submit the vegetable to the action of the two fluids successively, than of both united. Extracts obtained by the agency of water are called ivatery or aqueous extracts; those by means of alcohol, undiluted or diluted, alcoholic or spirituous extracts The method of preparing the solution is not a matter of indifference. The vegetable should be thoroughly bruised, or reduced to a coarse powder, so as to Extracta. PART n. allow tlr access of the solvent to all its parts, and yet not so finely pulverized as to prevent a ready precipitation of the undissolved and inactive portion. When water is employed, it has been customary to boil the medicine for a con- siderable time, and, if the first portion of liquid does not completely exhaust it, to repeat the operation with successive portions, till the whole of the active mat- ter is extracted. This may be known by the sensible properties of the liquid, and by its influence upon reagents. But the boiling temperature produces the decomposition of many vegetable principles, or at least so modifies them as to render them inert; and the extracts prepared by decoction are usually less effi- cient than those made with a less degree of heat. From numerous experi- ments upon extracts, Orfila concluded that their virtues were less in proportion to the heat employed. It has, therefore, been recommended to substitute for decoction the process of maceration, digestion, or hot infusion; in the first of which the liquid acts without heat, in the second is assisted by a moderately in- creased temperature sustained for a considerable time, and in the third is poured boiling hot upon the vegetable matter, and allowed to stand for a short period in a covered vessel, When the active principles are readily soluble in cold water, maceration is often preferable to the other modes, as starch, which is inert, is thus left behind; but in many instances the preparation would spoil before the extraction would be completed. By digestion, though the solvent power of water is moderately increased, the advantage is often more than counterbalanced by the increased disposition to spontaneous decomposition. Hot inf union, there- fore, is to be preferred where the vegetable does not readily yield its virtues to cold water. It has the advantage, moreover, in the case of albuminous sub- stances, that the albumen is coagulated, and thus prevented from increasing the bulk of the extract, without adding to its virtues. A convenient mode of per- forming this process, is to introduce the solid material into a vessel with an opening near the bottom temporarily closed, or into a funnel with its mouth loosely stopped, then to pour on the boiling water, and, having allowed it to re- main a sufficient length of time, to draw it off through the opening. This opera- tion may be repeated till the water comes away without any obvious impregna- tion. It is always desirable to obtain the solution in the first place as concen- trated as possible, so as to prevent the necessity of long-continued evaporation, which injures the extract. It is better, therefore, to incur the risk, both when decoction and infusion are employed, of leaving a portion of the active matter behind, than to obtain a very weak solution. When successive portions of water are employed, those which are least impregnated should be brought by evapora- tion to the strength of that first obtained before being mixed with it, as the latter thus escapes unnecessary exposure to heat. Sometimes the filtering of a turbid infusion or decoction, before evaporation, causes the resulting extract to keep better, by removing substances, which, besides undergoing decomposition themselves, may act as a ferment, and thus occasion the decomposition of the active matter of the extract. When alcohol is employed as a menstruum, the vegetable should be macerated in it for one or two weeks, and care should be taken that the tincture be as nearly saturated as possible. The extraction may be hastened by substituting digestion for maceration ; as the moderate heat employed, while it facilitates the action of the alcohol, has in this case no effect in promoting decomposition, and the influence of the atmospheric air may be excluded by performing the process in close vessels. When alcohol and water are both used, it is best, as a general rule, to exhaust the vegetable with each separately, as the two menstrua require different modes of treatment. In whichever of these modes the extrac- tion is effected, it requires the assistance of occasional agitation; and, when the vegetable matter is very porous, and absorbs a large quantity of the solvent, expression must be resorted to. VART II. Extracta. 1081 Acetic acid has been introduced into nse as a menstruum in the preparation of extracts. It is supposed to be a better solvent of the active principles of certain substances than either water or alcohol alone. According to Girolamo Ferrari, the acrid narcotics, such as aconite, hemlock, hyoscvamus, and stramo- nium, yield much stronger extracts with distilled vinegar than with water, ano still stronger with alcohol to which strong acetic acid has been added. (Journ de Pharm., 3e ser., i. 289.) This acid is used in the preparation of the acetic extract of colchicum. Ether also is now used to a considerable extent in the preparation of certain extracts. Having the property of dissolving volatile oil and resin, and of evapo- rating at a temperature insufficient to volatilize the oil, it is admirably adapted for the preparation of extracts from those substances, the virtues of which reside in the two principles referred to. An ethereal tincture is first prepared by the process of percolation or displacement, and the ether is then either allowed to escape by spontaneous evaporation, or is distilled off at a very moderate heat. The oleoresinous extracts thus obtained are usually of a thick fluid or semi-fluid consistence. For more precise information as to the mode of preparing them, the reader is referred to a paper by Prof. Procter, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxi. 114). Several of them are now ranked among the officinal preparations, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, under the title of Oleoresins. The process of percolation or displacement has within a few years been very advantageously applied to the preparation of extracts, both with water and spi- rituous menstrua. It has the following great advantages ; 1. that it enables the soluble principles to be sufficiently extracted by cold water, thereby avoiding the injury resulting from heat in decoction and hot infusion; 2. that it effects the extraction much more quickly than can be done by maceration, thereby not only saving time, but also obviating the risk of spontaneous decomposition; and 3. that it affords the opportunity of obtaining highly concentrated solutions, thus diminishing the injurious effects of the subsequent evaporation. While thus ad- vantageous, it is less liable in this particular case than in others to the objection of yielding imperfect results if not well performed ; for, though an inexpert or careless operator may incur loss by an incomplete exhaustion of the substance acted on, and the extract may be deficient in quantity, it may still be of the in- tended strength and quality, which is not the case with infusions or tinctures unskilfully prepared upon this plan. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, all the extracts to which the process is applicable are prepared by percolation, and, with a very few exceptions, without previous maceration or digestion, which, as a general rule, is useless if not injurious. In the British Pharmacopoeia, the process is applied, as it were, hesitatingly to a portion of the extracts, and withheld in others to which it seems equally appropriate; and, as if there was an unwilling- ness to trust this exotic method entirely, previous maceration for a greater or less length of time, never less than twelve, and more generally for twenty-four hours, is with a single exception universally adopted, whenever percolation is employed. In this respect British pharmacy is, we think, behind that of the United States. For an account of the mode of operating in the process of displacement, and of the instruments used, the reader is referred to pages 894 and 905. Some prefer the mode of expression to that of displacement. This also is ap- plicable both to watery and alcoholic menstrua. The substance to be acted upon is mixed with the menstruum, cold or hot according to circumstances; and the mixture is allowed to stand from twelve to twenty-four hours. The liquid part is then filtered off, and the remainder submitted to strong pressure, in a linen bag, by means of a common screw press, or other convenient instrument. Another portion of the menstruum may then be added, and pressure again applied; and, if the substance is not sufficiently exhausted, the same operation may be per- formed a third time. Frequently only a single expression is required, and very 1082 Extracta. PART II. seldom a third. The quantity of menstruum added must vary with the solubility of ti e principles to be extracted. According to Mohr, the method of expression has the advantages over that of displacement, that it yields solutions of more uniform concentration, that it does not require the materials to be so carefully powdered, or otherwise so skilfully managed in order to ensure favourable re- sults, and finally that it occupies less time. 2. Mode of conducting the Evaporation. In evaporating the solutions obtained in the modes above described, attention should always be paid to the fact, that the extractive matter is constantly be- coming insoluble at high temperatures with the access of air, and that other chemical changes are going on, sometimes not less injurious than this, while the volatile principles are expelled with the vapour. The operator should, there- fore, observe two rules; 1. to conduct the evaporation at as low a temperature as is consistent with other objects; 2. to exclude atmospheric air as much as possible, and, when this cannot be accomplished, to expose the liquid the shortest possible time to its action. According to Berzelius, the injurious influence of atmospheric air is much greater at the boiling point of water than at a less heat, even allowing for the longer exposure in the latter case; and, therefore, a slow evaporation at a moderate heat is preferable to the more rapid effects of ebulli- tion. Bearing these principles in mind, we shall proceed to examine the different modes in practice. First, however, it is proper to observe that decoctions gen- erally let fall upon cooling a portion of insoluble matter; and it is a question whether this should be rejected, or retained so as to form a part of the extract. Though it is undoubtedly in many instances inert, as in that of the insoluble tannate of starch formed during the decoction of certain vegetable substances, yet, as it frequently also contains a portion of the active principle which a boil- ing saturated solution necessarily deposits on cooling, and, as it is difficult to decide with certainty when it is active and when otherwise, the safest plan, as a general rule, is to allow it to remain. The method of evaporation usually resorted to in the case of aqueous solu- tions is rapid boiling over a fire. The more quickly the process is conducted the better, provided the liquid is to be brought to the boiling point; for (he tem- perature cannot exceed this, and the length of exposure is diminished. But, eTen where this method is employed, it should not be continued till the completion of the evaporation; for, when most of the water has escaped, the temperature '.-an no longer be kept down to the boiling point, and the extract is burnt. Tne < au- tion, therefore, should always be observed of removing the preparation from the fire before it has attained the consistence of thick syrup, and completing the evaporation, either by means of a water-bath, or in shallow vessels at a modf rate heat. When large quantities of liquid are to be evaporated, it is best to divide them into portions, and evaporate each separately; for, as each portion recuires less time for evaporation than the whole, it will thus be a shorter time exposed to heat. {Mohr.) But the mode of evaporation by boiling is always more or less objectionable, and should be employed only in cases where the principles the plant are so fixed and unchangeable as to authorize their extraction by decoction. Evaporation by means of the water-bath, from the commencement of th*» pro- cess, is safer than the plan just mentioned, as it obviates all danger of burning the extract; but, as the heat is not supplied directly from the fire, the volatili- zation of the water cannot go on so rapidly, and the temperature being nearly the same, when the water-bath is kept boiling, there is greater risk of injurious action from the air. The liquid should be stirred during the process. The use of the vapour-bath, as suggested by M. Henry, is perhaps preferable; as it re- quires a smaller consumption of fuel, and the heat imparted to the liquM, wl'.le Extracta. 1083 PART II sufficient to evaporate it, is less than 212°. We take the following description of the apparatus, employed at the Central Pharmacy of Paris, from M. Cheval- lier’s highly useful Manual. It consists of a covered boiler, containing water, the vapour of which is conducted through a pipe into evaporating vessels, com- municating with each other by means of metallic tubes. These vessels have the form of an ordinary copper basin, over the top of which is soldered a shallow tin capsule, intended to contain the liquor to be evaporated. The vapour from the boiler circulates through these vessels, and the water into which it condenses is allowed to escape through a stop-cock attached to the bottom of each vessel. From the last one of the series a tube passes into a vessel of water, so as to afford a slight pressure against the escape of any excess of vapour. The liquid to be evaporated is first distributed in two or three capsules, but, when consider- ably concentrated, is transferred to a single one, where it is stirred towards the close of the process to hasten the evaporation. The heat applied to the liquid, if there are four vessels, is in that nearest the boiler about 198° F., in the fourth or most remote, about 135°. An incidental advantage of this apparatus is, that it affords a large supply of distilled water. As the heat capable of being applied by a boiling water-bath to the evapo- rating liquid does not exceed 200° F., while that by steam can, by a moderate pressure, be increased to the boiling point or beyond it, the evaporation by the latter agency may be much more rapid than by the former, according to Mr. Redwood, twice as rapid, when the pressure is from ten to twenty pounds to the square inch; so that there is a temptation to raise the heat to a degree seriously injurious to the product. Evaporation, therefore, by steam heat always requires caution, while the water-bath is much less liable to be abused. In this respect, the latter method has the advantage. A good plan of evaporation, though slow, is to place the liquid in a broad, shallow vessel, exposed in a stove or drying room to a temperature of about 100°, or a little higher, taking care that the air have free access in order to facilitate the evaporation. This mode is particularly applicable to those cases in which maceration or infusion is preferred to decoction for extracting the ac- tive principles. Berzelius says that we may thus usually obtain the extract in the form of a yellowish transparent mass, while those prepared in the ordinary way are almost black, and are opaque even in very thin layers. Even when the liquid is boiled at first, the process may often be advantageously completed in this manner. It has been proposed to effect the evaporation at the common temperature, by directing a strong current of air, by means of a pair of smith’s bellows, over the surface of the liquid; and, in reference to substances which are injured by heat and not by atmospheric air, the plan will be found useful. Plans have been proposed and carried into execution for performing evapo- ration without the admission of atmospheric air. The apparatus for evapora- tion in vacuo, invented by Mr. Barry, and described in the Lond. Journ. of Science and Arts (vol. viii. p. 360), is well calculated to meet this object, at the same time that, by removing the atmospheric pressure, it enables the water to rise in vapour more rapidly, and at a comparatively low temperature. The method of Barry consists in distilling the liquid into a large receiver, from which the air has been expelled by steam, and in which the vapour is condensed by cold water applied to the surface of the receiver, so as to maintain a partial vacuum. Mr. Redwood has modified this process by keeping an air-pump in action during the evaporation, thus removing not only the air, but the vapour as fast aQ it forms, and maintaining a more complete vacuum than can be done by the condensation of the vapour alone. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., i. 231.) Another method is to place the liquid under an exhausted receiver, together with some concentrated sulphuric acid or chloride of calcium, which, by its affinity for water, promotes the evaporation of the liquid. But, from the expense and trouble Extracta. PART n. of tnese modes of evaporation, they are not calculated for general use. Dr. Chris- tison recommends as probably the most perfect and convenient method, especially with watery infusions and decoctions, to evaporate the fluid in a vacuum to the consistence of syrup, and then to complete the process in shallow vessels, ex- posed to a current of air without heat.* A convenient plan of excluding the air, though it does not at the same time meet the object of reducing the requisite degree of heat, is to distil off the water in close vessels. Berzelius says that this is the best mode of concentration next to that in vacuo. Care, however, must be taken that the fire be not too long applied, lest the extract should be burnt. The process should, therefore, be com- pleted by means of the water-bath. In the concentration of alcoholic solutions, distillation should always be per- formed ; as not only is the atmospheric air thus excluded, but the alcohol is recovered, if not absolutely pure, certainly fit for the purpose to which it was originally applied. Here also the water-bath should be employed, to obviate any possible risk of injury from the fire. When the decoction or infusion, and tincture of the same vegetable have been made separately, they should be sepa- rately evaporated to the consistence of syrup, and then mixed together, while they are of such a consistence as to incorporate without difficulty. The object of this separate evaporation is, that the spirituous extract may not be exposed to the degree of heat, or lengthened action of the air, which is necessary in the ordinary mode of concentrating the infusion or decoction. In every instance, care should be taken to prevent any portion of the extract from becoming dry and hard on the sides of the evaporating vessel, as in this state it will not readily incorporate with the remaining mass. The heat, there- fore, should be applied to the bottom, and not to the sides of the vessel. 3. Condition and Preservation of Extracts. Extracts are prepared of two different degrees of consistence; soft so that they may be readily made into pills, and hard that they may be pulverized. In astringent extracts, the evaporation should be carried to dryness. Those obtained from the expressed juices of plants are apt to attract moisture from the air, in consequence of the deliquescent nature of the salts existing in the juice. They are thus rendered softer, and more liable to become mouldy upon the surface. Others, especially such as contain much chlorophyll, harden by time, in conse- quence of the escape of their moisture; and it not unfrequently happens that small crystals of saline matter are formed in their substance. Most extracts, especially those containing azotized principles, are capable, when left to them- selves, of producing nitrates. Mr. John Attfield, of London, has made a che- mical examination of the crystals found in numerous extracts, and ascertained that, in a large number, they consisted of chloride of potassium, and, in a com- * M. Grandval has described an apparatus for evaporation in vacuo, for the preparation of extracts, in the Journ. de Pharm. (xv. 82). In the same journal (xxiii 1), MM. Soubeiran and Gobley have described and figured an apparatus, founded upon that of M. Grandval, nut modified so as to be adapted to operations on a small scale, and to be within the reach of apothecaries who may desire to prepare their own extracts. Messrs. Tilden & Co., of New York, employ a vacuum apparatus analogous to that used in refining sugar. The va- cuum is obtained and continued by the constant action of a powerful steam-driven pump. Their apparatus includes two evaporating pans; one large, having a capacity of several hundred gallons, used to concentrate the solutions for extracts to a syrupy consistence; the other, holding about fifty gallons, in which the evaporation is finished. The latter is furnished witn an opening of such size as to permit the operator to remove the residual extract. The temperature during the evaporation is from 120° to 140° F., and is derived from steam pipes, placed within the boiler in the large evaporating pan, and a steam jacket beneath the smaller one. Very fine extracts are prepared in this way.—Note to the ninth and tenth editions. PART II. Extracta. paratively few, of the nitrate of potassa.* The air, moreover, exercises an un- favourable chemical influence over the softer extracts, which are enfeebled, and ultimately become nearly inert, by the same changes which they undergo more rapidly in the liquid state at an elevated temperature. If an extract be dissolved in water, and the liquid be saturated with common salt, or any other very solu- ble salt of difficult decomposition, the greater part of it will be precipitated, in consequence of the insolubility of this class of substances in saline solutions. The precipitate may be again dissolved in pure water. Extracts, in order that they may keepwell, should be placed in glazed earthen- ware, glass, or porcelain jars, and completely protected from the access of the air. This may be effected by covering their surface with a layer of melted wax, or with a piece of paper moistened with strong spirit, then closing the mouth ol the vessel with a cork, spreading wax or rosin over this, and covering the whole with leather, or a piece of bladder. {Duncan.) The dry extracts, being less liable to be affected by atmospheric oxygen, do not require so much care. The application of alcohol to the surface has a tendency to prevent mouluiness. A method of protecting extracts from the action of the air, frequently resorted to, is to cover them closely with oiled bladder; but this, though better than to leave them uncovered, is not entirely effectual. Should the extract become too moist, it may be dried by means of a water-bath; should it, on the contrary, be too dry, the proper consistence may be restored by softening it in the same manner, and incorporating with it a little distilled water. (Ghevallier.) Some extracts when powdered have a tendency to cohere again. According to Geiseler, this may be obviated by the addition of sugar of milk or powdered liquorice-root; two or three parts of the former, and one part of the latter to one of the extract being sufficient for the purpose. {Pharm. Cent. Blatt, A. D. 1850, p. 238.) Mohr recommends the following plan of drying and preserving extracts. Take equal parts of powdered liquorice-root and of the extract, run them well together in a mortar, put the resulting paste into an earthen vessel with a flat bottom, place this in another of iron, a little deeper, containing chlo- ride of calcium thoroughly dried by heat insufficient to melt it; then enclose the whole with a cover fitted to the iron vessel, and allow them to stand for a day or more. When the mixture is quite dry, powder it, and add so much of the powdered root as to make the weight double that of the original extract. {Ibid., p. 719.) Extracts from recent plants should be prepared at the season when the plant is medicinally most active; and a good rule is to prepare them once a year.t Mr. T. S. Wiegand considers glycerin as the best excipient for extracts given in the form of liquid mixture, or applied externally; equal parts being used in the former case, and a double proportion of glycerin in the latter. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1863, p. 117.) * Thus, chloride of potassium was detected in the extracts of belladonna, hemlock, sar- saparilla (compound), colchicum seeds, stramonium seeds, and aconite; nitrate of potassa rn extracts of belladonna, hyoscyamus, and lettuce; and sulphate of soda in extract of stramonium seeds. (Pharm. Journ., March, 1862, p. 448.) f M. Lepage, of Gisors, gives the following method of testing the quality of the narcotic extracts, and determining whether they contain any of the alkaloids to which they owe their efliciency. Take a gramme (15 8 grs.) of the extract, dissolve it in twice its weight of distilled water, introduce the solution into a test-tube, and add from 25 to 30 centigrammes (4 or 5 grs ) of powdered bicarbonate of potassa. When effervescence has ceased, add to the mixture 5 or 6 times its bulk of pure ether, cork the tube, and shake briskly three times in 2 or 3 minutes. Then let the mixture rest; and, when the ether has become trans- parent, decant, and allow it to evaporate spontaneously. Dissolve the residue in 6 or 8 grammes (fsjiss. to fjjij.) of water, acidulated with a drop or two of muriatic acid. If the extract be good, the solution will be rendered very turbid by a few drops of a solution of the double iodide of mercury and potassium, and will give a flocculent precipitate with solution of tannic acid. [Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1863, p. 362.) This test is applicable to the extracts of aconite, belladonna, hyoscyamus, and conium.—Note to the twelfth edition. Extracta. PART II. “ In preparing the Extracts, unless otherwise directed, evaporate as quickly as possible, in a broad, shallow vessel, by means of a water-bath, until they have acquired the consistence proper for forming pills; and, towards the end of the process, stir them constantly with a spatula. Sprinkle upon the softer Extracts a small quantity of Alcohol.” U. S. EXTRACTUM ACONITI. Br. Extract of Aconite. “Take of the fresh Leaves and Flowering Tops of Aconite one hundred and twelve pounds [avoirdupois]. Bruise in a stone mortar, and press out the juice; heat it gradually to 130°, and separate the green colouring matter by a calico fdter. Heat the strained liquor to 200° to coagulate the albumen, and again filter. Evaporate the filtrate by a water-bath to the consistence of a thin syrup; then add to it the green colouring matter previously separated, and, stirring the whole together assiduously, continue the evaporation at a tempera- ture not exceeding 140°, until the extract is of a proper consistence.” Br. The extract from the fresh leaves of aconite has been abandoned in the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, probably because the plant is not generally cultivated in this country. It will be perceived that, in the British process, not the leaves only, but the flowering tops also are used, as experience has shown that these are at least equally efficient. The process consists essentially in the evaporation of the expressed juice; and the product, therefore, ranks with inspissated juices. In relation to the preparation of this extract, as well as of all others derived from the expressed juices of narcotic plants, the following summary of the plan pursued by Mr. Battley, an experienced apothecary of London, may be of ser- vice. Having passed the expressed juice through a fine hair sieve, he places it immediately upon the fire. Before it boils, a quantity of green matter rises to the surface, which in some plants is very abundant. This is removed by a per- forated tin dish, and preserved. It ceases to appear soon after the liquid begins to boil. The boiling is continued till rather more than half the fluid has been evaporated, when the decoction is poured into a conical pan and allowed to cool. An abundant dark-green precipitate forms, from which the supernatant liquid is poured off; and this, having been reduced one-half by a second boiling, is again allowed to stand. The precipitate which now falls is less green than the first. The remaining fluid is once more placed over the fire, and allowed to boil till it assumes the consistence of syrup, when it is removed. The matter at first col- lected by skimming, together with that precipitated, is now incorporated "with it, and the whole placed in a metallic pan, and by means of a water-bath evapo- rated to the consistence of an extract. In the latter part of the process, care is necessary to prevent the extract from hardening on the sides of the vessel, as it thus loses its fine green colour, and becomes proportionably feeble. The superiority of this plan over a continuous boiling is, that the portions of active matter which are deposited at different stages of the process are subjected for a shorter time to heat than if allowed to remain in the liquor, and are con- sequently less deteriorated. The matter which coagulates before the fluid boils is chiefly albumen, embracing portions of chlorophyll and of the undissolved vegetable fibre. It might probably be thrown away without diminishing the vir- tues of the extract; but as chlorophyll, though itself inactive, has often associ- ated with it a portion of the active principle, it is the most economical plan to incorporate it with the other matters, and, besides, its presence in the mass is said to render it easier to be worked into pills. Mr. Brande states that one owt. of fresh aconite yields about five pounds of extract. According to Geiger, one pound yields an ounce and a half. In the new process of the British Pharmacopoeia, it will be perceived that a 4. General Officinal Directions. Extracta. 1087 PART IIh discrimination is made between the chlorophyll and albumen; the former, wnich coagulates at 130°, being at first separated in order to prevent the continuous action of heat upon it, and afterwards added to the extract; the latter, coagu- lating at 200°, is separated and rejected. The rejection of the albumen is alto- gether advisable, as it is not only inert, but renders the extract more liable to decomposition. The chlorophyll is retained for the reasons stated in the pre- ceding paragraph; and also to give a greenish colour to the extract, which has conie to be associated in general opinion with its goodness of quality. When properly prepared, this extract has a greenish-brown colour, with a disagreeable narcotic odour, and the acrid taste of the plant. It may be given in the dose of one or two grains, night and morning, to be gradually increased till the system is afl'ected. Twenty grains or more have been given in the course of a day. W. EXTRACTUM ACONITI ALCOHOLICUM. U.S. Alcoholic Ex- tract of Aconite. “ Take of Aconite Leaf, recently dried and in fine powder, twelve troy ounces ; Alcohol a pint; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with one-third of the Alcohol, into a conical percolator, and pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid has all been ab- sorbed by the powder, pour on Diluted Alcohol until a pint of tincture has been obtained. Set this aside in a warm place, and allow it to evaporate spontane- ously until reduced to three fluidounces. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until two pints more of tincture have passed, or until the powder is ex- hausted ; then evaporate, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not ex- ceeding 160°, to the consistence of syrup, and add the three fluidounces of tincture first obtained. Lastly, continue the evaporation, at a temperature not exceeding 120°, until the whole is reduced to the proper consistence.” TJ. S. The exhaustion of the aconite in this process is indicated by the absence of its peculiar taste in the liquid which passes. By the former U. S. process the alcohol in the evaporation was recovered by distillation and saved. In the present, this is impossible at the low temperature at which the evaporation is directed, unless by the aid of a vacuum apparatus; but, at the present high price of alcohol, it would be advisable for every apo- thecary, who prepares these alcoholic extracts, to be provided with such an in- strument. The attempt to save the alcohol by ordinary distillation would imply an elevation of the heat above that officinally ordered, and thus endanger the decomposition of the active principle of the aconite; and views of economy should never be allowed to interfere with the efficiency of medicines. If made from recently dried leaves, which have not yet been impaired by time, this is a good preparation of aconite; and it is believed to be more powerful, and to keep better, than the inspissated juice. According to Prof. Schroflf, of Vienna, it has four times the strength of that preparation. The dose is half a grain or a grain, to be gradually increased if necessary. An alcoholic extract prepared from the root is stronger, and may be given in the dose of one-sixth or one-quarter of a grain three times a day, to be gradually increased until its effects are experienced.* W. * Plaster of Aconite. It is often desirable to employ aconite externally in the form of a plaster,“and foiTthis purpose the alcoholic extract of the root may be advantageously re- sorted to. Professor Procter prepares such a plaster by the following process. Mix four ounces of the coarsely powdered root with six fluidounces of alcohol (sp. gr. 0-835), ma- oerate for 24 hours, then submit the mixture to percolation with alcohol, so as to obtain a pint of tincture. Prom this distil off three-fourths of the alcohol, and evaporate the residue by a water-bath to a syrupy consistence. While it is still hot, add three ounces and a half of adhesive plaster, previously melted, and stir the mixture constantly till it cools. About four ounces of plaster are thus obtained. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 202.) —Xoit to the tenth edition. 1088 Extracta. t PART II. JEXTRACTUM ALOES BARBADENSIS. Br. Extract of Barbados* Aloes. •‘Take of Barbadoes Aloes, in small fragments, one pound [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Add the Aloes to the Water, and stir well until they are thoroughly mixed. Set aside for twelve hours; then pour off the clear liquor, strain the remainder, and evaporate the mixed liquors by a water-bath or a current of warm air to a proper consistence.” Br. EXTRACTUM ALOES SOCOTR1NA3. Br. Extract of Socotrine Aloes. This is prepared precisely as the Barbadoes Aloes. The object of these processes is to separate from aloes the resinoid matter, the apotheme of Berzelius, which is supposed to irritate the bowels, without pos- sessing purgative properties; but the truth appears to be, that, when deprived of a small proportion of adhering extractive, this matter is quite inert. It can- not, therefore, injuriously affect the virtues of the medicine; and, as it exists in comparatively small proportion, and during the process a part of the extractive becomes insoluble, the preparation may be considered as at best unnecessary. The dose of the purified aloes is from five to fifteen grains.* Off. Prep. Decoctum Aloes Compositum, Br. W. EXTRACTUM ANTHEMIDIS. Br. Extract of Chamomile. “ Take of Chamomile Flowers one pound [avoirdupois]; Oil of Chamomile fifteen minims; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Digest the Chamomile in six pints [Imperial measure] of the Water for twelve hours, pour off the clear liquor and press; again digest, and press as before. Evaporate the mixed liquors by a water-bath to a proper consistence, adding the Oil of Chamomile at the end of the process.” Br. According to Mr. Brande, one cwt. of dried chamomile flowers affords upon an average 48 pounds of extract. This extract has a deep-brown colour, with the bitter taste and aroma of cha- momile. It much better represents the chamomile than the old Edinburgh ex- tract, which, being obtained by decoction and inspissation, contained none of the volatile oil of the plant. In the present British process, not only is care taken to avoid boiling, but also to supply any possible loss of oil during the cautious evaporation, by the addition of a small portion near the close of the process. The extract may be given for the same purposes as the flowers, but is most used as a vehicle for other tonics in the pilular form. The dose is from ten to twenty * Glycerate of Aloes. Glycerole of Aloes. Under the latter name, M. Chausit brought to the notice of the profession a preparation consisting of an alcoholic extract of aloes dis- solved in glycerin. Mr. Haselden prepared this in the following method. Macerating half an ounce of aloes in four fluidounces of alcohol until dissolved, he filtered the tincture through bibulous paper, evaporated it to the consistence of molasses, and, while it was still warm, added enough glycerin to make four fluidounces. Finding that the aloes was wholly dissolved, with the exception of a little impurity, he concluded that the spirit might very well be dispensed with, and the aloes used directly in the process. Accordingly, he pro- poses to substitute the following method. Mix well in a mortar half an ounce of Socotrine aloes, in fine powder, and four fluidounces of glycerin; transfer the mixture to a bottle, and agitate occasionally for several days; if the aloes be not now dissolved, heat for fifteen minutes by a water-bath, and strain through linen to separate impurities. The resulting liquid is of a bright mahogany colour, and of the consistence of glycerin. The preparation has been recommended as an external remedy in lichen agrius and the excoriations of eczema, applied by means of a camel's hair brush. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1859, p. 822.) It is unfortunate, we think, that the French name of glycerole has been employed to express solutions in glycerin, as this has been adopted as the termination of certain proximato principles. It appears to us that the term glycerate would be unexceptionable; as it is suf- ficiently expressive, and no confusion could result. For the mode of preparing & fluid ex- tract of aloes with the aid of glycerin, by Prof. Procter, see Proceed. of Am. Pharm. 1863, p. 24:0.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Extracta. grains. An extract may be prepared, having the peculiar flavour as well as bit terness of chamomile, by macerating the flowers in water, and evaporating the infusion in vacuo. W. EXTRACTUM ARNICA ALCOHOLICUM. U. S. Alcoholic Ex- tract of Arnica. “ Take of Arnica, in moderately coarse powder, twenty-four troyounces; Al- cohol four pints; Water two pints ; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the Alcohol and Water, and moisten the powder with a pint of the mixture; then pack it firmly in a cylindrical percolator, and gradually pour on the re- mainder of the mixture. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until six pints of tincture have passed. Lastly, evaporate this, by means of a water- bath, to the proper consistence.” U. S. This extract very well represents the virtues of arnica, and is a convenient form for its administration. According to Prof. Procter, it amounts, in the soft state, to 33 per cent, of the flowers. The dose is from five to ten grains. But the chief employment of the extract is in the preparation of the plaster. (See Emplastrum Arnicse.) Off. Prep. Emplastrum Arnicse, U. S. W. EXTRACTUM BELLADONNA TJ.S.,Br. Extract of Belladonna. “ Take of Belladonna Leaf, fresh, twelve troyounces. Bruise the Leaf in a stone mortar, sprinkling on it a little water, and express the juice; then, having heated this to the boiling point, strain, and evaporate to the proper consist- ence.” U.S. The British Pharmacopoeia takes the “fresh leaves and young branches of Belladonna,” and prepares the Extract from them in the same manner precisely as Extract of Aconite. (See Extractum Aconiti.) The U. S. Pharmacopoeia directs this extract to be prepared from the leaves of the plant, the British from the leaves and young branches. The latter direc- tion was probably based on experiments by Mr. Squire, of London, who found that an extract prepared from the soft herbaceous parts of the plant generally, including leaves, flowers, and young stalks, not only has a better consistence, and is less apt to become mouldy by keeping, than that made from the leaves exclusively, but is more effectual in the same quantity. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1861, p. 300.) There is little doubt of the accuracy of these results, and it is to be hoped that, in a future edition of our officinal standard, should they be con- firmed by further observation, the same measure may be adopted. It is probable that these remarks are as applicable to otjier extracts prepared from fresh leaves as to that of belladonna, at least in relation to perennial plants. From the experiments of MM. Solon and Soubeiran, it appears that, in relation to this extract, the insoluble matter separated from the expressed juice by filter- ing, and that coagulated by heat, are nearly if not quite inert; so that advantage iemits from clarifying the juice by these means before evaporating it. So far as the albumen is concerned, there can be no doubt of the accuracy of this state- ment ; but it is questionable whether the same remark is applicable to the chlo- rophyll which first separates, and which is reserved in the British process. (See Extractum Aconiti, page 1085.) Mr. Brande states that one cwt. of fresh bel- ladonna yields from 4 to 6 pounds of extract. According to M. Recluz, nearly ten parts may be obtained from one hundred. The best extract is brought chiefly from England; but Mr. Alfred Jones has found that it may be prepared of equally good quality from the plant grown in the United States. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 108.) It has usually a dark-brown colour, a slightly narcotic not inpleasant odour, a bitterish taste, and a soft consistence which it long retains, isparagin has been found in this extract. (Journ. de Pharm., xxi. 178.) Its medical properties and uses have been detailed under the head of Bella- Extracta. PART II. donna. A few words in relation to its mode of application may be proper here. For the dilatation of the pupil, it is either mixed with water to the consistence of cream and rubbed on the brow and eyelids, or dissolved in water and dropped into the eye. In rigidity of the os uteri, it is applied at intervals to the neck of the uterus, mixed with simple ointment in the proportion of two drachms to an ounce; but care must be taken not too powerfully to affect the system; and the preparation, therefore, should be used in a small quantity at first. In irritability of the bladder, chordee, spasm of the urethra, and painful constriction of the rectum, it may either be rubbed in the form of ointment upon the perineum, along the urethra, &c., or may be used in the form of enema; but care is requisite not to introduce it too freely into the bowel. It is sometimes smeared upon the bougie, mixed with oil, in the treatment of stricture of the urethra. In the form of ointment it has been beneficially employed in phymosis and paraphymosis, and in that of plaster or ointment, in local neuralgic or rheumatic pains. (See Em- plastrum Belladonnae.) The dose of the extract is uncertain on account of its variable strength. The best plan is to begin with one-quarter or one half of a grain, repeated two or three times a day, and gradually to increase the dose till the effects of the medicine are experienced. To a child two years old not more than one-twelfth of a grain should be administered at first. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Belladonnae, Br.; Unguentum Belladonnae. W. EXTRACTUM BELLADONNA ALCOHOLICUM. U.S. Alco- holic Extract of Belladonna. “ Take of Belladonna Leaf, in fine powder, twenty-four troyounces; Alcohol four pints; Water two pints; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the Alcohol and Water, and moisten the powder with a pint of the mixture; then pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon it the re- mainder of the mixture. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until six pints of tincture have passed. Lastly, evaporate this, by means of a water- bath, to the proper consistence.” U. S. This is a good preparation, though less necessary than some other spirituous extracts of the narcotic plants; as the inspissated juice, or common extract of belladonna, can generally be procured of good quality. It is one of the officinals of the French Codex. The dose to begin with is half a grain. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Belladonnas, U. S. W. EXTR ACTUM CALUMBA. Br. Extract of Columho. “ Take of Columbo, in powder, one pound [avoirdupois] ; Proof Spirit four pints [Imperial measure]. Macerate*the Columbo in two pints of the Spirit for twenty-four hours; pack in a percolator, and pass the remainder of the Spirit slowly through it; distil off the Spirit; and evaporate the residue to the proper consistence.” Br. As proof spirit takes up all the active matter of columbo, leaving the starch and albumen behind, the extract prepared according to this formula has, in a comparatively small bulk, all the powers of the root, except those of the small proportion of volatile oil which may be dissipated in the process. It may be given in the dose of from five to fifteen grains three times a day. W. EXTRACTUM CANNABIS PURIFICATUM. U.S. Extract™ Cannabis Indict. Br. Purified Extract of Hemp. Extract of Indian Hemp. “Take of Extract of Hemp two troyounces; Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Rub the Extract with two fluidounces of Alcohol until they are thoroughly mixed; and, having added twelve fluidounces of Alcohol, allow the mixture to macerate for twenty-four hours. Then filter the tincture through paper, passing sufficient Alcohol, through the filter, to exhaust the dregs completely. Lastly, PART II. Extracta. 1091 by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 1.60:', evaporate to dryness.” U. S. “ Take of Indian Hemp, in coarse powder, one pound [avoirdupois]; Recti fied Spirit four pints [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Hemp in the Spirit for seven days, and press out the tincture. Distil olf the Spirit, and evaporate by a water-bath to a proper consistence.” Br. These are not identical preparations; the TJ. S. purified extract being made from the impure extract imported from India, the British extract from the dried plant. It is probable that the former would be found most efficient. Prof. Procter has investigated the subject of the tests for purified extract or resin of hemp, and come to the following conclusions. Its peculiar odour when mode- rately heated, its indifference to alkalies, and its solubility in alcohol, ether, chlo- roform, benzole, and oil of turpentine are characteristic though not entirely dis- tinctive properties. The best test, he thinks, is nitric acid (sp. gr. P38), which acts slowly when cold, but with heat rapidly, evolving red fumes, and converting the resin into an orange-red resinoid substance, which, when washed and dried, closely resembles gamboge in colour. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., A. D. 1864.) For remarks in relation to the uses and doses of this preparation, see Ex- tractum Cannabis, in Part I. (page 381). It is no doubt of more uniform strength than the crude extract, but cannot always be relied on as equable in this respect, and therefore should be prescribed with caution in relation to the dose. Off. Prep. Tinctura Cannabis, U. S.; Tinctura Cannabis Indiese, Br. W. EXTRACTUM CINCHONA. U.S. Extract of Cinchona. “ Take of Yellow Cinchona, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Alcohol four pints; Water a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with three fluidounces of Alcohol, into a conical glass percolator, and gradually pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid ceases to pass, pour upon the residue sufficient Water to keep its surface covered, until four pints of tincture have passed. Set this aside, and continue the percolation until six pints of infusion are obtained. Distil off the alcohol from the tincture, and evaporate the infusion until the liquids respectively are brought to the consistence of thin honey; then mix them, and evaporate to the proper consistence.” U. S. The yellow or Calisaya bark is selected for this preparation, as it can always be relied on as efficient By this process all the virtues of the bark are extracted; the parts soluble in alcohol being first taken up, and afterwards those in water, and the tincture and infusion thus obtained separately. This proceeding has the great advantage that no more heat is necessary to evaporate the tincture than the alcoholic menstruum requires ; while, if the two liquids were mixed, it would be necessarily subjected to a longer continuance if not a higher degree of the heat; and the advantage is the greater as most of the active matter is extracted in the first percolation with alcohol. If proper care be taken in executing the process, both in relation to the percolation, and the avoidance of too high a temperature, the extract will fully represent the virtues of the bark. The former extracts of cinchona of the British Colleges are all or. itted in the new British Pharmacopoeia, which directs in their place a fluid extract, under the name of Extractum Cinchonse Liquidum, which will be treated of among the Fluid Extracts. A very good extract of bark was formerly prepared, in the shops of Philadel- phia, by macerating cinchona for a considerable length of time in a large pro- portion of wrnter, and slowly evaporating the infusion, by a very moderate heat, in large shallow dishes placed upon the top of a stove. Before the use of sul- phate of quinia had superseded that of most other preparations of bark, we em- ployed this extract with success in the treatment of intermittents, and found ten grains of it equivalent to nearly a drachm of the powdered cinchona. The extract should always be brought to the hard dry state in which it may be 1092 Extracta. PAltT II. pulverized; as it is thus less apt to be injured by exposure, and in the state of powder may be more uniformly incorporated with other substances. Though directed officinally to be prepared from the yellow or Calisaya bark, it would no doubt be equally efficient if made from the red.* Medical Uses. The extract of Peruvian bark is at present much less employed than before the discovery of quinia. It is still, however, occasionally prescribed as a tonic in combination with other medicines; and, as it possesses, when pro- perly prepared with a spirituous menstruum, almost all the active principles as they exist in the bark itself, it may be used in preference to the sulphate of quinia, whenever it is supposed that the latter is incapable of exerting all the curative influence of cinchona. We are told, however, that, on account of the high price of Calisaya bark, much of the extract as at present in the shops is prepared from inferior varieties. The dose is from ten to thirty grains, equiva- lent to about a drachm of the powdered bark. W. EXTRACTUM COLCI1ICI. Br. Extract of Colchicum. “ Take of Fresh Colchicum Corms, deprived of their coats, seven pounds [avoirdupois]. Crush the Corms; press out the juice; allow the feculence to subside, and heat the clear liquor to 212°; then strain through flannel, and evaporate by a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, to a proper consistence.” Br. There scarcely seems to be occasion for both this and the following extract. The dose is one or two grains. In Great Britain a preparation called preserved juice of colchicum is given in the dose of five minims or more. It is made by expressing the fresh bulb, allowing the juice to stand for forty-eight hours that the feculent matter may subside, then adding one-quarter of its bulk of alcohol, allowing it again to stand for a short period, and ultimately filtering. W. EXTRACTUM COLCIIICI ACETICUM. U.S., Br. Acetic Extract of Colchicum. “Take of Colchicum Root, in moderately fine powder, twelve troyounces; Acetic Acid four fluidounces; Water a sufficient quantity. To the Acetic Acid add a pint of Water, and mix the resulting liquid with the Colchicum Root. Transfer the mixture to a conical glass percolator, and pour Water gradually upon it until the liquid passes with little or no taste. Lastly, evapo- rate the liquid, in a porcelain vessel, to the proper consistence.” U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia this extract is directed to be prepared precisely as the preceding, except that six fluidounces of Acetic Acid (Br.) are to be added to the crushed corms before expression. As the fresh colchicum bulb is rarely to be had in this country, the U. S. Pharmacopoeia employs the dried bulb; and its process, if properly conducted, will afford a very efficient extract. Some inconveniences are experienced in preparing the extract, according to the London process, from the recent bulb by expression, which would seem to render the U. S. process under all circum- stances preferable. (Pharm. Journ., xiii. 62.) The use of the acetic acid, in this preparation, is to render more soluble the alkaline principle upon which the virtues of meadow-saffron are thought to do- * Quinium. Under this name a preparation has had some reputation in Europe, made hy mixing quinia and cinchonia barks in such proportion that there should be about two parts of the former alkaloid to one of the latter, with half their weight of slaked lime, ex- hausting the mixture with alcohol, and then distilling and evaporating to dryness. The resulting quinium should yield one-third of its weight of the two alkaloids. The dose is three grains. The disadvantage of this as of all the amorphous preparations of the cin- chona alkaloids, is the want of that protection against adulteration which is atfc-ded by the crystalline form of the pure principles. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm , Sept. 1853, p 400.1— Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Extracta. 1093 pend. The acetic extract of colcliicum is highly commended by Sir C. Scuda- more, who prefers it made by evaporating, to the consistence of honey, a satu rated acetic infusion of the dried bulb. (Lond. Med. Gazette, Dec. 10, 1841.> The dose of the extract is one or two grains, to be repeated two or three times a day, and increased if necessary. W. EXTRACTUM COLOCYNTHIDIS ALCOHOLICUM. U.S. Alco- holic Extract of Colocynth. “Take of Colocynth forty-eight troyounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Dry the Colocynth, and, having removed the seeds, and reduced it to coarse powder by grinding or bruising, macerate it in eight pints of Diluted Al- cohol for four days, with occasional stirring; then express strongly, and strain through flannel. Pack the residue, previously broken up with the hands, firmly in a cylindrical percolator, cover it with the strainer, and pour Diluted Alcohol upon it, until the tincture and expressed liquid, taken together, measure sixteen pints. Mix the tincture with the expressed liquid, and, having recovered from the mixture ten pints of alcohol by distillation, evaporate the residue to dryness by means of a water-bath. Lastly, reduce the dry mass to powder, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle. The Extract obtained by this process weighs about seven troyounces.” U. S.. Colocynth should be deprived of its seeds, as directed by the U. S. Pharma- copoeia, before being submitted to the action of the menstruum. Dr. Duncan found half a pound of colocynth to contain 2770 grains of seeds, which, boiled by themselves, yielded almost nothing to water. Dr. Squibb found selected fruits to yield from 25‘8 to 34 per cent, of medullary part; and this, when well ex- hausted by diluted alcohol, to yield 60'7 to 60-8 per cent, of dry extract; while from the whole fruit, including pulp and seeds, from 15 69 to 20'6 per cent, was obtained according to the degree of dryness. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1857, p. 98.) Boiling water extracts so much pectic acid and mucilage from colocynth, that the decoction or hot infusion gelatinizes on cooling; and the extract made by means of it is loaded with inert matter, and, besides, is apt to become mouldy, or so tough and hard as to resist trituration and formation into pills. Hence the London College, following in this respect the French Codex, directed, in the last edition of its Pharmacopoeia, maceration with cold water; but diluted alcohol has been found to be a much better menstruum, and has been adopted in the U. S. process; while, in the British Pharmacopoeia, the simple extract has been discarded altogether. The chief; if not exclusive use of the alcoholic extract is in the preparation of the compound extract. Off. Prep. Extractum Colocynthidis Compositum, U. S. W. EXTRACTUM COLOCYNTHIDIS COMPOSITUM. U.S., Br. Compound Extract of Colocynth. “ Take of Alcoholic Extract of Colocynth, in fine powder, three troyounces and a half; Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Resin of Scammony, in fine powder, three troyounces; Cardamom, in fine powder, a troy- ounce; Soap, in fine powder, three troyounces. Mix the powders thoroughly, and keep the mixture in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Colocynth, freed from the seeds, six ounces; Extract of Socotrine Aloes twelve ounces; Scammony or Resin of Scammony, in powder, four ounces; Hard Soap, in powder, three ounces; Cardamoms, freed from their capsules, in fine powder, one ounce; Proof Spirit one gallon [Imperial mea- sure]. Macerate the Colocynth in the Spirit for four days; press out the tincture, and add to it the Extract of Aloes, the Soap, and the Scammony. Distil off the spirit, and evaporate the residue by a water-bath to a pilular consistence, add- ing the Cardamoms towards the end of the process.” Br. The ounce employed in this process is the avoirdupois. Extracta. PART II. The present (J. S. formula differs from that of 1850, in taking the alcoholic extract of colocynth already prepared, instead of directing its preparation from the colocynth, and in substituting resin of scammony for the scammony itself. The former provision ensures uniformity of result so far as the colocynth is con cerned; whereas, by the old formula, this was impossible, owing to the variable quality of the colocynth employed, unless an unusual amount of care was taken in its selection. The second change contributes to the same result of uniformity ; because the resin of scammony is very nearly of equable strength, while scam- mony is notoriously otherwise; and it has the additional advantage of yielding a stronger extract, as the resin is much more energetic in an equal dose than the crude drug as ordinarily found in the market. The object of the soap in this formula is to improve the consistence of the mass, which, when hardened by time, it renders more soluble in the liquors of the stomach. It may possibly also serve the purpose of qualifying the action of the aloes. In the U. S. process the ex- tract is in the form of powder, which is very convenient for admixture with other substances; while, if given uncombined, it may be readily made into pills by suit- able additions. The alternative of using the scammony or its resin, in the British formula, appears to us very objectionable. This extract is an energetic and safe cathartic, possessing the activity of its three purgative ingredients, with comparatively little of the drastic character of the colocynth and scammony. It may be still further and advantageously modi- fied by combination with rhubarb, jalap, calomel, &c., with one or more of wThich it is often united in prescription. In such combination it is much employed whenever an active cathartic is desirable, particularly in the commencement of fevers and febrile complaints, in congestion of the liver or portal system, and in obstinate constipation. In small doses it is an excellent laxative in that state of habitual costiveness, depending on a want of the due irritability of the bowels, which often occurs in old people. The dose is from five to thirty grains, accord- ing to the effect to be produced, and the susceptibility of the bowels. A very eligible combination is the compound cathartic pill of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. We are informed that much of the extract sold in this country is made with in- ferior scammony and aloes, and an insufficient proportion of colocynth, so that it is comparatively inert. Cheap compound extract of colocynth should be looked on with suspicion, and the apothecary should prepare it for himself.* Off. Prep. Pilulae Cathartic® Composit®, U. S. W. EXTRACTUM CONII. U. S., Br. Extract of Hemlock. “Take of Hemlock, fresh, twelve troyounces. Bruise the Hemlock in a stone mortar, sprinkling on it a little water, and express the juice, then, having heated this to the boiling point, filter it, and evaporate to the proper consistence, either in a vacuum with the aid of heat, or in shallow vessels, at the ordinary tempera- ture, by means of a current of air, directed over the surface of the liquid.” U. S. The directions of the British Pharmacopoeia for this extract are precisely the same as those for the extract of aconite, the fresh leaves and young branches of eonium being used. The most important point in the preparation of this extract is to evaporate the juice without an undue degree of heat. At a temperature of 212° or upwards, its active principle undergoes rapid decomposition, being converted into resinous matter and ammonia. This is detected by the operator by the ammoniacal odour mixed with that which is peculiar to the plant. The juice always to a certain extent undergoes this decomposition when evaporated over a fire, and is not ex empt from it even when the heat is regulated by a water-bath. Hence the pro- * See in the American Journal of Pharmacy for March, 1857 (xxix. 97), and in tha Pro- ceedings of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858 (p. 411), some useful practical observations by Dr. E. R. Squibb, upon the best method of preparing this extract, so as to secure ur and efficiency. PART II. Extract a. 1095 priety of the directions in the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias. An excellent plan in the evaporation is to conduct it first in a vacuum, and afterwards in shallow vessels with a current of air at common temperatures. By the direction to heat the juice to the boiling point, or 200° (Br.), and then to filter, whereby the inert albumen is coagulated, and, with the equally inert chlorophyll and vegetable fibre, is separated from the liquid before evaporation, the extract is procured in a more concentrated state, and, besides, deprived of substances which might favour its decomposition. Long-continued exposure to the air is productive of the name result as too much heat, so that old extracts are frequently destitute of activity. (Journ. de Pharm., xxii. 416.) No one of the extracts is more vari- able in its qualities than this. The season at which the herb is collected, the place and circumstances of its growth, the method of preparing the extract, are all points of importance, and are all too frequently neglected. (See Conii Folia.) In this country the process has often been carelessly conducted; and large quan- tities of an extract, prepared by boiling the plant in water and evaporating the decoction, have been sold as the genuine drug. The apothecary should always prepare the extract himself, or procure it from persons in whom he can have confidence. That imported from London has usually been considered the best; but we have seen and tried the extract prepared by the Messrs. Tilden & Co., of New York, by evaporation in vacuo at a low heat, and have found it superior to any that we had previously employed. It is not improbable that, as suggested to us by Professor Procter, the addition of a portion of acetic acid to the juice, before evaporation, might tend to fix the conia, and enable it better to resist the influence of heat than in its native combination. The activity of any specimen of the extract may be in some measure judged of by rubbing it with potassa, which, disengaging the conia and rendering it volatile, gives rise to the peculiar mouse-like odour of that principle. If no odour be evolved under these circumstances, the extract may be deemed inert. The extract of hemlock prepared without separating the chlorophyll has a fresh olive or green colour, but, according to the U. S. process, is brownish. It should have a strong narcotic, somewhat fetid odour, and a bitterish saline taste. According to Brande, from three to five pounds are obtained from one cwt. of the leaves. M. Recluz got rather more than an ounce from sixteen ounces. Of the medical properties and application of this extract, we have spoken under :he head of Conii Folia. The dose is two grains two, three, or four times a day, to be gradually increased till evidences of its action upon the system are afforded. It may be administered in pill or solution. W. EXTRACTUM CONII ALCOHOLICUM. U.S. Alcoholic Extract of Hemlock. “Take of Hemlock, recently dried and in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Alcohol a pint; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with one-third of the Alcohol, into a conical percolator, and pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid has all been ab- sorbed by the powder, pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until a pint of tincture has been obtained. Set this aside in a warm place, and allow it to evaporate spon- taneously until reduced to three fluidounces. Continue the percolation with Di- luted Alcohol until two pints more of tincture have passed, or until the powder 's exhausted; then evaporate this liquid, by means of a water-bath, at a tem- perature not exceeding 160°, to the consistence of syrup. To this add the three fluidounces of tincture first obtained, and continue the evaporation, at a tem- perature not exceeding 120°, until the whole is reduced to the proper consist- ence.” U. S. This is one of the French officinal extracts, and, when well made from recently and carefully dried leaves, is a good preparation. The same caution is requisite m evaporating in this case as in that of the inspissated juice or common extract. 1096 Extracta. PART II. lr, will be noticed that care is taken in the formula to prevent injury from too great a heat, by first passing alcohol, which forms a highly concentrated tinc- ture, and allowing this to evaporate spontaneously to three fiuidounces, which is not added to the remainder until but little of the menstruum remains; and the process is completed at the low heat of 120°. This caution is necessary from the great facility with whiph conia is decomposed by heat. The proportion of ex- tract yielded by dried hemlock, by percolation with alcohol, is, according to Messrs. Vielguth and Nentwich, 21 3 per cent. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 237.) The dose, to begin with, is one or two grains, to be in- creased if necessary. W. EXTRACTUM DIGITALIS ALCOIIOLICUM. U.S. Alcoholic Ex- tract of Digitalis. j “Take of Digitalis, recently dried and in fine powder, twelve troyounces. Alcohol a pint; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with one-third of the Alcohol, into a percolator, and pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid has all been absorbed by the powder, pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until a pint of tincture has been obtained. Set this aside in a warm place, and allow it to evaporate spontaneously until reduced to three fiuidounces. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until two pints more of tincture have passed, or until the powder is exhausted; tnen evaporate this liquid, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not ex- ceeding 160°, to the consistence of syrup. To this add the three fiuidounces of tincture first obtained, aud continue the evaporation, at a temperature not ex- ceeding 120°, until the whole is reduced to the proper consistence.” U. S. This is a new officinal of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, though less needed than many others, because the dose of digitalis itself is small; and nothing is gained on the point of equability of strength ; as the really active part of digitalis con- stitutes but a small proportion even of the extract, and might be altogether wanting without observably affecting its bulk. The same caution is used, in pre- paring this extract, against the injurious effects of heat as in the instance of the extract of coniutn. The skill, exhibited by the revisers of the Pharmacopoeia in the application of the process of percolation to pharmaceutical purposes, is evinced nowhere more strongly than in the directions for preparing the extracts, fluid extracts, and oleoresins. The alcoholic extract of digitalis contains all the virtues and may be used for all the purposes of the powdered leaves. Accord- ing to Messrs. Vielguth and Nentwich, the amount of alcoholic extract obtained from dried digitalis by cold displacement is 27T per cent. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 237.) The dose, therefore, of this extract to begin with should not exceed one-fourth of a grain. W. EXTRACTUM DULCAMAR2E. U.S. Extract of Bittersweet. “ Take of Bittersweet, in moderately fine powder, twelve troyounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Bittersweet with four fiuidounces of Diluted Alcohol, pack it in a conical percolator, and pour Diluted Alcohol gra- dually upon it until the tincture passes but slightly impregnated with the pro- perties of the Bittersweet. Distil off the alcohol from the tincture until reduced to one-half; then strain, and, by means of a water-bath, evaporate to the proper consistence.” U. S. This preparation is well known on the continent of Europe, but comparatively little used in the United States or Great Britain. The substitution, in the late revision of the Pharmacopoeia, of diluted alcohol for water as the menstruum is a decided improvement. The dose is from five to ten grains; but much more may be given with safety. W. EXTRACTUM GENTIANiE. U.S., Br. Extract of Grentian. “Take of Gentian, in moderately coarse powder, twelve troyounces; Water PART II. Extracta. a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Gentian with four fluidounees of Water, pack it in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the infusion passes but slightly impregnated with the properties of the Gentian. Boil the liquid to three-fourths of its bulk; then strain, and, by means of a water-bath, evaporate to the proper consistence.” U. S. “ Take of Gentian, sliced, one pound [avoirdupois] ,• Boiling Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Gentian in the Water for two hours, boil for fifteen minutes; pour off, press, and strain. Then evaporate by a water-bath to a proper consistence.” Br. The IT. S. plan of percolation with cold water is admirably adapted to the extraction of the active matter of gentian, and even the British method of ma- ceration with hot water is much better than the old method of decoction. By the use of cold water starch and pectic acid are left behind, while any albumen that may be taken up is got rid of by the boiling and straining. The extract, however, may be advantageously made by macerating the root in two parts of water for thirty-six hours, then expressing in a powerful press, again macerating with additional water, and in like manner expressing, and evaporating the united expressed liquors. MM. Guibourt and Cadet de Yaux obtained by maceration in cold water an extract not only greater in amount, but more transparent, more bitter, and possessing more of the colour and smell of the root than that prepared by decoction. Guibourt attributes this result to the circumstance that, as gentian contains little if any starch, it yields nothing to boiling which it will not also yield to cold water; while decoction favours the combination of a portion of the colouring matter with the lignin. But this opinion requires modification, now that it is understood that gentian contains pectic acid, which water will extract when boiling hot, but not when cold. For observations in relation to the best modes of evaporation in the formation of extracts, the reader is referred to page 1082. Gentian, according to Braude, yields half its weight of extract by decoction. As ordinarily procured, the extract of gentian is nearly inodorous, very bit- ter, of a dark-brown colour approaching to black, shining, and tenacious. It is frequently used as a tonic, in the form of pill, either alone or in connection with metallic preparations. The dose is from ten to thirty grains. W. EXTRACTUM II2EMATOXYLL U.S., Br. Extract of Logwood. “Take of Logwood, rasped, twelve troyounces; Water eight pints. Boil down to four pints, and strain the decoction while hot; then evaporate to dry- ness.” U. S. “ Take of Logwood, in fine chips, one pound [avoirdupois] ; Boiling Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Macerate for twenty-four hours, then boil down to one-half, strain, and evaporate by a water-bath to a proper con- sistence, stirring with a wooden spatula.” Br. This is one of the few instances in which decoction in the preparation of ex- tracts is not considered objectionable. Iron vessels should not be employed in the process, in consequence of the presence of tannic acid. The evaporation should be carried so far that the extract may be dry and brittle when cold. About 20 lbs. of it are obtained from one cwt. of logwood. (Brande.) It is of a deep-ruby colour, and an astringent, sweetish taste, and has all the medical virtues of the wood. If given in pills, these should be recently made, as, when long kept, they are said to become so hard as sometimes to pass unchanged through the bowels. The extract, however, is best administered in solution. The dose is from ten to thirty grains. This extract is said to be prepared largely n Yucatan and other parts of Mexico. W. EXTRACTUM HELLEBORI ALCOHOLICUM. U.S. Extractum 1098 Extracta. PART II. Hei.lb’BORI. TJ. S. 1850. Alcoholic Extract of Blade Hellebore. Extract of Hellebore. “ Take of Black Hellebore, recently dried and in fine powder, twelve troy- ounces; Alcohol a pint; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with one-third of the Alcohol, into a conical perco- lator, and pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid has all been absorbed by the powder, pour on Diluted Alcohol until a pint of tincture has been obtained. Set this aside in a warm place, and allow it to evaporate spontaneously until reduced to three fluidounces. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until two pints more of tincture have passed, or until the pow- der is exhausted; then evaporate, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, to the consistence of syrup. To this add the three fluid- ounces of tincture first obtained, and continue the evaporation, at a temperature not exceeding 120°, until the whole is reduced to the proper consistence.’-’ U. S. In consequence, probably, of the injurious influence of heat upon black helle- bore, the watery extract prepared by decoction is little if at all stronger than the root. The process of percolation with cold spirit was, therefore, adopted in the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, and has been retained with improvement in the present edition; and, if proper care be taken to conduct the evaporation at as low a temperature, and with as little exposure to the air as possible, an efficient extract will be obtained. Any resin which may be deposited during the evaporation should be separated from the sides of the vessel, and mixed with the rest. If the hellebore itself be of good quality, the extract will operate as a drastic purge in the dose of from five to ten grains. The former French Codex contained a process for preparing the extract of hellebore, according to the method of Bacher. Two pounds of the root and half a pound of carbonate of potassa are digested, with a moderate heat, for twelve hours, in eight pounds of alcohol of 22° B.; the tincture is straiued with ex- pression ; the residuum is again digested with eight pounds of white wine fo* twenty-four hours; the wine is expressed, and, having stood four hours to settle, is decanted; the liquors are then mixed, and with a gentle heat evaporated to the consistence of an extract. One ounce of this extract, mixed with the same quantity of myrrh, and with ten scruples of the powdered leaves of Centaurea benedicta, and made into pills of one grain each, constitutes the preparation known as the tonic pills of Bacher, formerly much used in amenorrhoea and dropsy, and probably not without advantage, especially in the former of these diseases. The dose is from ten to twenty pills during the day. An additional quantity of diluted alcohol might, without disadvantage, be substituted for the wine in the preparation of this extract. W. EXTRACTUM HYOSCYAMI. U S., Br. Extract of Henbane. “ Take of Henbane Leaf, fresh, twelve troyounces. Bruise the Leaf in a stone mortar, sprinkling on it a little water, and express the juice ; then, having heated this to the boiling point, strain, and evaporate to the proper consistence.” U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia this extract is prepared from “the fresh Leaves and young Brauches of Hyoscyamus” in the same manner precisely as Extract of Aconite. (See Extractum Aconiti.) MM. Solon and Soubeiran have shown that the insoluble matter separated from the expressed juice of henbane by filtering, and that coagulated by heat, are nearly if not quite inert; so that the juice may be usefully clarified before evaporation. (Amer. Journ. of Pharm., viii. 228.) The retention of the chlo- rophyll, however, as provided for in the British formula, is thought to be advan- tageous. Extract of Henbane has been chiefly derived from England, but it is at present prepared by Messrs. Tilden & Co., of New York, by the vacuum pro- cess. Mr. Brande says that one cwt. of the fresh herb affords between fim • and five pounds. M. Ilecluz obtained about one part from sixteen. PART II. Extract a. 1099 The extract is of a dark-olive colour, of a narcotic rather unpleasant odour, and a bitterish, nauseous, slightly saline taste. It retains its softness for a long time; but at the end of three or four years becomes dry, and exhibits, when broken, small crystals of nitrate of potassa and chloride of sodium, (liecluz.) Like all the inspissated juices it is of variable strength, according to its age, tne care used in its preparation, and the character of the leaves from which it was procured. (See Hyoscyamus. )* In its use, therefore, it is advisable to begin with a moderate dose, two or three grains for instance, and gradually to increase the quantity till some effect is experienced, and the degree of efficiency of the par- ticular parcel employed is ascertained. It is usually given in pill. It is some- times used externally for the same purposes as extract of belladonna. Off. Prep. Pilula Colocynthidis et Hyoscyami,i?r. W. EXTRACTUM HYOSCYAMI ALCOHOLICUM. U. S. Alcoholic Extract of Henbane. “ Take of Henbane Leaf, recently dried and in moderately fine powder, twenty- four troyounces; Alcohol four pints; Water two pints; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the Alcohol and Water, and moisten the powder with a pint of the mixture; then pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon it the remainder of the mixture. Continue the percolation with Diluted Alcohol until the tincture measures six pints. Lastly, evaporate this, by means of a water-bath, to the proper consistence.” U. S. The alcoholic extract of henbane, if prepared from recently dried leaves, is thought to be more uniform and powerful than the inspissated juice or common extract. It is one of the preparations of the French Codex. The dose is one or two grains, to be gradually increased until its effects are obtained. W. EXTRACTUM IGNATLE ALCOHOLICUM. U. S. Alcoholic Ex- tract of Ignatia. “Take of Ignatia, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the Ignatia with four fluidounces of Alcohol, and allow the mix- ture to stand for an hour. Then introduce it into a cylindrical percolator, press it firmly, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until three pints of tincture have slowly passed. Distil off the Alcohol, by means of a water-bath, until the tincture is reduced to half a pint, and evaporate this to the proper consistence.” U. S. This was newly introduced into the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, not so much because the preparation is needed; for it is essentially the same in remedial properties and applications as the extract of nux vomica; as in order to give due officinal sanction to a preparation already in popular use, and, by * Much depends on the choice of the leaves; and too little attention is paid to this point. In reference tc the biennial plant, there seems to be no doubt that the leaves of the second year are much more efficacious than those of the first, and should, therefore, always be selected. It is stated under Hyoscyamus, in the first part of this work, that the leaves should be gathered soon after the plant has flowered. Mr. Charles Cracknell gives more particular directions. He thinks that the plant is in a fit state for collection only during a very short period; when the flowers at the top are blown, but have not yet begun to fade, and the seed-vessels and seeds which have been formed are still soft and juicy. For other observations on the preparation of this extract, see a paper by Mr. Cracknell in the Am. Journ. of Pharm, (xxiii. 245), from the Pharm. Journ., March, 1851. Ah important contribution to our knowledge, as to the proper choice of the parts of this plant to be expressed, has been made by Mr. T. B. Groves, of England. Whatever may be the case with those plants, such as aconite, the roots of which are active, and in which the juice, containing the active matter, on its way from the leaves to the root, might be supposed to exist in the young stems, this does not appear to be the case with the Hyoscy- amus; and, accordingly, an extract obtained by inspissating the juice of the stems was found altogether inferior to another obtained in like manner from the leaves, being not jnly less in amount, but less bitter and odorous, and more saline, showing that it contained wore oe the ordinary salts of the plant, and less of its active matter. (Pharm. Journ.. Jau. 1862, p. 376.' 1100 Extracta. PART II. regulating it duly, to prevent serious consequences from so powerful a medicine.* For the uses of the extract the reader is referred to the article on Ignatia in Part I. The dose is from half a grain to three times that quantity, to be repeated three times a day until its effects begin to be experienced. W. EXTRACTUM U.S.,Br. Extract of Jalap. “Take of Jalap, in moderately fine powder, twelve troyounces; Alcohol/our pints; Water a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously mixed with three fluidounces of Alcohol, into a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon it the remainder of the Alcohol. When the liquid ceases to pass, pour upon the residue sufficient water to keep its surface covered, until four pints of tinc- ture have passed. Set this aside, and continue the percolation until six pints of infusion have been obtained. Distil off the alcohol from the tincture, and eva- porate the infusion until the liquids respectively have been brought to the con- sistence of thin honey; then mix them, and evaporate to the proper consist- ence. ” U. S. “ Take of Jalap, in coarse powder, one pound [avoirdupois] ; Rectified Spirit four pints [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water one gallon [Imp. meas.]. Ma- cerate the Jalap in the Spirit for seven days; press out the tincture, then filter, and distil off the Spirit, leaving a soft extract. Again macerate the residual Jalap in Water for four hours, express, strain through flannel, and evaporate by a water-bath to a soft extract. Mix the two extracts, and evaporate, at a tem- perature not exceeding 140°, to a proper consistence.” Br. Jalap contains a considerable quantity of starch, which is extracted by decoc- tion, but left behind by cold water; and, as this principle serves only to impede the filtration or straining, and augment the bulk of the extract, without adding to its virtues, cold water is very properly used in both the U. S. and Br. processes. The use both of alcohol and water has been deemed necessary, in order to extract all the medicinal qualities of the drug; and they are employed successively, under the impression that the previous removal of the resin by the former facilitates the action of the latter. The use of percolation, as directed by the U. IS. Phar- macopoeia, enables the cold water to extract the soluble parts without the long maceration which would otherwise be necessary. According to Cadet de Gfassi- court, water at ordinary temperatures, and in the old mode, acts so slowly, that fermentation takes place before the active matter is all dissolved. Hence, if the extract be prepared without percolation, the residuum, after the tincture has been decanted, should be digested with water at a heat of about 90° or 100 F., which, while it is insufficient for the solution of the starch, enables the solvent to take up the active matter with sufficient rapidity. One cwt. of jalap affords, according to Mr. Brande, about fifty pounds of aqueous extract and fifteen of resin. The product of the former is somewhat less by infusion than decoction; and the extract is proportionably stronger. There is reason to believe, as we have been informed on good authority, that what is sold for extract of jalap is sometimes prepared from tubers whicu had been previously exhausted of their resin by alcohol; and a spurious substance has been ottered in considerable quantities in our markets for extract of jalap, which, on examination by Messrs. Ch. Bullock and Ed. Parrish, proved to owe its purgative property to 42 per ceut. of gamboge. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1862, p. 113.) Extract of jalap is of a dark-brown colour, slightly translucent at the edges, and tenacious wheu not perfectly dry. It contains the resin and gummy extrac- * According to Prof. Procter, a portion of fixed oil is extracted by the alcohol, which separates when the concentrated tincture is allowed- to stand, and, being in itself inert, might be rejected with advantage, care being taken to wash it first with alcohol, and add the washings to the liquid. The same result does not happen when diluted alcohol is used as the menstruum; as this does not take up the oil. PART II. Extracta. 1101 live, and, consequently, has all the medical properties of the root; but it is not often exhibited alone, being chiefly used as an ingredient of purgative pills, for which it is adapted by its comparatively small bulk. It is most conveniently kept for use in the form of powder, which, however, is apt to attract moisture and to aggregate into a solid mass, unless carefully excluded from the air. The dose is from ten to twenty grains, or rather more than half that of jalap.* Off. Prep. Pilul® Cathartic® Composit®, U. S. W. EXTRACTUM JUGLANDIS. U.S. Extract of Butternut. “Take of Butternut, in moderately coarse powder, twelve troy ounces; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Butternut with four fluidounces of Water, pack it in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the in- fusion passes but slightly impregnated with the properties of the Butternut. Boil the liquid to three-fourths of its bulk; then strain, and, by means of a water-bath, evaporate to the proper consistence.” TJ. S. This extract was formerly for the most part prepared by the country people, who are said to have used the bark of the branches and even the branches them- selves, instead of the inner bark of the root; and to have injured the prepara- tion by too much heat. That it should have proved uncertain in the hands of many physicians is, therefore, not a matter of surprise. It should be prepared by the apothecary, and from the inner bark of the root gathered in May or June. Experiments are yet wanting to prove that water is the best solvent of the active principles of this bark. Prof. Procter informs us that he has found an extract of the fresh bark prepared with diluted alcohol to have much more of the pungency of the bark than the officinal. The extract of butternut is of a black colour, sweetish odour, and bitter astrin- gent taste. In the dose of twenty or thirty grains, it acts as a mild cathartic. (See Juglans.) W. EXTRACTUM KRAMERIiE. TJ. S., Br. Extract of Rhatany. “Take of Rhatany, in moderately fine powder, twelve troyounces; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with four fluidounces of Water, pack it in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the infusion passes but slightly impregnated with the astringent property of the Rhatany. Heat the liquid to the boiling point, strain, and, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, evaporate to the proper consistence.” U. S. “ Take of Rhatany, in coarse powder, one pound [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Rhatany in a pint and a half [Imp. meas.] of the Water for twenty-four hours; then pack in a perco- lator, and add more Distilled Water, until twelve pints [Imp. meas.] have been collected, or the Rhatany is exhausted. Evaporate the liquor by a water-bath to a proper consistence.” Br. In selecting a plan for the preparation of this extract, it was undoubtedly wise to adopt the mode of displacement, with cold water as the menstruum. (See page 502.) It is absolutely necessary to the success of the process, that the root should be well and uniformly comminuted; and the “ moderately fine powder” of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is, therefore, preferable to the “coarse powder” of * Fluid Extract of Jalap. The following process has been proposed by Prof. Procter. Take of jalap, in coarse powder, 3 xvi; sugar carbonate of potassa j|ss; alcohol, water, each, q. s. Add to the jalap one pint of a mixture consisting of two parts of alcohol and one of water, and set aside for 24 hours. Then put the mixture into a percolator, and pour on it diluted alcohol until half a gallon has passed. Evaporate the filtered liquid one-half, add the sugar and carbonate of potassa, and evaporate to 12 fluidounces.' Put the liquid, while warm, into a pint bottle, add four fluidounces of alcohol, and mix. The carbonate of potassa renders the resin soluble in water, and probably favourably qualifies the irritating properties of the jalap. A fluidrachm of this extract would represent a drachm of jalap, so tiiivt the dose should be from 15 to 30 minims, (flw. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 108.)—Note to ttu eleventh edition. 1102 Extracta. PART II. the British The wood of the root yielded to Prof. Procter only 6 8 per cent, of extract, while the bark separated from the wood yielded 33 per cent. As the wood is of difficult pulverization, the inference is obvious, that, in powdering the roots, the ligneous portion may be rejected with advantage. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 270.) As a prolonged exposure of the infusion to the air is at- tended with the absorption of oxygen, and the production of insoluble apotheme, it is desirable that the evaporation should be conducted rapidly or in a vacuum. There scarcely appears to be occasion, in the case of rhatany, for heating and filtering the infusion before evaporation, the only use of which is to get rid of albumen, which is not among the recognised ingredients of the r^>ot. "Very inferior extracts of rhatany are often sold. Such is the South American extract, which has been occasionally imported. As the product obtained by de- coction .is greater than that afforded by the officinal plan, the temptation to sub- stitute the former is not always resisted, although it has been shown to contain nearly 50 per cent, of insoluble matter. Some druggists prepare the extract with an alcoholic menstruum with a view to the greater product; but the extract thus prepared has from 20 to 30 per cent, less of the active principle than the officinal. A substance has been shown to us, said to have been imported as ex- tract of rhatany from Europe, which was nearly tasteless, and was plausibly con- jectured to be the dried coagulated matter of old tincture of kino. Indeed, we are informed that very little of the genuine extract, prepared according to the officinal directions, is to be found in the shops. From a notice by Prof. Procter in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (May, 1862, p. 209), it would appear that the rha- tany now imported is much inferior to that formerly in use, having a larger pro- portion of wood, and yielding much less extract; and, a specimen carefully ma- nipulated by himself, gave but 9 14 per cent. Extract of rhatany should have a reddish-brown colour, a smooth shining fracture, and a very astringent taste; and should be almost entirely soluble in water. Its virtues may be considered as in proportion to its solubility. It is much used for all the purposes for which the astringent extracts are employed. The dose is from ten to twenty grains. Off. Prep. Syrupus Krameriae, U. S. W. EXTR ACTUM LUPULT. Br. Extract of Hop. “Take of Hop one pound [avoirdupois]; Rectified Spirit one pint and a half [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water one gallon [Imp. meas.]. Macerate the Hop in the Spirit for seven days; press out the tincture, filter, and distil off the spirit, leaving a soft extract. Boil the residual Hop with the Water for one hour, then express the liquor, strain, and evaporate by a water-bath to the con- sistence of a soft extract. Mix the two extracts, and evaporate at a temperature not exceeding 140° to a proper consistence.” Br. This is a great improvement on the old Lond. and Ed. process by maceration with water and evaporation. Alcohol is necessary for the exhaustion of the hop, and very cautious evaporation, to preserve the aroma in the extract. But since the discovery of the fact that the active properties of hops reside chiefly in the lupulin, the extract has been to a great extent superseded by that substance in this country, and has been little used. Lupulin may be advantageously substi- tuted for it in all cases in which it was formerly employed. Mr. Brande says that the average yield of one cwt. of hops is 40 lbs. of the extract. The dose is from ten to thirty grains. Under the inappropriate name of humuline, an extract has been prepared by first treating hops with alcohol and subsequently with water, evaporating the tincture and infusion separately, and mixing the products. (Pharm. Journ., xiii. 231.) EXTR ACTUM NUCIS VOMICAE ALCOIIOLICUM. U.S. Ex- PART II. Extracta. tractum Nucis Vomkle. Br., U.S. 1850. Alcoholic Extract of Nux Vo- mica. Extract of Nux Vomica. “Take of Nux Vomica, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Alcohol a suffi- cient quantity. Mix the Nux Yomica with four fluidounces of Alcohol, and allow the mixture to stand for an hour. Then introduce it into a cylindrical percolator, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until the tincture passes without bitterness. Distil off the alcohol, by means of a water-bath, until the tincture is reduced to half a pint, and evaporate this to the proper consistence.” U. S. “Take of Nux Yomica one pound [avoirdupois]; Rectified Spirit a suffi- ciency. Apply steam to the Nux Yomica until it is thoroughly softened, then dry rapidly, and reduce to fine powder. Exhaust the powder by boiling it with successive portions of the Spirit until the latter comes off nearly free from bit- terness. Strain, distil off the spirit, and evaporate by a water-bath to the pro- per consistence.” Br. In both the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias the nux vomica is directed in fine powder; but in the latter only are we told how to reduce it to that state. Another method, formerly employed by the Ed. College, was to grind it in a coffee-mill. The method of percolation in the U. S. process is preferable to that of decoc- tion in the British, for exhausting the drug. We prefer the simple British name, which was that of our Pharmacopoeia of 1850, to the more prolix one adopted in the late revision. As there is no other extract of nux vomica, it appears to us to have been an unnecessary precision to add the epithet alcoholicum, which renders the title more unwieldy, without making it more distinctive. This is one of the few instances in which the IJ. S. Pharmacopoeia deems a preliminary ma- ceration advisable. It is said that, when the extract is kept in powder, it is apt to agglutinate into a tough mass. According to Zippel, this may be prevented by adding a little water before the close of the evaporation, and then continuing the evaporation to dryness. {Arch, der Pharm., July 24, 1859.) This extract is an active preparation, though not always of uniform strength, owing to the variable proportion of strychnia in the nux vomica. M. Recluz obtained from sixteen ounces of nux vomica the average product of one ounce and a quarter. The dose of the extract is from half a grain to two grains, to be repeated three times a day.* W. EXTRACTUM. OPII. U.S.,Br. Extract of Opium. “ Take of Opium twelve troyounces; Water five pints. Cut the Opium into small pieces, macerate it for twenty-four hours in a pint of the Water, and reduce it to a soft mass by trituration. Express the liquid, and treat the residue with each of the four remaining pints of water successively in the same manner. Having mixed the liquids, filter the mixture, and evaporate, by means of a water- bath, to the proper consistence.” U. S. “Take of Opium, in thin slices, one pound [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water six pints [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Opium in two pints of the Water for twenty-four hours, and express the liquor. Reduce the Opium to a uniform pulp, macerate it again in two pints of the Water for twenty-four hours, and express. Repeat the operation a third time. Mix the liquors, strain through flannel, and evaporate by a water-bath to a proper consistence.” Br. These processes are essentially the same. An advantage of the preparation is that, by the solubility of the extract in water, it affords a convenient method of * Professor Procter informs us, as the result of his own observation, that in the alco- holic extract of nux vomica there is a considerable proportion of fixed oil (giij in §xvi of the seeds), which will not remain mixed with the other ingredients, becoming fiuid in summer, and concreting in cold weather. This he thinks should be separated from the extract, and shaken with a little diluted alcohol which takes from it any adhering active matter. The washings should be evaporated, and the residuum mixed with the extract, the fatty matter being thrown away.—Note to the tenth edition. 1104 Extract a. PART II. obtaining quickly an aqueous solution of the active ingredients of opium. It is exceedingly doubtful whether anything is left behind after the opium has been exhausted by water, wdiich materially modifies the action of its anodyne prin- ciple; and the extract probably has no advantage on this account over opium. Nor has it the advantage of greater uniformity; as the gum, extractive, &c., taken up by the water, bear no fixed proportion to the active ingredients. But, as purely aqueous preparations of opium have been found to agree better with certain individuals than opium alone or its alcoholic preparations, there is reason to believe that there are in the crude drug one or more principles, capable of causing nausea, headache, nervous disturbance, &c., which are insoluble in water, though extracted by alcohol or ether. M. Guibourt states that this extract, when kept, is apt to swell up, owing, as be at first supposed, to the fermentation of glucose; but he now ascribes the phenomenon to the change of meconic acid into the parameconic, with the escape of carbonic acid. (.. the orbit, by infiltrating it by injection with a fluidrachm of a solution of lactate of iron, containing eight grains of the salt. (Ranking's Abstract, xvili. 253.1 B FERRI OXIDUM IIYDRATUM. U. S. Ferri Peroxidum Hydra- tum. Br. Ferrugo, Ed. Hydrated Oxide of Iron. Hydrated Perox- ide of Iron. Hydrated Sesquioxide of Iron. “ Take of Solution of Tersulphate of Iron a pint; Water of Ammonia, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. To the Solution of Tersulphate of Iron, previously mixed with three pints of Water, add Water of Ammonia, with constant stirring, until in slight excess. Then pour the whole on a wet muslin strainer, and wash the precipitate with water until the washings pass nearly tasteless. Lastly, mix the precipitate with sufficient Water to make the mixture measure a pint and a half, and transfer it to a wide-mouthed bottle, which must be well stopped. “ When Hydrated Oxide of Iron is to be made in haste for use as an anti- dote, the washing may be performed more quickly, though less perfectly, by pressing the strainer forcibly with the hands until no more liquid passes, and then mixing the precipitate with sufficient Water to bring the mixture to the measure of a pint and a half.” U. S. “Take of Solution of Persulphate of Iron four fluidounces; Solution of Soda thirty-three fluidounces, or a sufficiency; Distilled Water one pint [Im- perial measure]. Add the Persulphate of Iron to the Distilled Water, and grad- ually pour the dilute solution into the Solution of Soda, stirring well for a few minutes; collect the precipitate on a calico filter, and wash it with distilled water, until the filtrate ceases to give a precipitate with chloride of barium. Lastly, enclose the precipitate, without drying it, in a porcelain pot whose lid is made tight by a luting of lard. This preparation should be recently made.” Br. This preparation was introduced into the officinal catalogues on account of its importance as an antidote to arsenious acid. In the former processes the first step was to convert the sulphate of protoxide of iron into the tersulphate of sesquioxide; but in the present the officinal solution of tersulphate of iron (persulphate, Br.) is taken already containing the iron in the proper state of oxidation. This is simply treated with water of ammonia (U. S.), or diluted solution of soda (Br.), which throws down the sesquioxide combined with water, constituting the hydrated sesquioxide required. After due washing, it is mixed with water in order to maintain its pulpy state, and then carefully enclosed in bottles, which should be wide-mouthed, in order to permit its ready extraction. Besides having this antidote ready formed in the pulpy state, it is the duty of the apothecary to be always prepared to make it, by keeping the necessary solu- tions for its precipitation; namely, the solution of tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron and solution of ammonia. In relation to this subject the reader is referred to a paper by Prof. Procter, in the American Journal qf Pharmacy for March, 1853 (p. 104). Properties. Hydrated oxide of iron, as directed to be kept by the U. S. for- mula, is a soft, moist, reddish-brown magma. If dried at a heat not exceeding 180°, and afterwards pulverized, it forms a reddish-brown powder, not attracted by the magnet, being the sesquioxide in the state of hydrate, containing about 18 per cent, of water. In this state it is wholly and readily soluble in muriatic acid without effervescence. If exposed to a red heat it loses the combined water, and becomes the anhydrous sesquioxide, less easily soluble in acids, improper for medicinal use, and altogether without effect as an antidote. Hydrated oxide of iron consists of one eq. of sesquioxide 80, and two of water 18 = 98, and is represented by the formula Fe303-J-2H0. Kept for some time in the pulpy state, 1140 Ferrum. PART II. ir loses half its combined water, and becomes less soluble in acids, and less effi- cient as an antidote. Medical Properties and Uses. The hydrated oxide of iron is not an eligible ferruginous preparation for medical use. Its antidotal powers in poisoning by arsenic, the manner in which it acts, the circumstances which impair its efficiency, and the mode of using it are fully explained under arsenious acid (page 28). Its power of rendering arsenious acid insoluble is readily shown by agitating a solu- tion of the acid with a considerable excess of the moist oxide, filtering, and then testing the filtered solution for the acid ; not a trace of the metal can be detected, even by sulphuretted hydrogen. The hydrated oxide, as obtained by the U. S. formula, contains a little ammonia, which is thought by some to assist its anti- dotal powers. At least it has been ascertained that the sesquioxide, when pre- cipitated by potassa as formerly directed by the Dublin College, is less efficient than when precipitated by ammonia, and must be employed in quantities three or four times as large to produce the same effect. The dry hydrate, rubbed up with water, is in the same proportion weaker than the pulpy hydrate. It has already been mentioned, under arsenious acid, that the officinal subcarbonate of iron (formerly called precipitated carbonate) possesses antidotal powers to ar- senic, though in an inferior degree ; but this statement will not apply to it, after it has been exposed to a red heat, to which it is improperly subjected by some manufacturing chemists. By ignition it becomes anhydrous, and altogether in- efficient as an antidote. Off. Prep. Ferri Peroxidum, Br. B. FERRI OXIDUM MAGNETICUM. Br. Magnetic Oxide of Iron. Martial Ethiops. “Take of Sulphate of Iron six ounces [avoirdupois] ; Sulphuric Acid three jluidrachms ; Nitric Acid two ftuidrachms; Solution of Soda fifty-eight fluid- ounces, or a sufficiency; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Add the Sulphuric Acid to five fluidounces of the Water, and with the aid of heat dissolve in the mixture four ounces [avoird.j of the Sulphate of Iron. Mix the Nitric Acid with two fluidounces of the Water, and, having added the dilute acid to the solution of sulphate of iron, concentrate by boiling until, on the sudden disengagement of ruddy vapours, the liquid passes from a dark to a red colour. To the solution thus obtained add the two remaining ounces of Sulphate of Iron, first dissolved in half a pint [Imperial measure] of Distilled Water. Mix well, add to the liquid the Solution of Soda, and, having boiled for five minutes in an iron vessel, collect the precipitate on a calico filter, and wash it with boiling Distilled Water, until the liquid which passes through ceases to give a precipitate when allowed to drop into a solution of chloride of barium. Lastly, dry the precipitate with- out heat in a confined portion of air over a capsule containing sulphuric acid, and enclose U in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In this formula, two-thirds of the sulphate of protoxide of iron taken are con- verted into tersulphate of sesquioxide. The remaining third of the sulphate is then dissolved in water, and mixed with the solution of the tersulphate. A com- pound solution is thus obtained, containing two-thirds of the iron in the state of sesquioxide, and one-third in that of protoxide. When this solution is treated with soda, a mixed precipitate of one eq. of protoxide and one of sesquioxide is thrown down (FeO,Fe,03). Now such a compound oxide corresponds in com- position with the native magnetic black oxide. The precipitate is washed to remove sulphate of soda, and the washings are known to be completed when the chloride of barium ceases to give a precipitate with them. Properties, dec. The artificial magnetic oxide of iron is a brownish-black powder, without taste, and strongly magnetic. According to the Br. Pharma- copoeia, it consists of peroxide (sesquioxide) of iron (Fea03) with about 9 per cent, of protoxide (FeO), and 22 per cent, of water. It dissolves without sflhr- Ferrum. 1141 PART II. vescence in muriatic acid diluted with half its bulk of water; and the solution gives a blue precipitate both with the ferrocyanide and ferridcyanide of potas- sium, showing the presence both of the protoxide and sesquioxide of iron. The Br. Pharmacopoeia gives the following tests. “Twenty grains moistened with nitric acid, and calcined at a low red heat, leave 15'8 grains of peroxide [sesquioxide] of iron. Twenty grains dissolved in hydrochloric acid continue to give a blue precipitate with ferridcyanide of potassium until 8‘3 measures of the volumetric solution of bichromate of potash have been added.” The former test measures the whole ferruginous strength of the preparation, the protoxide being sesquioxidized by the nitric acid and heat; the second the quantity of pro- toxide present, which must be such as to require the indicated quantity of the bichromate for its sesquioxidation. The dose is from five to twenty grains, given several times a day. Scales of iron {ferri squamae) were formerly officinal with the Dublin Col- lege under the name of black oxide. They were prepared from the scales, found at the blacksmith’s anvil, by washing them with water, separating them from impurities by means of a magnet, and reducing them to a fine powder. They are of variable composition ; being mixtures of the two oxides of iron with metallic iron. In view of their want of uniformity in composition, they were abandoned by the College for the magnetic oxide. B. FERRI PEROXIDUM. Br. Peroxide of Iron. Sesquioxide of Iron. “ Take of Hydrated Peroxide of Iron four ounces. Place the Peroxide of Iron in a stove or oven until it becomes dry to the touch, and then expose it to a heat of 212° until it ceases to lose weight. Lastly, reduce it to a fine powder, and preserve it in a bottle.” Br. This is the late Dublin process slightly modified. The hydrated oxide (Fe2Ov 2HO) loses, by the process, one-half of its combined water, and is converted into the monoliydrated sesquioxide (Fe203,H0), which is the present officinal prepa- ration. As prepared by the Dublin process, in which it was heated to redness, it lost the second eq. of water, and became the anhydrous sesquioxide (Fe203), identical with the colcothar of commerce. Properties, &c. This oxide is a reddish-brown, tasteless, insoluble powder, differing from colcothar in containing an eq. of water. It should not be deli- quescent, and should dissolve entirely in muriatic acid without effervescence. Its solution in diluted muriatic acid yields a copious blue precipitate with the ferro- cyanide of potassium, but none with the ferridcyanide; showing that it contains sesquioxide of iron but no protoxide. If it contain copper, its muriatic solution will deposit this metal on a bright piece of iron. This oxide is not used as a medicine. It is employed in making iron plaster and reduced iron, for which purposes other forms of oxidized iron would answer as well. The former Dublin rubigo ferri or rust of iron, formed by exposing moistened iron wire to the air till converted into rust, is essentially the sesquioxide, containing a little car- bonate of the protoxide. Off. Prep. Emplastrum Ferri, Br.; Ferrum Redactum, Br. B. FERRI PHOSPIIAS. U.S., Br. Phosphate of Iron. “Take of Sulphate of iron five troyounces; Phosphate of Soda six troy- ounces; Water eight pints. Dissolve the Salts separately, each in four pints ol the Water; then mix the solutions, and set the mixture by that the precipitate may subside. Lastly, having poured off the supernatant liquid, wash the pre- cipitate with hot water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. “ Take of Sulphate of Iron three ounces [avoirdupois] ; Phosphate of Soda (wo ounces and a half [avoird.] ; Acetate of Soda one ounce [avoird.] ; Boil- ing Distilled Water four pints [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Sulphate of Iron in one-half of the Water, and the Phosphate and Acetate of Soda in the 1142 jFerrum. PART II. remaii ing half. Mix the two solutions, and, after careful stirring, transfer the precipitate to a calico filter, and wash it with hot distilled water, till the filtrate ceases to give a precipitate with chloride of barium. Finally dry on porous bricks in a stove whose temperature does not exceed 100°. Preserve the dried salt in a stoppered bottle.” Br. The U. S. preparation is the result of a double decomposition between the saline materials employed. As the medicinal phosphate of soda is the middle tribasic phosphate, having the composition 2NaO,HO,PO,, it follows that it re- quires two eqs. of sulphate of protoxide of iron for its decomposition, as shown by the following equation: 2(FeO,SOs) and 2Na0,H0,P05 = 2FeO,HO,POs and 2(NaO,SOs). The resulting salts, therefore, are one eq. of the middle tribasic phosphate of iron, the salt under notice, and two eqs. of sulphate of soda, which are washed away. If the ferruginous sulphate be a perfect sulphate of the pro- toxide, the precipitate as first thrown down will be white ; but it quickly absorbs oxygen and becomes bluish-white. When perfect it consists of two eqs. of pro- toxide of iron, one' of basic water, and one of phosphoric acid ; but generally it contains some phosphate of the sesquioxide without basic water (Fe303,P0,.). The British phosphate of iron is a different salt; for, while the former has two eqs. of oxide of iron, this has three eqs. to one of the acid; the third eq. being supplied by the acetate of soda used in the process. Supposing the double de- composition to have occurred, as in the U. S. process, between two eqs. of the sulphate of iron and one of the double-based phosphate of soda, producing two eqs. of sulphate of soda and one of the double-based phosphate of iron ; the reaction next takes place between the generated eq. of phosphate of iron, one eq. of sulphate of iron, and one of acetate of soda, resulting in the production of an additional eq. of sulphate of soda, an eq. of free acetic acid, and the addi- tion of a third eq. of oxide of iron to the phosphate, which, being insoluble, is precipitated. This latter result arises from the strong disposition of the tribasic phosphoric acid to combine with three bases, which could only be satisfied by the liberation of an eq. of the acetic acid of the acetate. This salt, when first formed, is represented by the formula 3Fe0,P06; but the strong affinity of its protoxide for oxygen causes the gradual production of sesquioxide, which, therefore, to a certain extent always exists in the preparation. Phosphate of iron, by whichever process procured, is in the form of a powder of a bright slate colour, insoluble in water, but soluble in acids. The solution in dilute muriatic acid gives a blue precipitate with both fcrridcyanide and ferro- cyanide of potassium, but much the more copiously with the former, proving the presence both of protoxide and sesquioxide of iron, but a great preponderance of the protoxide. With ammonia the same solution yields a precipitate insoluble in an excess of the alkali. This is a test of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, probably intended to show that the salt, while containing a portion of phosphate of ses- quioxide of iron, has been quite freed by washing from phosphate of soda; for, though a precipitate is produced by ammonia with the phosphate of the protox- ide, it is redissolved by an excess of the precipitant, whereas, with the sesqui- oxide salt, the precipitate is not redissolved by such excess, unless by the aid of phosphate of soda or other salt of similar powers. If the preparation contain arsenic, it will be detected by producing a dark precipitate on the surface of a slip of pure copper introduced into the solution. Phosphate of iron, dissolved to saturation in a boiling solution of metaphos- phoric acid (HO,POs), under the name of superphosphate of iron, was proposed as a new remedy, in Jan. 1851, by Dr. llouth, of London. Mr. Thomas Greenish, of the same city, states that the solution of the salt, on cooling, hardens into a mass of a pilular consistence, soluble in water in all proportions, and free from any disagreeable or inky taste. He has prepared from it a syrup, cor tailing live grains of the salt to the fluidrachm. PART II. Per rum. 1143 Medical Properties. Phosphate of iron possesses the general properties ot the ferruginous preparations, and has been given with advantage in araenorrhoea and some forms of dyspepsia. It was introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia at the suggestion of the late Dr. Hewson, of this city, who found it, after an extensive experience, to be a valuable chalybeate. The dose is from five to ten grains.* B. FERRI PYROPHOSPHAS. U.S. Pyrophosphate of Iron. “Take of Phosphate of Soda seven troyounces and a half; Solution of Ter- sulphate of Iron seven fluidounces, or a sufficient quantity; Citric Acid two troyounces; Water of Ammonia five fluidounces and a half, or a sufficient quantity ; Water a sufficient quantity. Heat the Phosphate of Soda, in a por- celain capsule, until it undergoes the watery fusion, and continue the h$at until it becomes dry. Transfer the dry salt to a shallow iron capsule, and heat it to incipient redness, without fusion. Then dissolve it in three pints of Water, with the aid of heat, and, having filtered the solution and cooled it to the tempera- ture of 50°, add Solution of Tersulphate of Iron until this ceases to produce a precipitate. Stir the mixture thoroughly, and pour it upon a muslin strainer, and, when the precipitate has drained, wash it with water until the washings pass nearly tasteless, and transfer it to a weighed porcelain capsule. “To the Citric Acid, contained in a suitable vessel, add Water of Ammonia until the Acid is saturated and dissolved. Then add the solution to the precipi- tate in the weighed capsule, stir them together, and evaporate until the liquid is reduced to sixteen troyounces. Spread this on plates of glass or porcelain, so * Compound Syrup of Phosphate of Iron. Chemical Food. For a formula for a compound syrup of phosphate of iron by Mr. Wiegand, made by introducing into it the phosphates of lime, potassa, and soda, and for remarks on the pharmacy of the phosphates by Prof. Procter, see tha Am. Journ. of Pharm, for March, 1854 (pp. Ill and 112). A formula similar to Mr. Wiegand’s, communicated by Mr. Edward Parrish, as probably representing the pro- cess for a secret preparation considerably used in this city, may be found in the Am. Journ. of Pharm, for Nov. 1857 (p. 573). These formulas are too complicated to have any thera- peutic value. Nevertheless, as the preparations have had much vogue, under the name of chemical food, we give the formula of Mr. Parrish from the journal referred to. “Take of Protosulphate of Iron gx; Phosphate of Soda gxii; Phosphate of Lime gxii; Glacial Phosphoric Acid gxx; Carbonate of Soda J)ij; Carbonate of Potassa gi; Muriatic Acid, Water of Ammonia, each, q. s.; Powdered Cochineal gij ; Water q. s. to make ; Sugar Ibiij (troy); Oil of Orange Dissolve the Sulphate of Iron in f ajij, and the Phosphata of Soda in of boiling Water. Mix the solutions, and wash the precipitated phosphate of iron till Uie washings are tasteless. Dissolve the Phosphate of Lime in f 3jiv of boiling Water with sufficient Muriatic Acid to make a clear solution, precipitate it with Water of Ammonia, and wash the precipitate. To the freshly precipitated phosphates add the Phos- phoric Acid previously dissolved in Water. When clear add the Carbonates of Soda and Potassa, and afterwards sufficient Muriatic Acid to dissolve the precipitate. Now add the Cochineal mixed with the Sugar, apply heat, and when the syrup is formed, strain and flavour it. Each teaspoonful contains about one grain of phosphate of iron and two and a half grains of phosphate of lime, with smaller quantities of the alkaline phosphates, all in perfect solution.” The objection to such preparations as this is not that each of the ingre- dients may not be useful; but that they are so numerous that a morbid state of system must be extremely rare in which they can all be indicated, and every medicine is more or less noxious if given when it is not needed. The probability is that the therapeutic value of the preparation depends mainly on its ferruginous ingredient, and that, as a general rule, its therapeutic effects may be equally as well, if not better obtained, from a simple eyrup of phosphate of iron. Simple Syrup of Phosphate of Iron. Subsequently, Mr. Wiegand gave a formula for a sim- ple syrup of phosphate of iron, made by dissolving the recently precipitated salt in muri- atic acid, and adding the requisite quantity of sugar. By a misprint the phosphate of soda taken is double what it should be. The same writer has proposed to make a syrup of the pfiosphates of iron and lime, by dissolving in the above a definite quantity of recently pre- cipitated phosphate of lime, made by double decomposition between solutions of chloride of calcium and phosphate of soda. See his formulas in the Am. Journ. of Pharrh for March, 1355 (p 104j - — Votes "o the tenth, eleventh and twelfth editions. 1144 Ferrum. PART II that, cri drying, the salt may be obtained in scales. Lastly, preserve it in a well- stopped bottle, protected from the light.” U. S. This formula appears to be based upon a method, proposed by M. E. Robi- quet to the Academy of Medicine at Paris, in Feb. 1857, of preparing pyro- phosphate of iron for use, by dissolving a gelatinous precipitate of the salt in a solution of citrate of ammonia, and forming a syrup with the solution. Prof. Procter devised a formula upon this plan, published in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. 1857, p. 573), the result of which also was a syrup. The officinal formula, which provides for the preparation of the salt in the solid form, capable of being readily made into a syrup if desired, is that of Dr. Squibb published in the same journal (Jan. 1860, p. 37). The first step in the officinal process is to convert the common tribasic phos- phate of. soda (2Na0,H0,P05 + 24HO), by moderately igniting it, into the pyro- phosphate or bibasic phosphate of soda (2Na0,P05), which may be obtained crystallized by dissolving it in boiling water and evaporating, in which state it is represented by the formula 2Na0,P05 -f 10HO. The uncrystallized pyro- phosphate is dissolved and mixed with solution of tersulpliate of iron, when the pyrophosphate of sesquioxide of iron is deposited. This, while in a pulpy state, is added to a solution of citrate of ammonia formed by a direct union of its constituents, by which it is dissolved. The process is completed by evaporating the solution sufficiently, and then spreading it out to dry on glass or porcelain so that the salt may be obtained in scales. The reactions which result in the formation of the ferruginous salt, contained in this compound, probably take place between three eqs. of the bibasic phosphate of soda 3(2Na0,P05) and two eqs. of the tersulphate of iron 2(Fe203,3S03), forming six eqs, of sulphate of soda, and one eq. of sesquiphosphate of sesquioxide of iron, having (according to Gmelin) the equivalent composition represented by the formula 2Fe203,3F05 + 9HO. The preparation is probably an intimate mixture of the ferruginous and am- moniacal salts in the solid form; at least such must be the view of the revisers of the Pharmacopoeia, who name it pyrophosphate of iron. It is in scales of an apple-green colour, and an acidulous somewhat saline taste. It is wholly and freely dissolved by water. Ferrocyanide of potassium occasions no precipitate with its solution, though it causes a pale-blue colour, showing that the iron is in the state of sesquioxide, and that there is a substance present (citrate of ammo- nia) capable of holding ferrocyanide of iron in solution. The salt contains 48 per cent, of anhydrous pyrophosphate of iron. (U. S.) It is a very good chalybe- ate, mild yet efficient in its action on the system, without disagreeable taste, and, from its solubility, readily administered in any form that may be desirable, whe- ther that of pill, simple solution in water, or syrup. The dose is from two to five grains. A syrup may be readily prepared by dissolving it in water, and mixing the solution with simple syrup.* W. * This ferruginous pyrophosphate is soluble in pyrophosphate of soda; and hence, if an excess of pyrophosphate of soda is used in the double decomposition, the ferruginous pyrophosphate, first thrown down, is redissolved. This solution was proposed as a medi- cine by M. Persoz in 1848, and by M. Leras in 1849. M. Leras conceives that pyrophos- phate of iron, rendered soluble by pyrophosphate of soda, is the only ferruginous prepara- tion which is not precipitated in the stomach by the agency of the food or gastric juice. Mr. Alex. Ure, of London, tried this solution, calling it soda-pyrophosphate of iron, in scro- fula, and found it a mild and efficient chalybeate. The same solution, as prepared by M. Leras, has been employed with marked success in anemic diseases, by MM. Follet and Baume, who found it easily administered and rapidly absorbed. In the preparation used by him, the sulphate of soda, resulting from the double decomposition, was allowed to re- main. The same solution, including the sulphate of soda, has been prepared as a syrup by M. Soubeiran. Syrup of Pyrophosphate of Iron. M. Soubeiran's formula is as follows. Add 55 grains of Arsulpbato of sesquioxide of iron, dissolved by a gentle heat in 2 fluidounces of water, to PART II. Ferrum. 1145 FERRI SUBCARBONAS. U. S. Subcarbonate of Iron. Sesquioxide of Iron. Red Oxide of Iron. Precipitated Carbonate of Iron. Aperitive Saffron of Mars. “Take of Sulphate of Iron eight troyounces; Carbonate of Soda nine troy- ounces; Water eight pints. Dissolve the salts separately, each in four pint? of the Water; then mix the solutions, and, having stirred the mixture, set it by that the precipitate may subside. Having poured off the supernatant liquid, wash the precipitate with water until the washings pass nearly tasteless, and dry it on bibulous paper without heat.” U. S. When the solutions of carbonate of soda and sulphate of iron are mixed together, a hydrated carbonate of protoxide of iron, of a pale-blue colour,* ia thrown down, and sulphate of soda remains in solution. The equivalent quan- tities of the crystallized salts for mutual decomposition are 139 of the sulphate and 143 3 of the carbonate. Taking the quantity of sulphate of iron at 8 parts, the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia orders 9 parts of tli® carbonate of soda, which gives a slight excess of the latter. The precipitate, during the washing and drying, ab- sorbs oxygen, and loses nearly all its carbonic acid, whereby it is converted almost entirely into sesquioxide of iron. Hence, the London College gave it the name of Ferri Sesquioxidum; but, as this is applicable to the red oxide, obtained by calcining the sulphate, or igniting the hydrated sesquioxide, the U. S. name of Ferri Subcarbonas, adopted in allusion to the small quantity of carbonic acid present in it, is more distinctive. Carbonate of soda is preferred to carbonate of potassa for decomposing the ferruginous sulphate; because it produces in the double decomposition sulphate of soda, which, from its greater solubility, is more readily washed away than sulphate of potassa. The direction to dry the precipitate without heat is important; as even a moderate elevation of temperature has been shown, by the experiments of Mr. J. A. Rex, to modify the resulting product unfavourably, diminishing its solubility in muriatic acid in proportion to. the heat employed. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1862, p. 193.) Properties. Subcarbonate of iron is a reddish-brown powder, of a disagree- able, slightly styptic taste; insoluble in water, aud not readily dissolved by any acid except the muriatic, with which it effervesces slightly. When of a bright- red colour it should be rejected, as this colour shows that it has been injured by exposure to heat. After precipitation from its muriatic solution by ammo- nia or potassa, either of which throws down the sesquioxide of iron, the super- natant liquor should give no indications of containing any metal in solution by the test of sulphuretted hydrogen or ferrocyanide of potassium. It is incom- patible with acids and acidulous salts. In composition it is a hydrated sesquiox- ide of iron, containing a little carbonate of the protoxide. By exposure to a rea 462 grains of crystallized pyrophosphate of soda, dissolved in 7% fluidounces of water and 8| jiuidounces of mint water, and mix. So soon as the precipitate formed redissolves, filter the solution, and add to the filtrate 19 troyounces, of white sugar, which must be allowed to dissolve without heat. The dose of this syrup, which is easy to take, is a tablespoonful, containing about a third of a grain of iron. An equivalent preparation may be made from the U. S. pyrophosphate of iron by dis- solving 2-6 grains in a fluidounce of syrup; but this would be a feeble preparation; and, besides, the quantity of sugar might be embarrassing to the stomach. A better plan would probably be to dissolve 20 grains in a fluidounce of syrup, giving 2-5 grains of the salt to each fluidraclim, and making the dose from one to two teaspoonfuls. The salt may be dis- solved in a little water before being incorporated with the syrup, care being taken that the resulting liquid should contain 20 grains to the fluidounce. Dr. Squibb prepares a syrup of the pyrophosphate by adding to 24 parts of the solution of the formula, after filtration, 248 parts of Syrup, and thus obtains a preparation contain- ing about two grains of the officinal salt, or one grain of the anhydrous pyrophosphate, in a fluidrachm.— Notes to the eleventh and twelfth editions. * The carbonate of the protoxide of iron is white if perfectly pure; but as the sulphate of iron used is not absolutely pure, containing almost always a little sesquioxide, this ia thrown down with the carbonate, giving it a bluish tinge. 1146 Ter rum. PART II. heat, it at sorbs oxygen, and loses water and carbonic acid, being converted into the astringent saffron of Mars of the French Codex. After ignition it is no longer a subcarbonate, but is converted into the pure sesquioxide, which is less soluble in acids, and less efficient as a medicine than the preparation in its ori- ginal state. Hence it is wrong to expose the subcarbonate to a red heat, as some manufacturing chemists are in the habit of doing, in order to give it a bright-red colour. Medical Properties and Uses. Subcarbonate of iron is tonic, alterative, and emmenagogue, and is employed for all the purposes to which the preparations of iron are generally applicable. It was recommended by Mr. Carmichael in cancer, and is said sometimes to prove useful. Mr. Hutchinson brought it into notice as a remedy for neuralgia; and an extensive experience with it in that disease has established its value. It is also useful in chorea, chlorosis, and, gene- rally, in those diseases in which the blood is deficient in red corpuscles. It has been used by I)r. Woollam, Dr. Shearman, Dr. Elliotson, and others in traumatic tetanus, with success in twelve cases, and failure in three.. In the second stage of hooping-cough, Dr. Steymann represents it to be a prompt and efficacious remedy. When prescribed as a tonic, the usual dose is from five to thirty grains three times a day, given in pill or powder, and frequently combined with aro- matics and vegetable tonics. In neuralgia, chorea, and tetanus, it is administered in doses of from one to two teaspoonfuls. No nicety need be observed in the dose; as its only obvious effect in very large doses is a slight nausea, and a sense of weight at the stomach. It blackens the stools. The subcarbonate of iron acts as an antidote to the poison of arsenious acid, provided it has not been exposed to a red heat; and, though not so powerful as the hydrated oxide in the form of magma, should always be used until the latter can be procured. (See page 30.) Off. Prep. Eraplastrum Ferri, U. S.; Ferrum Redactum, U. S. ; Trochisci Ferri Subcarbonatis, U. S. B. FERRI SULPHAS. U. S., Br. Sulphate of Iron. Green Vitriol. “ Take of Iron, in the form of wire, and cut in pieces, twelve troyounces; Sul- phuric acid eighteen troyounces; Water eight puds. Mix the Sulphuric Acid and Water, and add the Iron; then heat the mixture until effervescence ceases. Pour off the Solution, and, having added thirty grains of Sulphuric Acid, filter through paper, allowing the lower end of the funnel to touch the bottom of the receiving vessel. Evaporate the filtered liquor in a matrass until sufficiently con- centrated ; then set it aside in a covered vessel to crystallize. Drain the crystals in a funnel, dry them on bibulous paper, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle.” U.S. “ Take of Iron Wire four ounces [avoirdupois] ; Sulphuric A four fluid- ounces [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water one pint and a half [Imp. meas.]. Pour the Water on the Iron placed in a porcelain capsule, add the Sulphuric Acid, and, when the disengagement of gas has nearly ceased, boil for ten mi- nutes. Filter now through paper, and, after the lapse of twenty-four hours, sepa- rate the crystals which have been deposited from the solution. Let these be dried on filtering paper placed on porous bricks, and preserved in a stoppered bottle.” Br. The object of these processes is to make a pure sulphate of protoxide of iron by direct combination. Sulphuric acid, in a concentrated state, acts but imper- fectly on iron; but when diluted, a vigorous action takes place, the oxygen of the water converts the metal into protoxide, with which the sulphuric acid unites, and hydrogen is evolved. The equivalent quantities for mutual reaction are 28 of iron to 49 of acid. This proportion is one part of iron to one and three-quar- ters of acid. The U. S. proportion is oae part of iron to one and a half of acid, and gives a quantity of iron one-sixth more than the acid can dissolve. The PART II. Ferrum. 1147 British Council uses an excess of acid, the weight of acid taken being 7 38 avoirdupois ounces, instead of 7. An excess of iron, however, is desirable; as it tends to secure the production of a perfect sulphate of the protoxide. The re- maining steps of the U. S. process are peculiar, and are intended to secure the formation of a salt, entirely free from sesquioxide, by the method of Bonsdorff. This chemist found that, when a perfect sulphate of protoxide of iron was formed in solution by heating dilute sulphuric acid with an excess of iron, it might be crystallized free from sesquioxide, provided a little excess of sulphuric acid were added to the liquid before filtration, in order to hold in solution any sesquioxide that may have been formed; at the same time avoiding, as much as possible, the contact of the air. Hence the directions in the U. S. formula to acidulate with sulphuric acid, to cause the funnel to touch the bottom of the receiving vessel, which avoids the dropping of the liquid through the air, and to cover the vessel containing the concentrated liquid, when it is set aside to crystallize. The Lon- don and Edinburgh Colleges prepared this officinal by purifying the impure commercial sulphate; but their plan was superseded by that of the Dublin Col- lege in the recent consolidation of the several pharmacopoeias in the British. Properties. Sulphate of iron is in the form of transparent crystals, efflores- cent in the air, of a pale bluish-green colour, and having the shape of oblique rhombic prisms. It has a styptic taste, and an acid reaction. As prepared by Bonsdorff’s method, it is blue verging to green. When it becomes more green than blue, or entirely green, an indication is afforded that it contains some ses- quioxide. By exposure to the air the crystals absorb oxygen, and become first green, and ultimately covered with a yellow efflorescence of raonosulphate of the sesquioxide, insoluble in water. Sometimes the crystals are quite permanent when made by Bonsdorff’s method, owing to the slight excess of acid which they contain. Sulphate of iron is soluble in about twice its weight of cold water, and in three-fourths of its weight of boiling water, but is insoluble in alcohol. The aqueous solution is bluish-green; but by standing it attracts oxygen, and is ren- dered first green and then reddish, depositing, in the mean time, a portion of sesquisulphate of the sesquioxide, having the composition 2Fe20,,3S03 -f 8IIO. (Wittstein, Chemical Gazette, May 15, 1849, from Buchner's Bepert.) When heated moderately, it parts with six-sevenths of its water of crystallization, and becomes grayish-white. (See Ferri Sulphas Eccsiccata.) At a red heat it uoses its acid, and is converted into the anhydrous sesquioxide of iron called colcothar. It is incompatible with the alkalies and their carbonates, soaps, lime- water, the chlorides of calcium and barium, the borate and phosphate of soda, nitrate of silver, and the acetate and subacetate of lead. It is decomposed also by astringent vegetable infusions, the tannic and gallic acids of which form, if any sesquioxide be present, a black compound of the nature of ink. The extent to whicli this change lessens the activity of the salt is not well ascertained. Sul- phate of iron, as kept in the shops, is often the impure commercial sulphate, which is not fit for medicinal use.* The perfectly pure salt is precipitated white * Commercial Sulphate of Iron. Ferri Sulphas Venalis. Land. Green Vitriol. Copperas. This was formerly officinal in the London Pharmacopoeia, in which it was employed for preparing the pure sulphate. It is manufactured on a large scale for the purposes of the arts, from the native sulphuret of iron, or iron pyrites, by roasting, oxidation by exposure to air and moisture, and lixiviation. The constituents of the mineral become sulphuric acid and protoxide of iron, which, by their union, form the salt. Sulphate iron is also ob- tained in many chemical processes as a collateral product, as in the manufacture of alum, in the precipitation of copper from solutions of sulphate of copper by scraps of iron, &e. Commercial sulphate of iron is far from being pure. Besides containing some sesqui- oxide of iron, it is generally contaminated with metallic and earthy salts; such as those of copper, zinc, alumina, and magnesia. Two principal kinds occur in the market; one in large grass-gr°“n crystals, the surface of which is studded with ochreous spots; the other, of a bluish-green colour, and ordinarily mixed with the powder of the effloresced salt. The commercial sulphate should never be dispensed by the apothecary, until it has undergone 1148 Ferrum. PART II. by ferrocyanide of potassium ; but that of ordinary purity gives a greenish pre- cipitate, more or less deep, with this test, owing to the presence of some sesqui- oxide of iron. Copper may be detected by immersing in the solution a bright piece of iron, on which a cupreous film will be deposited. Both copper and zinc may be discovered by sesquioxidizing the iron by boiling the solution of the salt with nitric acid, and then precipitating the iron by an excess of ammonia. If the filtered solution is blue, copper is present; and if it contain zinc, this will be separated in flakes of white oxide, on expelling the excess of ammonia by ebul- lition. Sulphate of iron, when crystallized, consists of one eq. of acid 40, one of protoxide 36, and seven of water 63 — 139, and its formula is FeO,S03 -f 7HO. Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphate of iron is astringent and tonic. In large doses it is apt to produce nausea, vomiting, griping, and purging; and its use, when long continued, injures the stomach. As its effect is chiefly that of an astringent, it cannot be used with advantage to improve the quality of the blood. As an astringent it is given in diseases attended with immoderate discharges; such as passive hemorrhages, colliquative sweats, diabetes, chronic mucous ca- tarrh, leucorrhcea, gleet, &c. As a tonic it is used in dyspepsia, and in the de- bility following protracted diseases. amenorrhcea with deficient action it is resorted to with supposed advantage, either alone or conjoined with the fetid and stimulant gums. Externally, the solution is used in chronic ophthalmia, leu- corrhcea, and gleet, made of various strengths, from one or two, to eight or ten grains of the salt to the fluidounce of water. M. Velpeau has found it an excel- lent remedy in erysipelas, applied topically in the form of solution or ointment. In forty cases in which it was tried, it cut short the disease in from 24 to 48 hours. The solution was made of three and a half drachms of the salt to a pint of water, and applied by compresses, kept constantly wet. In a few cases conve- nience required the application of the ointment, made of eight parts of the salt to thirty of lard. An ointment, made of one or two parts of the sulphate to sixty of lard, was found by M. Devergie to be particularly efficacious in certain skin diseases, especially in the different forms of eczema. In scaly affections it had no effect. The dose is one or two grains, in the form of pill, which should be made from the dried sulphate. (See Ferri Sulphas Exsiccata.) When given in so- lution, the water should be previously boiled to expel the air, which, if allowed to remain, would partially decompose the salt. Taken in an overdose it acts as a poison. Off. Prep. Ferri Arsenias, Br.; Ferri Carbonas Saccharata, Br.; Ferri et Quinite Citras, Br.; Ferri Oxidum Magneticuin, Br.; Ferri Phosphas; Ferri Subcarbonas, U. S.; Ferri Sulphas Exsiccata; Liquor Ferri Subsulphatis, 17. S.; Liquor Ferri Tersulphatis, U. S.; Mistura Ferri Composita; Pilulae Ferri Car- bonatis, U. S.; Pil. Ferri Compositae, U. S. B. FERRI SULPHAS EXSICCATA. U.S.,Br. Dried Sulphate of Iron. “ Take of Sulphate of Iron, in coarse powder, twelve troyounces. Expose it, in an unglazed earthen vessel, to a moderate heat, with occasional stirring, until it has effloresced; then increase the heat to 300°, and maintain it at about that temperature until the salt ceases to lose weight. Lastly, reduce the residue to fine powder, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “ Take of Sulphate of Iron four ounces. Expose the Sulphate of Iron in a a careful purification. The following was the formula of the London College for effecting this object. “Take of Commercial Sulphate of Ivon four ounces [troy~\\ Sulphuric Acid a fluidounce [Imperial measure]; Iron wire an ounce [troy]; Distilled Water four pints [Imp. mens.] Mix the Acid with the Water, and add to them the Sulphate and Iron, then apply heat, stirring occasionally, till the Sulphate is dissolved. Filter the solution while hot, and set aside to crystallize., Pour off the liquor, and evaporate it that crystals may again form Dry all the crystals.”—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Ferrum. porcelain capsule to a moderate heat, which may be finally raised to 400°, until aqueous vapour ceases to be given off. Reduce the residue to a fine powder, and preserve it in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In these processes six eqs. out of seven of the water of crystallization of the salt are driven off. The heat should not exceed 400°, otherwise the salt itself would suffer decomposition. Dried sulphate of iron is used for making pills, the crystallized sulphate not being adapted to that purpose. In prescribing the dried sulphate it is necessary to recollect that three grains are equivalent to five of the crystallized salt. B. FERRI SULPHAS GRANULATA. Br. G-ranulated Sulphate of Iron. “ Take of Iron Wire four ounces [avoirdupois] ; Sulphuric Acid four fluid - ounces [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water one pint and a lialf\_Imp. meas.] ; Rectified Spirit eight fluidounces [Imp. meas.]. Pour the Water on the Iron placed in a porcelain capsule, add the Sulphuric Acid, and, when the disengage- ment of gas has nearly ceased, boil for ten minutes, and then filter the solution into ajar containing the spirit, stirring the mixture so that the salt shall sepa- rate in minute granular crystals. Let these, deprived by decantation of adhering liquid, be transferred on filtering paper to porous bricks, and dried by exposure to the atmosphere. They should be preserved in a stoppered bottle.” Br. The directions given in the first part of this process are precisely the same as those laid down by the British Council for making Sulphate of Iron; but the hot solution of the iron in the sulphuric acid, instead of being allowed to filter into an empty vessel, is made to drop into a portion of rectified spirit, the mix- ture-being stirred while it cools. The acid directed is in excess ; and the filtrate is consequently an acid solution of sulphate of protoxide of iron, mixed with spirit. The stirring as the mixture cools finely granulates the salt, which sepa- rates perfectly pure; the spirit holding in solution any tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron which may have been formed, and the excess of acid dissolving any free sesquioxide. This process, in its main features, is the same as that of M. Ber- themot, given in the eighth edition of this work. It was adopted from the Dub- lin Pharmacopoeia. Properties, &c. Granulated sulphate of iron is a crystalline, granular, bluish- white powder. When carefully dried it undergoes no change by keeping. It ap- pears to have been introduced into the catalogue of the Dublin Pharmacopoeia of 1850, as the best form of the sulphate for conversion into the officinal dried salt; and its peculiar state of aggregation would seem to fit it for that purpose ; yet this intention, if it existed, seems to have been overlooked in the revision of the British Pharmacopoeia, in which the granulated salt is not directed in the formula for the dried sulphate. The only reason for its retention was probably that it is less liable to oxidation on exposure than the sulphate in its ordinary form. Off. Prep. Syrupus Ferri Phosphatis, Br. B. FERRUM REDACTUM. U.S.,Br. Ferri Pulvis U.S. 1850. Re- duced Iron. Powder of Iron. “ Take of Subcarbonate of Iron thirty troyounces. Wash the Subcarbonate thoroughly with water until no traces of sulphate of soda are indicated by the appropriate tests, and calcine it in a shallow vessel until free from moisture. Then spread it upon a tray, made by bending an oblong piece of sheet-iron in the form of an incomplete cylinder, and introduce this into a wrought iron reduc- tion-tube, of about four inches in diameter. Place the reduction-tube in a char- coal furnace; and, by means of a self regulating generator of hydrogen, pass through it a stream of that gas, previously purified by bubbling successively through solution of subacetate of lead, diluted with three times its volume of 1150 Ferrum. PART II. water, and through milk of lime, severally contained in four-pint bottles, about one-third filled. Connect with the further extremity of the reduction-tube, a lead tube bent so as to dip into water. Make all the junctions air-tight by ap- propriate lutes; and, when the hydrogen has passed long enough to fill the whole of the apparatus to the exclusion of atmospheric air, light the fire, and bring that part of the reduction-tube, occupied by the Subcarbonate, to a dull- red heat, which must be kept up so long as the bubbles of hydrogen, breaking from the water covering the orifice of the lead tube, are accompanied by visible aqueous vapour. When the reduction is completed, remove the fire, and allow the whole to cool to the ordinary temperature, keeping up, during the refrige- ration, a moderate current of hydrogen through the apparatus. Withdraw the product from the reduction-tube, and, should any portion of it be black instead of iron-gray, separate such portion for use in a subsequent operation. Lastly, having powdered the Reduced Iron, keep it in a well-stopped bottle. When thirty troyouuces of Subcarbonate of Iron are operated on, the process occupies from five to eight hours.” U. S. “ Take of Peroxide of Iron one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Zinc, granulated, Sul- phuric Acid of commerce, Chloride of Calcium, each, a sufficiency. Introduce the Peroxide of Iron into a gun-barrel, confining it to the middle part of the tube by plugs of asbestos. Pass the gun barrel through a furnace, aud, when it has been raised to a strong red heat, cause it to be traversed by a stream of hy- drogen gas, developed by the action on the Zinc of some of the Sulphuric Acid diluted with eight times its volume of water. The gas before entering the gun- barrel must be rendered quite dry by being made to pass first through the remain- der of the Sulphuric Acid, and then through a tube eighteen inches long, packed with minute fragments of the Chloride of Calcium. The farther end of thef gun- barrel is to be connected by a cork with a bent tube dipping under water; and when the hydrogen is observed to pass through the water at the same rate that it bubbles through the Sulphuric Acid, the furnace is to be allowed to cool down to the temperature of the atmosphere, the current of hydrogen being still con- tinued. Tne reduced iron is then to be withdrawn, and enclosed in a dry stop- pered bottle.” Br. This preparation was introduced into the U. S. and Dublin Pharmacopoeias of 1850, and is retained in the present edition of our own, and in the British. It consists of metallic iron in fine powder, obtained by reducing the sesqui- oxide by hydrogen at a dull-red heat. The subcarbonate of the U. S. Pharma- copoeia, which is essentially the sesquioxide of iron, is deprived of water by cal- cination, and then subjected to the reducing influence of a stream of hydro- gen, purified from sulphuretted hydrogen and other acid by passing successively through a solution of subacetate of lead and milk of lime. The hydrogen unites with the oxygen of the sesquioxide to form water, and leaves the iron in the metallic state. The subcarbonate should be perfectly free from sulphate of soda, which it is apt to contain when imperfectly washed. If this salt be present it will be reduced by the hydrogen to the state of sulphuret of sodium, which will contaminate and spoil the metallic iron formed, and cause the preparation, when taken, to give rise to unpleasant eructations. The heat should be carefully regu- lated ; for if it fall belowT dull redness, part of the oxide will escape reduction; and, if it exceed that point considerably, the particles of reduced iron will ag- glutinate, and the preparation will be heavy and not readily pulverizable. The British process is not so well fitted for practical purposes as that of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The direction to drv the hydrogen is unnecessary. On the sub- ject of powder of iron, manufacturing chemists will find it useful to consult the paper of MM. Soubeiran and Dublanc, in which full directions are given for puri- fying the hydrogen, constructing the furnace, regulating the heat, and avoiding explosions. (Amer. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 303, from the Journ. de I'ha?m.t PART II. Ferrum. 1151 viii. 187.) Prof. Procter, of Philadelphia, has made some improvements in the process of Soubeiran and Dublanc, which he has communicated in a paper, em- bracing many useful details. (Amer. Journ. of Pharm., xix. 11.) Since the tenth edition of this work was published, several processes have been proposed for obtaining powder of iron. Mr. Arthur Morgan, of Dublin, recommends the use of dried ferrocyanide of potassium, thoroughly mixed-with anhydrous red oxide of iron, and calcined with pure carbonate of potassa at a low red heat. The product contains all the iron in a reduced state, mixed with soluble matters, which are carefully washed away. (See Amer. Journ. of Plxarm., Sept. 1854, p. 450.) A similar process to the above has been proposed by a German chemist, named Ziingerle; the oxalate of protoxide of iron being sub- stituted for the red oxide. (See Pharm. Journ., May, 1857, p. 565.) Prof. Wohler recommends the use of the same oxalate, not in connection with ferro- cyanide of potassium; but as a suitable compound of iron for reduction by hydrogen. Oxalate of protoxide of iron is a salt of a lemon-yellow colour, and may be obtained by precipitating a concentrated solution of sulphate of iron with oxalic acid. Another eligible compound for reduction is the crystalline powder of oxide of iron, prepared by fusing, in a clay crucible, pure dried sul- phate of iron with three times its weight of chloride of sodium, and then wash- ing the melted mass when cold, until everything soluble is removed. (Wohler.) The process of M. Eugene Fegueux consists in reducing the oxide of iron by carbonic oxide, formed by passing a stream of carbonic acid over red-hot char- coal in the reduction tube, before it reaches the oxide of iron. The carbonic acid, thus reduced to carbonic oxide, is formed again by the deoxidizing of the ferru- ginous oxide. Properties. Powder of iron, called by the French, fer reduit, is a light, taste- less powder, soft to the touch, of an iron-gray colour, and without metallic lustre. If black the preparation is to be rejected as not being fully deoxidized. When thrown into a dilute acid, it causes a lively effervescence of hydrogen. A small portion of it, struck on an anvil with a smooth hammer, forms a scale, having a brilliant metallic lustre. On account of its great liability to oxidation, it should be kept in a dry bottle, well stopped. A black powder, having a composition corresponding with that of the magnetic oxide of iron, has been sold in London and Edinburgh under the name of Quevenne’s iron. The spurious powder may be known by its having a black instead of an iron-gray colour, and by its effer- vescing but slightly with acids. In the process for making reduced iron, part of the sesquioxide almost always escapes full deoxidation, and comes out of the tube of a black colour. This part should be rejected, instead of being sold as reduced iron, as appears to have been done by some manufacturing chemists. If the preparation has been very badly made, its solution in dilute sulphuric acid will produce an intensely red colour with sulphocyanide of potassium. Medical Properties. Powder of iron, reduced from the oxide by hydrogen, was first prepared for medicinal purposes by Quevenne and Miqnelard, of Paris. The general therapeutic properties of the preparations of iron, and the mode in which they should be given, have been stated under another head. (See page 198 ) Of these, the preparation under consideration is among the most import- ant. It is that which introduces the largest proportion of iron into the gastric juice, according to Quevenne, and to M. Costes, of Bordeaux. The chief objec- tion to it is the difficulty of obtaining it well prepared. Much of the powder of iron found in the shops is not to be depended on, in consequence of imperfect reduction. The principal diseases in which it has been employed are anaemia, chlorosis, amenorrhcea, chorea, and enlargement of the spleen following inter- mittent fever. Its general mode of action is to improve the quality of impove- rished blood. Observations to determine its therapeutic value, compared with that of the other ferruginous preparations, were made by M. Costes, for nearly 1152 Hydrargyrum. part ir. lour years, at the hospital Saint-Andre, of Bordeaux, and with results highly favourable to it. The dose is from three to six grains several times a day, given in powder or pill. It is sometimes prepared with chocolate in the form of lo- zenges. B. HYDRARGYRUM. Preparations of Mercury. Of the mercurial preparations formerly officinal, the following have been dis- carded in the recent editions of the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias; Pure Mercury, Dub., Solution of Bichloride of Mercury, Loud., Black Oxide of Mercury, U. S., Black Sulphuret of Mercury, U. S., and Mercury icitli Mag- nesia, Dub. The Solution of Nitrate of Mercury has been transferred to the Ltquores or Solutions. HYDRARGYRI CIILORIDUM CORROSIYUM. U.S. Hydrargy- rum Corrosivum Sublimatum. Br. Hydrargyui Bichloridum. Bond. Corrosive Chloride of Mercury. Bichloride of Mercury. Corrosive Subli- ?nate. “Take of Mercury twenty-four troyounces; Sulphuric Acid thirty-six troy- ounces; Chloride of Sodium eighteen troyounces. Boil, by means of a sand- bath, the Mercury with the Sulphuric Acid until a dry white mass is left. Rub this, when cold, with the Chloride of Sodium in an earthenware mortar; then sublime with a gradually increasing heat.” U. S. “ Take of Sulphate of Mercury twenty ounces [avoirdupois] ; Chloride of So- dium, dried, ten ounces [avoird.] ; Black Oxide of Manganese, in fine powder, one ounce [avoird.]. Reduce the Sulphate of Mercury and the Chloride of Sodium each to fine powder, and, having mixed them and the Oxide of Manganese thoroughly by trituration in a mortar, place the mixture in a tall matrass of green glass, and, by a regulated heat applied through the intervention of sand, let the corrosive sublimate be sublimed. The matrass must now be broken in order to remove the sublimate, which should be kept in jars or bottles impervious to the light.” Br. In order to understand the above processes, which are the same in principle, it is necessary to premise that corrosive sublimate is a bichloride of mercury, consisting of two eqs. of chlorine and one of mercury. By boiling Sulphuric acid in excess with mercury to dryness, a white salt is formed, which is a bisulphate of the deutoxide of mercury. (See Hydrargyri Sulphas.) When this is mixed with chloride of sodium (common salt), and the mixture exposed to a subliming heat, a mutual decomposition takes place. The chlorine of the common salt combines with the mercury, and sublimes as bichloride of mercury; while the sodium, oxygen of the deutoxide of mercury, and sulphuric acid unite to form sulphate of soda, which remains behind. The quantities for mutual decomposi- tion are two eqs. of chloride of sodium, consisting of two eqs. of chlorine and two of sodium ; and one eq. of bisulphate of deutoxide of mercury, consisting of one eq. of mercury, two of oxygen, and two of sulphuric acid. The two eqs. of chlorine combine with the one eq. of mercury to form one eq. of corrosive subli- mate; and the two eqs., severally, of sodium, oxygen, and sulphuric acid form, by their union, two eqs. of dry sulphate of soda. The British formula differs from ours in ordering the bisulphate of the deutoxide of mercury ready formed under the name of sulphate of mercury, instead of preparing it as the first step of the process, and in the use of a small proportion of black oxide of manga- nese, intended to deutoxidize any portion of protoxide of mercury that may be contained in the sulphate, and thereby prevent the formation of protochloride of mercury or calomel. (See Hydrargyri Sulphas.) The names given in the two Pharmacopoeias to this important chloride, do PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1153 not exactly correspond. It is called the corrosivje chloride of mercury in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and corrosive sublimate, irrespective of chemical nomen- clature, in the British. Thus far, no harm can arise from the want of conformity, as neither of these names can be mistaken ; but, unfortunately, it has been deemed proper, in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, immediately after the officinal title, and in close connection with it, to define the salt as chloride of mercury, in conformity with the new view, adopted in that work, of the equivalent of mercury. Now this view is by no means universally accepted, and, with many, calomel is still the chloride of mercury; so that there is some chance that, should calomel be prescribed by this title, corrosive sublimate may be dispensed for it, with danger- ous if not fatal effects to the patient. Indeed, death has, at least in one recorded instance, occurred in consequence of this confusion of nomenclature; and our officinal guides should take especial care to guard against such mistakes, instead of contributing to them. Preparation on the Large Scale, Sc. The first step is to form the bisulphate of the deutoxide of mercury, which is effected by heating the sulphuric acid and metal together in an iron pot, so arranged as to carry off the unwholesome fumes of sulphurous acid, which are copiously generated. The dry salt obtained is then mixed with the common salt, and the mixture sublimed in an iron pot lined with clay, and covered by an inverted earthen pan. The late Dr. A. T. Thomson, of London, took out a patent for forming corrosive sublimate, on the large scale, by the direct combination, by combustion, of gaseous chlorine with heated mer- cury. The product is stated to be perfectly pure, and to be afforded at a lower price than the sublimate made in the usual way. In order that the combination may take place, the mercury need not be heated to its boiling point, but only to a temperature between 300° and 400°. According to Dr. Maclagan, corrosive sublimate, made by this process, is liable to the objection that a proportion of calomel is always formed, occasionally amounting to 10 per cent. It may sometimes be useful to know how to make a small quantity of corro- sive sublimate on an emergency. This may be done by dissolving deutoxide of mercury (red precipitate) in muriatic acid, evaporating the solution to dryness, dissolving the dry mass in water, and crystallizing. Here a double decomposi- tion takes place, resulting in the formation of water and the bichloride. Properties. Corrosive chloride of mercury, as obtained by sublimation, is in the form of colourless crystals, or of white, semi-transparent, crystalline masses, of the sp. gr. 5-2, permanent in the air, and of an exceedingly acrid, styptic, me- tallic, durable taste. It dissolves in 16 parts of cold water, and in 3 of boiling water. A boiling saturated solution, upon cooling, lets it fall in a confused mass of crystals. It is soluble also in 2 3 parts of cold alcohol, in about its own weight of boiling alcohol, and in 3 parts of ether. The latter solvent is capable of re- moving corrosive sublimate, to a considerable extent, from its aqueous solution, when agitated with it. According to M. Mialhe, ether will not dissolve it when accompanied by a considerable quantity of deutoxide of mercury, and a chloride of an alkalifiable metal. Sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acids dissolve it without alteration. When heated it melts, and readily sublimes in dense, white, acrid vapours, which condense, on cool surfaces, in white shining needles. Its aqueous solution renders green the syrup of violets, and is precipitated brick-red, be- coming yellow, by the fixed alkalies and alkaline earths, and white by ammonia. (See Hydrargyrum Ammoniatum.) The former precipitate is the hydrated deutoxide of mercury, which has the property of emitting oxygen, and of being reduced to metallic globules when exposed to heat. This oxide is formed in the process for preparing aqua phagedsenica, called also lotio Jlava or yellow wash, which is obtained by mixing half a drachm of corrosive sublimate with a pint of lime-water. Corrosive sublimate forms with muriate of ammonia and chloride of sodium, compounds which are more soluble than the uucombined mercurial 1154 Hydrargyrum. PART II. salt. It is on Thu account tijat aqueous solutions of sal ammoniac, ,r of com- mon salt, dissolve much more corrosive sublimate than simple water. The com- bination of corrosive sublimate with muriate of ammonia was formerly called sal alembroth or salt of wisdom. According to F. Hinterberger, corrosive sublimate is capable of combining with quinia and cinchonia. ( Ghem. Gaz., ix. 211.) Corrosive sublimate has the property of retarding putrefaction. Animal mat- ters, immersed in its solution, shrink, acquire firmness, assume a white colour, and become imputrescible. On account of this property it is usefully employed for preserving anatomical preparations. Test of Purity and Incompatibles. Pure corrosive chloride of mercury sub- limes, when heated, without residue, and its powder is entirely and readily solu- ble in ether. Consequently, if a portion of any sample should not wholly dissolve in ether, or if it should not evaporate entirely, the presence of some impurity is proved. If calomel be present, it will not be wholly soluble in water. Corrosive sublimate is incompatible with many of the metals, the alkalies and their car- bonates, soap, lime-water, tartar emetic, nitrate of silver, the acetates of lead, the sulphurets of potassium and sodium, and all the hydrosulphates. It is de- composed by many vegetable and some animal substances. According to Dr. A. T. Thomson, it produces precipitates in infusions or decoctions of chamomile, horse-radish, columbo, catechu, cinchona, rhubarb, senna, simaruba, and oak- bark. MM. Mialhe and Lepage have shown that corrosive sublimate is slowly converted into calomel by syrup of sarsaparilla and syrup of honey, but is not changed by contact with pure syrup. B. Medical Properties and Uses. Corrosive sublimate is a very powerful pre- paration, operating quickly, and, if not properly regulated, producing violent effects. It is less apt to salivate than most other mercurials. In minute doses, suitably repeated, it may exert its peculiar influence without any obvious altera- tion of the vital functions, except, perhaps, a slight increase in the frequency of the pulse, and in the secretions from the skin and kidneys. Sometimes, however, it purges; but this effect may be obviated by combining it with a little opium. In larger doses it occasions nausea, vomiting, griping pain in the bowels, diar- rhoea, and other symptoms of gastric and intestinal irritation ; and in still larger quantities produces all the effects of a violent corrosive poison. It has long been used as a remedy in syphilis, in all stages of which it has been highly recommended. It is said to remove the symptoms more speedily than other mercurials; whilst its action is less unpleasant, as the mouth is less liable to be made sore. For the latter reason it has been much employed by empirics, and is an ingredient in most of those nostrums which have at various periods gained a temporary popularity as anti-venereals. But, while it is extolled by some authors, others, among whom is Mr. Pearson, of London, deny its extraordinary merits, and maintain that, though occasionally useful in arresting the progress of the complaint, particularly in the secondary stage, it does not produce per- manent cures, and, in the primary stage, often fails altogether. On the whole it appears to be best adapted to secondary syphilis, in which it occasionally does much good. It is also used advantageously in some chronic cutaneous affec- tions, and in obstinate chronic rheumatism. It is usually associated with altera- tive or diaphoretic medicines, such as the antimonials, and the compound decoc- tion or syrup of sarsaparilla; and, in order to obviate the irritation it is apt to produce, it may often be advantageously united with opium, or extract of hem- lock. There is no doubt that many 'of the substances, in connection with which it is employed, alter its chemical condition; but it does not follow that, even in its altered state, it may not be very useful as a remedy. Externally employed, corrosive sublimate is stimulant and eseharotic. A solution in water, containing from an eighth to half a grain in the fluidouime, is employed as an injection in gleet, as a gargle in venereal soretbroat, and as a Hydrargyrum. 1155 part LI eollyrium in chronic venereal ophthalmia. A stronger solution, containing one or two grains in the fluidounce, is an efficacious wash in lepra, and other scab eruptions. Dissolved in water, in the proportion of five to ten grains to the fluidounce, it may be used with much benefit in venereal ulcers of the throat, to which it should be applied by means of a camel’s hair pencil. With lime-water it forms the aqua phagedaenica of the older writers, employed as a wash for ill- conditioned ulcers. The powdered chloride has been used as an escharotic; but is, in general, inferior to nitrate of silver or caustic potassa. In onychia ma- ligna, however, it is employed with great advantage, mixed with an equal weight of sulphate of zinc, and sprinkled thickly upon the surface of the ulcer, which is then to be covered with a pledget of lint saturated with tincture of myrrh. The whole diseased surface is thus removed, and the ulcer heals. This practice originated, we believe, with the late Dr. Perkins, of Philadelphia, and was highly recommended'by Dr. Physick. We have often employed it with com- plete success. A solution of corrosive sublimate in collodion, in the proportion of four parts of the former to thirty of the latter, has of late been used as a caustic, for the destruction of nmvi materni, and for other purposes. It has the advantages that it may be applied to parts of inconvenient access for ordinary caustics, and forms a well defined boundary, without risk of, spreading. It is applied by means of a camel’s hair pencil. The dose of corrosive sublimate is from the twelfth to the quarter of a grain, repeated three or four times a day, and given in pill, or dissolved in water or spirit. The pill, which is the preferable form, is usually prepared with crumb of bread; and care should be taken that the medicine be equally diffused through the pilular mass, before it is divided. Mucilaginous drinks are usually given to obviate the irritating effects of the medicine. Toxicological Properties. Swallowed in poisonous doses, it produces burn- ing heat in the throat, excruciating pain in the stomach and bowels, excessive thirst, anxiety, nausea and frequent retching with vomiting of bloody mucus, diarrhoea and sometimes bloody stools, small and frequent pulse, cold sweats, general debility, difficult respiration, cramps in the extremities, faintings, insensi- bility, convulsions, and death. The mucous membrane of the stomach exhibits, on dissection, signs of the operation of a violent corrosive poison. These symp- toms are sometimes followed or conjoined with others indicating an excessive mercurial action upon the system, such as inflammation of the mouth and sali- vary glands, profuse salivation, fetid breath, &c. A case is on record of death, in an infant, from the constitutional effects of corrosive sublimate sprinkled upon an excoriated surface; and, in two instances of children, the one seven, and the other nine years old, death, with all the symptoms of internal poisoning, fol- lowed the application to the scalp of an ointment, said to consist of one part of the corrosive chloride to four parts of tallow. {Dub. Quarterly, Aug. 1854, p. 70.) In the inferior animals, in whatever mode introduced into the system, it is said to occasion irritation of the stomach and rectum, inflammation of the lungs, oppression of the brain, and depression if not inflammation of the heart. (Christison.) In the treatment of poisoning by corrosive sublimate, Orfila re- commends the free use of the white of eggs beat up with water. The albumen, forms an insoluble and comparatively innocent compound with the corrosive sublimate; and the liquid by its bulk dilutes the poison, and distends the sto- mach so as to produce vomiting. It is, however, asserted by M. Lassaigne that this compound of albumen and corrosive sublimate, when recently precipitated, is soluble in acid and alkaline liquids, and in solutions of the chlorides of potas- sium sodium, and calcium. (See Journ. de Pharm.,xx\n. 510.) It is also soluble in an excess of albumen, whether introduced into the stomach, or previously ex- isting there. It is, therefore, important, at the same time that the antidote is used, tu evacuate the stomach before the newly formed compound can be dissolved. 1156 Hydrargyrum. PART ir. If eggs cannot be procured, wheat flour may be substituted; gluten having, ac- cording to M. Taddei, the same effect as albumen. Milk has also been recom- mended, in consequence of the insoluble compound which casein forms with the poison. Besides the antidotes mentioned, Peruvian bark, meconic acid, proto- sulphuret of iron, and iron filings have been proposed, all of which have the property of decomposing corrosive sublimate. The protosulphuret of iron was found quite successful by M. Mialhe in experiments upon dogs, if given immedi- ately after the poison was swallowed, but failed when delayed for ten minutes. I)r. T. H. Buckler, of Baltimore, made some experiments on lower animals upon the antidotal properties of a mixture of gold dust and iron filings, which, prov- ing successful, were published in the Medical and Surgical Journal in 1843; and a case of poisoning by corrosive sublimate has recently been recorded by Dr. Ch. Johnston, of the same city, in which the antidote was employed with the appa- rent effect of saving life, after albumen had been used without effect. Dr. John- ston, however, employed the reduced iron of the Pharmacopoeia, and gold leaf, arranging them in alternate layers, so as to make boluses of convenient size. (Am. Jour n. of Med. Set., April, 1863, p. 340.) The method of operating of this antidote will be understood, when the action of gold and iron as a test for corrosive sublimate is explained in the succeeding paragraph. It is of the ut- most importance that whatever antidote is used should be given without delay, and in this respect the one nearest at hand may be considered the best. Should neither of the substances mentioned be attainable, mucilaginous drinks should be largely administered; and, in any event, the patient should be made to drink copiously, so long as vomiting continues, or till the symptoms are relieved. Should he be unable to vomit, the stomach should be washed out by means of the stomach pump. The consecutive inflammation should be treated with general or local bleeding, fomentations, and cooling mucilaginous drinks; and the attend- ant nervous symptoms should be alleviated by opiates. W. Tests for Corrosive Sublimate. On account of the extreme virulence of this chloride as a poison, the reagents by which it may be detected form a subject of study of the utmost importance, as connected with medico-legal investigations. The best tests for determining its mercurial nature, mentioned in the order of their delicacy, are ferrocyanide of potassium, lime-water, carbonate of potassa, iodide of potassium, ammonia, sulphuretted hydrogen, and protochloride of tin Ferrocyanide of potassium gives rise to a white precipitate (ferrocyanide of mercury), becoming slowly yellowish, and at length pale-blue. Lime-water throws down a yellow precipitate of hydrated deutoxide. Carbonate of potassa causes a brick-red precipitate of carbonate of mercury. Iodide of potassium produces a very characteristic pale-scarlet precipitate of biniodide of mercury. This precipitate frequently appears at first yellow, especially if the corrosive sub- limate be present in minute proportion. Ammonia gives rise to a white, floccu- lent precipitate, the officinal ammoniated mercury, or white precipitate. Sul- phuretted hydrogen occasions a black precipitate of bisulphuret of mercury; and the same precipitate is thrown down by hydrosulphuret of ammonia. Finally. protochloride of tin causes a grayish-black precipitate (mercury in a finely di- vided state), and, as a test, is not liable to any fallacy. Taking the results of Devergie, the relative delicacy of these tests may be expressed numerically 9S follows:—Ferrocyanide of potassium lime-water 4; carbonate of potassa 7 ; iodide of potassium 8; ammonia 36; sulphuretted hydrogen or hydrosulphuret of ammonia 60; and protochloride of tin 80. To the above the following tests may be added, easily applied even by one unacquainted with chemistry. A bright plate of copper, immersed in a solution containing corrosive sublimate, is in- stantly tarnished, and, after the lapse of half an hour, becomes covered with a grayish-white powder. A polished piece of gold, moistened with the clear mer- curial solution, and touched through the liquid with a piece of iron, cortraets » PART II. Hydrargyrum. white stain. This test, which was proposed by Mr. Sylvester and simplified by Dr. Paris, is conveniently applied by moistening, with the suspected solution, 9 gold coin or ring, and touching it through the moistened spot with the point o* a penknife. The object of the iron is to form with the gold a simple galvanic circle, which enables the latter metal to precipitate the mercury on its surface Nearly all the above tests merely prove the presence of mercury. To determine whether the metal is united with chlorine, the mercurial liquid may be precipi- tated by lime-water, and the filtered solution, acidulated with nitric acid, theu tested with nitrate of silver. If the mercury is in the state of chloride, the fil- tered solution will be one of chloride of calcium, which, with nitrate of silver, will yield a heavy white precipitate (chloride of silver), insoluble in nitric acid, but soluble in ammonia. The nitrate of silver may be added directly to the mercurial liquid; and, if it contain corrosive sublimate, chloride of silver will fall, but probably mixed with calomel. By the combined indications of the foregoing tests, corrosive sublimate may be infallibly detected, unless it exists in very minute quantity, associated with organic substances, by which its presence is often greatly obscured. When it exists in organic mixtures, made by boiling the contents or substance of the stomach in distilled water, Dr. Christison recommends that a preliminary trial be made with the protochloride of tin, on a small portion filtered for the purpose. If this causes a grayish-black colour, he shakes the mixture, as recommended by Orfila, with a fourth of its bulk of cold ether, which dissolves the corrosive sub- limate, and rises to the surface. The ethereal solution is then evaporated to dryness, and the dry salt obtained is dissolved in hot water, whereby a pure so- lution is procured, in which the poison may be readily detected by the ordinary tests. In using ether, however, it must be borne in mind that, as ascertained by M Mialhe, the presence of a considerable quantity of deutoxide of mercury, and of a chloride of an alkahfiable metal, prevents the solvent power of ether. If the trial test should produce a light-gray colour, the corrosive sublimate is indi- cated in still less quantity, and Dr. Christison recommends to proceed in the fol- lowing manner. Treat the unfiltered mixture with protochloride of tin, as long as any precipitate is formed, which will have a slate-gray colour. Collect, wash, and drain it on a filter, and, having removed it without being dried, boil it, in a glass flask, with a moderately strong solution of caustic potassa, until all the lumps disappear. The alkali will dissolve all animal and vegetable matter; and, on allowing the solution to remain at rest, a heavy grayish-black powder will subside, which consists chiefly of metallic mercury, and in which small globules of the metal may sometimes be seen with the naked eye, or by the aid of a magnifier. Probably advantage might be derived from the process of dia- lysis, in separating corrosive sublimate, among other crystallizable substances, from the colloidal matters contained in organic mixtures. (See Dialysis, p. 896.) Off. Prep. Hydrargyri Iodidum Rubrum ; Hydrargyrum Ammoniatum. B. HYDRARGYRI CHLORIDUM MITE. U.S. Calomelas. Br. Mild Chloride of Mercury. Calomel. “Take of Mercury forty-eight troyounces ; Sulphuric Acid thirty-six troy- ounces; Chloride of Sodium eighteen troyounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Boil, b}f means of a sand-bath, twenty-four troyounces of the Mercury with the Sulphuric Acid, until a dry white mass is left. Rub this, when cold, with the remainder of the Mercury, in an earthenware mortar, until they are thoroughly mixed. Then add the Chloride of Sodium, and, having rubbed it with the other ingredients until globules of Mercury cease to be visible, sublime the mixture. Reduce the sublimed matter to a very fine powder, wash it with foiling Distilled Water, until the washings afford no precipitate with water of ammonia, and dry it.” U. S. “Take of Sulphate of Mercury ten ounces [avoirdupois]; Mercury seven 1158 Hydrargyrum. PART II. luvas [avoir'!.]; Chloride of Sodium, dried, five ounces [avcird.] ; Boiling Distilled Water a sufficiency. Moisten the Sulphate of Mercury with the Water, and rub it and the Mercury together until globules are no longer visible; add the Chloride of Sodium, and thoroughly mix the whole by continued trituration. Sublime by a suitable apparatus into a chamber of such size that the Calomel, instead of adhering to its sides as a crystalline crust, shall fall as a fine powder on its floor. Wash this powder with boiling Distilled Water, until the washings cease to be darkened by a drop of hydrosulphuret of ammonia. Finally, dry at a heat not exceeding 212°, and preserve in ajar or bottle impervious to light.’' Br. The object of the above processes is to obtain the protochloride of mercury. This chloride consists of one eq. of chlorine and one of mercury, and conse- quently contains precisely half as much chlorine as corrosive sublimate, combined with the same quantity of mercury. In the TJ. S. process, as in the case of cor- rosive sublimate, a bisulphate of the deutoxide is first formed; but, instead ot being immediately sublimed with the chloride of sodium, it undergoes a prepa- ratory trituration with a quantity of mercury equal to that employed in forming it. This trituration may be conceived to take place between one eq. of bisul- phate of the deutoxide, and one of metallic mercury, which are thus converted into two eqs. of monosulphate of the protoxide. This change will be easily un- derstood, by adverting to the fact, that the bisulphate of the deutoxide consists of two eqs. of sulphuric acid, two of oxygen, and one of mercury; and, when rubbed up with one additional eq. of mercury, the whole becomes two eqs. of acid, two of oxygen, and two of mercury, evidently corresponding with two eqs. of monosulphate of the protoxide. The two eqs. of monosulphate thus formed, being heated with two of common salt, the two eqs. of chlorine in the latter sub- lime in union with the two of mercury in the former, and generate two eqs. of protochloride of mercury ; while the two eqs. severally, of sulphuric acid, oxygen, and sodium, unite together to form two of dry sulphate of soda, which remain as a fixed residue. It is hence apparent that the residue of this process and of that for corrosive sublimate is the same. The calomel in mass, as sublimed, is liable to contain a little corrosive subli- mate; and hence the direction of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia to reduce the sub- limed matter to a very fine powder, and to wash it with boiling distilled water until ammonia produces no precipitate with the washings. Ammonia occasionu a white precipitate (ammoniated mercury) so long as the washings contain cor- rosive sublimate; and, when it ceases to produce this effect, the operator may rest satisfied that the whole of the poisonous salt has been removed. According to M. Berthe, calomel, in contact with hot water, is converted, to a small extent, into corrosive sublimate; and hence he recommends that the portion of water to be tested should be cold when passed through the calomel. The British process is a modification of that of the late Dublin Pharmaco- poeia, including, like that, no directions for making the bisulphate of the deut- oxide of mercury; because this salt is made by a separate formula, being desig- nated as sulphate of mercury. It omits, however, as unnecessary, a partial pre- liminary sublimation, directed by the Dublin College, to test the production cf corrosive sublimate, and, immediately after a thorough mixture of the materials, proceeds to the final sublimation. A special proceeding, in which the Dublin process is followed, is to cause the vapours to enter for condensation a chamber of considerable size, so that they may fall in powder, instead of condensing on the sides of the receiver in a crystalline mass. The necessity of pulverizing the calomel is thus avoided. As our own, the Br. Pharmacopoeia directs the powder to be washed; but, instead of using ammonia as a test of the abso-ee of corro- sive sublimate in the washings, directs for the purpose hydrosulphuret cl airuro- nia, which throws down a black precipitate if corrosive sublimate is pie>ent PART II. Hydrargyrum. Preparation on the Large Scale. The process for making calomel, by means of the bisulphate of deutoxide of mercury, was originally practised at Apothe- caries’" Hall, London. The proportions taken and the mode of proceeding m that establishment are, according to Mr. Brande, as follows: 50 lbs. of mercury are boiled to dryness with TO lbs. of sulphuric acid, in a cast-iron vessel; and 02 lbs. of the dry salt formed are triturated with 40|- lbs. of mercury till the globules disappear, and the whole is mixed with 34 lbs. of common salt. The mixture is sublimed from an earthenware retort into an earthenware receiver, and the product is from 95 to 100 lbs. of calomel in mass. This is then ground to an impalpable powder, and washed with a large quantity of distilled water. The object of bringing calomel into a state of minute division is more per- fectly accomplished by the method of Mr. Joseph Jewell, of London, improved by M. Ossian Henry. It consists in causing the calomel in vapour to come in contact with steam in a large receiver, whereby it is condensed into an impalpa- ble powder, and perfectly washed from corrosive sublimate in the same operation. Calomel made by this process, sometimes called Jewell’s or Howard’s hydrosub- limate of mercury, is free from all suspicion of containing corrosive sublimate, is much finer than when obtained by levigation and elutriation, and possesses more activity as a medicine. This kind of calomel is included in the French Codex under a distinct name (mercure doux d la vapeur). M. Soubeiran, of Paris, has perfected a process for obtaining calomel as an impalpable powder, by substituting the agency of cold air for that of steam for the purpose of con- densing it; a process which he believes to be precisely the same as that pursued by the English manufacturers, and which produces a calomel equal to the best English. A description of his apparatus may be found in the Journal de Phar- macie (3e ser., ii. 507), and of the English apparatus, as described by F. C. Cal- vert, in the same journal (3e ser., iii. 121). Both these papers are copied into the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xv. 89 and 93). Prof. Wohler has proposed to obtain calomel, in the humid way, by precipi- tating a solution of corrosive sublimate by a stream of sulphurous acid, taking advantage of a reaction first observed by Vogel. Calomel, obtained in the humid way, called precipitated calomel, was formerly officinal with the Dublin College, and is still retained in the French Codex. This form of calomel is of doubtful utility ; and, when obtained by Prof. AVohler’s process, it is a crystalline powder, which is a fatal objection to it. Properties. Mild chloride of mercury is a tasteless, inodorous substance, in- soluble in water, alcohol, and ether, less volatile than corrosive sublimate, unal- terable in the air, but blackening by long exposure to the light. When in mass its form and appearance depend on the shape and temperature of the subliming vessel. In this state it is generally in the form of a white, fibrous, crystalline cake, the interior surface of which is often studded with shining transparent crys- tals, having the shape of quadrangular prisms, and a texture somewhat horny and elastic. When the mass is scratched it yields a yellow streak, which is very characteristic. Its sp. gr. is 7'2. The officinal form of this chloride is that of powder, in which state it is always kept in the shops. The powder has a light buff or ivory colour, if obtained by the levigation of sublimed masses; but if condensed at once in the form of an impalpable powder, as is the case with Jewell’s calomel, it is perfectly white. To protect it from the action of the light, it should be kept in a dark place, or in bottles painted black, or covered with black paper. By the action of the fixed alkalies or alkaline earths it immediately becomes black, in consequence of the formation of protoxide, reducible by heat to the metallic state. The preparation employed under the name of lotio nigra or olack wash, as a local application to syphilitic ulcers, &c., is made by adding a drachm of calomel to a pint of lime-water. By double decomposition between the calomel and lime, the black protoxide precipitates, and chloride of calcium Hydrargyrum. PART II. remairj in solution, indicated by yielding a copious white precipitate with ni- trate cf silver. The oxide, however, is not pure, but associated with undecom- posed calomel. Before being applied, the wash should be well shaken. Tests of Purity and Incompatibles. Calomel, when pure, completely sub- limes on the application of heat, a property which detects all fixed impurities, such as carbonate, sulphate, and phosphate of lime, sulphate of baryta, and car- bonate of lead. Under the influence of an elevated temperature, especially in the presence of alcohol or water, it gives rise to a small quantity of corrosive sublimate. (M. Berthe.) Calomel strikes a black colour, free from reddish tinge, by the action of the fixed alkalies; and the black oxide thus produced is brought by heat to the metallic state. The buff colour indicates the absence of corrosive sublimate; but whiteness by no means shows the presence of this impurity. Its freedom from the corrosive chloride may be determined by washing a portion of it in warm distilled water, and then testing the water with ammonia, which will cause a white precipitate (ammoniated mercury), should the water have taken up any of the poisonous chloride. The presence of any chloride whatever in the calomel would be detected by the production of a precipitate with the washing by nitrate of silver. Soluble salts of mercury may be detected by rubbing the suspected calomel with ether on a bright surface of copper, when the metal will become amalgamated, and exhibit a white stain. When this test shows impurity, the soluble salt present is probably corrosive sublimate. Calomel, containing corrosive sublimate, acts violently on the bowels; and, when the impurity has present in considerable amount, has been known to cause death. Besides being incompatible with the alkalies and alkaline earths, calomel is also decom- posed by the alkaline carbonates, soaps, hydrosulphates, and, according to some authorities, by iron, lead, and copper. By boiling with the alkaline formiates it is decomposed, and metallic mercury liberated. (H. Rose, Annal. der Physik und Ghem., cvi. 500.) According to M. Lebeaux, calomel should not be prescribed wii h iodine ; unless the prescriber intends to give biniodide (red iodide) of mer- cuiy, when the dose must be reduced accordingly. (Annuaire de Therap., 1857, p. 180.) It should not be given at the same time with nitromuriatic acid, for tea* of generating corrosive sublimate. One of the authors has been informed of a case, in which death, with symptoms of violent gastro-intestinal irritation, fo1 lowed their simultaneous use. Agreeably to the experiments of M. Deschamps, calomel is decomposed by bitter almonds and by hydrocyanic acid. In the former case corrosive sublimate, bicyanide of mercury, and muriate of ammonia are formed; in the latter, corrosive sublimate and bicyanide only. Hence this writer considers it very dangerous to associate calomel with bitter almonds or hydro- cyanic acid in prescription. This conclusion has been confirmed by M. Mialhe and M. Prenleloup; and, more recently, it has been shown by I)r. E. Riegel that cherry-laurel water has the power of converting calomel into corrosive sub- limate. According to M. Mialhe, calomel is in part converted into corrosive sublimate and metallic mercury by muriate of ammonia, and by the chlorides of sodium and potassium, even at the temperature of the body; and hence he be- lieves that the conversion may take place in the primrn vim. Popular belief coincides with M. Mialhe’s views in regard to the power of common salt to in- crease the activity of calomel. More recently M. Mialhe has extended his ob- servations, and now believes that all the preparations of mercury yield a certain amount of corrosive sublimate by reacting with solutions of the chlorides of potassium, sodium, and ammonium. The deutoxide and similarly constituted compounds are most prone to undergo this change. Even metallic mercury, digested with the chlorides named, is partly converted, under the influence of the air, into corrosive sublimate. Dr. Gardner denies the assertion of M. Mialhe, that calomel is converted into corrosive sublimate by chlorides of the alkali liable metals, maintaining that it is merely rendered soluble by their solutions. Tha PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1161 results, however, of M. Mialhe have been confirmed experimentally by Dr. A Fleming, of Pittsburg, Pa. {Am. Journ. of Pharm , Sept. 1857.) M. Bauwens of Ghent, recognising the conversion of calomel into corrosive sublimate in the body by these chlorides, explains by this fact the relatively less powerful action of large than of small doses of calomel. He also states that physicians near the sea, where the water is brackish, seldom prescribe calomel, and that naval sur- geons have been obliged to abstain from giving it to sailors who eat salt meat. I)r. H. Peake of Arkadelphia, Arkansas, has known many instances in which salivation has been induced by the joint use of calomel and vegetable acids, in the forms of sour fruit, vinegar, buttermilk, &c., where the mercurial alone would not have induced it. {N. 0. Med. and Surg. Journ., Nov. 1858, p. 724.) B. Medical Properties and Uses. Calomel unites to the general properties of the mercurials those of a purgative and anthelmintic. It is the most valuable of the mercurial preparations, and in extent of employment is inferior to few articles of the Materia Medica. Whether the object is to bring the system under the general influence of mercury, or to produce its alterative action upon the hepatic or other secretory function, calomel, on account both of its certainty and mildness, is preferred to all other preparations, with the single exception of the blue pill, which, though less certain, is still milder, and is sometimes pre- ferably employed. When used with the above objects, the tendency to purge which it sometimes evinces, even in very small doses, must be restrained by com- bining it with opium. In sialagogue or alterative doses, it is often prescribed with other medicines, which, while they give it a direction to certain organs, have their own peculiar influence increased by its co-operation. Thus it renders squill more diuretic, nitre and the antimonials more diaphoretic, and seneka more expectorant. As a purgative, calomel owes its chief value to its tendency to the liver, the secretory function of which it powerfully stimulates. It is usually slow and some- what uncertain in its cathartic effect, and, though itself but slightly irritating, sometimes occasions severe griping pain with bilious vomiting, attributable to the acrid character of the bile which it causes the liver to secrete. It is pecu- liarly useful in the commencement of bilious fevers, in hepatitis, jaundice, bilious and painters’ colic, dysentery, especially that of tropical climates, and all other affections attended with congestion of the portal system, or torpidity of the he- patic function. The difficulty with which it is thrown from the stomach, renders it highly useful in some cases of obstinate vomiting, when other remedies are rejected. In the cases of children it is peculiarly valuable from the facility of its administration ; and, in the febrile complaints to which they are subject, appears to exercise a curative influence, depending on some other cause than its mere purgative effect, and perhaps referrible to its action upon the liver. In the treat- ment of worms it is one of the most efficient remedies, acting probably not only as a purgative, but also as an irritant to the worms, either by its immediate in- fluence, or that of the acrid bile which it causes to flow. The slowness and un- certainty of its action, and its liability to salivate if too long retained in the bowels, render it proper either to follow or combine it with other cathartics, in order to ensure its purgative effect. When given alone, it should be followed, if it do not operate in six or seven hours, by a dose of castor oil or sulphate of magnesia. The cathartics with which it is most frequently combined are jalap, rhubarb, aloes, scammony, colocynth, and gamboge. It is often added in small quantities to purgative combinations, with a view to its influence on the liver. In very large doses, calomel is supposed by some to act directly as a sedative, and with this view has been given in yellow and malignant bilious fevers, vio- lent dysentery, malignant cholera, &c. The quantities which have been admi- nistered in such affections, with asserted impunity and even advantage, are almost incredible. A common dose is one :>r two scruples, repeated every half 1162 Hydrargyrum. PART II hcur, or hoar, or less frequently, according to the circumstance of the case. We have had no experience in this mode of administering calomel. It is sometimes used as an errhine in amaurosis, mixed with twice its weight of sugar, or other mild powder; and in the same combination is occasionally employed to remove specks and opacity of the cornea. For the latter purpose, Dupuytren recommended particularly the calomel prepared according to the plan of Mr. Jewell. Calomel is also sometimes employed externally in herpetic and other eruptions, in the shape of an ointment. The dose as an alterative, in functional derangement of the liver, is from half a grain to a grain every night, or every other night, followed in the morning, if the bowels are not opened, by a gentle saline laxative. When the stomach ox bowels are very irritable, as in cholera and diarrhoea, from an eighth to a quarter of a grain may be given every hour or two, so as to amount to one or two grains in the course of the day. With a view to salivation, the dose is from half a grain to a grain three or four times a day, to be increased considerably in urgent cases. Sometimes, very minute doses, as the twelfth of a grain or less, given very frequently, so as to amount to the ordinary quantity in twenty-four hours, will operate more effectually as a sialagogue than larger doses. When large doses are given with this view, it is often necessary to combine them with opium. As a purgative, from five to fifteen grains or more may be exhibited. Calomel has the peculiarity that its cathartic action is not increased in proportion to the dose, and enormous quantities have been given with impunity.. In yellow fever, tropical dysentery, &c., from twenty grains to a drachm have been given, and repeated at short intervals, without producing hypercatharsis; but this practice is justifiable only in cases of extreme urgency, in which the constitutional action of mercury as well as purgation is indicated. Even in very small doses of not more than one, two, or three grains, calomel purges some individuals briskly. In these persons, large doses, though they do not proportionably increase the evacuation, often occasion spasmodic pain in the stomach and bowels. For children larger doses are generally required in proportion than for adults. Not less than from three to six grains should be given as a purge to a child two or three years old; and this quantity often fails to act, unless assisted by castor oil or some other cathartic. Calomel may be given in pill made with gum arabic and syrup, or in powder mixed with syrup or molasses. Off. Prep. Pilulse Antimonii Composite, U.S.; Pilula Calomelanos Com- posita, Br.; Pilulse Cathartic® Compositse, U. S.; Unguentum Calomelanos, Br. W. HYDRARGYRI CYANIDUM. U.S. IIydrargyri Cyanuretum. JJ. iS. 1850. Cyanide of Mercury. Cyanuret of Mercury. Bicyanide of Mercury. Brussiate of Mercury. 11 Take of Ferrocyanide of Potassium five troyounces; Sulphuric Acid four troyounces and one hundred and twenty grains; Red Oxide of Mercury, in fine powder, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Ferrocyanide of Potassium in twenty fluidonnces of Water, and add the solution to the Sulphuric Acid, previously diluted with ten fluidounces of Water, and contained in a glass retort. Distil the mixture nearly to dryness into a receiver, containing ten fluid- ounces of Water and three troyounces of Red Oxide of Mercury. Set aside two fluidounces of the distilled liquid, and to the remainder add, with agitation, suffi- cient Red Oxide to destroy the odour of hydrocyanic acid. Then filter the solution, and, having added the reserved liquid, evaporate the whole in a dark place, in order that crystals may form. Lastly, dry the crystals, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle, protected from the light.” U. S. This is an entirely different formula from that of the Pharmacopoeia of 1850, in which the ferrocyanide of iron and red oxide of mercury were brought to- gether under circumstances favourable to reaction, with the result >f p: >duc- PART II. Hydrargyrum. ing bicyanide of mercury, the protoxide and sesquioxide of iron, ana an unde- termined compound of cyanogen. The present formula is based upon that of Winkler, given in the eleventh edition of the U. S. Dispensatory. Hydrocyanic acid is generated by the action of sulphuric acid on the ferrocyanide of potassium, and, being received in a vessel containing water and a portion of red oxide of mercury, reacts with the oxide, generating, by double decomposition, water, and bicyanide of mercury which is held in solution. The reaction takes place be- tween one equivalent of the red oxide of mercury which is a binoxide, and two eqs. of hydrocyanic acid. The two eqs. of oxygen of the binoxide take two eqs. of hydrogen of the acid to form two eqs. of water, and the two liberated eqs. of cyanogen combine with the single liberated eq. of mercury to form the bicy- anide of that metal. Sufficient red oxide of mercury is not used at first to saturate the whole of the hydrocyanic acid generated, because, should there happen to be any excess of the red oxide, there would be produced on evapora- tion, instead of the substance wanted, a peculiar salt composed of bicyanide and red oxide of mercury, which would crystallize in small acicular crystals. Hence, a portion of the water still containing uncombined hydrocyanic acid is set aside, to be added to the liquid in which the acid had been completely saturated by the addition of red oxide, and thus at least neutralize any oxide of mercury that might be present in it in excess. A surplus of hydrocyanic acid would be of no disservice, except the loss of material incurred, as it is evaporated in the subse- quent concentration. Properties, &c. Cyanide of mercury is permanent in the air, and crystallizes in anhydrous right square prisms, which are sometimes transparent, but usually white and opaque. It has a disagreeable styptic taste. It is but sparingly soluble in alcohol, but dissolves readily in cold water, and much more abund- antly in hot. When acted on by muriatic acid, hydrocyanic acid is evolved, re- cognisable by its odour, and bichloride of mercury is left, which is wholly vola- tilizable by heat. When heated it yields cyanogen, and a black matter is left containing globules of mercury. In composition, according to the view taken in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, it is a bicyanide of mercury, consisting of one eq. of the metal 200, and two of cyan- ogen 52 = 252; its formula being HgCy2. But with those who consider the eq. of mercury as 100, the salt is a protocyanide, with one eq. of each of its constit- uents (HgCy), and its combining number would be 126. The reader is already aware that the former opinion is still admitted in this work. Cyanide of mercury acts on the animal economy as a potent poison. In medi- cinal doses it sometimes causes ptyalism, but does not produce epigastric pain like corrosive sublimate. It has been occasionally used as a remedy in syphilis; and in the treatment of that disease it is preferred by some practitioners to cor- rosive sublimate, on account of its not giving rise to pain, and not being decom- posed by alkalies and organic substances. M. Desmartis, of Bordeaux, considers it superior to all the other preparations of mercury in the treatment of syphilitic complaints; particularly in cases in which the patients have suffered, for a long period, from obscure pains. The dose is from the sixteenth to the eighth of a grain, which should not be exceeded; as the medicine may meet with free mu- riatic acid in the stomach. B 11YDRARGYRI IODIDUM RUBRUM. U.S.,Br. Red Iodide of Mercury. Biniodide of Mercury. “ Take of Corrosive Chloride of Mercury a troyounce; Iodide of Potassium a troyounce and one hundred and twenty grains; Distilled Water a sufficient puantPv Dissolve the Chloride of Mercury in a pint and a half, and the Iodide of Potassium in half a pint of Distilled Water, and mix the solutions. Collect the precipitate upon a filter, and, having washed it with Distilled Water, dry it with a gentle heat, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. Hydrargyrum. PART IT. ''Take of Corrosive Sublimate four ounces [avoirdupois]; Iodide of Potas- sium/toe ounces [avoird.] ; Boiling Distilled Water four pints [Imperial mea- sure]. Dissolve the Corrosive Sublimate in three pints [Imp. meas.], and the Iodide of Potassium in the remainder of the Water, and mix the two solutions. When the temperature of the mixture has fallen to that of the atmosphere, de- cant the supernatant liquor from the precipitate, and, having collected the latter on a filter, wash it twice with cold distilled water, and dry it at a temperatuia not exceeding 212°.” Br. In the above processes for forming biniodide of mercury, which may be con- sidered as identical, a double decomposition takes place between corrosive subli- mate and iodide of potassium, resulting in the formation of chloride of potassium which remains in solution, and biniodide of mercury which precipitates. The precipitate is soluble in the reacting salts, and hence a loss of part of it is in- curred by an excess of either. It is best, however, to have a slight excess of the iodide of potassium, which is furnished by the proportion taken in the formulas; as then the decomposition of the whole of the corrosive sublimate is ensured, and any contamination of the biniodide by it prevented. The late process of the Ed- inburgh College consisted in a combination of the ingredients by trituration in due proportion with the aid of alcohol; but, after the red powder was obtained, it was treated with a boiling solution of common salt, which dissolved the bin- iodide to the exclusion of any contaminating protiodide; and the solution, thus obtained, on cooling, deposited the pure biniodide in crystals. Properties. Biniodide of mercury is a scarlet-red powder, of the sp. gr. 6 3, in- soluble in water, sparingly soluble in alcohol, freely so in ether, and soluble in muriatic acid and in solutions of iodide of potassium, chloride of sodium, and many of the mercurial salts. As obtained by the late Edinburgh process, it is in splendid crimson acicular crystals. When heated it fuses readily into a yellow liquid, and sublimes in yellow rhombic scales, which become red on cooling. Biniodide of mercury is a dimorphous substance, having a different crystalline form in its red and yellow states. According to Schiff, it is only in its yellow form that it is soluble in alcohol; and hence it is that, when separated by water from its alcoholic solution, it falls in this condition. {Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., cix. 311.) It forms definite compounds with the iodides of the alkalifiable metals. The compound formed with iodide of potassium has been used as a medicine. (See Iodoliydrargyrate of Potassium, in Part III.) Biniodide of mercury con- sists of one eq. of mercury 200, and two of iodine 252-6 = 452-6, and its formula is Hgl2. In the Br. Pharmacopoeia, which recognises 100 as the eq. of mercury, it is considered as the neutral iodide, with the formula Hgl. It combines with the protiodide, so as to form a yellow sesquiodide, represented by the formula Hgl +Hgl2 or Hg2I3. Medical Properties and Uses. Biniodide of mercury is a powerful irritant poison. It has been used in similar diseases with the protiodide, namely, in scro- fula and syphilis, but is much more active. Dr. Fuller, physician to St. George’s Hospital, London, has found it a valuable remedy in rheumatism, dependent on a syphilitic taint, having cured several cases in which corrosive sublimate had been given in vain. He also employed it with good results in two cases of epilepsy, dependent on injuries to the head, in which he suspected thickening of the dura mater, or deposit between it and the bone. (Ranking's Abstract, No 25, p. 51.) The dose of this iodide is the sixteenth of a grain, gradually increased to the fourth, given in pill or dissolved in alcohol. A preferable mode of admi nistering it, is dissolved in a solution of iodide of potassium. This mode was adopted by Dr. Fuller, who attributes his success with the remedy, in great, measure, to its having been given in this way. The preparation thus made is really a solution of iodohydrargyrate of potassium. M. Cazenave considers biniodide of mercury as the best topical application in PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1165 lupus. lie applies it in thin layers, every six or eight days, to small portions of the ulcerated surface at a time, in the form of a caustic ointment, made of equal parts of the iodide, oil, and lard. The application produces severe pain, and gives rise to a sharp inflammation which soon terminates, leaving the ulcer in an improved condition, with a tendency to cicatrize smoothly, and on a leve1 with the surrounding skin. (Ann. de Therap., 1852, p. 175.) Off. Prep. Liquor Arseuici et Hydrargyri Iodidi, U. S.; Unguentum Ilydrar- gyri Iodidi Rubri, Br. B. HYDRARGYRI IODIDUM VIRIDE. TJ.S.,Br. Hydrargyri Io- didum. U. S. 1860. Green Iodide of Mercury. Protiodide of Mercury. Iodide of Mercury. “Take of Mercury a, troyounce ; Iodine three hundred grains; Stronger Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the Mercury and Iodine in 'a mortar, and, having added half a fluidounce of Stronger Alcohol, triturate the mixture until the ingredients are thoroughly incorporated. Stir the mixture occasionally, and, at the end of two hours, triturate again, with considerable pressure, until it is nearly dry. Then rub it up with Stronger Alcohol, gradually added, until it is reduced to a uniform thin paste; and, having transferred this to a filter, wash it with Stronger Alcohol until the washings cease to produce a permanent cloudi- ness when dropped into a large quantity of water. Lastly, dry the Iodide in the dark with a gentle heat, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle, protected from the light. ” U. S. “ Take of Mercury, by weight, one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Iodine two hundred and seventy-eight grains; Rectified Spirit a sufficiency. Rub the Iodine and Mercury in a porcelain mortar, occasionally moistening the mixture with a few drops of the Spirit, and continue the trituration until metallic globules are no longer visible, and the whole assumes a green colour. The product thus obtained should be dried in a dark room, on filtering paper, by simple exposure to the air, and preserved in an opaque bottle.” Br. This process for forming the protiodide of mercury is a case of simple combi- nation, the alcohol facilitating the union by dissolving the iodine. It may also be prepared by precipitation, by adding a solution of iodide of potassium to one of nitrate of protoxide of mercury; but, as it is difficult to prepare the nitrate of the protoxide, without being mixed with some binitrate of deutoxide, the protiodide, when thus obtained, is apt to be contaminated with biniodide. M. Roland Seeger suggests double decomposition between protacetate of mercury and iodide of potassium. (Am. Journ. of Pharrn., May, 1859, p. 204.) M. Bou- tigny proposes to decompose calomel by iodide of potassium, and gives the fol- lowing formula. Twenty-nine drachms of calomel are mixed with twenty of pulve- rized iodide of potassium in a glass mortar, and twelve ounces of boiling distilled water poured upon the mixture. After cooling the liquid is decanted, and the precipitate washed on a filter with distilled water, and dried in the shade. (See Am. -Journ. of Pliarm., viii. 326.) This process did not succeed with Mr. Charles Bullock, of this city, when he used the reacting ingredients in quantities six times those recommended by M. Boutigny. Mr. John Canavan, of Aew York, ascribes the failure to insufficient trituration, which, to ensure complete reaction, must be long continued. If the reaction be imperfect, the water washes away not only chloride of potassium, but also iodide of potassium, holding in solution a part of the protiodide of mercury formed, which is ultimately decomposed into binio- dide and metallic mercury. The experiments of Mr. J. M. Maisch, of this city, tend to confirm this view. He further found that a boiling temperature enables chloride of potassium to decompose the protiodide perceptibly, and infers that the use of cold water would give a purer product. He, therefore, concludes that the process of Boutigny cannot be depended upon for giving a pure protiodide, and that we must fall back on the Pharmacopoeia process. As prepared by the Hydrargyrum. PART II. 0". 8. formula- of 1850, it was liable to contain a little biniodide; but this is ob- viated in the present edition by the direction to wash it, near the close of the operation, with stronger alcohol. It is known to be free from the biniodide when the alcoholic washings produce no permanent cloudiness with a large quantity of water. Even thus purified, however, it generally contains a little metallic mer- cury, and, according to Dr. Squibb, a considerable proportion of the yellow or subiodide; but these are of little consequence compared with the biniodide, which should always be carefully sought for, and separated if found. (See Mr. Maisch’s paper, Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1857.) Properties. Iodide of mercury is in the form of a greenish-yellow powder, insoluble in water, alcohol, and solution of chloride of sodium, but soluble in ether. Its sp. gr. is 7’75. When exposed to the light it is partially decomposed, and becomes of a dark-olive colour. If quickly and cautiously heated, it sublimes in red crystals which afterwards become yellow. It is a protiodide of mercury Hgl, consisting of one eq. of mercury 200, and one of iodine 1263 = 326-3. The Br. Pharmacopoeia considers it a subiodide, with the formula Hg2I; the eq. of mercury being 100. Medical Properties and Uses. Iodide of mercury has been given in scrofula and scrofulous syphilis. The dose is a grain daily, gradually increased to three or four grains. It should never be given at the same time with iodide of potas- sium, which converts it immediately into biniodide and metallic mercury. (Mialhe, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 36.) B. IIYDRARGYRI OXIDUM RUBRUM. U. S., Br. Hydrargyri Nitrico-oxidum. Bond. Red Oxide of Mercury. Red Precipitate. “Take of Mercury thirty-six troyounces; Nitric Acid twenty-four troy - ounces; Water two pints; Dissolve the Mercury, with the aid of a gentle heat, in the Acid and Water previously mixed, and evaporate to dryness. Rub the dry mass into powder, and heat it in a very shallow vessel until red vapours cease to rise.” U. S. “ Take of Mercury, by weight, eight ounces [avoirdupois] ; Nitric Acid three fluidounces; Water two fluidounces. Dissolve half the Mercury in the Nitric Acid diluted with the Water, evaporate the solution to dryness, and with the dry salt thus obtained, triturate the remainder of the Mercury until the two are uniformly blended together. Heat the mixture in a porcelain capsule, with re- peated stirring, until acid vapours cease to be evolved, and, when cold, enclose the product in a bottle.” Br. In these processes the mercury is first oxidized at the expense of a portion of the nitric acid, the remainder of which unites with the oxidized metal to form either nitrate of deutoxide of mercury, or a mixture of this with nitrate of the protoxide. The resulting mass when exposed to a strong heat is decomposed, giving out red nitrous fumes, and assuming successively a yellow, orange, and brilliant purple-red colour, which becomes orange-red on cooling. These changes are owing to the gradual separation and decomposition of the nitric acid, by the oxygen of which the protoxide of mercury, if any be present, is converted into deutoxide, while nitric oxide gas escapes, and becomes hyponitric acid vapour on contact with the air. The deutoxide of mercury is left behind; but in general not quite free from the nitrate, which cannot be wholly decomposed by heat, without endangering the decomposition of the oxide itself, and the volatilization of the metal. The preparation is commonly called red precipitate. The name of red oxide of mercury, by which it is now designated in most of the Pharma- copoeias, is appropriate, as nitrate of mercury exists in it merely as an accidental impurity; and there is no occasion to distinguish the preparation from the pure deutoxide obtained by calcining mercury, the latter not being officinal, and per haps never employed. In the preparation of this mercurial, various circumstances influence the PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1167 nature of the product, and must be attended to, if we desire to procure the oxide with that fine bright orange-red colour, and shining scaly appearance, usually considered desirable. Among these circumstances is the condition of the nitrate of mercury submitted to calcination. According to Gay-Lussac, it should be employed in the form of small crystalline grains. If previously pulverized, as directed in the officinal processes, it will yield an orange-yellow powder; if it be in the state of large and dense crystals, the oxide will have a deep-orange colour. Care must also be taken that the mercury and acid be free from impuri- ties. It is highly important that sufficient nitric acid be employed fully to satu- rate the mercury. M. Paysse, who paid great attention to the manufacture of red precipitate, recommended TO parts of nitric acid from 34° to 38° Baume, to 50 parts of mercury. This, however, is an excess of acid. We have been told by a skilful practical chemist of Philadelphia that he has found, by repeated ex- periment, T parts of nitric acid of 35° Baume, to be sufficient fully to saturate 6 parts of mercury. Less will not answer, and more would be useless. It is not necessary that the salt should be removed from the vessel in which it is formed; and it is even asserted that the product is always more beautiful when the cal- cination is performed in the same vessel. A matrass may be used with a large flat bottom, so that an extended surface may be exposed, and all parts heated equally. The metal and acid having been introduced, the matrass should be placed in a sand-bath, and covered with sand up to the neck. The solution of the mercury should be favoured by a gentle heat, which should afterwards be gradually increased till red vapours appear, then maintained as equably as pos- sible till these vapours cease, and at last slightly elevated till oxygen gas begins to escape. This may be known by the increased brilliancy with which a taper will burn if placed in the mouth of the matrass, or by its rekindling if partially extinguished. Too high a temperature must be carefully avoided, as it decom- poses the oxide, and volatilizes the mercury. At the close of the operation, the mouth of the vessel should be stopped, and the heat gradually diminished, the matrass being still allowed to remain in the sand-bath. These last precautions are said to be essential to the fine red colour of the preparation. It is best to oper- ate upon a large quantity of materials, as the heat may be thus more uniformly maintained. The direction in the British, taken from the late Ed. Pharmaco- poeia, to rub a portion of mercury with the nitrate before decomposing it, ren- ders the process more economical; as the nitric acid, which would otherwise be dissipated, is thus employed in oxidizing an additional quantity of the metal. As the process is ordinarily conducted in laboratories, the nitrate of mercury is decomposed in shallow earthen vessels, several of which are placed upon a bed of sand, in the chamber of an oven or furnace, provided with a flue for the escape of the vapours. Each vessel may conveniently contain ten pounds of the nitrate. There is always loss in the operation thus conducted. Under the name of Hydrargyri Oxydum Rubrum, the Dublin College for- merly directed a preparation, called by the elder chemists hydrargyrum prse- cipitatum per se, or precipitate per se, and sometimes calcined mercury, made by exposing the metal to a heat near its boiling point, or about 600° F., in a matrass with a broad bottom and narrow mouth. The vapours rising were con- densed in the upper part of the vessel; and a circulation was thus kept up with- in it, during which the mercury slowly combined with oxygen, being converted first into a black and then into a red powder. But the process was very slow, requiring several weeks for the complete oxidization of the metal; and, as the product, which was pure deutoxide, had no peculiar virtues to recommend it over the oxide procured in the ordinary mode, it was properly discarded by the College. The oxide made in this way is in minute, sparkling, crystalline scales, of a deep-red colour, becoming still deeper by heat. The same oxide of mercury, prepared by precipitation, was recognised in a Hydrargyrum. PART rr. former London Pharmacopoeia by the name of Hydrargyri Binoxidum, or bin■ oxide of mercury. It was made by adding solution of potassa in excess to a solution of bichloride of mercury, and differed from the preceding only in con- taining some water. It was an orange-red, impalpable powder, having the same properties essentially as the present officinal red oxide. Properties, &c. Red precipitate, well prepared, has a brilliant red colour, with a shade of orange, a shining scaly appearance, and an acrid taste. It is very slightly soluble in water, of which Dr. Barker found 1000 parts to take up 0'62 of the oxide. Dr. Christison found 1 part of the oxide to be dissolved by about 1000 parts of boiling water, and the solution to give a black precipitate with sulphuretted hydrogen. Tannic acid precipitates metallic mercury from its aqueous solution, especially when heated. (Bullock, Proceed, of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 306.) It is insoluble in cold alcohol and ether. (Ibid.) Nitric and muriatic acids dissolve it without effervescence. It yields oxygen when heated, and at a red heat is decomposed and entirely dissipated. It is essentially the deutoxide (peroxide) of mercury, consisting of one equivalent of the metal 200, and two of oxygen 16 = 216, or, according to the Br. Pharmacopoeia, the protoxide, consisting of one eq. of mercury 100, and one of oxygen 8 = 108; but, in its ordinary state, it always contains a minute proportion of nitric acid, pro- bably in the state of subnitrate. According to Brande, when rubbed and washed with a solution of potassa, edulcorated with distilled water, and carefully dried, it may be regarded as nearly pure deutoxide. It is said to be sometimes adul- terated with brickdust, red lead, &c.; but these may be readily detected, as the oxide of mercury is wholly dissipated if thrown upon red-hot iron. The disen- gagement of red vapours, when it is heated, indicates the presence of nitrate of mercury. The same or some other saline impurity would be indicated, should water, in which the oxide has been boiled, afford a precipitate with lime-water. Medical Properties and Uses. This preparation is too harsh and irregular in its operation for internal use; but is much employed externally as a stimulant and escharotic, either in the state of powder or of ointment. In the former state it is sprinkled on the surface of chancres, and indolent, flabby, or fungous ulcers; and, mixed with 8 or 10 parts of finely powdered sugar, is sometimes blown into the eye to remove opacity of the cornea. The powder should be finely levigated. The ointment is officinal.* Off. Prep. Hydrargyri Cyanidum, U. S.; Unguentum Hydrargyri Oxidi Rubri. ' W. * Black Oxide of Mercury. Oxidum Tlydrargyri Nigrum. U. S. 1850. Though discarded from the Pharmacopoeia, this preparation still has claims to notice. It was obtained by the fol- lowing officinal process. “Take of Mild Chloride of Mercury [calomel], Potassa, each, four ounces; Water a pint. Dissolve the Potassa in the Water, and, when the dregs have subsided, pour off the clear solution. To this add the Mild Chloride of Mercury, and stir them constantly together till the Black Oxide is formed. Having poured off the supernatant liquor, wash the Black Oxide with distilled water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. 1850. The object of this process is to obtain the protoxide or black oxide of mercury, which was at one time believed to be the active constituent of those preparations in which the metal is minutely divided by trituration. The calomel is completely decomposed by the solu- tion of potassa; its chlorine uniting with potassium to form chloride of potassium, which remains in solution, and the mercury with the oxygen of the potassa to form protoxide of mercury, which subsides. More potassa is employed than by calculation would seem to be requisite; but it has been ascertained by experiment that a considerable excess is neces- sary for the complete decomposition of the calomel. The use of the officinal solution of potassa is preferable, on the score of economy, to that of a solution extemporaneously pre- pared from the caustic alkali. In order to ensure the success of the process, the calomel, very finely levigated, should be rubbed quickly with the alkaline solution in a mortar; and the resulting oxide should be dried in the dark with a very gentle heat, as it is decom- posed by the agency both of light and of an elevated temperature. For the same reason it should be preserved in an opaque bottle. This mode of preparing the black oxide of mer- cury originated with Mr. Donovan. PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1169 HYDRARGYRI SULPHAS. Sulphate of Mercury. Br. Appendix. “Take of Mercury, by weight, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Sulphuric Acid twelve Jluidounces [Imperial measure]. Heat the Mercury with the Sulphuric* Acid in a porcelain vessel until the metal disappears, then continue the heat until a dry white salt remains.” Br. Appendix. Mercury is not acted on by cold sulphuric acid; but, when boiled with an excess of this acid to dryness, it is deutoxidized at the expense of part of the acid, sulphurous acid being copiously evolved; and the deutoxide formed unites with the undecomposed portion of the sulphuric acid, so as to form bisulphate of deutoxide of mercury, which is the officinal sulphate. Sulphate of mercury, as obtained by a separate formula, is peculiar to the British Pharmacopoeia; but it is formed as the first step of the processes of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia for preparing corrosive sublimate, calomel, and turpeth mineral. The adoption of a separate formula and distinct officinal name for this salt is certainly a convenience; as it obviates the necessity of repeating the di- rections for obtaining the same substance in several formulas. On account of its various uses, it requires to be made on a large scale by the manufacturing chemist; and the process is generally performed in a cast-iron vessel, which The oxide may also be prepared by decomposing a solution of nitrate of protoxide of mercury by solution of potassa. This nitrate may be obtained by treating 20 parts of mer- cury with 18 parts of nitric acid of 25° Baum6, adding, when nitrous vapours cease to rise, 10 parts of warm distilled water, boiling for a short time, decanting the clear liquor, and setting it aside to crystallize. The mother-waters by evaporation will furnish a new pro- duct of crystals of nitrate of protoxide. (Ratier, Pharm. Frang.) The London College form- erly prepared this oxide by decomposing calomel with lime-water; but it is extremely difficult to effect a complete decomposition in this way, and the preparation was conse- quently almost always mixed with calomel. The preparation, officinal in a former Dublin Pharmacopoeia under the name of Pulvis Hydrargyri Cinereus, made by adding carbonate of ammonia to a solution of mercury in heated nitric acid, was a mixture of subnitrate of mercury and ammonia with protoxide of mercury. Both the London and Dublin Colleges abandoned the protoxide in the latest editions of their Pharmacopoeias. Properties, $c. As first prepared, this oxide is greenish-black; but, as found in the shops, it is almost always of an olive colour. It is inodorous, tasteless, and said to be insoluble in water and alkaline solutions; but, according to Mr. Charles Bullock, it is appreciably soluble in cold water, and to a greater extent in boiling water, but is insoluble in cold alcohol and ether. (Proceedings of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 302). It consists of one eq. of mercury 200, and one of oxygen 8 = 208. On exposure to light or heat it is decomposed, one part assuming the metallic state, in consequence of the loss of its oxygen, which con- verts another part into the deutoxide. The preparation, therefore, becomes a mixture of the protoxide, deutoxide, and metallic mercury, with which calomel is sometimes associ- ated, in consequence of the incomplete decomposition of that employed in the process. By a strong heat it is completely dissipated, and metallic globules are sublimed. When pure it is soluble in acetic and nitric acids, and entirely insoluble in muriatic acid, which forma with it water and calomel. If it contain the deutoxide, this will be dissolved by muriatic acid, and may be detected in the solution by the production of a white precipitate with water of ammonia, and a yellow one with solution of potassa. Calomel, if present, may be discovered by boiling the powder with a solution of potassa, thus forming chloride of potassium, which, when the solution is saturated with nitric acid, will afford a white pre- cipitate of chloride of silver on the addition of nitrate of silver. [Phillips.) Medical Properties and Uses. The black oxide is alterative, sialagogue, and purgative. It may be employed for the same purposes as calomel, over which, however, it has not in our hands exhibited any superiority, while, from the occasional presence of the deutoxide, it must be liable to operate harshly. Dr. B. H. Coates, of this city, informed us some years since that he used it habitually as a mercurial, and found it to answer an excellent purpose. The idea under which it was introduced into use, that it was the basis of the blue pill, is erroneous. Made into an ointment with lard, according to the process of Donovan, it may be applied externally with good effect in bringing the system under the mercurial influence. (See Unguentum Hydrargyri.) Its dose as an alterative is one-fourth or half of a grain daily, as a sialagogue from one to three grains two or three times a day, given in the form of pill. It was used by Mr. Abernethy for mercurial fumigation; the patient being placed, covered with undor garments, in a vapour-bath, and exposed for 15 or 20 minutes to the vapours arising from two drachms of the oxide, put upon heated iron within the bath. W. 1170 Hydrargyrum. PART II. should be conveniently arranged for the escape and decomposition of the sul- phurous acid fumes, which otherwise become a serious nuisance to the neigh- bourhood. The best way to effect this purpose is to allow them to pass off through a very lofty chimney, mixed with abundance of coal smoke. Properties, &c. Sulphate of mercury is in the form of a white saline mass. It consists of two eqs. of acid 80 and one of deutoxide of mercury 216 = 296; or, according to the Br. Pharmacopoeia, of one eq. of acid 40 and one of pro- toxide of mercury 108=148. It has no medical uses. Off. Prep. Calomelas, Br.; Hydrargyrum Corrosivum Sublimatum, Br. B. HYDRARGYRI SULPHAS FLAYA. U.S. Yellow Sulphate of Mercury. Turpeth Mineral. “ Take of Mercury four iroyounces; Sulphuric Acid six troyounces. Mix them in a glass vessel, and boil, by means of a sand-bath, until a dry white mass remains. Rub this into powder, and throw it into boiling water. Pour off the supernatant liquor, wash the yellow precipitate repeatedly with hot water, and dry it.” U. S. By referring to the articles on corrosive sublimate and calomel, it will be found that the peculiar salt which is generated by boiling sulphuric acid with mercury to dryness, is directed to be made as the first step for obtaining these chlorides; and here the same salt is again directed to be formed in preparing turpeth mineral. We have already stated that this salt is the bisulphate of deut- oxide of mercury. When thrown iuto boiling or even warm water it is instantly decomposed, and an insoluble salt is precipitated, which is the turpeth mineral. According to Berzelius, turpeth mineral is a basic sesquisulphate of deutoxide of mercury, and the supernatant solution contains a supersulphate, consisting of six eqs. of acid and one of base. The same composition for turpeth mineral is given by Gay-Lussac; and its accuracy was verified by Sir Robert Kane, of Dublin. (See Pharm. Journ., August, 1842.) The composition above given of turpeth mineral implies the decomposition of four eqs. of bisulphate of deutox- ide, and the manner in which the reaction takes place is shown by the following equation; 4(IIg02,2S03) = turpeth mineral, 3IIg0a,2S03, and supersulphate of mercury, lIg02,6S03. Properties, &c. Yellow sulphate of mercury is a lemon-yellow powder, of a somewhat acrid taste. It dissolves in 2000 parts of cold, and about 600 of boil- ing water. Exposed to a moderate heat, it becomes first red and afterwards brownish-red, but regains its original colour on cooling. (Barker.) At a red heat it is decomposed and dissipated, sulphurous acid being evolved, and metal- lic globules sublimed. It was originally called turpeth mineral, from its resem- blance in colour to the root of Ipomsea Tarpethum. Medical Properties and Uses. Turpeth mineral is alterative, and powerfully emetic and errhine. As an alterative, it has been given in leprous disorders and glandular obstructions. It has been usefully employed as an emetic, repeated every few days, in chronic enlargement of the testicle. It operates with great promptness, and sometimes excites ptyalism. Dr. Hubbard, of Maine, considers it a valuable emetic, in cases requiring an equalizing and revulsive effect, apart from any cathartic operation, wrhich he has never known it to produce. He recommends it highly as an emetic in croup, on the ground of its promptness and certainty, and of its not producing catharsis, or the prostration caused by anti- mony. The dose for a child two years old is twro or three grains, repeated in fifteen minutes, if it should not operate. As an errhine, it has been used with benefit in chronic ophthalmia; but it sometimes produces salivation when thus employed. The dose as an alterative is from a quarter to half a grain; as an emetic from two to five grains. When employed as an errhine, one grain may be mixed with five of starch or powdered liquorice root. Turpeth mineral, in an overdose, acts as a poison. A case of death in a boy PART II. Hydrargyrum. 1171 aged sixteen, caused by swallowing a drachm, is reported by Dr. Letheby in the London Medical Gazette for March, 1847. B. HYDRARGYRI SULPHURETUM RUB RUM. U. S. Cinnabaris. Ed. lied Sulphuret of Mercury. Bisulphuret of Mercury. Cinnabar. “ Take of Mercury forty troyounces ; Sulphur eight troyounces. To the Sul- phur, previously melted, gradually add the Mercury, with constant stirring, and continue the heat until the mass begins to swell. Then remove the vessel from the fire, and cover it closely to prevent the contents from inflaming. When the mass is cold, rub it into powder, and sublime.” U. S. This preparation has been discarded, we think somewhat prematurely, by the British Council. Mercury and sulphur, when heated together, unite with great energy, and a product is obtained, which by sublimation becomes the red or bisulphuret of mercury. In order to render the combination more prompt, the sulphur is first melted; and the addition of the mercury should be made gradually, while the mixture is constantly stirred. Dr. Barker recommends the addition of the metal by straining it upon the melted sulphur through a linen cloth, whereby it falls in a minutely divided state. When the temperature has arrived at a certain point, the combination takes place suddenly with a slight explosion, attended with the inflammation of the sulphur, which must be extinguished by covering the vessel. A black mass will thus be formed, containing generally an excess of sulphur, which, before the sublimation is performed, should be got rid of by gently heating the matter, reduced to powder, on a sand-bath. The sublimation is best performed, on a small scale, in a loosely stopped glass matrass, which should be placed in a crucible containing sand, and, thus arranged, exposed to a red heat. The equivalent quantities for forming this sulphuret are 32 of sulphur and 200 of mercury. Preparation on the Large Scale. Cinnabar is seldom prepared on a small scale, being made in large quantities for the purposes of the arts. In Holland, where it is principally manufactured, the sulphur is melted in a cast-iron vessel, and the mercury is added in a divided state, by causing it to pass through cha- mois leather. As soon as the combination has taken place, the iron vessel is surmounted by another, into which the cinnnbar is sublimed. The larger the quantity of- the materials employed in one operation, the finer will be the tint of the product. It is also important in the manufacture to use the materials pure, and to drive off any uncombined sulphur which may exist in the mass, before submitting it to sublimation. Properties, dec. Red sulphuret of mercury is in the form of heavy, brilliant, crystalline masses, of a deep-red colour and fibrous texture. It is inodorous and tasteless, and insoluble in water and alcohol. It is not acted on by nitric, muri- atic, or cold sulphuric acid, or by solutions of the caustic alkalies; but is soluble in nitromuriatic acid, on account of the free chlorine the mixed acid con- tains. When heated with potassa, it yields globules of mercury. In the open air it is decomposed by heat, the sulphur becoming sulphurous acid, arid the mercury being volatilized. In close vessels at a red heat it sublimes without de- composition, and condenses in a mass, composed of a multitude of small needles. When duly levigated, it furnishes a brilliant red powder, which is the paint called vermilion. The same compound occurs native, being the sole ore from which mercury is extracted. The preparation, if purchased in powder, should be carefully examined; as, in that state, it is sometimes adulterated with red lead, dragon’s blood, or chalk. If red lead be present, acetic acid, digested with it, will yield a yellow precipitate (iodide of lead) with iodide of potassium. Dragon’s blood may be detected by alcohol, which will take up the colouring matter of that substance, if present; and, if chalk be mixed with it, effervescence 1172 Hydrargyrum. PART II. will be excited on the addition of an acid. This sulphuret consists of one eq. of mercury 200, and two of sulphur 32 = 232. Medical Properties and Uses. Cinnabar was formerly thought to be altera- tive and anthelmintic, but is at present seldom given internally. It is sometimes employed by fumigation, as a rapid sialagogue, in venereal ulcers of the nose and throat, in cases in which it is important to bring the system under the in- fluence of mercury in the shortest possible time. The dose internally is from ten grains to half a drachm, in the form of electuary or bolus. When used by fumi- gation, half a drachm may be thrown on a red-hot iron, and the fumes inhaled as they arise. These consist of sulphurous acid gas and mercurial vapour, the former of which must prove highly irritating to the patient’s lungs. A better substance for mercurial fumigation is the black oxide of mercury.* B. HYDRARGYRUM AMMONIATUM. U. S., Br. Hydrargyri Pre- cipitatum Album. Ed. Hydrargyri Ammonio-chloridum. Bond. Ammoniated Mercury. White Precipitate. “ Take of Corrosive Chloride of Mercury six troyounces ; Water of Ammonia eight fluidounces; Distilled Water eight pints. Dissolve the Corrosive Chloride of Mercury in the Distilled Water, with the aid of heat, and to the solution, when cold, add the Water of Ammonia, frequently stirring. Wash the precipi- tate with water until the washings become nearly tasteless, and dry it.” U. S. “ Take of Corrosive Sublimate three ounces [avoirdupois] ; Solution of Am- * Black Sulphur et of Mar cury. Ethiops Mineral. Hydrargyri Sulphuretum Nigrum. Though very properly discarded from the Pharmacopoeias, this has too long occupied a place in the catalogue of the Materia Medica to be passed over entirely without notice. The following was the formula of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, for its preparation. “Take of Mercury, Sulphur, each, a pound. Rub them together till all the globules dis- appear.” U.S. Mercury and sulphur have a strong affinity for each other, as is shown by the fact, that, when they are triturated together in quantities, the mixture grows hot, cakes, and exhales a sulphurous odour. During the trituration, the mixture should be sprinkled from time to time with a little water or alcohol, to prevent the dust from rising, which exposes the ope- rator to serious inconvenience. When rubbed together in equal weights, as directed in the formula, they are supposed to unite chemically; but the proportion of sulphur is much greater than is necessary to form a definite compound. Only two sulphurets of mercury have been admitted by chemists generally, the protosulphuret, and bisulphuret or cinnabar; but the quantity of sulphur directed in the process is much more than sufficient to form even the latter. It is still undetei’mined what is the exact nature of the officinal black sul- phuret, or ethiops mineral. Mr. Brande, from his experiments, considers it to be the bisul- phuret mixed with sulphur. Thus, he found that, when boiled repeatedly in solution of potassa, sulphur was dissolved, and a black insoluble powder was left, which sublimed without decomposition, and yielded a substance having all the characters of cinnabar. Ethiops mineral is sometimes obtained by melting sulphur in a crucible, and adding to it an equal weight of mercury; but, when'thus prepared, the sulphur is apt to become acidified, and the preparation to acquire an activity which does not belong to it when ob- tained by trituration. jProperties, $c. Black sulphuretof mercury is a heavy, tasteless, insoluble powder. When exposed to heat, it becomes of a dark-violet colour, emits the excess of sulphur in sulphur- ous acid fumes, and sublimes in brilliant red needles without residue. If charcoal be pre- sent it will remain behind. When well prepared, no globules of mercury are discernible in it when viewed with a magnifier; and, if rubbed on a gold ring, it should not communi- cate a white stain. Ivory black is detected in it by throwing a small portion on red-hot iron, when a white matter (phosphate of lime) will be left behind. Adulteration by sul- phuret of antimony is shown, if muriatic acid, boiled on a portion of the powder, acquires the property of causing a precipitate of oxychloride of antimony when added to water. Ac- cording to the views of Mr. Brande, ethiops mineral consists of one eq. of bisulphuret of mercury, mixed with about ten and a half eqs. of sulphur in excess. Medical Properties. Ethiops mineral is supposed to be alterative, and as such has been sometimes prescribed in glandular affections and cutaneous diseases, especially in the cases of scrofulous children, to which, from the mildness of its operation, it has been thought to be well adapted. The dose generally given was from five to thirty grains, repeated several times a day; but it has often been administered in much larger doses, without producing any obvious impression on the system. At present it is very little used as a medicine. B Hydrargyrum. PART II. monia four ounces [avoird.] ; Distilled Water three pints [Imperial measure] Dissolve the Corrosive Sublimate in the Water with the aid of a moderate heat*, mix the Solution with the Ammonia, constantly stirring; collect the precipi- tate on a filter, and wash it well with cold Distilled Water until the liquid which passes through ceases to give a precipitate when dropped into a solution of nitrate of silver acidulated with nitric acid. Lastly, dry the product at a tem- perature not exceeding 212 V’ Br. The Pharmacopoeias now agree in obtaining white precipitate by precipitating a solution of corrosive sublimate by ammonia. When ammonia, in slight excess, is added to a cold solution of corrosive sublimate, muriate of ammonia is formed in solution, and the white precipitate of the Pharmacopoeias is thrown down. The precipitate is washed, according to the TJ. S. formula, until the washings be- come nearly tasteless, according to the British, with greater precision, until they cease to give evidence of the presence of a chloride by producing a precipitate with nitrate of silver acidulated with nitric acid. The matter washed away is muriate of ammonia and the excess of ammonia employed; and hence the wash- ings, agreeably to the directions of the British formula, are tested with an acid solution of nitrate of silver. According to Sir Robert Kane, white precipitate has a composition corresponding to one eq. of bichloride of mercury, united with one eq. of a compound consisting of one eq. of mercury combined with two eqs. of a hypothetical body represented by one eq. of ammonia minus one eq. of hy- drogen. This hypothetical body, represented by NIIa, he has named amidogen, the amide of some chemists. The reaction may be supposed to take place between four eqs. of ammonia and two of bichloride of mercury. Two eqs. of ammonia by parting with one eq., each, of hydrogen, become two eqs. of amidogen, which unite with the mercury of one eq. of the bichloride to form the binamide of mer- cury; while the two liberated eqs. of hydrogen of the ammonia combine with the two liberated eqs. of chlorine of the bichloride, forming two eqs. of muriatic acid; and the binamide then unites with the second eq. of the bichloride to pro- duce the insoluble chloro-amide of mercury or white precipitate, which falls. The two eqs. of muriatic acid combine with a like number of ammonia, and re- main in solution as two eqs. of muriate of ammonia. In symbols the reaction is thus denoted: 4NH3 and 2HgCla=Hg,2NH2-f HgCl, and 2(NH,,HC1). For an account of ammonium, see page 95. The analysis of Kane agrees virtually with those of Guibourt and Hennell. Properties, &c. Ammoniated mercury is in powder or pulverulent masses, perfectly white, insoluble in water and alcohol, decomposed by boiling water, and having a taste at first earthy, and afterwards metallic. It dissolves without effervescence in muriatic acid. When heated with a solution of caustic potassa, it yields ammonia and becomes yellow. Exposed to a strong heat it is entirely dissipated, and resolved into nitrogen, ammonia, and protochloride of mercury. Adulteration with white lead, chalk, or sulphate of lime may be detected by exposing a sample to a strong red heat, when these impurities will remain. Should starch be mixed with it, a charry residue will be obtained on the appli- cation of heat. Lead or starch may be found by digesting it with acetic acid, and testing the acetic solution with the compound solution of iodine, which will give a yellow precipitate if lead, and a blue one if starch be present. The ab- sence of protoxide of mercury is shown by its not being blackened when rubbed with lime-water. Ammoniated mercury is used only as an external application. Ammoniated mercury has been swallowed by mistake. It is highly poisonous, producing gastric pain, nausea, and purging. A case of recovery, after taking what was estimated to be half a drachm, is reported in the London Lancet for July 4, 1857. The remedies employed were an emetic of sulphate of zinc, and milk to allay the gastro-intestinal irritation. Off. Prep. Unguentum Hydrargyri Ammoniati. B. 1174 Hydrargyrum. PART II. HYDRARGYRUM CUM CRETA. U. S., Br. Mercury with Chalk. Cray Poioder. “ Take of Mercury three troyounces; Prepared Chalk five troyounces. Rub them together until the globules cease to be visible, and the mixture acquires a uniform gray colour.” U. S. “ Take of Mercury, by weight, one ounce; Prepared Chalk two ounces. Rub the Mercury and Chalk in a porcelain mortar until metallic globules cease to be visible to the naked eye, and the mixture acquires a uniform gray colour.” Br. When mercury is triturated with certain dry and pulverulent substances, such as chalk or magnesia, it gradually loses its fluidity and metallic lustre, and be- comes a blackish or dark-gray powder. A similar change takes place when it is rubbed with viscid or greasy substances, such as honey or lard. The globules disappear, so as in some instances not to be visible even through a good lens; and the mercury is said to be extinguished. It was formerly thought that the metal was oxidized in the process. At present, the change is generally ascribed to the mechanical division of the metal, which in this state is supposed to be capable of acting on the system. There is good reason, however, to believe that in this, as in all the analogous preparations of mercury, in which the metal is extinguished by trituration, a very small portion is converted into protoxide, while by far the greater part remains in the metallic state. Mercury with chalk is a grayish powder, in which globules of mercury can generally be seen with the aid of a microscope; as the metal can scarcely be completely extinguished with chalk alone by any length of trituration. Mr. Jacob Bell found that, by powerfully pressing it, a considerable quantity of metal was separated in the form of globules. Mr. Phillips states that the extin- guishment of the mercury is greatly accelerated by the addition of a little water. Dr. Stewart, of Baltimore, proposed the following process, by which he stated that the preparation might be completed in a short time, so that no globules should be visible with a powerful lens. Three ounces of mercury and six ounces of resin are to be rubbed together for three hours; five ounces of chalk are to be added, and the trituration continued for an hour; the mixture is then to be heated with alcohol so as to dissolve the resin; and the remaining powder is to be dried on bibulous paper, and well rubbed in a mortar. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 162.) But Professor Procter has shown that the preparation thus made con- tains deutoxide of mercury, and is, therefore, injuriously harsh in its operation. (Ibid., xxii. 113.) It is said that the precipitated black oxide is sometimes added with a view to save time in the trituration ; but this must be considered as an adulteration, until it can be shown that the same oxide exists, in the same pro- portion, in the preparation made according to the officinal directions. Dr. Ed. Jenner Coxe, of New Orleans, has found that the extinguishment of the mercury may be effected much more speedily than in the ordinary manner, by putting the ingredients into a quart bottle, to be well corked, and kept in constant agi- tation till the object is attained. A portion of the chalk may be thus shaken with the metal until no globules can be seen, and the process completed by tritu- ration with the remainder of the chalk in a mortar. This mode of proceeding was suggested to Dr. Coxe by Mr. W. Hewson, of Augusta, Ga. (Ibid., xxii. 317.) Dr, S piibb, having ascertained that the preparation cannot be satisfactorily made in this way on a large scale (Proceed, of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 424), has invented a machine for accomplishing the same object, by which the requisite motion is imparted to the materials contained in two large bottles, and which is said to answer the purpose well. By means of this apparatus, Dr. Squibb pre- pares mercury with chalk on a large scale, mixing the materials in the officinal proportions, but aiding the extinguishment of the metal by adding to it about one-seventh of its weight of honey, and making the chalk into a paste with water before introducing it into the bottles. (Ibid., 1859, p. 359. ( A s found i.* PART II. Hydrargyrum.—Inf us a. 1175 commerce, mercury with chalk, instead of being the mild preparation n was in- tended to be, sometimes acts very harshly, producing vomiting, gastric pains, &c. This has been ascribed to the presence of antimony or arsenic, existing as impurities in the mercury employed; but this can seldom happen ; and the ordi- nary cause of the harshness is no doubt peroxide of mercury, produced in minute proportion either by improper modes of preparation, or by too long a perseve- rance in trituration, or by the spontaneous change which occurs with time; the protoxide being converted into deutoxide by the influence of light. The only method to guard against such results is to make the preparation strictly accord- ing to the officinal process, or carefully to test before dispensing it. If the mer- cury contained in the preparation be volatilized by heat, and the remaining chalk be dissolved by dilute acetic acid, the solution should not be coloured by sul- phuretted hydrogen. The presence of any probable metallic impurity may be detected in this way. To detect peroxide of mercury, a portion of the powder may be treated with dilute muriatic acid with a moderate heat, and the solution tested by protochloride of tin, which if there be any peroxide in the preparation, will cause a precipitation of metallic mercury in the form of a black powder. Medical Properties and Uses. Mercury with chalk is a very mild mercurial, similar in its properties to the blue pill, but much weaker. It is sometimes used as an alterative, particularly in the complaints of children attended with deficient biliary secretion, indicated by white or clay-coloured stools. The chalk is antacid, and, though in small quantity, may sometimes be a useful accompaniment of the mercury in diarrhoea. Eight grains of the U. S. preparation contain three grains of mercury. The dose is from five grains to half a drachm twice a day. Two or three grains is the dose for a child. It should not be given in pill with sub- stances which become hard on keeping; as the contraction of the mass presses together the particles of mercury, which, in time, appear in globules in the inte- rior of the pill. W. INFUSA. Infusions. These are aqueous solutions obtained by treating with water, without the aid of ebullition, vegetable products only partially soluble in that liquid. The water employed may be hot or cold, according to the objects to be accomplished. In- fusions are generally prepared by pouring boiling water upon the vegetable sub- Etance, and macerating in a lightly closed vessel till the liquid cools. The solu- ble principles are thus extracted more rapidly, and, as a general rule, in a larger proportion than at a lower temperature. Some substances, moreover, are dis- solved in this manner, which are nearly or quite insoluble in cold water. A pro- longed application of heat is in some instances desirable; and this may be effected by placing the vessel near the fire. Cold water is preferred when the active prin- ciple is highly volatile, when it is injured by heat, or when any substance of diffi- cult solubility at a low temperature exists in the vegetable, which it is desirable to avoid in the infusion. A longer continuance of the maceration is necessary in this case; and, in warm weather, there is sometimes danger that spontaneous decomposition may commence before the process is completed. When a strong infusion is required, the process of percolation may be advantageously resorted to. (See pages 894 and 905.) The water employed should be free from saline impurities, which frequently produce precipitates, and render the infusion tur- bid. Fresh river, rain, or distilled water is usually preferable to that of pumps or springs. The substance to be acted on should be sliced or bruised, or in the state of powder; but, unless when percolation is employed, this last condition is seldom requisite, and is always inconvenient, as it requires that the infusion should be 1176 Infusa. PART II. filtered through paper in order completely to separate the undissolved portion. In other cases, it is sufficient to strain through fine linen or muslin. When per- colation is resorted to, the substance should be more or less finely powdered. Infusions are usually prepared in glazed earthenware or porcelain vessels fitted with covers. Mr. Braude suggests the use of clean metallic vessels, which, when finely polished, retain the heat for a longer time; but they are also more liable to chemical alteration, and may sometimes injuriously affect the preparaticn. Vessels of block-tin are generally well adapted for the purpose.* As infusions do not keep well, especially in warm weather, they should be made extemporaneously and in small quantities. In this country they are usually pre- pared in families, and the propriety of their introduction into the Pharmacopoeia has been doubted; but it is desirable to have certain fixed standards for the regulation of the medical practitioner; and it is sometimes convenient to direct infusions from the apothecary, for whose guidance officinal formulas are neces- sary. Physicians would, indeed, find their advantage in more frequently directing * Alsop's Infusion Jar. This presents a very neat and effectual method of making the hot infusions. It consists of an earthenware mug, represented in the marginal figure, with a spout (d) proceeding from the bottom, and placed closely to the side of the vessel to prevent fracture; a perforated plate or diaphragm (b), supported on a ledge (c), at about one-quarter or one-third of the height of the vessel from the top; and a lid (a), which may be fastened on by a string through holes (ff). The material to be submitted to infusion is placed on the perforated plate, and the hot water poured in so as to cover it, the vessel having been previously warmed so as not to chill the liquid. As the water becomes impregnated, it acquires an in- creased specific gravity, and sinks to the bottom, its place being supplied by the unsaturated por- tion; and this circulation goes on until the whole of the soluble matter is extracted. In order to maintain a due warmth, the vessel may be placed upon a stove or an iron plate near the fire. The advantage of the process is that the material is subjected to the solvent power of the least impreg- nated portion of the menstruum. Such jars may now be had in Philadelphia. In order that the ves- sel may be adapted for the preparation of different quantities of infusions, it will be proper to have ledges arranged within at different heights, so that the diaphragm may be supported at any desirable point. The surface of the liquid (e) should of course always be above the medicinal substance placed upon the diaphragm. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., viii. 89.) Squire's Infusion Jar. Mr. Squire, of London, has modified this jar by adding a colander of queensware, which is closely covered with a lid, and descends into the jar so as to form a diaphragm for the support of the substance to be infused. It has the advantage that the material, af- ter having been exhausted, may be lifted out without disturbing the infusion. In the margin is a figure of Squire’s implement. It consists of a queensware mug, of the capacity of two pints, into which a thim- ble-shaped colander descends to somewhat less than half its depth, supported on the rim of the mug by a projecting ledge, with a carefully fitted cover, which closes the whole. The substance to be submitted to infusion is introduced into the colander either before or after it has been fitted to the mug; the water, hot of cold, as the case may be, is then poured in so as to fill the lower vessel, and cover the materials in the upper; and, the cover having been applied, the vessel is set aside for the length of time required. The colander is then to bo lifted out, and the infusion is ready for use. For preparing small quantities of infusion, a pint for example, the mug must be made of a smiller size. PART II. Infusa. 1177 them from the shops, instead of leaving their preparation to the carelessness 01* want of skill of attendants upon the sick. For a mode of preserving infusions, the reader is referred to the introductory observations, page 899. By making very concentrated infusions, as suggested by Mr. Donovan, with a mixture of three parts of water and one of alcohol, they may be long kept, and when used can be diluted with water to the proper strength. Thus, if made four times as strong as the officinal infusion, they may be diluted with three measures of water. The proportion of alcohol would thus be very small; but it might still be medically injurious; and infusions should not be prepared in this way unless with the cognizance of the prescriber. Mr. Battley, of London, has introduced a new set of preparations, which he calls inspissated inf usions, the advantages of which are that the virtues are ex* tracted by cold water, are not injured by heat used in the evaporation, are in a concentrated state, and are not impaired by time. To prepare them he macerates the material, coarsely powdered, bruised, or finely sliced, in twice its weight of cold distilled water, pressing the solid matter into the liquid repeatedly by a rammer or the hand; then allows the liquid to drain out, or expresses it in the case of highly absorbent substances; and repeats the process, with an amount of water equal to that which has been separated, until the strength is exhausted. Four or six hours of maceration are usually sufficient. The infusion is then to be concentrated by evaporation at a temperature not exceeding 160° to the sp. gr. 1-200, and as much alcohol is to be added as will make its sp. gr. IT00. These preparations are very analogous to the fluid extracts already treated of. As a general rule it would probably be preferable to prepare the infusion by the process of percolation. The inspissated infusions must be diluted when ad- ministered. The presence of alcohol, though in small quantity, would in some instances be a serious objection. (Pharm. Journ., x. 129.) As we have already treated of the chemical relations and medical properties of the substances used in infusion, it would be useless repetition to enlarge upon these points in the following details. We shall touch upon them only in cases of peculiar interest, or where changes requiring particular notice may grow out of the nature of the process. The former officinal preparations of this class, omitted in the present U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are the Infusions of Horseradish, U. S., Lond., of Pale Peruvian Bark, Lond., Dub., Ed., and of Simaruba, Ed., Dub.; the In- spissated Infusions of Yellow and Pale Bark, Lond.; and the Compound In- fusion of Senna, Ed. The U. S. Infusions of Sassafras Pith and of Slippery- elm Bark have been transferred to the Mucilages. W. INFUSUM ANGUSTURiE. U.8. Infusum Br. Infusion if Angustura. Infusion of Cusparia. “Take of Angustura [Bark], in moderately coarse powder, half a troyounce; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with two fluidrachms of Water, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint. “This Infusion may also be prepared by macerating the Angustura in a pint of Boiling Water, for two hours, in a covered vessel, and straining.” U. S. “ Take of Cusparia, in coarse powder, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water, at 120°, ten jluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for two hours, and strain.” Br. The dose of the infusion is two fluidounces, repeated every two, three, or four hours. W INFUSUM ANTIIEMIDIS. U.S., Br. Infusion of Chamomile. “Take of Chamomile half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for ten minutes in a covered vessel, and'strain.” U.S. Infusa. PART II. “Take of Chamomile Flowers half an ounce [avoirdupois] ; Boiling Distilled Water ten fuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for fifteen minutes, and strain ” Br. The infusion of chamomile has the odour and taste of the flowers. It affords precipitates with gelatin, yellow Peruviau bark, sulphate of iron, tincture of chloride of iron, nitrate of silver, corrosive chloride of mercury, and the acetates of lead. (London Dispensatory.) As a tonic it is given cold, in the dose of two fluidounces several times a day. To assist the operation of emetic medicines it should be administered in the tepid state, and in large draughts. The infusion prepared by maceration in cold water is more grateful to the palate and stomach than that made with boiling water, but is less efficient as an emetic. W. INFUSUM AURANTII. Br. Infusion of Orange Peel. “Take of Bitter Orange Peel, cut small, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boil- ing Distilled Water ten fuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for fifteen min- Dtes, and strain.” Br. This infusion is given as a grateful stomachic, in the dose of two or three fluidounces. W. INFUSUM BUCHU. U.S. Infusum Bucco. Br. Infusion of Buchu. “ Take of Buchu a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “Take of Buchu, bruised, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. This is the Infusum Diosmse of former Pharmacopoeias. It has the odour, taste, and medical virtues of the leaves, and affords a convenient method of ad- ministering the medicine. The dose is one or two fluidounces. W. INFUSUM CALUMBiE. U.S.,Br. Infusum Colombo. U. S. 1850. Infusion of Columbo. Infusion of Calumbo. “Take of Columbo, in moderately coarse powder, half a troyounce; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with two fluidrachms of Water, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the fil- tered liquid measures a pint. “This Infusion may also be prepared by macerating the Columbo in a pint of boiling Water, for two hours, in a covered vessel, and straining.” U. S. “Take of Calumbo, in coarse powder, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Cold Distilled Water ten f uidounces. Macerate for one hour, and strain.” Br. The infusion of columbo is apt to spoil very quickly, especially in warm wea- ther. It has been generally supposed that the cold infusion would keep better than the hot, because it contains no starch. Mr. Thomas Greenish, however, upon comparing specimens of the two infusions, found that the spontaneous change began sooner in the cold than the hot, though the former was clearer. Columbo contains starch and albumen. Cold water extracts the latter without the former; hot water the former with comparatively little of the latter, which is partially coagulated by the heat. Both starch and albumen are liable to spontaneous change; but the former is much the more permanent of the two. Hence it is, according to Mr. Greenish, that the hot infusion keeps best. Indeed, he ascribes the change which takes place in the starch of the hot infusion chiefly to the agency of a little albumen, which has escaped coagulation. According to these views, the best plan of preparing infusion of columbo is to exhaust the root with cold water, by which the starch is left behind, and then to heat the infusion to the boiling point in order to coagulate the albumen. (Am. Journ. of Bharm., xviii. 141, from Pharm. Journ.) Upon comparing specimens of the cold and hot infusion, we have not found the results of Mr. Greenish fully con- firmed. The cold infusion appeared to keep better than the hot. Nevertheless, the plan of preparing the infusion above proposed is probably the ber-t The PART II. lnfusa. 1179 infusion of columbo is not disturbed by salts of iron, and may be conveniently administered in connection with them. The dose is two fluidounces three or four times a day. W. INFUSUM CAPSICI. U.S. Infusion of Capsicum. “ Take of Capsicum, in coarse powder, half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. This infusion is used chiefly as a gargle. It may, however, be given internally in the dose of half a fluidounce. W. INFUSUM CARYOPIIYLLI. U.S., Br. Infusion of Cloves. ‘‘Take of Cloves, bruised, one hundred and twenty grains; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Cloves, bruised, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. The infusion of cloves affords precipitates with lime-water, and with the soluble salts of iron, zinc, lead, silver, and antimony. (Phillips.) The dose is about two fluidounces. W. INFUSUM CASCARILLiE. U. S., Br. Infusion of Cascarilla. “Take of Cascarilla, in moderately coarse powder, a troyounce; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of Water, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint. “ This Infusion may also be prepared by macerating the Cascarilla with a pint of boiling Water, for two hours, in a covered vessel, and straining.” U. S. “Take of Cascarilla, in coarse powder, one ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. This infusion affords precipitates with lime-water, infusion of galls, nitrate of silver, acetate and subacetate of lead, sulphate of zinc, and sulphate of iron, (London Dispensatory.) The medium dose is two fluidounces. W. , INFUSUM CATECIIU COMPOSITUM. U. S. Infusum Catechu.'" Br. Compound Infusion of Catechu. Infusion of Catechu. “Take of Catechu, in fine powder, half a troyounce; Cinnamon, in mode- rately fine powder, sixty grains; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for an hour in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Catechu, in coarse powder, one hundred and sixty grains; Cin- namon, bruised, thirty grains; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. This is an elegant mode of administering catechu. The dose is from one to three fluidounces, repeated three or four times a day, or more frequently. W. INFUSUM CIIIRATiE. Br. Infusion of Chiretta. “Take of Chiretta, bruised, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water, at 120°, ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain. ” Br. The dose of this simple bitter is from one to three fluidounces. W. INFUSUM CINCHONiE FLAViE. U.S., Br. Infusion of Yellow Cinchona. Infusion of Yellow Bark. “Take of Yellow Cinchona, in moderately fine powder, a troyounce; Aro- matic Sulphuric Acid afluidrachm; Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acid with a pint of Water. Then moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of the mixture, and, having packed it firmly in a conical glass percolator, gradu- 1180 Infusa. part II. ally pour upon it the remainder of the mixture, and afterwards Water, until the filtered liquid measures a pint.” U. S. “Take of Yellow Cinchona Bark, in coarse powder, half an ounce [avoirdu- pois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for two hours, and filter through paper.” Br. Though the infusion with boiling water is more quickly prepared than the cold infusion, and therefore better adapted to cases of emergency, yet the latter is a more elegant preparation, not turbid like the former, and at least equally effi- cient. We, therefore, prefer the process of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, provided it be skilfully conducted. The U. S. infusion is an elegant and very efficient preparation. Water ex- tracts from bark the kinates of quinia and cinchonia, but leaves behind the compounds which these principles form with the cinchotannic acid. The simple infusion, therefore, is rather feeble. But the addition of the acid ensures the solution of all or nearly all the active matter. We have been long in the habit of using this infusion, and have had reason to be satisfied with its efficacy. It would be best that the bark should be macerated with the acidulated water some time before being introduced into the instrument. The infusion of cinchona, made without acid, affords precipitates with the alkalies, alkaline carbonates, and alkaline earths; the soluble salts of iron, zinc, and silver; corrosive chloride of mercui’y, arseuious acid, and tartar emetic; gelatinous solutions; and various vegetable infusions and deeoctions, as those of galls, chamomile, columbo, cascarilla, horse-radish, cloves, catechu, orange- peel, foxglove, senna, rhubarb, valerian, and simaruba. In some instances the precipitate occurs immediately, in others not for several hours. (London Dis- pensatory.) Few, however, of these substances diminish the efficacy of the in- fusion, as they do not affect the active principles. The alkalies, alkaline earths, and vegetable astringents are really incompatible. As gallic, tartaric, and oxalic acids form salts with quinia of somewhat difficult solubility, the neutral and soluble gallates, tartrates, and oxalates produce in the infusion slight precipitates of corresponding salts of the alkaloids; but these are redissolved by an excess of the acid. Tartrate of antimony and potassa does not precipitate the alkaloids. Solutions of iodine are incompatible by forming with the alkaloids insoluble compounds. For an account of the chemical reactions of the infusions of different varieties of Peruvian bark, see the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (ix. 128). The simple infusion of cinchona may be advantageously administered in cases which require tonic treatment, but do not call for the full powers of the bark. The acid infusion has, we believe, all the powers of cinchona itself, and may be given for the same purposes. The medium dose is two fluidounces, equivalent to a drachm of the bark, to be repeated three or four times a day as a tonic, but more frequently as an antiperiodic. W. INFUSUM CINCHONiE RUBR2E. U.S. Infusum Cinchona Com- positum. U. S. 1850. Infusion of Red Cinchona. Compound Infusion of Peruvian Bark. Infusion of Red Bark. “Take of Red Cinchona, in moderately fine powder, a troyounce; Aromatic Sulphuric Acid a fuidrachm ; Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acid with a pint of Water. Then moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of the mix- ture, and, having packed it firmly in a conical glass percolator, gradually pour upon it the remainder of the mixture, and afterwards Water, until the filtered liquor measures a pint.” U. S. The remarks made in relation to infusion of yellow bark are equally applicable to this. W. INFUSUM CUSSO. Br. Infusion of Kousso. “Take of Kousso, in coarse powder, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; PART II. Infusa. 1181 Boiling Distilled Water four fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for fifteen minutes, without straining.” Br. The whole may be taken for a dose. W. INFUSUM DIGITALIS. TJ.S.,Br. Infusion of Digitalis. “Take of Digitalis [dried leaves], in coarse powder, sixty grains; Tincture of Cinnamon a fluidounce; Boiling Water half a pint. Macerate the Digitalis with the Water for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain; then add the Tinc- ture of Cinnamon, and mix.” U. S. “Take of Digitalis, dried, thirty grains; Boiling Distilled Water; ten fluid- ounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. The U. S. infusion is essentially the same as that employed by Withering. It affords precipitates with sulphate of iron, acetate of lead, tannic acid, and infu- sion of Peruvian bark. The dose is usually stated at half a fluidounce, repeated twice a day under ordinary circumstances, every eight hours in urgent cases until the system is affected. The proportion of digitalis is scarcely half as great in the British preparation, and the dose is proportionably larger. It will not escape the close observer, that the stated dose of digitalis in infusion is much larger than in substance, for which there does not appear to be a good reason. It might be safer to give only half the quantity, and increase if necessary. Tho British infusion has only about half the strength of ours. W. INFUSUM DULCAMARAS. Br. Infusion of Dulcamara. “Take of Dulcamara, bruised, one ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. The dose is one or two fluidounces three or four times a day. W. INFUSUM ERGOT2E. Br. Infusion of Ergot. “ Take of Ergot, in coarse powder, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boil- ing Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. The dose of this infusion is two fluidounces for a woman in labour. W. INFUSUM EUPATORII. U.S. Infusion of Thoroughwort. “Take of Thoroughwort [the dried herb] a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” XJ. S. As a tonic, this infusion should be taken cold in the dose of one or two fluid- ounces three or four times a day, or more frequently; as an emetic and diapho- retic, in large tepid draughts. W. INFUSUM GENTIANiE COMPOSITUM. U.S., Br. Compound In- fusion of Crentian. “Take of Gentian, in moderately coarse powder, half a troyounce; Bitter Orange Peel, in moderately coarse powder, Coriander, in moderately coarse pow- der, each, sixty grains; Alcohol two fluidounces; Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Alcohol with fourteen fluidounces of Water, and, having moistened the mixed powders with three fluidrachms of the menstruum, pack them firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon them first the remainder of the men- struum, and afterwards Water, until the filtered liquid measures a pint.” XJ. S. “ Take of Gentian, sliced, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Bitter-Orange Peel, bruised, Coriander, each, thirty grains; Proof Spirit two fluidounces; Cold Distilled Water eight fluidounces. Pour the Spirit upon the dry ingredi- ents, in a covered vessel; in two hours add the Water, and in two hours more •train through calico. ” Br. The use of the alcohol is to assist in dissolving the bitter principle, and at the same time to contribute towards the preservation of the infusion, which, without this addition, is very apt to spoil. The dose is a fluidounce repeated three or four times a day. W. 1182 Infuta. PART II. INFUSUM D.UMULI. U.S. Infusum Lupuli. Br. Infusion of Hops. “Take of Hops half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “Take of Hops half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fiuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for two hours, and strain.” Br. The dose of this infusion is one or two fiuidounces. W. INFUSUM JUNIPERI. U.S. Infusion of Juniper. “Take of Juniper, bruised, a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for an hour in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. The whole quantity made may be taken in twenty-four hours, in doses of two or three fiuidounces. W. INFUSUM KRAMERI2E. U.S.,Br. Infusion of Rhatany. “Take of Rhatany, in moderately coarse powder, a troyounce; Water a suf- ficient quantity, Moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of Water, and, hav- ing packed it (irmly in a conical glass percolator, gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint.” U. S. “Take of Rhatany, bruised, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fiuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. The infusion of rhatany is probably most efficient, prepared by the mode of per- colation, with cold water, from the root in a state of moderately coarse powder, as directed in the U. S. process. The dose of the infusion is one or two fluid- ounces. W. INFUSUM LINI COMPOSITUM. U.S. Infusum Lim.Br. Com- pound Infusion of Flaxseed. Infusion of Linseed. “Take of Flaxseed half a troyounce; Liquorice Root, bruised, one hundred and twenty grains; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “Take of Linseed one hundred and sixty grains; Fresh Liquorice Root, sliced, sixty grains; Boiling Distilled Water ten fiuidounces. Infuse in a cov- ered vessel, for four hours, and strain through calico.” Br. This is a useful demulcent drink in inflammatory affections of the mucous membrane of the lungs and urinary passages. It may be taken ad libitum. W. INFUSUM MATIC2E. Br. Infusion of Matico. “Take of Matico, cut small, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fiuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain ” Br. The dose of this infusion is two fiuidounces. W. INFUSUM PAREIRiE. U.S. Infusion of Par eira Brava. “ Take of Pareira Brava, bruised, a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Ma- cerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. The infusion of pareira brava is highly esteemed by some English practitioners as a remedy in irritation and chronic inflammation of the urinary passages, and has been found useful in catarrh of the bladder. The dose is one or two fluid- ounces. Brodie employed a decoction of the root, which he prepared by boiling half an ounce in three pints of water down to a pint, and gave in the quantity of from eight to twelve fiuidounces daily. The Br. Pharmacopoeia has substi- tuted the decoction for the infusion. '\\r, INFUSUM PICIS LIQUIDS. U.S. Infusion of Tar. Tar Water. “ Take of Tar a pint; Water four pints. Mix them, and shake the mixture frequently during twenty-four hours. Then pour off the infusion, and filter through paper.” U. S. Water takes from tar a small portion of acetic acid, empyreumatic oil includ- PART II. Inf usa. 1183 ing creasote, and resinous matter, acquiring a sharp empyreumatie taste, the odour of tar, aud the colour of Madeira wine. Thus impregnated it is stimulant and diuretic, and may be taken in the quantity of one or two pints daily. It is also used as a wash in chronic cutaneous affections, and is said to have proved beneficial, by injection into the bladder, in some cases of chronic cystitis. W. INFUSUM PRUNI VIRGINIANiE. U.S. Infusion of Wild-cherry Bark. “ Take of Wild-cherry Bark, in moderately coarse powder, half a troy ounce; Water [cold] a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with six fluidrachms of Water, let it stand for an hour, pack it gently in a conical glass percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint.” U. 8. This is a peculiarly suitable object for officinal direction, as, in consequence of the volatile nature of one of its active ingredients, and for another reason be- fore stated (see page 690), it is better prepared with cold water than in the ordi- nary mode. The infusion of wild-cherry bark is one of the preparations to which the process of percolation or displacement is well adapted. In this way the vir- tues of the bark can be more rapidly and thoroughly exhausted than by mace- ration alone. In order to allow time for the reaction necessary to the produc- tion of the hydrocyanic acid, an hour’s preliminary maceration is directed, which might perhaps be advantageously somewhat lengthened. When properly made, the infusion is beautifully transparent, has the colour of Madeira wine, and the agreeable bitterness and peculiar flavour of the bark. The dose is two or three fluidounces three or four times a day, or more frequently when a strong impres- sion is required. W. INFUSUM QUASSIiE.'U. S., Br. Infusion of Quassia. “ Take of Quassia, rasped, one hundred and twenty grains; Water [cold] a pint. Macerate for twelve hours, in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “Take of Quassia, in chips, sixty grains; Cold Distilled Water ten fluid- ounces. Infuse, in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. The proportion of Quassia directed in the former London and Edinburgh Pharmacopoeias was much too small. The London infusion contained the strength of only two grains of quassia in a fluidounee, and the Edinburgh three grains; while the dose of quassia in substance is from twenty grains to a drachm, and of the extract not less than five grains. This error has been corrected in the British Pharmacopoeia. Boiling water may be employed when it is desirable to obtain the preparation quickly; but cold water affords a clearer infusion. The dose is two fluidounces three or four times a day. W. INFUSUM RHEI. U.S.,Br. Infusion of Rhubarb. “ Take of Rhubarb, bruised, one hundred and twenty grains; Boiling Water half a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” JJ. S. “ Take of Rhubarb, in thin slices, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boil- ing Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. In order that the rhubarb may be exhausted, it should be digested with the water near the fire, at a temperature somewhat less than that of boiling water. It is customary to add some aromatic, such as cardamom, fennel-seed, or nut- meg, which improves the taste of the infusion, and renders it more acceptable to the stomach. One drachm of either of these spices may be digested in con- nection with the rhubarb. This infusion may be given as a gentle laxative, in the dose of one or two fluidounces, every three or four hours, till it operates. It is occasionally used as a vehicle of tonic, antacid, or more active cathartic medicines. The stronger acids and most metallic solutions are incompatible with it. W. 1184 Infusa. PART IL INFUSUM ROSiE COMPOSITUM. U. S. Infusum Rosje Acidum. Br. Compound Infusion of Rose. Acid Infusion of Roses. “ Take of Red Rose [dried petals] half a troyounce ; Diluted Sulphuric Acid three fluidrachms; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, a troyounce and a half; Boiling Water two pints and a half. Pour the Water upon the Rose in a cov- ered glass or porcelain vessel; then add the Acid, and macerate for half an hour. Lastly, strain the liquid, and in it dissolve the Sugar.” U. S. “ Take of Red-rose Petals a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Dilute Sul- phuric Acid one fluidrachm; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Add the Acid to the Water, infuse the Petals in the mixture in a covered vessel, for half an hour, and strain.” Br. The red roses serve little other purpose than to impart a fine red colour and a slight astringent flavour to the preparation, which owes its medicinal virtues almost exclusively to the sulphuric acid. It is refrigerant and astringent, and affords a useful and not unpleasant drink in hemorrhages and colliquative sweats. It is much used by British practitioners as a vehicle for saline medicines, par- ticularly sulphate of magnesia, the taste of which it serves to cover. It is also employed as a gargle, usually in connection with acids, nitre, alum, or tincture of Cayenne pepper. The dose is from two to four fluidounces. W. INFUSUM SALVLE. U.S. Infusion of Sage. “ Take of Sage half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for half an hour in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. This preparation is less used internally than as a gargle, or as a vehicle for other substances, such as alum, employed in this way. W. INFUSUM SENEGiE. Br. Infusion of Seneka. “ Take of Senega, bruised, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel for one hour, and strain.” Br. The efficacy of the officinal decoction of seneka has been proved by so long an experience, that we should be cautious in allowing it to be superseded by the infusion on hypothetical grounds. The dose of the preparation is from one to three fluidounces. W. INFUSUM TJ. S., Br. Infusion of Senna. “Take of Senna a troyounce; Coriander, bruised, sixty grains; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for an hour in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Senna half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Ginger, sliced, thirty grains; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for one hour, and strain.” Br. We prefer the coriander of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia to the ginger of the Bri- tish, though the reduction of the proportion of this ingredient formerly directed by the British Colleges is an improvement. This infusion deposits, on exposure to the air, a yellowish precipitate, which is said to aggravate its griping tend- ency; it should, therefore, not be made in large quantities. It is customary to connect with it manna and some one of the saline cathartics, which increase its efficacy, and render it less painful in its operation. The following is a good for- mula for the preparation of senna tea. Take of senna half an ounce; sulphate of magnesia, manna, each, an ounce; fennel-seed a drachm; boiling water half a pint. Macerate in a covered vessel till the liquid cools. One-third may be given for a dose, and repeated every four or five hours till it operates. Such a combination as this is called the black draught by English writers. The dose of the infusion of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is about four fluidounces. The coldt infusion, especially if made by percolation from the coarsely pow- dered leaves, while probably not inferior in strength to that prepared with boil- ing water, is said to be less unpleasant to the taste. W. PART 1£. Infusa. 1185 INFUSUM SERPENTARIiE. U. S., Br. Infusion of Serpentarici. “Take of Serpentaria, in moderately coarse powder, half a troyounce; War ter a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with two fluidrachtns of Water pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint. “This Infusion may also be prepared by macerating the Serpentaria with a pint of boiling water, for two hours, in a covered vessel, and straining.” U. S. “Take of Serpentary a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Dis- tilled Water ten Jiuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel for two hours, and strain.” Br. This is the ordinary form in which serpentaria is employed. The dose is on© or two fluidouuces, repeated every two hours in low forms of fever, but less fre- quently iu chronic affections. W. INFUSUM SPIGELI/R. U. S. Infusion of Spigelia. “ Take of Spigelia half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. The dose of this infusion, for a child two or three years old, is from four flui- drachms to a fluidounce; for an adult, from four to eight fluidounces, repeated morning and evening. A quantity of senna equal to that of the spigelia is usu- ally added, in order to ensure a cathartic effect. W. INFUSUM TABACI. U.S. Enema Tabaci. Br. Infusion of To- bacco. “Take of Tobacco sixty grains; Boiling Water a pint. Macerate for an hour in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. For the mode of preparing the British Enema Tabaci, see page 1077. This is used only in the form of enema in strangulated hernia, obstinate colic, and retention of urine from spasm of the urethra. Only half of the pint of the U. S. infusion should be employed at once; and, if this should not produce re- laxation in half an hour, the remainder may be injected. Fatal consequences have resulted from too free a use of tobacco in this way. W. INFUSUM TARAXACI. U.S. Infusion of Dandelion. “ Take of Dandelion, bruised, two troyounces; Boiling Water a pint. Mace- rate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. This has been substituted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia for the decoction. The dose is a wineglassful two or three times a day, or oftener. W. INFUSUM UVAE URSI. Br. Infusion of Bearberry. “ Take of Bearberry Leaves half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel, for two hours, and strain through calico.” Br. The dose is one or two fluidounces three or four times a day. W. INFUSUM VALERIANAE. U.S., Br. Infusion of Valerian. “ Take of Valerian, in moderately coarse powder, half a troyounce; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with two fluidrachms of Water, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until the filtered liquid measures a pint. “ This Infusion may also be prepared by macerating the Valerian with a pint of boiling Water, for two hours, in a covered vessel, and straining.” TJ. S. “ Take of Valerian, bruised, one hundred and twenty grains; Boiling Dis- tilled Water ten Jiuidounces. Infuse in a covered vessel for one hour, and strain.” Br. The dose of this infusion is two fluidounces, repeated three or four times a day, or more frequently. W. 1186 Linimenta. PART II. INFUSUM ZINGIBERIS. U. S. Infusion of Ginger. “Take of Ginger, bruised, half a troyounce; Boiling Water a pint. Mace- rate for two hours in a covered vessel, and strain.” U. S. The dose of this infusion is two fluidounces. W LINIMENTA. Liniments. These are preparations intended for external use, of such a consistence as to render them conveniently applicable to the skin by gentle friction with the hand. They are usually thicker than water, but thinner than the ointments, and are al- ways liquid at the temperature of the body. The former officinal preparations, belonging to this class, which have been omitted in the present editions of the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are the Liniments of Verdigris, Lond , and of Sesquicarbonate of Ammonia, Lond.; the Compound Liniment of Ammonia, Ed.; the Camphorated Soap Liniment, or Opodeldoc, U. S.; and the Simple Liniment, Ed. LINIMENTTJM ACONITI. Br. Liniment of Aconite. “Take of Aconite Root, in powder, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Camphor one ounce [avoird.]; Rectified Spirit thirty fluidounces,or a sufficiency. Moisten the Aconite Root with a portion of the Spirit, and macerate for seven days; then percolate into a receiver containing the Camphor, until the product amounts to one pint [Imperial measure].” Br. This is a very strong tincture of aconite root, intended only for external use.* (See Aconiti Radicis.) It may be applied alone by means of a camel’s hair pen- cil, or in connection with two parts or more of soap liniment or chloroform lini- ment, by rubbing it on the part affected. W. LINIMENTUM AMMONITE. U. tS., Br. Liniment of Ammonia. Vol- atile Liniment. “Take of Water of Ammonia a fuidounce; Olive Oil two troyounces. Mix them.” U. S. ’ “ Take of Solution of Ammonia one fuidounce; Olive Oil three fuidounces. Mix together with agitation.” Br. The IT. S. and British Pharmacopoeias agree at present very nearly in the strength of this liniment; the U. S. preparation being somewhat the stronger. In the process, the ammonia reacts with the oil to form a soap, which is partly dissolved, partly suspended in the water, producing a white, opaque emulsion. The liniment is an excellent rubefacient, frequently employed in inflammatory affections of the throat, catarrhal and other pectoral complaints of children, and in rheumatic pains. It is applied by rubbing it gently upon the skin, or placing a piece of flannel saturated with it over the affected part. Should it occasion too much inflammation, it must be diluted with oil. W. * A liniment of aconite has for some years been considerably employed in Philadelphia, prepared according to the following formula of Prof. Procter. Take of Aconite Root, in powder, four troyounces, Glycerin two fluidrachms, Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Macerate the Aconite with half a pint of Alcohol for twenty-four hours; then pack it in a small percolator, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until a pint of tincture has passed. Distil off twelve liuiduunces, and evaporate the residue until it measures twelve fluidrachms, to which the glycerin and two fluidrachms of alcohol are to be added, making the resulting fluid extract measure two fluidounces. Each minim of this represents two grains of the root, and, if the aconite is exhausted in the process, and nothing lost during the evaporation, both of which conditions we understand to be fulfilled in the process, the preparation is twice as strong as the British liniment. It is intended, as its name implies, only for external use. It may be used in the same manner as the liniment described in the text. (Am. Joun. of Fharm., xxv. 293.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Linimenta. 1187 LINIMENTUM BELLADONNA. Br. Liniment of Belladonna. This is prepared from Belladonna Root precisely as the Liniment of Aconite is prepared from Aconite Root; and the same remarks are applicable as to its strength and use. (See Linimentum Aconiti.) LINIMENTUM CALCIS. TJ. S., Br. Lime Liniment. “Take of Solution of Lime eight fluidounces; Flaxseed Oil seven troy- ounces. Mix them.” U. S. “Take of Solution of Lime two fluidounces; Olive Oil tiuo fluidounces. Mix together with agitation.” Br. The lime forms a soap with the oil, of which there is a great excess, that sepa- rates upon standing. Olive oil, as directed by the British Pharmacopoeia, is often substituted for that of flaxseed, but possesses no other advantage than that of having a less unpleasant odour. This is a very useful liniment in recent burns and scalds. It is sometimes called Garron oil, from having been much employed at the Carron iron works in Scotland. It is recommended to be ap- plied upon some carded cotton. W. LINIMENTUM CAMPIIORA. U.S.,Br. Liniment of Camphor. “ Take of Camphor three troyounces; Olive Oil twelve troyounces. Dissolve the Camphor in the Oil.” U. S. “Take of Camphor one ounce [avoirdupois]; Olive Oil four fluidounces. Dissolve the Camphor in the Oil.”Rr. This is employed as an anodyne embrocation in sprains, bruises, rheumatic or gouty affections of the joints, and other local pains. It is also supposed to have a discutient effect when rubbed upon glandular swellings. Mr. Wm. B. Price, of Burlington, N. J., proposes a modification of this lini- ment, founded on the solvent power of chloroform over camphor, whereby the preparation is made stronger with camphor, and acquires also additional ano- dyne influence from the chloroform. The proposed liniment consists of an ounce and a half of camphor, two fluidrachms of chloroform, and two fluidounces of olive oil. It is useful in rheumatic and neuralgic pains. (N. J. Med. Reporter, ii. 217.) Off. Prep. Linimentum Chloroformi, Br.; Linimentum Ilydrargyri, Br.; Lini- mentura Terebinthinse Aceticum, Br. W. LINIMENTUM CAMPIIORA COMPOSITUM. Br. Compound Liniment of Camphor. “Take of Camphor two ounces and a half [avoirdupois]; English Oil of Lavender one fluidrachm; Strong Solution of Ammonia five fluidounces; Rectified Spirit fifteen fluidounces. Dissolve the Camphor and Oil of Lavender in the Spirit; then add the Solution of Ammonia gradually, with agitation, until the whole is dissolved.” Br. This is used as a rubefacient and at the same time anodyne embrocation in local pains, particularly of a rheumatic character. W. LINIMENTUM CANTHARIDIS. U.S., Br. Liniment of Cantha- rides. “Take of Cantharides, in fine powder, atroyounce; Oil of Turpentine half a pint. Digest the Cantharides with the Oil for three hours in a close vessel, by means of a water-bath, aud strain.” U. S. “ Take of Cantharides, in powder, eight ounces [avoirdupois] ; Acetic Acid four fluidounces; Ether one pint [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Cantha- rides m the Acetic Acid for twenty-four hours; then place in a percolator, and allow the Ether to pass slowly through till twenty fluidounces are obtained. Keep it in a stoppered bottle.” Br. Oil of turpentine dissolves, especially with the aid of heat, the active principle 1188 Linimenta. PART II. of cantharides, and, when impregnated with it, acquires in addition to its own rubefacient properties those of a powerful epispastic. The U. S. liniment was introduced into notice by the late Dr. Joseph Hartshorne, of Philadelphia, who employed it with advantage as an external stimulant in the prostrate states of typhus fever. Caution, however, is necessary in its use, both to graduate its strength to the circumstances of the case, and not to apply it very extensively, lest it may produce troublesome, if not dangerous vesication. If too powerful, it may be diluted with olive or linseed oil. The British preparation is a solution of the active matter of the flies in acetic acid and ether, and, as the ether must quickly evaporate, conjoins the influence of the cantharides and the acid. W. LINIMENTUM CHLOROFORMI. U.S., Br. Liniment of Chloroform. “ Take of Purified Chloroform three troyounces; Olive Oil four troy ounces. Mix them.” U. S. “Take of Chloroform tivo fluidounces; Liniment of Camphor two fluid- ounces. Mix.” Br. This is an excellent local application in painful affections, though the common commercial chloroform would have answered quite as well as the purified, di- rected in the U. S. formula. As the chloroform rapidly evaporates, it is desira- ble, in order to obtain its full anodyne effect, to guard against this by oiled silk or some other impermeable covering. As some object to the greasy residue left on the skin by the evaporation of the chloroform, the soap liniment, which can readily be removed with a little warm water, may be substituted for the olive oil of the U. S., or the camphor liniment of the British preparation. W. LINIMENTUM CROTONIS. Br. Liniment of Croton Oil. “ Take of Croton Oil half a fluidounce ; Olive Oil three fluidounces and a half. Mix.” Br. This is a pustulating preparation, operating somewhat slowly. From ten to thirty minims or more may be rubbed upon a limited surface, and repeated twice a day or oftener till an eruption is produced. W. LINIMENTUM HYDRARGYRI. Br. Liniment of Mercury. “Take of Ointment of Mercury one ounce [avoirdupois]; Solution of Am- monia, Liniment of Camphor, each, one fluidounce. Liquefy the Ointment of Mercury in the Liniment of Camphor, with a gentle heat, then add the Solution of Ammonia, and mix with agitation.” Br. This is a stimulating liniment, employed for the discussion of chronic gland- ular enlargements, swellings of the joints, and venereal tumours, and to promote the absorption of collections of fluid. It is said to be more apt to salivate than mercurial ointment. One drachm of it may be rubbed upon the affected part night and morning. W. LINIMENTUM IODI. Br. Liniment of Iodine. “ Take of Iodine one ounce and a quarter [avoirdupois]; Iodide of Potas- sium half an ounce [avoird.]; Rectified Spirit five fluidounces. Dissolve the Iodine and Iodide of Potassium in the Spirit.” Br. This is a very strong alcoholic solution of iodine, in which the iodide of po- tassium acts by increasing the solubility of the active ingredient. See for its effects the article on Iodine in the first part of this work. W. LINIMENTUM OPII. Br. Liniment of Opium. Anodyne Liniment. “ Take of Tincture of Opium, Liniment of Soap, each, two fluidounces. Mix.” Br. This is commonly called anodyne liniment, and is employed as an anodyne and gently rubefacient embrocation in sprains, bruises, and rheumatic and gouty pains. We are info-rmed that the preparation which has commonly been used, under the name of anodyne liniment, in this city, is that of the late London PART II. Linimenta. 1189 Pharmacopoeia, as given in former editions of the IJ. S. Dispensatory, consist ing of one part by measure of tincture of opium and three of soap liniment, and consequently having only half the opiate strength of the present British lin„ ment. W. LINIMENTUM SAPONIS. U. Br. Soap Liniment. Tincture Saponis Camphorata. U. S. 1850. Camphorated Tincture of Soap. “Take of Soap, in shavings, four tr oy ounce s; Camphor two troyounces; Oil of Rosemary half a fluidounce; Water four fluidounces; Alcohol two pints. Mix the Alcohol and Water, digest the Soap with the mixture, by means of a water-bath, until it is dissolved; then filter, and, having added the Camphor and Oil, mix the whole thoroughly together.” U. S. “Take of Hard Soap two ounces and a /la//[avoirdupois]; Camphor one ounce and a quarter [avoird.]; English Oil of Rosemary three fluidrachms; Rectified Spirit eighteen fluidounces; Distilled Water two fluidounces. Mix the Water with the Spirit, and add the Oil of Rosemary, the Soap, and the Camphor. Digest at a temperature not exceeding 70°, with occasional agita- tion, uutil all are dissolved.” Br. It is necessary, in preparing this liniment, that the soap employed should not have been made with animal oil, as otherwise the preparation will not be fluid at ordinary temperatures. The soap indicated by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is that “prepared from soda and olive oil,”commonly called Castile soap. Made ac- cording to the directions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1840, the tincture was unable to retain the soap in solution, and therefore coagulated more or less on cooling. This defect was corrected in the edition of 1850, by the addition of water; and a similar reformation has been made in the British process. In former editions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, this preparation, though com- monly called Soap liniment, received the name of Tinctura Saponis Campho- rata, to distinguish it from a similar preparation called Opodeldoc, which, hav- ing a soft semi-solid consistence, was introduced with the title of Linimentum Saponis Camphoratum. This, having been discarded at the late revision, the Tincture reverted to its place among the liniments, and is now called simply Linimentum Saponis. But, as the old Camphorated Soap Liniment or Opodeldoc is an excellent preparation, and still somewhat in use, we give here the process of the Pharmacopoeia of 1850 for its preparation, with some remarks on the subject. “Take of Common Soap, sliced, three ounces; Camphor an ounce; Oil of Rosemary, Oil of Origanum, each, a fluidrachm; Alcohol a pint. Digeskihe Soap with the Alcohol, by means of a sand-bath, till dissolved; then add the Cam- phor and Oils, and when they are dissolved, pour the liquor into broad-mouthed bottles. This liniment has, when cold, the consistence of a soft ointment.” This preparation differs from the officinal Linimentum Saponis chiefly in being prepared with-common white soap, made with animal fat, instead of Castile soap, which is made of olive oil. The former is peculiarly adapted to the purposes of this formula, in consequence of Assuming, when its alcoholic solution cools, the consistence characteristic of the liniment. It is customary, after the solution oi the soap has been effected, to pour the liquor into small wide-mouthed glass bottles, containing about four fluidounces, in which it concretes into a soft, trans- lucent, uniform, yellowish-white mass. This liniment melts with the heat of the body, and therefore becomes liquid when rubbed on the skin. The Soap liniment is much used, as an anodyne and gently rubefacient embro- cation, in sprains, bruises, and rheumatic or gouty pains. Off. Prep. Linimeutum Opii, Br. W. LINIMENTUM TEREBINTHINiE. U.S.,Br. Liniment of Turpen- tine. “Take of Resin Cerate twelve troyounces; Oil of Turpentine half a pint. Add the Oil to the Cerate previously melted, and mix them.” U. S 1190 Linimenta.—Liquor es. PART II. “Take of Oil of Turpentine five fluidounces; Ointment of Resin right ounces [avoirdupois]. Melt the Ointment of Resin, then add the Oil of Turpen- tine gradually, and stir until a uniform liniment is obtained.” Br. This preparation is the liniment originally proposed by Dr. Kentish, and sub- seqv ently so highly lauded as a remedy in burns and scalds. It should be applied as soon after the occurrence of the accident as possible, and should be discon- tinued when the peculiar inflammation excited by the fire is removed. The best mode of application is to cover the burnt or scalded surface with pledgets of patent lint saturated with the liniment. It should not be allowed to come in contact with the sound parts. This liniment may also be successfully applied in other cases of cutaneous inflammation requiring stimulation, as in certain condi- tions of erysipelas. W. LINIMENTUM TEREBINTIIINiE ACETICUM. Br. Liniment of Turpentine and Acetic Acid. “Take of Oil of Turpentine one Jluidounce; Acetic Acid one jiuidounce ; Liniment of Camphor one Jluidounce. Mix.” Br. This is a powerful rubefacient liniment, combining the irritant properties of the oil of turpentine and acetic acid, though somewhat diluted by the camphor liniment. W. LIQUORES. Solutions. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia includes, in this class of preparations, all aqueous solutions in which the substance acted on is wholly soluble in water, excluding those in which the dissolved matter is gaseous or very volatile, as in the Aquas or Waters. The Solution of Gutta-percha is the only one in which water is not used as the menstruum; and that seems to have been placed in the present cate- gory, because no better position could be found for it. In the British Pharmacopoeia it has been deemed expedient, in almost all in- stances in which the substance to be dissolved is an isolated solid body, to make the solutions of uniform strength, without regard to the physiological powers of the medicine, or its ordinary dose. The solutions of this kind contain four grains of the medicine to an Imperial fluidounce of the menstruum, or half a grain in a fluidrachm. There is a convenience in this plan to the prescriber, in relation to all medicines which habitually present themselves to his mind in the solid state; but to alter the strength of a solution which has been long known, and the dose of which is familiar, in order to make it conform with others, is to endanger fre- quent serious errors for the sake of an idea. In such medicines, for example, as Fowler’s solution, the dose is fixed in the mind of the practitioner in reference to the solution, and not to the solid medicinal substance it may contain. On the whole, therefore, we prefer the method of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, which regu- lates the strength of its solutions in regard to the properties of the medicine, and not in accordance with an ideal standard. Though several of the solutions have long been officinal, it is now for the first time that, in both Pharmacopoeias, they have been dislocated from their old at- tachments, and arranged together as a distinct class of preparations. W. LIQUOR AMMONEE ACETATIS. U.S.,Br. Spiritus Mindereri Solution of Acetate of Ammonia. Spirit of Mindererus. “Take of Diluted Acetic Acid two pints; Carbonate of Ammonia a suffi- cient quantity. Add the Carbonate gradually to the Acid until this is saturated, and filter. This preparation, when dispensed, should be freshly made.” 11. S. “Take of Strong Solution of Ammonia three fluidounces and a half, or a sufficiency; Acetic Acid ten fluidounces, or a sufficiency. M ix gradually, at l, Liquores. 1191 PART II. if the product is not neutral to test paper, make it so by the addition of the pro- per quantity of either liquid.” Br. This preparation is an aqueous solution of acetate of ammonia. The U. S. process by which it is formed constitutes a case of single elective affinity. The acetic acid combines with the ammonia of the carbonate, forming the acetate of ammonia, and disengages the carbonic acid with effervescence. Distilled vinegar was formerly used, but has been abandoned for diluted acetic acid, which is much to be preferred; because, besides furnishing a solution of the acetate of uniform strength, a result which cannot be attained by the employment of distilled vine- gar, it avoids the production of a brownish solution, which uniformly follows the use of the latter, especially when it has been condensed in a metallic worm. The quantity of carbonate of ammonia, necessary to saturate a given weight of the acid of average strength, cannot be laid down with precision, on account of the variable quality of the salt. The preparation, when made with the diluted acetic acid of the XL S. Pharmacopoeia, contains about 6 per cent, of acetate of ammonia. It is more convenient to add the salt to the acid than the acid to the salt; as the point of saturation is thus more easily attained. In ascertaining this point by test-paper, the alkaline reaction will begin, though a portion of free acetic acid may still remain; a little of it being insufficient to overcome the natural alkaline reaction of the salt. (See page 21.) A complication is caused by the presence of free carbonic acid, which may be expelled from the liquid towards the end of the saturation by warming it. Supposing the carbonic acid got rid of, the best rule, perhaps, is to cease adding the carbonate of ammonia, upon the occurrence of the least sign of alkalinity. In the British process the ammonia combines directly with the acetic acid, without other reaction. The solution is much stronger than that of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, or of the former Pharmacopoeias of Great Britain, being made with stronger solution of ammonia and undiluted acetic acid, probably because it keeps better when thus made. To reduce it to the strength of the XJ. S. pre- paration, it would require to be diluted with about four measures of distilled water. There is an advantage in the British process in the use of ammonia in- stead of its carbonate; as the difficulty of ascertaining the precise point of satu- ration arising from carbonic acid is avoided; but in this solution, as in the neu- tral mixture, a great benefit remedially is gained by the presence of that acid, which reconciles the stomach to the medicine, and sometimes even allays vomit- ing in febrile diseases. With this view of the subject, it is better to use the car- bonate of ammonia, and to prepare the solution without heating it in order to drive off the acid, even though thereby there might be some risk of a slight ex- cess of one of the constituents. Properties. Solution of acetate of ammonia, when made of pure materials, is a limpid and.colourless liquid without smell. Its taste is saline, and resembles that of a mixture of nitre and sugar. When it contains an excess of alkali, its taste is bitterish. It should be freshly prepared at short intervals; as its acid becomes decomposed, and a portion of carbonate of ammonia is generated. As formerly prepared, under the name of spiritus Mindereri, it was made from the impure carbonate of ammonia containing animal oil, which modified the prepa- ration by giving rise to a portion of ammoniacal soap. When pure it is not coloured by hydrosulphuric acid, nor precipitated by chloride of barium. Nitrate of silver precipitates crystals of acetate of silver, soluble in water, and especially in nitric acid. An insoluble precipitate with this test is chloride of silver, and snows the presence of muriatic acid. Potassa disengages ammonia; sulphuric acid, acetous vapours. When evaporated to dryness, the residue is wholly dis- sipated hv heat with the smell of ammonia. It is incompatible with acids, the fixed alkalies and their carbonates, lime-water, magnesia, sulphate of magnesia, corrosive sublimate, the sulphates of iron, copper, and zinc, and nitrate of silver. 1192 Liquores. PART II. When it contains free carbonic acid, it produces with the acetate or subacetate of lead a precipitate of carbonate of lead, which, being mistaken for the sulphate, has sometimes led to the erroneous conclusion that sulphuric acid was present in the distilled vinegar, when this has been employed. Acetate of ammonia is a salt of difficult crystallization, and very deliquescent. When perfect it probably has an alkaline reaction, like the acetates of potassa and soda. It may be obtained by sublimation from a mixture of equal parts of dry acetate of potassa or of lime, and muriate of ammonia. It consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, and one of am- monia 17 = 68, with seven eqs. of water 63, when crystallized. It may be viewed as acetate of oxide of ammonium, containing six eqs. of water. Medical Properties and Uses. Solution of acetate of ammonia is a valuable diaphoretic, much employed in febrile and inflammatory diseases. According to the indications to be answered by its use, it is variously combined with nitre and antimonials, camphor and laudanum. If, instead of promoting its determination to the skin by external warmth, the patient walk about in a cool air, its action will be directed to the kidneys. In large doses, it is said to relieve painful men- struation. It is sometimes used externally as a discutient. Mr. Brande speaks of it as very useful in mumps, applied hot upon a piece of flannel. In the hydro- cele of children, it is strongly recommended by Dr. Maushner, applied by means of compresses kept constantly moist. Mixed in the quantity of a fluidounce with seven fluidounces of rose-water, and two fluidrachms of laudanum, it forms a use- ful collyrium in chronic ophthalmia. The late Dr. A. T. Thomson used it as a lotion with good effect in porrigo affecting the scalp. The dose of the U. S. pre- paration is from half a fluidounce to a fluidounce and a half, every three or four hours, mixed with water and sweetened with sugar. It proves sometimes very grateful to febrile patients, when prescribed with an equal measure of carbonic acid water. Of the Br. solution the sp. gr. is 1*06; and one fluidounce treated with excess of muriatic acid, and evaporated to dryness by a water-bath, leaves a residue of muriate of ammonia weighing 100 grains. It is directed in the Pharmacopoeia to have no action on litmus, and not to be rendered turbid by lime-water; the former test indicating its neutrality, the latter the absence of free carbonic acid or a carbonate. It is very important not to confound the British solution with our own, as the dose is much smaller, being only, for ordinary purposes, from thirty minims to a fluidrachm, which should be largely diluted with water. B. LIQUOR ANTIMONII TERCHLORIDI. Br. Solution of Terchloride of Antimony. “Take of Prepared Sulphuret of Antimony one pound [avoirdupois]; Com- mercial Hydrochloric Acid four pints [Imperial measure]. Place the Sulphuret of Antimony in a porcelain vessel, pour upon it the Hydrochloric Acid, and, constantly stirring, apply to the mixture, beneath a flue with a good draught, a gentle heat, which must be gradually augmented as the evolution of gas begins to slacken, until the liquid boils. Maintain it at this temperature for fifteen minutes; then remove the vessel from the fire, and filter the liquid through calico into another vessel, returning what passes through first, that a perfectly clear so- lution may be obtained. Boil this down to the bulk of two pints [Imp. meas.J, and preserve it in a stoppered bottle.” Br. When tersulphuret of antimony is dissolved with the aid of heat in muriatic acid, a double decomposition takes place, resulting in the formation of terchloride of antimony and hydrosulphuric acid (sulphuretted hydrogen), which gives rise to effervescence. As this gas is exceedingly offensive and deleterious, the ma- terials, during the reaction, are directed to be placed under a flue with a good draught. When the reaction is over, the resulting aqueous solution of terchlo- ride, after having been strained, is boiled down to a determinate volume. Properties. Solution of terchloride of antimony is a transparent, pale-yellow, PART II. Liquores. 1193 dense liquid, possessing caustic properties. When of a deep-red colour, it iif impure from the presence of iron. Its sp. gr., concentrated to the extent directed in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, is 1-470. “A little of it dropped into water gives a white precipitate, and the filtered solution lets fall a copious deposit on the ad- dition of nitrate of silver. If the white precipitate formed by water be treated with sulphuretted hydrogen it becomes orange.” (Br.) These reactions show that it contains antimony and chlorine. A fluidrachm of it, mixed with four fluid- ounces of water in which are dissolved 110 grains of tartaric acid, forms a clear solution, from which sulphuretted hydrogen throws down an orange precipitate (tersulphuret of antimony), weighing, when washed and dried at 212°, at least 22 grains. (Br.) When it is distilled, water, the excess of muriatic acid, and any tersulphuret of arsenic that may happen to be present, are first expelled, and afterwards the terchloride volatilizes. The pure terchloride may be obtained by changing the receiver, as soon as the distilled product concretes on cooling Pure terchloride of antimony, called by the earlier chemists butter of antimony, is a white, readily fusible solid, of the consistence of butter, deliquescent and powerfully caustic, and volatilizable under an obscure red heat. It was formerly used in medicine as a caustic. It usually acts without causing much pain or in- flammation ; and, after the separation of the eschar, a clean, healthy ulcer is left. Solution of terchloride of antimony was a new officinal of the Dublin Pharma- copoeia of 1850, and is probably retained in the British not as a therapeutic agent, but simply as a source of the officinal oxide of antimony. Off. Prep. Antimonii Oxidum, Br. B. LIQUOR ARSENICI ET HYDRARGYRIIODIDI. U.S. Solution of Iodide of Arsenic and Mercury. Solution of Hydriodate of Arsenic and Mercury. Donovan’s Solution. “ Take of Iodide of Arsenic, Red Iodide of Mercury, each, thirty-five grains; Distilled Water half a pint. Rub the Iodides with half a fluidounce of the Water, and, when they have dissolved, add the remainder of the Water, and filter through paper.” U. S. This solution was introduced to the notice of the medical profession in 1839, by Mr. Donovan, of Dublin, as a therapeutic agent combining the medical virtues of its three ingredients, and was adopted as an officinal preparation in the U. S. and Dublin Pharmacopoeias of 1850. The former has retained it in the present edition ; but, on the absorption of the latter in the British Pharmacopoeia, it was discarded. The formula of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is the simplified one of Prof. Procter, which consists essentially in dissolving equal weights of the terio- dide of arsenic and biniodide (red iodide) of mercury in a measured quantity of distilled water. The proportion of equal weights corresponds nearly to single equivalents of the component iodides. The Dublin formula was more compli- cated. In it the proper quantities of arsenic, mercury, and iodine were caused to unite by first rubbing them together with alcohol, and then boiling the pro- duct with distilled water, which was afterwards added, so as to give the whole a determinate bulk. The iodides of arsenic and mercury, formed by the tritura- tion, were assumed by Mr. Donovan to become, by solution, hydriodates seve- rally of arsenious acid (white oxide of arsenic), and of deutoxide of mercury (red precipitate). Properties. This solution has a pale-yellow colour, and a slightly styptic taste. Sometimes, however, the colour is orange-yellow, owing to the presence of free iodine. This may be neutralized by rubbing the solution with a little metallic mercury or arsenic, in fine powder, and the proper hue thus restored. The solu- tion is incompatible with laudanum, and the soluble salts of morphia. On the supposition that it is an aqueous solution of iodides, it will contain them in the proportion of one eq. of teriodide of arsenic 453-9 to one of biniodide of mer- 1194 Liquores. PART II. cury 452 6, which are nearly equal weights. On the theory of their conversion into hydriodates by solution, five eqs. of water 45 would be required, three for the arsenical teriodide, and two for the mercurial biniodide; and the result would be one eq. of arsenious acid 99, one of deutoxide of mercury 216, and five of hydriodic acid 636'5, the latter containing five eqs. of iodine 631 5. The solution here supposed would contain about two and one-sixth times as much deutoxide of mercury as of arsenious acid. Medical Properties. This preparation has been found decidedly useful as an alterative in various diseases of the skin, such as the different forms of psoriasis, impetigo, porrigo, lepra, pityriasis, lupus, and venereal eruptions, both papular and scaly. In support of its efficacy in these affections, Mr. Donovan has ad- duced the testimony of a number of respectable practitioners, who have com- municated to him the results of their experience. The disease in some of the cases cured had existed for several years. Many American physicians also have used it advantageously in cutaneous diseases, and found more marked and prompt effects from it than from the remedies usually resorted to. The dose is from five to twenty drops three times a day, given preferably in distilled water. The latter dose contains the twenty-fourth of a grain of arsenious acid, a little over the twelfth of a grain of deutoxide of mercury, and about a quarter of a grain of iodine. Dr. E. I. Taylor, of New York, who has employed it in many cases, never exceeded five drops, three times a day. Sometimes the medicine deranges the stomach, confines the bowels, and causes headache, giddiness, and confusion of mind. When these effects are produced, it must be laid aside, and a purgative administered. After an interval varying from ten days to three weeks, it may be resumed, but in a smaller dose. The treatment must often be persevered in for several months. Sometimes the medicine produces moderate salivation. The solution, diluted with an equal bulk of water, has occasionally been used with ad- vantage as an application to the ulcers or eruptions, at the same time that it was given internally. (See three papers by Mr. Donovan, contained in the Dublin Journal of Medical Science for Nov. 1839, Sept. 1840, and Nov. 1842.) B. LIQUOR ATROPLZE. Br. Solution of Atropia,. “ Take of Atropia, in crystals, four grains; Rectified Spirit one Jluidrachm ; Distilled Water seven fuidrachms. Mix the Spirit and the Water, and dis- solve the Atropia in the mixture.” Br. For the effects of this solution, see Atropia. If given internally the dose to begin with should not exceed four minims. But, as we have in the extract of belladonna a preparation which may generally be depended on for obtaining the effects of the medicine, it seems hardly advisable to make use internally of so powerful and dangerous a preparation. It may be applied to the eye for dilating the pupil, or injected into the subcutaneous tissue for obtaining the effects oi Belladonna on the system. W. LIQUOR BARII CIILORIDI. U.S. Solution of Chloride of Barium. Solution of Muriate of Baryta. “Take of Chloride of Barium a troyounce; Distilled Water three Jiuid- ounces. Dissolve the Chloride in the Distilled Water, and filter through paper.” U. S. This has been omitted from the list of preparations in the British Pharma- copoeia, but is contained in the Appendix as a test solution. Chloride of barium, not being used in the solid state, is here dissolved for con- venience in prescribing. The solution is nearly saturated, and is probably too strong for convenient use. It should be limpid and colourless; and, to make it so, the salt in crystals, and not in powder, should be employed. Medical Properties and Uses. This solution is deobstruent and anthelmintic, and in large doses poisonous; its action, according to some, being analogous to PART II. Liquores. 1195 that of arsenic. It was introduced into practice by Dr. Crawford as a remedy for cancer and scrofula. Its value in the latter disease has been insisted on by Hufeland. This physician considers it to act more particularly on the lympUatic system, in the irritated states of which he esteems it a valuable remedy. Hence he recommends it in the scrofulous affections of delicate and irritable organs, such as the eyes, lungs, &c. In the commencement of scrofulous phthisis, he views it as one of the best remedies to which we can have recourse. It is also employed in diseases of the skin, in ulcers, and ophthalmia. The dose for an adult of the U. S. solution is about five drops, given twice or thrice a day, and gradually but cautiously increased, until it produces nausea, or some other sen- sible impression. When taken in an overdose it causes violent vomiting and purging, vertigo, and other dangerous symptoms. To combat its poisonous effects, recourse must be had immediately to a weak solution of sulphate of mag- nesia, which acts by converting the poison into the insoluble sulphate of baryta. If vomiting does not come on, it should be induced by tickling the fauces, or by the administration of an emetic. A case of poisoning by three drachms of the solid salt, taken by mistake for sulphate of magnesia, was successfully treated with dilute sulphuric acid and castor oil, by Dr. C. Wolf, a German physician. The chief symptoms were tormina and vomiting, weak and irregular pulse, cold extremities, weak voice, want of muscular power in the hands and feet, and paralysis of the left eyelid. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Ferri et Quinise Citras, Br. B. LIQUOR CALCII CHLORIDI. U. S. Solution of Chloride of Cal- cium Solution of Muriate of Lime. “ Take of Marble, in small pieces, six troyounces; Muriatic Acid twelve troy- ounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acid with half a pint of Distilled Water, and gradually add the Marble. Towards the close of the effervescence apply a gentle heat, and, when the action has ceased, pour off the clear liquid and evaporate to dryness. Dissolve the residue in one and a half times its weight of Distilled Water, and filter through paper.” U. S. This is not included among the preparations of the British Pharmacopoeia, but is placed in the Appendix as a test solution. By the above process chloride of calcium is first formed, and then dissolved in a certain proportion of water. The solution contains 1 part of the chloride in about 2-5 parts. The solution of chloride of calcium has a disagreeable, bitter, acrid taste. It is decomposed by sulphuric acid and the soluble sulphates ; by potassa, soda, and their carbonates; by carbonate of ammonia, tartrate of potassa and soda, nitrate of silver, nitrate and acetate of mercury, and acetate of lead. The mode of pre- paring chloride of calcium, and its chemical properties, are detailed under the head of Calcii Chloridum in the first part of this work. Medical Properties and Uses. Chloride of calcium is considered tonic and deobstruent, and is said to promote the secretion of urine, perspiration, and mu- cus. It was first brought into notice as a remedy by Fourcroy, and was at one time much used in scrofulous diseases and goitre. It still continues in favour with some physicians, but is less employed than formerly. It has been especially recommended in tabes mesenterica. Cazenave has employed it advantageously in chronic eczema and impetigo, connected with a lymphatic temperament. When too largely taken it sometimes occasions nausea, vomiting, and purging, and in excessive doses may even produce fatal effects; but it is a much safer remedy than chloride oi barium, which has been recommended in the same complaints. The dose of the solution is from thirty minims or drops to a fiuidrachm, to be repeated twice or three times a day, and gradually increased to two, three, or even four fluidrachms. It may be given in milk or sweetened water. Off. Prep Calcis Carbonas Fraecipitata, U. S. W. Liquores. PART n. LIQUOR CALCIS. U. S., Br. Solution of Lime. Lime-water. “Take of Lime four troyounces; Distilled Water eight pints. Upon the Lime, first slaked with a little of the Distilled Water, pour the remainder, and stir them together. Then immediately cover the vessel, and set it aside for three hours. Keep the solution, together with the undissolved Lime, in a well- stopped bottle, and pour off the clear liquor when wanted for use. Water free from saline or other obvious impurity, though not distilled, may be employed in this process.” U. S. “ Take of Slaked Lime two ounces [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Water one gal- lon [Imperial measure]. Introduce the Lime into a stoppered bottle containing the Water; and shake well for two or three minutes. After twelve hours the excess of lime will have subsided, and the clear solution may be drawn olf with a syphon as it is required for use, or transferred to a green-glass bottle furnished with a well-ground stopper. When the whole of the solution has been with- drawn from the bottle in which it was made, a fresh solution may be obtained by shaking the sediment at the bottom of the bottle with another gallon of Dis- tilled Water; and, if the lime be pure, and the bottle accurately stopped, the process may be repeated four or five times.” Br. A solution of lime in water is the result of these processes. By the slaking of the lime it is reduced to powder, and rendered more easily diffusible through the water. According to both Pharmacopoeias, the solution is to be kept in bottles with a portion of undissolved lime, which causes it always to be satu- rated, whatever may be the temperature, and to whatever extent it may be ex- posed to the air. If care be taken to have a considerable quantity of the solution in the bottle, and to avoid unnecessary agitation, the upper portion will always remain sufficiently clear for use. The repetition of the process, suggested in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, cannot, of course, be carried into effect indefinitely. By the absorption of carbonic acid, the lime is gradually converted into the carbonate, and thus rendered insoluble. The employment of distilled water as the solvent may seem a useless refinement; and it certainly is unnecessary when pure spring or river water is attainable; but in many places the common water is very im- pure, and wholly unfit for a preparation, one of the most frequent uses of which is to allay irritation of stomach. Water dissolves but a minute proportion of lime, and, contrary to the general law, less when hot than cold. Hence the propriety of employing cold water in the process. According to Mr. Phillips, a pint of water (the wine pint of the U. S. Pharm.) at 212° dissolves 5-6 grains of lime, at 60°, 91 grains, and at 32°, IDO grains. When a cold saturated solution is heated, a deposition of lime takes place. Properties. Lime-water is colourless, inodorous, and of a disagreeable alka- line taste, changes vegetable blues to green, and forms an imperfect soap with oils. Exposed to the air it attracts carbonic acid, and becomes covered with a pellicle of insoluble carbonate of lime, which, subsiding after a time, is replaced by another, and so on successively till the whole of the lime is exhausted. Hence the necessity of keeping lime-water either in closely corked bottles which should be full, or, what is more convenient, in bottles with an excess of lime. “ Ten fluid- ounces of it require for neutralization at least twenty measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” Br. Medical Properties and Uses. Lime-water is antacid, tonic, and astringent, and is very usefully employed in dyspepsia with acidity of stomach, diarrhoea, diabetes, and gravel attended with superabundant secretion of uric acid. Mixed with an equal measure of milk, which completely covers its offensive taste, it is one of the best remedies in our possession for nausea and vomiting dependent on irritability of stomach. We have found a diet exclusively of lime-water and milk to be more effectual than almost any other plan of treatment in dyspepsia accompanied with vomiting of food. In this case, one part of the solution to PART II. Liquores. 1197 two or three parts of milk is usually sufficient. Lime-water is also thought to be useful by dissolving the intestinal mucus in cases of worms, and in other com- plaints connected with an excess of this secretion. Externally it is employed as a wash in tinea capitis and scabies, as an application to foul and gangrenous ulcers, as an injection in leucorrhoea and ulceration of the bladder or urethra, and, mixed with linseed or olive oil, as a liniment in burns and scalds. The dose is from two to four fluidounces several times a day. When employed to allay nausea, it is usually given in the dose of a tablespoonful mixed with the same quautity of new milk, and repeated at intervals of half an hour, an hour, or two hours. If too long continued it debilitates the stomach. Pit arm. Uses. In preparing Argenti Oxidum, Br. Off. Prep. Linimentum Calcis. W. LIQUOR CALCIS CIILORATiE. Br. Solution of Chlorinated Lime. “Take of Chlorinated Lime one pound [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Mix well the Water and the Chlorinated Lime by trituration in a large mortar, and, having transferred the mixtitre to a stoppered bottle, let it be well shaken several times for the space of three hours. Pour out now the contents of the bottle on a calico filter, and let the solution which passes through be preserved in a stoppered bottle. The sp. gr. of this liquid is 1-035P Br. For the properties and uses of this preparation, see Calx Chlorinata, page 185. The British Pharmacopoeia gives the following test of its strength. “ One fluidrachm mixed with twenty grains of iodide of potassium dissolved in four fluidounces of water, when acidulated with two fluidrachms of hydrochloric acid, gives a red solution, which requires for the discharge of its colour forty-six mea- sures of the volumetric solution of hyposulphite of soda.” This determines its strength in chlorine, by determining the quantity of iodine which the chlorine contained in it is capable of separating from iodide of potassium. Notwithstand- ing, however, that a test of its character is thus given by the Pharmacopoeia, its strength must vary according to the quality of the chlorinated lime employed. It is one of the best antidotes for hydrosulphuric acid, hydrosulphate of ammo-> uia, sulphuret of potassium, and hydrocyanic acid. The dose for internal use is from twenty minims to a fluidrachm. For external application the solution may be diluted with twice its bulk of water, or may be used of the full strength in some cutaneous affections. W. LIQUOR CALCIS SACCHARATUS. Br. Saceharated Solution of Lime. “ Take of Slaked Lime one ounce [avoirdupois]; Refined Sugar, in powder, two ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Mix the Lime and the Sugar by trituration in a mortar. Transfer the mixture to a bottle containing the Water, and, having closed this with a cork, shake it occasionally for a few hours. Finally separate the clear solution with a siphon, and keep it in a stoppered bottle. The sp. gr. is 1‘052. One fluidounce requires for neutralh zation 25 4 measures of the standard solution of oxalic acid, which corresponds to 7T1 grains of lime.” Br. Lime appears to form a combination with sugar which is much more soluble than the lime itself, so that in this way we can obtain a much stronger solution of lime than by the instrumentality of water alone. This preparation may be used in diarrhoea with acidity, in vomiting, in affections of the urinary organs requiring antacid treatment, and for all other therapeutical purposes to which lime is applied. The dose equivalent to a fluidounce of lime-water is about a fluidrachm.* W * Syrup of Lime. Saccharate of Lime. Under the latter name a preparation has been introduced into notice, made by saturating pure syrup with lime, and filtering. The sugar 1198 Liquores. PART IL LIQUOR FERRI CITRATIS. U.S. Solution of Citrate of Iron. “Take of Citric Acid, in coarse powder, five troyounces and three hundred and sixty grains; Solution of Tersulphate of Iron a pint; Water of Ammonia, Distilled Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Dilute the Solution of Tersulphate of Iron with two pints of Distilled Water, add a slight excess of Water of Am- monia, with constant stirring, transfer the precipitate formed to a muslin strainer, and wash it with water until the washings are nearly tasteless. When the preci- pitate is drained, put half of it in a porcelain capsule on a water-bath, heated to 150°, add the Citric Acid, and stir the mixture until the precipitate is nearly dissolved. Then add so much of the reserved precipitate as may be necessary fully to saturate the Acid. Lastly, filter the liquid, and evaporate it, at a tem- perature not exceeding 150°, until it is reduced to the measure of a pint.” U. S. In this process, the hydrated sesquioxide of iron is first obtained by treating solution of the tersulphate with ammonia, and is then combined, with the aid of heat, with the citric acid, thus forming a solution of the citrate of the sesqui- oxide of iron, consisting of one eq. of acid and one of sesquioxide. It might appear, from the phraseology of the process, that, in the direction to add the citric acid to the precipitated sesquioxide, the addition of water to hold the re- sulting citrate in solution had been omitted; but the fact is, that the precipitate, even after draining, retains mechanically quite sufficient water for the purpose, so much, indeed, that evaporation is necessary at the end of the process to re- duce the bulk to the required standard. The temperature is limited to 150°, be- cause, though a moderate heat promotes the solution, a high degree of it dimi- nishes the solubility of the oxide, and thus interferes with the process. The solution has a deep reddish-brown colour, and a slight not unpleasant chalybeate taste. It keeps for a long time without change, and answers admira- bly well for preparing solid citrate of iron, and the chalybeate salts containing it, and for introducing it into extemporaneous mixtures. Each fluidounce of it contains half a troyounce of citrate of iron. It may be given, for the general purposes of the ferruginous preparations, in the dose of ten minims, equivalent to five grains of the salt, several times a day. Off.'Prep. Ferri Citras, U. S.; Ferri et Ammoniae Citras, U. S.; Ferri et Quiniae Citras, U. S. W. LIQUOR FERRI NITRATIS. U.S. Liquor Ferri Pernitratis. Br. Solution of Nitrate of Iron. Solution of Pernitrate of Iron. Solution of Ternitrate of Sesquioxide of Iron. “ Take of Iron, in the form of wire, and cut in pieces, two troyounces and a half; Nitric Acid [sp. gr. 142~] five troyounces ; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Iron with twelve lluidounces of Distilled Water in a wide-mouthed bottle, and add to the mixture, in small portions at a time, with frequent agitation, three troyounces of the Nitric Acid, previously mixed with six fluidounces of Distilled Water, moderating the reaction by setting the vessel in cold water, in order to prevent the occurrence of red fumes. When the effervescence has nearly ceased, agitate the solution with the undissolved Iron until a portion of the liquid, on being filtered, exhibits a pale-green colour. Then filter the liquid, and, having forms a soluble compound with the lime, large quantities of which are dissolved by the syrup. The syrup remains perfectly transparent, and is in no degree disturbed by dilu- tion with water. It has a decidedly alkaline and even caustic taste, and should always be largely diluted when administered. It was first prepared by M. Beral; and its practical use was originally suggested by Dr. Capitaine, of Paris. Trousseau has employed it in the chronic diarrhoea of infants, and recommends it as an addition, in very small proportion, to the milk employed as a diet for children liable to this complaint. For this purpose he adds about eight grains of the syrup to the quart of milk. He gives the saturated syrup of lime to a child in the quantity of fifteen or thirty grains in the course of the day; to an adult, in five times the quantity. (Trait. de Thirap., 4e ed., i. 317 and 321.)—Note to tht tenth edition. PART II. Liquores. 1199 poured it into a capacious porcelain capsule, heat it to the temperature of 130°, and add the remainder of the Nitric Acid. When the effervescence has ceased, continue the heat until no more gas escapes, and then add sufficient Distilled W ater to bring the liquid to the measure of thirty-six fluidounces.” U. S. “ Take of fine Iron Wire, free from rust, one ounce [avoirdupois]; Nitric Acid [sp. gr. 1-5] three fluidounces [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water a suf- ficiency. Dilute the Nitric Acid with sixteen [fiuid]ounces of the Water, in- troduce the Iron Wire into the mixture, and leave them in contact until the metal is dissolved, taking care to moderate the action, should it become too vio- lent, by the addition of a little more Distilled Water. Filter the solution, and add to it as much Distilled Water as will make its bulk one pint and a half [Imp. meas.]. The specific gravity is 1T07.” Br. The above U. S. formula has been substituted for the one adopted in the second edition of the Pharmacopceia, published in Dec. 1855, which upon trial was found by Prof. Procter to have defects, which, it is believed, have been corrected in the present. In the existing formula, nitric acid (sp. gr. IAS), diluted, is gradu- ally added to an excess of iron, mixed with water, so as to ensure the produc- tion of the mononitrate of protoxide of iron, which is filtered from the excess of iron. To this is added a quantity of nitric acid, equal to two-thirds of that ori- ginally directed, which converts the mononitrate of the protoxide into the terni- trate of the sesquioxide, attended with a violent effervescence of red hyponitric acid vapours. The preparation is finished by giving it a determinate bulk by the addition of water. In this process, the two portions of nitric acid used are cor- rectly adjusted to produce the intended result. Thus, six eqs. of mononitrate, containing six eqs. of nitric acid, require exactly four additional eqs. of acid to effect the conversion; one eq. of the additional acid being expended in convert- ing the six eqs. of protoxide into three eqs. of sesquioxide, and the three remain- ing eqs. in completing three eqs. of ternitrate.* The peculiarity of the above process is the addition of the nitric acid in two portions at different times; the first portion not larger than is necessary to form the nitrate of the protoxide, and the second sufficient to convert this into the ternitrate of the sesquioxide. The object gained by this procedure seems to be to obviate the tendency which nitric acid has to sesquioxidize a larger portion * Prof. Procter has proposed the following formula for a syrup of the nitrate of protoxide of iron, a preparation considerably used, in Philadelphia, as an astringent in chronic diar- rhoea. Take of Iron Wire, in pieces (card teeth), two ounces; Nitric Acid (sp. gr. 1-42) three fluidounces ; Water thirteen ftuidounces; Sugar, in powder, two pounds. Put the iron in a wide- mouthed bottle, kept cool by standing in cold water, and pour upon it three fluidounces of water. Then mix the acid with ten fluidounces of water, and add the mixture in portions of half a fluidounce to the iron, agitating frequently until the acid is saturated, using litmus paper. When the saturation is complete, filter the solution into a bottle containing the sugar, and marked to contain thirty fluidounces. If the whole does not measure that bulk, pass water through the filter to make up the deficiency. When all the sugar is dis- solved, strain if necessary, and introduce the syrup into suitable vials, and seal them. This syrup is thick, permanent, of a light-greenish colour, perfectly transparent, neutral, and yields a greenish precipitate with ammonia. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Oct. 1851, p. 814.) Mr. W. W. D. Livermore has given a formula for a similar syrup. (Ibid., p. 815.) A third formula has been proposed by Mr. Thomas Lancaster, of this city, in which the nitrate of protoxide of iron is obtained by double decomposition between nitrate of lime and sul- phate of protoxide of iron. [Ibid., Sept. 1854, p. 400.) These syrups should not contain an excess of acid; for if they do, they are apt to deposit, after keeping, white granular masses of grape sugar, as observed by Mr. W. Tozier, of Kingstown, Ireland, in consequence of the action of the acid upon the cane sugar. According to Mr. Joseph Laidley, of Richmond, Va., the so-called syrup of the nitrate of sesquioxide of iron is an unscientific preparation, containing protoxide if an excess of acid is avoided, and liable to let fall a precipitate of oxalate of iron when the acid is in excess. Hence Mr. Laidley believes that-the only ni- trate, proper to be formed into a syrup, is the nitrate of the protoxide, where alone the protective influence of sugar is required. (Ibid., March, 1853, p. 97.)—Note to the tenth and eleventh editions. 1200 Liquores. PART II. of iron than can be neutralized by >vhat remains of the acid, unless this be em- ployed in such a proportion as to endanger an excess in the resulting solution. By this excess of sesquioxide, a subsalt is formed, which is not readily held in solution with the neutral sesquinitrate, and is therefore apt to be slowly depos- ited from the officinal preparation, unless care is taken to prevent its production. The U. S. solution of nitrate of iron has a sp. gr. between 1‘060 and 1‘OYO, a pale-amber colour, and a strong astringent acid taste. It contains no protoxide of iron, and does not give a blue precipitate with ferridcyanide of potassium. A fluidounce of it, on the addition of an excess of ammonia, yields a reddish-brown precipitate, which, when washed, dried, and ignited, weighs between eight and ten grains. (U. S ) The British preparation is of a reddish-brown colour, of the sp. gr. 1TOY, and gives no precipitate with ferridcyanide of potassium. The precipitate obtained from a fluidrachm of it by the addition of an excess of ammonia, when washed, dried, and ignited, weighs 2 6 grains. (Br.) It is, therefore, about twice as strong as the U. S. solution. Ternitrate of sesquioxide of iron, as described by Mr. J. M. Ordway, of Mas- sachusetts, is in the form of oblique rhombic prisms, which are either colourless, or of a delicate lavender colour. It is somewhat deliquescent, very soluble in water, and sparingly soluble in nitric acid. It consists of three eqs. of nitric acid, one of sesquioxide of iron, and eighteen of water. (SiUimart's Journ., Jan. 1850.) S. Hausmann found only twelve eqs. of water. (Chem. Gaz., June 1,1854.) Medical Properties. This solution was introduced to the notice of the pro- fession by Mr. William Kerr, in 1832. Its -virtues are those of a tonic and astrin- gent. Dr. R. J. Graves, of Dublin, praises it as a remedy in chronic diarrhoea, especially when occurring in delicate and nervous women, in which there is no thirst, redness of tongue, tenderness of the abdomen on pressure, or other indi- cation of inflammation. Mr. Kerr attributed to it the property of diminishing the irritability of the intestinal mucous membrane. It is particularly applicable to the treatment of mucous diarrhoea, attended with pain, but not to cases in which ulcerations of the intestines exist. Dr. T. C. Adams, of Michigan, also re- ports favourably of this remedy in chronic diarrhoea, considering it, like Mr. Kerr, to act as a sedative as well as astringent. He employed it, likewise with good effect, in menorrhagia, and both internally and by injection in leucorrhoea, when occurring in pale, exsanguine, and feeble subjects. The dose, according to Dr. Graves, is seven or eight drops, gradually increased to fifteen, sufficiently di- luted, given in the course of the day. Dr. Adams gave it in doses of ten drops, two, three, or four times a day, and sometimes increased it to twenty-five drops. Dr. Garrod and Mr. Squire, the two most prominent expounders of the British Pharmacopoeia, state the dose of the British preparation, though twice as strong in iron as our own, at from thirty minims to a fluidrachm. Considering that a fluidrachm of the British solution contains Y‘865 grains of the salt, this appears to us a very large dose; and the doses recommended by Drs. Graves and Adams would probably be safer. As an injection Dr. Adams employed it sufficiently diluted to cause only a slight heat and smarting in the vagina. B. LIQUOR FERRI PERCHLORIDI. Br. Solution of Perchloride of Iron. “ Take of Iron Wire two ounces [avoirdupois] ; Hydrochloric Acid ten fluid- ounces; Nitric Acid six fiuidrachms; Distilled Water seven fuidounces. Dilute the Hydrochloric Acid with five [fluid]ounces of the Water, and pour the mixture on the Iron Wire in successive portions, applying a gentle heat when the action becomes feeble, so that the whole of the metal may be dissolved. To the Nitric Acid add the two remaining ounces of Water, and, having poured the mixture into the solution of iron, evaporate the whole until the bulk is re- duced to ten fluidounces. ”i?r. By the reaction between the muriatic acid and iron a chloride of that metal PART II. Liquor es. 1201 is produced, which by the subsequent agency of the nitric acid is converted into the sesquichloride, or, as denominated in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, the perchlo ride, which is held in solution by the water. It was intended that the conversion of the protochloride into sesquichloride should be complete; and hence the solution is described as having an orange- brown colour, and as not being precipitated by ferridcyanide of potassium, which throws down a blue precipitate with the protochloride. But it is stated by Mr. Squire that, if made in accordance with the officinal directions, the solution is almost black in consequence of the presence of protochloride, and besides con- tains free nitric acid; the whole of that directed in the formula not being de- composed. According to the Pharmacopoeia, it mixes with water and alcohol in all proportions; and it is by the addition of alcohol to it that the British tincture of the chloride is formed; whereas, in reality, if mixed with alcohol in the proportion ordered for the tincture, it yields a considerable deposit. The error of the Pharmacopoeia consists in an insufficient concentration, after the addition of the nitric acid, so that the nitric acid has not been completely decomposed, and failed of course to change the protochloride completely into the sesquichlo- ride. But, should the evaporation be continued, a large quantity of basic chlo- ride is thrown down because the proportion of muriatic acid directed in the formula is insufficient to sesquichloridize the whole of the protochloride. The formula, therefore, requires revision in both these respects. The muriatic acid must be increased to twelve fluidounces, and the evaporation continued to live fiuidounces. Then by adding sufficient water to make the measure of the solu- tion ten fluidounces, a preparation will be obtained such as was contemplated, though its sp. gr. will be 1 *410, instead of 1338 as given in the Pharmacopoeia. (Compart.. to Br. Pharm., p. 100.) The solution of perchloride of iron, properly made, is of an orange-colour, and a strongly astringent, chalybeate taste. Water and alcohol unite with it in all proportions. When diluted with water, it gives a white precipitate with nitrate of silver, and a blue one with the ferrocyanide of potassium, but not with the ferridcyanide. The Pharmacopoeia gives as a test that “ a fluidrachm of it diluted with twro fluidounces of water gives, upon the addition of an excess of solution of ammonia, a reddish-brown precipitate, which, wrhen well washed and incinerated, weighs 15-62 grains.” Br. Were this test to be relied on, the solution would be about four times as strong in iron as the U. S. Tincture of the Chloride.* Medical Uses. This preparation was brought prominently into notice by M. Pravaz, a surgeon of Lyons, who found that a few drops of a strong solution, injected into a blood-vessel, produced coagulation of all the blood in the vessel for the extent of an inch or more. Its use as a styptic was the necessary result * This solution, when kept, has a disposition to deposit the insoluble oxychloride of iron, anJ the resulting excess of muriatic acid is apt to render it injuriously irritating. To obvi- aif this disadvantage, M. Burin du Buisson recommends the following mode of prepara- tion. “Saturate as quickly as possible pure and colourless muriatic acid with [gelatinous] hjdrated peroxide of iron; evaporate the solution to somewhat less than one-half over a gentle fire; and then continue the evaporation by means of the salt-bath, taking care to remove the aqueous vapours, which would cause the formation of muriatic acid, and a deposition of insoluble oxychloride. When the solution has attained the consistence of thick syrup (in which state it curdles on cooling, without, however, becoming a solid mass), cease evaporating, add an excess of the gelatinous hydrate diluted with a little water, agitate for a quarter of an hour, and afterwards allow the liquor to rest for several hours. Next add distilled water sufficient to bring the solution to the density of 30° Baum6, and allow it to stand for eight days in contact with an excess of the hydrate; after which filter, and again allow it to stand for two weeks.” This strength of the solution is required for the cure of varices. For injection into aneurismal tumours, it is sufficient to employ a solution of 20°'or even 15°. These degrees of Baurn6 are equivalent, 30° to 29-70 per cent, of the dry salt, 20° to 17-05 per cent., and 15° to 12 10 per cent. (See Ferri C/.loridum, U. S...page 1 ’28 ) 1202 Liquores. PART II. of this observation. In this capacity it has been used in the cure of varices, and has even been recommended as an injection in ordinary aneurisms. In arresting hemorrhages Irom cut surfaces or wounded vessels it has proved remarkably suc- cessful. It has also been found advantageous as an application to nasal polypi, in ulcers about the nails, and in various cutaneous affections. (See Chloride of Iron.) It may be used internally, properly diluted, for the general purposes of the chalybeates, and especially as a substitute for the tincture of the chloride of iron, when the alcohol of that preparation may be objectionable. The dose would be from two to ten minims. In the Br. Pharmacopoeia it is used in the prepa- ration of the tincture of the chloride. Off. Prep. Tinctura Ferri Perchloridi, Br. W. LIQUOR FERRI SUBSULPHATJS. U. S. Solution of Subsulphate of Iron. Solution of Persulphate of Iron. Monsel's Solution. “ Take of Sulphate of Iron, in coarse powder, twelve troyounces; Sulphuric Acid a troyounce and thirty grains; Nitric Acid a troyounce and three hun- dred grains; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acids with half a pint of Distilled Water, in a capacious porcelain capsule, and, having heated the mixture to the boiling point, add the Sulphate of Iron, one-fourth at a time, stirring after each addition until effervescence ceases. Then keep the solution in brisk ebullition until nitrous vapours are no longer perceptible, and the colour assumes a deep ruby tint. Lastly, when the liquid is nearly cold, add sufficient Distilled Water to make it measui’e twelve fluidounces.” U. S. This process is essentially that of Dr. Squibb, published in the American Journal of Pharmacy for January, 1860 (p. 33). The object is to obtain in solution MonseVs persulphate of iron, improperly so called, as it differs both in composition and properties from the salt of iron properly named persulphate. This consists of one eq. of sesquioxide of iron and three of sulphuric acid (Fe203, 3S03), and is a neutral salt, while Monsel’s persulphate consists of two eqs. of the sesquioxide and five of the acid (2Fe203,5S03), and, having one-half of an eq. less than is necessary for saturation, is properly a subsalt, as it is very appro- priately designated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. With this preliminary explana- tion, the process will be easily understood. In its preparation the protoxide of iron of the protosulphate is sesquioxi- dized at the expense of the nitric acid; but the sulphuric acid, mixed with the nitric, is in quantity insufficient to the increased demand by the sesquioxide for neutralization. Thus, for each equivalent of the sesquioxide produced an addi- tional eq. of acid would be necessary to constitute the neutral tersulphate of the sesquioxide, while the quantity added is only the half of one equivalent. The sesquioxide is therefore but partially saturated and a subsalt results, having the constitution above mentioned. The solution of subsulphate of iron is of a syrupy consistence, a ruby-red colour, inodorous, of an extremely astringent but not acrid taste, without caus- ticity, and of the sp. gr. 1552. It mixes with water and alcohol in all propor- tions without decomposition. With ammonia it yields a copious reddish-brown precipitate of sesquioxide of iron. A little sulphuric acid decolorizes the liquid in a considerable degree, and an excess of the same acid converts it into a white, soft, pasty solid, resembling plaster of Paris when it has begun to solidify after mixture with water. This test, according to Dr. Squibb, is quite characteristic. ( Transact. King's Co. Med. Soc., in N. Y. Journ. of Med., March, 1860, p. 173.) By evaporation, upon a glass surface, with a moderate heat, the solution yields the subsulphate of the sesquioxide of iron in the form of thin transparent scales, of a light reddish-brown colour, deliquescent, and readily soluble in water. Attention was first called to the special styptic virtues of sulphate of per- oxide of iron by M. Monsel in 1852; but it was not till a later period chat he discovered the peculiar salt which now goes by his name, and the so'utton of PART II. Liquores. 1203 which is the subject of the present article. It was in 1851 that he published a formula for the salt. (See Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1857, and Juillet, 1859.1 The remedy soon became generally known in Europe; and a paper on the sub- ject was published by Dr. Hutchison in the New York Journal of Medicine for January, 1859; but it seems to have come into more general use in this coun- try, through the published experience of Dr. H. H. Toland and others in the Pacific Medical and Surgical Journal of California. In consequence of its deficiency of sulphuric acid, this salt is less irritant than the tersulphate of the sesquioxide, while it has at least equal if not greater a'i- tringency. It is therefore very efficacious as a styptic, and peculiarly adapted through the power of coagulating the blood, to cases of hemorrhage from in- cised wounds, or surfaces in which it is specially desirable to avoid irritation. It is said also to have been found peculiarly efficacious in chancre. The solution may be applied by means of a small sponge or pencil of spun-glass to the bleed- ing surface or vessel. It has also been used internally ; and there is little doubt that it would prove efficacious as a styptic in hemorrhage from the stomach and bowels, and by injection into the rectum in bleeding from that part. It may be given in a dose of from five to fifteen grains. W. LIQUOR FERRI TERSULPIIATIS. U.S. Solution of Tersulphate of Iron. Solution of Persulphate of Iron. Br. Appendix. “Take of Sulphate of Iron, in coarse powder, twelve troyounces; Sulphuric Acid two troyounces and sixty grains; Nitric Acid a troyounce and three hun- dred and sixty grains; Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Acids with half a pint of Water in a capacious porcelain capsule, and, having heated the mix- ture to the boiling point, add the Sulphate of Iron, one-fourth at a time, stirring after each addition until effervescence ceases. Then continue the heat until the solution acquires a reddish-brown colour, and is free from nitrous odour. Lastly, when the liquid is nearly cold, add sufficient Water to make it measure a pint and a half.” U. S. This solution is placed in the Appendix of the British Pharmacopoeia, under the name of Solution of Persulphate of Iron, among the substances used in pre- paring medicines, with the following directions for making it. “ Take of Sulphate of Iron eight ounces [avoirdupois]; Sulphuric Acid six fluidrachms; Nitric Acid four fluidrachms; Distilled Water twelve fluid- ounces, or a sufficiency. Add the Sulphuric Acid to ten [fluid]ounces of the Water, and dissolve the Sulphate of Iron in the mixture, with the aid of heat. Mix the Nitric Acid with the remaining two [fluid]ounces of Water, and add the dilute acid to the solution of Sulphate of Iron. Concentrate the whole by boiling, until, upon the sudden disengagement of ruddy vapours, the liquid ceases to be black and acquires a red colour. A drop of the solution is now to be tested with ferridcyanide of potassium, and if a blue precipitate forms, a few additional drops of Nitric Acid should be added, and the boiling renewed, in order that the whole of the protosulphate may be converted into persulphate of iron. When the solution is cold, make the quantity eleven fluidounces by the addition, if neces- sary, of Distilled Water.”Br. The sulphate of iron used in these formulas is a sulphate of the protoxide of iron. The nitric acid in the process gives up enough of its oxygen to convert the protoxide entirely into sesquioxide, and the effervescence is owing to the escape of nitric oxide becoming red hyponitric acid by contact with the air. The conversion of protoxide into sesquioxide is incomplete until the effervescence ceases, and the colour, from black, as it was at first, has become reddish-brown. Indeed, in order to sesquioxidize the whole of the protoxide of the sulphate, it is necessary to continue the heat until nitrous odour ceases to be evolved; and thus, moreover, the entire absence of nitric or nitrous acid from the solution is en- sured. But m consequence of the higher oxidation of the iron the sulphuric acid Liquores. PART II. of the sulphate is insufficient to saturate it, and just in proportion to the addi- tional oxygen. Enough sulphuric acid, therefore, is added to meet this demand, that is, in such proportion as to give an eq. of the acid for each additional eq. of oxygen in the oxide. The process is completed by adding enough water to make a definite measure. The U. S. and British formulas are the same in principle; but in the latter, the additional precaution is taken, in order to ensure the com- plete change of protoxide into sesquioxide, of testing the liquid with ferridcya- nide of potassium, which will produce a blue precipitate so long as any of the protoxide remains. This solution, prepared according to the U. S formula, is a perfectly clear and mobile liquid, in no degree viscid, of a reddish-brown colour, almost inodorous, of a sour, extremely astringent and somewhat acrid taste, and miscible in all pro- portions, without decomposition, with water and alcohol. The sp. gr. of the TJ. S. solution is 1-320; and a fluidounce of it yields, on the addition of ammonia in excess, a bulky precipitate, of a reddish-brown colour, and without blackish tinge, which, when washed, dried, and ignited, weighs 69 grains. The solution, diluted with water, gives a white precipitate with chloride of barium, showing that it contains a sulphate, and a blue precipitate with ferrocyanide of potassium, but none with the ferridcyanide, showing that the sulphate is that of sesquioxide of iron. It keeps well; and we have seen a specimen three or four years old, which retained all its properties unchanged,,and had deposited nothing. The British solution is considerably stronger than ours, having the sp.gr. 1-441, and yield- ing from a fluidrachm, on precipitation by ammonia, a precipitate, which, when washed and incinerated, weighs 11-44 grains. It is described in the Br. Phar- macopoeia as viscid, and of a dark-red colour. Prof. Procter has found that a preparation containing 120 grains of sesquioxide to the fluidounce is apt to de posit the anhydrous sulphate on standing. This solution, though possessed of astringent properties rendering it useful as a styptic, is inferior remedially to that of the subsulphate of iron, which is less irritant, and certainly not less efficacious. The chief use of it is in making other ferruginous preparations, in which the sesquioxide of iron is wanted; and it should always be kept on hand, if for nothing else, for the quick preparation of the hydrated sesquioxide of iron, to be used as an antidote in cases of arsenical poisoning. Off. Prep. Ferri et Ammoniae Citras, Br.; Ferri et Ammoni* Sulphas, U. S.; Ferri et Ammoniae Tartras, U. S.; Ferri et Potass® Tartras, TJ. S.; Ferri et Quinise Citras, Br.; Ferri Ferrocyanidum, TJ. S.; Ferri Oxidum Hydratum, U.S.; Ferri Peroxidum Hydratum, Br.; Ferri Pyrophosphas, TJ. S.; Ferrum Tartaratum, Br.; Liquor Ferri Citratis, TJ. S. W. LIQUOR GUTTA-PERCHA. U.S. Solution of Gutta-percha. “Take of Gutta-percha, in thin slices, a troyounce and a, half; Purified Chlo- roform seventeen troyounces; Carbonate of Lead, in fine powder, twotroyounces. To twelve troyounces of the Chloroform, contained in a bottle, add the Gutta- percha, and shake occasionally until it is dissolved. Then add the Carbonate of Lead, previously mixed with the remainder of the Chloroform, and, having several times shaken the whole together, at intervals of half an hour, set the mixture arude. and let it stand for ten days, or until the inspluble matter has subsided, and the solution become limpid, and either colourless or of a pale-straw colour. Lastly, decant the liquid, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” TJ. S. Difficulty is often experienced in obtaining a clear solution of gutta-percha in chloroform of the proper consistence for use, in consequence of its viscidity, and the strong affinity with which it holds on to the colouring matter. It cannot be clarified by filtration; and the carbonate of lead is therefore resorted to, which unites with the colouring matter, and, in consequence of its weight, gradually subsides, carrying undissolved substances along with it, and leaving a f ear and f ART II. Liquores. colourless or nearly colourless solution behind. The use of carbonate of leaa for the purpose was first suggested by Mr. Wm. Hodgson, jun., of Philadelphia Something in the success of the process appears to depend on the quality of the gutta-percha used. Should the operator be unable to procure a clear solution by acting in precise accordance with the formula, he would be justifiable in add- ing more chloroform, filtering if necessary, and evaporating by a very moderate heat to the due consistence. When the preparation becomes too viscid in con- sequence of the spontaneous evaporation of the menstruum on exposure, we have always found that the addition of a little chloroform, with agitation, re- stores it without difficulty to the due condition. The ordinary commercial chlo- roform may be used in the process, as the preparation is exclusively for external use. It should be kept in small glass vials, with accurately fitting glass stoppers, and not containing more than maybe wanted at once, say a fluidounce. We have nothing, on the whole, so convenient and effective as this prepara- tion, as a protective to the surface, in slight cases of superficial inflammation and abrasion. By the rapidity with which the chloroform evaporates, a thin elastic nearly colourless film is left after its application, sufficient to prevent in- jurious influence from the air, w’holly without irritating properties, not shrinking inconveniently, and, in consequence of its softness, not mechanically disturbing the part, as sometimes happens with collodion. A little of it applied by the end of the finger, or by means of a small brush, or a glass rod, over eruptive affections, abrasions or slight excoriations, inflammation from friction, chaps on the lips or hand, and slight superficial wounds that have ceased bleeding, will often enable the parts beneath to heal almost immediately, while, if unprotected, they might go on for an indefinite period, giving annoyance, and often increasing. Surfaces, yet sound, that are liable to irritation and abrasion from contact, pressure, friction, and the application of acrid substances, may often be protected by a coating of this material. The agreeable odour of chloroform is another recommendation over other preparations, of a similar character, made with ether or benzole. We have so often experienced its advantages that we wish to press it upon the atten- tion of the profession, which it has not yet received to the degree that it merits. One cause of this, perhaps, is the difficulty of obtaining it in the shops, a large proportion of which, either from the difficulties in its preparation, or want of de- mand, are insufficiently supplied. W. LIQUOR I1YDRARGYRI NITRATIS. U. S. Liquor Hydrargyri Nitratis Acidus. Br. Solution of Nitrate of Mercury. Acid Solution of Nitrate of Mercury. “ Take of Mercury three troyounces ; Nitric Acid five troyounces; Distilled Water six fluidrachms. Dissolve the Mercury, with the aid of a gentle heat, 'n the Acid previously mixed with the Distilled Water. When reddish vapours .'“ease to arise, evaporate the liquid to seven troyounces and a half, and keep it :n a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “ Take of Mercury four ounces [avoirdupois] ; Nitric Acid [sp. gr. D5] three fluidounces and a quarter [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water three fluid- ounces. Mix the Nitric Acid with the Water in a flask; and dissolve the Mer- cury in the mixture without the application of heat. Boil gently for fifteen minutes, cool, and preserve the solution in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In the process for making this new officinal of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, mer- cury is dissolved, with the assistance of heat, in an excess of nitric acid, and there is formed an acid binitrate of deutoxide of mercury, which is brought to a determinate bulk by evaporation. The nitric acid taken weighs five ounces. This proportion is sufficient not only to deutoxidize the mercury and generate a bisalt, but to furnish a large excess of acid. The solution is a dense, trans- parent, nearly colourless liquid, of a strongly acid taste, of the sp.gr. 2T65 as 1206 Liquores. PART II. prepared by the U. S. process, and 2-246 by the British. Its distinguishing properties, as given in the TJ. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are that it is not pre- cipitated by distilled water; gives when diluted a dull yellow precipitate with potassa and a bright red one soluble in an excess of the precipitant with iodide of potassium ; does not produce a precipitate when dropped into muriatic acid diluted with twice its bulk of water; when dropped on a bright surface of cop- per instantly occasions a mercurial coating; and, finally, causes a crystal of sulphate of iron dropped into it, as well as the liquid around the salt, to assume a dark colour. These tests show that the salt contained in it is a nitrate and not a sulphate, and that its base is deutoxide of mercury, without the presence of any protoxide" of that metal. The rather loose direction, at the close of the British process, to boil for fifteen minutes, cannot but lead to somewhat uncer- tain results, unless care is taken by the operator to bring the sp. gr. of the solu- tion to the point indicated in the description of the solution, given in another part of the Pharmacopoeia. Binitrate of deutoxide of mercury (the salt present in this preparation) is un- crystallizable, unless when exposed in a freezing mixture to a temperature of 5°, when it crystallizes with the formula Hg02,2N0.-f 16HO. (H. S. Bitten.) According to the new view of the equivalent of mercury, adopted in the Br. Pharmacopoeia, the salt is a nitrate of protoxide of mercury, and is represented by the formula, independently of water of crystallization, HgO,NO.. Medical Properties. This preparation is frequently used in Europe, and has been employed to some extent in this country, as a caustic application to malig- nant ulcerations and cancerous affections. It has been used by Biett in lupus, by Bennett and others in ulceration of the neck of the uterus, and by Recamier in cancer. It is applied to the diseased surface by a camel’s hair brush, or pre- ferably by a brush made of spun-glass. The parts touched immediately become white, the surrounding parts inflame, and in a few days a yellow scab is formed, which gradually falls off. Sometimes the application produces salivation. When it is desirable to avoid this result, the cauterized part should be washed with water immediately after the application of the caustic. Acid nitrate of mercury is extensively used by Mr. Startin in the Hospital for Cutaneous Diseases, London.* He has employed it with advantage in acne, boils, carbuncle, lupus, sloughing ulcers, and other external affections. In acne, a very minute drop of the solution is placed, by means of a finely pointed glass brush, on the top of each indolent tubercle. The application, if carefully made, leaves no scar. In treating boils, a full-sized drop is applied to the apex of the furuncle. {Med. Times and Gaz., Jan. 1855, p. 9.) B. LIQUOR IODINII COMPOSITUS. U. S. Compound Solution of Iodine. “Take of Iodine three hundred and sixty grains; Iodide of Potassium a troyounce and a half; Distilled Water a pint. Dissolve the Iodine and Iodide of Potassium in the Distilled Water.” U. S. In this solution iodine is dissolved in water with the assistance of iodide ol potassium. Iodine dissolves sparingly in water, but freely in a solution of that salt. In using iodide of potassium to render iodine more soluble in water, the iodide is generally taken in a quantity twice the weight of the iodine; and this is the proportion adopted in the H. S. formula. The preparation is a concen- trated solution of iodine with iodide of potassium, and is intended to facilitate the administration of the combination in drops. A solution of the same kind, though weaker, was directed in the Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, but has been omitted in the British. The medicinal properties of the solution depend mainly * The acid nitrate, used by Mr. Startin, does not correspond, in the proportions em- ployed, with the British preparation. It is made by dissolving two ounces of i!ern\ry in four ounces of nitric acid (sp. gr. 1-5). FART II. Liquor es. 1207 on the free iodine contained in it, by which the dose must be regulated, and not by the iodide of potassium. According to Mr. Lloyd, of St. Bartholomew’s Hos- pital, London, it acts differently from iodide of potassium, which, when given alone, does not produce the same effects. In a case of constitutional syphilis under his care, the compound solution of iodine effected a rapid cure, after the iodide of potassium had been taken in large doses, for several months, without benefit. The dose is six drops, containing about a quarter of a grain of iodine, three times a day, given in four tablespoonfuls of sweetened water, and gradually increased. The dilution should always be large, in order to favour the absorp- tion of the medicine, and to avoid any irritation of the stomach. For children the dose to begin with is two drops. B. LIQUOR MAGNESIiE CITRATIS. U.S. Solution of Citrate of Magnesia. “Take of Magnesia one hundred and twenty grains; Citric Acid four hun- dred and fifty grains; Syrup of Citric Acid two fluid ounce s; Bicarbonate of Potassa forty grains; Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Citric Acid in four fluidounces of Water, and, having added the Magnesia, stir until it is dissolved. Filter the solution into a strong twelve-ounce bottle containing the Syrup of Citric Acid. Then add the Bicarbonate of Potassa, and sufficient Water to nearly fill the bottle, which must be closed with a cork secured with twine. Lastly, shake the mixture occasionally until the Bicarbonate is dissolved.” U. S. This is a revised formula for solution of citrate of magnesia, which first ap- peared in the second edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850. The original formula was soon found to have several defects. It called for the use of car- bonate of magnesia, which often contains gritty impurities. Four-fifths of the carbonate was dissolved in the citric acid, and the solution filtered into a bottle containing the syrup of citric acid ; and then the reserved fifth, mixed with water, was added to the acid citrate, and the bottle tightly corked. The addition of the reserved carbonate was intended to impregnate the preparation with carbonic acid by its solution in the excess of citric acid. To effect the solution of this re- served carbonate required at least half an hour. But the chief objection to the formula, as originally framed, was that the citrate of magnesia, when the solu- tion was kept for some days, underwent a molecular change, resulting in the formation of a white granular precipitate, which rendered the solution unfit for medical use. This precipitate was found by Prof. Procter to consist of one eq. of citric acid, three of magnesia, and fourteen of water. In the revised formula, now adopted, magnesia, which is generally purer than the carbonate, is substi- tuted for it; and the impregnation of the solution with carbonic acid is effected by adding, just before the closing of the bottle, a small quantity of bicarbonate of potassa in crystals, which dissolve immediately, instead of consuming half an hour. Solution of citrate of magnesia, made by this formula, is not liable to the objection of letting fall a granular precipitate, and may be prepared in a short time. The use of bicarbonate of potassa, it is true, introduces citrate of potassa, but in too small a proportion to be of any consequence. Properties, &c. This officinal solution is founded on a preparation proposed by M. Roge Delabarre, and improved by M. Rabourdin, of Paris. It is an aqueous solution of citrate of magnesia, containing an excess of citric acid, im- pregnated with carbonic acid, and sweetened with syrup. When properly pre- pared, it is a clear liquid, having an agreeable taste like that of lemonade. Over- looking the excess of acid which it contains, the salt present is that tribasic citrate, in which the three eqs. of basic water in the crystallized acid are re- placed by three eqs. of magnesia. Accordingly it consists of one eq. of citric acid and three of magnesia. In the revised formula, this salt does not precipi- tate by keeping, as in the superseded one, probably because the solution contains a greater excess of acid. Liquores. Dorwilt makes a solid citrate of magnesia which is perfectly and readily solu- ble, by melting on a sand-bath 100 parts of crystallized citric acid in its water of crystallization, and thoroughly incorporating with it 29 parts of calcined magnesia. A pasty mixture is formed, which soon hardens, and may be pulverized for use. Citrate of magnesia, thus prepared, is soluble in twice its weight of water. When in saturated solution it soon precipitates as a nearly insoluble hy- drate ; but with eight or ten times its weight of water, it forms a permanent solution. See the report on the solid citrate, made by E. Parrish and A. Smith to the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (Am. Journ. of Pharm., April, 1852, p. 113). See also M. E. Robiquet’s paper on lemonades of citrate of magnesia (Journ. de Pharm., April, 1852, p. 295), and his formula for preparing a solu- ble citrate of magnesia (Am. Journ. of Pharmacy for July, 1855). M. Simonin finds that an insoluble citrate of magnesia may be restored to solubility in boil- ing water, by being thoroughly rubbed up with water so as to form a paste. The necessary trituration is abridged, if a little citric acid be added. (Ann. de Therap., 1857, p. 124.) Mr. Charles Ellis, of this city, prepares a soluble citrate of magnesia with sugar, citric acid, bicarbonate of soda, and oil of lemons, in the form of a powder, which effervesces when mixed with water. For the details of the formula, the reader is referred to his paper in the Am. Journ. of Phar- macy for July, 1854.* Medical Properties. This solution is a cooling cathartic, and operates mildly. It has come into extensive use in the United States, on account of the facility with which it may be taken, and its acceptability to the stomach. The dose as a full purge is the whole quantity directed in the formula, or twelve fluidounces; as a laxative, half that quantity or less. B. LIQUOR MORPIiLZE HYDROCIILORATIS. Br. Liquor Mor- phias Muriatis. Dub. Solutioii of Hydrochlorate of Morphia. Solution of Muriate of Morphia. “Take of Hydrochlorate of Morphia four grains; Dilute Hydrochloric Acid eight minims; Rectified Spirit two Jluidrachms; Distilled Water six fiui- drachms. Mix the Hydrochloric Acid, the Spirit, and the Water, and dissolve the Hydrochlorate of Morphia in the mixture.” Br. The use of the alcohol is to prevent spontaneous decomposition, that of the PART II. * Solid Citrate of Magnesia. This salt as heretofore prepared, though soluble at first, is apt to become more or less insoluble, when kept, in consequence of molecular change. The following process, by M. de Letter, of Brussels, yields a salt which is said to retain its solubility indefinitely. “Take of Citric Acid 20 parts, and of Carbonate of Magnesia 12 parts. Powder the acid finely, and mix it intimately with the carbonate, also in fine pow- der. Allow the mixture to stand, at the ordinary temperature, for four or five days, or until it ceases to manifest reaction when a little is thrown into water. During this time the powder slowly swells up, and gradually assumes the appearance of a spongy mass. Dry this at 86° F., pulverize it, and keep the powder in closely stopped vials.” According to M. de Letter, water, in a certain quantity, favours the formation of an insoluble hy- drate; and hence the success of his process, in which no other water is present than that which is solidified in the dry materials. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1868, p. 812.) M. Hager has been unable to prepare a soluble salt by the process of M. de Letter. He considers citrate of magnesia as presenting itself in three forms; 1. crystallizable, soluble in from 80 to 90 parts of water, with the formula 3MgO,Ci -f- 14HO; 2. amorphous, soluble in two parts of water; and 3. metamorphous, soluble in 8 or 10 parts of water, with a strong tendency to crystallize. It is the crystalline variety, presenting the form of microscopic needles, that occasions the difficulty; and its production should be avoided. M. Hager proceeds in the following manner. Rub 40 parts of citric acid and 25 of carbonate of mag- nesia, both in powder, with sufficient alcohol of -888 to make a thick mixture; and, having allowed this to stand for several days, at a medium temperature, dry it at a heat of 118° F. The product is the amorphous salt, soluble in 2-5 parts of water, in half an hour at 60°, im- mediately at 86°. Its solution, whether made with hot or cold water, retains its clearness after long standing. The salt is neutral, and contains about 13 eqs. of water. To succeed certainly it is necessary that the carbonate of magnesia be free from dust and impurities. (Ibid., Jan. 1864, p. 19.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Liquor es. 1209 acid probably to assist in the solution of the salt. It is unfortunate that, in the solutions of the salts of morphia, the same degree of strength should not have- been directed by the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias. As they now are, the medi- cal practitioner and apothecary must be on their guard to avoid serious results The strength of this solution is four times that of our officinal solution of sul- phate of morphia, one fluidounce of the former containing four grains, of the lat ter only one grain of their respective salts. The full dose of the British solution for an adult is from fifteen to thirty minims or drops, containing from an eighth to a quarter of a grain of the hydrochlorate, and about equivalent to as many drops of laudanum. W. LIQUOR MORPHIiE SULPHATIS. U.S. Solution of Sulphate oj Morphia. “Take of Sulphate of Morphia eight grains; Distilled Water half a pint Dissolve the Sulphate of Morphia in the Distilled Water.” U. S. Sulphate of morphia, as found in the shops, is not always entirely soluble in water. This sometimes, perhaps, arises from adulterations; but more frequently, in all probability, from the mode of making the sulphate. As this salt was for- merly prepared, the quantity of water employed for the suspension of the mor- phia was sometimes insufficient to hold the resulting sulphate in solution; and the consequence was that, upon the addition of sulphuric acid, the crystallization of the sulphate took place before the whole of the morphia wras saturated by the acid. A portion of uncombined morphia was therefore necessarily mixed with the salt. Under such circumstances, the addition of a little sulphuric acid usually remedied the defect, and rendered the whole soluble. Pure sulphate of morphia is readily and entirely soluble in water. This solution is very convenient, by enabling the physician to prescribe a mi- nute dose, W'hich, in consequence of the great energy of the preparations of mor- phia, is often necessary. It has the advantage that it may be kept for a very considerable length of time unchanged. The full dose for an adult is from one to twro fluidrachms, containing from an eighth to a quarter of a grain of the sulphate. Unfortunately, in some parts of the Union, the formula of Magendie for this solution, containing 16 grains in a fluidounce, is habitually employed under the name of solution of sulphate of morphia. This is the proper name of the offi- cinal solution, which is much weaker ; and the most dangerous results may ensue from the confusion. Magendie’s solution should never be prescribed or sold, unless under some special designation. W. LIQUOR PLUMBI SUBACETATIS. U.S.,Br. Solution of Subace- tate of Lead. “ Take of Acetate of Lead sixteen troyounces; Oxide of Lead [Litharge], in fine power, nine troyounces and a half; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Boil the Acetate and Oxide with four pints of Distilled Water, in a glass or porcelain vessel, for half an hour, occasionally adding Distilled Water to pre- serve the measure, and filter through paper. Lastly, keep the liquid in a well- stopped bottle.” U. S. The sp. gr. of this solution is 1267. “ Take of Acetate of Lead five ounces [avoirdupois]; Litharge, in pe trder, three ounces and a half [avoird.]; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial mea- sure], or a sufficiency. Boil the Acetate of Lead and the Litharge in the Water for half an hour, constantly stirring; then filter, and, when the liquid is cold, add to it more Distilled Water, until the product measures twenty fluidounces. Keep the clear solution in stoppered bottles.” Br. The sp. gr. of the solution is D260. Crystallized acetate of lead consists of one equivalent of acetic acid 51, one ot protoxide of lead 111 6, and three of water 27 = 189'6. Litharge, as usually found in the shops, is an impure protoxide of lead. When the solution of the 1210 Liquor es. PART II. former is boiled with the latter, a large quantity of the protoxide is dissolved, and a subacetate of lead is formed which remains in solution. The precise com- position of the subacetate varies with the proportion of acetate of lead and of litharge employed. When the quantity of the latter exceeds that of the former by one-half or more, the acetic acid of the acetate unites, according to the high- est chemical authorities, with two additional equivalents of protoxide, forming a trisacetate; when the two substances are mixed in proportions corresponding with their equivalent numbers, that is, in the proportion of 189'6 of salt to 111T) of oxide, or 10 to 6 nearly, only one additional equivalent of protoxide unites with the acid, and a diacetate of lead is produced. In the officinal pro- cess, the proportions appear to have been arranged in reference to this result. In executing the process, the litharge should be employed in very fine powder, and, according to Thenard, should be previously calcined in order to decompose the carbonate of lead, which it always contains in greater or less proportion, and which is not dissolved by the solution of the acetate. In former editions of the London and Dublin Pharmacopoeias, a different process was directed, consisting in boiling litharge with distilled vinegar, the former being in much larger proportion than necessary to form the neutral ace- tate. A diacetate was thus produced; but, as the vinegar was of uncertain strength, there was necessarily more or less inequality of strength in the pre- paration. This process, therefore, has been abandoned. The solution pi’epared irom litharge and distilled vinegar has a pale greenish-straw colour, owing to impurities in the vinegar. Made with common vinegar it is brown. Properties. The solution of subacetate of lead of the Pharmacopoeias is colourless, and of a sweetish, astringent taste. When concentrated by evapora- tion, it deposits on cooling crystalline plates, which, according to Pr. Barker, are flat, rhomboidal prisms, with dihedral summits. It has an alkaline reaction, tinging the syrup of violets green, and reddening turmeric paper. One of its most striking properties is the extreme facility with which it is decomposed. Carbonic acid throws down a white precipitate of carbonate of lead; and this happens by mere exposure to the air, or by mixture even with distilled water, if this has had an opportunity of absorbing carbonic acid from the atmosphere. It affords precipitates also with the alkalies, alkaline earths, and their carbonates, with sulphuric and muriatic acids free or combined, with hydrosulphuric acid and the hydrosulphates, with the soluble iodides and chlorides, and, according to The- nard, with solutions of all the neutral salts. Solutions of gum, tannin, most vegetable colouring principles, and many animal substances, particularly albu- men, produce with it precipitates consisting of the substance added and oxide of lead. It should be kept in well-stopped bottles. It is known to contain a salt of acetic acid by emitting an acetous smell when treated with sulphuric acid; and a salt of lead, by yielding a white precipitate with an alkaline carbonate, a yellow one with iodide of potassium, and a black one with hydrosulphuric acid. It is distinguished from the solution of acetate of lead by being precipi- tated by gum arabic. Two fluidrachms of the Br. solution require for perfect pre- cipitation twenty-seven measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid. (Br.) Medical Properties and Uses. This solution is astringent and sedative, but is employed only as an external application. It is highly useful in inflammatiou arising from sprains, bruises, burns, blisters, &c., to which it is applied by means of linen cloths, which should be removed as fast as they become dry. It always, however, requires to be diluted. From four fluidrachms to a fluidounce, added to a pint of distilled water, forms a solution sufficiently strong in ordinary cases of external inflammation. When applied to the skin denuded of the cuti- cle, the solution should be still weaker; as constitutional effects might result from the absorption of the lead. Paralysis is said to have been produced by its local action. The solution has the common name of Goulard's extract, *le- PART II. Liquorcs. 1211 rived from a surgeon of Montpellier, by whom it was introduced into general notice, though previously employed. Off. Prep. Ceratum Plumbi Subacetatis, TJ. S.; Liquor Plumbi Subacetatis Dilutus; Unguentum Plumbi Subacetatis, Br. W LIQUOR PLUMBI SUBACETATIS DILUTUS. U. S., Br. Di- luted Solution of Subacetate of Lead. Lead-water. “Take of Solution of Subacetate of Lead three fluidrachms; Distilled Water a pint. Mix them.” U. S. “ Take of Solution of Subacetate of Lead two fluidrachms; Rectified Spirit two fluidrachms; Distilled Water nineteen fluidounces and a half. Mix, and filter through paper. Keep the clear solution in a stoppered bottle.” Br. This preparation is convenient; as, in consequence of the subsidence of the carbonate of lead usually formed on the dilution of the strong solution, it en- ables the apothecary to furnish clear lead-water when it is called for. In our comments on the TJ. S. process of 1850, it was stated that the strength of our officinal preparation, though double what it formerly was, might be still further increased with propriety. In the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia the proportion has been increased from two to three fluidrachms to the pint. The Br. preparation, though stronger than the old one of the London College, is still feeble. The old French Codex directed two drachms of the strong solution to a pound of distilled water, and an ounce of alcohol of 22° Baume, and thus formed the vegeto-mineral water of Goulard. The minute proportion of proof spirit in the British solution can have little effect. The preparation should be as much as possible excluded from the air. W. LIQUOR POTASSiE. TJ. S., Br. Solution of Potassa. “Take of Bicarbonate of Potassa fifteen troyounces; Lime nine troyouncesg Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Bicarbonate in four pints of Distilled Water, aud heat the solution until effervescence ceases. Then add Dis- tilled Water to make up the loss by evaporation, and heat the solution to the boiling point. Mix the Lime with four pints of Distilled Water, and, having heated the mixture to the boiling point, add it to the alkaline solution, and boil for ten minutes. Then transfer the whole to a muslin strainer, and, when the liquid portion has passed, add sufficient Distilled Water, through the strainer, to make the strained liquid measure seven pints. Lastly, keep the liquid in well-stopped bottles of green glass. Solution of Potassa, thus prepared, has the sp. gr. 1 065, and contains 5’8 per cent, of hydrate of potassa. “ Solution of Potassa may also be prepared in the following manner. “Take of Potassa a troyounce; Distilled Water a pint. Dissolve the Po- tassa in the Distilled Water, and allow the solution to stand until the sediment subsides. Then pour off the clear liquid, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle of green glass.” U. S. “Take of Carbonate of Potash one pound [avoirdupois] ; Slaked Lime twelve ounces [avoird.] ; Distilled Water one gallon [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Carbonate of Potash in the Water; and, having heated the solution to the boiling point, in a clean iron vessel, gradually mix with it the Slaked Lime; and continue the ebullition for ten minutes with constant stirring. Then remove the vessel from the fire; and, when by the subsidence of the insoluble matter the supernatant liquor has become perfectly clear, transfer it by means of a siphon to a green-glass bottle furnished with an air-tight stopper. The sp. gr. is 1 058.” Br. The object of the first U. S. and of the British process is to separate carbonic acid from the carbonate or bicarbonate of potassa, so as to obtain the alkali in a caustic state. This separation of the carbonic acid is effected by hydrate of lime; and The chemical changes which take place are most intelligibly explained by supposing the occurrence of a double decomposition. The lime of the hydrate of Liquores. PART II. lime, by its superior affinity, combines with the carbonic acid, and precipitates as carbonate of lime; while the water of the hydrate of lime unites with the potassa and remains in solution as hydrate of potassa. The proportion indicated by theo/y for this decomposition would be 69 2 of the dry carbonate to 28 of lime, or one equivalent of each ; but in practice it is found necessary to use an excess of lime. The bicarbonate is preferred in the U. S. process, as affording a purer product, being itself free from the contaminations usually found iu the carbonate; and the application of heat to the solution of the bicarbonate is to drive off a portion of the carbonic acid and thus bring the salt to the state of a carbonate. The proportion of water employed has a decided influence on the result. If the water be deficient in quantity, the decomposing power of the lime, on account of its sparing solubility, will be lessened; and more of it will be required to complete the decomposition of the carbonate than if the solutions were more dilute. Straining must not be used; as it causes a prolonged contact with the air, and risk of the absorption of carbonic acid, and is apt, moreover, to introduce organic matter from the strainer into the solution. The direction to keep the solution in green glass bottles is judicious; as white flint glass is slightly acted on, and contaminates the solution with lead.* As the solution of potassa is made by the manufacturing chemist in considera- ble quantities, the following details, taken from Berzelius, of the best mode of conducting the process, may not be without their use. Dissolve one part of car- bonate of potassa in from seven to twelve parts of water in a bright iron vessel, and decant the solution after it has become clear by standing. Boil the solution in an iron vessel, and, while it is boiling, add at intervals small quantities of slaked lime, reduced to a thin paste with water; allowing the solution to boil a few minutes after each addition. One and a half parts of pure lime will be more than sufficient to decompose one part of the carbonate. When about half the hydrate of lime has been added, take out about a teaspoonful of the boiling so- lution, and, after diliition and filtration through paper, test it by adding it to some nitric acid, or by mixing it with an equal bulk of lime-water. If the solu- tion has not been completely freed from carbonic acid, the first reagent will cause an effervescence, and the second a milky appearance; in either of which events the addition of the lime must be continued as before, until the above-mentioned tests give negative indications. In conducting the process, several advantages are gained by keeping the solution constantly boiling. One is that the carbonate of lime formed is in this way rendered granular and heavy, and more disposed to subside; another, that it prevents the precipitated carbonate from coalescing into a mass at the bottom of the vessel, an occurrence which causes the ebulli- tion, when subsequently renewed, to take place imperfectly and by jerks; and a third, that any silica present is precipitated in combination with lime and po- tassa. The process here described is essentially the same with those introduced into the last editions of the Edinburgh and Dublin Pharmacopoeias. According to Prof. Wohler, solution of pure hydrate of potassa for analytic purposes may be conveniently obtained by exposing for half an hour to a mode- rate red heat, in a copper crucible, one part of pure nitre, and two or three parts of copper cut into small pieces. The resulting mass, consisting of hydrate of potassa and black oxide of copper, is treated with water, and the solution * For remarks by Prof. Redwood, of London, in relation to the preparation of this Solu- tion, and for a new process for which various advantages are claimed, the reader is refer- red to the London Pharmaceutical Journal for March, 1861, p. 450. The following are the outlines of the process. Into a stoppered bottle of green glass is introduced a mixt are of §viiss of slaked lime and three Imperial pints of distilled water; and to this mixture is added, in small quantities at a time, a solution of viiss of carbonate of potassa in one Im- perial pint of distilled water, the bottle being shaken for some minutes after each addition. After the last addition, continue the shaking until a portion of the filtered liquid no longer gives out carbonic acid, upon adding an excess of muriatic acid through calico.—XoU to the lyad/th edition. PABT II. Liquores. poured into a narrow cylindrical vessel, where it is left until it gets perfectly clear by the deposition of the oxide of copper. It is then drawn off, and kept in well-stopped bottles. (Ghent. Gaz., Nov. 15, 1853, p. 429.) Graf and Riegel as- sert that hydrate of potassa, thus obtained, contains nitrate and nitrite of po- tassa; but Dr. A. Geuther found it perfectly pure, when the process was properly conducted. (Ghent. Gaz., June 1, 1856.) A pure hydrate may also be obtained by the process of Dr. Mohr, of Coblentz, which consists in precipitating solution of sulphate of potassa with caustic baryta, obtained from the nitrate. Thus pro- cured, the alkali is entirely free from chlorine, silica, and sulphuric acid. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 310.) Properties, &c. Solution of potassa is a limpid, colourless liquid, without smell, of an acrid caustic taste, and alkaline reaction. It acts rapidly on animal and vegetable substances, and, when rubbed between the fingers, produces a soapy feel, in consequence of a partial solution of the cuticle. It dissolves gum, resins, and extractive matter, and forms soap with oily and fatty bodies. The Br. solu- tion is never pure, but contains either undecomposed carbonate, or free lime, in addition to minute portions of sulphate of potassa, chloride of potassium, silica, and alumina; impurities usually present in the carbonate of potassa used in their preparation. The U. S. solution, being obtained from the bicarbo- nate of potassa, is purer. Undecomposed carbonate may be detected in the manner explained in a preceding paragraph, and free lime, by the produc- tion of a milky appearance on the addition of a few drops of carbonate of po- tassa, which precipitates the lime as a carbonate. When saturated with nitric acid, the solution should give little or no precipitate with carbonate of soda, chloride of barium, or nitrate of silver. The presence of lead is detected by a black precipitate produced by hydrosulphuret of ammoffia. When solution of potassa is used as a test for diabetic urine, it should be free from lead, the pre- sence of which renders the indications of the test ambiguous. (See Wood's Prac- tice of Med., 4th ed., ii. 586.) With bichloride of platinum it produces a yellow precipitate, showing that the alkali present is potassa. It is incompatible with acids, acidulous salts, and all metallic and earthy preparations held in solution by an acid; also with all ammoniacal salts, and with calomel and corrosive sub- limate. The two officinal solutions of potassa vary in strength; the U. S. solu- tion having the sp. gr. 1-065 and the Br. D058. These solutions are quite dilute ; that of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, which is the strongest, containing only 5-8 per cent, of hydrate of potassa. On account of its strong attraction for carbonic acid, solution of potassa should be carefully preserved from contact with the air. In consideration of the change to which it is liable by keeping, it may sometimes be advantageously prepared extemporaneously, according to the second U. S. process, by dissolving the hydrate in water. B. Medical Properties and Uses. Solution of potassa is antacid, diuretic, and nntilithic. It has been much employed in calculous complaints, under the im- pression that it has the property of dissolving urinary concretions in the kidneys and bladder; but experience has proved that the stone once formed cannot be removed by remedies internally administered, and the most that the alkaline medicines can effect, is to correct that disposition to the superabundant secretion of uric acid, or the insoluble urates, upon which gravel and stone often depend. For this purpose, however, the carbonated alkalies are preferable to caustic po- tassa, as they are less apt to irritate the stomach, and to produce injurious effects when long continued. It has been proposed to dissolve calculi by injecting im- mediately into the bladder the solution of potassa in a tepid state, and so much diluted that it can be held in the mouth ; but this mode of employing it has not been found to answer in practice. This solution has also been highly recom- mended in lepra, psoriasis, and other cutaneous affections; and is said to have proved peculiarly useful in scrofula; but in all these cases it probably acts siui- 1214 Liquores. PART II. pi) hy its antacid property, and is not superior to the carbonate of potassa or of soda. Externally it has been used, in a diluted state, as a stimulant lotion in rachitis and arthritic swellings, and, concentrated, as an escharotic in the bite of rabid or venomous animals. The dose is from ten to thirty minims, repeated two or three times a day, and gradually increased in cutaneous affections to one or two fluidrachms; but the remedy should not be too long continued, as it is apt to debilitate the stomach. It maybe given in sweetened water or some mucila- ginous fluid. Yeal broth and table beer have been recommended as vehicles ; but the fat usually present in the former would be liable to convert the alkali into soap, and the acid in the latter would neutralize it. In dyspeptic cases it may be associated with the simple bitters. In excessive doses it irritates, in- flames, or corrodes the stomach. Oils and the milder acids, such as vinegar and lemon-juice, are the antidotes to its poisonous action. They operate by neutral- izing the alkali. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Atropia, U. S.; Sulphurated Antimony, U. S.; and Oxide of Silver, U. S. Off. Prep. Potassa; Potassii Bromidum, Br.; Potassii Iodidum, Pr. W. LIQUOR POTASSiE ARSENITIS. U. S. Liquor Arsenicalis. Br. Solution of Arsenite of Potassa. Arsenical Solution. Fowler's Solution. “ Take of Arsenious Acid, in small pieces, Bicarbonate of Potassa, each, sixty-four grains; Compound Spirit of Lavender half a fluidounce; Dis- tilled Water a sufficient quantity. Boil the Arsenious Acid and Bicarbonate of Potassa, in a glass vessel, with twelve fluidounces of Distilled Water, until the Acid is entirely dissolved. To the solution, when cold, add the Compound Spirit of Lavender, and aftarrwards sufficient Distilled Water to make it measure a pint.” U. S. “ Take of Arsenious Acid, Carbonate of Potash, each, eighty grains; Com- pound Tincture of Lavender five fluidrachms [Imperial measure]; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Place the Arsenious Acid and Carbonate of Potash in a flask with ten [fluid]ounces of the Water, and apply heat until a clear solution is obtaiued. Allow this to cool. Then add the Compound Tincture of Lavender, and as much Distilled Water as will make the bulk one pint [Imp. meas.].” Br. The sp. gr. of this solution is 1-009. This preparation originated with the late Dr. Fowler, of Stafford, England, and was intended as a substitute for the celebrated remedy, known under the name of “the tasteless ague drop.'” It is an arsenite of potassa dissolved in water, and is formed by the combination of the arsenious acid with the potassa of the bicarbonate or carbonate, the carbonic acid being evolved. In the present U. S. process, the bicarbonate has been substituted for the carbonate, probably because more readily obtained pure. Its eq. corresponds so nearly with that of arsenious acid that, practically, the equal quantities directed will serve the purposes of the formula. According to M. II. Buignet, ebullition disengages the carbonic acid slowly; so that, after four hours’boiling, the solution still retains about one- sixth of this acid. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1856, p. 440 ) The name by which the preparation is designated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is the most correct. It has, however, been denied that the carbonate of potassa is decomposed by the arsenious acid, which is supposed to be merely held by it in solution; and, in this view of the nature of the preparation, the British name of Arsenical So- lution would be appropriate. The spirit of lavender is added to give it taste, and prevent its being mistaken for water. The U. S. preparation is of about the same strength as the British; for, although one-fourth more acid and alkali is taken in the latter formula, yet the Imperial pint is nearly one-fourth larger than the wine pint. In making this preparation, care should be taken that the arsenious acid is PART II. Liquores. 1215 pure. This object is best secured by using the acid in small pieces instead of iu powder. Sulphate of lime is a common impurity in the powdered acid, and if present will remain undissolved, and cause the solution to be weaker than it should be. A nother insoluble impurity in the powdered acid is arsenite of lime, which is sometimes present to the amount of 25 per cent. (Buignet.) Hence, if the arsenious acid does not entirely dissolve, the solution must be rejected. Properties. Solution of arsenite of potassa is a transparent liquid, having the colour, taste, and smell of the spirit of lavender. It has a strong alkaline reac- tion. It is decomposed by the usual reagents for arsenic, such as nitrate of sil- ver, the salts of copper, lime-water, and sulphuretted hydrogen; and is incom- patible with infusions and decoctions of cinchona. Before sulphuretted hydrogen will act, the solution must be acidulated with some acid, as the muriatic or acetic. If very long kept in flint glass, it is apt to suffer partial decomposition, exhal- ing a garlicky odour, and giving the inner surface of the bottle a metallic lustre, owing to the lead of the glass being revived. (Canavan, N. Y. Journ. of Pharm , i. 131.) According to Dr. R. Fresegius, solutions of alkaline arsenites, by keep- ing, absorb oxygen from the air, and are in part converted into arseniates. Hence the propriety of keeping this solution in small bottles quite filled. Mohr states that the alkaline reaction of the officinal solution delays the change. Medical Properties and Uses. This solution has the general action of the arsenical preparations on the animal economy, already described under the head of Arsenious Acid. Its liquid form makes it convenient for exhibition and gradual increase; and it is the preparation generally resorted to, when arsenic is given internally. It has been much employed in intermittent fever. Prof. Thomas D. Mitchell, of Jefferson Medical College, has given the result of his experience, as to its efficacy and safety in this disease, when exhibited in the large dose of fifteen or twenty drops three times a day. It is a valuable resource in the intermittents of children, who are with difficulty induced to swallow bark or even sulphate of quinia. The late Dr. Dewees related the case of a child only six weeks old, affected with a severe tertian, in which this solution was given with success. A fluidrachm was diluted with twelve fluidrachms of water; and of this six drops were given every four hours. Fowler’s solution is useful in many diseases. It has been employed with great success in lepra and other inveterate cutaneous affections. The late Dr. S. Cal- houn published an account of five cases of nodes successfully treated by it; and Dr. Baer, of Baltimore, and the late Dr. Eberle afterwards gave it a trial in this affection, and obtained satisfactory results. Several cases of chorea, cured by it, are reported by Mr. Martin, Mr. Slater, and Dr. Gregory, in the Medico-Chi- rurgical Transactions of London. Two interesting cures of periodical head- ache, performed by the solution, were related by the late Dr. Otto, of Philadel- phia, in the North American Med. and Surg. Journal (vols. iv. and v.). Mr. H. Hunt found it useful in menorrhagia, but prefers arsenious acid, as less apt to produce unpleasant effects. Dr. Fuller, of London, praises its effects in rheuma- tic gout, attended with turbid urine, in the dose of from eight to fifteen minims, conjoined with solution of potassa, or acetate of potassa. For an account of the successful use of Fowler’s solution in five cases of snake bite, see page 25. A diluted solution, in the proportion of a fluidrachm to the fluidounee of water, has been used with advantage as a topical application to foul ulcers. Each fluidrachm of the solution contains half a grain of arsenious acid. The average dose for an adult is ten drops two or three times a day. For the pecu- liar effects which it produces in common with the other arsenical preparations, the reader is referred to the article Arsenious Acid. Duflos’s antidote to the poisonous effects of Fowler’s solution, and of the salts of the acids of arsenic generally, is the acetate of the sesquioxide of iron with excess of base, made by dissolving freshly precipitated sesquioxide in acetic aty'd 1216 Liqnores. PART II. to saturation, adding an equal quantity of the oxide to the solution, and diluting the whole with water to the consistence of cream. B. LIQUOR POTASSiE CITRATIS. U. S. Solution of Citrate of Po- tassa. “ Take of Citric Acid half a troyounce; Bicarbonate of Potassa three hun- dred and thirty grains; Water half a pint. Dissolve the Acid and Bicarbonate in the Water, and strain the solution through muslin.” U. S. MISTURA CITRATIS. TJ.S. Liquor Potassa Citra- tis. U. S. 1850. Mixture of Citrate of Potassa. Solution of Citrate of Po- . tassa. Neutral Mixture. “ Take of Lemon-juice, fresh, half a pint; Bicarbonate of Potassa a sufficient quantity. Add the Bicarbonate gradually to the Lemon-juice until the acid is completely saturated; then strain through muslin.” U. S. We regret that two preparations so nearly identical in character, and asso- ciated in the Pharmacopoeia of 1850, should have been separated in the present edition. We consider them here together, because essentially connected in prac- tice ; one being substituted for the other according to circumstances unconnected with their real remedial effects, as the presence or absence of fresh lemons or limes in the market, the taste of the patient, &c. In the present formula for solution of citrate of potassa the volatile oil of lemons has been omitted; which we should also regret, were it not easy to supply the omission extemporaneously if required. Two minims of the oil, rubbed up with the citric acid before it is dissolved, will materially improve the flavour, and give the preparation a closer resemblance to the original neutral mixture made from lemon-juice, from which it was copied. In both the above preparations, the potassa of the bicarbonate unites with the citric acid, and the carbonic acid js liberated. A portion of the latter re- mains in the solution, and a portion escapes with effervescence. The result, there- fore, is a solution of citrate of potassa in wrnter impregnated with carbonic acid. When lemon-juice is employed, the solution has a greenish colour; but prepared with the pure acid it is colourless. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, bicar- bonate of potassa was substituted for the carbonate before used. As the pre- paration was formerly made, a flocculent precipitate wras apt to exhibit itself in small quantity, owing to the silicate of potassa generally present as an impurity in the carbonate. This gave up its base to the citric acid, and the silica was de- posited in the state of a hydrate. The bicarbonate is free from this impurity, and consequently hydrated silica is not throwm down; nevertheless, the solution is still directed to be filtered; a direction which may be useful, when fresh lemon- juice is used, by separating the undissolved matters of the juice, and in other in- stances is only surplusage. About 48 grains of the crystals of the bicarbonate, 33 grains of the pure and perfectly dry carbonate, or 45 grains of the hydrated car- bonate found in the shops, are sufficient to saturate a fiuidounce of good lemon- jui.ie; but the strength of the juice is variable, and the carbonate is apt to ab- sorb moisture from the air, so that precision as to quantities cannot be readily attained. Hence the propriety of the direction in the process for the neutral mixture, to add the alkaline carbonate to saturation. The point of saturation maybe determined by the cessation of effervescence, the absence of either an acid or alkaline taste, and still more accurately by litmus paper, which should not be rendered bright-red by the solution, nor blue if previously reddened by an acid. The inequality of strength in the lemon-juice renders the neutral mixture pre- pared with it more or less uncertain; though, if the apothecary select ripe and sound fruit, and express the juice himself, the preparation will be found to ap- proach sufficiently near a uniform standard for all practical purposes. Never- theless, if the physician wish absolute precision, he may order the neutral mixture to be made with crystallized citric acid, as directed in the first officinal formula; PART II. Liquores. 1217 or he may pursue the following plan suggested in former editions of this work. Dissolve two drachms of bicarbonate of potassa in two fluidounces of water; satu rate the solution with good fresh lemon-juice, and strain; and, lastly, add enough water to make the mixture measure six fluidounces. A fluidounce of this solu- tion may be given for a dose. Another mode of preparing the neutral mixture, officinal in 1850, but omitted in the present edition of the Pharmacopoeia, is simply to dissolve citrate of po- tassa in water, in the proportion of six drachms to half a pint. The preparation may be improved in flavour, and rendered more agreeable to the stomach, by rub- bing a drop or two of oil of lemons with the six drachms of citrate before dis- solving it, and substituting carbonic acid water for water as the menstruum. Effervescing Draught. Under this name, the citrate of potassa is often pre- pared extemporaneously, and given in the state of effervescence. The most convenient mode of exhibition is to add to a fluidounce of a mixture consisting of equal parts of lemon-juice and water, half a fluidounce of a solution contain- ing fifteen grains of carbonate of potassa, or twenty grains of the bicarbonate. Should effervescence not occur, as sometimes happens, when the carbonate is used, in consequence of the weakness of the lemon-juice, more of the juice should be added; as, unless sufficient acid is present to neutralize the potassa, part of the carbonate passes into the state of bicarbonate, and the gas is thus prevented from escaping. A solution of citric acid of the strength of that directed in the officinal formula may be substituted for lemon-juice, if this is not to be had. The fifteen grains of carbonate of potassa above mentioned are scarcely sufficient to saturate the lemon-juice, if of ordinary strength; but a little excess of the acid renders the preparation more agreeable to the taste. Some prefer the bicarbo- nate in the preparation of the effervescing draught, because it will always effer- vesce with lemon-juice, no matter what may be the strength of the latter. But this is an objection. The carbonate serves, by the absence of effervescence, to indicate when the lemon-juice is very weak in acid; and the defect may then be easily remedied by the addition of more juice. When the bicarbonate is used, if there should be a deficiency of acid, it is not discovered; and the patient takes a considerable portion of undecomposed bicarbonate, instead of the full quantity of citrate intended. Medical Properties and Uses. The solution of citrate of potassa has long been used under the name of neutral mixture, saline mixture, or effervescing draught. It is an excellent refrigerant diaphoretic, adapted to almost all cases of fever with a hot dry skin, and especially to the paroxysms of our remittent and intermittent fevers. The effervescing draught is peculiarly useful. The carbonic acid serves to cover the taste of the citrate of potassa, and adds to the diaphoretic powers of the salt its own cordial influence upon the stomach. No preparation with which we are acquainted is equally efficacious in allaying irri- tability of stomach and producing diaphoresis in our remittent fevers. It is usually also very grateful to the patient. In order to increase the sedative and diaphoretic properties of the neutral mixture, it is customary to add to it a portion of tartar emetic; and a little sweet spirit of nitre will be found an ex- cellent adjuvant in fevers with nervous disturbance. Should the solution irritate the bowels, as occasionally happens, it may be combined with a little laudanum or solution of sulphate of morphia. Sugar maybe added if desired. The dose of the officinal solution is a tablespoonful or half a fluidounce, which should be somewhat diluted when taken. The whole of each effervescing draught, prepared as above stated, is to be taken at once. Each dose should be repeated every hour, two, or three hours, according to the urgency of the symptoms. W. LIQUOR POTASSiE PERMANGxANATIS. Br. Solution of Perman- ganate of Potassa. 1218 Liquores. PART II. “ Take uf Permanganate of Potash four grains; Distilled Water one Jluid- ounce. Dissolve.” Br. This is a simple solution of permanganate of potassa, in the proportion, as nearly as may be, of one part by weight to 110 parts of water; and is intended to be of standard strength. But, while for some purposes it is too strong, for others it is too feeble; and we prefer M. Reveil’s normal solution of 10 parts to 90, so that the solution shall contain 10 per cent, of the salt, which may be used of its full strength when required, or diluted more or less according to circumstances. For details on this point the reader is referred to the article on permanganate of potassa (page 684). The London solution is used as a gargle in fetid affections of the throat, and for washing the hands after dissections, in the proportion of one part to forty of water. W. LIQUOR SODiE. U.S..Br. Solution of Soda. “ Take of Carbonate of Soda twenty-six troyounces; Lime eight troy ounces; Distilled Water a su fficient quantity. Dissolve the Carbonate in three pints and a half of Distilled Water, and heat the solution to the boiling point. Mix the Lime with three pints of Distilled Water, and, having heated the mixture to the boiling point, add it to the solution of the Carbonate, and boil for ten minutes. Then transfer the whole to a muslin strainer, and, when the liquid portion has passed, add sufficient Distilled Water, through the strainer, to make the strained liquid measure six pints. Lastly, keep the liquid in well-stopped bottles of green glass. Solution of Soda has the sp. gr. 1071, and contains 5’7 per cent, of hy- drate of soda.” U. S. The British Pharmacopoeia takes of Carbonate of Soda twenty-eight ounces [avoirdupois]; Slaked Lime twelve ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water one gal- lon [Imperial measure], and prepares the Solution in the manner directed for Liquor Potass®. The sp. gr. of the British solution is 1 047 ; and the propor- tion of hydrated soda contained in it is 441. Solution of soda is prepared in the same way as solution of potassa. By a double decomposition between carbonate of soda and hydrate of lime, there are formed hydrate of soda in solution, and carbonate of lime which precipitates. In both the processes an excess of lime is used, which is necessary to ensure a full de- composition of the carbonate. “One fluidounce [of the British solution] requires for neutralization 47 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” Br. Properties, &c. Solution of soda, sometimes called solution of caustic soda, is a colourless liquid, having a caustic taste and alkaline reaction. Its properties and tests are the same as those of solution of potassa, with the exception that no precipitate is produced by bichloride of platinum or tartaric acid. The alkali dissolved must be viewed as hydrate of soda, consisting of one eq. of soda 31 *3, and one of water 9 = 40 3. Pliarm. Uses. In preparing Antimonium Sulphuratum, Br.; Cinchoniae Sul- phas, £7. 5.; Ferri et Quiniae Citras, Br.; Ferri Oxidum Magneticum; Ferri Peroxidum Hydratum, Br.; Ferrum Tartaratum, Br.; Quinise Sulphas, Br. Off. Prep. Soda Caustica, Br.; Sod® Yalerianas, U. S. B. LIQUOR SODiE ARSENIATIS. Br. Solution of Arseniate of Soda. “ Take of Arseniate of Soda (rendered anhydrous by a heat not exceeding 300°) four grains; Distilled Water one fluidounce. Dissolve.” Br. This is simply an officiual form for the administration of arseniate of soda. (See Sodee Arsenias.) The salt is directed to be dried, in order, we presume, that the solution may be of a uniform strength; as, from the mode in which the ar- seniate of soda is ordered to be prepared, it is scarcely possible that it should always contain precisely the same quantity of water of crystallization. It is im- portant in drying it to limit the heat to 300°, lest a portion of the arsenic should be volatilized. The commencing dose is from three to five minims or drops, to Liquores. 1219 PART II. be very cautiously increased if necessary. Its arsenical strength is about the same as that of the British solution of arsenite of potassa. W LIQUOR SODiE CHLORINATES. U.S. Liquor Sodj3 Chlorate. Br. Solution of Chlorinated Soda. Solution of Chloride of Soda. Labar- raque’s Disinfecting Liquid. “ Take of Chlorinated Lime twelve troyounces; Carbonate of Soda twenty- four troy ounce s; Water twelve pints. Dissolve the Carbonate of Soda in three pints of the Water, with the aid of heat. Triturate the Chlorinated Lime, a little at a time, with small portions of the Water, gradually added, until a smooth, uniform mixture is obtained. Mix this intimately with the remainder of the Water, and set the mixture aside for twenty-four hours. Then decant the clear liquid, and, having transferred the residue to a muslin strainer, allow it to drain until sufficient liquid has passed to make, with the decanted liquid, eight pints. Mix the liquid thoroughly with the Solution of Carbonate of Soda, transfer the mixture to a muslin strainer, and allow it to drain, adding water, if necessary, towards the close, until eleven pints and a half of liquid have passed. Lastly, keep the liquid in well-stopped bottles, protected from the light.” U. S. The sp. gr. of this solution is 1 045. “ Take of Carbonate of Soda twelve ounces [avoirdupois]; Chloride of So- dium four ounces [avoird.]; Black Oxide of Manganese, in powder, three ounces [avoird.]; Sulphuric Acid two jluidounces and a half [Imperial mea- sure]; Distilled Water forty-four Jluidounces [Imp. meas.]. Reduce the Car- bonate of Soda to powder, dissolve it in thirty-six [fluid]ounces of the Water, and put the solution into a glass vessel. Mix the Chloride of Sodium and the Oxide of Manganese, place them in a retort, and add to them the Sulphuric Acid, previously mixed with three [fluid]ounces of the Water, and allow to cool. Heat the mixture gradually, and pass the evolved chlorine through a wash bottle containing five [fluid]ounces of the Water, and afterwards into the solution of carbonate of socla. When the disengagement of chlorine has ceased, transfer the solution to a stoppered bottle, and keep it in a cool and dark place.” Br. The sp. gr. of this solution is 1T03. This solution was first brought into notice as a disinfecting agent by Labar- raque, an apothecary of Paris. It was afterwards found to possess valuable the- rapeutic properties. The U S. process is that of Payen, adopted in the French Codex of 1837. It consists in decomposing a solution of carbonate of soda by one of chlorinated lime. Carbonate of lime is precipitated and the chlorinated soda remains in solution. The proportion employed gives an excess of carbonate of soda, the presence of which renders the solution more permanent. The British process is that of Labarraque. All the chlorine generated from the prescribed quantity of materials for forming that gas, is passed into the solution of carbon- ate of soda; and, when the chlorine is limited to this quantity, no carbonic acid is disengaged. The chlorine is first passed through water to free it from muriatic acid, which, if suffered to come over, would convert the alkali into common salt. Properties. The U. S. solution is transparent, of a greenish-yellow colour, a faint smell of chlorine, a sharp saline taste, and an alkaline reaction. With lime-water it yields a precipitate of carbonate of lime, known to be a carbonate by its dissolving with effervescence in an acid. This precipitate is caused by the excess of carbonate of soda. Owing to the presence of loosely combined chlorine, it rapidly destroys the colour of sulphate of indigo. It produces a copious, light-brown precipitate with the sulphate of iron. The British solution is a colourless alkaline liquid, of an astringent taste, and a feeble smell of chlo- rine. With muriatic acid it effervesces, and evolves chlorine and carbonic acid, and forms a solution which is not precipitated by bichloride of platinum, thus showing the absence of potassa. It is not precipitated by oxalate of ammonia, 1220 Xiquores. PART II. showing that it contains no lime. “One fiuidrachm, added to a solution of 20 grains o! iodide of potassium iu four fluidounces of water, and acidulated with two fluidiachms of hydrochloric acid, requires for the discharge of the brown colour which the mixture assumes, forty-three measures of the volumetric solu- tion of hyposulphite of soda.” (Br.) This testis intended to determine the chlorine strength of the solution. The hydrochloric acid liberates the chlorine, which then separates from the iodide of potassium an equivalent quantity of iodine, by which the solution is rendered brown ; and the iodine being con- verted into hydriodic acid by the hyposulphite of soda, the solution again be- comes colourless. The quantity of the solution of the latter salt required to bleach the liquid measures the proportion of iodine, and this that of the chlo- rine which separates it. The colour of turmeric is first rendered brown, and afterwards destroyed. When it is boiled, chlorine is not given off, nor is its bleaching property sensibly impaired; and, when carefully evaporated, a mass of damp crystals is obtained, wThich, when redissolved in water, possess the pro- perties of the original liquid. Both solutions,when exposed to the air, absorb car- bonic acid and slowly evolve chlorine. It is on this property of gradually evolv- ing chlorine that their disinfecting power depends. Nature and Composition. The chemical nature of these solutions is differ- ent. Assuming the chlorinated lime to be essentially hypochlorite of lime with chloride of calcium (see page 186), the U. S. solution, after decantation from the precipitated carbonate of lime, will contain hypochlorite of soda with chlo- ride of sodium. Ca0,C10-|-CaCl and 2(Na0,C02) = Na0,C10-fNaCl and 2(Ca0,C02). Besides these there will be present more or less carbonate of soda, according as there happens to be in the chlorinated lime less or more chlorine to decompose it. In all cases, however, there will be an excess of carbonate of soda; as the best chlorinated lime does not contain sufficient chlorine to effect its entire decomposition, in the proportion in which it is taken in the formula. The constitution of the British preparation is more complicated. As it is a pe- culiarity in its formation that no carbonic acid is evolved, it is necessary to as- sume the presence of all the carbonic acid of the carbonate of soda; and hence it is considered to be a combination of hypochlorite of soda, chloride of sodium, and bicarbonate of soda. The reaction is supposed to take place between four eqs. of carbonate of soda and two of chlorine. By a transfer of carbonic acid from two eqs. of carbonate to the remaining two eqs. of the same salt, two eqs. of bicarbonate are formed, and two of soda left. The sodium and oxygen of one eq. of soda unite, each, with one eq. of chlorine, so as to form one eq. of chlo- ride of sodium, and one of hypochlorous acid. This acid then unites with the yemaining eq. of soda to form hypochlorite of soda. The view here taken makes the U. S. and British solutions analogous in constitution; but differing in one containing the carbonate, the other the bicarbonate of soda. In the latter, half the soda is bicarbonated ; in the former, from a half to a third is monocarbon- ated, according to the quality of the chlorinated lime used. According to Mil- Ion’s view, both solutions contain oxychloride of sodium, Na | , or, which is the same thing, bichloride of soda (XaO,Cl2); thus making the compound as- similate in constitution to the teroxide of sodium (NaOs). On Millon’s view, one eq. of carbonate of soda would decompose two of chloride of lime, with the result of forming one eq. of bichloride of soda, one of carbonate of lime, and one of free lime. 2(CaO,Cl) and Na0,C02= XaO,Cl2and CaO,C02and CaO. M. Millon’s view doubles the proportion of the chlorine to the soda. Mr. B. Ka- vanagh, of Dublin, finds that a solution of alum has its alumina precipitated upon being added to the British chlorinated soda liquid, without effervescence of car- bonic acid, but with the evolution of chlorine on the application of heat. Hence he infers that the soda, not combined with carbonic acid iu the preparat’< n, is part II. Liquores. 1221 united with chlorine and not with hypochlorous acid, and, accordingly, conceives that he has proved the correctness of Millon’s views. Upon the whole, analyse* are wanting before we can determine the true constitution of the officinal soia- tions of chlorinated soda. The British solution, though made on Labarraque’s plan, is considerably stronger than his preparation; for in the British process the carbonate is dissolved in about three times its weight of water, before the chlorine is transmitted ; whereas Labarraque dissolved it in four times its weight. Medical Properties and Uses. Solution of chlorinated soda is stimulant, antiseptic, and resolvent. Internally it has been employed in diseases termed putrid or malignant, as typhus fever, scarlatina maligna, &c. The conditions which indicate the propriety of its use are great prostration of strength, fetid evacuations, and dry and furred tongue. Under these circumstances it promotes urine, creates a moisture on the skin, and improves the secretions and evacua- tions. It has also been given in dysentery accompanied with peculiarly fetid stools, in dyspepsia attended with putrid eructations, and in glandular enlarge- ments and chronic mucous discharges. Other diseases in which it has been re- commended, are secondary syphilis, scrofula, bilious disorders, and chronic dis- eases of the skin. M. Chailly speaks in praise of it in suppressed or deficient menstruation. In asphyxia from sulphuretted hydrogen it forms, like chlori- nated lime, an efficacious antidote. The dose is from thirty drops to a teaspoon- ful, given in a cupful of water or mild aqueous liquid, and repeated every two or three hours. As a local remedy it is found useful in all affections attended with fetor, such as gangrenous, cancerous, scrofulous, and syphilitic ulcers, ulceration of the gums, carbuncle, ozaena, mortification, putrid sorethroat, &c. In these cases it is ap- plied as a gargle, wash, ingredient of poultices, or imbibed by lint. In the slough- ing of the fauces occurring in severe cases .of scarlatina, Dr. Jackson, late of Northumberland, Pa., found it efficacious, used as a gargle, or injected into the throat. In small-pox Mr. John Gabb employed this solution with great benefit, as a wash and gargle for the mouth and throat, and as an application to the skin to allay itching. In the sore-mouth from ptyalism, it forms a good mouth-wash, when diluted with eight parts or more of water. In fetid discharges from the vagina, uterus, and bladder, it has been employed with advantage as an injec- tion, diluted with from fifteen to thirty parts of water for the vagina and uterus, and with sixty parts when the object is to wash out the bladder by means of a double cannula. The solution of chlorinated soda has also been applied suc- cessfully to burns, and to cutaneous eruptions, particularly psoriasis, tinea capi- tis, scabies, and obstinate herpetic affections. In these cases it is diluted with from ten to thirty parts of water, the strength varying according to circumstances. For the cure of sore nipples, Dr. Chopin found nothing so successful as fre- quently repeated lotions with this solution. Solution of chlorinated soda is a powerful disinfectant, better suited for dis- infecting operations on a small scale than chlorinated lime. In the chambers of the sick, especially with infectious diseases, it is highly useful, sprinkled on the floor or bed, and added to the vessels intended to receive the excretions. Off. Prep. Cataplasma Sodae Chloral®, Br. B. LIQUOR STRYCHNLZE. Br. Solution of Strychnia. “ Take of Strychnia, in crystals, four grains ; Dilute Hydrochloric Acid six minims; Rectified Spirit two fluidrachms; Distilled Water six fluidrachms. Mix the Hydrochloric Acid with four [fluijdrachms of the Water, and dissolve the Strychnia in the mixture by the aid of heat. Then add the Spirit and the remainder of the Water.” Br. This is in fact a solution of the muriate of strychnia. The spirit is added for its preservation. Two fluidrachms of it contain a grain of strychnia, and the com- mencing dose is ten minims, equal to one-twelfth of a grain of the alkaloid. W. 1222 Lithia.—Magnesia. PART II, LITHIA. Preparation of Lithia. LIT 11 HE CITRAS. Br. Citrate of Lithia. “Take of Carbonate of Lithia fifty grains; Citric Acid, in crystals, ninety grains; Warm Distilled Water one fluidounce. Dissolve the Citric Acid in the Water, and add the Carbonate of Lithia, in successive portions, applying heat until effervescence ceases, and a perfect solution is obtained. Evaporate by a steam or sand-bath till water ceases to escape, and the residue is converted into a viscid liquid. This should be dried in an oven or air-chamber at the tem- perature of about 240°, then rapidly pulverized, and enclosed in a stoppered bottle. ” Br. The British Pharmacopoeia gives, as the composition of citrate of lithia, three eqs. of lithia and one of citric acid (3LO,C12H5On); this acid being tribasic. The eq. of carbonate of lithia being 3T, and three eqs. entering into the constitution of the salt, 111 parts of the carbonate will of course require 201 parts or one eq. of crystallized citric acid for saturation. Consequently, to saturate the 50 grains of carbonate of lithia directed by the Pharmacopoeia, 90 54 grains of the crystal- lized acid will be required; so that there is a slight deficiency on the part of the acid; whereas it should be in slight excess, and, according to Mr. Squire, 100 grains of the acid should be used instead of 90 grains. Citrate of Lithia, thus prepared, is in the form of a white powder, deliques- cent, and soluble, without residue, in 2 5 parts of water. (Squire.) Heated to redness it blackens, evolving inflammable gases; and the residue, neutralized by hydrochloric acid, yields with rectified spirit a solution which burns with a crimson flame. (Br.) This test proves that the base is lithia, and the acid or- ganic. That the salt is a citrate will be shown by its solution becoming turbid when boiled with lime-water, but clear again on cooling. (Brande and Taylor.) “ Twenty grains of it, burned at a low red heat, with free access of air, leave 10-6 grains of white residue.” (Br.) In other words, 20 grains of the salt yield 10'6 grains of carbonate of lithia; for all the acid with its carbon must be con- sumed in the process. If the salt consist, as stated in the Pharmacopoeia, of 3 eqs. of lithia = 45, and one eq. of citric acid (C12H.On) = 165, without water, 210 parts of it should yield 111 parts of the carbonate, which is almost exactly the result given by the Pharmacopoeia; so that the citrate must be considered as anhydrous. Medical Properties and Uses. These are essentially the same as those of the carbonate, as, before entering the circulation, the citric acid is decomposed, and the lithia circulates with the blood, and passes out with the urine in the form of carbonate. While thus capable of producing the antacid, antilithic, and diu- retic effects of the carbonate, it has the advantages over that salt of having a less disagreeable taste, and of being less disposed to irritate the stomach; the same advantages that, in many instances, the citrate of potassa has over the carbonate of that alkali. The dose is stated at from five to ten grains; but pro- bably much more might sometimes be given with advantage, especially wher employed with the object of dissolving depositions of urate of soda. W MAGNESIA. Preparations of Magnesia. MAGNESIA. U. S. Magnesia Levis. Br. Magnesia. “Take of Carbonate of Magnesia a convenient quantity. Put it intc an earthen vessel, and expose it to a red heat for two hours, cr until the carbcuie acid is entirely expelled.” U. S. PART II. Magnesia. 1223 In the British Pharmacopoeia directions are given for preparing two forms of magnesia, one called Magnesia Levis, or Light Magnesia, from the Light Car- bonate, and the other simply Magnesia from the heavy carbonate, which it de- signates simply as Carbonate of Magnesia. It is the former which corresponds with our ordinary magnesia. “Take of Light Carbonate of Magnesia four ounces. Introduce the Carbo- nate of Magnesia into a Cornish or Hessian crucible closed loosely by a lid, ana let this be exposed to a low red heat as long as a little of the powder, taken from the centre of the crucible, when cooled and dropped into dilute sulphuric acid, gives rise to effervescence. The product should be preserved in corked bottles.” Br. Magnesia. Br. This is directed, in the British Pharmacopoeia, to be prepared precisely in the same manner as magnesia, using, however, the heavy carbonate, named by it Carbonate of Magnesia. By exposure to a red heat, the water and carbonic acid of the carbonate of magnesia are expelled, and the earth is obtained pure. According to Dr. Black, the carbonate loses seven-twelfths of its weight by calcination. Brande says that the loss varies from 50 to 60 per cent., of which from 15 to 20 per cent, is water. About the close of the process the earth exhibits a luminous or phosphorescent appearance, which is said to be a good criterion of its freedom from carbonic acid. (Duncan.) A more certain indication, however, is the absence of efferves- cence when muriatic acid is added to a little of the magnesia, previously mixed with water. It is an error to suppose that a very intense heat is requisite in the calcination. The temperature of ignition is sufficient for the expulsion of the water and carbonic acid, and any increase serves only to render the magnesia harder, denser, less readily soluble in acids, and consequently less useful as a medicine. In order to ensure a pure product, care should be taken that the car- bonate employed be free from lime. It should be rubbed to powder before being introduced into the pot or crucible; and, as in consequence of its levity it occu- pies a very large space, the plan has been proposed of moistening and compress- ing it in order to reduce its bulk; but the French pharmaceutical writers direct that the vessels employed should be sufficiently large to contain a considerable quantity of the carbonate, without the necessity of resorting to compression.* The officinal direction, to keep the magnesia, after it has been prepared, in well- stopped glass vessels, is founded on the fact that it absorbs carbonic acid and water from the air; but, as the absorption of the acid goes on very slowly, and that of water does not injure the preparation, the caution is often neglected in the shops. The great bulk of the earth renders its introduction into small bot- tles inconvenient. A four ounce bottle holds only about an ounce of the purest and finest magnesia. But its specific gravity is greatly increased by trituration; and four times the quantity may be thus got into the same space. The density of Henry's magnesia, which is at least four times that of the earth prepared in the ordinary way, has been ascribed to this cause. It has also been attributed to the influence of intense heat employed in the calcination. The conjecture has even been advanced-, that this magnesia, which has enjoyed so great a popularity in * In a paper by M. A. V6e (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1860, p. 84), it is stated that the mag- nesia of commerce, in consequence of imperfect preparation, is often found dense, granu- lar, harsh, and of difficult solubility in the acids. To remedy this inconvenience the only method heretofore known was to prepare it in small quantities, and to stir the magnesia during calcination with an iron spoon. The difficulty in preparing it properly on the large scale depends upon the unequal action of the heat on large masses, so that the outer part become® heated in excess before the inner is sufficiently so. To remedy this inconvenience M. Vee uses a Airnace and crucible of a peculiar shape, so arranged that the magnesia may not be in layers thicker than seven centimetres (2-7 inches), may be exposed equably to heat, and not longer exposed than may be necessary for its decomposition. For an account at the apparatus, and of the proper method of managing the process, the reader is referred to the Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1862, p 522.—Note to the twelfth edition. 1224 Magnesia. PART II. England a/ri this country, is prepared by precipitating a solution of sulphate of magnesia by caustic potassa; as the earth afforded by this plan is comparatively dense. It is asserted that the magnesia, prepared from the carbonate procured by precipitating the sulphate of magnesia with carbonate of soda, is softer to the touch, and bears a closer resemblance to Henry’s than that prepared from the ordinary carbonate. The fact is explained by the presence in common magnesia of a little sulphate of potassa, from which it is difficult entirely to free it in con- sequence of the sparing solubility of this salt, and of a portion of silica, which originally existed in the carbonate of potassa employed to decompose the sul- phate of magnesia, and of which the carbonate of soda is destitute. According to Mr. Richard Phillips, jun., if equivalent quantities of crystallized sulphate of magnesia and crystallized carbonate of soda be boiled together in water, the mixture evaporated to dryness, the residual salts calcined, and the sulphate of soda dissolved out by water, the magnesia obtained will be dense. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xvi. 118.) By packing the carbonate closely in the crucible, or by moistening and then compressing it strongly in a cloth, before calcination, a heavy magnesia is obtained. The advantages of Henry’s magnesia, independ- ently of the convenience of its less bulk, are its greater softness, and more ready miscibility with water. Preparations similar to Henry’s are made by T. J. Hus- band and by Charles Ellis, of Philadelphia, and sold under the names respec- tively of Husband'’a and of Ellis's Magnesia* * The three kinds of heavy magnesia sold in our market have been examined by Prof. Procter, with the following results. All are heavier than common magnesia, more readily miscible with water, smoother upon the tongue, and of a less quickly developed taste; but they differ in these respects, Henry’s standing first, Husband’s second, and Ellis’s last. But the two latter are much more readily acted on by acids than Henry’s, differing in this respect little from each other. Both, moreover, though less readily miscible with water than Henry’s, are longer retained in suspension, and Ellis’s exceeds Husband’s in this quality. In reference, therefore, to mere facility of administration and to taste, it appears that the imported magnesia has the advantage; but for forming liquid mixtures, and for rapidity of antacid action, the American are preferable. Husband’s contained 7 per cent, of combined water; the two others lost at a red heat only seven-tenths of one per cent. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxii. 383.) Dr. Pereira found light magnesia, under the microscope, to exhibit the same forms ob- served in the light carbonate; namely, one portion was amorphous and of a flocculent or granular consistence, and another was composed of fragments of prismatic crystals; while the heavy magnesia was homogeneous, exhibiting no traces of crystals, and consisting of minute granules more or less cohering into small soft balls or masses. (Pharm. Journ., viii. 235.)—Note to the ninth edition. In reference to the preparation of heavy magnesia, Mr. T. H. Barr, after trying various methods, obtained the best results either by precipitating a hot concentrated solution of sulphate of magnesia with a like solution of carbonate of soda, or by decomposing chloride of magnesium by heat. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 193.) Mr. Thomas Weaver proposes the following ready method of preparing a heavy magne- sia, which, as we have been informed, yields a good product, having not only the recom- mendation of density, but that also of smoothness, which is a no less desirable quality. “Take of sulphate of magnesia giv, gij; bicarbonate of soda Dissolve the sulphate in six ounces of water, add a few drops of nitric acid, and boil for 15 or 20 minutes; then add sufficient carbonate of soda, dissolved in a little water, to produce a slight precipitate, and continue boiling for some time; filter, and set aside to cool. Triturate the bicarbonate of soda with about eight ounces of cold water, and add it to the cold solution of sulphate of magnesia. After frequent agitation, filter, transfer to a porcelain capsule, and boil quickly till reduced to a small bulk. Collect the precipitate on a filter, wash thoroughlj-, and, when nearly dry, transfer to a crucible free from iron, and calcine, bearing in mind the suggestion of Mr. Barr, that a low heat just approaching redness, and long continued, will ensure a much finer product than a high heat for a short time.” The object of the nitric acid is to peroxidize any iron present in the sulphate, and the subsequent addition of carbonate of soda, followed by ebullition, is to precipitate the ferruginous oxide. Cold solutions cf bicarbonate of soda and sulphate of magnesia do not react on each other; but, when the excess of carbonic acid is driven off by boiling, a precipitation takes place of carbonate of magnesia, which affords a denser magnesia by calcination than can be ob- tained by the use of carbonate of soda. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 214.)—N< le to the eleventh edition. PART II. Magnesia. 1225 Properties, &c. Magnesia is a very light, white, inodorous powder, of a feeble alkaline taste. Its sp.gr. is commonly stated at 2-3. It was deemed infusible till melted by means of the compound blowpipe of Dr. Hare. Water sprinkled upon it is absorbed to the extent of about 18 per cent., but with scarcely any in crease of temperature. It is almost insoluble, requiring, according to Dr. Fyfe, 5142 parts of water at 60°, and 36,000 parts of boiling water for solution. Water thus impregnated has no effect on vegetable colours; but magnesia itself produces a brown stain by contact with moistened turmeric paper. Magnesia is a metallic oxide, consisting of one equivalent of magnesium 12, and one of oxy- gen 8 = 20. Magnesium is a white, very brilliant metal, resembling silver, mal- leable, fusible at a low temperature, and convertible into magnesia by the com- bined action of air and moisture. There is a hydrate of magnesia consisting of one equiv. of the earth and one of water. Magnesia forms with nitric and mu- riatic acids, salts which are soluble in alcohol, and very deliquescent. It is pre- cipitated from its saline solutions by the pure alkalies in the state of a hydrate, aud by the carbonates of potassa and soda as a carbonate; but it is not precipi- tated by the alkaline bicarbonates, nor by common carbonate of ammonia. Magnesia is liable to contain, as impurities, carbonate of magnesia, lime, alumina, silica, and small quantities of the soluble salts employed or produced in the preparation of the carbonate from which it is procured. The presence of carbonate of magnesia is indicated by effervescence when the earth is dissolved in muriatic acid. Lime, which is a very frequent impurity, and imparts to the magnesia a more strongly alkaline and more disagreeable taste, is detected by oxalate of ammonia or bicarbonate of potassa. Neither of these salts disturbs a neutral solution of pure magnesia in a dilute acid ; but, if lime is present, both produce a precipitate, the former of oxalate, the latter of carbonate of lime. As magnesia is completely dissolved by muriatic acid, silica and other impurities insoluble in that acid would be left behind. Alumina is indicated by the produc- tion of a precipitate when ammonia is added in excess to a solution of fifty grains of magnesia in a fluidounce of muriatic acid. (Christison's Dispensatory.) If the magnesia contain a soluble sulphate or carbonate, chloride of barium will reveal it by producing a precipitate with water digested on the magnesia. Medical Properties and Uses. Magnesia is antacid and laxative; and is much used, under the name of calcined magnesia, in'dyspepsia, sick headache, gout, and other complaints attended with sour stomach and constipation. It is also a favourite remedy in the complaints of children, in which acidity of the primae vise is often a prominent symptom. Its antacid properties render it use- ful in gravel attended with an excessive secretion of uric acid. Its advantages over carbonate of magnesia are that it may be given in a smaller dose, and does not occasion flatulence. The dose as a laxative is from thirty grains to a drachm ; as an antacid merely, or antilithic, from ten to thirty grains twice a day. When it meets with no acid, it is apt to linger in the stomgch or bowels, and may in that case be followed by lemonade. It should be administered in water or milk, and thoroughly triturated so as to render the mixture uniform. If mixed with less than 14 or 15 times its weight of water, and allowed to stand for a day or two, magnesia is apt to form a more or less concrete mass, owing to the produc- tion of a hydrate of the earth, and the solidification of a portion of the water. This change does not take place, or at least takes place much less readily, when magnesia already saturated with moisture is employed instead of that freshly cal- cined. It has been conjectured that anhydrous magnesia might prove injurious m the stomach by solidifying its liquid contents; and the earth which has be- t ome saturated with moisture by exposure to a damp air is preferably recom- mended. Freshly precipitated hydrate of magnesia will serve as an antidote to arsenious acid, though less efficient than hydrated sesquioxide of iron. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Yeratria, U. S. 1226 Mellita. PART II. Off. Prep. Liquor Magnesiae Citrates, U.S.; Pilulae Copaibae, U. S.; Pulvia Rhei Compositus; Trochisci Magnesiae, U. S. W. MELLITA. Preparations of Honey. Honey is used in pharmacy chiefly as the vehicle of more active medicines. It is said to have this advantage over syrup, that its preparations are less apt to. become candied; but, as it contains principles which disagree with the stomach in many persons, and as its variable consistence prevents the same exact precision in regard to proportion as is attainable with a solution of pure sugar, it is at present little employed. The preparations in which honey and vinegar are com- bined are called Oxymels. The Oxymel of Squill, of the former U. S. and Lon- don Pharmacopoeias, has'been omitted in the existing editions of the two national codes. Medicated honeys are of a proper consistence, if, when a small quantity, al- lowed to cool upon a plate, is divided by the edge of a spoon, the portions do not readily coalesce. A more accurate criterion, however, is their specific gravity, which should be 1319 (35° B.) at ordinary temperatures, and 1261 (30° B.) at the boiling point of water. The specific gravity is most readily determined by means of the saccharometer. W. MEL DESPUMATUM. U. S. Mel Depuratum. Br. Clarified Honey. “ Take of Honey a convenient quantity. Melt it by means of a water-bath, and then remove the scum.” U. S. “Take of Honey five pounds. Melt the Honey in a water-bath, and strain, while hot, through flannel previously moistened with warm water. ” Br. Honey, by the heat of the water-bath, becomes so fluid that the wax and other lighter impurities which it contains rise to the surface, and may be skimmed off; while the heavier substances which may have been accidentally or fraudulently added, such as sand or other earth, sink to the bottom. The following method of clarifying honey has been practised in France. Take of white honey 3000 parts; water 750 parts; carbonate of lime, powdered and washed, 96 parts. Mix them in a suitable vessel, and boil for three minutes, stir- ring constantly. Then add 96 parts of animal charcoal, previously washed, heated to redness, powdered, and sifted, and boil for a few minutes. Lastly, add the whites of two eggs beat up with 500 parts of water, and bring the liquid to the boiling point. Withdraw the vessel from the fire, and, after the mixture has cooled for 15 minutes, strain it through flannel, and repeat the straining till the liquid passes perfectly clear. Should it not have a due consistence, it should be concentrated sufficiently by a quick boiling. The carbonate of lime serves to saturate any acid in the honey, which might favour the formation of glucose, and thus increase the tendency to granulation. The French Codex simply directs six pounds of white honey to be heated with two pounds of water, skimmed, concentrated to 30° B. while boiling hot, and then strained through flannel. The following method of clarifying honey is recommended by Andre von Hirschberg. Boil 25 fibs, of honey, to which half the quantity of water has been added, with a pulp obtained by stirring three sheets of white blotting-paper with water, over a slow fire, till the paper is reduced to minute fibres. When the mixture cools, put it into a woollen filtering bag, previously moistened, and allow the honey to pass. It comes away quite clear. The paper pulp may then be washed, and the dark liquid which passes, evaporated by a water-bath to the proper consistence. (See Pharm. Journ., ix. 543.) Another process, recommended by A. Hofmann, is to dissolve fibs, jf Looey part II. Mellita. 1227 in twice its weight of water, heat the solution to the boiling point, and then add a solution of three drachms of gelatin in three times its weight of water, and afterwards an aqueous solution of one drachm of tannin, or an infusion of two drachms of galls. The mixture is to be well stirred, and kept hot for an hour Lastly, seven-eighths of the honey may be drawn off clear, the remainder fil tered through flannel, and the whole evaporated. (Ibid., xv. 121.) Honey clarified with carbonate of lime and animal charcoal, as in the first process described, is as clear and colourless as syrup made with sugar, but still retains a peculiar flavour. It is less disposed to ferment than crude honey, and is said not to be so liable to produce griping pain when swallowed. Off. Prep. Confectio Aromatica, U. S.; Confectio Opii, U.S.; Confectio Pi- peris, Br.; Confectio Ros®, U. S.; Confectio Scammonii, Br.; Confectio Tere- binthin®, Br.; Mel Boracis, Br.; Mel Ros®, U. S ; Mel Sod® Boratis, U. S.; Oxymel, Br.; Pilul® Ferri Carbonatis, U. S.; Pilul® Quini® Sulphatis, U. S.; Tinctura Cardamomi Composita, U.S.; Tinctura Opii Camphorata, U.S. W. MEL ROSiE. U.S. Honey of Boses. “ Take of Red Rose, in moderately fine powder, two troyounces; Clarified Honey twenty-five troyounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of Diluted Alcohol, pack it firmly in a coni- cal glass percolator, and gradually pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until six flui- drachms of filtered liquid have passed. Set this aside, and continue the perco- lation until half a pint more of liquid is obtained. Evaporate this, by meaus of a water-bath, to ten fluidrachms, add the reserved liquid, and mix the whole with the Clarified Honey.” U. S. Though one of the officinals in the late London and Edinburgh Pharma- copoeias, the Honey of Roses has been dropped in the British. The TJ. S. formula is based on that of Prof. Grahame, of Baltimore. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1859, p. 443.) The object in reserving a portion of the first tincture, in the process, is to avoid the evaporation of the volatile oil in the concentration of the infusion, and thus to preserve the flavour as well as the as- tringency of the roses. Honey of roses forms a pleasant addition to the gargles employed in inflammation and ulceration of the mouth and throat. W. MEL SODiE BOHATIS. U. S. Mel Boracis. Br. Honey of Borate of Soda. Honey of Borax. “ Take of Borate of Soda, in fine powder, sixty grains; Clarified Honey a troyounce. Mix them.” U. S. “Take of Borax, in fine powder, sixty-four grains; Clarified Honey an ounce. Mix.”i?r. This preparation might w®ll be left to extemporaneous prescription. It is used in the thrush of infants, and aphthous ulcerations of the mouth. W. OXYMEL. Br. Oxymel. “ Take of Clarified Honey forty ounces [avoirdupois]; Acetic Acid five fluidounces; Distilled Water five fiuidounces. Liquefy the Honey by heat, and mix with it the Acetic Acid and Water.” Br. This mixture of honey and vinegar forms a pleasant addition to gargles, and is sometimes used as a vehicle of expectorant medicines, and to impart flavour to drinks in febrile complaints.* W. * Oxymel of Squill. Oxymel Scillse. There may be some, who notwithstanding the omis- sion of this preparation by the Pharmacopoeias, may still continue to prescribe it, and the pharmaceutist should be prepared to fulfil their prescription. We therefore retain, in the of a note what was formerly said in the text in reference to this oxymel. The fol- lowing was the (J. S. formula of 1850. “Take of Vinegar of Squill two pints; Clarified Honey a pint and a half. Mix them, and evaporate by means of a water-bath to the proper consistence. The specific gravity of the Dxyinel of Squill should be 1-32.” This preparation has the virtues of squill, but is in no respect superior to the syrup. 1228 Misturae. PART II. MISTURiE. Mixtures. This terra should be restricted, in the language of pharmacy, to those prepara- tions in which insoluble substances, whether solid or liquid, are suspended in watery fluids, by the intervention of gum arabic, sugar, the yolk of eggs, or other viscid matter. When the suspended substance is of an oleaginous nature, the mixture is sometimes called an emulsion. The object of these preparations is usually to facilitate the administration, to conceal the taste, or to obviate the nauseating effects of unpleasant medicines; and their perfection depends upon the intimacy with which the ingredients are blended. Some skill and care are requisite for the production of a uniform and perfect mixture. As a general rule, the body to be suspended should be thoroughly mixed by trituration with the substance intended to act as the intermedium, before the watery vehicle is added. In the case of the liquid balsams and oils, if gum arabic be employed as the intermedium, it should be previously brought to the state of mucilage of the consistence directed in the IJ. S. Pharmacopoeia.* The white of eggs has been frequently ordered by physicians as the suspending substance; but it is inferior for this purpose to the yolk, or to gum arabic. When the white is used it should be well beaten, and incorporated with the oleaginous or balsamic substances be- fore the water is added. Mixtures are generally the objects of extemporaneous prescription; but a few have been deemed of sufficient importance to merit a place in the Pharmacopoeias. They should be prepared only when wanted for use. The Mixtures, formerly officinal, which have been discarded in the recent revision of the Br. Pharmacopoeia, are Mistura Acaciae, Ed., Mistura Alihsese, Ed., Misfura Camphorae cum Magnesia, Ed., Mistura Ferri Aromatica, Dub., Mistura Gentianae Gomposita, Lond., and Mistura Spiritus Vini Gallici, Lond. W. MISTURA AMMONIACI. TJ. S., Br. Mixture of Ammoniac. “ Take of Ammoniac one hundred and twenty grains; Water half a pint. Rub the Ammoniac with the Water, gradually added, until they are thoroughly mixed, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Ammoniac, in coarse powder, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water eight fluidounces. Triturate the Ammoniac with the Water, gradually added, until the mixture assumes a milky appearance, then strain through muslin. ” Br. In this mixture the insoluble part of the ammoniac is suspended by means of the gum, imparting a milky appearance to the preparation, which, from this cir- cumstance, was formerly called lac ammoniaci or milk of ammoniac. The greater portion of the resin subsides upon standing. The mixture is slightly curdled by acids. The dose is from one to two tablespoonfuls. W. MISTURA AMYGDALAE. U. S. Mixture of Almond. Almond Emul- sion. “Take of Sweet Almond half a troyounce; Gum Arabic, in fine powder, It is chiefly used as an expectorant in chronic catarrh, humoral asthma, hooping-cough, and generally in those states of the pulmonary organs in which the bronchial tubes are loaded with a viscid mucus of difficult expectoration. The dose is from one to two flui- drachms. In large doses it is emetic, and as such may sometimes be given with advantage in infantile croup and catarrh. * The proportion of gum and water necessary to make a good emulsion with the fixed oils varies with the oil. Thus, while castor oil requires only two drachms of the gum and three drachms of water to the ounce, most other fixed oils require half their weight of gum, and a weight of water equal to half that of the oil and gum united. These quan- tities being well rubbed together, any desirable amount of water may afterwards be gra- dually added, and will readily incorporate with the other ingredients. (Overbeck, Phara*. Cent. Blatt, A. 0. 1851, p. 95.) PART II. Misturse. 1229 thirty grains; Sugar one hundred and twenty grains; Distilled Water eight -fluidounces. Having blanched the Almond, beat it with the Gum Arabic and Sugar, in a mortar, until they are thoroughly mixed; then rub the mixture with the Distilled Water gradually added, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Compound Powder of Almonds two ounces and a /m£/[avoirdupois]; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Rub the Powder with a little of the Water into a thin paste, then add the remainder of the Water, and strain through muslin.” Br. These preparations are essentially the same; the gum and sugar, which enter into the U. S. formula directly, being ingredients of the compound powder of almonds of the British. The processes are both preferable to that of the old London Pharmacopoeia, in which a confection of almonds was employed ; as this preparation was liable to spoil quickly when kept. The gum arabic in these for- mulas is introduced, not so much for its demulcent properties, as to assist in the suspension of the insoluble ingredients of the almonds. The same formula will answer for the preparation of an emulsion of bitter almonds, which may be pre- ferred to the present when a slight influence of hydrocyanic acid is desired. The oleaginous matter of the almonds is suspended in the water by means of their albumen, gum, and sugar, forming a milky emulsion. When the almonds themselves are employed, as in the U. S. process, care should be taken to reduce them to the consistence of a paste previously to the addition of the water; and with each successive portion of fluid a uniform mixture should be formed before another portion is added. Common water, when not very impure, may be pro- perly substituted for the distilled. Great care should be taken to select the al- monds perfectly free from rancidity. The mixture is not permanent. Upon stand- ing, the oil rises like thick cream to the surface, and the separation is effected more quickly by heat, alcohol, and the acids, which coagulate the albumen. The preparation is closely analogous to milk in chemical relations and appearance. In warm weather it soon becomes sour, and unfit for use. The almond mixture has a bland taste, and may be used as an agreeable, nu- tritive demulcent in catarrhal and dysenteric affections, and irritation of the urinary passages. To be of service it must be freely employed. From two to eight fluidounces may be taken at once. It is occasionally employed as the vehicle of less agreeable medicines; but should not be used in connection with any considerable quantity of tinctures, acidulous salts, or other substances con- taining an excess of acid. W. MISTURA ASSAFCETIDiE. U.S. Assafetida Mixture. “Take of Assafetida one hundred and twenty grains; Water half a pint. Rub the Assafetida with the Water, gradually added, until they are thoroughly mixed.” U. S. This mixture, from its whiteness and opacity, is frequently called lac assafce- lidse or milk of assafetida. It is, as a general rule, the best form for the admi- nistration of this antispasmodic, being less stimulant than the tincture, and more prompt in its action than the pill. Its excessively disagreeable smell and taste are, however, objections, which induce a frequent preference of the last-mentioned preparation. It is very often employed as an enema. The dose is from one to two tablespoonfuls frequently repeated. From two to four fluidounces may be given by the rectum.* W. * St/ruv of Assafetida. Such a preparation has been proposed by Mr. Richard Penz. He has found the iolfbwing formula to answer the purpose best. Take of assafetida §j, boiling water Oj, sugar Ibij. Rub the assafetida with a part of the water so as to make a uniform paste, then gradually add the remainder of the water, strain, and add the sugar, heating moderately till it is dissolved. This has a less disagreeable taste than the mixture, and keeps much better, remaining several months without change, while the latter is often al- tered in a short time. The dose is the same as that of the mixture. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 313.)—Note to the tenth edition. Misturse. PART II. MISTURA CHLOROFORM! U.8. Mixture of Chloroform. “ Take of Purified Chloroform half a iroyounce ; Camphor sixty grains; the yolk of one Egg; Water six Jluidounces. Rub the yolk in a mortar, first by itself, then with the Camphor, previously dissolved in the Chloroform, and lastly, with the Water, gradually added, so as to make a uniform mixture.” U. S. In consequence of the great facility with which camphor dissolves in chloro- form, and the ready miscibility of the solution, by the intervention of the yolk of eggs, with water, this mixture affords an easy and agreeable method of ad- ministering these medicines jointly. Besides, in consequence of the preservative influence of the chloroform, it will keep long unchanged. The dose is one or two tablespoonfuls. MISTURA CREASOTI. Br. Creasote Mixture. “Take of Creasote sixteen minims; Glacial Acetic Acid sixteen minims; Spirit of Juniper half a Jluidrachm; Syrup one fluidounce ; Distilled Water fifteen Jluidounces. Mix the Creasote with the Acetic Acid, gradually add the Water, and lastly the Syrup and Spirit of Juniper.” Br. The dose of this mixture is a fluidounce, containing a minim of Creasote. W. MISTURA CRETiE. U.S.,Br. Chalk Mixture. “ Take of Prepared Chalk half a troyounce; Sugar [refined], Gum Arabic, in fine powder, each, one hundred and twenty grains; Cinnamon Water, Water, each, four Jluidounces. Rub them together until they are thoroughly mixed.” U. S. “ Take of Prepared Chalk a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois] ; Gum Arabic, in powder, a quarter of an ounce [avoird.] ; Syrup half a fluidounce ; Cinna- mon Water seven Jluidounces and a half. Triturate the Chalk and Gum Arabic with the Cinnamon Water, then add the Syrup, and mix.” Z?r. This mixture is a convenient form for administering chalk, and is much em- ployed in looseness of the bowels accompanied with acidity. Laudanum and kino or catechu are very often added to increase its astringency. The dose is a tablespoonful frequently repeated. W. MISTURA FERRI COMPOSITA. TJ. SBr. Compound Mixture of Iron. “Take of Myrrh, Sugar [refined], each, sixty grains; Carbonate of Potassa twenty-five grains; Sulphate of Iron, in coarse powder, twenty grains ; Spirit of Lavender half a fluidounce; Rose Water seven Jluidounces and a half. Rub the Myrrh, Sugar, and Carbonate of Potassa with the Rose Water, gra- dually added, then with the Spirit of Lavender, and, lastly, with the Sulphate of Iron; and pour the mixture immediately into a bottle, which must be well stop- ped.” U. S. “Take of Sulphate of Iron thirty grains; Carbonate of Potash twenty-jive grains; Myrrh, in powder, Sugar, each, sixty grains; Spirit of Nutmeg one Jluidrachm; RoseWater eight Jluidounces. Triturate the Myrrh and Carbo- nate of Potash with the Sugar, the Spirit of Nutmeg, and seven [fluid]ounces of the Rose Water, the latter being gradually added, until a uniform mixture is obtained. To this add the Sulphate of Iron, previously dissolved in the remain- ing [fluid]ounce of Rose Water, and enclose the mixture at once in a bottle which should be tightly corked.” Br. Wine of Assafetida. Mr. H. N. Rittenliouse proposes a concentrated wine of assafetida, as affortJTng an easy method of preparing the mixture, which, when called for in haste, can- not always be furnished in due time, from the amount of trituration required. He rubs half an ounce of the gum-resin with ten fluidrachms of white wine until the former is sus- pended. Two ounces of the wine are thus obtained; and, as each drachm contains fifteen grains of assafetida, it is easy to prepare the mixture of the officinal strength, by simply mixing the wine in due proportion with water. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 216.)—Note to the eleventh edition. PART II. Misturse. 1231 This is very nearly the same with the celebrated tonic or antihectic myrrh mixture of Dr. Griffith. The sulphate of iron is decomposed by the carbonate of potassa, with the production of sulphate of potassa and carbonate of prot- oxide of iron; while the excess of the alkaline carbonate forms a saponaceous compound with the myrrh. The mixture is at first of a greenish colour, which it loses upon exposure to the air, in consequence of the conversion of the prot- oxide of iron of the carbonate into the red or sesquioxide. It may, however, be kept for some time without change, if the vessel in which it is contained be well closed ; but the best plan is to prepare it only when wanted for use. The sugar contained in it contributes somewhat to retard the further oxidation of the prot- oxide of iron, and, if considerably increased in amount, would act still more effi- ciently. The finest pieces of myrrh in lump should be selected, and rubbed down for the occasion with a little of the rose water; as the powdered myrrh of the shops is often impure, and does not make a good mixture. This mixture is a good tonic in debility of the digestive organs, especially when attended with derangement of the menstrual function. Hence it is used with advantage in chlorosis and hysterical affections. It has been also much employed in the hectic fever of phthisis and chronic catarrh. It is contraindi- cated by the existence of inflammation of the gastric mucous membrane. The dose is one or two fluidounces two or three times a day. W. MISTURA GLYCYRRHIZiE COMPOSITA. U.S. Compound Mix- ture of Liquorice. Brown Mixture. “Take of Liquorice [extract], in fine powder, Sugar, in coarse powder, Gum Arabic, in fine powder, each, half a troyounce ; Camphorated Tincture of Opium two fluidounces; Wine of Antimony a fluidounce; Spirit of Nitrous Ether half a fluidounce ; Water twelve fluidounces. Rub the Liquorice, Sugar, and Gum Arabic with the Water, gradually added; then add the other ingredients, and mix the whole together.” U. S. This is an exceedingly popular cough mixture, which was made officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850. The spirit of nitrous ether is probably useful by somewhat retarding decomposition. The preparation is applicable to the advanced stages of catarrhal affections, after expectoration has become estab- lished. The dose is a tablespoonful for an adult; a teaspoonful for a child two years old. It should be well shaken when administered. W. MISTURA GUAIACI. Br. Gruaiac Mixture. “ Take of Guaiac Resin, in powder, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Sugar half an ounce [avoird.] ; Gum Arabic, powdered, a quarter of an ounce [avoird.] ; Cinnamon Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Triturate the Guaiac with the Sugar and the Gum, adding gradually the Cinnamon Water.” Br. For the changes of colour which the guaiac in this mixture undergoes, and produces in other substances, see Guaiaci Resina, p. 429. From one to three tablespoonfuls may be given for a dose, and repeated two or three times a day, or more frequently. W. MISTURA POTASSiE CITRATIS. U.S. Liquor Potassa Citra- TIS. U.iS. 1850. Mixture of Citrate of Potassa. Neutral Mixture. “Take of Lemon Juice, fresh, half a pint; Bicarbonate of Potassa a suffi- cient quantity. Add the Bicarbonate gradually to the Lemon Juice until the acid is completely saturated; then strain through muslin.” U. S. For remarks on this preparation, see Liquor Potassse Citratis, page 1201. The dose is a tablespoonful or half a fluidounce, which, when taken, may be eomewhat diluted with water. W. MISTURA SOAMMONII. Br. Scammony Mixture. “Take of Resin of Scammony four grains; Milk two \_Jluid~\ounces. Tri 1232 Morphia. part ii. turate the Resin of Seammony with a little of the Milk, and continue the tritu- ration, gradually adding the remainder of the Milk, until a uniform emulsion is obtained.” Br. This officinal is an imitation of a mixture recommended by Planche. The resin of seammony mixes admirably with the vehicle, and forms an emulsion scarcely distinguishable in appearance or taste from rich milk. Of course, it should be prepared only when wanted for immediate use. The whole is to be taken for a dose. W. MORPHIA. Preparations of Morphia. MORPHIA. U.S. Morphia. “Take of Opium, sliced, twelve troyounces; Water of Ammonia six fluid- ounces; Animal Charcoal, in fine powder, Alcohol, Distilled Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Macerate the Opium with four pints of Distilled Water for twenty-four hours, and, having worked it with the hand, again macerate for twenty-four hours, and strain. In like manner, macerate the residue twice suc- cessively with the same quantity of Distilled Water, and strain. Mix the infu- sions, evaporate to six pints, and filter; then add five pints of Alcohol, and afterwards three fluidounces of the Water of Ammonia, previously mixed with half a pint of Alcohol. After twenty-four hours, pour in the remainder of the Water of Ammonia, mixed, as before, with half a pint of Alcohol; and set the liquid aside for twenty-four hours that crystals may form. To purify these, boil them with two pints of Alcohol until they are dissolved, filter the solution, while hot, through Animal Charcoal, and set it aside to crystallize.” U. S. This process will be better understood by a previous acquaintance with the properties and chemical relations of the substance in question. Morphia crystallizes from alcohol in the form of small, colourless, shining crystals. It is inodorous and bitter. Exposed to a moderate heat, it loses its water of crystallization and the crystalline form, becoming white and opaque. At a higher temperature it melts, forming a yellowish liquid, which becomes white and crystalline upon cooling. Heated in the open air, it burns with a bright flame, and at a red heat is wholly dissipated. In the products resulting from the combustion of opium or morphia, this alkaloid may be detected, proving that it is partly volatilized, when burned. (Descharmes, Arch. Gen., Fev. 1855, p. 240.) It is insoluble or nearly so in cold water, soluble in rather less than 100 parts of water at 212°, slightly soluble in cold alcohol, and freely so in boil- ing alcohol, which deposits it upon cooling. It is dissolved also by the fixed and volatile oils, but very slightly if at all by ether. Both morphia and its salts are insoluble in chloroform. (Lepage, Journ. de Pharm., xxv. 258.) Morphia in solution is to a considerable extent absorbed by animal charcoal, which, though it will part with most of the alkaloid to alcohol, cannot be wholly de- prived of it by repeated washings with that liquid, whether cold or hot. (Lefort, Journ. de Pharm., A out, 1861, p. 98.) Its solution restores the blue colour of litmus paper reddened by acids, and turns the yellow of turmeric to brown. With the acids it forms salts, which are generally soluble, and are decomposed by the alkalies. The solutions of potassa and soda also dissolve morphia, which is precipitated slowly from them on exposure to the air, in consequence of the absorption of carbonic acid. Solution of ammonia has to a certain extent the same solvent power; and hence the necessity, in precipitating morphia by this alkali, not to employ it in great excess. Solution of iodine with iodide of potas- sium precipitates the salts of morphia in aqueous solution. With chlorine water morphia and its salts assume an orange colour, and the same effect is produced on them by solution of chlorinated soda. (Fairthorne, Am. Journ. of Pharm.. xxviii. 9.) By the contact of nitric acid, they assume a blood-red colour, which PART II. Morphia. 1233 ultimately changes to yellow; and this is one of the tests of morphia; but, as the same change of colour is produced with brucia and impure strychnia, it cannot be relied on in the absence of other evidence. When added to a solution of iodic acid, or an acidulous iodate, morphia and its salts redden the liquid and set iodine free. (Serullas.) This is a very delicate test, but is not conclusive, as various other organic substances act in a similar manner. M. J. Lefort, however, has found that the colour produced by these substances is removed by ammonia, while the redness produced with morphia is greatly intensified by the addition of that alkali. This test, thus modified by the addition of ammonia, is so delicate that, according to M. Lefort, it will detect one part of morphia in 10,000 parts of a liquid holding it in solution. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1861, p. 113.)* Mor- phia and its salts assume a fine blue colour with the sesquichloride of iron, and the salts of the sesquioxide; at least this is true of the alkaloid, its sulphate, acetate, and oxalate ; and the same effect will be produced by the other salts, if previously decomposed by an alkali; but that this test should be satisfactory, it is neces- sary to operate on morphia either in powder or concentrated solution. (Lefort.) Water, acids, and alkalies, added in large quantity to the blue compound formed, destroy its colour. According to Pelletier, moreover, there occasionally exists in opium a principle called by him pseudomorphia, which becomes red under the action of nitric acid, and changes the salts of sesquioxide of iron blue, and yet is destitute of poisonous properties; so that the occurrence of these phenomena, in any medico-legal case, cannot be considered as certain evidence of the presence of morphia. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., viii. 77.) The terchloride of gold pre- cipitates morphia first yellow, then bluish, and lastly violet. (Larocque and Thibterge.) Peroxide of copper and oxide of silver are precipitated by morphia from their ammoniacal solutions, and ferridcyanide of potassium in solution is reduced by it to the ferrocyanide. (Chem. Gaz., No. 367, p. 54.) A solution of acetate or sulphate of morphia, containing only one part of the salt in 100, pre- cipitates silver from a solution of the nitrate of that metal. (Horsley.) Morphia is precipitated from its solutions by potassa or soda, and redissolved by an ex- cess of the alkali. Infusions of galls and other vegetable substances containing tannic acid precipitate morphia in the state of a tannate, which is soluble in acetic acid; but, according to Dublanc, the alkali is not precipitated by pure * When a mixture of a little morphia and iodic acid with a few drops of water is gently heated in a capsule, a series of explosions is produced, with the evolution of gas. The same thing happens with other vegetable alkaloids treated in the same manner; and Dr. Brett proposes this reaction of iodic acid, which takes place with no other organic sub- stance that he has tried, as a test of the alkaloids. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 211.) Unsized Paper in testing for Morphia. Most of the tests of morphia will act more satisfac- torily if the alkaloid or its salts be fixed in unsized paper, which will then exhibit the char- acteristic changes of colour when exposed to the agents employed. Paper may be prepared for this purpose by dipping slips of perfectly white filtering paper several times in the liquid to be examined, and, after each immersion, drying the paper by a moderate heat. (Lefort, Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1861, p. 106.)—Note to the twelfth edition. Stas's method of extracting the Alkaloids from Mixtures. To separate the alkaloid from foreign matters, the mixture is treated alternately with water and alcohol in ditferent de- grees of concentration; the liquors thus obtained are filtered; tartaric or oxalic acid, but preferably the former, is added in excess; the mixture is heated to 160° or 170° F.; the whole is placed upon a filter; the deposited matter is washed with concentrated alcohol; the alcoholic solution is evaporated at a temperature not exceeding 95° F.; the residue is introduced into a small bottle; a solution of caustic potassa or soda is added, little by lit- rie, and afterwards four or five times the measure of ether ; the mixture is shaken and then allowed to stand; and, finally, the ether is decanted, and yields the alkaloid by spontaneous evaporation. Stas included morphia among the alkaloids thus separable, though known to be nearly insoluble in ether; but Lefort has shown that the process is not applicable to that alkaloid. (Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1861, p. 99.) M. Alfred Valser, however, has ascer- tained that, if acetic ether be substituted for ether, the process is equally applicable to morphia. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1864, p. 439.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 1234 Morphia. PART II. gallic ai fd If ammonia be added to a mixture of the solutions of chlorine and morphia, a dark-brown colour is produced, which is destroyed by a further ad- dition of chlorine. The proportion of the constituents of morphia is somewhat differently given by different writers. According to the most recent authorities, anhydrous morphia consists of thirty-four eqs. of carbon 204, nineteen of hydro- gen 19, one of nitrogen 14, and six of oxygen 48 = 285, to which in the crystals are added two eqs. of water 18, or about 5*8 per cent. (CS4H19NO ,2BO). Various processes for preparing morphia have been employed. In most of them the morphia is extracted from opium by maceration with water either pure or acidulated, is then precipitated by ammonia, and afterwards purified by the agency of alcohol, or by repeated solution in a dilute acid and precipitation. Sertiirner, the discoverer of morphia, made an infusion of opium in distilled water, precipitated the morphia by ammonia in excess, dissolved the precipitate in dilute sulphuric acid, precipitated anew by ammonia, and purified by solution in boiling alcohol, and crystallization. The process of the French Codex is a modification of that of Sertiirner. It is as follows. “Take of opium 1000 parts, solution of ammonia a sufficient quantity. Exhaust the opium, by means of cold water, of all its parts soluble in that menstruum. For that purpose, it is sufficient to treat the opium, four times consecutively, with ten parts of water to one of the drug, provided care be taken to macerate the opium for some hours, and to work it with the hands. Filter the liquors, and evaporate them to a quarter of their volume. Then add sufficient ammonia to render the liquor very sensibly alkaline. Boil for some minutes, always maintaining a slight excess of ammonia. Upon cooling, the morphia, impure and much coloured, will be precipitated in granular crystals, which are to be washed with cold water. Reduce this coloured morphia to powder, macerate it for twelve hours in alcohol of 24° Cartier [sp. gr. about 0'900] ; then decant the alcoholic liquid; dissolve the residuary morphia, already in great measure deprived of colour by the cold alcohol, in boiling alcohol of 33° Cartier [sp. gr. about 0 850]; add to the solution a little animal charcoal and filter. Upon cooling, the morphia crystallizes in colourless needles. In this state the morphia always retains some narcotina, to free it from which, boil it with sulphuric ether in a matrass with a long neck surmounted by a refrigerator.” The process of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is an improvement upon the above, and is essentially the same as that of Dr. Edward Staples, published in the Journal of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (i. 15). Without repeating a description of the process, we shall make such remarks upon its several steps, as appear to us likely to be of practical advantage. The employment of water as the solvent is justified by the almost universal practice. It is true that dilute acetic acid has sometimes been employed, and Vogel states that the product thus obtained is much greater than when water alone is used. But, when the opium is properly comminuted, either by being reduced to a coarse powder when dry, or by being finely sliced in its ordinary state, water alone will be found suf- ficiently to extract the morphia, by a protracted maceration or digestion in suc- cessive portions of water, assisted by kneading, as directed in the Pharmaco- poeia. The acids have this disadvantage, that they dissolve more of the narco- tina than pure water, and thus render the ultimate product more impure; for the narcotina which is originally taken up continues associated with the morphia in all the subsequent steps of the process. It has been proposed to expose the opium to fermentation with water and yeast, in order to facilitate the extraction of the morphia. By this plan M. Blondeau succeeded in procuring more of the alkaline principle than he could obtain by the ordinary mode; and his results were confirmed by the experiments of MM. Robiquet and Guibourt. According to these latter chemists, no alcohol is produced during the fermentation, which appears to act merely by disengaging the morphia from the comHnations in 1235 PART II. Morphia. which it naturally exists, and which tend to counteract the solvent power of the menstruum. Alcohol was proposed as the solvent by M. Guillermond, but is lia- ble to the objection that it dissolves also the resin, a portion of which is after- wards precipitated with the morphia, and embarrasses the process. Much of the resin, however, may be separated by distilling most of the alcohol from the tinc- ture, and then adding water. The resin is precipitated, and the liquor may now be treated in the same manner as the aqueous infusion.* On the whole, however, the officinal mode of extraction will probably be found most satisfactory; and Mohr states that opium thus exhausted yields no more morphia even to muri- atic acid; but he recommends that each maceration should be followed by strong expression. The infusion of opium having been prepared, the next object is to decompose the meconate or other salt of morphia contained in it. For this pur- pose solution of ammonia is added, which seizes the acid, and precipitates the organic alkali; but much colouring matter is thrown down along with the lat- ter, occasioning some trouble to separate it, unless measures are taken to obvi- ate this effect. The object is gained by mixing .the infusion with alcohol, pre- viously to the addition of the ammonia, and by employing the solution of am- monia itself in connection with alcohol, as directed in the Pharmacopoeia. This is the peculiarity and chief merit of the process of Dr. Staples. By the presence of the alcohol in all parts of the liquor, the colouring matter is dissolved as soon as it is separated by the ammonia, and the morphia is thus precipitated in a much purer state. The advantage of adding the ammonia in separate portions is, that the morphia, being thus more slowly disengaged, can be more completely deprived of its impurities by the alcohol of the mixture, than if the whole were liberated at once. It is necessary to be careful that the ammonia be not in great excess; as it has the property, under these circumstances, of dissolving the mor- phia in some degree, and will therefore lessen the product, while waste is in- curred by its own unnecessary consumption. Very little more should be added than is sufficient to saturate the acid present. The solution of ammonia of the shops is often much below the officinal standard, and this should always be at- tended to in the process. Alcohol is mixed with the ammonia before it is added, in order that every particle of the separated morphia may come in contact with the particles of this fluid, and thus have the opportunity of being deprived of colouring matter. The crystals of morphia obtained by this first operation have a light-yellowish colour, and are much purer than when no alcohol is added to the infusion before the precipitation by ammonia. According to Dr. Staples, opium yields from 10 to 12-5 per cent, of the crystals. Their purification by so- lution in boiling alcohol is the concluding step of the operation. The liquid, on cooling, deposits the morphia crystallized, and nearly free from colour. As cold alcohol retains a portion of morphia, it should not be employed too largely. Alcohol somewhat reduced by water is preferable to highly rectified spirit; as it is less capable of holding the morphia in solution when cold. It is sufficiently strong at 25° Baume (sp. gr. 0'9032). The impure morphia remaining in the alcohol may be obtained by distilling off the latter, and, when sufficiently accu- mulated, may be purified by a separate operation. The crystals of morphia may * By a modification of the process of Guillermond, MM. Desmedt have succeeded in ex- tracting all the morphia from opium, perfectly free from narcotina. Of crude opium 60 parts were treated with 240 of alcohol at 71° centigrade (160° F.), and expressed when cold; the residue was then treated in the same manner with 160 parts of alcohol; the liquor was introduced into a bottle well stopped; next day a copious crystallization of narcotina appeared, without the least morphia; the liquid was decanted, and, on the ad- dition of 4 parts of ammonia, furnished a considerable quantity of morphia, free from narcotina. To the mother-liquor a little distilled water was added, and the mixture was kept at the temperature of 24° C. In two days an additional quantity of the crystals ot morphia was obtained equally free from narcotina. The opium was completely exhausted, and the 60 parts employed furnished 5 parts of morphia. (Annuaire de Therap., 1852, p. 31.)—Note to the tenth, edition. Morphia. PAKT II. also be purified by solution in dilute sulphuric acid, digestion with purified ani- mal charcoal, filtration, and precipitation by ammonia.- If alcohol he added to the solution previously to the ammonia, the digestion with animal charcoal may be dispensed with, as the alcohol retains the colouring matter. Morphia pro- cured in this way always contains narcotina, from which it may be freed by ether, or in some of the modes hereafter to be indicated. Magnesia was employed by Robiquet instead of ammonia. But his process was soon abandoned; as it was found to occupy more time, to require a greater consumption of alcohol, and to be attended with a greater loss of morphia in consequence of the previous washing, than the processes in which ammonia was employed as the precipitant. For an account of it the reader is referred to former editions of this work. A process for extracting morphia without the employment of alcohol was de- vised by MM. Henry, jun., and Plisson. The opium was exhausted by water acidulated with muriatic acid; the resulting solution was sufficiently concentrated, then filtered, and decomposed by ammonia; the precipitate was washed and treated with muriatic acid to saturation; and the muriatic solution wras boiled with animal charcoal, filtered, and evaporated to the point of crystallization. The crystals of muriate of morphia thus obtained were pressed, purified by re- peated solution and crystallization, and finally decomposed by ammonia. (Journ. de Chim. Med., Mars, 1828.) Somewhat similar to this is the process of Gregory, of Edinburgh, by which muriate of morphia is obtained by double decomposition between chloride of calcium and the meconate of morphia of the opium, and the muriate thus ob- tained is decomposed by ammonia. This process was adopted by the Ed. College for the preparation of muriate of morphia; and is retained In the present Br. Pharmacopoeia. It will be sufficiently explained under Muriate of Morphia. Mohr has proposed a process founded on the solubility of morphia in water mixed with lime, which he recommends as the shortest and easiest method of procuring the alkaloid, without the use of alcohol, and without the possibility of contamination from narcotina. Opium is three or four times successively mace- rated with three parts of water, and each time strongly expressed. The liquors are then added to a boiling-hot milk of lime, containing a quantity of lime equal to about a sixth or a quarter of the opium used; and the mixture is boiled for a few minutes. It is then strained through linen, and the residue washed with boiling water and expressed. The whole of the narcotina is left behind, as not a trace of it can be discovered in the filtered liquor. The liquor thus obtained is evaporated till reduced to double the weight of the opium, then quickly fil- tered through paper, and heated to ebullition. Muriate of ammonia is now added to it in the proportion of 1 part to 16 of the opium used; and the mor- phia is abundantly precipitated. The use of animal charcoal is unnecessary in the process, as the lime acts even more powerfully as- a decolorizing agent. The crystallized morphia obtained is somewhat coloured, but may be rendered pure by solution in dilute muriatic acid, boiling with milk of lime, filtration, and pre- cipitation by muriate of ammonia. (Annal. der Pharm., xxxv. 119.) Various other processes, or modifications of those above described, have been proposed; but, for the preparation of small quantities of morphia by the apo- thecary, none are probably better adapted than that of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. It has been already stated that morphia, obtained in the ordinary manner, contains a considerable proportion of narcotina. It is highly probable that this ingredient exercises no influence, either beneficial or injurious, upon the opera- tion of the morphia; but, as the contrary has been supposed, various methods have been employed for separating it. The simplest and easiest is to submit the mixture to the action of ether, which dissolves the narcotina and leaves the mor- phia. The agency of acetic acid may also be resorted to. Distilled vinegar, or PART II. Morphia. 1237 diluted acetic acid of the same strength, will dissolve the morphia and leave the narcotina, and the former may be recovered from the acetic solution by saturating the acid with ammonia. Another mode is to dissolve the mixed bases in strong acetic acid (of 7° Baume, or sp.gr. 1-0511, for example), and expose the solu- tion to heat. The narcotina is deposited, and the morphia, remaining in solution, may be precipitated by diluting the liquid and adding ammonia. (Journ. de Pharm., xvii. 640.) Wittstock advises one of the following modes. Dissolve the impure morphia in dilute muriatic aeid, evaporate to the point of crystalliza tion, and strongly express the crystals, which consist solely of the muriate ot morphia, the narcotina being retained in the mother-waters:—or saturate the muriatic solution with common salt, which will render the liquor milky, and cause the narcotina to separate after some days; then precipitate the morphia by ammonia:—or pour into the diluted muriatic solution a weak ley of caustic potassa, which, if in slight excess, will dissolve the morphia at the moment of its separation, while the narcotina is precipitated; then immediately filter the liquor, and separate the morphia by neutralizing the alkali. If the potassa is in great excess, a little of the narcotina is redissolved. (Berzelius, Traite de Chim.) Mohr recommends to dissolve the morphia in dilute muriatic acid, and to boil the solution with lime, which throws down the narcotina and holds the morphia dissolved. The liquid being filtered yields the morphia upon the addition of muriate of ammonia. (Annal. der Pharm., xxv. 123.) The proportion of pure morphia which Turkey opium is capable of affording varies from 9 per cent, or less to 14 per cent., according to the quality of the drug; but much less than the least quantity mentioned is often obtained, in con- sequence of the incomplete exhaustion of the opium, the loss in the process for preparing it, or inferiority in the quality of the drug. Medical Properties. There can be no doubt that morphia is the chief nar- cotic principle of opium, from which, however, it differs somewhat in its mode of action. Whether the difference arises from the peculiar state of combination in which morphia exists in opium, or from other narcotic principles being associated with it, is somewhat uncertain; but the former would seem to be in part the cause, from the circumstance that, long before the discovery of this alkaloid, pre- parations of opium were habitually used, in which the properties of the medicine were somewhat similarly modified by the agency of vinegar, lemon-juice, or other vegetable acid. In consequence of its insolubility in water, morphia in its pure 6tate is less certain in its effects than some of its saline compounds; as the mode and degree of its action must, in some measure, depend on the presencfe or ab- sence of acid in the stomach, and perhaps on the peculiar character of the acid. Its salts are therefore always preferred. The acetate, sulphate, and muriate have been employed. Between these there is a great similarity of action, and what may be said of one, in regard to its therapeutical effects, will equally apply to the others. They have the anodyne, soporific, and diaphoretic properties of opium, but are less stimulant, less disposed to constipate the bowels, and less apt to leave behind them headache, nausea, or other unpleasant effect. They are usually also more acceptable to an irritated stomach, and may be retained, when opium or its tincture would be rejected. That they operate by entering the circulation is proved by the detection of morphia in the urine, though it is said not to be elimi- nated by the skin. (Lefort.) They are applicable to all cases where the object is to relieve pain, quiet restlessness, promote sleep, or allay nervous irritation in any shape; but are less efficient than opium in the suppression of morbid dis- charges, and as stimulants in low forms of disease. A great advantage which they possess is the convenience of their external application to blistered surfaces, and the certainty of their effects when thus applied. In cases which do not ad- mit of the internal use of opium or its preparations, the acetate or sulphate of morphia, sprinkled, in triple the ordinary dose, upon a blistered surface denuded 1238 Morphia. PART ir. of the cuticle, will be found to exercise upon the system all the influence it is capable of exerting when taken into the stomach. Applied in this manner, these salts are peculiarly useful in relieving violent neuralgic pains, and controlling ob- stinate sickness of the stomach. When intended to act on the system through the medium of the skin, they should be applied preferably to the epigastrium ; when to act locally, as near the affected part as possible. Solutions of the salts of morphia also sometimes operate very favourably, both generally and locally, when injected, by means of a sharp-pointed syringe, adapted to the purpose, into the areolar tissue beneath the skin. Given in doses nearly, but not quite suffi- cient to produce sleep, they sometimes occasion a very troublesome condition of the brain, amounting almost to delirium ; but this always subsides spontaneously, or vanishes immediately upon the increase of the dose. An embrocation for ex- ternal use may be made by dissolving muriate or acetate of morphia in glycerin, which takes up about 5 per cent, of these salts at common temperatures, and more with the aid of heat. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 90.) Oleic acid has also been proposed as a vehicle for morphia externally used, as it dissolves both the alkaloid and its salts perfectly in considerable proportion. A liniment has been proposed, consisting of 300 parts of oleic acid and 1 of morphia, scented with a little oil of bergamot. (Ibid., xxvi. 302.) In overdoses, morphia and its salts produce the effects of narcotic poisons, though not perhaps equally with a quantity of opium equivalent in anodyne ef- fect. An instance of death from the injection of three grains of morphia into the rectum is recorded by Dr. Anstie, of England, but the age of the patient is not mentioned. (Med. Times and Gaz., Dec. 1862, p. 317.) The toxicological treat- ment is precisely the same as in the case of laudanum. (See Opium.) Strong coffee has been employed with great apparent advantage as antidote. As the proportion of acid necessary to neutralize morphia is very small, the dose of the alkaloid is the same as that of its salts. One-sixth of a grain may be considered about equivalent to a grain of opium of the medium strength. Off. Prep. Morphiae Acetas, U. S.; Morphias Murias, U. S.; Morphiae Sul- phas, U. S. W. MORPFILZE ACETAS. U. S. Acetate of Morphia. “ Take of Morphia, in fine powder, freed from narcotina by the action of Ether, a troyounce ; Distilled Water half a pint; Acetic Acid a sufficient quantity. Mix the Morphia with the Distilled Water; Alien carefully drop in Acetic Acid, constantly stirring, until the Morphia is saturated and dissolved. Evaporate the solution, by means of a water-bath, to the consistence of syrup. Lastly, dry the salt with a gentle heat, and rub it into powder.” U. S. In this process, morphia is saturated with acetic acid, which is employed in preference to vinegar for saturating the alkaloid, because it can leave no im- purity in the resulting salt. The solution of the morphia in the water is an indi- cation that it is saturated. A small excess of acid is attended with no incon- venience, as it is subsequently driven off by the heat. Care is required not to employ too much heat in the evaporation; as the acetate is easily decomposed, a portion of the acetic acid escaping, and leaving an equivalent portion of un- combined morphia. With attention to arrest the evaporation at a certain point, the acetate may be obtained in the state of crystals; but the crystallization is attended with some difficulty, and evaporation to dryness is almost univerally preferred. Some recommend to dissolve the morphia in boiling alcohol, iimtead of suspending it in water, previously to the addition of the acetic arid. A less heat is thus required in the evaporation, and impurities in the morphia may often be detected, as they are apt to be insoluble in alcohol. To ascertain, in this case, whether the morphia is saturated, it is necessary to employ litmus paper, the blue colour of which should not be restored, if previously reddened by an acid. If the morphia used in preparing the acetate contain uar e%jrnd has the characteristic smell and taste of corian- PART II. Olea Bestillata. 1251 der. Its sp.gr. is from 0 859 to 0’871; and its boiling point 302° F. It is an oxygenated oil, with the formula Oil of coriander has the medical pro- perties of the fruit, and, like the aromatic oils generally, may be used to cover the taste, or correct the nauseating or griping properties of other medicines Off. Prep. Syrupus Sennse, Br. W. OLEUM CUBEBiE. U. S., Br. Oil of Cubeb. “The Oil distilled in England from Cubebs.” Br. This oil is obtained from cubebs by grinding them, and then distilling with water. From ten pounds Schonwald procured eleven ounces of oil; and this result very nearly coincides with the experiments of Christison, who obtained * per cent. When recently distilled from the fruit, the oil is somewhat greenish, be- coming yellowish by age; but when carefully redistilled it is colourless. It has the smell of cubebs, and a warm, aromatic, camphorous taste; is of a consistence approaching that of almond oil; is lighter than water, having the sp.gr. 0-929; and, when exposed to the air, is said to thicken without losing its odour. Upon standing, it sometimes deposits crystals, which are thought to be a hydrate of the oil. It consists of carbon and hydrogen, with the formula C15H12. The oil has the medicinal properties of cubebs ; but it is probably not the sole active ingredient; as it is much less pungent than the fluid extract or oleo-resin. It may, however, often be advantageously substituted for the powder, in the commencing dose of ten or twelve drops, to be gradually increased until its effects are obtained, or until it proves offensive to the stomach. It may be given suspended in water by means of sugar, or in the form of emulsion, or enclosed in capsules of gelatin. W. OLEUM ERIGERONTIS CANADENSIS. U.S. Oil of Canada Fleabane. The oil of fleabane is limpid, of a light-straw colour, a peculiar aromatic persistent odour, and a mild characteristic taste Its sp. gr., according to Prof. Procter, is 0-845. It probably consists of two distinct oils, as it begins to boil at 310° F.; and its temperature continues to rise to 365°. When distilled with- out water, it comes over colourless, and a little resinous matter is left behind, probably resulting from the oxidation of one or both of the constituent oils. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It is slowly reddened by potassa, com- bines with iodine without explosion, is instantly decomposed by sulphuric acid, and is acted on by strong nitric acid, slowly at ordinary temperatures, but with heat explosively. (Procter, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 502.) It was first brought into notice by the so-called eclectic physicians, who use it in diarrhoea, dysentery, and the hemorrhages. In a communication by Dr. Wilson, of Philadelphia, to the College of Physicians (Nov. 1, 1854), it is stated that the oil of Philadelphia fleabane had been employed with great advantage by Dr. Bournonville and himself in uterine hemorrhage. {Trans, of Col. of Phys., N. S., ii. 330.) There can be little doubt, from the account of the oil at the same time given, that it was the oil of E. Canadense, or that now under con- sideration, which was really used; as E. Philadelphicum yields merely a trace of volatile oil when distilled; Mr. J. F. John having obtained only half a flui- drachm of it from 45 avoirdupois pounds of the herb. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 105.) It probably acts very much as the oil of turpentine as a haemostatic. The dose is from five to ten drops, which should be repeated every hour or two. W. OLEUM FCENICULI. U.S. Oil of Fennel Fennel seeds yield about 2-5 per cent., or, according to Zeller, from 3-4 to 3 8 per cent, of oil. That used in this country is imported. It is colourless or yel- lowish, with the odour and taste of the seeds. Its sp. gr. is 0 984 to 0-997. It congeals below 50° into a crystalline mass, separable by pressure into a solid Olea DestillcivJ. PART II. and liquid oil (stearoptene and eleoptene); the former heavier than water, and less volatile than the latter, which rises first when the oil is distilled. As found in the shops, therefore, the oil of fennel is not uniform ; and a specimen exam- ined by Dr. Montgomery did not congeal at 22°. It consists of carbon, hydro- gen, and oxygen; its formula being, according to Blanchet and Sell, C13H802. Its two component oils are now distinguished by the names of liquid and solid anethol, isomeric with the similar constituents of oil of anise. (See Oleum Anisi.) It is slightly dextrogyrate. The dose is from five to fifteen drops. Off. Prep. Aqua Foeniculi, U. S.; Spiritus Juniperi Compositus, U. S. W. OLEUM GAULTHERUE. U.S. Oil of Gaulthcria. This oil is a product of the United States, and is prepared chiefly in New Jersey. It is directed by the Pharmacopoeia to be prepared from the leaves of Gaultheria procumbens; but the whole plant is usually employed. It has been obtained by Prof. Procter from the bark of Betula lenla or sweet birch, and has been supposed to exist also in the root of Poly gala paucifolia, and the roots and stems of Spiraea ulmaria, Spiraea lobata, and Gaultheria hispidula, which have its peculiar flavour. Oil of partridge-berry when freshly distilled is nearly colourless, but as found in the shops has a brownish-yellow or reddish colour. It is of a sweetish, slightly pungent, peculiar taste, and a very agreeable characteristic odour, by which it may be readily distinguished from all other officinal oils. It is the heaviest of the known essential oils, having the sp. gr. 1173. Its boiling point is 412°. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., iii. 199, and xiv. 213.) Its unusual weight affords a convenient test of its purity. Another distinguishing property is that, in watery solution, it gives a purple colour writh the salts of sesquioxide of iron. Prof. Procter proved it to possess acid properties, and to be closely analogous to sali- cylous acid, one of the results of the decomposition of salicin by sulphuric acid and bichromate of potassa, and an ingredient in the oil of Spiraea ulmaria. (See Salix.) M. Cahours has since corroborated this view, and shown that one-tenth of the oil consists of a peculiar carbohydrogen, which is called gaultherilen, and the remaining nine-tenths of salicylate of oxide of methyl, or methylsalicylic acid; and a product having the properties of the latter compound was obtained by distilling a mixture of pyroxylic spirit, salicylic acid, and sulphuric acid. (Ibid., xiv. 211, and xv. 241.) Methylsalicylic acid forms with bases crystalline salts, which are resolved by heat into salicylic acid and wood spirit. Dr. T. J. Gallaher, of Pittsburg, Pa., records the case of a boy, nine years old, who took about half an ounce of this oil, with the effect of producing severe vomiting, purging, epigastric pain, hot skin, frequent pulse, slow and laboured respiration, dulness of hearing, and, notwithstanding excessive gastric irritability, an uncon- trollable desire for food. After two or three days of great danger, he began to improve, and in two weeks was entirely restored to health. (Med. Examiner, N. S., viii. 347.) Oil of gaultheria is chiefly used, on account of its pleasant flavour, to cover the taste of other medicines. Off. Prep. Syrupus Sarsaparillae Compositus, U. S. W. OLEUM IIEDEOMiE. U.S. Oil of lledeoma. Oil of American Pen- nyroyal. This, though analogous in properties to the oil of European pennyroyal, is de- rived from a distinct plant (Hedeoma pulegioides) peculiar to North America. It has a light-yellow colour, with the odour and taste of the herb. Its sp. gr. is 0'948. It may be used as a remedy in flatulent colic and sick stomach, to correct the operation of nauseating or griping medicines, and to impart flavour to mix- tures. It is also much employed as a domestic remedy in amencr-hoea. The dose is from two to ten drops. \\ PART II. Olea Destillata. 1253 OLEUM JUNIPERI. U.S,Br. Oil of Juniper. “ Juniperus communis. The Oil distilled in England from the unripe fruit.” Br The proportion of oil which juniper berries afford is stated very differently by different authors. Tromrasdorff obtained one per cent. The highest quantity given in the table of Recluz is 2 34, the lowest 0 31 per cent. Zeller gives as the product of the fresh ripe fruit 13 percent., of that a year old 0-86 per cent (Gent. Blatt, Miirz, 1855, p. 207.) The berries are most productive when bruised The oil of juniper consumed in this country is brought from Europe, and is be- lieved to be procured chiefly from the tops of the plant, being sold for a price which is altogether incompatible with the idea that it is prepared from the fruit alone. It is colourless, or of a light greenish-yellow, with a terebinthinate odour, and hot acrid taste. Oil of Juniper has a sp.gr. from 0 879 to 0 911, and is moderately lsevogyrate. (Buignet.) It is not very soluble in alcohol. According to Blanchet, it contains two isomeric oils, of which one is colourless, and the other coloured and less volatile. It is, when pure, a carbohydrogen, and is said to have the same composition as oil of turpentine (O10H8); but it does not form a solid compound with muriatic acid. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 80.) Oil of turpentine is often fraudulently added, but may be detected by the specific gravity of the mixture, which is considerably less than that of the unadulterated oil of juniper. The oil is stimulant, carminative, and diuretic; and maybe employed advan- tageously in debilitated dropsical cases, in connection with other medicines, espe- cially digitalis. It is this oil which imparts to Holland gin its peculiar flavour and diuretic power. The dose is from five to fifteen drops two or three times a day, and may be considerably increased. Off. Prep. Spiritus Juniperi, Br.; Spiritus Juniperi Compositus, U. S. W. OLEUM LAVANDULAE. U. S., Br. Oil of Lavender. “Lavandula vera. The Oil distilled in England from the fiowersA Br. This oil is usually distilled from the flowers and flower-stems conjointly, though of finer quality when obtained from the former exclusively. Dried lav- ender flowers are said to yield from 1 to l-5 per cent, of oil. According to Zel- ler, the fresh flowers yield 1-03, the dried 4’3, the whole fresh herb in flower 0 76 per cent. It is stated that the lavender produced by an acre of ground under cultivation will yield from 10 to 12 pounds of the oil. (Pharm. Journ., Nov. 1864, p. 257.) The oil is very fluid, of a lemon-yellow colour, with the fragrance of the flowers, and an aromatic, burning taste. That met with in commerce has the sp. gr. 0'898 at 68° F., which is reduced to 0-877 by rectification (Berzelius), or 0 886 (Buignet). It is lrevogyrate. According to Brande, the sp. gr. of the oil obtained from the whole herb is 0 9206. Alcohol of 0 830 dissolves oil of lavender in all proportions; that of 0‘877, only 42 per cent. (Berzelius.) Proust states that, when allowed to stand in imperfectly stopped bottles, it lets fall a crystal- line deposit, which often amounts to one-fourth of its weight. This has been found by M. Dumas to have the same point of volatilization and the same com- position as the true camphor, but differs in the total want of rotatory power. (Ibid., Juillet, 1863, p. 30.) It is said that the portion of oil first distilled is most fragrant, and is often kept separate, and sold at a higher price. Accord- ing to M. Lallemand, oil of lavender consists chiefly of an oil isomeric with pure oil of turpentine, but contains acetic acid in combination, probably in the state of amylacetic ether. (Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1860, p. 290.) It is used chiefly as a perfume, though possessed of carminative and stimulant properties, and some- times useful in cases of nervous languor and headache. The dose is from one to five drops.* * Cologne Water. One of the Farinas, the noted manufacturers of Cologne water, the composition of which has been carefully kept secret by that family, is said recently to have published the following formula, as being that of the genuine perfume. “Take of Oil oi 1254 Olea Destillata. PART II. Oil of Spil e is procured from the broad-leaved variety of lavender which grows wild in Europe, the Lavandula Spica of De Candolle. Its odour is less fragrant than that of common oil of lavender, and is somewhat analogous to that of oil of turpentine, with which it is said to be often adulterated. It is used by artists in the preparation of varnishes. Ojf. Prep. Linimentum Camphor® Compositum, Br.; Spiritus Ammonias Aromaticus, U. S.; Spiritus Lavandulae; Spiritus Lavandulae Compositus, U.S.; Tinctura Lavandulae Composita, Br. W. OLEUM MENTHiE PIPERITAE. U.S., Br. Oil of Peppermint. “Mentha piperita. The Oil distilled from the fresh herb in flower.” Br. Peppermint varies exceedingly in the quantity of oil which it affords. Four pounds of the fresh herb yield, according to Baume, from a drachm and a half to three drachms of the oil. Zeller gives as the product of the fresh herb from 037 to 0-68 per cent., of the dried 114 per cent. The yield is generally less than 1 percent. This oil is largely distilled in the United States. It is of a greenish-yellow colour or nearly colourless, but becomes reddish by age. Its odour is strong and aromatic, its taste warm, camphorous, and very pungent, but succeeded, when air is admitted into the mouth, by a sense of coolness. Its sp. gr. is stated differently from 0-902 to 0 920; its boiling point at 3G5°. It is con- siderably laevogyrate. (Buignet.) Upon long standing it deposits a stearoptene, which, according to Kane, has the same composition as the oil, viz , Berzelius states that at 8° below zero the oil deposits small capillary crystals. These, which are called peppermint camphor, melt at 95° F., volatilize un- changed, and, when distilled with anhydrous phosphoric acid, yield a peculiar aromatic product, denominated menthene. (Gmelin’s Handbook, xiv. p. 445.) This oil is frequently adulterated with alcohol, and occasionally, there is reason to believe, with oil of turpentine. This is detected by its odour, by its deficient solubility in cold alcohol, and by imparting the property of exploding with iodine. Itis.stated by the Messrs. Hotchkiss that, in much of the land under culture with peppermint in this country, other oil-producing plants are carelessly allowed to grow, which, being gathered and distilled with the peppermint, contaminate the product. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 222.) Such impuri- ties may be detected by the altered odour of the oil. When freshly prepared, it should volatilize completely from paper without leaving a mark, and, when dropped into alcohol of 85 per cent., should completely dissolve without agita- tion. (Bullock, Ibid., Nov. 1859, p. 553.) Much of the oil used in the United States is produced in Michigan. (Ibid., xxix. 312.) Oil of peppermint is stimulating and carminative, and is much used in flatu- lence, nausea, spasmodic pains of the stomach and bowels, and as a corrigent or adjuvant of other medicines. The dose is from one to three drops, and is most conveniently given rubbed with sugar and then dissolved in water. The oil is frequently employed, dissolved in alcohol, in the form of essence of peppermint, which is an officinal preparation. (See Spiritus Menthae Piperitae.) Off. Prep. Aqua Menthae Piperitae; Pilulae Rhei Compositae; Spiritus Men- thae Piperitae; Trochisci Menthae Piperitae, U. S. W. OLEUM MENTIIiE VIRIDIS. U.S.,Br. Oil of Spearmint. “ Mentha viridis. The Oil distilled in England from the fresh herb in flower ” Br. Lavender 4 ounces; Purified Benzoin, Oil of Rosemary, each, 2 ounces; Stronger Alcohol 9 gallons. Dissolve the oils and benzoin in the alcohol; and to the solution add successively, of Oil of Neroli, Oil of the young orange denominated by the French limit de Petits Grains, Oil of Lemons, each, 10-4 ounces; Oil of the Sweet Orange, Oil of the Lime, an 1 Oil of Ber- gamot, each, 20-8 ounces; Tincture of the Flowers of the Rose Geranium sufficient quan- tity. Macerate for some weeks, and introduce into flasks.” (See Am. Journ. oj Fb***n , Jin /, 1864, p. 376.)—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Olea Eestillata. 1255 According to Lewis, ten pounds of spearmint yield an ounce of oil; by others the product is stated not to exceed one part from five hundred. The oil is largely distilled in this country. It is pale-yellow or greenish when recently prepared, but becomes red with age, and ultimately almost of a mahogany colour. Its fla- vour is analogous to that of the oil of peppermint, but less agreeable and less pungent. Its sp.gr. is stated differently from 0 914 to 0'9I5; its boiling point at 320°. Kane gives the formula as representing its composition. It is used for the same purposes as the oil of peppermint, in the dose of from two to. five drops. An essence of spearmint, prepared by dissolving the oil in alco- hol, is officinal. (See Spiritus Menthae Viridis.) Off. Prep. Aqua Menthm Viridis; Spiritus Menthae Yiridis, U. S. W. OLEUM MONARDiE. U. S. Oil of Horsemint. This is prepared by our distillers from the fresh herb of Monarda punctata. It has a reddish-amber colour, a fragrant odour, and a warm, very pungent taste. At 40° F., or lower, especially in the preseuce of moisture, it is gradually trans- formed by oxidation into a crystalline body, having the odour and taste of the oil. This appears to be analogous in constitution to camphor, being the oxide of a carbohydrogen radical (C10H.), three eqs. of which with one eq. of oxygen form the liquid oil. (C. T. Bonsall, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 200.) It is now considered as identical with thymol, or camphor of the oil of thyme. (See Oleum Thymi, iu Part I.) Applied to the skin, monarda oil is powerfully rubefacient, quickly producing heat, pain, redness, and even vesication. It has been employed externally in low forms of fever, cholera infantum, chronic rheumatism, and other affections in which rubefacients are indicated. In ordinary cases it should be diluted before being applied. It may be given internally as a stimulant and car- minative, in the dose of two or three drops mixed with sugar and water. W. OLEUM ORIGANI. U.S. 1850, Ed. Oil of Origanum. Oil of Mar- joram. This is obtained from the common marjoram, Origanum, vulgare, and is fre- quently called oil of marjoram. Though it has been satisfactorily determined by Mr. Hanbury that the oil circulating in commerce by the name of oil of ori- ganum is really obtained from Thymus vulgaris growing in the south of France, and on this account the proper oil of marjoram has been expunged from our Pharmacopoeia, and its place supplied by the oil of thyme (see Oleum Thymi iu Part I.), yet, as Origanum vulgare is a common plant, possessed of valuable aro- matic properties, and readily yields its oil by distillation in the ordinary mode, and as there is no reason to suppose that the descriptions given by authors from whom we have quoted are not those of the genuine oil, it is deemed expedient to retain the oil in its old position, and to continue the description given of it in former editions. The plant varies exceedingly in the proportion of oil which it affords. The mean product may be stated at from four to six parts from a thou- sand. The recent oil, when properly prepared, is yellow; but, if too much heat is used in the distillation, it is said to be reddish, and it acquires the same tint by age. It may be obtained colourless by rectification. It has the odour of the plant, and a hot acrid taste. Kane gives its sp. gr. 0'86t, its boiling point 354°, and its composition C50H40O. According to Lewis, its sp. gr. is 0-940, according to Brande 0 909. It is sometimes used as an external irritant, and to allay the pain of toothache, by being introduced, on lint or cotton, into the cavity of a carious tooth. It is little employed internally. The oil of sweet marjoram (Origanum Majorana) is obtained from the plant by distillation, in the quantity of from 2'5 to 6 parts from 1000. It is of a lemon- yellow colour, light, and camphorous, and is said upon long standing to deposit a substance resembling camphor. It is not used in this country. W. Olea Destillata. PART II. OLEUM PIMENTiE. U. S., Br. Oil of Pimento. “The Oil distilled in England from Pimento.” Br. The berries yield from 1 to more than 4 per cent, of oil, which, as found in the shops, is brownish-red, and has the odour and taste of pimento, though warmer and more pungent. It is said, when freshly distilled, to be colourless or yellowish. Nitric acid reddens it. Its sp. gr. is stated at 1021, but varies. It consists, like oil of cloves, of two distinct oils, a lighter and heavier, the former of which comes over first in distillation. They may be separated by distilling the oil from caustic potassa. The light oil comes over, and the heavy remains combined with the potassa. The latter may be obtained by distilling the residue with sulphuric acid. The light oil is lighter than water, and is a pure carbohy- drogen. The heavy has the acid property of forming crystalline compounds with the alkalies. They are analogous to the light and heavy oils of cloves. Indeed, the heavy has been found to be identical with the eugenic acid of that oil. (See Oleum Caryophylli.) The oil of pimento is given for the same purposes as the other stimulant aromatic oils. The dose is from three to six drops. W. OLEUM ROSMARINI. U.S.,Br. Oil of Rosemary. “Rosmarinus officinalis. The Oil distilled in England from the flowering tops.” Br. The fresh leaves of rosemary yield, according to Baume, 0 26 per cent, of oil; but the product is stated much higher by others. According to Braude, a pound of the fresh herb yields about a drachm of the oil, which is about 1 per cent.; and Zeller gives very nearly the same product for the dried herb. This oil is colourless, with an odour similar to that of the plant, though less agreeable.. Its sp. gr. is said to be 0*911, but reduced to 0 8886 by rectification. Buignet gives the sp. gr. of the rectified oil 0'896, and states that it is moderately dextrogy- rate. It is soluble in all proportions in alcohol of 0 830; but requires for solu- tion at 64° forty parts of alcohol of 0 887. (Berzelius.) Kane gives its sp.gr. 0‘897, its boiling point 365°, and its composition Kept in bottles im- perfectly stopped, it deposits a stearoptene analogous to camphor, sometimes amounting, according to Proust, to one-tenth of the oil. Bucholz states that it alfords camphor when digested with from one-lialf its weight to an equal weight of potassa, and distilled. It is said to be sometimes adulterated with oil of tur- pentine, which may be detected by mixing the suspected liquid with an equal volume of pure alcohol. The oil of rosemary is dissolved, and that of turpentine left. This oil is stimulant, but is employed chiefly as an ingredient of rubefacient liniments. The dose is from three to six drops. A case of death is recorded, in a child four or five years old, from a mixture of six measures of this oil, and two of oil of wormseed, given in repeated doses of a tablespoonful. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiii. 286.) Off. Prep. Linimentum Saponis; Spiritus Lavandulae Compositus, TJ. S.; Spiritus Rosmarini, Br.; Tinctura Lavandulae Composita, Br. W. OLEUM RUT2E.Br. Oil of Rue. “Ruta graveolens. The Oil distilled in England from the fresh leaves and unripe fruit.” Br. Rue yields a very small proportion of a yellow or greenish oil, which becomes brown with age. According to Zeller, the product of the fresh herb is 0‘28 per cent., of the seeds about, 1 per cent. The oil has the strong unpleasant odour of the plant, and an acrid taste. Kane gives its sp. gr. 0’837, its boiling point 446°, and its composition C12SH2803. Gregory considers it as hydrated oxide of rutyl or rutylic aldeliyd (C20H19O,HO = ), associated with a carbohy- drogen. (Handbook of Organic Chemistry, 4th ed., pp. 275 and 342.) Accord- ing to Williams, the composition of the pure oxygenated oil is C22H2202. which is confirmed by Ilarbordt, who, by oxidizing it by means of chromic acid, ob* Olea JDestillata. 1257 PART II. tained caprinic acid, and concludes that its proper title is methylo-caprinol, and its rational formula C2II3,C20K19O2. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1863, p- 34.) When treated with nitric acid, it yields, among other products, pelargonic acid, which is used in the preparation of a fruit essence, denominated pelargonic eilier. (See Fruit Essences, in Part III.) It is stimulant and antispasmodic, and has been given in hysteria, convulsions, and amenorrhoea. The dose is from two to five drops. W OLEUM SABINiE. U.S., Br. Oil of Savine. “The Oil distilled in England from fresh Savin.” Br. According to the more recent authorities, the proportion of volatile oil ob- tained from savine varies from less than 1 to 2 5 per cent. The oil is nearly colourless or yellow, limpid, strongly odorous, and of a bitterish, extremely acrid taste. Kane gives its sp.gr. 0-915, its boiling point 315°, and its composition ClftHa, equivalent to that of oil of turpentine. According to Winckler, it is con- verted by sulphuric acid into an oil not distinguishable from that of thyme. (Chem. Gaz., Jan. 1847, p. 11.) With iodine it becomes heated, detonates, and gives otf yellow and violet-red vapours. (Flaschoff.) Distilled with 24 parts of water and 8 of chloride of lime, it evolves carbonic acid with efl'ervescence, and yields chloroform. (Guidin'1 s Handbook, xiv. 310.) The oil of savine is stimu- lant, emmenagogue, and actively rubefacient, and may be given for the same purposes as the plant in substance. It has been much employed empirically in amenorrhoea, and with a view to produce abortion, and in some instances with fatal effects. The dose is from two to five drops. . W. OLEUM SASSAFRAS. U. S. Oil of Sassafras. The proportion of oil yielded by the root of sassafras is variously stated from less than 1 to somewhat more than 2 per cent. The bark of the root, directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, would afford a larger amount. Yery large quantities of the oil are distilled in Maryland, and sent to Baltimore for sale. The usual yield is said by Mr. Sharp to be one pound from three bushels of the root. From fifteen to twenty thousand pounds were sent annually, before the war, to the Bal- timore market. (A. P. Sharp, Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1863, p. 53.) The oil is of a yellow colour, becoming reddish by age. It has the fragrant odour of sas- safras, with a warm, pungent, aromatic taste. It is among the heaviest of the vola- tile oils, having the sp. gr. 1-094, or 1-087 on the authority of Buignet, who states also that it is very slightly dextrogyrate. According to Bonastre it separates, by agitation with water, into two oils, one lighter, the other heavier than water. Berzelius states that the first is often nothing more than oil of turpentine exist- ing as an adulteration in the oil of sassafras. Nitric acid colours it red, and fuming nitric acid inflames it more readily than most other oils. It has the pro- perty of dissolving caoutchouc. When kept for a long time it deposits transparent crystals, having the same odour as the liquid oil. By treating the oil with chlo- rine, neutralizing with lime, and distilling, a product is obtained identical in properties and composition with common camphor. (See Am. Jou?-n. of Pharm., xxvi. 166.) Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, has shown that the oil forms an insoluble compound with lead; a property which renders leaden vessels, or those containing lead, unsuitable recipients for it. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 521.) Oil of sassafras is stimulant, carminative, and supposed to be diaphoretic ; and may be employed for the same purposes as the bark from which it is derived. The dose is from two to ten drops. Off. Prep. Syrupus Sarsaparilla? Comp., U. S.; Trochisci Cubebse, U. S. W. OLEUM SUCCINI RECTIFICATUM. U. S. Rectified Oil of Amber. “Take of Oil of Amber a pint; Water six pints. Mix them in a glass re- port, and distil until four pints of water have passed with the Oil into the re- 1258 Olea Destillata. PART II. ceiver; then separate the Oil from the Water, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle” U. S. For an account of the crude oil (Oleum Succini) the reader is referred to Part 1. (page 5*78). By successive distillations oil of amber is rendered thinner and more limpid, till at length it is obtained colourless. The first portions which distil are less coloured than those which follow, and may be separated for keeping, while the remainder is submitted to another distillation. For practical purposes, how- ever, the oil is sufficiently pure when once redistilled, as directed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. As usually found in the shops, the rectified oil is of a light yel- lowish-brown or amber colour. When quite pure it is colourless, as fluid as alcohol, of the sp. gr. 0-758 at 75°, and boils at 186°. It has a strong, peculiar, unpleasant odour, and a hot, acrid taste. It imparts these properties in some degree to water, without being perceptibly dissolved. It is soluble in eight parts of alcohol of the sp. gr. 0-847 at 55°, in five parts of the sp. gr. 0-825, and in all proportions in absolute alcohol. The fixed oils unite with it. On exposure to the light and air, it slowly changes in colour and consistence, becoming ulti- mately black and solid. It appears, when quite pure, to be a carbohydrogen, consisting, according to Dr. Dopping, of 88'46 parts of carbon and II 54 of hy- drogen in 100. (Chem. Gaz.,1\Tov. 1845, p. 447.) It is said to be sometimes adulterated with oil of turpentine, which may be detected by passing muriatic acid gas through the suspected oil. If pure it will remain wholly liquid; while oil of turpentine, if present, will give rise to the formation of solid artificial camphor. (Pharm. Journ., xiii. 292.) Medical Properties and Uses. Rectified oil of amber is stimulant and anti- spasmodic, and occasionally promotes the secretions, particularly that of urine. It has been employed with advantage in amenorrhoea, and in various spasmodic and convulsive affections, as tetanus, epilepsy, hysteria, hooping-cough, and in- fantile convulsions from intestinal irritation, &c. The dose is from five to fifteen drops, diffused in some aromatic water by means of sugar and gum arabic. Ex- ternally applied the oil is rubefacient, and is considerably employed as a lini- ment in chronic rheumatism and palsy, and in certain spasmodic disorders, as hooping-cough and infantile convulsions. In the latter affection it should be rubbed along the spine, and was highly recommended by the late Dr. Joseph Parrish, mixed with an equal measure of laudanum, and diluted with three or four parts of olive oil and of brandy. W. OLEUM TABACI. U.S. Oil of Tobacco. “Take of Tobacco, in coarse powder, twelve troyounces. Put it into a re- tort of green glass, connected with a refrigeratory, to which a tube is attached for the escape of the incondensible products. Then, by means of a sand-bath, heat the retort gradually to dull redness, and maintain it at that temperature until empyreumatic oil ceases to come over. Lastly, separate the dark, oily liquid in the receiver from the watery portion, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This is a black, thickish liquid, of a strong characteristic odour, identical with that of old tobacco pipes, and in no degree resembling that of undecomposed tobacco. It may be obtained colourless by rectification, but soon becomes yel- lowish and ultimately brown. It probably contains a portion of nicotia volatil- ized unchanged, and is a powerful poison, unfit for internal use, and when em- ployed externally requiring much caution. Mixed with simple ointment or lard, in the proportion of twenty drops to an ounce, it has been used as an applica- tion to indolent tumours, buboes, ulcers, and obstinate cutaneous eruptions; but, in all cases where the cuticle is wanting, it should be employed with reserve, and its effects carefully watched. W OLEUM VALERIANAE. U.S. Oil of Valerian. This was introduced for the first time as an officinal into the U. S Pharma* PART II. Olea Destillata.— Oleoresinse. 1259 copoeia of 1850. It is obtained from the root of Yaleriana officinalis by tne usual process of distillation with water. According to Zeller, the dried root of the best quality yields P64 percent, of the oil. Very good oil has been distilled from the root cultivated in this country. As first procured, it is of a pale-green- ish colour, of the sp. gr. 0 934, with a pungent odour of valerian, and an aro- matic taste. Upon exposure, it becomes yellow and viscid. It is a complex sub- stance, containing 1. a carbohydrogen isomeric with pure oil of turpentine ; 2. a small proportion of stearoptene, of an odour resembling that of camphor and pepper, and formed probably by the combination of water with the preceding con- stituent ; 3. a peculiar oxygenated oil, called valerol Kane’s Chemis- try), which, by the agency of the air, is converted into valerianic ( valeric) acid and a resinous matter; and 4. valerianic acid, which always exists in the oil iD small proportion, but is increased by exposure. The conversion of valerol into valerianic acid, through the agency of atmospheric oxygen, is very much pro- moted by the presence of caustic alkalies, which combine with the acid, when formed, to produce valerianates. Somewhat different views of the oil are given by M. Pierlot, who has investigated its nature. According to this chemist, the oil, whether fresh or old, always contains about 5 hundredths of valerianic acid, and, besides this, the two oils above referred to, namely, the carbohydrogen, which he names valerene, and the valerol, the formula of which he gives as C24H20O2, and which becomes resinified by exposure to the air. He has concluded, moreover, that valerol cannot be changed into an acid by any known process. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1860, p. 142.) The oil of valerian exercises the same influence as the root on the nervous system, and is frequently administered as a substitute for it in the dose of four or five drops. W. OLEORESINiE. Oleoresins. The oleoresins, as a class of Preparations, were newly introduced into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia at the late revision, having been previously considered with the Fluid Extracts. Their peculiarity is that they consist of principles, which, when extracted by means of ether, retain a liquid or semi-liquid state upon the evaporation of the menstruum, and at the same time have the property of self-preservation; differing in this respect from the fluid extracts, which re- quire the presence of alcohol or sugar to prevent decomposition. They consist chiefly, as their name implies, of oil either fixed or volatile, holding resin and sometimes other active matter in solution. Their preparation is very simple, consisting in the exhaustion of the medicine employed with ether, by means of percolation, and the subsequent evaporation of the menstruum. In consequence of the great volatility of ether, it may in great measure be recovered by distilla- tion, thus very materially diminishing the costliness of the process. It is proper not to continue the heat necessary for the distillation till the whole of the ether ’s driven over, lest, towards the close, a portion of the volatile matters also should pass, and the strength of the oleoresin be impaired. Hence, in every instance, the last portions of the menstruum are allowed to separate by spontaneous eva- poration. W. OLEORESIN A CAPSICI. U. S. Oleoresin of Capsicum. “Take of Capsicum, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Ether a sufficient quantity. Put the Capsicum into a cylindrical percolator, press it firmly, and gradually pour Ether upon it until twenty-four fluidounces of filtered liquid have passed. Recover from this, by distillation on a water-bath, eighteen fluidounces of etuer, and expose the residue, iu a capsule, until the remaining ether has 1260 Oleoresinse. PART II. evaporated. Lastly, remove, by straining, the fatty matter which separates on standing, and keep the Oleoresin in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. The active principle of capsicum, called capsicin, is very soluble in ether, and is wholly extracted in the process. Its precise nature has not been determined : but, in the purest form in which it has been obtained, it is of a semi-liquid olea- ginous consistence. After the concentration of the ethereal solution, a solid fatly matter separates on standing, but a portion of fixed oil probably still remains. The preparation is a very thick liquid, capable, however, of being dropped, of a dark reddish-brown colour, and, though opaque in mass, yet transparent in thin layers. It has not very decidedly the odour of capsicum, but to the taste is in- tensely pungent. It may be usefully employed to give locally stimulant proper- ties to substances administered internally in a pilular form, in cases of gastric insensibility and excessive flatulence. Not more than a drop should be given at once, and that very much diluted, whether mixed with solids in the pill mass, or in liquid mixtures. It may be used also as a powerful rubefacient, diluted with olive oil or soap liniment. W. OLEORESINA CUBEBiE. U. S. Extractum Cubebs Fluidum. U. S. 1850. Oleoresin of Oubeb. Fluid Extract of Cubebs. “ Take of Cubeb, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Ether a sufficient quan- tity. Put the Cubeb into a cylindrical percolator, press it moderately, and grad- ually pour Ether upon it until twenty-four fluidounces of filtered liquid have passed. Recover from this, by distillation on a water-bath, eighteen fluidounces of ether, and expose the residue, in a capsule, until the remaining ether has evaporated. Lastly, keep the Oleoresin in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This oleoresin consists mainly of the volatile oil and resin, with a portion of the cubebin and waxy matter of the cubebs. The consistence differs with the cha- racter of the cubebs employed; its degree of fluidity being proportionate to the amount of volatile oil contained in the medicine. The colour is usually black- ish-brown, with more oiness of a greenish hue, according to the quantity of chlo- rophyll present, which varies with the character of the cubebs, and with that of the menstruum; pure ether extracting the green colouring matter preferably, while ordinary alcoholic ether extracts also the brown. Cubebs yield from one- eighth to one-fifth of their weight of fluid extract. The preparation deposits waxy matter and crystals of cubebin on standing; but its efficacy is probably not impaired. It was first introduced into use by Prof. Procter. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 168.) The dose is from five to thirty minims, which may be given suspended in water, or mixed with powdered sugar. Off. Prep. Trochisci Cubeb®, TJ. S. W. OLEORESINA FILICIS. Extractum Filicis Liquidum. Br. Oleo- resin of Fern. Liquid Extract of Fern Hoot. “ Take of Fern Root, in coarse powder, two pounds [avoirdupois]; Ether four pints [Imperial measure], or a sufficiency. Mix the Fern Root with two pints [Imp. meas.] of the Ether; pack closely in a percolator; and add the re- mainder of the Ether at intervals, until it passes through colourless. Let the ether evaporate on a water-bath, or recover it by distillation, and preserve the oily extract.” Br. This is a new officinal of the British Pharmacopoeia, and ought to have a place in our own. Though introduced in the Pharmacopoeia among the Extracts, it yet by its character belongs so decidedly to the oleoresins, that we have deemed it expedient to give it this position, and to name it, in chief, Oleoresin of Fern. It is an ethereal extract of the Fern Root, consisting mainly of oily and resinous matter, and has been long known and much used on the Continent of Europe, under the name of oil of fern, in the treatment of the tape worm. It is a thick, dark liquid, with the odour of fern, and a nauseous, bitterish, some- PART II. Oleoresinse. 1261 what acrid taste. (See Filix Mas, in Part I.) It is believed to have all the an- thelmintic powers of the male fern, and may be giveu in the dose of half a flui- drachm. W. OLEORESINA U.S. Oleoresin of Lupulin. “Take of Lupulin twelve troyounces; Ether a sufficient quantity. Put the Lupulin into a narrow cylindrical percolator, press it firmly, and gradually pour Ether upon it until thirty fluidounces of filtered liquid have passed. Recover from this, by distillation on a water-bath, eighteen fluidounces of ether, and ex- pose the residue, in a capsule, until the remaining ether has evaporated. Lastly ke§p the Oleoresin in a wide-mouthed bottle, well stopped.” U. S. Lupulin yields its volatile oil and resin, as well as any other active principle h may contain, to ether, and the resulting oleoresin constitutes about three-eighths, or somewhat less than one-half of the original drug. It is of a very thick semi- fluid consistence, so thick indeed that it cannot be conveniently administered by drops. Its colour is almost black in mass, but a rich reddish-brown in thin layers. It has the odour and taste of lupulin, and possesses all its medical properties. The dose is from two to five grains, and may be most conveniently administered in the form of pill, made with powdered liquorice root, or other proper exci- pient. W. OLEORESINA PIPERIS. XI. S. Extractum Piperis Fluidum. TJ. S. 1850. Oleoresin of Black Pepper. Fluid Extract of Black Pepper. “Take of Black Pepper, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Ether a suffi- cient quantity. Put the Black Pepper into a cylindrical percolator, press it firmly, and gradually pour Ether upon it until twenty-four fluidounces of filtered liquid have passed. Recover from this, by distillation on a water-bath, eighteen fluidounces of ether, and expose the residue, in a capsule, until the remaining ether has evaporated, and the deposition of piperin in crystals has ceased. Lastly, separate the Oleoresin from the piperin by expression through a muslin strainer, and keep it in a well stopped bottle.” XJ. S. A substance has long been in use under the name of oil of black pepper, con- sisting mainly of the volatile oil and resin of the pepper, and belonging, there- fore, to the oleoresins. As usually found, it is almost black, and of a thickish consistence, and is a residue of the process for preparing piperin. The officinal oleoresin has the same general character, but is more fluid, and of more uniform strength, and should, therefore, be preferred. It contains almost all the volatile oil and acrid resin of black pepper, with little of the piperin; and, as the last- mentioned principle, when quite pure, is of doubtful efficacy, the extract may be considered as representing the virtues of the fruit. The colour is greener than that of the common oil of black pepper, and not so dark, owing to the fact that ether dissolves the green more readily than the brown colouring matter. A pound of black pepper yields about six drachms of the fluid extract, the dose of which, proportionate to the ordinary dose of pepper, would be one or two minims. It may be given in emulsion, or may be combined in small proportion with other substances in the form of pill. W OLEORESINA ZINGIBERIS. U.S. Oleoresin of dinger. “Take of Ginger, in fine powder, twelve troyounces; Stronger Ether twelve fluidounces; Alcohol a sufficient quantity. But the Ginger into a cylindrical percolator, press it firmly, and pour upon it the Stronger Ether. When this has been absorbed by the powder, add Alcohol until twelve fluidounces of filtered liquid have passed. Recover from this, by distillation on a water-bath, nine fluid- ounces of ether, and expose the residue, in a capsule, until the volatile part has evaporated. Lastly, keep the Oleoresin in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. In the preparation of this oleoresin alcohol is used in connection with ether, out .solely on the score of economy; as it is added in order to displace the ether, Oleoresin se.—Pilulse. PART IT. and thus save an unnecessary expenditure of this more costly fluid. A little of the alcohol, no doubt, mixes with the ether at their surface of contact, but only a little; and the liquid which passes is mainly the ether loaded with the oleore- sinous matter of the ginger. The whole of the virtues of the root are extracted in this preparation, as the residuary ginger is nearly or quite tasteless. The oleoresin constitutes about 5 per cent, of the dried root. It is the piperoid of [linger of M. Beral.'(Soubeiran's Trait, de Pharm., i. 371.) It is a clear dark- brown liquid, of a thick consistence, though capable of being dropped, with the flavour of ginger, and intensely pungent. Its dose should not exceed a minim, and should be much diluted when administered. W. PILULJE. Pills. These are small globular masses of a size convenient for swallowing. They are well adapted for the administration of medicines which are unpleasant to the taste or smell, or insoluble in water, and do not require to be given in large doses. Deliquescent substances should not be made into pills; and those which are efflorescent should be previously deprived of their water of crystallization. Care should also be taken not to combine materials, the mutual reaction of which may result in a change of form. Some substances have a consistence which enables them to be made immedi- ately into pills. Such are the softer extracts and certain gum-resins; and the addition of a little water to the former, and a few drops of spirit to the latter, will give them the requisite softness and plasticity, if previously wanting. Sub- stances which are very soft, or in the liquid state, are formed into the pilular mass by incorporation with dry and inert powders, such as wheat flour, starch, and powdered gum arabic, or with crumb of bread. Powders must be mixed with soft, solid bodies, as extracts, confections, soap, &c., or with tenacious liquids, as syrup, molasses, honey, mucilage, or glycerin ; aud the last-mentioned substance has been especially recommended in connection with a little alcohol. (Tich- borne.) Heavy metallic powders are most conveniently made into pills with the former; light vegetable powders with the latter. Mucilage is very often used; but pills made with it are apt when kept to become hard, and of difficult solu- bility in the liquids of the stomach, and, if metallic substances are mixed with it, the mass does not work well. A mixture of syrup and powdered gum arabic is not subject to the same inconveniences, and is an excellent material for the formation of pills. Honey has been highly recommended. Confection of roses and molasses are among the best excipients, when the pills are to be long kept. Por the same purpose of keeping the pill soft, the addition of a small portion of some fixed oil or deliquescent salt has been recommended ; and glycerin will pro- bably answer still better. Many powders require only water.' Such are all those which contain ingredients capable of forming an adhesive or viscid solution with that liquid. Care should always be taken that the matter added be not incom- patible with the main constituents of the pill. The materials should be accurately mixed together, and beat in a mortar till formed into a perfectly uniform and plastic mass. This should be of such a consistence that the pills may preserve their form, without being so hard as to resist the solvent power of the gastric liquors. As pills frequently become very hard by time, it is often convenient to keep the mass in a state fit to be divided when wanted for use. This may be done by wrapping it in bladders, putting it in covered pots, and occasionally moistening it as it becomes dry ; or, more effectually, by keeping it in glass or well-glazed jars, accurately closed with varnished bladder. The mass, having been duly prepared, is made iuto pills by rolling it with a Pilulse. PART II. spatula, or with a flat, smooth piece of hard wood, into a cylinder of precisely the same thickness throughout, and of a length corresponding to the number of pills required. It is then divided as equally as possible by the hand, or more accurately by a machine made for the purpose.* The pills receive a spherical form by being rolled between the fingers. M. Miahle describes a little instrument for rolling pills, composed of two circular plates, one about 12, the other 6 inches in diam- eter ; the former having a ledge at the border one-third of an inch high, the latter with a similar ledge, varying, according to the size of the pills, from less than a line to nearly two lines, and with a strap on the back by which it can be fitted to the hand. This is to be moved in a rotary mauner upon the larger plate, holding the divided portions of the pill mass. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xvii. 218.) In order to prevent the adhesion of pills to one another, or to the sides of the vessel in which they may be placed, it is customary to agitate them with some dry powder, which gives them an external coating, that serves also to con- ceal their taste. For this purpose, carbonate of magnesia, powdered liquorice root, or starch may be used. Carbonate of magnesia is sometimes incompatible with one of the ingredients of the pills; and liquorice root is generally prefera- ble, though it sometimes becomes mouldy with very damp pills. The powder of lycopodium, which has been long in use in Europe, is now considerably em- ployed in this country, and is perhaps the best substance for the purpose; and it was formerly the custom to give the pill a coating of gold or silver leaf.f It has been proposed by M. Garot to cover pills with gelatin, which answers the purpose of concealing their taste and odour, and counteracting deliquescence or chemical change from exposure to the air, without interfering with their solu- bility in the stomach. He dips each pill, sustained on the point of a pin, into melted gelatin, withdraws it with a rotary motion, then fixes the pin in a paste so as to allow the coating to dry in the air, and, having prepared about fifty pills in this way, proceeds to complete the operation by holding the pin in the flame of a taper so as to melt the gelatin near its point, and then withdrawing it from the pill so as to close up the orifice. The purest glue should be selected for this purpose, melted with the addition of two or three drachms of water to an ounce of the glue, and kept liquid by means of a salt-bath. Another plan for attaining the same objects, less effectual, but more conve- nient than the above, is to introduce the pills into a spherical box, to drop on them enough syrup simply to moisten their surface, then to give a rotary move- ment to the box until the pills are uniformly covered, and finally to add by de- grees a powder consisting of equal parts of gum, sugar, and starch, shaking the box with each addition, and continuing the process until nothing more will adhere to the pills. The investing material may be rendered agreeable to the taste and smell by aromatic additions, if deemed advisable. (Journ. de Pharm., x. 32.) M. Calloud has found that a better powder for the purpose, because less disposed to attract moisture, is made by boiling one part of flaxseed and three parts of white sugar with sufficient water till a thick mucilage is formed, evaporating this carefully to dryness, and then pulverizing. (Ibid., xxiii. 301.) The same writer has since suggested, as still more effective, a powder made by forming a mucilage with one part of tragacanth and two of water, press- ing this through linen, mixing it with twenty parts of sugar of milk, spreading * The common pill-mcachine is too well known to require description. In the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxiv. 315) the reader will find the description of a rotary pill-machine, calcu- lated to prepare large numbers of pills in a short time; and in the same journal (xxvi. 118) of another, which is considered an improvement on the first. f This mode of protecting pills is still practised to some extent; and Messrs. Parrish and Bakes have published their method of proceeding. It consists in agitating the pills, pre- pared without dusting powder, and with their surface still damp, along with gold or silver leaf, in a hollow spherical wooden box, made by turning two hemispheres out of hard wood, fitting each other, and provided with a short handle. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. ISfil, p. 2.) 1264 Pilulae. PART II. the paste thus made in thin layers to dry, and then powdering. The pills may be simply moistened with water, and then shaken in the powder. M. Lhermite proposes first to agitate the pills in a mortar with a little concentrated solution of gum, and afterwards to put them into a box containing dry and very finely powdered sugar, to which a rotary motion is given. If the coating be not suffi- ciently thick, the process may be repeated. (Ibid,, xxv. 460 )* Still another me- thod, proposed by Mr. E. K. Durden, is to cover the pills with collodion, which completely conceals the taste. The solution employed by Mr. Durden had the sp. gr. 0 810; and two dippings give a sufficient coating. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 183.) It is, however, yet to be determined whether a coating of collodion would yield readily to the solvent powers of the gastric juice. M. Blan- card covers pills with a solution of Tolu balsam in ether; but Mr. H. C. Bail- don objects to this, that it takes too long to dry, and suggests as a substitute a solution of a drachm of the balsam in three drachms of chloroform, which dries sufficiently in twenty minutes. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 350.) If old and solid Tolu balsam be selected, it will be less liable to the objection of drying slowdy. A solution of mastic in ether has also been used, and is officinally em- ployed in coating the TJ. S. pills of iodide of iron. The white of egg has been recommended for the same purpose. (Ibid., March, 1862, p. 131.) Pills which are to be long kept should be well dried, and put into bottles with accurately fitting stoppers. Though the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, in almost every instance, orders the mass to be divided into pills; yet it should be understood rather as indicating the number of pills to be made from a certain quantity of the mass, when particular directions are not given by the physician, than as re- quiring the division to be made immediately after the materials have been mixed. It will be found convenient by the apothecary to retain a portion of the mass undivided, especially when it is desirable to keep the pills soft.f The Pills formerly officinal, which have been omitted in the present U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are the Compound Pills of Aloes, Lond., Dub.; the Pills of Calomel and Opium, Ed.; the Compound Pill of Hemlock, Lond.; the Pills of Sulphate of Iron, Ed.; those of Mild Chloride of Mercury, TJ. S., and of Ipe- cacuanha with Squill, Lond.; the Opiate Pills of Lead, Ed.; Pills of Rhubarb and Iron, Ed.; aud the Compound Pills of Storax, Lond., Ed. W. * The sugar coating of pills is now conducted upon a great scale by manufacturers, who send large quantities both of popular and officinal pills into the market thus protected. The process employed is similar to that of the confectioners in coating almonds. After having been thoroughly dried, the pills are put into a hemispherical tinned copper basin, which is suspended from the ceiling, and moved quickly backward and forward with an eccentric motion, so as to cause a constant attrition among the pills. First a little very thick syrup, or syrup of gum, is introduced in order to give a thin coating to their sur- face; and afterwards very finely powdered and very dry white sugar is sifted or thrown over them; the motion being constantly maintained. The sugar is fixed by the moist sur- face of the pills, and the coating made compact and smooth by the attrition. The process is aided by a gentle heat, arising from an open charcoal fire beneath; but the heat must be guarded, lest the pills be much softened, and thus lose their shape, and even discolour the coating. Dextrous manipulation is necessary in order that the process may succeed satisfactorily.—Note to the twelfth edition. f Granules. Minute pills, scarcely larger than a pin’s head, have been recently popular in France, under the name of granules; and their use has of late been introduced to some extent in the United States. They are generally used for the administration of very pow- erful medicines, as digitaline for instance, which is given in the dose of one-fiftieth of a grain. An objection to them is the great difficulty of securing an exactly equal amount of the medicine in each granule; and great care, therefore, is necessary, in their prepara- tion, to guard against this danger. Like the pills, these also are prepared on the large scale, and like them are sugar coated. The process moreover for making them is somewhat similar. The mass is first divided by a hand machine so as to ensure uniformity of size, and the little particles are then coated. The details, however, of the proceeding, as well as of the apparatus employed, are kept secret.—Note to the twelfth edition PART II. Pilulse. 1265 PILUL2E ALOES. U. S. Pilula Aloes Barbadensis. Br. Pilule Aloes Br. Bills of Aloes. Pill of Barbadoes Aloes. Pill of Socotrine A loes. “Take of Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, Soap, in fine powder, each, a troy ounce. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred and forty pills.” U. S. “ Take of Barbadoes Aloes, in powder, two ounces [avoirdupois]; Hard Soap, in powder, one ounce [avoird.]; Oil of Caraway one ftuidrachm; Confection of Roses one ounce [avoird.]. Beat all together until thoroughly mixed.” Br. The British process for pill of Socotrine Aloes is the same, except that So- cotrine is substituted for Barbadoes Aloes, and the volatile Oil of Nutmeg for that of Caraway. The soap, in this formula, not only serves to impart a proper consistence to the aloes, but is thought to qualify its operation, and diminish its liability to ir- ritate the rectum. Five of the TJ. S. pills, containing ten grains of aloes, may be given with a view to their purgative effect; but the preparation is usually em- ployed as a laxative in habitual costiveness, in the quantity of one, two, or pills, taken before breakfast or dinner, or at bedtime. The British pill is of very nearly the same strength. W. PILULiE ALOES ET ASSAFCETIDiE. U. S., Br. Pills of Aloes and Assafetida. “Take of Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, Assafetida, Soap, in fine powder, each, half a troyounce. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into one hundred and eighty pills.” U. S. “ Take of Socotrine Aloes, in powder, Assafetida, Hard Soap, in powder, Confection of Roses, each, an ounce. Beat all together until thoroughly mixed.” Br. These pills are peculiarly adapted, by the stimulant and carminative proper- ties of the assafetida, to cases of costiveness attended with flatulence and de- bility of the digestive organs. Each pill contains about four grains of the mass. From two to five may be given for a dose. W. PILULE ALOES ET MASTICHES. TJ.S. Pills of Aloes and Mas- tic. “ Take of Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, a troyounce and a half; Mastic, in fine powder, Red Rose, in fine powder, each, half a troyounce. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into four hun- dred pills.” U. S. Each of these pills contains about four grains of the mass, including the water employed, and nearly twro grains of aloes. They are an imitation of Lady Web- ster’s dinner pills, and one of them may be given as a laxative at bedtime, or before a meal. The mastic has probably little other effect than to impair the solubility of the aloes, and thus give it a still greater tendency to act on the lower bowels.* W. * The following is the formula for the aloetic pills, usually called dinner pills, or Lady Webster's pills. They are the pilulse stomachicse of the fifth edition of the Paris Codex, A. D. 1758. Take of the best aloes six drachms; mastic and red roses, each, two drachms; syrup of wormwood sufficient to form a mass, to be divided into pills of three grains each. Common syrup may be substituted for syrup of wormwood. One or two of these pills, taken shortly before a meal, will usually produce one free evacuation. The Philadelphia College of Pharmacy has adopted the following formulas for the com- pound aloetic preparations commonly called Hooper's and Anderson’s pills. “Hooper's female pills. R. Aloes Barbadensis Ferri Sulphatis Exsiccati Jjij, giss, vel Fend Sulphatis Crystal, Extracti Hellebori §ij, Myrrh® ij, Saponis Canellae »n pulv. tritse Zingiberis in pulv. trit. gj.—Beat them well together into a mass with 1266 Pilulse. PART II. PIIJfLJE ALOES ET MYRRHS. U.S., Br. Pills of Aloes and Myrrh “Take of Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, two troyounces; Myrrh, in fine powder, a troyounce; Saffron, in fine powder, half a troyounce; Syrup a suffi- cient quantity. Beat the whole together so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into four hundred and eighty pills.” U. S. “Take of Socotrine Aloes two ounces; Myrrh one ounce ; Saffron, dried, half an ounce; Confection of Roses two ounces and a half. Triturate the Aloes, Myrrh, and Saffron together, and sift; then add the Confection of Roses, and beat together into a uniform mass.” Br. This composition has been long in use, under the name of Rufus's pills. It is employed, as a warm stimulant cathartic, in general debility attended with constipation, and retention or suppression of the menses. From three to six pills, or from ten to twenty grains of the mass may be given for a dose. W. PILULiE ANTIMONII COMPOSITE. U.iS. Pilula Calomelanos Oomposita. Br. Compound Pills of Antimony. Compound Calomel Pill. Plummer s Pills. “ Take of Sulphurated Antimony, Mild Chloride of Mercury, each, one hun- dred and twenty grains; Guaiac, in fine powder, Molasses, each, half a troy- ounce. Rub the Sulphurated Antimony first with the Mild Chloride of Mer- cury, and afterwards with the Guaiac and Molasses, so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred and forty pills.” U. S. “ Take of Calomel, Sulphurated Antimony, each, one ounce [avoirdupois]; Guaiac Resin, in powder, two ounces [avoird.]; Castor Oil one fluidounce. Triturate the Calomel with the Antimony, then add the Guaiac Resin and Cas- tor Oil, and beat the whole into a uniform mass.” Br. We prefer the title “compound calomel pill” of the British Pharmacopoeia; as, though not scientific, it is not liable to any mistake, and is most expressive of the quality of the medicine. The antimonial employed, though under a dif- ferent name, is identical with the old U. S. precipitated sulphuret. According to Yogel, a reaction takes place between the calomel and sulphuret of antimony, resulting in the production of chloride of antimony and sulphuret of mercury. (Annul, der Pharm., xxviii. 236.) The preparation was originally introduced to the notice of the profession by Dr. Plummer, who found it useful as an altera- tive, and upon whose authority it was at one time much employed under the name of Plummer's pills. The combination is well adapted to the treatment of chronic rheumatism, and of scaly and other eruptive diseases of the skin, espe- cially when accompanied with a syphilitic taint. Six grains of the U. S. prepara- tion, and five of the British contain about one grain of calomel, and each D. S. pill about half a grain. One to two pills or more may be given morning and evening. W. PILULiE ASSAFGETIDiE. U.S. Pills of Assafetida. “ Take of Assafetida a troyounce and a half; Soap, in fine powder, half a troyounce. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred and forty pills.” U. S. Each of these pills contains three grains of the gum-resin. They are a con- venient form for administering assafetida, the unpleasant odour and taste of which render it very offensive in the liquid state. W. water, and divide into pills, each containing two and a half grains.” (Journ. of the Phil. Col of Pharm., v. 25.) “Anderson’s Scots’ pills. R. Aloes Barbadensis gxxiv, Saponis J-iv, Colocynthidis ip, Gambogise ip, Olei Anisi f§ss. Let the aloes, colocynth, and gamboge be reduced to a very fine powder; then beat them and the soap with water into a mass, of a propc* consistence to divide into pills, each containing three grains.” [Ibid.) Pilulse. 1267 PART II. PILULA CAMBOGLZE COMPOSITA. Br. Compound Pill of Cam boge. “Take of Gamboge, Barbadoes Aloes, Aromatic Powder, each, one ounce. Hard Soap, in powder, two ounces; Syrup a sufficiency. Pulverize the Gam- boge and Aloes separately, mix them with the Aromatic Powder, add the Soap and afterwards the Syrup; and beat the whole into a uniform mass.” Br. This is an active purgative pill, and may be given in the dose of ten or fifteen grains. The formula is that of Dr. George Fordyce simplified. W. PILULiE CATHARTICS COMPOSITS. U.S. Compound Cathar- tic Pills. “Take of Compound Extract of Colocynth half a troyounce; Extract of Jalap, in fine powder, Mild Chloride of Mercury [calomel], each, one hundred and eighty grains; Gamboge, in fine powder, forty grains. Mix the powders together; then with water form a pilular mass, to be divided into one hundred and eighty pills.” U. S. This cathartic compound was first made officinal in the second edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. It was intended to combine smallness of bulk with effi- ciency and comparative mildness of purgative action, and a peculiar tendency to the biliary organs. Such an officinal preparation was much wanted in this country, in which bilious fevers, and other complaints attended with congestion of the liver and portal circle generally, so much abound. The object of small- ness of bulk is accomplished by employing extracts and the more energetic cathartics; that of a peculiar tendency to the liver, by the use of calomel; and that of efficiency with mildness of operation, by the union of several powerful purgatives. It is a fact, abundantly proved by experience, that drastic cathar- tics become milder by combination, without losing any of their purgative power. Nor is it difficult, in this case, to reconcile the result of observation with physi- ological principles. Cathartic medicines act on different parts of the aliment- ary canal and organs secreting into it. In small doses, both the irritation which they occasion and their purgative effect are proportionably lessened. If several are administered at the same time, each in a diminished dose, it is obvious that the combined purgative effect of all will be experienced; while the irritation, being feeble in each part affected, and diffused over a large space, will be less sensible to the patient, and will more readily subside. In the compound cathar- tic pills, most of the active purgatives in common use are associated together in proportions corresponding with their respective doses, so that an excess of any one ingredient is guarded against, and violent irritation from this cause prevented. The name of the preparation may at first sight seem objectionable, as it might be applied to any compound pills possessing cathartic properties; but, when it is considered that the ingredients cannot all be expressed in the title, that no one is sufficiently prominent to give a designation to the whole, and that the preparation is intended as the representative of numerous cathar- tics, and calculated for a wide range of application, the name will not be con- sidered an inexcusable deviation from ordinary medical nomenclature. It is highly important, for the efficiency of these pills, that they be prepared in exact compliance with the directions, and that the compound extract of colocynth and the extract of jalap used be of good quality. When they fail, the result is generally ascribable to the substitution of jalap for the extract, or to the use of a compound extract of colocynth made with nearly inert scammony, inferior aloes, and insufficient colocynth, and altogether badly prepared. Three of the pills, containing 10f grains of the mass, are a medium dose for an adult. In this quantity are four grains of compound extract of colocynth, inree of extract of jalap, three of calomel, and two-thirds of a grain of gamboge. A single pili will generally be found to operate as a mild laxative. In a full Pilulse. PART II. dose, the preparation acts vigorously on the bowels, producing bilious stools, generally without much pain or disorder of the stomach. It may be employed in most instances where a brisk cathartic is required; but is particularly appli- cable to the early stages of bilious fevers, to hepatitis, jaundice, and all those derangements of the alimentary canal, or of the general health, which depend on congestion of the portal circle. W. PILULA COLOCYNTHIDIS COMPOSITA. Br. Compound Pill of Colo cy nth. “Take of Colocynth, in powder, one ounce; Barbadoes Aloes, in powder, two ounces; Scammony, in powder, two ounces; Sulphate of Potash, in powder, a quarter of an ounce; Oil of Cloves two fluidraclims; Distilled Water a suffi- ciency. Mix the Powders, add the Oil of Cloves, and beat into a mass with the aid of Water.” Br. The ounce employed is the avoirdupois ounce. This is not, like the late London pills of the same name, merely another form of the compound extract of colocynth, though containing essentially the same materials; one great difference being that colocynth and aloes are used in sub- stance in the pill, instead of in the state of extract. The present British prepa- ration is that of the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia slightly altered. Sulphate of potassa is used to promote the more complete division of the aloes and scam- mony. The preparation is actively cathartic in the dose of from five to twenty grains. W. PILULA COLOCYNTHIDIS ET HYOSCYAMI. Br. Pill of Colo- cynth and Ilyoscyamus. This is directed in the British Pharmacopoeia to be prepared in the same manner as the Compound Pill of Colocynth, except that three ounces of Ex- tract of Ilyoscyamus are taken in addition to the other ingredients, and added along with the oil of cloves to the mixed powders. This is an old officinal of the Edinburgh College. It is asserted that the com- pound pill and compound extract of colocynth are almost entirely deprived of their griping tendency by combination, as above, with extract of Ilyoscyamus, without losing any of their purgative power. The dose is from five to twenty grains. W. PILULiE COPAIBiE. U.S. Pills of Copaiba. “ Take of Copaiba two troyounces ; Magnesia, recently prepared, sixty grains. Mix them together, and set the mixture aside until it concretes into a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred pills.” U. S. When copaiba is mixed with pure magnesia, it gradually loses its fluidity, forming at first a soft tenacious mass, and ultimately becoming dry, hard, and brittle. The quantity of magnesia, and the length of time requisite for this change, vary with the condition of the copaiba; being greater in proportion to the fluidity of this substance, or, in other words, to its amount of volatile oil. The quantity of magnesia directed by the Pharmacopoeia, one-sixteenth of the weight of the copaiba, is sufficient to solidify the latter, as it is often found in the shops, in the course of six or eight hours; but, when the copaiba is fresh, or has been kept in closely stopped bottles, and retains, therefore, nearly the whole of its oil, it is necessary either to augment the proportion of magnesia, or to expose the mixture for a much longer time, or to diminish the volatile oil of the copaiba by evaporation. The magnesia combines chemically with the capaivic acid or hard resin, but, in relation to the volatile oil, acts merely as an absorbent; for, when the solidified mass is submitted to the action of boiling alcohol, a part is dissolved, abandoning the magnesia with which it was mixed, while the resin, combined with another portion of the earth, remains undisso'ved. Varieties of copaiba, therefore, are solidifiable by magnesia, directly in propor- tion to the hard resin they contain, and inversely in proportion to the volatile PART II. Pilulse. 1269 oil; the soft resin being indifferent. According to Guibourt, copaiba, not solidi fiable by magnesia, may be made so by adding one-sixth of Bordeaux or com mon European turpentine. The magnesia employed should not have been allowed to become hydrated by exposure to a moist air or otherwise. In the preparation of the pills of copaiba, care should be taken to divide the mass before it has become too hard. The advantage of this preparation is, that the copaiba is brought to the state of pill with little increase of bulk. Each pill contains nearly five grains of copaiba, and from two to six may be taken for a dose twice or three times a day. Hydrate of lime produces the same effect as magnesia, and, as stated by M. Thierry, in a shorter time, if employed according to his formula. He takes 15 parts of copaiba and 1 part of slaked lime, mixes them in a marble mortar, trans- fers the mixture to an open vessel, places this upon a sand-bath, and sustains the heat for four hours, occasionally stirring. The hydrate of lime must have been freshly prepared from recently burnt lime. The mixture loses only a twenty- fourth of its weight, which-is chiefly the water of the hydrate. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., i. 310.) Pills may also be made by incorporating vegetable powders with copaiba so as to bring it to the proper consistence; but this method has the inconvenience of greatly increasing the bulk. Spermaceti and wax have been proposed as ex- cipients ; and the latter, which was originally suggested by J. F. Simon, is recom- mended by Mr. Maisch as retaining all the volatile oil, and, with some vegetable powder, forming a mass that will retain its plasticity for years. One part, each, of wax, copaiba, and vegetable powder will answer the purpose, when the copaiba does not contain more than 50 per cent, of volatile oil; but if richer than this, it will require more of the excipient. To prepare the pills, melt the wax at the lowest possible heat, then gradually add the copaiba, and lastly incorporate some vegetable powder, as pulverized liquorice root, for example, with the other ingre- dients. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1863, p. 17.) W. PILULES FERRI CARBONATIS. U.S.,Br. Pills of Carbonate of Iron. Vallet’s Ferruginous Pills. “Take of Sulphate of Iron eight troyounces; Carbonate of Soda nine troy- ounces; Clarified Honey three troyounces; Sugar, in coarse powder, two troy- ounces; Boiling Water two pints; Syrup a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the salts separately, each in a pint of the Water, a fluidounce of Syrup having been previously added to each pint. Mix the two solutions, when cold, in a bottle just large enough to hold them, close it accurately with a stopper, and set it by that the carbonate of iron may subside. Pour off the supernatant liquid, and, having mixed water, recently boiled, with Syrup in the proportion of a pint to the fluidounce, wash the precipitate with the mixture until the washings no longer have a saline taste. Place the precipitate on a flannel cloth to drain, and, having expressed as much of the water as possible, mix it immediately with the Clarified Honey and Sugar. Lastly, by means of a water-bath, evaporate the mixture, constantly stirring, until it is brought to the weight of eight troy- ounces.” U. S. “Take of the Saccharated Carbonate of Iron one ounce; Confection of Red Roses a quarter of an ounce. Beat them into a uniform mass.” Br. The effect of saccharine matter in protecting iron from oxidation has been explained under the heads of Ferri Carbonas Saccharata and Syrupus Fern lodidi. The U. S. pill of carbonate of iron is another example of a ferruginous preparation, in which the iron is protected from further oxidation by the same means. The salts employed are the same as those used for obtaining the officinal subcarbonate of iron; but, in forming that preparation, the carbonate which is at first precipitated absorbs oxygen, and loses nearly all its carbonic acid in the processes of washing and drying. When, however, as in the U. S. formula above 1270 Pilulse. PART II. given, the reacting salts are dissolved in weak syrup instead of water, and the washing is performed with weak syrup also, the absorption of oxygen and loss of carbonic acid, during the separation of the precipitate, are almost completely prevented. It only remains, therefore, to preserve it unaltered, and to bring it to the pilular consistence, and this is effected by admixture with honey and sugar, and evaporation by means of a water-bath. It is essential to the success of this process, that the sulphate of iron should be pure; otherwise some ses- quioxide will be present in the product. The process is that of M. Yallet, of Paris, after whom the preparation is popularly called. The present U. S. pro- cess differs from that of 1850, in boiling the water for washing so as to expel the air, and in evaporating to a definite weight at the close, instead of to a proper consistence as before directed; both of which changes are improvements sug- gested by Dr. Squibb. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 426.) The Bri- tish pill of carbonate of iron is made from the saccharine carbonate, which is brought to the pilular consistence by being mixed with conserve of roses. This mode of making it is inferior to that of Yallet; for, in the first place, the saccha- rine carbonate is admitted to contain sesquioxide of iron, and, secondly, conserve of roses, while it is a less efficient preservative of the pilular mass than honey and sugar, will, through its tannic acid, form an inky compound with the ferru- ginous sesquioxide. (See Ferri Carbonas Sacchara'a.) Properties. The U. S. preparation is in the form of a soft pilular mass, of a dark greenish-gray colour, becoming black on exposure, and with a strong ferru- ginous taste. When carefully prepared, it is wholly and readily soluble in acids. It contains nearly half its weight of carbonate of protoxide of iron. The cor- responding pill, obtained from the saccharine carbonate, may be supposed to contain one-third of ferruginous matter. Medical Properties. The U. S. pill of carbonate of iron, or Yallet’s ferru- ginous mass, is admirably adapted to cases in which chalybeate preparations are indicated. It is considered particularly useful in chlorosis, amenorrhoea, and other female complaints, and appears to act favourably by increasing the colour- ing matter of the blood, causing the capillary system to become more fully in- jected, and the lips to assume a redder colour. It may be given in divided doses to the extent of from ten to thirty grains in the course of the day, and continued for a month or six weeks, if improvement take place. As the mass is not divided in the U. S. formula, it is necessary in prescription to indicate the weight of each pill, which may vary from three to five grains, according to the views of the pre- scriber. There is little doubt that, when the alterative effects of iron are indi- cated, Yallet’s preparation is one of the best that can be employed. Its chief merits are its unchangeableness and ready solubility in acids. For further in- formation respecting it, see the favourable report made on Yallet’s pills to the French Royal Academy of Medicine, in 1837, by M. Soubeiran, republished in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (x. 244), and the paper on carbonate of iron by Professor Procter, in the same journal (x. 272). Blaud's ferruginous pills, celebrated in France as a remedy in chlorosis, are prepared from equal weights of sulphate of iron and carbonate of potassa, made into a pilular mass with mucilage of tragacanth and powdered liquorice root. They contain, as the result of the double decomposition, carbonate of protoxide of iron and sulphate of potassa. B. PILULiE FERRI COMPOSITE. U.S. Compound Pills of Iron. “ Take of Myrrh, in fine powder, one hundred and twenty grains; Oarbouate of Soda, Sulphate of Iron, each, sixty grains; Syrup a sufficient quantity. Rub the Myrrh, first with the Carbonate of Soda, and afterwards with the Su.phate of Iron, until they are thoroughly mixed; then beat them with Syrup ?o us to form a pilular mass, to be divided into eighty pills.” U. S. This preparation is closely analogous to the Mistura Ferri CompofcPa in pro- PART II. Pilulse. 1271 perties and composition. It is a good emmenagogue and antihectic tonic. As its peculiar advantages depend upon the presence of carbonate of protoxide of iron, which speedily changes into the sesquioxide on exposure, it is proper that only so much of the mass should be prepared as may be wanted for immediate use. It is said that the iron will be better preserved in the state of protoxide, if, instead of mixing the ingredients as directed in the Pharmacopoeia, the operator should first dissolve the sulphate of iron, finely powdered, in the syrup, with a moderate heat, then add the carbonate of soda, stirring till they are thoroughly mixed, and lastly incorporate the myrrh. From two to six pills may be given at a dose three times a day. W. PILULiE FERRI IODIDI. U.S. Pilula Ferri Iodidi. Br. Pills of Iodide of Iron. “Take of Iodine half a troyounce; Iron, in the form of wire and cut in pieces, one hundred and twenty grains; Sugar, in fine powder, a troyounce; Marshmallow, in fine powder, half a troyounce; Gum Arabic, in fine powder, Reduced Iron, each, sixty grains; Water ten fluidrachms. Mix the Iodine with a fluidounce of the Water in a thin glass bottle, add the Iron, and shake them together until a clear, green solution is obtained. Mix the Powders in a small porcelain capsule, and filter upon them, through a small filter, first the solution previously heated, and afterwards the remainder of the Water in order to wash the filter. Then, by means of a water-bath, with constant stirring, evapo- rate the whole to a pilular consistence, and divide the mass into three hundred pills. “Dissolve sixty grains of Balsam of Tolu in a fluidrachm of Ether, shake the pills with the solution until they are uniformly coated, and put them on a plate to dry, occasionally stirring them until the drying is completed. Lastly, keep the pills in a well-stopped bottle. “ These pills are devoid of the smell of iodine; and distilled water, rubbed with them and filtered, does not colour solution of starteh, or gives it only a slight blue tint.” U. S. “ Take of Fine Iron Wire forty grains; Iodine eighty grains; Refined Sugar, in powder, seventy grains; Liquorice Root, in powder, one hundred and forty grains; Distilled Water fifty minims. Agitate the Iron with the Iodine and Water in a strong stoppered ounce phial, until the froth becomes white. Pour the fluid upon the Sugar in a mortar, triturate briskly, and gradually add the Liquorice.” Br. The pills of iodide of iron were introduced, as a new officinal, into the IT. S. Pharmacopoeia at the revision of 1850. The IT. S. pills are formed on the plan proposed by Prof. Procter, in imitation of Blaneard's pills (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1860), and are much superior to those made by the IT. S. pro- cess of 1850, or by that of the British Pharmacopoeia. The iodine and iron unite directly to form the iodide of iron in solution, wffiich is protected against the oxidizing influence of the air by the sugar and reduced iron into which the solution is dropped, while the marshmallow and gum serve to give due consist- ence and plasticity to the pilular mass. The pills are still further protected from the air by the impervious coating of balsam of Tolu, which readily yields to the softening and solvent properties of the gastric liquids. The great disadvantage of the pill of iodide of iron, as ordinarily prepared, is that it will not keep; crum- bling by time and exposure, and evolving iodine in consequence of the oxidation of the iron. The preparation, made according to the U. S. formula, has stood the test of time; and we have seen pills prepared four years since, which exhibit nc sierns of change. Each pill contains about a grain of iodide of iron and one-fifth of a grain of reduced iron. The therapeutic uses of this preparation are the same as those of iodide of iron. (See Ferri Iodidum.) B. 1272 Pilulx. PILULES GALBANI COMPOSITE. U.S. Pilula Assafcetidaj Comfosita. Br. Compound Pills of G-albanum. Compound Pill of Assa- fetida. “Take of Galbanum, Myrrh, each, three hundred and sixty grains; Assa- fetida one hundred and twenty grains ; Syrup a sufficient quantity. Beat them together so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred and forty pills.” U. S. ■ “Take of Assafetida, Galbanum, and Myrrh, each, two ounces; Treacle an ounce. Heat all together in a capsule by means of a steam or water bath, and stir the mass until it assumes a uniform consistence.” Br. This compound is given as an antispasmodic and emmenagogue in chlorosis and hysteria. The dose is from ten to twenty grains. W. PILULiE HYDRARGYRI. U. S. Pilula Hydrargyri. Br. Pills of Mercury. Mercurial Pill. Blue Pill. “Take of Mercury a troy ounce ; Confection of Rose a troyounce and a half; Liquorice Root, in fine powder, half a troyounce. Rub the Mercury with the Confection until the globules cease to be visible; then add the Liquorice Root, and beat the whole into a pilular mass, to be divided into four hundred and eighty pills.” U. S. The British process is the same with the above, one-half only of the quan- tity of materials being used, and no division of the mass into pills directed. This preparation is generally known by the name of blue pill or blue mass. The mercury constitutes one-third of the mass; and consequently the pill of our Pharmacopoeia, weighing three grains, contains one grain of the metal. The precise condition of the mercury in this preparation is somewhat uncer- tain. By far the greater portion is in a state of minute mechanical division, and not chemically altered. Some maintain that the whole of the metal is in this state, others, that a small portion is converted during the trituration into the protoxide, and that this is the ingredient upon which the activity of the pill depends. The supposed oxidation is attributed partly to the influenceof the air upon the surface of the metal, greatly extended by the separation of its par- ticles, partly to the action of the substance used in the trituration. If the mer- cury be not oxidized during the trituration, there can be little doubt that it be- comes so to a slight extent by subsequent exposure. The obvious changes which the mass undergoes by time can be explained in no other way; and protoxide of mercury is asserted to have been actually extracted from old mercurial pill. Nevertheless, it scarcely admits of dispute, that the metal, quite independently of oxidation out of the body, is capable of producing the peculiar mercurial effects when introduced into the stomach, probably undergoing chemical changes there. According to M. Mialhe, mercury is slowly converted into corrosive sub- limate in the stomach, under the combined agency of air and chloride of sodi- um. All agree that the efficacy of the preparation is proportionate to the ex- tinction of the mercury, in other words, to the degree in which the metallic globules disappear. This extinction may be effected by trituration with various substances; and manna, syrup, honey, liquorice, mucilage, soap, guaiac, and extract of dandelion have been recommended, among others, for this purpose; but the confection of roses has been adopted in all the Pharmacopoeias, as less liable to objection fthan any other. The mercury is known to be completely ex- tinguished, when, upon rubbing a small portion of the mass with the end of the finger upon a piece of paper or glass, no globules appear. Powdered liquorice root is added in order to give due consistence to the mass. Some prefer for the purpose powdered marshmallow root. Mr. W. W. Stoddart has found that the extinguishment of the mercury, in the officinal process, is very much hastened by rubbing’t first with the powdered liquorice root, moistened with a little dis- PART IT. 1273 part II. Pilulae. tilled water or rose water, and afterwards incorporating the confection. {Am Journ. of Pharm.,xx\iii. 162.) As the trituration requires to be long continued, and renders the process very laborious, it is customary to prepare the mass by machinery. At Apothecaries’ Hall, in London, the trituration is effected by the agency of steam. The machine there employed consists of “ a circular iron trough for the reception of the materials, in which revolve four wooden cylin- ders, having also a motion on their axis.” A machine for preparing blue mass, capable of being worked by the hand or by steam-power, has been invented by Mr. J. W. W. Gordon, of Baltimore, and, having been found to answer well, is in extensive use. It is described and figured in the American Journal of Phar- macy (xxi. 6). We have already referred, under Hydrargyrum cum Greta, to another ingenious apparatus invented by Dr. Squibb, by which the extinguish- ment of mercury is very satisfactorily effected.* Formerly much of the blue mass used in this country was imported; but at present the market is chiefly supplied by our own druggists. The preparation slowly changes colour upon being kept, assuming an olive and sometimes even a reddish tint, in consequence, probably, of the further oxidation of the mercury, f Medical Properties and Uses. These pills are among the mildest of the mer- curials, being less liable than most others to act upon the bowels, and exercising the peculiar influence of the remedy upon the system with less irritation. They are much employed for producing the sialagogue and alterative action of mer- cury. For the former purpose, one pill may be given two or three times a day; and in urgent cases the dose may be increased. Even this preparation some- times disturbs the bowels. It should then be given combined with a little opium, or in very minute doses, as half a grain or a grain of the mass, repeated every hour or two through the day, so as to allow of its absorption before a sufficient quantity has been administered to act as an irritant. With a view to the altera- tive efl'ect upon the digestive organs, one pill may be given every night, or every other night, at bedtime, and followed in the morning, if the bowels should not be opened, by a small dose of laxative medicine. From five to fifteen grains of the mass are occasionally given as a cathartic, in cases requiring a peculiar im- pression upon the liver; but, when used for this purpose, it should always either be combined with or speedily followed by a more certain purgative. The blue mass may often be administered with advantage, suspended in water by the in- tervention of thick mucilage; and it forms an excellent addition to the chalk * Mr. James Beatson, apothecary of the U. S. Naval Hospital at New York, found great advantage in the following mode of preparing the mercurial pill, which, while much easier than the officinal method, yields the same results. Instead of mixing the mercury with the confection, he first rubs it with the honey directed in the preparation of the confection, until the globules disappear, then adds the heated rose water and sugar, and lastly the powdered red roses and liquorice root in succession, all in the officinal proportions. For the quantity of the material directed in the U. S. process for confection of roses, he em- ploys 32 ounces of mercury. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 204.) f The mercurial pill is very apt to contain less than the due proportion of the metal. This was frequently the case with the mass as formerly imported. The fraud may be de- tected by the following plan of estimating the proportion of mercury, suggested by Prof. Reid, of New York, and modified by a committee of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. A certain weight of the mercurial pill, say fifty grains, is mixed with about one-fourth of its weight of iron filings, and introduced into a small green glass bulb, at the end of a somewhat curved tube, the open extremity of which is inserted, through a cork, into al- cohol, contained in a broad-mouthed glass vial; another tube, open at both ends, passing through the cork in order to permit the escape of uncondensed gases. Heat is then ap- plied to the bulb by means of a spirit-lamp, is gradually increased until the glass becomes red hot, and continued for an hour. The alcohol in the vial dissolves the empyreumatic products, and, by being allowed to rise in the tube, and then expelled, serves to wash out any mercury that may be condensed upon its sides. The alcohol is poured off from the con- densed mercury, which is then washed with fresh alcohol, dried, and weighed. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xvii. 151 and 309.) 1274 Pilulae. PART II. mix tun in diarrhoea, particularly that of children, when the biliary secretion is deticienc, or otherwise deranged.* W. PILULiE OPII. U. S. Pills of Opium. “Take of Opium, in fine powder, sixty grains; Soap, in fine powder, twelve grains. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be di- vided into sixty pills.” U. S. This process is designed merely to furnish a convenient formula for putting opium into the pilular form, preferable to the mode sometimes practised of mak- ing the pills directly from the unpowdered mass of opium as found in commerce. The soap answers no other purpose than to give a due consistence, and is there- fore in small proportion. Each pill contains a grain of opium. As hard old opium pills are sometimes preferred, in cases of irritable stomach, in consequence of their slow solution, it is proper for the apothecary to keep some in this state to meet the prescription of the physician. Of either of the officinal pills above directed, one is a medium dose in refer- ence to the full effects of opium. W. PILULA PLUMBI CUM OPIO. Br. Pill of Lead and Opium. “Take of Acetate of Lead, in fine powder, thirty-six grains; Opium, in fine powder, six grains; Confection of Roses six grains. Beat them into a uniform mass.” Br. This pill would be better left to extemporaneous prescription; the requisite proportion of opium to the acetate varying in different cases. The tannic acid of the confection of roses decomposes a portion of the acetate; but the result- ing tannate of lead is not inert. The mass contains six parts of the acetate of lead in eight, and may be given in the dose of two or three grains to begin with. W. PILULE QUINI2E SULPIIATIS. U.S. Pills of Sulphate of Quinia. “Take of Sulphate of Quinia a troyounce; Gum Arabic, in fine powder, one hundred and twenty grains; Clarified Honey a sufficient quantity. Mix the Sulphate of Quinia and Gum Arabic; then beat them with Clarified Honey so as to form a mass, to be divided into four hundred and eighty pills.” U. S. As the pills made as here directed are apt to become hard, and of difficult solubility when long kept, various other excipients have been recommended to obviate this disadvantage, as honey alone, and confection of roses. Mr. Edward Parrish has long been in the habit of preparing pills of sulphate of quinia, by taking 20 grains of the salt, adding 15 drops of aromatic sulphuric acid, and triturating until the mixture assumes a pilular consistence. Though at first liquid, the mixture soon thickens, and finally becomes quite solid. The officinal sulphate is thus rendered more soluble by combining with an additional eq. of sulphuric acid. The advantages of this process are the solubility of the result- ing pill, and the smallness of its bulk. A five-grain pill made in this wray is not inconveniently large. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 292.) Each of the officinal pills contains a grain of the sulphate of quinia, and twelve are equivalent to an ounce of good Peruvian Bark. W. * The blue pill is sometimes wanted in the state of powder; but, from its peculiar con- stitution, is not eligible for reduction to this form; as the mercury is disposed to aggre- gate during pulverization, and, from the honey it contains, it is apt, when pulverized, to attract moisture from the air. Mr. Ch. Bullock, therefore, recommends the lollowing me- thod of preparing a powder, which shall, as nearly as possible, represent the blue pill, in reference to its therapeutic efi'ects. Take of finely powdered Elm-bark, finely pcnvdered Sugar, and Mercury, equal parts, and of Alcohol a sufficiency. Rub the mercury with the powdered bark, adding from time to time enougn alcohol to maintain a pasty consistence, till the mercury is completely extinguished; then spread the mass on paper to dry. When dry, powder it, add. the sugar, and rub the mixture thoroughly until the powder will pass through a sieve of fine bolting cloth. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 271.)—Note tn the twelfth edition. . Pilulse. 1275 PART II. PILULiE RHEI. U.S. Pills of Rhubarb. “Take of Rhubarb, in fine powder, three hundred and sixty grains; Soap, in fine powder, one hundred and twenty grains. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into one hundred and twenty pills.” U.S. Rhubarb is so often given in the pilular form, that it is convenient both for the physician and apothecary to have'an officinal formula, indicating the mode of preparing the pills, as well as the quantity of rhubarb to be contained in each. Soap, as directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, has stood the test of long experience as a good excipient for rhubarb. We have found rhubarb pills, made with compound tincture of cardamom, without other ingredient, to answer an excellent purpose. Each officinal pill contains three grains of rhubarb. W. PILULiE RHEI COMPOSITE. U. S. Pilula Rhei Composita. Br. Compound Pills of Rhubarb. Compound Rhubarb Pill. “ Take of Rhubarb, in fine powder, a troyounce; Socotrine Aloes, in fine pow- der, three hundred and sixty grains; Myrrh, in fine powder, half a troyounce; Oil of Peppermint half a fluidrachm. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into two hundred and forty pills.” U. S. “Take of Rhubarb, in fine powder, three ounces; Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, two ounces and a quarter; Myrrh, in fine powder, one ounce and a half; Hard Soap one ounce and a half; English Oil of Peppermint one fluidrachm and a half; Treacle, by weight, four ounces. Reduce the Soap to a fine pow- der, and triturate it with the Rhubarb, Aloes, and Myrrh, then add the Treacle and Oil of Peppermint, and beat the whole into a uniform mass.”Br. This is a warm tonic laxative, useful in costiveness with debility of stomach. From two to four pills, or from ten to twenty grains of the mass, may be taken twice a day. W. PILULiE SAPONIS COMPOSITE. U.S. Pilula Opii. Br. Com- pound Pills of Soap. “Take of Opium, in fine powder, sixty grains; Soap, in fine powder, half a troyounce. Beat them together with water so as to form a pilular mass.” U. S. “Take of Opium, in fine powder, half an ounce; Hard Soap two ounces; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Reduce the Soap to a fine powder, add the Opium with the Wrater, and beat into a uniform mass.”Rr. This preparation is useful by affording the opportunity of conveniently ad- ministering opium, in a pilular and readily soluble form, in small fractions of a grain. The name used in the former British Pharmacopoeias, and adopted in our own, was probably intended to conceal the nature of the preparation from the patient. Both the name, however, and the object have been abandoned by the British Council. One grain of opium is contained in five of the mass. W. PILULiE SCILLiE COMPOSITE. U.S. Pilula Compo- sita. Br. Compound Pills of Squill. Compound Squill Pill. “Take of Squill, in fine powder, sixty grains; Ginger, in fine powder, Am- moniac, in fine powder, each, one hundred and twenty grains; Soap, in fine powder, one hundred and eighty grains; Syrup a sufficient quantity. Mix the powders together; then beat them with Syrup so as to form a pilular mass, to be divided into one hundred and twenty pills.” U. S. “Take of Squill, in fine powder, one ounce and a quarter; Ginger, in fine powder, Ammoniac, in powder, Hard Soap, each, one ounce; Treacle two ounces, or a sufficiency. Reduce the Soap to powder, and triturate it with the Squill, Ginger, and Ammoniac; then add the Treacle, and beat into a uniform mass.” Br. This is a stimulant expectorant compound, depending for its virtues chiefly 1276 Plumbum. PART II. on the squill, and applicable to the treatment of chronic affections of the bron- chial mucous membrane. From five to ten grains may be given three or four times a day. The preparation should be made when wanted for immediate use, as the squill which it contains is liable to be injured by keeping. W. PLUMBUM. Preparations of Lead. Of the Preparations formerly considered under this head, Solution of Subace- tate of Lead and Diluted Solution of Subacetate of Lead have been trans- ferred to the Liquores or Solutions; and Iodide of Lead, of the U. S. Pharma- copoeia, is the only one remaining. PLUMB I IODIDUM. U.S. Iodide of Lead. “Take, of Nitrate of Lead, Iodide of Potassium, each, four troyounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantiy. With the aid of heat, dissolve the Nitrate of Lead in a pint and a half, and the Iodide of Potassium in half a pint of Dis- tilled Water, and mix the solutions. Allow the precipitate formed to subside, and, having poured off the supernatant liquid, wash it with Distilled Water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. In this process the nitrate of lead gives up its metal to the iodine, from which it receives the potassium ; the operation taking place between single equivalents of the several ingredients. The nitrate of potassa thus formed remains in solu- tion, while the iodide of lead is precipitated. The saturating proportions of ni- trate of lead and iodide of potassium are 165-6 of the former and 165 5 of the latter, or almost precisely equal quantities. The proportions should be as nearly as possible those of exact saturation. An excess of the iodide of potassium, in- dependently of the waste, has the disadvantage of holding a portion of the iodide of lead in solution; while, according to Christison, an excess of lead over the iodine disposes to the formation of the lemou-yellow insoluble oxyiodide of lead. By the use of equal quantities of the two salts, these disadvantages are avoided. As iodide of lead is slightly soluble in cold water, it is desirable to use as little of the menstruum as will answer; and hence the comparatively small proportion of water employed. Iodide of lead has been omitted in the present British Pharmacopoeia; though all the three Colleges, the London, Edinburgh, and Dublin, gave processes for it. In the London process acetate of lead was employed instead of the nitrate; but M. Depaire, of Brussels, ascertained that, in this process, a considerable amount of iodine remains in solution after the precipitation of the iodide of lead; and M. F. Boudet states that the quantity of the iodide resulting from the process is 10 percent, less than theory would indicate. By the addition of nitric acid to the solution, after precipitation, an additional quantity of iodide of lead is ob- tained. M. Boudet ascribes this result to the formation of a portion of soluble iodide of potassium and lead, whenever iodide of lead and acetate of potassa are in contact. By substituting nitrate for acetate of lead, he found that a quantity of iodide of lead was obtained, as near that required by theory as the solubility of the iodide of lead permits. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xi. 274.) From the above remarks it would appear that the process of the U. S. Phar- macopoeia is on the whole to be preferred, and especially over that in which the acetate of lead is used, as the nitrate is more easily obtained pure. Some inter- esting experiments have been made by M. T. Huraut, of Paris, on the different methods of preparing iodide of lead. It may be obtained by the reaction between any of the soluble iodides and the soluble salts of lead. It resulted from his ob- servations that of the two salts of lead employed, the nitrate was to be preferred, and of the various iodides, though iodide of potassium yielded a very handsome PART II. Plumbum.—Potassa. 1277 product, yet iodide ol calcium afforded one not inferior in quality, and somewhat greater in quantity. Upon a small scale, as the process is performed by the apothecary, the difference would be of little or no consequence; but it might be important to the manufacturer. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 228.) As obtained by the U. S. process, iodide of lead is in the form of a bright yellow, heavy, tasteless, inodorous powder. It is soluble in 1235 parts of cold water (Soubeiran, Trait, de Pharm.), and 194 of boiling water, which, on cool- ing, deposits it in minute, shining, golden-yellow, crystalline scales. It melts by heat, and is dissipated in vapours, which are at first yellow, and ultimately violet in consequence of the disengagement of the iodine. It consists of one equivalent of iodine 126 3, and one of lead 103-6 = 229 9. As a test of its purity, the Edinburgh College stated that five grains are entirely dissolved, with the aid of heat, by a fluidrachm of pyroligneous acid, diluted with a fluidounce and a half of distilled water; and golden crystals are copiously deposited when the solution cools. According to the late London Pharmacopoeia,’100 grains of it, dissolved at a boiling heat in nitric acid diluted with two parts of water, will, after the ex- pulsion of the iodine, yield with sulphate of soda, a precipitate of sulphate of lead weighing 66 grains. It should be kept excluded from the light. It is stated by Engelhardt that iodine is separated from iodide of lead by the perchlorides of iron and copper; while the other metallic chlorides, whether bichlorides, sesqui- chlorides, or protochlorides, have no such effect, producing compounds of iodides of the metal employed with chlorides of lead. ( Chem. Gaz., Jan. 15,1856, p. 24.) Medical Properties and Uses. This compound is supposed to have the re- solvent properties of iodine, combined with those which are peculiar to lead, and was at one time recommended in tuberculous diseases, in which, however, it has proved wholly inefficient. It is said to have been usefully employed in the dis- cussion of scrofulous tumours and other indolent swellings, and in the cure of obstinate ulcers; and for these purposes has been used both internally, and lo- cally in the form of an ointment. According to Dr. Cogswell, if given for some time in small doses, it produces the effects of lead, but not those of iodine, upon the system. ( Christison’s Dispensatory.) The dose is from half a grain to three or four grains. Dr. O’Shaughnessy states that ten grains are borne without in- convenience. W POTASSA. Preparations of Potassa. Of the Preparations formerly embraced in this category, the Solution of Po- tassa, and the Solution of Citrate of Potassa have been transferred to the Li- quores or Solutions; Pure Nitrate of Potassa, Dub., has been treated of in Part I. of this work ; and the following preparations, at one time officinal, have been omitted in the existing Pharmacopoeias; namely, Solution of Carbonate of Potassa, U. S , Lond., Dub., Effervescing Water of Potassa, Ed., Sulphate of Potassa with Sulphur, Ed., Bisulphate of Potassa, Ed., Dub., and Compound Solution of Iodide of Potassium, Lond., Dub. POTASSA. U. S. Potassa Caustica. Br. Kali Purum. Potassa. Caustic Potassa. Hydrate of Potassa. “ Take of Solution of Potassa eight pints. Evaporate it rapidly in an iron vessel, over the fire, until ebullition ceases, and the Potassa melts. Pour this into suitable moulds, and keep it, when cold, in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Solution of Potash two pints [Imperial measure]. Boil down the Solution rapidly in a silver or clean iron vessel, till all ebullition ceases, and a fluid of oily consistence remains. Pour this into proper moulds, and when it has solidified, and while it is still warm, put it into stoppered bottles.” Br. The concrete alkali, obtained by these processes, is the hydrate of potassa, 1278 Potassa. PART II. sufficiently pure for medicinal purposes. The solution of the alkali freed from carbonic acid having toen obtained by another formula (see Liquor Potassee), the formation of the present preparation requires merely the evaporation of this solution, until the whole of its uncombined water is driven off. The evapora- tion must be performed in metallic vessels, as those of glass or earthenware are acted on by the alkali; and it should be completed as quickly as possible, in order to abridge the period during which the solution would be liable to absorb carbonic acid from the atmosphere. When poured out on a metallic plate or dish, the cake, just as it concretes, may be marked with a knife in the directions in which it is'to be divided, and when cold it readily breaks in those directions. A better plan, however, is to run the fused alkali into suitable moulds, as directed in the U. S. and British formulas. These should be made of iron and have a cylindrical shape, which is the most convenient form of the alkali for surgical use. Green glass bottles with ground stoppers are best adapted for preserving this preparation, as white flint glass is slightly acted on. Properties, &c. In its officinal form, potassa is in sticks having a fibrous frac- ture, and, when properly prepared from pure materials, white and somewhat trans- lucent; but, as often found in the shops, they have a dingy gray or greenish co- lour, with occasionally a bluish tint, and the peculiar odour of slaking lime. It is extremely caustic and very deliquescent, and dissolves in less than its weight of water, leaving but a slight residue. Its aqueous solution agrees in properties with Liquor Potassae. It is also readily soluble in alcohol. When exposed to a low red heat it melts, and at bright redness is volatilized. On account of its deliquescent property, and its strong attraction for carbonic acid, it requires to be kept in very accurately stopped bottles. In the state here described, the alkali is united with water, forming hydrate of potassa. As formerly obtained by the U. S., London, and Edinburgh formulas, from solution of potassa derived from an impure carbo- nate, it contained various impurities, which, however, did not interfere with its medicinal value; such as chloride and teroxide of potassium, sesquioxide of iron, lime, silica, alumina, sulphate of potassa, and a portion of the alkali still in a carbonated state. As our officinal solution of potassa, from which the alkali is now prepared, is made from the bicarbonate, the resulting potassa is purer than as formerly obtained. According to the U. S. Pharmacopceia, it is dissolved by water and alcohol, with the exception of a slight residue, which probably con- sists chiefly of undecomposed carbonate, as this is insoluble in alcohol. Officinal potassa may be rendered nearly pure by digestion in alcohol, which takes up only the hydrated alkali, evaporating the solution to dryness, and fusing the dry mass obtained. Hydrate of potassa, when thus procured, is called alcoholic po- tassa. It is generally in flat white pieces, which are dry, hard, brittle, and ex- tremely caustic. Its other properties are similar to those of the impure hydrate above described. According to Mr. H. Wurtz, of New York, alcoholic potassa usually contains a trace of silicate of potassa, which appears to be taken up by the alcohol. The source’of this is the carbonate of potassa employed, which may be freed from this impurity by evaporating its aqueous solution, in a sheet- iron dish, to dryness, and adding, from time to time, lumps of carbonate of am- monia. The silicate is thus converted into the carbonate; and, on dissolving the residue, the silica appears in flakes, which may be separated bv filtration. (K Y. Journ. of Pharm., Feb. 1852.) Potassa may be discriminated from the other fixed alkalies (soda and lithia) by affording, when in solution, a crystalline precipitate (cream of tartar) with an excess of tartaric acid, and a yellow one with bichloride of platinum. Potassa imparts to the flame of burning alcohol in which it is dissolved a reddish tint; soda colours it yellow even in the presence of potassa; and thus a method is afforded of detecting an admixture of the latter with the former alkali. According to Bunsen, when the flame is regarded through a glass of a cobalt blue colour, only the colour :,nparted by potassa is seen, thaT PART II. Potassa. peculiar to soda not being able to penetrate through blue glass. yJourn. de, Pharm., Oct. 1860, p. 319.) The officinal potassa, apart from impurities, consists of one eq. of dry potassa 47 2, and one of water 9 = 56-2. Dry potassa is com- posed of one eq. of potassium 39 2, and one of oxygen 8 = 47 2. (See Potas- sium.) B. Medical Properties and Uses. This is the old causticum commune acerrimum or strongest common caustic. It is a powerful escharotic, quickly destroying the life of the part with which it comes in contact, and extending its action to a considerable depth beneath the surface. In this latter respect, it differs from nitrate of silver or lunar caustic, to which it is, therefore, preferred in forming issues and opening abscesses. It has been used for removing stricture of the urethra; but, in consequence of its tendency to spread, it may, unless carefully applied, produce such a destruction of the lining membrane, as to open a pas- sage for the urine into the cellular tissue. The most convenient mode of employ- ing the caustic for the formation of an issue, is to apply to the skin a piece of linen spread with adhesive plaster, having a circular opening in its centre cor- responding with the intended size of the issue, and then to rub upon the skin, within the opening, a piece of the caustic previously moistened at one end. The application is to be continued till the life of the part is destroyed, when the caustic should be carefully washed off with a wet sponge or wet tow, or neutral- ized by vinegar. The preparation is also employed for forming solutions of potassa of definite strength, whether for medicinal or pharmaceutic use. A solution of one drachm and a half of caustic potassa in two fluidounces of dis- tilled water was highly recommended by the late Dr. Ilartshorne, of Philadelphia, as an application to the spine in tetanus. It may.be applied by means of a sponge attached to the end of a stick, which should be drawn quickly along the back from the nape of the neck to the sacrum. It produces a powerful rubefa- cient effect.* Pharm. Uses. In the preparation of Ether, U. S. Off. Prep. Liquor Potassae, U. S.; Potassa cum Calce, U. S.; Potassae Per- manganas, Br.; Potassii Iodidum, U. S. W. POTASSA CUM CALCE. U. S. Potassa with Lime. A “ Take of Potassa, Lime, each, a troyounce. Rub them together so as to form a powder, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This preparation is a grayish-white powder, sometimes called Vienna caustic. It should not effervesce on the addition of an acid. It is prepared for use by being made up into a paste with a little alcohol. The paste is applied to the part to be cauterized for ten or fifteen minutes, and is conveniently limited in its operation by a piece of adhesive plaster, in the manner explained under potassa. The former Edinburgh preparation, made by evaporating the solution of potassa to one-third, and adding lime enough to bring it to the state of a firm paste, was often called causticum commune mitius or milder common caustic. Potassa with lime is a more manageable caustic than the officinal potassa, on account of the presence of the lime, which renders it milder, slower in its operation, and less deliquescent, and causes it to spread less beyond the part intended to be affected. Dr. Eilhos has improved this caustic by forming it in sticks. To pre- pare it thus, the potassa is perfectly fused in an iron spoon, and one-third of its * At the suggestion of Dr. Maunoury, of Chartres, M. E. Robiquet has prepared a paste consisting of gutta percha and caustic potassa, which otfers many advantages of manipalsT tion, in the application of the latter substance. It is prepared by simply melting together equal weights of the two substances. The resulting paste can be moulded into any form that may be thought desirable, either of cylinders, plates, or lozenges, and retains its form indefinitely, even when introduced into cavities. All that is necessary, before applying it, is to dip it into alcohol for a few seconds. The resulting eschars are very precise in thcii form. (Journ. de Pharm., xxx. 275.)—Note to the eleventh edition. 1280 Potassa. PART II. weight of quicklime is added in divided portions; the whole being stirred with an iron rod. The fus«i mass is then, run into lead tubes, closed at one end, about three inches long, ami from a quarter to half an inch in diameter in the clear. The sticks are kept, still enclosed in the lead tubes with the open end down- wards, in thick glass tubes, containing some powdered quicklime, and closed with a cork, between which and the stick some cotton is put to steady the caus- tic. When employed, as much of the caustic is uncovered at the end, by scrap- ing off the lead, as it is proposed to use. This form of caustic is particularly recommended for cauterizing the neck of the uterus. M. E. Robiquet has modi- fied the caustic, by fusing the potassa and lime at a higher heat, running the fused mass into iron moulds, and quickly coating the sticks, when cold, with melted gutta percha. The higher heat employed renders the caustic harder and more homogeneous.* B. POTASSiE ACETAS. U.S., Br. Acetate of Potassa. “Take of Acetic Acid a pint; Bicarbonate of Potassa a sufficient quantity. Add the Bicarbonate gradually to the Acid until this is saturated ; then filter the solution, and evaporate cautiously, by means of a sand-bath, until a dry salt remains. Lastly, keep this in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Carbonate of Potash twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Acetic Acid [sp. gr. 1-044] two pints [Imperial measure], or a sufficiency. To the Acetic Acid, placed in a thin porcelain basin, add gradually the Carbonate of Potash, filter, acidulate, ifpecpssary, with a few additional drops of the Acid, and, having evaporated t$.dj|7ness, raise the heat cautiously so as to liquefy the pro- duct. Allow the basifflpo cool, and, when the salt has solidified, and while it is still warm, break it in fragments, and put it into stoppered bottles.” Br. The process for forming this acetate is a case of single elective affinity. The substitution in the present Pharmacopoeia, of the bicarbonate of potassa for the carbonate used in the formula of 1850, is an improvement, as it ensures a purer product. The form of acid for generating the salt directed in both Pharmaco- poeias is officinal acetic acid. Distilled vinegar should never be employed, on account of organic impurity, which gives the solution, when concentrated, a red- dish or brownish colour. When acetic acid is used, a colourless solution is ob- tained. This is evaporated to dryness, according to the U. S. and British Phar- macopoeias ; but the latter, following the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia, directs the dry salt to be melted, so that it may be obtained as a solid mass on cooling. When fusion is resorted to, great care must be taken not to use too high a heat; as otherwise part of the acetic acid will be decomposed, and the resulting salt will be discoloured. For drying the acetate of flotassa, Dr. Christison considers the heat of a vapour-bath too low, and that of a sand-bath apt to become too high. He, therefore, recommends the use of a bath of chloride of calcium when operating on a small scale. In conducting the evaporation, it is best to have the solution always slightly acid; for if the alkali predominate, it will react upon the acetic acid when the solution is concentrated, and give rise to discoloration. Acetate of potassa may also be obtained by double decomposition between acetate of lead and sulphate of potassa. When thus procured it is very white and pure, but liable to the objection, for medical use, that it may possibly contain a little lead. Another method by double decomposition is between acetate of lime and sulphate of potassa. Properties, &c. Acetate of potassa when pure is a white salt, perfectly neutral * M. Piedagnel has found that by mixing the Vienna powder with muriate of morphia, in the proportion of three parts of the former to one of the latter, a caustic is obtained, which will produce an eschar without causing pain. He first mixes them intimately in the dry state, and then with alcohol, chloroform, or water, makes a paste, which may be applied by means of adhesive plaster. (Journ. de Pham., 3e ser., xxxiii. 469.)—Note tc the twelfth edition. PART II. Potassa. 1281 to test paper, unctuous to the touch, and of a warm, pungent, saline taste. When unskilfully prepared it is apt to be more or less coloured. Its state of aggrega- tion diifers with the manner in which it is prepared. As obtained by evaporating the solution to dryness, agreeably to the directions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, it is in the form of soft fibrous masses. As usually prepared and found in the shops, it has a foliated texture, which is given to it by fusion and cooling. On account of this appearance it was formerly called foliated earth of tartar. This salt is extremely deliquescent, and, if exposed to the air, becomes converted into a liquid of an oleaginous appearance. It is on account of this property that it must always be preserved in well-stopped bottles. It dissolves in about half its weight of water, and twice its weight of alcohol. Anything remaining undis- solved by these menstrua is impurity. Heated above its point of fusion, it is de- composed into acetone and carbonate of potassa; the acetic acid being resolved into that volatile liquid and carbonic acid. When treated with sulphuric acid, acetous vapours are copiously evolved, and sulphate of potassa is formed; and a blood-red colour is produced by a solution of sesquichloride of iron. One hun- dred grains of the salt, decomposed by sulphuric acid, furnish a salt (sulphate of potassa), which, after exposure to a strong heat, weighs 88-8 grains. (Lond. Pharm.) The most usual impurities contained in it are sulphate and tartrate of potassa, chloride of potassium, and the salts of lead and copper. A soluble sul- phate maybe detected by chloride of barium; and chloride of potassium, or other soluble chloride, by nitrate of silver added to a dilute solution. If the ni- trate be added to a concentrated solution, crystals of acetate of silver will be precipitated, soluble in water or dilute nitric acid. of platinum it yields a yellow, and with tartaric acid a crystalline precipitate, showing it to be a salt of potassa. If tartate of potassa be present, it will remain undissolved when the salt is acted on by alcohol. Lead and copper may be detected by sul- phuretted hydrogen and ferrocyanide of potassium; the former test producing with the lead a blackish, and the latter with the copper a brown precipitate. Since the introduction of the cheap method of obtaining pure acetic acid from wood, this salt has scarcely been subjected to adulteration. Acetate of potassa is incompatible with the mineral acids, which expel the acetic acid; with the sul- phates of soda and magnesia; with corrosive sublimate and nitrate of silver; and with several other earthy and metallic salts. This salt exists in the juices of many plants, and especially in the sap of trees, and is the principal source of the car- bonate of potassa existing in the ashes of wood. It consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, one of potassa 4D2, and two of w’ater 18 = 116 2. Medical Properties and Uses» Acetate of potassa acts as a diuretic in doses of from a scruple to a drachm, and as a mild cathartic when given to the extent of two or three drachms. It is employed in dropsies, and often with good effect. The late Dr. Duncan, of Edinburgh, considered it to be a medicine of great efficacy, and one of our best saline deobstruents. Dr. J. A. Easton, of Glasgow, has found it useful in several skin diseases, such as psoriasis, eczema, and lepra, Cases which had resisted the ordinary remedies were cured, after a treatment occupying from three weeks to two months. The dose, given by Dr. Easton was half a drachm, three times a day, dissolved in water. The remedy seemed to act through the kidneys, the urine being remarkably increased, both in its aque- ous and solid contents. The late Dr. Golding Bird treated a large number of cases of acute rheumatism with remarkable success with this salt. The pain of the disease declined as soon as the urine became alkaline and rose in specific gravity. The quantity given, in twenty-four hours, was half an ounce in divided doses, largely diluted with water. (Braithwaite’s Retrospect, Am. ed , July, 1854, p. 43.) It has been highly recommended by Ambrosoli in large doses as a remedy in acute and subacute urethritis with mucous or puruloid discharge, and in simi- lar affections of the vagina and uterus. (Ann. de Therap., 1863, p. 115.) Ace- 1282 Potassa. PART II. tate of potassa may be made extemporaneously in the liquid form by saturating distilled vinegar with carbonate of potassa. Two drachms of the carbonate, saturated with vinegar, will sometimes produce in hydropic cases ten or twelve stools, and a copious discharge of urine. {Duncan.) Acetate of potassa, like the other alkaline salts containing a vegetable acid, may be given in the uric acid diathesis, to render the urine alkaline; for the experiments of Wohler have shown that the acid of these salts undergoes decomposition in the digestive and assimilating processes, while the alkali enters the current of the circulation. From the decided property which this salt possesses of increasing the secretion of the kidneys, it was formerly called sal diureticus or diuretic salt. B. POTASSiE CARBONAS. U. S., Br. Carbonate of Potassa. Carbon- ate of Potassa from Pearlash. “Take of Impure Carbonate of Potassa [pearlash] thirty-six troyounces; Water two pints and a half. Dissolve the Impure Carbonate in the Water, and filter the solution; then pour it into an iron vessel, and-evaporate over a gentle fire until it thickens. Lastly, remove it from the fire, and stir constantly with an iron spatula until it forms a granular salt.” U. S. In the British Pharmacopoeia this salt is placed in the catalogue of the Materia Medica, without any process for its preparation, or intimation of its source, but with the following account of its characters, from which we may infer that it may possibly be obtained, like the TJ. S. carbonate, from pearlash. “ When supersatu- rated with nitric acid, and evaporated to dryness, the residue is almost entirely soluble in water, only a little remaining undissolved. It is precipitated only faintly by chloride of barium and nitrate of silver. Eighty-seven grains require for neutralization at least ninety-eight measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” The object of the above process is to purify the impure carbonate of potassa, or pearlash. This generally contains certain insoluble impurities, as well as small portions of sulphate and silicate of potassa, and chloride of potassium, as ex- plained under another head. (See Potassse Carbonas Impurus.) By dissolving it in a due proportion of water, and filtering the solution, the insoluble impuri- ties are got rid of, as well as the greater part of the foreign salts, which, being much less soluble than the carbonate of potassa, are excluded by the superior affinity of this salt for the water. The proper way of conducting the purifica- tion is to mix the impure carbonate with an equal weight of cold water, and to allow the mixture to stand for a day or two, stirring it frequently to promote the action of the water. The clear liquor obtained by decantation or filtration is then evaporated to dryness. The officinal process is conducted very much in this way; cold water being employed, and about equal weights of alkali and water being used. The prolonged contact of the water with the salt, and the occa- sional stirring of the mixture, formerly ordered by the Dublin College, were use- ful directions. In no case should the undissolved residue be washed with a fresh portion of water; as, by such a proceeding, the foreign salts, which it is the ob- ject of the process to separate, would be dissolved. Iron vessels are directed, because this metal is not Acted on by the alkali, while glass is attacked by it. In granulating the salt by stirring, it is better, when the solution is brought nearly to dryness, to keep it on the fire at a reduced heat until the process is finished, than to remove it the moment it thickens. According to Berzelius, a more productive process for purifying pearlash, though the resulting salt is not so pure as when obtained in the way just de- scribed, is to dissolve the pearlash in more than its weight of water, to evapo- rate the solution till it has the sp. gr. 1 52, and then to put it in a cool place, that the foreign salts, principally sulphate of potassa and chloride of potassium, may crystallize. The solution is then decanted, and evaporated to dryness. To get rid of the silica, Rieckher proposes to evaporate the sedation, exempt PART II. Potassa. from sulphate, to dryness, to moisten the residue with solution of carbonate of ammonia, and again evaporate. The silica separates, ana passes into the insolu- ble state at the temperature necessary for evaporation. By again dissolving and evaporating, the carbonate is obtained free from this impurity. (Ghent. Central Blatt, 1863, p. 158.) Properties, &c. Carbonate of potassa, as found in the shops, is in the form of a coarse, granular, white powder, having a nauseous, alkaline taste, and acting as an alkali on vegetable colours. It is very soluble in water, dissolving in iu weight of that liquid, but is insoluble in alcohol. It is extremely deliquescent; and hence a portion of it, exposed to the air for some time, attracts so much water as completely to dissolve into an oily liquid, called by the older chemists, oleum tartari per deliquium. On account of this property, carbonate of potassa should be kept in bottles with accurately ground stoppers. If exposed in its usual state to a red heat, it retains its carbonic acid, but loses 16 per cent, of water ; and, when decomposed by dilute sulphuric acid, evolves 26 3 per cent, of carbonic acid. (Lond. Pharm.) It should be completely soluble in water ; but, generally, a small insoluble portion is left of earthy matter. The usual impurities are earthy matter, sulphate of potassa, chloride of potassium, and silica in the state of silicate of potassa. When dissolved in water and treated with nitric acid in excess, it affords a faint cloudiness with chloride of barium, and a slight precipitate with nitrate of silver; effects showing the presence of minute por- tions of a sulphate and of a chloride. The nitric solution is also precipitated by carbonate of soda, if earthy matter be present. If the indications of these tests are decided, the salt is below the officinal standard of purity. Its aqueous solution, saturated by an acid, slowly deposits a slight flocculent precipitate of hydrated silica. It is incompatible with acids and acidulous salts, muriate and acetate of ammonia, lime-water, chloride of calcium, sulphate of magnesia, alum, tartar emetic, nitrate of silver, ammoniated copper and ammoniated iron, sulphate of iron, tincture of chloride of iron, calomel and corrosive sublimate, acetate and subacetate of lead, and sulphate of zinc. It is not decomposed by tartrate of iron and potassa. Composition. Carbonate of potassa, after exposure to a red heat, is anhy- drous, consisting of one eq. of carbonic acid 22, and one of potassa 47 -2 = 69-2. Obtained by the officinal formulas, it is, according to Mr. Phillips, a ses- quihydrate, containing two eqs. of carbonate and three of water. According to the Br. Pharmacopoeia, each eq. of the salt denominated by it carbonate of po- tassa contains two eqs. of water; its formula being K0,C02-f 2HO ; but this is not precisely the salt under consideration; nor does the Pharmacopoeia indicate its source. When exposed to the air, carbonate of potassa absorbs sufficient wa- ter, before losing its solid form, to give it three equivalents ; with more it begins to deliquesce. (Dr. Pohl. See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 532 ) B. Medical Properties and Uses. Purified pearlash is the form of carbonate of potassa usually employed in this country, where it is frequently, though incor- rectly, called salt of tartar; the latter name being strictly applicable to the purer carbonate obtained by decomposing cream of tartar. It is occasionally used as an antacid in dyspepsia, a diuretic in dropsy, and antilithic in gravel at- tended with red deposits in the urine; but the purpose to which it is most com- monly applied is the formation of the neutral mixture and effervescing draught. (See Liquor Potassse Citratis.) It is also used with advantage in some cases of jaundice, in which it probably operates by entering the circulation, and directly exciting the hepatic function. It has enjoyed considerable popular reputation mixed with cochineal in hooping-cough, and is supposed by some, in common with other alkaline remedies, to operate favourably in pseudo-membranous in- flammations of the mucous tissues. It is considered among the most effectual remedies in obstinate cutaneous eruptions, in which it is employed both inter- 1284 Potassa. part rr. nally and externally. The dose is from ten to thirty grains, given in some aro- matic water sweetened with sugar. In large quantities it acts as a corrosive poison, and is capable of producing death in a few hours. The antidotes are the fixed oils and vegetable acids. As a local remedy in cutaneons affections, carbonate of potassa is used in the form of bath, of lotion, and of ointment. From eight to sixteen ounces may be used for a single bath, the quantity being gradually increased. Lotions may be made by dissolving two or three drachms in a pint of water; and ointments, by rubbing from ten grains to a drachm with an ounce of lard. A solution of the salt, on exposure to the air, or on the addition of an acid, deposits flocculi consisting of hydrate of silica, resulting from the decomposition of silicated potassa, which is always present as an impurity. The spontaneous deposition of silica is owing to the absorption of carbonic acid. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Atropia, Br.; Chloroformum Purificatum, U. S.; Spiritus JEtheris Nitrosi, U. S. Off. Prep. Decoctum Aloes Compositum, Br.; Enema Aloes, Br.; Extractum Spigeli® et Senn® Fluidum, U. S.; Liquor Arsenicalis, Br.; Liquor Potass®, Br.; Mistura Ferri Composita; Potassa Sulphurata, Br.; Potass® Acetas, Br.; Po- tass® Bicarbonas; Potass® Chloras, Br.; Potass® Citras, Br.; Potass® Sul- phas, Br.; Potass® Tartras; Potassii Sulphuretum, U. S. W. POTASSiE CARBONAS PURA. U. S. Pure Carbonate of Potassa. Salt of Tartar. “ Take of Bicarbonate of Potassa, in coarse powder, twelve troyounces. Put it into a capacious iron crucible, heat gradually until the water of crystalliza- tion is driven off; then raise the heat to redness, and maintain that tempera- ture for half an hour. Having taken the crucible from the fire, and allowed it to cool, dissolve its contents in Distilled Water, and filter the solution. Then pour it into an iron vessel, and evaporate over a gentle fire until it thickens. Lastly, remove it from the fire, and stir constantly with an iron spatula, until it forms a granular salt.” U. S. In this process the bicarbonate of potassa is ignited, whereby it loses its water of crystallization and second equivalent of carbonic acid, and is reduced to the state of carbonate. As the bicarbonate is a very pure salt, so the carbonate ob- tained from it is also very pure. The pure carbonate was formerly obtained from bitartrate of potassa, by first purifying it by solution and crystallization, and then incinerating it; and this was one of the processes of the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia. The tartaric acid, which consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, is decomposed, and gives rise, among other products, to carbonic acid, which combines with the potassa. The matter, after ignition, contains, besides carbonate of potassa, certain impu- rities derived from the bitartrate. These are carbonate of lime arising from the decomposition of tartrate of lime, alumina, and minute portions of the oxides of iron and manganese; but, being all insoluble in water, they are left behind when the mass is acted on by that liquid, the alkaline carbonate being taken up. Some silicate of potassa is sometimes dissolved, derived from silica, either originally in the bitartrate, or derived from the earthenware or porcelain crucibie in which the ignition is performed. Pure carbonate of potassa may also be obtained by deflagrating a mixture oi two parts of bitartrate of potassa, and one of nitrate of potassa. This process has been objected to on the ground that it gives a carbonate, apt to contain a little of the poisonous cyanide of potassium. But this objection is unfounded. It is true, as Engelhardt and Wicke have proved, that the deflagrated mass con- tains cyanate of potassa; but this is entirely decomposed into ammonia and car- bonate of potassa by the subsequent operations of solution and evaporation to dryness, to which the mass is subjected. PART II. Potassa. 1285 It was this origin from bitartrate of potassa, called in its impure state tartar that gave rise to the name of salt of tartar, still frequently applied to the purer forms of the carbonate. It may, indeed, be very much doubted whether the real salt of tartar is often kept in our shops; the ordinary carbonate, as purified from pearlash, being generally substituted for it, and answering, in most cases, every medicinal purpose that could be expected from the use of the purer salt. Properties, &c. Pure carbonate of potassa, obtained from the bicarbonate 01 cream of tartar, differs from the same salt procured from pearlash, in containing no impurities. With the tests mentioned under the carbonate it gives negative indications, showing the entire absence of foreign substances. The U. S. Phar- macopoeia gives the following characters of the salt. It is white, deliquescent, and wholly soluble in water; effervesces with acids, and has an alkaline reac- tion ; yields, in solution, a yellow precipitate with bichloride of platinum, and a white one effervescing with acids, with sulphate of magnesia; when saturated with an acid deposits nothing upon standing, and, when treated with pure nitric acid in excess, is not precipitated by carbonate of soda, chloride of barium, or nitrate of silver. It loses 16 per cent, of its weight at a red heat. Medical Properties and Uses. These are the same with those of the carbon- ate of potassa described in the preceding article. The pure carbonate, on account of its freedom from silica, furnishes the best material for forming the solution of citrate of potassa, or neutral mixture. Off. Prep. Potassii Bromidum, U. S.; Potassii Cyanidum, U. S. B. POTASSiE BICARBONAS. U.S.,Br. Bicarbonate of Potassa. “Take of Carbonate of Potassa forty-eight troyounces; Distilled Water fen pints. Dissolve the Carbonate in the Distilled Water, and pass carbonic acid through the solution till it is fully saturated. Then filter the liquid, and evapo- rate that crystals may form, taking care that the heat does not exceed 160°. Lastly, pour off the supernatant liquid, and dry the crystals upon bibulous paper. Carbonic Acid may be obtained from marble by the addition of dilute sulphuric acid.” U.8. “Take of Carbonate of Potash one pound [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water two pints [Imperial measure] ; Hydrochloric Acid of Commerce one pint and a half [Imp. meas.]; Water three pints [Imp. meas.] ; White Marble, in frag- ments, one pound [avoird.], or a sufficiency. Dissolve the Carbonate of Potash in the Distilled Water, and filter the solution into a three-pint bottle, capable of being tightly closed by a cork, traversed by a glass tube sufficiently long to pass to the bottom of the fluid. Introduce the Marble into another bottle, in the bot- tom of which a few small holes have been drilled, and the mouth of which is closed by a cork, also traversed by a glass tube, and place the bottle in ajar, of the same height as itself, but of rather larger diameter. Connect the two glass tubes, air-tight, by a caoutchouc tube. The cork of the bottle containing the Carbonate of Potash having been placed loosely, and that of the bottle contain- ing the marble tightly, in its mouth, pour into the jar surrounding the latter bottle the Hydrochloric Acid, previously diluted with the Water. When the carbonic acid gas has passed through the potash solution for two minutes so as to expel the whole of the air of the apparatus, fix the cork tightly in the neck of the bottle, and let the process go on for a week. At the end of this time nu- merous crystals of Bicarbonate of Potash will have formed, which are to be removed, shaken in a capsule with twice their bulk of cold Distilled Water, and, after decantation of the water, drained, and dried on filtering paper by exposure to the air. The mother-liquor, filtered, if necessary, and concentrated to one-half, at a temperature not exceeding 110°, will yield more crystals. The tube im- mersed in the solution of carbonate of potash, which should have as large a dia- meter as possible, may require the occasional removal of the crystals formed within it, in order that the process may not be interrupted.” Br 1286 Potassa. PART II. Iii tV-se processes, the carbonate of potassa, consisting of one eq. of acid and one of base, is combined with an additional equivalent of carbonic acid. The combination is effected by passing a stream of this acid through a solution of the carbonate, so long as it is absorbed. In the U. S. formula the distilled water taken is about three times the weight of the carbonate. As the bicarbonate of potassa requires four times its weight of water to dissolve it, the quantity of water ordered in the U. S. formula would seem not to be sufficient to dissolve the new salt; unless it be assumed that the solution becomes heated in conse- quence of the reaction. The solution of the whole of the new salt is not intended in the British process, which proceeds on the plan of forming crystals of bicar- bonate at once in the original solution, without concentration by heat. The fil- tration directed in the U. S. formula is ordered on the presumption that the whole of the bicarbonate formed is dissolved ; and is intended to separate silica, which is always deposited during the progress of the saturation, when carbonate of potassa from pearlash is employed. On a small scale the saturation of the carbonate is best conducted in a Wolfe’s apparatus of three bottles; the first containing water to wash the carbonic acid gas, the two others, solutions of the carbonate. The bottles should be connected by means of wide tubes, to prevent their being obstructed by the crystals formed. On a large scale the saturation is performed in strong vessels, into which the carbonic acid is driven under pres- sure. Sulphuric acid is always used by the manufacturing chemist for generating the carbonic acid; but in small operations, muriatic acid, diluted with twice its bulk of water, is more convenient; inasmuch as it generates with the marble or chalk a soluble salt (chloride of calcium), which does not interfere with the ex- trication of the carbonic acid, as the insoluble sulphate of lime does. In the British process dilute muriatic acid is used for the extrication of the carbonic acid, which is effected in a self-regulating generator of that gas. In the process of the late Ed. Pharmacopoeia, carbonate of ammonia was incor- porated with carbonate of potassa, by the assistance of a little water, so as to form a uniform pulp, which was dried by a gentle heat. By the combined influence of the volatility of the ammonia, and the affinity of the carbonate of potassa for carbonic acid, the carbonate of ammonia was totally decomposed; its carbonic acid generating the bicarbonate by uniting with the carbonate, and its ammonia being evolved during the drying of the pulp, which was then reduced to a fine powder. This process is alleged by Dr. Christison to be superior to the other “in point of economy, dispatch, and certainty in small operations.” Mr. Braude gives the following proportions for the preparation of bicarbo- nate of potassa on the large scale: “100 lbs. of purified carbonate of potassa are dissolved in 17 gallons of water, which, when saturated with carbonic acid, yield from 35 to 40 lbs. of crystallized bicarbonate; 50 lbs. of carbonate of po- tassa are then added to the mother-liquor, with a sufficient quantity of water to make up 17 gallous, and the operation repeated.” Wohler states that charcoal, when mixed with the carbonate, facilitates by its porosity, in a remarkable degree, the formation of the bicarbonate. Thus he found that, when crude tartar wras charred in a covered crucible, and the carbo- naceous mass, after having been slightly moistened writh water, was subjected to a stream of carbonic acid, the gas was absorbed with great rapidity, and heated the mass so considerably, as to render it necessary to surround the vessel with cold water, to prevent the decomposition of the bicarbonate formed. When the temperature diminished, the saturation was known to be completed. The mas* was lixiviated in the smallest quantity of water at the temperature of from 85° to 100°, and the solution, after filtration and cooling, deposited the greater part of the bicarbonate in fine crystals. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., x. 82.j M. Behrens has proposed to obtain bicarbonate of potassa by partially satu- rating the carbonate, dissolved in an equal weight of water, with acetic acid PART II. Potassa. 1287 gradually added. Up to a certain point, no carbonic acid is extricated, and a precipitate takes place of pure bicarbonate of potassa, equal to half the weijrh of the carbonate employed. After the bicarbonate is separated, the saturation may be completed, and acetate of potassa obtained. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 464.) The bisalt is also produced when the carbonate is treated with weak lemon-juice in forming the citrate. (See page 1217.) According to Berzelius, the cheapest method of obtaining the bicarbonate of potassa is to suspend a concentrated solution of the purified carbonate, contained in a stoneware dish, within a cask, over a liquid undergoing the vinous fermenta- tion. The alkali is thus surrounded by an atmosphere of carbonic acid, and, by absorbing it, crystallizes into bicarbonate in the course of five or six weeks. Distillers and brewers may prepare this salt with great facility by suspending the alkaline solution in the fermenting tun. The salt in powder called sal aera- tus, made principally in New England, is, we believe, prepared in this way. TrT composition it is between a carbonate and bicarbonate. Properties, &c. Bicarbonate of potassa is in transparent, colourless crystals, slightly alkaline to the taste and to test paper, permanent in the air, and having the shape of irregular eight-sided prisms with two-sided summits. It dissolves in four times its weight of cold water, and in five-sixths of its weight of boiling water, by which it is partially decomposed, and converted into sesquicarbonate. It is insoluble in alcohol. Exposed to a red heat, it loses 30‘7 per cent., com- prising half its carbonic acid and the whole of its water of crystallization, and returns to the state of carbonate, which, when thus obtained, is free from silica, and otherwise very pure. This method is now adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia for obtaining the pure carbonate. Treated with nitric acid in excess, it should give a clear solution, the transparency of which is not disturbed by chloride of barium, and but slightly by nitrate of silver. When a perfect bicarbonate, its solu- tion, unless heated, does not precipitate a solution of sulphate of magnesia. This negative indication, however, cannot be depended upon as showing the absence of carbonate; for, according to Dr. Christison, no precipitate will be occasioned, even when 50 per cent, of this impurity is present. Bicarbonate of potassa does not decompose calomel. When dissolved in 40 parts of water, it produces a white haze merely with a solution of corrosive sublimate; but if it contain so much as a hundredth part of carbonate, a brick-red precipitate is immediately produced. (Christison.) Another way of detecting the presence of carbonate is to add starch sugar to a heated solution of the suspected bicarbonate. If any carbonate be present, the mixture turns yellow or brown. (Chevallier.) Bicarbonate of potassa consists of two eqs. of carbonic acid 44, one of potassa 47-2, and one of water 9 — 100-2. “Fifty grains exposed to a low red heat, leave 345 grains of a white residue, which requires for exact saturation fifty measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” Br. Medical Properties. The medical properties of this salt are similar to those of the carbonate, to which it is preferable from its milder taste, and greater ac- ceptability to the stomach. The dose is from twenty grains to a drachm. Dr. Garrod, of London, has had great success in the treatment of acute rheumatism by the use of two-scruple doses of this salt, given in weak solution, every two hours, day and night, and continued for a few days after the articular affection and febrile disturbance have subsided. The salt probably acts by rendering the secretions alkaline, and by increasing the alkalinity of the blood. For this purpose it is much better than the carbonate, which is not well borne by the stomach when continued for any length of time. Off. Prep. Liquor Magnesi® Citratis, U. S.; Liquor Potass®, U. S.; Liquor Potass® Arsenitis, U. S.; Liquor Potass® Citratis, U. S.; Mistura Potass® Ci- tratis, U. S.; Potass® Acetas, U. S.; Potass® Carbonas Pura, U. S.; Potass® Citras, U. S. B. 1288 Potassa. PART II. P0TASS2E CITRAS. U.S.,Br. Citrate of Potassa. “Take of Citric Acid ten troyounces ; Bicarbonate of Potassa fourteen troy- ounces ; Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Citric Acid in two pints of Water, add the Bicarbonate gradually, and, when effervescence has ceased, strain the solution and evaporate to dryness, stirring constantly, after a pellicle has begun to form, until the salt granulates. Then rub it in a mortar, pass it through a coarse sieve, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “ Take of Carbonate of Potash eight ounces [avoirdupois], or a sufficiency; Citric Acid, in crystals, six ounces [avoird.], or a sufficiency; Distilled Water two pints [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Citric Acid in the Water, add the Carbonate of Potash gradually, and, if the solution be not neutral, make it so by the cautious addition of the Acid or the Carbonate of Potash. Then filter, and evaporate to dryness, stirring constantly, after a pellicle has begun to form, till the salt granulates. Triturate in a dry, warm mortar, and preserve the pow- der in stoppered bottles.” Br. Citrate of potassa was first recognised as officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850. It was known formerly by the name of salt of Bivei'ius. In the above TJ. S. formula, mutually saturating proportions of the acid and bicarbonate were intended to be employed; the latter ingredient being preferred to the carbonate on account of its greater purity. The potassa of the bicarbonate unites with the citric acid, to form the citrate of potassa, and the carbonic acid escapes, produc- ing effervescence. The resulting solution is directed to be evaporated to dryness, as affording the most convenient form for use. The granulation ordered has a tendency to retard the deliquescence of the citrate. The British process differs only in the use of the carbonate instead of bicarbonate, and by providing more carefully for an exact neutralization. Citrate of potassa is crystallizable, but, as procured by the above process, is in the form of a white granular powder. It is inodorous, of a saline, slightly bit- terish, not unpleasant taste, deliquescent, very soluble in water without residue, and insoluble in alcohol. It is stated in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia that its solution does not change the colour of litmus; but we have found a carefully prepared specimen slightly to redden the paper; and the acid used in the process is theo- retically in slight excess. By a red heat, with exposure to the air, the salt is decomposed, leaving a residue of pure carbonate of potassa. The presence of tartaric acid would be indicated by a precipitate of bitartrate of potassa on the addition of muriatic acid. The British Pharmacopoeia gives the following tests of its character. Heated with sulphuric acid it forms a brown fluid, and gives off inflammable vapours with the odour of acetic acid. Its solution, mixed with a solution of chloride of calcium, remains clear till it is boiled, when a white precipitate is formed readily soluble in acetic acid. This is a character of citric acid, which, in saline combination, unites with lime to form the insoluble citrate only when heated. Acidulated with hydrochloric acid, the solution gives a yellow precipitate with bichloride of platinum; showing that the base of the salt is potassa. When 102 grains are heated to redness till gas is no longer evolved, an alkaline residue (carbonate of potassa) is left, which requires for exact saturation 100 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid. As citric acid is tribasic, this salt consists of three eqs. of potassa and one of acid ; its formula being 3KO,C12H6Ou. Medical Properties. Citrate of potassa is a grateful refrigerant diaphoretic, and has long been used in the fevers of this country, in the extemporaneous forms of neutral mixture and effervescing draught. As these require time and a some- what careful manipulation in their preparation, it has been found more conve.- nient to keep the citrate of potassa ready made, and dissolve it in water when wanted for use. This solution will no doubt produce the essential diaphoretir PART II. Potassa. 1289 and refrigerant effects of the neutral mixture or effervescing draught; but is less agreeable to the stomach and palate, because destitute of thd carbonic acid con- tained in these preparations. The dose of the citrate is from twenty to twenty- five grains. (See Liquor Potassee Citratis, p. 1216.) W. POTASS.ZE ET SODiE TARTRAS. U. S. Soda2 et Potassa Tar- tras. Br., U. S. 1850. Sod,® Potassio-tartras. Loud. Tartrate of Potassa and Soda. Tartrate of Soda and Potassa. Tartarized Soda. Rochelle Salt. “Take of Carbonate of Soda twelve troyounces; Bitartrate of Potassa, in fine powder, sixteen troyounces ; Boiling Water five pints. Dissolve the Carbonate of Soda in the Water, and gradually add the Bitartrate of Potassa. Filter the solution, and evaporate until a pellicle begins to form; then set it aside to crys- tallize. Pour off the mother-water, and dry the crystals on bibulous paper. Lastly, evaporate the mother-water, that it may furnish more crystals.” U. S. “Take of Acid Tartrate of Potash, in powder, sixteen ounces [avoirdupois], or a sufficiency; Carbonate of Soda twelve ounces [avoird.], or a sufficiency; Boiling Distilled Water four pints [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Carbonate of Soda in the Water, add gradually the Acid Tartrate of Potash, and, if after being boiled for a few minutes the liquid has an acid or alkaline reaction, add a little Carbonate of Soda or Acid Tartrate of Potash till a neutral solution is obtained. Boil and filter; concentrate the liquor till a pellicle forms on the sur- face, and set it aside to crystallize. More crystals may be obtained by again evaporating as before. ” Br. This is a double salt, consisting of tartrate of potassa combined with tartrate of soda ; or, if the bibasic view of tartaric acid is accepted, a tartrate of potassa and soda, as its name imports, consisting of one eq. of tartaric acid with one of each of the alkalies. The theory of its formation is very simple, being merely the saturation of the excess of acid in the bitartrate of potassa by the soda of the carbonate of soda, the carbonic acid of which escapes writh effervescence. The quantities of the materials for mutual saturation are 143 3 parts of carbonate and 188'2 of bitartrate, or one eq. of each. This gives the ratio of 3 to 3-95. The proportion adopted in the U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias is as 3 to 4, which is very near the theoretical quantities. As the salts employed are apt to vary in composition and purity, the carbonate from the presence of more or less water of crystallization, and the bitartrate from containing tartrate of lime, it is, per- haps, best in all cases, after indicating the nearest average proportion as a gene- ral guide, to present to the operator the alternative of using the cream of tartar to the point of exact saturation. Properties. Tartrate of potassa and soda is in the form of colourless, trans- parent, slightly efflorescent crystals, often very large, and having the shape, when carefully prepared, of right prisms, with ten or twelve unequal sides. As ordi- narily crystallized, they are generally in half prisms, as if split in the direc- tion of their axis. The salt has a saline and slightly bitter taste. It dissolves in 2 5 parts of cold water, and in much less boiling water. Any undissolved residue is impurity, probably tartrate of lime or bitartrate of potassa, or both. Its solution is neutral to test paper, and yields no precipitate with chloride of barium, or a dilute solution of nitrate of silver. The non-action of these tests shows the absence of sulphates and chlorides. When the salt is exposed to a strong heat, it blackens, and gives out inflammable gases with the odour of burnt sugar; the tartaric acid being destroyed, and a mixture of the carbonates of •potassa and soda left. It sometimes contains tartrate of lime, which may be re- moved by solution and crystallization; but, when the crystals are large and well defined, it may be assumed to be pure. It is incompatible with most acids, and with all acidulous salts except bitartrate of potassa. It is also decomposed oy the acetate and subacetate of lead, by the soluble salts of lime, and by those Potassa. PART II. of baryta, unless the solution of the tartrate be considerably diluted. The way in which a< ids act in decomposing it, is by combining with the soda, and throw- ing down bitartrate of potassa as a crystalline precipitate. This double salt was discovered by Seignette, an apothecary of Rochelle, and hence is frequently called Seigiiette’s so It, or Rochelle salt. Composition. Tartrate of potassa and soda consists of two eqs. of tartarie acid 132, one of potassa 47 2, one of soda 31 *3, and eight of water 72 = 282 5; or, considered as a double salt, of one eq. of tartrate of potassa 113 2, and one of tartrate of soda 97'3, with the same quantity of water. If tartaric acid is bibasic, it must be considered as consisting, the eight eqs. of water being left out of the question, of one eq. of each of its other three constituents, the equiva- lent of the acid being doubled. Forty-seven grains of it, thoroughly incinerated, leave sufficient of the two alkaline carbonates to neutralize 30 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid. (Br.) Medical Properties and Uses. This salt is a mild, cooling purgative, well suited to delicate and irritable stomachs, being among the least unpalatable of the neutral salts. As it is not incompatible with tartar emetic, it may be asso- ciated with that salt in solution. It is an ingredient in the effervescing aperient called Seidlitz powders. (See Pulveres Effervescentes Aperientes.) The dose as a purge is from half an ounce to an ounce. Given in small and repeated doses it does not purge, but is absorbed, and renders the urine alkaline. (Millon and Laveran, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., vi. 222.) Tartrate of potassa a,nd magnesia, formed by saturating cream of tartar with carbonate of magnesia, has been proposed by M. Maillier as a safe and pleasant purgative. (Journ. de Pharm., xiii. 252.) Off. Prep. Fulveres Effervescentes Aperientes, U. S. B. POTASS2E TARTRAS. U. S., Br. Tartrate of Potassa. Soluble Tartar. “Take of Carbonate of Potassa sixteen troyounces; Bitartrate of Potassa [cream of tartar], in fine powder, thirty-six troyounces, or a sufficient quantity ; Boiling Water eight pints. Dissolve the Carbonate of Potassa in the Water; then gradually add Bitartrate of Potassa to the solution until it is completely saturated, and boil. Filter the liquid, evaporate it until a pellicle forms, and set it aside to crystallize. Lastly, pour off the mother-water, and, having dried the crystals on bibulous paper, keep them in a well-stopped boittle.” U. S. “ Take of Acid Tartrate of Potash twenty ounces [avoirdupois], or a suffi- ciency ; Carbonate of Potash nine ounces and a quarter [avoird.], or a suffi- ciency; Boiling Distilled Water two pints and a half [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Carbonate of Potash in the Water; add by degrees the Acid Tar- trate of Potash, and if, after a few minutes’ boiling, the liquid is not neutral to test paper, make it so by the careful addition of more of the Carbonate or of the Acid Tartrate. Then filter, concentrate till a pellicle forms on the surface, and set it aside to cool and crystallize. More crystals may be obtained by eva- porating and cooling the mother-liquor. Drain the crystals, dry them by ex- posure to the air in a warm place, and preserve them in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In these processes, the excess of acid in the bitartrate is saturated by the potassa of the carbonate, the carbonic acid is extricated with effervescence, and the neutral tartrate of potassa is formed. On account of the greater solubility of the carbonate than of the bitartrate, the former is first dissolved, and the latter added to the solution to full saturation. As the bitartrate is gradually added, the mutual action of the salts should be promoted by constant stirring, and the addition continued so long as effervescence takes place, which is a better mode of proceeding than to add any specified quantity of the bisalt; since, Aom its variable quality, it is impossible to adjust precisely the proportions appli- cable to all cases. It is necessary that the solution should be exactly neutral, PART II. Potassa. 1291 or a little alkaline; and hence, if inadvertently too much bitartrate has been used, the proper state may be restored by adding a little of the alkaline car- bonate. When the saturation has been completed, the solution is filtered in order to separate tartrate of lime, which appears in white flocks, and which is always present in cream of tartar as an impurity. The evaporated liquor should then be placed in warm earthenware vessels, to ensure a slow refrigera- tion; and, after remaining at rest for several days, the crystals begin to form. In order that the crystallization should proceed favourably, it is necessary, according to Baume, that the solution should be somewhat alkaline. Iron vessels should not be used in any part of the process; as this metal is apt to discolour the salt. Tartrate of potassa is sometimes made in the process for preparing tartaric acid. When thus obtained, the excess of acid of the bitartrate is neutralized by means of carbonate of lime. This generates an insoluble tartrate of lime, and leaves the neutral tartrate in solution, from which it may be obtained by evapo- ration and crystallization. (See Acidum Tartaricum.) Properties, &c. Tartrate of potassa, prepared according to the officinal pro- cesses, is in white crystals, which are neutral to test paper, slightly deliquescent, and usually in the form of irregular six-sided prisms with dihedral summits. Its taste is saline and bitter. It dissolves in its own weight of cold, and in half its weight of boiling water ( Witlstein), and is nearly insoluble in alcohol. Exposed to heat it undergoes fusion, swells up, blackens, and is decomposed; being con- verted into carbonate of potassa. For medical use it should be crystallized; but, as it ordinarily occurs in the shops, it is a white granular powder, obtained by evaporating the solution to dryness, while it is constantly stirred. In this state it is said to require four times its weight of water for solution. It is not known to be purposely adulterated; but, if obtained by evaporation to dryness, it is liable to contain an excess of carbonate or bitartrate of potassa, when it will have either an alkaline or acid reaction. It is decomposed by all the strong acids, and by many acidulous salts, which cause the precipitation of minute crystals of bitar- trate of potassa, by abstracting one eq. of alkali from two of the salt. Chloride of barium or acetate of lead occasions a white precipitate of tartrate of baryta or lead, distinguishable from the sulphate of those bases by being wholly soluble in dilute nitric acid. Tartrate of potassa is composed of one eq. of potassa 4P2, and one of tartaric acid 66 = 113-2, or, if tartaric acid be Considered as bibasic, of two eqs. of base 94'4 and one of acid 132 = 226 4. According to Berzelius, the crystals contain no water of crystallization. Medical Properties. Tartrate of potassa is a mild, cooling purgative, operat- ing, like most of the neutral salts, without much pain, and producing watery stools. It is applicable to febrile diseases, and is occasionally combined with senna, the griping effects of which it has a tendency to obviate. The dose is from a drachm to an ounce, according to the degree of effect desired. B. POTASSII BROMIDUM. U. S., Br. Bromide of Potassium. “ Take of Bromine two troyounces ; Iron, in the form of Filings, a troyounce; Pure Carbonate of Potassa two troyounces and sixty grains; Distilled Water four pints. Add the Iron, and afterwards the Bromine, to a pint and a half of the Distilled Water, stirring the mixture frequently with a glass rod for half an hour. Apply a gentle heat, and, when the liquid assumes a greenish colour, add gradually the Pure Carbonate of Potassa, previously dissolved in a pint and a half of the Distilled Water, until it ceases to produce a precipitate. Continue the heat for half an hour, and then filter. Wash the precipitate with the remain- der of the Distilled Water, boiling hot, and again filter. Mix the filtered liquids, and evaporate that crystals may form. Lastly, pour off the mother-water, and, having dried the crystals on bibulous paper, keep them in a well-stopped bottle.” U. b. Potassa. PART II. “Take of Solution of Potash two pints [Imperial measure]; Bromine four fiuidounces [Imp. meas.], or a sufficiency; Wood Charcoal, in fine powder, two ounces [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water one pint and a half [Imp. meas.]. Put the Solution of Potash into a glass or porcelain vessel, and add the Bromine in successive portions, with constant agitation, until the mixture has ac- quired a permanent brown tint. Evaporate to dryness; reduce the residue to a fine powder, and mix this intimately with the Charcoal. Throw the mixture in small quantities at a time into a red-hot iron crucible, and, when the whole has been brought to a state of fusion, remove the crucible from the fire, and pour out its contents. When the fused mass has cooled dissolve it in the Water, filter the solution through paper, and set it aside to crystallize. Drain the crystals, and dry them with a gentle heat. More crystals may be obtained by evaporating the mother-liquor and cooling. The salt should be kept in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In the first step of the U. S. process, a solution of bromide of iron is formed; and this, by the addition of the solution of carbonate of potassa, is decomposed so as to generate carbonate of the protoxide of iron which precipitates, and bro- mide of potassium in solution. By straining, the precipitated carbonate is sepa- rated, and from the strained liquor crystals of bromide of potassium are obtained by due evaporation. In the Br. process, by reaction between potassa and bro- mine, the bromide of potassium and bromate of potassa are produced in solution, and, having been obtained dry by evaporation, are exposed with the powder of charcoal to a red heat, whereby the bromate of potassa is converted into bro- mide of potassium by the separation of its oxygen. The remainder of the pro- cess consists in obtaining the bromide in crystals by solution in boiling water, which deposits it on cooling. Properties, &c. Bromide of potassium is a permanent, colourless, anhydrous salt, crystallizing in cubes or quadrangular prisms, and having a pungent, saline taste, similar to that of common salt, but more acrid. It is very soluble in cold water, more so in hot, and but slightly soluble in alcohol. When heated it de- crepitates, and, at a red heat, fuses without decomposition. If its aqueous solu- tion be mixed with a little chlorine water, and then shaken with ether, the bro- mine, separated by the chlorine, will be dissolved by the ether, which will rise to the surface df a red colour. The salt may thus be known to be a bromide. That the base is potassium may be known by the white crystalline precipitate pro- duced by tartaric acid added to its solution. The following characters are given of the salt in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. “Its aqueous solution does not affect the colour of litmus or turmeric, and is not precipitated by chloride of barium. When mixed with starch and treated with sulphuric acid, it becomes yellow. The salt, when subjected to heat, does not lose weight. Ten grains of it require, for com- plete precipitation, 1430 grains of nitrate of silver; and the precipitate formed has a yellowish colour.” The object of adding sulphuric acid with the starch, is to set the bromine free. If iodine be set free at the same time, the starch will assume a violet or feeble blue colour. To test for iodine in this salt, Lassaigne recommends to add to its solution a few drops of chlorine water, and then to in- troduce a piece of starched white paper. If iodine be present, the starch will become violet, or faintly blue; and iodide of potassium, which is not an unfre- quent impurity, may thus be detected. If the salt decomposes more nitrate of silver than is above stated, its saturating power is greater than it should be, and the presence of a chloride, probably of potassium or sodium, may be suspected. Chlorides may be more certainly detected by precipitating the salt with nitrate of silver, and treating the precipitate with a slight excess of ammonia. If there be a chloride, the chloride of silver will be thrown down, to be dissolved by the ammonia; and the solution thus obtained, if treated with nitric acid in excess, will throw down a white precipitate of chloride of silver. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1863, p. 514.) An iodide of an alkaline metal will be detected by adding PART II. Potassa. 1293 to the solution of the bromide the chloride of palladium, which will precipitate all the iodine in the form of iodide of palladium, while the bromide of that metal will remain in solution. (Ibid.) Bromide of potassium consists of one eq. of bro- mine 78’4, and one of potassium 39’2 = 117'6. Medical Properties. Bromide of potassium is alterative and resolvent, and is thought to be sedative to the nervous system and powerfully antaphrodisiac. In 1828, Pourche used it with benefit, both internally and in the form of ointment, in the treatment of bronchocele and scrofula. Favourable results were obtained by the late Dr. T. Williams, of London, from its use as an internal remedy in enlarged spleen, and it has been given advantageously in goitre. According to Rieord, it produces effects in secondary syphilis similar to those of iodide of potassium, but acts more slowly. The same view is taken of its slow action in syphilis by Dr. John Egan. This surgeon, after experimenting with bromide of potassium for four years in the Westmoreland Lock Hospital, found its ef- fects, in secondary and tertiary syphilis, slow and unsatisfactory, when compared with those of the iodide. While the latter generally increased the appetite and improved digestion, the bromide not unfrequently produced nausea and derange- ment of the digestive organs. M. Huette, from extensive trials of the remedy in the same stages of syphilis, found it inefficacious; exhibiting, iu its effects, a marked contrast to iodide of potassium, which rapidly relieved the cases in which the bromide had failed. (Ann. de Therap., 1851, p. 216.) Given in largo doses (from two to five drachms daily), it produces headache, followed by a pe- culiar intoxication, with torpor and drowsiness, slowness of the pulse, temporary dulness of sight and hearing, and weakness of the intellectual faculties. In one case, observed by M. Rames, the insensibility was so complete that the puncture of the skin with a suture needle was not felt, and the titillation of the conjunctiva and fauces with a feather produced neither winking nor desire to vomit. (Journ. de Pharm., Dec. 1849.) Anaesthesia of the fauces, produced by the bromide, was subsequently observed by M. Huette, who also noticed in it the property of in- ducing more or less torpidity of the genital organs. Its powers as an antaphro- disiac have been confirmed by Dr. Thielmann, of St. Petersburg, M. Trousseau, of Paris, and subsequently by many others. Sir Charles Locock has used it ad- vantageously in hysterical epilepsy, and other nervous affections connected with uterine disorder. Dr. Garrod has found it powerfully sedative to the sexual function, and recommends it strongly in nymphomania, priapism, certain forms of menorrhagia, and even in ovarian tumours. (Med. Times and Oaz., March, 1864, p. 276.) It is efficacious in the painful erections occurring in gonorrhoea; and has been much used, with supposed advantage, in spermatorrhoea. Dr. J. Jones, of London, has found it very effectual in certain infantile convulsions, given in the dose of two or three grains every four or six hours. (Ibid., p. 254.) By M. Ozanam, of Paris, it has been successfully used in fourteen cases of pseudo- membranous affections, two of which were croup. It has been given with good effect by Mr. Spencer Wells, of London, in cancerous tumours, in the dose of from five to ten grains, with one, two, or three drachms of cod-liver oil, three times a day. (Ibid. July, 1857, p. 31.) In reference to its anaesthetic action on the fauces, it has been usefully employed in examination of these parts, and in operations upon them. Bromide of potassium may be given in the form of pill, or dissolved in water, in doses of from three to ten grains three times a day. When used as an anta- phrodisiac, the dose is two or three grains every two hours. The ointment may be made by mixing from a scruple to two drachms of the bromide with an ounce of lard. Of this from half a drachm to a drachm may be rubbed on a scrofulous tumour, or other part where its local action is desired, once in twenty- four hours. Sometimes bromine is added to this ointment iu the proportion of thirty minims to the ounce of lard. B. Potassa. PART II. POTASSII CYANIDUM. TJ. S. Potassii Cyanuretum. U. S. 1850. Cyanide of Potassium. Cyanuret of Potassium. “Take of Ferrocyanide of Potassium, dried, eight troyounces; Pure Car- bonate of Potassa, dried, three troyounces. Mix the salts intimately, and throw the mixture into a deep iron crucible previously heated to redness. Maintaiu Hie temperature until effervescence ceases, and the fused mass concretes, of a pure white colour, upon a warm glass rod dipped into it. Then pour out the liquid carefully into a shallow dish to solidify, ceasing to pour before the salt becomes contaminated with the precipitated iron. Break up the mass while yet warm, and keep the pieces in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. The above process for obtaining this cyanide, which is that of F. & E. Rodgers, though generally known under the name of Liebig, was substituted, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, for the process in which the ferrocyanide is ignited without addition. It furnishes a large product, but a considerable part of it is the impurity, cyanate of potassa. The reaction takes place between two eqs. of ferrocyanide of potassium and two of carbonate of potassa. The iron is set free, the carbonic acid evolved, and a compound of five eqs. of cyanide of po- tassium and one of cyanate of potassa is formed. The iron occupies the lower part of the fused liquid; and, if the latter be carefully poured out to solidify, the portion contaminated with the iron may be left behind, The reaction is ex- plained by the following equation : 2(2KCy,FeCy) and 2(K0,C02) = 5KCy and KO,CyO and 2Fe and 2C02. Dr. Wittstein gives the reaction differently, to explain the larger proportion of cyanate of potassa formed than the above equation calls for. He conceives that the product consists of seven eqs. of cya- nide of potassium, and three of cyanate of potassa. MM. Fordos and Gelis, in an able paper contained in the Journ. de Pharmacie for Aug. 1857, have pointed out numerous causes which concur in rendering the salt, as obtained by the use of carbonate of potassa, impure. The commercial cyanide, which is obtained by this process, was found by these writers to be very impure, only containing from 36 to 55 per cent, of the pure salt. The cyanate of potassa may be readily detected by saturating the product with an acid, which will cause an efferves- cence of carbonic acid, and the generation of a salt of ammonia. According to Dr. Schwarz, it may be freed from cyanate and carbonate of potassa, by treat- ing the impure cyanide with bisulphuret of carbon, which dissolves it, and may be recovered in great measure by distillation. (Chem. News, No. 190, p. 41.) In the process in which the ferrocyanide of potassium is ignited alone (former TJ. S. process), the salt is first deprived of its water of crystallization by exposure to a moderate heat, and then calcined at a red heat for two hours, in order to decompose the cyanide of iron. The product of the calcination is a black, porous mass, consisting of cyanide of potassium, mixed with carburet of iron and char- coal. As the cyanide is very prone to absorb oxygen, especially when hot, whereby it is decomposed, atmospheric air is excluded from the retort while it is cooling, by luting its orifice. When the whole is cold, the black mass is re- duced to coarse powder, and exhausted by cold distilled water, which dissolves the cyanide of potassium, and leaves the carburet of iron and charcoal behind. The filtered liquor, therefore, is an aqueous solution of cyanide of potassium, which is obtained in a solid state by a rapid evaporation to dryness. During the evaporation, a small portion of the cyanide is decomposed, attended with the evolution of ammonia, and the production of formiate of potassa. A portion of this salt, therefore, contaminates the cyanide, as obtained by this process; but the quantity is too small to interfere with its medicinal action. The decom- position here referred to takes place between one eq. of cyanide of potassium and four of water, and is represented by the following equation, in which the cyanogen is expressed by its full symbol NC2, and formic acid by C2H03: K,N02 and 4HO = NHsand K0,C2H03. This decomposition is avoided by exhausting Potassa. 1295 PART II. the black mass with boiling alcohol of 60 per cent. (sp. gr. 0-896) instead of with water. The alcoholic solution, by evaporation to a pellicle, lets fall the salt upon cooling, as a crystalline precipitate, perfectly white and pure. According to the process of the French Codex, which is that of Robiquet, this cyanide is obtained in the dry way, without the use of any solvent. The calcination is performed in a coated stoneware retort, half-filled with the ferro- cyanide, to which a tube is attached for collecting the gaseous products. When these cease to be disengaged, the heat is gradually raised to a very high tem- perature, at which it is kept for a quarter of an hour; after which the tube is closed with luting, and the whole left undisturbed until quite cold. When the calcination is thus conducted, the retort, upon being broken, will be found to contain a black matter, covered with a fused layer of pure cyanide of potassium, resembling white enamel. This is detached by means of a knife, and immedi- ately transferred to a bottle, with an accurately fitting stopper. The black mat- ter, under the name of black cyanide of potassium, is also kept for medicinal use; but the dose of this cannot be accurately fixed, on account of its contain- ing, at different times, more or less impurity. According to MM. Fordos and Gelis, the French Codex process should su- persede the carbonate of potassa process; as it gives a product far purer, and in larger proportion to the materials employed, estimated by the pure product. The same process is preferred by Mr. Donovan, who has modified it by substi- tuting, for the stoneware retort, an iron mercury bottle, which, when cold, must be cut in two by a chisel and hammer to get out the product. The same recom- mendation of iron in preference to stoneware vessels, is made by Fordos and Gelis, who found that the latter, at the high heat employed, were acted on. The process of Wiggers consists in disengaging hydrocyanic acid from a mix- ture of ferrocyanide of potassium and sulphuric acid, and passing it into a cooled receiver, containing an alcoholic solution of hydrate of potassa. The contents of the receiver ultimately form a solid magma of the cyanide, which is drained, washed several times with strong alcohol, pressed between folds of bibulous paper, and dried as quickly as possible. Cyanide of potassium may be formed by passing a current of strongly heated nitrogen over charcoal, impregnated with carbonate of potassa, and heated to white redness. (See page 686.) Properties. Cyanide of potassium, as prepared by the U. S. formula, is in white, opaque, amorphous masses, having a sharp, somewhat alkaline and bitter- almond taste, and an alkaline reaction. If yellow it contains iron. It is deliques- cent in moist air, readily soluble in water when reduced to powder, and sparingly soluble in strong alcohol. Its solution effervesces with acids. The salt and its solution, when exposed to the air, exhale the odour of hydrocyanic acid, and be- come weaker; but the change takes place slowly. Orfila found that the salt, after fourteen days’ exposure, by which it was almost entirely liquefied, still possessed energetic poisonous properties. He thinks, therefore, that the bad effects of open- ing the containing bottle, in dispensing the medicine, have been exaggerated. Unfortunately, the salt varies in quality, independently of the effects of time and exposure. Dr. David Stewart, of Baltimore, examined six samples of this cya- nide, on sale, and found them to vary considerably in purity. Besides water, the usual impurities are hydrate, carbonate, cyanate, and formiate of potassa. They sometimes amount to half the weight of the cyanide, consisting principally of the carbonate. From the extensive use at present made of cyanide of potassium in electro-metallurgy and photography, it is of importance to have a reliable test of its purity. Such a test lias been discovered by MM. Fordos and Gelis, founded on the fact that two eqs. of iodine rapidly react with one of the cyanide, so as to form a colourless compound, consisting of one eq. of iodide of potassium, and one of iodide of cyanogen : KCy and 2I = KI and Gy I. Accordingly, a tincture 1296 Potassa. PART II. of iodine of known strength is gradually added to an aqueous solution of a given weight of the cyanide to be tested, until it assumes a permanent yellowish tinge ; and the amount of iodine expended indicates the proportion of cyanide in the specimen. A necessary preliminary step, before using the tincture, is to add suf- ficient carbonic acid water to the solution of the cyanide, to convert any hydrate or carbonate of potassa present into bicarbonate, in which state neither has any action on the iodine. (Ghent. Gaz., Oct. 15, 1852, p. 387.) This test is applicable to other cyanogen compounds. (See page 926.) Mr. Thornton J. Herapath’s test for commercial cyanide of potassium is a standard solution of ammonio- sulphate of copper, the blue colour of which is destroyed by a solution of the cyanide. The copper solution is added to one of the cyanide of known strength, until a faint blue coloration is produced; and the richness of the sample in pure cyanide is in proportion to the quantity of the copper solution required. (Che- mist, April, 1856, and Feb. 1857.) Applying this test to five samples, Mr. Hera- path found the proportion of pure cyanide to vary from 41 to 65 per cent. Cyan- ide of potassium yields with nitrate of silver a precipitate of cyanide of silver, which is wholly soluble in ammonia. It consists of one eq. of cyanogen 26, and one of potassium 39-2 = 65'2. Medical Properties. Cyanide of potassium is pre-eminently poisonous, act- ing precisely like hydrocyanic acid as a poison and as a medicine. (See Acidum Hydrocyanicum Dilutum.) Since the tenth edition of this work was published, three fatal cases of poisoning by this salt have occurred in the United States. The first case, reported by Dr. C. E. Ware, of Boston, wrns that of a woman who took, by mistake, a teaspoonful of a solution, containing about seven grains of the salt. The second and third cases occurred in Baltimore, and arose from the mistake of an apothecary in putting up cyanide of potassium for chlorate of po- tassa in a mixture. A dose of the mixture destroyed a child, and, likewise, the apothecary, who, to show his confidence in the correctness with which it had been compounded, swallowed a portion of it himself. Hydrocyanic acid has been detected in the blood of a person who had been fatally poisoned by the cyanide (Yenghauss, Arch, der Pharm., clii. 138.) The grounds on which this cyanide was proposed as a substitute for hydrocyanic acid by Robiquet and Villerme, were its uniformity as a chemical product, and its less liability to undergo de- composition. The dose is the eighth of a grain, dissolved in half a fluidounce of distilled water, to which may be added half a fluidrachm of syrup of lemons, if the prescriber wish to set the hydrocyanic acid free. The spurious cyanide, formed by calcining dried muscular flesh with potash, consists principally of car- bonate of potassa, and is but slightly poisonous. (Orfila.) A solution of cyanide of potassium, made with from one to four grains to the fluidounce of water, has been recommended in neuralgic and other local pains, applied by means of pieces of linen. Mr. Guthrie found that a solution of from three to six grains to the fluidounce of distilled water, formed an admirable remedy, applied by drops every other day, for removing the olive-coloured stains of the conjunctiva caused by nitrate of silver. B. POTASSII IODIDUM. U.S.,Br. Iodide of Potassium. “Take of Potassa six troyounces; Iodine, in fine powder, sixteen troy- ounces:, or a sufficient quantity; Charcoal, in fine powder, two troyounces; Dis- tilled Water a sufficient quantity. To the Potassa, dissolved in three pints of Distilled Water, boiling hot, gradually add the Iodine, stirring after each addition until the solution becomes colourless, and continue the additions until the liquid remains slightly coloured from excess of Iodine. Evaporate the solution to dry- ness, stirring in the Charcoal towards the close of the operation, so that it may be intimately mixed with the dried salt. Rub this to powder, and heat it to dul. redness in an iron crucible, maintaining that temperature for fifteen minutes ; then, after it has cooled, dissolve out the saline matter with Distilled Water, filter the PART II. Potassa. 1297 solution, evaporate, and set it aside to crystallize. An additional quantity of crystals may be obtained from the mother-water by evaporating and crystalliz- ing as before.” U. S. “ Take of Solution of Potash one gallon [Imperial measure] ; Iodine, in powder, twenty-nine ounces [avoirdupois], or a sufficiency; Wood Charcoal, in fine powder, three ounces [avoird.]; Boiling Distilled Water a sufficiency. Put the Solution of Potash into a glass or porcelain vessel, and add the Iodine in small quantities at a time with constant agitation, until the solution acquires a permanent brown tint. Evaporate the whole to dryness in a porcelain dish, pulverize the residue, and mix this intimately with the Charcoal. Throw the mixture, in small quantities at a time, into a red-hot iron crucible, and, when the whole has been brought to a state of fusion, remove the crucible from the fire and pour out its contents. When the fused mass has cooled, dissolve it in two pints [Imp. meas.] of boiling Distilled Water, filter through paper, wash the filter with a little boiling Distilled WTater, unite the liquids, and evaporate the whole till a film forms on the surface. Set it aside to cool and crystallize. Drain the crystals, and dry them quickly with a gentle heat. More crystals may be obtained by evaporating the mother-liquor and cooling. The salt should be kept in a stoppered bottle.” Br. In these processes, which are essentially the same, an aqueous solution of potassa is treated with iodine in slight excess. The result of thus saturating potassa with iodine is the formation of two salts, iodide of potassium and iodate of potassa, Six eqs. of iodine react with six of potassa, and there are formed five eqs. of iodide of potassium, and one of iodate of potassa (6KO and 61 = 5KI and KO,IOa). By evaporating the solution to dryness the mixed salts are ob- tained ; and, if the dry mass be exposed to a red heat, the iodate will be con- verted into iodide of potassium, thus removing this impurity from the iodide. In the formula the mixed salts, towards the close of their evaporation to dry- ness, are directed to be mixed with powdered charcoal, according to the plan of Mr. Scanlan, which facilitates the deoxidation of the iodate. This being accom- plished by a dull red heat, the iodide of potassium is dissolved out of the mass, and the solution set aside to crystallize. In the late Ed. and Dub. processes the first step was to form iodide of iron in solution, precisely as is done in the formula for that compound; and the second to decompose it by carbonate of potassa, which gave rise to iodide of potassium in solution, and a precipitate of carbonate of protoxide of iron. The solution of iodide of potassium was separated by filtration and washing from the precipitated carbonate, and evaporated to dryness. The dry salt was then freed from iron and other impurities by solution in boiling water or alcohol, filtration, and crys- tallization. Messrs. T. and H. Smith, of Edinburgh, instead of washing the pre- cipitate, prefer the plan of pressing it strongly in a cloth, in order to extract the remains of the solution. The mass left is broken up in a portion of distilled water equal to about two-thirds of the weight of the iodine employed, and pressed a second time. Proceeding thus, less water is used, and less evaporation is neces- sary. The solution obtained by them is evaporated to dryness, and the dry salt is carefully fused in an iron pot, in order to free it from colour. It is then dis- solved, and the solution, by filtration, concentration, and cooling, furnishes a perfectly pure iodide nearly to the last.* * For formulas by Prof. Mayer, of New York, for the preparation of the iodides and bromides, based on the reaction between iodine or bromine on the one hand, and iron and bicarbonate of potassa or the carbonate of soda, lithium, or lime, according to the parti- cular iodide wanted, on the other, see the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (July, 1862, p. 292). An- other process of Liebig, as detailed by Mr. Squire, will be found in the same journal for Sept. 1862 (p. 437). To 1 part of phosphorus covered with 40 parts of water, 20 parts of odine are gradually added; the solution of phosphoric and hydriodic acids thus obtained 1298 Potassa. PART II. Proper hr, a, dc. Iodide of potassium, sometimes incorrectly called hydrio- date of potassa, is in opaque, white or transparent crystals, permanent in a dry air, slightly deliquescent in a moist one, and having a sharp saline taste. It does not change the colour of litmus, and has little or no effect on turmeric. According to the Messrs. Smith, of Edinburgh, it is not at all deliquescent when perfectly pure. It generally crystallizes in cubes. It is soluble in about two- thirds of its weight of cold water, and in from six to eight parts of rectified spirit. If solution of iodide of potassium be mixed with solutiou of starch, and a minute quantity of solution of chlorine be added, a blue colour will be pro- duced ; the chlorine combining with the potassium and thus liberating the iodine which forms a blue compound with starch. Its solution is decomposed by the addition of a few drops of sulphuric acid, hydriodic acid being generated, which speedily undergoes decomposition, with evolution of iodine ; and, if starch be added after the lapse of a few minutes, a blue colour is produced. The starch test will not give the characteristic blue colour immediately, if added simulta- neously with the acid, unless the iodide of potassium contains iodate of potassa, which impurity causes an immediate liberation of iodine. The blue colour being produced by the starch and acid, if simultaneously added, is, therefore, a sign of impurity. A very delicate test of iodide of potassium, and other soluble iodides, is that of M. Grange. It consists in pouring a little of the liquid to be examined into a test tube, adding a few drops of solution of starch, and passing through the mixture a few bubbles of fuming nitrous acid. The liquid immedi- ately assumes a pale-rose colour, inclining to violet, when containing 1-200,000th of its weight of the iodide, and a bright-blue colour, if 1-100,000th is present. (See page 411.) “ When tartaric acid is freely added to a strong solution of the iodide, it occasions a white crystalline precipitate; and the supernatant liquid, if mixed with starch, becomes first purple, and finally blue. Bichloride of pla- tinum colours its solution reddish-brown, without causing a precipitate ; chloride of barium but slightly affects it; and sulphate of iron occasions no change.” (U. S.) The non-action of the last test shows the absence of carbonate of potassa. The aqueous solution is capable of taking up a large quantity of iodine, forming a liquid of a deep-brown colour. Exposed to a dull red heat iodide of potassium fuses, and on cooling con- cretes into a crystalline pearly mass, without loss of weight; but at a full red heat it is slowly volatilized without decomposition. The most usual impurities contained in this salt are the chlorides of potassium and sodium, bromide of potassium, and carbonate and iodate of potassa. The presence of a chloride may be determined by nitrate of silver. This test will throw down nothing from the pure salt but iodide of silver, which is scarcely soluble in ammonia; while chloride of silver is readily soluble in it. If then a solution of the iodide be precipitated by an excess of nitrate of silver, and agitated with ammonia, the latter will dissolve any chloride which may have been thrown down, and will yield it again as a white precipitate on being saturated with nitric acid. If, on the other hand, the iodide of potassium be pure, the ammonia will take up only a minute quantity of iodide of silver, and the addition of nitric acid will scarcely disturb the transparency of the solution. The iodide of silver precipitated from 10 grains of iodide of potassium weighs, when washed and dried, 14T grains. is poured off, and milk of lime added in slight excess; the whole is placed upon a filter, arid the precipitate, consisting of phosphate of lime, is pressed and washed; the filtrate, containing only iodide of calcium, is boiled down, with 12 parts of powdered sulphate of potassa, to about one-half; the whole, after standing six hours, is filtered, and the pre- cipitate pressed as before; a little pure carbonate of potassa is added to the filtrate to re- move every trace of lime; and the filtered solution, containing only iodide of potassium, yields that salt in crystals by concentration. By slight modifications of the process, the iodides of sodium, lithium, and various other metals may be obtained.—-Note to *Jie twelfth edition. Potassa. 1299 PART II. When acetate of lead is added to a solution of iodide of potassium, a yellow precipitate of iodide of lead is thrown down, soluble in boiling water. The low price of bromide of potassium, compared with that of the iodide, has caused the former to be used to adulterate the latter. When bromide of potassium is sola for the iodide, the fraud may be detected by the fact that the addition of sul- phuric acid produces copious reddish fumes, instead of the purple ones, arising from the iodide. In order to detect bromine, M. Personne first precipitates from an aqueous solution of the suspected iodide, the whole of the iodine as protiodide of copper, by successively adding, in excess, a solution of sulphate of copper, and aqueous sulphurous acid; and then treats the filtered liquid with ether and chlorine water, the whole being shaken together and left at rest. If bromine be present, the ether which rises to the surface will be tinged of a reddish-yellow colour. Carbonate of potassa may be discovered by lime-water, which causes a milkiness (carbonate of lime), and by tincture of iodine, the colour of which is destroyed. The Br. Pharmacopoeia admits a slight degree of this impurity, directing that lime-water should only faintly precipitate the solution. The iodate may be detected by adding a solution of tartaric acid to a solution of the sus- pected iodide. Bitartrate of potassa will be precipitated, and, if the iodide be pure, a yellow colour is soon developed by the action of the air on the liberated hydriodic acid; but, if any iodate be present, the test will give rise to both iodic and hydriodic acids, which, by their mutual action, will instantly develope iodine. Mr. William Copney has pointed out an excellent test for detecting carbonate and iodate of potassa, in the use of protiodide of iron, in the form of syrup of iodide of iron, recently prepared. (See Syrupus Ferri Iodidi.) A drop of the syrup is added to a solution of the suspected iodide of potassium. A bluish pre- cipitate indicates the carbonate; a red one, the iodate; and a blue precipitate, followed by a red one, both impurities. Carbonate of potassa is generally pre- sent in the proportion of from I, to 10 per cent. Dr. Christison has detected 74A per cent., and Dr. Pereira as high as 77 per cent. An adulteration by the car- bonate under 10 per cent, does not alter the crystalline appearance of the iodide, but gives it an increased tendency to deliquesce. When it is greater it renders the salt granular and highly deliquescent. As iodide of potassium is soluble in rectified spirit, anything left undissolved by that menstruum is impurity. The amount of impurity in this salt, without ascertaining its nature, may be deter- mined by the method of Marozeau, wilich consists in adding a solution of cor- rosive sublimate to one of the iodide to be examined, the salts being taken in the proportion of four eqs. of thejodide to one of the bichloride. If the iodide be pure, its excess will be just competent to redissolve all the red iodide of uler- cury formed by the addition of the corrosive sublimate solution. If impure, a reddish colour from undissolved red iodide will appear before the whole of the latter solution is added. Accordingly, if a solution of one eq. of corrosive sub- limate be gradually added to a solution of four eqs. of the iodide, until the red- dish colour ceases to disappear upon stirring, the proportion expended will represent the pure iodide, and that unexpended, the impurity in the specimen examined. (See the paper of Mr. J. M. Maisch, in the Am. Journ. of P harm , xxvi. 293.) Iodide of potassium consists of one eq. of iodine 126 3, and one of potassium 39’2=165'5. It contains no water of crystallization. Prof. Procter has given a paper on the incompatibles of iodide of potassium in relation to the mercurial preparations. He finds it incompatible with calomel, the black and red oxides of mercury, turpeth mineral, white precipitate, blue mass, and metallic mercury. These experiments serve to confirm the observa- tion of M. Melsens, that iodide of potassium, given in connection with the in- soluble preparations of mercury, renders them soluble and much more active. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 222.) With nitrous ether iodide of potas- sium reacts, yielding, among other products, hydriodic ether and a little ordinary 1300 Potassa. PART ir. ether. (Juncadella, Comptes Rendus, Fev. 1859, p. 345 ) At ordinary tempera- tures iodide of potassium is slowly decomposed, with evolution of iodine, by ni- trate of ammonia and boracic acid ; and, at high temperatures, in a glass test tube, with escape of violet vapours, not only by the two substances just named, but also by sulphate, oxalate, carbonate, and muriate of ammonia, sulphate, phos- phate, nitrate, and borate of soda, sulphates of potassa and magnesia, nitrate of lime, chlorides of sodium, potassium, and calcium, and silicic acid. (Ubaldini, Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1859, p. 292.) Medical Properties, &c. The general therapeutic properties of the prepara- tions of iodine, of which iodide of potassium is the most important, have been given under the head of iodine. By most practitioners the preparation under notice is preferred for producing the constitutional effects of iodine. It certainly produces very marked effects on the secretions, which it uniformly increases, and into which it readily passes. It has a tendency to irritate the mucous membrane of the air-passages, as shown by its sometimes occasioning an affection like col i in the head. When long continued in large doses, it occasionally produces a tender, enlarged, lobulated, and fissured tongue, constituting a true chronic glos- sitis. Mr. Langston Parker, of England, has reported several cases of this kind, in which the iodide had been taken for years. Its obvious effects on the system are very variable, arising probably either from peculiarities of constitution, or from the unequal quality of the medicine itself. Thus it produces nausea, pain in the stomach, and diarrhoea, in moderate doses, in some cases; and is borne in large doses without inconvenience in others. It generally increases the appetite and flesh. The general character of its action is to remove abnormal tissue, eliminating the material for the most part by the channel of the kidneys. There are but few diseases in which it has not been tried. Its use in scrofulous affec- tions, combined with iodine, has been explained, under the head of iodine. It has been recommended by M. Oke in chorea, after the preparations of iron have failed; by M. Gendrin, Dr. Clendenning, and Mr. Spencer Wells in gout; by M. Arrigan in albuminuria; by Mr. Satikey in ague, given in large doses; and by MM. Demarquay and Gustin in stomatitis. The latter writers think it more effi- cacious in this disease than chlorate of potassa. Dr. Williams, of London, considers it applicable to the treatment of various forms of secondary syphilis. He used it with success, in a majority of cases, in removing hard periosteal nodes, and found it beneficial in the treatment of tubercular forms of venereal eruptions. It is also considered as one of the best alterative remedies in mercurio-syphilitic sorgthroat. Rieord bears testimony to its valuable powers in the treatment of secondary syphilis. Dr. Handheld Jones found it particularly efficacious in that form of rheumatism characterized by wan- dering pains in the bones. According to the clinical observations of Dr. W. R. Basham, iodide of potassium is well suited to the treatment of chronic periosteal rheumatism in subjects who have previously taken mercury to salivation; while it is not applicable to the disease when occurring in patients who have not un- dergone a mercurial course, but have suffered from syphilis, which has been ne- glected, or treated only locally. In the latter cases lie conceives that corrosive sublimate and sarsaparilla are the proper remedies. It is probably useful in the former cases on the principle of eliminating mercury from the system, agreeably to the views of M. Melsens, given below. In 1843 MM. Gnillot and Melsens gave iodide of potassium with advantage, in doses of from a drachm to a drachm and a half daily, in mercurial tremors and lead poisoning. In a memoir pub- lished in 1849, M. Melsens gives a full account of his experiments with it as a remedy for the affections caused by mercury and lead. He effected a number of cures of mercurial tremors and lead palsy ; and, during the progress of the cure, these metals were found in the urine. The manner in which the remedy acts, ac- cording to M. Melsens, is by rendering the poisonous metal, which had becna* PART ir. Potassa. fixed in the tissues, soluble, first converting it into an iodide, and then dissolving the iodide formed. This view is supported by the fact that all the compounds o* mercury and lead are soluble in iodide of potassium.* The views and results of M. Melsens have been confirmed by therapeutic trials in lead poisoning by M. Malherbe, of Nantes, and by Drs. Parke and Sieveking, of London. An important fact observed by M. Melsens was that iodide of po- tassium, given at the same time with certain compounds of mercury, rendered them more active; and, when given after them, developed an activity not pre- viously manifested, and sometimes to such an extent as to occasion serious acci- dents. This fact he explained by referring it to the power of the iodide to render the mercurial compounds soluble, in which state only are they capable of being eliminated with the urine. During the use of iodide of potassium, ptyalism sometimes occurs. This has been usually considered a primary effect of the remedy; but the light shed on the subject by M. Melsens leads to the belief, that it may be a secondary effect, resulting from the liberation from the tissues of mercury previously taken, which is thereby enabled, by becoming soluble, to produce its constitutional effects. Dr. Budd relates several cases, in which mer- curial ptyalism came on, during the use of iodide of potassium, in persons who had not taken mercury for weeks or months before. It is probable that, in these cases, the mercury had been long lying fixed in the system, and was rendered soluble and active by the iodide. The late Dr. Isaac Parrish, of this city, employed iodide of potassium suc- cessfully in strumous inflammation of the eye, given in the compound syrup of sarsaparilla. It appeared promptly to relieve the severe neuralgic, circumorbital pain. Dr. Griscom, also of this city, cured a case of supposed membranous croup in a child by the use of this remedy, after leeches, sinapisms, warm baths, and eme- tics had failed. ( Trans, of the Coll, of Phys. of Philad., N. S., ii. 164.) Dr. De Renzy, of Carnew, Ireland, found it efficacious in haemoptysis. Dr. G. L. Upshur, of Virginia, recommends its use in the suppurative stage of pneumonia. The dose of iodide of potassium is from two to ten grains or more, three times a day, given in dilute solution. Ricord rarely exceeded three scruples a day. Some practitioners have employed enormous doses, such as two, four, and even six drachms daily without inconvenience. Dr. Buchanan, of Glasgow, as- sures us that he has given the pure salt in doses of half an ounce, without any precaution being observed by the patient, except to drink freely of diluents. Notwithstanding this testimony, Dr. Lawrie, of the same city, reports several cases of dryness and irritation of the throat, ending in severe spasmodic croup, and one case of death following the sudden occurrence of dyspnoea, caused by the use of this iodide, even when given in small doses. According to Dr. Gull, of London, the efficiency of the remedy is much increased by uniting it with carbonate of ammonia, in the proportion of two or three grains of the iodide to four or five of the carbonate. Iodide of potassium passes quickly into the urine, in which it may be detected by first adding to the cold secretion a portion of starch, and then a few drops of nitric acid, when a blue colour will be produced. It has been detected in six minutes after having been swallowed. According to Schottin it passes slowly into the sweat. Taken in half-drachm doses daily, it did not appear in that secretion until five days had elapsed. According to Ricord, this salt produces in some constitutions peculiar effects ; such as eruptions of the skin, excessive diuresis, vascular injection of the con- junctiva and tumefaction of the eyelids, cerebral excitement like that produced by alcoholic drinks, and discharges from the urethra and vagina, resembling * See the Memoir of M. Melsens, translated by Dr. Budd, of Bristol, England, in the Brit, and For. Medico-Chir. Review, Am. ed., for Jan. 1853, p. 157; also a paper by Dr. J. W Corson, in the A. Y. Journ. of Med. for Sept. 1853. 1302 Potassa. PART II. blennorrhoea. Eruptions of the skin were also observed by Dr. A. Yan Buren, as a very common effect of large and long-continued doses of iodide of potas- sium, given to patients in the Bellevue Hospital, N. Y. Dr. John O’Rielly, of New York, reports several cases, in which, after the use of this iodide, spots like purpura were produced, invading first the face, and then the trunk and ex- tremities. These became bullae, sometimes an inch in diameter, filled with a purple liquid, and finally sphacelated spots ending in ulcers. Great constitutional disturbance coexisted, with swollen tongue, fetor, and salivation. The remedies found successful were nutritious diet, tonics, and stimulants. From the facts above mentioned, showing the power of iodide of potassium to render active mercury that is latent in the system, it is not improbable that the cases of Dr. O’Rielly were mercurial salivation, modified by a cachectic condition of the system, which caused the coincident eruption. Iodide of potassium is employed as an external application in the form of ointment, either alone or mixed with iodine. (See Unguentum Polassii Iodidi and Unguentum. lodinii Compositum.) Off. Prep. Hydrargyri Iodidum Rubrum; Linimentum Iodi, P>r.; Liquor lodinii Compositus, U. S.; Plumbi Iodidum, U. S.; Tinctura Iodi, Pr.; Tinctura lodinii Composita, U. S.; Unguentum Iodi Compositum, Br.; Unguentum lodinii, U. S.; Unguentum lodinii Compositum, U. S.; Unguentum Potassii Iodidi. B. POTASSII SULPIIURETUM. U. S. Potassa Sulpiiurata. Br. Sul- phuret of Potassium. Sulphurated Potassa. Liver of Sulphur. “Take of Sublimed Sulphur a troyounce; Carbonate of Potassa two troy- ounces. With the Sulphur rub the Carbonate, previously dried, and heat the mixture gradually in a covered crucible until it ceases to swell, and is completely melted. Then pour out the liquid on a marble slab, and, when the mass is cold, break it into pieces, and keep these in a well-stopped bottle of green glass.” U. S. “Take of Carbonate of Potash, in powder, ten ounces; Sublimed Sulphur four ounces and a half. Mix the Carbonate of Potash and the Sulphur in a warm mortar, and, having introduced them into a Cornish or Hessian crucible, let this be heated, first gradually, until effervescence has ceased, and finally to deep redness, so as to produce perfect fusion. Let the liquid contents of the crucible be then poured out on a clean flagstone, and covered quickly with an inverted porcelain basin, so as to exclude the air as completely as possible, while solidification is taking place. The solid product thus obtained should, when cold, be broken into fragments, and immediately enclosed in a green-glass bottle, furnished with an air-tight stopper.” Br. These processes are essentially the same, except that a greater heat is used in the Br. process, which somewhat modifies the result. When carbonate of po- tassa is melted with half its weight of sulphur, as in the U. S. process, the car- bonic acid is expelled. The explanation heretofore given is as follows. Four eqs. of potassa and ten of sulphur may be supposed to react on each other. Three eqs. of potassa are decomposed into three eqs. of potassium and three of oxygen. The three eqs. of potassium unite with nine eqs. of sulphur to form three eqs. of tersulphuret of potassium. The three eqs. of oxygen, by uniting with the remaining eq. of sulphur, form one eq. of sulphuric acid, which combines with the undecomposed eq. of potassa to form sulphate of potassa. Thus, the preparation may be considered to be a mixture of tersulphuret of potassium with sulphate of potassa; and the French Codex sulphuret, made from the same proportion of carbonate and sulphur, is stated in that work to have the same composition. The fact is, however, that the composition varies with the heat employed. If the heat do not exceed 365° F., the resulting preparation will con- tain hyposulphite of potassa; if above 572° F., sulphate of potassa. ( and Gelis.) The U. S. preparation, therefore, which is made at the temperature of fusion, probably contains hyposulphite of potassa, and may be represented ?ART II. Potassa. 1303 by the formula 2KS3-fKO,S2Oi; three eqs. of C02 escaping: while the British, being prepared at a red heat, contains sulphate of potassa, with the formula 3KS3-fK0,S03; four eqs. of C02 escaping. The Pharmacopoeias use the carbonate of potassa from pearlash; but in the process of M. Henry, which is stated to be the best yet devised, the pure carbon- ate of potassa is employed. His formula is as follows. Mix two parts of real salt of tartar with one of roll sulphur reduced to powder, and put the mixture into flat-bottomed matrasses, which should be only two-thirds filled. These are placed on a sand-bath, and the fire is applied so as, at first, to produce only a gentle heat, which is afterwards increased. Care must be taken that the necks of the matrasses do not become obstructed. The heat is continued, until the matter is brought to the state of tranquil fusion, when it is allowed to cool. The mass obtained, which is compact, smooth, and of a fine yellow colour, is broken into pieces, and preserved in well-stopped bottles. Properties, &c. Sulphuret of potassium, when properly prepared, is a hard, brittle substance, having a nauseous, alkaline, and bitter taste. Its colour is liver-brown, and hence its name of hepar sulphuris or liver of sulphur. The colour of the surface of a fresh fracture is brownish-yellow. It is inodorous when dry, but emits a slightly fetid smell when moist, owing to the extrication of a little sulphuretted hydrogen gas. It is soluble in water, forming an orange-yfel- low liquid, and exhaling the smell of sulphuretted hydrogen. By exposure to the air it attracts oxygen, and the sulphuret of potassium is gradually changed into sulphate of potassa, when the preparation becomes inodorous, and white on the surface. The solution is decomposed by the mineral acids, which extricate sulphuretted hydrogen, and precipitate the excess of sulphur. It is also incom- patible with solutions of most of the metals, which are precipitated as sulphurets. When boiled with an excess of muriatic acid and filtered, it gives a yellow pre- cipitate with bichloride of platinum, and a white one with chloride of barium. The preparation of the Br. Pharmacopoeia yields about three-fourths of its weight to alcohol; the portion dissolved being sulphuret of potassium, and the undissolved portion sulphate of potassa. B. Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphuret of potassium is a local irritant, and, in small and repeated doses, is said to increase the frequency of the pulse, heat of the skin, and different secretions, especially the mucous. Occasionally it vomits and purges. It acts, moreover, as an antacid, and produces the alterative effects of sulphur. By some it is maintained to be sedative, and directly to reduce the action of the heart. It probably does so, when taken in considerable quantities, by the development of sulphuretted hydrogen. In overdoses it acts, according to Orfila, as a violent poison, corroding the stomach, and depressing the powers of the nervous system. Acetate of lead or acetate of zinc may be used as an antidote; but the latter is preferable, as less likely to act injuriously in an over- dose, and having besides emetic properties. The complaints in which it has been most advantageously employed are chronic rheumatism and gout, and various cutaneous affections. It has been given also in painters’ colic, asthma, and chronic catarrh, and acquired a short-lived reputation as a remedy in croup, after the publication of the essay in which the prize offered by Napoleon for the best dissertation on that disease was awarded. It is said, in some cases of cancer, to have assisted the palliative operation of hemlock. In consequence of forming insoluble sulphurets with the metallic salts, it has been proposed as an antidote for some mineral poisons; but Orfila has shown that it does not prevent their effects. Dissolved in water it has proved efficacious as an external applica- tion in cutaneous diseases, and in scabies is an almost certain remedy. It may ne used for this purpose in the form of lotion, bath, or ointment. For a lotion it may be dissolved in water in the proportion of from fifteen to thirty grains to the fluidounce, and for a bath the same quantity or rather more may be added 1304 Potass a.—Pulveres. PART n. to a gallon of water. A very small proportion of muriatic or sulphuric acid may in either case be added to the solution. The ointment is made by mixing half a drachm of the sulphuret with an ounce of lard. The dose of sulphuret of potas- sium is from two to ten grains, repeated several times a day, and given in pill with liquorice, or in solution with syrup. In infantile cases of croup, from one to four grains were given every three or four hours. W PULVERES. Powders. The form of powder is convenient for the exhibition of substances which are not given in very large doses, are not very disagreeable to the taste, have no cor- rosive property, and do not deliquesce rapidly on exposure. As the effect of pulverization is to expose a more extended surface to the action of the air, care should be taken to keep substances which are liable to be injured by such ex- posure in closely-stopped bottles. In many instances it is also important to ex- clude the light, which exercises a deleterious influence over numerous medicines when minutely divided. This may be done by coating the bottles with black varnish. In relation to substances most liable to injury from these causes, the best plan is to powder them in small quantities as wanted for use.* Powders may be divided into the simple, consisting of a single substance, and the compound, of two or more mixed together. The latter only are embraced under the present head. In the preparation of the compound powders, the in- gredients, if of different degrees of cohesion or solidity, should be pulverized separately and then mixed. An exception, however, is when one substance is employed to facilitate by its hardness the minute division of another, as in the powder of ipecacuanha and opium. Deliquescent substances, and those con- taining fixed oil in large proportion, should not enter into the composition of powders intended to be kept; the former because they render the preparation damp and liable to spoil; the latter, because they are apt to become rancid, and impart an unpleasant odour and taste. When deliquescent substances are ex- temporaneously prescribed, the apothecary should enclose them before delivery in tin foil or other impervious covering; and the same remark is applicable to volatile powders, as carbonate of ammonia and camphor. The lighter powders may in general be administered in water or other thin liquid; the heavier, such as those of metallic substances, require a more con- sistent vehicle, as syrup, molasses, honey, or one of the confections. Resinous powders, if given in water, require the intervention of mucilage or sugar. The whole substance in the mortar should not be beaten till completely pul- * In contradiction to what has been stated in the text in relation to keeping powders in well-stopped bottles, it is asserted by M. HiAouard, a French pharmaceutist, that this plan, instead of preserving powders, tends in fact to their more speedy and certain change. What- ever pains may be taken in drying medicines previously to powdering them,-most of them during the process attract moisture, so as to put themselves in this respect in equilibrium with the surrounding air; and, if enclosed in this state in air-tight vessels, they are ex- posed to injurious influence from their own absorbed water, which, vaporized in hot wea- ther, is in the colder seasons condensed on the inner surface of the vessel, and determines a movement of fermentation; and even cryptogamic growths appear. The best method of preservation, the author thinks, is to enclose the powders in strong paper bags of a blue or gray colour, so as to exclude the light, while the air has exit or entrance through the porous walls. But whatever may be our theoretical opinions on the point, M. H6rouard asserts the fact, as the result of observation, that powders keep best in this way. They may be more likely to cake or harden into aggregate masses; but this disadvantage is easily counteracted by a new pulverization when required. There is probably much truth in these statements; and the inference may at least be drawn, that, where powders are kept in air-tight bottles, they should be thoroughly dried, after pulverization, before being en- closed. (Journ. de Phartn., Aout, 18G2, p. 98.)—Note to the twelfth edition. FART II. Pulveres. verized ; as the portion already powdered interferes with the action of the pestle upon the remainder, while the finer matter is apt to be dissipated ; so that there is a loss both of time and material. The proper plan is to sift off the fine pow der after a short trituration, then to return the coarser parts to the mortar, a’lior to repeat several times this alternate pulverization and sifting, until the process is completed. Care should be taken to mix thoroughly the several portions

-t indicates inversely 1322 Quinia. PART TI. College gave tl»e following mode of testing the purity of sulphate of quinia. “A solution of ten grains in a fluidounce of distilled water and two or three drops of sulphuric acid, if decomposed by a solution of half an ounce of carbonate of soda in two waters ftwice its weight of water], and heated till the precipitate shrinks and fuses, yields on cooling a solid mass, which when dry weighs 74 grains, and in powder dissolves entirely in solution of oxalic acid.” According to the London College, “100 grains dissolved in diluted hydrochloric acid, yield, on the addition of chloride of barium, 26 6 grains of sulphate of baryta, dried at a red heat.” Though sulphate of quinia, as prepared for use, frequently contains a portion of one or more of the recently discovered cinchona alkaloids, the salt is probably not less efficacious on that account; as these alkaloids have been shown to possess identical therapeutical properties with those of quinia, and to be little inferior in strength, if at all, in relation to most of them. Medical Properties and Uses. Sulphate of quinia produces upon the system, so far as we are enabled to judge by observation, the same effects as Peruvian bark, without being so apt to nauseate and oppress the stomach. (See Cinchona.) Its effects upon the brain are even more striking than those of cinchona, proba- bly because it is given in larger proportional doses. Even in ordinary doses, it often produces considerable cerebral disturbance, evinced by a feeling of tight- ness or distension in the head, ringing, buzzing, or roaring in the ears, hardness of hearing, &c. Some individuals are more liable to these effects than others, and in some even small doses produce them. A certain degree of this observable action on the brain is rather desirable than otherwise, as an evidence that the medicine is affecting the system. In very large quantities, as from a scruple to a drachm or more, besides the phenomena mentioned, it has been observed to occa- sion severe headache, vertigo, deafness, diminution or loss of sight, dilated and immovable pupil, loss of speech, general tremblings, intoxication or delirium, coma, and great prostration. In some instances the pulse has been remarkably diminished in frequency, down to fifty or even less in the minute. In an instance recorded by Giaeomini, in which a man took by mistake about three drachms, the patient became insensible, and some hours afterwards was found by the physician in a state of general prostration, from which he recovered under the use of laudanum and aromatic waters. (Ann. de Therap., A. D. 1843, p. 176.) Besides its effects on the brain, sulphate of quinia sometimes occasions great gastric and iutestinal irritation, marked by oppression of stomach, nausea, ab- dominal pains, vomiting, and purging. In general these effects of excessive doses gradually pass off, although partial deafness often continues for several days, and sometimes much longer. It is even said that permanent deafness has resulted. Though sulphate of quinia has been proved by the experiments of Dr. Baldwin, of Montgomery, Alabama, to be fatal to dogs, if prevented from vomiting by a ligature round the oesophagus, in quantities varying from fifteen or twenty grains to two drachms, with the symptoms of narcotic poisoning; yet we have seen no well authenticated case of death from its direct action on the perfectly healthy human subject. Given largely in disease, it has repeatedly caused fatal results, not so much however by its peculiar action, as by co-operat- ing with the disease in establishing intense local irritation or inflammation, espe- cially in the brain. Though capable, therefore, of doing mischief if improperly used, sulphate of quinia can scarcely be ranked among the poisons. From its occasional effect in diminishing the frequency of the pulse and the general strength, it has been supposed to be essentially sedative in large doses. Such an opinion, unless well founded, might lead to hazardous practice. The the solubility of the alkaloid. Quinidia requires from 10 to 11 times more of the ammoni- acal liquid than quinia, cinchonidia from 12 to 13 times more; while cinchonia is not dis- solved by a much larger proportion than is required by either of the others, and though, when mixed in very small proportion with quinia it is dissolved at first, yet it aftei >var'li separates on standing.—Note to the twelfth edition. PART II. Quinia. 1323 probability is that the apparently sedative effect upon the circulation arises from an overwhelming stimulant influence upon the cerebral centres, whereby the system is deprived of the support of these centres, and the heart’s action is depressed with other organic functions. Similar effects may be obtained from excessive doses of most of the cerebral stimulants. Examination of the brain in the-lower animals, after death from quinia, has shown great congestion of that organ and its membranes, and even meningitis. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xix. 197.) In the present state of our knowledge, therefore, it is safest to con* sider sulphate of quinia as a direct and powerful stimulant to the brain. It pro- bably operates through the circulation, as there is no doubt that it is absorbed, the alkaloid having been found unchanged in the urine. Sulphate of quinia may be substituted for cinchona in all diseases to which the latter is applicable; and, in the treatment of intermittents, has almost entirely superseded the bark. It has the advantage over that remedy, not only that it is more easily administered in large doses, and more readily retained by the stomach, but that, in cases which require an impression to be made through the rectum or the skin, it is much more effectual; because, from the smallness of its bulk, it is more readily retained in the former case, and more speedily absorbed in the lat- ter. Still we cannot be certain that there are not other active principles in bark besides the alkaloids, which are closely analogous in their effects, nor that the mode of combination in which these principles exist may not in some measure modify their therapeutic action. Until this question is solved, we may resort to the bark if the sulphate of quinia should not answer the ends in view; and in- stances have occurred, under our own notice, in which it has proved successful in intermittents after the salt had failed. Sulphate of quinia may be given in pill or solution, or suspended in water by the intervention of syrup and mucilage. The form of pill is usually preferred. (See Pilulse Quinise Sulphatis.) The solution may be readily effected by the addition of a little acid of almost any kind to the water. Eight grains of the sulphate will dissolve in a fluidouuce of water, acidulated with about twelve minims of the diluted sulphuric acid, or aromatic sulphuric acid of the Pharma- copoeias ; and this is the most eligible mode of exhibiting the medicine in the liquid form. The addition of a small proportion of sulphate of morphia or of laudanum will often be found advantageous, when the stomach is disposed to be sickened, or the bowels to be disturbed by the quinia. Mr. J. S. Blockey ascer- tained that glycerin will, if gently heated, dissolve eight grains of the sulphate in each fluidrachm, and may therefore be conveniently used as a vehicle. (Lond. Chemist, Sept. 1857.) Dr. R. H. Thomas, of Baltimore, found that one part of tannic acid will deprive five parts of sulphate of quinia of bitterness, without impairing its medicinal efficacy. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xix. 541.) It is obvious that tannate of quinia is thus formed; and as this, though insoluble in water, is readily dissolved in dilute acids, and consequently in the gastric liquor when acid, there can be no doubt that it will generally prove efficacious. It may, however, happen that the stomach maybe quite free from acid, and that the operation of this salt may prove less certain than that of the sulphate ; and such is asserted to have been the case in some instances; but a little lemonade taken after the medicine would probably obviate the difficulty. Twelve grains of sulphate of quinia are equivalent to about an ounce of good bark. The dose varies exceedingly, according to the circumstances of the patient, and the object to be accomplished. As a tonic simply, a grain may be given three or four times a day, or more frequently in acute cases. In intermittents, from twelve to twenty-four grains should be given between the paroxysms, di- vided into smaller or larger doses according to the condition of the stomach, or he length of the intermission. From one to four grains may be given at once, and some even advise the whole amount. In malignant intermittents and remit- 1324 Quinia. PART II. tents, the quantity may be increased to thirty grains or even a drachm between the paroxysms. M. Maillot gave one hundred and twenty-eight grains, in the course of a few hours, in a case of malignant fever occurring in Northern Africa, with the happiest results. The caution, however, is necessary, not to employ this heroic practice against easily conquerable diseases. Very large doses of the sulphate have recently been given in acute rheumatism, and with great asserted success; but the occurrence of at least one fatal case from inflammation of the brain should lead to some hesitation in this employment of the remedy. When the stomach will not retain the medicine, it may be administered with nearly as much efficacy by enema; from six to twelve grains, with two fluidounces of liquid starch, and from twenty to forty drops of laudanum, being injected into the rectum, in ordinary cases, every six hours. Should circumstances render this mode of application impracticable, an equal quantity, diluted with arrow- root or other mild powder, may be sprinkled, at the same intervals, upon a blis- tered surface denuded of the cuticle. The epigastrium, or the inside of the thighs and arms, would be the proper place for the blister. The sulphate has also been employed by friction in the form of ointment, in cases of malignant intermittent. The ointment should be made by incorporating a saturated alcoholic solution of the salt with lard, and should be applied to the inside of the thighs and arms. It is said that quinia is more readily absorbed when united with a fatty acid. This union may be effected by mixing solutions of soap and of a salt of quinia. The quinia soap is precipitated. Purified oleic acid will dissolve one-tenth of its weight of sulphate of quinia, if aided by a gentle heat; and this solution may be used as a liniment. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 13.) Solutions of sulphate of quinia have been advantageously employed as local applications to indolent ulcers, and chronic mucous inflammations. (Wedderburn and Fearn, New Orleans Med. and Surg. Journ., iii. 161 and 341.) Off. Prep. Ferri et Quinise Citras ; Pilulae Quinise Sulphatis, U. S.; Quinite Valerianas, U. S.; Tinctura Quinise Composita, Br. W. QUINI.ZE VALERIANAS. U. S. Valerianate of Quinia. “Take of Valerianic Acid half a troyounce; Sulphate of Quinia two troy- ounces; Diluted Sulphuric Acid, Water of Ammonia, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Sulphate of Quinia in a pint of Water, with the aid of Diluted Sulphuric Acid ;. then add Water of Ammonia in slight excess, and wash the precipitated quinia with water until freed from sulphate of ammonia. Dis- solve the Valerianic Acid in five pints of Water, heated to 180°, add the quinia to the solution, and, when it is dissolved, set the whole aside for several days to crystallize. Decant the mother-water from the crystals, dry them on bibulous paper, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle. By evaporating the mother-water at a temperature not exceeding 120°, more crystals may be obtained.” U. S. In this process quinia is first obtained by decomposing sulphate of quinia, by means of ammonia, and then combined directly with valerianic acid, to form va- lerianate of quinia, which crystallizes from the solution when it cools, because much less soluble in cold than in hot water. By the late Dublin formula, which, with the salt itself, has been omitted in the British Pharmacopoeia, the valerian- ate was obtained by double decomposition between muriate of quinia and vale- rianate of soda, resulting in the production of chloride of sodium, which remained in solution, and valerianate of quinia, which crystallized. Valerianate of quinia is a colourless salt, crystallizing in rhomboidal plates. It has a bitter taste, and the strong, adhesive odour of valerianic acid, which is very repulsive, and quite distinct from that of oil of valerian. It is soluble in 110 parts of cold and 40 parts of boiling water, and is deposited from its warm solution in fine crystals on cooling. It is dissolved by 6 parts of cold, and by an equal weight of boiling alcohol, and is soluble also in ether. In boiling water it melts into oily globules, and undergoes decomposition, with the escape of vale- PART II. Resinse. 1325 rianic acid; and hence the direction in the formula not to exceed 120° in eva- porating the mother-water. Even at common temperatures it is probably under- going a constant, though slow loss of the acid, of which it smells so strongly. Exposed to a dry heat, it melts and gives off white vapours. It may be given in the dose of a grain or two repeated several times a day, in cases of debility at- tended with nervous disorder. A combination of Peruvian bark and valerian long been known as peculiarly efficacious in hemicrania. Perhaps the valerianate of quinia may be used advantageously in the same affection. W. RESINAE. Resins. The Resinse or Resins of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia constitute a peculiar class of preparations, made by exhausting the substances from which they are obtained by alcohol, and then precipitating the resinous matter from the tincture, by the addition of water, which abstracts the alcohol by its stronger affinity. It is ob- vious that the resins thus prepared are different substances from the alcoholic extracts, which contain all the ingredients of the medicine which alcohol is able ;o take from it. RESINA JALAPiE. U.S. Jalaps Resina. Br. Resin of Jalap. “Take of Jalap, in fine powder, sixteen troyounces; Alcohol, Water, each. a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Jalap with four ftuidounces of Alcohol, pack it firmly in a cylindrical percolator, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until four pints have passed, or until the filtered liquid ceases to occasion turbidness when dropped into water. Reduce the tincture to half a pint by distilling off the alcohol, mix the residue with four pints of Water, separate the precipitate formed, wash it thoroughly with Water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. “Take of Jalap, in coarse powder, eight ounces [avoirdupois]; Rectified Spirit, Distilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Macerate the Jalap with sixteen huidounces of the Spirit in a covered vessel, at a gentle heat, for twenty-four hours; then transfer to a percolator, and, when the tincture ceases to pass, pour into the percolator successive portions of Spirit until the Jalap is exhausted. Add to the tincture four fluidounces of the Water, and distil off the Spirit by a water bath. Remove the residue while hot to an open dish, and allow it to be- come cold. Pour off the supernatant fluid from the resin, wash this two or three times with hot water, and dry it on a porcelain plate by a stove or water bath.” Br. The two processes probably do not differ very materially in the result; though, if jalap yield anything to alcohol that is insoluble in water besides resin, it will be necessarily found in the British preparation, while that of the U. S. Pharma- copoeia consists of resin almost exclusively. The difference arises from the cir- cumstance that, in the Br. process, probably to enable the whole of the alcohol to be saved by distillation, the water for precipitation is added before the spirit is distilled off, while, in the U. S. process, it is not added until so much of the al- cohol has been distilled as to leave only enough to hold the extracted matters in solution. It is obvious, therefore, that the resin of the former contains everything insoluble in water that the alcohol had extracted; while that of the latter con- tains nothing which water was unable to precipitate from the half pint of con- centrated tincture. The U. S. resin is probably, therefore, a purer product than the British. The U. S. resin, though tolerably pure, and quite sufficiently so for practical purposes, is still coloured. To obtain it colourless, if this be desired, the pow- dered jalap should be mixed, before percolation, with an equal quantity of finely powdered, animal charcoal, and, previously to the introduction of this mixture into the percolator, half the quantity of animal charcoal, similarly powdered, Resinse. PART II. should bo packed in the bottom of the instrument. The colouring matter is thus Jeft behind; and the resulting tincture, treated as directed in the process, yields the resin as white as starch. Resin of jalap consists of two portions, one of which is hard and insoluble in ether, the other is soft and soluble in that menstruum; the former constituting about 70 percent. It is insoluble in oil of turpentine. {Squire.) For an account of its chemical properties the reader is referred to the article on jalap, in Part I. It was at one time supposed that the purgative properties of the resin re- sided chiefly if not exclusively in the hard resin; but experiments by Mr. John C. Long appear to prove that the soft is equally energetic. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 489.) Guaiac, rosin, and other resinous substances are said to be sometimes fraudu- lently added to the resin of jalap. Guaiac may be detected by the green colour it produces, when a few drops of solution of chloride of soda or of lime are added to an alcoholic solution of the suspected resin. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., x. 357.) According to G. A. Kaiser, jalap resin may be distinguished from all other resins by being gradually dissolved by concentrated sulphuric acid, and deposit- ing, after some hours, a brown soft viscid matter. {Chem. Gaz., Jan. 1845, from Liebig's Annalen.) A better test is probably that proposed by A. Buchner. When pure jalap resin is dissolved in an alkaline solution, it is not precipitated by the addition of sulphuric or muriatic acid, having been converted, through the agency of the alkali, into an acid soluble in water. All the adulterating resins yield precipitates under the same circumstances. The resins of scammony and of fusiform jalap act in this respect like the true jalap resin, but are distin- guishable by being wholly soluble in ether, which jalap resin is not. {Neues Re- pert, fur Pharm., No. 1, 1854.) It is now generally believed that the resin of jalap is its sole purgative prin- ciple, the gummy extractive being either simply diuretic or wholly inert. Never- theless, the extract of jalap probably better represents the whole virtues of the root, its specially hydragogue as well as simply purgative property; or at least contains the resin so involved with other ingredients, as in some measure to qua- lify its irritant and griping properties, and thus favourably modify its cathartic action. To obviate the occasional harshness of the resin, it has been advised to tri- turate it with loaf-sugar, sulphate of potassa, almond emulsion, or other substance calculated to separate its particles. The dose is from two to five grains. W. RESINA PODOPHYLLI. U. S. Podopiiylli Resina. Br. Resin of May-apple. Resin of Podophyllum. “Take of May-apple, in fine powder, sixteen troy ounces; Alcohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Moisten the May-apple with four fiuidounces of Alcohol, pack it firmly in a cylindrical percolator, and gradually pour Alcohol upon it until four pints have passed, or until the filtered liquid ceases to occa- sion turbidness when dropped into water. Reduce the tincture to half a pint by distilling off the alcohol, mix the residue with four pints of Water, separate the precipitate formed, wash it thoroughly with Water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. “ 'fake of Podophyllum, in coarse powder, one pound [avoirdupois] ; Recti- fied Spirit, three pints, or a sufficiency; Distilled Water, Hydrochloric Acid, each, a sufficiency. Exhaust the Podophyllum with the Spirit by percolation ; place the tincture in a still, and draw off the spirit. Acidulate the Water with one twenty-fourth of its bulk of Hydrochloric Acid, and slowly pour the liquid which remains after the distillation of the tincture into three times its volume of the acidulated water, constantly stirring. Allow the mixture to stand for twenty-four hours to deposit the resin. Wash the resin on a filter with Distilled Water, and dry it on a stove.” Br. There is a considerable difference between the preparations resulting from PART II. Resin se. 1327 these two processes The U. S. preparation is obtained simply by precipitating a concentrated tinciure of the root by water, and consists mainly of the pecu- liar resin of podophyllum; the British, by precipitating with water acidulated by muriatic acid, whereby berberina, an alkaloid recently found to exist in podo- phyllum, is thrown down in the state of an insoluble muriate. As berberina ex- ists in the may-apple, it is so combined as to be soluble both in alcohol and water, and is therefore contained in the concentrated tincture. But, having the remark- able property of forming an insoluble salt with muriatic acid, it is thrown down along with the resin; so that the resulting preparation is a mixture of the pro- per resin of podophyllum with this salt. Hence the British resin is of a yellow colour, given to it by the muriate of berberina, while the U. S. resin is drab- coloured. It follows that the British resin is a more exact representation of the virtues of the root than ours, while the latter is perhaps preferable simply as a purgative. Mr. Maisch has found some berberina in the resin precipitated by water from the concentrated tincture, which is removed by washing with hot water, and probably also by the thorough washing with cold water directed by the Pharmacopoeia. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1863, p. 303.) The percent- age of resin obtained from the root, as given by different operators, varies from 3d 2 to 5 25 per cent. Resin of podophyllum has a light-brown colour, an acrid bitter taste, and a slight odour of the root. It consists of two resins, one soluble both in ether and alcohol, the other in alcohol only. The resin extracted by ether constitutes, according to Mr. John W. Cadbury, 75 per cent, of the whole (Am. Journ. of Pharm,, July, 1858, p. 301), according to Mr. Harvey Allen, 80 per cent. (Ibid., May, 1859, p. 206). The officinal resin is soluble in alkaline solutions, from which it is precipitated by acids, in this respect differing strikingly from the resins of jalap and scammony. It is insoluble in oil of turpentine. The name of podophyllin, given to it by the practitioners calling themselves eclectics, who have long been in the habit of using this resin, is inappropriate, and should be abandoned. Resin of podophyllum is a powerful cathartic, occasionally producing some griping and nausea, but capable of being favourably modified by combination, and of being very usefully employed in connection with other cathartics, to give them increased energy. It is supposed by some to be specially cholagogue; but though, like all other active cathartics, it may occasionally produce bilious stools by emptying the gall-bladder, there is no sufficient proof that it increases especially the secretory function of the liver. There has been much difference of opinion as to the relative activity of the two resins composing it, some main- taining that both are active, others that the activity resides mainly, if not ex- clusively, in the resin soluble in ether. It is difficult to resist the evidence of the experiments of Mr. Cadbury, who states in the paper above referred to that, while half a grain of the ethereal resin acted energetically, and a cathartic ef- fect was produced by even one-fourth of a grain, the portion insoluble in that menstruum was given in the dose of one grain without any effect whatever. The dose of the officinal resin is from one-fourth of a grain to a grain. It should generally be given in combination. A small proportion of extract of belladonna or hyoscyamus is said much to mitigate its irritaut action. W. RESINA SCAMMONII. U. S. Scammonle Resina. Br. Resin of Scammony. “ Take of Scammony, in fine powder, six troyounces; Alcohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Digest the Scammony with successive portions of boiling Alcohol until exhausted. Mix the tinctures, and reduce the mixture to a syrupy consistence by distilling off the alcohol. Then add the residue to a pint of Wa- ter, separate the precipitate formed, wash it thoroughly with Water, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. 1328 Resinse.—Santoninum. PAKT II. “Take of Scammony Root, in coarse powder, eight ounces [avoirdupois']; Rectified Spirit, Bistilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Macerate the Scammony Root with sixteen flpidounces of the Spirit in a covered vessel, at a gentle heat, for twenty-four hours; then transfer to a percolator, and, when the tincture ceases to pass, pour into the percolator successive portions of Spirit until the root is exhausted. Add to the tincture four fluidounces of the Water, and distil off the Spirit by a water bath. Remove the residue while hot to an open dish, and allow it to become cbld. Pour off the supernatant fluid from the resin, wash this two or three times with hot water, and dry it on a porcelain plate by a stove or water bath.” Br. The U. S. and British resins, though procured, the former from the gum-resin, the latter from the root of the plant, are nearly identical in their effects. The ad- vantage of the preparation is that the resin is obtained free from the inert mat- ters with which it is so often associated in the scammony of commerce. When pure virgin scammony can be procured any preparation is unnecessary. Ob- tained according to the U. S. process, the resin is of a dirty greenish-brown colour, with a feeble odour and taste of scammony, and is very soluble in ether, alcohol, and boiling proof spirit. When purified with animal charcoal it has a pale brownish-yellow colour, and is without odour or taste; but retains its pur- gative property. The Br. resin is in brownish translucent pieces, with a resinous fracture, and of a sweetish, fragrant odour derived from the root, and wholly different from that of scammony. The resin of scammony is liable to adulteration. Jalap resin maybe detected by its partial insolubility in rectified ether, which dissolves that of scammony in all proportions. Sulphuric acid is the best test of common rosin or colophony, producing instantaneously with this substance an intense red colour; while in the resin of scammony it causes no immediate change. For the tests of guaiac, the reader is referred to that article in the Materia Medica. (See also Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 158.) In regard to this sophistication, the Br. Pharmacopoeia directs that the tincture shall not render the fresh-cut surface of a potato blue. The presence of other resins, besides those of the Convolvulaceae, may be known by yielding precipitates when sulphuric acid is added to their alkaline solution; the resin of scammony agreeing with that of jalap in not affording a precipitate under such circumstances. Mr. Ch. Bullock has found this resin, as well as that of jalap and of podophyllum, to be insoluble in benzole, thus enabling any resin soluble in this liquid, which may be employed in their sophistication, to be readily detected. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1862, p. 114.) When rubbed with unskimmed milk, the resin of scammony forms a uniform emulsion, undis- tinguishable from rich milk itself. This is an excellent mode of administration. The resin should always be given either rubbed up with some mild powder, or in emulsion. The dose is from four to eight grains. Off. Prep. Confectio Scammonii, Br.; Extractum Colocynthidis Composi- tum ; Mistura Scammonii, Br. W. SANTONINUM. Santonin. SANTONINUM. U. S., Br. Santonin. “Take of Santonica, in moderately coarse powder, forty-eight troyounces; Lime, recently slaked and in fine powder, eighteen troyounces; Animal Char- coal, in fine powder, Diluted Alcohol, Acetic Acid, Aicohol, each, a sufficient quantity. Digest the Santonica and Lime with twelve pints of Diluted Alcohol for twenty-four hours, and express. Repeat the digestion and expression twice with the residue, using the same quantity of Diluted Alcohol. Mix the tinctures, and reduce the mixture to eight pints by distilling off the alcohol. Then, having Santoninum. PART II. filtered, and evaporated to one-half, gradually add Acetic Acid until in slight excess, stirring during the addition, and set the whole aside for forty-eight hours. Place the resulting crystalline mass upon a funnel loosely stopped, wash it with water, and dry it. Next, boil the dry residue with ten times its weight of Alcohol, and, having digested the tincture for several hours' with Animal Charcoal, filter it while hot, and add sufficient hot Alcohol, through the filter, to wash the Charcoal thoroughly; then set it aside in a dark place to crystal- lize. Lastly, dry the crystals on bibulous paper in the dark, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle, protected from the light. By evaporating the mother- water, more crystals may be obtained.” U. S. “Take of Santonica, bruised, one pound [avoirdupois]; Slaked Lime seven ounces [avoird.] ; Hydrochloric Acid a sufficiency; Solution of Ammonia half a fuidounce ; Rectified Spirit fourteen fluidounces; Purified Animal Char- coal sixty grains; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Boil the Santonica with a gallon [Imperial measure] of the Water and five ounces [avoird.] of the Lime, in a copper or tinned iron vessel, for an hour, strain through a stout cloth/and express strongly. Mix the residue with half a gallon [Imp. meas.] of the Water and the rest of the Lime, boil for half an hour, strain and express as before. Mix the strained liquors, let them settle, decant the fluid from the deposit, and evaporate to the bulk of two pints and a half [Imp. meas.]. To the liquor while hot, add, with diligent stirring, the Hydrochloric Acid until the fluid has be- come slightly and permanently acid, and set it aside for five days that the pre- cipitate may subside. Remove by skimming any oily matter which floats on the surface, and carefully decant the greater part of the fluid from the precipitate. Collect this on a paper filter, wash it first with cold Distilled Water till the washings pass colourless and nearly free from acid reaction, then with the Solu- tion of Ammonia previously diluted with five fluidounces of the Water, and lastly with cold Distilled Water till the washings pass colourless. Press the filter containing the precipitate between folds of filtering paper, and dry it with a gentle heat. Scrape the dry precipitate from the filter, and mix it with the Animal Charcoal. Pour on them nine ounces of the Rectified Spirit, digest for half an hour, and boil for ten minutes. Filter while hot, wash the charcoal with an ounce of boiling Spirit, and set the filtrate aside for two days in a cool dark place to crystallize. Separate the mother-liquor from the crystals, and concen- trate to obtain a further product. Collect the crystals, let them drain, redissolve them in four ounces of boiling Spirit, and let the solution crystallize as before. Lastly, dry the crystals on filtering paper in the dark, and preserve them in a bottle protected from the light.” Br. By the U. S. process, which was taken from Wittstein’s Pharmaceutical Che- mistry (page 563), the santonica is first exhausted by digestion with diluted alcohol, in connection with slaked lime; the latter substance being employed to saturate the santonin, and remove colouring matter which might subsequently embarrass the proceedings. The tincture thus obtained, having been reduced by the distillation of the alcohol to little more than an aqueous solution, is filtered and treated with acetic acid, in slight excess, by which the santonin is separated from the lime which holds it in solution, and, being itself insoluble, is gradually deposited in a crystalline state. The remainder of the process is intended simply to obtain the crystals free from colouring matter, and otherwise pure. The British process, which is that of M. Mialhe somewhat modified (Pharm. Journ., June, 1864, p. 635), spares the expenditure of alcohol in the exhaustion of the santonica, by boiling it originally with water in connection with lime; and differs also from the preceding in precipitating the santonin by muriatic instead of acetic acid. The purification is effected in the same manner, except that solu- tion of ammonia is employed in the washing, probably to remove the last trace if acid. W ormseed of Aleppo yields from 1 2 to 1 4 per cent, of santonin. (Journ. 1330 Santoninum. PART II. de Pharm., Mars, r364, p. 241.) It has been intimated to us that the large manufacturers of santonin, abroad, first distil off from the santoniea its volatile oil, which has.some commercial value in Europe; and that, so far from being injured by the operation, the process for preparing santonin is probably facili- tated, in consequence of an affinity of the oil for the santonin, which may render it more difficult to obtain that principle pure. Properties. Santonin is in colourless crystals, which have the form of flat rhombic prisms. It is inodorous, and at first nearly tasteless, but after a time produces a sense of bitterness. It is fusible by a moderate heat, and assumes the form of a crystalline mass on cooling. At a somewhat higher, heat, it rises in dense, white, irritating vapours, and condenses unchanged. The air has no effect upon it, but it becomes yellow on exposure to sunlight. According to M. Ses- tini, the santonin is changed, through the influence of light, into formic acid, an uncrystallizable substance much more soluble in alcohol and ether than santonin itself, which he calls photo-sanlonic acid, and a red resinous substance. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1864, p. 527.) It is nearly insoluble in cold water, or in weak acid solutions, but is dissolved by 250 parts of boiling water, by 43 parts of cold and 3 parts of boiling alcohol, and by 75 parts of ether; and its alco- holic and ethereal solutions are extremely bitter. {U. S.) It is also freely solu- ble in chloroform. Though neuter to test paper, it unites with alkaline bases to form crystallizable and soluble salts. In its relations to polarized light, it is very strongly lsevogyrate, more so than any other body-previously noticed, and retains this property with acids, though losing it entirely when combined with salifiable bases. (Buignet, Journ. de Pharm., Janv. 1862, p. 26.) When exposed to red heat, with access of air, it is entirely dissipated. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen ; its formula being In chemical character it appears to be analogous to the stearoptenes, or concrete principles of the volatile oils. Under the influence of sulphuric acid and heat, it is resolved into glucose and a new body, for which the name of santoniretin has been proposed, and must therefore rank with the glucosides. (Kosmann, Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1860, p. 81.) Medical Properties and Uses. The effects of santonin on the system do not appear to have been very precisely determined. Without any very obvious effects on the circulation or digestive organs, it seems to produce some impression of a slightly narcotic character on the brain, and occasionally operates feebly as a diuretic. A singular effect on vision which has often been observed from santo- nica, is probably owing to the santonin, as similar effects have been produced by that principle. To persons under the influence of santonin, it often happens that all objects appear discoloured, generally yellow, but frequently also green, and sometimes blue. At the same time the urine is tinged of a yellow or green colour; and so rapidly does the santonin pass, that the change of colour in the urine has been observed at the end of 16 minutes. {Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1863, p. 161.) These effects are ascribed to a change in the santonin in the system analogous to that which takes place by its exposure to light; the yellow substance circulating with the blood, and passing out of the circulation with the urine. Santonin has been found to possess the vermifuge properties of santoniea, and is probably its exclusive anthelmintic principle; as the volatile oil, to which this property was at one time ascribed, has little or no effect, being probably absorbed from the stomach before it reaches the worms in the bowels, while the santonin, being in- soluble, or only becoming so by partial conversion into the santonate of. soda when it reaches the bile in the duodenum, passes into the small intestines and poisons the worms. Besides, the volatile oil is poisonous to the system in large doses, while santonin is innocent in any quantity in which it is likely to be admin- istered. {Edm. Rose, of Berlin.) A case of poisoning ascribed to santonin was found to be owing to strychnia mixed with it. (Chem. News, No. 230, p. 212.) Santonin has also been found advantageous in amaurosis by M. Martin und M. Soda. 1331 PART II. Guepin, the latter of whom recommends it especially in cases which have suc- ceeded acute choroiditis and iritis, with plastic exudation, after all symptoms of inflammation have ceased. (Ann. de Therap., 1862, pp. 179, 183.) Santonin may be given in doses of two or three grains twice or three times a day. Some have recommended its salts, but Rose objects to these as being soluble, and therefore net so likely to reach the worm, in consequence of absorption; and, besides, in large doses they are injurious. In amaurosis, M. Guepin uses it in the form of syrup; its solubility being, in this case, a recommendation. The syrup may be made by mixing a drachm of santonin, dissolved in a little alcohol, with eight fluidounces of syrup, of which two teaspoonfuls may be given for a dose. Santo- nin may also be given in the form of lozenge with sugar and tragacanth. A for- mula will be found in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (vi. N. S., p. 124). W. SODA. Preparations of Soda. SODA CAUSTICA. Br. Caustic Soda. “Take of Solution of Soda two pints. Boil down the Solution rapidly, in a silver or clean iron vessel, until there remains a fluid of oily consistence, a drop of which when removed on a warmed glass rod solidifies on cooling. Pour the fluid on a clean silver or iro'n plate, and, as soon as it has solidified, break it in pieces, and preserve it in stoppered green-glass bottles.” Br. The solution of soda, being a solution of the caustic alkali, yields it on eva- poration in the solid state. Metallic vessels are used in consequence of the che- mical action of soda on earthenware or porcelain, and the product is directed to be kept in green glass bottles, because these resist its action better than those of white glass. Instead of being poured into cylindrical moulds to harden, as caustic potassa, this is allowed to solidify in mass, and is broken into irregular fragments. As prepared by the above process, caustic soda is in grayish-white fragments, opaque, brittle, and extremely corrosive. It is deliquescent, very soluble in water, soluble in alcohol, and possessed of all the alkaline properties of potassa, from which it differs in imparting a yellow colour to flame, and in not giving in solution a yellow precipitate with bichloride of platinum, or a crystalline precipi- tate with tartaric acid in excess. When heated it melts, and at an intense heat evaporates. In composition, it is the hydrated oxide of sodium (NaO,HO), and cannot be deprived of its water by heat. Though deliquescent like potassa, it does not like that alkali become permanently liquid, but forms a paste, which after a time effloresces. The difference in this respect between the two alkalies is owing to the circumstance that, while both are converted into carbonates by uniting with the carbonic acid of the air, potassa forms a deliquescent, and soda an efflorescent salt. It is apt to contain impurities originating from the carbonate, of soda used in preparing the solution from which it is made; and the presence ot these is recognised by the Br. Pharmacopoeia, when it states that the aqueous so- lution, acidulated with nitric acid, gives a scanty white precipitate with nitrate of silver and chloride of barium, indicating the existence of a chloride and sulphate or carbonate. According to the same authority, it leaves scarcely any sediment when dissolved in water, and 40 grains require for neutralization 90 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid, corresponding to 2P9 grains of soda. If the solution be coloured brown by sulphuretted hydrogen or hydrosulphate ot ammonia, the presence of lead may be suspected, derived probably from the glass vessels in which it has been kept. It may be used externally as a caustic in the same manner as potassa, for which purpose it may be melted and cast into sticks. It has the advantage of being less deliquescent, and probably milder. Soda. PART ir« It may be used also for making the solution of soda extemporaneously, for which purpose a drachm may be dissolved in three and a half fluidouuces of distilled water. W. SODiE ARSENIAS. Br. Arseniate of Soda. “ Take of Arsenious Acid ten ounces [avoirdupois]; Nitrate of Soda eight ounces and a half [avoird.]; Dried Carbonate of Soda five ounces and a half [avoird.]; Boiling Distilled Water thirty-five fluidounces. Reduce the dry ingredients separately to fine powder, and mix them thoroughly in a por- celain mortar. Put the mixture into a large clay crucible, and cover it with the lid. Expose to a full red heat, till all effervescence has ceased, and complete fusion has taken place. Pour out the fused salt on a clean flagstone, and as soon as it has solidified, and while it is still warm, put it into the boiling Water, stir- ring diligently. When the salt has dissolved, filter the solution through paper, and set it aside to crystallize. Drain the crystals, and, having dried them rapidly on filtering paper, enclose them in stoppered bottles.”/^. This is a new officinal of the Br. Pharmacopoeia. In the process, the arseni- ous acid is converted into arsenic acid at the expense of the nitric acid of the nitrate of soda, and then combines with the soda of both salts, carbonic acid and nitrous fumes being given off. As the salt consists of two eqs. of base#to one of acid, each eq. of arsenious acid, having been converted into arsenic acid by two eqs. of oxygen from one eq. of the nitric acid of the nitrate, combines with the separated eq. of soda of that salt, and with another eq. of soda of the car- bonate ; and the three substances employed are therefore required in the pro- portion of their equivalents. This is almost exactly the case in the formula, the nitrate being very slightly in excess, and the carbonate about in the same pro- portion deficient. Arseniate of soda is in colourless, transparent crystals, soluble in two parts of water {Squire), of a somewhat saline taste leaving a slight sense of acrimony, and with an alkaline reaction. Heated to 300° it melts, and loses its water of crystallization and 4038 percent, of its weight. “A solution of 10 grains of the residue, treated with 53 measures of the volumetric solution of soda, continues to give a precipitate with the volumetric solution of nitrate of silver until 161-3 measures of the latter have been added.” (Br.) In this test the soda is added in order that, by the decomposition of the nitrate of silver, one additional eq. of oxide of silver may be furnished, so as, with the two eqs. given up in ex- change for the two eqs. of soda of the arseniate of soda, to make up the three eqs. necessary for the formation of the arseniate of silver (3Ag0,As05). The precipitate is arseniate of silver, and the quantity precipitated should be equiva- lent to 6-16 grains of arsenic acid. Its aqueous solution gives white precipitates with chloride of barium, chloride of calcium, and sulphate of zinc (arseniates of baryta, lime, and zinc), and a brick-red precipitate with nitrate of silver (arseni- ate of silver). Arseniate of soda is composed of two eqs. of soda 62, one eq. of basic water 0, one eq. of arsenic acid 115, and fourteen eqs. of water of crystallization 126 = 312; arsenic acid being tribasic. Its formula, therefore, is 2NaO,HO,AsO.-j- 14KO. In medical properties this salt agrees with the other preparations of arsenic (see Acidum Arseniosum), and may be employed for the same purposes. It is preferred by some, under the impression that it is milder than the arsenious acid or the arsenites; and, in the same dose, it certainly contains somewhat less metallic arsenic. The dose of the crystallized salt is stated at from one-twelfth to one-third of a grain ; but it is generally prescribed in the form of solution. (See Liquor Sodse Arseniatis.) This may be made extemporaneously by dis- solving 4 grains of the anhydrous or 6'5 grains of the crystallized salt in a fluid- ounce of distilled water. arsenical solution is an aqueous solution PART II. Soda. 1333 of arseniate of soda, containing one grain of the salt in a fluidounce, and there- fore much weaker than the officinal solution. Off. Prep. Liquor Sodse Arseniatis, Br. W. SODJE BICARBONAS. TJ.S., Br. Bicarbonate of Soda. “Take of Carbonate of Soda a convenient quantity. Put the Carbonate, pre- viously broken in pieces, into a wooden box, having a horizontal partition near the bottom pierced with numerous small holes, and a cover which can be tightly fitted on. To a bottle having two tubulures, and half filled with water, adapt two tubes, the first passing from an apparatus for generating carbonic acid, through onetubu- lure, to a point below the surface of the water in the bottle ; the second reaching from the other tubulure to an opening near the bottom of the box, beneath the partition. Then lute all the joints, and cause a stream of carbonic acid to pass through the water into the box until the Carbonate is fully saturated. Lastly, remove the product from the box, and, having dried it, rub it into powder. Car- bonic acid may be obtained from Marble by the addition of dilute Sulphuric Acid.” U. S. “ Take of Carbonate of Soda two pounds [avoirdupois]; Dried Carbonate of Soda three pounds [avoird.]; White Marble, in fragments, four pounds [avoird.]; Hydrochloric Acid of Commerce one gallon [Imperial measure]; Water two gallons [Imp. raeas.] ; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Fill with the Marble a tubulated glass bottle having a few small holes drilled in the bottom, connect the tubulure tightly by a bent tube and corks with an empty two-necked bottle, and connect this with another bottle filled with the Carbonates of Soda well triturated together, and let the tube be long enough to reach the bottom of the bottle. Before fixing the cork in the bottle containing the Carbonate of Soda, partially immerse the bottle containing the Marble in the Hydrochloric Acid previously diluted with the Water and placed in any convenient vessel. When the whole apparatus is filled with carbonic acid gas, fix in tightly the cork of the bottle containing the carbonate of soda, and let the action go on until the gas ceases to be absorbed. Agitate occasionally for half an hour the damp salt which is formed, with half its weight of cold Distilled Water, drain the undissolved portion, and dry it by exposure to the air on filtering paper placed on porous bricks.” Br. The object of these processes is to unite the soda with an additional equiva- lent of carbonic acid, whereby it becomes converted into the bicarbonate. The process adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, since 1840, is that which has been practised for many years in the United States, and was described in 1830, by Dr. Franklin R. Smith, in the first volume of the Journal of the Phila- delphia College of Pharmacy. This process is attributed to Dr. Smith by Sou- beiran, who characterizes it as the best that can be employed. It was adopted in the French Codex on its revision of 1837. A stream of carbonic acid, freed from any accompanying impurity by passing through water in the intervening bottle, is conducted into a suitable vessel, containing the crystallized carbonate placed on a diaphragm, pierced with numerous holes. As the bicarbonate combines with much less water of crystallization than is contained in the carbonate, it fol- lows that, during the progress of the saturation of the carbonate, a considerable quantity of water is liberated. This water would finally dissolve a portion of the bicarbonate formed, were it not for the pierced diaphragm, through which it is allowed to drain off holding in solution a part of the carbonate. When the satu- ration is completed, the pieces of crystals, still supported on the diaphragm, are found to have retained their original form, but to have become opaque and of a porous texture. The necessary carbonic acid for forming the bicarbonate may be economically obtained from other processes in which this acid is evolved; as, for example, from the process for making tartaric acid, in which tartrate of lime is formed from cream of tartar by the addition of carbonate of lime. Soda. PART II. The British process is that of Berzelius. In the U. S. process, the excess of water over the quantity necessary for the bicarbonate is allowed to drain off; but it holds a certain portion of carbonate in solution, which thus escapes the action of the carbonic acid. To avoid this result it is only necessary to prepare a car- bonate containing just sufficient water of crystallization to accommodate the bi- carbonate; and the process recommended by Berzelius accomplishes that pur- pose. Thus, the salt which he prepares to be submitted to the carbonic acid, is an intimate mixture, in fine powder, of four parts of effloresced carbonate, with one of the crystallized salt. The proportion adopted by the Br. Pharmacopoeia is different, namely, three parts of the dried carbonate to two of the crystallized carbonate; and is such as to afford an excess of water over that required to constitute the bicarbonate. Hence this process furnishes a damp salt, which is first washed with a small portion of water to free it from any remaining carbo- nate, and then dried in the air without heat. The apparatus employed for ob- taining the carbonic acid is precisely the self-regulating generator, devised by Dr. Hare on the principle of Gay-Lussac’s. The empty bottle, placed between the generating apparatus and that containing the salt, is intended, as in the U. S. process, to detain any impurity which may be carried over with the stream of carbonic acid. Artus has given a process for obtaining bicarbonate of soda, similar to that of Wohler for forming the corresponding salt of potassa. (See Potassse Bicar - bonas.) In this process, the effloresced carbonate, mixed with half its weight of freshly ignited and finely powdered charcoal, is saturated by a stream of car- bonic acid, derived from the fermentation of sugar. The presence of the char- coal greatly promotes the absorption. (Pharm. Gent. Blatt, 1843, p. 254.) We are informed that much bicarbonate of soda is now prepared in breweries, in the same manner as bicarbonate of potassa or sal aeratus, by placing the car- bonate in suitable vessels over the fermenting beer in the vats, so as to oe con- stantly immersed in an atmosphere of carbonic acid. It is sold under the same name as the analogous salt of potassa; but is sometimes distinguished as the soda sal aeratus. Properties, &c. As obtained by the U. S. formula, bicarbonate of soda is in opaque, porous masses, made up of numerous, aggregated crystalline grains, hav- ing a snow-white colour. For the convenience of the apothecary these masses are reduced to powder. As procured by the Br. process, it is in small, white, opaque, irregular scales. Bicarbonate of soda is permanent in the air, and slightly alkaline to the taste and to turmeric paper. It is soluble in thirteen parts of cold water. When the solution is exposed to heat, the salt gradually parts with car- bonic acid, and, at the temperature of 212°, is converted into sesquicarbonate. At a red heat, the water of crystallization and the second equivalent of carbonic acid, amounting together to 37 percent., are expelled, and the anhydrous carbon- ate is left. One eq., or 84'3 parts of the crystallized bicarbonate, should lose, on complete decomposition by dilute sulphuric acid, two eqs. or 44 parts of carbonic acid, equal to 521 per cent. The salt is seldom so perfect as to sutisfy this test; as good commercial samples generally contain from 2 to 3 per cent, of car- bonate. “Eighty-four grains, exposed to a red heat, leave 53 of an alkaline residue, which require for neutralization 100 measures of the volumetric solution of oxalic acid.” Br. This is almost the precise proportion of carbonate of soda, which the bicarbonate should yield when deprived of its water and one eq. of carbonic acid. The presence of carbonate may be known by a decided alkaline taste and reaction, by a cold solution of the salt yielding a precipitate with sul- phate of magnesia, and by a solution in 40 parts of water, affording, without agitation, an orange-coloured or reddish-brown precipitate with corrosi fv- suo- limate. Tbe pure bicarbonate is not precipitated by bichloride of platinum, nor, when treated with nitric acid in excess, by chloride of barium or nitrate of silver. Soda. PART II, The non-action of these tests shows the absence of salts of potassa, and of sul- phates and chlorides. The incompatibles of this salt are the same as those else- where mentioned of the carbonate, except sulphate of magnesia in the cold, which decomposes the carbonate, but not the bicarbonate. Composition. Bicarbonate of soda, when perfect, consists of two eqs. of car- bonic acid 44, one of soda 31 3, and one of water 9= 843. The London College formerly prepared this salt by a faulty process, and gave it the name of sesqui- carbonate. In its Pharmacopoeia of 1851, it placed the salt, under the correct name of bicarbonate, in the catalogue of Materia Medica; where, perhaps, it would properly stand, as it is now prepared in great perfection on a large scale Medical Properties. This salt has the general medical properties of the carbonate; but, from its mild taste and less irritating qualities, proves more acceptable to the palate and stomach. It is often resorted to in calculous cases, characterized by excess of uric acid. The continued use of the carbonate, in these cases, is liable to induce phosphatic deposits, after the removal of the uric acid. According to D’Arcet, who made the observation at the springs of Vichy, this objection does not apply to the bicarbonate, especially when taken in car- bonic acid water; for this salt, by its superabundant acid, has the power of maintaining the phosphates in solution, even after the alkali has caused the uric acid-to disappear. The same remark is applicable to the bicarbonate of potassa. Bicarbonate of soda has been given in infantile croup, with apparent advantage in promoting the expulsion of the false membrane, in the dose of a grain every five minutes, dissolved in milk and water. Dr. Lemaire has proposed it as an antiphlogistic remedy in the treatment of pneumonia, membranous angina, and croup, supposing it to act on the principle of removing from the blood the ex- cess of fibrin, which exists in that liquid in inflammation. Its utility in mem- branous angina has been confirmed by M. Marchal (de Calvi). According to M. Jeannel, the use of bicarbonate of soda lessens the sugar in the urine of dia- betic patients. The dose for an adult is from ten grains to a drachm, and is taken most conveniently in a glass of carbonic acid water. When given in an- gina, fifteen grains may be administered every half hour in a tablespoonful of water. This salt is principally consumed in making soda and Seidlitz powders. (Seepages 1305, 1306.) It is sometimes made into lozenges. (See Trochisc- Sodse Bicarbonatis.) Pharm. Uses. In the preparation of Aqua Acidi Carbonici, U. S. Off. Prep. Bulveres Effervescentes, U. S.; Pulveres Effervescentes Aperientes, U. S.; Trochisci Sodse Bicarbonatis, TJ. S. B. SODiE CARBONAS EXSICCATA, U.S.,Dr. Dried Carbonate of Soda. “Take of Carbonate of Soda a convenient quantity. Expose it to heat in an iron vessel, until it is thoroughly dried, stirring constantly with an iron spatula; then rub it into powder.’’ U. S. “Take of Carbonate of Soda eight ounces. Expose the Carbonate of Soda in a porcelain capsule to a rather strong sand heat, until the liquid which first forms is converted into a dry cake, and, having rubbed this to powder, enclose it in a stoppered bottle.”Br. Carbonate of soda contains ten equivalents of water of crystallization, and, when heated, readily undergoes the watery fusion. Upon continuing the heat, the water is dried off, and a white porous mass remains, which is easily reduced to powder. Dried carbonate of soda is in the form of a white powder, and dif- fers in nothing from the crystallized, except in being devoid of water of crystal- lization. (See Sodse Carbonas.) When decomposed by dilute sulphuric acid, it evolves 40T per cent, of carbonic acid. (Bond. Pharm.) Medical Properties and Uses. This preparation was introduced into practice By Dr. Beddoes, who extolled its virtues in calculous complaints. It is applica Soda. b.e to the cure of such affections, only when dependent on a moroid secretion uric acid. Its advantage over the common carbonate is that it admits of being made into pills, in consequence of being in the dried state. As the water of crys- tallization forms more than half of the carbonate, the dose of the dried salt must be reduced in proportion. From five to fifteen grains may be given three times a day, in the form of pill prepared with soap and aromatics. For the medical properties of this salt see Sodse Carbonas. Off. Prep. Sodae Arsenias, Br.; Sodse Bicarbonas, Br. B. SODiE PHOSPHAS. U. S., Br. Phosphate of Soda. Medicinal Tri- ’>asic Phosphate of Soda. “ Take of Bone, calcined to whiteness and in fine powder, one hundred and twenty troy ounces ; Sulphuric Acid seventy-two troyounces ; Carbonate of Soda, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Mix the powder with the Sulphuric Acid in an earthen vessel; then add eight pints of Water, and, having stirred the mixture thoroughly, digest for three days, occasionally adding a little Water to replace that which is lost by evaporation, and frequently stirring the mixture. At the expiration of that time, pour in eight pints of boiling Water, and strain through muslin, gradually adding more boiling Water until the liquid passes nearly taste- less. Set by the strained liquor that the dregs may subside, and, having poured off the clear solution, boil it down to eight pints. To the concentrated liquid, poured off from the newly formed dregs and heated in an iron vessel, add by degrees Carbonate of Soda, previously dissolved in hot Water, until effervescence ceases, and the phosphoric acid is completely saturated; then filter the liquid, and set it aside to crystallize. Having removed the crystals, add, if necessary, a small quantity of Carbonate of Soda to the liquid, so as to render it slightly alkaline ; then alternately evaporate and crystallize, so long as crystals are pro- duced. Lastly, keep the crystals in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Bone Ash, in powder, ten potinds [avoirdupois]; Sulphuric Acid of Commerce fifty-six fluidounces; Distilled Water four gallons and a half [Imperial measure], or a sufficiency; Carbonate of Soda sixteen pounds [avoird.], or a sufficiency. Place the Bone Ash in a capacious earthenware or leaden vessel, pour on the Sulphuric Acid, and stir with a glass rod until the whole powder is thoroughly moistened. After twenty-four hours, add gradually and with constant stirring a gallon [Imp. meas.] of the Water; digest for forty- eight hours, adding Distilled Water from time to time to replace what has evapo- rated. Add another gallon [Imp. meas.] of the Water, stirring diligently, digest for an hour, filter through calico, and wash what remains on the filter with suc- cessive portions of Distilled Water, till it has almost ceased to have an acid re- action. Concentrate the filtrate to a gallon, let it rest for twenty-four hours, and filter again. Heat the filtrate to near the boiling point, add the Carbonate of Soda previously dissolved in two gallons [Imp. meas.] of the Water, till it ceases to form a precipitate, and the fluid has acquired a feeble alkaline reaction. Filter through calico, evaporate the clear liquor till a film forms on the surface, and set it aside to crystallize. More crystals will be obtained by evaporating the mother-liquor, a little Carbonate of Soda being added if necessary to maintain its alkalinity. Dry the crystals rapidly, and without heat, on filtering paper placed on porous bricks, and preserve them in stoppered bottles.” Br. The incombustible part of bones is obtained by burning them to whiteness, and consists of a peculiar phosphate of lime, called bone-phosphate, associated with some carbonate of lime, &c. (See Os.) When this is mixed with sulphuric acid, the carbonate of lime is entirely decomposed, giving rise to effervescence. The phosphate of lime undergoes partial decomposition; the greater part of the lime, being detached, precipitates as sulphate of lime, while the phosphoric acid, set free, combines with the undecomposed portion of the phosphate, and remains in solution as a superphosphate of lime, holding dissolved a small portion o* th« PART II. PART II. Soda. 1337 sulphate of lime. In order to separate the superphosphate from the precipitated mass of sulphate of lime, boiling water is added to the mixture, the whole is strained, and the sulphate washed as long as superphosphate is removed, which ■ is known by the water passing through in an acid state. The different liquids which have passed the strainer, consisting of the solution of superphosphate oi lime, are mixed and allowed to stand; and by cooling a portion of sulphate 01 lime is deposited, which is got rid of by decantation. The bulk of the liquid is now reduced by evaporation, and, in consequence of the diminution of the water, a fresh portion of sulphate of lime is deposited, which is separated by subsidence and decantation as before. The superphosphate of lime solution, being heated, is now saturated by means of a hot solution of carbonate of soda. The carbonic acid is extricated with effervescence, and the alkali, combining with the excess of acid of the superphosphate, generates one variety of the tri- basic phosphate of soda; while the superphosphate of lime, by the loss of its excess of acid, becomes the neutral phosphate and precipitates. The phosphate of lime is separated by a new filtration; and the filtered liquor, which is a solu- tion of phosphate of soda, is evaporated so as to crystallize. In the U. S. process, the calcined bone is to the acid as 10 to 6 ; in the Br. process as 10 to 6|- nearly. The proportion recommended by Berzelius is as 1C to 6 66. The acid, in the officinal processes, is added to the calcined bone in the concentrated state, and afterwards diluted with more or less water. In the process given by Berzelius it is first diluted with twelve times its weight ol water. All the writers state that phosphate of f oda crystallizes more readily by allowing its solution to be slightly alkaline; and a remarkable fact is that a neutral solution, when it crystallizes, leaves a supernatant liquid which is slightly acid and uncrystallizable. Hence it is necessary, after getting each successive crop of crystals, to render the mother-water neutral or slightly alkaline, before it will furnish an additional quantity. M. Funcke, a German chemist, has given the following cheap and expeditious method for obtaining phosphate of soda. To the powdered calcined bone, dif- fused in water, sufficient dilute sulphuric acid is added to decompose all the car- bonate of lime which it contains. When the effervescence ceases, the matter is treated with nitric acid, which dissolves the phosphate of lime, and leaves the sulphate. The nitric solution of the phosphate is then treated with sulphate of soda, equal in quantity to the bone employed; and, after the reaction is com- pleted, the nitric acid is recovered by distillation. In consequence of a double decomposition, sulphate of lime and phosphate of soda are formed, the latter of which is separated by water, and crystallized in the usual manner. Properties, &c. The medicinal phosphate of soda is in large colourless crys- tals, which have the shape of oblique rhombic prisms. They are transparent at first, but speedily effloresce and become opaque when exposed to the air. It possesses a pure saline taste, resembling that of common salt. With tests it dis- plays an alkaline reaction. It dissolves in four parts of cold, and in two of boil- ing water, but is insoluble in alcohol. Before the blowpipe it first undergoes the aqueous fusion, and afterwards, at a red heat, melts into a globule of limpid glass, which becomes opaque on cooling. It is not liable to adulteration, but sometimes contains carbonate of soda, from this salt having been added in excess in its preparation; in which case it will effervesce with acids. If it contain sul- ohate of soda, or any other soluble sulphate, the precipitate caused by chloride of barium will be a mixture of sulphate and phosphate of baryta, and will not be totally soluble in nitric acid. Chloride of barium will detect carbonate of soda also, by producing a precipitate (carbonate of baryta), soluble with effer- vescence in nitric acid. If a chloride be present, the yellow precipitate caused by nitrate of silver will be a mixed one of chloride and phosphate of silver, not entirely soluble in the same acid. The salt is incompatible with soluble salts of 1338 Soda. PART IT, lime, with which it gives a precipitate of phosphate of lime, and with neutral metallic solutions. It is found in several of the animal secretions, particularly the urine. The medicinal phosphate of soda is one of the three tribasic phosphates of soda, characterized by having its three bases, made up of two eqs. of soda and one of water. When crystallized, it consists of two eqs. of soda 62 6, one of ba- sic water 9, one of phosphoric acid 72, and twenty-four of water of crystalliza- tion 216 = 359 6. Its formula is, therefore, 2NaO,HO,P05 + 24HO. When gently heated it loses its water of crystallization; and at a red heat its basic water is driven off, and the salt is converted into pyrophosphate of soda, or that variety of bibasic phosphate which has the formula 2NaO,POft. This bibasic phosphate is characterized by giving a white precipitate with nitrate of silver. When the medicinal salt is thus dried and ignited,, it loses 63 per cent, of its weight; and the residue, dissolved in water, gives with chloride of barium a pre- cipitate entirely soluble in dilute nitric acid. (Br.) Medical Properties and Uses. Phosphate of soda was introduced into prac- tice, about the year 1800, by the late Dr. Pearson, of London. It is a mild pur- gative, and, from its pure saline taste, is well adapted to the cases of children, and of persons of delicate stomach. The dose is from one to two ounces, and is best given in gruel or weak broth, to which it gives a taste, as if seasoned with common salt. Off. Prep. Ferri Phosphas ; Ferri Pyrophosphas, U. S.; Syrupus Ferri Phos- phatis, Br. • B. SODiE VALERIANAS. TJ.S. Valerianate of Soda. Br. Appendix. “ Take of Bichromate of Potassa, in fine powder, ten troyounces; Sulphuric Acid fourteen troyounces; Amylic Alcohol four fluidounces; Water four pints; Solution of Soda a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Bichromate, with the aid of heat, in three pints of the W'ater, and add to the solution seven troy- ounces of the Sulphuric Acid, previously diluted with the remainder of the Water. Pour the liquid into a tubulated retort, to which a receiver is attached without luting. Mix the Amylic Alcohol with the remainder of the Sulphuric Acid, gradually added, and, by means of a funnel-shaped tube, passing through a cork in the tubulure of the retort and dipping into the liquid, introduce the mixture, when cool, into the retort, in small portions at a time, until it is all added. Return to the retort any liquid which may have spontaneously distilled over, and agitate the whole until the reaction has subsided, and the temperature has fallen to about 100°. Then, by means of a sand-bath, distil the liquid neany to dryness. Introduce the distilled liquid into a capacious glass matrass, and add to it Solution of Soda, with frequent agitation, until it is accurately satu- rated. Separate the oil that floats on the liquid, and evaporate the latter until aqueous vapour ceases to escape, and nothing remains but the salt in a state of fusion. Lastly, pour the fused salt on a porcelain slab, and, after it has concreted, break the mass while yet warm in pieces, and keep these in a well- stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Solution of Soda a sufficiency; Fousel Oil four fluidounces [Im- perial measure] ; Bichromate of Potash nine ounces [avoirdupois] ; Sulphuric Acid six fluidounces and a half [Imp. meas.] ; Distilled Water half a gallon. Dilute the Sulphuric Acid with ten fluidounces of the Water, and dissolve the Bichromate of Potash in the remainder with the aid of heat. When both liquids are cold, mix them with the Fousel Oil in a matrass with occasional brisk agita- tion until the temperature of the mixture has fallen to about 90°. Connect the matrass with a condenser, and distil until about half a gallon of liquid has passed over. Saturate the distilled liquid accurately with the Solution of Soda, remove any oil which floats on the surface, evaporate till watery vapour ceases to escape, and then raise the heat cautiously so as to liquefy the salt. When the product PART II. Soda.—Spiritus. 1339 has cooled and solidified, break it into pieces, and immediately put it into a stoppered bottle.” Br. These processes are essentially the same as that of the late Dublin Phar- macopoeia, into which the preparation was introduced in 1850. They consist of two steps; first, the artificial formation of valerianic acid, and secondly, the saturation of this acid with caustic soda. By distilling fusel oil with a mix- ture of sulphuric acid and bichromate of potassa, valerianic acid is formed, and passes over with water. The change is effected by the oxidizing agency of the chromic acid of the bichromate; for when fusel oil loses two eqs. of hydrogen by oxidation, and gains two of oxygen, it is converted into valerianic acid. Thus, CjJIjjO-1-HO and 4O = C10H9O3+HO and 2HO. (See Potassse Bi- chromas and Alcohol Amylicum.) The distillate, by exact saturation with the solution of caustic soda, is converted into a solution of valerianate of soda, which, by the application of heat until the water is driven off, and the residual matter is partially liquefied, furnishes, on cooling, the concrete salt. The small portion of oil that floats on the surface of the solution is valerianate of amylic ether (C10HuO,C10H((O3). Properties, &c. Valerianate of soda is a deliquescent, very soluble salt, in snow-white masses, having the disagreeable odour of valerianic acid, and a taste at first styptic, but afterwards sweetish. When heated to 285°, it fuses without loss of acid, and, upon cooling, concretes into a white solid. The salt, as offici- nally ordered, is in the form produced by fusion. It consists of one eq. of vale- rianic acid and one of soda (NaO,C10H9O3). It has no medical applications, having been introduced into the Dublin officinal catalogue for the sole purpose of forming, by double decomposition, the valerianates of iron, quinia, and zinc, and retained in the TJ. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias for the preparation of tho last-mentioned salt. Off. Prep. Zinci Valeri an as. B. SPIRITUS. Spirits. Spirits, as the term is here used, are alcoholic solutions of volatile principles, formerly in general procured by distillation, but now frequently prepared by simply dissolving the volatile principle in alcohol or diluted alcohol. The dis- tilled spirits are prepared chiefly from aromatic vegetable substances, the essen- tial oils of which rise with the vapour of alcohol, and condense with it in the receiver. Some of the oils, however, will not rise at the temperature of boiling alcohol, but may be distilled with water. In this case, it is necessary to employ proof spirit or diluted alcohol, with the water of which the oil comes over in the latter part of the process. As the proof spirit of the shops is often impregnated with foreign matters, which give it an unpleasant flavour, it is better to use al- cohol which has been carefully rectified, and to dilute it with the due proportion of water, as directed by the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. *In preparing the spirits, care should be taken to avoid the colour and empyreumatic flavour arising from the decomposition of the vegetable matter by heat. Sufficient water must, therefore, be added to cover the vegetable matter after the alcohol shall have been distilled ; and, as a general rule, the heat should be applied by means of a water-bath, or of steam. The aromatic should be macerated for some days with the alcohol, oefore being submitted to distillation ; as the oil, being thus dissolved, rises more read'ly with the spirituous vapour than when confined in the vegetable tissue. It is necessary, during the process, frequently to renew the water in the refrige- ratory; as otherwise much of the vapour will escape condensation. A good »pparatus for the purpose is described and figured in page 889. 1340 Spiritus. PAKT II. The aromatic spirits are used chiefly to impart a pleasant odour and taste to mixtures, and to correct the nauseating and griping effects of other medicines. They serve also as carminatives in flatulent colic, and agreeable stimulants in debility of stomach ; but their frequent use may lead to the formation of intem- perate habits, and should, therefore, be avoided. We follow the example of the Pharmacopoeias, in considering in the present class several articles, which, though with the title of spirit, were formerly ar- ranged with the substances which constitute their active ingredients, as the spirits of ammonia, ether, and nitrous ether. The Spirits, formerly officinal, which have been omitted in the present U. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are Spiritus Carui, Loud., Ed., Spiritus Cassiae, Ed., and Spiritus Pulegii, Lond. W. SPIRITUS iETIIERIS. Br. Spirit of Ether. “Take of Ether ten jluidounces; Rectified Spirit one pint [Imperial mea- sure]. Mix. The specific gravity 0-809.” Br. This preparation is merely ether, diluted with twice its volume of alcohol. When prepared with materials of proper strength, its sp. gr. is 0 809. Its medi- cal properties are similar to those of ether. The dose is from one to three flui- drachms, given with a sufficient quantity of sweetened water. Off. Prep. Tinctura Lobeliae jEtherea, Br. B. SPIRITUS JETIIERIS COMPOSITUS. U.S. Compound Spirit of Ether. Hoffmann s Anodyne Liquor. “ Take of Ether half a pint; Alcohol a pint; Ethereal Oil six Jiuidrachms. Mix them.” U. S. This preparation is an alcoholic solution of ether, impregnated with heavy oil of wine. In the formula, determinate measures of ether, alcohol, and oil are taken, the ether having half the volume of the alcohol. The proportion of ethereal oil has been doubled in the present edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia; but as the oil, as now prepared, is diluted with its bulk of ether, the oleaginous strength of the compound spirit is really the same. In the late revision of the British Pharmacopoeias, and their consolidation into one, this preparation has been omitted; unfortunately, we think, as there is scarcely a doubt that the influence of the ether, as a composing medicine in nervous disorder, is much increased by the oil of wine. Compound spirit of ether is a colourless, volatile liquid, having a burning, slightly sweetish taste, and the peculiar odour of ethereal oil. If it has an em- pyreumatic odour, it has been badly prepared. Its sp. gr. is 0 815, according to the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. When pure it is wholly volatilized by heat, and devoid of acid reaction. It becomes milky on being mixed with water, owing to the precipitation of the ethereal oil; but this change does not prove its goodness, as the same property may be given to the spirit of sulphuric ether by the addi- tion of various fixed oils. This sophistication may be detected, according to Prof. Procter, by mixing the suspected preparation with water, drawing a piece of paper over the surface of the liquid to absorb the oily globules, and exposing the paper to heat. If the glo*bules are fixed oil, the greasy stain will remain ; if ethereal oil, the stain will disappear. When fixed oils are used to adulterate this preparation, the milkiness is generally too great, and not like the transpa- rent, leaden milkiness of the genuine article. (Dr. Squibb.) “It gives only a slight cloudiness with chloride of barium; but when a fiuidounce of it is evapo- rated to dryness with an excess of this test, it yields a precipitate [residue] of sulphate of baryta, which, when washed and dried, weighs 6 25 grains. When a few drops are burned on glass or porcelain, there is no visible residue, but the surface will be left with an acid taste and reaction. A pint of water, by the ad mixture of forty drops, is rendered slightly opalescent.” U. S. It is much to be regretted that our manufacturing chemists do not follow toe PART II. Spiritus. Pharmacopoeia in making Hoffmann’s anodyne. In rectifying crude ether, the distillation is continued as long as the ether comes over of the proper specific gravity; after which, the manufacturer has been in the habit of changiug the receiver, and obtaining an additional distillate, consisting of ether and alcohol, impregnated with a little ethereal oil. Now it is this second distillate, variously modified by the addition of alcohol, ether, or water, so as to make it conform in taste, smell, opalescence, &c. to a standard preparation, kept by the manufac- turer, that is sold as Hoffmann’s anodyne. (See Prof. Procter’s paper on Hoff- mann’s anodyne in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for July, 1852, p. 213.) Nothing could be more uncertain in its results than a proceeding like this; and we can- not be surprised that the medicine, as obtained from different apothecaries, varies very much in properties, and often disappoints the expectations of the physician. The chief excuse for the departure from the officinal directions is the costliness of the ethereal oil; but were this much greater than it really is, the excuse would not be valid ; and it cannot be justified, on any principle of morality, to sell under the officinal title a preparation which has no claim to it whatever. Medical Properties. This preparation is intended as a substitute for the ano- dyne liquor of Hoffmann, which it closely resembles when properly prepared. In addition to the stimulating and antispasmodic qualities of the ether which it con- tains, it possesses anodyne properties, highly useful in nervous irritation, and want of sleep from this cause. These additional virtues are probably derived from the officinal oil of wine, which is a more important substance than is gene- rally supposed. Mr. Braude believes that the only effect of it, in the preparation under notice, is to alter the flavour of the ether. In this opinion he is certainly in error. The late Drs. Physick and Dewees of this city found the officinal oil of wine, dissolved in alcohol, very efficacious in certain disturbed states of the system, as a tranquillizing and anodyne remedy. Such indeed are the generally admitted effects of Hoffmann’s anodyne, when made with a due admixture of the ethereal oil. This preparation is on many occasions a useful adjunct to lauda- num, to prevent the nausea which is excited by the latter in certain habits. The dose is from thirty minims to one or two fluidraehms, given in water sweetened with sugar. B. SPIRITUS iETHERIS NITROSI. U. S., Br. Spiritus Nitrici. U. S. 1850. Spiritus Nitri Dulcis. Spirit of Nitrous Ether. Sweet Spirit of Nitre. “ Take of Nitric Acid nineteen troyounces and a half; Stronger Alcohol nine pints; Carbonate of Potassa a troyounce. Introduce four pints of the Alcohol into a retort, having the capacity of eight pints, and containing some pieces of glass, and add the Nitric Acid. Adapt the retort to Liebig’s con- denser, and apply heat by means of a water-bath so arranged that the water may be drawn off during the process. When the mixture boils briskly, draw off almost all the water of the bath, and allow the distillation to proceed sponta- neously until it begins to slacken. Then cautiously reapply heat by means of the water-bath, and continue the distillation until four pints of the distilled liquid have passed over. Having thrown away the residue, rinse the apparatus thor- oughly, return the liquid to the retort, add the Carbonate of Potassa to it, agitate the mixture, and again distil by means of a water-bath, slowly at first, until three pints and a half of distilled liquid have been obtained. With this mix thoroughly the remainder of the Alcohol, and transfer the mixture to halt- pint bottles, which must be well stopped, and protected from the light. Spirit of Nitrous Ether has the sp. gr. 0 837, and contains from 4 3 to 5 per cent, of its peculiar ether. It should not be kept long, as it becomes strongly acid by age ” U.S. “Take of Nitrite of Soda five ounces [avoirdupois]; Sulphuric Acid four Spiritm. PART II. flui&ninces; Rectified Spirit two pints. Introduce the Nitrite of Soda into a matrass connected with a condenser; pour upon it the Spirit and the Sulphuric Acid, previously mixed; and distil thirty-five fluidounces, the receiver being kept very cool.” Br.* The officinal spirit of nitrous ether is a mixture, in variable proportions, of ni- trous ether (C4H50,N03) and alcohol (rectified spirit). Nitrous ether is always generated by the reaction of nitric acid with alcohol; and it matters not whether the alcohol be mixed with nitric acid directly, or with the materials for geue- ating it, namely, nitre and sulphuric acid. In the former U. S. Pharmacopoeia the requisite nitric acid was obtained by using the materials for generating it; nitrate of potassa, namely, and sulphuric acid. The formula was modelled after a recipe communicated by Mr. John Carter, manufacturing chemist, to the Phila- delphia College of Pharmacy, and recommended for adoption by a committee of that body.f The nitre and alcohol being mixed in the retort, the sulphuric acid was gradually added, and a gentle heat applied. Nitric acid was set free, and by reacting with a part of the alcohol produced the nitrous ether. Upon the subsequent increase of the heat, the ether and the remainder of the alcohol distilled over as sweet spirit of nitre. The distilled product, however, contained some acid, and hence was rectified by a distillation from carbonate of potassa. Diluted alcohol was added before commencing this distillation, to enable the ope- rator to obtain a quantity of distilled product equal to that procured at first, without distilling to dryness, which would endanger the production of empy- reuma. The alcohol was first mixed with the nitre, in the retort, and the sul- phuric acid afterwards gradually added. Had the alcohol and sulphuric acid been previously mixed, the risk would have been run of generating ether before their addition to the nitre. In repeating this process the retort employed should be capable of holding twice the amount of the materials. The sweet spirit of nitre, obtained by the old formula, was estimated to contain 4 per cent, in vo- lume of nitrous ether. The above process, as conducted by Mr. Carter on a large scale, was performed in a copper still of about twenty gallons capacity, and furnished with a pewter head and worm. The materials for the first distillation were 18 pounds of puri- fied nitre, 12 gallons of alcohol of 34° Baume (0 847), and 12 pounds of sulphu- ric acid ; and 10 gallons were drawn off. The distilled product was then mixed with a gallon of diluted alcohol, and rectified by a new distillation from lime or a carbonated alkali ; the same quantity being distilled as at first. When large * Nitrite ofBoda. (Br.) The nitrite of soda used in this formula is directed in the Ap- pendix of the Br. Pfiafmacopaeia among the substances used in the preparing of medicines, with the following formula for its preparation. “ Take of Nitrate of Soda one pound [avoirdupois] ; Charcoal, recently burned, and in fine powder, one ounce and a quarter [avoird.]. Mix the Nitrate and the Charcoal thoroughly in a mortar, and drop the mix- ture in successive portions into a clay crucible heated to dull redness. When the salt has be- come quite white, raise the heat so as to liquefy it, pour it out on a clean flagstone, and, when it has solidified, break it into fragments, and keep it in a stoppered bottle.” By this process, in theory, the nitric acid of the nitrate of soda, through the influence of charcoal and heat., loses two out of its five eqs. of oxygen, and is thus converted into the nitrous acid, fvhich remains in combination with the soda forming the nitrite of soda (NaO,NOs) used in the process for spirit of nitrous ether. The Pharmacopoeia gives various tests of this salt.; but, as produced by the Br. process, it is of uncertain composition, containing a variable proportion of the proper nitrite, never more than 25 per cent., mixed with un- certain quantities of nitrate and carbonate of soda and caustic soda. (Squire, Comp, to Br. Bharm., p. 16.)—Note to the twelfth edition. 1 The following is the formula of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850. “ Take of Nitrate of Potassa, in coarse powder, two pounds; Sulphuric Acid a pound and a half; Alcohol nine pints and a half; Diluted Alcohol a pi?it; Carbonate of Potassa an ounce. Mix the Nitrate ot Potassa and the Alcohol in a large glass retort, and having gradually poured in the Acid, digest with a gentle heat for two hours; then raise the heat and distil a gallon. To the distilled liquor add the Diluted Ah ohol and Carbonate of Potassa, and again distil gallon.” U.S. PART II. Spiritus. 1343 quantities ot this preparation are made, the several portions require to be mixed in a large glass vessel, to render the whole of uniform strength ; as the por- tion which first comes over in the rectification is strongest in hyponitrous ether Previously to the redistillation, the head and worm must be washed thoroughly with water, to remove a little acid which comes over in the first distillation {Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., i. 308.) In the present U. S. process, which was modelled after the plan of Dr. Squibb, the nitric acid and alcohol are directly mixed in a retort containing pieces of glass to facilitate ebullition and prevent concussion, and arrangements are made for applying heat by means of a water-bath, so that it may be diminished when necessary to repress the violence of the reaction, and increased when this requires invigoratiou. The liquid condensed in the receiver is mixed with carbonate of potassa, and again distilled in’order to free it from the acid which has come over with the nitrous ether *r and, being too strong with ether to meet the purposes required, is diluted with alcohol, and thus brought to the state of spirit of ni- trous ether. It is a great improvement over the old formula, and has the merit of ensuring a preparation of definite strength. The British process is a new one. Instead of using nitric acid either directly or by the decomposition of nitre, it substitutes nitrous acid from the nitrite of soda, separating it by means of sulphuric acid in the presence of alcohol, and thus bringing together the materials for forming the ether more nearly in the condition in which they are to exist in the ether when formed. But the intended results are not obtained by the process ; for the nitrite of soda, as prepared by the British formula, is a mixture containing only a small relative proportion of the propel nitrite, which, according to Mr. Squire, exists in it in variable quantities from 5 to 25 per cent., and never exceeding the latter amount; so that the resulting spirit of nitrous ether must necessarily be of uncertain strength. Mr. A. J. Ro- berts, however, prepared a specimen, in accordance with the Br. formula, using the impure nitrite made according to the directions of the Pharmacopoeia, and found it to have the sp. gr. 0-840, which approaches closely to that of the offici- nal spirit. {Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1865, p. 355.) Theory of the Production of Nitrous Ether, dc. One eq. of nitric acid, by reacting with one eq. of alcohol, forms one eq. of nitrous acid (formerly hyponi- trous), one eq. of aldehyd (C4H40.2), and two eqs. of water. Thus, NO. and C4II, O = NO., and C.H.O., and 2HO. The nitrous acid, as soon as formed, reacts with a second eq. of alcohol, so as to form one eq. of nitrous ether, with separation of one eq. of water. It has, however, been shown by Dr. Golding Bird that, when an excess of alcohol is used, oxalhydric {saccharic) acid is first formed, and that, when the formation of the nitrous ether has nearly ceased, aldehyd appears in the distilled product, and simultaneously oxalic acid in the contents of the retort, be- fore which time the latter cannot be discovered. All these products result from the oxidizing action of the nitric acid upon the alcohol, increasing the proportion of oxygen in the substances formed, either by removing the hydrogen, or by ab- stracting this element and adding oxygen at the same time. Properties of Nitrous Ether. Pure nitrous (hyponitrous) ether is pale-yellow, has the smell of apples and Hungary wines, boils at 62° (below 65° Hare), and has the sp. gr. 0 947 at 60°. The density of its vapour is 2*627- Litmus is not affected by it. When it is mixed with an alcoholic solution of potassa, hypo- nitrite of potassa and alcohol are formed, without producing a brown colour, showing the absence of aldehyd. It is soluble in 48 parts of water, and in all proportions in alcohol or rectified spirit. It is highly inflammable, and burns with a white flame without residue. The impure ether, as formerly obtained by the Edinburgh and Dublin processes for subsequent dilution to form sweet spirit of nitre, boiled at 70°, and had the density ot 0 886 at 40°. The specific gravity assigned to it by the Edinburgh College was 0'899. Mixed with an 1344 Spiritus. PART II. alcoholic solution of potassa, it became dark-brown, with production of aldehyd resin. (See pope 14.) This discoloration showed the presence of aldehyd. When kept it became acid in a short time, as shown by litmus; and nitric oxide was given off, which often caused the bursting of the bottle. Its tendency to become acid was rendered greater by the action of the air, and depended on the absorp- tion of oxygen.by the aldehyd, which thereby became acetic acid. These facts evince the propriety of preserving this ether in small, strong bottles, kept full and in a cool place. Nitrous ether consists of one eq. of nitrous acid and one of ether, and its formula is C4H50,N0s. It was, therefore, improperly called nitric ether. Considered as a salt, its proper name is nitrite of ether. In its pure and concentrated state it is never used in medicine. Properties of Spirit of Nitrous Ether. This is a pale-yellow, volatile liquid, of a fragrant ethereal odour, and pungent, aromatic, sweetish, acidulous taste. As usually prepared it slightly reddens litmus, but does not cause effervescence with carbonate of soda. Its officinal sp. gr. is 0 837, U. S.; 0’843, Br. The U. S. preparation contains from 4’3 to 5 per cent, of the proper nitrous ether. It keeps well in half-pint bottles, securely stopped with waxed glass stoppers, and covered with dark paper; as Dr. Squibb proved by examining some bottles thus put up, after the lapse of two years. High density is not necessarily an in- dex of deficient strength; since it may arise from the presence of a large pro- portion of nitrous ether. When heated by means of a water-bath, the U. S. sweet spirit of nitre begins to boil at about 14o°. If a test tube, half filled with the U. S. spirit, be plunged into water heated to 145°, and held there until its contents acquire that temperature, the spirit will begin to boil distinctly on the addition of a few small pieces of glass. ( U. S.) Sweet spirit of nitre mixes with water and alcohol in all proportions. It is very inflammable, and burns with a whitish flame. It should not be kept long, as it always becomes strongly acid with age. Impurities and Tests. Sweet spirit of nitre is never quite free from aldehyd; and, if the distillation be too long continued, it is apt to contain a good deal of this substance, which afterwards becomes acetic acid by absorbing oxygen. The change goes on rapidly if the preparation be insecurely kept. Aldehyd, if in considerable proportion, may be detected by imparting a pungent odour and acrid flavour, and by the preparation assuming a brown tint on the addition of a weak solution of potassa, owing to the formation of aldehyd resin. The po- tassa test, with the best specimens, produces a straw-yellow tint within twelve hours. “When mixed with half its volume of officinal solution of potassa, pre- viously diluted with an equal measure of distilled water, it assumes a yellow colour, which slightly deepens without becoming brown, in twelve hours.” U. S. Another test for aldehyd, less reliable, is the addition of an equal volume of sul- phuric acid to the sweet spirit of nitre. If the sample be good, the change of colour will be slight, and the mixture will be considerably viscid; but if it con- tain much aldehyd, it will become dark-coloured. If water or spirit be present in undue proportion, the viscidity will be less. (Phillips.) Acetic acid, as well as other acids (usually nitrogen acids) that may happen to be present, may be discovered by the taste, by their acting on litmus strongly, and by their decom- posing the alkaline carbonates or bicarbonates with effervescence. Nitrogen acids are known by colouring blue a piece of paper previously dipped into tinc- ture of guaiac. These acids operate injuriously by their chemical reactions with other substances, when sweet spirit of nitre is prescribed in mixtures. Thus, they liberate iodine from iodide of potassium, gradually decolorize compound infusion of roses, and, in the compound mixture of iron, hasten the conversion of protox- ide of iron into sesquioxide. To obviate these effects, Mr. Harvey, of Leeds, keeps sweet spirit of nitre standing on crystals of bicarbonate of potassa, and states that, if the preparation be of full strength, no appreciable .portion of the PART II. Spirit us. 1345 alkali will be dissolved. (Pliarm. Journ., Jan. 1842.) When acid sweet spirit or nitre is rectified from calcined magnesia, it becomes acid again in a short time; but, according to M. Klauer, when rectified from neutral tartrate of potassa, it continues unchanged for months. A deep-olive colour with sulphate of protox- ide of iron shows the presence of a nitrogen oxide or acid. According to Mr. Bastick, sweet spirit of nitre contains about one-fifth of one per cent, of anhydrous hydrocyanic acid, when made from nitrous (hyponitrous) ether, formed by impregnating alcohol with nitrous acid, evolved by the action ot starch on nitric acid, according to the process of Liebig. In making sweet spirit of nitre on a large scale, Dr. Squibb found that hydrocyanic acid vapours were pro duced if the heat happened to rise too high, and the ether ceased to be formed. Alcohol and water are often fraudulently added to sweet spirit of nitre. When in undue proportion, they may be detected in the British preparation, as stated in the Pharmacopoeia, by agitating it with twice its volume of a saturated solu- tion of chloride of calcium. If the sweet spirit of nitre be of the full strength, one and a half per cent, of ether will slowly separate, and rise to the surface. If less ether or none separate, the presence of too much alcohol and water will be indicated. This test is hardly applicable to the U. S. preparation, which is weaker than the British. Specific gravity is no criterion of the goodness of the preparation as obtained by any formula. The addition of water will raise its density; and the same effect will be produced by adding nitrous ether. A high density, in connection with deficient ethereal qualities, would of course indicate free acids, or an excess of water, or both. A specific gravity lower than the U. S. and Br. standard would show the presence of alcohol, either stronger than it should be, or in too large a proportion. The fraudulent dilution of sweet spirit of nitre with alcohol and water is a great evil, considering its extensive use, and valuable remedial properties. Water is injurious, not merely as a diluent, but as the most efficient promoter of chemi- cal changes. We have been informed that the medicine is variously diluted with twice, thrice, and even four times its weight of alcohol and water. In this way its ether strength is often reduced to less than half what it should be. Dr. Squibb examined six samples of sweet spirit of nitre, five of which were obtained from respectable wholesale druggists; and of these one sample contained 316 per cent, of hyponitrous ether, four between one and two per cent., and one under one per cent.; while a standard preparation, made according to the U. S. Phar- macopoeia, contained at least 4-3 per cent. In some shops a strong and a weak preparation are kept, to suit the views of customers as to price. Some druggists are said to dilute their sweet spirit of nitre, upon the plea that the physician’s prescriptions are written in view of the use of a weak preparation ! All the&e evils would be corrected, if the manufacturing chemists of the Union would pre- pare it by the formula of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, at the same time adopting measures necessary to preserve it from change. A uniform preparation being thus furnished to the druggists, all that would be necessary on their part, would be to refrain from weakening it by the admixture of alcohol and water. Medical Properties and Uses. Sweet spirit of nitre is diaphoretic, diuretic, and antispasmodic. It is deservedly much esteemed as a medicine, and is exten- sively employed in febrile affections, either alone or in conjunction with tartar emetic, for the purpose of promoting the secretions, especially those of sweat and urine. It often proves a grateful stimulus to the stomach, relieving nausea and removing flatulence, and not unfrequently quiets restlessness and promotes sleep. On account of its tendency to the kidneys, it is often conjoined with other diuretics, such as squill, digitalis, acetate of potassa, nitre, &c., for the purpose of promoting their action in dropsical complaints. Dr. Duncan, of Edinburgh, praised a combination of it with a small proportion of aromatic spirit of ammo- nia, as eminently diaphoretic and diuretic, and well suited to certain states of Spiritus. PART II. febrile disease The dose is from thirty minims to a fluidraehm, every two or three hours, mixed with a portion of water. When used as a diuretic, it should be given in larger doses. When the vapour of sweet spirit of nitre is inhaled, it produces, according to Mr. D. R. Brown, of Edinburgh, among other symptoms, a leaden-purple colour of the lips, mouth, hands, &e., and extreme muscular debility, enduring for hours. In his own case, these symptoms were unaccompanied with the slightest effect on the brain; but in others the effects were different; headache being invariably produced. (Pharm. Journ., March, 185T, p. 456.)* Off. Prep. Mistura Gljcyrrhizse Composita, U. S. B. SPIRITUS AMMONLZE. U. S. Spirit of Ammonia. “ Take of Muriate of Ammonia, in small pieces, Lime, each, twelve troyounces, Water six pints ; Alcohol twenty ffuidounces. Upon the Lime, in a convenient vessel, pour a pint of the Water, and stir the mixture so as to bring it to the consistence of a smooth paste. Then add the remainder of the Water, and mix it well with the Lime. Decant the milky liquid from the gritty sediment into a glass retort, of the capacity of sixteen pints, and add the Muriate of Ammonia. Place the retort on a sand-bath, and adapt to it a receiver, previously connected with a two-pint bottle containing the Alcohol, by means of a glass tube reach- ing nearly to the bottom of the bottle. Surround the bottle with ice cold water; and apply a gradually increasing heat until ammonia ceases to be given off. Lastly, remove the liquid from the bottle, and introduce it into small bottles, which must be well stopped.” U. S. Spirit of ammonia is now officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia only; the British Pharmacopoeia not having adopted it. It is a solution of caustic ammonia in rectified spirit. As prepared by the U. S. process of 1850, the ammoniacal gas was received in the alcohol and condensed by it; and the proportions of the ingredients were so adjusted as to give a preparation containing between 10 and 11 per cent, of ammonia, and capable of saturating about 30 per cent, of officinal sulphuric acid. Accordingly it agreed, as it was intended it should, in ammoni- acal strength, with the U. S. Liquor Ammoniee. Its sp. gr. was 0'831, or there- abouts. But, in the present officinal process, the materials for the generation of ammonia are mixed with a large proportion of water, the vapour of which comes over to some extent with the gas, and is condensed along with it. The resulting spirit is, therefore, somewhat diluted with water, and to an indefinite extent, so that the preparation can have no precise sp. gr.; and, though the whole amount obtained contains all the ammonia generated, we have no accurate cri- terion of its relative strength. Properties. The U. S. spirit of ammonia, formerly called ammoniated alco- hol, is a transparent colourless liquid, having a strong ammoniacal odour, and acrid taste. When good it does not effervesce with dilute muriatic acid; but, if old, or carelessly kept, it is apt to be partially carbonated, as shown by this test. It, however, absorbs carbonic acid more slowly than Liquor Ammoniae. Medical Properties and Uses. Spirit of Ammonia is stimulant and antispas- modic, and is given in hysteria, flatulent colic, and nervous debility. It is, how- ever, little used internally; the aromatic spirit, which is pleasanter and has simi- lar properties, being preferred. The dose of the U. S. preparation is from ten to thirty drops in a wnneglassful of water. Spirit of ammonia dissolves resins, gum- resins, camphor, and the volatile oils; and is a very convenient addition to spi- rituous liniments, intended to produce a rubefacient effect. Not more than one * In relation to sweet spirit of nitre, the reader is referred to the paper of D R. Brown, of Edinburgh, contained in the Pharm. Journ. (March. 1856, p. 400); also to an instructive practical paper by Dr. E. R. Squibb, U. S. Navy, published in the Am. Jourit of Pliarm (July, 1856, p. 289), from which we have freely drawn in revising this article. Spiritue. 1347 PAltT II. part of the Spirit should, as a general rule, be added to six or eight parts, by measure, of the liniment. It enters into no officinal preparation. B. SPIRITUS AMMONIA AROMATICUS. U. A., Br. Aromatic Spirit of Ammonia. “Take of Carbonate of Ammonia a troyounce; Water of Ammonia thre*- fluidounces; Oil of Lemons two fiuidrachms and a half; Oil of Nutmeg forty minims; Oil of Lavender fifteen minims; Alcohol a pint and a half; Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Carbonate in the Water of Ammonia, pre- viously mixed with four fluidounces of Water. Dissolve the Oils in the Alcohol, mix the two solutions, and add sufficient Water to make the whole measure two pints.” U. S. “Take of Carbonate of Ammonia eight ounces [avoirdupois]; Strong Solu- tion of Ammonia four fluidounces ; Volatile Oil of Nutm eg four fiuidrachms ; Oil of Lemon six fiuidrachms; Rectified Spirit six pints [Imperial measure] ; Water three pints [Imp. meas.]. Mix, and distil seven pints [Imp. meas.]. Sp. gr. 0'870.” Br. In both of these formulas carbonate of ammonia and uncombined ammonia are used; but they differ in the relative proportion of the materials and the mode of conducting the process. The U. S. spirit is a mere solution of the ingredients in alcohol diluted with a small proportion of water; while the British contains such and so much of the ingredients as may rise in distillation, and be condensed with the seven pints of spirit that result. The former is of definite strength, the latter more or less indefinite, as a portion of the materials must be left behind. The proportion of ammonia to the carbonate (sesquicarbonate) is such as to pro- duce a neutral carbonate. The sp. gr. of the Br. preparation is 0-870. Medical Properties and Uses. Aromatic spirit of ammonia is fitted to fulfil the same indications as the simple spirit; but is much more used on account of its grateful taste and smell, it is advantageously employed as a stimulant ant- acid in sick headache. The dose of the IT. S. spirit is from thirty drops to a flui- drachm, sufficiently diluted with water. Aromatic spirit of ammonia may be use- fully added to aperient draughts, to render them less offensive to the stomach; but care must be taken not to mix it with incompatible substances; and, in order that these may be avoided, it must be recollected that most of the ammonia con- tained in it is probably in the state of the neutral carbonate. Off.Prep. Tinctura Gfuaiaci Ammoniata; Tiuctura Valerianae Ammoniata. B. SPIRITUS ANISI. U.S. Spirit of Anise. “Take of Oil of Anise afluidounce; Stronger Alcohol fifteen fluidounces. Dissolve the Oil in the Stronger Alcohol.” U. S. The dose of this preparation, as a stomachic and carminative, is one or two fiuidrachms. W. SPIRITUS ARMORACIiE COMPOSITUS. Br. Compound Spirit of Horse-radish. “Take of Horse-radish [root], sliced, Bitter Orange Peel, dried, each, twenty ounces [avoirdupois]; Nutmeg, bruised, half an ounce [avoird.]; Proof Spirit one gallon [Imperial measure]; Water two pints [Imp. meas.]. Mix, and distil a gallon [Imp. meas.] with a moderate heat.” Br. This may be used advantageously as an addition to diuretic remedies, in dropsy attended with debility, especially in the cases of drunkards. The dose is from one to four fiuidrachms. W. SPIRITUS CAJUPUTI. Br. Spirit of Cajuput. “Take of Oil of Cajuput one fluidounce ; Rectified Spirit nine fluidounces. Dissolve.” Br. For an account of the medical properties and uses of oil of cajeput, of which 1348 Spiritus. PART n. this is sin-ply an alcoholic solution, see Oleum Cajuputi, in Part I. The dose of the spirit is from 10 minims to a fluidrachm. W SPIRITUS CAMPIIORiE. U. S., Br. Spirit of Camphor. Tinctura Camphors. U. S. 1850. Tincture of Camphor. “Take of Camphor four troyounces; Alcohol two pints. Dissolve the Cam- phor in the Alcohol, and filter through paper.” U. S. “Take of Camphor one ounce [avoirdupois]; Rectified Spirit nine fluid- ounces. Dissolve.” Br. This is precisely the IT. S. Tincture of Camphor of 1850, with a changed name. It is used chiefly as an anodyne embrocation in rheumatic and gouty pains, chilblains, and the inflammation resulting from sprains and bruises. It may also be employed internally, due regard being paid to the stimulant proper- ties of the alcohol. The camphor is precipitated by the addition of water, but may be suspended by the intervention of sugar. The dose is from five drops to a fluidrachm, first added to sugar, and then mixed with water. W. SPIRITUS CHLOROFORMI. U. S., Br. Spirit of Chloroform. “Take of Purified Chloroform a troyounce; Stronger Alcohol six fluid- ounces. Dissolve the Chloroform in the Stronger Alcohol.” U. S. “Take of Chloroform one fluidounce; Rectified Spirit nineteen fluidounces. Dissolve. Sp. gr. 0-871.” Br. The chloroform strength of these preparations is very different, the U. S. spirit having one measure of chloroform to between eight and nine of alcohol, the Bri- tish one to nineteen. Solution of chloroform in alcohol in variable proportions was at one time erroneously called chloric ether, and was used as a respiratory anaesthetic agent in the place of chloroform, under the impression that it would lie safer; the stimulant properties of the alcohol obviating the sedative action of the chloroform. It is at present, however, little if at all used in this way; they who employ chloroform, and yet wish to guard against its depressing effects, preferring ether to alcohol as the corrigent. The spirit of chloroform is a con- venient form for internal exhibition, as it is more readily incorporated in mix- tures than chloroform itself. The dose of the U. S. spirit is from half a flui- drachm to a fluidrachm; of the British, much more, in order to produce an equal effect; so much more, indeed, that the effect of the alcohol would neutralize in great measure that of the chloroform. The dose, however, as mentioned by Bri- tish writers, is from ten to sixty minims; in which quantity, judging from our own experience, the chloroform would be of little use except for its flavour.* W. * Alcoholic Solution of Chloroform. The following observations formed a part of the article on chloroform in the eleventh edition of the Dispensatory; but, with the changes in rela- tion to this substance in the new U. S. Pharmacopoeia, they find a more appropriate place here in the present edition. A preparation for inhalation, composed of one-third pure chloroform and two-thirds nearly absolute alcohol, was recommended by Dr. Warren, under the name of strong chloric ether. Dr. Snow has since employed a similar mixture, using equal parts of chloroform and alcohol. The mixture, made in the proportion adopted by Dr. Snow, is commended by M. Robert as the best anaesthetic agent yet proposed. As the name chloric ether was originally applied by the late Dr. T. Thomson, of Glasgow, to the Dutch liquid, it would be well to abandon the same appellation to designate chloroform, or its mixture with alcohol. A correct name for the latter would be alcoholic solution of chloroform, or tincture of chloroform. Dr. Warren used his preparation in fifty cases with success, and considered it safer than chloroform, and more agreeable than ether. Further observation is required to determine the value of “strong chloric ether” as an anaesthetic. The alcohol may prove useful by obviating, through its stimulant properties, the depress- ing influence of the chloroform; and ether has been occasionally mixed with chloroform, with the same view. The preparation, sold in London and elsewhere undej the name of “chloric ether,” is a weak tincture of chloroform of variable quality, containing at most but 16 or 18 per cent, of chloroform, and sometimes not more than 5 or 6 per cent. B PART II. Spiritus. SPIRTTUS CINNAMOMI. U. S. Spirit of Cinnamon. “Take of Oil of Cinnamon a fluidounce ; Stronger Alcohol fifteen fluid- ounces. Dissolve the Oil in the Stronger Alcohol.” U. S. The spirit of cinnamon is an agreeable aromatic cordial, and may be given in debility of the stomach in the dose of from ten to twenty drops. W. SPIRITUS JUNIPERI. Br. Spirit of Juniper. “ Take of English Oil of Juniper one fluidounce; Rectified Spirit nine fluid- ounces. Dissolve. This Spirit contains about ninety-five times as much Oil ot Juniper as the London Spiritus Juniperi.” Br. The spirit of juniper is used chiefly as an addition to diuretic infusions. The dose may be from twenty to sixty minims. Off. Prep. Mistura Creasoti, Br. W. SPIRITUS JUNIPERI COMPOSITUS. U.S. Compound Spirit of Juniper. “Take of Oil of Juniper a fluidrachm and a half; Oil of Caraway, Oil of Fennel, each, ten minims; Diluted Alcohol eight pints. Dissolve the Oils in the Diluted Alcohol.” U. S. This spirit is a useful addition to diuretic infusions and mixtures in debilitated cases of dropsy. The dose is from two to four fluidrachms. W. SPIRITUS LAVANDULAE. U. S., Br. Spirit of Lavender. “Take of Lavender [flowers], fresh, twenty-four troyounces; Alcohol eight pints; Water two pints. Mix them, and with a regulated heat, distil eight pints.” U.S. “Take of English Oil of Lavender one fluidounce; Rectified Spirit nine fluidounces. Dissolve.” Br. Mr. Brande asserts that the dried flowers produce as fragrant a spirit as the fresh. Spirit of Lavender is used chiefly as a perfume, and as an ingredient in other preparations. The perfume usually sold under the name of lavender water is not a distilled spirit, but an alcoholic solution of the oil, with the addition of other odorous substances. The following is given by Mr. Brande as one of the most approved recipes for preparing it. “Take of rectified spirit five gallons, essential oil of lavender twenty ounces, essential oil of bergamot five ounces, essence of ambergris [made by digesting one drachm of ambergris and eight grains of musk in half a pint of alcohol] half an ounce. Mix.” Off. Prep. Mistura Ferri Composita, U. S. W. SPIRITUS LAVANDULAE COMPOSITUS. U.S. Tinctura La- vandula Composita. Br. Compound Spirit of Lavender. Compound Tincture of Lavender. “Take of Oil of Lavender a fluidounce; Oil of Rosemary two fluidrachms; Cinnamon, in moderately fine powder, two troyounces; Cloves, in moderately fine powder, half a troy ounce; Nutmeg, in moderately fine powder, a iroyounce; Red Saunders, in moderately fine powder, three hundred and sixty grains; Al- cohol six pints; Water two pints; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Dis- solve the Oils in the Alcohol, and add the Water. Then mix the powders, and, having moistened the mixture with a fluidounce of the alcoholic solution of the Oils, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon it the re- mainder of the alcoholic solution, and afterwards Diluted Alcohol, until the fil- tered liquid measures eight pints.” U. S. The British Pharmacopoeia directs a fluidrachm and a half of oil of laven- der, ten minims of oil of rosemary, one hundred and fifty grains of bruised cinnamon, the same quantity of bruised nutmeg, three hundred grains of red saunders, and two pints (Imperial measure) of rectified spirit; macerates the 1350 Spiritus. PART II. solids in hie spirit for seven days; then expresses, filters, dissolves the oils, and adds sufficient rectified spirit to make two pints. When properly made, this is a delightful compound of spices. It is much em- ployed as an adjuvant and corrigent of other medicines, and as a remedy for gastric uneasiness, nausea, flatulence, and general languor or faintness. The dose is from thirty drops to a fluidrachm, and is most conveniently administered on a lump of sugar, or mixed with sugar and water in a wineglass. Off. Prep. Liquor Arsenicalis, Br.; Liquor PotassaB Arsenitis, U. S. W. SPIRITUS LIMONIS. U.S. Spirit of Lemon. Essence of Lemon. “ Take of Oil of Lemon two fluidounces ; Lemon Peel, freshly grated, a troy- ounce ; Stronger Alcohol two pints. Dissolve the Oil in the Stronger Alcohol, add the Lemon Peel, macerate for twenty-four hours, and filter through paper.” U S. This spirit is used chiefly for flavouring mixtures. W. SPIRITUS MENTHiE PIPERITA. U.S., Br. Tinctura Olei Mentile Piperita. U. S. 1850. Spirit of Peppermint. Tincture of Oil of Peppermint. Essence of Peppermint. “Take of Oil of Peppermint a ffuidounce; Peppermint, in coarse powder, one hundred and twenty grains; Stronger Alcohol fifteen fluidounces. Dis- solve the Oil in the Stronger Alcohol, add the Peppermint, macerate for twenty- four hours, and filter through paper.” U. S. “Take of English Oil of Peppermint one ffuidounce; Rectified Spirit nine fluidounces. Dissolve. This spirit contains about forty-seven times as much Oil of Peppermint as Spiritus Menthae Piperitae, Bond.” Br. The distilled spirit has no advantage over a simple solution of the oil in al- cohol, and this mode of preparing it has been adopted both in the XJ. S. and British Pharmacopoeias. The present officinal spirit is the Tincture of Oil of Peppermint of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850 ; and is much stronger than the old distilled spirit. It has long been popularly used under the name of essence of peppermint. The present preparation is only about half as strong as the for- mer tincture, and differs in having a little of the dried herb added to the oil, the object of which, as we are informed, is to impart colour to the spirit. The spirit of peppermint affords a convenient method of administering a dose of the vola- tile oil; being of such a strength that, when dropped on loaf-sugar, it may be taken without inconvenience. The dose is from twenty to thirty drops, which may be given as just mentioned, or mixed with sweetened water. W. SPIRITUS MENTHiE VIRIDIS. U.S. Tinctura Olei Mentha Yiridis. U. S. 1850. Spirit of Spearmint. Tincture of Oil of Spearmint. Essence of Spearmint. “Take of Oil of Spearmint a ffuidounce; Spearmint, in coarse powder, one hundred and twenty grains; Stronger Alcohol fifteen fluidounces. Dissolve the 0.1 in the Stronger Alcohol, add the Spearmint, macerate for twenty-four hours, and filter through paper.” U. S. The remarks made on the Spirit of Peppermint are equally applicable to this. Both are usually employed as carminatives. The spirit of spearmint may be given in the dose of thirty or forty drops. W. SPIRITUS MYRISTIC2E. U.S.,Br. Spirit of Nutmeg. “Take of Nutmeg, bruised, two troyounces; Diluted Alcohol eight pints' Water a pint. Mix them, and with a regulated heat, distil eight pints.” U S. “Take of volatile Oil of Nutmeg one ffuidounce ; Rectified Spirit nine 'hnd- ounces.” Br. 1351 PART II. Spiritus.—Strychnia. The spirit of nutmeg is used chiefly for its flavour, as an addition to other medicines. The dose is one or two fluidrachms. Off. Prep. Mistura Ferri Composita, Br. W. SPIRITUS ROSMARINI. Br. Spirit of Rosemary. “Take of English Oil of Rosemary one ffuidounce; Rectified Spirit nine ffuidounees. Dissolve. This spirit contains about thirty-one times as much Oil of Rosemary as Spiritus Rosmarini, Lond." Br. Spirit of rosemary is a grateful perfume, and is used chiefly as an ingredient in lotions and liniments. W. STRYCHNIA. Preparations of Strychnia. STRYCHNIA. U.S.,Br. Strychnia. “Take of Nux Vomica, rasped, forty-eight troyounces; Lime, in fine powder, six troyounces; Muriatic Acid three troyounces and a half; Alcohol, Diluted Alcohol, Diluted Sulphuric Acid, Water of Ammonia, Purified Animal Char- coal, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Macerate the Nux Vomica for twenty- four hours in sixteen pints of Water, acidulated with one-third of the Muriatic Acid; then boil for two hours, and strain with expression through a strong muslin bag. Boil the residue twice successively in the same quantity of acidu- lated Water, each time straining as before. Mix the decoctions and evaporate to the consistence of thin syrup; then add the Lime previously mixed with a pint of Water, and boil for ten minutes, frequently stirring. Pour the whole into a double muslin bag, and, having thoroughly washed the precipitate, press, dry, and powder it. Treat the powder repeatedly with Diluted Alcohol, in order to remove the brucia, until the washings are but faintly reddened by nitric acid. Then boil it repeatedly with Alcohol until deprived of its bitterness, mix the several tinctures; and distil off the Alcohol by means of a water-bath. Having washed the residue, mix it with a pint of Water, and, applying a gentle heat, drop in sufficient Diluted Sulphuric Acid to neutralize and dissolve the alkaloid. Then Add Purified Animal Charcoal, and, having boiled the mixture for a few minutes, filter, evaporate, and set aside to crystallize. Dissolve the crystals in Water, and add sufficient Water of Ammonia to precipitate the Strychnia. Lastly, dry this on bibulous paper, and keep it in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “Take of Nux Vomica one pound [avoirdupois]; Acetate of Lead one hun- dred and eighty grains; Solution of Ammonia, Rectified Spirit, Distilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Subject the Nux Vomica for two hours to steam in any convenient vessel; chop or slice it; dry it by the vapour bath or hot-air cham- ber, and immediately grind it in a coffee mill. Digest the powder at a gentle heat for twelve hours with two pints [Imperial measure] of the Spirit and one of the Water, strain through linen, express strongly and repeat the process twice. Distil off the spirit from the mixed fluid, evaporate the watery residue to about sixteen ounces and filter when cold. Add now the Acetate of Lead, previously dissolved in Distilled Water, so long as it occasions any precipitate; filter; wash the precipitate with ten ounces of cold Water, adding the washings to the fil- trate; evaporate the clear fluid to eight [fluid]ounces, and when it has cooled add the Ammonia in slight excess, stirring thoroughly. Let the mixture stand At the ordinary temperature for twelve hours; collect the precipitate on a filter, wash it once with a few ounces of cold Distilled Water, dry it on the vapour bath, and boil it with successive portions of Rectified Spirit, till the fluid scarcely tastes bitter. Distil off most of the Spirit, evaporate the residue to the bulk of about half an ounce, and set it aside to cool. Cautiously pour off the yellowish mother-liquor (which contains the Brucia of the seeds) from the white crust of 1352 Strychnia. PART II. Strychnia which adheres to the vessel. Throw the crust on a paper filter, wash it with a mixture of two parts of Rectified Spirit and one of the Water, till the washings cease to become red on the addition of nitric acid; finally, dissolve it by boiling it with an ounce of Rectified Spirit, and set it aside to crystallize. More crystals may be obtained by evaporating the mother-liquor.” Br. In preparing strychnia, the first step is properly to comminute the nux vomica. This may be done by rasping the seeds, or, as directed in the British Pharma- copoeia, by first softening them by steam, then slicing, drying, and grinding them. The next object is to extract the strychnia. For this purpose, in the U. S. process, water is employed acidulated with muriatic acid; in the British, rec- tified spirit diluted with half its bulk of water. In the latter, the native igasurate of strychnia is taken up ; in the former, the muriate, which is a very soluble salt. In the IJ. S. process, after a concentration of the infusion, the salt of strychnia is decomposed by lime, which precipitates the strychnia along with the excess of lime employed and impurities. The strychnia is extracted from the precipitate by boiling alcohol, and may be obtained in crystals by the concentration of the solution. But in this state it is much coloured and impure. To obviate these impurities in some degree, the British Pharmacopoeia directs that the concen- trated liquid should be treated with acetate of lead, which precipitates much of the contaminating matter, and then that the liquor, previously filtered, should be treated with ammonia, by which the strychnia is thrown down less impure than in the U. S. process. At this stage of the proceedings, the present IJ. S. Phar- macopoeia directs that the precipitate, which, besides strychnia, contains also brucia and various impurities, should be freed from the latter alkaloid by re- peated washing with cold diluted alcohol, in which brucia is much more soluble than strychnia. This is a great improvement upon the U. S. formula of 1850, in which the brucia was allowed to accompany the strychnia to the end of the pro- cess. In the U. S. process, the impure strychnia is converted into a sulphate by the addition of sulphuric acid, and precipitated again by ammonia; being, while in the state of the sulphate, decolorized by means of animal charcoal. The Br. Pharmacopoeia completes the process by washing the precipitate produced by ammonia with cold water, drying it, then exhausting it with alcohol, and con- centrating the alcoholic solution. The strychnia now crystallizes, leaving most of the brucia in the mother-liquor. But, as some of the latter alkaloid still con- taminates the product, the Pharmacopoeia directs this to be washed with cold alcohol somewhat diluted, until the washings cease to give evidence of the pre- sence of brucia by being reddened by nitric acid; thus accomplishing at the end of the process what was done in the U. S. formula at an earlier stage. To free the strychnia entirely from brucia requires repeated crystallizations, and a little of the latter principle is consequently almost always retained; but it is not in- jurious, as the effects of the two alkalies upon the system are very similar. The bean of St. Ignatius yields strychnia more easily and more largely than mnr vomica, but is less plentiful.* * M. J. F. Molyn proposes, previously to the extraction of strychnia, to subject nux vomica t by which the saccharine and gummy matters of the seeds are decomposed, and lactic acid is formed, which decomposes the igasurates of strychnia and brucia, pro- ducing with these bases very soluble lactates. For the particulars of his process, see the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xix. 99). We are informed that none of the officinal processes are followed exactly by the large manufacturers, in reference to the preliminary comminution of the nux vomica. The plan most approved is to macerate the whole seeds in dilute sulphuric acid, and to pass steam through them, under pressure, in a covered vat, lined with lead. The seeds softened in this way are then ground, and the pulp lixiviated or expressed. One advantage of the sulphuric acid, employed in this way, is thought to be the conversion of the bassorin, which impedes the process, into soluble dextrin. The liquors are precipitated with lime, and the process completed as officinally directed.—Note to the tenth edition. Mr. John Horsley, of Cheltenham, England, proposes a new process for preparing PART II. Strychnia. 1353 If thought desirable, brucia may be in great measure separated from the strychnia of the shops, by dissolving the latter in very dilute nitric acid, filter- ing, and concentrating. Nitrate of brucia crystallizes in short, thick, dense prisms grouped together; nitrate of strychnia in radiated tufts of long, light, capillary needles. By gentle agitation with the liquid, the latter salt is suspended and may be poured off, leaving the former. The alkalies may be obtained by dis- solving the salts in water, and precipitating with ammonia. (Christison.) As usually kept in the shops, strychnia is a white or grayish-white powder. When rapidly crystallized from its alcoholic solution, it has the form of a white, granular powder; when slowly crystallized, that of elongated octohedra, or quad- rilateral prisms with quadrilateral terminations. It is permanent in the air, in- odorous, but excessively bitter, with a metallic after-taste. So intense is its bit- terness, that one part of it is said to communicate a sensible taste to GOO,000 parts of water. It melts like a resin, but is not volatile, being decomposed at a comparatively low temperature, and entirely dissipated at a red heat. It is solu- ble in 6667 parts of water at 50°, and about 2000 at the boiling point. Boiling officinal alcohol dissolves it without difficulty, and deposits it upon cooling. In absolute alcohol and in ether it is very sparingly soluble. According to the ex- periments of Messrs. Plummer and Kelly, strychnia is soluble, at the ordinary temperature, in 387 parts of officinal alcohol (sp.gr. 0'835), 179 parts of abso- lute alcohol, and 682 parts of ether. (Am. Journ. of Pharrn., Jan. 1859, p. 25.) The volatile oils dissolve it freely. It has an alkaline reaction on test paper, and forms salts with the acids. Nitric acid does not redden it if perfectly pure, but almost always reddens it as found in the shops, in consequence of the presence of brucia. M. Eugene Marchand proposes the following test, by which a very minute proportion of strychnia may be detected. If a little of the alkaloid be rubbed with a few drops of concentrated sulphuric acid containing one-hundredth of nitric acid, it will be dissolved without change of colour; but if the least quantity of per- strychnia, which has the advantage of dispensing with alcohol. One-quarter of a pound of nux vomica is kneaded with an equal weight of commercial acetic acid, the pulpy mass thus obtained is diluted with two or three pints of cold water, and the mixture is digested for a few days. The clear liquor is then decanted, an equal quantity of cold water poured on the mass, and digestion continued for a day or two longer, or till everything soluble has been extracted. The clear liquor is again decanted, and the residue filtered through flannel. The clear liquors are mixed, and evaporated to a syrupy consistence. The residue, when cold, is diluted with an equal quantity of water, ammonia is added in excess, and the mixture set aside for a day or two, that the strychnia may crystallize. This forms little white tufts in the liquid, and on the sides of the vessel. When the crystallization is complete, the supernatant liquid is filtered through calico, and the residue, with the im- pure crystals collected from the vessel added to it, is allowed to drain, then collected, and dried by means of a water-bath. The substance thus obtained, consisting of strychnia, brucia, and various impurities, is digested in hot diluted acetic acid, and the solution fil- tered. The strychnia and brucia may be precipitated from the filtered liquid by potassa; or, if the strychnia alone be wanted, a solution of chromate of potassa may be added, which will throw down chromate of strychnia, free from brucia, if the liquid be tolerably acid. The chromate of strychnia, being well drained on a filter, may be digested in solu- tion of ammonia, by which the alkaloid will be precipitated of a more or less snowy white- ness. Mr. Ilorsley thus obtained about 1 per cent, of strychnia from nux vomica, which is at least twice the ordinary yield. (Pharrn. Journ., xvi. 179.) Mr. John Williams proposes the use of benzole in the preparation of strychnia. Having extracted the soluble matters of nux vomica by repeated decoction with water acilulated with sulphuric acid, he evaporates the liquid to the consistence of thin treacle, and adds a concentrated solution of caustic potassa, so as to render the liquid strongly alkaline. He then adds an equal bulk of benzole, shakes the mixture well, and keeps it in a warm place for 12 hours. The benzole, holding the alkaloids in solution, rises, and is poured off; a new portion is added, and after similar treatment is also decanted; the mixed benzole solutions are distilled; and the residue treated with acetic acid, filtered, and precipitated with caustic soda. The precipitate is white, and consists of strychnia and brucia, which tuay be separated in the ordinary meth td. (See Am. Journ. of Pharrn., xxvi. 339.)— Note tc the eleventh edition. 1354 Strychnia. PART II. oxide of leal l b added to the mixture, a magniBcent blue colour will be instantly developed, which will pass rapidly into violet, then gradually to red, and ulti- mately become yellow. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 200.) Professor Otto recommends as a test a minute quantity of solution of bichromate of potassa, which, added to the solution of strychnia in concentrated sulphuric acid, pro- duces a splendid violet colour. (Am. Jovrn. of Pharm., xix. 77.) A similar change of colour is produced, according to Dr. E. W. Davy, by substituting a strong solution of ferridcyanide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa) for that of bichromate of potassa. (Ibid., xxv. 414.) It appears that any substance capa- ble of yielding nascent oxygen readily will serve to develop the characteristic violet colour, when applied after the addition of sulphuric acid. Landerer has found that solid iodic acid or iodate of potassa, heated gently with strychnia, gives rise to a beautiful violet colour, gradually passing to red, which remains unchanged for many days. (Ibid., March, 1861, p. 110.) According to Mr. Wm. Copney, the least efficacious agent is chlorate of potassa, a much better is deu- toxide of lead, a still better is deutoxide of manganese, and the best of all is bi- chromate of potassa; and the general result of numerous experiments, recently made, is that the last-mentioned reagent is the most effective. The sulphuric acid must be of not less sp. gr. than P84; and that of l-85 is better. The play of colours, according to Mr. Copney, is first blue, then purple, then crimson, which is followed by red and green, the latter sometimes giving place to yellow. It is stated that the 1-500,000 part of a grain may be detected. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 459.)* The usual mode of proceeding is to drop the solution * This subject requires a more detailed consideration than space can be afforded for in the text. The questions have been discussed whether strychnia, taken in poisonous quan- tities, is decomposed after a short period in the system, so that it cannot be detected by chemical reagents either in the secretions or in the body; and whether, allowing it to re- main in the system, the quantity required to produce death may not be so small, and so diffused, as to afford no evidence of its presence to chemical tests. The general results of the experiments upon these points are, that strychnia is found unaltered in the urine after being swallowed; that it strongly resists decomposition in the system; and that, in cases of poisoning, even though it may have been absorbed from the stomach, and not to be found there, it may be detected in the blood and solid tissues of the body, if taken, largely enough to cause death. But to succeed in detecting the alkaloid when mixed, in small proportion, with organic matters, it is necessary first so to disintegrate the organic matter that the action of a solvent of the strychnia should not be impeded, and that the alkaloid should be com- pletely separated from the foreign matter. The process of Messrs. Rogers & Girdwood, by which these objects are effected, is the following. Digest the substance, supposed to contain the strychnia, with a mixture of 1 part of muriatic acid and 10 of water, until it becomes apparently fluid. Filter, and evaporate the liquid to dryness by a water-bath. Treat the residue with alcohol as long as anything is dissolved, filter, and evaporate. Dis- solve the residue in water and filter. Add solution of ammonia in excess to the aqueous solution, and agitate in a bottle or long tube with half an ounce of chloroform. Upon re- pose the chloroform subsides, holding the alkaloid in solution. Draw it off by a pipette, and evaporate the chloroform over a water-bath. Moisten the dry residue with concen- trated sulphuric acid, and expose the mixture for some hours to the temperature of a tvater-bath, by which means all the organic matter besides the strychnia is decomposed. Treat the charred mass with water, filter, add excess of ammonia, and shake the mixture with a drachm of chloroform. Separate the chloroform as before; and, if the matter left after the evaporation of a small portion of it is charred by concentrated sulphuric acid, the whole of it must be treated in the same manner as the previous chloroform solution. The last chloroform solution obtained is then to be tested for strychnia. Take up a little of it in a capillary tube, and drop it on the smallest space of a warm porcelain capsule, so that each successive drop may be evaporated. When the capsule is quite cold, moisten the spot with concentrated sulphuric acid, and add a minute fragment of bichromate of potassa. Should the characteristic colour not be developed, it is said that, if there be the minutest quantity of strychnia present, the colour will become visible by adding sulphuric acid ren- dered slightly yellow by chromic acid. In conducting the process, care must be taken nr« to stir the spot moistened by sulphuric acid with a rod before the addition of the bichro- mate, and not to expose the spot to a very strong light, w'hich interferes with the chei»ica’ Strychnia. 1355 PART II. Buspected to contain strychnia upon a clean surface of porcelain, evaporate to dryness, then apply the sulphuric acid to the spot, and afterwards a minute fragment of a crystal of the bichromate, which will immediately produce the change of colour. Some doubt was thrown upon the value of this test by ex- periments, which seemed to prove that the presence of morphia in excess, es peciallv in connection with organic matter, so far modified or disguised the action of the test upon strychnia as to prevent the appearance of the cnar- acteristic colour; but subsequent and carefully conducted experiments, by the late Dr. Robert P. Thomas, satisfactorily determined that the conclusions in re- lation to the effects of morphia were erroneous, and that, whether alone or as- sociated with organic matters, in small or in large quantity, it does not prevent the operation of this colour-test if carefully applied. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1861, p. 414; and April, 1862, p. 340.) Strychnia consists of carbon, hy- drogen, nitrogen, and oxygen; but the proportion of its constituents is very differently given by different authors. Liebig states the composition to be CHHa N204; in the British Pharmacopoeia, it is given as C42H22N204, which is the for- mula inferrible from the analysis of Gerhardt. (See Am. Journ. of Pliarm., March, 1859, p. 135.) The salts of strychnia are for the most part soluble and crystallizable. Their solution is decomposed by the alkalies and their carbon- ates, and by tannic, but not by gallic acid; and is not affected by the salts of sesquioxide of iron. They are precipitated by the solution of iodine in iodide of potassium, and the precipitate, though soluble in alcohol, is insoluble in the diluted acetic and muriatic acids of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. (Fairthorne, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 212.)* reactions. (Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., June, 1857, p. 620.) It is probable that the process of dialysis might be advantageously applied to the separation of strychnia from the or- ganic matters containing it, when brought to the liquid state. (See Dialysis, page 896.) Diluted acetic acid may be used for extracting the alkaloid with other soluble substances from the contents of the stomach. It is stated by Mr. C. W. Bingley that, if much tartar emetic be contained in a solution with a little strychnia, a pale-greenish colour is produced instead of the violet; and, in like manner, if chloride of antimony be present, the sulphuric acid and bichromate of po- tassa test fails altogether. (Cfaem. Gaz., June 16,1856, p. 229.) Mr. Richard Hagen, having been induced, by the assertion of Von Sicherer that this test fails when the strychnia is mixed with tartar emetic or other tartrates, or even tartaric acid, to investigate the sub- ject, ascertained that this statement, as a general rule, is erroneous; for the reaction takes place with strychnia or its muriate, though mixed with 20 or 30 parts of tartrate of anti- mony; yet when nitrate of strychnia is used with 20 parts of the antimonial tartrate, the mass almost instantly acquires a green colour with the reagents mentioned. But even with nitrate of strychnia, the test succeeds if peroxide of lead is used instead of chromic acid as the oxidizing agent. [Ibid., Oct. 15, 1857, p. 398.) For a particular account of the results produced by the reaction of a large number of substances with strychnia, the reader is referred to a paper by Dr. T. G. Wormley, in the Chemical News for April 14th and 28th, 1860 (pp. 218 and 242). Among other trials made by him was that of the action of this alkaloid on frogs, proposed as a test by the late Dr. Marshall Hall. The poison was injected into the stomach of the animals through a pipette. A solution containing 1 per cent, of strychnia immediately produced rigidity and violent tetanic spasms, and death in 8 minutes. With 1 part of strychnia to 1000 of the menstruum, the spasmodic symptoms were induced in 3 or 4 minutes; with 1 in 10,000, in from 10 to 24 minutes; with 1 in 20,000, and 1 in 30,000, the symptoms were less unequivocal, though tetanic spasms were noticed in some of the animals. Experiments by Mr. W. A. Guy on the etfects of sulphuric and nitric acids on strychnia and many other alkaloids, published with tabulated results, show that in no one out of 66 proximate principles, chiefly alkaloids, was the same change of colour produced as in strychnia by concentrated sulphuric acid, followed by a crystal of bichromate of potassa. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 517.) In'the same number of the same journal (p. 527) is a paper by Mr. T. E. Jenkins, giving the result of experiments with sulphuric acid and bichromate of potassa on numerous alkaloids, all tending to prove the delicacy and certainty of this colour-test of strychnia—Note to the eleventh and twelfth editmis. * When an aqueous solution of sulphate of strychnia and nitrite of potassa is boiled, an effervescence takes p)ao« owing to the escape of nitrogen, and the solution becomes yellow. Strychnia. Part II. Strychnia is apt to contain imparities, of which the chief, besides brucia, are colouring matter, and lime or magnesia. The two latter impurities are left be- hind when the adulterated alkaloid is incinerated in the open air. Pure strych- nia leaves no ashes under these circumstances. Brucia is detected by the red colour which it yields with nitric acid. Neither this nor sulphuric acid colours strychnia; a test which serves to distinguish it from several other alkaloids. Medical Properties and Uses, &c. The effects of strychnia upon the system are identical in character with those of nux vomica, and it is employed for the same purposes as a medicine. (See Nux Vomica, page 561.) It operates in the i>ame way by whatever avenue it may enter into the circulation; but is said to act most powerfully when injected into the veins, or applied to a fresh wound. The blood of an animal under its influence produces similar effects in another, if transfused into its veins. There is no doubt that it is absorbed; as, after having been swallowed, it has been found in the urine, the blood, and the tissue of va- rious organs. In overdoses it is a most violent poison. Pelletier and Caventou killed a dog in half a minute with one-sixth of a grain of the pure alkaloid. One grain or even less might prove fatal in the human subject. A case, however, is recorded in which recovery took place after seven grains had been swallowed; but the medicine was probably impure. (See Am. Journ. of Aled. Sci., N. S., xxx. 562.) Its most striking and characteristic effect, when taken in poisonous doses, is violent tonic spasms of the muscles, like those of tetanus, which some- times continue after death. According to M. Duclos, the poisonous effects of strychnia upon animals subside under the application of negative electricity, while they are aggravated by the positive. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., xvi. 154.) M. Boudet has found that chlorine water alternated with tartar emetic, so as to produce vomiting, obviates these effects in dogs. {Arch. Gen., Feb. 1853, p. 222.) Kermes mineral has been recommended by M. Thorel as an antidote, being thought by him to form with strychnia an insoluble sulphuret, at the same time aiding any other emetic which may be administered for its expulsion. In cases of poisoning with strychnia he recommends fifteen grains of kermes, and one and a half grains of tartar emetic. MM. Bouchardat and G-obley state that, out of the body, the ioduretted iodide of potassium acts far more powerfully in producing an absolutely insoluble compound. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiii. 84.) Animal charcoal has been employed with a view to absorb the poison; being thrown in by means of a stomach-tube. {Lond. Aled. Times and Gaz., April, 1855, p. 423.) Tannic acid, chlorine, and the tinctures of iodine and bro- mine are recommended as the best antidotes by Prof. Bellini. (See Am. Journ. of Aled. Sci., July, 1863, p. 276.) The indications are to evacuate the stomach, using at the same time any chemical antidote that may be at hand, and to relieve the spasms by opiates, ether, or other narcotics. Of the emetics sulphate of zinc would be among the most efficient; and powdered mustard has been highly re- commended. They should be aided by the very free use of warm water. But it often happens that, before aid arrives, enough of the poison has been absorbed to produce death; so that vomiting, even aided by chemical antidotes, cannot If ammonia be now added, a precipitate takes place, which has been found to consist of two new alkaloids, resulting from the oxidation of the strychnia in different degrees. One of these the discoverer, P. Schutzenberger, proposes to name oxystrychnia, and the other binoxy strychnia (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1859, p. 133.) Methyl-strychnia. Methyl-brucia. These alkaloids are formed by replacing one of the eqs. of hydrogen in strychnia by methyl (C2H3), which is effected by acting on the alkaloids by iodide of methyl. A singular and, if verified, very important statement in relation to these modifications of strychnia and brucia, made by Stahlschmidt (Ann. der Phys. und Chem.), is that they are not poisonous. lie gave to a rabbit five grains of methyl-strychDia, without any bad symptoms, though the same animal was afterwards killed in five minutes by one-twentietli of a grain of strychnia placed upon its tongue. The important practical inference is that iodide of methyl ought to be an antidote to strychnia. (See Am. Journ. of Pkarrn., May, 1860, p. 220.)—Note to the twelfth edition. Strychnia. 1357 PART II. be relied on. To relieve the spasm, besides opium and ether, camphor has been used with supposed success; and several cases are on record in which the inha iation of chloroform has not only afforded great relief, but appears to have been the means of saving life. Chloroform has been used also with seeming advan- tage by the stomach. In a case recorded by Dr. Dresbach, of Tiffin, Ohio, two drachms, swallowed by a patient alarmingly ill from the effects of three grains of strychnia, produced complete relief in less than fifteen minutes. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xix. 546, from Western Lancet, Feb. 1850.)* A case occurring at St. Louis, Missouri, is on record, in which a patient, who had taken six grains of strychnia, was, after having been vomited, apparently saved by the internal use of infusion of tobacco, administered by Drs. Byrne and O’Reilly. (Ranking's Abstract, No. 29, p. 287.) Aconite has been shown by experiments on dogs, per- formed by Dr. Woakes, to have a similar physiological antagonism with strych- nia, and has been recommended in poisoning by this alkaloid, after evacuation of the stomach. (British Med. Journ., Oct. 26, 1861.) Different persons are very differently susceptible to the action of strychnia, and some are powerfully affected by the smallest doses. Besides, being more or less impure as kept in the shops, it cannot be relied on with certainty. Hence the necessity of great caution in prescribing it, and of carefully watching the patient during its use. The best plan is always to begin with very small doses, and gradually increase till its ef- fects are observed. From one-sixteenth or even one-twenty-fourth to one-twelfth of a grain internally, and from an eighth to one-third of a grain externally, upon a blistered surface, may be employed at first; and afterwards increased if necessary. It is most conveniently administered in the form of pill. It may be given also in the saline state, which is produced by dissolving it in water acidu- lated with sulphuric, muriatic, nitric, or acetic acid. For its therapeutical appli- cations, see Nux Vomica in Part I. Dr. Isaac Hays, of Philadelphia, has found a solution of acetate of strychnia, dropped into the eye, to possess powers similar to those of the Calabar bean, in producing contraction of the pupil, and influ- encing the muscles of accommodation, and has been for several years in the habit of using it for this purpose. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., July, 1863, p. 266.) Off. Prep. Strychniae Liquor, Br.; Strychnise Sulphas, U. S. W. STRYCHNINE SULPHAS. U.S. Sulphate of Strychnia. “Take of Strychnia a troyounce; Dilute Sulphuric Acid nine ffuidrachms, or a sufficient quantity; Distilled Water a pint. Mix the Strychnia with the Distilled Water, heat the mixture gently, and gradually add Diluted Sulphuric Acid until the alkaloid is neutralized and dissolved. Filter the solution, and evaporate with a moderate heat, so that crystals may form on cooling. Lastly, having drained the crystals, dry them rapidly on bibulous paper, and keep them in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This salt is in colourless prismatic crystals, efflorescent on exposure, inodor- ous, extremely bitter, freely soluble in water, sparingly soluble in alcohol, and insoluble in ether. It melts with a moderate heat, losing nearly 14 per cent, of water of crystallization, and by a strong heat is completely dissipated. The chief advantage of this preparation over strychnia is its solubility in water, by which it is better adapted to external use, as for application to blistered surfaces, or for subcutaneous injection, should this at any time be deemed advisable, or as an ingredient in collyria. But even these advantages may be so easily gained by * In a letter to the authors, from Dr. Wm. D. Barclay, dated Muscatine, Iowa, May 4th, 18G3, the case of a robust young man is described, who, after taking four grains of strych nia, was seized with the most violent tetanic spasms, accompanied with intense suffering and recovered under the use of chloroform, given both internally and by inhalation. It was necessary to keep him under the influence of the medicine for thirteen consecutive hours, during which two pounds of chloroform were consumed by inhalation. Two drops were given every five minutes, by the stomach, when the mouth could be opened.—Not* to the twelfth edition. 1358 Sued. PART II. adding a few drops of an acid, the acetic, for example, to strychnia, as much to diminish the value of this as a distinct officinal preparation. The dose is the same as that of the alkaloid itself. W. SUCCI. Br. Though introduced to professional notice by Mr. Squire, so long since as m the year 1835, and subsequently used by many practitioners, the Juices have now for the first time been made officinal, as a distinct class of preparations. They consist of the expressed juices of fresh plants, preserved by the addition of one-third of their bulk of alcohol. Considering the great inequality in strength, and of course uncertainty in operation of the fresh juices themselves, according to soil, climate, mode of cultivation, season, and age of the plant, it may be ques- tioned whether they merit the prominence which has been given them in the Bri- tish Pharmacopoeia. Only three of them have been made officinal. SUCCUS CONII. Br. Juice of Hemlock. “Take of Fresh Leaves of Hemlock seven pounds; Rectified Spirit a suffi- ciency. Bruise the Hemlock in a stone mortar; press out the juice; and to every three measures of juice add one of the Spirit. Set aside for seven days, and filter. Keep it in a cool place.” Br. The albumen is probably coagulated under the influence of the alcohol; and hence the propriety of directing filtration. The dose of this preparation is from 30 to 90 minims. It is probably quite as reliable as the tincture. W. SUCCUS SCOPARII. Br. Juice of Broom. “Take of Fresh Broom Tops seven pounds; Rectified Spirit a sufficiency. Bruise the Broom Tops in a stone mortar; press out the juice; and to every three measures of juice add one of the Spirit. Set aside for seven days, and filter. Keep it in a cool place.” Br. The dose of this preparation as a diuretic is from 30 minims to a fluidrachm. In large doses it would be apt to disturb the stomach and bowels. It is more appropriately used as an adjuvant to other diuretics than alone. W. SUCCUS TARAXACI. Br. Juice of Taraxacum. “Take of Dandelion Root seven pounds; Rectified Spirit a sufficiency. Bruise the Dandelion Root in a stone mortar; press out the juice; and to every three measures of juice add one of the Spirit. Set aside for seven days, and filter. Keep it in a cool place.” Br. The dose of this juice is from two fluidrachms to half a fluidounce.* W. Juices. * Preserved Juice of Taraxacum. Mr. Donovan proposes the following plan, by which tho juice of taraxacum may he obtained and preserved throughout the year, with nearly all its native efficiency. The whole herb, immediately after collection, is tg be washed, bruised, and expressed; and the residue, having been mixed with as much water at 200° as will bring it to the consistence of a pulp, is to be allowed to stand for two hours, and then again expressed. The liquids thus obtained are to be mixed, and very slowly evaporated, in a wide earthen vessel, and with constant agitation, to one-half. The salts are thus ob- tained, though with little of the bitter principle. To supply this, a quantity of the roots equal to the weight of the herb first employed, is to be bruised and expressed. The result- ing juice, which is in small quantity and bitter, is to be set aside; while the residual maro is to be mixed with the concentrated juice already prepared, previously brought to a boil- ing heat. When cold, the mixture is to be strongly expressed, and the liquor obtained to be mixed with one-sixth of its measure of alcohol. The liquor is then to be poured into quart bottles, but so as not to fill them. These are to be immersed in a vessel containing water as high as the liquid within them, and placed over a fire; the water is to be slowly heated to 180°; the bottles are to be withdrawn; and the reserved juice of the root is to be added to each in equal quantities. The space at first left in the bottles should bt Such that, after the addition of the juice, and the driving in of the cork, as little as possibl* II. Sulphur. 1359 Preparaticms of Sulphur, SULPHUR. SULPHUR PR2ECIPITATUM. U.S.,Br. Lac Sulphuris. Precipi- tated Sulphur. Milk of Sulphur. “Take of Sublimed Sulphur twelve troyounces; Lime eighteen troyounces, Muriatic Acid, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Pour sufficient Water on the Lime to slake it, and, having mixed the Sulphur with it, add fifteen pints of Water to the mixture; then boil for two hours, occasionally adding Water to preserve the same measure, and filter. Dilute the filtered liquid with an equal bulk of Water, and drop into it Muriatic Acid so long as a precipitate is produced. Lastly, wash the precipitated Sulphur repeatedly with Water until the washings are nearly tasteless, and dry it.” XJ. S. “Take of Sublimed Sulphur five ounces [avoirdupois]; Slaked Lime three ounces [avoird.]; Hydrochloric Acid eight fluidounces, or a sufficiency; Dis- tilled Water a sufficiency. Heat the Sulphur and Lime, previously well mixed, in a pint [Imperial measure] of the Water, stirring diligently with a wooden spatula, boil for fifteen minutes, and filter. Boil the residue again in half a pint [Imp. meas.] of the Water, and filter. Let the united filtrates cool, dilute with two pints [Imp. meas.] of the Water, and, in an open place or under a chimney, add in successive quantities the Hydrochloric Acid previously diluted with a pint [Imp. meas.] of the Water, until effervescence ceases and the mixture ac- quires an acid reaction. Allow the precipitate to settle, decant off the super- natant liquid, pour on fresh Distilled Water, and continue the purification by affusion of Distilled Water and subsidence, until the fluid ceases to have an acid reaction and to precipitate with oxalate of ammonia. Collect the precipitated sulphur on a calico filter, wash it once with Distilled Water, and dry it at a tem- perature not exceeding 120°.v Br. In the U. S. process three eqs. of lime react with six of sulphur, so as to form two eqs. of bisulphuret of calcium, and one of hyposulphite of lime (3CaO and 6S = 2CaS2 and Ca0,S202). On the addition of the muriatic acid, six eqs. of sulphur are precipitated (four from the two eqs. of bisulphuret of calcium and two from the one eq. of hyposulphite of lime), and the calcium and oxygen unite with the muriatic acid, so as to form chloride of calcium and water. This ration- ale is not exactly applicable to the British process, in which the proportion of the sulphur to the lime employed is much greater than in that of the U. S. Phar- macopoeia. The muriatic acid is the most eligible precipitant for the sulphur; as it gives rise to chloride of calcium, which is a very soluble salt, and easily washed away. Sulphuric acid is wholly inadmissible; as it generates sulphate of lime, which, from its sparing solubility, becomes necessarily intermingled with the precipitated sulphur. According to Schweitzer, the best material from which should remain. The corks, being now cut off close to the glass, are to be covered with hard sealing-wax; and the bottles set by, inverted, in a cool place. The alcohol used is alone insufficient for the preservation of the juice; and hence the necessity of heating the bottles, and sealing them when quite full, according to Appert’s process. Each ounce will contain about a drachm of the alcohol. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 65.) Professor Procter proposes the following plan. Of the fresh roots collected in September or October, twenty pounds avoirdupois are to be sliced transversely, reduced to a pulpy mass by grinding or contusion, then thoroughly incorporated with four pints of alcohol of 0-835, and set aside in stoneware jars. After a week, or a longer time, the pulpy mass is to be subjected to strong pressure, and the liquid filtered and bottled for use. Even after six months the pulp thus treated preserves the sensible properties*of the dandelion in a marked degree. Should the alcohol in the expressed liquor be objected to, it may be partially removed by a gentle evaporation by means of a water-bath until the bulk of the juice has been diminished one-sixth, and then adding eight ounces of sugar for every pint. (ibid., xxv. 408.)—Note to the tenth edition. 1360 Sulphur. PART II, to precipitate the sulphur is the sulphuret of potassium, formed by boiling sul- phur with caustic potassa. Dr. Otto, of Brunswick, finds that sulphuret of potas- sium is apt to contain sulphuret of copper, and therefore prefers sulphuret of calcium. (Pharm. Gent. Blatt, Jan. 1845.) Properties, &c. Precipitated sulphur is in friable lumps, having a white colour, with a pale yellowish-green tint, and consisting of finely divided particles slightly cohering together. It is entirely dissipated by heat. Water boiled upon it should not redden litmus. When recently prepared, it is devoid of taste, but possesses a peculiar smell. When long exposed, in a moist state, to the air, it becomes strongly contaminated with sulphuric acid. From its colour it was formerly called lac sulphuris or milk of sulphur. It is insoluble in water, but dissolves in a boiling solution of caustic potassa, and in oil of turpentine by the aid of heat. When of a brilliant white colour, the presence of sulphate of lime may be sus- pected ; in which case the preparation will not be wholly volatilized by heat. If pure it communicates a harsh feel when rubbed between the fingers, owing to the friction of the crystalline particles. {Dr. Bridges.) We have seen a sample of so-called precipitate of sulphur, which consisted almost entirely of sulphate of lime. Precipitated sulphur differs from sublimed sulphur in being in a state of more minute division, and in presenting, after fusion, a softer and less brittle mass. Its peculiarities are supposed to depend upon the presence of water, which, however, is found in too small a quantity to constitute a regular hydrate. Ac- cording to Rose, its white colour is occasioned by the presence of a small pro- portion of bisulphuretted hydrogen. Soubeiran states that it always contains some sulphuretted hydrogen, which causes it to differ as a therapeutic agent from sublimed sulphur. Medical Properties and Uses. Precipitated sulphur possesses similar medical properties to those of sublimed sulphur. It is the form of sulphur used by Dr. Fuller, of London, as an external application in sciatica and chronic rheumatism. (See Sulphur, Part I.) Its state of extreme division renders it more readily suspended in liquids; but its liability to become acid by keeping is an objection to it. It is sometimes selected for forming ointments, which have the advantage of being of a lighter colour than wrhen made with sublimed sulphur. The dose is from one to three drachms. B. SULPHURIS IODIDUM. U. S. Iodide of Sulphur. Bisulphuret of Iodine. “Take of Iodine four troy ounces; Sublimed Sulphur a troyounce. Rub them together until they are thoroughly mixed. Introduce the mixture into a flask, close the orifice loosely, and apply a gentle heat so as to darken the mass without melting it. When the colour has become uniformly dark throughout, increase the heat so as to produce liquefaction. Then incline the flask in different directions, in order to return into the liquid any portions of Iodine which may have been condensed on the inner surface of the vessel. Lastly, withdraw the heat, and, when the liquid has congealed, remove the mass by breaking the flask, reduce it to pieces, and keep these‘in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. This preparation, though formerly officinal with the London and Dublin Col- leges, does not retain a place in the British Pharmacopoeia. The U. S. process is that of the French Codex, ft simply effects a combina- tion of the two ingredients. Properties, &c. Iodide of sulphur has a grayish-black colour, and radiated crystalline appearance like that of sulphuret of antimony. Its smell resembles that of iodine, and it stains the cuticle in a similar manner. It dissolves in sixty parts of glycerin, forming a solution which would probably prove useful, in some cases, as a substitute for the ointment of this iodide. It is rapidly decomposed, when in a state of powder, upon the addition of several of the volatile oils, violet vapours of iodine being evolved, and the smell of sulphur perceived. {Dr. G. IF. PART II. Sulphur.—Suppositoria. 1361 Patterson.') It is entirely volatilized by heat, and by continued boiling with water is wholly decomposed, iodine escaping with the steam, and sulphur being left nearly pure. The proportion of sulphur thus obtained is about 20 per cent (Lond. Pharm.) This result shows that the compound is a bisulphuret. Iodide of sulphur has been very usefully employed as an external remedy in various' skin diseases, such as tinea capitis, lupus, lepra, &c., applied in the form of oint- ment. (See Unguentum Sulphuris loaidi.) It has been used internally, asso- ciated with iodide of potassium and senna, in the form of a syrup, in scrofulous and cutaneous diseases. (E. Levrat.) This syrup contains ioduretted iodide of potassium, and free sulphur, in consequence of a reaction which takes place between the two iodides. In a case of glanders in the human subject, which ter- minated in recovery under the care of M. Bourdon, of Paris, the iodide of sul- phur was used internally, and was thought to have exercised a favourable influ- ence. (Ann. de Therap., 1858, p. 239.) Off. Prep. Unguentum Sulphuris Iodidi. B. SUPPOSITORIA. Br. Suppositories. As a class of officinal preparations, suppositories have been introduced in~*i the British Pharmacopoeia; and they would seem to have a claim to this position quite as strong as the Enemata, which have long been officinally recognised. In- deed, provision has been made in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia for such a class, by the introduction into the Materia Medica Catalogue of the butter of cacao (Oleum Theobromae), which, beyond all other substances, is peculiarly calculated for their preparation. Suppositories are solid bodies intended to be introduced into the rectum, with the view either of evacuating the bowels by irritating the mucous mem- brane of the rectum, or of producing a specific effect on the neighbouring parts, or on the system at large. They fulfil the same indications as enemata, and are some- times preferable from the facility of their application, and, when the object is to produce the peculiar effect of a medicine, from the smallness of their bulk, which facilitates retention. Their form may be cylindrical, conical, or spherical; the last being preferable when the bulk is small. They should be of such a consist- ence as to retain their shape, but so soft as to incur no risk of wounding the rectum. For laxative purposes the suppository may be from one to three inches long, and about as thick as a common candle ; with a view to the specific effects of medicines, it should be considerably smaller, as in this case it is important that the medicines should be retained, and the irritative influence of distention avoided. Soap is not unfrequently employed in this way as a laxative. A piece of solidi- fied molasses (molasses candy) is sometimes preferred. To increase the purga- tive effect, and at the same time act on the uterine function, aloes may be added to the soap. Mr. A. B. Taylor, of Philadelphia, some years since called atten- tion to cocoa butter, already familiar to French pharmacy, as the best excipient for solids administered by the rectum, having more exactly the requisite degree of consistence and fusibility than any combination of suet, spermaceti, wax, &c., that could be employed. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1852, p. 211.) Experi- ence has shown that the consistence of cacao butter for this purpose may be improved by incorporating it with a little wax, from one-fifth to one-eighth of its weight. This may be done by melting the two together at the time of pre- paring the suppositories; or the mixture maybe kept ready-made on hand. In oreparing the suppository, the excipient should be liquefied by a gentle heat, the medicine then incorporated with it, and the mixture poured into suitable moulds to harden. A convenient weight for each suppository is about twenty-five grains; out this may be much lessened or increased as circumstances may seem to de- Suppositoria. PART II. mand.* It has been recommended to form the excipient into the required shape, and then, while it is still soft, make an excavation from the base upward, into which the medicine may be introduced, and afterwards enclosed by a little of the cacao butter. But as one of the objects of the excipient is an equable diffusion of the medicine to prevent irritation, this method would be altogether inappli- cable to substances in any degree locally irritant. Opium, or some one of its pre- parations, is very advantageously administered in the form of a suppository, in cases of irritation of the rectum, urinary passages, or genital apparatus. The other narcotics may be used in the same way; and indeed any other medicine, in refer- ence to its effects on the system, provided the quantity be not too large, and the local effects not too irritant. Tannic acid or other astringent substance may also very appropriately be employed in this way in cases of prolapsus, or other affection depending on relaxation of the rectum or anus. The dose may in general be three times that of the medicine given by the mouth. W. SUPPOSITORIA ACIDI TANNICI. Br. Suppositories of Tannic Acid. Tannin Suppositories. “Take of Tannic Acid twenty-four grains; Glycerine tiventy minims; Pre- pared Lard, White Wax, each, a sufficiency. Melt eighty grains of the Lard and forty grains of the Wax in a water-bath, and, when nearly cold, add the Tannic Acid previously well mixed with the Glycerine. When the mixture has solidified, divide the mass into twelve equal portions, to be formed into cones, which are to be allowed to stand till they acquire sufficient firmness. Dip each cone into a mixture of three parts of the Wax and eight of the Lard, kept melted in a water-bath, and set aside in a cool place, that the coatiug may be- come hard.” Br. Though the British Pharmacopoeia has only two suppositories, it is to be sup- posed that the intention of its framers was not to limit the number employed so narrowly, but to present a model form, after which others might be prepared. It is certain that a good choice has been made; for, omitting the mere laxative suppository, none are perhaps so frequently used as those of tannic acid, and some one of the preparations of opium. The last part of the process is proba- bly to give a coating to the suppository somewhat firmer than its interior sub- stance, which must be softened by the glycerin. It is doubtful whether, in our hot summer weather, the formula could be conveniently carried into effect; at least, it would probably be found advisable to increase the proportion of wax. The weight of each suppository is about 20 grains, and the quantity of tannic acid in each 2 grains. The remedy is especially applicable to piles and prolapsus of the rectum from relaxation. W. SUPPOSITORIA MORPHINE. Br. Morphia Suppositories. “Take of Hydrochlorate of Morphia three grains; Refined Sugar thirty grains ; Prepared Lard, White Wax, each, a sufficiency. Melt thirty grains of * It has been customary to give shape to the suppository by pouring the material pre- viously melted into small paper moulds of a conical form, which may readily be made by rolling up an oblong slip of strong glazed paper with the fingers. The hollow cones may be an inch or more in length, and about half an inch in diameter at the base. A more con- venient method, however, is to cast the suppository in metallic moulds. Mr. A. B. Taylor, who has paid special attention to the subject, recommends that their shape, instead of being strictly conical, should be somewhat incurved towards the base, where there may be a small cylindrical projection for the purpose of fitting into the end of a very convenient instrument, invented by him for the introduction of the suppository into the rectum. This instrument, which he calls a Suppositer, consists of a slender handle a few inches long, with a ring at one end for the finger, and an expansion at the other, having a cavity for the reception of the cylindrical base of the suppository. The metallic mould should be very cold at the time of introducing the melted mixture, so as quickly to solidify it, and thus prevent the suspended medicine from sinking to the bottom, and becoming unequally distribute i [Am. Journ. of Pharm , May, 1861, p. 202.)—-Note to the twelfth edition. Suppositoria.—Syrupi. PART II. the Lard and the same quantity of the Wax in a water bath, and, having re- moved the vessel, mix them thoroughly with the Hydrochlorate of Morphia ana the Sugar previously rubbed together. When the mixture has solidified, divide the mass into twelve equal portions, to be formed into cones, which are to be al- lowed to stand till they acquire sufficient firmness. Dip each cone into a mixture of three parts of Wax and eight of Lard, melted together in a water bath, and set aside in a cool place, that the coating may become hard.” Br. The sugar in this mixture is probably intended to give bulk to the salt of morphia, and thereby eusure its more equable diffusion. This is an excellent remedy in strangury, tenesmus, and other cases of irritation in the lower bowels and urinary passages. It may also be used to control vomiting, and to produce the general effects of opium on the system. Each suppository contains one- fourth of a grain of muriate of morphia, and is sufficient for many of the pur- poses for which the medicine is given in this form, but scarcely sufficient to pro- duce the full effects of morphia on the system in the adult. W. SYRUPI. Syrups. Syrups are concentrated solutions of sugar in watery fluids, either with or without medicinal impregnation. When the solution is made with pure water, it is named syrup or simple syrup, when with water charged with one or more medicinal agents, it is called in general terms a medicated syrup, and receives its particular designation from the substance or substances added. Medicated syrups are usually prepared by incorporating sugar with vegetable infusions, decoctions, expressed juices, fermented liquors, or simple aqueous solutions. When the active matter of the vegetable is not readily soluble in water, is associated with soluble matter which it is desirable to avoid, or is volatilized or decomposed by a heat of 212°, it is sometimes extracted by diluted alcohol, the spirituous ingredient of which is subsequently driven olf. Medicated syrups are also occasionally prepared by adding a tincture to simple syrup, and evapo- rating the alcohol. Another and better mode of effecting the same object, when aromatic or other volatile substances are concerned, is to mix the tincture with sugar in coarse powder, expose the mixture to a very gentle heat or in the sun till the alcohol has evaporated, and then prepare the syrup from the impregnated sugar by dissolving it in the requisite proportion of water. Since the introduc- tion into use of the process of percolation, or filtration by displacement, it has been applied very advantageously to the preparation of various syrups, especi- ally those made from vegetables of which the active principle is injured or dis- sipated by decoction. But, unless the operator be at once skilful and careful, there will be danger of imperfectly extracting the active matters, and thus mak- ing a feeble preparation. One important practical rule is, when the liquid ob- tained by percolation requires concentration, to set aside the first portions of filtered liquor, which are usually strongly impregnated, and to subject only the subsequent weaker portions to evaporation. For the mode of properly conduct- ing this process the reader is referred to pages 894 and 905. The quality and quantity of the sugar employed are points of importance. Refined sugar should always be preferred, as it often saves the necessity of clari- fication, and makes a clearer and better flavoured syrup than the impure kinds. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia simply directs sugar, but explains that it is the purified or refined sugar which is indicated by that term. In relation to the quantity of sugar, if in too small proportion, fermentation is apt to occur; if too abundant, crystallization. The proper proportion is about two parts to one of the liquid. A somewhat smaller quantity will answer, where an acid, such as lemon juice or vinegar, is used. 1364 Syrupi. PART II. As it is desirable, in many instances, that the active matters should be in as concentrated a state as possible in the syrup, it is often necessary to evaporate a large proportion of the watery fluid in which they are dissolved. This may be done either before the addition of the sugar or afterwards. In either case, care is requisite not to apply a heat too great or too long continued, lest the active principles should be injured. When these are very volatile or easily de- composed by heat, it is expedient to dispense with concentration altogether. Some substances which are volatilized or decomposed at the temperature of boiling water remain fixed and unaltered at that which is necessary for the eva- poration of alcohol. These, as before observed, may be dissolved in diluted alco- hol, and the concentration effected by evaporating the spirituous part of the sol- vent. Independently of the injury which the medicinal ingredient of the syrup may sustain, the syrup itself is apt to become brown by a long-continued appli- cation of heat, even when the degree is not excessive. It is recommended, there- fore, that syrups which admit of concentration should be boiled briskly over a lively fire, so as to accomplish the object as quickly as possible. It is important to be able to ascertain positively when they have attained the due consistence. An operator skilled in their preparation can judge with sufficient accuracy by various familiar signs; such as the slowness with which the parts of a drop of syrup coalesce, when previously separated by the edge of a blunt instrument; and the receding of the last portion of each drop, when the syrup, after being cooled, is poured out drop by drop. A pellicle forming upon the surface of the syrup when it cools, indicates that it has been too much boiled. But these signs are not to be relied on, except by those who have acquired much experience. The easiest method of ascertaining the proper point of concentration is by the use of that variety of Baume’s hydrometer called a saccharometer; an instru- ment almost indispensable to the apothecary. This should stand at 30° in boil- ing syrup (30| in hot weather), and at 35° in the syrup when it is cool. An- other very accurate, though less ready method, is to ascertain the sp. gr. by weigh- ing a portion of the liquid. Syrup when boiling should have a sp. gr. of about 1261; when cold, of about 1-319. Thomson and Duncan are mistaken in giving the proper sp. gr. of cold syrup as 1 385. We found that of a specimen of simple syrup, made with two pounds and a half of sugar to a pint of water, as directed in former editions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, to be 1 326 at 68° F.; and this consistence is rather too great for practical convenience in cold weather. In the syrup now officinal it is only 1-317 at 60°, wdrich is an improvement. A third method of ascertaining the proper point of concentration is by the thermometer, wrhich, in boiling syrup of the proper consistence, stands at 221° F. This in- dication is founded on the fact, that the boiling point of syrup rises with the increase of its density. When carefully prepared with the best double refined sugar, syrups usually require no other clarification than to remove any scum which may rise to their surface upon standing, and to pour them off from any dregs which may subside. But, as the sugar employed is seldom free from impurities, it may be best, as a general rule, to remove the scum as it rises during the heating process, and to strain them while hot through muslin or flannel. Should they at any time want the due degree of clearness, they may be filtered through flannel, or, when not likely to be injured by the treatment, may be clarified by means of the white of eggs or animal charcoal, as mentioned under the head of Syrupus. But the active vegetable principles are so apt to be absorbed by the charcoal along with impurities, that this agent should be used with caution. The medicated syrups are liable to undergo various alterations, according to their nature and mode of preparation. The acid syrups, when too much boiled, often let fall a copious white deposit, which is a saccharine matter analogous to the sugar of grapes, produced by the reaction of the acid upon the sugar Even PART II. Syrupi. at ordinary temperatures, acids slowly convert common sugar into the sugar of grapes, which, being less soluble than the former, is gradually deposited in the form of crystalline grains. Syrups containing too little sugar are apt to pass into the vinous fermentation, in consequence of the presence of matters which act as a ferment. Those which contain too much deposit a portion in the crys- talline state; and the crystals, attracting the sugar remaining in solution, gradu- ally weaken the syrup, and render it liable to the same change as when originally made with too little sugar. The want of a due proportion of saccharine mattei frequently also gives rise to mouldiness, when air has access to the syrup. It is said that syrups, enclosed while they are still hot in bottles, are apt to ferment; because the watery vapour, rising to the surface and there condensing, diminishes the proportion of sugar, so as to produce a commencement of chemical action, which gradually extends through the whole mass; but, if the bottles are well shaken, this result is obviated; and the syrups will generally keep better when thus treated. When syrups undergo the vinous fermentation, they become covered at the surface with froth, produced by the disengagement of carbonic acid, and acquire a vinous odour from the presence of alcohol ; while their consistence is diminished by the loss of a portion of the sugar, which has been converted into that liquid. When the quantity of alcohol has increased to a certain point, the fermentation ceases, or goes on more slowly, owing to the preservative influence of that principle; and, as the active ingredient of the syrup has frequently un- dergone no material change, the preparation may often be recovered by boiling so as to drive off the alcohol and carbonic acid, and concentrate the liquid suffi- ciently. A syrup thus revived is less liable afterwards to undergo change, be- cause the principles which acted as ferments have been diminished or consumed. It is obvious that syrups which depend for their virtues upon a volatile ingre- dient, or one readily changeable by heat, cannot be restored to their original condition. At best, syrups are too apt to change, and various measures have been pro- posed for their preservation. According to Dr. Macculloch, the addition of a little sulphate of potassa, or chlorate of potassa which is tasteless, prevents their fermentation. M. Chereau has found sugar of milk effectual to the same end, in the instance of the syrup of poppies; and it may prove useful in others. The proportion employed by him is 32 parts of sugar of milk to 1000 of syrup. Mr. E. Durand has found that l-3 per cent, of Hoffmann’s anodyne has the effect of completely arresting or preventing fermentation, probably through the agency chiefly of the oil of wine contained in it. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xiii. 185.) But the best plan is to make small quantities of syrups at a time, and to keep them, unless when wanted for immediate use, in bottles quite full and well stopped, which should be put in the cellar or other cool place. The Syrups, formerly officinal, which have been omitted in the present IT. S. and Br. Pharmacopoeias, are Syrupus Aceti, Ed., Syrupus Althseee, Bond., Ed., Syrupus Cocci, Lond., Syrupus Croci, Lond., Ed., Dub., Syrupus Rhamni, Lond., Ed., Syrupus Rosse (Centifolise), Lond., Ed., Syrupus Sarzse, Lond., Ed., and Syrupus Violse, Ed. W. SYRUPUS. U. S., Br. Syrupus Simplex. Syrup. Simple Syrup. “ Take of Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, thirty-six troyounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Sugar, with the aid of heat, in twenty fluidounces of Distilled Water, raise the temperature to the boiling point, and strain the solution while hot. Then add sufficient Distilled Water, through the strainer, to make the Syrup measure two pints and twelve fluidounces, or weigh fifty-five troyounces. Lastly, incorporate the Water, added through the strainer, with the solution. Syrup, thus prepared, has the specific gravity D31T.” U. S. “ Take of Refined Sugar five pounds [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water two yints [Imperial measure]. Dissolve the Sugar in the Water with the aid of heat; Syrapi. PAKT II. and aid, aTer cooling, as much Distilled Water as may be necessary to make the weight of the product seven pounds and a half [avoirdupois]. The sp. gr. should be 1-330.” Br. This syrup, when properly prepared, is inodorous, of a sweet taste without peculiar flavour, thick, viscid, nearly colourless, and perfectly transparent. If somewhat turbid, as it is apt to be when made with sugar not well refined, it may be clarified by beating the white of an egg to a froth with three or four ounces of water, mixing this with the syrup, boiling the mixture for a short time that the albumen may coagulate, and taking off the scum which rises to the surface, or separating it by filtration through paper or flannel. Two gallons of the syrup may be thus clarified. Any colour and peculiar flavour which it may possess may be removed by treating it, at the same time, with a small proportion (about 5 per cent.) of animal charcoal. The white of egg is beaten to a froth in order that, when it coagulates, it may be rendered by the air which it contains specifically lighter than the syrup, and thus rise to the surface. If not thus treated, it floats, when coagulated, in the syrup, or sinks to the bottom. Now it is obvious that, if the syrup and albumen be heated together, the latter must be deprived of a portion of the air which it contains before the point of coagulation is attained, and thus become less dis- posed to rise to the surface. Guibourt, therefore, recommends that it should not be added till the syrup is boiling hot, and should then be poured in from a height, in order to increase the quantity of air entangled in it. M. Salles, an apothecary of Clermond-Ferrand, in France, recommends that syrups which require clarification should be treated in the following manner. Allow the liquor with which the syrup is to be prepared, without previously de- canting or filtering it, to become quite cold; then mix with it the white of eggs unbeaten, in the proportion of one egg for every five or six pounds (avoirdu- pois) of sugar employed; and, having added the sugar or honey, boil the whole for half an hour, or until a portion of the syrup upon cooling exhibits flocculi of albumen floating in a transparent medium. During the ebullition care must be taken to agitate the syrup in such a manner as to prevent the formation of foam upon its surface. When allowed to cool, the coagulated albumen with the impurities subsides, and the clear syrup floats above, and may be drawn off or decanted. In this process the albumen sinks, because not incorporated with air. M. Salles calls it clarification per descensum, and states that it is applicable to all syrups of a density below 30° Baume at the boiling point. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiv. 490.) From the observations of M. Maumene, it appears that a solution of pure cane sugar, when long kept, undergoes a molecular change analogous to that pro- duced by the reaction of weak acids; the saccharine liquid becoming brown when boiled with potassa. But, as this phenomenon is exhibited alike by uncrys- tallizable sugar and by glucose, the experiment does not determine which of those forms of saccharine matter has been produced. (Comptes Rendus, xxxix. 914.) Prof. Procter has observed a similar change in simple syrup which had been kept in his cabinet for six years. {Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 430.) Syrup is very useful in the formation of pills and mixtures, and in various other pharmaceutical operations in which sugar in solution is required. The IT. S. syrup has the sp. gr. 3 317, which is as near as may be the true standard in our climate. That of the Br. syrup is 1330, probably adapted to the climate of Great Britain, which is not so cold in winter as ours, at least in the Northern and Middle States. Pharm. Uses. In preparing Pilula Aloes et Myrrhae, U. S.; Pil. Cambogiae Composite, Br.; Pil. Galbani Comp , U. S.; Pil. Scillte Comp., U. S. Off. Prep. Confectio Seammonii, Br.; Mistura Creasoti, Br.; Mistura 0) e'm, Br.; Pilulae Ferri Carbonatis, U.S.; Filulae Ferri Composite, U. S / Qyrujua PART II. Syrupi. 1367 Acidi Citrici, U. S.; Syrupus Aurantii, Br.; Syrupus Ferri Iodidi, U. S.; Sy- rupus Ipecacuanhas, U. S.; Syrupus Lactucarii, U. S.; Syrupus Rhei, U. S., Sy- rupus Rhei Aromaticus, U. S.; Syrupus Rubi, U. S.; Syrupus Zingiberis, Br. W. SYRUPUS ACACIiE. U.S. Syrup of Cum Arabic. “ Take of Gum Arabic, in pieces, two troyounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, fourteen troyounces; Water eight fluidounces. Dissolve in the Wa- ter, first the Gum Arabic without heat, then the Sugar with a gentle heat, and strain.” U. S. The gum should be carefully selected ; and, if its solution contain impurities, it should be strained before the addition of the sugar. On the whole, taking into consideration the great liability to the use of materials not quite pure, it might be advisable, in all cases, to heat momentarily to the boiling point, skim off what may rise to the surface, and then strain. This syrup is useful in the preparation of mixtures, pills, and troches, and is a good demulcent; but unfortunately the proportion of the gum to the sugar is too small to meet all the indications call- ing for the conjoint use of these two substances, and could not be much increased without endangering the stability of the preparation. W. SYRUPUS ACIDI CITRICI. U.S. Syrup of Citric Acid. “Take of Citric Acid, in fine powder, one hundred and twenty grains; Oil of Lemon four minims; Syrup two pints. Rub the Citric Acid and Oil of Lemon with a fluidounce of the Syrup; then add the mixture to the remainder of the Syrup, and dissolve with a gentle heat.” U. S. This is more uniform in its character, keeps better, and is more readily pre- pared than lemon syrup, but does not equal it in flavour, if the latter is well made. If long kept it is apt to acquire a musty taste, and to deposit grape sugar copiously, in consequence of the action of the acid on the cane sugar. It is much employed as an agreeable and refrigerant addition to drinks, especially carbonic acid water. Tartaric acid, on account of its greater cheapness, has not unfre- quently been substituted for the citric; but the syrup made with it does not keep so well, and, moreover, is more apt to irritate the stomach. Off. Prep. Liquor Magnesiae Citratis, U. S. W. SYRUPUS ALLII. U. S. Syrup of Carlic. “Take of Garlic, sliced and bruised, six troyounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, twenty-four troyounces; Diluted Acetic Acid a pint. Macerate the Garlic with ten fluidounces of the Diluted Acetic Acid, in a glass vessel, for four days, and express the liquid. Then mix the residue with the remainder of the Acid, and again express until sufficient additional liquid has been obtained to make the whole, when filtered, measure a pint. Lastly, introduce the Sugar into a two-pint bottle, pour upon it the filtered liquid, and agitate until it is dissolved.” U. S. This preparation is made upon correct principles; as vinegar is a better sol- vent of the active matter of garlic than water. The syrup is given in chronic catarrhal affections of the lungs, and is particularly beneficial in infantile cases, by the stimulus which it affords to the nervous system. A teaspoonful may be given for a dose to a child a year old. W. SYRUPUS AMYGDALiE. U.S. Syrup of Almond. Syrup of Orgeat. “Take of Sweet Almond twelve troyounces; Ritter Almond four troyounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, seventy-two troyounces; Water three pints. Having blanched the Almonds, rub them in a mortar to a very fine paste, add- big, during the trituration, three fluidounces of the Water and twelve troyounces of the Sugar. Mix the paste thoroughly with the remainder of the Water, strain xith strong expression, add to the strained liquid the remainder of the Sugar, and dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat. Lastly, strain the solution through Syrupi. PART II. muslin, and, having allowed it to cool, keep it in well-stopped bottles in a cool place.” U. S. This process corresponds closely with that of the French Codex. Orange- flower water, however, which is an ingredient of the French preparation, is wanting in ours. It may be added to the syrup, in the quantity of half a pint, immediately after the sugar is dissolved. For a modified formula for preparing syrup of orgeat, by M. Capdeville, the reader is referred to the American Journal of Pharmacy (xxvii. 450), in which it is copied from the Repert. de Pharm. of January, 1855. This is an elegant syrup, much employed in Europe, and occasionally in this country. It is demulcent, nutritive, and, in consequence of the hydrocyanic acid of the bitter almonds, somewhat sedative. It is said to impair greatly the odour of musk and assafetida, when mixed with them. It may be added to cough mix- tures, or used for flavouring drinks in complaints of the chest. W. SYRUPUS AURANTII CORTICIS. U.S. Syrupus Aurantii. Br. Syrup of Orange Peel. “ Take of Sweet Orange Peel, recently dried and in moderately fine powder, two troyounces; Carbonate of Magnesia half a troyounce; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, twenty-eight troyounces; Alcohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Orange Peel with half a fluidounce of Alcohol, introduce it into a conical percolator, and pour Alcohol upon it until six fluidounces of tincture have passed. Evaporate this, at a temperature not exceeding 120°, to two fluidounces, add the Carbonate of Magnesia and a troyounce of the Sugar, and rub them together, gradually adding half a pint of Water during the tritu- ration. Then filter, and having added sufficient Water to make the liquid mea- sure a pint, dissolve in it the remainder of the Sugar with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain.” U. S. “ Take of Tincture of Orange Peel one fluidounce; Syrup seven fluidounces. Mix.” Br. The present IJ. S. formula is a great improvement over that of 1850, in which water was used as the menstruum, and consequently but little relatively of the volatile oil of the resin was extracted. Not only is alcohol used, but afterwards, when, the greater part of the alcohol having been evaporated as no longer needed, water is added, care is taken, by rubbing this and the concentrated tinc- ture with carbonate of magnesia, to enable the water to take up and hold in solution the oil extracted by the alcohol. The present syrup is consequently much more highly flavoured than the one which it has superseded. In the eva- poration it is important that the heat should not exceed 120°, in consequence of the volatile nature of the active principle of the peel; and, to facilitate the solu- tion of the sugar, it should be previously powdered. The British preparation, which is a mere mixture of the tincture with syrup, is in all respects inferior. The U. S. formula is that of Prof. Procter, which was published in the eleventh edition of the U. S. Dispensatory (page 1274). The use of carbonate of mag- nesia was first suggested by Mr. John D. Finley. The syrup has an agreeable flavour, for which alone it is employed. Prepared according to the U. S. process of 1850, it was apt to ferment in warm weather; an objection to which the present syrup is not liable. Off. Prep. Confectio Sulphuris, Br. W. SYRUPUS AURANTII FLORUM. U.S. Syrupus Aurantii Flo- RIS. Br. Syrup of Orange Flowers. “Take ot Orange Flower Water five fluidounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, thirty-six troyounces; Distilled Water fifteen fluidounces. Dissolve the Sugar in the Distilled Water, with the aid of a gentle heat, and raise the PART II. Syrupi. 1369 temperature to the boiling point. When the solution is nearly cold, mix thor oughly with it the Orange Flower Water, and strain.” U. S. “Take of Orange-flower Water eight jtuidounces; Refined Sugar three pounds [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water sixteen Jtuidounces, or a sufficiency. Dissolve the Sugar in the Distilled Water, by means of heat; strain, and when nearly cold add the Orange-flower Water, with a sufficient quantity of Distilled Water, if necessary, to make the product four pounds and a half [avoird.]. The sp. gr. should be P330.” Br. This is used for flavouring mixtures. W. SYRUPUS FERRI IODIDI. U.S.,Br. Liquor Ferri Iodidi. U.S. 1850. Syrup of Iodide of Iron. Solution of Iodide of Iron. “Take of Iodine two troyounces; Iron, in the form of wire and cut in pieces, three hundred grains; Distilled Water three Jtuidounces; Syrup a sufficient quantity. Mix the Iodine, Iron, and Distilled Water in a flask of thin glass, shake the mixture occasionally until the reaction ceases, and the solution has acquired a green colour and lost the smell of iodine. Then, having introduced a pint of Syrup into a graduated bottle, heat it by means of a water-bath to 212°, and, through a small funnel inserted in the mouth of the bottle, filter into it the solution already prepared. When this has passed, close the bottle, shake it thor- oughly, and, when the liquid has cooled, add sufficient Syrup to make the whole measure twenty fluidounces. Lastly, again shake the bottle, and transfer its contents to two-ounce vials, which must be well stopped.” U. S. “ Take of fine Iron Wire one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Iodine two ounces [avoird.] ; Refined Sugar twenty-eight ounces [avoird.] ; Distilled Water thir- teen Jtuidounces. Prepare a syrup by dissolving the Sugar in ten [fluid]ounces of the Water with the aid of heat. Digest the Iodine and the Iron Wire in a flask, at a gentle heat, with the remaining three [fluid]ounces of the Water, till the froth becomes white; then filter the liquid, while still hot, into the syrup, and mix. The product should weigh two pounds eleven ounces [avoird.], and should have the sp. gr. l'385.”Rr. These preparations furnish solutions of iodide of iron, rendered more perma- nent by sugar. The mode of making the iodide is precisely the same as that given under the head of Ferri lodidum. The gentle heat employed in the Bri- tish process is unnecessary. The iodine should be quite dry; as, if moist, as British iodine often is, less iodide of iron will be formed, and the syrup will be proportionably weaker. In both processes a large excess of iron is taken, being greatest in the British. A moderate excess is useful in preventing the solution of iodide of iron from undergoing any change from the absorption of oxygen during filtration, before it comes in contact with the sugar. Assuming that the iodine without loss is all converted into iodide of iron, it is easy to calculate the strength of the officinal solutions. Thus, it will be found that the U. S. solution contains 7-33 grains, and that of the British Pharmacopoeia about 4‘30 grains of the dry iodide to the fluidrachm. In both preparations there is sufficient sugar to constitute a syrup; the present U. S. process differing in this respect from that of 1850, which was denominated a solution, because containing insufficient sugar to be entitled to the name of a syrup. Indeed, the proportion of sugar in the old formula was insufficient duly to protect the iodide, and was therefore in- creased. In the solution of 1850, a coil of iron wire, or a strip of bright iron, immersed in the solution, was found to assist in preserving it from change. The plan of protecting the solution of iodide of iron from change by saccha- rine matter originated with M. Frederking, of Riga, who published a formula for the purpose in Buchner's Repertorium in 1839. The same plan was pro- posed in a paper by Prof. Procter, contained in the Amer. Journ. of Pharmacy cov April, 1840. In the Journal de Pharmacie for March, 1841, Dr. Dupasquier, of Lyons, claims to have made a pure iodide of iron, protected by syrup of gum, 1370 Syrupi. PART II os e-trly as 1838. In the Pharm. Journ. for August, 1841, the late Dr. A. T. Thomson published a paper in which he confirmed the results of Frederking and Procter, and proposed a formula for a strong syrup, which is the basis of that adopted in the British Pharmacopoeia. Properties. The XJ. S. syrup of iodide of iron is a transparent liquid, of a pale-green colour, and deposits no sediment on being kept; nor does it tinge a solution of starch blue, showing that it is well protected. In regard to the for- mer IT. S. preparation, Mr. E. S. Wayne observed that, when kept for some time, it occasionally deposited grape sugar, into which the cane sugar was converted, probably through the agency of hydriodic acid. According to Mr. J. M. Maisch, of this city, the solution was decomposed not only by light, but also by the ac- tion of atmospheric oxygen in bottles partly filled and frequently opened. The oxidation of the iron and the evolution of the iodine were accelerated by the action of light, when the solution was thus insecurely kept; but, when the altered solution was transferred to air-tight bottles, completely filled, and exposed to the direct light of the sun, it resumed its transparency; and its original colour was restored, or rendered much lighter. After this restoration the solution could not be the same; and Mr. Maisch thought it probable that it contained some iodate of sesquioxide of iron. (See his papers in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for Sept. 1854, and May, 1855.) The removal of the apparent defects of a solution of iodide of iron by the action of sunlight is, therefore, not an admissible expedi- ent; because it changes the nature of the solution. Mr. Maisch discovered cop- per in a sample of this preparation. It may be detected by putting into the solution a piece of bright iron, which, by a prolonged contact, will be covered with copper, if that metal be present. Syrup of iodide of iron is rendered brown by sulphuric acid, and emits violet vapours when heated. It should not contain any free iodine, which, if present, may be detected by the production of a blue colour with starch. These observations of Mr. Maisch in reference to the former Liquor Ferri Iodidi, so far as concerns the influence of light, are probably true of the pre- sent syrup, though the greater proportion of sugar contained gives it, no doubt, additional protection against the oxidizing influence of the air. When the syrup is concentrated it becomes brown, and, when evaporated to dryness, forms a mass which may be called saccharine iodide of iron, and which is not entirely soluble again, a little sesquioxide of iron being left. This saccha- rine iodide, being protected by the sugar it contains, is not liable to the objections which apply to the pure solid salt, and may be made into pills. Medical Properties. These have been detailed under the head of Ferri Io- didum. The dose of the syrup is from 20 to 40 minims, diluted with water. The dilution should be made at the moment it is taken ; and, in order to guard against injury to the teeth, the mouth should be carefully washed after each dose. Solution of iodide of iron is sometimes used as an external application; and when so employed, the necessary dilution should be made at the moment of ap- plying it. B. SYRUPUS FERRI PHOSPIIATIS. Br. Syrup of Phosphate of Iron. “Take of Granulated Sulphate of Iron two hundred and twenty-four grains ; Phosphate of Soda two hundred grains; Acetate of Soda seventy-four grains ; Diluted Phosphoric Acid five fiuidounces and a half; Refined Sugar eight ounces [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Water eight fiuidounces. Dissolve the Sul- phate of Iron in four [fluidjounces of the Water, and the Phosphate and Ace- tate of Soda in the remainder; mix the two solutions, and, after careful stirring, transfer the precipitate to a calico filter, and wash it with Distilled Water, till the filtrate ceases to be affected by chloride of barium. Then press the pre- cipitate strongly between folds of bibulous paper, and add to it the Dilute Phos- phoric Acid. As soon as the precipitate is dissolved, filter the solution, ad 1 the PART II. Syrupi. 1371 Sugar, and dissolve without heat. The product should measure exactly twelve fluidounces.” Br. The first part of this process is almost precisely a repetition of that of the Br. Pharmacopoeia for phosphate of iron. (See Fern Phosphas.) But after that salt has been prepared, instead of being dried, it is first strongly pressed, and then dissolved in the dilute phosphoric acid, and made into a syrup with sugar. As the phosphate of iron is insoluble in water, it was necessary to have recourse to an acid to effect its solution, and the phosphoric acid was selected as therapeutically co-indicated. Each fluidrachm contains 3'5 grains of the pho« phate of iron, and about 21'5 minims of dilute phosphoric acid. For its pro- perties and uses, see Ferri Phosphas (page 1143). The dose is one or two fluidrachms. W. SYRUPUS HEMIDESMI. Br. Syrup of Hemidesmus. Syrup of Indian Sarsaparilla. “ Take of Hemidesmus, bruised, four ounces [avoirdupois]; Refined Sugar twenty-eight ounces [avoird.]; Boiling Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Infuse the Hemidesmus in the Water, in a covered vessel, for four hours, and strain. Set it by till the sediment subsides; then decant the clear liquor, add the Sugar, and dissolve by means of a gentle heat. The product should weigh two pounds ten ounces, and should have the specific gravity P335.” This is a very weak preparation. The dose is stated at from one to four flui- drachms, but the syrup may be taken almost ad libitum. (See Hemidesmus.) W. SYRUPUS IPECACUANHiE. JJ.S. Syrup of Ipecacuanha. “ Take of Fluid Extract of Ipecacuanha two fluidounces; Syrup thirty fluid- ounces. Mix them.” U. S. By the former U. S. process of 1850, a tincture of ipecacuanha was first formed with diluted alcohol, then reduced by evaporation so as to drive off the alcohol, and afterwards diluted with water and made into a syrup with sugar. The present process simply mixes the fluid extract, which is an officinal prepara- tion, with syrup. The French Codex dissolves the alcoholic extract of ipecacu- anha in water, and then mixes it with syrup; but it is obvious that the U. S. plan is preferable, as it spares the continued heat requisite to reduce the tincture to dryness. The present U. S. syrup, which is twice as strong as that of 1850, is made in accordance with the suggestions of Mr. Laidley, of Richmond, Ya., who found the syrup, as ordinarily prepared, to spoil by keeping. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 103.) This syrup is chiefly applicable to the cases of children. One fluidounce of it, prepared according to the U. S. formula, should contain the virtues of thirty grains of ipecacuanha. The dose of it, as an emetic, is for an adult from four fluidrachms to a fluidounce, for a child a year or two old, from thirty minims to a fluidrachm, repeated every fifteen or twenty minutes till it acts. As an ex- pectorant, the dose for an adult is thirty minims or a fluidrachm, for a child from two to ten minims. W. SYRUPUS KRAMERIiE. U.S. Syrup of Rhatany. “Take of Rhatany, in moderately fine powder, twelve troyounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, thirty troyounces; Water a sufficient quantity. Mix the Rhatany with half a pint of Water, and, having allowed the mixture to stand for two hours, introduce it into a glass percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until four pints of filtered liquor are obtained. Evaporate this, by means of a water-bath, to seventeen fluidounces, and, having added the Sugar, dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot. This Syrup may also be prepared in the following manner. “ Take of Extract of Rhatany two troyounces; Sugar in coarse powder, thirty 1372 Syrupi. PART II. troyounces; Water a pint. Dissolve the Extract in the Water, and filter; then, having added the Sugar, dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot.” U. S. As rhatany yields a variable proportion of extract, it follows that the syrup resulting from these two modes of preparation must differ. To obviate this evil as far as possible, care should be taken, in following the first process, to select the best rhatany, and preferably the small roots, as it is these only which will yield two ounces of good extract to the pound. In the second process, extract of rhatany as free as possible from insoluble matter should be chosen; and that prepared according to the U. S. directions will be found the best. (See Extractum Krameriae.) This preparation affords a convenient mode of exhibiting rhatany to infants. The dose for an adult is half a fluidounce, for a child a year or two old, twenty or thirty minims. W. SYRUPUS LACTUCARII. U.8. Syrup of Lactucarium. “Take of Lactucariura a troyounce; Syrup fourteen fluidounces ; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient qua.ntity. Rub the Lactucarium with sufficient Diluted Alcohol, gradually added, to bring it to a syrupy consistence. Then introduce it into a conical percolator, and, having carefully covered the surface with a piece of muslin, gradually pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until half a pint of tinc- ture has passed. Evaporate this, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, to two fluidounces, mix it with the Syrup, previously heated, and strain while hot.” U. S. This syrup has the virtues of lactucarium, free from its inert albuminous mat- ter. The dose of it is two or three fluidrachms. W. SYRUPUS LIMONIS. U.S.,Br. Syrup of Lemon. “Take of Lemon Juice, recently expressed and strained, a pint; Sugar [re- fined], in coarse powder, forty-eight troyounces; Water a pint. Mix the Lemon Juice and Water, and, having added the Sugar to the mixture, dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot.” U. S. “Take of Fresh Lemon Peel tioo ounces [avoirdupois]; Lemon Juice, strained, one pint [imperial measure] ; Refined Sugar two pounds and a quarter [avoird.]. Add the Sugar and the Lemon Peel to the Lemon Juice in a covered vessel, and dissolve the Sugar with the aid of a steam or water bath, then strain. The product should weigh three pounds and a half [avoird.], and should have the sp.gr. D340.” Br. The British preparation has an advantage over that of the U. S. Pharmaco- poeia in possessing more of the aromatic liavour of the rind; and it would be an improvement to our formula to add a little grated fresh lemon-peel to the other ingredients. In the present U. S. syrup, the juice, instead of being used undiluted, as in the process of 1850, is mixed with an equal measure of water, which is an improvement. This syrup forms a cooling and grateful addition to beverages in febrile com- plaints, and serves to conceal the taste of saline purgatives in solution. W. SYRUPUS MORI. Br. Syrup of Mulberries. “Take of Mulberry Juice one pint [Imperial measure]; Refined Sugar two pounds [avoirdupois] ; Rectified Spirit two fluidounces and a half. Dissolve the Sugar in the Juice, by a gentle heat, and set aside for twenty-four hours. Then remove the scum, and pour off' the clear liquid from the dregs, if any ap- pear. Lastly, add the Spirit. The product should weigh three pounds six ounces [avoird.], and should have the sp.gr. l'330.”Rr. This may be used for the same purposes with lemon syrup. In like manner syrups may be prepared from various succulent fruits, such as strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, currants, pineapples, &c. When the juice is thick, it be diluted with from one-third of its bulk to an equal bulk of water pre- PART II. Synipi. 1373 viously to the addition of the sugar. In the preparation of raspberry syrup, which, as ordinarily made, is apt to gelatinize, M. Blondeau'recommends that the strained juice be allowed to stand from eight to fifteen hours, according to the temperature, in order to ferment. The juice separates into two portions, the upper thick, the lower clear. The latter is to be separated by straining, and made into a syrup with the usual proportion of sugar. The process of the Lou- don College for Syrupus Mori, retained in the British Pharmacopoeia, is in ac- cordance with this recommendation. These syrups are employed to flavour drinks, and are much used as grateful additions to carbonic acid water.* W. SYRUPUS PAPAYERIS. Br. Syrup of Poppies. “ Take of Poppy Capsules, bruised and freed from seed, thirty-six ounces [avoirdupois]; Boiling Distilled Water twenty pints [Imperial measure] ; Rec- tified Spirit sixteen jiuidounces; Refined Sugar four pounds [avoird.]. Ma- cerate the Poppy Capsules in the Water, in a water bath, kept hot, for twelve hours. Then evaporate all the water except that absorbed by the capsules, press strongly, and strain. Reduce the strained liquor to three pints [Imp. meas.], and, when quite cold, add the Spirit. Mix and filter. Distil off the spirit, eva- porate the remaining liquor to two pints [Imp. meas.], and then add the Sugar. The product should weigh six pounds and a half [avoird ], and should have the sp.gr. 1320.” As the capsules contain variable proportions of the narcotic principle, tho syrup prepared from them is necessarily of variable strength. It was, moreover, as formerly prepared, very apt to spoil. It is, we presume, to correct this tend- ency, that the direction is given in the Pharmacopoeia to add alcohol to the in- fusion, by which coagulable matter may be separated; the alcohol itself being * Some practical remarks in relation to these syrups, so much used with artificial mineral water, may prove useful to the inexperienced pharmaceutist. Care should be taken that the fruit employed should be fully ripe, and freed from all its natural attachments, as calyx, stem, &c., and from all other impurities. Without being previously crushed, it should be put into canvass or woollen bags, which should be about two-thirds full when placed under the press. The expressing force should be gradually increased, so as effectu- ally to remove the juice with as little of the tissue of the fruit as possible. It is customary to make a pint of syrup from a pint measure of fruit, and, if the expressed juice is insuffi- cient for the purpose, to dilute it with water; but this is obviously an arbitrary rule, which cannot be universally applied without injuriously affecting the character of the product. The rule in the text is better; viz., to dilute the juice when too thick. In dissolving the sugar, as short an exposure to heat as possible is desirable. Some dissolve the sugar in a portion of the juice with heat, and add the remainder a few minutes before removal from the fire. Some fruits contain so much pectin that their syrups are apt to gelatinize. This is particularly the case with currants and raspberries. A mode of preventing this result has been mentioned in the text. Another method is to add to the juice, after expression, one-tenth of its bulk of the juice of sour cherries, allow the mixture to stand for fifteen hours, and then separate the coagulated pectin by very gentle pressure in a cloth. Pine- apple syrup may be made either in the ordinary mode, or by slicing the fruit, alternating the s'.icos with layers of powdered sugar, permitting them to stand twenty-four hours, and then expressing the syrup formed. Each pound of the pared fruit, with thirty ounces of sugar, should yield with the requisite quantity of water two pints of syrup. For some further practical remarks on the preparation of particular syrups, the reader is referred to a paper by Mr. Ambrose Smith, in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xxii. 212). Cream Syrups. Under this name, there has come into use, in Philadelphia, a variety of syrupsTgiven with carbonic acid water, to which they impart an agreeable richness of flavour. To prepare them, a gallon of fresh sweet cream is made to dissolve, without heat, 14 pounds (avoird.) of powdered sugar; and the solution, having been immediately bottled, i3 placed on ice, in a cold cellar. It will keep from three to eight days, according to cir- cumstances. It is added to other syrups, given with carbonic acid water, equal measures beii.g employed. The use of cream syrups is said to have originated with Mr. C. A. Smith, of Cincinnati. Mr. A. B. Taylor, of Philadelphia, prepares cream vanilla syrup by mixing together three fiuidrachms of strong fluid extract of vanilla, a pint of simple syrup, and a pint of cream syrup. (Aw. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 407.)—Notes to the ninth and eleventh editions. 1374 Syrupi. PART ir. subsequently removed by distillation. The place, however, of this syrup, might, with great propriety, be supplied by a syrup prepared from one of the salts of morphia, which would keep well, and have the advantage of uniform strength. Pour grains of the sulphate of morphia dissolved in a pint of syrup, would afford a preparation at least equal to the average strength of the syrup of poppies, and much more certain in its operation. Mr. Southall recommends that the syrup of poppies should be prepared with a cold infusion made by percolation; the same proportions being employed as directed by the late London Pharmacopoeia. The virtues of the capsules are thus extracted without those principles which cause the syrup to ferment speedily. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 140.) Mr. Southall, after preparing the infusion, evaporates it to the proper measure before adding the sugar. Mr. Stocken prefers adding the sugar before the concentration is completed, and afterwards evaporating to 32° of the saccharometer. {Pharm. Journ., xi. 299.) It is probable that a syrup, prepared with diluted alcohol as the menstruum, would keep better than that made on either of the above plans.* The syrup of poppies is employed, chiefly in infantile cases, to allay cough, quiet restlessness, relieve pain, and promote sleep. The dose is from half a flui- drachm to a fluidracbm for an infant, from half a fluidounce to a fluidounce for an adult. W. SYRUPUS PRUNI VIRGINIANS. U.S. Syrup of Wild-cherry Bark. “Take of Wild-cherry Bark, in coarse powder, five troyounces; Sugar [re- fined], in coarse powder, twenty-eight troyounces; Water a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Bark thoroughly with Water, and allow it to stand for twenty-four hours in a close vessel; then pack it firmly in a glass percolator, and gradually pour Water upon it until a pint of filtered liquor is obtained. To this, trans- ferred to a bottle, add the Sugar, and agitate occasionally until it is dissolved.” U. S. This process affords a handsome syrup, with the virtues of the bark unim- paired by the injurious effects of heat. It is based upon a formula proposed by Messrs. Procter and Turnpenny in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xiv. 27). It probably more precisely represents the bark than is done by the fluid extract, which contains a smaller proportion of the tannic acid than the bark, in consequence of the removal of a part of that principle by combination with the albumen of the almonds used in the process. In some cases, this want of tannic acid may specially recommend the fluid extract; while in others, as in the diar? rhoea of phthisis, for example, the syrup or infusion might be preferable from retaining it. The dose is half a fluidounce. W. SYRUPUS RHEI. U.S. Syrup of Rhubarb. “Take of Fluid Extract of Rhubarb three fluidounces; Syrup twenty-nine fluidounces. Mix them thoroughly.” U. S. This formula is an improvement on that of 1850, as being more precise. The syrup is a mild cathartic, adapted to the cases of infants, to whom it may be given in the dose of a fluidrachm. W. SYRUPUS RIIEI AROMATICUS. U.S. Aromatic Syrup of Rhu- barb. * Prof. Procter has furnished us with the following formula, which he has used for many years, and found to yield a good syrup, that will keep well. “Take of Poppy Capsules, de- prived of their seeds, and ground into coarse powder, eight troyounces; Sugar fifteen troy- ounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with four fluidounces of the Diluted Alcohol, pack it firmly in a percolator, and pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until three pints have slowly passed Distil off the alcohol until the residual liquid is reduced to half a pint, and filter. Allow sufficient Distilled Water to pass through the filter to mako the filtrate measure half a pint; then add the Sugar, dissolve with heat, and strain.”- — Pole to the twelfth edition. PART II. Syrupi. 1375 “ Take of Rhubarb, in moderately fine powder, two troyounces and a half: Cloves, in moderately fine powder, Cinnamon, in fine powder, each, half a troy- ounce ; Nutmeg, in moderately fine powder, one hundred and twenty grains ; Syrup six pints ; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the powders, and, having moistened the mixture with two fluidounces of Diluted Alcohol, intro- duce it into a conical percolator, and pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until a pint of tincture has passed. Add this to the Syrup, previously heated, and mix them thoroughly.” U. S* The aromatic syrup of rhubarb is a warm stomachic laxative, too feeble for adult cases, but well calculated for the bowel-complaints of infants which are so frequent in our cities during the summer season, and as a remedy for which this preparation, or one analogous to it, has been long in use under the name of spiced syrup of rhubarb. The dose for an infant with diarrhoea is a fluidrachm, repeated every two hours till the passages indicate by their colour that the medicine has operated. It should be borne in mind that the syrup, «as prepared by the present formula, contains one-seventh of diluted alcohol, which, though not injurious in most of the cases in which this syrup is used, might render it too stimulant in some instances of diarrhoea in the very young infant. W. .SYRUPUS RHCEADOS. Br. Syrup of Bed Poppy. “ Take of Red-poppy Petals thirteen ounces [avoirdupois]; Refined Sugar two pounds and a quarter [avoird.] ; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial mea- sure], or a sufficiency; Rectified Spirit two fluidounces and a half. Add the Petals gradually to the Water heated in a water-bath, frequently stirring, and afterwards, the vessel being removed, macerate for twelve hours. Then press out the liquor, strain, add the Sugar, and dissolve by means of heat. When nearly cold, add the Spirit, and as much Distilled Water as may be necessary to make up for loss in the process, so that the product shall weigh three pounds ten ounces, and should have the sp. gr. 1330.” Br. The object of introducing the petals into water heated by a water-bath is that they may shrink by being scalded; as otherwise they could not be com- pletely immersed in the quantity of water directed. After this has been accom- plished, they should be immediately removed from the fire, lest the liquor become too thick and ropy. The fine red colour of this syrup is its only recommendation. It is very liable to ferment. W. SYRUPUS ROSiE GALLICiE. U. S., Br. Syrup of Red Rose. “ Take of Red Rose, in moderately fine powder, two troyounces; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, eighteen troyounces; Diluted Alcohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Moisten the Rose with Diluted Alcohol, pack it firmly in a conical glass percolator, and gradually pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until a fluidounce of tincture has passed. Set this aside, and continue the percolation until five fluidouuces more of tincture are obtained. Evaporate this with a gen- tle heat to a fluidounce and a half, and mix it with seven fluidounces of Water. Then, having added the Sugar, dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot. Lastly, when the solution is cold, add the fluid- ounce of reserved tincture, and mix them thoroughly.” U. S. “ Take of dried Red-rose Petals two ounces [avoirdupois] ; Refined Su- gar thirty ounces [avoird.]; Boiling Distilled Water one pint [Imperial mea- * The following is the preferred formula of the Pharmacopoeia of 1850, omitted in the present edition, in which the syrup is prepared by maceration. “Take of Rhubarb, bruised, two ounces and a half; Cloves, bruised, Cinnamon, bruised, each, half an ounce; Nutmeg, bruised, two drachms; Diluted Alcohol two pints; Syrup six pints. Macerate the Rhubarb and Aromatics in the Diluted Alcohol for fourteen days, and strain; then, by means of a water-bath, evaporate the liquor to a pint, and, while it is still hot, mix it with the Syrup previously heated.” Care should be taken, in evaporating the tincture, not to let the heat exceed that of a water-bath, lest the aromatic oils should be driven off. 1376 Syrupi. PART II. sure ]. Infuse the Petals in the Water for two hours, squeeze through calico, and filter. Dissolve the Sugar in the liquor by means of heat. The product should weigh two pounds fourteen ounces [avoird.], and should have the sp. gr. 1-335.” Br. The syrup of red roses is mildly astringent; but is valued more for its fine red colour, on account of which it is occasionally added to mixtures. W. SYRUPUS RUBI. U. S. Syrup of Blackberry Root. “ Take of Blackberry Root, in moderately fine powder, eight troyounces; Syrup a pint and a half; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Introduce the powder, previously moistened with four fluidounces of Diluted Alcohol, into a glass per- colator, and pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until a pint and a half of tincture have passed. Evaporate this, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, to half a pint; then mix it while hot with the Syrup previously heated, and strain.” U. S. This process might perhaps be improved by filtering the concentrated tinc- ture before the addition of the sugar. The Syrup is a new officinal of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, called for by the popularity of similar preparations. It is very useful in diarrhoea of relaxation, and in the chronic forms of that complaint. The dose is one or two fluidrachms. W. SYRUPUS SARSAPARILLA COMPOSITUS. U. S. Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla. “ Take of Sarsaparilla, in moderately coarse powder, twenty-four troyounces: Guaiacum Wood, in moderately coarse powder, three troyounces; Pale Rose, in moderately coarse powder, Senna, in moderately coarse powder, Liquorice Root, in moderately coarse powder, each, two troyounces; Oil of Sassafras, Oil of Anise, each, five minims; Oil of Gaultheria three minims; Sugar, in coarse powder, ninety-six troyounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix the solid ingredients, except the Sugar, with three pints of Diluted Alco- hol, and allow the mixture to stand for twenty-four hours; then transfer it to a cylindrical percolator, and gradually pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until ten pints of tincture have passed. Evaporate this, by means of a water-bath, to four pints, filter, and, having added the Sugar, dissolve it with the aid of heat, and strain the solution while hot. Lastly, rub the Oils with a small portion of the solution, and mix them thoroughly with the remainder.” U. S. In the original edition of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia published in 1820, a pro- cess for a syrup of sarsaparilla was adopted, intended to represent the famous French sirop de Cuisinier. This was very much improved in the revised edi- tion published in 1830; and the amended process has been retained with little alteration in the subsequent editions; the process of percolation having been substituted in the present Pharmacopoeia for simple maceration directed in the first of the two formulas of 1850. In the original process, the sarsaparilla was subjected to long decoction with water. Now it has been proved that diluted alcohol more thoroughly extracts the acrid principle of the root, upon which its activity probably depends, than water, and that this principle is either dissipated or destroyed by the long-continued application of a boiling heat.* In the pre- sent formula, therefore, which employs diluted alcohol as the menstruum, the root is more completely exhausted of its active matter; while the heat applied to the concentration, being no higher than is requisite for the evaporation of the alcohol, is insufficient to injure the preparation. The spirituous menstruum has, moreover, the advantage of not dissolving the inert fecula, which encumbers * See a paper by J. Hancock, M. D., republished in the Journal of the Philadelphia Col- lege of Pharmacy (i. 295); a communication by M. B6ral to the Journal de Pharmacie (xv. 057); another by M. Soubeiran in the same journal (xvi. 38); and a paper by T. J. Hun* band in the American Journal of Pharmacy (xv. 6). PART II. Syrupi. 1377 the syrup prepared by decoction, and renders it liable to spoil. In the Pharma- copoeia of 1840, the pale or hundred-leaved roses were very properly substituted for the red ; as their slightly laxative property accords better with the character of the preparation. The operator should be careful to comply exactly with the directions of the Pharmacopoeia, not only those of the present formula, including the use of the water-bath, but also the general rules given for the management of the process of percolation. The essential oils, being intended solely to com- municate an agreeable flavour, are used in very small proportion. The only ob- jection to this process is that a portion of the resin, extracted by the alcohol from the guaiacum wood, is deposited during the evaporation of the tincture; but this is separated by the filtration directed, and is therefore of no disadvan- tage to the preparation. But the practitioner should be aware that much of the sarsaparilla, as it exists in the market, is nearly or quite inert, and should be prepared to meet with disappointment in the use of this or any other prepara- tion, unless satisfied of the good quality of the drug from which it is made. Corrosive sublimate, which is often given in connection with this syrup, is said to be completely decomposed by it, being converted into calomel. M. Le- page, of Gisors, proposes as a substitute the iodohydrargyrate of potassium (see Part III.), which he has found not to undergo decomposition. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., viii. 63.) The dose of the syrup is half a fluidounce, equivalent to somewhat less than a drachm of the root, to be taken three or four times a day. W. SYRUPUS SCILL2E. U.S., Br. Syrup of Squill. “ Take of Yinegar of Squill a pint; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, twenty- four troyounces. Dissolve the Sugar in the Yinegar of Squill, with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot.” U. S. “ Take of Squill, bruised, two ounces and a half [avoirdupois] ; Dilute Ace- tic Acid one pint [Imperial measure] ; Refined Sugar two pounds [avoird.]; Proof Spirit one fluidounce and a half. Digest the Squill in the Dilute Acetic Acid for three days, with a gentle heat; express, add the Spirit, and filter; then mix in the Sugar, and dissolve with the aid of heat. The product should weigh three pounds two ounces [avoird.], and should have the sp. gr. L330.” Br. This syrtip is much employed as an expectorant, especially in combination with a solution of tartarized antimony. The dose is about a fluidrachm. In in- fantile cases of catarrh and other pectoral complaints, it is sometimes given, in the same dose, as an emetic. W. SYRUPUS SCILLiE COMPOSITUS. U.S. Compound Syrup of Squill. Hive Syrup. “Take of Squill, in moderately coarse powder, Seneka, in moderately fine powder, each, four troyounces; Tartrate of Antimony and Potassa forty-eight grains; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, forty-two troyounces; Diluted Al- cohol, Water, each, a sufficient quantity. Mix the Squill and Seneka, and, hav- ing moistened the mixture with half a pint of Diluted Alcohol, allow it to stand for an hour. Then transfer it to a conical percolator, and pour Diluted Alcohol upon it until three pints of tincture have passed. Boil this for a few minutes, evaporate it by means of a water-bath to a pint, add six fluidounces of boiling Water, and filter. Dissolve the Sugar in the filtered liquid, and, having heated the solution to the boiling point, strain it while hot. Then dissolve the Tartrate ;>f Antimony and Potassa in the solution while still hot, and add sufficient boil- ’ng Water, through the strainer, to make it measure three pints. Lastly, mix the whole thoroughly together.” U. S. This is intended as a substitute for the popular preparation called Coxe's hive-syrup. from which it differs chiefly in containing sugar instead of honey. Prepared as originally directed in the Pharmacopoeia, it invariably fermented Syrupi. PART II. from the want of sufficient concentration. This defect was corrected at the re- vision of 1840, when also sugar was substituted for honey, in consequence of the uncertain consistence and constitution of the latter. In the Pharmacopoeia of 1850 two formulas were given for this syrup ; in the first of which the virtues of the squill and seneka were extracted by long boiling with water, in the second, by percolation with water to which a small portion of alcohol was added. The latter was preferable when skilfully performed; as it avoided in great measure the injurious influence of boiling upon the seneka, exhausted both this and the squill more readily in consequence of the addition of alcohol to the menstruum, and afforded a solution of their active principles, less embarrassed with inert matters calculated to favour fermentation. In this process, the filtered liquor was raised to the boiling point in order to coagulate the albumen, after which the evaporation was conducted at a lower temperature. The present formula is a decided improvement upon the one just described; as, diluted alcohol being employed as the menstruum, less of the albuminous and mucilaginous matter is extracted; while any disadvantage from the spirituous addition is obviated by the subsequent evaporation of the alcohol and the addition of water; the pro- vision being retained to boil the tincture for a short time to get rid of any albu- men that may have been taken up.* The compound syxup of squill combines the virtues of seneka, squill, and tartar emetic, of the last of which it contains one grain in every fluidounce. It is emetic, diaphoretic, expectorant, and frequently cathartic, and may be given with ad- vantage in mild cases of croup, in the latter stages of severe cases when the object is to promote expectoration, and in other pectoral affections in which the same indication is presented. As an emetic, however, in croup, we prefer a simple solution of tartar emetic in water. The dose of this syrup is, for children, from ten drops to a fluidrachm, according to the age, and should be repeated in cases of croup every fifteen or twenty minutes till it vomits. As an expectorant for adults the dose is twenty or thirty drops. ' W. SYRUPUS SENEGiE. U. S. Syrup of Seneka. “Take of Seneka, in moderately fine powder, four troy ounces: Sugar [re- fined], iu coarse powder, fifteen troyounces; Diluted Alcohol two pints. Moisten the Seneka with two fluidounces of the Diluted Alcohol; then transfer it to a conical percolator, and gradually pour upon it the remainder of the Di- luted Alcohol. When the tincture has ceased to pass, evaporate it, by means of a water-bath, at a temperature not exceeding 160°, to half a pint; then filter, and, having added the Sugar, dissolve it with the aid of a gentle heat, and strain the solution while hot.” U. S. This is essentially the second of the two formulas given in the Pharmacopoeia of 1850; the first having been omitted in the present edition, as quite super- annuated. There is no doubt that, if the existing formula be carried duly into * Great difficulty has been experienced in making this preparation so as to keep well. Va- rious improvements upon the former officinal formula have been suggested. Dr. Cummings, of Portland, Maine, proposed to use diluted acetic acid as the menstruum for squill, and di- luted alcohol for seneka; and thought that a syrup might thus be made which would not ferment. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 397.) Mr. A. P. Sharp, of Baltimore, has found great satisfaction from the following method of proceeding. As soon as one portion of the syrup has been made for use, he begins to prepare another in the following manner. Coarsely powdered seneka and squill, of each are macerated with a gallon of a mixture of one part of alcohol and two of water, and allowed to stand till the first portion is nearly cansumed, sometimes for two or three months, when the mixture is expressed or submitted to percolation. The tincture is then evaporated, till the alcohol has been driven off, the residue is filtered cold, fbvij of sugar are added, the liquid is evaporated without boiling to Ovj, is strained if necessary, and a grain of tartar emetic added for each [Ilid., xxvii. 220.) But the improvement in the officinal formula, it is hoped, will obviate all necessity for substituted formulas in future.—Note to the eleventh and twelfth editions. PART II. Syrupi. 1379 execution, it will yield an excellent preparation. But, in consequence of the abundance of a pectin-like matter in seneka, it is difficult to get the syrup quite clear without clarification with albumen. The syrup affords a very convenient- mode of exhibiting seneka in pectoral complaints. It may be given as a stimu- lant expectorant in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. W SYRUPUS SENNiE. Br. Syrup of Senna. “Take of Senna, broken small, sixteen ounces [avoirdupois]; Oil of Cori- ander three minims; Refined Sugar twenty-four ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water five pints [Imperial measure], or a sufficiency; Rectified Spirit two fiuidounces. Digest the Senna in seventy [fluid]ounces of the Water for twenty- four hours; press and strain. Digest the mark in thirty [fluid]ounces of the Water for six hours; press and strain. Evaporate the mixed liquors to ten fiuidounces, and, when cold, add the Rectified Spirit, previously mixed with the Oil of Coriander. Clarify by filtration, and wash what remains on the filter with Distilled Water, until the washings make up the filtrate to sixteen fiuidounces. Then add the Sugar, and dissolve by means of a gentle heat. The product should weigh two pounds ten ounces [avoird.], and should have the sp. gr. 1-310.” Br. The present British syrup, which has superseded the former syrups of the Lon- don and Edinburgh Colleges, differs from them, as well as from that of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, very greatly in strength ; so that, in’ prescribing it, phy- sicians accustomed to the doses of the former syrups must be on their guard not very seriously to overdose their patients. The syrup, as made by the above for- mula, contains the strength of about thirty grains of senna in each fluidrachm, and should rank with the Fluid Extracts rather than the Syrups. The dose for an adult would be one or two fluidrachms; but for children, for whom it was originally intended, not more than from one-eighth to one-quarter of that quan- tity, according to the age. It has been omitted in the present edition of the TJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, under the impression, we presume, that its place might be supplied by the fluid extract. W. SYRUPUS TOLUTANUS. U. S., Br. Syrup of Tolu. “Take of Tincture of Tolu two fiuidounces; Carbonate of Magnesia one hundred and twenty grains; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, twenty-six troyounces ; Water a pint. Rub the Tincture of Tolu first with the Carbonate of Magnesia and two troyounces of the Sugar, then with the Water gradually added, and filter. To the filtered liquid add the remainder of the Sugar, and, having dissolved it with the aid of a gentle heat, strain the solution while hot.” U. S. “ Take of Balsam of Tolu one ounce and a quarter [avoirdupois]; Refined Sugar two pounds [avoird.] ; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure], or a sufficiency. Boil the Balsam iu the Water for half an hour in a lightly covered vessel, stirring occasionally. Then remove from the fire, and add Distilled Water, if necessary, so that the liquid shall measure sixteen [fluid]ounces. Filter the solution when cold, add the Sugar, and dissolve with the aid of a steam or water- bath. The product should weigh three pounds [avoird.], and should have the sp. gr. D330.” Br. In the U. S. process, the tincture of tolu is rubbed with the carbonate of mag- nesia and a little sugar, and afterwards with the water, in order to enable this fluid to take from the tincture all that it is capable of dissolving; the carbonate of magnesia and the precipitated resin of the tincture being separated by filtra- tion. The process is then completed by forming a syrup with the filtered liquid. It is in accordance with a formula proposed by Mr. J. D. Finley, and published in a note in the eleventh edition of the U. S. Dispensatory. The resulting syrup is beautifully and permanently clear, and has very decidedly the flavour of the bal- sam. In the British process the soluble principles of the balsam are extracted by 1380 Syrupi.— Tlncturse. PART II. boiling it with water, but with great waste of the material, as the water dissolves but a small portion of the active matter of the balsam. To obviate this waste, the same portion of balsam is, according to Mr. Braude, usually employed in successive operations; and it long continues to impart odour and taste to boiling water. The British syrup may have an equal and possibly a finer flavour, but is less efficient medicinally than that of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. At best, how- ever, the syrup of tolu is a feeble preparation, and is used chiefly to impart its agreeable flavour to mixtures. Off. Prep. Trochisci Cubebse, XJ.S. W. SYRUPUS ZINGIBERIS. U.S.,Br. Syrup of Gringer. “Take of Tincture of Ginger six Jluidounces; Carbonate of Magnesia half atroyounce; Sugar [refined], in coarse powder, one hundred and eight troy- ounces; Water four pints. Evaporate the Tincture to three fluidounces with a gentle heat; then rub it first with the Carbonate of Magnesia and two troy- ounces of the Sugar, and afterwards with the Water gradually added, and filter. To the filtered liquid add the remainder of the Sugar, and, having dissolved it with the aid of a gentle heat, strain the solution while hot.” U. S. “Take of Tincture of Ginger one ffuidounce; Syrup seven Jluidounces. Mix with agitation.” Br. The U. S. process for syrup of ginger is upon the same amended plan as that adopted for Syrup of Tolu, and yields a fine preparation entirely free from tur- bidness. As the active principles of ginger are soluble in water, nothing is lost by the precipitation of the concentrated tincture by means of water, and the separation of the resinous matter by filtration. The British syrup being made by the simple incorporation of the tincture with syrup, has of course all the strength of the ginger, but is inferior to the U. S. preparation in appearance and flavour. The old plan of using water as the menstruum has been entirely abandoned, as the syrup thus made is encumbered with mucilage and starch, and consequently l’endered more liable to decomposition. In order that the preparation may be of the proper strength, it is necessary that the tincture should have been made with the best Jamaica ginger. The syrup of ginger is much used as a warm stomachic addition to tonic and purga- tive infusions or mixtures, and to impart flavour to drinks, particularly to car- bonic acid water. Off. Prep. -Trochisci Zingiberis, U. S. W. TINCTURiE. Tinctures. Tinctures, in the pharmaceutical sense of the term, are solutions of medicinal substances in alcohol or diluted alcohol, prepared by maceration, digestion, or percolation. Solutions in spirit of ammonia and ethereal spirit are embraced under the same denomination, but are severally distinguished by the titles of ammoniated tinctures and ethereal tinctures. The advantages of alcohol as a menstruum are, that it dissolves principles which are sparingly or not at all solu- ble in water, and contributes to their preservation when dissolved ; while it leaves behind some inert substances which are dissolved by watef. In no instance, how- ever, is absolute alcohol employed- The U. S. Pharmacopoeia directs it of the sp. gr. 0-835 ; the British, 0 838. When of these densities it contains water, and is capable of dissolving more or less of substances which are insoluble in anhy- drous alcohol; while its solvent power, iu relation to bodies soluble in that fluid, is sufficient for all practical purposes. Diluted alcohol or proof spirit is often preferable to officinal alcohol; as it is capable of extracting a larger proportion of those active principles of plants which require an aqueous menstruum, at the /ART II. Tincturae. same time that it is strong enough, in most instances, to prevent spontaneou.* decomposition, and has the advantages of being cheaper and less stimulating.* The diluted alcohol of the different Pharmacopoeias is not of the same strength, that of the United States consisting of equal measures of officinal alcohol and water, and having the sp.gr. 0 941; while that of the British, called Spiritus Tenuior or Proof Spirit, has the sp. gr. 0 920. The difference, however, is not very material. Alcohol or rectified spirit is preferred as the solvent, when the substance to be extracted or dissolved is nearly or quite insoluble in water, as in the instances of the resins, guaiac, camphor, and the essential oils. The pre- sence of water is here injurious, not only by diluting the menstruum, but by ex- ercising an affinity for the alcohol which interferes with its solvent power. Thus, water, added to an alcoholic solution of one of these bodies, produces a precipi- tate by abstracting the alcohol from it. Diluted alcohol or proof spirit is em- ployed, when the substance is soluble both in alcohol and water; or when one or more of the ingredients are soluble in the one fluid, and one or more in the other, as in the case of those vegetables which contain extractive or tannin, or the native salts of the organic alkalies, or gum united with resin or essential oil. As these include the greater number of medicines from which tinctures are pre- pared, diluted alcohol is most frequently used. In the preparation of the tinctures, the medicine should be in the dry state, and properly comminuted by beiug bruised, sliced, or pulverized. It is usually better in the condition of a coarse than of a very fine powder; as in the latter it is apt to agglutinate, and thus present an impediment to the penetration of the menstruum. When several substances differing in solubility are employed, they should be added successively to the spirit, those least soluble first, those most so last; as otherwise the menstruum might become saturated with the in- gredient for which it has the strongest affinity, and thus be rendered incapable of dissolving a due proportion of the others. Until recently, tinctures have been universally prepared by maceration or digestion. The Edinburgh College directed digestion to be continued usually for seven days. Our own Pharmacopoeia formerly directed maceration at ordi- nary temperatures, and extended the period to two weeks. The latter plan was preferable, as it was more convenient and equally effectual, the lower temper- ature being compensated by the longer maceration. In several instances in which maceration is ordered in our Pharmacopoeia, it is still continued for two weeks; but the period is very properly altered to suit the character of the sub- stance acted on, being sometimes shortened to a week when the medicine readily yields its virtues to the menstruum, and sometimes continued no longer than is necessary for its solution, when it is wholly soluble, as in the tinctures of iodine and tolu. When circumstances require that the tincture should be speedily pre- pared, digestion may be resorted to. Care should always be taken to keep the vessels well stopped, in order to prevent the evaporation of the alcohol. The materials should be frequently shaken during the digestion or maceration; and this caution is especially necessary when the substance acted on is in the state of powder. The tincture should not be used till the maceration is completed; when it should be separated from the dregs either by simply filtering it through paper, or, when force is requisite, by first expressing it through linen, and sub- sequently filtering. The plan of preparing tinctures by percolation has recently been extensively * Mr. Wm, Bastick, in a communication to the Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions, states, as the result of his experience, that most of the tinctures prepared with proof spirit or diluted alcohol undergo deterioration by time, in consequence of acetous fermentation taking place in the alcoholic fluid. The tinctures most prone to this change are those of senna, rhubarb, columbo, henbane, digitalis, bark, hops, aloes, and the compound tincture 'f cinnamon. The best preventive is to keep them in full and well-closed bottles, at a low temperature. (.4m. Joum. of Pharm., xx. 47.) 1382 Tincturse. PART IL adopted , and has been found to answer well when skilfully executed. In the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, and in the late Ed. Pharmacopoeia, this mode of preparation was given as an alternative in numerous instances; and would pro- bably have been exclusively recommended in some, except for its liability to fail in inexperienced hands. lit the present edition of our national standard, per- colation has been adopted as the rule; maceration being directed in a few in- stances in which it was deemed preferable, and the alternative expressly allowed only in a single tincture, that, namely, of aloes and myrrh. The British Pharma- copoeia, preferring maceration or digestion in several instances, has adopted percolation as a general rule; but, as if unprepared to trust this process alone, has combined with it a preliminary maceration of forty-eight hours, and a final expression, so as to separate the last remains of the tincture from the dregs. Perhaps these modifications may be desirable in instances where the operator is insufficiently skilful; but percolation, properly managed, is of itself adequate to all the desired purposes, even to the removal of almost the last drop of impreg- nated menstruum from the dregs; and, in our Pharmacopoeia, it is taken for granted that the apothecary has acquired the requisite skill. Where the operator cannot trust himself in this respect, it would be better to recur to the old method of maceration for two weeks. The reader will find rules for the proper manage- ment of the process of percolation at pages 894 and 905. It has been objected to this process that it yields tinctures of variable strength, according to the skill with which it is conducted; but, from numerous experiments performed, in reference to this point, by M. H. Buignet, of Paris, it appears that the tinctures made by percolation are quite as equable in strength as those prepared by ma- ceration, while they uniformly contain more of the soluble matter of the drug in proportion to the quantity of menstruum. The same writer states that he has constantly found three parts of alcohol, used in this method, to one of the material acted on, sufficient almost wholly to exhaust drugs of their soluble matter. He has derived no advantage from the preliminary maceration usually practised. (Journ.de Pharvi., Sept. 1857, p. 172.) M. Personne, however, has inferred, from his own observation, that five parts of alcohol are required by most sub- stances. (Ibid., Avril, 1860, p. 274.) Our own Pharmacopoeia generally exceeds this. It has been contended in opposition to percolation, applied to the prepa- ration of tinctures, that the menstruum in this process is apt to load itself with substances, which, after the preparation of the tincture, are deposited, carrying down with them more or less of the active matter; but M. Yauflart asserts that more than twenty years of observation has demonstrated to him, that tinctures by displacement, properly filtered, deposit no more than, at the end of a certain period, those deposit prepared by maceration. (Ibid., Avril, 1862, p. 262.) Fi- nally, all agree that the percolated tinctures are apt to contain more of the soluble matter of the drug; and the objections all resolve themselves into a question of skill on the part of the operator. Another mode of exhausting medicines by spirit has been proposed by Dr. II. Burton. It consists in suspending in the solvent, immediately under its surface, the solid matter contained loosely in a bag. The liquid in contact with the bag, becoming heavier by impregnation with the matters dissolved, sinks to the bot- tom; its place is supplied with a fresh portion, which in its turn sinks; and thus a current is established, which continues until the solid substance is exhausted, or the liquid saturated. During the maceration, the bag should be occasionally raised above the surface of the liquor in the bottle, allowed to drain, and then again immersed. It is asserted that the period of maceration is much shortened in this way. (Loud. Med. Gaz., Aug. 30, 1844.)* * ly ammonia, and the precipitated veratria is slightly washed with cold water to free it from adhering impurities. If much water is employed iu the washing, a considerable portion of the veratria is lost, in consequeuce of being in some degree soluble in that menstruum in its ordinary impure state. The re- maining steps of the British process consist in the purification of the veratria by forming a muriate in solution, decolorizing this by animal charcoal, and again precipitating by ammonia.* * Mr. James Beatson, manufacturing chemist of the U. S. Naval Laboratory at New York, recommends the following method of preparing veratria as less complicated and trouble- some than the officinal, and quite satisfactory in its results. Take 73 pounds (avoirdupois) of cevadilla, rub it upon a coarse wire sieve so as to separate the seeds from the capsules, and reduce the former to a coarse powder by a Swift’s drug mill. Pass the capsules also through the mill, separate the finer portion, and mix it with the ground seeds. Moisten the mixture with alcohol, and allow it to stand 12 hours; then introduce it into a displacement apparatus, and pour upon it 30 gallons of alcohol. When a convenient ouantity of the liquid has passed, submit it to distillation, and return the distilled alcohol to the displace- ment apparatus; and proceed in the same way until the cevadilla is thoroughly exhausted. Collect all the alcoholic liquor from the exhausted seeds, and continue the distillation until the tincture has a syrupy consistence. Pour this while hot into eight times its volume of cold water, throw the whole on a calico filter, and wash until the washings cease to indi- cate the presence of veratria. Mix the washings with what first passed through the filter, and add aqua ammonise in excess (about 4 pounds). Wash the precipitated veratria with cold water, and dry it with a very gentle heat. Mr. Beatson obtained by this process eleven and a quarter ounces of pure veratria, but faintly tinged with colouring matter. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 5.)—Note to the tenth edition. M. Auguste Delondre, in a paper upon veratria in the Journ. de Pharm. for June, 1855 (p. 417), having stated that he had found the veratria of commerce to contain only from 75 to 85 per cent, of the pure alkaloid; that in the ordinary modes of obtaining it with the aid of heat, much is lost in consequence of its extreme facility of volatilization; and that the operator is from the same cause exposed to excessive irritation of the air-passages, eyes, &c., from its vapours; proposes the following plan of preparing it as the result of many experiments and long attention to the subject. The powdered cevadilla is treated, by means of percolation, with cold water slightly acidulated with muriatic acid until the liquid which passes strongly reddens litmus paper, when the percolation is finished with pure water. It is known that the cevadilla has been exhausted, when the last liquid which passes gives no precipitate with ammonia. The liquid thus obtained is precipitated by a slight excess of the ammoniacal solution; the grayish precipitate formed is drained and washed; and the washings as well as the de- canted liquid are set aside. The precipitate, having been carefully dried and powdered, is treated, in a well-closed bottle, with twice its weight of ether for four hours, with oc- casional agitation; and the ethereal solution is filtered upon shallow porcelain vessels, and allowed to evaporate. A second treatment with half the quantity of ether serves to extract all the alkaloid. The veratria is allowed to dry, and is then carefully detached from the plates so as to avoid unpleasant consequences to the operator, and kept for use. M. Delondre considers his process more productive, cheaper, and less Inconvenient than the one generally employed; as the injurious effects of heat are avoided, and there are less frequent solutions. The alkaloid, veratrin, being insoluble in ether, is left behind after the operation of that liquid. It is extracted by alcohol, which, on evaporation, yields a brown resinous matter, from which the veratrin may be obtained by heating it with water acidulated with sulphuric acid, and precipitating by ammonia. It exists, however, in very minute proportion, and is difficult to obtain pure. Its effects have not been determined; but its powder produces sneezing, though much less violently than veratria. The washings and decanted fluid, which had been set aside, yield on evaporation an ex- tract, which, when dried, and treated with ether, gives a little additional veratria; the saba- dillin and resini-gum of M. Couerbe remaining behind. If the residue be dissolved iu cold water, and the solution filtered and slowly evaporated, a mixture of crystals of sabadillin and resini-gum is obtained, which it is very difficult to separate. Commercial veratria may be purified with great facility by means of ether which dis- solves the pure alkaloid, leaving the impurities.—Note to the eleventh edition. Dr. Murray Thomson, of Edinburgh, operates in a similar manner with M. Deloni’re in exhausting the seeds with water, acidulated with muriatic acid, and in precipitating with ammonia; but, instead of exhausting the precipitate with ether, he uses hot alcohol for the purpose, and then proceeds by evaporating the tincture, treating the residue with PART II. Veratria. The U. S. process is essentially that of M. Couerbe. The veratria obtained by it, though not pure, is sufficiently so for medical use. A drachm of it, in this state, may be procured from a pound of cevadilla. Besides veratria, M. Couerbe states that principles, which he calls respectively sabadillin (sabadillia) and veratrin, are also contained in this product. These are separated in the following manner. Into the solution of impure sulphate of veratria obtained in the above process, nitric acid is to be introduced by drops. This occasions an abundant precipitate, from which the clear liquor is to be decanted. A weak solution of potassa is then to be added to the liquor, and the precipitate which it produces is to be washed with cold water, and treated with boiling alcohol. The substance obtained by evaporating the alcohol yields the sabadillia to boil- ing water, which deposits it upon cooling; a substance, called by M. Couerbe resini-gum of sabadilla, remaining in solution. If the residue of the substance, treated as just mentioned with boiling water, be submitted to the action of ether, it yields to this liquid the proper veratria, which may be obtained entirely pure by the spontaneous evaporation of the ether. The matter remaining undissolved resinous substance which M. Couerbe called veratrin. Sabadillia is white, crystallizable, insupportably acrid, fusible by heat, readily soluble in hot water, which deposits it upon cooling, very soluble in alcohol, and wholly insoluble in ether. It is capable of saturating the acids. {Journ. de Pharm., xix. 527.) Ac- cording to Simon, sabadillia is a compound of resinate of soda and resinate of veratria. Fr. Hubschmann confirms the views of Couerbe as to the separate ex- istence of sabadillia. He obtained it by treating the matter considered as vera- tria with ether, which removed the pure veratria, and left the sabadillia. The latter does not irritate the nostrils like veratria. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxv. 133.) Properties, &c. In the impure state in which it is obtained by either of the above officinal processes, veratria is a grayish or brownish-white powder, with- out odour, and of a bitter, acrid taste, producing a sense of tingling or numb- ness in the tongue, and exciting violent sneezing and coryza, when admitted into the nostrils. When pure, it is white, pulverulent, inodorous, extremely acrid, fusible by heat, inflammable, scarcely soluble in cold water, soluble in a thou- sand parts of boiling water which it renders sensibly acrid, in eleven parts of alcohol of 0-847, and in six parts of ether (Delondre, Journ. de Pharm., xxvii. 421), and capable of neutralizing acids, with several of which, particu- larly the sulphuric and muriatic, it forms crystallizable salts. As commonly ob- tained, it is uncrystallizable; but Gr. Merck, by dissolving it in highly rectified alcohol, and allowing the solution to evaporate spontaneously, obtained fine crystals in the form of rhombic prisms. The quantity obtained in crystals was but a small proportion of the veratria used, which Merck considered to be a mixture of resin with the pure alkaloid, and on this account to be uncrystalliz- able. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 134.) The composition of veratria is expressed, according to Couerbe, by the formula C34II22N06; but Merck, who obtained it crystallized, and therefore pure, gives the formula C64H52N20Jfi. (lbid.,g. 135.) It may be recognised by its sensible properties, incapacity of crystallization as ordinarily procured, combustibility, fusibility, peculiar solu- bilities, alkaline reaction, the intense red colour it assumes upon contact with "‘oncentrated sulphuric acid, the yellow solution it forms with nitric acid, and #he white precipitates which its solution in dilute acetic acid yields with am- monia and the infusion of galls. Chlorine at first colours a solution of its salts acidulated water, decolorizing with a little animal charcoal, and precipitating with am- monia. The alkaloid thus obtained may be rendered purer by again dissolving and pre- cipitating as oefore. Dr. Thomson has thus obtained veratria in the proportion of 20 grains to an avoirdupois ounce of the seeds. (Phaim. Journ , May, 1861, p. 548.) It is, however, ot'-ions from what is said in the preceding note, that the veratria of Dr. Thomson con- tains veratrin. —JSote to the twelfth edition. 1432 Veratria. PART II. yellow, and afterwards produces a white precipitate. (Cent. Blatt, June 28,1856, p. 454.) Compound solution of iodine causes a reddish-brown precipitate, solu- ble in alcohol. (Fairthorne, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xviii. 212.) According to Trapp, of St. Petersburg, the smallest trace of veratria, if dissolved in highly concentrated muriatic acid, gives a solution which, though colourless at first, becomes red by boiling, gjid intensely red like permanganate of potassa if the boiling be long continued. (See A m. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1863, p. 556 ) It is entirely dissipated by a red heat. It is said sometimes to be sophisticated with lime, which is easily detected by incineration, and may be separated by dis- solving the powder in diluted alcohol, precipitating by sulphuric acid, filtering, evaporating the alcohol, and precipitating the veratria by ammonia. (Chem. Oaz , Feb. 1845, p. 73.) Mr. John E. Carter, of Philadelphia, found a specimen which he examined to contain 38 per cent, of magnesia. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1858, p. 16.) It may be used either in the uncombinejd state, or united with acids; as in both forms it produces essentially the same effects. Medical Properties and Uses. Yeratria is locally irritant, and exercises a peculiar influence on the nervous system. Rubbed upon the skin it excites a sensation of warmth and a peculiar tingling. Sometimes an evanescent blush is produced, and still more rarely an eruption upon the skin; but, in general, no decided signs of inflammation are evinced. Upon the denuded cutis, however, veratria and its salts are powerfully irritating; in the mouth and fauces produce an almost insupportable sense of acrimony; and snuffed up the nostrils excite violent sneezing. Magendie states that, when taken internally in the dose of a quarter of a grain, they promptly produce abundant alvine evacuations, and in larger doses provoke more or less violent vomiting. Other experimenters have observed similar effects. Dr. Turnbull, on the contrary, says that he has very seldom found them to purge, even when largely administered. According to this author, their first effect, when given in moderate doses, is a feeling of warmth in the stomach, gradually extending itself over the abdomen and lower part of the chest, and ultimately to the head and extremities. If the medicine is con- tinued, this feeling of warmth is followed by a sense of tingling, similar to that produced by the external use of the medicine, which manifests itself in different parts of the body, and sometimes over the whole surface, and is frequently ac- companied by perspiration and some feeling of oppression. Occasionally also diuresis is produced. A still further continuance of the medicine, or the use of large doses, excites nausea and vomiting. It occasions no narcotic effects. In overdoses it is a violent poison. Dr. J. L. Yan Praag has experimented with veratria on the lower animals, and gives as the result of his observations, that it lowers the circulation and respiration, diminishes the irritability of many ot the nerves, especially the cutaneous, and produces muscular relaxation ; while, at the same time, it frequently vomits, and in large doses purges. The secretion of saliva is much increased, but that of urine little affected. In poisonous doses, before producing the depressing effects above referred to, it accelerates the pulse and respiration, occasions tonic and clonic spasms of the muscles, and exalts the nervous irritability generally. Tetanic stiffening of the limbs, followed by a dancing movement, is a characteristic symptom of poisoning with this alkaloid. Death seems to result from paralysis of the spinal cord. (B. and F. Medico- Chirurg. Rev., July, 1855, Am. ed., p. 185, from Virchow's Arcliiv.) The diseases in which veratria has been employed are chiefly gout, rheuma- tism, and neuralgia. M. Piedagnel has used it with great supposed advantage in acute articular rheumatism, which he has found generally to get well under its use in seven or eight days. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxvi. 496.) Dr. Turnbull has found it useful also in dropsy, and in diseases of the heart, particularly those of a functional character. He thinks he has also seen it uo good in structural diseases of that organ, but chiefly by acting as a diuretic, and PART II. Veratria. — Vina Medicata. 1433 thereby removing effusion in the pericardium. Prof. Vogt, of Berne, employs it in pneumonia, giving 5 milligrammes (about the thirteenth of a grain) every two hours, and five or six times that amount during the day, increased in insus- ceptible persons to ten or twelve times the quantity; the dose being continued or increased till vomiting and reduction of the pulse are produced. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1860, p. 222.) Veratria has also been employed in dysmenorrhcea, and in various nervous affections, as paralysis, hooping-cough, epilepsy, hysteria, and disorders dependent upon spinal irritation. From one- twelfth to one-sixth of a grain may be given in the form of pill, and repeated every three hours till the effects of the medicine are experienced. Some prefe* the salts for internal use. Dr. Turnbull states that the tartrate is least disposed to irritate the stomach. The sulphate or acetate, however, may be used. Any one of these salts may be prepared by treating veratria with water acidulated with the acid to perfect neutralization, and then carefully evaporating to dry- ness. But veratria is much more employed externally than by the stomach* and is in this way to all the complaints already mentioned. It has been highly praised as a local application in chronic swellings, stiffening, and indura- tion of the joints, whether from rheumatism, scrofula, or simply from local inju- ries, as sprains. It may be used either dissolved in alcohol, or rubbed up with lard or other unctuous substance, in the proportion of from five to twenty grains to the ounce. It is advisable that the alkaloid should be dissolved in a little alcohol before being mixed with the lard. Of the ointment thus prepared, a por- tion of the size of a filbert may be rubbed upon the skin over the part affected, night and morning, from five to fifteen minutes, or until the more urgent symp- toms are relieve'd. Veratria may be used in this way to the amount of from four to eight grains in the day. Care must be taken that the cuticle is over the parts to which it is applied. When the skin is irritable, smaller quantities than riiose above mentioned must be used. Off. Prep. Unguentum Veratrise. W VINA MEDICATA. Medicated TVines. The advantages of wine as a pharmaceutic menstruum are that, in conse- quence of the alcohol it contains, it dissolves -substances insoluble in water, and, to a certain extent, resists their tendency to spontaneous change ; while, at the same time, it is less stimulant than rectified or proof spirit, both from its smaller proportion of alcohol, and from the modified state in which this fluid exists ir. its composition. The acid which it usually contains serves in some instances to increase its solvent power. But most wines, particularly the light varieties, are liable to undergo decomposition ; and even the strongest acquire such a liability from the principles which they extract from vegetable substances; so that medi- cated wines, though they keep much better than infusions or decoctions, are in- ferior in this respect to the tinctures. The proportion of alcohol, moreover, is not constant; and the preparations, therefore, made with them, are of unequal strength. From these causes, few medicated wines are at present retained. In the choice of wine, the purest and most generous should be selected. Sherry, as directed by the U. S. and British Pharmacopoeias, Teneriffe, or Madeira should be preferred. The medicated wines, in consequence of their liability to change, should be prepared in small quantities, without heat, and should be kept in well- stopped bottles in a cool place. The Wines, formerly officinal, which have been omitted in the present Pharma- copoeias, are Vinum Gentianae, Ed., and Vinum Veratri Albi, U. S., Lond. W 1434 Vina Medicata. PART II, VINUM ALOES. U.S.,Br. Wine of Aloes. “Take of Socotrine Aloes, in fine powder, a tr oy ounce; Cardamom [seeds], in moderately fine powder, Ginger, in moderately fine powder, each, sixty grains; Sherry Wine a pint. Macerate for seven days, with occasional agitation, and filter through paper.” U. S. “ Take of Socotrine Aloes one ounce and a half [avoirdupois] ; Cardamoms, ground, Ginger, in coarse powder, of each, eighty grains; Sherry two pints [Imperial measure]. Digest for seven days, and strain through calico.” Br. The wine of aloes is a warm stomachic purgative, useful in constipation de- pendent on a want of due irritability of the alimentary canal, and in complaints connected with this state of the bowels. It has long been used in chlorosis, ame- norrlicea, dyspepsia, gout, paralysis, &c. It is said to leave behind it a more lax condition of the bowels than most other cathartics. The dose as a stomachic is one or two fluidrachms, as a purgative from half a fluidounce to a fluid- ounce. W. VINUM ANTIMONII. U.S. Vinum Antimoniale. Br. Antimonial Wine. Wine of Antimony. “Take of Tartrate of Antimony and Potassa thirty-two grains; Boiling Dis- tilled Water a fluidounce; Sherry Wine a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Salt in the Distilled Water, and, while the solution is hot, add sufficient Sherry Wine to make it measure a pint.” U. S. “Take of Tartarated Antimony forty grains; Sherry one pint [Imperial measure]. Dissolve.” Br. In the first edition of the United States Pharmacopoeia, the proportion of tartar emetic was four grains to the fluidounce of wine. In the revision of 1830, the quantity was reduced to two grains, and, as this was very nearly the propor- tion directed by the British Colleges, the highly important object was accom- plished, of uniformity in the strength of this very popular preparation. The seeming discrepancy between the British formula, and that of the U. S. Phar- macopoeia will disappear, when it is considered that the Imperial pint, employed in the former, contains twenty fluidounces, each very nearly equal to the fluid- ounce of the ordinary apothecaries’ measure. The U. S. officinal name was adopted as most convenient, sufficiently expressive, and in accordance with the nomenclature of several other metallic preparations, such as Emplastrum Ferri, Mistura Fend Gomposita, &c. Difficulty is often experienced in effecting a solution of tartar emetic in wine; and precipitation is apt to occur after the solution has been effected. These re- sults are attributable either to impurity in the antimonial salt, which frequently contains bitartrate of potassa and various insoluble substances, or to inferiority in the character of the wine, which holds in solution vegetable principles that form insoluble compounds with the teroxide of antimony. Dr. Paris states that he has seen the decomposition of the tartar emetic so complete, that no traces of the salt could be detected in the supernatant liquid. The difficulty is not avoided by the plan adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, of first dissolving the antimonial in water, and then adding the wine; for, even allowing that the solu- tion may be accomplished, the same ingredients are present, and their mutual reaction must ultimately result in the same effects. The proper course is to select perfectly pure crystallized tartar emetic, and sound Sherry or Teneriffe wine, which make a permanent solution. To obviate the risk of decomposition, the Dublin College directed water and rectified spirit in about the proportion in which these exist in the wines just mentioned. The only objection to this men- struum is the want of colour, which renders the preparation liable to be cou founded with less active liquids. The advantages of antimonial wine are, that it affords the means of adraiiis- PART II. Vina Medicata. 1435 tering minute doses of tartar emetic, and is more permanent than an aqueous solution of that salt, which is liable to spontaneous decomposition, it is usually administered in small doses as a diaphoretic or expectorant, or as an emetic in infantile cases. When a considerable quantity of tartar emetic is requisite, it should always be given in extemporaneous aqueous solution. The dose of the wine, as an expectorant or diaphoretic, is from ten to thirty drops, given fre- quently; as an emetic for children, from thirty drops to a fluidrachm, repeated every fifteen minutes till it operates. Off. Prep. Mistura Glycyrrhizae Composita, U. S. W. VINUM COLCHICI RADICIS. U.S. Vinum Colchici. Br. Wine of Colchicum Root. “Take of Colchicum Root, in moderately fine powder, twelve troy ounces; Sherry Wine a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with four fluidounces of Sherry Wine, pack it firmly in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Sherry Wine upon it until two pints of filtered liquid are obtained.” U. S. “Take of Colchicum Corm, dried and sliced, four ounces [avoirdupois]; Sher?y one pint [Imperial measure]. Macerate the Colchicum in the Wine for seven days, press and strain through calico; pour on the marc sufficient Sherry to make up one pint [Imp. meas.], and, having pressed and strained as before, mix the fluids.” Br. This is intended to be a saturated vinous tincture of colchicum. As the col- chicum bulb imported into the United States is of variable strength, the only method by which an active preparation can be ensured, is to employ a large quantity of it in proportion to that of the menstruum. If the former should happen to be in excess, no other injury could result than a slight pecuniary loss; while a deficiency in the strength of the preparation would frequently be of serious detriment in urgent cases of disease. A wine made from the fresh bulb is occasionally imported from England, and is thought by some to be more efficacious than our officinal preparation; but we have seldom been disappointed in obtaining the effects of colchicum from the wine prepared according to the directions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The dose of the officinal wine is from ten minims to a fluidrachm, repeated three or four times a day, or more fre- quently in severe cases, till its effects are experienced. In gout it is frequently given in connection with magnesia and its sulphate; and in neuralgic cases we have found much advantage from combining it with the solution of sulphate of morphia, especially when we have desired to give it a direction rather to the skin than the bowels. It has been employed externally with asserted advantage in rheumatism. In overdoses it may produce fatal effects. Death is said to have occurred in one instance from two drachms and a half of the wine; but much more would probably in general be requisite to produce this result. W. VINUM COLCHICI SEMINIS. U. S. Wine of Colchicum Seed. “Take of Colchicum Seed, in moderately coarse powder, four troyounces; Sherry Wine two pints. Macerate for fourteen days, with occasional agitation ; then express, and filter through paper.” TJ. S. As the seeds of colchicum are less liable to injury than the bulb, and are, therefore, of more uniform strength, there is not the same necessity for prepar- ing a saturated tincture. Dr. Williams, who introduced the seeds into use, sup- posed that their active properties resided in their coating, and that it was, there- fore, not advisable to bruise them in preparing the wine or tincture. But this has been shown to be an error by the experiments of Mr. Bonnewyn, who found a larger proportion of colchicia in a tincture of the bruised than in one of the inbruised seeds. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 120.) In order that the seeds may be properly comminuted, Mr. Maisch recommends that they should be macerated for two or three days in a portion of the wine, before being bruised. 1436 Vina Medicata. PART IT. {[bid., xxviii. 514.) The dose is from thirty minims to two fluidrachms. Two fluidounces have proved fatal. W. VINUM ERGOTM.U.S. Wine of Ergot. “Take of Ergot, in moderately fine powder, four troyounces ; Sherry Wine a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of Sherry Wine, pack it in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Sherry Wine upon it until two pints of filtered liquid are obtained.” U. S. In a certain number of copies of the existing edition of the U. S. Pharmaco- poeia first issued from the press, two troyounces of the ergot were, no doubt in- advertently, directed instead of four; the intention being that the Wine should continue to have the same strength as that of 1850, in the preparation of which two ounces were directed; but the fact being overlooked that the quantity of the menstruum wras only one pint, while in the present formula it is two pints. The error, however, was corrected ; and in the copies now issued four ounces are ordered, as above stated. The large proportion of fixed oil in ergot interferes with the solvent action of the menstruum, unless the grains are finely powdered. It is, therefore, best to employ the ergot in this process well powdered, instead of merely bruised, as was formerly officinally directed. The dose of this wine is for a woman in labour two or three fluidrachms; for other purposes, one or two fluidrachms, to be repeated several times a day, and gradually increased if necessary. W. VINUM FERRI. Br. Wine of Iron. “Take of Tartarated Iron one hundred and sixty grains; Sherry one pint [Imperial measure]. Dissolve.”Br. This is simply a vinous solution of tartrate of iron and potassa, and is the most convenient form of this preparation. It is in fact this salt which is formed when wine is made to react on metallic iron; the metal being oxidized and then uniting with the excess of acid of the bitartrate, which is the characteristic salt of wines. The dose of the wine of iron is one or two fluidounces. W. VINUM IPECACUANHiE. U.S.,Br. Wine of Ipecacuanha. “Take of Ipecacuanha, in moderately fine powder, two troyounces; Sherry Wine a sufficient quantity. Moisten the powder with half a fluidounce of Sherry Wine, pack it moderately in a conical percolator, and gradually pour Sherry Wine upon it until two pints of filtered liquid are obtained.” U. S. “Take of Ipecacuan, bruised, one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Sherry one pint [Im- perial measure]. Macerate for seven days, with occasional agitation, express and filter.”Br. The preparations of the two Pharmacopoeias are not of the same strength ; the U. S. wine containing the virtue of 30 grains, the British of only somewhat more than 20 grains in a fluidounce. In the preparation of the British Pharma- copoeia, the strength of this wine was reduced almost one-third. Wine of ipecacu- anha possesses all the medical properties of the root, and may be used as a sub- stitute when it is desirable to administer the medicine in the liquid form. As it is milder, without being less efficacious than antimonial wine, it is in some instances preferable as an emetic for infants, especially when the antimonial, as not unfrequently happens, is disposed to irritate the bowels. It is much used as an expectorant and diaphoretic; aud the effects of the Dover’s powder may be obtained by combining it with laudanum, or other liquid preparation of opium. The dose as an emetic for an adult is a fluidounce; as an expectorant and diaphoretic, from ten to thirty minims. A fluidrachm may be given as an emetic to a child one or two years old, and repeated every fifteen minutes till it operates. VINUM OPII. U. V., Br. Wine of Opium. Sydenham's Laudanum “ Take of Opium, dried, and in moderately fine powder, two troyounces : Cic Vina Medicata.—Zincum. PART II. narnon, in moderately fine powder, Cloves, in moderately fine powder, each, sixty grains; Sherry Wine a sufficient quantity. Mix the powders with fifteen fluid- ounces of Sherry Wine, and macerate for seven days, with occasional agitation • then transfer the mixture to a conical percolator, and, when the liquid has passed the surface, gradually pour on Sherry Wine until a pint of filtered liquid is ob- tained.” U. S. “ Take of Opium, in powder, one ounce and a half [avoirdupois] ; Sherry one pint [Imperial measure]. Macerate for seven days, strain, express and filter; then add sufficient Sherry to make one pint [Imp. meas.].” Br. The wine made according to the directions of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia is a saturated vinous tincture of opium. It contains about the same proportions of the ingredients as the laudanum of Sydenham, from which it differs only in wanting a drachm of saffron. The aromatic additions are thought to adapt it to certain states of the stomach or system, in which laudanum is found to pro- duce unpleasant effects. On being long kept it deposits insoluble matter, a sam- ple of which M. Bihot, of Maliues, has shown to consist mainly of narcotina, withpossibly a little codeia, without any discoverable trace of morphia. (Journ. de Fharm., xxx. 200.) Mr. Ware recommended it as a local application to the eye, in the latter stages of ophthalmia, when the vessels of the conjunctiva still remain turgid with blood. Two or three drops are introduced into the eye every morning till the redness disappears. The dose of the wine of opium is the same as that of the tincture.* W. VINUM RHEI. U.S. Wine of Rhubarb. “Take of Rhubarb, in moderately coarse powder, two troyounces; Canella, in moderately fine powder, sixty grains; Sherry Wine fourteen jluidounces; Diluted Alcohol a sufficient quantity. Mix two fluidounees of Diluted Alcohol with the Sherry Wine, and moisten the powders, previously rubbed together, with half a fluidounce of the mixture ; then transfer them to a conical perco- lator, and gradually pour upon them the remainder of the mixture, and after- wards Diluted Alcohol until a pint of filtered liquid is obtained.” U. S. This is a warm cordial laxative, applicable to debilitated conditions of the system or alimentary canal requiring evacuation of the bowels. The dose is from one to four fluidrachms or more, according to the amount of effect required, and the condition of the patient. W. VINUM TAB A &L. U.S. Wine of Tobacco. “ Take of Tobacco, in moderately fine powder, a troyounce; Sherry Wine a pint. Macerate for seven days, with occasional agitation; then express, and filter through paper.” U. S. The dose of the wine of tobacco, as a diuretic, is from ten to thirty minims. It is very seldom used. W. ZINCUM. Preparations of Zinc. Of tne officinal Preparations of Zinc formerly treated of under this head, Sulphate of Zinc has been transferred to the Materia Medica, and Prepared * Rousseau's laudanum is a tincture of opium made with very weak alcohol, which may be classed with propriety along with the above preparation. It is made according to the following formula. “Take of white honey twelve ounces; warm water three pounds. Hav- ing dissolved the honey, set the solution aside in a warm place; and, as soon as fermenta- tion begins, add of selected opium four ounces, previously dissolved in twelve ounces of wa- ter. Allow the mixture to stand for a month at the temperature of 24° Reaumur (86°F.); then strain, filter, and evaporate to ten ounces; finally strain, and add four ounces and a half of alcohol of 20° 13. Seven drops contain about a grain of opium.” (Pharmacop. Univtrs.f ii. 265.) Zincum. PART II. Calamine, U. S., Lond., Ed., and Solution of Chloride of Zinc, Dub., have been omitted in the present Pharmacopoeias. ZINCI ACETAS. U.S., Br. Acetate of Zinc. “Take of Acetate of Lead twelve troyounces; Zinc, granulated, nine troy- ounces; Distilled Water a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the Acetate of Lead in three pints of Distilled Water, and filter. Then add the Zinc to the solution, and agitate the mixture occasionally, in a stopped bottle, for five or six hours, or until the liquid yields no precipitate with a solution of iodide of potassium. Filter the liquid, evaporate it with a moderate heat to one-fifth, acidulate it slightly with acetic acid, and set it aside to crystallize. Pour off the liquid, and dry the crystals on bibulous paper. Should the crystals be coloured, dissolve them in a pint and a half of Distilled Water, and, having heated the solution to ebullition, drop into it, while boiling, recently precipitated carbonate of zinc, in successive portions, until a small quantity of the liquid, being filtered, passes colourless. Then filter the liquid, acidulate it slightly with acetic acid, and evaporate that crystals may form.” U. S. “ Take of Carbonate of Zinc two ounces [avoirdupois]; Acetic Acid five fluidounces, or a sufficiency; Distilled Water six fiuidounces. Add the Car- bonate of Zinc in successive portions to three [fluidjounces of the Acetic Acid, previously mixed with the Water in a flask ; heat gently, add by degrees the remainder of the Acid till the carbonate is dissolved; boil for a few minutes, filter while hot, and set it aside for two days to crystallize. Decant the mother- liquor ; evaporate to one-half, and again set it aside for two days to crystallize. Place the united crystals in a funnel to drain, then spread them on filtering paper on a porous brick, and dry them by exposure to the air at ordinary tempera- tures.” Br. In the U. S. process the lead is wholly precipitated by the zinc, which forms with the acetic acid the acetate of zinc in solution. In order to be sure that the solution is entirely free from lead, it is tested with iodide of potassium, which will produce a yellow precipitate if any of the lead remain unprecipitated. The crystals of acetate of zinc, as first obtained, are apt to be coloured with iron. Should this be the case, a boiling solution of them in distilled water is to be treated by the addition of successive portions of precipitated carbonate of zinc, until a small quantity of the liquid, being filtered, passes colourless. The zinc of the carbonate of zinc precipitates the iron, and tak£s its place in the solu- tion ; and the iron is known to be all removed, when a portion of the solution is found, upon trial, to filter colourless. This mode of purifying the acetate of zinc from iron was suggested by Professor Procter, and was adopted in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850, in place of the mode by means of a solution of chlori- nated lime, which he found to separate the iron imperfectly. The necessary carbonate of zinc may be obtained extemporaneously, by converting one-thir- tieth of the coloured solution of the acetate into carbonate by precipitating it with carbonate of potassa in slight excess, as originally proposed by Prof. Proc- ter. The precipitated carbonate, first washed from acetate of potassa, is added in the state of magma to the coloured solution, boiling hot. During the evapo- ration of the solution of the acetate of zinc, a small portion of the acetic acid is lost; and hence the necessity of acidulating with a few drops of acetic acid before crystallizing. In the British process, there is simply a decomposition of the carbonate of zinc by acetic acid, with the formation of acetate of zinc in solution, and the escape of carbonic acid. Though not an economical process, it has the recommendation of being easily performed, and of yielding a pure product. In relation to the acetate of zinc, see a paper by Mr. Ambrose Smith, contained in the Amer. Journ. of Pharm. (vii. 14). Properties, &c. Acetate of zinc, when carefully crystallized, is in c<. tourless hexagonal plates, which effloresce in a dry air. As found in the shrps it is in PART II. Zincum. white micaceous crystals. It is very soluble in water, moderately so in rectified spirit, and has an astringent, metallic taste. The solution yields white precipi- tates with ferrocyanide of potassium and hydrosulphuret of ammonia. The pre- cipitate thrown down by ammonia from the pure salt is entirely redissolved by an excess of the precipitant; but, if sesquioxide of iron be present, it will be left undissolved. Acetate of zinc is decomposed by the mineral acids, with the escape of acetous vapours. It consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, one of protoxide of zinc 40 3, and two of water 18 = 109 3 (Zn0,CtII303 -f 2HO). Medical Properties. Acetate of zinc is used almost exclusively as a local remedy. It is employed principally as an astringent collyrium in ophthalmia, and as an injection in gonorrhoea, after the acute stage in these affections has passed. The strength of the solution, usually prescribed, is one or two g"ains to a fluidounce of distilled water. B. ZINCI CARBONAS PRiECIPITATA. U. S. Zinci Carbonas. Br. Precipitated Carbonate of Zinc. Carbonate of Zinc. “ Take of Sulphate of Zinc, Carbonate of Soda, each, twelve troyounces; Wa- pints. Dissolve the salts separately, with the aid of heat, each in four pints of the Water. Then mix the solutions, and, having stirred the mixture, set it by that the powder may subside. Lastly, having poured off the superna- tant liquid, wash the precipitate with hot water until the washings are nearly tasteless, and dry it with a gentle heat.” U. S. “Take of Sulphate of Zinc ten ounces [avoirdupois]; Carbonate of Soda ten ounces and a half [avoird.] ; Boiling Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dis- solve the Carbonate of Soda with a pint [Imperial measure] of the Water in a capacious porcelain vessel, and pour into it the Sulphate of Zinc also dissolved in a pint [Imp. meas.] of the Water, stirring diligently. Boil for fifteen minutes after effervescence has ceased; and let the precipitate subside. Decant the super- natant liquor, pour on the precipitate three pints of boiling Distilled Water, agi- tating briskly; let the precipitate again subside; and repeat the processes of affusion of hot Distilled Water and subsidence, till the washings are no longer precipitated by chloride of barium. Collect the precipitate on calico, let it drain, and dry it with a gentle heat.” Br. In view of the impurities and frequent falsification of the native carbonate of zinc, the revisers of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia conceived that it would be best to dis- card altogether the old preparation, which in the edition of 1850 was still retained under the changed name of Calamina, and to recognise exclusively the new one first adopted in 1850. In the U. S. formula a double decomposition takes place be- tween the salts employed, resulting in the formation of sulphate of soda in solu- tion, and carbonate of zinc which precipitates. Carbonate of soda is preferable to carbonate of potassa for decomposing the sulphate; since the former gives rise to sulphate of soda, which is more easily washed away than sulphate of po- tassa, derived from the latter. Boiling water is properly used in the process, in order to obtain a pulverulent precipitate, which is readily washed. If cold solu- tions are used, a gelatinous precipitate is formed, wrhich is washed with difficulty. The present British formula is essentially the same with that of the U. S. Pharm., having superseded the Dublin process, in which the reacting salts were chloride of zinc and carbonate of soda. Properties, &c. Precipitated carbonate of zinc is in the form of a very soft, loose, white powder, resembling magnesia alba. It dissolves in dilute sulphuric acid with effervescence, forming a solution having the characters of a solution of sulphate of zinc. If adulterated with chalk, it will be only partly soluble in this acid. Precipitated carbonate of zinc is often sold under the incorrect name of dowers of zinc, a name which properly belongs only to the oxide, as obtained by combustion. When obtained from boiling solutions of sulphate of zinc and carbonate of soda, it has the composition, according to Schindler and Lefort, 1440 Zincum. PART II. &Zn0,3C02 -f- 6110. (Journ. de Pharm., oe ser., xi. 329.) According to the Br. Pharmacopoeia, it consists, as thus prepared, of one eq. of carbonate and two eqs. of oxide of zinc, with three eqs. of water (ZnO,C02 + HO) -J- 2(ZnO,HO). The basic character of the salt is explained by the fact that effervescence of carbonic acid takes place on mixing the solutions. It is employed for the same purposes as prepared calamine, and is gradually superseding the spurious article usually sold under that name. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia orders a cerate made from it as a substitute for calamine cerate. (See Ceratum Zinci Carbonolis.) Off. Prep. Zinci Acetas, Br.; Ceratum Zinci Carbonatis, U.S.; Zinci Chlo- ridum, Br.; Zinci Oxidum ; Zinci Sulphas, Br. B. ZINCI CHLORIDUM. U. S., Br. Chloride of Zinc. Butter of Zinc. “ Take of Zinc, in small pieces, two Iroyounces and a half; Nitric Acid, Pre- pared Chalk, each, sixty grains; Muriatic Acid, Water, each, a sufficient quan- tity. To the Zinc, in a glass or porcelain vessel, add gradually sufficient Muriatic Acid to dissolve it; then strain the solution, add the Nitric Acid, and evaporate to dryness. Dissolve the dry mass in five fluidounces of the Water, add the Chalk, and allow the mixture to stand for twenty-four hours. Then filter into an eva- porating basin, and again evaporate to dryness. Lastly, fuse the dry mass in the basin, pour out the liquid on a flat stone, and, when it has congealed, break the mass in pieces, and keep the fragments in a well-stopped bottle.” U. S. “ Take of Granulated Zinc sixteen ounces [avoirdupois] ; Hydrochloric Acid forty-four fluidounces [Imperial measure] ; Solution of Chlorine a sufficiency; "Carbonate of Zinc half an ounce [avoird.], or a sufficiency; Distilled Water one pint [Imp. meas.]. Put the Zinc into a porcelain basin, add by degrees the Hydrochloric Acid previously mixed with the Water, and aid the action by gently warming it on a sand-bath until gas is no longer evolved. Boil for half an hour, supplying the water lost by evaporation, and allow it to stand on a cool part of a sand-bath for twenty-four hours, stirring frequently. Filter the product into a gallon bottle, and pour in the Solution of Chlorine by degrees, with fre- quent agitation, until the fluid acquires a permanent odour of chlorine. Add the Carbonate of Zinc, in small quantities at a time, and with renewed agitation, until a brown sediment appears. Filter through paper into a porcelain basin, and evaporate until a portion of the liquid, withdrawn on the end of a glass rod and cooled, forms an opaque white solid. Pour it out now into proper moulds, and when the salt has solidified, but before it has cooled, place it in closely stoppered bottles.” Br. In the IJ. S. process the chloride of zinc is first formed in solution by dissolv- ing zinc in muriatic acid. The nitric acid added sesquioxidizes any iron which may have existed as an impurity in the zinc. By evaporating to dryness and dissolving in water, most of the sesquioxide of iron is left behind. Lastly, in order to remove any remains of iron, a small portion of chalk is added, which precipitates it as a sesquioxide; and the mixture, after standing, is filtered and evaporated to dryness. This process is the same as that of the French Codex. The British agrees with the U. S. process in first preparing the chloride of zinc in solution; but differs in the mode of getting rid of the iron. Instead of nitric acid it uses chlorine, which combines with the iron to form a chloride; and, carbonate of zinc being then added, the zinc combines with the chlorine to increase the product of chloride of zinc, while the oxygen of the oxide of zinc, "the carbonic acid, and the iron unite as the carbonate of iron, which is depo- sited. As this preparation is used chiefly as a caustic, it is melted and cast into moulds as the last step in both processes. In relation to this chloride, the reader is referred to a paper by Mr. B. J. Crew in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1853, p. 203. j/m M. Rhighini prepares this chloride by double decomposition between solu- tions of chloride of barium and sulphate of zinc. Sulphate of baryta is precipi- PART II. Zincum. 1441 tated, and chloride of zinc remains in solution, from which it is obtained in white flaky crystals by due evaporation. P *operties. Chloride of zinc is a grayish-white, translucent, deliquescent sub stance having the softness of wax. When pure, it is wholly soluble in water alcohol, and ether; but, as prepared by the U. S. formula, it contains some oxychloride, which is left undissolved by water. According to M. Lassaigne, commercial chloride of zinc sometimes contains as much as 12 per cent, of arse- niate of zinc, which, being insoluble in solution of chloride of zinc will be left undissolved, when the chloride is treated with water. (Phillips’s Trans, of the Lond. Pharm., 1851, p. 375.) Its solution yields with nitrate of silver a white precipitate (chloride of silver) insoluble in nitric acid; and with ammonia and potassa a white precipitate, soluble in those reagents when added in excess. The carbonates of potassa and soda also throw down a white precipitate, which is not dissolved by an excess of the precipitants. When exposed to heat chloride of zinc first melts and then sublimes. When pure it gives white precipitates with ferrocyanide of potassium and hydrosulphuret of ammonia. A blue precipitate with the former test w7ould indicate iron, a black one with the latter, lead: It co«sists of one eq. of zinc 32-3, and one of chlorine 35-5 = 67'8. Medical Properties and Uses. This chloride was introduced into medicine by Dr. Papenguth, of St. Petersburg, and subsequently recommended by Prof. Hancke, of Breslau, and Dr. Canquoin, of Paris. Internally it has been given as an alterative and antispasmodic in scrofula, epilepsy, chorea, and, combined with hydrocyanic acid, in facial neuralgia. Its chief use, however, has been as an escharotic, applied to cancerous affections, and to ulcers of an anomalous and intractable character. When thus used, it not only destroys the diseased struc- ture, but excites a new action in the surrounding parts. As a caustic it has the advantage of not causing constitutional disorder from absorption, an effect which is sometimes produced by the arsenical preparations. Dr. Canquoin prepares the chloride of zinc, as an escharotic, by thoroughly and quickly mixing it with wheat flour and water into a paste of four different strengths, containing severally an ounce of the chloride, incorporated with two, three, four, and five ounces of flour ; fifteen drops of water being added for every ounce of flour, or sufficient to form the paste. It is applied in cakes from a twelfth to a third of an inch in thickness, and produces an eschar more or less deep (from a line to an inch and a half), according to the thickness of the paste, the length of the application, and the nature of the part acted on. The strongest paste is applied to lardaceous and fibro-cartilaginous structures; the seeoud to carcinomatous tumours, and very painful cancers which have not much thickness, and the third to cancerous affections in persons who have a dread of the use of the knife. These preparations, applied to the skin denuded of its cuticle by means of a blister, excite in a few minutes a sensation of heat, and afterwards violent burning pain. The eschar, wrhich is white, thick, and very hard, falls off, with the aid of an emollient poultice, between the eighth and twelfth days. To de stroy thick cancerous tumours, having an uneven surface, and situated in fleshy parts, Dr. Canquoin uses a caustic formed of one part of chloride of zinc, half a part of chloride of antimony, and two and a half parts of flour, made into a paste with water. In all cases, the caustic is to be reapplied, after the falling off of the eschar, until the whole morbid structure is destroyed. When the skin is unbroken, it is now usual to destroy, not merely the cuticle, but the true skin also, by means of the acid nitrate of mercury, to the extent desired for the ehlo- »ide to operate. This is applied, spread on lint, and the dressing is covered with a portion of cotton wadding, to absorb any discharge, and to preserve a uniform temperature. The surrounding skin should be protected from the caustic by a thickly spread dressing of simple cerate, containing as much chloroform as it will take up, as recommended by Dr. E. S. Haviland, of London. M. Bonnet Zincum. PART II. has applied the paste of chloride of zinc to the treatment of aneurism. He has reported the complete cure of one case of subclavian aneurism from a penetrat- ing wound, by a continued series of applications of the paste. Every two or three days, the superficial layers of the slough were removed by a bistoury. At the end of the second month, the eschar began to detach itself without any hemor- rhage, and the clot came away with the eschar. Chloride of zinc has also been used successfully by MM. Bonnet and Gensoul in the treatment of aneurism by anastomosis. {Med. Times and Gaz., July 23,1853.) Instead of flour, I)r. Alex, lire, of Glasgow, mixes the chloride with pure anhydrous sulphate of lime in impalpable powder. He states that this has the advantages of furnishing a porous medium from which the escharotic gradually exudes into the morbid structure, and of forming afterwards, by acquiring a firmer consistence, aD im- pervious case for the eschar. Mr. Cock, of Guy’s Hospital, has imitated this mode of preparing the chloride, so as to form a caustic which may be limited in its action, and does not run. It may be prepared as a caustic seton, by thickly covering a waxed cotton wdck with Dr. Canquoin’s caustic paste, and then roll- ing it out in the form of a cylinder, according to the plan of M. Ancrenis, of Lyons. A thread is wound spirally round the cylinder to give it firmness. Mr. Calloway, of Guy’s Hospital, has employed the chloride of zinc with considera- ble success in the treatment of naevi materni. He rubs it, at intervals, on the part until the skin becomes slightly discoloured. The late Mr. Guthrie used it with advantage for penetrating the hard case of new bone which forms over a seques- trum, in order to expose the latter, and permit its convenient extraction. Chloride of zinc is an ingredient in the complex caustic formed of chlorides, employed by Prof. Landolfi, of Naples, in the treatment of cancer. For his formula, see page 173. This treatment was reported on unfavourably, in 1856, by a committee of the French Academy of Medicine, headed by M. Broca. (See Banking's Abstract, No. 24, p. 100.) The cancer caustic of Dr. J. W. Fell con- sists of chloride of zinc, mixed with bloodroot, and made into a paste with flour and water. It is not supposed that the bloodroot has any decided caustic effect; so thai; the local treatment of cancer by Dr. Fell is virtually the same as that recommended in certain cases by Dr. Canquoin. Chloride of zinc, with a view to its escharotic effect, may be formed extempo- raneously by means of galvanism, on the plan recommended by an English phy- sician, Dr. Thomas Smith. A simple galvanic circle is formed by riveting a disc of zinc, of the size of the eschar desired, to a disc of silver of equal size; the pair being excited by a piece of spougio-piline, placed on the silver, and moist- ened with a solution of common salt. The little battery is then fixed upon the skin by means of strips of adhesive plaster. Once in twelve hours it must be removed, and washed in salt and water, and then reapplied. By the electrolysis of the common salt chlorine is liberated, which, combining with the zinc, converts it to a certain extent into the chloride. This, acting on the skin, exercises its caustic effect; and at the end of twelve days a white eschar is formed. This mode of forming an issue has, according to Dr. Smith, the advantage of being less painful than those usually employed. According to M. E. Robiquet, chloride of zinc may be made into a very mal- leable, pliable caustic, susceptible of taking any shape desired by the surgeon, by melting it with an equal weight of gutta percha. (See page 433.) For internal exhibition, the most convenient form is a solution in the spirit of .ether, in the proportion of half an ounce to three fluidounces. Of this from four to eight drops may be given twice a day. Dr. Lloyd, of London, has found chloride of zinc useful as an injection in the acute stage of gonorrhoea, made of the strength of about two grains to three fluidounces of distilled water, and em- ployed once in five or six hours. A solution of one grain to the fluidounce is used by Mr. Critchett, of the Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, as a eolly- PART II. Zincum. 1443 rium in cases of vascular and thickened conjunctiva, forming a sort of gleet o the eye. In overdoses chloride of zinc acts as a corrosive poison, producing burning pain in the gullet and stomach, nausea and vomiting, cold sweats, depression of the pulse, and cramps of the legs. According to Dr. T. Stratton, surgeon R. N., who treated two cases of poisoning with this chloride at Montreal, the best antidotes are the carbonated alkalies, which act by converting the poison into carbonate of zinc. Should the alkalies not be at hand, a solution of common soap should be immediately and freely given. {Med. Exam., Feb. 1849, from the Brit. Am. Journ. of Med. and Phys. Sci.) Dr. Letheby reports a fatal case ot poisoning by this chloride occurring in a child. The form of chloride swallowed was Burnett’s disinfecting fluid. (See the next article.) Its local effect was that of a corrosive on the lips, mouth, and fauces. Among the constitutional effects were paralysis of the voluntary muscles, coldness of the surface dilated pupil, and coma.* B. * Solution of Chloride of Zinc. Zinci Chloridi Liquor. This was officinal in the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia, with the following formula. “Take of Sheet Zinc one pound [avoirdupois]; Muriatic Acid of Commerce, Water, of each, two pints and a half [Imperial measure], or as much as may be sufficient; Solution of Chlorinated Lime one fluidounce [Imp. meas.] ; Prepared Chalk one ounce [avoird.]. To the Zinc, introduced into a porcelain capsule, gradually add the Muriatic Acid, applying heat until the metal is dissolved. Filter the liquid through calico, and, having added to it the Solution of Chlorinated Lime, concentrate at a boiling temperature, until it occupies the bulk of one pint [Imp. meas.]. Permit the solution now to cool down to the temperature of the air, place it in a bottle with the Chalk, and, having first added Distilled Water, so that the bulk of the whole may be a quart [two pints, Imp. meas.], shake the mixture occasionally for twenty-four hours. Finally, filter, and preserve the product in a well- stopped bottle. The specific gravity of this liquor is 1-593.” Dub. The chloride of zinc is made, in the usual way, by dissolving zinc in muriatic acid. The chlorinated lime is added in order to convert any iron present into sesquichloride, from which it is afterwards precipitated by the chalk. The use of this precipitant introduces into the preparation a little chloride of calcium, which is of no consequence. The two pints and a half of water, ordered in the formula, are not used in the process. They were probably intended to be added to the muriatic acid, which acts better on the zinc when diluted. The preparation is completed by bringing it to a certain bulk by the addition of distilled water, and by filtration to separate the precipitated iron and any excess of chalk. Solution of chloride of zinc is a dense, colourless liquid, having a burning, nauseous taste even when dilute. It contains 175 grains of zinc in the Imp. fluidounce, and has the gp. gr. 1-593. This solution is equivalent to Burnett’s disinfecting fluid noticed below. It is a powerful disinfectant, and, when applied, duly diluted with water, to cancerous and other offensive ulcers, destroys their fetor so long as the dressings are kept moist with it. The solution is recommended by M. Gaudriot in gonorrhoea in both sexes, as having re- markable remedial powers. For men he uses an injection, composed of from twenty-four to thirty-six drops in four fluidounces of water. A small quantity only is injected about an inch up the urethra, two or three times a day. For women he employs a vaginal sup- pository, formed of five drops of the solution, half a grain of sulphate of morphia, and three drachms of a paste consisting of a drachm and a half of starch, a drachm of mucilage of tragacanth, and half a drachm of sugar. The suppository is introduced every day, or every second day. Burnett's disinfecting fluid, like the Dublin officinal solution, is an aqueous solution of chloride of zinc. It contains 200 grains of zinc in each Imperial fluidounce, and has the sp. gr. 2. It is, therefore, considerably stronger than the Dublin solution. It is so called after Sir William Burnett, who introduced it into use, in 1840, as a powerful deodorizing and disinfecting agent in neutralizing noxious effluvia, and in arresting animal and vege- table decomposition. Diluted with water it forms Sir William’s patent preservative against the dry rot The concurrent testimony of a number of observers shows that it acts as an excellent disinfectant for ships, hospitals, dissecting rooms, water-closets, privies, &c. (See Extracts from the British Navy Reports on chloride of zinc as a disinfectant, in the Bond. Med. Times and Gaz., Oct. 1853, p. 341.) Injected into the blood-vessels, it preserves oodies for dissection, without impairing their texture, and is said not to injure the knives employed; but the accuracy of the latter statement is doubtful. The advantage is claimed for it. that, while it destroys putrid odours, it has no smell of its own. For preserving 1444 Zincuni. PART II. ZINCI OXIDUM. U.S.,Br. Oxide of Zinc. “Take of Precipitated Carbonate of Zinc twelve troyounces. Expose it, in a shallow vessel, to a low-red heat until the water and carbonic acid are wholly expelled.” U. S. “ Take of Carbonate of Zinc six ounces. Place the Carbonate of Zinc in a loosely covered Hessian crucible, and expose it to a dull red heat until a por- tion, taken from the centre of the contents of the crucible and cooled, no longer effervesces when dropped into dilute sulphuric acid. Let the crucible cool, and transfer the product to stoppered bottles.” Br. Both the Pharmacopoeias prepare the oxide of zinc from the carbonate al- ready formed. By referring to the article on precipitated carbonate of zinc, page 1439, it will be found that it is obtained in the U. S. and Br. processes from sulphate of zinc, by the decomposing influence of carbonate of soda. Other methods of obtaining the carbonate of zinc are by the mutual decom- position of the chloride and carbonate of soda and of the sulphate and carbon ate of ammonia ; but the officinal plan is to be preferred. M. Lefort found it to furnish a carbonate which is washed with facility, and is convertible by calci- nation into a pure oxide, readily reduced to an impalpable and very light pow- der. (Journ. de Pharm.,3e ser., xi. 329.) It is, besides, more economical. Tho carbonate of zinc, in whatever way obtained, is exposed to heat to drive off the carbonic acid and water, in order to obtain the oxide. According to Mohr, a full red heat is not necessary ; a temperature between 536° and 572° being suf- ficient, It is probable that an unnecessarily high heat injures the oxide as a the- rapeutic agent. Oxide of zinc may be obtained by the combustion of the metal; and in this way it was formerly prepared by the Dublin College. Zinc melts at 773°, and immediately becomes covered with a film of gray oxide. When the temperature reaches nearly to redness, it takes fire and burns with an intense white light, generating the oxide in the form of very light and white flocculi, resembling carded wool, which quickly fill the crucible, and are in part driven into the atmo- sphere by the current of air. The late Mr. G. D. Midgely, of London, several years ago, called attention to the production of oxide of zinc by combustion, and gave a description of the apparatus, by which he was enabled to prepare from one to two hundred weight of the oxide at one operation. It consisted of a large muffle, heated to redness in a suitable furnace, and supplied with zinc from time to time as the combustion proceeded. The necessary draught of air was conveyed from the muffle by a tube, passing through the top of the furnace, and terminating in a vessel of water, in which the portion of oxide carried up by the current was retained. The resulting oxide was freed from particles of metallic zinc by being passed through a sieve. Properties. The officinal oxide of zinc is an inodorous, tasteless, yellowish- white powder, insoluble in water and alcohol, and anhydrous. As obtained by combustion it is perfectly white. It dissolves readily in acids without efferves- cence ; and in potassa and soda, but not in their carbonates. Being anhydrous, it is insoluble in ammonia; but the impure oxide found in the shops, being gene- rally hydrated, is soluble in that alkali. At a low white heat it fuses, and at full whiteness sublimes. When prepared by combustion it was formerly called pompholix, nihil album, lana philosophica, and flowers of zinc. Its neutral solution in acids should give a white precipitate with ferrocyanide of potassium and hydrosulphuret of ammonia. If the precipitate with the former test is blu- ish-white, iron is indicated; if black with the latter, lead is shown. Prepared by the old officinal process, namely, by precipitating sulphate of z!dc with am- anatomical subjects, one part of the disinfecting fluid to eighteen of Water will form a solution of the proper strength. For disinfecting operations on a large scale a pint jf un fluid may be mixed with four gallons of water. PART II. Zincum. 1445 monia, it contains the subsulphate, the acid of which may be detected by dis- solving the oxide in nitric acid, and precipitating by nitrate of baryta. Some- times it is obtained by precipitating chloride of zinc with ammonia, in whicb case the oxide contains subchloride, easily detected by nitrate of silver. If ii contain white lead or chalk, it will not be entirely soluble in dilute sulphuric acid, but an insoluble sulphate of lead or of lime will be left. If iron be pre- sent, brownish-red flocks of sesquioxide of iron will remain undissolved, when the muriatic solution of the oxide is treated with ammonia in excess. Oxide Gi zinc consists of one eq. of zinc 32 3, and one of oxygen 8 = 40 3. The powder sold in the shops as oxide of zinc is often very impure. Some- times the carbonate is substituted for it, showing that the exposure to a red heat has been omitted. In this case the preparation will effervesce with acids. Most samples contain a large proportion of subsulphate, showing that the discarded but productive process of precipitating the sulphate of zinc solution by ammo- nia has been employed. Again, other samples contain subchloride. These spu- rious oxides are pointed out by Mr. Redwood, of London, as occurring in the English market, and, no doubt, are sold in the shops of the United States. (See Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1855, p. 301.) Unfortunately, a white oxide is preferred by purchasers, though whiteness is generally a sign of impurity; the officinal oxide being yellowish-white. Medical Properties and Uses. This oxide is tonic and antispasmodic. It has been given in chorea, epilepsy, hooping-cough, spasm of the stomach dependent on dyspepsia, and other similar affections. Externally it is employed as an ex- siccant to excoriated surfaces, sometimes by sprinkling it on the affected part, but generally in the form of ointment. (See Unguentum Zinci Oxidi.) The dose is from two to eight grains or more, repeated several times a day, and given in the form of pill. Oxide of zinc, prepared by combustion, is extensively used in painting as a substitute for white lead, over which it has the advantage of not being disco- loured by sulphuretted hydrogen. It has, moreover, the merit of not producing injurious effects on the workmen at all comparable to those caused by white lead. The oxide thus prepared, even though pure, should not be substituted for the officinal, as its state of aggregation is probably different. Off. Prep. Unguentum Zinci Oxidi. B. ZINCI VALERIAN AS. U.S.,Br. Valerianate of Zinc. “Take of Valerianate of Soda two troyounces and a half; Sulphate of Zinc two troyounces and four hundred and twenty grains; Distilled Water a suffi- cient quantity. Dissolve the salts separately, each in twenty fluidounces of Dis- tilled Water, and, having heated the solutions to 212°, mix them, and set the mixture aside to crystallize. Decant the mother-water from the crystals, and put them upon a filter in a funnel to drain. Mix the mother-water and the drainings, evaporate at a heat not exceeding 200° to four fluidounces, and again set aside to crystallize. Add the crystals, thus obtained, to those in the funnel, wash the whole with a little distilled Water, and, having removed them with the filter, spread them on bibulous paper, and dry them with a heat not exceeding 200°.” U.S. “Take of Sulphate of Zinc five ounces and three-quarters [avoirdupois]; Valerianate of Soda five ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dis- solve the Sulphate of Zinc and the Valerianate of Soda, each in two pints [Im- perial measure] of the Water; raise both solutions to near the boiling point, mix them, cool, and skim off the crystals which are produced. Evaporate the mother-liquor at a heat not exceeding 200°, till it is reduced to four [fluid] ounces; cool again, remove the crystals which have formed, and add them to 'hose which have been already obtained. Drain the crystals on a paper filter, and wash them with a small quantity of cold Distilled Water, till the washings Zincum.—Tests. PART II. give but a very feeble precipitate with Chloride of Barium. Let them now be again drained, and dried on filtering paper at ordinary temperatures.” Br. These formulas are essentially the same as that of the late Dublin Pharmaco- poeia. In the formation of the salt a double decomposition takes place between the reacting salts, resulting in the production of valerianate of zinc and sulphate of soda. Upon mixing the hot solutions, crystals of the sparingly soluble vale- rianate of zinc form on the surface of the liquid; and, during the progress of its concentration to one-tenth, more of them are successively produced. These are then washed with cold distilled water to separate adhering sulphate of soda, drained on a filter, and dried. Properties. This salt is in white, pearly scales, having a faint odour of vale- rianic acid, and a metallic, styptic taste. It dissolves in 160 parts of cold water, and in 60 of alcohol of The solutions, which have an acid reaction, become turbid on the application of heat, but clear again on cooling. The salt, as obtained by the officinal formulas, is anhydrous; but, when formed by exactly saturating carbonate of zinc, made into a paste with water, with valerianic acid, it contains twelve eqs. of water, and, when dried at 122°, perfectly resembles the anhydrous salt. (G. G. Wittstein.) Sometimes acetate of zinc, impregnated with oil of vale- rian, is fraudulently substituted for this salt. The butyrate of zinc has been sold in Paris for the valerianate, and is so similar to it as not to be distinguished by its physical properties. The two salts, however, may be discriminated, by adding a concentrated solution of the acid of the suspected salt, obtained by distilla- tion with sulphuric acid, to a concentrated solution of acetate of copper. If the acid is the butyric, its addition to the solution of the acetate disturbs the trans- parency of the latter, by the formation of a bluish-white precipitate ; while, if the valerianic, no change is produced. (Larocque and Huraut, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ix. 430.) Medical Properties. Valerianate of zinc was proposed as a remedy, on theo- retical grounds, by Prince Louis-Lucien Bonaparte. Upon trial it was found to possess antispasmodic properties. By some of the Italian physicians it has been extolled as a remedy in neuralgic affections. Dr. Namias, of Venice, employed it with advantage in anomalous nervous affections, attended with palpitation of the heart, constriction of the throat, and pain in the head. Dr. Francis Devay, of Lyons, found it useful in epilepsy, and in the nervous affections which pany chlorosis. The dose is one or two grains, repeated several times a day, and given in the form of pill. (See a paper on this valerianate by Prof. Procter, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for April, 1845.) B. TESTS. In the Appendix of the British Pharmacopoeia, two series of tests are given, one qualitative, the other quantitative, to which frequent reference is made throughout that work, and which, so far as they are not incidentally described in the Dispensatory, require a special notice in this place; as, otherwise, much that has been stated in regard to the British Preparations would be unintelligible. 1. Qualitative Tests. Those here given are all fn the state of solution, and are used for determj iing the character of particular substances, whether isolated or in composition; thus enabling us to ascertain the identity of medicines, their purity or ii 1 purity, and PART II. Tests. 1447 the character of the foreign ingredients which may be mixed with them acci- dentally, or with a view to adulteration. Solution of Acetate of Copper. Formula of acetate of copper Cu0,C4H303-|-H0. “Take of Subacetate of Copper of Commerce, in fine powder, half an ounce [avoirdupois] : Acetic Acid one fluidounce [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dilute the Acid with half a fluidounce [Imp. meas.] of the Water; digest the Subacetate of Copper in the mix- ture at a temperature not exceeding 212° with repeated stirring, and continue the heat until a dry residue is obtained. Digest this in four [fluid]ounces of boiling Distilled Water, and by the addition of more of the Water make up the solution to five fluidounces.” Solution of Acetate of Potassa. Dissolve half an avoirdupois ounce of Acetate of Po tassa in five fluidounces of Distilled Water. Solution of Acetate of Soda. Dissolve half an avoirdupois ounce of Acetate of Soda in five fluidounces of Distilled Water. Solution of Albumen. Mix, with trituration, in a mortar the White of one Egg and four fluidounces of Distilled Water, and filter through clean tow previously moistened with Distilled Water. The solution should be prepared when wanted for use. Solution of Ammonio-nitrate of Silver. Formula of the salt Ag0,N05-f-2NH3. “Take of Nitrate of Silver, in crystals, a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois] ; Solution of Ammonia half a fluidounce, or a sufficiency; Distilled Water q sufficiency. Dissolve the Nitrate in eight fluidounces of the Water, and to the solution add the Ammonia until the precipitate first formed is nearly dissolved. Filter, and add Distilled Water, so that the bulk may be ten fluidounces.” Solution of Ammonio-sulphate of Copper. Formula of the salt Cu0,S03-f-2NH3,H0. “Take of Sulphate of Copper, in crystals, half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Solution of Am- monia, Distilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Dissolve the Sulphate in eight fluidounces of the Water, and to the solution add the Ammonia until the precipitate first formed is nearly dissolved. Filter, and then add Distilled Water, so that the bulk may be ten fluidounces.” Solution of Bichloride of Platinum. Formula of the salt PC12. “Take of thin Pla- tinum foil a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois] ; Nitric Acid, Hydrochloric Acid, each, a sufficiency; Distilled Water seven fluidounces. Mix half a fluidounce of the Nitric Acid with three fluidounces of the Hydrochloric Acid and two fluidounces of the Water; pour the mixture into a small flask containing the Platinum, and digest at a gentle heat, adding more of the Acids mixed in the same proportion, should this be necessary, until the metal is dissolved. Transfer the solution to a porcelain capsule, add to it a fluidrachm of Hydro- chloric Acid, and evaporate on a water-bath until acid vapours cease to be given off. Let the residue be dissolved in the remaining five [fluid]ounces of Distilled Water, and pre- serve in a stoppered bottle.” Solution of Boracic Acid. Dissolve fifty grains of Boracic Acid in one fluidounce of Rectified Spirit. Solution of Bromine. Upon ten minims of Bromine, in a bottle furnished with an accu- rately fitting glass stopper, pour five fluidounces of Distilled Water, and shake repeatedly. Solution of Carbonate of Ammonia. “Take of Carbonate of Ammonia, in fine powder. half an ounce [avoirdupois]; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Shake the Carbonate in a bottle with eight fluidounces of the Water until it is dissolved, and by the addition of more of the Water make up the bulk of the solution to ten fluidounces.” Saturated Solution of Chloride of Calcium. Dissolve three hundred and thirty-six grains of Chloride of Calcium in one fluidounce of Distilled Water. Solution of Chloride of Tin. Formula SnCl. “Take of Granulated Tin one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Hydrochloric Acid three fluidounces; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dilute the Acid in a flask with one fluidounce of the Water, and, having added the Tin, apply a moderate heat until gas ceases to be evolved. Add as much of the Water as will make up the bulk to five fluidounces, and transfer the solution, together with the undissolved tin, to a bottle with an accurately ground stopper.” Solution of Corrosive Sublimate. Dissolve one hundred grains of Corrosive Sublimate :n fire fluidounces of Distilled Water, and keep the solution in a bottle impervious to light. Solution of Ferridcyanide of Potassium. Dissolve a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois] of crystallized Ferridcyanide of Potassium in five fluidounces of Distilled Water, and keep the solution in a stoppered bottle. Solution of Ferroctanide of Potassium. Dissolve a quarter of an ounce [avoirdupois] 1448 Tests. PART ir. of crystallized Ferrocyanide of Potassium in five fluidounces of Distilled Water, and keep the solution in a stoppered bottle. Solution of Gelatin. “Take of Isinglass [Ichthyocolla], in shreds, fifty grains; Warm Distilled AVater om fluidounce. Mix and digest for half an hour on a water-bath with re- peated shaking, and filter through clean tow moistened with Distilled Water.” Solution of Hydrochlorate of Ammonia. Dissolve one avoirdupois ounce of Hydro- chlorate of Ammonia in eight fluidounces of Distilled AVater, and with Distilled Water make up the bulk to ten fluidounces. Solution of IIydrosulphuret of Ammonia. Formula of the saltNH4S,HS. “Take of Solution of Ammonia one fluidounce. Conduct into this a stream of Sulphuretted Hydrogen so long as this gas continues to be absorbed, and then transfer the solution to a green-glass bottle furnished with a well-ground stopper.” Solution of Iodate of Potassa. Formula K0,I05. “Take of Iodine, Chlorate of Potash, each, fifty grains; Nitric Acid five minims; Distilled AVater ten fluidounces and a half. Rub the Iodine and Chlorate of Potash together to a fine powder; place the mixture in a Flo- rence flask, and, having poured upon it half a [fluidjounce of the AVater acidulated with the Nitric Acid, digest at a gentle heat until the colour of the iodine disappears. Boil for one minute, then transfer the contents of the flask to a capsule, and evaporate to perfect dryness at 212°. Finally dissolve the residue in the remaining ten [fluidjounces of Dis- tilled AVater, filter the solution, and keep it in a stoppered bottle.” Solution of Iodide of Potassium. Dissolve one avoirdupois ounce of Iodide of Potassium in eight fluidounces of Distilled AVater, and, by the addition of Distilled Water, make up the bulk of the solution to ten fluidounces. Solution of Oxalate of Ammonia. Formula of the salt NH40,C203-{-HO. “Take of Purified Oxalic Acid one ounce [avoirdupois] ; Boiling Distilled AVater eight fluidounces; Car- bonate of Ammonia, in powder, a sufficiency. Dissolve the Oxalic Acid in the AVater, neu- tralize the solution with the Carbonate of Ammonia, filter, cool, and crystallize. Take of the crystals of Oxalate of Ammonia thus obtained, first dried on filtering paper by simple exposure to air, and free from efflorescence, half an ounce [avoird.]; AVarm Distilled AVater one pint [Imperial measure]. Dissolve.” Solution of Phosphate of Soda. Dissolve one avoirdupois ounce of crystallized Phosphate of Soda in eight fluidounces of Distilled AVater, and add as much Distilled Water as will make the bulk of the solution ten fluidounces. Solution of Sulphate of Indigo. Formula HO,C16II4NO,2SOg. “Take of Indigo five grains; Pure Sulphuric Acid one fluidrachm; Distilled Water ten fluidounces. Mix the Indigo and Acid in a small test tube, and apply the heat of a water-bath for an hour. Pour the blue liquid into the Distilled Water, agitate the mixture, and, when the undissolved indigo has subsided, decant the clear liquid into a stoppered bottle.” Solution of Sulphate of Iron. Dissolve ten grains of Granulated Sulphate of Iron in one fluidounce of boiling Distilled AA7ater. This solution should be prepared when wanted. Solution of Sulphate of Lime. “Take of Plaster of Paris a quarter of an ounce [avoir- dupois] ; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Rub the Plaster of Paris in a porce- lain mortar for a few minutes with two [fluid]ounces of the AVater, introduce the white mixture thus obtained into a pint bottle [Imp. meas.] containing the rest of the AVater, shake well several times, and allow the undissolved sulphate to subside. AVhen this has occurred, filter, and preserve the clear solution in a stoppered bottle.” Solution of Tartaric Acid. Dissolve one avoirdupois ounce of crystallized Tartaric Acid in eight fluidounces of Distilled AArater, add two fluidounces of Rectified Spirit, and keep the solution in a stoppered bottle. The spirit is added to preserve the solution. Solution of Terciiloride of Gold. Formula of the salt AuCls. “Take of fine Gold, re- duced by a rolling machine to a thin lamina, sixty grains; Nitric Acid one fluidounce [Im- perial measure]; Hydrochloric Acid seven fluidounces [Imp. meas.]; Distilled AArater nine fluidounces [Imp. meas.]. Tlace the Gold in a flask with one fluidounce of the Nitric and six fluidounces of the Hydrochloric Acid, first mixed with four fluidounces of the AVater, and digest until it is dissolved. Add to the solution an additional fluidounce of Hydrochloric Acid, evaporate at a heat not exceeding 212° until acid vapours cease to be given otf, and dissolve the Terchloride of Gold thus obtained in five fluidounces of Distilled Water. The solution should be Kept in a stoppered bottle.” PART II. Tests. — Volumetric Solutions. 1449 The quantitative tests are intended to estimate the quantity of any particulai substance in the mixture or compound submitted to examination. They are all liquid, being denominated in the British Pharmacopoeia Volumetric Solutions, and have individually been frequently referred to, throughout the Dispensatory, when it was deemed proper to indicate a method of determining the strength of medicines or their preparations recognised in the British Pharmacopoeia. The method of operating in volumetric analysis is simple. A tube is to be provided, capable, when filled up to a point marked 0, of containing 1000 grains of dis- tilled water at 60° F., and beneath this point graduated into 100 equal parts. Into this tube the volumetric solution is to be introduced of a certain strength, so that the quantity of the substance dissolved which may be consumed in the application of the test is at once known, by observing the number of hundredths of the volumetric solution which have disappeared. This quantity, being known, measures the quantity of the substance acted oh by the test, supposing the nature of the reactions to be understood, and the equivalents of the several substances well ascertained. The volumetric solution, before being used, should be wrell shaken, in order that it may be uniform throughout. Volumetric Solution of Bichromate of Potassa. Formula of the salt K0,2Cr03=- 147-5. Dissolve 129 grains of Pure Bichromate of Potassa in one Imperial pint of Distilled Water. “The quantity of this solution which fills the volumetric tube to 0, contains one tenth of an equivalent, in grains, of the Bichromate of Potash, and, when added to a solu tion of a protosalt of iron acidulated with hydrochloric acid, is capable of converting one- tenth of six eqs. of iron (16-8 grains) from the state of a protosalt to that of a persalt [ses- quisalt]. In practising this volumetric process, it is known that the whole of the protosalt, has been converted into a persalt, when a minute drop of the solution, placed in contact with a drop of the solution of ferridcyanide of potassium, on a white plate, ceases to strike with it a blue colour.” It is obvious, therefore, that, by means of this test, it is possible to estimate the quan- tity of protoxide, protochloride, protiodide, or protobromide of iron in any mixture or compound in which it may exist. The rationale, in reference to the protoxide of iron, is that two eqs. of the bichromate, containing two eqs. of chromic acid (2Cr03), and of course six eqs. of oxygen, give up three eqs. of oxygen, whereby the acid becomes sesquioxide of chrome (Cr203), to six eqs. of the protoxide of iron (6FeO), converting them into three eqs. of the sesquioxide (8Fe203); and, in reference to haloid salts, it is only necessary that each of them should be preliminarily converted, through the instrumentality of the water present, into the protoxide and the acid corresponding with its other element, in order that the same reaction should be exerted upon it as on the protoxide. Volumetric Solution of Hyposulphite of Soda. Formula of the crystallized salt NaO, S202 + 5110 = 124. “Take of Hyposulphite of Soda, in crystals, 260 grains; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dissolve the Hyposulphite in one pint [Imperial measure] of the Water, and drop the solution cautiously from the volumetric tube into 100 measures of the volumetric solution of iodine, until the brown colour of the iodine is just discharged. Note the num- ber of measures (N) which have been used to produce this effect; and, having then taken sixteen fluidounces of the same solution, augment this quantity by the addition of Distilled Water until it amounts to -1 - fluidounces. If, for example, N = 96, the sixteen [fluid] ounces of the solution of the hyposulphite should be diluted with distilled water so as to become 1 6 00 =16-66 fluidounces. 96 “This solution is used for estimating free iodine, an object which it accomplishes by forming with the iodine, iodide of sodium and tetrathionate of soda. One hundred measures of it include one-tenth of two eqs. of the hyposulphite in grains, and therefore correspond to 12-7 grains of free iodine.” Tetrathionic. acid consists of four eqs. of sulphur and five of oxygen; and tetrathionate of soda would be represented by the formula Na0,S405. When the hyposulphite (dithio- nate) of soda (NaO,S2()2) reacts with iodine, two eqs. of the salt are called into action, and, oy the substitution of one eq. of iodine for one eq. of oxygen of the soda, become one eq. of iodide of sodium, one of soda, and one of tetrathionate of soda; as represented by the following equation, I + 2(Na0,S,02) = NaI-f- Na0,S405. Two eqs. of the test salt are there fore capable of neutralizing and rendering invisible one eq. of iodine; and, as the eq. of 2. Quantitative Tests. 1450 Tests. PART II. the salt n 124 and that of iodine 127, it follows that 248 grains of it should neutralize 127 grains oi iodine, or every grain of the former consumed would indicate the neutralization of '512 grain of the latter as nearly as may be. Volumetric Solution of Iodine. Formula 1 = 127. “Take of Pure Iodine, in powder, 111-125 grains; Iodide of Potassium 150 grains; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Mix the Iodide of Potassium and Iodine in a bottle with eighteen [fluid]ounces of the Water, agi- tate until both are dissolved, and, when the solution is complete, add as much more Dis- tilled Water as will make the total bulk exactly one pint [Imperial measure]. “This solution may be employed for determining the amount of sulphuretted hydrogen or of a metallic sulphuret in a fluid, but is chiefly used for the estimation of sulphurous and aisenious acids. It is dropped from the volumetric tube into the liquid to be tested until free iodine begins to appear in the solution. One hundred volumetric measures of it include 12-7 grains (one-tenth of an eq.) of iodine, and therefore correspond to 1-7 grains of sulphuretted hydrogen, 3-2 grains of sulphurous, and 4-95 grains of arsenious acid.” Volumetric Solution of Nitrate of Silver. Formula of the salt AgO,N05= 170, Dissolve 148-75 grains of Nitrate of Silver in one Imperial pint of Distilled Water, and keep the solution in an opaque stoppered bottle. “The quantity of this solution which fills the volumetric tube to 0, includes 17 grains of nitrate of silver, or one-tenth of an eq. of the salt in grains. Upon dropping it into dilute hydrocyanic acid rendered alkaline by soda, the precipitate first formed is upon agitation redissolved, and continues to be so until the whole of the cyanogen of the acid has united with the sodium and silver, form- ing the double cyanide of sodium and silver. In such experiments 100 volumetric mea- sures of the solution correspond to 5-4 grains of absolute hydrocyanic acid.” Volumetric Solution of Oxalic Acid. Formula of crystallized oxalic acid IIO,C2 Og-}-2HO = 63. “Take of Purified Oxalic Acid, in crystals, quite dry, but not effloresced, 551-25 grains; Distilled Water a sufficiency. Dissolve the Oxalic Acid in eighteen fluidounces of the Water, and when the solution is complete, add as much Distilled Water as w-ill make its bulk exactly twenty fluidounces at 60°. “The quantity of this solution which fills the volumetric tube to 0, includes exactly 63 grains of crystallized oxalic acid, and is therefore capable of neutralizing an eq. iD grains of any alkali, or alkaline carbonate.” Volumetric Solution of Soda. Formula of soda NaO = 31. “Take of Solution of Soda, Distilled Water, each, a sufficiency. Fill the volumetric tube to 0, with the Solution of Soda, and drop this into 63 grains of purified oxalic acid dissolved in two fluidounces of the Water, until the acid is exactly neutralized as indicated by litmus. Note the number of measures (N) of the Solution used, and having then taken forty fluidounces of the Solu- tion of Soda, augment this quantity by the addition of Distilled Water, until it becomes fluidounces. If, for example, N = 93, the 40 ounces of Solution of Soda should be diluted so as to become jj°- = 43-01 fluidounces. The quantity of this Solution which fills the volumetric tube to 0, includes 31 grains of Soda, and will therefore neutralize au eq. in grains of any monobasic acid.” PART III. DRUGS AND MEDICINES NOT OFFICINAL.* In the progress of the medical art, numerous remedies have at diiferent times risen into notice and employment, which, by the revolutions of opinion incident to our science, or by the discovery of more efficient substitutes, have so far fallen into disrepute as to have been discarded from general practice, and no longer to hold a place in the officinal catalogues. Of these, however, some are still occa- sionally employed by practitioners and referred to by writers, and many retain a popularity as domestic remedies, or among empirics, which they have lost with the medical profession generally. The attention of physicians must, therefore, frequently be called to them in the course of practice; and it is highly desirable to possess some knowledge of their properties and effects, in order to be enabled to judge of their agency in any particular case, and at the same time to avoid the suspicion of incompetence which might attach to the exhibition of entire igno- rance in relation to them. The remark is true also of other substances, which, though at no time ranked among regular medicines, are yet habitually employed in families, and the influence of which, either remediate or otherwise, must often enter into our estimate of the causes which produce or modify disease. New medi- cines, moreover, are frequently brought forward, which, without having obtained the sanction of the medical authorities, are occasionally prescribed, and therefore merit notice. To supply, to a certain extent, the requisite means of information in regard to these extra-officinal remedies, is the object of the following brief no- tices, among which are also included accounts of substances not employed as medicines, but usually kept in the drug stores for various purposes connected with the arts, or with domestic convenience. In a work intended for the use as well of the apothecary and druggist as of the physician and medical student, the introduction of such accounts is obviously proper, if kept in due subordination to the more important object of teaching the properties of medicines, and the modes of preparing them. The authors regret that the limits, which practical convenience appears to require in a Dispensatory, do not admit of a more com- plete enumeration of the various drugs and medicines of the kind above alluded to, or of ampler details in relation to those actually treated of, than will be found in the following pages. They have endeavoured, however, in the selection of ob- jects, to choose those which are likely most frequently to engage the attention of the medical and pharmaceutical professions, and, in the extent of the descrip- tions, to consult as far as possible the relative importance of facts, of which they could not detail the whole. In relation to the nomenclature employed, it may be proper to observe that all those vegetable remedies, which, not being generally kept in the shops, have no current commercial name, are described under the scientific title of the plant producing them; while other substances are desig- nated by the names which ordinary usage has assigned them. W. * By the term officinal medicines, here as well as elsewhere in this work, are meant such as are embraced in the United States and British Pharmacopoeias. Acetate of Alumina.—Acetic Ether. PART III. ACETATE OF ALUMINA. This salt may be obtained by the direct combination of hy- drated alumina with acetic acid, or by reaction between sulphate of alumina and acetate of lead. According to Crum, when pure tersulphate of alumina and neutral acetate of lead are mixed, the resulting salt is apparently biacetate of alumina, which remains in solution with one eq. of pure acetic acid, as there is no teracetate of alumina. The solution, filtered to separate the sulphate of lead and evaporated, yields a gummy mass, which reddens litmus, and has an astringent taste. But if means are used to evaporate the solution quickly, at a low temperature, the salt is obtained dry and in a perfectly soluble state (Al!i03,2C1IIs03-(-4H0). (Qmelin’s Handbook, \iii. 303.) It is deliquescent. Acetate of alu- mina is valuable only as a disinfectant, operating in this way like the sulphate of alumina, and employed in the same manner. (See Aluminae Sulphas in Part II., page 970.) W. ACETATE OF COPPER. Cupri Acetas. Crystals of Venus. This salt is prepared by dis- solving verdigris, with the assistance of heat, in vinegar or dilute acetic acid. The solu- tion, after having been sufficiently concentrated, is transferred to suitable vessels, where it. crystallizes on cooling. Acetate of copper is a slightly efflorescent salt, crystallizing in rhomboidal prisms, and having a rich deep-blue colour aud strong styptic taste. It dis- solves in water without residue, a character which serves to distinguish it from verdigris. It consists of one eq. of acetic acid, one of protoxide of copper, and one of water. Its popular name of distilled verdigris is inappropriate; as no distillation is practised in its preparation. This salt is used for colouring maps. It was formerly the chief source of acetic acid. It has been used in the form of tincture by Dr. Rademacher in fevers; but with no very definite object. B. ACETATE OF IRON, TINCTURE OF. Tinctura Ferri Acetatis. The following is the for- mula of the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia for this preparation, which, not having been adopted in the British Pharmacopoeia, is no longer officinal. “Take of Sulphate of Iron eight ounces [avoirdupois] ; Distilled Water half a pint [Imperial measure] ; Pure Sulphuric Acid six flui- drachms [Imp. meas.]; Pure Nitric Acid half afluidounce [Imp. meas.]; Acetate of Potash eight ounces [avoird.] ; Rectified Spirit half a gallon [Imp. meas.]. To nine [fluid]ounces of the Water add the Sulphuric Acid, and in the mixture, with the aid of heat, dissolve the Sul- phate of Iron. Add next the Nitric Acid, first diluted with the remaining [fluid]ounce of Water, and evaporate the resulting solution to the consistence of a thick syrup. Dissolve this in one quart [two pints, Imp. meas ], and the Acetate of Potash in the remainder of the Spirit, and, having mixed the solutions, and shaken the mixture repeatedly in a large bottle, let the whole be thrown upon a calico filter. When any further liquid ceases to trickle through, subject the filter, with its contents, to expression, and, having cleared the turbid tincture thus procured by filtration through paper, let it be added to that already obtained. The sp.gr. of this tincture is 0-891.” Dub. This preparation is a tincture of the teracetate of sesquioxide of iron. The first step in making it is to convert the sulphat e of protoxide of iron into the tersulphate of the sesquiox- ide by the action of sulphuric and nitric acids, with the aid of heat, in the usual way. The salt thus formed is then dissolved in half the rectified spirit, the acetate of potassa in the other half. The spirituous saline solutions having been mixed, a double decomposition of the salts takes place, resulting in the formation of teracetate of sesquioxide of iron which dissolves in the spirit, and sulphate of potassa which precipitates, being insoluble in that, menstruum. By filtration, therefore, the sulphate of potassa is removed, and the clear liquid constitutes the tincture under notice. As there is an excess of sulphate of protoxide of iron taken, the tersulphate of the sesquioxide into which it is converted, is more than sufficient to decompose all the acetate of potassa. Accordingly, the portion of the tersulphate not expended in the double decomposition, being soluble in rectified spirit, remains in solu- tion along with the teracetate in the tincture. This tincture is a transparent liquid, of a deep-red colour, and strong ferruginous taste. It is said to be an agreeable chalybeate. The dose is from twenty drops to a teaspoonful, sufficiently diluted with water. B. ACETATE OF MAGNESIA. Magnesise Acetas. This salt has been proposed as a purga- tive by M. Renault, of Paris. It is deliquescent, and cannot be crystallized without diffi- culty. (Carl von Hauer.) It has the merit of extreme solubility both in water and alcohol. Though without much taste, it is inferior in that respect to citrate of magnesia, for which it is proposed as a substitute. It is prepared for therapeutic use by saturating 120 parts of carbonate of magnesia with acetic acid, and evaporating the resulting liquid, after filtra- tion, to 300 parts. The product is a syrupy acetate of magnesia, which is to be mixed with three times its weight of syrup of oranges, to form the preparation of M. Renault. Of this about four ounces is the dose. An objection to the liquid acetate is, that, owing to its at- traction for moisture, it cannot be preserved of uniform strength for mixing with the syrup of oranges. (Journ. de Fharm., 3e ser., xiii. 200.) B. ACETIC ETHER. Hither Aceticus. This ether may be formed by several processes, the chief of which are the following.—1. Mix 100 parts of alcohol (sp.gr 0-83) with 63 parts of concentrated acetic acid, and 17 parts of strong sulphuric acid, and distil 125 parts into PART in. Actsea Spicata.—AEsculus Hippocastanum. 1453 a receiver, kept cold with wet cloths. 2. Distil to dryness a mixture of three parts of acetate of potassa, three of alcohol, and two of sulphuric acid, mix the distilled product with one-fifth of sulphuric acid, and distil a second time an amount of ether equal to the alcohol employed. 3. Distil two parts of effloresced acetate of lead with one part of alco- hol, and a little more than one part of sulphuric acid. In the last two processes, the acetic acid is set free by the action of the sulphuric acid on the acetate employed. Acetic ether is colourless, of a grateful odour, and a peculiar, agreeable taste. Its sp. gr. is 0-866, and its boiling point 160°. It undergoes no change by keeping. By contact with flame it burns readily, diffusing an acid odour. It dissolves in 7-5 parts of water, and unites in all pro- portions with alcohol. It consists of one eq. of acetic acid 51, and one of oxide of ethyl (ether) 37 = 88 (C4H50,C4H303). Acetic ether is occasionally used in medicine as a stimulant and antispasmodic. The dose is from fifteen to thirty drops, sufficiently diluted with water. It is sometimes em- ployed externally, by friction, as a resolvent, and for rheumatic pains. B. ACTiEA SPICATA. Baneberry. Herb Christopher. This is a perennial, herbaceous, Euro- pean plant, growing in the woods of mountainous regions, and attaining a height of two feet or more. The root is of a dark-brown colour, and bears some resemblance to that ot Helleborus niger, for which it is said to be occasionally substituted. Its odour, in the re ■ cent state, is sweetish and rather nauseous, but is in great measure dissipated by drying. The taste is bitterish and somewhat acrid. In its operation on the system, the root is pur gative and sometimes emetic, and is capable, in overdoses, of producing dangerous effects. It is unknown in this country. We have, however, a native species of Actaea, A. Americana. of Pursh, of which there are two varieties — alba and rubra — distinguished by the colour of their berries, which in the former are white, and in the latter red. They are sometimes called white and red cohosh, a name derived from the language of the Aborigines. By some botanists they are treated of as distinct species, under the names of Actzea alba and Actiea rubra. They grow in the rich deep mould of rocky woods, from Canada to Virginia. They are said to have been much esteemed by the Indians. Their medical properties are probably similar to those of A. spicata. The name baneberry, given to different species of Actaea, was derived from the reputed poisonous properties of their berries. Mr. Frederick Stearns, in his account of the medical plants of Michigan, speaks of the rhizoma of Actaea alba as being violently purgative. (Proceed. of the Am. Pharm. Assoc., 1858, p. 240. ) W. ADANSONIA DIGITATA. Baobab. A tree of enormous magnitude, belonging to the Linnasan class and order Monadelphia Polyandria, and to the natural family Stereuliacem (Lindley). It is a native of Africa, extending quite through that continent from Senegal to Abyssinia, and has been introduced into the West Indies. The leaves and bark of this tree abound in mucilage, and have little smell or taste; yet extraordinary virtues have been ascribed to them. Adanson found the leaves very useful as a preventive of fevers, and they are employed habitually by the native Africans with a view to their diaphoretic property. Dr. Duchassaing, of Guadaloupe, has published a statement of his experience with the bark, in the miasmatic diseases of the West Indies. Out of 93 cases, chiefly of intermittent fever, he failed only in three. M. Pierre has subsequently employed the remedy with success in intermittent fever at Bourgogne, in France. [Arch. Gen , 3e ser., xxiii. 535.) The bark has the advantage over cinchona of being almost without taste, and quite accept- able to the stomach. It produces no other observable physiological effect than increase of appetite, increased perspiration, and perhaps diminished frequency of pulse. An ounce .may be boiled in a pint and a half of water to a pint, and the whole taken in a day. [Journ. de Pharm., 8e ser., xiii. 412 and 421.) The fruit, which contains a subacid not disagreeable pulp, is used by the Africans in dysentery and other bowel complaints. IV. ADIANTUM PEDATUM. Maidenhair. An indigenous fern, the leaves of which are bit- terish and aromatic, and have been supposed to be useful in chronic catarrhs and othei pectoral affections. A European species, known by the same vulgar name, is the A. Capil- las Veneris, which has similar properties, though feebler, and has been much used asa pectoralT-on the continent of Europe, from very early times. It is given in the form of in- fusion, sweetened with sugar or honey; and a syrup prepared from it is popular in France, under the name of sirop de capillaire. The name of maidenhair has also been given to Ms- plenium Trichomanes, the leaves of which have a mucilaginous, sweetish, somewhat astrin- gent taste, ahtTEave been used for the same purposes with those of the plants above men- tioned. Another species of Asplenium, A. Adiantum nigrum, has been substituted for the genuine maidenhair; but neither of themEas t h e~mJrna t ic 11 avour of that fern. W. iESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM. Ilorsechestnut. The liorsechestnut is a native of Asia, and was introduced about the middle of the sixteenth century into Europe, where, as well as in this country, it is now extensively cultivated as an ornamental tree. Quercitrin. has been found by Rochleder in very small proportion in the leaves. [Journ. de Pharm., Mai, 1859, p. 393.) Fraxin..a peculiar principle of the bark of Fraxinus excelsior, has been de- lected also, by Mr. Stokes, in the bark of the liorsechestnut; and Rochleder has discovered 1454 JEsculus Hippocastanum.—Agaric. PART III. in the. capsules of the fruit a peculiar acid, which he names capsulccscic acid. {Ibid., Aofit, I860, p. 151.) The fruit and bark have been used in medicine. The fruit abounds in starch, but has a rough, disagreeable, bitter taste, which renders it unfit for food, though it is said to be eaten with avidity by horses, oxen, hogs, and sheep. It may be deprived, in great measure, of the bitter principle by maceration in an alkaline solution. The starch may be readily obtained in a state of purity, and is said to excel as an article of diet that procured from the potato. {Diet, de Mat. Med.) Considerable quantities have recently been prepared in France for use; the nut being reduced to a pulp, washed, and treated iike the potato. {Am. Journ. ofSci. and Arts, Sept. 1856, p. 264.) The bitter principle is denominated esculin, and, according to Rochleder, may be obtained by precipitating with acetate of lead "a decoction of the rind, filtering, treating the filtered liquor with sulphuretted hydrogen, again filtering, evaporating to the consistence of syrup, and setting the residue aside in a cool place. In a few days, the liquid is converted into a mass of crystals, which are to be expressed, and purified by repeated crystallization from alcohol, and afterwards from boil- ing water. If now washed on a filter with cold water till they have lost one-third of their weight, they are rendered as pure as it is possible to obtain them. Esculin is in shining, white, prismatic crystals, inodorous, bitter, but slightly soluble in cold water, more soluble in boiling water, and very readily so in boiling alcohol, and in alkaline solutions. Its solu- tion is precipitated by subacetate of lead. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; and its formula, according to liochleder, is {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xxiii. 474, and xxiv. 292.) When treated with dilute sulphuric acid, it is converted into grape sugar, and a peculiar substance called esculetin. {Chem. Gaz., Jan. 15, 1857, p. 27.) The pow- dered kernel of the fruit, snuffed up the nostrils, produces sneezing, and has been used with advantage as a sternutatory in complaints of the head and eyes. A fixed oil ex- tracted from the kernels by percolation with ether, and obtained separate by evaporating the ether, has recently been used in France as a topical remedy in gout and rheumatism, being applied by means of a hair brush to the part affected, which is then covered with waxed paper, cotton wadding, or flannel. The kernels yield only one tenth of 1 per cent, of the oil. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 231.) The bark of the horsecliestnut has attracted much attention on the continent of Europe, as a substitute for cinchona. That of the branches from three to five years old is considered best. It should be collected in the spring. It has little odour, but an astringent and bitter, though not very disagreeable taste. It contains, among other ingredients, a bitter principle and tannin, and imparts its virtues to boiling water. By many physicians it has been found very efficacious in the treatment of intermittent fever; but it has entirely failed in the hands of many others, and certainly cannot be considered comparable to the Peruvian bark in its power over that complaint. It is at present seldom used, and never in this country. It has been given in substance, decoction, and extract. From half an ounce to an ounce of the powder may be given in the course of twenty-four hours. The decoction is prepared and administered in the same manner as that of Peruvian bark. Esculin was given, with complete success by M. Monvenoux, in four cases of periodical neuralgia, in one of which quinia had failed lie gave 30 grains, at two doses, mixed with sweetened water. {Ann. de Therap.,\%b§, p 160.) At a later period the same principle has been found useful in neuralgia of the uterus, stomach, and bowels, and in periodical fevers, by M. Vicaire, in doses varying from seven to thirty grains. {Ibid., 1860, p. 198.) W. AGARIC. Touchwood. Spunk. Tinder. This is the product of different species of a genus of mushrooms denominated Boletus. Several species are used as food, several are poisonous, and two at least have been ranked among officinal medicines in Europe. Boletus laricis. which grows upon the larch of the old world, is the white agaric or purging agaricoFmedical writers. It is of various sizes, from that of the fist to that of a child’s head, or even larger, hard and spongy, externally brownish or reddish; but, as found in commerce, it is de- prived of its exterior coat, and consists of a light, white, spongy, somewhat farinaceous, friable mass, which, though capable of being rubbed into powder upon a sieve, is not easily pulverized in the ordinary mode, as it flattens under the pestle. It has a sweetish very bitter taste, and consists, according to Braconnot, of 72 parts of resinous matter, 2 of bitter extractive, and 26 offungin, a nutritious animalized principle, constituting the base of the fleshy substance of mushrooms. It contains also benzoic acid and various saline compounds. In the dose of four or six grains, it is said to act powerfully as a cathartic but Lieutaud asserts that it may be given in the quantity of thirty grains or a drachm without sensibly purging. M. Andral has found it useful in checking the night-sweats of phthisis. He uses it in doses of eight grains, and gradually increases to a drachm during the day. without any observable inconvenience to the digestive functions. In this country it is scarcely employed, though we have met with it in the shops. That which is most esteemed is said to be brought from Siberia; but it is probably produced wherever the European larch grows. I)r. Wm. M. McPheeters has published, in the St. Louis Med. and Surg. Journ. (x. 421), an account of several cases, in which he tried a specimen of Boletus laricis, brought from the Rocky Mountains, in almost all of which it proved decidedly PART III. Agave Americana.—Agrimonia Eujoatoria. 1455 cathartic. The dose was 25 grains, which it was sometimes necessary to repeat. A tinc- ture of the agaric of the Canadian larch has been used successfully in rheumatism by Dr. J. A. Grant. (British-Am. Journ., April, 1862.) Boletus igniarius, or agaric of the oak, like the species just described, is compared in shape to the horse’s hoof. Its diameter is from six to ten inches. It is soft like velvet when young, but afterwards becomes hard and ligneous. It usually rests immediately upon the bark of the tree, without any supporting footstalk. On the upper surface it is smooth, but marked with circular ridges of different colours, more or less brown or blackish; on the under, it is whitish or yellowish, and full of small pores; internally it is fibrous, tough, and of a tawny-brown colour. It is composed of short tubular fibres compactly arranged in layers, one of which is added every year. The best is that which grows on the oak, and the season for collecting it is August or September. It has neither taste nor smell. Among its constituents, according to Bouillon-Lagrange, are extractive, resin in very small pro- portion, azotized matter also in small quantity, chloride of potassium, and sulphate of lime; and in its ashes are found iron, and phosphate of lime and magnesia. It is prepared for use by removing the exterior rind or bark, cutting the inner part into thin slices, and beating these with a hammer until they become soft, pliable, and easily torn by the fingers. In this state it was formerly much used by surgeons for arresting hemorrhage, being ap- plied immediately, with pressure, to the bleeding vessel. It probably acts mechanically, like any other soft porous substance, by absorbing the blood and causing it to coagulate, and is not relied on in severe cases. In the obstinate hemorrhage which occasionally takes place from leech bites, especially those of the European leech, it may be used advan- tageously, though perhaps not more so than well-prepared lint. It has been sometimes applied to the purposes of moxa. When prepared agaric is steeped in a solution of nitre, and afterwards dried, it becomes very readily inflammable, and is employed as tinder. Some recommend the substitution of chlorate of potassa for nitre. The preparation is usually known by the name of spunk, and is brought to us from Europe. Spunk or tinder, the amadou of the French, is in flat pieces, of a consistence somewhat like that of very soft, rotten buckskin leather, of a brownish- yellow colour, capable of absorbing liquids, and inflammable by the slightest spark. It is said to be prepared from various other species of Boletus, as B. ungulatus, B. fomentarius, B. ribis, ftc. W. AGAVE AMERICANA. American Agave. American Aloe. Maguey. An evergreen succu- lent plant, indigenous in Florida, Mexico, and other parts of tropical America, and largely cultivated, chiefly for hedges, in the South of Europe, especially in Spain. This and other species of Agave bear a considerable resemblance, in appearance, to the plants of the genus Aloe, with which they are sometimes confounded. From the root and leaves of the Ameri- can agave, when cut, a saccharine juice flows out, which may be converted by evaporation into syrup and even sugar, and by fermentation into a vinous liquor. According to M. Leno- ble, this juice when fresh has an herbaceous somewhat nauseous odour and acrid taste, and reddens litmus paper. It is said to be laxative, diuretic, and emmenagogue. Dr. G. Perin, of the U. S. army, has found the juice an admirable remedy in scurvy, being more prompt and efficacious even than lime-juice. He gave two fluidounces three times a day. (N. Ir. Journ. of Med., N. S., vii. 181.) The expressed juice, evaporated to the consistence of a soft extract, forms a lather with water, and is employed as a substitute for soap. The fibres of the old leaves, separated by bruising and maceration in water, are used for forming thread. In the vicinity of Cordova, in Spain, the author had an opportunity of seeing the preparation of those fibres by the peasantry. Hung up to dry, they appeared at a little distance like bundles of silk. M. Lenoble found in the leaves an acrid volatile oil, a gum- resinous principle, lignin, salts of potassa and lime, and silica ; and thinks that a vinegar or ointment of the leaves might be advantageously used as an epispastic. (Journ. dt Fharm. et de Chim , xv. 350.) Agave which grows in our Southern States, and is known in South Carolina by the name of rattlesnake's master, has a very bitter root, which is used, in the form of tincture, in flatulent colic, and as a counter-poison in the bites of serpents. (Robert King Reid, Inaug. T/ies., A. D. 1849.) W. AGRIMONIA EUPATORIA. Common Agrimony. This species of agrimony is a peren- nial herb, inhabiting Asia, Europe, and North America, and, in this country, found in fields and on the borders of woods, and flowering during the summer months. Its stem, which rises from one to three feet, in height, is hairy, furnished with interruptedly pinnate leaves, and terminated by a long simple spike of yellow flowers. Both the herb and root have been employed. The former has a weak but agreeable aromatic odour, and a rough, bitterish, somewhat aromatic taste. The fragrance is strongest in the flowers. The root has similar properties; but its taste is more bitter and astringent. A volatile oil may be obtained from the plant by distillation. Agrimony is a mild corroborant and astringent. The herb has been employed in relaxed conditions of disease, as in passive hemorrhages, and chronic af- fections of the mucous membranes. It has been recommended, also, as a deobstruent in Ailanthus Grlandulosa.—Albuminate of Iron and Potassa. PART III. jaundice and visceral obstructions, and as an alterative in diseases of the skin. In Europe it is popularly used, in the form of gargle, in affections of the throat. The Indians of North America and the Canadians are reported to have employed the root with advantage in fe- vers. The plant may be given in substance, infusion, or decoction. The dose of the powder is a drachm or more. W. AILANTHUS GLANDULOSA. This tree is well known in the United States, where it has within a few years been extensively cultivated as a shade tree, for which purpose it would be admirably adapted by its rapid growth and abundant foliage, as well as by its exemption ft )m the attacks of insects, were it not for the offensive odour emitted by it in its flowering period. The tree belongs to Polygamia Monoecia in the Linnaean system, and to the natural order of Rutaceae, Juss., Xanthoxylaceae, Lindley. In its general aspect and the character of its foliage, it appears like a gigantic sumach, and it was at one time considered as a Rhus. The name of Japan varnish (verms du Japon), by which it is known in Franco, arose from its having been mistaken for the true Japan varnish tree, which is a species of Sumach. Attention has recently been called to this tree in France by M. Hdtet, Professor in the Ma- rine Medical School at Toulon, who has found it to possess properties which promise to ren- der it of great use in medicine, especially as a vermifuge. Before it had engaged his no- tice as a medical plant, it had begun to assume considerable importance in an economical point of view; its leaves having been found to be suitable food for a species of silk worm, Bombyx cinthia, imported from China. The bark is the part in which its anthelmintic virtues have been shown to reside. This, in powder, is of a greenish-yellow colour, a strong, nar- cotic, nauseating odour, in its recent state, and of a strongly bitter taste. When chewed, be- sides the bitterness, it appears, through its influence on the gustatory nerves, to produce in a few moments a general uneasiness, a sense of increasing weakness, dazzling, cold sweats, with shivering and nauseous sensations, which are very remarkable, but seem to be well attested. The inference from these effects is that it has probably a powerful depressing agency on the nervous system, similar to that of tobacco. Examined chemically, the bark has been found to contain lignin, chlorophyll, a yellow colouring principle, a gelatinous substance (pectin), a bitter substance, an odorous resin, traces of a volatile oil, an azotized fatty matter, and several salts. An oleoresin is obtained from the bark by the action of al- cohol, which has the consistence of tar, a very dark greenish-brown colour, and in a high degree the smell and taste of the bark. M. H<5tet experimented upon dogs with the pow- dered bark, powdered leaves, and various preparations of the bark. As a general result, they were found to produce a purgative effect, with copious stools and the discharge of worms. The resin purged, but rarely acted as an anthelmintic. The depressing effects on the nervous system in man were found to depend on the volatile oil, as the resin alone had no such influence. The oil is so powerful that persons exposed to the vapours, in preparing the extract, are liable to be seized with vertigo, cold sweats, and vomiting. The powdered bark has .been given in several cases of tape-worm in the human subject, and proved remarkably successful in its expulsion, at the same time operating on the bowels. The oleoresin produced the same effect in a somewhat smaller dose, and has the advantage that it keeps better than the bark, which loses its powers with age. A fact worthy of remark is that neither the bark nor its preparation, taken internally, produce vomiting in man, while this effect is determined by the inhalation of its vapours, when it is boiled. The ca- thartic operation is not violent. The dose of the powder which was found sufficient for the expulsion of the tape-worm was from seven or eight to thirty grains. (Journ. de Tharm., Mars, 1859, p. 163.) W. AJUGA CHAMjEPITYS. Ground Pine. Chamsepitys. A low, creeping, annual, labiate plant, a native of Europe, and found also in some parts of the United States. The leaves, which bear some resemblance to those of the pine in shape, have a strong, peculiar, resin- not disagreeable odour, and a bitter, balsamic taste. They yield by distillation with water a small proportion of volatile oil, resembling that of turpentine. They are said to be stimulant, diuretic, and aperient; and have been given in rheumatism, gout, palsy, and atnenorrhoea. The dose of the leaves in powder is one or two drachms; but their infusion in wine is considered the best preparation. Ajuga replans or common bugle, and A.pyramidalis, perennial plants of Europe, have also been used'in 'medicine. They are nearly inodorous, but have a somewhat astringent, bit- terish, and saline taste. Their virtues are probably those of a mild astringent and tonic. They have been recommended in pulmonary consumption, hemoptysis and other hemor- rhages, and in hepatic obstructions, and have enjoyed considerable reputation as vulnera- ries; but they are at present nearly obsolete. \y ALBUMINATE OF IRON AND POTASSA, SYRUP OF. This syrup, proposed by M. Lassaigne, is made as follows. Dissolve 100 parts of the white of eggs in 100 of distilled water, and precipitate the filtered solution with 36 parts of a solution of the tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron, marking 6° of the areometer. Then add 2 parts of alcoholic potassa. previously dissolved in 50 parts of water. This, by agitation, will gradually dissolve the PART in. Albuminate of Iron and Soda.—Aleurites Triloba. 1457 precipitate caused by the ferruginous solution, forming a deep orange-yellow liquid. The liquid is then converted into a syrup by dissolving in it one and a half times its weight of coarsely powdered sugar, and filtered. The syrup has a slightly alkaline and sweetish taste, totally devoid of inky flavour. Each fluidounce contains about six grains of anhy- drous sesquioxide of iron. Mr. A. J. Cooley has proposed to make a simple albuminate oj iron by dissolving the freshly precipitated oxides of iron in a filtered solution of albumen R. ALBUMINATE OF IRON AND SODA. Angelico Fabri, observing that simple contact of the white of eggs with a salt of iron and soda was sufficient to produce a soluble albu- minate of iron and soda, the composition of which is so stable that it is not disturbed by ferrocyanide of potassium unless with the presence of an acid, and inferring that this is the condition in which the several ingredients of the compound exist in the blood, pro- poses this salt as likely to meet better than any other those wants of the system which call for the use of chalybeates. He prepares the salt by pouring upon the whites of four eggs, previously beaten up, solutions separately made of 112 grains of caustic soda, and 104 of sulphate of iron in sufficient distilled water; shaking the mixture, and placing it on a filter to separate the excess of hydrated oxide of iron which has precipitated; add- ing lime-water to the filtrate to separate the sulphuric acid of the sulphate of soda w'hich exists in the solution; again filtering, and precipitating the lime held in the solution by passing through it a stream of carbonic acid; filtering a third time to separate the car- bonate of lime; and finally reducing the liquid with a moderate heat to the measure of a pint. A transparent orange-yellow solution is thus obtained, having a slightly saltish and chalybeate taste, and unaffected by ferrocyanide of iron unless with the presence of an acid. Each fluidounce contains 4 grains of the albuminate, with an excess of albumen and soda, which gives it an alkaline reaction, and renders it conformable to the state in which the compound exists in the blood. The albuminate of iron and soda is represented by the formula C30H50O10-[-HO-|-Fe2O3--j-NaO-|-2IIO = Al,Fe;,O3,NaO-j-2HO. it maybe obtained in radiated crystals by evaporating the salt to dryness. (Am. Journ. of P harm., Jan. 1863, p. 69; from Journ. of Rational Medicine, May, 1862.) W. ALCHEMILLA VULGARIS. Ladies'1 Mantle. A perennial European herb, growing in meadows, on the banks of rivulets, and in the borders of woods. The whole plant has an astringent, bitterish taste, which is strongest in the root. It was formerly employed in diarrhoea, and other complaints requiring the use of astringents. By the ancients it was highly esteemed; and extraordinary powers were ascribed to it by the alchemists, from whom, according to Linnaeus, it derived its generic title. W. ALCORNOQUE. Under this name, a bark was introduced into Europe from South America, more than fifty years since, and for a short time attracted considerable attention. It has been conjecturally referred by different writers to different plants, but its precise origin is unknown. It is in large thick pieces, composed of two layers, of which the ex- ternal is reddish, cracked, granular, spongy, and two or three lines in thickness, the in- ternal lamellated, woody, and possessed of the property of imparting a yellow colour to the saliva when chewed. It is inodorous. The outer layer is of an astringent, somewhat bitter taste, and was thought to have febrifuge powers; the inner is much more bitter, and is decidedly emetic. The bark was brought into notice chiefly as a remedy in phthisis; but, having been found useless in that complaint, has fallen into entire neglect. It was given in the form of powder, in the dose of thirty grains; or half an ounce of it was boiled in a pint of water down to half a pint, and two or three tablespoonfuls of the decoction were administered every two hours. In these doses it acted as an emetic. The bark known in Spain by the name of alcornoque is obtained from the cork tree (Quercus Saber), and has sometimes been confounded in European pharmacy with that derived from South America. It has the properties of the ordinary oak barks. IV. ALEURITES TRILOBA, OIL OF. This is a small tree belonging to the Linnsean Class and Order Moncecia Monadelphia, and the Natural Order Euphorbiaceae. It is widely diffused through the tropics, being indigenous in the East Indies and Islands of the Pa- cific, and naturalized in the West Indies. The fruit is a nut nearly as large as a walnut, consisting of a thick shell enclosing a kernel, which is rich in oil, and yields it readily by expression. The nuts, strung together on the fibres of the palm-leaf, are used in the South Pacific Islands as a substitute for candles. The oil has been long known in the various countries inhabited by the plant, being called in Jamaica Spanish walnut oil, in India Jietjumin walnut oil, in Ceylon kckune oil, and in the Sandwich Islands kufcui oil'. It may be obtained by boiling with water'fEe’TJE'rnels previously beaten in a mortar, or by expres- sion. Sixteen pints of kernels yield about three pints of oil. The yearly product of the Sandwich Islands is said to be 10,000 gallons. (M. C. Cooke, Pharm. Journ., Nov. I860, p. 282.) The oil has been used in the arts; but it is only of late that attention has been galled to its medicinal qualities by Mr. O’Rorke. The following account of its properties and uses we take from Bouchardat's Annuaire (1859, p. 117). The oil is very fluid, of an 1458 Alisma Plantago.—Alnus Glutinosa. PART III. amber coiour, without taste or smell, congealing at 32° F., insoluble in alcohol, readily saponifiable, “and very strongly drying.” As a medicine it acts as a prompt and efficient but mild cathartic, without any tendency to produce nausea, vomiting, or griping pains, and destitute of any other medical property. It seems to be admirably adapted to cases in which castor oil is used, but has the great advantage over that cathartic that it does not nauseate, and is very easily administered. The dose is from one to two ounces; the smaller quantity generally answering. The cake left after the expression of the oil, given to a dog in the dose of about half an ounce, produced no vomiting, but acted strongly as a purgative. Should all that has been said of the oil prove correct upon further trial, it would be likely to supersede castor oil to a considerable extent. W. ALISMA PLANTAGO. Water Plantain. A perennial herbaceous plant, common to Europe and the United States, and growing in streams, pools, ditches, and other standing waters. The root has when fresh an odour like that of Florentine orris, but loses it when dried. Its taste is acrid and nauseous. It acquired at one time considerable credit as a preventive of hydrophobia, for which purpose it was said to have been used with great advantage in Russia; but subsequent experiments have proved its total inefficacy. The Calmucks are said to use it for food. The leaves are rubefacient, and will sometimes even blister when applied to the skin. They have been recommended in gravel and complaints of the bladder, in the dose of a drachm. The root has recently been used in chorea and epilepsy with asserted advantage. The dose of the powdered root, at first about 8 or 10 grains morning and evening, is rapidly increased to a teaspoonful and in the end carried to three or four spoonfuls in the course of the day. [Ann. de Therap., 1859, p. 62.) AV. ALKANET. This is the root of Anchusa tinctoria or dyers' alkanet. an herbaceous per- ennial plant, growing in the Grecian Archipelago and the south of Europe. It is said in some medical works to be cultivated abundantly in the south of France; but another plant is probably referred to—Lithospermum tinctorium of Linnaeus and De Candolle, Anchusa tinctoria of Lamarck—which is a native of that country, and the root of which is con- sidered as the true alkanet by the French writers. Alkanet, as found in the shops, is in pieces three or four inches long, from the thickness of a quill to that of the little finger, somewhat twisted, consisting of a dark-red, easily separable bark, and an internal ligne- ous portion, which is reddish externally, whitish near the centre, and composed of numer- ous distinct, slender, cohering fibres. As it comes to us it is usually much decayed inter- nally, very light, and of a loose, almost spongy texture. The fresh root has a faint odour, and a bitterish, astringent taste; but when dried it is nearly inodorous and insipid. Its colouring principle, which abounds most in the cortical part, is soluble in alcohol, ether, and the oils, to which it imparts a fine deep red; but is insoluble in water. It may be obtained by first exhausting the root with water, and then treating it with a weak solution of the carbonate of potassa or soda, from which the colouring principle may be precipi- tated by an acid. According to Pelletier, by whom it was discovered, it possesses acid properties, forming with the alkalies and earths neutral compounds, which are of a blue colour, and soluble in alcohol and ether, lie calls it anchusic acid, and states that it may be sublimed unchanged. (Journ. dePharm., xix. 105.) The tincture'of alkanet has its colour deepened by acids, changed to blue by alkalies, and again restored by neutralizing the latter substances. It may, therefore, be used as a test. The extract obtained by evaporat- ing the tincture is dark-brown. Alkanet is somewhat astringent, and was formerly used in several diseases; but it is now employed exclusively for colouring oils, ointments, and plasters, which are beautifully reddened by one-fortieth of their weight of the root. It is said also to be used in the preparation of spurious port wine. AV. ALLIARIA OFFICINALIS. Erysimum Alliaria. Linn. Hedge Garlic. A perennial Eu- ropean herb, having an alliaceous odour when rubbed, and a bitterish, somewhat acrid taste. AVlien eaten it communicates its smell to the breath. Mr. AVertheim obtained from the root a volatile oil, apparently identical with that of mustard. (Ann. der Cherti. uvd /’harm., liii. 52.) The herb and seeds are esteemed diuretic, diaphoretic, and expectorant, and have been given in humoral asthma, chronic catarrh, and other complaints in which garlic is useful. The herb has also been recommended as an external application in gan- grenous affections, and to promote suppuration. AV. ALNUS GLUTINOSA. Common European Alder. A European tree, twenty-five feet or more in height, growing in swamps, on the sides of streams, and in other damp places. The bark and leaves are very astringent, and somewhat bitter. The former has been used in intermittent fever, the latter as a topical remedy in wounds and ulcers. The bruised leaves are sometimes applied to the breast for the purpose of repelling the milk. The cones also are astringent, and form a useful gargle in complaints of the throat. All these parts of the tree are used in dyeing, and the leaves and bark in tanning. The tannic acid, how- ever, appears to differ from that of galls and oak bark, as, according to Dr. Stenhouse, it does not yield glucose when acted on by sulphuric acid. (Pharm. Journ., Dec '.861, p. 331.) A In us scrrulata, or common American alder, has analogous proper tits. AV. part hi. Amaranthus Hypochondriacus.—Ammoniated Iron. AMARANTHUS HA’POCTIONDRIACUS. Prince's Feather. An annual plant, growing spontaneously though sparingly in the Middle States, but believed to have been derived from tropical America. (Gray's Manual, p. 368.) It is cultivated in our gardens on account ot its flowers, which are in densely crowded spikes, and of a deep-red colour. The leaves are said to be astringent, and to be used internally and topically in the complaints to whicn the astringents generally are applicable. Vi. AMBERGRIS. Ambra Grisea. This substance, which is found floating on the sea, or thrown by the waves upon the shores of various countries, particularly in the southern hemisphere, is now generally believed to be produced in the intestines of the Physeter ma- crocephalus, or spermaceti whale, and perhaps in those of some other fish. It is m roundish or amorphous pieces, usually small, but sometimes of considerable magnitude; and masses have been found weighing 50, 100, and even 200 pounds. These pieces are often composes of concentric layers. They are of various colours, usually gray, with brownish, yellow, and white streaks, often dark-brown or blackish on the external surface. They are opaque, lighter than water, and of a consistence like that of wax. Ambergris has a peculiar aro- matic agreeable odour, is almost tasteless, softens with the warmth of the hand, melts under 212°, is almost completely volatilizable by heat, and is inflammable. It is insoluble in water, but is readily dissolved, with the aid of heat, by alcohol, ether, and the volatile and fixed oils. It consists chiefly of a peculiar fatty matter analogous to cholesterin, and denominated by Pelletier and Caventou ambrein. This may be obtained by treating amber- gris with heated alcohol, filtering the solution, and allowing it to stand. Crystals of am- brein are deposited. It is incapable of forming soaps with the alkalies. When pure it has little or no odour. Ambergris is often adulterated; but does not then exhibit its ordinary fusibility and volatility. It was long regarded as a cordial and antispasmodic, somewhat analogous to musk; and has been recommended in typhoid fevers, and various nervous diseases. It formerly entered into many officinal preparations, and is still retained in some European Pharmacopoeias. It is, however, feeble as a remedy, and is much more used in perfumery than in medicine. The dose is from five grains to a drachm. W. AMBROSIA TRIFIDA. Ragweed. (Gray's Manual, p. 212.) This and another indigenous species, A. artemisieefolia, both annual plants, and usually ranked among worthless weeds, have found a place in the Materia Medica of the Eclectics, by whom they are deemed as tringent and somewhat exciting, and are given in low forms of fever, and other conditions of the system in which the vital actions are enfeebled. W. AMMONIATED IRON. Ferrum Ammoniatum. Ammoniated Iron. Ammonia-chloride of Iron. Though discharged from the officinal lists at the late revision of the Pharmacopoeias, this preparation.has too long occupied a conspicuous place in the Materia Medica to justify its omission in a work of this kind. It was recognised until recently both by the U.’S. and London Pharmacopoeias, which contained formulas for its preparation. The following was the U. S. process. “Take of Subcarbonate of Iron three ounces; Muriatic Acid ten fluidounces; Muriate of Ammonia two pounds and a half; Distilled Water four pints. Mix the Subcarbonate of Iron with the Muriatic Acid in a glass vessel, and digest for two hours; then add the Muriate of Ammonia, previously dissolved in the Distilled Water, and, having filtered the liquor, evaporate to dryness. Rub the residue to powder.” (U.S.) The process of the London College was essentially the same as the above, of which, in fact, it was the original. By the mutual action of muriatic acid and the sesquioxide of iron of the subcarbonate, water and sesquichloride of iron are formed; and the solution of the latter, being evaporated along with that of the muriate of ammonia, yields a mixture of the two salts. If any car- bonate of iron be present in the subcarbonate, a portion of protochloride of iron must also be formed, which, however, would probably be converted into sesquichloride during the operation. The preparation was formerly made by subliming a mixture of red oxide (sesquioxide) of iron and muriate of ammonia. A portion of the muriate of ammonia was decomposed, the ammonia escaping, and the muriatic acid reacting upon the sesquioxide of iron so as to form water and sesquichloride of iron, the latter of which was sublimed with the undecomposed muriate of ammonia. By this mode of preparation the proportion be- tween the two salts was variable. The late officinal plan has the double advantage of uniformity in the result, and greater facility in the process. '1 here is no reason to believe that the sesquichloride of iron and muriate of ammonia are chemically combined in the preparation. According to Mr. Phillips, they are in the proportion of 15 parts of the ses- quichloride to 85 of the muriate. Properties. Ammoniated iron, thus prepared, is in crystalline grains, of a fine reddish- orange colour, and a sharp, styptic, saline taste. It is entirely soluble in water and diluted aieohol, is deliquescent, and should be kept in well-stopped bottles. By the alkalies and rheir carbonates, and by lime-water it is decomposed, with the precipitation of about 7 per cent, of sesquioxide of iron; and potassa in excess occasions the evolution of ammonia. Like the other it is incompatible with vegetable astringents. As procured by sublimation, P is of a yellow colour and feeble odour, and is probably the result of a che- mical reaction between the ingredients. Ampelojosis Quinquefolia.—Anacahuite Wood. PART III. Medical Properties and Uses. This preparation unites aperient properties with those be- longing to the chalybeates generally, and is said to have been used with advantage in ame- uorrhoea, epilepsy, scrofula, rickets, &c.; but it is at best uncertain, and is now very seldom prescribed. The sublimed preparation was formerly employed under the names of flores martiales and ens mortis. From four to twelve grains may be given in the form of pill, elec- tuary, or solution, several times a day. W. AMPELOPSIS QUINQUEFOLIA. Virginia Creeper. American Ivy. (Gray's Manual, p. 78.) This woody creeper, which is a common indigenous plant, and conspicuous in autumn by its bright crimson leaves, has been used by the “eclectics” as an alterative, tonic, and ex- pectorant. The bark and twigs are the parts employed. The remedy has recently been re- commended by Dr. J. McCall, in the Memphis Journal of Medicine, in the treatment of dropsy. He believes it to act rather by stimulating absorption than as a diuretic. Dr. McCall em- ploys the bark collected late in the fall, and exhibits in the state of decoction or infusion. [Penins. and Independ. Med. Journ., June, 1858, p. 169.) W. AMYLEN. Valeren. This compound was alluded to under amylic alcohol, page 78. It is an iso-equivalent, carbohydrogeu, having the formula C10H10. Amyl is C10Hn, and amylic alcohol (fusel oil) is the hydrated oxide of amyl C10HnO-(-HO, or the bihydrate of amylen Ci0Hio+2HO. Amylen was discovered by M. Balard, of Paris, in 1844. It is prepared by distilling amylic alcohol with a concentrated solution of chloride of zinc. The product is redistilled, and that which comes over first, constituting the more volatile part, is separately collected, and agitated with concentrated sulphuric acid, when the amylen, freed from water, will rise to the surface. Amylen is a colourless, very mobile liquid, having the density 0-695 at 56°. Its boiling point is 102° (95° Duroy), and the density of its vapour 2-45. Its smell is peculiar and disagreeable. It is soluble in alcohol and ether, in all proportions, but very sparingly so in water. When pure it does not act on potassium, and is not coloured by a prolonged contact with caustic potassa. Amylen was proposed as a new anaesthetic by Dr. Snow, in a paper read before the Lon- don Medical Society on the 10th of Jan. 1857. The advantages claimed for it, compared with other anaesthetics, were that its vapour is less pungent; that it abolishes pain with a stupor less deep; and that there is no struggling on the part of the patient, and no sick stomach after its administration. Its bad smell was admitted as an objection. These alleged advantages have not been found to counterbalance the dangers of its use. Dr. Snow admits “the absolute safety which seems to attend sulphuric ether under all circumstances;” an admission which makes it less necessary to seek for a new anaesthetic. Already, within the brief period during which it has been tried, two deaths have occurred, although the amylen was administered by Dr. Snow himself. The French Academy of Medicine, after a delibe- rate examination of its alleged advantages, have condemned it as dangerous. From a che- mical examination of various specimens of commercial amylen, as well as of the purest form of it as prepared by the process of M. Balard, Dr. Schauenstein has found that they all contain chlorine; and the uncertainty thus thrown upon the nature of the compound adds to the motives, previously existing, for abandoning the use of it as an anaesthetic agent. (See B. and F. Med.-Chir. Rev., Am. ed., Jan. 1858, p. 193.) Hydruret of Amyl (hydride of amyl), C10HnH, is another new anaesthetic, proposed by Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh. It was discovered by Dr. E. Franklin, of Manchester, who obtained it by a complicated process, which has been rendered more easy of execution by Messrs. T. & H. Smith, of Edinburgh, who prepared the substance at the request of Prof. Simpson. (See T. & H. Smith’s paper, in thePharm. Journ., June, 1857.) Hydruret of amyl is a colour- less, volatile, mobile liquid, possessing a grateful fruity odour, but no taste. It is the lightest liquid known, having the sp. gr. 0-638 at 57°. It boils at 86°, and the density of its vapour is 2*5. It is very inflammable, and burns with a brilliant white flame. It is readily soluble in alcohol and ether, but insoluble in water. “It is a very stable compound, resist- ing the action of fundng sulphuric acid and the most powerful oxidizing agents.” We have not seen any precise account of its mode of action as an anaesthetic. B. Nitrite of amyl has recently been examined experimentally by Dr. B. W. Richardson, in reference to its physiological effects, and found when inhaled to act immediately as a pow- erful stimulant to the heart, more powerful, indeed, than any other known agent; and a little of it applied to the nostrils causes an instantaneous and extraordinary flushing of the face. Given to animals by inhalation, and in considerable quantities, it produced death. Dr. Richardson was disposed to think, from the instantaneousness of its effects, that it pro- bably acted through the nerves. It has not yet been used as a therapeutic agent, and does not appear to be fit for ansesthetic inhalation; but its extraordinarily rapid and powerful action on the heart suggests important applications of it in threatening cases of syncope, ani others of great failure in the heart’s actions. W. ANACAIIU1TE WOOD. Under this name, in the year 1860, considerable quantities of a peculiar wood were imported from Tampico, in Mexico, into Germany, where for a shrrt time it attracted great attention as a supposed remedy in phthisis. The circrmstanco ?ART III. Anacardium Occidentale.—Anchusa Officinalis. that the wood was destitute of taste and smell naturally suggested that it could possess little remedial power; and frequent trials of it in consumptive atfections have ended in failure; so that the wood is likely to be forgotten almost as speedily as brought into tem- porary notoriety. In the mean time the question of its botanical origin attracted the at- tention of pharmacologists; and the question has been at length determined by the im- portation of a living specimen of the tree into Germany, which partially flowered in the botanical garden of Gottingen. This, with dried specimens received from Mexico, enabled the botanists to decide that the wood was the product of the Cordia Boissieri of Alphonse De Candolle. (See Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1862, p. 272, where the plant is figured.) W. ANACARD1UM OCCIDENTALE. Linn. Cassuvium pomiferum. Lam. Cashew-nut. A small and elegant tree, growing in the West Indies, and other parts of tropical America. A gum ex- udes from the bark, which bears some resemblance to gum arabic, but is only in part soluble in water, and consists of true gum and bassorin. It is the gomme d’acajou of the French writers. The fruit is a fleshy, pear-shaped receptacle, supporting at its sfiramit a hard, shining, ash-coloured, kidney shaped nut, an inch or more in length, and three-quarters of an inch broad, consisting of two shells, with a black juice between them, and of a sweet oily kernel. The receptacle is red or yellow, and of an agreeable subacid flavour with some astringency. It is edible, and affords a juice which has been recommended in uterine com plaints and dropsy. This juiceys converted by fermentation into a vinous liquor, winch yields a spirit by distillation, used in making punch, and said to be powerfully diuretic. The nuts are well knowif under the name of cashew-nuts. The black juice, contained between their outer and inner shell, is extremely acrid and corrosive, producing, when applied to the skin, severe inflammation, followed by blisters or desquamation. It has been examined chemically by Stoedeler, who found in it two peculiar principles, one having acid properties, which he calls anacardic acid, and the other a yellow, oleaginous liquid, named cardol. (See Journ. de Pharm., 3eser., xxii. 459 ) The juice is used in the West Indies for the cure of corns, warts, ringworms, and obstinate ulcers, and is said to be sometimes applied to the face by females, in order to remove the cuticle, and produce a fresher and more youthful aspect. In a case of external poisoning which came under our notice, in a lady who was exposed to the fumes of the nut while roasting, the face was so much swollen that for some time not a feature was discernible. A similar case, occurring in a boy who had cut open one of the nuts, eaten a small portion raw, and by handling it had spread the juice over different parts of the body, is recorded by Dr. Monkur in the TV. J. Med. Reporter (April, 1855, p. 187). The tongue, face, neck, hands, forearms, scrotum, &c. were red and enormously swollen, and very painful. The tincture of iodine was found useful as a local application to the parts affected. The kernel has a sweet, agreeable taste, and is eaten like chestnuts, either raw or roasted. It is also used as an ingredient of puddings, &c., and forms an excellent chocolate when ground with cocoa. By age it becomes rancid. The black juice of the nut, and a milky juice which flows from the tree by incision, are sometimes used for marking linen, upon which they leave a nearly indelible brown or black stain. W. ANAGALLIS ARVENSIS. Scarlet Pimpernel. An annual plant, growing in Europe and this country, with small, delicate, procumbent stems, furnished with opposite branches, opposite ovate leaves, and small scarlet flowers, which are supported upon axillary, soli- tary peduncles, and appear in June and July. It has little smell, but a bitterish, somewhat acrid taste. The ancients esteemed it a counter-poison, and in modern times it has been used as a preventive of hydrophobia; but at present no faith is placed in its alexipharmic powers. It is, nevertheless, not wholly inactive; as’Orfila found three drachm's oihn ex- tract prepared from it sufficient to destroy a dog, with marks of inflammation of the Dowels. It has been recommended as a local application to old and ill-conditioned ulcers, and has been given internally in visceral obstructions, consumption, dropsy, epilepsy, mania, &c. But too little is known of its precise properties, to authorize its indiscriminate employment in these complaints. Mr. J. A. Heintzelman obtained a small quantity of vola- tile oil from the dried herb, and found it of a strong peculiar odour, a pungent and some- what acrid taste, and the sp.gr. 0-987. Four drops of it produced intense headache and nausea, which continued for 24 hours, with pains throughout the body. Another species, considered by Linnseus as a variety of A. arvensis, is A. ccerulea. distinguished by its blue flowers. The medical properties of the two, so far as is known, are the same. W. ANCHUSA OFFICINALIS. Bugloss. This species of Anchusa is a native of Europe, and unknown in the United States. It is a biennial plant, from one to three feet high, and was formerly much esteemed as a medicine. The root, leaves, and flowers were officinal. These are inodorous and nearly tasteless. The root is mucilaginous and slightly sweetish, and the flowers very feebly bitter. The plant has no claim whatever to the credit, formerly attached to it, of possessing cordial and exhilarating properties. It was used by the ancients in hy- pochondriacal affections; but, as it was given in wine, the elevation of spirits was probably due to the vehicle. In France, the AnsJiusa Ilalica, which is there known as buglosse, is employed for the same purposes and in tEe~ same manner as Borago officinalis. (See Bo- rago officinalis in Part III.) W. 1462 Andromeda Arborea.—Anilin. PART III ANDROMEDA ARBOREA. Sorrel-tree. A beautiful indigenous tree, growing in the val- leys of the Alleghanies, from Pennsylvania to Florida. The leaves have a pleasant acid taste, which has given rise to the common name of the tree. They are used by hunters to allay thnst, and form in decoction a grateful refrigerant drink in fevers. The other species of Andromeda are shrubs, and some of them ornamental. Dr. Barton, in his “Collections,” states that a decoction of A. Mariana is employed in the Southern States, as a wash in a disagreeable ulceration of the feet to which the negroes are liable. The powder upon the leaves and buds of A. speciosa is said to be a powerful errhine. W. ANEMONE PRATENSIS. Meadow Anemone. This plant enjoyed at one time considerable credit from the recommendation of Stdrck, who believed that he had found it useful in amaurosis and other complaints of the eye, in secondary syphilis, and in cutaneous erup- tions. Dr. J. de Ramm found it also very useful in hooping-cough. A. Pulsatilla (pulsatilla), an analogous species, has been employed for similar purposes: and favourable reports have been made of its efficacy in obstinate diseases of the skin, and in hooping-cough. The pre- paration employed was an extract of the herbaceous part of the plant, which was given by dtdrck in the dose of one or two grains daily, gradually increased to twenty grains or more. In large doses it was found frequently to produce nausea and vomiting, or griping and loose- ness of the bowels, and sometimes acted as a diuretic. It is, we believe, a favourite remedy' with the homoeopathists. The species of Anemone above mentioned are European plants, and are not cultivated in this country. We have several native species. One of them, A. nemorosa, which is common to Europe and the United States, is said to act as a poison to cattle, producing bloody urine and convulsions. It is stated also to have proved, when ap- plied to the head, a speedy cure for tinea capitis. Most of the species are, in the recent state, acrid and rubefacient, resembling in this respect other llanunculaceaa. They contain a peculiar crystallizable principle, named anemonin. convertible into anemonie acid by the action of alkalies. [Ann. der Pharm.., xxxii. 276.) It is deposited by water distilled from the fresh herb upon standing, and resembles camphor. According to J. Muller, it is formed by a metamorphosis of the acrid matters which are distilled with the water. [Pharm. Cent. Platt, Sept. 11, 1850, p. 618.) The A. Ludoviciana, an American species, growing in Minne- sota and other parts beyond the Mississippi, has been employed with supposed advantage by Dr. W. II. Miller, of St. Paul, in chronic diseases of the eyes, in cutaneous eruptions, and syphilitic affections. Mr. A. W. Miller, having submitted the plant to chemical examination, succeeded in obtaining anemonin from it. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1862, p. 300.) W. ANILIN. Aniline. Anilia. This is an organic alkaloid obtained from coal tar. It was first discovered by Unverdorben, in 1826, among tlie products of the dry distillation of in- digo, and was named by him crystalline. Fritzshe, who obtained it afterwards from indigo by another process, seems to have been the first to give it the name of anilin. In 1837 Runge obtained three volatile principles from coal tar, which he named kinol, leucol, andpyr- rhol. Of these, kinol was afterwards found by Hoffmann to be identical with anilin, and leucol has been ascertained to be the same as quinolin (cincholin). (Seepaye 290 ) Nitro- benzole has also been made to yield anilin by various processes; and this and coal tar are its chief practical sources. When coal tar is distilled, a set of the more volatile principles first come over, and, when condensed in the liquid form, constitute the light oil of tar. This includes benzole. Afterwards, another set come over, heavier, and with a higher boiling point, and these are all embraced under the name of the heavy oil of tar. Among these are anilin, quinolin, creasote, phenol, &c. After these follow other substances having when con- densed a buttery consistence, among which are paraffin, &c. The heavy oil conies over be- tween the temperatures of 300° and 450° F. At a higher heat than about 480° F. anilin is no longer found among the results of distillation. Hoffmann procures anilin in the follow- ing manner. The heavy oil already referred to is agitated with muriatic acid, and set aside for 12 or 14 hours. The liquid separates into an oily and an acid layer. The latter is se- parated and agitated with another portion of oil, though not to full saturation. The acid liquid containing the alkaloids in the form of muriates, having been filtered to separate all the oil, is mixed with an excess of lime and distilled. A milky liquid comes over containing the alkaloids, and anilin among them. These are again saturated with diluted muriatic acid, and the solution, after being concentrated by a water-bath, is treated with a slight, excess of soda or potassa. The bases then set free float on the surface of the liquid, and, having been removed by a pipette, are rectified by distillation. The distillate which first conies over, at a heat short of 400° to 420° F., is anilin sufficiently pure for commercial purposes. Beyond the latter heat it is principally quinolin that comes over. To get anilin chemically pure, oxalic acid in alcoholic solution is added to the impure alkaloid. Oxalate of anilin is thrown down as a mass of white crystals. This is washed with alcohol, pressed, and then dis- solved hi water with a little alcohol, from which the oxalate crystallizes on concentration. The oxalate is decomposed by a caustic alkali, and the anilin, thus set free, is dirt lied once more. Water first comes over, then water with some anilin, and lastly pure nn’lin. (Se«J Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. and March, 1861, pp. 39 and 129, for the abstract of It paptr bv PART ill. Anilin.—AnimL 1463 M. E. Kopp, abridged from the Moniteur Scientifique, t. ii. liv. 86.) For tne mode of preparing anilin from nitrobenzole, the reader is referred to a paper by Prof. Procter in the Am. Joum. of Pharm., July, 1862, p 296. Properties. Pure anilin is a thin colourless fluid, of an oily appearance; but as found in the shops it is generally more or less coloured, and sometimes of a deep reddish-brown. It has a peculiar not disagreeable odour, and a pungent, aromatic, burning taste, and the sp. gr. 1-020 [Hoffmann), 1-028 (Fritzshe). It is not solidified at —4° F., boils at 860°. and its vapours are condensed unchanged. It is slightly soluble in water. Though possessed o' strong basic powers, it does not restore the colour of reddened litmus, nor does it redden turmeric. It changes, however, the violet colour of dahlias to green. With the acids it forms soluble and readily crystallizable salts. It is inflammable, and absorbs oxygen from the air, becoming at first yellowish, afterwards reddish, and ultimately brown. A characteristic property is that it produces instantly a deep-blue or purple colour when brought into con- tact with chlorinated lime or other hypochlorite. Dr. Letheby has described a very deli- cate test for this alkaloid If a drop of a very weak solution of the sulphate be placed on a piece of clean platinum foil, and touched with the negative pole of a galvanic battery, the solution acquires a bluish, then a violet, and ultimately a pink colour. [Pharm. Joum., Sept. 1862, p. 128.) It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen; its formula being The chief value of anilin at present is for the colouring matters derived from it. Beautiful reds, purples, yellows, and blues, and various other tints are obtained from it, some of them truly magnificent. (See Am. Joum. of Sci. and Arts, May, 1863, p. 417.) Medical Properties and Uses. Anilin is said by Wohler and Frerichs to have no poisonous action on dogs. Some experiments have been made which show that it has a deleterious in- fluence on leeches and frogs, and young rabbits were killed by it; but these prove nothing as to its effects on man. A case is on record in which a workman having been exposed strongly to the vapours of anilin, in consequence of a vessel containing it. having broken and spilled the contents over his person, was seized with symptoms of great prostration, from which, however, he recovered under stimulating treatment. [Med. Times and Gaz., June 7, 1862.) Dr. Turnbull, of Liverpool, has employed the sulphate remedially, and speaks favourably of its effects in chorea. A remarkable effect whicl~he found it to produce was a transient blueness of the skin and lips, which he ascribed to the oxidation of anilin in the blood. [Pharm. Joum., Nov. 1861, p. 284.) In some instances headache and symptoms of general depression were experienced, which, however, disappeared without leaving any un- pleasant effect. The sulphate is made by simply saturating the alkaloid with the acid. Prof. Procter gives the following formula. Take 500 grains of pure anilin, 250 grains of sulphur# acid, and 4 fluidounees of distilled water. Mix the acid and water, add the anilin, and agi- tate till a thick mass is formed, and the odour of anilin is lost. Wash this with strong alco- hol till the acid and colouring matter are removed, press the salt in bibulous paper, and dry it in the dark. [Am. J. of Pharm., July, 1862, p. 298.) The salt is liable to be decomposed, and to change colour when exposed to air and light. Water at 60° dissolves about 6 per cent. It is only sparingly soluble in cold, but freely in hot absolute alcohol. It is more soluble in diluted alcohol, and insoluble in ether. The limits of the dose have not been satisfactorily determined. It has been given in the dose of three-fourths of a grain gradually increased to four or even seven grains, without any derangement of the functions, except the change of colour above referred to ; but how far the latter dose may be exceeded with impunity has not been ascertained. [Ann. de Therap., 1864, p. 101.) From trials which have been made of the remedy by Drs. Fraser and Davis, it has been inferred that the sulphate is much less powerful than the free alkaloid; and it is even stated that, while anilin itself is a powerful poison, the sulphate has little effect on the system. [Pharm. Joum., Sept. 1863, p. 133 ) W. ANIME. Gum Animf. The substance known at present by the name of anime is a resin supposed to be derived from the llymensea Courbaril, a tree of South America; though this origin is denied by Hayne. According to Dr. W. Hamilton, the resin exudes from wounds in the bark, and is found also underneath the surface of the ground, between the princi- pal roots. [Pharm. Joum., vi. 522.) It is in small, irregular pieces, of a pale lemon-yellow colour, sometimes inclining to reddish, more or less transparent, covered with a whitish powder, brittle, and pulverizable, with a shining fracture, a weak but agreeable odour, and a mild, resinous taste. It softens in the mouth, adheres to the fingers when in pow- der, and readily melts with heat, diffusing its agreeable odour in an increased degree. \t consists of two resins, one soluble, the other insoluble in cold alcohol, and of a small Proportion of volatile oil. There is a variety of a darker colour, less transparent, and with email cavities in the interior; in other respects resembling the preceding. Another variety is the East Indian, supposed to be derived from Vateria Indica; but this never reaches us £.» a di«tinct article of commerce. Anime formerly entered into the composition of various ointments and plasters; but is now used only as incense, or in the preparation of varnishes The Brazilians are said to employ it internally in diseases of the lungs. W. 1464 Annotta.—Antimoniated Hydrogen. PART HI. ANNOTTA. Orleana. The colouring substance called annotta, arnotia, or roucou, is the reddish pulp surrounding the seeds in the fruit of Bixa Orellana, a middling-sized tree growing in Guiana, and other parts of South America. For a paper on the cultivation of this tree and the mode of preparing the annotta, by Mr. Th. Peckolt, see Am. Journ of Pharm. (July, 1859, p. 360). The pulp is separated by bruising the fruit, mixing it with water, then straining through a sieve, and allowing the liquid to stand till the undissolved portion subsides. The water is then poured otf, and the mass which remains, having been sufficiently dried, is formed into flat cakes or cylindrical rolls, and sent into the market. Another mode is to bruise the seeds, mix them with water, and allow the mixture to fer- ment. The colouring matter is deposited during the fermentation, after which it is removed and dried. In commerce there are two kinds of annotta, the Spanish or Brazilian, and French; the former coming in baskets from Brazil, the latter in casks from French Guiana. The French, which is also called/A/y annotta, has a disagreeable smell, probably from having been prepared by the fermenting process; but is superior, as a dye-stuff, to the Spanish, which is without any disagreeable odour. Annotta is of a brownish-red colour, usually rather soft, but hard and brittle when dry, of a dull fracture, of a sweetish peculiar olour, and a rough, saline, bitterish taste. It is inflammable, but does not melt with heat. It softens in water, to which it imparts a yellow colour, but does not dissolve. Alcohol, ether, the oils, and alkaline solutions dissolve the greater part of it. It contains a peculiar crys- tallizable colouring principle, to which M. Preisser, its discoverer, gave the name of bixin. (See Journ. de Pharm., 3c ser., v. 258.) The chief uses to which annotta is applied are for dyeing silk and cotton orange-yellow, and for colouring cheese. The colour, however, which it imparts to cloth, is fugitive. It has been given internally as a medicine; but is not now used, and probably exercises little influence upon the system. In pharmacy it is used to colour plasters, and has occasionally been substituted for saffron. It is said to be sometimes largely adulterated; and red ochre, powdered bricks, colcothar, farinaceous substances, chalk, sulphate of lime, turmeric, etc. have been employed for the purpose. The mineral substances, if present, will be left behind when the annotta is burned. (See, in reference to its adulteration, Pharm. Journ., xv. 199, 299, and 323.) W. ANTENNARIA MARGARITACEA. This is one of our indigenous plants which are known commonly by the name of life everlasting. It is an herbaceous plant, a foot or two in height, and grows everywhere in the U. States northward of N. Carolina. For a de- scription of the plant, see Gray’s Manual of Botany (p. 229). The flowers are of a pearly whiteness, and slightly fragrant. The leaves are the part used, having the credit, with the of being somewhat astringent and expectorant. W. ANTIIRAKOKALI. This preparation, introduced by Dr. Polya, is of two kinds, the sim- ple and the sulphuretted. The simple anthrakokali is formed by adding 160 parts of por- phyrized mineral coal to 192 parts of a concentrated and boiling solution of caustic po- tassa, contained in an iron vessel, the -whole being well stirred together. When the mixture is completed, the vessel is taken from the fire, and the stirring continued until the whole is converted into a homogeneous black powder. The sulphuretted anthrakokali is prepared in a similar manner, 16 parts of sulphur being mixed with the mineral coal before it is added to the caustic potassa solution. Dr. Polya recommends these preparations, both in- ternally and externally, in scrofula, chronic rheumatism, rheumatic tumours of the joints, and certain herpetic affections. The dose is a grain and a half three or four times a dav, mixed with two or three times its weight of powdered liquorice root. For external use, sixteen grains may be rubbed with an ounce of lard, to form an ointment, to be used by friction night and morning. p. ANTIIRISCUS CEREFOLIUM. De Cand. Chserophyllum sativum. Lam. Scandix Cerefo- lium. Linn. Chervil. An annual European plant, cultivated in gardens as a potherb, and supposed by some physicians to possess remedial powers. It has a strong agreeable odour, especially when rubbed, and a pungent, slightly bitterish taste. These properties it owes to a volatile oil, which may be separated by distillation with water. It is said to be deob- struent, diuretic, and emmenagogue, and has been recommended by different authors in consumption, scrofula, dropsy, cutaneous and scorbutic affections, and as an external ap- plication to swollen breasts, bruises, and other local complaints or injuries. It is, however, very feeble, and is more used as an addition to broths than as a medicine. W. ANTIMONIATED HYDROGEN. This is a gaseous substance, and, being taken by in- halation, is prepared at the moment of administration. A drachm of pure antimony and twice the quantity of pure zinc formed into an alloy, and a drachm of tartar emetic or chloride of antimony, are mixed, and introduced into a bottle with a large tubulure; and from time to time, as the gas is wanted for inhalation, from half a drachm to a drachm of muriatic acid is added, of which the whole quantity must not exceed about eight drachms Muriatic acid gas is evolved at the same time with the antimoniated hydrogen; and to pie- vent the inhalation of the former, a sponge wet with an alkaline solution ’s made to close the respiratory orifices. This arrests the acid gas, but allows the other to pass into *bc PART III. Antirrhinum Linaria.—Argemone Mexicana. lungs. The patient is to breathe the atmosphere impregnated in this manner for five mi nutes every hour. Besides, the bottle may be left unstopped in the mean time, so that the air of the chamber may become more or less affected. It is asserted that few therapeutical agents are more powerful than this in pneumonia and capillary bronchitis with fever. Thu gas is inodorous and unirritating, and the respiration is in no degree oppressed. The pulse diminishes in frequency and force, without nausea or vomiting; the expectoration is facili- tated and increased; and a cure is effected more quickly than by any other known method of treatment. Such are the statements made by M. J. Hannon, an abstract of which may be seen in Bouchardat’s Annuaire (1860, p. 143). W. ANTIRRHINUM LINARIA. Linn. Linaria Vulgaris. (Lindley.) Common Toadflax. This is a perennial herbaceous plant, from one to two feet high, with numerous narrow linear leaves, and a terminal crowded spike of large yellow flowers. It is a native of Europe, but has been introduced into this country, and now grows in great abundance along the road-sides, through the Middle States. It is readily distinguishable by the shape of its leaf, and its conspicuous yellow flowers, which appear in succession from June to Oc- tober. The herb is the part used. It should be collected when in flower, dried quickly, and kept excluded from the air. When fresh it has a peculiar, heavy, rather disagreeable odour, which is in a great measure dissipated by drying. The taste is herbaceous, weakly saline, bitter, and slightly acrid. This plant is said to be diuretic and cathartic, and has been used in dropsy, jaundice, and cutaneous eruptions. It is most conveniently employed in infusion. The fresh plant is sometimes applied, in the shape of poultice or fomentation, to hemorrhoidal tumours; and an ointment made from the flowers has been employed for the same purpose, and also locally in diseases of the skin. The flowers are used in Ger- many for dyeing yellow. W. AQUA BINELLI. An Italian nostrum, named after a physician of Turin, which at one time enjoyed great reputation in Europe as a styptic; but has been proved to possess very little efficacy. It is a transparent liquid, with little taste and an empyreumatic odour, and, after the discovery of creasote, was conjectured to contain a small proportion of that principle. It is now out of use. A recipe for its preparation is given in the Annuaire de Therapeutique, 1843, p. 227. AV. AQUILEGIA VULGARIS. Columbine. A perennial herbaceous plant, indigenous in Europe, but cultivated in our gardens as an ornamental flower. All parts of it have been medicinally employed. The root, leaves, and flowers have a disagreeable odour, and a bitterish, acrid taste. The seeds are small, black, shining, inodorous, and of an oleaginous sweetish taste, followed by a sense of acrimony. Columbine has been considered diuretic, diaphoretic, and antiscorbutic, and has been employed in jaundice, in small-pox to pro- mote the eruption, in scurvy, and externally*as a vulnerary. It is not used at present, and is even suspected to possess dangerous properties, like most other E,anunculacea3. W. ARECA NUT. Betel Nut. This is the product of Areca Catechu, an East India tree be- longing to the family of palms. The fruit, which is about the size and shape of a small egg, and of an orange-yellow colour, contains the nut embedded in a fibrous, fleshy en- velope, and invested with a brittle shell which adheres to the exterior flesh. The kernel, which is the betel-nut of commerce, is of a roundish conical shape, rather larger than a chestnut, externally of a deep-brown, diversified with a fawn colour, so as to present a reticular appearance, internally brownish-red with whitish veins, very hard, of a feeble odour when broken, and of an astringent, somewhat acrid taste. It abounds in tannin, and contains also gallic acid, a fixed oil, gum, a little volatile oil, lignin, and various saline substances. It yields its astringency to water; and, in some parts of Hindostan, an ex- tract is prepared from it having the appearance and properties of catechu. Immense quantities of the nut are consumed in the East, mixed with the leaves of the Piper Betel, and with lime, forming the masticatory so well known by the name of Betel. The red colour which this mixture imparts to the saliva and the excrements is owing to the areca nut, which is also powerfully astringent, and, by its internal use, tends to counteract the relaxation of bowels to which the heat of the climate so strongly predisposes. The nut is used, in this country, almost, exclusively in the preparation of tooth-powder, for which purpose it is first reduced by heat to the state of charcoal. The superiority of this form of charcoal over that from other sources is probably owing to its hardness. The nut has been used successfully in Great Britain, by Lr. Edwin Morris, in the treatment of the tape- worm, in doses of from four to six drachms. (See Am. Jnurn. of Med. Sci., April, 1862, p. 496.) ‘ W. ARGEMONE MEXICANA. Prickly Poppy. An annual plant, belonging to the Papave- raceae, growing in our Southern and Western States, Mexico, the West Indies, Brazil, and fn many parts also of Africa and Southern Asia. It has an erect, somewhat glaucous, bristly stem, with alternate sessile leaves, sinuated and prickly at the angles, and usually marked with white spots. The flowqrs are solitary, yellow or white, with two or three prickly deciduous sepals, four or six large petals, about twenty stamens, and four to six Arseniate of Ammonia.—Asclepias Curassavica. part iii. reflected si graas. The whole plant abounds in a milky, viscid juice, which becomes yel- low on exposure to the air. From the statements of different authors, it may be inferred that the plant is emetic and purgative, and possesses also narcotic properties. The juice, which is acrid, has been used internally in obstinate cutaneous eruptions, and as a local application to warts and chancres, and in diseases of the eyes. The flowers are stated by De Candolle to have been employed as a soporific. But the seeds are most esteemed. They are small, round, black, and roughish. In the dose of two drachms, infused in a pint of water, they are said to act as an emetic. In smaller doses they are purgative. An oil may be obtained from them by expression, which lias the cathartic property of the seeds, and. according to M. Lcpine, might be advantageously used in the arts. (Journ. de Bharm., Juil- let, 1861, p. 16.) According to Dr. AV. Hamilton, the seeds unite an anodyne and soporific with the cathartic property; and, in the hands of Dr. Affleck, of Jamaica, have proved use- ful in flatulent colic, given in emulsion, in the dose of about eight grains, repeated every half hour till three doses were taken.. The pain was relieved, and the bowels opened. (Pharm. Journ., xiii. 642.) W. ARSENIATE OF AMMONIA. Ammonise Arscnias. This salt is obtained in crystals by saturating a concentrated solution of arsenic acid with ammonia or carbonate of ammonia, and allowing it to evaporate spontaneously. It has been used with advantage by Biett in several inveterate diseases of the skin. It is administered in solution, formed by dissolving a grain of the salt in a fluidounce of distilled water. Of this the dose is from twenty to twenty-five drops, given in the course of the day, and gradually increased. B. ARSENIC ACID. Acidum Arsenicum. This acid is described 'At page 141. It has similar therapeutic effects to those of arsenious acid, but is more poisonous. The dose is the twentieth of a grain, given in aqueous solution. B. ASARABACCA. This is the product of Asarum Europseum, an herbaceous perennial plant, growing in Europe, between 37° and 60° north latitude, in woods and shady places, and flowering in May. All parts of the plant are acrid. The leaves were specially directed by the London College, when the plant was recognised as officinal; but the whole plant, including the root, stem, leaves, and flowers, is usually kept in the shops. The root is about as thick as a goose-quill, of a grayish colour, quadrangular, knotted and twisted, and sometimes furnished with radicles at each joint. It has a smell analogous to that of pepper, an acrid taste, and affords a grayish powder. The leaves, which have long foot- stalks, are kidney-shaped, entire, somewhat hairy, of a shining deep-green colour when fresh, nearly inodorous, with a taste slightly aromatic, bitter, acrid, and nauseous. Their poffder is yellowish-green. Both parts rapidly lose their activity by keeping, and ulti- mately become inert. Geiger, however, asserts that they keep well if perfectly dry. Their virtues are imparted to alcohol and water, bat are dissipated by decoction. According to MM. Feneulle and Lassaigne, the root contains a concrete volatile oil, a very acrid fixed oil, a yellow substance analogous to cutisin, starch, albumen, mucilage, citric acid, and saline matters. The latest analysis is by Grager, who found in the root a liquid volatile oil, two concrete volatile substances called respectively asarum camphor or asarone, and asarite, a peculiar bitter principle called asarin. tannin, extractive, resin, starch, gluten, albumen, lignin, citric acid, and various salts; in the leaves, asarin, tannin, extractive, chlorophyll, albumen, citric acid, and lignin. The active principles appear to be the vola- tile oil, which is lighter than water, glutinous, yellow, of an acrid and burning taste, and a smell like that of valerian, and the asarin, which is soluble in alcohol and very bitter, and is probably, the same as the cytisin of Feneulle and Lassaigne. (See Cytisus Laburnum, in Part III.) The root and leaves of asarabacca, either fresh or carefully dried, are pow- erfully emetic and cathartic, and were formerly much used in Europe with a view to these effects. The dose is from thirty grains to a drachm. But as aii emetic they have been en- tirely superseded by ipecacuanha; and they are now used chiefly, if not exclusively, as an errhine. One or two grains of the powdered root, snuffed up the nostrils, produce much irritation, and a copious flow of mucus, which is said to continue sometimes for several days. The leaves are milder, and generally preferred. They should be used in the quan- tity of three or four grains, repeated every night until the desired effect is experienced. They have been strongly recommended in headache, chronic ophthalmia, and rheumatic and paralytic affections of the face, mouth, and throat ; and are in great repute in Russia, as a remedy for the deranged state of health consequent on habits of intoxication. W. ASCLEPIAS CURASSAVICA. Bastard Ipecacuanha. Redhead. Blood Weed. This is a very pretty species of Asclepias, from one to three feet high, and bearing umbels of bright-red flowers. It is a native of the B est Indies, abounding especially in Nevis and St. Kins, where it. is considerably used as a medicine. Both the root and expressed juice are emetic, the former in the dose of one or two scruples, the latter in that of a fluidounce or more. They are also cathartic in somewhat Smaller doses; and the expressed juice, made jyito a syMij with sugar, has been strongly recommended as a remedy in worms. The medicine, however, is somewhat uncertain in its operation. According to Dr. IV. Hamilton, the plant mtv a sa PART III. Asclepias Incarnata.—Asparagus Officinalis. 1467 be usefully employed in arresting hemorrhages, and in obstinate gonorrhoea, in which it lias been found very efficient by Dr. Barham. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xix. 19.) w ASCLEPIAS INCARNATA. Flesh-coloured Asclepias. (Gray's Manual, p.353.) This spe- cies of Asclepias held formerly a place in the secondary catalogue of the U. S. Pharmaco pueia, from which, however, it was dismissed at the recent revision of that work. It has an erect downy stem, branched above, two or three feet high, and furnished with opposite, nearly sessile, lanceolate, somewhat downy leaves. The flowers are red, sweet-scented, and disposed in numerous crowded erect umbels, which are generally in pairs. The nectary is entire, with its horn exserted. In one variety the flowers are white. The plant grows in all parts of the United States, preferring a wet soil, and flowering from June to August. Upon being wounded it emits a milky juice. The root was the officinal portion. Its properties are probably similar to those of A. Syriaca; but they have not, so far as we know, been fully tested. Dr. Griffith states that it has been employed by several physicians, who speak of it as a useful emetic and cathartic. (Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., iv. 283.) Dr. Tully, of New Haven, has found it useful in catarrh, asthma, rheumatism, syphilis, and worms. W. ASCLEPIAS SYRIACA. A. Syriaca. Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1265. A. Cornuti (Decaisne, Gray's Manual, p. 351). Common Silk-weed. Common Milk-weed. This, like the preceding species, was discharged from the secondary catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, but, we think, on in- sufficient grounds, considering the extent to which it has been used by regular practitioners, to say nothing of its reputation with others. The silk-weed has simple stems, from three to five feet high, with opposite, lanceolate-oblong, petiolate leaves, downy on their under surface. The flowers are large, of a pale-purple colour, sweet-scented, and arranged in two or three nodding umbels. The nectary is bidentate. The pod or follicle is covered with sharp prickles, and contains a large quantity of silky seed-down, which has been used as a substi- tute for fur in the manufacture of hats, and for feathers in beds and pillows. This species of Asclepias is very common in the United States, growing in sandy fields, ■»n the road-sides, and on the banks of streams, from New England to Virginia. It flowers in July and August. Like the preceding species, it gives out a white juice when wounded, and has hence received the name of milk-weed, by which it is frequently called. This juice has a faint smell, a sub-acrid taste, and an acid reaction. According to Shultz, 80 parts of it contain 69 of water, 3-5 of a wax-like fatty matter, 5 of caoutchouc, 0‘5 of gum, 1 of sugar with salts of acetic acid, and 1 of other salts. (Pharm. Central Blatt, 1844, p. 302.) Dr. C. List has found the chief solid ingredient of the juice to be a peculiar crystalline substance, of a resinous character, closely allied to lactucone, and which he proposes to call asclepione. To obtain it, the juice is coagulated by heat, filtered so as to separate the liquid portionT and then digested with ether, which dissolves the asclepione, and yields it by evaporation. To purify it, the residue must be treated repeatedly with anhydrous ether, which leaves an- other substance undissolved. It is white, crystalline, tasteless, inodorous, fusible, insoluble in water and alcohol, soluble in ether, oil of turpentine, and concentrated acetic acid. A strong hot solution of potassa does not affect it. Its constituents are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, and its formula C40H34O6. (List, Liebig's Annalen, Jan. 1849 ) Medical Properties and Uses. Dr. Richardson, of Massachusetts, found the root possessed of anodyne properties. He gave it with advantage to an asthmatic patient, and in a case of typhus fever attended with catarrh. In both instances it appeared to promote expectoration, and to relieve pain, cough, and dyspnoea. He gave a drachm of the powdered bark of the root, in divided doses, during the day, and employed it also in strong infusion. In a letter to one of the authors, dated Jan. 22d, 1850, Dr. A. E. Thomas, of Rocky Spring, Mississippi, stated that he had employed the root in scrofula with great success, and in dyspepsia with advantage. He found it cathartic and alterative, but observed no anodyne property. He was induced to try it by having noticed that it was much used by the planters in scrofula and other diseases, and by the recommendation of Dr. McLean, of Kentucky, who had em- ployed it in scrofula for twenty years, with the most satisfactory results. In a letter subse- quently received from Dr. McLean himself, this account of the virtues of the asclepias root has been confirmed. Dr. McLean has also found it an excellent alterative in hepatic affec- tions; but he seems to be of the opinion that the root he employed was from a different spe- cies of Asclepias, and one not described in this Dispensatory. Mention may here be made of another indigenous species of Asclepias, A. verticillata (Gray's Manual, p. 354), which has reputation in some parts of the Southern States as a remedy in snake-bites aud the bites of venomous insects. It is given in the form of a saturated decoction of the fresh plant (root, stem, and leaves), of which three gills are said to have been taken at a draught, with tho effect of producing an anodyne and sudorific effect, followed by a gentle sleep. (See Va. Med Journ., Dec. 1858, p. 458.) W. ASPARA.GUS OFFICINALIS. Asparagus. This well-known garden vegetable is a native of Europe. It is perennial and herbaceous. The root, which is inodorous, and of a weak, sweetish taste, was formerly used as a diuretic, aperient, and purifier of the blood; and it is stated to oe still employed to a considerable extent in France. It is given in the form of 1468 Asplenium Filix Foemina.—Balm of Crilead. PART III. decoction, made in the proportion of one or two ounces of the root to a quart of water. Hayne asserts that, in the dried state, it is wholly inert. The young shoots are much used as food. Before being boiled they have a disagreeable taste; and their juice was found by Robiquet and Vauquelin to contain a peculiar crystallizable principle, called asparagin. (See page 90.) This has been thought not to exert any special influence on the system; but Dr. Allen Dedrick, of New Orleans, has found it to be sedative to the circulation; eight grains of it having reduced his own pulse from 72 to 56 in the minute, while, at the same time, brief frontal headache, a sense of fulness of the eyes, and a feeling of muscular weakness were experienced. The effect on the pulse was perceived at the end of five minutes, was at its height in an hour, and continued so for half an hour, when it gradually subsided. The pulse was also rendered intermittent. (N. 0. Med. and Surg. Journ., xi. 198.) Asparagin is said to be obtained with facility by the process of dialysis. If the thick viscid mucilage of the marshmallow (Althaea officinalis) be put into a dialyser, with distilled water outside, the asparagin passes into the water," and may be obtained in crystals by evaporating the solu- tion. (See Pharm. Journ., May, 1862, p. 572.) It might probably be obtained in the same way from an infusion of asparagus. The sprouts themselves are not without effect; as the urine acquires a disagreeable odour very soon after they have been eaten. They have been accused of producing irritation, with a morbid flow of mucus, of the urinary passages. (Ann. de Therap., 1861, p. 107.) They are considered by some writers as diuretic, aperient, and deobstruent, and as constituting a very wholesome and useful article of diet, early in the spring, when vegetables are scarce. Broussais thought that they were sedative to the heart, and recommended them especially in hypertrophy, and other diseases of that organ attended with excessive action, and with- out phlogosis of the stomach. M. Gendrin, however, after much experience with asparagus, affirms that he never knew it to exercise the slightest influence over the heart, and ascribes its palliative effects, in diseases of that organ, to a diuretic action. He found it, in all the cases in which he administered it, to increase the quantity of urine, which, in some in- stances, was quintupled. The most convenient forms for exhibition are these of syrup and extract, prepared from the shoots. The former may be given in the dose of one or two fluid- ounces, the latter, of half a drachm or a drachm. The syrup may be made by adding a suf- ficient quantity of sugar to the expressed juice of the shoots, previously deprived of its albu- men by exposure to heat and by filtration; the extract, by evaporating the same juice to the consistence of a pilular mass. Dr. S. J. Jefferson, of England, has employed a tincture of asparagus for 16 years with great benefit, as an adjuvant of other diuretics. He prepares the tincture either by macerating 5 ounces Of the dried tops in 2 pints of proof spirit; or by taking 5 pounds of the fresh tops, expressing the juice, evaporating it to a pint, strain- ing, and adding a pint of rectified spirit. He gives from half a drachm to two drachms with each dose of the diuretic employed. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxx. 490, from the Assoc. Med. Journ.) The berries are capable of undergoing the vinous fermentation, and affording alcohol by distillation. In their unripe state they possess the same properties as the shoots, and probably in a much higher degree. We have employed a syrup prepared from them, with apparent advantage, in a case of diseased heart. The seeds have been tried as a sub- stitute for coffee, which, when treated in the same way, they are said to resemble in flavour. (See Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., July 19, 1854.) W. ASPLENIUM FILIX FCEMINA. R. Brown. Female Fern. This is the Polypodium Filix foemina of Linn., the Aspidium Filix feemina of Swartz, and the Athyrium Filix foemina of Roth. It has a root analogous in character to that of the male fern (Aspidium Filix mas), and has been supposed to possess similar vermifuge properties. At present, however, it is not used. The vulgar name of female fern is also given to the Pteris aquilina, or common brake, which is said by some authors to have the property of destroying the tape-worm. The leaves of two species of Asplenium, A. Trichornanes, or common spleenwort, and A. Adiantum-nigrum, or black spleenwort, are mucilaginous, and have been used as substitutes for the maidenhairs (Adiantum Capillus Veneris and A. Pedatum) as pectorals, though destitute of the aromatic flavour which is the chief recommendation of these plants. W. ASTER PUNICEUS. (Gray’s Manual, p. 195.) This species of Aster is a very common indigenous plant, growing from three to six feet high, in low swampy places. The rootlets are said to be aromatic, bitterish, and astringent, and have been employed in domestic and irregular practice as a stimulating diaphoretic, in rheumatic and catarrhal affections. Other species also of Aster have attracted attention for supposed remedial powers. W. ATHEROSPERMA MOSCHATA. Australian Sassafras. The bark of this tree contains a volatile oil which is obtained by distillation, and has gained some reputation in Australia as a remedy. It is said to be diaphoretic and diuretic, and at the same time sedative in its action on the heart. The dose is a drop every 6 or 8 hours. A new alkaloid called atfiero- syermin has been extracted from the bark by M. Zeyer, of Munich. (Pharm. Journ., April ~i863, p. 447.) w. BALM OF GILEAD. Balsam of Gilead. Balsamum Gileadense. Baume de la Mecque, Ft PART III. Balsam of Sulphur.—Barhadoes Nuts. The genuine balm of Gilead is the resinous juice of the Amyris Gileadensis of Linn., the Balsamodendron Gileadense of Kunth, a small evergreen tree, growing on the Asiatic and African shores of the Red Sea. It was in high repute with the ancients, and still retains its value in the estimation of the eastern nations, among whom it is employed both as a medicine and cosmetic. In western Europe and in this country, it is seldom found in a state of purity, and its use has been entirely abandoned. It is described as a turbid whitish, thick, gray, odorous liquid, becoming solid by exposure. It possesses no medical properties which do not exist in other balsamic or terebinthinate juices. It was formerly known by the name of oyobalxumum; while the dried twigs of the tree were called xylobgl- samum, and the dried fruit, carpobalsamum. W. BALSAM OF SULPHUR. This name was formerly given to a substance resulting from the reaction of sulphur upon olive oil at a high temperature. It was directed in the old Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, under the name of Oleum Sulphuratum; but was discharged from that work at the last revision. The directions of the College were to boil eight parte of olive oil and one part of sublimed sulphur together, with a gentle fire, in a large iron pot, stirring them constantly till they united. The iron pot was directed to be large enough to hold three times the quantity of the materials employed; as the mixture might other- wise boil over. As the vapours which rose were apt to take fire, a lid was to be at hand to cover the pot, and thus extinguish the flame if necessary. Sulphur is soluble to a consid- erable extent in heated oil, from which, if the solution be saturated, it is deposited in a crystalline state on cooling. But it is not a mere solution which this process was intended to effect. The oil was partly decomposed, and the resulting preparation was an extremely fetid, acrid, viscid, reddish-brown fluid. In order that it might be obtained, it was neces- sary to heat the oil to the boiling point. Sulphurated oil, or balsam of sulphur, was formerly thought useful in chronic catarrh, consumption, and other pectoral complaints; but incon- venience arose from its acrid properties, and its internal use was abandoned. It is said to be sometimes applied as a stimulant to foul ulcers. The dose is from five to thirty drops. W. BALSAMUM TRANQUILANS. Baume Tranquille. This is a preparation of some note, directed by the French Codex, and consisting essentially of olive oil holding in solution the active matters of certain narcotic and aromatic plants. The fresh plants are boiled with the oil until all their water is driven off; the o.il is then expressed and poured upon the dried plants properly comminuted; and the mixture, having been allowed to stand for a month, is strained, and the oil decanted. The preparation is used by friction as an ano - dyne in local pains. A formula for it is contained in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (Jan. 18t32; p. 22), and in the Journ. de Pharm. (Aout, 18t52, p. 121). W. BAPTISIA TINCTORIA. Sophora tincloria. Linn. Podulyria tinetoria. Michaux. Wild In- digo. This is an indigenous perennial plant, found in all parts of the United States, grow- ing abundantly in wrnods and dry barren uplands. It is from one to three feet high, with a smooth, very branching stem, small, ternate, cuneate obovat.e, bluish-green leaves, and yellow flowers, which appear in July and August, and, like the whole plant, become black when dried. The root, which is the part most highly recommended, is of a dark-brown colour, of a slight peculiar odour in the dried state, and of a nauseous, bitter, somewhat acrid taste. Its virtues appear to reside chiefly in the cortical portion. Mr. B L. Smedley has rendered it probable that it contains a peculiar alkaloid. (Am. Journ. of Pharm.., July, 1862, p. 311.) In large doses, it is said to operate violently as an emetic and cathartic; in smaller, to produce only a mild laxative effect. It is said to have proved useful in scarla- tina, typhus fever, and in that state of system which attends gangrene or mortification. Dr. Thacher spoke highly of its efficacy as an external application to obstinate and pain- ful ulcers; and Dr. Comstock, of Rhode Island, found it extremely useful, both as an internal and external remedy, in threatened or existing mortification. By the latter phy- sician it was given in decoction, made in the proportion of an ounce of the root to a pint of water, of which half a fluidounce was administered every four or eight hours, any ten- dency to operate on the bowels being checked with laudanum. Dr. Stevens, of Ceres, Pennsylvania, has employed a decoction of the root advantageously in epidemic dysentery. (N. Y. Journ. of Med., iv. 358.) It may be used externally in the form of decoction or cata- plasm. The stem and leaves possess the same virtues as the root, though in a less degree A pale-blue colouring substance has been prepared from the plant as a substitute for indigo, but is greatly inferior. Another species, B. Alba, or prairie indigo, which is abundant in our N. W. prairies, is said to have similar properties,’"and to be sometimes used as a substitute for B. tinetoria. W. BARBADOES NUTS. Purging Nuts. Physic Nuts. These are the seeds of the Curcas purgans of Adanson (Jatropha Curcas of Linnaeus), growing in Brazil, the West Indies, and on the western coast of Africa. The fruit is a three-celled capsule, containing one seed in each cell, and is about the size of a walnut. The seeds are blackish, oval, about eight lines long, flat on one side, convex on the other; and the two sides present a slight longitudinal prominence. They yielded to Soubeiran fixed oil, an acrid resin, sugar, gum, a fatty acid, Bassora Gum.—Bedeguar. PART III. g?uten, a free acid and salts. The oil may be separated by expression. When fresh it is without smell or colour, but becomes yellowish and slightly odorous by time. When cold it deposits a white substance, which is probably margarin. Alcohol does not readily dissolve M Some call it jatrophaoil. For an account of the chemical properties of this oil, see the Chemical Gazettej\)7h7\o, 1854, p. 409). From three to tive of the seeds, slightly roasted and deprived of their envelope, operate actively as a cathartic, and not unfrequerrtly pro- duce nausea and vomiting, with a sense of burning in the stomach. The oil purges in the dose of twelve or fifteen drops, and is analogous in its action to croton oil, though less pow- erful. The cake left after the expression of the oil is an acrid emeto-cathartic, operating in the dose of a few grains. Either of these substances may produce serious consequences in overdoses. The leaves of the plant are rubefacient, and the juice is said to have been use- fully employed as a local remedy in piles. . The seeds of _C ureas multifidus (Jatropha multifida, Linn.) have similar properties, and yield a similar oit This species also grows in Brazil and the West Indies. W. BASSORA GUM. The plant which yields this substance is unknown. It came into com' tnerce originally from the neighbourhood of Bassora, on the Gulf of Persia; but is fre- quently found mixed with gum brought from other countries, and is probably not the pro- duct of one plant exclusively. It is in irregular pieces, of various sizes, never very large, Avhite or yellow, intermediate in the-degree of its transparency between gum arabic and tragacanth, inodorous, tasteless, and possessed of the property of yielding a slight sound when broken under the teeth. But a small portion of it is soluble in water, whether hot or cold. The remainder swells up considerably, though less than tragacanth, and does not, like that substance, form a gelatinous mass, as it consists of independent granules which have little cohesion. The soluble portion is pure gum or arabin, and, according to M. Guerin, consti- tutes 11-2 per cent. The insoluble portion consists of a peculiar principle called bassorin, associated with a small proportion of saline substances, which yield, when the gum is burnt, 6-6 per cent, of ashes. The gum is useless both in medicine and pharmacy, and is described here only as containing a principle which enters into the composition of several medicinal substances. Bassorin is insoluble in water, alcohol, and ether, but softens and swells up in hot or cold water. Diluted nitric and muriatic acids, with the aid of heat, dissolve it almost entirely. The acidulous solution, concentrated by evaporation, and treated with alcohol, lets fall a fiocculent precipitate which has all the characters of pure gum, into which the bassorin ap- pears to have been converted by the action of the acid. This does not, however, constitute more than a tenth part of the bassorin dissolved. By gradually evaporating the alcoholic acidulous solution, a thick bitterish liquid is obtained, which exhales a strong odour of am- monia when treated with potassa. Strong nitric acid converts bassorin into mucic and ox- alic acids; and, treated with sulphuric acid, it yields a sweet crystalline substance which is incapable of the vinous fermentation. (Guerin.) Vauquelin was the first to call attention to this principle, upon which he conferred its present name, from having first observed it in the Bassora gum. Bucholz afterwards discovered the same, or a closely analogous prin- ciple, in tragacanth; and John, a principle which was supposed to be the same, in the gum of the cherry tree. Hence it has sometimes been called tragacanthin and cerasin. M. Gue- rin, however, has demonstrated that the insoluble principle of the cherry gum is essen- tially different from bassorin. Berzelius considered the latter as belonging to the class of substances which he associated under the name of mucilage, and of which the mucilages of flaxseed and quince seed are examples. (See Linurn, p. 514.) W. BDELLIUM. This name has been given to two different gum-resins, distinguished ns Indian and African bdellium. Dr. Royle was informed that the former was obtained from the Amyris Commiphora of Roxburgh, growing in India and Madagascar. The latter is said to be the product of lleudelotia Africana, which grows in Senegal. Bdellium sometimes comes mixed with gum arabic and gum Senegal. It is either in small roundish pieces, of a reddish colour, semi-transparent, and brittle, with, a wax-like fracture, or in large irregular lumps, of a dark brownish-red colour, less transparent, somewhat tenacious, and adhering to the teeth when chewed. It has ati odour and taste like those of myrrh, but weaker. It is in- fusible and inflammable, diffusing while it burns a balsamic odour. According to Pelletier it consists of 59 per cent, of resin, 9-2 of gum, 30-6 of bassorin, and 1 -2 of volatile oil, in- cluding loss. In medical properties it is analogous to myrrh, and was formerly used for the same purposes; but it is now scarcely ever given internally. In Europe, it is still occa- sionally employed as an ingredient of plasters. The dose is from ten to forty grains. W. BEDEGUAR. Fungus Rosarum. An excrescence upon the sweetbrier or eglantine, and other species of Rosa, produced by the puncture of insects, especially by one or more species of Cynips. It is of irregular shape, usually roundish, about an inch in diameter, with numer- ous cells internally, in each of which is the larva of an insect. It has little smell, and a slightly astringent taste. Though formerly considered diuretic, anthelmintic, and litliou- triptic, and employed as a remedy for toothache, it has fallen into disuse. It was given iu doses of from ten to forty grains. VV. PART III. Benzoate of Soda.—Benzole. 1471 BENZOATE OF SODA. Sodse Benzoas. This salt has been employed by MM. Socquet and Donjean, in conjunction with silicate of soda and other substances, as a remedy in gout and rheumatism, for the purpose of eliminating uric acid. It is prepared by saturat- ing a solution of benzoic acid with a solution of carbonate of soda. For the complicated formula proposed, including eolchicum and aconite, see Am. Journ. of Fharm., July, 1857, p. 314." m B BENZOIN ODOBIFERUM. Nees. Laurus Benzoin. Linn. Spice-wood. Spice-bush. Fever- bush. An indigenous shrub, from four to ten feet high, growing in moist, shady places, in all parts of the United States. Its flowers appear early in spring, long before the leaves, and are succeeded by small clusters of oval berries, which, when ripe, in the latter part of September, are of a shining crimson colour. All parts of the shrub have a spicy, agree- able flavour, which is strongest in the bark and berries. The small branches are some- times used as a gently stimulating aromatic, in the form of infusion or decoction. They are said to be employed in this way by the country people as a vermifuge, and an agree- able drink in low fevers; and the bark has been used in intermittents. The berries, dried and powdered, were sometimes substituted, during the revolutionary war, for allspice. According to Dr. Drake, the oil of the berries is used as a stimulant. W. BENZOLE. Benzin. Benzene. Phene. Uydruret of Phenyl. This substance must not be confounded with a commercial article sometimes sold as benzine, which is a mixture of various carbohydrogens of light sp.gr., obtained in the distillation of coal gas and petro- leum. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1861, p. 367.) Benzole is a distinct carbohydrogen, with a definite constitution. It was originally obtained by distilling benzoic acid with lime. It was afterwards discovered by Faraday as a constituent of coal-gas tar. This tar, when distilled, furnishes coal-naphtha (the commercial benzine above referred to), a com- plex substance, containing a number of carbohydrogens, among which is benzole. Upon distilling this naphtha from a metallic still, surmounted by an open vessel filled with water, and containing a worm terminating in a refrigerated receiver, the benzole will pass over and condense in the receiver; while the other substances associated with it, having higher boiling points, will condense in the worm, and fall back into the still. The benzole is then purified by distillation at a heat between 176° and 194°, and by subjecting the product to a new distillation from one-fourtli of its volume of sulphuric acid. A method of obtaining it pure is described by Mr. A. II. Church, consisting in the dry distillation of a compound made by treating the ordinary benzole of commerce with fuming sulphuric acid, then add- ing carbonate of ammonia, evaporating the whole to dryness, and exhausting the residue with alcohol. The alcoholic solution is distilled to dryness, and the remaining mass dis- tillecv at a higher heat. The distillate is washed with solution of potassa, and then rectified from caustic potassa. The product is perfectly pure benzole. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1860, p. 144.) M. E. Kopp purifies benzole by taking advantage of its high congeal- ing point. He exposes the impure mixture containing it to a degree of cold sufficient to solidify it (5° F.), presses the congealed mass to separate the liquid carbohydrogens, al- lows it to become fluid, then again freezes and presses it, and thus obtains it almost entirely pure. The mixed fluids treated in this way he obtains by decomposing the heavier tar 'oils by a high degree of heat. (Chcm. News, May 14, 1864, p. 229.) Prof. Calvert, of Manchester, purifies coal-naphtha, so as to render it a sufficiently pure benzole to be usefully applied to the purpose of removing fatty and oily matters from ani- mal and vegetable substances, by subjecting it to the action of sulphuric acid, added in small quantities, so long as coloration is produced, then washing it with pure water, and afterwards subjecting it to distillation in an ordinary still. The sulphuric acid destroys the less volatile carbohydrogens present, which interfere writh the solvent power of the benzole. In consequence of the great volatility and extreme inflammability of benzole and its attendant carbohydrogens, much care is necessary both in their preparation and subse- quent use to avoid any possible exposure to flame. Very serious results have taken place from want of caution in this respect. Benzole is a colourless oleaginous liquid, possessing an agreeable odour. Its sp.gr. is 0-85, congealing point 32°, and boiling point 176°. Its formula is C12H6. Its potvers as a solvent are very extensive. Among the substances soluble in it are sulphur, phosphorus, and iodine. It dissolves quinia, but not cinchonia, with which it forms a bulky gelatinous mass. Morphia and strychnia are sparingly soluble. Its solvent power over some of the organic alkalies led Mr. John Williams, of London, to employ it in extracting them from the vegetables in wrhieh they are found; and he succeeded in obtaining them in several instances on a small scale. In this way he extracted quinia, quinidia, and amorphous quinia, together, from cinchona bark, but not cinchonia. In like manner he separated strychnia and brucia from nux vomica,' and handsome crystals of cantharidin from can- tharides. Mr. Williams supposes that benzole might form a good test of the value of Peru- vian barks. Benzole is also a solvent of many of the resins, of mastic, camphor, wax, fatty ana oily substances, essential oils, caoutchouc, and gutta percha. The last two substances 1472 Benzole. PART III. may be obtained, without, alteration of properties, in tough sheets of any desired tenuity, by spreading their benzole solutions on glass or other polished surface, and allowing the solvent to evaporate. The same solutions, brushed over the skin, form artificial cuticles, which have been found useful as coverings to wounds and burns. The vapour of benzole, when inhaled, acts as an anaesthetic. In relation to this substance, see the paper of C. B. Mansfield, in the Chem. Gaz (No. 159, p. 224), from, which many of the of this article have been taken. A case is on record showing that, taken internally in a considerable quantity, it has a decided narcotic action, apparently intermediate between that of ardent spirit and opium. Swallowed accidentally, to the amount probably of one or two fluid- ounces, it produced vertigo with a sensation as of intoxication, followed by sleep for two hours, from which the patient awoke with a gay delirium, attended with bursts of laughter, and some impediment of speech, continuing for four hours. The pulse was slightly quick- ened, the surface warm, and the expression of face animated. Sleep then came on, from which the patient awoke next day, still feeling some dizziness. The breath had a strong smell of benzole. (See Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1861, p. 222.) M. Reynal, of the Veterinary School at Alfort, has long been in the habit of destroying parasites occurring in domestic animals by benzole, and proposes its employment in the parasitic diseases of man. It has the advantage of not affecting the skin. For this pur- pose a mixture may be used, consisting of 10 parts of benzole, 5 of soap, and 85 of water. Nitrobenzole. Benzole, by the action of fuming nitric acid, is converted into nitrobenzole, also called nitrobenzule and nitrobenzide, having the formula C12H5,N04. The product, after having been washed with water, forms an oily, yellowish, intensely sweet liquid, with an odour like that of oil of bitter almonds. Its density is 1-209, and boiling point 415°. Lat- terly, it has become of commercial importance under the name of artificial oil of bitter almonds, being employed in confectionery, for scenting soaps, and for flavouring articles of diet. Nitrobenzole may be viewed as benzole, in which one eq. of hydrogen is replaced by one of hyponitric acid. For some observations on nitrobenzole, especially for a test of it by Mr. Maisch, see Part I. page 573. Dr. F. Mahla, of Chicago, considers the commercial nitrobenzole as a different compound from the proper chemical article, which he has found to have an odour between that of cinnamon and of bitter almond oils, but more closely analogous to the former. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1859, p. 202.) B. A very interesting paper by Mr. H. Letheby, on the physiological and toxicological properties of nitrobenzole, is contained in the Pharmaceutical Journal (Sept. 1863, p. 130). In manufactories where the fluid is prepared, the workmen are often affected with head- ache and sleepiness from exposure to the vapour which escapes; but the effects are quickly relieved by fresh air and a mild stimulant. Two fatal cases, however, are recorded, one from the inhalation of the vapour, proceeding from the poison spilled upon the person of the individual affected, the other from the accidental swallowing of a small portion. The effects were the same. For some time there was no feeling of discomfort; but gradually symptoms of stupor came on, with flushed face, ending in profound coma, in which state the patients died, about 9 hours from the time of taking the poison, the coma having come on in 4 hours. The brain was found congested, the heart full, and the blood black and fluid. Chemical examination detected both nitrobenzole and anilin in the blood, showing that the former had been converted into the latter. Mr. Letheby also made experiments with the poison on domestic animals, and obtained some extraordinary results. From 30 to 60 drops were given by the mouth to cats and dogs. There was rarely vomiting or other sign of gas- tric irritation. Two classes of effects were observed, either rapid coma, or a slowr occurrence of palsy and coma after a period of apparent inaction of the poison. Even in the rapidly comatose cases, paralytic symptoms were noticed in the earlier stage. The time varied in these cases from 25 minutes to 12 hours between the exhibition of the poison and death. In the slower cases there was no visible effect for hours and sometimes for days. Suddenly, however, the animal would be attacked with vomiting, followed by convulsions, which, on their subsidence, left more or less paralysis, first of the hinder and then of the fore limbs. After this the animal generally lay for days, more or less conscious, with now and then epi- leptic attacks, and at length died of exhaustion or gradually recovered. The time from the exhibition of the poison to the first epileptic fit was from 19 to 72 hours, in most cases about two days, and to the period of death was from 4 to 9 days. This apparent inaction of the poison at first is very extraordinary, almost justifying the belief in those cases of poisoning said to have occurred in ancient times, in which the substance given exerted no ertect till a considerable time after it tvas exhibited. The explanation is that the nitro- benzole undergoes changes in the system into a more violent poison, and as anilin is found alter death, this may be the real agent. Notwithstanding these statements of Mr. Letheby, we find it positively asserted by M. Collas that nitrobenzole is not poisonous; as M. Lassaigne had made numerous trials with it on dogs, to which he had given from one to two drachms without other effect than to periume their evacuations. (Ann. de ThSrap., 1861, p. 35.) It is obvious that either the substances with w7hich Mr. Letheby and M. Lassaigne experimented were not the same- PART III. Betonica Officinalis.—Bistort. 11 rTC' 4 I C or that the causes which in some of Mr. Letheby’s cases operated to prevent action for a time, were of permanent operation in the cases of M. Lassaigne. W. BETON1CA OFFICINALIS. Wood Betony. A perennial European herb, belonging t* the labiate plants. It has a pleasant but feeble odour, and a warm, somewhat astringent, and bitterish taste. By the ancients it was much esteemed, and employed in numerous ,• diseases; but it is at present little used. It is slightly warming and corroborant, but is inferior in this respect to many other plants of the same family. The root has been con- s .dered emetic and purgative. W. BETULA ALBA. Common European Birch. Various parts of this tree have been applied to medical uses. The young shoots and leaves secrete a resinous substance, having acid properties, which, combined with soda, is said to produce the effects of a tonic laxa- tive. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 208.) The inner bark, which is bitterish and astringent, has been employed in intermittent fever. The epidermis is separable into thin layers, which may be employed as a substitute for paper, and are applied to various economical uses. The bark contains a peculiar principle, called betuliy, which is ranked among the sub- resins. When the bark is distilled, it yields an empyreumatic oil, having the peculiar odour of Russia leather, in the preparation of which it is employed. This oil has been found very useful as a local application in chronic eczema. The leaves, which have a peculiar, aromatic, agreeable odour, and a bitter taste, have been employed, in the form of infusion, in gout, rheumatism, dropsy, and cutaneous diseases. The same complaints, particularly dropsy, are said to have been successfully treated by enveloping the body in the fresh leaves, which thus applied excite perspiration. When the stem of the tree is wounded, a saccharine,juice flows out, which is considered useful in complaints of the kidneys and bladder, and is sus- ceptible, with yeast, of the vinous fermentation. A beer, wine, spirit, and vinegar are pre- pared from it, and used in some parts of Europe. Of the American species of birch, Belula lenta, variously called sweet birch, black birch, cherry birch, and mountain mahogany, is remarkable for the aromatic flavour of its bark and leaves, which have the odour and taste of Gaultheria procumhenS, and are sometimes used in in- fusion, as an agreeable, gently stimulant, and diaphoretic drink. An oil is obtained by distillation from the bark, which has been proved by Prof. Procter to be identical with oil of gaultheria. As in the case of the oil of bitter almonds, this oil does not pre-exist in the dried bark of the birch, but is formed by reaction between water and a neuter principle in the bark, analogous to amygdalin, to which Prof. Procter has given the name of gaulthe- rin. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 243 and 246.) This species also affords a saccharine liquor, which, indeed, appears to be common to all the birches. The bark of B. papyracea is em- ployed by the Northern Indians for making canoes; and thin layers of the epidermis are placed inside of boots to prevent the access of moisture. W. BEZOAR. This name has been given to concretions formed in the stomach or intestines of animals, which were formerly thought to possess extraordinary medical virtues. Many varieties have been noticed; but they were all arranged in two classes, the oriental bezoar (lapis bezoar orientalis), and western bezoar (lapis bezoar occidentalis), of which the former was most esteemed. They have fallen into merited neglect. W. BIDENS BIPINNATA. (Gray's Manual, p. 222.) Spanish Needles. An herbaceous indi- genous plant, of which the root and seeds, as well as those of other species of the same genus, have a popular reputation as emmenagogue, and are given by the “eclectics” in laryngeal and bronchial diseases as expectorants. W. BIRD-LIME. A viscid substance, existing in various plants, particularly in the bark of Vis cum album and Ilex aauifolium or European holly, from the latter of which it is usually procured.” The processior preparing it consists in boiling the middle bark for some hours in water, then separating it from the liquid, and placing it in proper vessels in a cod situation, where it is allowed to remain till it becomes viscous. It is then washed to sepa- rate impurities, and constitutes the substance in question. Bird lime thus prepared is greenish, tenacious, glutinous, bitterish, and of an odour analogous to that of flaxseed oil. Exposed to the air in thin layers it becomes dry, brown, and pulverizable, but reac- quires its viscidity upon the addition of water. It is a complex body, but is thought to- owe its characteristic properties to a proximate principle, identical with that which exudes spontaneously from certain plants, and is called glu by the French chemists. This principle ;s without odour or taste, extremely adhesive, fusible by heat, inflammable, insoluble in water, nearly insoluble in alcohol, but dissolved freely by ether and oil of turpentine. Ac- cording to M. Macaire, it is insoluble in the fixed oils, either hot or cold; a property which distinguishes it from the resins. M. Macaire proposes for it the name of visgjjx- (Journ. de Pharm., xx. 18.) Bird-lime is so tenacious that it may be employed to catch small birds, which, when they alight on a stick thickly covered with it, are unable to escape. W. BISTORT. This is the root of Polygonum Bistorta. a perennial herbaceous plant, grow- ng in Europe and the north of Asia. The root is cylindrical, somewhat flattened, about 1474 Bistort.—Bisulpliate of Potassa PART III. ns thick as the ht'le finger, marked with annular or transverse wrinkles, furnished with numeious fibres, and folded or bent upon itself, so as to give it the tortuous appearance from which its name was derived. When dried, it is solid, brittle, of a deep-brown colour externally, reddish within, inodorous, and of a rough, astringent taste. It contains much tannin, some gallic acid and gum, and a large proportion of starch. It resembles the other vegetable astringents in medical properties, and is applicable to the same complaints; but is less efficient than catechu or kino, and in this country is seldom used. It may be em- ployed in powder, decoction, or extract. The dose of the powder is 20 or 30 grains. Besides the bistort, some other plants belonging to the genus Polygonum have been used as medicines. Among these are P. aviculare, or knot grass, a mild astringent, formerly em- ployed as a vulnerary and styptic; P. Per sic aria (Persicaria mitis), of a feebly astringent saline taste, and at one time considered antiseptic; and~Fi Ilydropiper or water-pepper (Persicaria urens), the leaves of which have a burning and biting taste, inflame the skin when rubbed upon it, and are esteemed diuretic. The water-pepper or smart-weed of this country—P. punctalum (Elliott), P. hydropiperoides (Michaux)—which grows abundantly in moist places, possesses properties similar to’lhose of the European water-pepper, and is occasionally used as a detergent in chronic ulcers, and internally in gravel. Dr. Eberle very strongly recommended it in amenorrhoea, in which complaint he found no other remedy equally effectual. He gave a fluidrachm of the saturated tincture of the plant, or from four to six grains of the extract, three or four times a day. He found it to produce a warmth and peculiar tingling sensation throughout the system, with slight aching pains in the hips and loins, and a sense of weight and tension within the pelvis. [Eberle's Mat. Med., 4th ed., i. 441.) Dr. Wilcox, of Elmira, New York, has found advantage from a de- coction of the dried leaves, made in the proportion of an ounce to the pint, and applied locally, in mercurial salivation, and the sore-mouth of nursing women. [Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. 8., xvi. 248.) P. Faaopyrum is common buckwheat. The leaves of this plant have been found by Mr. Ed. Schunck to contain a crystallizable colouring principle, identi- cal with the rutin or rutie acid previously discovered by Weiss in the leaves of the common rue, and probably with the ilixanthui of Moldenhaus, existing in the leaves of Ilex aquifo- lium or common holly. Buck wheat leaves yielded to Mr. Schunck somewhat more than one part of rutin in a thousand. [Chem. Gaz., No. 399, p. 201.) W. BISULPHATE OF POTASSA. Potassse Bisulphas. This salt, though formerly officinal in the Ed. and Dub. Pharmacopoeias, has been omitted in the British. The following are the formulas of the two Colleges. “ Take of the residuum of the preparation of Pure Nitric Acid two pounds; Sulphuric Acid (commercial) seven jluidounces and one fluidrachm [Imperial mea- sure]; boiling Water six pints [Imp. meas.]. Dissolve the salt in the Water, add the Acid, concentrate the solution, and set it aside to cool and form crystals.” [Ed.) “Take of Sul- phate of Potash, in powder, three ounces [avoirdupois]; Pure Sulphuric Acid one fluidounce [Imperial measure]. Place the Acid and Salt in a small porcelain capsule, and to this apply a heat capable of liquefying its contents, and which should be continued until acid vapours cease to be given off. The Bisulphate, which concretes as it cools, should be reduced to a line powder, and preserved in a well-stopped bottle.” [Dub.) • In explaining the Edinburgh formula, it is only necessary to recall to the reader’s atten- tion a part of the explanations given under the head of Acidum Nitricum, in Part I. It is there stated that, for the decomposition of nitre on the small scale for the purpose of ob- taining nitric acid, it is necessary to use two eqs. of sulphuric acid to one of the salt. Con- sequently, the salt which remains after the distillation of nitric acid is really a bisulphate, and would seem only to require to be dissolved, and the solution filtered and duly evaporated, in order to obtain the salt in crystals. But Mr. Phillips states that, when bisulpliate of po- tassa is dissolved in water, and the solution is allowed to crystallize, some sulphate and much sesquisulphate are obtained instead of bisulphate, owing to the water retaining a part of the excess of acid in solution. This result is prevented by the sulphuric acid directed to be added, and, consequently, the real bisulphate is obtained in crystals. In the Dublin pro- cess, sulphate of potassa is mixed with more sulphuric acid than is necessary to convert it into bisulphate, and the mixture is exposed to a liquefying heat, which is continued so long as acid vapours are given off. The portion of acid, more than sufficient to form a bisulphate, is thus driven off; so that the saline matter left is the salt under consideration, which, after concreting, is reduced to fine powder. Properties, a I lu imintica, PART III. Cabbage-tree Baric.—Cahinca that the workmen engaged in sawing it are apt to be affected with inflammation of the eyes, constriction of the throat, excessive thirst, a bitter, burning taste, a troublesome itching over the body, and sometimes eruptions on the skin. By treating a concentrated decoction of the wood with hydrate of lime, filtering after 48 hours, evaporating to the consistence of syrup, and exhausting the residue with alcohol, Peckolt obtained a yel- lowish-brown colouring matter which he called andirm. and which may prove serviceable in painting. He also obtained a peculiar resin by treating the wood with alcohol, filtering, distilling off most of the alcohol, and then precipitating by water. The resin is inodorous, of a bitter, acrid taste, soluble in alcohol, and but partially soluble in ether. This resin, and peculiarly the portion soluble in ether, is the ingredient which gives its irritating properties to the sawdust. (Chern. Cent. Blatt, Nov. 17, 1858, p. 813.) On the continent of Europe, the bark of Andira retusa (Geoffrova Surinamensis), which > grows in Surinam, has also been used. It is considered more powerfully vermifuge, and v less liable to produce injurious effects. It has a grayish epidermis, beneath which it is reddish-brown, laminated, compact, and very tenacious, and, when cut transversely, ex- hibits a shining and variegated surface. In the dried state it is inodorous, but has an austere bitter taste. The powder is of a pale-cinnamon colour. - Cabbage-tree bark is cathartic, and, in large doses, apt to occasion vomiting, fever, and delirium. It is said that these effects are more liable to result if cold water is drunk during its operation, and are relieved by the use of warm water, castor oil, or a vegetable acid. In the West Indies it is esteemed a powerful vermifuge, and is much employed for expel- ling lumbrici; but it is dangerous if incautiously administered, and instances of death from its use have occurred. It is almost unknown in this country, and does not enter into our officinal catalogues. The usual form of administration is that of decoction, though the medicine is also given in powder, syrup, and extract. The dose of the powdep is from a scruple to half a drachm, of the extract three grains, of the decoction two fluidounces. W. CAHINCA. This medicine attracted at one time considerable attention. The name of cahinca or cainca'was adopted from the language of the Brazilian Indians. The Portuguese of Brazil call the medicine raiz pretta or black root. When first noticed in Europe, it was supposed to be derived from the Chiococca racemosa of Linnaeus, which was known to bota- nists as an inhabitant of the West Indies. Kit Martius, in his “Specimen Materise Medico) Brasiliensis,” describes two other species of Chiococca, C. angmfuga and C. densifolia, which afford roots having the properties of the root ascribed to C. racemosa; and, as"tlie*medicine was brought from Brazil, there seemed to be good reason for referring it to one or both of the plants named by that botanist. A. Richard, however, received from Brazil specimens of C. racemosa as the cahinca plant. A specimen brought into this market consisted of cylindrical pieces, varying in size from the thickness of a straw to that of the little finger, somewhat bent or contorted, slightly wrinkled longitudinally, with occasional small asperities, internally ligneous, ex- ternally covered with a thin, brittle, reddish-brown bark, having a light-brown or brown- ish ash-coloured epidermis. The cortical portion, which was of a resinous character, had a bitter disagreeable taste, somewhat acrid and astringent; the ligneous part was quite tasteless. The virtues of the root reside almost exclusively in its bark. They are extracted by water and alcohol. Cahinca has been analyzed by several chemists. Four distinct principles were discovered in it by Pelletier and Caventou:—1. a crystallizable bitter substance, believed to be the active principle, and called cahincic acid; 2. a green fatty matter of a nauseous odour; 3. a yellow colouring matter; analT a coloured viscid sub- stance. Rochleder and Hlasiwetz found also caffeotannic acid. By these chemists a tinc- ture, obtained by boiling the bark in alcohol, was precipitated first with a spirituous solu- tion of acetate of lead, and afterwards, having been previously filtered, with the tribasic acetate of lead. The first precipitate consisted chiefly of caffeotannate and a portion of cahincate of lead, the second of cahincate of lead exclusively. To obtain the caffeotannic acid separate, the first precipitate was treated with sulphuretted hydrogen, and afterwards with neutral acetate of lead, and in like manner several times, until at length a pure caffeotannate of lead remained, which, on decomposition, yielded an acid identical with the tannic acid of coffee. The cahincic acid was obtained by treating the second precipi- tate with sulphuretted hydrogen, and concentrating the resulting liquid. The chemists iast mentioned gave as its formula C16II13Or (Chem. Gaz , ix. 121.) Cahincic acid is white, without smell, of a taste at first scarcely perceptible, but afterwards extremely bitter and slightly astringent, of difficult solubility in water, but readily soluble in alcohol, perma- nent in the air, and unaltered at 212°. It reddens vegetable blues, and unites with the alkalies, but does not form crystallizable salts. It is thought to exist in the root as sub- cahincate.of lime. Medical Properties. Cahinca is tonic, diuretic, purgative, and emetic. In moderate doses it gently excites the circulation, increases the discharge of urine, and produces evacua- tions from the bowels; but is rather slow in its operation. It may be made to act also as a diaphoretic, by keeping the skin warm, using warm drinks, and counteracting its purga- Cahinca.—Calabar Bean. PART III. live tea leni;r'. In some patients it occasions nausea and griping, and in very large doses always acts powerfully both as an emetic and cathartic. In Brazil it has long been used by the natives as a remedy for the bites of serpents; and its Indian name is said to have been deiived from this property. According to Martius, the bark of the fresh root is rubbed with water till the latter becomes charged with all its active matters; and the liquid, while yet turbid, is taken in such quantities as to produce the most violent vomiting and purging, preceded by severe spasmodic pains. Patrick Brown speaks of the root of C. racemosa as very useful in obstinate rheumatisms. But the virtues of cahinca in dropsy, though well known in Brazil, were first made known to the European public in the year 1826, by M. Langsdorf, Russian Consul at Rio Janeiro. Achille Richard afterwards published a few observations in relation to it in the Journal de Chimie Medicale; and its properties were subse- quently investigated by numerous practitioners. M. Framjois, of Paris, contributed more than any other physician to its reputation. It wras .considered by him superior to all other remedies in dropsy. But general experience has not confirmed the partial estimate of Dr. Francois; and, having been found at least equally uncertain with other diuretics, the medicine is now little used. It was employed in substance, decoction, extract, and tinc- ture. The powdered bark of the root was given as a diuretic and purgative, in a dose varying from a scruple to a drachm; but the aqueous or spirituous extract was preferred. The dose of either of these is from ten to twenty grains. Dr. Francois recommended that, in the treatment of dropsy, a sufficient quantity should be given at once to produce a de- cided impression, which should afterwards be maintained by smaller doses, repeated three or four times a day. W. CALABAR BEAN. Ordeal Bean of Calabar. It has been long known that certain poison- ous substances were used as an ordeal, to determine the guilt or innocence of accused in- dividuals, Among the Negroes of Western Africa. One of these, called the ordeal bean of ' Calabar, from the region where it is used, was brought to the notice of the scientific public by Dr. Daniell, in a paper read before the Ethnological Society of Edinburgh in 1846. Considerable attention was attracted to the subject; and specimens of the bean were ob- tained by Dr. Cliristison from the Gold Coast. These were planted in the Botanical Garden at Edinburgh, and produced a plant, Avhich proved to be a perennial creeper, belonging to the natural family Leguminosse; but at the date of the publication of the last edition of this work, early in 1858, the precise botanical position of the plant had not been determined. In the year 1859, specimens of the plant wrere sent from Calabar, which came under the observa- tion of Dr. Balfour, of Edinburgh, who was thus enabled to ascertain its botanical character. He communicated the results of his examination to the Royal Society of Edinburgh; and his paper is published, with a particular description of the plant, in its Transactions (vol. xxii. p. 805). Having found that the plant belonged to a yet undescribed genus, he estab- lished a new one with the title of Pfiysostigma, suggested by a peculiar inflation of the stigma; and designated the species as venenosum, from the notorious qualities of the fruit. The P/a/sp- stigma venenosum is a climbing plant with a ligneous stem, mounting on trees and shrubs, and frequenlThg especially the banks of streams, into which it often drops its fruit when ripe; and it is said that the people of Calabar obtain their supply principally from the borders of the river down which the fruits are carried. A description of the plant, taken from that by Dr. Balfour in the Philosophical Transactions, may be seen in the Edinburgh Medical Jour- nal (July, 1863). In the same journal (p. 36) is an essay by Dr. Thos. R. Fraser, containing a summary of what was known on the subject of the bean up to that date, with a particular description of the bean, and an account of experiments made with it on animals. The plant is the only known species of the genus. The seed is about the size of a large horse-bean, being somewhat mbre than an inch in length by three-fourths of an inch in breadth, with a very firm, hard, brittle, shining integument of a brownish-red, pale-chocolate, or ash-gray colour. The shape is irregularly kidney-form, with a longer convex and a shorter concave edge, two flat sides, and a furrow running longitudinally along its convex margin, and ending in an aperture near one of the extremities of the seed. Within the shell is a kernel consisting of two cotyledons, weighing on an average about 46 grains, hard, white, and pulverizable, of a taste like that of the ordinary edible leguminous seeds, without bitter- ness, acrimony, or aromatic flavour. The bean yields its virtues to alcohol, and imper- fectly to water. Jobst and Hesse are said to have succeeded in isolating the active princi- ple, which they found exclusively in the cotyledons. They obtained it by exhausting an alcoholic extract of the seeds with water, adding magnesia to neutralization, which is indi- cated by the liquid becoming brown, then concentrating, and treating with ether. The ethereal'solution is shaken with a little weak sulphuric acid. The liquid separates into two layers; the upper, ethereal, containing no alkaloid, and the lower, a solution of the sul- phate in water. The latter is separated, treated with magnesia, and afterwards with ether, which yields the alkaloid on evaporation. The substance thus obtained they propose to name physosligmm. It is brown, amorphous, soluble in ammonia, soda, ether, benzole, and alcohol, anertess so in cold water. Its watery solution has an alkaline reaction, and form* part ill. Calabar Bean. 1481 Balts with the acids. Iodide of potassium precipitates it of a dark-brown colour. Melted with potassa it yields alkaline vapours. (Journ. de Pharrn., Mars, 1864, p. 277.) The bean is the only part known to possess medicinal properties. The shell is not withou. Borne influence on the animal system, as shown by experiments upon rabbits made by Dr- Fraser, who found it to purge, increase the flow of urine, and produce temporary paralysis of the extremities, but without loss of conrciousness; and, though a quantity of extract equivalent to a drachm of the shell was it did not cause death. The kernel, how- ever, is by far the most active part, as a rabbit was killed by five and a half grains of it. The most prominent effects of this part of the bean were obviously on the spinal marrow, and, as believed by Dr. Fraser, of a depressing character. They were paralysis, loss of reflex action, contraction of the pupil, occasionally evacuation of the bowels, with reten- tion of consciousness until all power of expression ceased. Immediately after death the pupils dilated. No changes of structure were discoverable which could explain the pheno- mena. The brain and spinal "marrow were apparently normal, and the heart full of blood. Similar effects were produced by topical application. The function of the part was sus* pended. The cardiac action and the vermicular movements of the bowels ceased by con- tact with the poison; and a little of it applied to the eye, produced contraction of the pupil of that eye, but not of both. The general conclusions of Dr. Fraser were, that the kernel has a depressing action on the spinal cord, causing death by paralysis in some instances of the respiratory muscles, in others of the heart. One of the most interesting results of his experiments appears to be, that the integument of the seed, though possessing in a slight degree the powers of the kernel over the nervous system, differs from it in being actively cathartic. In reference to the effects of the medicine upon the human system, precise results have not been obtained. It was known that the beans used by the natives as an ordeal, when given in a certain quantity, generally proved fatal, and the individual only escaped when they provoked vomiting, which was rare. A draught containing 19 seeds pounded and in- fused in water killed a man in an hour. It would be a subject of interesting inquiry, whe- ther the integuments might not, in certain quantities, act energetically as an emetic as well as cathartic; and whether the escape of the accused person, in some instances, might not be owing to the accidental or contrived exhibition of a larger than ordinary proportion of this part of the seeds. Dr. Christison took about 12 grains of the kernel, which in 15 mi- nutes produced giddiness and a feeling of torpidity, followed by great weakness and faint- ness, paleness of the surface, extreme weakness and irregularity of the pulse, and indispo- sition or inability to make voluntary muscular effort. There was no pain or other uneasiness, except the feeling of prostration and some nausea, and the intellect was normal. In two hours after the poison was swallowed, drowsiness occurred, but no stupor. Dr. Fraser experienced from smaller doses effects of a similar character, with temporary dimness of vision. The heart appears to be somewhat variously affected, sometimes acting irregularly or tumult- uously, and sometimes less frequently. A peculiar epigastric sensation is generally expe- rienced as the first symptom, about five minutes after the taking of the medicine, gradually increasing, and becoming at length almost painful. This continues at intervals for a con- siderable time, is after a little while attended with some dyspnoea; and then dizziness and feebleness of the extremities are experienced. The most interesting effect of the calabar bean, so far as its practical application is con- cerned, is that of contracting the pupil: an effect resulting whether from its internal or local use. It is most conveniently obtained by introducing a drop of watery solution of the alcoholic extract into the eye. Only the eye operated on is in this case affected. It is highly probable that the effect is produced by a debilitating or paralyzing influence on the spinal centres, whereby the action of the expanding fibres is suspended, and the-con- tractile influence from the cerebral centres is left unimpeded. Another effect on the eye, more recently noticed, is the contraction of the ciliary muscle, which regulates the accom- modating power of the organ. Credit is especially due to Dr. D. A. Robertson, of Edinburgh, for calling attention to this influence of the calabar bean. {Ed. Med Journ., March, 1868, p 815.) By this influence on the accommodation of the eye, distant objects become indistinct, are apparently magnified, and seem nearer; and Dr. Robertson noticed that this effect was produced sooner and ceased sooner than that upon the pupil. The eye in its normal state thus becomes near-sighted under the influence of the bean. In both these respects there is a strong contrast between the actions of the calabar bean and belladonna; one being exactly antagonistic of the other; as belladonna produces dilatation of the pupil, probably by re- laxing the contractile power from the cerebral centres, and at the same time relaxes the ciliary muscles. It does not follow that the operation of the bean is positively stimulant any more upon the ciliary muscles than upon the contractile muscles of the iris. It may in both cases be considered as diminishing or paralyzing a power which in the normal state balances the stimulant influence of the brain. The practical application of these properties of the calabar bean is obvious; and it is now considerably used whenever the indication is pre- sented either for producing contraction of the pupil, or increasing the power of accommo- Jaticn of the eye to distances. Calabar Bean.—Calamina. PART IIL In regard to the general therapeutic application of the calabar bean less has been deci- dedly determined. But it would seem to be indicated, if the above view's of its mode of action are correct, in all cases of abnormal excitement or irritation of the spinal marrow, espe-' cia.ly in tetanus and the poisonous effects of strychnia. The bean may be used in the form of tincture or alcoholic extract. The dose of the kernel would be vwo or three grains, to begin with, and increased if necessary. But it is seldom used in this way. A strong tincture may be made by percolation with alcohol, in which five minims shall represent three grains of the bean, and a tincture of this strength is recom- mended by Dr. Fraser. The same writer obtained about 4 per cent, of extract by exhausting the kernel with alcohol. The dose, therefore, of alcoholic extract should not exceed one- twenty-fourth of that of the kernel, or one-eighth of a grain. For application to the eye Dr. Robertson employed an alcoholic extract mixed with wafer so as to make liquid preparations of different strengths, one minim representing half a grain, two grains, or four grains. He found these begin to affect the power of accommodation in 10 minutes, and to produce the full effect in 20 or 30 minutes. They were also wholly unir- ritating to the eye. But they did not keep well, and he afterwards abandoned them for pre- parations made by suspending the extract in simple syrup. But it W'Ottld seem best to keep the extract perfectly dry and mix it with a little water when wanted. This extract dissolves freely in glycerin; and a solution of two and a half grains in 100 minims of that liquid per- fectly pure has been found to answer in practice. (Pharm. Joum., July, 1863, p. 26.) An- other method of application is to impregnate paper by immersing it three or four times in a concentrated tincture of the bean, allowing it to dry after each immersion, and placing within the lower lid a piece of the paper thus prepared, about one-eighth of an inch square. W. CALAMINA. Calamine. Lapis Calaminaris. Calamine is introduced into this part of the Dispensatory, because dismissed from the Pharmacopoeias. The term calamine is applied by mineralogists indiscriminately to two minerals, scarcely distinguishable by their ex- ternal characters, the carbonate and silicate of zinc. The term, however, in the pharmaceu- tical sense refers to the native carbonate only. The silicate is sometimes called electric cala- mine. Calamine is found in the United States, but more abundantly in Germany and England. It usually occurs in compact or earthy masses, or concretions, of a dull appearance, readily scratched by the knife, and breaking with an earthy fracture; but sometimes it is found crystallized. Its colour is very variable; being, in different specimens, grayish, grayish- yellow, reddish-yellow, and, when very impure, brown or brownish-yellow. Its sp. gr. varies from 3-4 to 4-4. Before the blowpipe it does not melt, but becomes yellow and sublimes. When of good quality, it is almost entirely soluble in the dilute mineral acids; and, unless it has been previously calcined, emits a few bubbles of carbonic acid. If soluble in sulphuric acid, it can contain but little carbonate of lime, and no sulphate of baryta. Ammonia, added to the sulphuric solution, throws down the oxide of zinc, mixed with the subsulphate, and takes it up again when added in excess. If copper be present, the ammonia will give rise to a blue colour; if iron, the alkali will throw down the sesquioxide, not soluble in an excess of the precipitant. The officinal calamine is distinguished from the electric calamine, which is a silicate of zinc, by dissolving in warm nitric acid without gelatinizing, and by not being rendered electric by heat. Impurities. According to Mr. Robert Brett, calamine, as sold in the English shops, is fre- quently a spurious mixture containing only traces of zinc. He analyzed six specimens, and found them to contain from 78 to 87-5 per cent, of sulphate of baryta, the rest consisting of sesquioxide of iron, carbonate of lime, sulphate (sulphuret) of lead, and mere traces of zinc. When acted on by muriatic acid, the spurious calamine, in powder, evolved sulphuretted hydr'ogen, and was only in small part dissolved, the great bulk of it remaining behind as sulphate of baryta. (Amer. Journ. of Pharm., ix. 173.) The results of Mr. Brett have been confirmed by Dr. R. D. Thomson, Mr. D. Murdock, and Mr. E. Moore. Dr. Thomson thinks the spurious calamine is made of sulphate of baryta and chalk, coloured with Armenian bole. The late Mr. Jacob Bell, of London, held the more probable opinion that it is the native sul- phate of baryta, deriving its colour from iron, which is a mineral having some resemblance to calamine. Mr. Midgley, indeed, states that the miners in England distinguish two cala- mines, brass calamine, which is sold to the makers of brass, atid baryta calamine. W'hich is really the native amorphous sulphate of baryta, and which is furnisEecTtothe druggists in the place of the genuine native carbonate of zinc. Even the genuine calamine of the shops is impure, usually containing iron and copper, and various earthy matters'. That which has been calcined, to render it more readily pulverized, contains little or no carbonic acid. In view of these facts, the revisers of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850 deemed it proper to in- troduce, as a new officinal, the pure carbouate of zinc, obtained by precipitation. (See Zinci Carbonas Prsecipitata.) The crystallized variety is anhydrous, and consists of one eq. ot carbonic acid 22, and one of protoxide of zinc 40-3 = 62-3. The compact and earth}' varie- ties are said to contain one eq of water. Prepared Calamine. Calamina Prseparata. Calamine must be impalpable before being L”«ed, PART III. Calendula Officinalis.—Canary Seed. 1483 iii medicine. In this state it forms prepared calamine, which, though but recently an officinal preparation, has shared the fate of its original, and been discarded from the Pharmaco- poeias. The following is the U. S. formula of 1850. “Take of Calamine a convenient quantity. Heat it to redness, and afterwards pulverize it; then reduce it to a very fine powder in the manner directed for Prepared Chalk.” ( U.S.) The object of this process is to bring the native carbonate of zinc, or calamine, to the state of an impalpable powder. It is first calcined, to render it more readily pulverizable, and then levigated and elutriated. During the calcina- tion, water and more or less carbonic acid are driven off; so that little else remains than the oxide of zinc, and the earthy impurities originally existing in the mineral. Calamine, as sold in England, is almost always spurious, consisting wholly or principally of native sulphate of baryta, coloured with sesquioxide of iron. The same remark applies to the calamine in the shops of the United States. Of six samples analyzed by Mr. E. Bringhurst, of Wilmington, Del., five were totally devoid of zinc, and the sixth contained only 2 per cent, of the oxide. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1857.) Prepared calamine is in the form of a pinkish or flesh-coloured powder, of an earthy appearance. Sometimes it is made up into small masses. It is used only as an external application, being employed as a mild astringent and exsiccant in excoriations and superficial ulcerations. For this purpose it is usually dusted on the part, and hence the necessity for its being in very fine powder. It is often employed in the form of cerate. (See Ceratum Calaminx, page 1044.) The evi- dence being conclusive that the powder almost universally sold as prepared calamine is a spurious article, consisting chiefly of sulphate of baryta, whatever therapeutic effects it may have exerted, must be attributed to that salt. B. CALENDULA OFFICINALIS. Marygold. This well-known garden plant was formerly much employed in medicine. It has a peculiar, rather disagreeable odour, which is lost by drying, and a bitter, rough, saline taste. Among its constituents is a peculiar principle, called calendulin, discovered by Geiger most abundantly in the flowers, and considered by Berzelius as analogous to bassorin, though soluble in alcohol. The plant was thought anti- spasmodic, sudorific, deobstruent, and emmenagogue, and was given in low forms of fever, scrofula, jaundice, amenorrtcea, &c. Both the leaves and flowers were used; but the latter were preferred, and were usually administered in the recent state, in the form of tea. An extract was also prepared, and employed in cancerous and other ulcers, sick stomach, &c. At present marygold is very seldom if ever used in regular practice. W. CALLITRICHE VERNA. (Gray's Manual, p. 384.) Water Starwort. This is a small, herbaceous, indigenous water plant, growing in shallow streams, ditches, or ponds, with a long stem under water, and leaves floating on the surface. This and several other species of the same genus are supposed to have diuretic properties, and are given in decoction in dropsical affections and complaints of the urinary organs. W. CALOTROPIS GIGANTEA. Brown. Asclepias gigantea. Linn. Under the name of madar or mudar, a medicine has been employed in the East Indies, with great asserted advantage. It is the bark of the root of a species of Calotropis, generally considered as 0. gigantea, but asserted by Dr. Casanova to be a distinct species, and named by him C. Madarii Indico- orientalis. C. gigantea is a native of Hindostan, and has been introduced into the West Indies, where it is now naturalized. The bark, as employed, is without epidermis, of a whitish colour, nearly or quite inodorous, and of a bitter somewhat nauseous taste. It ap- pears to have the general properties of many other acrid medicines; in small doses, in- creasing the secretions, and in larger, producing nausea and vomiting. According to Dr. Casanova, who published an essay upon the subject at Calcutta, it is especially directed to the skin, the capillaries and absorbents of which it stimulates to increased action. It is chiefly recommended as a remedy in the obstinate cutaneous diseases of tropical climates, such as elephantiasis and leprosy. It has been employed also in syphilis, dropsy, rheu- matism, and hectic fever. It is given in substance in the dose of from three to twelve grains, three times a day, and gradually increased till it affects the system. The plant has of late years been applied to various economical purposes in India, independently of iis medical use. The most important of these is the manufacture of cords, ropes, &c. from the fibres of its branches, which are said to possess many of the properties of flax, and to be applicable to the making of cloth. (Cliem. News, No. Ib7, p. 76.) W. CAM WOOD. A red dye-wood, procured from the Baphia nitida of De Candolle, a legu- vunous tree, growing on the Western Coast of Africa. The wood is usually kept in the suops in the ground state. It yields its colouring matter scarcely at all to cold water, slightly to boiling water, and readily to alcohol and alkaline solutions. This colouring matter is thought to be identical with santalin. W. CANARY SEED. The seeds of Phalaris Canariensis, an annual plant belonging to the grasses, originally from the Canary- Islands,TmfTnow growing wild in Europe and the United States, and cultivated in many places. The seeds are ovate, somewhat compressed, about two lines long, shining, and of a light yellowish-gray colour externally, and brown- ish within. Their chief constituent is starch. They were formerly esteemed medicinal, but 1484 Caoutchouc. PART III. are new used on*/ for emollient cataplasms. They are nutritive, and their meal is said to be mixed, in some places, with wheat flour, and made into bread. They are used is food for Canary birds. W. CAOUTCHOUC. Gum Elastic. Indian Rubber. Many lactescent plants belonging to the natural orders Artocarpesc, Apocynacese, and Euphorbia cese, and growing in hot countries, yield products analogous to caoutchouc; but, as found in general commerce, this substance is the concrete juice of different species of Siphonia, especially the Siphonia Cahuchu of Schreber and Willdenow, identical with Siphonia elastica of Persoon, the Jatropha elastica of the younger Linnaeus, and the Uevea Guianensis of Aublet. This is a large tree, grow- ing in Brazil, Guiana, and probably also in Central America (Journ. of Phil. Col. of Pharm., iii. 292); but the product is brought chiefly from the port of Para, in Brazil. On being wounded, the tree emits a milky juice, which concretes on exposure, and constitutes the substance in question. Caoutchouc comes to us in large flat pieces, or moulded into various shapes. The latter are formed by applying successive layers of the juice upon moulds of clay, which are broken and removed when the coating has attained a sufficient thickness and consistence. In the drying of these layers, they are exposed to smoke, which gives to the concrete mass a blackish colour. The juice, when it concretes by exposure to the air, assumes on the outer surface a yellowish-brown colour, while the mass remains white or yellowish-white within. It is said that a little alum facilitates the coagulation, while ammonia retards it; so that a little of the latter may be advantageously added, when it is desired to keep the milky juice in the liquid state. (B. Spruce, Pharm. Journ., xv. 1 18.) The recent juice contains, according to Faraday, 1-9 per cent, of vegetable albumen, traces of wax, 7-13 per cent, of a bitter azotized substance soluble in water and alcohol, 2-9 of a substance soluble in water but insoluble in alcohol, 56-37 of water with a little free acid, and only 31-7 of the pure elastic principle to which chemists have given the name of caout- chouc. Besides these principles the concrete juice, as it reaches us, generally contains soot derived from the smoke used in drying it. Pure caoutchouc is nearly colourless, and in thin layers transparent. It is highly elastic, lighter than water, without taste and smell, fusible at about 248°, remaining unctuous and adhesive upon cooling, inflammable at a higher temperature, insoluble in water, alcohol, the weak acids, and alkaline solutions, soluble in ether when entirely freed from alcohol, soluble also in chloroform and most of the fixed and volatile oils, though, in the latter, at the expense of its elasticity. It is said, however, that the oils of lavender and sassafras dissolve it without change, and that, when precipi- tated by alcohol from its solution in cajeput oil, it is still elastic. But its best solvents, for practical purposes, are coal-naphtha or benzine, the empyreumatic oil obtained by dis- tilling caoutchouc itself, and pure oil of turpentine. According to Dr. Bolley, the best method of effecting its solution, for the preparation of a varnish, is first to digest it, cut in small pieces, in bisulphuret of carbon, which converts it into a jelly, and then to treat this jelly with benzine. A larger proportion is thus taken up than by any other method. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1862, p. 414.) Caoutchouc is not affected by atmospheric air, chlorine, muriatic or sulphurous acid gas, or ammonia. It consists, according to Faraday, of 87-2 parts of carbon, and 12-8 of hydrogen. By the action of sulphur caoutchouc acquires properties which greatly increase its value in the arts. It becomes of a black colour and horny consistence, preserves its elasticity uAder the influence both of heat and cold, is compressible with great difficulty, and resists the ordinary solvents, such as petroleum and oil of turpentine. In this state it is said to be vulcanized. The discovery of the process of vulcanization is ascribed to Mr. Charles Good- year, of New York. (Chem. Gaz., x. 193.) It consists in submitting caoutchouc in thin sheets to the action of a mixture, composed of 40 parts of bisulphuret of carbon and 1 of chloride of sulphur. For fuller details the reader is referred to the Journ. de Pharm. (3e ser., xvii. 205). But the same object may be effected in other methods. When thin layers of caoutchouc are immersed for two or three hours in melted sulphur at the heat of 240° F., they are penetrated by the sulphur, but undergo no change of properties. If now heated in an inert, medium to a temperature of from 275° to 320°, a chemical reaction takes place, and the vulcanized product is obtained. The same result takes place if the caout- chouc be first pounded with from 12 to 20 per cent, of finely powdered sulphur, and then heated to the temperature requisite for vulcanization. In either case a portion of uncom- bined sulphur remains mechanically mixed with the vulcanized caoutchouc, from which it may be separated by various solvents, such as solutions of caustic soda or potassa, bisul- phuret of carbon, oil of turpentine, anhydrous ether, &c. The dcsulphurated product thus obtained, while exempt from the disadvantages arising from the reaction of free sulphur, is more porous than before. (Ibid., xxi. 366.) Caoutchouc is used for erasing pencil marks; in the formation of flexible tubes for the laboratory, and of catheters, bougies, pessaries, dilaters, and other instruments for sur- gical purposes; in the melted state, as a luting to the joints of chemical apparatus; in the shape of thin layers, for covering the mouths of bottles, and for other purposes in which the exclusion of air and moisture is requisite; in the manufacture of water-proof cloth; PART III. Capparis Spinosa.—Caramania Gum. 1485 as a Tarnish, and for numerous other purposes, to which its elasticity, and the resistance which it offers to the ordinary solvents, and to other powerful chemical agents, peculiarly adapt it. It may be brought to the state of thin layers, by softening the small flasks of it in ether containing alcohol, or boiling them in water for fifteen minutes, and then dis tending them by means of air forced into them; and the same end may be attained by spreading its naphtha or ethereal solution upon a smooth surface, and allowing the solvent to evaporate. Tubes of caoutchouc may be made from its solution, or from the juice im- ported in the liquid state. A court-plaster prepared with caoutchouc has been considerably used, and from its impermeability by moisture is sometimes valuable. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xv. 38.) A convenient sticking plaster may be prepared by spreading the liquid caoutchouc, by a stiff brush, upon calico, soft leather, or thin sheets of vulcanized Indian rubber as found in the shops. Small thin pieces of caoutchouc may be very advantageously employed to suppress hemorrhage from leech-bites, &c., by first softening one surface of the piece by a taper, and when cool applying it firmly over the bleeding point. The cavity of a decayed tooth may be lined with caoutchouc, so as to prevent the access of air, and thus relieve pain, by fastening a piece firmly around the end of a rod, liquefying the surface by heat, then introducing it with pressure into the cavity, and again withdrawing it. The milky juice obtained from the plant, and prevented from coagulating in the bottle by a little solution of ammonia, has been recommended as a local application in cutaneous eruptions, burns, erysipelas, &c., in which it proves useful by concreting, and forming an elastic covering, impermeable to moisture and the. air. A solution of caoutchouc in chlo- roform is used for the same purpose; the menstruum evaporating quickly, and leaving a thin layer of the elastic substance on the surface. Caotitchouc has been given internally in phthisis, in the dose of one or two grains, gradually increased. W. CAPPARIS SPINOSA. Caper-bush. A low, trailing shrub, growing in the south of Eu- rope and north of Africa. The buds or unexpanded flowers, treated with salt and vinegar, form a highly esteemed pickle, which has an acid, burning taste, and is considered useful in scurvy. The dried bark of the root was formerly officinal. It is in pieces partially or wholly quilled, about one-third of an inch in mean diameter, transversely wrinkled, grayish externally, whitish within, inodorous, and of a bitterish, somewhat acrid, and aromatic taste. It is considered diuretic, and was formerly employed in obstructions of the liver and spleen, amenorrlioea, and chronic rheumatism. W. CARAMANIA GUM. Under this name a large quantity of a peculiar product was a short time since brought into this market for sale, a specimen of which, kindly sent us by Mr. B. R. Smith, we have had the opportunity of examining. No history of its origin came with it, but, judging from its name and character, we have little doubt that it is identical with the Caramania gum, noticed under the head of tragacanth, as one of the substances used in the adulteration of that drug. It is in pieces differing in size from that of a small pea to that of a Spanish chestnut, of various shapes, sometimes irregularly spherical, some- times elongated, often bent or somewhat contorted, occasionally appearing as if several smaller pieces had adhered longitudinally, smootliish on the surface, generally pale, but in some pieces brown, and in most of a faint reddish hue, and translucent in all. The gum is very hard yet brittle, without smell, nearly tasteless, and very gradually softening when held in the mouth. At our request, Professor Procter subjected a portion to examination, and found it, when macerated in cold water, gradually to swell up like tragacanth. and like it, to give up a part of its substance to water, but less than tragacanth. After four or five days it ceased to swell, and the bulky hydrated masses formed appeared like clouded calf’s-feet jelly, and with little cohesiveness, in this respect resembling Bassora gum. The dissolved portion was mucilaginous but not thick. It was precipitated by subacetate of lead, but less decidedly than arabin. Oxalate of ammonia caused a -white precipitate, indi- cating the presence of lime. It was not coagulated by borax or sesquichloride of iron, nor was it precipitated by alcohol in flakes like arabin. The undissolved portion, boiled with diluted sulphuric acid, was broken down, assuming a syrupy consistence, and yielded to Trommer’s test evidence of the presence of glucose, which must have been formed under the influence of the acid, as the first watery solution contained none. Prof. Procter failed to find any signs of lead on the surface, so that the statement made by Mr. Maitass in re- lation to the Caramania gum used to adulterate tragacanth is not applicable to this But there was no reason to expect it, as this was offered in the market under its own and not a false name. It is very obviously the concrete exuded juice of a tree, but the particular plant which yields it is unknown. So far as examined it corresponds to a considerable extent with Bassora gum; and as it probably comes from Caramania, a province in the eastern part of Asia Minor, it is not impossible that the two are of the same origin, the Bassora gum being carried down to the Persian Gulf.* W. * After the article upon Caramania gum had been sent to the press, a specimen was shown us, labeled false tra gacanth, which had been kept for many years in a materia medica cabinet, and had probably been separated from a parcel of adulterated tragacantli. and which so closely resembled the gum described in the text, that we have nc doubt of their identity in character and origin. Accoiding to Mr. Maitass, Caramania gum is used in the adultera tion of tragacuuth to the extent, in different varieties, of from 25 to 100 per cent. {Pharm. Journ., xv. 20.) Caranna.—Carlolic Acid. PART III. CAE ANNA. Gum Caranna. A resinous substance, in pieces of a blackish-gray colour ex- ternally, dark-brown internally, somewhat shining and translucent, brittle and pulveriza- ble when dry, but, in the recent state, soft and adhesive like pitch, easily fusible, of an agreeable balsamic odour when heated, and of a bitterish resinous taste. (Geiger.) It is 6aid to be derived from the Amyris Caranna of Humboldt, a tree growing in Mexico and South America. Geiger refers TtaTsoTcTSMraerg aummiferji of the West India Islands; but the resin obtained from this tree is described by the French writers under the name of resine de Gornart, or resine de chibou, or cachibou, and is said to bear a close resemblance to the resin tacamahac. W. CARBAZOTIC ACID. Picric Acid. Niiropicric Acid. This acid is obtained by the action of nitric acid on indigo, silk, and other substances. It may be cheaply prepared from coal tar creasote (impure phenylic acid), or from Australian gum. It is in pale-yellow shining scales, soluble in water, to which it gives a strong yellow colour and very bitter taste. Its salts crystallize readily, and explode when heated. The potassa salt is so sparingly soluble, that an alcoholic solution of the acid may be used as a test for this alkali. Its for- mula is C12(H,3N04)0 -f- HO; being phenylic acid, with three eqs. of hydrogen replaced by three of hyponitric acid. From the therapeutic trials, made with carbazotic acid, it is inferred to be tonic and astrin- gent. In large doses it is poisonous; 10 grains of it having been sufficient to kill a dog in less than two hours. (Taylor on Poisons, p. 793.) It was first used in intermittent fever by Dr. Bell, of Manchester, who thought it might be employed as a cheap substitute for quinia. Its salts are preferred to the free acid, which is apt to cause cramps of the stomach; and those most approved are the carbazotates of ammonia and iron. Dr. T. Moffat cured several cases of cephalalgia by the iron salt, aml ca'ses'of intermitt'OTt-fever and anaemia by the am- monia salt. Mr. Alfred Aspland has given an ample trial to the acid and the salt of ammo- nia, and confirms the statements previously made of their efficacy, having found them espe- cially useful in intermittent fever, and applicable to all cases in which quinia is indicated. (Med. Times and Gaz., Sept. 1862, p. 289.) The dose of either, administered in pills, is from a quarter to half a grain, three times a day. Mr. Aspland began with a grain three times a day, and increased to 4 grains for a dose. A curious effect, of these salts, first observed by Dr. Moffat, is to produce, in many cases, a temporary yellowness of the skin and conjunc- tiva, as in jaundice. The effect is generally induced when about 15 grains of the acid have been taken. The urine also becomes orange-coloured. The colour disappears in two or three weeks after ceasing to use the medicine. Carbazotate of iron may be prepared by digesting pure crystallized carbazotic acid with an excess of recently precipitated sesquioxide of iron and water at a gentle heat, till the acid has disappeared, filtering, and evaporating the filtrate at a temperature not exceeding 212°. Thus prepared it is amorphous, reddish-brown in mass, lighter-coloured in powder, of an astringent and intensely bitter and persistent taste, and readily soluble in water. On account of its bitterness, it is best given in pill. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1863, p. 169.) B. CARBOLIC ACID. Phenic Acid. Phenylic Acid. Phenol. Hydrated Oxide of Phenyl. This substance bears so close a resemblance to creasote, that the two have by some been consid- ered identical; and, though they have been proved to be distinct bodies, yet they are often mixed in commerce, and we have been informed that much of what is sold as creasote is really carbolic acid. This name was given to the substance under consideration by Runge, wh<$ discovered it, in 1834, in the tar of coal. In 1841, it was thoroughly investigated by Laurent, who, considering it as a hydrated oxide of a peculiar compound radical which he named phenyl (Cl2H4), described it under the name of hydrated oxide of phenyl (Cj.JI5,0 -}- HO). Its acid properties having been subsequently recognised, it received the name of phenic acid; but chemists appear disposed, out of justice to its original discoverer, to adhere to the title he gave it of carbolic acid. It exists in that portion of coal tar which distils over between 300° and 400° F. This, when mixed with a hot concentrated solution of hydrate of potassa, is resolved, on the addition of water, into a light oil, and a heavier alkaline liquid. If the latter be separated and neutralized with muriatic acid, carbolic acid will be disengaged in an impure state, and will float on the surface in the form of a light oil. By distilling this from chloride of calcium to separate water, and exposing the distillate to a low temperature, carbolic acid congeals in the form of a colourless crystalline mass disposed to deliquescence, which is to be separated from the accompanying liquid by pressure in bibulous paper. This remains solid at a higher temperature than that required to congeal it; but at 95° it melts, and constitutes the acid in its liquid form. It has been already stated that the congealed acid is disposed to deliquesce. If exposed to the air, it attracts moisture, and rapidly be- comes liquid, and continues in this form at ordinary temperatures. As commonly kept in the shops, carbolic acid is a colourless liquid, of an oily aspect, a peculiar empyreumatic odour recalling that of creasote, yet quite distinct, and an acrid burning taste. Its sp gr. is 1-062, and its boiling point 370°. According to M. Lemaire, it is soluble in 20 parts of water. It is freely dissolved by alcohol; and its solubility in water is much increased by the addition of from 5 to 10 per cent, of alcohol or acetic acid. (Lemaire.) Though neutral PART III. Carbolic Acid.—Carburet of Iron. 1487 to test-paper, it combines feebly with salifiable bases; its salts being decomposed by car- bonic acid, and those with the alkalies having an acid reaction. Heated with ammonia, it yields anilin and water. In antiseptic power, as well as in physiological effects, it has a ciose analogy with creasote; yet is sufficiently distinguished by its greater sp. gt\, its much higher congealing and lower boiling point, and by the result of the action of strong nitric acid, which with carbolic acid produces pure picric or trinitrophenic acid, while with creasote it gives rise to oxalic acid, resinous matter, and but a small proportion of picric acid. (F. Grace Calvert, Lancet, Oct. 31,1863, p. 523 ) Its aqueous solution coagulates albumen, arrests fer- mentation, instantly destroys the lower forms of vegetable and animal life, and in very small proportion prevents mouldiness in vegetable juices, and protects animal substances against putrefaction. In consequence of this property, also, it is believed by M. Lemaire to have the power of destroying miasms, and even of modifying the matter of contagion. Injected into the rectum it destroys the thread-worm, and thus favours its evacuation. Applied in a pure state to the skin it causes sharp pain, lasting for about an hour; a white appearance is pro • duced, consequent on the coagulation of the albumen, and this is followed by intense inflam- mation, with exfoliation of the epidermis, continuing for many days On the mucous sur- face its action is similar. (Lemaire. See Chem. News, No. 192, p. 66, also No. 194, p. 89.) Medical Properties and Uses. Much is due to Prof. F. Crace Calvert, of Manchester, England, for bringing into notice this valuable medicine, which was formerly merely one of the refuse matters in the utilization of coal tar. Not only did he first call attention to it; but he has also taken the trouble to collect accounts of its various practical applications, which he has published in the journals, and of which we give a brief abstract. Its most important use hitherto has been as an external remedy. But it has also been used internally with benefi- cial results. Dr. Henry Browne, of Manchester, has used it advantageously in diarrhoea, and Dr. Roberts has checked vomiting with it, given in the dose of a drop in the form of pill, after creasote had failed. It has been found to give relief in cases of dyspepsia accom- panied with pain in the stomach after meals. Dr. Goddard, of Burslem, has cured a severe case of spasmodic asthma by the acid given with decoction of sarsaparilla. Locally, it may be applied of full strength as a caustic, or variously diluted for different purposes. With reference to its caustic effect, it is peculiarly valuable as affecting only a superficial layer of the surface to which it is applied. Hence it is especially adapted to cases of diphtheritis and malignant angina. It may be used also in anthrax, unhealthy suppuration, and gan- grenous or cancerous ulcers, in which its influence in correcting fetid odours renders it peculiarly useful. In hemorrhoidal affections and fistulas it has also proved efficacious. When required to be diluted, it may be dissolved in glycerin, which takes it up in all pro- portions. Diluted in this way it has been used in lepra with very good effects. To the same affection it may be applied in the form of ointment, made with 4 parts of carbolic acid to 56 of spermaceti. An emulsion of it may be prepared by mixing one part of the acid with 8 parts of sweetened water Containing 17-5 per cent, of sugar. A watery solution, made with one part of the acid to 40 parts of hot water, well shaken and then filtered, may be used as an alterative and disinfectant in all fetid ulcers and abscesses, gangrenous wounds, and cases of caries or necrosis, in which it may be injected through the fistulous openings. In many cutaneous eruptions, as lepra, porrigo, and the advanced stages of eczema and impe- tigo. it has proved efficacious. Should the acid be in the solid state, it may readily be melted by placing the bottle containing it in hot water. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1861, p. 319, and Journ. de Pharm , Mars, 1863, p. 250.) M. Bazin employs, with great success, a solution of 1 part of carbolic acid in 40 parts of acetic acid of 8° B. and 100 of water, against tetter and the itch, in the former applying a compress wet with the solution daily, in the latter using it simply as a lotion. One application is sufficient to destroy the psora insect. Carbolic acid has also been used to prevent putrefaction in organic substances; and, according to M. Le- maire, the corpse of a man can be preserved by less than 50 centimes (75 grains) of the acid. For internal use the dose may be a drop. {Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1861, p. 67.) M. Boboeuf prefers the salts of carbolic acid to the acid itself. He has found the carbolate of soda or potassa, in a solution of from 5° to 10° B , applied by means of compresses to bleed- ing wounds, to suppress the hemorrhage instantly. {Ann. de Therap., 1862, p. 62.) W. CARBONIC OXIDE. Dr. Ozanam has proposed this gas as an anaesthetic; his opinion of its fitness being founded on twenty-five experiments on rabbits, and five on man; but his results show it to be dangerous, on account of the sudden manner in which it sometimes acts, and its supposed advantages are problematical. (See B. and F. Medico-Chir. Rev., Am. ed., July, 1857, p. 176.) B. CARBURET OF IRON. Ferri Carhuretum. Plumbago. Black Lead. This substance has been used both internally and externally in cutaneous affections. For medicinal use it is re- duced to very fine powder, and purified by being boiled in water, and digested with dilute nitromuriatic acid. The dose is from five to fifteen grains or more, three or four times a day, given in the form of powder or pill. The ointment is made by mixing from two to six drachms with an ounce of lard. B. 1488 Cardamine Pratensis.—Caulophyllum Thalictr aides. FART ITT. CARDAMINE PRATENSIS. Cuckoo flower. This is a perennial herbaceous plant, with a simple, smooth, erect stem, about a foot in height. The leaves are pinnate: the radical, composed of roundish irregularly toothed leaflets, those of the stem alternate, with leaflets which become narrower, more entire, and pointed ns they ascend. The flowers are purplish- white or rose-coloured, and terminate the stem in a raceme approaching the character of a corymb. The plant is a native of Europe, and is found in the northern parts of our continent, about Hudson’s Bay. It is a very handsome plant, abounding in moist meadows, which it adorns with its flowers in the months of April and May. The leaves are bitterish, and slightly pungent, resembling in some measure those of water-cresses, and like them sup- posed to be possessed of antiscorbutic properties. In Europe they are sometimes added 10 salads. The flowers have the same taste as the leaves, and, when fresh, a somewhat pungent odour. When dried they become inodorous and nearly insipid. They formerly possessed the reputation of being diuretic, and, since the publication of a paper by Sir George Baker, more than half a century ago, have been occasionally used as an antispasmodic in various nervous diseases, such as chorea and spasmodic asthma, in which they were successfully employed by that physician. They produce, however, little obvious effect upon the system, and are not employed in this country. W. CAllVA. Hickory. Juglans, Linn. Several species of the genus Carya, of Nuttall, sepa- rated by that botanist from the Juglans of Linnaeus, grow within the limits of the United States, of which C. oliueformis bears the pecan-nut of the South-West, C. alba, the fruit so well known by the nam~e~ol~shell- bark, derived probably from the ragged state of the bark of the stem, Ci sulcata, another variety of shell-bark, and C. tomentosa, the common thick- shelled hickory nut. Other indigenous species are C. amara, C. glabra, and C. micrccarpa. The leaves of most if not all of these trees are somewhat aromatic and astringent, and the bark astringent and bitter; and both no doubt possess medical virtues. Attention has re- cently been called to them by Mr. Frederick Stearns, of Detroit, in a paper on the medical plants of Michigan, read before the American Pharmaceutical Association, and published in their Proceedings (1859, p. 249). Mr. Stearns bases his opinion of the probable virtues of these products upon a communication made to him by Mr. Caffinbury, of the same State, who had found great advantage from chewing the inner bark of the hickory in dyspepsia, and has used a tincture made from the same bark with great success in the treatment of intermittent fever. The use of the remedy had extended in his neighbourhood, and many employ it habitually in the same complaint, some of whom very wisely prefer the infusion to the tincture, as it has been found equally effectual. W. CASTANEA. Chinquapin. This held a place in the secondary catalogue of our Pharmaco- poeia, until the late revision, when it was discarded. It is the bark of Castanea pumila, or chinquapin, of our Atlantic States. We present here the short account of it formerly con- tained in the first part of this work. The genus Castanea belongs to Monoecia Polyandria of the Linnrean system, and to the natural order Cupuliferae, wTith the following generic character: —“Male. Ament naked. Calyx nous. Corolla five-petaled. Stamens ten to twenty. Female. Calyx five or six leaved, muricate. Corolla none. Germs three. Stigmas pencil formed. Nuts three, included in the echinated calyx.” (Willd.)—The chinquapin is a shrub or small tree, which, in the Middle States, rarely much exceeds seven or eight feet in height, but, in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Louisiana, sometimes attains an elevation of thirty or forty feet, with a diameter of trunk equal to twelve or fifteen inches. The leaves are oblong, acute, naucro- nately serrate, and distinguished from those of the chestnut, which belongs to the same genus, by their whitish and downy under surface. The barren flowers are grouped upon axillary peduncles, three or four inches long; the fertile aments are similarly disposed, but less conspicuous. The fruit is spherical, covered with short prickles, and encloses a brown nut, which is sweet and edible, but differs from the chestnut in being much smaller, and convex on both sides. The tree extends from the banks of the Delaware southward to the Gulf of Mexico, and south-westward to the Mississippi. It is most abundant in the southern portions of this tract of country. The bark is the part used. It is astringent and tonic, and has been employed in the cure of intermittents. W. CATALPA CORDIFOLIA. Bignonia Catalpa. Linn. Catalpa tree, or Catawba tree. This is a beautiful indigenous flowering tree, occasionally cultivated for ornamental purposes. It is reputed to be poisonous. The seeds have been employed by several practitioners of con- tinental Europe in asthma. M. Automarchi recommends a decoction, made by boiling twelve ounces of water with three or four ounces of the seeds down to six ounces, the whole to bo given morning and night; but, if there be any foundation for the prevalent opinion as to the poisonous character of the tree, this might be a hazardous dose; and it would be ad- visable, in any one who might be disposed to imitate the practice, to begin with much smaller doses, and to increase until the effects of the medicine on the system are ascer- tained. W CAULOPHYLLUM THALICTROIDES. (Michaux.) Leontice ihalictroides. Linn. Blue Co- hosh. Pappoose Root. (Gray's Manual, p. 20.) An indigenous, perennial, herbaceous plant, PART ill. CeanotJius Am eric anus.—Cedron 148iJ with matted, knotty rhizomas, from which rises a single, smooth stem, about two feet high, naked till near the summit, where it sends out a large triternately compound leaf, and end- ing in a small raceme or panicle of greenish-yellow flowers, at the base of which is often a smaller biternate leaf. The whole plant when young, as well as the seeds, which are about as large as peas, is glaucous. It is the only known species of the genus. It is found in most parts of the United States, growing in moist rich woods. The root is the part used. This has a sweetish, pungent taste, and yields its virtues to water and alcohol. It is deemed especially emmenagogue, and is thought also to promote the contractions of the uterus, for which pur- pose, we learn, it is much employed by the “eclectic” practitioners, who consider it also possessed of diaphoretic and various other remedial properties. It is given in decoction, in- fusion, or tincture; the first two being made in the proportion of an ounce to a pint of water, the last of four ounces to a pint of spirit. The dose of the decoction or infusion is one or two fluidounces, of the tincture one or two fluidrachms. W. CEANOTHUS AMERICANUS. New Jersey Tea. Red-root. A small indigenous shrub, growing throughout the United States. The root is astringent, and imparts a red colour to water. It is said to be useful in syphilitic complaints, in which it is given in the form of decoction, made with two drachms of the root to a pint of water. Schoepf states that it is pur- gative. The leaves were used during the revolutionary war as a substitute for tea. Dr. Hub- bard recommends a strong infusion of the dried leaves and seeds, as a local application in aphthous affections of the mouth and fauces, and the sorethroat of scarlatina, and as an internal remedy in dysentery. (Boston Med. and Surg. Journ., Sept. 30, 1835.) B. CEDRON. The seeds of a tree growing in New Granada and Central America, and de- scribed by M. Planchon under the name of Simaba Cedron, in the London Journal of Botany (v. 566), from specimens sent by Mr. Wm. Purdie, curator of the Botanical Garden at Trini- dad, to Sir Wm. J. Hooker. Mr. Purdie had received the first intimation of the value of this medicine from Dr. Cespedes, a physician of Bogota. The first account of it, however, which reached Europe appears to have been that of Dr. Luigi Rotellini, a physician of St. Domingo, who had previously resided in New Granada. It was published in an Italian journal so early as the year 1846. In France it appears to have been made known through M. Jamord, who received information of its effects from M. Herran, Charg6 d’Affaires in France of the Re- public of Costa Rica. The fullest account that we have seen of the plant and its product is from the pen of Sir Wm. J. Hooker. (See Pharm. Journ., Jan. 1851, x. 344.) Simaba Cedron belongs to the natural family of Simarubacese. It is a small tree, with an erect stem, not exceeding six inches in diameter, branching at top in an umbellate form, with large,‘glabrous, pinnate leaves, and pale-brown flowers, in long, branching racemes. The fruit is a large, solitary drupe, containing a single seed. The whole plant appears to be impregnated with a bitter principle, but it is the seed only that is used. A specimen of the dried fruit was kindly sent to the author from Cartago, in Costa Rica, by Dr. Guier, formerly of Philadelphia. It is light, of a yellowish-ash colour, flattish-ovate, with one edge convex and the other nearly straight, the convex outline terminating at each end in an obtuse point, of which that at the apex is most prominent. It is about two inches long, and sixteen lines in its greatest breadth. Within, the seed is loose and movable. The seed itself is about an inch and a half long, ten lines broad, and half an inch thick. It is convex on one side, flat or slightly concave on the other, and presents an oval scar near one extremity of the flat surface. It is hard and compact, but may be readily cut with a knife. Cedron seed is inodorous, but of a pure and intensely bitter taste, not unlike that, of quassia. It yields its virtues to water and alcohol. M. Lewry obtained from it a crystal- line substance, intensely bitter, freely soluble in boiling water, and neutral to test paper, which he supposes to be the active principle, and proposes to name cedrin. He obtained it by first exhausting the cedron with ether, then treating it with alcohol, and crystallizing from the tincture. [Journ. de Pharm., xix. 335.) This medicine has long had great reputation in New Granada and Central America, as a remedy for the bite of serpents, being mentioned in the History of the Buccaneers, pub- lished in 1699, as useful fpr this purpose; and such continues to be the confidence of the natives in its virtues, that they have no fears of the poisonous bite of these reptiles, if provided with the antidote. It is also highly esteemed for the prevention of hydrophobia, and in the treatment of intermittent fever, spasm of the stomach and bow'els, and dyspep- tic affections. Dr. Guier informed us that he had seen it once apparently successful in curing the bite of a poisonous serpent, and had used it effect ually in cholera morbus, colic, and neuralgia of the face. In the hands of Dr. J. B. Thompson, of London, it has proved useful in gout. [Med. Times and Gaz., April, 1852 ) Dr. S. S. Purple, of New York, has found it promptly effectual in a number of cases of intermittent fever, and believes it to possess valuable antiperiodic properties. (A". Y. Journ. of Med., N. S., xiii. 173.) To us the medicine appears to be closely analogous to quassia, with which it is botanically allied. The dose used in Central America is one or two grains. M. Herran states that he had employed the remedy in eight cases of poisoning, and that his mode of using it was to administer five 1490 Celastrus Seandens.—Centaury. PART III. *.r six grains with a spoonful of brandy, and to dress the bite with the tincture. He had rarely occasior to repeat the dose to effect a cure. Hr. Rotellini says that it is poisonous in overdoses, and has occasioned death in the quantity of twenty-five or thirty grains. A vinegar has been prepared in London by macerating for seven days two scruples of the ceiron in an ounce of distilled vinegar. The dose is from twenty minims to a fluidrachm. (Pharm. Joum., xii. 63.) From the statements of Dr. Purple, it appears that the doses above stated are too small, and that, from any ordinary quantity, no fear of injurious conse- quences need be entertained. He gave from ten to thirty grains every four hours, and Btates that though, in very large doses, it may produce griping and diarrhoea, these effects are easily controlled. W CELASTRUS SCANDEN8. Climbing Staff-tree. A climbing indigenous shrub, growing from Canada to Carolina, and said to possess emetic, diaphoretic, and narcotic properties. The bark is the part employed. It has been used in chronic affections of the liver and secondary syphilis. For a full description of the plant, see Darlington’s Flora Cestrica, p. 149. Other species of Celastrus, growing in various parts of the world, have been employed in medicine, though with little reputation. W. CENTAUREA BENEDICTA. Blessed Thistle. Carduus benedictus. Cnicus benedictus. (De Cand.) This is an annual herbaceous plant, the stem of which is about two feet high, branch- ing towards the top, and furnished with long, elliptical, rough leaves, irregularly tocthed, barbed with sharp points at their edges, of a bright-green colour on their upper surface, and whitish on the under. The lower leaves are deeply sinuated, and stand on footstalks; the upper are sessile, and in some measure decurrent. The flowers are yellow, and sur- rounded by an involucre of ten leaves, of which the five exterior are largest. The calyx is oval, woolly, and composed of several imbricated scales, terminated by rigid, pinnate, spinous points. The plant is a native of the south of Europe, and is cultivated in gardens in other parts of the world. It has become naturalized in the United States. The period of flowering is June, when its medicinal virtues are in greatest perfection. The leaves are the officinal portion. They should be gathered when the plant is in flower, quickly dried, and kept in a dry place. The herb has a feeble unpleasant odour, and an intensely bitter taste, more disagreeable in the fresh than the dried plant. Water and alcohol extract its virtues. The infusion with cold water is a grateful bitter; the decoction is nauseous, and offensive to the stomach. The bitterness remains in the extract. The active constituents are volatile oil, and a peculiar principle for which the name of cnicin has been proposed. This is crystallizable, inodorous, very bitter, neither acid nor1 alkaline, scarcely soluble in cold water, more soluble in boiling water, and soluble in all proportions in alcohol. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, and is analogous to salicin in composition. In the dose of 4 or 5 grains, it is said often to vomit, and in that of 8 grains, to be useful in intermittent, fevers. [Ann. de Therap., 1843, p. 20G.) The blessed thistle may be so admin- istered as to prove tonic, diaphoretic, or emetic. The cold infusion, made with half an ounce of the leaves to a pint of water, has been employed as a mild tonic in debility of the stomach. A stronger infusion, taken warm while the patient is confined to bed, pro- duces copious perspiration. A still stronger infusion or decoction, taken in large draughts, provokes vomiting, and has been used to assist the operation of emetics. The herb, how- ever, is at present little employed, as all its beneficial effects may be obtained from chamo- mile. The dose of the powder as a tonic is from a scruple to a drachm, that of the infusion two fluidounces. Attention has recently been called to another species, Carduus or Cnicus marianus, which was of old used for the same purposes as the C. benedictus, under the impression that its seeds have valuable haemostatic properties. Rademacher is stated to have found a decoc- tion of the seeds of great use in hemorrhages, particularly when connected with diseased liver or spleen. Dr. Lobach considers no other remedy so efficacious in uterine hemorrhage and melaena. He has also found it useful in amenorrlioea when connected with derange- ment of the portal circulation. He gives the seeds in decoction, made in the proportion of two ounces to the pint of water, of which the dose is a tablespoonful every hour. (See Am Joum. of Med. ScL, April, 1859, p. 537.) W. CENTAUPtY. Common European Centaury. Centaurium. This long used remedy, which held a place in the Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia even to its latest edition, has been omitted in the British Pharmacopoeia. It consists of the herb, and more especially of the flowering heads of Erythrsea Centaurium (Persoon), Chironia Centaurium (Willd. Sp. Plant, i. 1068). It is a small, annual, herbaceous plant, rising about a foot in height, with a branching stem, which divides above into a dichotomous panicle, and bears opposite, sessile, ovate-lanceo- late, smooth, and obtusely pointed leaves. The flowers are of a beautiful rose colour, standing without peduncles in the axils of the stems, with their calyx about half as long as the tube of the corolla. The plant grows wild in most parts of Europe, adorning the woods and pastures, towards the close of summer, with its delicate flowers. The herb, though without odour, has a strong bitter taste, which it imparts to water and PART III. Cephalanthus Occidentals.—Chelidonium Majus. 1491 alcohol. The flowering summits are the officinal part. We have seen no satisfactory ana- lysis of this plant. Among its constituents is a bitter extractive matter, for which the name of centaurin has been proposed. But it can scarcely be considered as a pure proxi- mate principle. The fresh herb yields by distillation an odorous watery product, of sharp taste (Geiger, ii. 482), in which M. M6ha, a French pharmaceutist, has detect ea vaienanic acid. The same chemist claims to have discovered a peculiar colourless crystallizable. non-nitrogenous substance, which he names erythrocentaurjn. He obtained it by exhausting the tops with water, evaporating a portion of the water, allowing the residue to stand, sepa- rating the precipitated matter or apotheme, adding alcohol to the remaining liquid which now deposited a bitter substance, and, after the separation oftliis by decantation, evapo- rating the liquid to the consistence of syrup, and treating the residue with ether. The ethe • real solution, upon evaporation, yielded the erythrocentaurin in crystals These are needle- shaped, soluble in the ordinary menstrua, and possessed of the remarkable property of being strongly reddened by exposure to solar light, and reacquiring their colourless character upon being again dissolved and crystallized. The bitter substance above mentioned maj be separated by menstrua into two, one scft and the other dry, the former of which it is that gives its strong smell to the distilled water. Beside these principles, M. Meha found also in centaury a wax-like substance, and saline matter. (Journ. de Pharm., xliii. 88.) Medical Properties and Uses. The common centaury of Europe has tonic properties very closely resembling those of gentian, with which it is associated in the same natural family. It is employed on the other side of the Atlantic in dyspeptic complaints, and formerly had considerable reputation in the treatment of fever. It was one of the ingredients of the Portland powder. In the United States it has been superseded by Sabbatia angularis, or American centaury. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to a drachm. Another species of Erythrsea (E. Chilensis) possesses similar properties, and is employed to a con- siderable extent in Chili as a mild tonic. An elaborate account of it may be seen in the Journal de Pharmacie (3e ser., xxv. 434). W. CEPHALANTHUS OCCIDENTALIS. Button-bush. (Gray's Manual, p. 172.) A very com- mon indigenous shrub, which received both its generic title and common name from the arrangement of its flowers in dense spherical heads (x£ancients it was much esteemed as a remedy in jaundice; and it has been found useful in the same complaint by some modern physicians. It was the chief ingredient of the old decoclum ad ictericos of the Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia. It has been given also in other complaints, especially those of a scrofulous character, affecting the mesenteric and lymphatic glands, the skin, and the eyes. The yellow juice is often applied to corns and warts, which it destroys by stimulating them beyond their vital powers, and is said to be very useful in eczema, urticaria, and other itching eruptions. The fresh herb is also applied locally about the pelvis, with asserted benefit, in amenor- rhoea, and is much used in the south of Europe as a vulnerary. The dose of the dried root or herb is from thirty grains to a drachm, that of the fresh root one or two drachms; and the same quantity may be given in infusion. The watery extract and expressed juice have also been employed. The dose of the former is from five to ten grains, of the latter from ten to twenty drops, to be gradually increased. W. CHELONE GLABRA. Snake-head. Turtle-head. (Gray's Manual, p. 285.) This is a very common indigenous, perennial, herbaceous plant, a foot or two in height, readily distin- guished by its conspicuous closely clustered flowers, the shape of which, from their resem- blance to the head of a snake or tortoise, has given origin both to the common and scientific names of the plant. It prefers low wet places. The leaves have a bitter taste, and are said to be tonic and aperient, with a supposed peculiar action on the liver. The decoction, made in the proportion of two ounces of the fresh herb to the pint, may be given in the dose of one or two fluidounces. W. CHELTENHAM SALT, ARTIFICIAL. Several artificial mixtures have been prepared, professing to be exact imitations of the saline ingredients in the chalybeate Cheltenham water; but the only ones which appear worthy of confidence are those prepared by Alsop, chemist, of London, and W. Hodgson, jun., druggist, of this city. The composition of the natural Cheltenham chalybeate is given at page 131. The imitation of Mr. Alsop, as analyzed by Dr. Faraday, contains the same solid and gaseous constituents as the natural water, except the sulphate of lime, which is very properly omitted; and in the same pro- portions precisely, with the exception that there is about twice as much free carbonic acid in the artificial preparation. The iron is present in the state of protoxide, and is imme- diately dissolved by the free carbonic acid, upon adding a sufficient quantity of water. The carbonic acid probably exists in a free state in a dry mixture; as there is no obvious agent present to cause it to be disengaged in the mere act of solution. Mr. Alsop’s artificial mixture is in the form of a powder, nearly white, possessing a saline and slightly ferruginous taste. It forms a good combination, in which the aperient pro- perty of the salts present is combined with the tonic virtue of the iron. It is considered to be useful in glandular obstructions, especially of the liver, and in scrofulous affections, attended with feeble digestion, sluggish bowels, and pallidness of skin. It is employed, also, with advantage in sick headache, habitual costiveness, and hemorrhoids. The dose is a teaspoonful, quickly dissolved by brisk stirring in half a pint of cold water, and swal- lowed immediately, before the iron has time to separate in an insoluble state. This quantity may be taken in the morning, fasting, and repeated once or twice after an interval of twenty minutes, or in the course of the day. To obtain its full tonic and alterative effects, it shoul 1 be persevered with for a month or six weeks. The artificial Cheltenham salt of Mr. Hodgson is identical with that of Mr. Alsop, and may be used wTith entire confidence for all the pur poses to which the latter is applied. B. CHLORIDE OF ARSENIC, SOLUTION OF. Liquor Arsenici Chloridi. DeValangin's Ar- senical Solution. The following formula was given for this preparation in the late London Pharmacopoeia. “Take of Arsenious Acid, broken into small pieces, half a drachm; Hydro- chloric Acid a fiuidrachm and a half [Imperial measure] ; Distilled Water a pint [Imp. meas.]. Boil the Arsenious Acid with the Hydrochloric Acid, mixed with a fluidounce [Imp. meas.] of the Water until it is dissolved; then add sufficient Water to make the solution accurately fill the measure of a pint [Imp. meas.].” This is an imitation of De Valangin’s arsenical solution, called by the inventor, who wms a practitioner in London, solutio solvetitis mineralis. It was originally made by subliming three parts of arsenious acid with eight of common salt, and dissolving the product in a determinate quantity of dilute muriatic acid. The sublimation directed by De Valangin with common salt h»d n’j PART III. Chloride of Bromine.—-Chloride of Silver. on the arsenious acid; and, accordingly, his preparation may be considered to have been a solution of arsenious acid in muriatic acid, becoming terchloride of arsenic by the mu- tual decomposition of the acids. In the London formula thirty grains of arsenious acid are dissolved in twenty Imperial fluidounces of the menstruum, that being the measure to which the preparation is ultimately brought. Hence each fluidounce contains a quantity of ter- chloride, equivalent to a grain and a half of arsenious acid. Terchloride of arsenic is a colourless anhydrous liquid of the sp.gr. 2-18. It is strongly acid to litmus, completely soluble in alcohol and ether, and possesses the power of dissolving a considerable propor- tion of arsenious acid. (Dr. Penny and Mr. W. Wallace, Philos. Mag., xli. 865.) Medical Properties. This arsenical solution has considerable reputation in London as an alterative. It is chiefly employed in the treatment of chorea and lepra vulgaris. Dr. Farre, of London, states, as the result of his observation, that it effectually cures the worst forms of chorea. (Pereira, Mat. Med., 3d ed., p. 670.) The late Dr. Pereira, who used this solu- tion on numerous occasions, found it efficacious in the treatment of chorea and lepra, but was not convinced of its superiority to Fowler’s solution. It is said to be less apt to dis- turb the stomach; but it must be recollected that De Valangin’s solution is only three- eighths as strong as that of Fowler, and yet is not given in a larger dose. The average dose is five drops three times a day. Dr. Farre begins with three drops three times a day, in- creasing one drop each day, until the dose reaches ten drops three times daily. Whenever the stomach becomes disordered, the medicine should be suspended; and, when renewed, it must be given in the original dose. Dr. Fuller, of London, praises this solution as a re- medy in rheumatic gout, if the urine be clear and of low sp. gr. In such cases he gives it in the large dose of from ten to twenty drops, either alone or combined with cinchona. If mineral acids are indicated, muriatic acid is added. 13. CHLORIDE OF BROMINE. Brominii Chloridum. This chloride is prepared by passing chlorine gas through bromine, and condensing the vapours which form by a freezing mix- ture. It is a reddish-yellow, very mobile and volatile liquid, emitting dark yellow fumes, which have a very powerful odour, and cause a flow of tears. Its taste is hot and unplea- sant. Chloride of bromine is used by Prof. Landolfi, of Naples, in the treatment of cancer and malignant tumours, both internally, and as an ingredient in his caustic. For the com- position of the caustic, and his formula for administering the chloride of bromine, see page 173, and the article on Zinci Chloridum. in Part II. B. CHLORIDE OF MAGNESIUM. Magnesii Chloridum. Muriate of Magnesia. When a con- centrated solution of this salt is evaporated to dryness, it is partially decomposed into magnesia and muriatic acid, the latter being evolved. By a careful evaporation, stopping it so soon as the vapour begins to redden litmus paper, the chloride may be obtained in the ' state of a fused hydrate, having the composition MgCl,6HO. (Casaseca, Chem Gaz., Oct. 15, 1853, p. 384.) The physiological action of this bitter and very deliquescent salt is the sub- ject of a memoir by Dr. Lebert. He finds it to act mildly and favourably as a purgative, producing a flow of bile, and an increase of appetite. On account of its extreme deliques- cence, he recommends it in the liquid form, prepared by dissolving the salt in its weight of water. Of this solution he gives an ounce sufficiently diluted to an adult, and half an ounce to a child from 10 to 14 years of age. [Arch. Gen., 4e ser., iii. 448.) B. CHLORIDE OF MERCURY AND QUINIA. Ilydrargyri et Quinise Chloridum. This com- pound has been prepared by Mr. McDermott, of Dublin, by uniting chemically corrosive sublimate with quinia. The corrosive sublimate was found to be reduced to the state of calomel; and, hence, it may be inferred that half the chlorine of the former united with the quinia. This preparation has been found useful in the treatment of obstinate skin dis- eases, given in the dose of a grain two or three times a day. B. CHLORIDE OF POTASSA, SOLUTION OF. Liquor Potassse Chlorinatse. Javelle's Water. Eau de Javelle. This is prepared from carbonate of potassa precisely as the solution of chlorinated soda from carbonate of soda, and probably has an analogous composition. (See Liquor Sodse Chlorinatse.) It is employed for taking out fruit stains, &c. from linen. B. CHLORIDE OF SILVER. Argenti Chloridum. This has been already referred to as being mevitably formed when nitrate of silver is given internally. (See page 1011.) It is readily prepared by adding a solution of common salt to one of nitrate of silver, as long as it pro- duces a precipitate. As first thrown down it is a white curdy substance, but it soon becomes discoloured when exposed to the light. It is decomposed by solutions of the caustic alkalies, which convert it into oxide, but not by their carbonates. After the formation of the oxide in this way, the addition of sugar reduces it, and revives the silver. (Levol.) Chloride ot silver has been used, rubbed on the tongue, in syphilis, and internally in epilepsy, chronic dysentery and diarrhoea, and other diseases in which nitrate of silver has been given. The uose is from one to three grains or more, four or five times a day. Dr. Perry administered it at the Philadelphia Hospital, Blockley, in chronic dysentery, with the immediate effect of diminishing the number of stools. The crystallized ammonio-chloride of silver has been given to. syphilitic affections, in the dose of the fourteenth of a grain. It is formed by saturating Chlorinated Anaesthetic Compounds.—Chrome. PART III. solution af ammonia, by the aid of heat, with chloride of silver, and allowing the liquid to cool in a stopped bottle. It crystallizes in cubes, and is very liable to decomposition. B. CHLGRINATED ANAESTHETIC COMPOUNDS. By the mutual action of chlorine and olefiant gas, an oily liquid is obtained, discovered by the associated Dutch chemists, and called Patch liquid. The empirical formula of this compound is C4H4C12, which makes it the bichloride of ethylen; the rational formula is C4H3C1,HC1. When it is acted on by an alco- holic solution of potassa, muriatic acid is separated by the formation of chloride of potas- sium, and a compound represented by C4II3C1 is set free. By the action of additional chlorine, the Dutch liquid is susceptible of having each equivalent of hydrogen successively replaced by one of chlorine, forming four new compounds; namely, C4H2C12, HC1—C4H013,HC1 — C4C14,HC1 — C4C16. The last compound here is evidently a 6-4 chloride of carbon; and the others are called by Regnault, in allusion to the replacing chlorine, without noting the dis- appearing hydrogen, monochlorinated, bichlorinated, and trichlorinated Dutch liquid. The Dutch liquid has been tried as an anaesthetic by Prof. Simpson and Mr. Nunnely. Prof. Simpson was not satisfied with its effects; but Mr. Nunnely, having administered it fre- quently in practice, found it perfectly agreeable in every respect. Its use, he alleges, is not attended by the troublesome excitement produced by ether, or by the tendency to collapse caused by chloroform. Two forms of Dutch liquid have been recently experimented with by Dr. Aran, of Paris; and one of them furnished satisfactory clinical results. The liquid which gave favourable results has been ascertained by Mialhe and Flourens to be the mono- chlorinated Dutch liquid; but its cost proved to be too high to allow of its general use as a therapeutic agent. In consequence of this objection to the monochlorinated liquid, Mialhe and Flourens were induced to search for a substitute in the corresponding compound of a parallel series of ethers, formed by the action of chlorine on muriatic ether. When muri- atic ether (C4H5C1) is acted on by successive portions of chlorine, the hydrogen is replaced by the latter, equivalent for equivalent, and there are formed the five following compounds: C4H4C1, — C4H3C13 — C4H2C14 — C4HC15 — C4C16. Of this series, the first member is isomeric with the Dutch liquid; the second, third, and fourth with the mono- bi- and trichlorinated Dutch liquid, and the fifth is the 6-4 chloride of carbon, the terminating compound of the other series. The first member, though identical with the Dutch liquid in elementary com- position, and having a vapour of the same density, has, nevertheless, a lower boiling point, and is different in chemical properties. Thus, it is not decomposed by an alcoholic solution of potassa, as the Dutch liquid is, and is not acted on by potassium, while the Dutch liquid is immediately attacked by it. These facts show that the atomic constitution of these two substances must be different. In like manner the second, third, and fourth members of this series are different in chemical properties from their isomeric representatives in the Dutch liquid series. In denoting the different degrees of chlorination of the muriatic ether series, Regnault indicates merely (as in the Dutch liquid series) the number of eqs. of chlorine supposed to replace hydrogen. Accordingly, he calls the first member of the series mono- chlorinated muriatic ether, corresponding to the Dutch liquid; and the second, third, and fourth, bi- tri- and quadrichlorinated muriatic ethers, corresponding to the mono- bi- and trichlorinated Dutch liquids. This confusion of nomenclature arises from the fact that the replacement by chlorine sets out from five eqs. of hydrogen in the muriatic ether series, and from four eqs. in the Dutch liquid series. From the explanations above given, it will be understood that the compound of the mu- riatic ether series, corresponding to the monochlorinated Dutch liquid, is the bichlorinated muriatic ether. This compound proved too volatile to act advantageously as a local anaes- thetic. The tri- and quadrichlorinated ethers are denser and less volatile, and acted more favourably. The conclusion arrived at by Mialhe and Flourens appears to be that the four chlorinated muriatic ethers all possess anaesthetic properties; nnd, as it would be difficult to separate them, they propose the use of the mixed ethers, consisting principally of the tri- and quadrichlorinated compounds, as an anaesthetic, under the indefinite name of chlo- rinated muriatic ether. Chlorinated muriatic ether (chlorinated chlorohydric ether) is a colourless, very mobile, neu- ter liquid, having an aromatic ethereal odour, and hot saccharine taste. It is sparingly soluble in water, but readily soluble in alcohol, ether, and most of the fixed and volatile oils. It is not inflammable, in which respect it agrees with chloroform. Being a mixture of different liquids, its sp. gr. is not uniform. Its boiling point varies from 230° to 266°. Ac- cording to the experiments of Flourens, it has a similar action to chloroform, the most im- portant of the chlorinated anaesthetics. (See Chloroformum.) Its local action is that of a powerful sedative. (B. Cucuel, Ann. de Therap., 1853, 102.) B. CHROME. Chromium. As it has been customary, in this work, to notice more or less fully the metals of which one or more compounds are officinal, even though the metal may not hold the same position, it is proper to give a brief notice in this place of the metal chrome, of which two compounds, chromic acid and bichromate of potassa, are contained in the Materia Medica Catalogue of our Pharmacopoeia. Chrome was discovered by Vaquelin in 1797. Its most common ore is the chromite of iron, consisting of protoxide of Iron and PACT III. Chrome Yellow.—Cicuta Virosa. 1495 sesquioxide of chromium. This is not an abundant mineral; and one of the most copious sources of it is in the chrome mines of south-eastern Pennsylvania. Chrome is obtained by igniting its oxide intensely in contact with charcoal. It is a brittle metal, of a grayisli-wnite colour like platinum, with some lustre, and very hard, so that it scratches glass. Its sp. gr. is 5-9, equivalent 26-3, and symbol Cr. It does not change by exposure to the air, and is with difficulty attacked by the acids. It forms with oxygen live compounds: 1. the pro- toxide (CrO), 2. the sesquioxide (Cr203), 3. chromic acid (Cr03). Of the two others, one may be considered as a compound of the protoxide and sesquioxide (Cr0,Cr203), and the other, called perchromic acid, is said to consist of two eqs. of chrome and seven of oxygen (Cr207). Chrome combines with chlorine in two proportions, forming the protochloride and sesqui- chloiide. The chief value of chrome in the arts is as the source of bichromate of potassa, extensively used in dyeing and valuable for the facility with which it parts with oxygen, and as the base of certain beautiful pigments. W. CHROME YELLOW. This is the neutral .chromate of lead, prepared by precipitating a solution of the nitrate of lead with chromate of potassa. It is of a beautiful lemon-yellow colour. The subchromate of lead, consisting of one eq. of acid and two eqs. of base, is of a red colour, and is sometimes used as a pigment. Chrome green is a mixture of chrome yel- low and Prussian blue. W. CICHORIUM INTYBUS. Chicory. Succory. A perennial herbaceous plant, indigenous in Europe, but naturalized in this country, where it grows in fields, and in roads along the fences, in neighbourhoods which have been long settled. It is one or two feet high, with large, compound, beautifully blue flowers, which appear in July and August, and serve to distinguish the plant at first sight. The whole plant has a bitter taste, without acrimony, or any very peculiar flavour. The taste is strongest in the root, and weakest in the flowers. The leaves, when young and tender, are said to be sometimes eaten as salad in Europe. Succory is gently tonic without being irritating, and is considered by some authors as aperient and deobstruent. It is said to be useful, if freely taken, in hepatic congestion, jaundice, and other visceral obstructions in the early stages; and is affirmed to have done good even in pulmonary consumption. The usual form of administration is that of decoc- tion, which is prepared by boiling one or two ounces of the root, or a handful of the herb, in a pint of water. The root, dried and roasted, is much used in certain parts of Europe as a substitute for coffee, and is said also to be mixed fraudulently with ground coffee for sale. In preparing it for coffee, Dausse recommends that the dried root should be cut into rather large and equal pieces, which are to be roasted until they lose 140 out of 500 parts. The pieces are then easily ground in a mill, and afford a yellowish-brown powder. (Pharm. Cent. Platt, Oct. 1850, p. 688.) The plant is now largely cultivated both in England and on the Continent, to supply the demand for its root, which has grown out of its use for admixture with coffee, or as a substitute. In France alone the annual consumption is said to be 16 millions of pounds. [Pharm. Journ., Aug. 1860, p. 125.) The garden endive is a species of Cichorium, denominated C. Endivia. W. CICUTA VIROSA. Water Hemlock. Cowbane. A perennial, umbelliferous Europear, plant, growing on the borders of pools and streams. It is very poisonous, proving fatal to most animals which feed upon it, though said to be eaten with impunity by goats and sheep. Several instances are on record of children who have died from eating the root by mistake for parsnep. It operates as an acrid narcotic, producing inflammation of the sto/r.ach, to- gether with symptoms which indicate cerebral disturbance, such as vertigo, intoxication, and convulsions. Infusion of galls is recommended as an antidote, but should not be pelied on to the exclusion of emetics. When the plant vomits, as it frequently does, fatal effects are less apt to ensue. It is said to be less poisonous dried than fresh; and it has been in- ferred that the active principle is volatile. But the volatile oil, obtained by distillation, was found by Simon, of Berlin, not to be poisonous. Indeed, from the experiments of M. Julius Trapp, of St. Petersburg, it appears to be identical with the volatile oil of cummin seeds (Cuminum Cyminum), which rank among the aromatics. (Chern. Central Platt, June 9, 1858, p. 414.) On the other hand, the alcoholic extract of the dried root operated as a violent poison upon animals. (Annal. der Pharm., xxxi. 258.) vlt present the plant is never used internally, having been superseded by Conium maculatum. Externally it is sometimes employed as an anodyne poultice in local pains, particularly those of a rheumatic or gouty nature. Cicuta maculata. or American water hemlock, which grows in meadows and on the borders of streams throughout the United States, is closely analogous, in botanical character, and in effects, to the European species. In several instances, children have been fatally poisoned be eating its root. This consists of several oblong, fleshy tubers, sometimes as long as the finger, spreading out from the base of the stem, and having a smell and taste not unlike those of parsnep. Until recently it has not been used in medicine; but we are told in Mr, Stearns’ account of the medical plants of Michigan, that Dr. Norton, of Minnesota, highly ;ecommends it as a specific in nervous and sick headache. (Proceed. of Am. Pharm. Assoc., Citrate of Iron and Magnesia.—Coal Tar. PART III. p. 253.) For a full account of the plant, see Bigelow's Medical Botany (i. 125). The see pro- duct of the same tissue; as these are boiled with a large quantity of water, and dried, be- fore they are submitted to destructive distillation. The oily product of this distillatior, after l edification, forms the bone-oil of commerce. Bone-oil has a dark-brown almost black colour with a greenish shade. It is perfectly opaque in the mass, but brown when viewed by trans PART ill. Dirca Palustris.—Emery. 1511 mitted light in a thin layer. Its sp. gr. is about 0-970. Its smell is peculiarly uisagreeaDle and somewhat ammoniacal. A piece of fir-wood, moistened with muriatic acid, and held over the mouth of a vessel containing it, acquires a dark reddish-purple colour, character- istic of pyrrol. It contains several organic bases, such as petinin, picolin, fyc., which have been examined by Dr. Thomas Anderson, of Scotland. (See his paper on the products of the distillation of animal substances, in the Philos. Mag., 3d series, xxx. 174; and for a notice of picolin, see the note in page 648.) Animal oil was formerly much used in medicine; but its repulsive odour and taste, as it. is ordinarily prepared, have caused it to be almost entirely laid aside. It is given in the dose of a few drops, mixed with water, and acts as a stimulant and antispasmodic. Its presence in the spirit and salt of hartshorn gives to these preparations medicinal properties different from those of the pure spirit and of carbonate of ammonia. B. DIRCA PALUSTRIS. Leather Wood. An indigenous shrub, usually very small, but sometimes attaining the height of five or six feet, growing in boggy woods, and other low wet places, in almost all parts of the United States. The berries, which are small, oval, and of an orange colour, are said to be narcotic and poisonous. The bark has attracted most attention. It is extremely tough, and of very difficult pulverization. In the fresh state it. has a peculiar rather nauseous odour, and an unpleasant acrid taste, and when chewed ex- cites a flow of saliva. It yields its acrimony completely to alcohol, but imperfectly to water even by decoction. In the dose of six or eight grains, the fresh bark produces vio- lent vomiting, preceded by a sense of heat in the stomach, and often followed by purging. Applied to the skin it excites redness and ultimately vesicates; but its epispastic operation is very slow. It appears to be analogous in its properties to mezereon, to which it is botani- cally allied. W. DRAGON’S BLOOD. Sanguis Draconis. This is a resinous substance obtained from the fruit of several species of Calamus, especially C. Rotang,and C. Draco, small palms, grow- ing in Siam, the Molucca Islands, and otEer"parts of the East Indies. On the surface of the fruit, when ripe, is an exudation, which is separated by rubbing, or shaking in a bag, or by exposure to the vapour of boiling water, or finally by decoction. The finest resin is pro- cured by the two former methods. It comes in two forms: sometimes in small oval masses, of a size varying from that of a hazelnut to that of a walnut, covered with the leaves of the plant, and connected together in a row like beads in a necklace; sometimes in cylindrical sticks, eighteen inches long and from a quarter to half an inch in diameter, thickly covered with palm leaves, and bound round with slender strips of cane. In both these forms, it is of a dark reddish-brown colour, opaque, and readily pulverizable, affording a fine scarlet powder. It sometimes comes also in the form of a reddish powder, and in small irregular fragments or tears. An inferior kind, said to be obtained by boiling the fruit in water, is in flat circular cakes, two or three inches in diameter and half an inch thick. This also yields a flue red powder. A fourth variety, much inferior even to the last mentioned, is in large disks, from six to twelve inches ip diameter, by an inch in thickness, mixed with various impurities, as pieces of the shell, stem, &c., and supposed to be derived from the fruit by decoction with expression. A substance known by the name of dragon’s blood is derived by exudation from the trunk of Dracsena Draco, a large tree inhabiting the Canary Islands and the East Indies, and another from Pterocarpus Draco, a tree of the West Indies and South America, by incision into the bark. These last, however, are little known in commerce. According to Lieut. Wellstead, much dragon’s blood is obtained in the island of Socotra, by spontaneous exudation from a large tree, growing at a considerable eleva- tion on the mountains. Dragon’s blood is inodorous and tasteless, insoluble in water, but soluble in alcohol, ether, and the volatile and fixed oils, with which it forms red solutions. According to Her- berger, it consists of 90-7 parts of a red resin, wrhich he calls drj&owp, 2-0 of fixed oil, 3-0 of benzoic acid, 1-6 of oxalate of lime, and 3-7 of phosphate of lime. It was formerly em- ployed in medicine as an astringent, but is nearly or quite inert, and is now never given internally. It is sometimes used to impart colour to plasters, but is valued chiefly as au ingredieit of paints and varnishes. W. DUTCH PINK. A yellow or brownish-yellow paint, consisting of clay, or a mixture of clay and chalk, or carbonate of lime in the form of whiting, coloured by a decoction of woad, French berries, or birch leaves, with alum. W. EMERY. A very hard mineral, the powder of which is capable of wearing down all other substances except, the diamond. As existing in commerce, it is said to be derived chiefly from the island of Naxos, in the Grecian Archipelago; but, according to Landerer, it has been found also in Asia Minor and the Morea. It is pulverized by grinding it in a steel mill, and the povvuer is kept in the shops of different degrees of fineness. It is used for polish- ing metals and hard stones. The method, adopted in Smyrna, of ascertaining its purity, is to rub a plate of glass of known weight with a certain quantity of the suspected mineral 1512 Epigsea Repens.—Erythronium, Americanum. PART III. until it ceases to have any effect. The loss of weight in the glass is the measure of the value of the emery. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1862, p. 187.) W. EPIGiEA HE PENS. Trailing Arbutus. Ground Laurel. Mayflower. This is a small trail- ing plant, with woody stems from six to eighteen inches long, entire, cordate-ovate leaves, and small, very fragrant flowers, which appear early in the spring. It is found in the woods, and affects the sides of hills with a northern exposure. Dr. Darlington states that the plant has been supposed to be injurious to cattle, when eaten by them. (Flora Cestrica, p. 259.) The late Dr. Eli Ives, of New Haven, Connecticut, furnished us with the following account of its virtues and uses, founded on his own observation. “The Epigma repens has been freely used for some years in diseases of the urinary organs, and of the pelvic viscera generally, particularly of irritated action, in those cases in which the uva ursi and bucliu are indicated. The leaves and stems are prepared in the same manner, and administered in the same dose as the uva ursi. The Epigaea has given relief in some cases where the uva ursi and buchu have failed. May 4th, 1849.” W. EPILOBIUM ANGUSTIFOLIUM. (Gray't Manual, p. 130.) Willow-herb. There are seve- ral species of Epilobium, which have the common name of willow-herb from the resemblance of their leaves to the willow, and probably have nearly identical properties. They are all perennial and indigenous. The E. angustifolium is the largest of them, having a simple stem, from four to seven feet high. It is common in the Northern States, frequenting low, or newly-cleared grounds. It bears showy purple flowers, which appear in July and August. The leaves and roots are said to be demulcent, tonic, and astringent, and yield their virtues to water and alcohol. They are used by the “eclectics,” generally and locally, in decoction, infusion, or cataplasm, in cases which call for the use of astringent remedies. W. EQUISETUM H YEMALE. (Gray's Manual, p. 585.) Horsetail. Scouring Rush. An indi- genous cryptogamous plant, with slender annual stems from 18 inches to 3 feet high, grow- ing abundantly in the Northern States, and preferring wet places, as the banks of streams, &c. The plant derives its name of scouring rush from its use in scouring, for which it is fitted by the siliceous character of the stems. It has the reputation of being diuretic, and is used sometimes in dropsical diseases and those of the urinary passages. The whole plant is employed, usually in the form of infusion. W. ERECHTHITES IIIERACIFOLIA. [Gray's Manual, p. 230.) Fireweed. An annual indige- nous plant, growing in moist woods and recent clearings, and having a rank odour, though somewhat aromatic, which probably called attention to the plant in reference to its use in medicine. Its taste is bitterish, slightly acrid, and disagreeable. It yields these and what medical virtues it may possess to water. It has been especially recommended in dysen- tery. This plant is apt to infest the peppermint fields of Michigan; and its oil is said sometimes to deteriorate the oil of peppermint from that region. W. ERYNGIUM AQUATICUM. Button Snakeroot. The root of Eryngium aquaticum was re- cognised as officinal in the Secondary Catalogue of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, until the recent revision, when it was dismissed. The plant belongs to Pentandria Digynia of the Linntean system, and to the natural order Apiaceae or Umbelliferse. The following is its generic cha- racter. “Flowers capitate. Involucrum many-leaved. Proper calyx five-parted, superior, per- sistent. Corolla of five petals. Receptacle foliaceous, segments acute or cuspidate. Fruit bi- partite.” (Nuttall.) The button snakeroot or water eryngo is an indigenous herbaceous plant, with a perennial tuberous root, and a stem two or three feet high, sometimes, according to Pursh, six feet, generally branching by forks, but trichotomous above. The leaves are very long, linear-lanceolate on the upper part, of the stem, sword-shaped below, with bristly spines at distant intervals upon their margin. The floral leaves are lanceolate and dentate. The flowers are white or pale, and in globose heads, with the leaflets of the involucrum shorter than the head, and, like the scales of the receptacle, entire. This plant is found in low wet places, as far south as Virginia and N. Carolina. Its period of flowering is August. The root, which is the medicinal portion, has a bitter, pungent, aromatic taste, provoking, when chewed, a flow of saliva. It is diaphoretic, expectorant, in large doses occasionally emetic; and is used by some physicians in decoction as a substitute for seneka. [Bigelow. | We are told in Barton’s Collections, that it is nearly allied to the contrayerva of the shops. W. ERYTIIRONIUM AMERICANUM. (Muhl. Catalogue, 84; Bigelow, Am. Med. Bot., iii. 151.)—E. lanceolatum. (Pursh, p. 320.) The root and herb of this plant, were officinal in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, in which they occupied a place in the Secondary Catalogue until the late revision. The plant belongs to Hexandria Monogynia in the Linnaean system, and to the natural order of Liliacese. The following is the generic character. “■Calyx none. Corolla inferior, six-petaled; the three inner petals with a callous prominence on each edge near the base.” [Bigelow.) This is an indigenous perennial bulbous plant, sometimes called, after the European species, dog's tooth violet. The bulb (cormus), which is brown externally, white and solid within, sends up a single naked slender flower-stem, and two smooth, lanceolate nearly equal leaves, sheathing at their base, with an obtuse callous point, and of a brownish- PART III. Erythroxylon Coca. 1513 green colour diversified by numerous irregular spots. The flower is solitary, nodding, yellow, with oblong-lanceolate petals obtuse at the point, a club-shaped undivided style, and a three lobed stigma. The Erythronium grows in woods and other shady places throughout the Northern and Middle States. It flowers in the latter part of April or early in May. All parts of it are active. In the dose of twenty or thirty grains, the recent bulb operates as an emetic. The leaves are said to be more powerful. The activity of the plant is dimin- ished by drying. W. ERYTHROXYLON COCA (Lamarck). Coca. This is a shrub growing wild in South Ame- rica, and largely cultivated in Bolivia for the sake of its leaves, which are much used in that country as a masticatory. The plant is propagated from the seed in nurseries, which begin to yield in eighteen months, and continue productive for half a century. The leaves, on being picked, are dried in the sun, and then packed in bags. They are known in South America by the name of coca. This was in general use among the natives of Peru at the time of the conquest, and has continued to be much employed to the present time. The leaves resemble in size and shape those of tea, being oval-oblong, pointed, two inches or more in length by somewhat over an inch in their greatest breadth, and furnished with short delicate footstalks; but they are not, like the tea leaves, dentate, and are distinguished from most other leaves by a slightly curved line on each side of the midrib, running from the base to the apex. When well dried, they have an agreeable odour resembling that of tea, and a peculiar taste, which, in decoction, becomes bitter and astringent. Some attempts were made to analyze coca before the publication of the eleventh edition of this Dispensatory, of which the main result was, that the leaves contained a peculiar very bitter principle on which their virtues probably depended. M. Stanislas Martin afterwards made a hasty examination, from which it appeared that they contain a peculiar bitter principle, resin, tannin, an aro- matic principle, extractive, chlorophyll, a substance analogous to thein, and salts of lime. (Journ. de Pharrn., Avril, 1859, p. 283.) Dr. Albert Niemann, of Goslar, has made a more thorough investigation of the leaves, and succeeded in isolating a peculiar alkaloid, to which he gives the name of cocaina. The following was his process. The leaves were exhausted with 85 per cent, alcohol acidulated with 2 per cent, of sulphuric acid; the tincture was treated with milk of lime and filtered; the filtrate was neutralized with sulphuric acid, and the alcohol distilled off. The syrupy residue was treated with water to separate resin, and then precipitated by carbonate of soda. The deposited matter was exhausted by ether, and the ethereal solution, after most of the ether had been distilled, was allowed to evaporate spontaneously. The cocaina was thus obtained in colourless crystals, mixed with a yellow- ish-brown matter of a disagreeable odour, which >--*s separated by washing with cold alco- hol. Pure cocaina is in colourless transparent prisms, inodorous, of a bitterish taste, soluble in 704 parts of cold water, more soluble in alcohol, and freely so in ether. The solution has an alkaline reaction, and a bitterish taste, leaving a peculiar numbness on the tongue, fol- lowed by a sensation of cold. The alkaloid melts at 208° F., and on cooling congeals into a transparent mass, which gradually becomes crystalline. Heated above this point it changes colour, and is decomposed. It is inflammable, burning with a bright flame, and leaving char- coal With the acids it forms soluble and crystallizable salts, which are more bitter than the alkaloid itself. It was found to consist of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen; and the formula as given by Dr. Niemann is C32H20NOS. He also obtained wax, a variety of tannic acid (cocatannic acid), and a concrete volatile odorous substance. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1861, p7l22.) Mr. Maisch, of Philadelphia, succeeded in obtaining from the leaves an uncrystallizable alkaloid, having so nearly the properties of cocaina that he considered it merely as the result of the action of heat on the crystallizable principle. (Ibid., Nov. 1861, p. 500.) Still more recently M. Lossen has examined cocaina, and ascertained that, when heated with muriatic acid, it splits into benzoic acid and anew base which he calls ecgonin. The mutability of cocaina with acids, explains why the attempts to extract the alkaloid witE" acid liquids have failed. M. Lossen therefore recommends the omission of acid in operating on the leaves, and proposes the following modification of Niemann’s plan. An infusion is first made: this is precipitated with acetate of lead; the lead is removed by sulphate of soda; the liquid is concentrated, carbonate of soda added, and the whole shaken with ether. The ether extracts the alkaloid, and yields it in a crude state by evaporation. It is then purified as in the process of Dr. Niemann. (Journ. de Pharm., Juin, 1862, p. 522.) According to Dr. Weddell, coca produces a gentle excitant effect, with an indisposition to •sleep; in these respects resembling tea and coffee. It is asserted to support the strength for a considerable time in the absence of food; but it does not supply the place of nutri- ment, and probably, in this respect also, acts like the two substances referred to. The In- dians, while chewing it, pass whole days in travelling or working without food; but they nevertheless eat freely in the evenings. Weddell states that persons, unused to it, are liable to unpleasant effects from its abuse; and he has known instances of hallucinations appa- rently resulting from this cause. The natives chew with it same alkaline substance, as the ashes of certain plants, or lime. (Weddell, Voyage dans le Nord de la Bolivia.) In large quan- tities, it is said to produce a general excitation of the circulatory and nervous systems, int' Euphorbium.—Ferridcyanide of Potassium. part nr. parting incivased vigour to the muscles as well as to the intellect, with an indescribable leeling of satisfaction, amounting altogether sometimes to a species of delirium; and what is most singular, if true, this state of exaltation is asserted not to be followed by any feelings of languor or depression. (Mantegazza, M. Am. Med.-Chir. Rev., March, 1860, p. 340.) A medium dose is from three to four drachms, taken in infusion. For the result of experiments on the physiological action of coca by M. Reis, see Ann. de Thirap. (1864, p. 118). W. EUPHORBIUM. This was contained in the materia medica catalogue of the late Edin- burgh Pharmacopoeia; but, having been omitted in the British, it is no longer officinal. It is the concrete resinous juice of one or more species of Euphorbia; but its precise source is uncertain. It has been ascribed to E. officinarum, growing in the north of Africa and at the Cape of Good Hope, E. Canariensis, a native of the Canary Islands and Western Africa, and E■ antiquorum, inhabiting Egypt, Arabia, and the East Indies, and supposed to be the plant from whicTi the ancients derived this resinous product. These species of Euphorbia bear some resemblance in form to the Cactus, having leafless, jointed, angular stems, divided into branches of a similar structure, and furnished with double prickles at the angles. When ■wounded, they yield an acrid milky juice, which concretes on the surface, and, being re- moved, constitutes the euphorbium of commerce. This occurs in the shape of tears, or in oblong or roundish masses, about the size of a pea or larger, often forked, and perforated with one or two small conical holes, produced by the prickles of the plant, around which the juice has concreted, and which sometimes remain in the holes. The masses are occasionally large and mixed with impurities. The surface is dull and smooth, bearing some resemblance to that of tragacamh; the consist- ence somewhat friable; the colour light yellowish or reddish; the odour scarcely per- ceptible; the taste at first slight, but afterwards excessively acrid and burning. The colour of the powder is yellowish. The sp. gr. of euphorbium is 1-124. Triturated with water it renders the liquid milky, and is partially dissolved. Alcohol dissolves a larger portion, forming a yellowish tincture, which becomes milky on the addition of water. Its constituents, according to Pelletier, are resin, wax, malate of lime, malate of potassa, lignin, bassorin, volatile oil, and water. Brandes found caoutchouc. It contains no soluble gum. The proportions of the ingredients are variously stated by different chemists, and probably vary in different specimens. The most abundant is resin, and the remainder consists chiefly of wax and malate of lime. The resin is excessively acrid, is soluble in alcohol, and, when exposed to heat, melts, takes fire, and burns with a brilliant flame, diffusing an agreeable odour. Medical Properties and Uses. Euphorbium taken internally is emetic and cathartic, often acting with great violence, and in large doses producing severe gastric pain, excessive heat in the throat, and symptoms of great prostration. In consequence of the severity of its action, its internal use has been entirely abandoned. Applied to the mucous membrane of the nostrils, it excites violent irritation, attended with incessant sneezing and sometimes bloody discharges. They who powder it are under the necessity of guarding their eyes, nostrils, and mouth against the fine dust which rises. Largely diluted with wheat flour or starch, it may be used as an errhine in amaurosis, deafness, and other obstinate affections of the head. Externally applied, it inflames the skin, often producing vesication; and on the continent of Europe is sometimes used as an ingredient of epispastic preparations. It is employed in veterinary practice, with a view to its vesicating power. W. EUPHRASIA OFFICINALIS. Eyebrigkt. A small annual plant, common to Europe and the United States, without odour, and of a bitterish, astringent taste. It was formerly used in various complaints, and amoDg the rest in disorders of the eyes, in which it was thought to be very efficacious, and in the treatment of which it is still popular in some countries The probability is that it is nearly inert. W. FERRIDCYANIDE OF POTASSIUM. Red Prussiate of Potassa. This is formed by pass- ing a current of chlorine through a solution of ferrocyanide of potassium, until the liquid ceases to form a precipitate with a solution of sesquichloride of iron, a proof that the whole of the ferrocyanide has been converted into the ferrideyanide. The solution, by due eva- poration, yields the compound in question. It may also be prepared, in the dry svay, by agitating chlorine with the finely powdered ferrocyanide, as long as it is absorbed. The theory of the formation of this compound is that one eq. of chlorine withdraws from twro eqs. of. the ferrocyanide, one eq. of potassium, forming chloride of potassium wtiich re-% mains in the mother-water. The reaction is explained by the following equation: 2(K2Cfy) and Cl=K3Cfy2 and KC1. The radical ferrideyanogen is supposed to be formed by the coalescence of two eqs. of ferrocyanogen, and is represented by the symbol, Cfdy. Accord- ingly, the formula of ferrideyanide of potassium is KsCfdy. This salt, discovered by Gme- lin, is in beautiful deep hyacinth-red anhydrous crystals, which are soluble in four parts of water. Its solution forms a delicate test of the salts of protoxide of iron, with which it produces a blue precipitate; but with the salts of the sesquioxide, it only strikes a g?eev or brown colour. Ferrideyanide of potassium is directed by the U. S. Pharm-'capocia. ia part in. Ferrocyanide of Zinc.—Fruit Essences, Artificial. 1515 conjunction with sulphate of protoxide of iron, as a test of the chlorine strength of chlo- rinated lime. (Ses page 187.) It is used in dyeing and calico-printing. B. FERROCYANIDE OF ZINC. Zinci Ferrocyanidum. Eerrocyanuret of Zinc. Formed by double decomposition between hot solutions of ferrocyanide of potassium (ferroprussiate of potassa) and sulphate of zinc. It is thrown down as a white powder. It has similar medical properties to those of the cyanide, and is used in the same diseases, '•’he dose is from one to four grains, given in pill. (See Cyanide of Zinc.) FLAVOURING EXTRACTS. Under this name, preparations from various aromatics arv considerably used for culinary purposes. They are in the liquid form, and are generally alcoholic solutions of the sapid and odorous principles of substances having an agreeable flavour, such as orange peel, bitter almonds, roses, cinnamon, mace, ginger, anu celery Formulas for their preparation, given by Prof. Procter, may be found in the Am. Journ. cj Pharm. for May, 1856, p. 215. W. FRAXINUS EXCELSIOR. Common European Ash. It has been stated, in the first par' of this work, that, in the south of Europe, this tree yields manna by incisions in its trunk In this place, however, it is noticed only in reference to its bark and leaves. The bark n» bitter and astringent, and, before the introduction of cinchona into use, was employed in the treatment of intermittent fever; but has since fallen into neglect. Keller believed that he had found in the bark a peculiar crystallizable organic alkali, which Buchnes denomi- nated fraxinin: but Rochleder and Schwartz have since shown that the crystals, formed along withtBe bitter substance obtained by the process of Keller, were but man- nite. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, May, 1853, p. 312.) Since that period, however, a crystallizable bitter principle has been discovered by Prince Salm-Horstman, which has been named frq.xip.in. It is obtained by precipitating the decoction with acetate of lead, washing the precipitate, decomposing it by sulphuretted hydrogen, and concentrating the solution, which deposits the fraxinin in needle shaped crystals. These are four-sided pi isms, shining, white with a tinge of yellow, feebly bitter and astringent, inodorous, soluble with difficulty in cold but readily in hot water. The concentrated warm solution has an acid reaction. When much diluted, it exhibits a clear blue fluorescence by daylight, especially if a trace of ammonia is present. Alkalies, alkaline earths, and the carbonates colour it yellow; and chloride of iron first colours it green, and then throws down a yellow precipitate. (Chem. Cent. Blatt, Juli 8, 1857, p. 452.) The leaves have been at different times recommended as an antidote to the poison of serpents, and as a remedy in scrofula. Within a few years they have been introduced into use in Germany in the treatment of gout and rheumatism, in which they have acquired considerable reputation. Drs. Pouget and Peyraud, of France, have spoken in the highest terms of their efficacy in these diseases; and, upon the authority of the former, it is stated that they have been used for forty years by the peasants of Au- vergne as a specific in gout. M. Garot has shown that they contain 16 per cent, of nialate of lime, to which it is thought their anti-arthritic virtues may be ascribed. [Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xxiv. 311.) By some authors.the leaves are said to be purgative, which is, how- ever, contradicted, by Drs. Pouget and Peyraud. An ounce may be infused in half a pint of boiling water, and taken three times during the day. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N.S., xxv. 492.) W. FRENCH CHALK. A variety of indurated talc. It is compact, unctuous to the touch, of a greenish colour, glossy, somewhat translucent, soft and easily scratched, and leaves a silvery line when drawn over paper. It is used chiefly for marking cloth, &c., and for extracting grease spots. W. FRUIT ESSENCES, ARTIFICIAL. Several of the compound ethers have been found to possess the odour and flavour of certain fruits, a property which has led to their em- ployment as flavouring materials for confectionery and desserts, under the name of fruit essences. The simple ethers, present in these compounds, so far as they have become of commercial importance, are common ether or oxide of ethyl, which should be called ethy- lic ether, and oxide of amyl or amylic ether. Each of these ethers possesses basic proper- ties, and has its alcohol; common or ethylic ether corresponding to common or ethylie alcohol, and amylic ether to amylic alcohol or fusel oil. These alcohols are hydrated oxides of ethyl and amyl respectively. (See Alcohol Amylicum, p. 78, and Alcohol, p. 73.) Butyrate of Ethylic Ether. Butyric Ether. (C4H50,C8H703 ) This ether is readily prepared by mixing 100 parts of butyric acid with 100 of alcohol, and 50 of concentrated sulphuric acid, and agitating the mixture for a short time. The ether forms a layer on the surface, and may be purified by washing it with water, and subjecting it to the action of chloride of calcium. Butyric ether is sparingly soluble in water, but very soluble in alcohol, and boils at 230°. It is said to be much used to communicate a pine-apple flavour to rum. Dis- solved in Q or 10 parts of alcohol it forms the pine-apple essence. From 20 to 25 drops of this essence, added to a pound of sugar containing a little citric acid, imparts to the mix- ture a strong taste ot pine-apple. Butyric acid is formed during what is called the butyric fermentation, which usually consumes two or three months before it is completed, and Fruit Essences, Artificial.—Fucus Vesiculosus. PART III ■which is preceded by the lactic fermentation. To prepare it a solution of grape sugar is mixed with half its weight of chalk, and with about one-tenth of its weight of cheese to act as a ferment; and the whole is kept at the temperature of 90°. The sugar is first trans- formed into a viscous substance, and afterwards into lactic acid, which is gradually con- verted into butyric acid, with the disengagement of hydrogen and carbonic acid. At the end of the fermentation, the liquid contains principally a mixture of butyrate and lactate of lime, from which the butyric acid may be obtained by precipitating the lime as a car- bonate by carbonate of soda, and decomposing the resulting butyrate of soda with sulphu- ric acid. Butyric acid is a colourless liquid, having a very disagreeable odour and a ran- cid taste. It dissolves in all proportions in water and alcohol, boils at 327°, and has the density 0-963. It is a hydrated acid, having the formula C8H,03.H0. Pelargonale of Ethylic Ether. Pelargonic Ether. (Enanthic Ether. (C4II50,Cj8II1703.) A preliminary step in forming this ether is to prepare the pelargonic acid. This is most con- veniently obtained, according to Dr. R. Wagner, by the action of nitric acid on oil of rue. Treat the oil with double its weight of very dilute nitric acid, and heat the mixture until it begins to boil. Two layers are formed in the liquid; the upper one being brownish, and the lower consisting of the products of the oxidation of the oil, with the excess of nitric acid. The lower layer, having been separated, is freed from the greater part of the nitric acid by evaporation in a chloride of zinc bath, and then filtered. The filtrate is a solution of pelargonic acid, and may be converted into pelargonic ether by a prolonged digestion, at a gentle heat, with alcohol. The ether, as thus prepared, has the agreeable odour of quince, and, when dissolved in alcohol in due proportion, forms the quince essence. (See Am. Journ. ing “umriitB ire PART III. Hypericum Perforatum.—Hypophosphites. 1531 the parts used, though the unripe capsules are possessed of the virtues of the plant in an equal degree, and the seeds are said to be even stronger. St. John's wort has a peculiar balsamic odour, which is rendered more sensible by rubbing or bruising the plant. Its last? is bitter, resinous, and somewhat astringent. It imparts a yellow colour to cold water, ana reddens alcohol and the fixed oils. Its chief constituents are volatile oil, a resinous sub- stance, tannin, and colouring matter. As a medicine it was in high repute among the an- cients, and the earlier modern physicians. Among the complaints for which it was used were hysteria, mania, intermittent fever, dysentery, gravel, hemorrhages, pectoral com- plaints, worms, and jaundice; but it was, perhaps, most highly esteemed as a remedy in wounds and bruises, for which it was employed both internally and externally. It is diffi- cult to ascertain its exact value as a remedy; but, from its sensible properties, and from the character of the complaints in which it has been thought useful, it may be considered, independently of its astringency, as somewhat analogous in medical power to the turpen- tines. It formerly enjoyed great reputation for the cure of demoniacs; and the superstition still lingers among the vulgar in some countries. At present the plant is scarcely used ex- cept as a domestic remedy. The summits were given in the dose of two drachms or more. A preparation was at one time officinal, under the name of oleum hyperici, made by treating them with a fixed oil. It has a red colour, and is still used in many families as a sovereign remedy for bruises. It is commonly called red IV. HYPOPHOSPHITES. Attention has been called to these salts, in consequence of their recommendation by Dr. Churchill, of Paris, in the treatment of phthisis, in which they are thought to be useful by furnishing phosphorus to the tissues. A paper on their mode of preparation and qualities was communicated by Prof. Procter to the American Journal of Pharmacy (March, 1858, p. 118), to which we are indebted for much of what follows on the chemistry of the subject. Hypophosphorous acid consists of one eq. of phosphorus and one of oxygen, and always contains two or three eqs. of water. It has a strong affinity for oxygen, and acts therefore as a powerful deoxidizing agent, and carries this property as well as water with it into composition. When heated it is resolved into phosphuretted hydrogen and phosphoric acid. Its salts are generally soluble in water and deliquescent, and many of them are soluble in alcohol. They are converted into phosphates by heat, with the escape of phosphuretted hydrogen; and some of them are explosive. Hypophosphite of Lime has attracted most attention, and would meet the views of those who wish to supply phosphate of lime to the system, as the hypophosphorous acid is converted into the phosphoric by its deoxidizing power. To prepare it Prof. Procter gives the following formula. Slake 4 lbs. avoird. of lime with a gallon of water, add it, in a deep boiler, to 4 gallons of boiling water, and mix thoroughly. To the mixture add a pound avoird. of phosphorus, and continue the boiling, adding hot water from time to time to keep up the measure, until the combination is complete, and phosphuretted hydrogen is no longer evolved. It is necessary that provision should be made for the escape of the gas, which takes fire spontaneously in contact with the air. There are formed in the liquid phosphate and hypophosphite of lime, the phosphorus having become oxidized at the expense of the wa- ter, the hydrogen of which has escaped in combination with another portion of phosphorus, which is therefore lost. The liquid is filtered to separate the insoluble phosphate and re- siduary lime, then concentrated, and refiltered to separate the carbonate of lime formed by the action of the air on a little lime held in solution, and lastly evaporated till a pellicle appears; after which the salt may be allowed to crystallize by setting the liquid aside, or may be obtained in the granular form by continuing the heat, and stirring. The salt should be introduced into bottles. It is white, of a somewhat pearly lustre, and crystallizes in flat- tened prisms. It is soluble in 6 parts of cold water, little more so in boiling water, and slightly soluble in diluted, but insoluble in officinal alcohol. Its formula is CaO,2HO,PO. Hypophosphite of soda is prepared by mixing solutions of hypophosphite of lime and crystallized carbonate of soda, in the proportion of 6>ounces of the former dissolved in 4 pints of water, to 10 of the latter in one and a half jpints. Double decomposition takes place, with the formation of carbonate of lime and hypophosphite of soda, of which the latter is held in solution, and the former precipitated. After filtration to separate the car- bonate of lime, the solution is evaporated to a pellicle, and then stirred constantly till the salt granulates, the heat being continued. If required quite pure, the granulated salt is dissolved in officinal alcohol; and the liquid, having been evaporated to a syrupy consist- ence, is set aside to crystallize. Sometimes the hypophosphite of soda explodes with vio- lence during the evaporation of its solution. This was ascribed to the use of too high a heat; but the same accident has occurred when the heat was applied by means of a water- bath. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., Jan. 1860, p. 87.) In a communication of Mr. Tuson to the Chemical News (No. 81, p. 46), it is stated that, though he had superintended the manufac- ture of large quantities of the hypophosphites of lime and of soda, he had never witnessed anything like an explosion; but the heat employed in evaporation had never approached 212°; and this is probably the true explanation. Caution, therefore, should be observed to evaporate at a low temperature. Hypophosphite of soda crystallizes in rectangular 1532 Hyposulphite of Lime.—Hyraceum. PART III. tables of a pearly lustre, deliquesces on exposure, and is soluble both in water and alco- hol. Its formula is NaO,2HO,PO. Hypophosphite of potassa is prepared in the same manner as the salt of soda; 5-75 ounces of granulated carbonate of potassa, dissolved in half a pint of water, being substituted for the carbonate of soda. This salt is still more deliquescent than the preceding, and there- fore less eligible. Its formula is KO,2HO,PO. Hypophosphite of ammonia may be obtained in like manner from hypophosphite of lime and sulphate or sesquicarbonate of ammonia; and tlfe~hypophosphite of sesquiozide of iron from solution of hypophosphite of soda or ammonia with solution of sulphate of sesquioxide of iron. A hypophosphite ofpuinia has also been proposed. (Chem. Gaz., No. 43, p. 186.) Prof. Procter gives a formula for preparing hypophosphorous acid\ which consists in decomposing hypophosphite of lime in solution by oxalic acid, whiclTprecipitates the lime, leaving the hypopkosphorous acid in solution. The quantities are so proportioned that a fluidrachm shall contain 6 grains of the acid, equivalent to about 2-25 grains of phosphorus. The dose of the acid is therefore from te«i minims to a fluidrachm. As the soluble salts of mercury and silver are reduced by the hypophosphites, they are of course incompatible with it in prescriptions. With the hypophosphite of lime, all the soluble sulphates and carbonates produce precipitates. The hypophosphite of iron may be given with the preparations of cinchona, as, though blackened by the tannic acid of galls, it is not so by cincho-tannic acid As these salts are insoluble in cod-liver oil, they should be dissolved in syrup before being added to the oil. Prof. Procter prepares a syrup of hypophosphite of lime by dissolving a troyounce of the salt in 9-6 fluidounces of water, then adding 12 troyounces of sugar and dissolving with a gentle heat, and finally adding half a fluidounce of the fluid extract of vanilla. The dose of the syrup is from one to four fluidrachms, three times a day. A compound syrup is prepared by the same writer, containing the hypophosphites of lime, soda, potassa, and iron, with hypophosphorous acid, a formula for which will be found in the same communication to which reference has been made above. The author does not wish to be understood as recommending these remedies in con- sumption. The weight of testimony appears to him to be opposed to the first favourable impressions; and, though some cases may have seemed to be benefited, yet great care must be taken not to allow a reliance on the hypophosphites to interfere with the use of reme- dies known to be efficient, as cod-liver oil and supporting measures generally. The dose of either of the hypophosphites may be from ten to thii'ty grains, three times a day. W. HYPOSULPHITE OF LIME. Calcis Jlyposulphis. Under the head of Sodae Ilyposulphis, page 792, reference is made to hyposulphite of lime, as possessing with other hyposul- phites, useful properties in the destruction of the lower forms of animal and vegetable life, by which the human system is often seriously infested; and the hope is even indulged that it may become a most useful agent in the prevention and relief of a class of diseases depending on infection of the blood. The following mode of preparing it is recommended by M. J. Laneau, of Paris. Take 1000 parts of sulphur, 40J of lime, and 4000 of rain- water; slake the lime with sufficient of the water, add the sulphur and the residue of the water, and boil for an hour and a half, adding water to keep up the measure; when cool filter the liquid through linen covered with filtering paper; and wash the residue with 1000 parts of water. A solution is thus obtained of polysulphuret of calcium of the sp. gr. 1 *141. Into this pass a current of washed sulphurous acid gas until the solution becomes colourless; separate the sulphur precipitated (which may be used for the officinal Precipi- tated Sulphur); and evaporate the clear solution at a heat not exceeding 140° F., until it begins to crystallize, when it is to be set aside. The product is 700 parts of hyposulphite of lime. This is in six-sided crystals, which effloresce in a dry air. M. Laneau prepares a syrup of the hyposulphite by dissolving 10 parts of the crystallized salt in 20 parts of dis- tilled water, and mixing with the solution 170 parts of syrup of orange flowers. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1863, p. 228.) The dose of the salt is from ten to twenty grains three times a day, of the syrup from two to four fluidrachms. W. HYPOSULPHITE OF SODA AND SILVER. Sodae et Argenti Jlyposulphis. This double salt may be prepared by dissolving freshly precipitated oxide of silver -in a solution of hyposulphite of soda, and evaporating the solution. It is in the form of minute crystals, very soluble in water, but insoluble in alcohol, and possessing a very sweet taste. Its solution, protected from the light, undergoes no change, and, when quite pure, does not discolour the skin or linen. M. Delioux, of Rochefort, has tried this salt externally only, and thinks it acts like nitrate of silver, but more mildly. He used it with advantage, especially in urethral discharges, dissolved in the proportion of one or two parts in two hundred of water, (if. and F. Medico-Chir. Rev., Am. ed., April, 1853, p. 447, from the Bull, de The rap.) B. H1RACEUM Under this name, a substance from the Cape of Good Hope lias been in- troduced to the notice of the profession, in Europe, as a substitute for castor. It is tl* part hi. Hyssopus Officinalis.—Ilex. product, of Hvrax Cavensis. an animal of South Africa, about the size of a large rabbit. It is said to be collected in small pieces on the rugged sides of mountains, and is probably the excrement of the animal. It is rather hard, tenacious, of a blackish-brown colour, and in taste and smell not unlike castor. It is inflammable, and yields portions of its con- stituents to water and alcohol. Examined with the microscope, it has been found to con- tain vegetable tissues, animal hairs, sand, and globular particles, either resinous or o;ly. Schrader has found it to contain stearin, a gum-resin soluble in absolute alcohol, an odorous yellow substance soluble in ordinary alcohol and in water, a brown substance in water, and insoluble residue. Dr. Pereira, from whose paper the above account is extracted, considered it worthless as a therapeutical agent, though in physiological effects it is said exactly to resemble American castor. [Pharm. Journ., x. 123.) For an elaborate paper on this substance by M. J. Leon Soubeiran, see Journ. de Pharm. (xxix. 378). W. HYSSOPUS OFFICINALIS. Hyssop. This is a labiate plant, belonging to the class and order Didynamia Gymnospermia of the sexual system. It is perennial, with numerous erect, quadrangular, somewhat branching stems, which are woody in their interior por- tion, about two feet high, and furnished with opposite, sessile, lanceolate-linear, pointed, punctate leaves. The flowers are violet-coloured or blue, sometimes white, turned chiefly to one side, and arranged in half verticillated, terminal, leafy spikes. The upper lip of the corolla is roundish and notched at the apex, the lower is divided into three segments, of which the undermost is obovate. Common hyssop is a native of Europe, where, as well as in this country, it is cultivated in gardens. The flowering summits and leaves are the parts used. They have an agree- able aromatic odour, and a warm, pungent, bitterish taste. These properties they owe to an essential oil, which may be separated by distillation with water, and rises also with alcohol. Hyssop is a warm, gently stimulant aromatic, applicable to the same cases as the other labiate plants. Its infusion has been much employed in chronic catarrhs, espe- cially in old people, and those of a debilitated habit of body. It acts by facilitating the expectoration of mucus when too abundantly secreted. In this country, however, it is seldom used by regular practitioners. VV. IBERIS AM AHA. Bitter Candytuft. A small herbaceous plant, indigenous in Europe, where it is cultivated in gardens on account of its bright milk-white flowers. The leaves, stem, and root are said to possess medicinal properties; but the seeds are the most effica- cious. The plant appears to have been employed by the ancients in rheumatism, gout, and other diseases. It was again brought into notice by Dr. Silvester, who ascribed to the late Dr. Williams, of St. Thomas’s Hospital, London, the merit of having first ascertained its real therapeutic value. In large doses it produces giddiness, nausea, and diarrhoea; but its virtues do not seem to be associated with any perceptible physiological effect. It is thought to exercise a happy influence over the excited actions of the heart, and is especially useful in hypertrophy. Much advantage is also said to have accrued from it in asthma, bron- chitis, and dropsy. 'J'he dose of the seeds is from one to three grains. (Prov. Med. and Sury. Journ., July 28, 1847.) W. ILEX. Holly. Several species of Ilex are employed in different parts of the world. The I. Aquifolium, or common European holly, has attracted much attention in France. It is usually a huTm some places attains the magnitude of a middling-sized tree. Differ- ent parts of it are used. The viscid substance called birdlime is prepared from the inner bark. The leaves, which are of a bitter, somewhat austere taste, were formerly much esteemed as a diaphoretic, and in the form of infusion were employed in catarrh, pleurisy, small-pox, gout, &c. A few years since they gained some reputation in France as a cure for intermit tents, and were considered by some as equal to Peruvian bark; but the first reports in their favour have not been fully confirmed. They were used in powder, in the dose of a drachm two hours before the paroxysm ; and this dose was sometimes repeated frequently during the apyrexia. Their febrifuge virtues are said to depend on a bitter principle, for which the name of ilicin has been proposed. M. Labourdais obtained this principle by boiling a filtered decoction of holly leaves with animal charcoal, allowing the charcoal to subside, washing it, then treating it with alcohol, filtering off the alcoholic solution, and evaporating it to a syrupy consistence. The liquid thus obtained was very bitter, and, on feeing allowed to evaporate spontaneously, yielded an amorphous substance, having the ap- pearance of gelatin, which was the principle in question. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 89.) A yellow colouring substance, called ilezanthin, and a peculiar acid, called Hide acid, have been obtained by Dr. F. Moldenhauer. Ilexanthin is obtained in the following manner. The leaves are exhausted with alcohol, the alcohol is distilled off, and the residue set aside for several days. A sediment forms, which is separated from the mother-liquor, treated with ether to remove the chlorophyll, and then purified by repeated solution in alcohol and crystallization. The composition of ilexanthin is It crystallizes in yellow needles, which change colour at 365° F., mett at 388°, and at 417° boil with decomposi Illicium Floridanum.—Imperatoria Ostruthium. part ill. lion, and are not sublimable. It is insoluble in ether, but soluble in alcohol. In cold water it is aimost insoluble; but hot water dissolves it freely, and deposits it in crystals on cool- ing. (Chem. Cent. Blatt, Oct. 21, 1857, p. 766.) The berries are about the size of a pea, red and bitter, and are said to be purgative, emetic, and diuretic. Ten or twelve of them will usually act on the bowels, and sometimes vomit. Their expressed juice has been used in jaundice. The Ilex opaca, or American holly, is a middling-sized evergreen tree, growing throughout the Atlantic section of the United States, and especially abundant in New Jersey. It is so similar to the European plant, that, it is, by some writers, considered as the same species. The berries, examined by Mr. D. P. Pancoast, were found to contain tannin, pectin, two crystallizable organic principles, and salts of potassa, lime, and magnesia One of the crystallizable principles was inodorous and tasteless, the other inodorous but intensely bitter. The latter was obtained by a treatment similar to that of M. Labourdais, above described; but, after the evaporation of the tincture to a syrupy consistence, the process was continued by adding carbonate of potassa and afterwards ether, and agitating briskly. The ethereal solution, rising to the surface on repose, was separated, and allowed to evapo- rate spontaneously. Crystals of the bitter principle were deposited. This is probably pure ilicin. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 314.) This species is said to possess the same medical properties as I. Aquifolium. Ilex Paraquaiensis, the I. Mate of St. Hilaire, yields the celebrated Paraguay tea, so ex- tensively consumed as a beverage in the interior of South America. It is a small tree or shrub growing wild along the streams in Paraguay, and also cultivated for the sake of its leaves, which are the part used. These are stripped from each plant every two or three years. (Parodi, Revista Farmaceutica de Buenos Aires, Jan. 1861.) They have a balsamic odour and bitter taste, and are usually at first disagreeable to the palate. They have a pleasant corroborant effect upon the stomach; but, when very largely taken, are said to purge and vomit. They are used in the form of infusion. According to Stenliouse, these leaves contain a principle identical with the caffein of tea and coffee; and like them con- tain also tannic acid; so that a close analogy exists in composition as well as effects be- tween these three products, so little allied botanically, and so far separated in place of growth. The Ilex vomitqria of Aiton and Linn., the I. Cassina of Michaux, is a handsome evergreen shrub, growing in our Southern States, and especially abundant along the southern coast of Florida. It is the cassina of the Indians, who formerly employed a decoction made from the toasted leaves, called black drink, both as a medicine, and as a drink of etiquette at their councils. It acts as an emetic. The leaves of the Hex Dahoon of Walter and Michaux have similar properties, and are also said to have entered into the composition of the black drink. W. ILLICIUM FLORIDANUM. Florida Anise-tree. This is an evergreen shrub or small tree, growing in Florida, along the coast which bounds the Gulf of Mexico. The bark, leaves, and probably also the seed vessels, are endowed with a spicy odour and taste, analogous to those of anise, and might, perhaps, be used for the same purpose as that aromatic. It is a question worthy of investigation, whether the capsules of this plant might not be sub- stituted for those of the Illicium anisatum or star aniseed, which yield much of the oil used in this country under the name of oil of anise. (See Anisum.) Another species, I. parvi- florum, a shrub found by Michaux in the hilly regions of Georgia and Carolina, has a flavour closely resembling that of sassafras root. W. IMPATIENS FULYA and 1MPATIENS PALLIDA. Touch-me-not. Jewel-weed. Balsam- weed. These two species of Impatiens are indigenous, annual, succulent plants, from two to four feet high, growing in low moist grounds in all parts of the Union, and flowering in July and August. They may be known by their tender, juicy, almost transparent stems; by their yellow flowers, which in one species are pale and sparingly punctate, in the other, are deeper coloured and crowded with dark spots; and by their capsules, which burst elastically, and curl up with the slightest pressure. They probably possess proper- ties similar to those of the I. Noli-me-tangere of Europe, which has an acrid burning taste, and, when taken internally, acts as an emetic, cathartic, and diuretic, though considered dangerous, and therefore little used. The late Dr. Kuan, of Philadelphia, informed us that he had employed with great advantage, in piles, an ointment made by boiling the American plants, in their recent state, in lard. The flowers may be used for dyeing yellow. The 1, Balsamma orbalsam-weed, touch-me-not, ,j'c. of the gardens, resembles the other species in its effects. IMPERATORIA OSTRUTHIUM. Masterwort. An umbelliferous plant, indigenous in the south of Europe. The root has a strong odour, similar to that of angelica, and a pungent, biting, aromatic taste, attended with a flow of saliva, and followed by a glowing warmth which remains long in the mouth. A crystallizable, tasteless principle, called imperatorin, was extracted from the root by Wackenroder, by allowing the ethereal tincture to evapo PART ill. Indelible Ink.—Indian Yellow. 1535 rate, and recrystallizing the residue from ether and alcohol. It was purified by com- bining it with lime, and decomposing the lime compound by acetic acid. R. Wagner has ascertained that this principle is identical with peucedanin. obtained from the root of Peucc- danum officinale, which was formerly employed in medicine, but is now quite ouFoi u«e. The principle is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, and is probably inert. (Chem. Qaz., Nov. 1, 1854.) The root of masterwort was formerly considered alexipharmic, sto- machic, corroborant, emmenagogue, diuretic, and diaphoretic; and was used in a wide circle of complaints with so much supposed success as to have gained for it the title of divinum remedium. The fact, however, appears to be, that it is merely a stimulant aromatic, analogous but inferior to angelica, which has nearly superseded it in European practice. In this country it is unknown as a remedy, and its vulgar name has been applied to another plant. ■ W. INDELIBLE INK. This is prepared by dissolving two drachms of nitrate of silver and a drachm of gum arabic in a fluidounce of distilled water, coloured with a little Indian ink. It is used for writing with a pen on linen and muslin. The place to be marked is prepared by being moistened with a solution of two ounces of crystallized carbonate of soda and two drachms of gum arabic in four fluidounces of water, and then dried. The alkaline solution decomposes the nitrate, and protects the cloth from the action of the free nitric acid. At the end of 24 hours, the spot is to be washed. Mr. Redwood, of London, proposes the following indelible ink, not requiring the use of a mordant. Dissolve an ounce of nitrate of silver, and an ounce and a half of crystallized carbonate of soda, separately, in distilled water, and mix the solutions. Wash the pre- cipitated carbonate of silver, and, having introduced it, still moist, into a Wedgwood mor- tar, rub it with eight scruples of tartaric acid, until effervescence ceases. Then add strong solution of ammonia, just sufficient to dissolve the tartrate of silver formed (about two fluidounces). Lastly, having mixed in half a fluidounce of archil, half an ounce of white sugar, and an ounce and a half of powdered gum arabic, add sufficient distilled water to make the whole measure six fluidounces. M. Soubeiran has given the following formula for indelible ink, which he considers simpler than Mr. Redwood’s. Dissolve 8 parts of crystallized nitrate of silver, 3 of nitrate of copper, and 4 of carbonate of soda, in 100 of water of ammonia, and add to the solution a little gum. The marks, produced by nitrate of silver on linen or muslin, may be completely removed by moistening them with a solu- tion of corrosive sublimate in 80 parts of distilled water, and afterwards washing them with ordinary water. M. Jules Guiller has devised the three following formulas for marking-inks for linen. 1. Nitrate of silver 11 parts; distilled water 85; powdered gum arabic 20; carbonate of soda 22; solution of ammonia 20. Dissolve the carbonate of soda in the water, rubbing the solution with the gum, and the nitrate of silver in the ammonia. Mix the solutions, and gradually heat the mixture in a flask until it boils. This ink flows readily from a pen. 2. Nitrate of silver 5 parts; distilled water 12; powdered gum arabic 5; carbonate of soda 7; solution of ammonia 10. The ingredients are treated as in the preceding formula, with the exception that the mixed solution is heated until it becomes of a very dark colour, and is reduced about one-twentieth in volume by evaporation. This ink is suitable for marking on linen with stamps. 3. Nitrate of silver 17 parts; distilled water 85; powdered gum arabic 20; carbonate of soda 22; solution of ammonia 42; sulphate of copper 33. Dissolve the nitrate of silver in the ammonia, the carbonate of soda in 25 parts of the water, and the gum in the remaining 60. Then mix with the soda solution, first the gum solution, and afterwards the silver solution. Lastly, add the sulphate of copper. This ink has a blue, instead of the dark-brown colour of the others. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1853, p. 33.) Herberger recommends the following indelible ink for other purposes than marking linen. Dissolve wheat gluten, carefully freed from starch, in a little weak acetic acid, and dilute the solution with rain water, so as to have about the strength of wine vinegar. For every four ounces of the solution, add ten grains of the best lampblack, two grains of in- digo, and a little oil of cloves. This ink has a beautiful black colour, and cannot be re- moved by chlorine or dilute acids. [Chem. Gaz., No. 70, p. 304.) B. INDIAN RED. A purplish-red pigment, brought from the island of Ormus in the Per- sian Gulf. It is a red ochre, and owes its colour to the red oxide of iron. W INDIAN YELLOW. This is a pigment manufactured from a yellow' substance from India, called purree. Purree occurs in commerce in balls, of from three to four ounces in weight, which are dark-brown externally, and deep-orange within. It has a peculiar smell, closely resembling that of castor. This circumstance gave rise to the belief that it was of animal origin; but Dr. Stenhouse, who examined it chemically, finds that it con- tains no nitrogen, and from this and other facts is led to the opinion that it is a vegetable substance Upon analysis he found it to consist of magnesia, united with a peculiar acid, which he names purreic (euxanthic acid of Erdmann), and w hich forms nearly one-half of 1536 Indigo. PART III. the crude substance. Purreic acid is in small crystals of a light-yellow colour, dissolving sparingly in cold water, pretty readily in boiling water, and abundantly in hot alcohol. It has at first a sweetish and then a slightly bitter taste, and possesses, in appearance, considerable resemblance to berberina. When acted upon by boiling nitric acid, it is finally converted into a new acid, crystallizing in yellow needles, called by Erdmann, Turreic acid has the formula C40II16O21. From his examination of purree, Ur. Sten- liouse concludes that it is probably the juice of some plant, saturated with magnesia, and boiled down to a solid consistence. (See his paper in the Philos. Mag., xxv. 321.) Other authorities conjecture that it is obtained from the deposit of,camels’ urine, after the ani- mals have eaten the fruit of Mangoslana mangifer. (Chem. Gaz., April, 1855, p. 134.) B. INDIGO, This well-known and highly important dye-stutf is obtained from various species of Indigofera, especially /. tinctoria, I. Anil, and I. argenie a; and is said to be afforded also by other plants, such as Wrightia tinctoria, Polygonum tincturium, Galega tinctoria, &c. It does not exist ready formed, but is generated, during fermentation, from another prin- ciple existing in the plant. This principle appears to have been isolated from Isatis tin.c- tpria by Ed. Scliunck, who has named it indican. Through the agency of tlie mineral acids, it is resolved into indigo and sugar; and perhaps the same result may take place in fer- mentation. Indican is yellow, amorphous, of a nauseous bitter taste, with an acid re- action, and readily soluble in water, alcohol, and ether. It contains nitrogen. (Pharm. Journ., xv. 166.) In the process of preparing indigo, the plant is macerated in water; fermentation takes place; the liquor becomes of a greenish colour, and in due time is de- canted; the colouring principle dissolved by the water absorbs oxygen from the air, and assumes a blue colour, becoming at the same time insoluble; a gradual precipitation takes place, favoured by the addition of lime-water or an alkaline solution; and finally the pre- cipitated matter, having been washed upon linen filters, is dried, shaped usually into cubi- cal masses, and sent into market. Most of the indigo consumed in dyeing is brought from the East Indies, though considerable quantities are imported also from Guatemala, and the northern coast of South America. It was formerly produced in our Southern States, especially Florida, where the plant grows luxuriantly; and it still appears to be prepared there for local use. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 473.) It is of an intensely blue colour, but assumes a coppery or bronze hue when rubbed by a smooth hard body, as the nail. Heated to 550°, it emits a reddish-violet, vapour, which condenses in minute crystals. It is insoluble in water or alcohol, but is readily dissolved by sulphuric acid, which, without destroying its blue colour, so far alters its nature as to render it freely soluble in water, and thus affords a convenient method of applying it to the purposes of dyeing. The solu- tion in sulphuric acid is kept in the shops under the name of sulphate of indigo. According to Berzelius, indigo contains, among other ingredients, four distinct principles: — 1. a substance resembling gluten; 2. a brown colouring substance; 3. a red colouring sub- stance; and 4. a blue colouring substance, which is the principle upon which its value as a material for dyeing depends, and which seldom constitutes so much as one-half of the indigo of commerce. This blue colouring matter is called indigotin. By deoxidizing agents it is deprived of its blue colour, which it recovers by the air, in consequence of the absorption of oxygen. Such is the case with the acid sulphites, and in a less degree with sulphurous acid. Certain volatile oils are said to have the same effect when boiled with tincture of indigo, as the oil of turpentine, peppermint, lavender, juniper, savine, or sage. [Journ. de Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 399.) Chlorine also destroys the blue colour. M. Freisser has concluded, from an elaborate examination of the colouring principles of plants, 1. that these principles are colourless in the young plants; 2. that they acquire colour by combination with oxygen; 3. that all the colouring matters, extracted from any one plant, are produced by the oxidation in different degrees of a single principle; 4. that they are deprived of colour by substances having a strong affinity for oxygen, and reacquire it by contact with oxidizing bodies; and 5. that these colouring principles are acids, and the lakes which they form genuine salts. [Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., v. 263.) For modes of test- ing the value of any specimen of indigo, see the Chemical Gazette (vii. 463, viii. 443, and x. 159); the Chem. News (Dec. 12, 1862, p. 284); and the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxv. 223). Indigo has been proposed by E. Mulder as a test for glucose and fruit sugar, which have the property of changing the blue colour of indigo to white in the presence of the alkalies. To the solution to be examined he adds sulphate of indigo, previously treated with an excess of carbonate of potassa or soda. The addition of the carbonated alkali to the sulphate of indigo scarcely affects the blue colour even at a boiling heat; but if the solution contain glucose or fruit sugar, the blue colour disappears even in the cold, but more rapidly with heat. Common sugar has no such effect. [Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1860, p. 179; from Archiv. der Pharm., civ. 268.) Indigo has been introduced to the notice of the profession as a remedial agent. It was at first employed chiefly by the German physicians, from whose statements our knowledge of its physiological action and therapeutical application was derived 'Though without odour and taste, it is said, in most individuals, to produce nausea and vomiting, frequently to ope- PART III. Insect Powder.—Iodide of Ammonium. rate upon the bowels, giving a bluish-black colour to the stools, to render the urine of a dark- violet or dark-green colour, without increasing its quantity, and sometimes to stimulate the secretory function of the uterus. From these statements it would appear to act as an irri- tant to the alimentary mucous membrane. The character of its general influence upon the system has not been well ascertained. In some instances, it is asserted to have been given in very large doses without any obvious effect. In connection with its influence, the curious fact may be stated, that a colouring matter has been occasionally found in the urine, either spontaneously deposited, or separated by the addition of strong muriatic acid, which in colour and other properties, especially that of being sublimable, bears a close resemblance to indigo, if it be not identical with it. (Chem. Gaz , July 15, 1854, p. 267.) The complaints in which indigo has been employed, with supposed advantage, are epilepsy, infantile con- vulsions, chorea, hysteria, and amenorrhoea. It is given, usually in connection with some aromatic powder, in the dose of a scruple three times a day, which may be increased to a drachm or more; and from half an ounce to an ounce has been employed daily for months together without disadvantage. (See .dm. Journ. of Med. Sci., xx. 487.) The general failure of indigo to produce the desired effects in epilepsy, in which it had at one time consider- able credit as a remedy, has been ascribed to the use of too small doses. M. Ideler, of Berlin, began with about two drachms daily, and increased gradually to two ounces; but there was great difficulty in reconciling the patient to such doses, on account of the intense nausea produced. (B. and F. Medico-Chirurg. Rev., Am. ed., Jan. 1856, p. 198.) W. INSECT POWDER. Under the name of Persian or Caucasian Insect powder, a substance has recently attracted attention in Western Europe, which has long been in extensive use among the people of Western Asia and Eastern Europe, for the destruction of vermin. Among the people south of the Caucasus, it is called guirila. It consists of the flowers of the Pyrcthrum carneum, and P. roseum, growing upon the Caucasian mountains, at an eleva- tion of about a mile'. itTs a coarse powder, of a greenish colour, and pungent odour. It does not appear to be poisonous to man, though it is said to cause some confusion of head in those who sleep in close apartments where much of it is used. Upon the insects, how- ever, which are apt to infest the person of man and animals, as well as bedding and sleep- ing apartments, it acts very destructively, first stupefying and then killing them. It is scattered over the person, upon the beds, about apartments, &c., and is even employed as a dressing for ulcers and wounds to prevent the formation of maggots. It also answers to preserve dried insects and plants in cabinet collections. The demand for the powder having much increased of late, it is said to be adulterated with the leaves and stems of the plant. (Noodt, Buchner's Neues Repert., vii. 562.) W. IODATE OF POTASSA. This salt has been proposed as a substitute for the chlorate of potassa. MM. Demarquay and Custin propose the following mode of preparation. Take of iodine and chlorate of potassa, each, one part, and mix them with five or six parts of water, previously acidulated with a few drops of nitric acid, and heated to ebullition. As soon as chlorine ceases to escape, treat the liquid with a concentrated solution of chloride of barium. Wash with distilled water, and decompose with dilute sulphuric acid the iodate of baryta precipitated; filter to separate the sulphate of baryta; and slowly evaporate the solution. Wash with distilled water the crystals of iodic acid that are formed, dissolve them in boiling distilled water, and saturate with bicarbonate of potassa. Gn cooling, the iodate is deposited in small crystals. The authors above mentioned have employed the iodate of potassa in all those cases of ulcerated and otherwise diseased mucous membrane of the mouth and fauces, in which the chlorate is usually prescribed, and have found it to produce the same curative effects more quickly, more energetically, and in smaller dose. In the healthy state, it acts remarkably on the pharyngeal and buccal mucous membrane, producing, in the quantity of 20 or 80 grains, a peculiar sense of constriction, and appear- ing considerably to diminish the mucous secretion. The diseases in which they have found it specially beneficial are diphtheria, mercurial affection of the mouth, and gangrenous stomatitis. The dose used by them was from four to eight grains. (Dorvaidt's Rev. Pharm., 1858, p. 25.) W. IODIDE OF AMMONIUM. Ammonii Iodidum. Ilydriodate of Ammonia. This salt is pre- pared in the following method by Mr. John A. Spencer, of London. Add to a portion of iodine, placed in a flask with a little water, a solution of hydrosulphuret of ammonia, until the mixture loses its red colour, and is turbid from the separation of sulphur only. Shake the flask, which causes the sulphur, for the most part, to agglomerate; and, having poured off the liquid, boil it until all odour of sulphuretted hydrogen and of ammonia i3 ost. Then filter the liquid, and, constantly stirring, evaporate it, first with a naked flame until it becomes pasty, and then in a water-bath until it forms a dry salt. Dr. Ja- cobson prepares the salt by dissolving equiv. weights of pure iodide of potassium and pure sulphate of ammonia, severally, in the smallest quantity of boiling distilled water, mixing and stirring the solutions, and, after the liquid has cooled, adding water con- taining 15 per cent, of alcohol, and setting it aside for 12 hours. Sulphate of potassa is 1538 Iodide of Antimony.—Iodide of Sodium. PART III precipiUtnl , and the liquor, containing iodide of ammonium in solution, is filtered and evaporated to a pellicle. The crystals of the iodide which form are drained; and the mother-liquor and sulphate of potassa may he made to yield a further supply by treating them with dilute alcohol and evaporating. (See Aw. Journ. of Pharm , May, 1864, p. 240.) Iodide of ammonium is a crystalline powder, soluble in water, and of a taste like that of iodide of potassium, but a little more pungent. It is beautifully white at first, but becomes, in a few weeks, yellowish, and at last brown. It may, however, be easily re- stored by dissolving the coloured salt in water, treating the solution with a little sulphu- retted hydrogen water, until it is rendered colourless, filtering, and evaporating to drjmess. (See Aw. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1853, p. 134.) This salt has been used externally as a substitute for iodide of potassium. By Dr. Pennock it is considered as a good remedy in certain cases of lepra and psoriasis, in the form of ointment, applied by friction in the quantity of half an ounce, morning and evening. The proportions employed are from a scruple to a drachm of the salt to an ounce of lard; the weaker preparation being used when the disease is recent, the stronger when it is chronic. As the iodide is decomposed by the air, the ointment should be kept in well-stopped bottles. Iodide of ammonium may bo used internally; in which case it acts as a resolvent, and sometimes as a diuretic; its effects resembling those of iodide of potassium. Dr. B. W. Richardson, of London, has prescribed it, in the dose of from one to three grains, with considerable success, in secondary syphilis, chronic rheumatism, incipient phthisis, and in a variety of forms of scrofulous disorder, attended with glandular enlargements. Dr. Richardson found a liniment, made by dis- solving half a drachm of the iodide in an ounce of glycerin, very efficacious in enlarged tonsils, applied every night with a large camel’s hair brush. B. IODIDE OF ANTIMONY. Antimonii lodidum. Teriodide of Antimony. According to Mr. W. Copney, of London, this iodide may be conveniently prepared by gently heating, in a Florence flask, metallic antimony and iodine, in the proportion of one eq. to three. The elements combine with sudden heat and liquefaction, and, upon the withdrawal of the heat, the iodide formed solidifies, and is removed from the flask by breaking it. Iodide of antimony, as thus prepared, forms a somewhat crystalline, foliated mass, which, when pul- verized, yields a deep orange-red powder. By the action of water it is decomposed. It has been tried as an alterative in a dose varying from a quarter of a grain to a grain, given in the form of pill. B. IODIDE OF BABIUM. Barii lodidum. This compound may be formed by double de- composition, by adding native carbonate of baryta in powder to a boiling solution of iodide of iron. M. Henry, jun., obtained it by decomposing a solution of sulphuret of ba- rium (seepage 1022) by a concentrated alcoholic solution of iodine. Sulphur is precipitated, which is separated by filtration, and iodide of barium formed in solution, from which it is obtained in the solid state by rapid evaporation to dryness. Iodide of barium crystallizes in small, colourless needles, which deliquesce slightly, and are very soluble in water. The solution promptly undergoes decomposition by exposure to the air, carbonate of baryta being precipitated, and iodine set free, which colours the solution. It has been used with advantage by Jalin, as an alterative, in scrofulous affections and morbid growths. Lugol employed it in scrofulous enlargements. The dose is the eighth of a grain three times a day, gradually increased to three grains. Biett applied it to scrofulous swellings in the form of ointment, made with four grains of the iodide to an ounce of lard. B. IODIDE OF SILVER. Argenti lodidum. This compound is formed by double decomposi- tion, by adding a solution of iodide of potassium to one of nitrate of silver. It is a green- ish-yellow powder, nearly insoluble in ammonia. It possesses the general medical proper- ties of nitrate of silver, and, according to Dr. Charles Patterson, of Dublin, may be used without any danger of producing the discoloration of skin which sometimes follows the use of that salt. Dr. Patterson found it generally successful in curing the stomach affec- tions of the Irish peasantry, in the treatment of which nitrate of silver had previously proved useful. He succeeded with it in curing several cases of hooping-cough in a short time, and in greatly relieving a case of dysmenorrhoea of three years’ standing. Its effects in epilepsy w'ere least satisfactory. The dose is one or two grains, three times a day, given in the form of pill; for children, from the eighth to the fourth of a grain, according to the age. B, IODIDE OF SODIUM. Sodii lodidum. This iodide may be prepared either by saturating a solution of caustic soda with iodine, or by double decomposition between iodide of iron and carbonate of soda, precisely as iodide of potassium is obtained by the corresponding processes for that salt. (See page 1296.) As only small quantities are likely to be wanted as a medicine, the latter process is preferable; being more easily conducted on a small scale. It is a very soluble white salt, crystallizing in anhydrous cubes from a hot solution, and in oblique rhombic prisms, with four eqs. of water, by spontaneous evaporation. Io- dide of sodium has the same therapeutic effects, and is used in the same diseases as iodide of potassium. It is said to be better borne than the latter iodide. In Italy it has been used PART III. Iodide of Starch.—Iodide of Zinc. with remarkable success in constitutional syphilis. The dose is twenty grains, gradually increased to forty, three times a day, dissolved in three fluidounces of water, (fcee Prof. Procter's paper on the preparation of this iodide, in the Am. Journ. of Pharm., July. 1854, p. 305.) 3. IODIDE OF STARCH. Dr. Andrew Buchanan, of Glasgow, proposed this compound as a means of administering iodine in large doses without causing irritation of the stomacn. lie prepares it by triturating twenty-four grains of iodine with a little water, adding gra- dually an ounce of very finely powdered starch, and continuing the trituration until the compound assumes a uniform blue colour. The iodide is then dried by a gentle heat, and kept in a well-stopped bottle. The dose is a heaped teaspoonful, given in water gruel, threu times a day, and afterwards increased to a tablespoonful. No nicety is necessary in ap- portioning the dose. In some cases Dr. Buchanan has given half-ounce doses of the iodide three times a day, immediately increased to an ounce. Thus administered iodine produces, according to this writer, little or no irritation of the alimentary canal, but is freely ab- sorbed, as is proved by its detection in large quantity in the secretions. Dr. Buchanan thinks that, by means of the starch, the iodine is converted into hydriodic acid, and in this state enters the circulation. Prof. John C. Dalton, of New York, found that nearly all the animal fluids decompose iodide of starch, and destroy its blue colour. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1856, p. 327.) This result is owing, no doubt, to the alkaline nature of most of the animal fluids, especially those of the duodenum. The iodine, being saturated with the alkali of the fluids, is no longer in the free state, the condition necessary to en- able the starch to form the blue compound with it. In other words, the starch compound is decomposed, and the starch set free. He prefers the iodide of starch to any other pre- paration of iodine for obtaining the alterative apart from the irritant effects of this sub- stance. [Ibid , xx. 213 and 217.) See Diluted Hydriodic Acid, page 922. It is a point of importance to have the iodide of starch soluble in water. M. Magnes- Lahens, of Toulouse, gained this advantage by his original process of roasting the starch moderately, whereby it is converted into dextrin, before it is mixed with the iodine. Sub- sequently he abandoned the use of torrefied starch, and now contents himself with making an intimate mixture of iodine and starch, slightly moistened, which he subjects to the heat of a water-bath, until it is converted into the iodide of starch, forming a solution with wa- ter of a magnificent blue colour. The heat, thus regulated, disaggregates the starch, with- out completely transforming it into dextrin, and gives a preparation, in the form of a black powder, resembling the soluble iodide of starch, prepared by M. Quesneville by a secret process. M. Seput, of Constantinople, has also given a formula for this soluble iodide, and for a syrup to be made from it. (See Journ. de Pharm., Mars, 1852, p. 202.) M. Soubeiran reported upon these preparations to the Paris Society of Pharmacy, and deemed them ineligible on account of their variable strength in iodine, arising from the greater or less loss of this element during the necessary exposure to heat. Nevertheless, as the syrup is called for, he recommended the following process for making it, availing himself of the ob- servations of his predecessors, which he had occasion to cite in his report. The quantities of the ingredients are here stated in French grammes, each of which weighs about fifteen grains. Triturate thoroughly, in a porcelain mortar, 36 grammes of nitric starch with 4J grammes of iodine, dissolved in three times its weight of ether, and added in successive portions, until, after the evaporation of the greater part of the ether, a blue powder re- mains. Introduce this into a weighed, stoppered flask, and, having added 520 grammes of water, expose the whole to the heat of a water-bath, with the stopper at first removed, in order to complete the dissipation of the ether. Afterwards the stopper is re-plaoed, being loosely tied with a packthread, so as to permit of its being raised without being driven out; and the heat is continued for about an hour and a half, when the iodide of starch will be completely formed. The flask is then weighed, and a quantity of water added to it, equal to that lost by evaporation. Lastly, 1040 grammes of sugar are added to the liquid, and dissolved by a gentle heat. By this formula a syrup is prepared, containing a quarter of one per cent, of iodine, a small part of which is in the state of hydriodic acid. The nitric starch is used by M. Soubeiran, because it unites with the iodine in much less time than the ordinary starch. It is made by mixing ordinary starch, in the cold, with 150 parts of wa- ter, to which 1 part of nitric acid has been added, and allowing the whole to dry in the open air. Three grains of this syrup, diluted with a pint of water, communicate to the liquid a sensible blue tint. This test may serve to determine whether the preparation is of full strength. [Journ. de Pharm , May, 1852, p. 329.) The dose of the syrup is from one to four tablespoonfuls a day. B. IODIDE OF ZINC. Zinci Iodidum. This iodide may be formed by digesting an excess of zinc, in small pieces, with iodine diffused in water. Combination takes place, and, by evaporation, a deliquescent, very soluble saline mass is obtained, having a metallic styptic taste, resembling that of sulphate of zinc. It may also be obtained by heating in a mvtrass % mixture of 20 parts of zinc and 170 of iodine, and subliming into a vial. When th $ e- 1540 lodo-cJilorides of Mercury.—Iodoform. PARI III. pared, it is iu the form of white needles. This salt is very liable to undergo spontaneous decomposition Iodide of zinc is tonic, astringent, and antispasmodic. In 1853, Dr. Barlow tried it in fluy’s Hospital, in cases of chorea, scrofula, cachexia, and some forms of hysteria, with favourable results. [Med. Times and Gaz., Nov. 1853, p. 501.) Since then a further expe- rience has confirmed him in his first estimate of its value. lie considers it particularly ap- plicable to the treatment of chorea, when complicated with scrofula. [Ibid., August, 1857, p. 105.) The best form of administration is syrup, to protect it from change, originally pro- posed by the late Dr. A. T. Thomson, and made on the same plan as the syrup of iodide of iron. (S*ee page 1369.) Mr. A. B. Taylor, of Philadelphia, proposes to form it by gently heating, in an evaporating dish, twelve drachms and two scruples of iodine, and an ounce of finely granulated zinc, with nine fluidounces of water, until they unite, filtering the solution, while hot, on a pound (avoird.) of sugar, contained in a wide-mouthed bottle holding a little more than a pint, and adding, through the filter, sufficient water to make the whole measure a pint. This syrup is perfectly clear and colourless, is styptic to the taste, and contains a drachm of iodide of zinc in each fluidounce. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1852, p. 33.) The dose of this syrup is from 20 to 50 drops, sufficiently diluted with water, three times a day. Iodide of zinc has been used for many years as an external application. Dr. J. J. Rossv of Scotland, employed a solution, containing from 10 to 30 grains to the fluidounce of water, with great advantage in enlarged tonsils, applied by means of a piece of sponge tied to a quill. After the use of the solution for some time, he applied the iodide, rendered liquid by de- liquescence, by means of a camel’s hair brush. A solution containing one or two grains to the fluidounce of water has been used as an astringent injection in gonorrhoea. An oint- ment, made with a drachm of the iodide to an ounce of lard, has been substituted by Dr. Ure for the ointment of iodide of potassium in the treatment of tumours, applied in the quantity of a drachm twice a day. B. IODO-CHLORIDES OF MERCURY. Iodides of Calomel. These compounds, called sub- iodide and protiodide of calomel, were brought forward as remedies by M. Boutigny in 1847. To prepare the former, one eq. of iodine and two eqs. of calomel are taken ; the calo- mel is introduced into a matrass, and gradually heated, with agitation, till it begins to sub- lime; then the iodine is added in small quantities at a time. The combination takes place with some sound, but without sensible loss of iodine. The second compound is prepared in the same mode precisely, one eq. of calomel only being used. [Arch. Gen., Jrvnv. 1857, p. 91.) M. J. Perrens proposes to make them, w'ithout the assistance of heat, by rubbing up, in a mortar, the constituents, taken in the proper equivalent quantities. Though called iodides of calomel, the protiodide is a mixture or combination of biniodide and bichloride of mercury, and the subiodide the same, with an excess of calomel. Both these substances are active preparations, and have been employed with success in syphilitic, scrofulous, and cancerous affections. The subiodide may be given in pill, in the dose of the twenty-fifth of a grain. The ointment is formed of one part of the subiodide to eighty of lard. It has been used by M. Rochard with advantage in acne rosacea, applied by daily frictions, And as a local application in engorgements of the neck of the uterus. The protiodide is used exter- nally only, and should be applied with caution. It acts as a caustic, and may be cast into sticks, like nitrate of silver. An ointment may be made of it, by rubbing one part with twenty of fresh lard. A portion of the ointment, the size of a large pea, may be rubbed daily on a scrofulous tumour, in the armpits, or on the inner part of the thigh. B. IODOFORM. Iodoformum. Teriodide of Formyl. (C2HI3.) This compound, discovered by S6rullas in 1822, was introduced as a remedy, about the year 1837, by Dr. R. M. Glover, of London, and M. Bouchardat, of Paris. It may be obtained, according to the process of MM. Corntilis and Gille, of Liege, by adding to an alcoholic solution of iodide of potassium, heated to 104°, chlorinated lime, in successive portions, stirring after each addition, until the liquid ceases to assume a dark-red colour. On cooling a confused mass of crystals is deposited, consisting of iodoform and iodate of lime. By treating these with boiling alco- hol of 90 per cent., the iodoform alone is dissolved; and the alcoholic solution, as it < ools, deposits the iodoform in crystals. [Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1852, p. 196.) It is in the form of small, pearly, yellow crystals, having a strong saffron-like odour, and sweet taste, in- soluble in water, but readily soluble in alcohol and ether. It is a volatile substance, to the touch, and totally devoid of corrosive properties. Given to the inferior anima’s it destroys them in a smaller dose than iodine does, producing depression, followed by a stage of excitement, with convulsions, contractions, &c. Though containing 29 parts in 30 ■>f its weight of iodine, it has not the least local irritant action. In the form of vapour, it possesses anaesthetic properties, but inferior to those of chloroform. On account of its large proportion of iodine, it is supposed to be capable of replacing that element and the iodides as a remedy, with the advantages of being non-irritant, and of having an organic nature, qualities which favour its absorption and assimilation. Besides the virtues it possesses in common with iodine, it is capable of acting as an anodyne, and is useful in neuralgic af- fections. The principal diseases in which it has been tried are goitre, rackets, scrofula. PAItT ill. Iodoliydrargyrate of .Potassium. phthisis, amenorrhoea, syphilis, glandular tumours, and cutaneous eruptions. In chronic enlargements of the prostate gland, M. More tin recommends the employment of iodoform as a suppository, made of a scruple of iodoform to an ounce of cocoa butter. The dose ot iodoform is from one to three grains, three times a day, given in the form of pill. In tlu treatment of cutaneous diseases and tumours, it is applied in the form of ointment, made by mixing from half a drachm to a drachm with an ounce of lard. B. IODOH YDRARGYRATE OF FOTASSIUM. It has been found by chemists that different iodides will unite together in different proportions, forming compounds which are called by Berzelius double iodides. Bonsdorff, of Finland, and Dr. Hare, of this city, with greater reason, have viewed these combinations as a peculiar kind of salts, in which one of the iodides performs the part of an acid, the other of a base. The substance, the name of which is placed at the head of this article, is one of these compounds, and was presented to the notice of the profession, as a new remedy of remarkable powers, in February, 1834, by Dr. William Channing, of New York. (Am. Jonrn. of Med. Sci., xiii. 388.) It consists of bin- iodide of mercury acting as an acid, and iodide of potassium as a base. But as these iodides combine in at least two proportions, it is necessary to indicate the particular combination employed by Dr. Channing. In a difficult case of pectoral disease, in which the ordinary remedies had failed, Dr. Channing determined to make trial of one of the iodides of mercury. He selected the bin- iodide; and, in order to have it in the liquid form, as it is insoluble in water, he dissolved it in a solution of the iodide of potassium. He was struck with the chemical changes which the compound solution underwent; and, on pursuing his observations, found that the two iodides really united by the intervention of the water; for, with the aid of an operative chemist, he was enabled by evaporation to obtain them in union, in the form of straw- coloured, needleform, deliquescent crystals. He next found, upon consulting the European authorities, that Bonsdorff, who had taken the lead in investigating similar compounds, had discovered the salt in 1826. Dr. Channing analyzed the salt with which he experimented, and found that it consisted of one eq. of biniodide of mercury, and two of iodide of potassium. This he determined by ascertaining that an aqueous solution of a little more than eight grains of iodide of potas- sium would dissolve, and combine with, eleven grains of biniodide of mercury, without being liable to decomposition when largely diluted with water. The combination here indicated corresponds with one of the double iodides of mercury and potassium, described by The- nard. (Trait6 de Chimie, 6<)me ed., iii. 493.) The other is represented by this author as con- sisting of a single eq. of each iodide. When copiously diluted with water, every two eqs. of this iodide let fall one eq. of the mercurial iodide; thus converting the salt into the medi- cinal double iodide. The same decomposition by means of water is noticed by Dr. Channing. For remarks on these double iodides see a paper by Mr. Ambrose Smith, Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xii. 265). Dr. Channing attributes to this preparation the effects of diffusing excitement, and equal- izing the circulation. In the different cases in which he tried it, he thought he saw evidence of its favourable influence on the lungs, in allaying cough and improving expectoration; on the alimentary canal, in restoring the healthy secretions; on the kidneys, in reviving their activity; on the skin and cellular tissue, in cicatrizing superficial ulcerations; and on the absorbent and exhalant systems, in causing the disappearance of effused fluid. The prin- cipal diseases in which he found it useful were chronic bronchitis, hooping cough, tonsillitis, chronic gastro-enteritis, dyspepsia, ascites, anasarca, amenorrhoea, leucorrhoea, eruptions, and scrofula. In some cases of phthisis, it mitigated the symptoms, and appeared to prolong life. Dr. Hildreth, of Ohio, has tried the preparation, and reports favourably of its effects in functional dyspepsia, enlargement of the spleen, amenorrhoea, dysmenorrhoea, leucorrhoea, scrofulous affections, ascites, and general dropsy. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., xxvi. 312.) The average dose of the remedy may be stated at the twelfth of a grain three times a day; but in peculiar constitutions, not more than the forty-eighth, the ninety-sixth, or the two hundredth of a grain daily can be borne. For the convenience of physicians who may wish to make trial of the remedy, we give the following formula, deduced from the state- ments in Dr. Channing’s paper.—Take of iodide of potassium three and a half grains; bin- iodide of mercury (red iodide) four and a half grains; distilled water a fluidounce. Dissolve first the iodide of potassium and then the biniodide of mercury in the water. The compound salt in this solution may be assumed to amount to eight grains, though there is a small ex- cess of the iodide of potassium. Of'this solution, from two to five drops, containing from the thirtieth to the twelfth of a grain, may be given three times a day. It may be adminis- tered in the compound syrup of sarsaparilla, which does not decompose it. B. The iodo-hydrargyrate of potassium was suggested by F. L. Winckler as a qualitative test of the organic alkaloids, with which it produces insoluble precipitates; and subsequently it lias been used by Prof. F. F. Mayer, of New York, for determining the quantity of these alka- loids in any mixture containing them. Prof. Mayer employs, for volumetric analysis, a solution made with 13 546 grammes of corrosive sublimate, 49-8 grammes of iodide of po- 1542 Iodo- Tannin.—Jeffersonia Diphjlla. PART hi. tassium and a litre of distilled water. For the value, in our own weights and measures, of the gramme and litre, the reader is referred to Tables in the Appendix of this work. Of the solutif a thus made one cubic centimeter precipitates, of Aconitta 0-0267 grammes. Atropia 0-0145 “ Narcotina... 0-0213 “ Strychnia... 0-0167 “ Brucia 0 0233 grammes. Veratria.... 0-0269 “ Morphia.... 0-0200 “ Conia 0-00416 “ Nicotia 0-00405 grammes. Quinia 0-0108 “ Cinchonia 0-0102 “ Quinidia... 0-0120 “ The resulting precipitates are liydriodates of the alkaloids, respectively, with iodide of mercury. They form in acid, neutral, and feebly alkaline liquids, except with the presence of alcohol and acetic acid, by which they are dissolved. For those who may not possess the requisite instruments, Prof. Mayer gives the following table, having reference to ordinary officinal weights. The solution is now made with 16-25 grains of corrosive sublimate, 100 grains of iodide of potassium, and enough distilled water to make altogether 12-5 troy- ounces, or 6000 grains. Of this solution 10 grains will precipitate, of Aconitia.„ 0-0534 grains. Atropia 0-0289 “ Sulphate of' atropia... j Sulphate of morphia. Conia 0-0083 “ Nico'tia 0-0081 “ Quinia 0*0216 “ 0-0500 grains. Cinclionia 0-0204 grains. Sulphate of' cinchonia 0-0250 “ Strychnia 0-0334 “ Brucia 0-0466 “ Morphia 0-0400 “ 0-0389 “ Quinidia 0-0240 “ Sulphate of quinidia . Sulphate of quinia.... 0-0296 “ Veratria 0 0538 “ 0-0284 “ For further observations upon Prof. Mayer’s method of effecting the assay of the alka- loids, the reader is referred to the American Journal of Pharmacy (Jan. 1863, p. 20). W. IODO-TANNIN. The solution of iodine in water, made with the assistance of tannic acid, called iodo-tannin, has been noticed elsewhere in this work. (Seepayee 470 and 941.) M. Guilliermond, of Lyons, makes a syrup of this solution, containing about a grain of iodine to the fluidounce, of which the dose is a tablespoonful, gradually increased. B. IQNIDIUM MARCUCCI. This name has been conferred by Dr. Bancroft upon a South American plant, supposed to be the source of a medicine used with great asserted advantage in Maracaibo and elsewhere, in some of the horrible cutaneous affections, especially ele- phantiasis, to which the inhabitants of the tropical regions of this continent are subject. A specimen, however, received from Dr. Bancroft, was found by Sir W. Hooker to be identi- cal with the Ionidium parvijiorum of Ventinat. The medicine is called by the Indians cuichun- chulli, and grows in the neighbourhood of Riobamba, a small town at the foot of the great mountain of Chimborazo. It is said to be diaphoretic, diuretic, occasionally sialagogue, and in large doses emetic and cathartic. The root is the part used. It is highly probable that other vegetable emeto-catharties, having the same property of stimulating the secretions, would be found equally effectual. For an account of what is known in relation to this medicine, the reader is referred to a paper by Dr. Bancroft, republished in the Am. Journ. of Pham. (iii. p. 125). W. ISATIS TINCTORIA. Woad. Pastel. A biennial plant, indigenous in Europe, where !t is also cultivated. The leaves have a fugitive pungent odour, and an acrid very durable t/.ste, and have been used in scorbutic affections, jaundice, and other complaints; but the is valuable only as the source of a blue dye-stuff, called woad, which has been long empl oyed in Fmrope, though at present nearly superseded bv indigo. The leaves are prepared by grinding them to a paste, which is made into balls, placed in heaps, and allowed to ferment. When the fermentation is at an end, the mass falls into a coarse powder, which is tin. dye- stuff in question. \y JEFFERSONIA DIPHYLLA. Twin-leaf. This is a small, indigenous, herbaceous, peren- nial plant, belonging to the class and order Octandria Monogynia, and natural ordec Ber- beridacem. From a knotty rhizoma, furnished with long radicles, arise a naked one-fkwered scape about a foot in height, and leaves which stand in pairs on long footstalks. The flower is white, with a four leaved coloured calyx, and eight petals: and the fruit is a one celled, obovate, substipitatc capsule, dehiscent near the top, with many oblong seeds, unite.! at the base. The plant grows in the Middle and Western States. The rhizoma, which, with the rooilets attached, is the part used, has a brownish-yellow colour, and a bitter, acrid taste, which resides in its cortical part, the inner portion being nearly tasteless. It has been ana- lyzed by Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, and found to contain albumen, gum, tannic acid, starch, pectin, a fatty resin, hard, resin, sugar, lignin, and a peculiar acrid principle, having acid properties and resembling polygalic acid, in -which it is supposed that the virtues of the t oot reside. The root is said to be emetic in large doses, tonic and expectorant in smaller doses, and not unlike seneka, as a substitute for which it is sometimes used. (Am. Journ of Pharm., xxvii. 1.) According to Prof. Mayer, of N. York, the rhizoma of this plant contains a small quantity of berberina, and another alkaloid which is white and in large proportion, as may be inferred from the reactions noticed by Mr. Bentley, of London. Tlie pe-tin cf Mr. Wayne he considers to be saponin ( Am Jcurn. of Pharm.. March, 1863, [. 39.) W. PART III. Jellies.—Labdanum. 1543 JELLIES. The form of Jelly is sometimes a convenient method of administering medi- cines, especially the fixed oils, as cod-liver oil and castor oil, which are thus rendered less adhesive to the mouth and fauces, and less liable to leave that disagreeable impression on the palate behind them, which renders such medicines often so offensive that it becomes difficult lo administer them. While preparing the jelly, opportunity is also offered for incor- porating sugar and aromatics so as very much to cover the offensive taste and odour of the oil. The same remarks are applicable to the resinous juices, as copaiba and some varieties of turpentine, liquid balsam of tolu, &c. The following is a formula recommended by Messrs. Ed. Parrish and Wm. C. Bakes. “Take of the fixed oil or liquid resin a troyounce; honey, syrup, each, half a troyounce; gum arabic, in powder, two drachms; Russian isinglass forty grains; orange-flower water six fluidrachms. Dissolve the isinglass, with the aid of heat, in half a fluidouuce of the orange-flower water, replacing the water as it evaporates. Triturate the other ingredients, with the remainder of the orange-flower water, into a homogeneous mass in a warmed mortar, then add the hot solution of isinglass, stir the mixture as it cools, and set it aside to gelatinize.” (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1861, p. 4.) Any other aromatic water may be substituted for that of the orange-flower, and cinnamon water diluted with an equal measure of pure water would probably better cover the offensive taste. In refer- ence to cod-liver oil, the bitter-almond or cherry-laurel water would be still more effectual; care, however, being taken in this case, that the water is duly diluted, lest too large a dose of it might be administered. W. KALMIA LATIFOLIA. Laurel. Mountain Laurel. Broad-leafed Laurel. Calico-hush. This well-known evergreen inhabits all sections of the United States, being especially abundant on the sides of hills and mountains, which it adorns in summer with its elegant flowers. It is from three to ten feet in height. The leaves are possessed of poisonous, narcotic pro- perties, and have been used in medicine. They have been analyzed by Mr. Charles Bullock, of Philadelphia, and found to contain gum, tannic acid, resin, chlorophyll, fatty matter, a substance resembling mannite, an acrid principle, wax, extractive, albumen, yellow colour- ing matter, lignin, and salts of potassa, lime, and iron. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xx. 264.) They are said to prove fatal to sheep and some other animals, but are eaten with impunity by deer, goats, and partridges. Dr. Barton states, in his “Collections,” that the Indians sometimes use a decoction of the leaves to destroy themselves. It is said that death has been occasioned by eating the flesh of partridges and pheasants which have fed upon them during winter. Dr. N. Shoemaker published, in the North American Medical and Surgical Journal, two cases of poisoning which resulted from eating a pheasant, in the craw of which laurel leaves were found. The symptoms were nausea, temporary blindness, pain in the head, dyspnoea, pallid countenance, cold extremities, and a very feeble pulse, which in one case wras for some time absent at the wrist, in the other beat only forty strokes in the minute. In both cases relief was afforded by vomiting, produced by a tablespoonful of flour of mustard mixed with warm water. A case of similar poisoning is related in the Edinburgh Medical Journal (May, 1856, p. 1014), in which epigastric tension and uneasi- ness, glowing heat of the head, loss of sight, coldness of the extremities, general prostra- tion, and twitchings of the muscles were the prominent symptoms, followed by nausea and full vomiting, which afforded some relief. But feelings of formication and weakness of the limbs, with great prostration of the circulation, remained for several hours, requir- ing the use of stimulants. Dr. Barton was informed that the powdered leaves were employed by an empiric with success in certain stages of fever; and Dr. Thomas, in an inaugural dissertation, published at Philadelphia, A. D. 1802, states that an obstinate case of diarrhoea was cured by a decoc- tion, made by boiling an ounce of the leaves in eight ounces of water down to four ounces. Thirty drops were given six times a day; but this quantity produced vertigo, and the dose was afterwards repeated only four times daily. The leaves are said to have been used advantageously in syphilis. Externally applied, in the shape of ointment or decoction, they have been found useful in tinea capitis, psora, and other cutaneous affections; but caution is necessary in their application, as, according to Dr. Barton, nervous symptoms have resulted from the external use of the decoction. Dr. Bigelow has seen the recently powdered leaves given in doses of from ten to twenty grains, without perceptible effect. It is probable that other species of Kalmia, as K. angustifo/ia or sherp-laurel, and K.alauca or swamp-laurel, have properties identical with those of K. latifolia. A decoction of the leaves of K. angustifolia is used by the negroes of North Carolina as a wash for an ulcer- ative affection between the toes. W. LABDANUM. Ijodanum. A resinous substance, obtained from various species of Cist us, especially C. Cretjcus, C. Indaniferus, and C. hnirifolius, small evergreen shrubs, inhabiting the islands oUthe Grecian Archipelago, and the different countries bordering on the Medi- terranean. Upon the leaves and branches of these shrubs a juice exudes, which is collected by means of an instrument resembling a rake, with leather thongs instead of teeth, which is drawn over the plant. The juice adheres to the pieces of leather, and is afterwards separated. R ts said that labdanum was formerly collected by combing the beards of goats Labdanum.—Lac. PART IIL which had been browsing upon the leaves of the cistus; and Landerer states that it is at the present time gathered in the same way in Cyprus from sheep, whose fleeces become loaded with it while they are pasturing. (See Pharm. Journ., xi. 6.) It comes chiefly from the Grecian Islands. Two varieties exist in commerce. The purest labdanum is in masses of various sizes, sometimes weighing sevei’al pounds, enclosed in bladders, dark- red almost black externally, grayish internally when first broken, of the consistence of a plaster, softening in the hand and becoming adhesive, of an agreeable balsamic odour like that of amber, and of a bitter, balsamic, somewhat acrid taste. It is very inflamma- ble, burning with a clear flame. On exposure it becomes dry, porous, and brittle. Little of this variety is found in the markets. Common labdanum is in contorted or spiral pieces, light, porous, blackish-gray, hard and brittle, not softening between the fingers, similar in odour and taste to the preceding variety, but less inflammable, and mixed with sand and other earthy matters, which are obvious to the sight. A specimen exhibited at the International Exhibition of 1862, at London, was in fiattish pieces, an inch or more thick, with remains of leaves on one side, of a very dark greenish-brown colour, and a granular somewhat shining fracture. Guibourt found in 100 parts of the labdanum in masses, 86 parts of resin with a little volatile oil, 7 of wax, 1 of watery extract, and 6 of earthy sub- stances and hair. In the contorted variety, Pelletier found 20 per cent, of resin, 3 6 of gum with malate of lime, 0-6 of malic acid, 1-9 of wax, 1-9 of volatile oil including loss, and 72 of ferruginous sand. Labdanum is a stimulant expectorant, and was formerly given in catarrhal and dysen- teric affections. At present it is employed in plasters, but seldom even for that purpose in the United States. It is sometimes used in fumigation. W. LAC. A resinous substance obtained from several trees growing in the East Indies, particularly from Croton lacciferum, and two species of Eicus, F. religiosa, and F. Indica. It is found in the form of a crust, surrounding the twigs or extreme branches, and is gen- erally supposed to be an exudation from the bark, owing to the puncture of an insect, be- longing to the genus Coccus, and denominated C. Lacca. By some it is thought to be an exudation from the bodies of the insects themselves, which collect in great numbers upon the twigs, and are embedded in the concreted juice, through which the young insects eat a passage and escape. Several varieties are known in commerce. The most common are stick-lac, seed-lac, and sliell-lac. Sliclc-lac is the resin as taken from the tree, still encrusting the small twigs around which it originally concreted. It is of a deep reddish-brown colour, of a shining fracture, translucent at the edges, inodorous, and of an astringent, slightly bitterish taste. Its ex- ternal surface is perforated with numerous minute pores, as if made by a needle; and when broken it exhibits many oblong cells, often containing the dead insect. When chewed it colours the saliva beautifully red, and, when burnt, diffuses a strong, agreeable odour. It is in great measure soluble in alcohol. Seed-lac consists of minute irregular fragments, broken from the twigs, and partially exhausted by water. It is of a light or dark-brown colour, inclining to red or yellow, feebly shining, almost tasteless, and capable of imparting to water less colour than the stick-lac, sometimes scarcely colouring it at all. It is occasionally mixed with small frag- ments of the twigs. Shell-lac is prepared by melting the stick-lac or seed-lac, previously deprived of its soluble colouring matter, straining it, and pouring it upon a flat smooth surface to harden. It is in thin fragments of various sizes, from half a line to a line thick, often somewhat curved, of a lighter or darker brown colour inclining more or less to red or yellow, shining, more or less transparent, hard and brittle, inodorous and insipid, insoluble in water, but easily and almost entirely soluble in alcohol, especially with the aid of heat. According to Ober- dorffer, cold ether takes from shell-lac only about 5 per cent., consisting of wax; and adulteration with resins soluble in ether is thus readily detected. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1861, p. 313.) A variety of lac is mentioned by writers in the form of cakes, called cake-lac or lump- lac {lacca inplacentis); but this is at present rare in commerce. According to John, lac consists of resin, colouring matter, a peculiar principle insoluble in alcohol, ether, or water, called laccin, a little wax, and various saline matters in small proportion. The resin, according to tfhverdorben, consists of several distinct resinous principles differing in their solubility in alcohol and ether. The laccin is nearly or quite wanting in shell-lac, which also contains scarcely any of the colouring principle. Mr. Hatchett found in stick-lac 68 per cent, of resin, and 10 of colouring matter; in seed-lac: 88*5 per cent, of resin, and 2-5 of colouring matter; in shell-lac 90-9 per cent, of resin, and 05 of colouring matter. The other constituents, according to this chemist, are wax and gluten, besides foreign matters. Lac in its crude state is slightly astringent, and was formerly used in medicine; but at present it is not employed. Shell-lac is wholly inert. Stick-lac and seed-lac are used on account of the colouring principle which they contain. Shell-lac, as well ac the other PART III. Lactate of Zinc.—Laurus Nobilis. 1545 varieties deprived of their colouring matter, is applied to numerous purposes in the arts. It is the chief constituent of sealing wax. The best red sealing wax is made by melting to- f ether, with a very gentle heat, 48 parts of shell-lac, 19 of Venice turpentine, and 1 ot alsam of Peru, and mixing with the melted mass 32 parts of finely powdered cinnabar But common resin is often substituted in part for the lac, and a mixture of red lead and chalk for the cinnabar. The best black sealing wax consists of 60 parts of lac, 10 of tur- pentine, and 30 of levigated bone-black; the best yellow sealing wax, of 60 parts of lac, 12 of turpentine, and 24 of chromate of lead. (Berzelius.) Lac is also used as a varnish, and forms an excellent cement for broken porcelain and earthenware. It has been highly re- commended as an adhesive material for the dressing of wounds, ulcers, &c. It is prepared for use by dissolving, with the aid of a gentle heat, in alcohol contained in a glass bottle, sufficient lac to give it a gelatinous consistence, and then closing the bottle. It is used by simply spreading it on the bandages. W. LACTATE OF ZINC. Zinci Ladas. This salt may be prepared by first obtaining lactate of potassa by double decomposition between lactate of lime and carbonate of potassa, and then adding the solution of the alkaline lactate, filtered from the carbonate of lime, to one of acetate of zinc. By a new double decomposition, lactate of zinc, on account of its sparing solubility in cold water, is deposited in crystals, and acetate of potassa remains in solution. The crystals may be purified by dissolving them in boiling water, and recrystallizing. This salt is in the form of white plates, soluble in sixty parts of cold water, and six at the boil- ing temperature. It is insoluble in alcohol. Its taste is highly saccharine, with a styptic after-taste. Exposed to heat it bears a temperature of 392° without decomposition. Lactate of zinc has been brought forward by M. Herpin as a remedy in epilepsy; and, after a trial of it in this disease for nearly two years, he concludes that it is at least as effi- cacious as the oxide, with the advantages of being better borne, and more easily taken. The dose is two grains three times a day, given in pill, and gradually increased until it amounts to ten grains. The best time for taking it is about an hour after meals. In M. Herpin’s cases it was continued for from five to twelve months. B. LAKES. These are compounds of vegetable or animal colouring principles with alumina or other metallic oxide, and are usually obtained by adding alum or bichloride of tin to the solution of the colouring matter in water, and precipitating by means of an alkali. The alumina or oxide of tin unites with the colouring matter at the moment of separation, and forms an insoluble compound. Lakes are obtained in this way from cochineal, madder, Brazil wood, seed-lac, French berries, &c. They are used in painting. W. LAURUS NOBILIS. The Bay Tree. The fruit of this tree, commonly called bay berries, was one of the officinals of the late London Pharmacopoeia, but has been omitted in the British. The tree belongs to Enneandria Monogynia in the Linnsean system, and to the natural order Lauracese. The following is the generic character of Laurus as given by Lindley in his Flora Medica. “Flowers dioecious or hermaphrodite, involucrated. Calyx four-parted; segments equal, deciduous. Fertile stamens twelve in three rows; the outer alternate with the segments of the calyx; all with two glands in the middle or above it. Anthers oblong, two-celled, all looking inwards. Fertile flowers with two to four castrated males surrounding the ovary. Stigma capitate. Fruit succulent, seated in the irregular base of the calyx. Umbels axillary, stalked.” Laurus nobilis is an evergreen tree, attaining in its native climate the height of twenty or thirty feet. Its leaves are alternate, on short petioles, oval-lanceolate, entire, sometimes wavy, veined, of a firm texture, smooth, shin- ing, deep-green upon their upper surface, paler beneath. The flowers are dioecious, of a yellowish-white colour, and placed, in small clusters of three or four together, upon a com- mon peduncle in the axils of the leaves. The corolla is divided into four oval segments. The fruit is an oval berry, of the size of a small cherry, and when ripe of a dark-purple, nearly black colour. The bay tree, so famous among the ancients, is a native of the coun- tries bordering on the Mediterranean. Its leaves and fruit, and an oil expressed from the latter, are the parts used. The leaves have a fragrant odour, especially when bruised, and a bitter, aromatic, some- what astringent taste. They yield by distillation a greenish-yellow volatile oil, upon which their properties chiefly depend. Water distilled from them has their peculiar odour. The berries when dried are black and wrinkled, and contain two oval fatty seeds, within a thin, friable envelope; or they may be considered as drupes, with a kernel divisible into two lobes. They have the same aromatic odour and taste as the leaves, but are more pungent. Besides an essential oil, they contain also a fixed oil, which may be separated by expres- sion or decoction. The expressed oil, which is obtained from the fresh fruit, is concrete, ot a greenish colour, and retains a portion of the volatile oil, which renders it agreeably aro- matic. Lard, impregnated with the odorous principle of the berries, and coloured green, is said to be often substituted for the genuine expressed oil. The sophistication may be de- tected by means of boiling alcohol, which dissolves the laurel oil. The leaves, berries, and oil of the bay tree are excitant and narcotic; but at present are neve1' used internally as Lawsonia Inermis.—Ligusticum Levisticum. PART III. medicinea. and in this country are scarcely employed in any manner. Their chief use is to communicate a pleasant odour to external remedies. Dr. A. T. Thomson says that he has found an infusion of the berries useful in impetigo. W. LAWSONIA INERMIS. Henna Plant. This belongs to Octandria Monogynia in the Lin- nman system, and to the natural family of Salicariae. It is a shrub growing in the Levant, Egypt, Persia, and India, and well known as the source of a dye-stuff denominated henna, much used throughout the Mahomedan countries of the East. It is largely cultivated in Egypt. The flowers have a strong pungent odour; and a distilled water is prepared from them, used by the women as a cosmetic. The fruit is thought to have emmenagogue pro- perties. But the leaves are the part which constitute the henna of commerce. They are used by the females to give an orange colour to their feet and hands, and a golden hue to their hair. They are also employed to stain common wood in imitation of mahogany. Henna is in the form of powder, which is strongly astringent. It has been chemically exam- ined by Abd-el-Aziz, of Cairo, Egypt, a former pupil in the laboratory for dyeing, connected with the famous manufacture of the Gobelins at Paris. He found in it a brown substance, of a resinoid fracture, having the chemical properties which characterize the tannins, and therefore named by him hennotannic acid. (Journ. de Pharrn., Janv. 1863, p. 35.) Henna is used in medicine, both internally and locally, as a remedy in leprosy and other affections of the skin. The fresh juice of the plant is said by Ainslie to be applied to the same pur- pose. (Herat ct De Lens.) W. LEDUM PALUSTRE. Marsh Tea. Rosmarinus Sylveslris. A small evergreen shrub, grow- ing in swamps and other wet places in the northern parts of Europe, Asia, and America, and in the mountainous regions of more southern latitudes. The leaves have a balsamic odour, and an aromatic, camphorous, bitter taste; and contain, among other ingredients, volatile oil and tannin. They are thought to possess narcotic properties, and have been employed in exanthematous diseases to allay irritation, in hooping-cough, in dysentery, and in various cutaneous affections, particularly leprosy and scabies. In complaints of the skin, they are used both internally and externally in the form of decoction. When placed among clothes, they are said to prevent the attacks of moths. In Germany they are some- times substituted for hops in the preparation of beer. Ledum latifolium, or Labrador tea_, which is a larger plant than the preceding, is a native of North America, growingin damp places in Canada and the northern parts of the United States. The leaves have an agreeable odour and taste, and are esteemed pectoral and tonic. They are said to have been used as a sub- stitute for tea during the war of independence. W. LEEK. Porrum. The Bulb of Allium Porrum. The leek is a biennial bulbous plant, grow- ing wild in Switzerland, and cultivated in the gardens of Europe and this country for culi- nary purposes. All parts of it have an offensive pungent odour, and an acrid taste, de- pendent on an essential oil, which is in a great measure dissipated by decoction, and may be obtained separate by distillation. The bulb, which is the medicinal portion, consists of concentric layers, like the onion, which it resembles in medical properties, though some- what milder. It is gently stimulant, with a peculiar direction to the kidneys. The expressed juice may be given in the dose of a fluidrachm, mixed with syrup. This species of Allium is not used medicinally in the United States. W. LEONURUS CARDIACA. Common Motherwort. [Gray's Manual, p. 317.) A perennial labi- ate herb, thought to be of foreign origin, but growing wild in this country in waste places, around dwellings, &c. The whole plant is used. It has a peculiar aromatic odour and a bitterish somewhat pungent taste, which it no doubt owes to a volatile oil. Its vernacular name implies its possession, in common estimation, of some influence over the uterine functions; and, in the form of infusion or decoction, it. is sometimes used in amenorrhoea, suppression of the lochia, and in hysterical affections. W. LIATRIS SPICATA. Gay-feather. Button Snakeroot. An indigenous perennial plant, growing in natural meadows and moist grounds throughout the Middle and Southern States. It has a tuberous root, and an erect annual stem, which terminates in a spike of beautiful, purple, compound flotvers, appearing in August. The root is said by Schoepf to have a terebinthinate odour, and a warm, bitterish, terebinthinate taste : to be possessed of diure- tic properties; and to be useful in gonorrhoea and sorerhroat; being employed internally in the shape of decoction in the former complaint, and as a gargle in the latter. Pursh in- forms us that L. scariosa and A. squarrosa are known in Virginia, Kentucky, and the Oaro- linas, by the name of rattlesnake's master; and that their roots are employed to cure the bite ot the rattlesnake, being bruised and applied directly to the wound, while their decoction in milk is taken internally. According to Dr. William P. C. Barton, all the tuberous rooted species of Liatris are active plants, and appear to be diuretic. W L1GUSTICUM LEVISTICUM. Lovage. An umbelliferous plant, growing wild in the south of Europe, and cultivated in gardens. The whole plant has a strong, sweetish, aro- matic odour, and a warm, pungent taste. When wounded it emits a yellow opaque juice, which concretes into a brownish resinous substance, not unlike opopanax. The roots, stems. PART III. Ligustrum Valgare.—Lint. leaves, and seeds have all been employed ; but the last have the aromatic properties of the plant in the highest degree. They are small, ovate-oblong, somewhat flattened, curved, strongly ribbed, and of a yellowish-brown colour. The medical properties of lovage are closely analogous to those of angelica. It is a stimulant aromatic, and has been employed as a carminative, diaphoretic, and emmenagogue. The best form for administration is that of infusion. The colouring principle has been isolated by M. J. Nickles. who gives it the name of ligulin, and suggests an important application of it that may be made in testing drinking water. If a drop of its alcoholic or aqueous solution is made to fall into distilled water, it imparts to the liquid its own fine crimson red colour, which undergoes no change; but if limestone water be substituted, the red colour disappears in a few seconds, and is followed by a beautiful blue. (Journ. de Pharm , Mai, 1859, p. 329.) W. L1GUSTRUM VULGARE Privet. A shrub from four to ten feet in height, growing wild both in Europe and the United States, usually in hedges and by the roadside. The leaves, •which have an astringent, bitter taste, and the flowers, which are small, snow-white, and of an agreeable odour, have been used in the form of decoction, in sorethroat, and aphthous and scorbutic ulceration of the mouth. The berries are black, have a sweetish, bitter taste, and are said to possess purgative properties, and to colour the urine brown. They are some- times used for dyeing. The bark was analyzed by M. G. Potex, who found a peculiar sub- stance which he denominated liaustrin. besides mannite, sugar, muco-saccharine matter, starch, chlorophyll, bitter extractive, bitter resin, tannin, albumen, and salts. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xii. 347.) W. LILIUM CANDIDUM. Common White Lily. This well-known plant is a native of Syria and Asia Minor, but has been long cultivated in gardens. The bulb, which consists of im- bricated fleshy scales, is without odour, but has a peculiar, disagreeable, somewhat bitter, and mucilaginous taste. It contains much mucilage, and a small proportion of an acrid principle, which is dissipated or destroyed by roasting or boiling. In the recent state, it is said to have been employed with advantage in dropsy. Boiled with water or milk, it forms a good emollient cataplasm, more used in popular than in regular practice. The flowers have an agreeable odour, which they impart to oil or lard; and an ointment or liniment is some- times prepared from them, and used as a soothing application in external inflammations. A case is recorded by Dr. Jeffries Wyman, of Boston, in which a little girl appeared to have been poisoned by the pollen of the tiger-lily (Lilium bulbiferum?), which the child had intro- duced into her nostrils and probably swallowedT'~SEe'was”aS'ected with vomiting, purging, drowsiness, &c., from which, however, she recovered. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1863, p. 271.) W. LINT. As an object of great importance to the surgeon, and a necessary article of sale to the apothecary, this seems not only to admit, but to require a brief notice in the present place. The term lint strictly speaking is applicable, as its name implies, to a substance prepared from linen. It is in fact linen made soft and somewhat fleecy by various me- chanical processes, so as to render it suitable for the dressing of wounds. The qualities required in good lint are 1. perfect softness to prevent mechanical irritation to the wound, 2. looseness of texture to render it capable of absorbing the secretions from the surfaces to which it is applied, 3. a certain tenacity so that it may receive unctuous dressings, yet with a facility of being torn in one direction, and 4. sufficient firmness of fibre to prevent small portions from being easily separated, and remaining as foreign bodies in the wound. As formerly and still frequently made for domestic purposes, it consists of old linen scraped by means of a knife with the hand, and thus brought into a soft flocculent §tate, almost des- titute of visible fibres. It is obvious that, though this answers some of the above requisi- tions, it entirely fails to answer others, and is unfit for general surgical use. It will not readily admit of the application of cerates, and must very often leave portions of its sub- stance in the wound, to serve as future sources of irritation. Much better is the old-fash- ioned lint, made by machines worked by the hand. This was formerly, and may still be made, in large quantities. Old linen was used for the purpose, such as shirts, sheets, table- cloths, &c., and generally in irregular pieces. This was first cleansed thoroughly by wash- ing with soap and water, or by boiling with a weak ley of soda or pearlash. Sometimes, when coloured, it was bleached before being washed. Thus prepared, it was operated on by a simple machine, in which the rag, wrapped round a cylinder, was submitted to the interrupted action of a knife, made to descend upon it at intervals of one-eighth of an inch, so as to cut the thread in one direction. On being removed from the machine, the cut ends of the thread became untwisted and loose, so as to give a flossy character to the fabric. 9 - render it smooth, it was passed through rollers, and its ragged edges were trimmed. Of course it had different degrees of fineness according to the character of the rags used; and this diversity rendered it fit for different purposes; the finer pieces being used merely as a dressing with unctuous matter to exclude the air, while the thicker were better adapted to the absorption of the liquid secretions. In the progress of improvement, machines were invented and patented for manufacturing 1548 Linum CatJiarticum.—Liquidambar Styracijiua. PART III. lint on the large scale. Thus made, it is distinguished in the shops as patent lint. This is generally prepared out of cloth manufactured for the purpose, and therefore has what- ever advantage may be derived from uniformity of shape and consistence. In other re- spects, it is doubtful whether it has any superiority over the old-fashioned article; espe- cially, as, in consequence of competition, cotton, being the cheaper article, has frequently been in part or altogether substituted for linen. It is said that lint may be rapidly pre- pared, by attaching a piece of linen to the toothed cylinder of the common carding machine. (Med. and Surg. Reporter, Oct. 4, 1862.) Cotton is in several respects inferior to linen for the preparation of lint; and, unless its presence in any manufact ured article sold by this name be made known, it should be looked on as a fraudulent substitution. Its fibre is less soft and therefore more likely to irritate; it has much less absorbing power; and it conveys heat less rapidly. The following are methods by which it may be distinguished. (Dr. Eisner.) 1. A linen thread when held erect, and set on fire, appears, after the flame is extinguished, in a smooth continuous form, while cotton thread similarly treated has a tufted aspect. 2. Under a microscope which magni- fies 300 diameters, the linen fibre appears to be a straight nearly solid cylinder, with a slender central canal; the cotton, flattened as a piece of tape, with a wide canal, and often twisted like a corkscrew. 3. The potassa test, proposed by Bottger, consists in ex- posing the doubtful substance to the action of a boiling concentrated solution of potassa. If made of linen, it will in two minutes assume a deep-yellow colour; if of cotton, it will either remain colourless, or will become very faintly yellow; and if the texture be com- posed of both, it will exhibit a streaked or mottled aspect. The examination must be quickly made, as the yellow colour of the potassa becomes faint with time. 4. Sulphuric acid dis- solves the linen fibre, while it leaves that of cotton little changed. 5. Linen thoroughly oiled has the transparent appearance of oiled paper; cotton remains white and opaque. 6. Tinctures of all organic red dye-stuffs, as cochineal, madder, &c., give a much deeper colour to linen than to cotton, and cause a mottled appearance when the two are mixed. Tow, and hemp in the state of oakum, have been employed for dressing wounds; but they are only applicable as exterior dressings to absorb the pus, when the discharge of this is very copious. Char pie, so much used by French surgeons in dressing wounds from the bottom, generally consists of bundles of straight threads, each four or five inches long, made by unravelling old rather coarse linen. It is much inferior as a dressing for wounds to purjoest forms of lint. On the subject of lint, we would refer the reader to an article in the Pharmaceutical Journal (x. 241); and to another in the American Journal of Pharmacy (July, 1861, p. 359). . W. L1NUM CATHART1CUM. Purging Flax. This has been brought hither from the first part of the work, because, though formerly one of the Edinburgh oflicinals, it»was discarded in the preparation of the present British standard. The character of the genus to which this plant belongs will be found under Linum, in Part I. Purging flax is an annual plant, six or eight inches high, having erect, slender stems, dichotomous near the summit, fur- nished with opposite, obovate lanceolate, entire leaves, and bearing minute white flowers, the petals of which are obovate and acute. It is a native of Europe, and not found in the United States, where it is never employed as a medicine. The whole plant is very bitter and somewhat acrid, and imparts its virtues to water, which acquires a yellow colour. It appears to owe its activity to a peculiar drastic principle, which has received the name of linin, and which is afforded most largely by the plant after the flower has fallen. (Pharm. Central Platt, 1844, p. 110.) Purging flax formerly enjoyed some reputation in Europe as a gentle cathartic, but fell into disuse. Attention has been again called to it as an excellent remedy in muscular rheumatism, catarrhal affections, and dropsy with disease of the liver. From four to eight grains of the extract, given twice or thrice daily, are said to operate as a purgative and diuretic, without inconvenience to the patient. (Medical Times, July, 1850.) A drachm of the powder, or an infusion containing the virtues of two or three drachms of the herb, may be taken for a dose. W. LIQUIDAMBAR STYRACIFLUA. Sweet Gum. An indigenous tree, growing in different parts of the United States from New England to Louisiana, and flourishing also in Mexico, where, as well as in our Southern States, it sometimes attains a great magnitude. In warm latitudes a balsamic juice flows from its trunk when wounded. This has attracted some attention in Europe, where it is known by the name of liquidamber, or copalm balsam, and is sometimes, though erroneously, called liqtiid storax. It is not afforded by the trees which grow in the Middle Atlantic States, but is obtained in the Western States bordering on the Ohio, and in those further south, as far as Mexico. It is a liquid of the consistence of thin honey, more or less transparent, of a yellowish colour, of a peculiar, agreeable, balsamic odour, and a bitter, warm, and acrid taste. By cold it becomes thicker and less transpa- rent. It concretes also by time, assuming a darker colour. It is sometimes collected in the form of tears, produced by the spontaneous concretion of the exuded juice. According to- M. Bonastre, it contains a colourless volatile oil, a semi-concrete substance which rise s in distillation and is separated from the water by ether, a minute proportion of benzoic acid, PART III Lithospermum Officinale.—Litmus. a yellow colouring substance, an oleo-resin, and a peculiar principle, insoluble in water and cold alcohol, for which M. Bonastre proposes the name of The proportion of benzoic acid is greatly increased by time. Mr. Hodgson obtained from a specimen which he examined 4-2 per cent. (Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., vi. 190.) According to Mr. Daniel Hanbury, the acid contained in it is the cinnamic, as is the case in all the products of the liquidambar trees. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 478.) Examined by Mr. W. P. Creecy, of Mississippi, it was found, besides a volatile odorous principle, and 80 per cent, of a hard resin, to contain cinnamic acid as the prominent acid ingredient, yet associated with a small proportion of benzoic acid. (Ibid , May, 1860, p. 199.) Another product is said to be obtained from the same tree by boiling the young branches in water, and skimming off the fluid which rises to the surface. It is of a thicker consist- ence and darker colour than the preceding, is nearly opaque, and abounds in impurities. This also has been confounded with liquid storax, which it resembles in properties, though derived from a different source. It is said to be used in Texas in coughs. (Gammage, N. 0. Med. and Surg. Journ., xii. 636.) Liquidamber may be employed for the same purpose as storax, but is very seldom used, and is almost unknown in the shops of the United States. The concrete juice is said to be chewed in the Western States in order to sweeten the breath. Dr. Gammage states that the juice is employed popularly in Texas as an addition to excitant ointments. According to C. W. Wright, of Louisville, Ky., the bark of the tree is used with great advantage in the Western States in the diarrhoea and dysentery of summer, especially in children. It is taken in the form of syrup, which may be prepared from the bark in the same manner as the syrup of wild-cherry bark, according to the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The dose is a fluidounce for an adult, repeated after each stool. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xxxii. 126.) The editor of the Va. Medical Journal (Aug. 1856, p. 143) states that the use of a decoction of the bark in milk is common in many parts of Virginia, as a remedy in the diarrhoea of children. Liquidambar Altingia is said to exude a balsam in the Tennasserim Provinces of India, somewhat resembling liquid storax. (See Pharm. Journ , viii. 243.) W. LITIIOSPERMUM OFFICINALE. Gromwell. Milium Solis. A European perennial, the seeds of which are ovate, of a grayish-white or pearl colour, shining, rather larger than millet seeds, and of a stony hardness, from which the generic name of the plant originated. From an opinion formerly prevalent, that nature indicates remedies adapted to certain dis- eases by some resemblance between the remedy and the character of the complaint or of the part affected, the seeds of this plant were applied to the treatment of calculous disor- ders ; and they retained their ground in the estimation of physicians as a diuretic, useful in complaints of the urinary passages, long after the fanciful notion in which their use ori- ginated had been abandoned. But they are at present considered nearly inert, and are not employed. W. LITMUS. Lacmus. Ed. Turnsole. Tournesol, Orseille, Fr. This is a peculiar colouring matter derived from Roccella tinctoria and other lichens. Three purple or blue colouring substances are known in commerce, obtained from lichenous plants. They are called seve- rally litmus, orchil, and cudbear. The lichens employed are different species of Roccella, Le- canora, Variolaria, and others. They grow on alpine or maritime rocks, in various parts of the world, and for commercial purposes are collected chiefly upon the European and African coasts, and the neighbouring islands, as the Azores, Madeira, Canaries, and Cape de Verds. The particular species most employed are probably Lecanora tartarea or Tartarean moss, growing in the north of Europe, and Roccella tinctoria or orchilla weed, which abounds upon the African and insular coasts, and is calTecT commercially, in common with other species of the same genus, Angola weed, Canary weed, &c., according to the place from which it may be brought. The principles in these plants upon which their valuable properties depend, are them- selves colourless, and yield colouring substances by the reaction of water, air, and ammonia. They are generally acids, and are named lecanoric, orsellic, erythric, &c., according to their use or origin. What is the exact chemical change by which the colouring matters are deve- loped is not determined; but the original body, in some instances at least, undergoes a series of changes, before the ultimate result is obtained. Dr. Stenhouse proposes that the principles should be extracted from the plants at their place of collection, so as to diminish the cost of carriage. For this purpose the lichens, having been finely divided, are to be ma- cerated with milk of lime, the infusion thus obtained to be precipitated with muriatic or acetic acid, and the precipitate to be dried with a gentle heat. Almost the whole of the co- louring principles are thus extracted, and obtained in a small bulk. To test the value of the plants as dye-stuffs, they may be macerated in a weak solution of ammonia, or a solution of hypochlorite of lime may be added to their alcoholic tincture. In the former case, a rich violet-red colour is produced; in the latter, a deep blood-red colour instantly appears, but .soon fades. All the three colouring substances above referred to may be obtained from the same plant. Lacmus or litmus is prepared chiefly if not exclusively in Holland. The process consists Lolium Temulentum.—Lycium Barbarum. PART HI. in macerating the coarsely powdered lichens, in wooden vessels under shelter, for several weeks, with occasional agitation, in a mixture of urine, lime, and potash or soda. A fer- mentation ensues, and the mass, becoming first red and ultimately blue, is after the last change removed, mixed with calcareous or siliceous matter to give it consistence, and with indigo to deepen the colour, and then introduced into small moulds, where it hardens. It comes to us in rectangular cakes, from a quarter of an inch to an inch in length, light, fri- able, finely granular, of an indigo-blue or deep-violet colour, and scattered over with white saline points. It has the combined odour of indigo and violets, tinges the saliva of a deep- blue, and is somewhat pungent and saline to the taste. From most vegetable blues it differs in not being rendered green by alkalies. It is reddened by acids, and restored to its original blue colour by alkalies. Its chief use in medicine is as a test of acids and alkalies. For this purpose it is employed either in infusion, or in the form of litmus-paper. The infusion, usually called tincture oj litmus, may be made in the proportion of one part of litmus to twenty of distilled water, and two parts of alcohol may be added to preserve it. Litmus-paper is prepared by first forming a strong clear infusion with one part of litmus to four of water, and dipping slips of white unsized paper into it, or applying it by a brush to one surface only of the paper The paper should then be carefully dried, and kept in well-stopped vessels, from which the light is excluded. It should have a uniform blue or slightly purple colour, neither very light nor very dark. As a test for alkalies, the paper may be stained with an infusion of litmus previously reddened by an acid. Orchil or archil, as prepared in England, is in the form of a thickish liquid, of a deep reddish-purple colour, but varying in the tint, being in one variety redder than in another. The odour is ammoniacal. It is made by macerating lichens, in a covered wooden vessel, with an ammoniacal liquor, either consisting of stale urine and lime, or prepared by distill- ing an impure salt of ammonia with lime and water. [Pereira.) It is occasionally adulterated with the extracts of coloured woods, as logwood, sappan-wood, &c. A mode of detecting these adulterations is given by Mr. F. Leeshing in the Chemical Gazette of June 1, 1855 (p. 219). Cudbear is in the form of a purplish-red powder. It is procured in the same manner as orchil; but the mixture, after the development of the colour, is dried and pulverized. The point in which the preparation of these colouring substances differs from that of lit- mus appears to be, that potash or soda is added, in the latter, to the ammoniacal liquid used Orchil and cudbear are employed as dye-stuffs, and sometimes, in like manner with litmus, as a test of acids and alkalies. W. LOLIUM TEMULENTUM. Darnel. Ivraie, Fr. One of the Graminaceae or grasses, be- longing to the Linnaean class and order Triandria Digynia, indigenous in the old world, but introduced into the U. States, and owing its chief importance to the circumstance that it is apt to grow among wheat and other grains, and thus sophisticate the product with its seeds. From ancient times, these have been supposed to be deleterious to the human system, pro- ducing symptoms analogous to intoxication from alcoholic drinks, whence the plant derived its specific name of Temulentum, and the French name of ivraie. The seeds have a sweetish taste, and are said to contain gluten, starch, and sugar; and there is nothing in their sen- sible properties which would suggest the idea that they might be poisonous. Indeed, De Candolle states that they are often eaten in bread without inconvenience; and that a beer into which they enter as an ingredient is drank with impunity. (Herat ct De Lens, iv. 141.) The testimony, however, to the fact, that they have a narcotic effect on the system, evincing itself by vertigo, dizziness, headache, sleepiness, and a species of drunkenness, is too strong to be resisted; though very few instances, so far as we know, have been recorded of posi- tively fatal effects from their use. MM. Rivibre and Maiziere have each recorded a fatal case, which occurred in peasants who had for several days lived upon bread, consisting to the extent of two-thirds or five-sixths of darnel. (Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1863, p. 280.) Though thus acting on man, dogs, sheep, and horses, the seeds are said to be wholly innox- ious to hogs, cows, and ducks; and poultry have even been fattened by them. The remedy in case of poisoning would be as soon as possible to evacuate the stomach. Lindley states that this is the only one of the grasses which has been satisfactorily proved to have dele- terious properties. (Med. and Economic Bot., p. 27.) W. LONICERA CAPRIFOLIUM. Honey suckle. This ornament of our gardens is a native of the south of Europe. Its sweet-scented flowers are sometimes used in perfumery; and a syrup prepared from them has been given in asthma and other pectoral affections. The ex- pressed juice of the plant has been recommended for the stings of bees, being rubbed directly on the injured spot. The fruit of all the species of Lonicera is said to be emetic and cathartic. (Herat et De Lens.) W. LYCIUM BARBARUM. Matrimony Vine. The genus Lycium belongs to the Linnaean class and order Pentandria Monogynia and to the natural order Solanaceae. Different species have been used in various parts of the world in reference to supposed medical vir- tues. Lycium barbarum, which is indigenous in the south of Europe and in Asia, ig a PART in. Lythrum Salicaria.—Malva Sylvestns. 1551 thorny shrub, with long flexible branches, and is cultivated for hedges and arbours. The leaves and stems were examined chemically by Drs. Husemann and Marme, who succeeded in extracting from them an alkaloid by means of phosphomolybdate of soda. For the mode of proceeding, as well as for the method of preparing the phosphomolybdate used by them, the reader is referred to the American Journal of Pharmacy (May, 1864, p. 226). The alka- loid, which they name Ivcin (lycina, or more nronerly, lycia), is characterized by its strong affinity for water, whiSh causes TTFo deliquescelnafew minutes after exposure, and ren- ders it very soluble in that liquid. It is also readily soluble in alcohol, but nearly insolu- ble in ether. It is crystallizable, of a sharp but not bitter taste, and forms erystallizable salts with the acids. The young shoots of one of the species of Lycium are eaten in Spain as asparagus, and its leaves as salad; and the aborigines of New Granada use another spe- cies against erysipelas. The leaves of L. barbarum, as well as the fruit, are said to be used by the physicians of Japan. (Herat et De Lens.) W. LYTHRUM SALICARIA. Loosestrife. Purple Willow-herb. This is an elegant perennial plant, two or three feet high, with an erect, quadrangular, hexagonal, downy, herbaceous stem, bearing opposite, ternate, sessile, lanceolate leaves, cordate at the base, and dowry on the under surface and at the margin. The flowers are axillary, forming a leafy verti- cillate spike. The calyx is red, with unequal segments, the petals purple and undulate, the fruit a small elliptical capsule. The plant grows wild in all parts of Europe, and is found in New England and Canada. It prefers meadows, swamps, and the banks of streams, which it adorns in July and August with its showy purple flowers. The whole herbaceous part is medicinal, and is dried for use. In this state it is inodorous, and has an herbaceous somewhat astringent taste. It renders boiling water very mucilaginous, and its decoction is blackened by the sulphate of iron. Loosestrife is demulcent and astringent, and may be advantageously given in diarrhoea and chronic dysentery, after due preparation by evacuating treatment. It has long been used in Ireland in these complaints, and is said to be a popular remedy in Sweden. The dose of the powdered herb is about a drachm, two or three times a day. A decoction of the root, prepared by boiling an ounce in a pint of water, may be given in the dose of two fluidounces. W. MALAMBO or MATIAS BARK. A bark received from South America by Dr. Alex. Ure, under the name of matias bark, was found to have the characters of the malambo bark, which is held in high esteem in New Granada where it is produced, and has been long known to the French pharmacologists. Though conjecturally ascribed by some to a Drimys, and by others to a Croton, its botanical source was unknown till within a few years. It has been ascertained by H. Karston, of Berlin, to be derived from a hitherto unde- scribed species of Croton, which he names Croton Malambo, and which is described in his recent work entitled uFlorse Columbine Terrarumque adjacentium Specimina Selecta.” This is a small tree or shrub, growing on the coast of Venezuela and New Granada. (Pharm. Journ., Dec. 1859, p. 321.) The bark is described by Dr. Ure as being three or four lines thick, brittle though somewhat fibrous, of a brown colour, and covered with an ash- coloured tuberculous epidermis. It has an aromatic odour, and a bitter pungent taste, and yields these properties to water and alcohol. Its active ingredients appear to be a volatile oil, and a bitter extractive matter. According to Dr. Mackay, it has been used successfully in intermittents, convalescence from continued fever, hemicrania, dyspepsia, and other cases in which tonic remedies are useful, and also as an adjuvant to diuretics. It is probably nothing more than an aromatic tonic. Dr. Ure has administered it with good effect as a substitute for Peruvian bark. [Pharm. Journ., iii. 169.) Under the name of Winter’s bark, a considerable quantity of bark was a short time since imported into the United States from South America, which Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincin- nati, has identified with the malambo bark above described, having found it to correspond With that product both in sensible characters and composition. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxix. 1.) We can confirm this decision of Mr. Wayne; as a specimen in our possession answers precisely to the description given by Dr. Ure. The malambo bark, analyzed by Cadet de Gassicourt, yielded volatile oil, bitter resin, and extractive; but no tannic nor gallic acid, and no alkaloid; and the same was the case with the so-called Winter’s bark examined by Mr. Wayne. [Ibid.) The same bark has been analyzed by Mr. F. B. Dancy, who found in it volatile oil, gum, starch, albumen, resin, extractive, fixed oil, wax, and several inorganic substances. [Ibid., p. 219.) W. MALVA SYLVESTIIIS. Common Mallow. This herb was recognised by the Edinburgh Col- lege, but has been discarded by the British Council, and is no longer officinal. It belongs to the Linnaean class and order Monadelphia I’olyandria, and the natural family Malvaceae. The following is its essential generic character. '■‘■Calyx double, the exterior three-leaved. Capsules very many, one-seeded.” ( Willd.) It is a perennial, herbaceous plant, with a round, hairy, branching, usually erect stem, from one to three feet high, bearing alternate, peti- olate, cordate, roughish leaves, which are divided into five or seven crenate lobes, and on the upper part of the stem are almost palmate. The flowers are large, purplish, and placed, 1552 Mandragora Officinalis.—Manganese. PART III. from three to five together, at the axils of the leaves, upon long slender peduncles, which, as well as the petioles, are pubescent. The petals are five, inversely cordate, and three times as long as the calyx. The capsules are disposed compactly in a circular form. This species of mallow is a native of Europe, growing abundantly on waste grounds and by the way-sides, and flowering from May to August. It is sometimes cultivated in our gardens. Other species, indigenous or naturalized in this country, are possessed of the same proper- ties, which are in fact common to the genus. Malva to tun difo lia is one of the most com- mon, and may be substituted for M. sylvestris. The herb”and TTowers have a weak, herba- ceous, slimy taste, without odour. They abound in mucilage, which they readily impart to water; and the solution is precipitated by acetate of lead. The infusion and tincture of the flowers are blue, and serve as a test of acids and alkalies, being reddened by the far- mer, and rendered green by the latter. The roots and seeds also are mucilaginous. Com- mon mallow is emollient and demulcent. The infusion and decoction are sometimes em- ployed in catarrhal, dysenteric, and nephritic complaints; and are applicable to all other cases which call for the use of mucilaginous liquids. They are also used as an emollient injection; and the fresh plant forms a good suppurative or relaxing cataplasm in external inflammation. It was formerly among the culinary herbs. W. MANDRAGORA OFFICINALIS. Atropa Mandragora. Linn. Mandrake. Mandragora. A perennial European plant, with spindle-shaped root, which is often forked beneath, and is therefore compared, in shape, to the human figure. In former times this root was sup- posed to possess magical virtues, and was used as an amulet to promote fecundity, &c.; and the superstition is still cherished by the vulgar in some parts of Europe. The plant is a poisonous narcotic, somewhat similar in its properties to belladonna, to which it is botanically allied. It was much used by the ancients with a view to its narcotic effects; and the root has been recommended by some eminent modern physicians, as an external application to scrofulous, scirrhous, and syphilitic tumours. It is said to have been used by the ancients as an anaesthetic agent before surgical operations. (Journ. de Pharm., xv. 290.) It is unknown as a remedy in the United States. W. MANGANESE. Manganesium. This metal and its compounds with oxygen (three regular oxides and two acids) have been already described. (See Manganesii Oxidum Nigrum.) Seve- ral of its combinations have been proposed as medicines, and the therapeutic trials, thus far made with them, place them alongside of those of iron as tonic and anti-anemic reme- dies. It will be recollected that manganese as well as iron is always present, in minute pro- portion, in healthy blood, and has been detected in various solids and fluids of the body. (See page 530.) According to an analysis by M. Burin-Dubuisson, the amount of manganese in the blood corpuscles is about one-twentieth that of the iron. It is stated as an advantage of the preparations of manganese, that they may be prescribed in conjunction with tannic acid and the various astringent medicines, which are all incompatible with the preparations of iron. Of the oxides of manganese, the protoxide only is strongly salifiable; and this is the oxide present in the ordinary salts of the meTal. It may be obtained by precipitation, as a white hydrate, from any of the soluble salts of manganese by the addition of a caustic alkali. This, according to M. Hannon, is a good medicinal preparation; but a strong objec- tion to it is that it rapidly absorbs oxygen, and passes to the state of the brown hydrated sesquioxide. The officinal deutoxide (native black oxide) is described at page 529, where its medical properties are also noticed. The sulphate of manganese, having been adopted as an officinal medicine at the late revision of the UTS. Pharmacopoeia, is also described in the first part of this work (page 531). The same is the case with hypermanganate or permanganate of potassa, which is fully treated of under the head of Potassse Permanganas (page 681). Iodide of Manganese. This iodide may be administered in syrup or pill. Professor Procter has proposed the following formula for the syrup. Dissolve sixteen drachms of sulphate of manganese, and nineteen drachms of iodide of potassium, separately, in three fhndounces of water, each portion of water being previously sweetened with two drachms of syrup. Mix the solutions in a glass-stoppered bottle, and, when the crystals of sulphate of potassa have ceased to precipitate, throw the liquor on a strainer of fine muslin, and allow it to filter into a pint bottle, containing twelve ounces of powdered sugar. When the solution has ceased to pass, wash the filter with a little sweetened water, and add sufficient of that liquid to make the whole measure a pint. Lastly, agitate the liquid until the sugar is dissolved. Prof. Procter states that this syrup contains about a drachm of iodide of manganese in each fluid- ounce, and corresponds in strength to the officinal solution of iodide of iron. The small pro- portion of sulphate of potassa which remains dissolved in the syrup, does not interfere with its medicinal efficacy. The dose is from ten to thirty drops, repeated several times a day. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Oct, 1850.) M. Hannon makes & pill of iodide of manganese by double Oecomposition between equal weights of iodide of potassium and crystallized sulphate of manganese. The salts are perfectly dried, accurately mixed in powder, and then rubbed up Avitli honey, so as to reduce the whole to a pilular mass, which may be divided into four- grain pills. Assuming that the honey added compensates for the loss of water in drying, each pill will consist of about two grains of iodide of manganese, one of sulphate of potassa, PART III. Manganese. and one of honey and sulphate of manganese in excess. The dose is one pill daily, gradually incieased to six. According to M. Hannon, iodide of manganese is particularly useful in the anaemia attendant on scrofula, phthisis, and cancer, and in syphilitic cachexy. Given in conjunction with cinchona, it rapidly removes the enlargement of the spleen often following protracted fevers. Carbonate of Manganese. This salt may be obtained by the following formula, which is that of M. Hannon, accommodated to the weights and measures of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Dissolve seventeen ounces of crystallized sulphate of manganese, and nineteen ounces of car- bonate of soda, separately, in two pints of water, a fluidounce of syrup having been pre- viously added to each pint; and, having mixed the solutions in a well-stopped bottle, allow the precipitate to subside. Decant the supernatant liquid, wash the precipitate with sweet- ened water, allow it to drain from a cloth saturated with syrup, express, mix with ten ounces of honey, and evaporate rapidly to form a pilular mass, which is to be divided into four- grain pills. By a double decomposition between the sulphate of manganese and carbonate of soda, carbonate of manganese is precipitated, and sulphate of soda remains in solution. The sulphate is washed away, and the carbonate is brought to a pilular consistence with honey, which, together with the syrup, prevents the protoxide of manganese in the pill from rising to a higher stage of oxidation. The dose is from two to ten pills daily. Carbonate of manganese was tried by M. Hannon as a medicine on himself. After its use for fifteen days he found his appietite improved, and his pulse increased in force; and he experienced a feeling of sanguineous plethora. He afterwards exhibited the remedy in several anemic cases, with the effect of exciting the functions to a more healthy action, increasing the strength and improving the blood. Phosphate, tartrate, and malate of manganese have also been proposed by M. Hannon as useful remedies. The phosphate is prepared by double decomposition between sulphate of manganese and phosphate of soda. A syrup of phosphate of manganese has been made by Mr. T. S. Wiegand, of this city. (See his formula in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. for July, 1854.) Dr. Simpson, of Edinburgh, informed one of the authors that a syrup made with two grains of phosphate of iron and one grain of the phosphate of manganese in a tluidrachm of syrup, was much and advantageously used by himself and others in Edinburgh. This may be easily prepared by adding to the two ingredients mentioned five grains of glacial phosphoric acid for each grain of the phosphate of iron. [Pharm. Journ., Nov. 1859, p. 288 ) Lactate of man- ganese has been given, associated with lactate of iron, in chlorosis, in the dose of~a grain, increased to five graius. Ferro-manganic Preparations. M. Hannon conceives that manganese is peculiarly suited to the treatment of anemic cases in which iron has failed, or acts very slowly; but, instead of passing at once from the use of iron to that of manganese, he prefers to give interme- diately a mixture of the two metals. Eor this purpose he recommends the following formula. Take of crystallized sulphate of iron six drachms and a half; crystallized sulphate of man- ganese two drachms; carbonate of soda nine drachms; honey five drachms Rub together, and with syrup make a mass, to be divided into four-grain pills. In this pill both the metals are present as carbonates; and, as the sulphate of soda is not washed away, it con- tains that salt also. The dose is from two to ten pills daily. (See the paper of M. Hannon, Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., xvi. 41 and 189; also a note of the favourable results obtained by M. Petrequin, of Lyons, Ibid., xvi. 381.) Further experience has confirmed the favourable opinion of M. Petrequin in relation to the therapeutic value of the ferro-manganic prepara- tions. A number of formulas have been devised by M. Burin-Dubuisson, of Lyons, for making them, containing the metals variously combined; but the most important of them is the syrup of iodide of iron and manganese, for the preparation of which we prefer the fol- lowing formula by Prof. Procter. '"Take of iodide of potassium 1000 grains; sulphate of protoxide of iron 630; sulphate of protoxide of manganese 210; iron filings 100; sugar, in coarse powder, 4800. Powder the iodide and sulphates separately, and, having mixed them with the filings, add half a fluidounce of distilled water, and triturate to a uniform paste. Then add another half fluidounce of distilled water to the paste, and triturate again; and, after an interval of fifteen minutes, add a third half fluidounce, and mix. Next transfer the magma of salts to a moistened filter, supported on a funnel, and allow them to drain into a bottle, holding a little more than twelve fluidounces, and containing the sugar. After they have drained, add cold boiled water by small portions at a time, until the solution of the iodides has been displaced and washed from the crystalline magma of sulphate of potassa. Finally, add sufficient cold boiled water to make the whole mea- sure twelve fluidounces. The object of the iron is to prevent the liberation of iodine. This syrup has a very pale straw colour. It contains a little sulphate of potassa, which does not injure it as a therapeutic agent. If the salts have not been all decomposed during their reaction, it will be greenish. Each fluidounce contains 50 grains of the mixed iodides, in the proportion of 3 parts of iodide of iron to 1 of iodide of manganese. The dose is from ten drops to half a fluidrachm. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1853, p. 198.) Syrup of iodide of iron and manganese is considered by M. Petrequin to be particularly suited to the treat- Meat Biscuit.—Medeola Virginica. PART III. inent of anaemia, rear King from obstinate intermittent fevers, prolonged suppuration, and scrofulous, syphilitic, and caiicerous affections. Dr. T. S. Speer, of Cheltenham, in imitation of the practice of M. Hannon and M. P6tre- quin, has employed the combined carbonates of iron and manganese with excellent effects; but, instead of using the carbonate in pill, protected by honey and syrup, as M. Hannon has done, he prefers a saccharine carbonate of the two metals, in imitation of the London saccharine carbonate of iron, made by the following formula. Dissolve three ounces and one drachm of sulphate of iron, one ounce and one scruple of sulphate of manganese, and five ounces of carbonate of soda, each, in thirty Imperial fluidounces of water, ana thoroughly mix the solutions. Collect the precipitated carbonates on a cloth filter, and wash them immediately with cold water, to separate the sulphate of soda. Then press out as much water as possible, and, without delay, triturate the pulp with two and a half ounces of finely powdered sugar. Lastly, dry the mixture at a temperature not exceeding 120°. The sac- charine carbonate of iron and manganese, as thus prepared, is a reddish-brown powder, devoid of all taste, except that imparted by the sugar. The dose is five grains, gradually increased to a scruple, three times a day, given with the meals, or immediately after them. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1854, p. 127, from Med. Times and Gaz.) B. MEAT BISCUIT. This alimentary substance, containing much nutriment in a small bulk, is the invention of Mr. Gail Bordon, jun., of Texas. It is made by mixing a concen- trated fluid extract of flesh, strained through wire-cloth, and freed from fat, writh good wheat flour, or other meal, and baking the dough into a biscuit, which must be preserved, in mass or coarse powder, free from moisture, in gutta percha bags, or air-tight casks or cases. To make the dough, about two parts of the extract are mixed with three of the flour; and about 20 per cent, is lost in baking. The extract contains the soluble ingredi- ents of the flesh, not coagulable by heat; namely, gelatin, kreatin, kreatinin, the phos- phoric, lactic, and inosinic acids, and certain salts. Of course it contains no albumen nor fibrin, unless in some altered state in which they are rendered soluble at a boiling tem- perature. In this nutritious biscuit, the absence of albumen and fibrin is supposed to be supplied by the gluten of the flour. To prepare a pint of palatable soup, an ounce of the powdered biscuit, first made into a thin paste with cold water, is added, with constant stir- ring, to sufficient boiling water, and the whole boiled for twenty minutes. Salt and pepper are then added to suit the taste. The meat biscuit forms an important resource in all cases in which food must be carried on long journeys for daily consumption. Preserved meat-juice is a nutritive liquid, prepared by Mr. Gillon, a manufactui’er of pre- served meats, at Leith, in Scotland. The process for making it, as described by Prof. Ohristison, is as follows. A number of cylindrical cases of tinned iron, each containing six pounds and a half of beef, and closed by soldering with a lid, having a hole half an inch wide in the middle of it, are placed in an iron cylinder, surrounded with an iron jacket so as to leave an interstice, and heated by steam, admitted into the interstice, to the temperature of 220° for about three hours. The cases are then withdrawn, and the juice is poured out, amounting to a few ounces for each case, and, after cooling, is entirely freed from fat. It is next poured into four-ounce tin cases, which are closed as before, with a small aperture in the lid secured with solder. These are subjected to a tempera- ture of 220° in a chloride of calcium bath for some time, and, when removed from the bath, are opened by melting the solder which secures the aperture; whereupon steam rushes out, and carries with it the air which may have collected in the upper part of the case. As soon as the gaseous matter ceases to be expelled, the aperture is resoldered. The process of heating in the bath, tapping, and resoldering is then repeated; and the cases are finally painted, to preserve them from rust. Dr. Christison states that he has repeatedly opened cases, eighteen months in his possession, and found the contents to possess the rich delicate aroma and taste of fresh beef-juice. Mr. Gillon’s meat-juice con- tains only 6-5 per cent, of solids, consisting of osmazome, with the salts, and sapid and odorous principles of meat. It contains neither fibrin, albumen, nor gelatin. It may be taken in the concentrated form, but is generally best diluted. The contents of a case (four ounces) will make sixteen ounces of strong beef tea, by the addition of the requisite quan- tity of boiling water. (See Med. Exam., March, 1855.) Pemmican is an alimentary substance, containing much nutriment in a small bulk, which is used by fur-traders and others, as their exclusive food, on long journeys in the north- west of this continent. It is made, according to Dr. C. C. Keeney, U. S. Army, by mixing equal weights of buffalo meat and buffalo tallow. The meat, thoroughly dried in the sun, is reduced to powder, and the tallow in the melted state is added to it, and the whole well stirred. The melted mixture is then poured into sacks of untanned buffalo hide, capable of containing from twenty to forty pounds. No salt is used, and yet the mixture keeps per- fectly well. [Med. Statistics, U. S. Army, p. 56.) B. MEDEOLA VIRGINICA. Gyromia Virginica. Nuttall. Indian Cucumber. An indigenous perennial herb, growing in all parts of the United States. The root, which in shape and flavour bears a strong resemblance to a small cucumber, is said by Pursh to be eaten by PART III. 3Ielilotus Officinals.—Menyanthes Trifoliata. the Indians. According to the late Professor Barton, it has been thought useful in dropsies, and probably possesses diuretic properties. It is figured and described by Dr. William P. G- Barton in his Medical Botany. W. MELILOTUS OFFICINALS. Melilot. An annual or biennial plant, indigenous in Europe, and growing also in this country. We have two varieties, one with yellow, the other with white flowers, which are considered by some as distinct species. The plant, when in fiowet, has a peculiar sweet odour, which, by drying, becomes stronger and more agreeable, some what like that of the tonka bean. Indeed, according to M. Guillemette, the odorous prin- ciple of the two substances is identical. (Journ. de Pharm., xxi. 172.) The taste of melilot is slightly bitterish. It has little medical power, and, though formerly recommended in various diseases, is at present not employed internally. As a local application, it is used, in decoction or cataplasm, in moderate inflammations, though probably with little otbsr advantage than such as results from the combination of warmth and moisture. W. MENISPERMUM CANADENSE. Moonseed. Yellow PariUa. This is a climbing plant, growing in various parts of the United States, from the northern boundary to the Gulf of Mexico. It is described in the Flora of North America by Torrey and Gray (i 48), and in Gray’s Manual of the Botany of the TJ. States (p. 18). The root or rhizoma is long, of a yel- low colour, and a bitter taste. Considerable quantities of a root were some time since brought to the market of Philadelphia from New Orleans, and offered for sale as Texas sarsaparilla. This was satisfactorily shown by Prof. Robert P. Thomas to be the root of Menispermum Canadense. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 7.) In an unpublished inaugural dis- sertation by Dr. Geo. F. Terrell (Feb. 1844), it is stated that the root of this plant is con- siderably employed in Virginia, both in domestic practice and by physicians, as a substi- tute for sarsaparilla, in scrofulous affections. It has a bitter taste, and is said to be a gently stimulating tonic. Its natural affinity with the columbo plant, both belonging to the family of Menispermacese, and the sensible properties of its root, naturally suggested that this might contain the same or similar active principles with columbo; and Mr. Maisch, in a recent examination, has determined that among its constituents are berbe- rina in small proportion, and a white or colourless alkaloid in larger quantity, which has an alkaline reaction on litmus and turmeric paper, is precipitated by tannin, phospliomo- lybdic acid, and iodohydrargyrate of potassium, and is soluble in ether, alcohol, and a large proportion of water. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1863, p. 302.) W. MENYANTHES TRIFOLIATA. Buckbean. Marsh Trefoil. The leaves of this plant were recognised in the late Edinburgh Pharmacopoeia, but, having been omitted in the British, are noticed in this place, in accordance with our plan of introducing into the third part of the work all the medicines which have ceased to be officinal. Menyanthes trifoliata belongs to the Linmean class and order Pentandria Monogynia, and the natural order Gentianacem, with the following generic character. “Corolla hirsute. Stigma bifid. Capsule one-celled.” ( Willd.) The plant has a perennial, long, round, jointed, horizontal, branching, dark-coloured root or rhizoma, about as thick as the finger, and sending out numerous fibres from its un- der surface. The leaves are ternate, and upon long stalks, which proceed from the end of the root, and are furnished at their base with sheathing stipules. The leaflets are obovate, obtuse, entire or bluntly denticulate, very smooth, beautifully green on their upper surface, and paler beneath. The flower-stalk is erect, round, smooth, from six to twelve inches high, longer than the leaves, and terminated by a conical raceme of whitish, somewhat rose-coloured flowers. The calyx is five-parted; the corolla funnel-shaped, with a short tube, and a five- cleft, revolute border, covered on the upper side with numerous long, fleshy fibres. The anthers are red and sagittate: the germ ovate, supporting a slender style longer than the stamens, and terminating in a bifid stigma. The fruit is an ovate, two-valved, one-celled capsule, containing numerous seeds. This beautiful plant is a native both of Europe and North America, growing in boggy and marshy places, always moist, and occasionally over- flowed with water. It prevails, in the United States, from the northern boundary to Vir- ginia. In this country the flowers appear in May, in England not till June or July. All parts of it are efficacious, but the leaves only are officinal. The taste of buckbean is intensely bitter and somewhat nauseous, the odour of the leaves faint and disagreeable. Its virtues depend on a bitter principle, denominated menu ant hin. frnich may be obtained sufficiently pure for use by treating the spirituous extract of the plant with hydrated oxide of lead, removing the lead by hydrosulphuric acid, filtering and evaporating the liquor, exhausting the residue with alcohol, and again evaporating with a gentle heat. It has a pure bitter taste, is soluble in alcohol and water, but not in pure ether, and is chemically neuter. (Pharm. Cent. Blatt, A.D. 1843, p. 24.) Medical Properties and Uses. With the ordinary properties of the bitter tonics, menyanthes unites a cathartic power, and in large doses is apt to vomit. It was formerly held in high esteem in Europe as a remedy in numerous complaints, among which were intermittents, rheumatism, scrofula, scurvy, dropsy, jaundice, and various cachectic and cutaneous affec- tions. In most of these it was administered under a vague impression of its alterative Mercurialis Annua.—Mesquite Gum. PART ill. powers. I. is little employed in this country; but, ns it is a native plant, and applicable to cases where a combined tonic and purgative effect is demanded, it is desirable that country practitioners should be aware of its properties. The dose of the powdered leaves or root as a tonic is from twenty to thirty grains; of an infusion, prepared with half an ounce to a pint of boiling water, from one to two fluidounces; and of the extract ten or fifteen grains, to be repeated three or four times a day. A drachm of the powder, or a gill of the strong decoction generally purges, and often occasions vomiting. W. MERCUKIALIS ANNUA. An herbaceous European plant, of the family of Euphor- biaceae, which has been employed, from the most ancient times, as a purgative and em- menagogue. It has also been considered by some as diuretic, and has been used in the treatment of syphilitic affections. When boiled, it loses its acrid properties, and in this condition has been used as an emollient. Another species, M. perennis, also a native of Eu- rope, is ranked among poisonous plants. (Herat et De Lens.) But what has recently recalled attention to the annual species is the discovery in it, by Reichardt, of a new volatile alka- loid, which he proposes to name mercurialin (mercurialia). This is a liquid, of an oily ap- pearance, narcotic odour, and alkaline refiction; boils at 284° F.; forms salts with the acids; absorbs carbonic acid; has a strong affinity for water; on exposure to the air is changed into a resin of a buttery consistence; and is very poisonous in its action on man. For the mode of procuring it, see Annuaire de ThArapeutique (1864, p. 44). The existence of a volatile alkaloid in the Mercurialis, suggests that other Euphorbiaceae may owe their acrid properties to a similar constituent. W. MESEMBRYANTHEMUM CllYSTALLINUM. Ice-plant. A biennial plant, growing spon- taneously in the south of Europe, and cultivated as a curiosity in colder countries, by the aid of artificial warmth. The stem and under surface of the leaves are covered with crys- talline drops, which give the plant the appearance of being coated with ice. The herb is without smell, and has a saline somewhat nauseous taste. It is considered demulcent and diuretic, and has been commended as a remedy in various complaints, especially those of the mucous membrane of the lungs and urinary passages. It has also been used in dropsy. The expressed juice is the form in which it has been generally employed. W. MESENNA. Musenna. Bisenna. Under these different names has been brought into notice, as a powerful taeniafuge, the bark of an Abyssinian tree, the botanical character of which has recently been determined by M. Brongniart from dried specimens brought to Paris by M. Courbon. The tree is leguminous, and belongs to the family of the Mimoseas. M. Brong- niart names it Albizzia anthelmintica. The bark is in flat pieces from five to ten inches long, smooth, slightly fissured, of a rusty-gray colour exteriorly, and pale-yellow and fibrous within. It consists of four layers, one of which contains very large cells, with thick coats, and is supposed to be the active part. MM. E. Caventou and Legendre have examined the bark, and found in it no alkaloid, but a peculiar, acid, resinous substance, having an acrid taste, analogous to that of the bark, of which it is probably the active principle. The Abys- sinians employ the powdered bark, in the dose of about two ounces, which they take in va- rious ways, suspended in water or other liquid, or mixed with flour in the form of bread, or made into a confection with honey, butter, &c. It is taken in the morning, three or four hours before breakfast, and no other precautions are used. It produces no pain nor any disturbance of the functions, not even purging actively. Fragments of the worm are voided the same evening, and the greater portion of it the next day. Successful trials of the remedy have been made elsewhere than in Abyssinia, though M. Rayer has collected cases which tend to discountenance the opinion of its vermifuge powers. But the bark may in these in- stances have been injured by time. (See Ann. de Therap., 1862, p. 161.) W. MESQUITE GUM. Gum Mesquite. Gum Mczquile. This is the product of A laarohia glandu,- losa (Torrey and Gray, Flor. of N. Amer., i. 399), a small thorny tree or shrubTbelonging to the family of M/mosese, and growing in New Mexico, Texas, and other neighbouring regions, where it covers vast extents of country. Captain R B. Marcy, of the U. S. Armjq who com- manded an expedition sent by our government into that region, gives a particular account of the tree, in a letter to Messrs. Rushtou & Co., of New York. He states that it was first described by Dr. Edwin James, who attended Colonel Long's exploring expedition to the Rocky Mountains upwards of forty years since. The specimens collected by Dr. James were submitted to Dr. Torrey, by whom the botanical character of the plant was determined. Ac- cording to Captain Marcy, the tree is found between 26° and 36° of N. latitude, and extends from 97° to 103° of longitude, over a region containing more than 500,009 square miles. In its botanical affinities and habits, it is closely analogous to the Acacioe, which yield gum arabic. The fruit is a long, compressed pod, filled with a sweet pulp, which is said to be used as food. A gum exudes from the stem and branches, especially when wounded, which hardens in the dry season, sometimes in masses as large as a hen’s egg. Specimens of this gum were collected, and sent for examination to various persons ir. the Atlantic cities, by Dr. Geo. G. Shumard, of the U. S. Army, who was attached t ;• Contain Marcy’s expedition. A portion received by one of the authors was in irregular, rcjmuth PART III. Mitchella Repens.—Monesia. pieces, of various sizes, and of different, hues, from colourless transparency to a dark amber- brown. Some of them had the fissured appearance of the best Turkey gum Examined by Professor Procter, the gum was found to resemble gum arabic in its solubilities, but to differ from it essentially in some of its chemical reactions. The most striking points of difference are that solution of gum mesquite is not. precipitated by subueetate of lead, and a strong solution is not coagulated by borax. [Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 224.) Dr. Campbell Morfit, of Baltimore, found it to approximate very closely to gum arabic in ultimate composition, its constituents being carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, with three per cent, of inorganic mar ter. He found also a very little bassorin (0206 per cent.), which did not exist in the speci- mens examined by Prof. Procter. [Am. Journ. of Sci. and Arts, March, 1855, p. 264.) There can be little doubt that this gum has all the valuable medicinal properties of gum arabic, and might be substituted for it in all cases, with this considerable advantage, that it may be added to diluted solution of subacetate of lead, so as to communicate to that pre- paration demulcent properties, in addition to those of a sedative and astringent, for which it is so much used as a local application. W. MITCHELLA REPENS. [Gray's Manual, p. 172.) Partridge-berry. Checker-berry. Winter Clover. This must not be confounded, in consequence of its common name, with Gaultheria procumbeus. It is a small, evergreen, trailing indigenous plant, creeping about the roots of trees, with fragrant flowers, and a berry-like, edible fruit, of a scarlet colour, which lasts through the winter. The whole plant is supposed to possess remedial properties, and is said to be employed, in decoction, by the Indian squaws to facilitate parturition. It appears to be diuretic, tonic, and astringent, resembling in these respects the pipsissewa, and may be used for the same purposes, and in the same manner as that plant, W. MOMORDICA BALSAMINA. Balsam Apple. Balsamina. An annual climbing plant, a native of the East Indies, but cultivated in our gardens for the sake of the fruit. This is ovate, attenuated towards each extremity, angular, warty, not unlike a cucumber in ap- pearance, of a lively red or orange-yellow colour, easily falling when touched, and spon- taneously separating into several pieces. It was formerly highly esteemed as a vulnerary, and is still in use among the common people. A liniment formed by infusing the fruit, de- prived of its seeds, in olive or almond oil, is applied to chapped hands, burns, old sores, piles, prolapsus ani, &c.; and the fruit itself is sometimes mashed, and used in the form of poultice According to M. Descourtlitz, it is poisonous when taken internally, having proved fatal to a dog in the quantity of two or three drachms. An extract prepared from it is said to be useful in dropsy, in the dose of from six to fifteen grains. W. MONESIA. Under this name, a vegetable extract from South America was, a few years since, introduced to the notice of the medical profession in France by M. Bernard Derosne, and for a time attracted much attention. Its origin was for some time uncertain; but at present it is believed to be derived from the bark of Chrysophyllum glycyphlseum, a tree of middling size, growing in the forests near Rio Janeiro, andelsewhere inBrazil. [Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., vi. 68.) Specimens of the bark were obtained along with the extract. The bark is in pieces, some of which are three or four lines thick, is very compact and heavy, of a deep brown or chocolate colour, contrasting strongly with the grayish colour of the epidermis when this remains, and of smooth fracture. The extract was received from S. America in cakes weighing rather more than a pound, from three-quarters of an inch to an inch in thickness, of a dark-brown almost black colour, very brittle, of a fracture nei- ther very dull nor very shining, and of a taste at first sweet, then astringent, and ulti- mately acrid; the acrimony being very persistent, and especially felt in the fauces. It is entirely soluble in water. The bark was analyzed by MM. Derosne, Henry, and Payen, and found to contain, in 100 parts, 1-2 of stearin, chlorophyll, and wax, 1-4 of glycyrrliizin, 4-7 of an acrid principle analogous to saponin, called nionesin, 7-5 of tannic acid, 9-2 of a red colouring substance, 1 8 of malic acid and malate of lime, 3-0 of various salts, including silica and oxides of iron and manganese, and 71'7 of pectic acid or pectin and of lignin, including loss, besides traces of an aromatic principle and of gum. Monesin was obtained by treating the bark or extract with alcohol, adding to the tincture an excess of hydrate of lime in fine powder, filtering, evaporating the clear liquor to dryness, treating the residue with water and animal charcoal, filtering, and again evaporating to dryness. Thus pro- cured it was in transparent yellowish scales, which were easily pulverized, forming a white powder. It was uncrystallizable, readily soluble in alcohol and water, to the latter of which it gave the property of frothing, and insoluble in ether. It had no power to saturate acids, was without odour, but had a slightly bitterish taste, followed by a decided and permanent acrimony in the posterior mouth and fauces. [Journ. de Pharm., Janvier, 1841.) Monesia owes its activity probably to this principle and to tannic acid. The effects of this medicine upon the system appear to be those of a moderate stomachic excitant, a general alterative, and a feeble astringent. In overdoses it is said to produce heat in the epigastrium, with obstinate constipation and tenesmus. It has been used inter- nally with asserted advantage in diarrhoea, haemoptysis, menorrhagia, scrofula, scurvy, the 1558 Mo n esia. —Moxa. paft irr. chronr (Marrb of old people, and dyspepsia. As a local remedy it has been found useful in leueoi rlioea, ulcerations of the mouth and fauces, spongy and scorbutic gums, carious teeth, and obstinate scrofulous and otherwise unhealthy ulcers upon the surface The ex- tract may be given in pill or pow.der, in aqueous solution, in tincture, or in syrup. The dose of it is from two to ten grains, repeated every hour, two, or three hours, or less frequently. From ten grains to a drachm may be given daily. In scrofulous affections, it must be given in large quantities, and persevered in for several weeks, in order to obtain its curative effects. Monesia is applied to ulcers either by being sprinkled in powder upon the surface, or in the form of ointment made with one part of the extract and seven parts of simple oint- ment. Monesin, or the acrid principle, has been given internally in the dose of about half a grain, an deltas also been applied to ulcers. Mr. Dupuy, of New York, states that specimens of an extract sold as monesia, which have come under his notice, bear so.close a resemblance to extract of logwood as to suggest the inquiry, whether they might not really have been the product of the same plant. (Ar. Y. Journ. of Pharm., i. 167.) W. MOXA. The term moxa is employed to designate small masses of combustible matter, in- tended, by being burnt in contact with the skin, to produce an eschar. They are of various forms, and made of different materials. The Chinese moxa is in small cones from eight to t welve lines in height, and is prepared from the leaves of one or more species of Artemisia. A. Chinensis and A. Indica were indicated by the Dublin College; but Lindley states that it is the A. Moxa of De Candolle which is employed. According to some authors, the part used is the down which covers the leaves and stems; but others, with greater probability, assert that it is a fine lanuginous substance, prepared from the leaves by beating them in a mortar. A coarser and a finer product are obtained, the former of which is used for tinder, the latter worked up into moxa. A similar moxa has been made in France, by a similar process, from the leaves of A. vulgaris. Various substitutes have been proposed for the Chinese moxa. all composed of some light, porous, soft, inflammable substance, which burns slowly, and thus allows the heat to be regulated according to the effect desired. Linen rolled into a cylinder, cotton formed into the same shape and enclosed in a piece of linen, cords of cotton in small masses of various shapes, and even common spunk made from the agaric of the oak, have been employed by different persons with the desired effect. But all these bodies are subject tp the inconve- nience of requiring to be constantly blown upon, in order that their combustion may be sustained. To remedy this defect, cotton impregnated with nitre has been recommended; and the moxa usually employed is prepared from that substance. It is important that the impregnation should be uniform; as otherwise different parts of the cylinder, burning with different degrees of rapidity, would produce unequal effects upon the skin. The following process is recommended. One pound of cotton is introduced into a vessel containing two ounces of nitre dissolved in half a gallon of water, and a moderate heat applied till all the liquid is evaporated. The cotton when perfectly dry is formed into thin, narrow sheets, which are rolled round a central cord of linen, so as to form a cylinder from half an inch to an inch in diameter, and several inches long. This is enclosed in a covering of silk or linen sewed firmly around it: and, when used, may be cut by a razor into transverse slices a few lines in thickness. By leaving a hole in the centre of the cylinder, the combustion will be rendered more vigorous, and a deeper eschar produced. The pith of Ilelianthus annuus, or the common sun-flower, has been proposed by M. Percy for the preparation of moxa, for which it is well adapted by the nitre which it contains, and which enables it to burn without insufflation. The stem, when perfectly mature, is cut into transverse sections about half an inch in thickness, which must be carefully dried, and kept in a perfectly dry place. They have this advantage, that, in consequence of the retention of the cortical portion, they‘may be held with impunity, while burning, bet ween the fingers of the operator. They are, however, often defective in consequence of an insuf- ficiency of nitre in the pith, or of the unequal inflammability of different parts. M. llobinet has perfected the preparation of moxa, by combining the advantages of the two kinds last described. He rolls cotton round a small central cylinder of pith, and en- velopes the whole in a piece of muslin, which is more or less firmly applied, according to the degree of compactness required. The cylinders, thus made, burn without assistance, uniformly, and with a rapidity proportionate to their firmness. Dr. Jacobson, of Copenhagen, has proposed, as a substitute for the ordinary forms of moxa, small cylinders formed out of strips of paper imbued with a solution of chromate of potassa; and cotton, impregnated with the solution of chlorate of potassa instead of nitre, is said to answer an excellent purpose. [Journ. de Pharm., xix. 608.) Small cylinders made out of strips of coarse muslin saturated with the same solution are also employed. M. Guepratt proposes pqper or cotton dipped into the solution of subacetate 0/ Lad, and afterwards dried. [Med. Exam., N. S., iii. 455.) Lime in the act of slaking has been employed by Dr. Osborne. A portion of pewdeied quicklime, half an inch in thickness, and of suitable lateral dimensions, is appl'c l so the PART III. Moxa.—Muriatic Ether 1559 skin, and confined by some convenient arrangement. A few drops of water are then added, and a degree of heat is soon evolved sufficient for a caustic effect, if the lime is allowed to remain as long as the heat continues. This may be increased or diminished by increasing or diminishing the quantity of lime ejnployed. The eschar formed is somewhat more than double the extent of the base of the moxa. (Dublin Journ., Jan. 1842.) Medical Uses. Cauterization by fire, in the treatment of disease, has been commonly practised among savage and half civilized nations from the earliest periods of history, and has not been unknown as a remedy in the most polished communities. The ancient Egyp- tians and Greeks were acquainted with the use of moxa; and in China, Japan, and other countries of Asia, it appears to have been employed from time immemorial. From these countries the early Portuguese navigators introduced it into Europe; and the term moxa is said to have been derived from their language, though supposed by some to be of Chinese origin. The true Chinese name is said to be kicw. (Percy and Laurent.) Some years since, the remedy became very popular in France, and attracted some attention in this country. It acts on the principle of revulsion; relieving deep-seated inflammation, and local irrita- tion whether vascular or nervous, by inviting the current of excitement to the skin. In some cases it may also operate advantageously by the propagation of a stimulant im pression to neighbouring parts. The celebrated Larrey was among those who contributed most to bring this remedy into repute. The diseases in which it was recommended by this author were amaurosis, loss of taste, deafness, paralytic affections of the muscular system, asthma, chronic catarrh and pleurisy, phthisis, chronic engorgement of the liver and spleen, rachitis, diseased spine, coxalgia, and other forms of scrofulous and rheumatic inflammation of the joints. It has also been used advantageously in neuralgia, and is applicable to chronic complaints gene- rally in which powerful external revulsion is indicated. The parts of the body upon which, according to Larrey, it should not be applied, are the cranium where protected only by the skin and pericranium; the eyelids, nose, and ears; the skin over the larynx, trachea, and mammary glands; over superficial tendons, project- ing points of bones, and articular prominences in which the capsular ligament, might be involved; the anterior surface of the abdomen; and the genitals. As a general rule it should be applied as near as possible to the seat of the disease; and, in neuralgic or paralytic cases, at the origin or over the course of the nerves proceeding to the part affected. Some advise that the cylinder be attached to the skin by some adhe- sive liquid; but a more general practice is to retain it in the proper position by a pair of forceps or other instrument. Larrey recommends that the skin around it be covered with a piece of moistened lint, having a hole in the centre to admit the base of the cylinder. The moxa should be set on fire at the summit, and the combustion sustained if necessary by the breath, the blow-pipe, or the bellows. The size of the cylinder should vary, accord- ing to the effect desired, from half an inch to an inch or more in diameter, and from a few lines to an inch in height. Any degree of effect may be obtained, from a slight inflamma- tion to the death of the skin, by regulating the time during which the moxa is allowed to burn. AVhen a slough is required, it should be suffered to burn until consumed. The first sensation experienced is not disagreeable; but the operation becomes gradually more pain- ful, and towards the close is for a short time very severe. W. MUREXIDE. A fine purple dye-stuff, made by the reaction of nitric acid on uric acid. As resulting from the action of nitric acid on urine, it was supposed by Mr. Prout to consist of purpuric acid and ammonia, and hence was named pur pur ate of ammonia; but chemists are not agreed as to its precise composition. It is now made from guano. This is first treated with muriatic acid to remove foreign substances, and then with soda to dis- solve the uric acid, which is separated by neutralizing the soda with muriatic acid. The uric acid is dissolved in nitric acid, the solution is heated, and after it cools ammonia or its carbonate is added, which developes the purple colour. Murexide is obtained in crys- tals, which have a square form, and are of a rich green colour by reflected, but of a purple red by transmitted light. They are slightly soluble in cold water, more so in boiling water, and insoluble in alcohol and ether. With potassa they form a rich purple solution. (Brands md Taylor.) See for an article on the subject of murexide ike Pharmaceutical Journal (xviii. 328). W. MURIATIC ETHER. JEther Mariaticus. Muriate of Ethylen. Chloride of Ethyl. This ether was discovered by Rouelle, but first obtained in sufficient quantities to permit the exa- mination of its properties by Basse. It may be procured by several processes, but the fol- lowing is the best. Distil a mixture of equal measures of concentrated muriatic acid and alcohol, and receive the product, by means of a curved glass tube, in a tubulated bottle, half filled with water at a temperature between 70° and 80°, and connected by means of a second tube v itr another bottle, loosely corked, and surrounded by a mixture of common salt with onow or pounded ice. The ether, as it enters the first bottle, is mixed with alcohol and acid, which are retained by the water; while the pure ether passes forward, and is condensed in Muriatic Ether.—Mushrooms. PART III. (he refrigerated bottle. It must be kept in strong bottles, well secured with ground stoppers covered with leather. Before being opened, the bottle should be cooled to the freezing point. Muriatic ether is a colourless liquid, having a strong, slightly saccharine, alliaceous taste, and a penetrating, ethereal, alliaceous smell. Its sp. gr. at the temperature of 41° ;s 0-774. It is extremely volatile, entering into ebullition at 54°; so that in summer it may be col- lected in the gaseous state, in bell-glasses over water. Its density in the state of vapour is 2 22. When kindled as issuing from a fine orifice, it burns with an emerald green flame with- out smoke, diffusing a strong odour of muriatic acid; but, when set on fire in quantities, it burns with a greenish-yellow, smoky flame. Water dissolves one-fiftieth of its weight of this ether, and acquires a sweetish, ethereal taste; and alcohol unites with it in all proportions. These solutions are not precipitated by nitrate of silver, showing that the chlorine present is in a peculiar state of combination. Like bydiic and nitric ether, it dissolves sulphur and phosphorus, the fat and volatile oils, and many other substances. It consists of one eq of muriatic acid 36-5, and one of ethylen 28 = 64-5: or, in volumes, of two volumes of the acid, and one volume of the vapour of ethylen, condensed into two volumes. Its formula is C4H4,HC1. Viewed as the chloride of ethyl, it is represented by C41I5,C1. Muriatic ether is a diffusible stimulant ; but, owing to its extreme volatility, cannot be kept in the shops. It may, however, be preserved in a cool cellar, the temperature of which does not rise above 45° or 50°, being well secured in bottles, which should be placed re- versed. When used as a medicine, it is generally mixed with an equal bulk of alcohol, form- ing what is called alcoholic muriatic ether. The dose is from five to thirty drops, given in sweetened water, or other convenient vehicle. B. MUSHROOMS. Fungi. This extensive family of cryptogamous plants is interesting to the physician, from the consideration, that, while some of them are very largely consumed as food, others are deleterious in their nature, and capable, when eaten, of producing poisonous effects. Their substance is made up of a cellular tissue, which is usually of that soft consist- ence denominated fungous, but is sometimes corky, ligneous, or even gelatinous. Many of them have an agreeable odour and taste, while others are unpleasant or offensive both to the nostrils and palate. Their juice generally exhibits an acid reaction. According to Bia- connot, most of them contain, among other substances, a peculiar principle denominated fungin, a peculiar acid called fungic acid usually combined with potassa, and a saccharine matter, less sweet than most other varieties of sugar, less soluble in alcohol and water than that of the cane, and distinguished by some writers as the sugar of mushrooms. M. Bolby found mannite in two different species, with oxalic acid in one, an acid which he supposed to be tire fumaric in a second, and lichstearic acid in a third. (Journ. de Pharm., 3e scr., xxiv. 236.) M. Dessaignes has ascertained the identity of the fumaric and fungic acids. (Ibid., xxvi. 133.) Fungin constitutes the basis of these vegetables, and is the principle upon which their nutritive properties chiefly depend. It is the fleshy substance which remains after they have been treated with boiling water holding a little alkali in solution. It is whitish, soft, and insipid; inflammable; insoluble in water, alcohol, ether, weak sulphuric acid, and weak solutions of potassa and soda; soluble in heated muriatic acid; decomposed by nitric acid, and by concentrated alkaline solutions; and converted by destructive distillation into substances resembling those which result from the distillation of animal matters. MM. Payen and Fromberg affirm that the fungin of Braconnot is nothing but cellulose; and this assertion is confirmed by M. Gobley, who attributes the animal properties ascribed to it, to the presence of unseparated albumen. M. Gobley also found the supposed peculiar saccha- rine matter to be mannite. He gives, as the result of his analysis of the edible mushroom, water, albumen, cellulose, mannite, extractive matters, salts, and fatty matter consisting of olein, margarin, and a peculiar concrete fatty substance analogous to cholesterin, and called by him agaracin. (Ibid , xxix. 91.) Mushrooms are very largely cultivated in Europe for the table. They require a rich soil; but the discovery is asserted to have been recently made, that they will flourish better, and attain a much greater size, in artificial beds of sulphate of lime, in which the spores are buried mixed -with powdered nitrate of potassa to the depth of about one-third or one-half of an inch; at least this is said to be true of a variety of the Agaricits campestris, called by the French “Vagaric de couche.” (Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1861, p. 1 y(5. It is highly important for those w’ho employ mushrooms as food, to be able to distinguish those which are wholesome from the poisonous. The following general rules are given by M. Richard in the Dictionnaire des Drogues. Those should be rejected which have a narcotic or fetid odour, or an acrid, bitter, or very acid taste; which occasion a sense of constric- tion in the throat when swallowed; which are very soft, liquefying, changing colour, and assuming a bluish tint upon being bruised; which exude a milky, acrid, and styptic juice; wdiicli grow in very moist places, and upon putrefying substances; in fine, all such as have a coriaceous, ligneous, or corky consistence. The last, however, are injurious in consequence rather of their indigestible than of their poisonous nature. Even mushrooms which are usually edible may prove poisonous, if collected too late, or in places which are too moist. It is said, moreover, that the poisonous species sometimes become innocent PART III. Mushrooms. —Musk, Artificial. when they grow under favourable circumstances. It is affirmed, for example, that mush rooms which prove poisonous in England are eaten with impunity in. Russia, a fact which Mr. W. Hamilton is disposed to ascribe less to difference in the plant, than in the mode od preparation; salt being much more largely used with them by the Russian than the Eng- lish cooks. (Pharm. Journ., xiv. 67.) In the autumn of 1859, out of six officers of the French army stationed at Corte, who partook of mushrooms, five died. In consequence of this event, the Army Board of Health drew up instructions for the use of the army as to the mode of distinguishing the poisonous from edible mushrooms. We have no space for them here; and must content ourselves with referring to the Journal de Pharmacie (Nov. 1860, p 839); and the Pharmaceutical Journal (Jan. 1861, p. 387). Immense quantities of mushrooms are eaten in France, Germany, Italy, and other parts of continental Europe; and they are said to constitute the chief food of the people in certain provinces. Some experiments of M. Gerard would tend to show that poisonous mushrooms may bt rendered innocent, by treating them with water slightly acidulated with vinegar, before cooking them. About a pound nvoirdupois of poisonous mushrooms, cut into pieces, are to be macerated for two hours in a quart of water, acidulated with two or three spoonfuls of strong vinegar, and afterwards to be washed with a large quantity of water. Next day they are to be put into cold water, .boiled for half an hour, then taken out, washed, and dried. They are now fit for food. (See Am Journ. of Pharm , xxv. 274 ) But subsequent experiments by MM. Demartis and Corne, of Bordeaux, have proved that this method is not always to be relied on; as certain mushrooms, after having been treated in the mannei suggested, have nevertheless produced fatal effects on animals; and, as the same mush- rooms may be poisonous at one season or in one situation, and innocent in another, the inference is that those experimented on by M. Gerard, though ordinarily poisonous, may not have been so in that particular instance. {Journ. dc Pharm., 3e ser., xxi. 468.) The symptoms produced by the poisonous mushrooms are anxiety, vertigo, nausea, faint- ness, vomiting, and, if they are not rejected from the stomach, somnolence, stupor, small and intermittent pulse, tension of the abdomen, cold extremities, livid skin, and death in thirty-six or forty-eight hours. Sometimes violent pains in the stomach and bowels are experienced; and occasionally severe vomiting and purging occur, and save the patient. Blackish or bloody dejections, with tenesmus, .sometimes attend the qction of the poison. The symptoms are not generally experienced until some hours after the mushrooms have been eaten, showing that their deleterious effects depend upon the entrance of the poisonous principle into the circulation. The remedies are emetics, if the physician is called in time, accompanied with the free use of warm drinks, and followed by cathartics. After the evacuation of the alimentary canal, demulcent and nutritive beverages should be given, and the strength of the patient sustained by mild tonics or stimulants. Ether is particu- larly recommended; and opiates would no doubt prove serviceable in the absence of coma, should any irritability of the stomach and bowels remain. Some of the poisonous species have been used as medicines; but in this country they are never employed; and too little seems to be precisely known of their modes of action, and their qualities, even in the same species, vary too much, according to the circum- stances of their growth and situation, to justify their introduction into the materia medica, without further investigation. A species of Lycoperdon or puff-ball, L. proteus, was thought to have been proved by Dr. B. W. Richardson, of to have remarkable narcotic and anaesthetic properties. Having noticed that the smoke of this fungus was used in the country for stupefying bees, he experimented with the fumes upon various animals, which, when caused to inhale them, became insensible, and could be operated on without evincing any signs of pain. When carried far, they caused death. He had himself inhaled the fumes clarified by passing them through water, and experienced symptoms of intoxication and drowsiness. They were procured by burning the fungus. (Lond. Med. Times and Gaz., June, 1853, p. 610.) Mr. Thornton Herapath, however, maintains, as the result of his ex- periments, that these anaesthetic effects are in reality not owing to any narcotic principle present in the fungus, but to the carbonic oxide gas generated during their combustion. (Philosoph. Magaz., July, 1855.) W. MUSK, ARTIFICIAL. Moschus Factitius. This is prepared, according to M. Eisner, by adding, by small portions at a time, one part of rectified oil of amber to three parts of fum- ing nitric acid. The resulting resin is washed with water to separate acid, and brought to the consistence of a firm extract in a water-bath. Thus prepared it is a dai'k brownish-red substance, having a burning, bitter, aromatic taste, and a musky odour. It is very soluble in alcohol, ether, and the volatile oils; and its alcoholic solution reddens litmus. Triturated with caustic potassa, it gives off ammonia. When set on fire, it burns with a very smoky flame, and leaves a shining porous charcoal. Its formula, deduced from its combination with protoxide of lead, is C15HgN2Or Comparing its composition with that of the oil of amber, the action of the nitric acid evidently consists in eliminating a portion of carboh~ancThydro- gen, adding to the oxygen, and furnishing nitrogen. M. Eisner found oil of amber to con- sist of several oily principles, having different boiling points, one of which, resembling Music, Artificial.—Myrica Cerifiera. PART III. tup:on, he ..ills amber eupion. As this substance yields artificial musk by the action of fum- ing nitric acid, he believes the property possessed by oil of amber yielding the same sub- stance to be due to its presence. (Journ. de Pharm., 8e ser., ii. 144.) During the reaction of nitric acid with oil of amber, Dr. John T. Plummer, of Indiana, has observed that oxalic acid is generated. Dr. S. W. Williams gives the following formula for the preparation of artificial musk. Add gialualiy, drop by drop, three drachms and a half of concentrated nitric acid to a drachm of rectified oil of amber, contained in a glass tumbler or very large wineglass. The mixture grows hot, and emits offensive fumes, which the operator must avoid. When the ordinary nitric acid is employed, which is not of full strength, the reaction must be assisted by heat; in which case Dr. Williams recommends that the vessel containing the mixed ingredients be placed in a plate before the fire, they being, meanwhile, continually stirred with a glass rod. After the mixture has remained at rest for 24 hours, it acquires a resinous appearance, and divides into two portious, an acid liquid below, and a yellow resin above, resembling musk in smell. This being thoroughly washed, first with cold and then with hot water, until all traces of acid are removed, is the artificial musk. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., viii. 14.) Artificial musk is an antispasmodic and nervine, and possesses the general therapeutic properties of the natural substance, though in a weaker degree. It is praised by Dr. Wil- liams in the treatment of hooping-cough, typhoid states of fever, and nervous diseases generally. When combined with water of ammonia, compound spirit of lavender, or lauda- num, he found no remedy so efficient in the sinking faintness occurring in the last stage of pulmonary consumption. The average dose for an adult is ten grains; for a child of two years old, from half a grain to a grain, repeated, in each case, every two or three hours. It may be prepared as the musk mixture, or with almonds in the form of emulsion. According to Berzelius, tincture of artificial musk is formed by dissolving a drachm of the musk in an ounce of alcohol, equivalent to ten fluidrachms, of the sp. gr. 0-835. Of this the dose for an adult is a teaspoonful. This tincture has been employed by Trof. Banner, chief physician of the Children’s Hospital at Munich, in uncomplicated spasm of the glottis, with invariable success in more than thirty cases. Though artificial musk is not equal in power to the na- tural substance, when genuine, yet it is in all probability superior to the adulterated article, so frequently sold under the name of musk.. B. MYRICA CERIFERA. Wax-myrtle. Bay-berry. This is an indigenous shrub, growing in great abundance in the sandy soil along the sea-shore, and even on the shores of our north- ern lakes. It belongs to Dioecia Tetrandria in the Linnaean system, and the natural order MyricaceaS. The genus is characterized by its sterile flowers in cylindrical, and its fertile in ovoidal closely imbricated catkins, without calyx or corolla, solitary under a scale-like bract with a pair of bractlets; the stamens 2 to 8, with filaments somewhat united below; the ovary with 3 scales at its base, and 2 thread-like stigmas; the fruit a small spherical nut. (Gray's Manual.) The leaves of the wax myrtle are oblong-lanceolate, narrower at their base, entire or somewhat toothed near the apex, shining, with resinous dots on both sides, and very fragrant when rubbed. The fruit is covered with a coating of white wax, and some- times continues on the plant for two years or more. 'The shrub is from three or four to ten feet high, often thickly crowded, and, under such circumstances, scenting the air with its spicy odour. The coating of wax upon the surface is collected, and known in commerce as myrtle icax. (See Vegetable Wax, page 241.) A volatile oil might probably be collected by distillation from tlie leaves, and used for purposes similar to those to which oil of pimento is applied. The bark of the stem and root is uupposed to possess valuable remedial properties, and has been employed to a considerable extent. In the dried state it is in quilled pieces of variable length, covered with a thin epidermis of a grayish colour somewhat mottled, and marked with slight circular fissures. Within the epidermis the colour is reddish-brown. The bark is brittle, and of a peculiar, astringent, bitterish, and pungent taste, followed by a slight sense of acrimony. Its powder has a peculiar aromatic odour, and irritates the nostrils and throat when inhaled. It yields its virtues to water and alcohol. Chemically examined by Mr. Geo M. Hambriglit, it was found to contain volatile oil, starch, lignin, gum, albumen, extractive a red colouring substance, tannic and gallic acids, an acrid resin soluble in alcohol and ether, an astringent resin soluble in alcohol and not in ether, and a peculiar acrid principle having acid properties, analogous to saponin, for which the name of myricinic acid is pro- posed. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1863, p. 193.) In relation to its effects on the system, the bark appears to be moderately tonic and astrin- gent, with probably expectorant properties connected with its acrid principle, and in large doses emetic. It has been considerably used by the “eclectics,” in diarrhoea, jaundice, scro- fula, &c. Externally the powdered bark is used as a stimulant to indolent ulcers; and the decoction as a gargle and injection in chronic inflammation of the throat, leucurrhoea, &c. The dose of the powder is twenty or thirty grains, of a decoction made with an to the pint of water, one or two fluidounces. An alcoholic extract, very inappropriately named myricin, is given in the medium dose of about five grains. W PART III. Myrobalans.—Narcissus Pseudo-Narcissus. 1563 MYROBALANS. Myrobalani. These are the fruits of various East India trees, particu- larly of different species of Terminalia. They are noticed here partly on account of their ancient reputation, partly because they are still occasionally to be found in the shops, though seldom if ever used in medicine. Five varieties are distinguished by authors. 1. Myrobalani belliricx. These are obtained from Terminalia Bellirica. They are roundish or ovate, from the size of a hazelnut to that of a walnut, of a grayish-brown colour, smooth, marked with five longitudinal ribs, and sometimes furnished with a short, thick footstalk. They consist of an exterior, firm, resinous, brown, fleshy portion, and an interior kernel, which is light-brown, inodorous, and of a bitterish very astringent taste. 2. Myrobalani che- bulse. This variety is produced by Terminalia Chebula. The fruit is oblong, pointed at each extremity, from fifteen to eighteen lines in length, of a dark-brown colour, smooth and shining, with five longitudinal wrinkles, but without footstalks. In their internal arrange- ment and their taste, they resemble the preceding. 3. Myrobalani citrinse weljiavse. These are from a variety of the same tree which affords the last-mentioned myrobalans, from which they differ only in being somewhat smaller, of a light-brown or yellowish colour, and of a taste rather more bitter. They were formerly sometimes sold in the shops of Philadelphia, under the name of white galls, to which, however, they bear no other resemblance than in taste. 4. Myrobalani Indicse vel nigrse. These are thought to be the unripe fruit of Terminalia Chebula, or T. Bellirica. They are ovate-oblong, from four to eight lines long, and from two to three lines thick, of a blackish colour, wrinkled longitudinally, and presenting, when broken, a thick brown mass, without kernel, but with a small cavity in the centre. They are sour ish and very astringent. 5. Myrobalani emblicse. This variety is wholly different from the preceding, and derived from a plant having no affinity to the Terminalite, namely, the Phyllanthus Emblica of Linnaeus. It is often in segments, as kept in the shops. When the fruit is entire, it is blackish, spherical, depressed, of the size of a cherry, presenting six obtuse ribs with as many deep furrows, and separating into six valves, and has a strongly astringent and acidulous taste. These fruits were in high repute with the Arabians, and were long employed by European practitioners, as primarily laxative and secondarily astringent, in various complaints, par- ticularly diarrhoea and dysentery. Their dose was from two drachms to an ounce. They are not now employed as medicines. We have been told that they have been used as a sub- stitute for galls in the preparation of ink-powder. W. NAPHTHALIN. This may be obtained by subjecting coal tar to distillation, when it passes over after the coal naphtha. It is a white, shining, crystalline substance, fusible at 176° and boiling at 423°. According to Kopp, its sp.gr. in the liquid state is 0-9774, ac- cording to Alluard, at 210° F., 0-9628. (Journ. dc Pharm., Avril, 1860, p. 318.) It is soluble in alcohol, ether, naphtha, and the oils, but insoluble in water. Notice has already been taken of the artificial preparation of alizarin, a colouring principle of madder, from naph- thalin, by M. Roussin. (See R.ubia, page 716.) It has been proposed by Dupasquier as an expectorant, and has been found, on trial, to act decidedly as such. In the impending suffocation, sometimes occurring in the chronic pulmonary catarrh of old persons, and in humoral asthma, it facilitated expectoration in a remarkable degree. Being a stimulating remedy, it is not proper in acute bronchitis, or where pulmonary inflammation exists. The dose is from eight to thirty grains, given in emulsion or syrup, and repeated at intervals of a quarter of' an hour, until an abundant expectoration takes place. [Journ. de Pharm., 3eser., ii. 513 ) M. Rossignon considers naphthalin to act like camphor, and to be capable of replacing it on many occasions as a remedy. It produces excellent effects in verminose affections. It has been found useful by M. Emery, in the form of ointment, made by mix- ing a scruple of naphthalin with five drachms of lard, in dry tetter, psoriasis., and lepra vulgaris. (Annuaire de Therap., 1843, pp. 64 and 66.) B. NAPLES YELLOW. A yellow pigment prepared by calcining a mixture of lead, sul- pliuret of antimony, dried alum, and muriate of ammonia, or a mixture of carbonate of lead, diaphoretic antimony, dried alum, and muriate of ammonia. [Gray.) W. NARCISSUS PSEUDO-NARCISSUS. Daffodil. This well-known bulbous plant is a native of Europe, but very common in the gardens of this country, where it attracts attention by the early appearance of its conspicuous yellow flowers. Both the bulb and flowers have been used in medicine. The latter have a feeble peculiar odour, and both have a bitter mueilaginous taste. They are emetic, though uncertain in their operation. It is probable that the flowers of the wild plant are more powerful than those of the cultivated. They may be given dried and powdered, or in the form of extract. The dose of the powder, to produce an emetic effect, varies, according to the statements of different physicians, from a scruple to two drachms; while the extract is said to vomit in the dose of two or three grains. It is conjectured that the emetic property is developed by the agency of water. The bulb is most powerful in the recent state, and, within our own knowledge, is occa- sionally used as an emetic in domestic practice in the country. When dried and powdered, it has been given in the dose of thirty-six grains without vomiting. The author, when a 1564 Nard.—Nitrate of Copper. PART III. student of medicine, wishing to ascertain whether this root might not, like ipecacuanha, possess diaphoretic properties, took a dose of/it suspended in some warm water at bed- time, and on awaking in the morning found himself bathed in a copious sweat, and freed, at the same time, from the symptoms of a severe attack of catarrh under which he was at the time labouring. The flowers are said also to possess antispasmodic powers, and have been used in France, with supposed advantage, in hooping-cough, epilepsy, and other con- vulsive affections. It is probable, however, that they operated in these cases by their nau- seating or emetic property. They have, moreover, been advantageously employed in diar- rhoea, dysentery, and intermittent fever. Other species of Narcissus are said to possess the same properties, though they have not been so much used. W. NA11D. Spikenard. Several aromatic roots were known to the ancients under the name of nardus, distinguished, according to their origin or place of growth, by the names of tiardus Indica, nardus Celtica, nardus montana, &c. They are supposed to have been derived from different species of Valeriana. Thus the nardus Indica is referred to F._ Jatamensi of Bengal, the nardus Celtica to V. Celtica, inhabiting the Alps, Apennines, &c., and the nardus montana to V. tuberosa, which grows in the mountains of the south of Europe. The Indian nard, or spikenard, sometimes also called Syrian nard, is still occasionally to be found in the shops. It is a small delicate root, from one to three inches long, beset with a tuft of soft, light-brown, slender fibres, of an agreeable odour, and a bitter, aromatic taste. It was formerly very highly esteemed as a medicine, but is now almost out of use. Its pro- perties are analogous to those of the officinal valerian. W. NASTURTIUM OFFICINALE. R. Brown. Sisymbrium Nasturtium.. Linn. Water-cress. A small, perennial, herbaceous, succulent plant, growing in springs, rivulets, and ponds, in North America, Europe, and some parts of Asia. The fresh herb has a quick penetrating odour, especially when rubbed, and a bitterish, pungent taste, but loses both when dried. In sensible and medical properties it boars some resemblance to scurvy grass, though milder, and on this account is preferred for the table. It is thought to be useful in scorbutic affec- tions, and visceral obstructions. The expressed juice is sometimes given in the dose of one or two ounces; but the herb is more frequently used in the form of a salad. Other species of Nasturtium, as N. Palustre or marsh water-cress, and N. anwhibium or water-radish, grow in similar situations uuHTthe Ar. similar virtues. " W. NERIUM OLEANDER. A notice of the oleander, so well known as an ornamental shrub of our conservatories, is introduced here mainly on account of its presumed poisonous pro- perties. The peasantry in the south of France, where the plant grows wild, employ the powdered bark as a poison for rats, and death is said to have occurred from eating food roasted by the oleander wood. (Merat et De Lens.) The leaves, boiled in lard or oil, yield an ointment which is said to be very efficacious, rubbed on the skin, against insects that infest the person. A case has been recently recorded in which a roan, in Hindostan, swallowed somewhat more than an ounce of the juice of Nerium odorum, with the effect of producing the most violent narcotic symptoms, as stupor, stertorous breathing, and convulsions, fol- lowed by great prostration, with involuntary evacuations, from which, however, after two days of danger, he recovered under the use of emetics, followed by supporting treatment. (B. and F. Med.-Chir. Rev., Am. ed., April, 1860, p 387 ) M. Latour has made a careful chemical examination of oleander, from which he obtained the following results. 1. The poisonous principle exists in the leaves, bark, and flowers, but most largely in the bark. 2. This principle is of a resinous nature, and not volatile, and is found more largely in the wild than the cultivated plant. 3. The solubility of this resin in water is much facilitated by the alkaline salts, and hence it exists in the watery extract. 4. The distilled water of the bark and leaves possesses some activity, which it owes to a small portion of the resin carried over with the steam. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., March, 1858, p. 172 ) W. NIGELLA SATIVA. Nutmeg-flower. Small Fennel-flower. A small annual plant, growing wild in Syria and the south of Europe, and cultivated in various parts of the world. The seeds, which are sometimes kept in the shops under the name of semen nigellse, are ovate, somewhat compressed, about a line long and half as broad, usually three-cornered, with two sides flat and one convex, black or brown externally, white and oleaginous within, of a strong, agreeable, aromatic odour, like that of nutmegs, and a spicy, pungent taste. Their chief constituents are a volatile and fixed oil, and a peculiar bitter principle denominated nigellin, which exists in the seeds in very minute proportion. {Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., ii. 128.) In India they are considered as stimulant, diaphoretic, and emmenagogue, and are believed to increase the secretion of milk. They are also used as a condiment and as a eor- rigent or adjuvant of purgative and tonic medicines. W. NITRATE OF COPPER. Cupri Nitras. This well-known salt has been employed with advantage, as a caustiq, in a severe case of ulceration of the throat and tongue, and in several similar cases, by Dr. William Moore, of Ballymoney, Ireland. The application is attended with no danger, provided the ulcer or part is dried before applying the caustic, ana aftei wards smeared with oil. (See Braithwaite's Retrospect, xxv. 201.1 B. PART III. Nitrate of Soda.—Nitrosulphate of Ammonia. NITRATE OF SODA. Cubic Nitre. This salt may be formed by treating carbonate of soda with nitric acid. It is found naturally in the desert of Atacama and elsewhere in Peru, where it forms beds of vast extent. Attempts were made between 1820 and 1830 to export it to England and the United States; but the cargoes were unsalable. Soon afterwards, however, its value became known; so that at present large quantities are exported from Peru, being consumed in the manufacture of sulphuric and nitric acids, and as a fertil- izer. The salt has also been found largely in Brazil, in the Province of Bahia, near the river San Francisco. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1861, p. 502. For a particular account of the nitrate of soda deposits of Peru, in a commercial point of view, see Ibid., March, 1862, P- 268.) The crude salt, as it comes from Peru, is in saline lumps, rather soft and friable, and damp on the surface. It is distinguished into varieties according to its colour and state of aggregation, as white compact, yellow, gray compact, gray crystalline, and white crystallive, and varies very much in purity, containing from 85 to only 20 per cent, of the pure salt. Some of the varieties contain iodine. (Seepage 47.) The impurities consist of common salt, sul- phate and carbonate of soda, and chloride of calcium. Occasionally borate of lime, asso- ciated with borate of soda, is found under the beds of the nitrate. (Seepage 784.) Nitrate of s«ia, when pure, is a white salt, crystallizing in rhomboidal prisms, and hav- ing a sharp, cooling, and bitter taste. It attracts moisture slightly from the air, and dis- solves in about twice its weight of water, at 60°. It has been praised as a remedy in dys- entery by two German physicians, Drs. Velseu and Meyer, given in the quantity of from half an ounce to an ounce in the course of the day, dissolved in gum water, or other mu- cilaginous liquid. It has been used with success in the same disease by Dr. Rademacher, of Vienna, who recommends it in a number of other diseases having nothing in common (Ann. de Therap., 1854.) Dr. J. B. Brown also bears very emphatic testimony to the value of nitrate of soda as a speedy and safe remedy in dysentery and dysenteric diarrhoea. (Charleston Med. Journ., May, 1854, p. 398, from North- Western Med. and Surg. Journ.) As nitrate of soda has been imposed upon our merchants for nitre, it may be useful to mention that the former salt may be distinguished by its giving rise to an orange-yellow flame when thrown on burning coals, and by the rhomboidal shape of its crystals; those of nitre being long six-sided prisms. B. N1TROPRUSSIDE OF SODIUM. This is the most interesting of a series of salts, dis- covered by Dr. Playfair, called nitroprussides, which are produced, for the most part, by saturating nitroprussic acid, formed by the action of nitric acid on ferrocyanide of potas- sium, with different bases. The sodium salt is best obtained by the process of A. Overbeck, as follows. Dissolve four parts of powdered ferrocyanide of potassium, contained in a flask, in five and a half parts of commercial nitric acid, diluted with an equal weight of water. After the action is completed, which generally occupies about ten minutes, and is accom- panied by a copious evolution of gases, heat the resulting coffee-brown liquid in a water- bath, until a drop of it gives a dingy green, instead of a blue precipitate, with a solution of sulphate of protoxide of iron. Then allow the liquid to cool; whereupon the larger part of the nitrate of potassa generated will be deposited in crystals. Pour off the green mother- liquor from these, and separate the remaining nitrate of potassa by repeated concentrations. Next neutralize the liquid, while heated in a water-bath, with carbonate of soda, taking care to add the carbonate so long only as a pure blue precipitate is produced. Lastly, filter the solution, and set it aside for the formation of crystals, which must be washed with wa- ter, and dried between blotting-paper. (Chem. Gaz., July 15, 1853, p. 271.) This salt is in the form of large, ruby-coloured, prismatic crystals, very much resembling those of ferrid- cyanide of potassium (red prussiate of potassa). It is soluble in two and a half parts of cold water, and in a less quantity of hot water. Its solution, exposed to sunshine, is decom- posed, with evolution of nitric oxide gas, and deposition of Prussian blue, at the same time acquiring a green colour. Nitroprusside of sodium, as well as the other soluble nitroprus sides, is a most delicate test for the alkaline sulphurets, with which it strikes a beautiful violet colour. Its composition is not certainly known; but the following formula, given bj Gerhardt, is probably the correct one: Na2,Fe2Cy5N02-}-4H0. Nitroprussic acid is the nitro- prusside of hydrogen, with the formula II2,Fe2Cy5NU2. B. NITROSULPHATE OF AMMONIA. This compound, discovered by Pelouze in 1835, may be formed by passing nitric oxide through a solution of sulphate of ampionia in five or six times its volume of water of ammonia. A large number of crystals are formed, which must be quickly washed with water of ammonia previously refrigerated, and dried without heat. Nitrosulphate of ammonia has been used at the IIotel-Dieu in Paris, in doses of twelve grains, with apparent advantage, in typhoid fever. Its composition cor- responds with one eq. of nitric oxide, one of sulphurous acid, and one of ammonia; but as ihe salt is not precipitated by barytic water, Pelouze conceives that the nitric oxide and sulphurous acid, together, form a peculiar acid which he calls mtrosulphuric acid, consist- ing of one eq. of nitrogen, one of sulphur, and four of oxygen (NSOJ. B. Nitrous Oxide.—Ocymum Basilicum. PART III. NITROUS OXIDE. This gas, well known from its power to cause a transient intoxica- tion when breathed, is capable of producing anaesthetic effects; but, even if these were as safely induced as by ether, the comparative expense of the gas would be an objection to its employment. The late Mr. Horace Wells, dentist, of Connecticut, tried to introduce it as an anaesthetic; but his first experiments were unsuccessful, and further attempts were superseded by the discovery of etherization. Recently, however, it is said to have been used to a considerable extent by the dentists, and with satisfactory results. It is alleged in its favour, that its operation, while equally effectual, is more pleasant and transitory than that of ether or chloroform, and that no serious consequences have been experienced. (Host. Med. and Surg. Journ., Oct. 15, 1863, p. 226.) As a remedial agent it is probably capable of beneficial application in cases requiring the use of a powerful nervous and cerebral stimulant; and some trials have been made with it in low forms of fever, in which it appeared to act favourably. Water, impregnated by pressure with about five times its volume of this gas, forms the nitrous oxide water, known in England under the name of Searle’spatent oxygenous aerated water, which has been used to some extent as an internal remedy. Sir H. Davy tried the aqueous solution, made without pressure, and thought it acted as a diuretic, and promoted digestion; and used it in Asiatic cholera with apparent advanfage. The patent water is asserted to be suited to the treatment of torpor, debility, depression of spirits, asthma, and dyspepsia; but to be contraindicated in inflammatory and plethoric states of the system. Dr. George J. Ziegler, of Philadelphia, has made a number of therapeutic trials with nitrous oxide water, charged with five times its volume of the gas, and finds it to possess tonic, resolvent, exhilarant, and diuretic properties. He has observed, however, that its free and prolonged use is apt to produce emaciation. Dr. Ziegler has also made some interesting experiments, tending to show the antidotal and revivifying properties oi nitrous oxide. In these experiments, dogs were asphyxiated or poisoned with carburetted hydrogen, chloroform, carbonic acid, hydrocyanic acid, and other agents, and, when in a state of suspended animation more or less complete, were generally revived by the nitrous oxide water, injected into the bowels in the quantity of from two to three pints. When ad- ministered by the stomach, the dose of the water is from half a pint to a pint and a half, taken in the coursq of the day. Dr. Ziegler concludes from his observations and experi- ments that nitrous oxide is a powerful arterial, nervous, and cerebral stimulant, possess- ing, at the same time, valuable antidotal powers. (Bost. Med. and Surg. Journ., xlvi. 453 and xlvii. 383.)* 15. NYMPIIiEA ODORATA. Sweet-scented Water-lily. An indigenous herbaceous perennial, growing in most parts of the United States, in fresh water ponds and on the borders of streams, and distinguished by the beauty and delicious odour of its large, white, many- petaled flowers. Its root is large and fleshy in the recent state, but becomes light, spongy, and friable by drying. It is very astringent and bitter, and, according to Dr Bigelow, contains much tannin and gallic acid. It is sometimes employed, in the form of poultice, as a discutient application. The root of the Nymphsea alba. or European while water-lily, was esteemed antaphrodisiac by the ancients, but has long lost this reputation. Like that, of the American plant, it is bitter and styptic, and may have been useful by its astringency in some cases of leucorrhoea, gonorrhoea, dysentery, &c., in which it was formerly em- ployed for its reputed sedative virtues. « W. OCHRES. These are native mixtures of argillaceous or calcareous earth and oxide of iron, employed in painting. They are prepared for use by agitating them with water, de- canting the turbid liquor after the coarser particles have subsided, then allowing it to rest in order that the finer parts may be deposited, and, lastly, drying the sediment which forms. The colour of the ochres varies with the state of oxidation of the iron, and with the propor- tion which it bears to the other ingredients, and is sometimes artificially modified by the agency of heat. Several varieties are kept in our shops under different names, according to their colour or place of origin. Such are the brown ochre, the yellow ochre; the red ochre, the Roman ochre of a brownish-yellow changing by heat to a purple-red, the Oxford ochre of a brownish-yellow colour less deep than the Roman, and the French ochre which is yellow. The Indian red from the Persian Gulf, and the Spanish brown may also be ranked in this class of pigments. Sometimes ochres come in a powdery state, and sometimes in hard masses; in the latter state they are called stone ochres. W. OCYMUM BASILICUM. Basil. An annual plant, a native of India and Persia, and cul- tivated in Europe and in this country in gardens. The whole plant has a strong, peculiar, agreeable, aromatic odour, which is improved by drying. The taste is aromatic, and some- what cooling and saline. It yields by distillation a yellowish-green volatile oil, lighter than water, which on being kept solidifies into a crystalline camphor, isomeric if not iden- tical with turpentine-camphor. (Gmelin’s Handbook, xiv. 359.) Basil has the ordinary pro- * In a letter addressed to one of the authors by Mr. R. C. Clark, it is stated that the writer had been effectually cured of severe neuralgia by taking a fluidounce of the nitrous oxide water every six hours. (Enanthe Crocata.—Oil of Anda. 1567 PART III. perties of the aromatic plants, and is in some places considerably used a3 a condiment. The seeds are said by Ainslie to be used in India, in the form of infusion, as a remedy in gonor- rhoea and nephritic affections. W CENANTHE CKOCATA. Hemlock Water-dropwort. A perennial, umbelliferous, aquatic European plant, exceedingly poisonous both to man and inferior animals. The root, which has a sweetish not unpleasant taste, is sometimes eaten by mistake for other roots, with the most dangerous effects; and numerous instances of fatal results are on record. The symp- toms produced are such as attend irritation or inflammation of the stomach, united with great cerebral disturbance, indicated by giddiness, convulsions, and coma. Externally ap- plied, the root produces redness and irritation of the skin, with an eruptive affection. It is said to be sometimes used empirically as a local remedy in piles; and a case is recorded in which an obstinate leprosy was cured by the continued use of the juice of the plant. Other species of (Enanthe are poisonous, and the whole genus should be regarded among the sus- pected plants. We have two or three indigenous species. The proper remedies, in cases of poisoning from these plants, are emetics, followed, after the stomach has been thoroughly evacuated, by demulcent drinks. A peculiar resinoid principle, denominated cenanlhin, has been found by Mr. Gerding in (Enanthe fistulosa, of which half a grain, given to an adult, produced long-continued irritation of the fauces, with hoarseness, and a grain occasioned vomiting. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxi. 68.) W. (ENANTHE PHELLANDRIUM. (Sprengel.) Phellandrium aquaticum. Linn. Fine-leaved Water-hemlock. A biennial or perennial, umbelliferous, European water-plant, the fresh leaves of which are said to be injurious to cattle, producing a kind of paralysis when eiiten. By drying, they lose their deleterious properties. The seeds have been used in Europe to a considerable extent in the treatment of disease. They are from a line to a line and a half in length, ovate-oblong, narrow above, somewhat compressed, marked with ten delicate ribs, and crowned with the remains of the calyx, and with the erect or reverted styles. Their colour is yellowish-brown; their odour peculiar, strong, and disagreeable; their taste acrid and aromatic. Among their constituents is a volatile oil, upon which their aromatic flavour depends. By Mr. C. Fronfield it has been rendered probable that they contain a volatile al- kaloid, analogous to conia, if it be not conia itself; for if the powdered seeds are rubbed with solution of potassa, the peculiar mouse-like odour of that alkaloid is exhaled. The powder was submitted to distillation with caustic potassa, the alkaline liquid obtained was neutralized with sulphuric acid and evaporated to a syrupy consistence, alcohol was added to precipitate the sulphate of ammonia, the liquid was then filtered, treated with caustic potassa, and again distilled. On the surface of the distillate a yellow oily fluid floated, which was only slightly soluble in water but readily so in ether and alcohol, evinced an alkaline reaction with turmeric paper, and neutralized the alkalies. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1860, p. 211.) By different writers the seeds are described as aperient, diuretic, emmena- gogue, expectorant, and sedative. They probably unite mild narcotic properties with the stimulant powers which are common to most of the aromatics, and may be directed, accord- ing to circumstances, to different secretory organs. In overdoses they produce vertigo, in- toxication, and other narcotic effects. They appear to have been used most successfully in chronic pectoral affections, such as bronchitis, pulmonary consumption, and asthma. They have been given also in dyspepsia, intermittent fever, obstinate ulcers, &c. The dose of the seeds, to commence with, is five or six grains, so repeated as to amount to a drachm in twenty-four hours. They should be given in powder. A tincture and alcoholic extract have been prepared, of which the former, containing the virtues of half a drachm of the seeds in a fluidounce, is given in a dose varying from half a fluidrachm to a fluidrachm, and the latter in that, of three to five grains. (Pharm. Journ., xii. 591.) IV. (ENOTIIERA BIENNIS. Tree Primrose. A biennial indigenous plant, growing in fields and along fences from Canada to the Carolines. It is from two to five feet high, with a rough stem, alternate, ovate-lanceolate leaves, and fine yellow flowers, which make their appearance in July and August. Schoepf states that it is esteemed useful as a vulnerary. The late Dr. R. E. Griffith found a strong decoction of the small branches, with the leaves and cortical part of the stem and larger branches, very beneficial in eruptive complaints, especially tetter. He applied the decoction several times a day to the affected part. He be- lieved the virtues of the plant to reside in the cortical part, which has a mucilaginous taste, and leaves a slight sensation of acrimony in the fauces. W. OIL OF ANDA. A fixed oil procured by expression from the seeds of An da Brasiliensis (Radde), Anda Gornesei (Ad. Jussieu), a tree of Brazil, belonging to the family of EiTphor- biacese. The bark yields on being wounded a milky juice, which is said to be poisonous, and to be used for stupefying fish. The fruit, which is about as large as an apple, ash- coloured, with two larger and two smaller angles, encloses a two-celled nut, containing two «eeds, about the size of a chestnut. Like the seeds of other Euphorbiaceous plants, these are actively purgative; one seed, according to Martius, being the dose for a man. By ex- pression these seeds yield a pale-yellow, transparent o'il, with little smell or taste, which 1568 Oil of Ben.— Oil of Jasmine. PART III. is said to be used in Brazil for burning and painting. Dr. Norris, who tried the oil at the Pennsylvania Hospital, found it to operate on tHe bowels moderately in the dose of fifty drops, and copiously, when more largely given. (Cyclopaedia of Prac. Med. and Surg., i. 470.) Dr. Alexander Ure, who has experimented with it in several cases, states that, in tho ave- rage dose of twenty drops, it usually operates mildly, without producing heat or pain in the throat, and seldom causing, nausea or vomiting. W. OIL OF BEN. This is a fixed oil extracted from the seeds of the Moringa pterggospema and M. aplera of Gsertner, confounded by Linnaeus under the name of Guilandina Moringa. llyperanthera Moringa (Vahl) is a synonyme of the former species. These are trees belong- ing to the family of Leguminosse, inhabiting different parts of India, Arabia, Syria, &c., and introduced into the W. Indies. The leaves and other parts have an acrid property, which lias probably given the name of horse-radish tree to M. pterygosperma. The oil of the seeds lias long been known, though used rather in the arts than in medicine. Most of it is pre- pared in Europe from the seeds brought from Egypt (Merat et De Lens); but it is said also 10 be extracted in the W. Indies. It is inodorous, clear, and nearly colourless, and keeps long without becoming rancid. It is employed for similar purposes with olive oil. Merat and De Lens say that it is purgative; but most of the fixed oils are so in sufficient doses. According to Volcker, the oil contains margarin, olein, and a peculiar fatty matter yield- ing an acid by saponification, which he names benic acid. (Journ dePhatm., xvi. 77.) W. OIL OF CADE. Oleum Cadinum. Iluile de Cade. French. This is a kind of tar, obtained by distillation, per descensum, from the interior reddish wood of Juniperus communis, or more strictly of <7. Orycedrus, which grows in the south of France, where fhe’substance is pre- pared. It is a thickliquid, black, and of a smell analogous to that of common tar. It has long been employed in the treatment of the cutaneous diseases of horses, sheep, &c.; and is also applied by the peasantry to their own skin affections. Recently it has acquired much reputation in these complaints, in consequence of its extensive and successful use in. the hospitals of Paris. M. Bazin has employed it with success in psora, lichen agrius, the dif- ferent scaly affections, the advanced stage of eczema, and favus. In most of these com- plaints we have long been in the habit of employing common tar ointment, and with proba- bly equal success. A kind of soap is prepared from the oil of cade, which affords a con- venient method of applying it. In the Ed Monthly Journ. for July, 1852 (page 66), it is stated that the soap is made by distilling the tar, incorporating the volatile oil obtained with a fixed oil, and then saponifying this with soda. It. is in the form of black balls, readily unites with water, and may be applied to the surface like any other soap. The best plan is probably to apply it at bedtime, and wash it off next morning. A glgcerate of the tar has recently been recommended for external use, made by mixing, with the aid of heat, an ounce of glycerin, half a drachm of the purified oil of cade, and half an ounce of pow- dered starch. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1859, p. 228.) W. OIL OF EUFHORBIA. A fixed oil, obtained from the seeds of Euphorbia Lathyris. a biennial plant growing wild in this country, though believed to have been introduced from Europe. It is often found near gardens and in cultivated fields, and is generally called mole plant, under the impression that moles avoid the grounds where it grows. (Pursh.) It is the caper plant of England. (Loudon's Encyc. of Plants.) lake the other species of Eu- phorbia, it contains a milky juice, which is extremely aci’id; and the whole plant possesses the properties of a drastic purge; but the oil of the seeds is the only part used in regular practice. This may be extracted by expression, or by the agency of alcohol or ether. In the first case, the bruised seeds are pressed in a canvass or linen bag, and the oil which escapes is purified by decanting it from the whitish flocculent matter which it deposits upon standing, and by subsequent filtration. By the latter process, the bruised seeds are digested in alcohol, or macerated in ether, and the oil is obtained by filtering and evapo- rating the solution. According to Soubeiran, however, the oils obtained by these different processes are not identical. That procured by expression is probably the purest. Oil of euphorbia is colourless, inodorous, and, when recent, nearly insipid; but it speed- ily becomes rancid, and acquires a dangerous acrimony. Soubeiran has ascertained that it has a complex composition, containing, besides the pure oil, four distinct, proximate principles. (Journ. de Pham., xxi. 259.) From 40 to 44 parts are obtained by expression from 100 of the seed. It is a powerful purge, operating with much activity in a dose vary- ing from five to ten drops. It was, some years since, much used by certain Italian and French physicians, who did not find it to produce inconvenient irritation of the stomach and bowels. Its want of taste, and the smallness of the dose, recommended it especially in the cases of infants. It was said to be less acrid and irritating than the croton oil, over which it also has the advantage of greater cheapness. Some trials made with it on this side of the Atlantic have not confirmed these favourable reports. It was found uncertain in its cathartic effect, and very liable to vomit. (Scattergood, Journ. of the Phil. Col. of Pharm., iv. 124.) It may be given in pill with the crumb of bread, or in emulsion. V*'. OIL OF JASMINE. This oil is obtained from the flowers of Jasminum officinale or cun- Olibanum.—Onion. 1569 PART HI. mon white jasmine, and from those also of J. Sambac and J. grandiflorum. Alternate layers of the fresh flowers, and of cotton saturated with the oil of ben (see page 1568), or perhaps other fixed oil, are exposed in a covered vessel to the warmth of the sun; the flowers being occasionally renewed till the oil becomes impregnated with their odour, when it is sepa- rated from the cotton by pressure. This method is necessary, as the flowers do not yield their aroma by distillation. The oil is used only as a perfume. W. OLIBANUM. Olibanum, the frankincense of the ancients, was erroneously ascribed by Linnteus to Junwerus Lycia. There appears to be two varieties, one derived from the coun- tries bordering on the Red Sea, and taken to Europe by way of the Mediterranean, the other brought directly from Calcutta. In reference to the tree producing the former there is some uncertainty. Captain Kempthorne, of the E. India Company’s Navy,-saw it grow- ing upon the mountains, on the African coast, between Bunder Maryah and Cape Guarda- fui. According to his statement, it grows on the bare marble rocks composing the hills of that region, without any soil or the slightest fissure to support it, adhering by means of a substance thrown out from the base of the stem. This rises forty feet, and sends forth near the summit short branches, covered with a bright-green, singular foliage. The juice, which exudes through incisions made into the inner bark, has at first .he colour and consistence of milk, but hardens on exposure. (Pharm. Journ., iv. 37.) Sir n. J. Hooker says that the African olibanum is derived fr m Plbsslea Horibunda of Endlich er (Boswellia, Royle); but thinks it highly probable that i ; is furnished by more than one species. (IbidOct. 1859, p. 217.) The India olibanum has been satisfactorily ascertained to be the product of welha serrata of Roxburgh, a large tree growing in the mountains of India, and found by Mr. Colebrook abundant in the vicinity of Nagpur. The tree belongs to the class and order Decandria Monogynia, and the natural order Tcrebintaceee of Kunth. The Arabian or African frankincense is in the form of yellowish tears, and irregular reddish lumps or fragments. The tears are generally small, oblong or roundish, not very brittle, with a dull and waxy fracture, softening in the mouth, and bearing much resem- blance to mastic, from which, however, they differ in their want of transparency. The reddish masses soften in the hand, have a stronger taste and smell than the tears, and are often mixed with fragments of bark, and small crystals of carbonate of lime. The Indian frankincense, or olibanum, consists chiefly of yellowish, somewhat translu- cent, roundish tears, larger than those of the African, and generally covered with a whitish powder produced by friction. It has a balsamic resinous smell, and an acrid, bitterish, somewhat aromatic taste. When chewed it softens in the mouth, adheres to the teeth, and partially dissolves in the saliva, which it renders milky. It burns with a brilliant flame, and a fragrant odour. Triturated with water, it forms a milky imperfect solution. Alco- hol dissolves nearly three-fourths of it, and the tincture is transparent. From 100 parts, Braconnot obtained 8 parts of volatile oil, 56 of resin, 30 of gum, and 5-2 of a glutinous matter insoluble in water or alcohol, with 0-8 loss. Various saline substances were found in its ashes. The oil may be separated by distillation, and resembles that of lemons in colour and smell. According to Stenhouse, it is isomeric with oil of peppermint, having the formula and consists of an oxygenous and non-oxygenous oil. (Gmelin’s Hand- book, xiv. 390.) Dr. W. F. Daniell has described an odorous product, used as frankincense in Sierra Leone, and obtained from a large tree, growing in the mountainous districts of that region. The tree has been described by Mr. J ohn J. Bennett in the Pharmaceutical Journal for Decem- ber, 1854 (p. 251), under the name of Daniellia thurifera. According to Dr. Daniell, the juice exudes through openings made by an inSect, and, concreting in connection with the woody particles resulting from the boring of the insect, falls at length to the ground, where it is collected by the negroes. (See Am. Journ. of I’harm., xxvii. 338.) Olibanum is stimulant like the other gum-resins; but is now very seldom used internally, M. Dslioux, of Toulon, however, is in the habit of using it for the same purposes as the balsams of Tolu and Peru, having satisfied himself by much experience that it produces similar effects, while it is less costly. He gives it, in the form of pills, in the medium dose of fifteen grains, which may be increased to a drachm or more. It appears to act more fa- vourably when combined with a little soap. He has also obtained advantage from the inha- lation of its fumes, when heated, in chronic bronchitis and laryngitis. (Bullet. Gen. de Therap., Feb. 28, 1861.) It is chiefly employed for fumigations, and enters into the composition of some unoflicinal plasters. W. ONION. Cepa. The bulb of Allium Cepa. This is a perennial bulbous plant, with a naked scape, swelling towards the base, exceeding the leaves in length, and terminating in a sim- nle umbel of white flowers. The leaves are hollow, cylindrical, and pointed. The original country of the onion is unknown. The plant has been cultivated from time immemorial, and is now diffused over the whole civilized world. All parts of it have a peculiar pungent odour, but the bulb only is used. This is of various size and shape, ovate, spherical, or flattened, composed of concentric fleshy and succulent layers, and covered with dry mem-- 1570 Opopanax.—Origanum Vulgare. PART III. branous coats. which are reddish, yellowish, or white, according to the variety. It has, in a high degree, t£e characteristic odour of the plant, with a sweetish and acrid laste. Four- croy and Vauqueiin obtained from it a white acrid volatile oil containing sulphur, albumen, much uncrystallizable sugar and mucilage, phosphoric acid both free and combined with lime, acetic acid, citrate of lime, and lignin. The expressed juice is susceptible of the vinous fermentation. The onion is stimulant, diuretic, expectorant, and rubefacient, Taken moderately it in- creases the appetite and promotes digestion, and is much used as a condiment ; but in large quantities it is apt to cause flatulence, gastric uneasiness, and febrile excitement. The juice is occasionally given, made into syrup with sugar, in infantile catarrhs and croup, in the absence of much inflammatory action. It is also recommended in dropsy and calculous disorders. Deprived of its essential oil by boiling, the onion becomes a mild esculent; and it is much more used as food than as medicine. Roasted and split, it is sometimes applied as an emollient cataplasm to suppurating tumours. W. OPOPANAX. The concrete juice of Pastingca Opopanax (Willd.), Opopanax Chironium (De Candolle). This species of parsnep, usually called rough parsnep, has a thick, yellow, fleshy, perennial root, which sends up annually a strong branching stem, rough near the base, about as thick as a man’s thumb, and from four to eight feet in height. The leaves are variously pinnate, with long sheathing petioles, and large, oblong, serrate leaflets, of which the terminal one is cordate, others are deficient at their base upon the upper side, and the whole are hairy on their under surface.- The flowers are small, yellow, and form large flat umbels at the termination of the branches. The plant is a native of the Levant, and grows wild in the south of France, Italy, and Greece. When the base of the stem is wounded, a juice exudes, which, when dried in the sun, constitutes the opopanax of com- merce. Some authors state that it is obtained from the root. A warm climate appears ne- cessary for the perfection of the juice; as that which has been collected from the plant in France, though similar to opopanax, is of inferior quality. The drug is brought from Tur- key. It is said to come also from the East Indies; but Ainslie states that he never met with it in any Indian medicine bazaar. It is sometimes in tears, but usually in irregular lumps or fragments, of a reddish-yellow colour, speckled with white on the outside, paler within, and, when broken, exhibiting wrhite pieces intermingled with the mass. Its odour is strong, peculiar, and unpleasant, its taste bitter and acrid. Its sp. gr. is 1-622. It is inflammable, burning with a bright flame. In chemical constitution it is a gum-resin, with an admixture of other ingredients in small proportion. The results of its analysis by Pelletier were from 100 parts, 33-4 of gum, 42 of resin, 4-2 of starch, 16 of extractive, 0-3 of wax, 2-8 of malic acid, 9-8 of lignin, 5-9 of vola- tile oil and loss, with traces of caoutchouc. Water by trituration dissolves‘about one-half of the gum-resin, forming an opaque milky emulsion, which deposits resinous matter on standing, and becomes yellowish. Both alcohol and water distilled from it retain its fla- vour; but only a very minute proportion of oil can be obtained in a separate state. Opopanax was formerly employed, as an antispasmodic and deobstruent, in hypochon- driasis, hysteria, asthma, atid chronic visceral affections, and as an emmenagogue in sup- pression of the menses; but it is now generally regarded as a medicine of very feeble pow ers, and in this country is scarcely ever used. The dose is from ten to thirty grains. W. ORANGE RED. Orange Mineral. Sandix. Red oxide of lead, prepared by calcining car- bonate of lead. It is of a brighter colour than minium, and is used as a pigment. W. ORIGANUM VULGARE. Common Marjoram. Origanum. This plant was officinal in the former U. S. and Ed. Pharmacopoeias; but as the volatile oil which was ascribed to it, and for which it was chiefly valued, has proved to be really the oil of thyme, it has been omitted both in the present U. S. and the Br. Pharmacopoeias, though, in consideration of its aro- matic properties, it might well have been introduced into the Secondary Catalogue of the former. The genus Origanum belongs to Didynamia Gymnospermia in the Linnsean system, and to the natural family Lamiaceae or Labiatoe, and is characterized as follows. “S/iobite four cornered, spiked, collecting the calyces. Corolla with the upper lip erect and flat, the lower three-parted, with the segments equal.” (Willd.) Two species have been used in me- dicine, 0. Majorana, or sweet marjoram, and 0. vulgare, or common marjoram. The former grows wild in Portugal and Andalusia, and is cultivated as a garden Herb in other parts of Europe, and in the United States. Some authors, however, consider 0. Major anoides, which is a native of Barbary, and closely allied to 0. Majorana, as the type of the sweet marjoram of our gardens. Sweet marjoram has a pleasant odour, and a warm, aromatic, bitterish taste, which it imparts to water and alcohol. By distillation with water it yields a volatile oil, which was directed by the Edinburgh College among their preparations. It is tonic and gently excitant, but is used more as a condiment in cookery than as a medicine. In domestic practice, its infusion is much employed by the vulgar to liasteu the tardy eruption in mea- sles and other exanthematous diseases. Origanum vulgare or common marjoram is a perennial herb, with erect, purplish, downy, PART III. Orobanche Virginiayia.—Oxalic Acid. 1571 four-sided, trichotomous stems, about eighteen inches high, and opposite, ovate, ennro, somewhat hairy leaves, of a deep yellowish-green colour. The flowers are of a pinkish-purpla or rose colour, disposed in roundish, panicled spikes, and accompanied with ovate reddish bractes, longer thau the calyx. This is tubular and five-toothed, with nearly equal segments. The corolla is funnel-shaped, with the upper lip erect, bifid, and obtuse, the lower tritid, blunt, and spreading. The anthers are double, the stigma bifid and reflexed. The plant is a native of Europe and America. In this country it grows along the road-sides, and in drj stony fields and woods, from Pennsylvania to Virginia, and is in flower from June to Oc- tober; but it is not very abundant, and is seldom collected for use. It has a peculiar, agree- able, aromatic odour, and a warm, pungent taste. These properties it owes to a volatile oil, which was formerly employed, but has been superseded, in great measure, if not altogether, by the oil of thyme. It may be separated by distillation with water. Origanum is gently tonic and excitant, and has been used in the form of infusion as a diaphoretic and emmena- gogue, and externally as a fomentation; but it is at present little employed. W. OROBANCHE VIRGINIANA. Epifagus Americanus. Nuttall. Beech-drops. Cancer-root. This is a parasitic, fleshy plant, with a tuberous, scaly root, and a smooth stem, branched from the base, from twelve to eighteen inches high, furnished with small ovate scales, of a yellowish or purplish colour, and wholly destitute of verdure. It is found in all parts of North America, growing upon the roots of the beech tree, from which it obtained its popular name. It is in some places very abundant. The plant has a bitter, nauseous, astringent taste, which is said to be diminished by drying. It has been given internally in bowel affec- tions; but its credit depends mainly upon the idea that it is useful in obstinate ulcers of a cancerous character, to which it is directly applied in the state of powder. The late Professor Barton conjectured that it was an ingredient of a secret remedy, at one time famous as Mar- tin's cancer powder, of which, however, the most active constituent was arsenious acid. Other species of Orobanche, growing in America and Europe, have been employed. They are all parasitic, fleshy plants, without verdure, and of a bitter, nauseous taste. In Europe they are called broom-rape. The 0. Americana and 0. uniflora, of this country, are said to be used for the same purposes as the species above noticed,lind like it are called cancer- root. W. ORPIMENT. King's Yellow. A native tersulphuret of arsenic, consisting of one eq. of metal 75, and three eqs. of sulphur 48 = 123. It is in masses of a brilliant lemon-yellow colour, composed of flexible laminae, and slightly translucent. It exists in various parts of the world, but is obtained for use from Persia and China. (Guibourt.) It is sometimes mixed with realgar, which gives it- a reddish or orange hue. A similar sulphuret may be made arti- ficially by passing sulphuretted hydrogen through a solution of arsenious acid in muriatic acid. There is reason to believe that neither the native sulphuret, nor the artificial, when prepared in the manner just mentioned and well washed, is poisonous, at least in a degree at all comparable to other arsenical compounds. Artificial orpimenp is prepared for use by fusing together equal parts of arsenious acid and sulphur, [Turner.) In Germany, according to Guibourt, it is prepared by subliming a mixture of these two substances. In this case, however, it retains a large portion of the acid undecomposed, and is therefore highly poisonous. Guibourt found a specimen which he ex- amined to contain 94 per cent, of arsenious acid, and only 6 per cent, of the tersulphuret. Orpiment is an ingredient of certain depilatories. Atkinson's depilatory is said to consist of one part of orpiment and six parts of quicklime, with some flour and a yellow colouring matter. [Ann. der Pharm., xxxiii. 348.) But this arsenical sulphuret is chiefly used in fire- works, and as a pigment. W. ORYZA SATIVA. Pice. This is an annual plant, originally, perhaps, derived from the East Indies, but now cultivated in all parts of the globe where the climate and soil are adapted to its growth. Barth says, in his Travels (Am. ed., 1857, ii. 345), that it grows wild in Central Africa. The rice of commerce consists of the seeds of the plant deprived of their husk. Carolina rice was found by Braconnot to contain 85-07 per cent, of starch, 3-60 of gluten, 0-71 of gum, 0-29 of uncrystallizable sugar, 0-13 of fixed oil, 4-80 of vegetable fibre, 5 00 of water, and 0 40 of saline substances. This grain is highly nutritious, and of easy digestion, and constitutes the almost exclusive diet of whole nations. Being entirely free from laxative properties, it is admirably adapted to cases of weak bowels, in which there is a strong tendency to diarrhoea. Care, however, should be taken that it be boiled till it be- comes soft. A decoction of rice, usually called rice-water, is a good nutritive drink in fevers, and inflammatory affections of the bowels, lungs, and kidneys. There appears to be no ground for the opinion, entertained by some, that a diet of rice is injurious to the eyes. W. OXALIC ACID. Acidum Oxalicum. This acid is found both in animals and vegetables. It is generated occasionally in consequence of a diseased action in the kidneys, and deposited in the bladder as oxalate of lime, forming a peculiar concretion, called the mulberry calculus. In vegetables, it occurs in a free state in the bristles of the chick-pea (Cicer arietinum), com- bined with ootassa as a supersalt in Rumex acetosa or common sorrel, and Oxalis Acetosella Oxalic Acid. 1572 PART IIL or -wood-sorrel, and united with lime in several species of lichen, and in the roots of rhu- barb, valerian, and several other plants. It is from the generic appellation Oxalis that it takes its name. Preparation. The usual process for obtaining oxalic acid consists in decomposing sugar by nitric acid. Four parts of sugar are acted upon by twenty-four of nitric acid of the sp. gr. 1 -24, and the mixture is heated so long as any nitric oxide is disengaged. A part of the carbon of the sugar is converted into carbonic acid by oxygen derived from the nitric acid, which is thereby partially converted into nitric oxide. The undecomposed nitric acid, react- ing with the remaining elements of the sugar, generates oxalic and saccharic (oxalbydric) acids, the former of which crystallizes as the materials cool, while the latter remains in solution. The crystals being removed, a fresh crop may be obtained by further evaporation. The thick mother-water which now remains is a mixture of saccharic, nitric, and oxalic acids; and, by treating it with six times its weight of nitric acid, the greater part of the saccharic acid will be converted into oxalic acid. The new crop of crystals, however, will have a yellow colour, and contain a portion of nitric acid, the greater part of which may be got rid of by allowing them to effloresce in a warm place. From the experiments of Mr. L. Thompson, of Newcastle-on-Tyne, it appears probable that, in the reaction occurring be- tween nitric acid and sugar, half the carbon of the latter is converted into carbonic acid, and the other half into oxalic acid. The manufacturing chemists are said to obtain oxalic acid on a large scale by heating a mixture of 112 lbs. of sugar, 560 lbs. of nitrate of potassa, and 280 lbs. of sulphuric acid. The products are 135 lbs. of oxalic acid, and 490 lbs. of supersulphate of potassa, or sal enixnvi. (L. Thompson.) Many substances, besides sugar, yield oxalic acid by the action of nitric acid; as mo- lasses, rice, potato starch, gum, wool, hair, silk, and many vegetable acids. In every case in which it is thus generated, the proportional excess of oxygen which it contains, com- pared with every other organic compound, is furnished by the nitric acid. When the acid is obtained from potato starch, this is first converted into starch sugar by the action of sulphuric acid. The following is an outline of the process, as conducted on a large scale. The pulp of potatoes, obtained by rasping or other suitable means, is washed two or three times by stirring it well with water, allowing it to subside and running off the water. It is then boiled for some hours with water in wooden boilers, lined wdth lead and heated by steam; a quantity of sulphuric acid being stirred in the mixture, equal to 2 per cent, of the weight of the potatoes employed. By this treatment the starch of the potatoes is con- verted into starch sugar; and the change is known to be completed, when a drop of tinc- ture of iodine, added to a little of the boiling liquor, placed on a piece of glass, ceases to produce a purple colour. The product is then filtered through a horse-hair cloth, and the liquid which passes is carefully evaporated until a gallon of it weighs about fourteen pounds. This liquid consists of a concentrated solution of starch sugar, and is now ready for conversion into oxalic acid by the action of nitric acid. For this purpose it is placed in wooden boilers, lined with lead, eight feet square and three deep, and, having been mixed with the requisite proportion of nitric acid, is heated to a temperature of about 125° by means of steam, passed through a coil of lead pipe, until the decomposition is effected. The liquor is then drawn off by a syphon or cock into shallow lead-lined wooden coolers to crystallize. The crystals having formed, the mother-waters are drawn off for use in a subsequent operation. When the manufacture of the acid is conducted in vessels of the size just indicated, the density of tlie nitric acid should not be less than 1-20 nor higher than 1-27. If the nitric acid is used of undue strength, a part of the oxalic acid at first formed becomes converted into carbonic acid, to the no small diminution of the desired product. (Chem. Gaz., March 15, 1852, p. 112.) The product of oxalic acid from a given quantity of saccharine material has been much understated. If properly treated with nitric acid, 100 lbs. of good sugar will yield from 125 to 130 lbs. of oxalic acid, and the same weight of molasses, from 105 to 110 lbs. Certain organic substances yield oxalic acid when heated with potassa. Thus shavings of wood, if mixed with a solution of caustic potassa, and exposed to a heat considerably higher than 212°, will be partially decomposed, and converted into oxalic acid, which then combines with the alkali. At present much of the oxalic acid of commerce is obtained by heating saw-dust with a mixture of caustic soda and potassa. Soda alone will not generate the acid, and potassa is too costly to be used by itself for the purpose; but Mr. Dale ascer- tained that, by mixing the two in the proportion of two eqs. of soda to one of potassa, the same result was obtained as from the latter alone. The following is an outline of Mr. Dale’s process. A watery solution of the mixed alkalies is evaporated to the sp. gr. 1 35, and then mixed with saw-dust to the consistence of a paste. This is heated on iron plates to 400° F., zuid kept at this temperature, with constant stirring, for an hour or two. The mass is now dark-coloured, and contains from 1 to 4 per cent, of oxalic acid, with about 0-5 per cent, of 101 mic acid. 1 he heat is continued and extended till the mass becomes quite dry, care being taken that it is not charred. It now contains from 28 to 30 per cent, of oxalic aciu. com- FART III. Oxalic Acid. bined with potassa and soda. By washing the powder on a filter with solution of carbo- nate of soda, the oxalate of potassa is converted into oxalate of soda, and all traces or potassa are washed out. The oxalate of soda is decomposed by heated milk of lime, and ihe resulting oxalate of lime, by sulphuric acid. The solution of oxalic acid is now evape ratfed, and yields the acid in crystals. Two pounds of saw-dust afford one of oxalic acid (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1863, p. 360.) As the oxalic acid of commerce often contains more or less of foreign matter,.it requires for certain purposes to be purified. M. E. J. Maumenti gives the following process for the purpose, which he says answers better than the method generally recommended. The acid is dissolved in sufficient hot water to give on cooling only from 10 to 20 for 100 ol the crystals, according to the degree of impurity. The first crystals are put aside. The mother-water is then concentrated; and, if the resulting crystals be submitted to two or three successive crystallizations, the acid will be obtained quite free from all alkaline oxalate. [Journ. de Pharm., Fev. 1864, p. 154.) Properties. Oxalic acid is a colourless crystallized solid, possessing considerable vola- tility, and a strong, sour taste. Its crystals have the shape of slender, flattened, four or six-sided prisms, with two-sided summits; and, when exposed to a very dry atmosphere, undergo a slight efflorescence. It dissolves in about nine times its weight of cold, and in its own weight of boiling water. The solution of the crystals takes place with slight crepi- tation. It dissolves also, but not to the same extent, in alcohol. The presence of nitric acid renders it more soluble in water. It combines with salifiable bases, and forms salts called oxalates. The most interesting of these are the three oxalates of potassa, severally called oxalate, binoxalate, and quadroxalate, and the oxalate of lime. The binoxalate and quadroxalate, both popularly called essential salt of lemons, are employed for removing iron moulds from linen, and act by their excess of acid, which forms a soluble salt with the sesquioxide of iron constituting the stain. Oxalic acid is used for removing ink stains and iron moulds, for cleaning the leather of boot-tops, and for discharging colours in calico-printing. This acid has a very strong affinity for lime, and forms with it an insoluble precipitate consisting of oxalate of lime, whenever the acid and earth are brought into contact in solution. It is even capable of decomposing fluoride of calcium, evolving hydrofluoric acid. (J. W. Slater.) Oxalic acid and its soluble combinations are the best tests for lime; and, conversely, a soluble salt of lime for oxalic acid. When lime is searched for, oxalate of ammonia forms the most convenient test. So strong is the mutual attraction between this acid and lime, that the former takes the latter even from sulphuric acid. Hence, the addi- tion of a soluble oxalate disturbs the transparency of a solution of sulphate of lime. . Oxalic acid is distinguished from all other acids by the form of its crystals, and by its solution yielding a precipitate with lime-water, insoluble in an excess of the acid. Composition. Oxalic acid consists of two eqs. of carbon 12, and three of oxygen 24 = 36. Some chemists consider it a bibasic acid, and double these numbers. When crystallized, three eqs. of water 27 must be added, making the eq. of the crystals 63. Two eqs. of this water may be driven off by a regulated heat, by which the acid is made to effloresce, but the third cannot be expelled without destroying the acid itself. Accordingly, anhydrous oxalic acid is not known to exist. From the constitution of oxalic acid thus given, it is plain that this acid corresponds in composition to carbonic acid and carbonic oxide taken together. Notwithstanding that it contains less oxygen than carbonic acid, it is incompa- rably stronger as an acid, owing probably to some peculiarity in the mode in which its elements are combined. The composition of the acid not only corresponds with the united constituents of carbonic acid and oxide, but there is reason to believe that these two com- pounds are actually its proximate constituents; for, if treated with strong sulphuric acid, the whole of the water will be abstracted, and the elements of the dry oxalic acid are in- stantly resolved into equal volumes of carbonic acid and carbonic oxide. Oxalic acid, in combining with salifiable bases, sometimes drops its essential equivalent of water, at other times retains it. Thus the oxalate of lead is a compound of the dry acid and protoxide of lead; while the oxalate of lime retains one equivalent of water. 'Medical and Toxical Properties. Oxalic acid, in small doses, largely diluted with water and sweetened to the taste, forms an agreeable, cooling beverage, which may be used in febrile diseases as a substitute for lemonade. M. Nardo recommends it as an antiphlogistic and anodyne remedy in inflammation of the mucous membranes, given in the dose of a grain and a half dissolved in eight fluidounces of liquid. It has been given in phthisis, with the asserted effect of lessening the night-sweats and expectoration, in the dose of half a grain, three or four times a day, increased to a grain. Notwithstanding the safety of its employ- ment in medicinal doses, it is a virulent poison in larger quantities, producing death with great rapidity and certainty. Instances are on record of its proving fatal in ten minutes, and few survive the effects of a poisonous dose beyond an hour. As this acid is generally kept in the shops, and not a few instances are on record of its fatal effects when taken by design, or by mistake for Epsom salt, it is necessary to be somewhat full on its toxical relations. 1574 Oxalic Acid.—Oxalis Acetosella. PART III. (I sali- acid r-as first. noticed as a poison by Mr. Royston in 1814; since which time it hi* bees, investigated in this relation principally by the late Dr. A. T. Thomson, of London, Dr. Percy, of Lausanne, Dr. Coindet, of Geneva, and Dr. Christison, of Edinburgh. Since its properties of certainty and rapidity as a poison have been more generally known, its employment for committing suicide has become more frequent. From the general resemblance which the crystallized oxalic acid bears to Epsom salt, many fatal mistakes have occurred in consequence of its being sold for that saline purga- tive. Nothing, however, can be easier than to distinguish them by tasting a minute portion of the suspected substance, which, if oxalic acid, will be found strongly sour, whereas the salt in question is bitter. Unfortunately, however, in the instances of these fatal mistakes, no suspicions being awakened, the solution is swallowed with haste, and the mischief is done before the victim is aware of his 'danger. Oxalic acid acts on the economy in two principal ways, according as its solution is con- centrated or dilute. When concentrated it causes exquisite pain, followed by violent efforts to vomit, then sudden dulness, languor, and great debility, and finally death without a struggle. When dissolved in twenty times its weight of water, it possesses no corrosive and hardly any irritating power, and is yet a fatal poison, causing death by acting on the brain, spinal marrow, and heart. This statement, however, does not accord with the observations of Dr. Letheby, who asserts that the acid, whether in strong or weak solution, always exer- cises a corroding or softening power on the animal tissues. The morbid appearances caused by oxalic acid are various. In a dissection reported by Dr. Christison, the mucous coat of the throat and gullet had an appearance as if scalded, and that of the gullet could be easily scraped off. The inner coat of the stomach was pul- taceous, in many points black, in others red, and that of the intestines, similarly but less violently affected. In another case, the whole villous coat of the stomach was either soft- ened or removed, as well as the inner membrane of the oesophagus; so that the muscular coat was exposed, and this coat exhibited a dark gangrenous appearance, being much thickened and highly injected. The stomach usually contains a dark fluid, resembling coffee-grounds, consisting chiefly of altered blood. Dr. Herbert Barker reports a fatal case of poisoning by this acid, in a boy aged sixteen years, in which about a drachm of the acid had been taken in the solid state. During life the tongue and lips were unusually pale, but not excoriated. The tongue, after death, was found dotted with white spots. (B. and F. Medico-Chir. Rev., Am. ed., April, 1856, p. 402.) Dr. Snow, of London, has seen a case, in which, after death, the tongue and lips were very white, while the stomach was black. In a few cases no morbid appearances have been discovered. In the treatment of poisoning by oxalic acid, the remedial measures must be employed with great promptitude. If the antidotes are not at hand, and vomiting is not free, emetics will be proper. The stomach pump would be useful, but no delay in the application of other remedies is admissible in the expectation of its use Dr. Christison objects to the use of warm water to facilitate vomiting, from a fear that it would increase the danger by favour- ing the absorption of the poison; but it may be a question whether this evil, considering the incidental benefit of the water in promoting vomiting, is not less than that of the cor- rosion of the stomach, which copious dilution has a tendency to prevent. The proper anti- dote is chalk or magnesia, mixed with water; and as soon as either can be procured, it must be administered in large and repeated doses. These substances act by neutralizing the poison, forming with it an insoluble oxalate of lime or of magnesia, both of which are inert. The soluble salts-of oxalic acid, as the oxalate of ammonia, and the oxalate of po- tassa, are likewise poisonous, and the antidotes for them are the same as for the acid. The best tests for the detection of oxalic acid in the contents of the stomach, or in the vomited matter, in cases of suspected poisoning by this acid, are chloride of calcium, sul- phate of copper, and nitrate of silver. The first causes a white precipitate of oxalate of lime, known by its being soluble in nitric acid; the second, a bluish-white precipitate of oxalate of copper; and the third, a dense white precipitate of oxalate of silver, which, when dried and heated, becomes brown and detonates faintly. When the antidotes have been freely used during life, the poison will be in the state of oxalate either of lime or magnesia. In this case, the oxalate found is to be boiled with a solution of carbonate of potassa, whereby an oxalate ofpotassa will be generated; and this must then be examined with the reagents above indicated. B. OXALIS ACETOSELLA. Wood-sorrel. Acetosella. The wood-sorrel is a small, perennial, herbaceous, stemless plant, with numerous radical leaves, which are all ternate, and sup- ported upon slender hairy petioles. The leaflets are obcordate, entire, hairy, of a yellow- ish-green colour, but frequently purplish on their under surface. The scape or flower-stalk, which usually exceeds the petioles in length, is furnished with two scaly bract,e3 near the middle, and terminates in a large white, or flesh-coloured flower, marked with red streaks. The styles are of the same length as the inner stamens. This plant is a native loth ot Europe and North America. In this country it is found chiefly in the mountainous Tegii as ot the interior. It selects shady places, such as woods, groves, and hedges, and tSvtvtrs in PART III, Oxalis Acetosella.—Ox-gall. 1575 May. Other indigenous species of Oxalis, more widely diffused than 0. Acelosetta, might ha substituted for it without disadvantage; as they possess similar properties. They all hava ternate leaves with obcordate leaflets, and, with the single exception of Q, violacea, bear yellow flowers. The whole herbaceous portion may be used. Wood-sorrel is without smell, and has an agreeable sour taste. It owes its acidity to binoxalate of potassa, which is sometimes separated for use, and sold under the name of salt of torrel. This is prepared in Switzerland and Germany, from different species of Oxalis and Rumex, by the following process. The plants, previously bruised, are macerated for some days in water, and then submitted to pressure. The liquid thus obtained is mixed with clay, and occasionally agitated for two days. At the end of this time, the clear liquor is decanted, and evaporated so that crystals may form when it cools. These are purified by solution and a new crystallization. Five hundred parts of the plant afford four parts of the acidulous salt. The same salt may be prepared by exactly neutralizing with potassa one part of oxalic acid in solution, then adding one part more of the acid, and evaporating the solution so that it may crystallize upon cooiing. Binoxalate of potassa is in rhomboidal crys- tals, of a sour, pungent, bitterish taste, soluble in forty parts of cold and six parts of boil- ing water (Kane), and unalterable in the air. It contains 72 parts or two equivalents of oxalic acid, 47-2 parts or one eq. of potassa, and 27 parts or three eqs. of water. Quad- roxalate of potassa is often substituted for the binoxalate. It is prepared in the same man- ner, except that, instead of one part, three parts of the acid are added to the original portion neutralized by potassa. Both salts are kept in the shops under the names of salt of sorrel and essential salt of lemons, and are employed for removing iron mould and ink stains from linen, and sometimes as a test for lime. Both are poisonous, though in a less degree than uncombined oxalic acid. This and other species of sorrel are refrigerant; and their infusion, or a whey made by boiling them in milk, may be used as a pleasant drink in febrile and inflammatory affec- tions. A solution of the binoxalate of potassa is used, on the continent of Europe, as a sub- stitute for lemonade. The fresh plant, eaten raw, is said to be useful in scurvy. Oxalis cras- sicaulis, a Peruvian species, yields an edible root, and, by expression from its leaves, a very sour and astringent juice, which is employed in the form of syrup, in hemorrhages, chronic catarrh, bowel affections, and gonorrhoea, with asserted advantage. W. OX-GALL. Fel Bovinum. The bile of the ox is a viscid fluid, of a green or greenish-yel- low colour, a peculiar nauseous odour, and a bitter taste. The exact composition of bile is not'yet. settled. According to Berzelius, it contains, 1. bilin. 2. cholevvrrhin. to which the bile owes its colour, 3. mucus. 4. extractive matters, 5. a peculiar fatty matter, origi- nally found in biliary calculi, called cholesterin, 6. oleate, margarate, and stearate of soda, with a little fatty matter not saponified, 7. chloride of sodium, sulphate, phosphate, and lac- tate of soda, and phosphate of lime. Of these substances, the most abundant and essen- tial is bilin. This, when pure, is uncrystallizable, colourless, translucent, inodorous, of an acrid and bitter taste with an after-taste of sweetness, inflammable, soluble in all propor- tions in water and anhydrous alcohol, insoluble in ether, neither alkaline nor acid, and com- posed partly of nitrogen. One of its most striking properties is the great facility with which it undergoes decomposition; and hence the numerous principles which different che- mists have found in bile, many of which are nothing more than metamorphoses of bilin. Under the action of acids, it is changed into two resinous acids called respectively fellinic acid and cholinic acid, into taurin and ammonia. The colouring principle or cholevvrrhin is also readily changed, and gives rise to various new products, among which are biliverdin, a green colouring matter resulting from the absorption of oxygen, and bilifulvin, a yellow co- louring matter, which is a double salt of lime and soda with a peculiar azotized acid. (Journ. dePharm., Seser., iii. 177, from the Journ. fur praktische Chernie.) E. A. Platner succeeded in separating the chief constituent of bile in a crystalline form, and considered it a compound of soda with a peculiar organic body. Liebig denominated this compound bilate of soda. Among the most recent and authoritative analyses of bile is that of Strecker, whose views differ essentially from those of Berzelius. According to Strecker, the bile of the ox, inde- pendently of the colouring, fatty, and saline matters above mentioned, consists essentially of a mixture of a nitrogenous acid free from sulphur, which he calls cholic acid (glycocholic acid), and an uncrystallizable, sulphuretted acid also containing nitrogen, denominated '.holeic acid (taurocholic acid), both of which are combined with soda, constituting a mixture of cholate and choleate of that alkali. These two salts may be separated in the following manner. Dry ox-bile is treated with absolute alcohol, and the tincture precipitated by ether In exc»»!< Both salts are deposited, and the cholate crystallizes upon standing, the chole- ate lemaining in an amorphous form, resembling oily or resinous matter. They may be separated more completely by taking advantage of their different relations to the acetate and subacetate of lead Both the acids are precipitated by the subacetate, the cholic only by the acetate. If deposit above referred to be dissolved in water, solution of acetate f lead will throw down a cholate of lead, while the addition of the subacetate of lead to ,ke remainder will precipitate the choleate. The acids may be separated from the salts of 1576 Ox-gall.—Pseonia Officinalis. PART IIL lead by sulphuric acid, and then recombined with soda. Both of the acids are decomposed by the alkalies, with the aid of heat, into cholalic acid, which contains neither nitrogen nor sulphur, and into another complex body, which, in the case of cholic acid, is a nitrogenous basic substance named glycocine (the glycocoll or sugar of gelatin of other chemists), and in that of choleic acid, a neuter substance called taurine, which contains both nitrogen and sulphur, the latter in the extraordinary proportion of 24 per cent. Acids with a boiling heat have an analogous effect, though the nature of the acid produced is different, the cholic acid being resolved into cholnidic acid and glycocine, and the choleic into the same acid and taurine. Hence, it has been inferred that the characteristic acids of bile consist of one acid, associated in the cholic with glycocine, and in the choleic with taurine; so that they have now received the more distinctive names of glycocholic and taurocholic acids, the former ni- trogenous, the latter containing nitrogen and additionally two eqs. of sulphur. (See Gre- gory’s Organic Chemistry, 4th ed., Bond., p. 513; also a paper by Dr. J. C. Dalton in the Am. Joum. of Med. Sci., N S., xxxiv. 305.) Since the examination of bile by Strecker, which ended in these results, further researches have led him to the discovery of other new prin- ciples in that part of bile which is soluble both in alcohol and ether. Independent of the fatty matters (glycerides) and cholesterin, he has detected 1. lecithin, a substance previously noticed by M. Gobley, which is resolved under the influence of baryta water into fatty acids, and phosphoglyceric acid, 2. sarcolactic acid, and 3. an energetic base which he calls cholin. For the methods of isolating these substances, we must content ourselves with referring to the Journal de Pharmacie (Nov. 1861, p. 374). Besides soda, it is said that there are small but variable quantities of potassa and ammonia combined with the glycocholic and tauro- cholic acids. In relation to the fatty matters of bile, M. Gobley has shown that they con- sist of olein, margarin, cholesterin, and especially lecithin, a fatty principle the characters of which were made known by M. Gobley, and that the oleic and margaric acids, generally supposed to exist in bile combined with soda, are the results of the decomposition of the last-mentioned principle, through the influence of putrefaction or chemical reagents. (Joum. de Pharm., xxx. 246.) Bile was formerly highly valued as a remedy in numerous complaints, and was considered peculiarly applicable to cases attended with deficient biliary secretion. It is supposed to be tonic and laxative. It is prepared for use by evaporating it to the consistence of an extract. The dose is from five to ten grains. Dr. Bonorden has found the most extraordi- nary effects, in the resolution of hypertrophies, from bile applied directly to the parts af- fected. Hypertrophy of the mamma and that of the tonsils are particularly mentioned as yielding with surprising facility to this application; but good may be expected from it in all cases of the affection, in which the part can be reached. He employs a mixture of 3 parts of inspissated bile, 1 part of extract of conium, 2 of soda soap, and 8 of olive oil, to be rubbed on the part four times a day. He has also found advantage in similar affections of the eye, as opacity of the cornea, pannus, and staphyloma, from bile dropped into the eye, or ap- plied by a hair pencil, several times a day. (Med. Times and Gaz., Oct. 1858, p. 353.) Re- fined ox-gall, much used by limners and painters, is prepared, according to Gray, in the following manner. Take of “fresh ox-gall one pint; boil, skim, add one ounce of alum, and keep it on the fire for some time; to another pint, add one ounce of common salt in the same manner; keep them bottled up for three months, then decant off the clear; mix them in an equal proportion; a thick yellow coagulum is immediately formed, leaving the refined gall clear and colourless.” A formula is given in the Br. Pharmacopoeia for purifying bile. (See Pel Bovinum Purificatum, page 1123.) W. PiEONIA OFFICINALIS. Peony. This well-known plant is a native of Southern Europe, but is everywhere cultivated in gardens for the beauty of its flowers. The root, flowers, and seeds were formerly officinal. The root consists of a caudex about as thick as the thumb, which descends several inches into the ground, and sends off in all directions spindle-shaped tubers, which gradually taper into thread-like fibres, by which they hang together. It has a strong, peculiar, disagreeable odour, and a nauseous taste, wdiicli is at first sweetish, and afterwards bitter and somewhat acrid. The odour is lost, or much diminished by drying. Peony root, was in very great repute among the ancients, who used it both as a charm and as a medicine in numerous complaints, particularly epilepsy. In modern times it has also been given in epilepsy and various nervous affections, but is at present seldom used. Dr. A. Livezey, of Lumberville, Penn., states that it is much used in the convulsions of children in his neighbourhood, and bears testimony to its possession of decided nervine powers. (Bost. Med. and Surg Journ., lv. 467.) The dose of the fresh root is from two drachms to an ounce, boiled in a pint of water down to half a pint., which should be taken daily. It is said to be less active when dried. The expressed juice of the recent root is recommended in the dose of an ounce. It is milky, of a strong odour, and very disagreeable taste. The jlou-ers are usually ot a deep-red colour, though in some varieties of a light-red, and even whitish. They have, when fresh, an odour similar to that of the root, but feebler, and an astringent., sweetish, herbaceous taste. When dry they are inodorous. As a medicine they have little power, [lie seeds are roundish-oval, about as large as a pea, externally smooth, shining. PART III. Palm Oil.—Paullinia. and nearly black, internally whitish, inodorous when dry, and of a mild, oleaginous taste By some authors they are said to be emetic and purgative, by others antispasmodic. They may be given in the same dose with the root, but are not used in regular practice. W. PALM OIL. This highly valuable fixed oil is the product of Elais Guiniensis, a pain? growing on the western coast of Africa, and cultivated in the West Indies and South Ame- rica. It is among the handsomest trees of its graceful family which flourish in the tropical regions of Africa. The oil is obtained by expression from the fruit. It is brought to this country chiefly from Liberia and other places on the African coast, though prepared also in the West Indies, Cayenne, and Brazil. It is not improbable that various species of palms contribute to the supply of this article of commerce. Palm oil has the consistence of butter, a rich, orange-yellow colour, a swietish taste, and an agreeable odour, compared by some to that of violets, by others to that of the Florentine orris. By age and exposure it becomes rancid and of a whitish colour. It melts with the heat of the hand, and when perfectly fluid passes readily through blotting paper. Highly rectified alcohol dissolves it at common temperatures, and in ether it is soluble in all pro- portions. According to M. Henry, it consists of 31 parts of stearin and 69 of olein. But, from the experiments of Fr6my and Stenhouse, it appears that the stearin has peculiar pro- perties entitling it to be considered as a distinct principle; and it has accordingly received the name of palmitin. This is converted into palmitic, acid by saponification. (Kane's Chemis- try.) It appears also that a considerable proportion of this acid, together with some glycerin, exists uncombined in the oil, as ascertained by MM. Pelouze and Boudet; so that the changes which are effected in oils, through the agency of alkalies, in the process of saponi fication, take place, to a certain extent, spontaneously in palm oil. (Journ. de Pharm., xxiv 389.) Hence it is more easily saponified than any other fixed oil. Preparatory to saponifi- cation, it may be bleached rapidly, according to J. J. Pohl, by heating it quickly to 464° F. and keeping it for ten minutes at that temperature. It loses for a time its peculiar odour by the process, acquiring an empyreumatie smell; but this after awhile ceases to be perceived, and the characteristic odour returns. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 346.) Palm oil is said to be frequently imitated by a mixture of lard and suet, coloured with turmeric, and scented with Florentine orris. It is much employed in the manufacture of a toilet soap, which retains its pleasant odour. Palm oil is emollient, and has sometimes been employed in friction or embrocation, though not superior for this purpose to many other oleaginous substances. W. PARIETARIA OFFICINALIS. Wall Pellitory. A perennial European herb, growing on old walls and heaps of rubbish. It is inodorous, has an herbaceous, somewhat rough and saline taste, and contains nitre derived from the walls where it flourishes. It is diuretic and refrigerant, and is said also, but without good reason, to be demulcent and emollient. The ancients employed it in various complaints, and it is still considerably used on the continent of Europe, especially in domestic practice. It is given in complaints of the urinary passages, dropsy, and febrile affections, usually in the form of decoction. The expressed juice is also used, and the fresh plant is applied in the shape of a cataplasm to painful tumours. W. PARTIIENIUM INTEGPHFOLIUM. Prairie Dock. This is an herbaceous perennial, growing abundantly in the prairies of our South-western States. It is recommended by Dr. Mason Houlton as a powerful antiperiodic. The flowering tops are the part used. They have an intensely bitter taste; and two ounces of them in the dried state, given in the form of infusion, are thought by Dr. Houlton to be equivalent to twenty grains of sul- phate of quinia. Thirty successive cases of periodic fever were cured by this remedy, without any unpleasant effect on the nervous system. [Med. Exam., N. S., ix. 719, from Memphis Med. Recorder; and Pharm. Journ., xii. 602, from N. Y. Journ. of Pharm.) W. PATENT YELLOW. Mineral Yellow. A pigment, consisting of chloride combined with protoxide of lead. It is prepared by mixing common salt and litharge with a sufficient quantity of water, allowing the mixture to stand for some time, then washing cut the .iberated soda, and exposing the white residuh to heat. W. PAULLINIA. Guarana. This is a new medicine introduced into Europe from Brazil, which has attracted some attention from the asserted fact, that it contains a principle iden- tical with caffein The name ofpaullinia has been bestowed upon it from the generic title of the plant from which it is obtained. That of guarana, by which it was previously known, was derived from a tribe of aborigines, called Guaranis, who are said to use it extensively as a corrigent of their vegetable diet. It is prepared from the seeds of the Paullinia sorbilis of Martius, a climbing shrub, belonging to the class and order Octandria Trigynia of the Linnsean system, and the natural family of the Sapindacem. Another species, the P. Cujmna, growing on the banks of the Orinoco River, is also said to yield it. [Ann. de fherap., 1858, p. 70.) The seeds, which are contained in a three-celled, three- valved, coriaceous capsule, are lenticular and almost thorny, and invested with a flesh- coloured arillus, which is easily separable when dry. They are prepared by powdering 1578 Paullinia.—Peach Leaves. PART III. (hem hi a mortar, or upon a chocolate stone previously heated, mixing the powder with a little water, exposing it for some time to the dew, then kneading it into a paste, mixing with this some of the seeds either whole or merely bruised, and finally forming the mix- ture into cylindrical or globular masses, which are dried and hardened in the sun, or by tue smoke of a fire. These masses are of a reddish-brown colour, rugose on the surface, very hard, and of a marbled appearance when broken. Paullinia is of a somewhat astrin- gent and bitterish taste, and, in this as well as in its odour, bears some resemblance to chocolate, though not oleaginous. It swells up and softens in water, which partially dis- solves it. Martius found in it a crystallizable principle, which he named guaranm, but which has been proved by MM. Berthemot and Dechastelus to be identical with caffein. The discovery of caffein in four plants belonging to distinct natural families, namely, the coffee and tea plants, the Paraguay tea, and the Paullinia, is a highly interesting result of recent chemical investigations. It is said to be more abundant in the Paullinia than in either of the other vegetables; 5'07 per cent, having been found by Dr. Stenhouse in paullinia, while he got only 2-13 from good black tea, 1-00 per cent, from coffee, and 1*2 from Paraguay tea. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 213.) According to Berthemot and Dechastelus, it exists in the seeds united with tannic acid, with which it appears to form two com- pounds, one crystallizable and soluble in water, the other of a resinoid appearance and insoluble. Besides these ingredients, the seeds contain also free tannic acid, gum, albumen, starch, and a greenish fixed oil. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvi. 514.) More recently M. Fournier has found in paullinia, besides tannate of caffein, the following principles; gum, starch, an acrid green fixed oil, a concrete volatile oil, an aromatic liquid volatile oil soluble in w ater with a little alcohol, another liquid volatile oil scarcely soluble in water, a peculiar principle not precisely determined, and tannic acid. (Ibid., Avril, 1861, p. 291.) It is said to have been by mistake that paullinia and guarana have been considered identi- cal; the former term being applicable exclusively to the product of the two species of Paul- linia above referred to, while the latter belongs properly to a preparation made by the aborigines, which, though it contains the seeds of the Paullinia, is a mixture of various substances, among them chocolate and farina, but the precise composition of which is most carefully kept secret by the natives. (Ann. de Therap., 1858, p. 70.) The effects of paullinia upon the system are said to be those of a tonic; but they do not appear to have been very accurately investigated. It is highly probable, both from its com- position and the use made of it by the natives of Brazil, that it has an influence over the nervous system similar to that of tea and coffee. It is habitually employed by the Indians, either mixed with articles of diet, as with cassava or chocolate, or in the form of drink, prepared by scraping it, and suspending the powder in sweetened tvater. It is considered by them useful in the prevention and cure of bowel complaints. Dr. Gavrelle, who was formerly physician to Don Pedro, in Brazil, and there became acquainted with the virtues of this medicine, called the attention of the profession to it some years since in France. He had found it advantageous in the diarrhoea of phthisis, sick-headache, paralysis, tedious convalescence, and generally as a tonic. By Dr. Ritchie, Surgeon in the British navy, it is highly recommended in irritation of the urinary passages. (Pd. Month. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., v. 467.) Dr. Hervd has been in the habit of using it daily for five or six years, and has never failed to derive advantage from it in idiopathic diarrhoea, even in the most obstinate cases. (B. and F. Med.-Chir. Rev., Jan. 1858 p. 192.) It may be given in sub- stance, in the quantity of one or two drachms,.scraped into powder and mixed with sweet- ened water; but the most convenient form of administration is that of spirituous extract. According to M. Dechastelus, alcohol is the only agent which completely extracts its virtues; ether and water effecting this object but partially. Of the extract eight or ten grains may be given during the day in the form of pill. Paullinia may also be taken along with chocolate as a drink. * PEACH LEAVES. Leaves of Amygdalae Persica. (Willd. Sp. Plant, ii. 982.) Persica vul- garis. (Miller, Lamarck.) Every one is familiar with the appearance of the common peach tree. It is characterized specifically by having '‘all the serratures of the leaves acute, and by its sessile solitary flowers.” Though its native country is not certainly known, it is gen- erally supposed to have been brought originally from Persia. In no country, perhaps, does it attain greater perfection, as regards the character of its fruit, than in the United States. Peaches are among the most grateful and wholesome of our summer fruits. They abound in saccharine matter, which renders their juice susceptible of the vinous fermentation, and a distilled liquor prepared from them has been much used, in some parts of the country un- der the name of peach brandy. The kernels of the fruit bear a close resemblance in appear- ance and properties, and probably in chemical nature, to bitter almonds, for which they are frequently, and without inconvenience, substituted in our shops. They are en ployed by distillers in the preparation of liqueurs, and by cake-bakers to give flavour to various pro- ductions of their o'ens; and are said to yield as much amygdalin as bitter almonds. The flowers, leaves, and bark also have the peculiar odour and taste of bitter almond*, and yield hydrocyanic acid. The leaves afford a volatile oil by distillation. The dialled wat >* PART III. Pearl White.—Peroxide of Hydrogen. 1579 prepared from them was found, in one instance, to contain 1-407 parts of hydrocyanic acid in 1000, and in another only 0-437 parts in the same quantity. From some experiments it may be inferred that the proportion of acid is greatest where there is the least fruit. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 172.) Medical Properties. Peach leaves are said to be laxative; and they probably exert, to a moderate extent, a sedative influence over the nervous system. They have been used as an anthelmintic with great reported success. More recently their infusion has been recom- mended in irritability of the bladder, in sick stomach, and hooping-cough. Half an ounce of the dried leaves may be infused in a pint of boiling water, and half a fluidounce given for a dose three times a day, or more frequently. Dr. Dougos gives, in hooping-cough, a pint of the strong infusion, in small doses, in the course of the day. [Journ. de Pharm., xxiii. 356.) The flowers are also laxative; and a syrup prepared from them is considerably used, in infantile cases, upon the continent of Europe. Woodville states that a drachm of the dried flowers, or half an ounce in their recent state, given in infusion, is the dose as a vermifuge. Cases of fatal poisoning from their use in children are on record. The kernels have more of the peculiar powers of hydrocyanic acid, and therefore require to be used with some caution. Blanched, and rubbed up with hot water, they form an emulsion well adapted to coughs depending on or associated with nervous irritation. The bruised leaves, flowers, or kernels may be used by the apothecary for cleansing his vessels from disagreeable odours. (Seejoaye 109.) The dried fruit, stewed with sugar, is an excellent laxative article of diet, suitable to cases of convalescence attended with torpid bowels. W. PEARL WHITE. Pearl Powder. This is identical with the subnitrate of bismuth, described at page 1025, and is made by adding a solution of the ternitrate of teroxide of bismuth to distilled water. It is used as a cosmetic. B. PELARGONIUM ODORATISSIMUM. Rose Geranium. This well-known plant, so much a favourite for its odour in our dwellings and conservatories, is a native of the Cape of Good Hopp, but is said to be cultivated extensively in the south of France and in Turkey for the sake of its volatile oil, which is much employed for the adulteration of the oil of roses. According to Guibourt, three species of Pelargonium yield a volatile oil by distilla- tion, closely analogous in smell to that of the rose; the species above named, P. cavitatum. and P. roseum. (ILst. Nat. des Drogues, 4e ed., iii. 52.) The oil is obtained from the leaves. M. Recluz obtained from 35 ounces of P. odoratissimum two drachms of a volatile, crystal- lizable oil. (Merat et De Lens, Diet, de Mat. Med., iii. 368.) According to Septimus Piesse, 1 cwt. yields about two ounces. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 368.) As we have seen the oil in our shops, purporting to be the oil of P. odoratissimum, it is perfectly fluid at ordinary temperatures, of a pale brownish-yellow colour, and the characteristic smell of the plant, recalling merely that of the rose. Gregory states that pelargonic acid was first obtained from the oil of P. roseum, which is probably the same as that under consideration. (Organic Chem., 4th ed., Lond., p. 274.) This oil is now much used in perfumery, and, dis- solved in alcohol in the proportion of three ounces to the gallon, forms the preparation called “extract of rose-leaf geranium.” Mr. Piesse states that, as this oil is,used to adulterate that of roses, so is it in its turn adulterated with the cheaper oil of Andropagon nardus. culti- vated in the Moluccas. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvi. 368.) ' w. PEROXIDE OF HYDROGEN. This substance, though long known to chemists, has but recently been brought into notice as a remedy. It consists of water in which, by the present- ing to it of oxygen in a nascent state, au additional equivalent of this element has com- bined with the hydrogen forming the deutoxide (H02). It was discovered by Thenard in 1818. To prepare it, peroxide of barium is rubbed with distilled water so as to form a liquid paste, which is added gradually, with constant stirring, to distilled water acidu- lated with one-third of its weight of muriatic acid, contained in a vessel immersed in a freezing mixture. The peroxide of barium (Ba02) gives up one of its eqs. of oxygen to one eq. of the water (IIO), forming an eq. of deutoxide or peroxide of hydrogen (1I02); while the protoxide of barium left reacts with an eq. of muriatic acid to form one eq. of chloride of barium and one of water. When the muriatic acid is saturated, a fresh quan- tity of the acid in a concentrated state is added, and then more of the peroxide of barium; and the operation is repeated till the solution will hold no more chloride of barium. It is then immersed in a mixture of ice and salt, and the greater part of the chloride of barium is deposited. The portion remaining in solution may be got rid of by the cautious addition of sulphate of silver, which precipitates sulphate of baryta and chloride of silver. The liquid being now filtered, is concentrated by exposing it in vacuo in a shallow vessed placed over another containing sulphuric acid. The water rises in vapour which is absorbed by the acid, ahd at last the peroxide of hydrogen is left nearly pure. (Regnault.) Thus pro- cured it is a colourless liquid of a fluid consistence, of the sp.gr. 1-452, remaining liquid at zero, beginning to give out oxygen when heated above 60°, and at a higher heat°rapidly and sometimes explosively resolved into water and oxygen. But when diluted with water,' with which it unites in all proportions, it is not decomposed under 100°. The graat facility Peroxide of Hydrogen.—Petroleum. PART III. with which it parts with oxygen renders it a powerful oxidizer; and the simple contact with various substances, as platinum, gold, and silver, causes it to be resolved into oxygen and water. On the contrary, certain other substances, even though ordinarily evincing a strong affinity for oxygen, as phosphorus, for example, are unaffected by it, and there is a large number of bodies, as ammonia, hydrocyanic acid, tobacco, aconite, and most other narcotic substances, which have the property not only of being unaffected by it, but of restraining its oxidizing influence on other bodies. Its relations to ozone are peculiar; and at one time it was conjectured that ozone was nothing else than peroxide of hydrogen. At present the oxygen in it is considered by some as in the positive state and called antozone, while ozote itself is oxygen in the negative state, and the two mixing produce oxygen in its ordinary state or neutral oxygen. When this neutral condition of oxygen is disturbed, giving rise to the phenomena of ozone, antozone is also liberated. Hence, according to Schonbein, whenever, upon the contact of phosphorus with water, ozone appears, the water is found to contain peroxide of hydrogen. These facts may at some future time prove to have an important bearing on peroxide of oxygen as a physiological or remedial agent; but at present they may be left out of view in treating of it medicinally. The profession is indebted to Dr. B. W. Richardson, of London, for what is known of the physiological operation and therapeutical effects of peroxide of hydrogen. In relation to its influence on organic bodies, Dr. Richardson found that to venous blood, deprived of its fibrin, it imparts oxygen, with an increase of heat, and a change of the colour to red. Fibrin and cellular tissue cause it to evolve oxygen. Sugar and starch are decomposed by it, giving out carbonic acid. Albumen, gelatin, urea, and cutaneous tissue have no effect on it. Injected into the left cavities of the heart of an animal, it restores the irritability of that organ, but has an opposite effect in the right cavities. Thrown into the arteries, immedi- ately after death, it restores for a time the contractile power of the muscles, and suspends cadaveric rigidity, while it counteracts the influence of various medicinal substances that cause muscular spasm. Dr. Richardson inferred from his experiments that the peroxiue might be found useful as an antidote to the narcotic poisons, as a local application to gan- grenous ulcers, and as an internal remedy in low forms of fever. Subsequently, from nu- merous therapeutical trials of the remedy, he came to the conclusion, that it is of great value in chronic and subacute rheumatism; acts in the removal of scrofulous tumours like iodine; relieves the paroxysms of hooping-cough, and cuts short the disease more effectually than any other medicine; affords great relief in chronic bronchitis with dyspnoea; and, in phthi- sis, operates favourably in the early stage by improving digestion and giving increased ac- tivity to chalybeate remedies, while, in the advanced stages, it afforded great relief to the dyspnoea and oppression, acting, indeed, in this respect, like opium without its narcotic effects. In general, it seemed to him to improve digestion, and therefore to be useful in cases complicated with dyspepsia. Sometimes, when freely employed, it produced profuse salivation, suggesting the idea that it might in other respects resemble mercury, and possi- bly be found capable of replacing this remedy to a certain extent in the treatment of dis- ease. Dr. Richardson recommends that a solution of the peroxide should be used charged with ten volumes of oxygen, the dose of which may be from one to four fluidrachms, freely diluted with water. There are so many substances which decompose the peroxide, that, as a general rule, it is best given without addition; at least nothing should be allowed to re- main long in contact with it. There can be no difficulty in obtaining the desired strength of ten volumes of oxygen to one of the solution, by estimating the quantity of oxygen con- tained in the peroxide of barium employed in the process. (See Lancet, Oct. 20, 1860, and April 12, 1862.) W. PETROLEUM. Rock Oil. This was recognised by the late London and Edinburgh Col- leges, but has been omitted in the British Pharmacopoeia, and, as it holds no place in that of the United States, takes rank among the extra-officinal medicines. Petroleum belongs to the class of native inflammable substances, called bitumens. These are liquids or readily fusible solids, which emit, when heated, a peculiar smell, burn easily, and leave a very small carbonaceous residue. They exist in nature either isolated, or combined with car- bon in various proportions, forming the different kinds of bituminous coal. Formerly the lighter coloured, purer, and more liquid forms of petroleum were distinguished by the name ot naphtha, which was defined to be a transparent, yellowish-white, very light and inflam- mable, limpid liquid, of the bitutninous character; but as this name has been conferred of late upon the lighter liquid resulting from the distillation of coal tar or petroleum at a com- paratively low temperature, and as there is no sufficient line of distinction between the na- tive naphtha and the impure forms of rock oil, it is, we think, desirable that the name should be confined to the artificial product, while the term petroleum is considered as embracing all the native liquid substances belonging to this class. When the bitumen is in the solid state it is called asphaltum. This is black, dry, friable, and insoluble in water or alcohol. Not unfrequently asphaltum exists in nature mixed with more or less of the liquid sub- stance; and this semi-solid mixture is distinguished by the name of maltha or mineral lar. Exposed t*» the air, petroleum gradually passes into the state of asphaltum. PART HI. Petroleum. 1581 Petroleum lias been known from the earliest historical period. Herodotus refers to wells of it existing in Zante, and from time immemorial it has been known in Persia, where it was probably connected with the origin and ceremonies of fire-worship. Till recently the best-known sources of it were the borders of the Caspian Sea in Persia, at Amiano in Italy, at Gabian in France, the island of Trinidad in the West Indies, and in the Burman Empire near Rangoon, where vast quantities have been annually raised for many centuries, with out any apparent exhaustion of the wells from which it was drawn. Within the limits of the United States it has long been known to exist in a few localities. On the borders of Seneca Lake in the State of New York, small quantities of it were collected, and to some extent used in medicine under the name of Seneca oil. In Western Pennsylvania, on Duck Creek in Ohio, near Scottsville in Kentucky, and on the Kenhawa in Virginia, it attracted some local attention; and a certain locality in Western Canada had acquired some notoriety by its burning spring. But little attention was paid to it until about eight years since; when, the preparation of oil for burning, distilled from coal tar, having proved very pro- fitable, and a strong resemblance if not identity having been proved to exist between this and petroleum, enterprise was directed towards some of the known sources of the latter liquid, which was greatly stimulated by success, and soon led to-further and astonishing discoveries. Hitherto the most productive locality of rock oil has been in Western Penn- sylvania ; but it has been found to exist in great quantities elsewhere, and in fact occupies great portions of a region commencing in Western Canada, and extending, through New York and Pennsylvania, westward into Ohio and Kentucky, and far southward into Western Virginia. From the latest accounts it appears that petroleum exists also abundantly in Cali- fornia, and promises to vie with gold as a source of wealth to that country. Establishments for purifying the petroleum have multiplied with great rapidity, and the quantity of oil collected, and either exported or consumed at home, would be incredible, considering the short time since the trade in it may be said to have begun, were it not attested by positive returns. The quantity of petroleum exported, either crude or refined, independently of that consumed in this country, from the ports of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, amounted in 1862 to 10,887,761 gallons; in 1863, to 28,250,721; and in 1864, to 31,772,972. (.V. Y. Times, Feb. 16, 1865.) Petroleum sometimes exists in overflowing springs, as in Canada, N. W. Virginia, and very largely in California, issuing along with the water, and spreading itself over the sur- face of streams for a considerable distance. It is, however, much more abundantly obtained by digging or boring wells. In this case, if the point struck be below some underground re- servoir of the oil, it may rise, as in artesian wells, to the surface. Sometimes it is driven up with considerable though variable force, probably by the expansive power of compressed gas, which not unfrequently escapes along with the oil, and in some places so copiously and steadily as to be used for lighting purposes in the immediate vicinity: the gas being some form of carburetted hydrogen. But in most instances it is necessary to raise the oil by pumps. The distance at which it is found beneath the surface is very different, the depth of boring in Western Pennsylvania varying from 71 to 600 feet. (D. Murray, Trans. Albany Instil., iv. 149.) It is necessary to bore through an overlying rock before reaching it. The oil is generally collected in the fissures and pores of some spongy rock as sandstone or shale. Its original source was probably an underground distillation of vegetable matter, carried on upon a vast scale by nature, by means of subterranean heat. Its close resem- blance to the tar resulting from destructive distillation of organic matter can be explained only upon this supposition. Crude petroleum is variable in character, being sometimes transparent and of an amber colour, but more generally brown or almost black and opaque in mass, or of various shades between the two, in some instances very thin and mobile, in others thicker, and occasionally almost semi-solid, of a peculiar characteristic odour, always lighter than water, and in great measure volatilizable by heat. A specimen of Pennsylvania 'petroleum, fresh from the wells, was found by Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, to have the sp. gr. 0 815, which, however, after the petroleum had been exposed to the air for 24 hours, rose to 0-825. When subjected to fractional distillation, it yielded liquid products varying in sp. gr. from 0-668 to 0-825; the lightest coming over first. The paraffin obtained from this petroleum Mr. Wayne believes to be very different from that obtained from coal tar, having both a lower boiling point and lower sp.gr., and, besides, differing in chemical constitution. (77ie Druggist, Cincin- nati, June 15,1860.) In the purer form of naphtha, petroleum is a carbohydrogen, and, on account of the absence of oxygen, has been used for the preservation of potassium. The crude oil consists of a large number of distinct substances, generally carbohydrogens, of various sp. gr. and boiling points, which may be separated by distillation, and by the ac- tion of sulphuric acid and soda or potassa. Mr. Schorlemmer states, as the result of his examination of refined American petroleum, the product of the first rectification, that it contains benzol and toluol in small proportion, but consists mainly of hydrides (hydrurets) ef the alcohol radicals, of which he isolated four; namely, hydride of amyl, C10H12, boiling at 92° F.; hydride of hexyl, C1:JHU, boiling at 154° F.; hydride of heptyl, CUH16, boiling at 1582 Petroleum. PART III. 208° F., and hydride of octyl, C]6H18, boiling at 236°. (Chem. News, April 4,18G3, p. 157.) MM. 1\ louze and Caliors have isolated seven distinct carbohydrogens from rectified American petroleum, of a lower boiling point than 392° F.; viz., butyl hydride C8H10, amyl hydride C10Kl2, caproyl hydride C12HU, oenanthyl hydride CuHlg, capryl hydride C16H18, pelargonyl hy- dride 018H20, and rutyl hydride C20H22. (Ibid., April 25, 1863, p. 197.) W. Barbadoes petroleum is a black, nearly opaque, inflammable liquid, of the consistence of molasses, unctuous to the touch, and possessing a bituminous taste, and strong and tena- cious odour. Its sp. gr. varies from 0730 to 0-878. When subjected to distillation it yields naphtha, and leaves a solid residue of asphaltum. It is little affected by alcohol, acids, or alkalies, but dissolves in ether and in the fixed and volatile oils. It consists chiefly of carbon and hydrogen, associated with a little nitrogen and oxygen. Rangoon petroleum, also called Rangoon tar and Burmese naphtha, has a greenish-brown colour, a peculiar, rather fragrant jdour, and the consistence of goose-fat. It is lighter than water. Heated to 90° it becomes a very mobile liquid. By distilling it in a current of steam, first at 212°, and afterwards super-heated, Drs. W. De la Rue and H. Muller obtained 96 per cent, of volatile products, solid and liquid. The solid product (varaffin) amounted to from 10 to 11 per cent., and was found resolvable by these chemists, by fractional crystallization from hot alcohol, into at least two polymeric carbohydrogens, having the probable formula CnIln. The liquid product, usually called naphtha, is separable by sulphuric and nitric acids into two sets of carbohydrogens; one set removable by these acids, the other resisting their action. The former set contain f jwer eqs. of hydrogen than of carbon, and embrace, among other car- bohydrogens, benzole and toluole. The latter, which form by far the larger portion of the liquid product, are perfectly colourless, almost inodorous, very mobile liquids, not congeal- able by intence cold. Their probable formula, according to Drs. De la Rue and Muller, is CnHn + j. (See Chem. Gaz., Oct. 1, 1856, p. 375.) B. The method of purifying petroleum is very nearly the same as that already described for purifying cjp.1 tar. The following description is taken chiefly from a communication of Mr. David Murray to the Albany Institute, Dec. 1862, and published iii its Transactions (vol. iv. p. 149). Much water is often pumped up with the petroleum, but separates from it on standing, the oil rising to the surface. The crude oil is put into large retorts of cast or wrought iron and exposed to a heat between 600° and 800°, by which all the volatile in- gredients are distilled, leaving 10 or 12 per cent, of solid residue, constituting a sort of coke. The liquid thus obtained is comparatively colourless, though still retaining the strong odour of the crude oil. To separate various organic alkaloids and acids with which it is mixed, the distilled petroleum is agitated first with sulphuric acid, and afterwards with a strong solution of soda or potassa; the sulphuric acid with its dissolved impurities being drawn off, and the oil well washed with water, before the addition of the alkali, and afterwards again washed when the alkali has performed its function. The purified petro- leum is now submitted to another distillation, but at first at a temperature not exceeding 120° (Murray), in order that only the more volatile carbohydrogens may be driven over, which are unsuitable for lamp-oil. These, being condensed, constitute what is no w commonly called naphtha, which is used as a solvent for varnishes and caoutchouc, and for mixture with paints, a purpose which it answers as well as oil of turpentine, except for its offen- sive smell. It is unsuitable for lamps from its extreme volatility, its liability to smoke when burned, and the danger of explosion from the admixture of its vapour with atmo- spheric air. After the naphtha, which is equivalent to the benzine of coal tar, has all come over, the heat is increased and the distillation continued until the distilled liquid attains the sp. gr. 0-820. This is the part, sold for lighting, and is by far the most important pro- duct of petroleum. The quantity of it obtained varies greatly, sometimes not exceeding 30 per cent., sometimes amounting to 80 or 90. It is clear, and of a fine deep amber colour, and answers admirably for lighting, yielding a brighter and purer flame than perhaps any other kind of lamp-oil. If the distillation be now continued, a darker and heavier product comes over, which upon cooling deposits paraffin. The part remaining liquid, which is too impure for burning, is employed for lubricating machinery. W. Medical Properties and Uses. Petroleum is accounted a stimulating antispasmodic, expec- torant, and diaphoretic. It, is occasionally given in disorders of the chest, when not at- tended with inflammation. In Germany it has been extolled as a remedy for tape-worm. Schwartz’s formula in such cases was a mixture of one part of petroleum with one and a half parts of tincture of assafetida, of which forty drops were given three times a day. Externally, petroleum is employed in chilblains, chronic rheumatism, affections of the joints, paralysis, and diseases of the skin. It is an ingredient in the popular remedy called British oil. (See note, p. 602.) The dose of Barbadoes petroleum is from thirty drops to a small teaspoonful, given in any convenient vehicle. Rangoon petroleum is probably more active, and should be given in a smaller dose. The New York petroleum, called Seneca oil, is used t > a considerable extent as an external application in domestic practice. It is lighter coloured, thinner in consistence, and less sapid and odorous than the Barbadoes petroleum., and probably contains more naphtha. The finer kinds of petroleum, called naphtha, liar* PART III. Phloridzin.—Physalis Alkekengi. 1583 been used with advantage in epidemic cholera by Dr. Andreosky, of the Russian army, by M. Cloquet, physician to the Shah of Persia, and by M. Moretin, of France. They gave from ten to twenty drops in half a glass of white wine or mint water. B. PHLORIDZIN. This i3 a bitter principle, discovered by Dr. Konink, of Germany, in the bark of the apple, pear, cherry, and plum trees. It is most abundant in the bark of tn« root, and derived its name from this circumstance (from two Greek words, bark, and X* a root). It i3 light, white, crystallizable in silky needles, of a bitter taste, soluble in about 1000 parts of cold and in all proportions in boiling water, very soluble in alcohol, scarcely soluble in ether cold or hot, dissolved without change by solutions of the alkalies, especially by ammonia, deprived of its water of crystallization at 212°, and fusible at a somewhat higher temperature. It is without acid or alkaline reaction, and consists of car- bon, hydrogen, and oxygen; its formula being, according to G. Roser, when dry, C42H25O20, with the addition of 4 eqs. of water when crystallized. When heated with dilute muriatic or sulphuric acid, it is converted into sugar and a peculiar substance called phloretin. (See Chem. Gaz., viii. 392.) To obtain it, the fresh bark of the root of the apple tree should be selected, as the dried bark is said to contain it in much smaller proportion. The bark is to be boiled for an hour or two successively in two separate portions of water, each sufficient to cover it, and the decoction set aside. At the end of thirty hours they will have deposited a considerable quantity of coloured phloridzin, which may be purified by boiling for a few minutes with distilled water and animal charcoal, filtering, repeating this process two or three times, and then allowing the solution to cool slowly. The phloridzin is deposited in the crystalline state. An additional quantity may be obtained by evaporating the decoction to one-fifth of its bulk, allowing it to cool, and purifying the substance deposited in the same manner as before. Phloridzin is said to possess the anti-intermittent property in a high degree, and to have proved successful where quinia had failed. It was employed by Dr. Konink in the dose of 10 or 15 grains, and effected cures in several cases of intermittent fever. Dr. De Ricci re- commends it very strongly as a tonic in the dyspepsia of delicate females, in the debility of children requiring a supporting treatment, and in all cases in which quinia is indicated but is not well borne. He has never known it to disagree with patients in the dose of 10 grains three or four times a day. As a tonic, 5 grains of it may be given at a dose. Though nearly insoluble in water alone, it may be readily exhibited in solution by adding to the water a few drops of spirit of ammonia. [Dub. Quart. Journ., Aug. 1862.) W. PHOSPHATE OF POTASSA. Potassse Phosphas. The phosphate of potassa, which has of late come into use as a medicine, is the neutral tribasic phosphate, having the formula 2KO,HO,POs, and, therefore, a composition precisely analogous to that of the medicinal phosphates of soda and ammonia. It is derived from the variety of phosphoric acid con- taining three eqs. of water, by the substitution of two eqs. of potassa for two of water, and, notwithstanding its slight alkaline reaction, is called neutral, in order to distinguish it from the decidedly alkaline tribasic phosphate, 3K0,P05. It may be formed precisely as phosphate of soda is prepared (see page 1336); or by saturating, by means of carbonate of potassa, glacial phosphoric acid (HO,POs), changed by solution in water and ebulli- tion into common phosphoric acid (3II0,P05). The medicinal phosphate of potassa is a white, amorphous, deliquescent salt, incapable of crystallization. It has been given as an alterative in scrofula and phthisis, and in some other diseases, with supposed advantage. The dose is from ten to thirty grains three times a day, dissolved in a tablespoonful of water. B. PHOSPHATE OF ZINC. Zinci Phosphas. Dr. Barnes, of London, has brought forward this salt of zinc, as having special advantages over other salts of the same metal in the treatment of nervous diseases. The theoretical ground of preference is that, in diseases of the brain there is apt to be a -waste of phosphorus in the cerebral substance, and the phosphoric acid offers the means of supplying the deficiency. Phosphate of zinc may bo prepared by the mutual reaction of sulphate of zinc and an alkaline phosphate. It is white, insoluble in water, but soluble in an excess of phosphoric acid. Dr. Barnes has found it peculiarly useful in the insanity occurring in the convalescence from fevers, in which he associates it with quinia, and in epilepsy attended with disorder of the uterine functions. He also uses it preferably to the sulphate of zinc in the sweats of phthisis. He finds it less liable to disturb the stomach than the sulphate. It may be given in pill, or dissolved in water acidulated with phosphoric acid, in the dose of from one to three grains. W. PHYSALIS ALKEKENGI. Alkekengi. Common Winter Cherry. A perennial herbaceous plant, growing wild in the south of Europe, and cultivated in our gardens. The fruit is a round red berry, about as large as a cherry, enclosed in the calyx, and containing numer- ous flat kidney-shaped seeds. All parts of the plant are bitter, especially the leaves and the capsules enveloping the fruit. The berries are very juicy, and have an acidulous, bit- terish taste. By drying they shrink, and become of a brownish-red colour. The bitter principle has beer, isolated by MM. Dessaignes and Chautard, and named by them physalin. 1584 Pichurim Beans.—Pimpinella Saxifraga. PART III. It is obtained by agitating an infusion of tlie plant with chloroform, which extracts the bitter principle, and yields it by evaporation. To purify it, dissolve it in hot alcohol, add a little animal charcoal, filter, precipitate by water, and wash the precipitate with the same liquid. It is a light powder, white with a shade of yellow, of a taste slight at first, but in the end permanently bitter, very slightly soluble in cold water, somewhat more soluble in boiling water, and very soluble in alcohol and chloroform, especially with the aid of heat. It consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. (Journ. de Pharm., Setter., xxi. 24.) The ber- ries are said to be aperient and diuretic, and have been recommended in suppression of urine, gravel, and other complaints of the urinary passages. M. Gendron recommends them very highly as a febrifuge. He thinks they are most effective when allowed to ripen and begin to dry on the stem. He usually administers about three drachms daily in two doses. (Arch. Gen., xxiii. 536 ) A French physician has lately published a pamphlet on gout, in which he strongly recommends alkekengi as more efficacious even than colcliicum. He takes the flowers and unripe fruit, dries and powders them, makes the powder into a paste with water and a little slaked lime, treats the mixture with boiling alcohol, and finally filters and evaporates the alcoholic liquid. The residue is given in the form of pill, made with solution of silicate of soda and powdered Teucrium Chamsedrys. Five or six of the pills are taken daily. (Braithwaite's Retrospect, Am. ed., No. 46, p. 214.) From six to twelve berries, or an ounce of the expressed juice, may be taken for a dose; and much larger quantities are not injurious. They are consumed to a considerable extent in some parts of Europe as food. The berries of the Physalisviscosa, of this country, are said by Clayton to be remarkably diuretic. ~~ W. PICHURIM EEANS. The seeds of an uncertain tree growing in Brazil, Guiana, Vene- zuela, and other parts of South America. The tree has been supposed to be the Ocotea Pichurim of Kunth (Laurus Pichurim, Richard, Aydendron Laurel, Nees); but its position in either of these genera is denied by F. Nees von Esenbeck: and the plant is now referred to the genus Nectandra with the specific name Puchury. There appear to be two varieties of Nectandra Puchury, one bearing larger and the other smaller fruit, and distinguished as the major ancf minor. Professor Carson, of the University of Pennsylvania, has had spe- cimens of the fruit and other parts of the tree sent him, sufficient to verify the ascription of the Pichurim beans to this source. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 385.) The beans are the kernels of the fruit separated into halves. They are ovate-oblong or elliptical, flat on one side, convex on the other, of a grayish-brown colour externally, chocolate-coloured within, of an aromatic odour between that of nutmegs and sassafras, and of a spicy pun- gent taste. There are two kinds, one about an inch and a half long by half an inch in breadth, the other little more than half as large, rounder, and of a dark-brown colour. The former are said by Dr. Carson to come from Brazil, the latter from Venezuela, and may be severally the product of the varieties of the tree above referred to. (Ibid., p. 387.) Bonastre has found them to contain a concrete volatile oil, a fatty matter of the consist- ence of butter, stearin, resin, brown colouring matter, fecula, gum, sugar, and lignin. Their virtues depend on the volatile oil. In the American Journal of Pharmacy for Jan. 1851 (p. 1), Prof. Procter describes a liquid product brought from South America, known as “the native oil of laurel or sassafras,” or “aceyte de sassafras,” said to be obtained by making incisions in the trunk of a tree growing on the Orinoco. As described by Prof. Procter, it is an oleo-resin, of the sp. gr. 0-898, of a light auburn colour, a peculiar pene- trating odour, and an aromatic, bitterish, pungent, and somewhat camphorous taste. On distillation, almost the whole passes over in the shape of a colourless volatile oil; a small proportion only of resinous matter being left behind. This oleo-resin is conjectured to be the same as that employed for adulterating the copaiba exported from Maracaibo. It may be distinguished from copaiba by its ready solubility in alcohol of 0-838, and by the fact that its volatile oil is acted on by potassium. It is believed to be the same product as the “native oil of laurel” described by Pereira, which was obtained from Dcmerara, and bv incisions in a large tree. Prof. Carson, on comparing with it a specimen of oil presented to him as obtained from the same tree with the fruit above mentioned, has no hesitation in considering them as identical, and, therefore, in referring the so-called native oil of laurel to Nectandra Puchury. In medical properties the pichurim beans resemble the common aromatics, and may be employed for the same purposes. In South America they are said to be used as a substitute for nutmeg, and have even been called by that name. They are rare in this county. The oil obtained from the tree is said to impart its odour to the perspiration and urine, and to be useful in rheumatism, gout, &c. The bark is sometimes employed as a tonic and febrifuge. W. PIMPINELLA SAXIFRAGA. Small Burnet Saxifrage. Saxifraga. A perennial umbellife- rous European plant, growing on sunny hills, and in dry meadows and pastures. The root is officinal in some parts of Europe. It has a strong, aromatic, yet unpleasant odour, and a sweetish, pungent, biting, aromatic, bitterish taste. Its active constituents are volatile oil and an acrid resin. It is considered diaphoretic, diuretic, and stomachic; and has been used in chronic catarrh, asthma, dropsy, amenorrhcea, &c. The dose in substance is about PART III. Pinclcncya Pubens.—Platinum. 1585 half a drachm, and in infusion two drachms. The root is used also as a masticatory in toothache, as a gargle in palsy of the tongue and in collections of viscid mucus in the throat, and externally to remove freckles. W. PINCKNEYA PUBENS. Michaux. A large shrub or small tree, growing in South Caro- lina, Georgia, and Florida, in low and moist places along the sea-coast. It is closely allied, in botanical characters, to the Cinchonae, with which it was formerly ranked by some bota- nists. The bark is bitter, and has been used with advantage in intermittent fever. Dr. Law, of Georgia, cured six out of seven cases in which he administered it. The dose and mode ©f preparation are the same with those of cinchona. The chemical composition and medical properties of this bark deserve a fuller investigation than they have yet received. W. PISCIDIA ERYTIIR1NA. Jamaica Dogwood. Dr. William Hamilton, of Plymouth, Eng- land, in a communication to the Pharmaceutical Journal (iv. 76, August, 1844), speaks of this plant as a powerful narcotic, capable of producing sleep and relieving pain in an extraordi- nary manner. He had noticed, when resident in the West Indies, the use of the bark of the root in the taking of fish, upon which, even when of a large size, it exercised a very strong narcotic effect. He was induced to try it as an anodyne in toothache, and found a saturated tincture exceedingly efficacious, not only affording relief when taken internally, but uni- formly curing the pain when introduced upon a dossil of cotton into the carious tooth. The bark of the root, to be effectual, should be gathered during the period of inflorescence in April. When chewed it has an unpleasant acrimony like that of mezereon. It yields its vir- tues to alcohol, but not to water. The formula employed by him in preparing the tincture was to macerate an ounce of the bark, in coarse powder, in four fluidounces of rectified spirit, for twenty-four hours, and then to filter. The dose is a fluidrachm. He first tried it on himself, when labouring under severe toothache, taking the quantity mentioned in cold water on going to bed. He first felt a violent sensation of heat internally, which gradually extended to the surface, and was followed by profuse perspiration, with profound sleep for twelve hours. On awaking, he was quite free from pain, and without the unpleasant sensa- tions which follow a dose of opium. W. I’LANTAGO MAJOR. Plantain. A well-known perennial herb, growing in fields, by th« roadsides, and in grass-plots, and abounding both in Europe and in this country. Th« leaves are saline, bitterish, and austere to the taste; the root saline and sweetish. The plan! has been considered refrigerant, diuretic, deobstruent, and somewhat astringent. The an- cients esteemed it highly, and employed it in visceral obstructions, hemorrhages, particu larly from the lungs, consumption, dysentery, and other complaints. In modern times if has been applied to similar purposes, and the root is said to have proved useful in intermit tents. At present, however, it is generally believed to be very feeble, and is little used in- ternally. As an external application it has been recommended in ulcers of various kinds and in indolent scrofulous tumours. Among the vulgar it is still much used as a vulnerary and as a dressing for blisters and sores. The dose of the expressed juice is from one to foui fluidounces. Two ounces of the fresh root or leaves may be boiled in a pint of water, an«i given during the day. Externally the leaves are applied whole, or in decoction PlantaaL media and P. lancifolia or rib-grass, which are also indigenous, possess properties similar to those of P. Major, and may be used fcr the same purposes. Under the name of semenpsyllii, the seeds of several species of Plantago, growing in Eu- rope, are sometimes kept in the shops. The best are those of Plantago Psyllium or fleawort, which grows in the south of Europe and Barbary. They are small, about a line long by half a line in breadth, convex on one side, concave on the other, flea-coloured, shining, inodorous, and nearly tasteless, but mucilaginous when chewed. They are demulcent and emollient, and may be used internally and externally in the same manner as flaxseed, which they closely resemble in medical properties. W. PLATINUM. In 1826 Prof. Gmelin, of Tubingen, made experiments to determine the action of this metal on the economy. In 1841 Dr. Ferdinand Hoefer published some obser- vations on the same subject. The latter experimented chiefly with the bichloride, and the double chloride of platinum and sodium. They are both poisonous; the bichloride in the dose of 15 grains, the double chloride in that of 80 grains. When a concentrated solution of the bichloride is applied to the skin, it produces violent itching, followed by an eruption. Administered internally it irritates the mucous membrane of the stomach and occasions headache. The double chloride has no action when externally applied, and, when given in- ternally, operates on the system in a less sensible manner than the bichloride. It possesses the power of augmenting the urine. Dr. Hoefer ranks the preparations of platinum with the alteratives, by the side of those of iodine, arsenic, and gold. He considers them particularly suited to the treatment of syphilitic diseases; the bichloride to cases of long standing and inveterate, the double chloride to those which are recent. The dose of the bichloride is from half a grain to two grains twice a day, given in pill. Eight grains may be made into sixteen with a drachm of the extract of guaiacum wood of the French Codex, and sufficient 1586 Plumbago Europsea.—Populus. PART III. powdered li pn rice root. Of these, one, two, or three may he taken morning and evening. The doubie chloride may be prepared by dissolving five grains of the bichloride and eight of pure chloride of sodium in seven fluidounces of gum-water; and the whole may be taken by tablespoonfuls in the course of twenty-four hours. For frictions on indolent ulcers, Dr. Hoefer used an ointment composed of sixteen grains of the bichloride, thirty-two graixs of extract of belladonna, and an ounce of lard. (Journ. de Pharm., xxvii. 218.) B. PLUMBAGO EUROPiEA. Leadwort. Dentellaria. A perennial, herbaceous plant, grow- ing in the south of Europe. It has an acrid taste, and, when chewed, excites a flow of sa- liva. This is particularly the case with the root, which has been long used to relieve tooth- ache. Hence the plant derived the name of dentelaire, by which it is known in France. A decoction of the root in olive oil has been highly recommended for the cure of the itch. Writers differ much in their statements in relation to the activity of the plant, some speak- ing of it as a rubefacient, vesicatory, and caustic, and, when swallowed, as violently emetic, and liable to produce dangerous irritation of the alimentary canal; while others consider it nearly inert Perhaps the difference may be ascribed in part to the use of the plant in the recent state in one case, and dried or long kept in the other. A crystallizable, acrid princi- ple, called plumbagin, has been extracted from the root by Dulong. W. POLYPODIUM VULGARE. Common Polypody. A fern belonging both to the old and new continents, and growing in the clefts of old walls, rocks, and decayed trunks of trees. The root, which is the part considered medicinal, is rather long, about as thick as a goose-quill, somewhat contorted, covered with brown, easily separable scales, furnished with slender radicles, and marked by numerous small tubercles. As found in the shops, it is sometimes destitute of the scales and radicles. Its colour is reddish-brown with a tinge of yellow, its odour disagreeably oleaginous, its taste peculiar, sweetish, somewhat bitter, and nauseoous. The root of the variety growing upon the oak has been preferred, though without good reason. It was deemed purgative by the ancients, who employed it for the evacuation of bile and pituitous humours in melancholic and maniacal cases. Modern physicians have used it in similar complaints, and as a pectoral in chronic catarrh and asthma. At present, how- ever, it is scarcely ever employed, being considered nearly inert. It was given in doses varying from a drachm to an ounce, usually in connection with cathartics. W. POLYTRICHUM JUNIPERINUM. Ilair-cap Moss. Robin's Rye. This moss is a native of the United States, and abounds in New England. For a particular description of it, the reader is referred to a communication in the Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S. (xxvii. 267), by Dr. Wm. Wood, of East Windsor Hill, Connecticut, who speaks in very strong terms of its efficacy as a diuretic, having found it the most successful remedy which he has employed in the treatment of dropsy. He infuses a large handful of the whole plant in water, and allows the patient to drink freely of the tea, “the more so the better.” Dr. Ariel Hunter, of Hyde Park, Vermont, has subsequently given additional testimony in its favour as a diuretic, doing good service in dysury. (iV. J. Med. and Surg. Reporter, ix. 417.) W. POPULUS. Poplar. Several trees belonging to this genus have attracted some attention in a medical point of view. In most of them the leaf-buds are covered with a resinous exu- dation, which has a peculiar, agreeable, balsamic odour, and a bitterish, balsamic, some- what pungent taste. This is abundant in the buds of Populus nigra or the black poplar of Europe, which are officinal in some parts of that continent! They contain resin and a pecu- liar volatile oil. The buds of P. balsamifera, growing in the northern parts of N. America and Siberia, are also highly balsamic; amTa resin is said to be furnished by the tree, which is sometimes, though erroneously, called tacamahac. The virtues cf the poplar buds are probably analogous to those of the turpentines and balsams. They have been used in pec- toral, nephritic, and rheumatic complaints, in the form of tincture; and a liniment, made by macerating them in oil, has been applied externally in local rheumatism. Thejcriguentum populeum of European pharmacy is made, according to the directions of the French Codex of 1837. by bruising in a marble mortar, and boiling in 2000 parts of lard, with a gentle fire, till the moisture is dissipated, 250 parts, each, of the fresh leaves of the black poppy, deadly nightshade, henbane, and black nightshade; then adding of the dried buds of the black poplar, bruised, 875 parts; digesting for 24 hours; straining with strong expression; and finally allowing the ointment to cool after defecation. This is an anodyne ointment, oc- casionally employed in Europe in painful local affections. It has been ascertained that poplar buds are capable of imparting a principle to ointments, which in a considerable degree ob- viates their tendency to rancidity. 'I h'e bark of certain species of poplar is possessed of tonic properties, and has been used in intermittent fever with advantage. Such is the case with that of P. tremuloides or Ame- rican aspen, and of P. tremu/a ov European_aspen. In the bark of the latter Braconnot found salicin, and another crystallizabTe principle ■which he named pop7ilin. It is in these, pro- bably, that the febrifuge properties of the bark reside. They obtained by preci- pitating a saturated decoction of the bark with solution of subacetate of lead, filtering, pre- cipitating the excess of lead by sulphuric acid, again filtering, evaporating, adding animal PART ill. JPortulaca Oleracea.—Prenanthes Serpentaria. 1587 charcoal towards the end of the evaporation, and filtering the liquor while hot. Salicin gra - dually separates, upon the cooling of the liquor, in the form of crystals. If, when this prin- ciple has ceased to crystallize, the excess of sulphuric acid in the liquid be saturated by a concentrated solution of carbonate of potassa, the populin will be precipitated. If this be pressed between folds of blotting paper, and redissolved in boiling water, it will be depo- sited, upon the cooling of the liquid, in the crystalline state. The leaves also of P. tremula afford populin, and more largely even than the bark. It is probable that exist in the bark of P. tremuloides, and other species. Salicin is described under Salix. Populin is very light, -and of a bitter, sweetish taste, analogous to that of liquorice. When heated it melts into a colourless and transparent liquid. It is soluble in 2000 parts of cold, and about 70 parts of boiling water; and is more soluble in boiling al- cohol. Acetic acid and the diluted mineral acids dissolve it, and, upon the addition of an alkali, let. it fall unchanged. Piria regards it as a complex body, consisting of benzoic acid, saligenin, and glucose. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 240.) Of these principles saligenin and glucose have been found in salicin; and it was inferred that, by separating benzoic acid, populin might be converted into salicin. This has been effected by Piria. When populin is boiled with baryta water or milk of lime, the benzoic acid precipitated by sesquichloride of iron, the excess of iron removed by lime, and the excess of lime by carbonic acid, the remaining liquid yields salicin on evaporation. The same conversion may be effected by heating populin with an alcoholic solution of ammonia to 212°. Piria obtained from populin 28 9 per cent, of benzoic acid. [Pharm. Journ., xv. 378.) Dr. T. L. Phipson, basing his ex- periments upon the results of Piria, has succeeded in preparing populin artificially by com- bining salicin and benzoic acid. Nothing more is necessary than to dissolve the two sub- stances in alcohol, and to concentrate the solution. Crystals are formed having all the characters of populin, and consisting of salicin and benzoic acid combined in the proportion of their equivalents. [Chem. News, Dec. 6, 1862, p. 278.) W. PORTULACA OLERACEA. Garden Purslane. An annual succulent plant, growing in gardens and cultivated grounds, in the United States, Europe, and most other parts of the globe. It has an herbaceous, slightly saline taste, and is often used as greens, being boiled with meat, or other vegetables. It is considered a cooling diuretic, and is recommended in scurvy, and affections of the urinary passages. The seeds have been thought to be anthel- mintic ; but they are tasteless and inert. W. POTENTILLA REPTANS. Cinquefoil. A perennial, creeping, European herb, with leaves which are usually quinate, and have thus given origin to the ordinary name of the plant. The root has a bitterish, styptic, slightly sweetish taste, and was formerly used in diar- rhoea, and other complaints for which astringents are usually prescribed. W. POWDER OF ALGAROTH. Pulvis Algarolhi. Oxychloride of Antimony. Nitromuriatic Oxide of Antimony. This powder is formed by dissolving tersulphuret of antimony in mu- riatic acid, assisting the action, at first, by a gentle heat, which must be gradually in- creased to ebullition; and then pouring the resulting solution, when cold, into a large quantity of water. By a double decomposition between the tersulphuret and acid, sulphu- retted hydrogen is given off copiously by effervescence, and a solution of terchloride of antimony is formed. When this is thrown into water, the greater part of the terchloride is converted, by the elements of that liquid, into muriatic acid, which remains in solution, and teroxide of antimony, which precipitates in union with the remainder of the terchlo- ride as the powder of Algaroth. Properties, #c. This is a white powder, having a crystalline appearance if left long in contact with the solution from which it is precipitated. When exposed to a red heat it fuses, and forms a yellow liquid, which, on cooling, concretes into a grayish crystalline mass of a pearly aspect. Its usual composition is represented by the formula 2SbOg.SbCl3 —|-HO. It was formerly used in the preparation of tartar emetic, but has been superseded for this purpose by the pure teroxide. It has also been used in medicine; but, owing to its unequal operation, has been properly laid aside. It is liable to contain tersulphuret of arsenic (orpiment), unless when obtained from the distilled concrete terchloride of anti- mony. (Larocque, Journ. de Pharm., March, 1849.) B. PRENANTHES SERPENTARIA. Lion's Foot. This is a perennial indigenous herb, growing in the mountainous districts of Virginia and North Carolina. It belongs to Syn- genesia JEqualis in the sexual system, and to the natural family of Chicoracese. The genus is characterized by its “four-flowered nodding heads, its cylindric involucre calyculate at the base, its subterete unbeaked akenes, its scabrous pappus in several series, and its naked receptacle ” This particular species has rough dentate leaves, of which the radical are palmate, the e»uline vith long footstalks, sinuate pinnatifid, disposed to be three-lobed, with the middle lobe three-parted, the upper lanceolate. The racemes are terminal, some- what panicled, short, and nodding, with an eight-cleft calyx, and twelve florets. (Pursh.) Dr. Darlington considers this a variety of Prenanlhes alba. It is about two feet high, with purple flowers Pursh speaks of it as in great repute among the inhabitants of the re- 1588 Propylamia. PART III. gions ii inhabits as a remedy for the bite of poisonous serpents, and relates a case in which he had seen it used effectively. The milky juice of the plant was taken internally, and the leaves steeped in water were applied to the wound and frequently changed. In October, 1849, the author received a specimen of a plant from Dr. Newsom J. Pittman, of N. Carolina, with the information that he had employed it in ten or twelve cases of the bite of the rattlesnake with uniform success. He gave internally a decoction of the root, which is extremely bitter. This plant was the Prenanthes Serpentaria of Pursh. W. PROPYLAMIA. Propylamin. Sccalia. Seca/in. Under the head of Ergota {page 368) allu- sion has been already made to a volatile alkaloid discovered by Winckler in the ergot of rye, and therefore denominated by him secalin. This has since been identified with propylamia previously discovered in herring pickle; a fact which explains the fishy odour long known as one of the characteristics of ergot. The same alkaloid has been obtained as an artificial product from narcotina (see page 619), codeia, cod-liver oil, and other substances, and has been found in saline combination in the flowers of Crmtagus oxycantka, Sorbus aucupa- ria, and one or more species of Chenopodium. The mode of obtaining it from ergot has been described in Part I. (page 368). The following method of procuring it from herring pickle has been published by Prof. Procter in the American Journal of Pharmacy (March, 1859, p. 127). Herring pickle procured from the dealers in salt fish, having been mixed with sufficient potassa to render the liquid strongly alkaline, is introduced into a retort or alembic, and heated. The vapours are condensed in a receiver containing distilled water duly refrigerated, and the heat is continued until the distillate, as it forms, ceases to have the odour of herrings. The condensed liquid, which contains the propylamia separated by the potassa from its saline combination in the pickle, is now neutralized with muriatio acid, and carefully evaporated to dryness. Ammonia, which comes over and is condensed with the propylamia, combines like it with the muriatic acid, and the dry salt obtained is a mixture of the muriates of both these bases. This is exhausted with absolute alcohol, which dissolves the muriate of propylamia, and leaves the muriate of ammonia. If the alcoholic solution be treated with hydrate of lime, propylamia in vapour is given out abundantly with very little heat, and may be condensed in a receiver, which should be kept well cooled. The process may be simplified, as suggested by Prof. Procter in a subsequent number of the journal (May, 1859, p. 222), by acidulating the liquid in the receiver with muriatic acid, added gradually as the acid becomes neutralized, thus directly forming the muriate, which may be obtained crystallized by subsequent concentration, and, if necessary, freed from the accompanying muriate of ammonia in the manner already mentioned. In consequence of the volatility of propylamia, it is better kept in the state of the muriate; and this may either be used by the physician, or extemporaneously converted into propy- lamia, should it be wanted, by adding an equivalent of solution of potassa. The pure muriate may be obtained by the concentration of the alcoholic solution, formed as one of the steps of the preceding process. Propylamia is a colourless transparent liquid, of a characteristic odour, usually attended with some pungency, which may possibly be ascribed to the ammonia frequently mixed with it. It is soluble in water and alcohol, has a strong alkaline reaction, and forms crystallizable salts with the acids. If the end of a glass rod, previously dipped into muriatic acid, be held over the open mouth of a vial containing it, a white cloud of the muriate will be seen, as in the case of ammonia. Though most of the salts of propylamia are soluble in water and alcohol, the sulphate is wholly insoluble in the latter of these menstrua. ( Winckler.) Propylamia consists of carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen; and its formula is C6H9N, which is represented by one eq. of propylene and one of ammonia C6H6,NH3, or one of propyl and one of amidogen NH2,C6I17. Dr. Awenarius of St. Petersburg, Russia, first called attention to the use of propyla- mia in rheumatism, for which he considered it as a specific; so much so that a case of doubtful rheumatism might be diagnosticated by the successful use of this remedy in the course of a few days. Between March, 1854, and June, 1856, he treated in the Hospital Kalinkin, in St. Petersburg, 250 cases of rheumatism with success. Some of the cases were acute, some chronic, many metastatic, with pericardial, pleuritic, and meningeal compli- cations; and hemiplegic and paraplegic cases were not wanting; but all recovered. In the acute cases the pain and fever disappeared in a day or two. He mixed 25 drops of propylamia with six fluidounces of distilled water, flavoured if necessary with sugar and oil of peppermint, and gave a tablespoonful every two or three hours, taking care that the alkaloid was pure and freshly prepared. {Ann. de Thirap., 1859, p. 74.) Confirmatory state- ments from various sources have since been published; and the remedy has been found ser- viceable in other painful affections. Dr. B. F. Eaton, of Barnet, Vermont, has given in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal an account of a severe case of neuralgia of the face, in which the pain appeared to have been entirely subdued by it in less than 24 hours. After using it for about three days, the patient was seized with vomiting, accompanied with faint- ness, and excessive thirst ; but whether these phenomena were the effects of the propyla- mia could not be determined. (See Am. Journ. ofPharm., May, 1862, p. 277 ) Experiment.* are wanting to show the precise physiological properties of this alkaloid: and how far or PART III. Prunella Vulgaris.—Pyroacetic Spirit. in what manner it may prove deleterious in overdoses. There is probably no better pla* of administering the remedy than that recommended by Dr. Awenarius; namely in watery solution. A solution of 24 drops in six fluidounces of peppermint water, with two drachms of sugar, may be given in the dose of half a fluidounce, equivalent to two drops of the alkaloid, every two hours in the more acute cases. Or 36 grains of the muriate may be substituted in the mixture for the 24 drops of the alkaloid, and 6 tluidrachms of the solu- tion of potassa added. This would give, with each dose of the propylamia, three or four grains of chloride of potassium, which could have no material effect, and certainly none of an injurious character. W. PRUNELLA VULGARIS. Self-heal. Heal-all. A small perennial labiate plant,'common both in Europe and the United States, growing especially by the waysides. It is inodorous, but has an austere bitterish taste. The herb in flower was formerly used, in the state of infusion or decoction, in hemorrhages and diarrhoea, and as a gargle in sorethroat. In this country it is not employed in regular practice. W. PULMONARIA OFFICINALIS. Lungwort. An herbaceous perennial, European plant, sometimes cultivated in this country in gardens. The leaves are inodorous, and have an herbaceous, somewhat mucilaginous, and feebly astringent taste. They have been consid- ered pectoral and demulcent, and employed in catarrh, haemoptysis, consumption, and other affections of the chest; but their virtues are doubtful, and they were probably used in pec- toral complaints as much on account of the supposed resemblance of their speckled surface to that of the lungs, as from the possession of any positively useful properties. W. PUMICE STONE. Pumex. A very light porous stone, found in the vicinity of active and extinct volcanoes, and believed to have been thrown up during their eruption. The pumice Btone of commerce is said to be obtained chiefly from Lipari. It is used whole, in the man- ner of a file, for removing the outer surfaces of bodies, or for rubbing down inequalities, and, in the state of powder, for polishing glass, metals, stones, &c.; purposes to which it is adapted by the hardness of its particles. W. PYRETHRUM PARTHENIUM. (Willd.) Matricaria Parthenium. (Linn.) Chrysanthemum Parthenium. (Persoon.) Feverfew. A perennial herbaceous plant, about two feet high, with an erect, branching stem, pinnate leaves, oblong, obtuse, gashed, and dentate leaflets, and compound flowers in a corymb upon branching peduncles. It is a native of Europe, but cultivated in our gardens. The whole herbaceous part is used. The plant has an odour and taste analogous to those of chamomile, which it resembles also in the appearance of its flow- ers, and in its medical virtues. According to Zeller, a pound of it yields 4-8 grains of vola- tile oil. (Cent. Platt, 1855, p. 205.) Though little employed, it is undoubtedly possessed of useful tonic properties. The flowers of this and of a closely resembling species, Matricaria parthenoides (Desf.), are said to be used in France, to a considerable extent, indiscriminately with thoseTof the true chamomile plant, Anthemis nobilis, which they closely resemble, espe- cially when double. They may, however, be distinguished, in this state, by their peculiar odour, their smaller receptacle, which is, moreover, rounded and flattened above, instead of being conical and somewhat pointed as in the Anthemis, and by the tubular five-toothed central florets, which in the chamomile are small, few, and scarcely visible, but, in the two species of Parthenium, are large, very numerous, and very long. Two other species of Par- thenium, P. roseum and P. carneum, have recently come into notice, as the source of the Persian insect powder. (See~7nsect Powder, page 1537.) W. PYROACETIC SPIRIT. Pyroacetic Ether. Acetone. This substance may be obtained by carefully distilling acetate of lime, and rectifying the product by repeated distillations from quicklime in a water-bath, until the boiling point becomes stationary, whereby it is freed from water and empyreumatic oil. It is a colourless, volatile, inflammable liquid, having a peculiar penetrating smell, and a pungent taste like that of peppermint. Its specific gravity is 0-792, and boiling point 132°. As found in the shops its density is not generally lower than 0-820. It is miscible in all proportions with water, ether, and alcohol, without disturb- ing its transparency If it becomes turbid when mixed with water, the fact shows that it coutains empyreumatic oil. It has been confounded with pyroxylic spirit, from which it is distinguished by its inability to dissolve a saturated solution of chloride of calcium, which is instantly dissolved in pyroxylic spirit. (Scanlan.) Its formula is C3H30; while that of py- roxylic spirit is C2H402. In constitution it bears considerable resemblance to alcohol. Thus, its formula doubled is C6H602, and that of alcohol is C4H602. It was thought at one time that the substance brought to the notice of the profession by Dr. John Hastings, of London, under the name of naphtha, as a remedy for pulmonary consumption, was pyroacetic spirit; nut it now appears to be settled that what he intended was pyroxylic spirit. (See Spiritus Pyroxilicus Rectificatus, page 803.) There is no doubt that these spirits were used indiscrimi- nately in the therapeutic trials which grew out of the publication of Dr. Hastings’ book; but no exact experiments have been made, so far as we know, to determine the precise physiological action of pyroacetic spirit. B. Pyrogallic Acid.—Rennet. PART IIL PYROGALLIC ACID. Pyrogalline or Galline (Rosing). This substance has recently ac- quired some importance as an agent in photography. It is one of the results of the igneous decomposition of gallic acid, and may be obtained by submitting extract of galls to the same treatment as that used for preparing benzoic acid from benzoin. The vapours of pyrogallio acid rise, and condense on the upper surface of the paper diaphragm. The chief difficulty in the process is properly to regulate the heat; as at a high temperature this acid passes rapidly into metagallic acid, and thus the product is diminished. According to Lowig, it is best prepared by heating gallic acid, previously dried at 212° F., in a glass retort, by means of a chloride of zinc bath, to 410° F ., when the pure acid sublimes. Liebig recommends another method, calculated especially to obviate the effects of heat, which, with all the de- tails, may be seen in the Am. Journ. of Pharm, for July, 1857 (p. 338). In the same journal (July, 1854, p. 362) are the details of a process by H. Gruneberg, of the character of the one first referred to above, by which he obtained from 50 pounds of Chinese galls 2 pounds of the acid. Pyrogallic acid is in white, shining scales, inodorous, very bitter, soluble in three and a half parts of water, readily dissolved by alcohol and ether, fusible at 239° F., and sublima- ble at 410° in irritating vapours. According to Rosing, of Christiania, it is always partially converted, when sublimed, into metagallic acid, to which probably it owes its acid reaction as generally found in commerce; for, when quite pure, it has no influence on litmus paper. Rosing denied altogether its claims to be considered as an acid, and proposed to call it.py- rogalline or galline. (Journ. de Pharm., Juillet,, 1857, p. 53.) In a subsequent memoir, how- ever, he admits its neutralizing power, and gives as its formula C12H606. One of its charac- teristic properties is its strong affinity for oxygen, in consequence of which it instantly un- dergoes change by contact with chlorine, iodine, bromine, and the acids which readily yield oxygen. Through the same property it rapidly reduces some of the metallic oxides; and its use in photography is based on this effect exercised ou the salts of silver. Though unaltera- ble in the air when quite dry, it is rapidly changed in solution by the absorption of oxygen, so that it may be used for ascertaining the proportion of this gas in a mixture of gases. W. REALGAR. This is the bisulphuret of arsenic, consisting of one eq. of arsenic 75, and two of sulphur 32 = 107. It is found native in Saxony, Bohemia, Transylvania, and in various volcanic regions. Realgar is artificially made by melting arsenious acid with about half its weight of sulphur. (Turner.) Thus prepared, it is of a crystalline texture, of a beautiful ruby-red colour, of a uniform conchoidal fracture, somewhat transparent in thin layers, and capable of being sublimed without change. Native realgar is said to be innocent when taken internally, while that prepared is poisonous, in conse- quence, according to Guibourt, of containing a little arsenious acid. Realgar is used only as a pigment. W. RED CHALK. Reddle. A mineral substance of a deep-red colour, of a compact texture, dry to the touch, adhering to the tongue, about as hard as chalk, soiling the fingers when handled, and leaving a lively red trace when drawn over paper. It consists of clay and oxide of iron, and is intermediate between bole and red ochre, containing more oxide of iron than the former, and less than the latter. It is used for drawing lines upon wood, &c., and is sometimes made into crayons by levigating and elutriating it, then forming it into a paste with mucilage of gum arabic, moulding this into cylinders, and drying it in the shade. It has been used internally as an absorbent and astringent. W. RENNET. GASTRIC JUICE. PEPSINE. As a remedial agent, the gastric juice of the inferior animals has been used in three forms; 1. that of the fresh liquid taken from the stomach, 2. that of rennet, or an infusion of the dried stomach, in wine or water, and 3. that, of a preparation called pepsine. 1. Gastric juice is a liquid secretion of the mucous membrane of the stomach, whereby nitrogenous food is rendered soluble and capable of being absorbed, and other changes are effected essential to healthful digestion. Various methods have been employed for ex- tracting it from the stomach for experiment, which it is unnecessary here to describe. For use in medicine, the most convenient method is to collect it from the stomachs of animals killed fasting, as the hog, sheep, and calf, and then deprive it, by filtration, of the mucus and undigested alimentary matters mingled with it. In this state it is a limpid liquid, slightly yellowish or brownish-yellow, heavier than water, of a somewhat saltish taste, and a characteristic odour, -which, -when the juice is heated, resembles that of soup. It usually has an acid reaction. At the temperature of 100° or lower, it has the property of dissolving nitrogenous articles of food, and, without affecting starch, of changing glu- cose or the sugar of grapes into lactic acid. When separated from its attendant acid, it loses in a greater or less degree this solvent power, which it recovers upon the addition of lactic or muriatic acid. The idea has been advanced that, in normal digestion, it supplies itself with the requisite lactic acid, by converting into that substance the giucise tak*n into the stomach, or resulting from the reaction of saliva or the gastric mucus upon But in cases where no starch is taken, there must be other means of supp’ying thi uetes* PART III. Rennet. 1591 sary acid. When the juice is heated to the boiling point, it becomes turbid, and loses the solvent property. The same change takes place more slowly at the temperature of 122' F. Strong alcohol causes a deposition of solid matter, and impairs the digestive power. Tannin produces a precipitate which has no influence on food. Some of the metallic salts, as bichloride of mercury and acetate of lead, also produce a precipitate; but this, when deprived of the metallic oxide, regains the characteristic solvent property. Pure gas- tric juice contains about 97 per cent, of water, 1-75 of salts, a free acid, and D25 of a substance, which has been considered by some chemists as a distinct organic principle, and has received the name of pepsin. (Boudault, Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1856, p. 162.) This principle is nitrogenous, and is believed to have the properties of a ferment, whereby the gastric juice is enabled, with the assistance of an acid, to exercise its peculiar power over food. It may be separated from the gastric juice by first precipitating this with a metallic salt, as the acetate of lead, and then decomposing the metallic precipitate by sul- phuretted hydrogen, which throws down the metal as a sulphuret, and leaves the pepsin in solution. The liquid is then evaporated at a very gentle heat, and the pepsin is left in the form of a soft, viscous substance, which can with difficulty be brought to a dry state without addition. But it is very doubtful whether the substance thus procured, though it has the digestive power of the gastric juice, is a pure proximate principle; as, in the purest state in which it has been obtained, it does not yield identical results on analysis. When gastric juice is completely protected from the air, it may be kept unchanged for a long time; but, on exposure, it speedily undergoes decomposition, acquires a very offensive odour, and loses its characteristic digestive property. The juice itself is almost never used internally; but, more than forty years ago, it was employed by Dr. P. S. Physick, the celebrated surgeon of Philadelphia, with considerable success, as a local application to cancers and sloughing ulcers, with the view of removing the dead bone and flesh, cor- recting the offensive odour, and yielding a healthful stimulus to the diseased surface. It has also been used with success, by Dr. Ellsworth, of Hartford, Connecticut, for dissolving a portion of tough animal food, which had become impacted in the oesophagus of a lad affected with stricture of that passage. The gastric juice of a pig was used. (Dost. Med. and Surg. Journ., April 17, 1856.) 2. Rennet. This is an aqueous or vinous infusion of the dried stomach of the calf, though that of the sheep or other animal would probably answer the same purpose. It is much used, as every one knows, for curdling milk; a property which it owes to a por- tion of the gastric secretion, retained and dried in the mucous tissue of the stomach. To the same material it probably owes the property which it possesses of converting glucose into lactic acid; and there is little doubt that it is capable, in greater or less degree, of exercising the solvent property of gastric juice over albuminous and fibrinous food. The first of the properties just referred to suggested to Dr. James Gray, of Glasgow, the use of rennet in diabetes, with the object of promoting the conversion of any sugar of grapes that might be formed in the stomach into lactic acid, and thus preventing its entrance into the circulation in its unchanged state. He met with considerable success in this use of the remedy; and it has since been employed by others, in the same disease, with supposed ad- vantage. Dr. Gray gave a teaspoonful of the rennet after each meal. To be efficient it must be recently prepared, and of such strength that a teaspoonful will coagulate a pint of milk in five minutes. [Ed. Monthly Journ. of Med. Sci., Jan. 1853, p. 31.) Rennet seems also to have been popularly employed for promoting defective digestion, in the west of England. [Med. Times and Gaz., April, 1857, p. 411.) It is highly probable that the prepa- ration, usually employed to curdle milk, may contribute to the ready digestibility of the curds and whey, so favourite an article of diet among children in this country. Dr. Geo. Ellis gives the following method of preparing rennet-wine, from which he has obtained the most satisfactory results, when pepsin from inadequate preparation had failed him. Take the stomach of a calf immediately after death, cut off and reject about three inches of the upper or cardiac portion, slit the stomach longitudinally, wipe it gently with a dry napkin so as to remove as little of the clean mucus as possible, then cut it into small pieces, the smaller the better, put it into a common wine bottle, fill the bottle with good sherry, and let it stand corked for three weeks. The dose is a teaspoonful, in a wineglassful of water, immediately after each meal. It is known to be good if a teaspoonful will coagulate half a pint of milk in two minutes at 100° F. [Dub. Med. Press, July 16, 1862.) Pepsine. Various attempts have been made to concentrate, and bring to a convenient form for administration, the-peptic principle of the gastric juice. It must not be supposed that the substances prepared with this object, and sold under the name of pepsine, have any claim to be considered as the pure principle, which, for the sake of distinction, maybe called pepsin. The one which approaches nearest that condition is the pepsine prepared by M. Boudault His process is as follows. The rennet bags of sheep, quite fresh, are opened, turned inside out, and waahed by a gentle stream of water; the mucous membrane is then tcraped off. bruised in a mortar so as to rupture the cells, and digested for twelve hours *d pure water. The infusion thus obtained is precipitated by acetate of lead, and the pre- Reseda Luteola.—Rhamnus Catharticus. PART III. eipitate, consisting of pepsin and oxide of lead, is mixed with water and decomposed by sulphuretted hydrogen, which throws down the lead, leaving the pepsin in solution. The liquid, having been filtered, is evaporated, at about 100 F., to a syrupy consistence; after which sufficient perfectly dry starch is added to absorb the semi-liquid matter, and bring it to the state of a dry powder. Lactic acid is sometimes added in small proportion to the liquid before evaporation, and no doubt contributes to its efficiency. An attempt to evapo- rate to dryness might injure the preparation; and at best a matter would be obtained, strongly disposed to absorb moisture, and consequently to undergo putrefaction. Starch is chosen for the solidification of the syrupy mass, on account of its absorbent property, and because it is not affected by the digestive power of the pepsin. If properly prepared, 15 grains of Boudault’s pepsine, with the aid of a little lactic or muriatic acid if the for- mer was not employed in the process, will cause the solution in water of four times its weight of fibrin at the temperature of the human body; and the amount of starch added in the process is proportioned to this result. (Pharm. Journ., xvi. 472.) Much care is re- quisite to use fresh rennet bags, before they have begun to undergo decomposition, and not to allow the temperature used in evaporation to exceed 100 F. It is asserted, of the pepsine of Boudault, that it has the reactions of the gastric juice above referred to, and is fully capable of replacing that liquid for the purposes of digestion. It may be given either with or without lactic or muriatic acid; the addition being unnecessary when there is already sufficient acid in the stomach. A spurious substance has been sold for it; but may be distinguished by the difference of its reactions, and agency in dissolving fibrin. 'The genuine pepsine, dissolved in water, is precipitated by acetate of lead, tannic acid, and strong alcohol; and 15 grains of it should, in 12 hours, effect the solution of a drachm and a half of boiled white of egg, or chopped meat, in half a fluidounce of water, at 100° F. (Ballard, Med. Times and Gaz., Feb. 1857, p. 177.) The spurious substance is destitute of these properties. The idea of employing the gastric juice, or some representative of it, in order to promote digestion, is not new; and it would be difficult to determine to whom the original use of this remedy is to be ascribed. According to Boudault, however, the application of the principle pepsin to this purpose was first suggested by Dr. Corvisart, of Paris. {Journ. d* Pharm., xxx. 169.) Boudault’s preparation has been used in England by many practitioners with good effects, if we may judge fr-om the reports made in the journals. The particular condition to which it is applicable is that debility of stomach, from whatever cause arising, in which gastric juice is not produced in sufficient quantity, or of sufficient power, to enable the requisite amount of food to be digested. In such cases, the debility of the sto- mach is kept up by the want of due nutrition of the organ, originating in its own defective function; and it has, therefore, no power of recovering its healthy condition. Artificial digestion supplies the deficient nutriment ; and the stomach, being now duly nourished, resumes its proper function. Dyspepsia, the debility of stomach following chronic gas- tritis, and that attendant upon convalescence, and certain exhausting diseases, such as phthisis, afford suitable occasions for its use. It is thought to have proved useful in the vomiting of pregnancy. The dose of Boudault’s preparation is 15 grains before each meal, to be taken in powder, or suspended in soup or syrup. Boudault recommends specially the syrup of cherries, as well calculated to cover its disagreeable taste. There is no in- compatibility between it and other remedies usually employed in similar cases, such as the simple bitters, quinia, nux vomica, the chalybeates, and opiates. W. RESEDA LUTEOLA. Weld. Dyers' Weed. An annual European plant, naturalized in the United States. It is inodorous, and has a bitter taste, which is very adhesive. Chev- reul obtained from it by sublimation a peculiar yellow colouring matter, which he called luteolin. In medicine it has been employed as a diaphoretic and diuretic, but is now neglected. On the continent of Europe it is much employed for dyeing yellow, and, before the introduction of quercitron into England, was extensively applied to the same purpose in that country. The whole plant is used. W. RHAMNUS CATIIARTICUS. Buckthorn. The Edinburgh College recognised the berries of this plant, and the London, the juice of the fruit; but neither has been admitted into the U. S. Pharmacopoeia or into that of the British Council. The plant belongs to PeDtan- dria Monogynia of the Linnoean system, and to the natural family Rhamnacefe. The fol- lowing is the essential generic character. “Calyx tubular. Corolla scales defending the 6tamens, inserted into the calyx. Berry." ( Willd.) The purging buckthorn is a shrub seven or eight feet high, with branches terminating in a sharp spine. The leaves are in fascicles, on short footstalks, ovate, serrate, veined. The flowers are usually dioecious, in clusters, small, greenish, peduncled, with a four-cleft calyx, and four very small scale-like petals, placed in the male flower, behind the stamens, which equal them in number. The fruit is a four-seeded berry. The shrub is a native of Europe, and has been found growing wild in this country. It was first discovered in the Highlands of New York by Dr. Barra tu {Eaton's Manual.) It flowers in May and June, and ripens its fruit in the latter part of Koptomber. The berries and their juice are used. When ripe they are of the sine of a pea, PART III. Rhododendrum Crysanthum.—Riga Balsam. 1593 round, somewhat flattened at top, black, smooth, shining, with four seeds in a green, juicy parenchyma. Their odour is unpleasant, their taste bitterish, acrid, and nauseous. The expressed juice has the colour, odour, and taste of the parenchyma. It is reddened by the acids, and from deep-green is rendered light-green by the alkalies. Upon standing it soon begins to ferment, and becomes red in consequence of the formation of acetic acid. Eva- porated to dryness, with the addition of lime or an alkali, it forms the colour called by painters sap-green. The dried fruit of another snecies. R. infect,orius. yields a rich yellow , colour, for which it is employed in the arts under the name oTFrench berries. Vogel obtained from the juice of the berries a peculiar colouring matter, acetic acid, mucilage, sugar, and a nitrogenous substance. Hubert found green colouring matter, acetic and malic acids, brown gummy matter, and a bitter substance which he considered as the purgative principle. M. Fleury obtained a peculiar crystallizable principle, which is contained both in the expressed juice and the residue remaining after expression, and for which he proposed the name of rhamnin; but he did not ascertain whether it possessed cathartic properties. (See Journ. de Pliarm., xxvii. 666.) Winckler obtained from the rips fruit a principle which he called cathartin, and believes that the rhamnin of Eleury, which was obtained from the unripe berries, is converted into that principle and grape sugar as the fruit matures. (Chem. Gaz., viii. 232.) The cathartin of Winckler, which must not be confounded with the substance of the same name at one time supposed to be the purga- tive principle of senna, may be procured by evaporating the expressed juice of the berries to the consistence treating this repeatedly with boiling absolute alcohol till it ceases to yield bitterness to the menstruum, mixing the tinctures, allowing the liquor to become cold, filtering, adding a large excess of ether, allowing the mixed liquids to stand, then filtering, evaporating in a water-bath, and repeating the process with the residue. The cathartin thus obtained is a pale-yellow powder, very bitter, soluble in water and alcohol but not in ether, and actively cathartic in the dose of from one to three grains. (See N. Y. Journ. of Pharm., April, 1853, and Am. Journ. ofPharm., xxv. 526.) Medical Properties and Uses. Both the berries and the expressed juice are actively pur- gative; but, as they are apt to occasion nausea and severe griping, with much thirst and dryness of the mouth and throat, they are now little employed. They formerly enjoyed considerable reputation as a hydragogue cathartic in dropsy; and were given also in rheu- matism and gout. The only shape in which they are used in this country is that of syrup, which is sometimes, though rarely, added to hydragogue or diuretic mixtures. The syrup was formerly officinal, and was prepared by adding to a pint (Imp. meas.) of the juice, allowed to stand for three days, and then filtered, six drachms of sliced ginger, and six drachms of powdered pimento, macerating for four hours with a gentle heat and again straining; then boiling down three other pints of the juice, allowed to stand and filtered as the first pint, to a pint and a half, and finally mixing the liquors, and dissolving in the mixture four pounds of refined sugar. The dose of the recent berries is about a scruple, of the dried a drachm, of the expressed juice a fluidounce, and of the syrup from four to eight fluidrachms. Under the name of cortex jranguise, the bark of Rhamnus Frangula is used in Germany as a cathartic. Buchner found in this bark a peculiar yeHowvo 1 atiTcTcolour- ing principle, which he called rhamnoxanthin, and which may be obtained by subjecting the alcoholic and ethereal extract to distillation. (Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xxiv. 293.) W. RHODODEiSDRUM CRYSANTHUM. Yellow-flowered Rhododendron. This is a beautiful evergreen shrub, about a foot high, with spreading branches, and oblong, obtuse, thick leaves, narrowed towards their footstalks, reflexed at the margin, much veined, rugged and deep-green upon their upper surface, ferruginous or glaucous beneath, and surround- ing the branches upon strong petioles. The flowers are large, yellow, on long peduncles, and in terminal umbels. The corolla is wheel-shaped, with its border divided into five roundish, spreading segments. The plant is a native of Siberia, delighting in mountain- ous situations, and flowering in June and July. The leaves are the part used. When fresh, they have a feeble odour, said to resemble that of rhubarb. In the dried state, they are inodorous, but have an austere, astringent, bitterish taste. They yield their virtues to water and alcohol. They are stimulant, narcotic, and diaphoretic, producing, when first taken, in- crease of heat and arterial action, subsequently a diminished frequency of the pulse, and, in large doses, vomiting, purging, and delirium. They have been long employed in Siberia as a remedy in rheumatism; and their use has extended to various parts of Europe. Their action is said to be accompanied with a sensation of creeping or pricking in the affected part, which subsides in a few hours, leaving the part free from pain. They have been recom- mended also in gout, lues venerea, and palsy. In Siberia they are prepared by infusing two drachms of the dried leaves in about ten ounces of water, in a close vessel, and keep- ing the liquid near the boiling point during the night. The strained liquor is taken in the morning; and a repetition of the dose three or four days successively generally effects a cure. The remedy is not used in this country. W. RIGA BALSAM. Balsamum Carpaticum. Balsamum Libani. This is a product of Pinus J umbra, a large tree growing in the mountainous regions and northern latitudes of Europe 1594 Robinia Pseudo-acacia.—Salep. PART III. and As\een used in Germany as a remedy in venereal and scrofulous affections, cuta- neous eruptions, and visceral obstructions. It appears to act as an alterative, like sarsa- parilla, to which it has been deemed superior in efficacy by some physicians. The plant is given in the form of decoction and extract, which may be freely taken. From two to four pints of the decoction daily are recommended in lues. The inspissated juice, given in the quantity of half an ounce in the course of a day, is said by Andry generally to cure go- norrhoea in about two weeks, without any other remedy. According to Dr. Bonnet and M. Malapert, this and other plants containing saponin are capable of producing poisonous effects. (Journ. de Pharrn., ‘6e ser., x. 339.) W. SARCOCOLLA. A peculiar vegetable product, exuding spontaneously from the Pemta Sarcocolla, P. mucronata, and other species of Penaea, small shrubs growing at the Cape"of Good Hope, in Ethiopia, Arabia, &c. It is in the form of small, roundish, irregular grains, sometimes agglutinated in masses, friable, opaque or semi-transparent, of a yellowish or brownish-red colour, inodorous unless heated, when they have an agreeable smell, and of a peculiar, bitter, sweetish, and acrid taste. Sarcocolla, according to Pelletier, consists of 65-3 per cent, of a peculiar substance, considered by Dr. Thomson as holding an interme- diate place between gum and sugar, and called sarcocollin or pure sarcocolla, 4-6 of gum, 3-3 of a gelatinous matter having some analogy with bassorin, and 26-8 of lignin, &c. It is said to be purgative, but at the same time to produce serious inconvenience by its acrid properties. The Arabian physicians used it internally; and by the ancients it was employed as an external application to wounds and ulcers, under the idea that it possessed the pro perty of agglutinating the flesh, whence its name was derived. It is out of use. W. SARRACENIA. Side-saddle Plant. Fly-trap. Two Southern species of this curious indige- nous genus of plants, S.fiava and S. variolaris, were brought into notice by Dr. F. P. Porcher, in a communication published in the Charleston Medical Journal and Review. Dr. Porcher states that the roots (rhizomes) of these plants have long been used as a domestic remedy by the inhabitants of the lower portions of South Carolina. The medicine is believed in that region to possess extraordinary powers in dyspepsia; and he received reports, from persons entirely deserving of confidence, of its efficacy in sick-headache, waterbrash, gastralgia, ab- dominal distension, &c. In trying the remedy upon himself, he found it to be bitter and as- tringent to the taste, and, in its effects on the system, stimulant to the stomach, the circu- lation, and in some degree to the brain, and at the same time to a certain extent diuretic, and disposed to operate mildly on the bowels. From the results stated by Dr. Porcher, we should infer that the medicine is a stimulating tonic, with some tendency to act on the brain; and probably well suited to cases of dyspepsia dependent on debility of stomach. Professor Sheppard submitted the root to chemical examination, and found it to contain lignin, co- louring matter, resin, an acid salt of lime, and a salt probably of an organic alkali. The best mode of administration seems not to have been well determined. Invalids chew it as they would chew tobacco; and from Dr. Porcher’s statements we should infer that it might be appropriately given in powder, in the dose of half a drachm three or four times a day. (See Wood's Quarterly Retrospect, ii. 78.) Much attention has recently been paid to another species of Sarracenia, the S.purpurea, in the treatment of smallpox, under the impression that it had the power of very favourably modifying that disease, and, indeed, of materially shortening its course. The claims made in favour of this remedy were so much in opposi- tion to all that we knew, whether of the medicine or the disease, that we had no hesitation in expressing our conviction, that the apparent efficacy of the remedy was simply owing to its employment in those cases of modified smallpox, which, in consequence of a partial pro- tection of the system, either through vaccination or a previous attack of smallpox, generally run a short, and almost always a favourable course; and subsequent experience has fully determined its entire want of any curative influence over the disease. The root was exhib- ited in infusion or decoction, made in the proportion of half an ounce to a pint of water, and given in the dose of a wineglassful every three hours. The whole herbaceous part of the plant, having been found to possess the same bitter taste, was afterwards used in the same manner and dose. For a description of this species of Sarracenia, in all its relations, see a paper by Prof. Bentley, in the Pharmaceutical Journal for Jan. 1863 (p. 294). W. SASSA GUM. This name has been applied by Guibourt. to a gum, occasionally brought into market from the East, and answering so exactly to Bruce’s description of the product of a tree which he calls sassa, that there is reason to believe in their identity. According to Guibourt’s description, it is in mammillary masses, or in convoluted pieces resembling an ammonite, of a reddish colour and somewhat shiniug surface, and more transparent than tragacanth. Its taste is like that of tragacanth, but slightly acrid. When introduced into water, it becomes white, softens, and swells to four or five times its original bulk; but it preserves its shape, neither like tragacanth forming a mucilage, nor like Bassora gum sepa- rating into distinct flocculi. It is rendered blue by iodine. W. SASSI BARK. This bark is interesting chiefly from its employment by the natives of Yt estern Africa as an ordeal in their trial for witchcraft or sorcery. Specimens sent to thus Satureja Hortensis.—Scrophularia Nodosa. PART ill. 1597 country from Liberia were first examined by Mr. C. A. Santos, who published his observa- tions in the Am. Journ. of Pharm. (xxi. 97, April, 1849). Other specimens, both of the bark and the plant producing it, afterwards came under the notice of Professor Procter, who was thus enabled to determine as well the chemical characters as the botanical source of the product. His papers on the subject are contained in the same journal (xxiii. 301, and xxiv. 195); and in the last is given a botanical description of the tree. To these papers the reader is referred for particular information on the subject. The bark was thought to be the product of a previously undescribed species of Erythrophleum, for which Prof. Procter proposed the name of E judiciale. It appears, however, from a note of Prof. Lindley, published in the Pharmaceutical Journal for January, 1857 (p. 373), that the tree had been previously de- scribed under t wo specific names, having been noted in Hooker’s Niger Flora (p. 329) as the Erythrophleum Quineense of Don, and the Fillrea suavcolius of Guillemin and Perottet’s Flora of SenejjalTfacts, of course, unknown to Prof. Procter when his papers were written. It is a large tree with spreading branches, doubly pinnated leaves, flowers in spike-like racemes, and leguminous fruit. The bark is in pieces more or less curved, with or without epidermis, in the former case somewhat fissured externally, of a dull-red colour diversified by whitish spots, brittle, presenting when cut transversely numerous fawn-coloured spots surrounded by reddish-brown tissue, nearly inodorous, of an astringent taste, and, according to Mr. Santos, of the sp. gr. 1-054. Prof. Procter found it to contain tannic acid, insoluble apo- theme analogous to that of rhatany, a red colouring matter formed by a combination of the two preceding constituents, gallic acid, gum, a little resin, fatty matter, various salts, and a peculiar substance precipitable by tannic acid, and soluble in alcohol and chloroform. He did not isolate the active principle. The bark yields its virtues to water. In reference to its effects on the system it has been considered as emetic and cathartic, with some influence over the cerebral functions; but little was certainly known. Professor Procter found three grains of the aqueous extract, given to a cat., to produce prostration, frothing at the mouth, dilatation of the pupils, and total loss of inclination to eat. Largely taken the bark was known often to cause death. The powder snuffed up the nostrils occasions violent sneezing. Some experiments made with it by Drs. S. Weir Mitchell and W\ A. Hammond have given us more precise knowledge in regard to its properties. From these it appears to be nausea- ting and emetic, narcotic, and astringent, but without any cathartic power. The same writers give the following as the result of the observation of Dr. Savage made in Africa, and communicated to them. When the bark is chewed, it causes a feeling of constriction in the fauces, attended with prickling, and followed by numbness. A strong infusion or decoction occasions stricture across the brow, severe pain in the head, coma, and death. Independently of its use by the natives as an ordeal poison, it is sometimes employed by them as a remedy in dysentery, diarrhoea, and colic. Dr. Savage himself has known it to be successful in intermittent fever, dysentery, and diarrhoea. A grain of the watery extract was given for a dose every three hours. (Charleston Med. Journ., Nov. 1859, p. 735.) W. SATUREJA IIORTENSIS. Summer Savory. An annual labiate plant, growing spon- taneously in the south of Europe, and cultivated in gardens as a culinary herb. It has an aromatic odour and taste, analogous to those of thyme, and was formerly used as a gentle carminative stimulant; but is now employed only to give flavour to food. S. montana or winter savory, which is also cultivated in gardens, has similar properties. W. SCOLOPENDRIUM OFFICINARUM. Smith. Asplenium Scolopendrinm. Linn. Ilarts- iongue. A fern indigenous in Europe and America. Its vulgar name was derived from the shape of its leaves, which were the part formerly used in medicine. The} have a sweetish, mucilaginous, and slightly astringent taste, and, when rubbed, a disagreeable oily odour. They were used as a deobstruent in visceral affections, as an astringent in hemorrhages and fluxes, and as a demulcent in pectoral complaints; but their properties are feeble, and they have fallen into neglect. \V. 81’ROPHUL ARIA NODOSA. Figwort. The root of the knotty-rootedfigwort is perennial, tuberous, and knotty; the stem is herbaceous, erect, quadrangular, smooth, branching, and from two to three feet high; the leaves are opposite, petiolate, ovate-cordate, pointed, sharply toothed, veined, and of a deep-green colour; the flowers are small, dark-purple, slightly drooping, and borne on divided peduncles in erect terminal branches. The plant is a native of Europe, where it grows in shady and moist places, and flowers in July. The leaves, which are the part used, have when fresh a rank fetid odour, and a bitter somewhat acid taste; but these properties are diminished by drying. Water extracts their virtues, forming a reddish infusion, which is blackened by the sulphate of the sesquioxide of iron. Walz has obtained from them two proximate principles, which he names respect- ively scrophularin and scrophularosmin. (Mayer, Am. Journ. of Pharm , July, 1863, p. 295.) Figwort leaves are said to be anodyne and diuretic, and to have repellent properties when externally applied. They were formerly considered tonic, diaphoretic, discutient, anthel- mintic, &c., and were thought to be useful in scrofula. They are at present very little em- ployed; but in Europe are sometimes applied, in the form of ointment or fomentation, to piles, painful tumours and ulcers, and cutaneous eruptions. W. 1598 Scutellaria Lateriflora.—Sedum Acre. PART III. SCUTELLARIA LATERIFLORA. Scullcap. This is an indigenous perennial herb, be- longing to the Linnsean class and order Didynamia Gymnospermia, and to the natural order Labiatx. Its stem is erect, much branched, quadrangular, smooth, and one or two feet ' high. The leaves are ovate, acute, dentate, subcordate upon the stem, opposite, and sup- ported upon long petioles. The flowers are small, of a pale-blue colour, and disposed in long, lateral, leafy racemes. The calyx has an entire margin, which, after the corolla has fallen, is closed with a helmet-shaped lid. The tube of the corolla is elongated, the upper lip concave and entire, the lower three-lobed. The plant grows in moist places, by the sides of ditches and ponds, in all parts of the Union. To the senses it does not indicate, by any peculiar taste or smell, the possession of medicinal virtues. It is even destitute of the aromatic properties which are found in many of the labiate plants. When taken internally, it produces no very obvious effects. Notwithstanding this apparent inertness, it obtained, at one period, extraordinary credit throughout the United States, as a preventive of hy- drophobia, and was even thought to be useful in the disease itself. A strong infusion of the plant was given in the dose of a teacupful, repeated several times a day, and continued for three or four months after the bite was received; while the herb itself' was applied to the wound. Strong testimony was adduced in favour of its prophylactic powers; but it has already shared the fate, which in this case is no doubt deserved, of numerous other specifics against hydrophobia, which have been brought into temporary popularity, only to be speedily abandoned. Nevertheless, it is thought by some practitioners to have valu- able therapeutic properties; and Drs. Ariel Hunton and C. H. Cleaveland, of Vermont, speak in strong terms of its efficacy as a nervine. They have employed it in neuralgic and convulsive affections, chorea, delirium tremens, and nervous exhaustion from fatigue or over-excitement, and have found it highly advantageous. Dr. Cleaveland says that he pre- fers it to all other nervines or antispasmodics, except where an immediate effect is de- sirable. He prefers the form of infusion, which he prepares by adding half an ounce of the dried leaves to a teacupful of water, and allows the patient to drink ad libitum. (Am. Journ. of Phami., xxiii. 370, from N. Y. Register of Med. and Pharm., also JV. J. Med. Reporter, v. 13.) Two preparations are now used; one called scutellarine, though erroneously, as it lias no claim to be considered a pure proximate principle, the other a fluid extract. The so- called scutellarine is prepared by mixing a concentrated tincture with water, precipitating by alum, and then washing and drying. Dr. Cleaveland gives it in a dose varying from one to three or four grains, and finds very happy effects from it in quieting nervous dis- orders. (N. J. Med. Reporter, viii. 121.) The fluid extract, prepared by the Messrs. Tilden, is used in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. Dr. Joseph Bates, of New Lebanon, N. Y., 6peaks highly of it as a nervine. (Post. Med. and S. Journ., lii. 337.) The Scutjflgriajaleri- culata, or common European scullcap, which also grows wild in this country, has a feeble, somewhat alliaceous odour, and a bitterish taste. It has been employed in intermittent*, and externally in old ulcers, but is now out of use. Dr. R. W. Evans, of Canada West, has found it useful in epilepsy; but to effect a cure it must be continued, he says, for five or six months. He makes an infusion with two ounces of the herb and eight ounces of water and gives a fluidounce every eight hours, doubling the quantity after a week. (See Am Journ. of Med. Sci, xvii. 495.) Another indigenous species, the S. integrifolig,, of which S hyssopifolia, Linn., is considered by some as a variety, is intensely bitter, and might pro- bably be found useful as a tonic. W. SECALE CEREALE. Rye. Syria, Armenia, and the southern provinces of Russia havo been severally indicated as the native country of rye. The plant is now cultivated in all temperate latitudes. The grains consist, according to Einhof, of 24-2 per cent, of envelope, 65-G of flour, and 10-2 of water. The flour, according to the same chemist, consists of 61'07 per cent, of starch, 9-48 of gluten, 3-28 of albumen, 3-28 of uncrystallizable sugar, 11-09 of gum, 6-38 of vegetable fibre, besides 5-62 of loss, comprising an acid, the nature of which was not determined. Rye flour has been much used, in the dry state, as an ex- ternal application to erysipelatous inflammation, and other eruptive affections, the burning and unpleasant tingling of which it tends to allay, while it absorbs the irritating secre- tions. In the form of mush, it is an excellent laxative article of diet, and, mixed with molasses, it may be given with great advantage in hemorrhoids and prolapsus ani, con- nected with constipation. Rye carbonized by heat, with exclusion of the air, has been highly recommended as a tooth-powder. W. SEDUM ACRE. Biting Stone-crop. Small Houseleek. A small, perennial, succulent Euro- pean plant, growing on rocks and old walls, with stems about as long as the finger, and numerous very minute leaves. It is inodorous, and has a taste at first cooling and herba- ceous, afterwards burning and durably acrid. Taken internally it vomits and purges, and, applied to the skin, produces inflammation and vesication The fresh herb and the ex- pressed juice have been used as an antiscorbutic, emetic, cathartic, and diuretic, and have been applied locally to old ulcers, warts, and other excrescences; but the plant is at pre- sent little employed. It has recently been recommended in Germany as a remedy in epi- lepsy. Other species are less acrid, and are even eaten as salad in some parts of Europe. PART III. Selinum Palustre.—Silene Virginica. 1599 Such are Sedum rupestre and S. album. S. Telephivm was formerly employed externally to cicatrize wounds, anil internally as an astringent in dysentery and haemoptysis; and is still esteemed by the common people in France as a vulnerary. AV. SELINUM PALUSTRE. [Linn.) Peucedanum montanum. (Lindley, Flor. Med.) Marsh Pars- ley. Persil de marais. (Fr.) This is an umbelliferous plant, belonging to Pentandria Digy- nia in the Linnaean system. It is with a fleshy, lactescent root, from which rises annually a single fistulous stem, about four feet high, furnished with large, soft, smooth, bipinnate or tripinnate leaves, and branching at top, with terminal umbels, each consisting of thirty small white flowers. The plant frequents low wet grounds in the north of Europe. The root is the part used. This, when dried, is of a brown colour exter- nally, of a strong aromatic odour, and an acrid, pungent, aromatic taste. The powder is of a light grayish-yellow colour. Analyzed by Peschier, it was found to contain a volatile oil, a fixed oil soluble in ether and alcohol, gum, a yellow colouring substance, a nitroge- nous, mucoso-saccharine principle, a peculiar acid which he calls selinic, phosphate of lime, and lignin. The root of Selinum palustre has long been a popular remedy for epilepsy in the Russian Province of Courland; and, having in 1806 attracted the attention of Dr. Trinius, a Russian physician, was by him in 1818 brought before the notice of the profession, and afterwards acquired some reputation in the treatment of that disease. It did not, however, long retain this reputation, and in a few years seems to have been quite forgotten. Recently, its use has been revived by Dr. Th. Ilerpin, who published a memoir upon the subject in 1859, speaking in decidedly favourable terms of its efficiency. In relation to its physio- logical effects, it seems to exercise no very obvious influence on the system, sometimes acting as an aperient, in a very few instances causing temporary nausea or gastric uneasi- ness, but in many cases passing through the alimentary canal without apparent effect, and never, however long continued, producing any derangement of the general health. It seems to act favourably on the menstrual function, restoring its regularity, and relieving the pains often attendant on it. In speaking of its use in epilepsy, Dr. Herpin ranks it as the fourth in value, estimating oxide of zinc, sulphate of copper, and valerian, in the order of their succession, and next Selinum. He has also used it with apparent advantage in hoop- ing-cough, and recommends its trial in other nervous affections. The commencing dose in epilepsy is from 20 to 30 grains three times a day, taken before breakfast and dinner, and at bedtime, and increased by one-half every week, until the original dose is quadrupled: after which it may be continued for six weeks or longer. For children the dose is to be diminished according to the age. (Journ. de Pharrn., Juillet, 1859, p. 16.) W. SEMPERVIVUM TECTORUM. Common Ilouseleek. A perennial, succulent, European plant, growing on rocks, old walls, and the roofs of houses, and remarkable for its tenacity of life. It is occasionally cultivated in this country as an ornament to the walls of houses, or as a domestic medicine. The leaves, which are the part used, are oblong, pointed, from half an inch to two inches in length, thick, fleshy, succulent, flat on one side, somewhat convex on the other, smooth, of a light-green colour, inodorous, and of a cooling, slightly saline, astringent, and sourish taste. They contain a large proportion of supermalate of lime. They are employed, in the recent state and bruised, as a cooling application to burns, stings of bees, hornets, &c., ulcers, and other external affections attended with inflamma- tion. The juice is said to cure warts. W. SENECIO VULGARIS. Common Groundsel. An annual European plant, introduced into this country, and growing in cultivated grounds. The whole herb is used, and should be gathered while in flower. It has, when rubbed, a peculiar rather unpleasant odour, and a disagreeable, herbaceous, bitterish, and saline taste, followed by a sense of , acrimony. It is emetic in large doses, and has been given in convulsive affections, liver complaints, spit- ting of blood, &c., but is now very little used. The bruised herb is sometimes applied ex- ternally to painful swellings and ulcers. The plant is employed also as food for birds, which are fond of it. Other species of Senecio have been medicinally used; arid an indigenous species, the S. aureus or ragwort, is said by Schoepf to be a favourite vulnerary with the Indians. 5Tie"“eclectics” consider it emmenagogue, and use it not only to stimulate the function, but to regulate it when in excess or otherwise deranged. They also believe it to possess diuretic properties, and to be useful in disorders of the urinary organs. They give the name of senecin to a preparation made by precipitating the tincture with water; but this name should be reserved for the active principle when discovered. The whole plant is used in decoction or infusion, which may be taken freely. W. SIENNA. Terra di Sienna. An argillaceous mineral, compact, of a fine texture, very light, smooth, and glossy, of a yellowish-brown or coffee-colour, leaving a dull-orange trace when moistened and drawn over paper. By calcination it assumes a reddish-brown c-olour, and is then called burnt sienna. In both the raw and burnt states it is used in painting. The best sienna is brought from Italy, but an inferior kind is found in England. W. SILENE VIRGINICA. Catchfly. Wild Pink. An indigenous perennial plant, growing in Western Virginia, the Carolinas, and in the States beyond the Alleghany mountains. Dr. Silex, Pulverized.—Sium Nodijlorum. PART III. Barton, in his “Collections,” states that a decoction of the roots is said to be efficacious as an anthelmintic. We are told that it is considered poisonous by some of the Indians. «S. Pennsulvanica. which grows in the Eastern section of the Union, from New York to Vir* gima, probably possesses similar properties. W. SILEX, PULVERIZED. Silex Contritus. Lond. Silicic Acid. In operations of phar- macy, substances are sometimes employed whose action is exclusively mechanical. Thus, in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, sand was used in preparing oil of amber and the fluid extract of rhubarb, and carbonate of magnesia is now used in forming several of the medicated waters. The use of the same carbonate was also directed in the London Pharmacopoeia of 1836, in ' alternative processes for preparing several of these waters. Mr. R. Warington objected to the use of this carbonate, as being dissolved to an injurious extent, and proposed to sub- stitute porcelain clay, or pulverized silica, glass, or pumice stone. The London College, probably influenced by this objection, abandoned, in its Pharmacopoeia of 1851, the use of carbonate of magnesia, and substituted finely pulverized silex, under the name of Silex Contritus. This powder may be conveniently obtained from colourless quartz or rock-crystal. In order to render the mineral more easily pulverizable, it is advantageous to heat it to red- ness, and quench it in water. It may then be reduced to fine powder in a porphyry or agate mortar. The London College prepared all the medicated waters, except two, from the vola- tile oils of the plants, in addition to the method of distillation with water from the plants themselves. When the volatile oils were used, pulverized silex was directed as a mechani- cal agent. The oil was rubbed up first with the silex and then with the water, and the whole was filtered. The silex acted by minutely dividing the oil and diffusing it through water, and, by the subsequent filtration, was entirely removed. Pulverized silex is a harsh, white, tasteless powder, insoluble in water and most other solvents. Its sp.gr. is 2-66. In composition it is a teroxide of silicon, Si03. A protoxide (SiO) has been discovered by Wohler. (Client. Gaz , May 15, 1857.) Silicon is anon-metallic element, which has been obtained in three allotropic states, called amorphous, graphitoidal, and octohedral silicon; the first corresponding to charcoal, the second to graphite, and the third to diamond. The octohedral crystallizes like diamond with curved facets, is hard enough to scratch glass but not topaz, and has the sp. gr. 2-49. B. SILICATE OF SODA. Sodse Silicas. Soluble Glass. This is the salt employed by MM. Socquet and Bonjean, in conjunction with benzoate of soda, in the treatment of gout and rheumatism, for the purpose of eliminating uric acid by the urine. (See page 1471.) It is made by fusing one part of silica and two of dried carbonate of soda, mixed in powder, in -an earthenware crucible, and pouring out the fused mass on a stone slab to cool. This is pulverized, and treated with boiling water, to dissolve the soluble part. The solution is filtered and concentrated, so as to form crystals on cooling. These are then purified by dis- solving them in water heated to 100°, filtering the solution, and concentrating it so that it may recrystallize. Silicate of soda is supposed to promote the discharge of uric acid by the kidneys; while the benzoate of soda transforms the same acid into hippuric acid. This action of the latter salt is doubtful; as it is well known that benzoic acid, when taken, is always changed into hippuric acid, the presence of which in the urine is mere plausibly attributed to the medicine than to the transformation of uric acid. B. SIS! MBRIUM OFFICINALE. Scopoli. Erysimum officinale. Linn. Hedge Mustard. A small annual plant, growing in the United States and Europe, along the roadsides, by walls and hedges, and on heaps of rubbish. It has an herbaceous somewhat acrid taste, which is strongest in the tops and flower-spikes, and resembles that of mustard, though much weaker. The seeds have considerable pungency. The herb is said to be diuretic and ex- pectorant, and has been recommended in chronic coughs, hoarseness, and ulceration of the mouth and fauces. The juice of the plant may be used mixed with honey or sugar, or the seeds may be taken in substance. Sisymbrium Sophia, or the flix weed, was formerly offi- cinal. It is of a pungent odour when rubbed, and of an acrid biting taste. The herb has been used externally in indolent ulcers, and the seeds internally in worms, calculous com- plaints, &c. Sisyrnbrmm mural/s (Ditoplaxis muralis, P. Robert) has been recently used in France in scurvy, scrofula, and other cachectic affections, especially associated, in the form of syrup, with iodide of potassium. yAnn. de Therap., 1864, p. 126.) W. SIUM NODIFLORUM. Water-parsnep. A perennial, umbelliferous, aquatic European plant, growing also in the southern section of the United States, where it is supposed to have been introduced. It is commonly considered poisonous; but the expressed juice, given by I\ ithering in the dose of three or four ounces every morning, was not found to affect the head, stomach, or bowels. He found it, in this quantity, very advantageous in obstinate cutaneous diseases; and the plant has been usefully employed by others in similar com- plaints, and in scrofulous swellings of the lymphatic glands. It is considered diuretic. Sium_lgtifolium, which grows in Europe and the United States, and is the common water- parsnep of this country, is positively asserted to be poisonous; and madness and even death are said to have followed the use of the root. The_£. Sisarum or skirret, a plant of Chines# PART ill. Smalt.—Soot. 1601 origin, cultivated in Europe, lias a sweetish, somewhat aromatic root, which is employed as food in the form of salad, and is supposed to be a useful diet in complaints of the chest- W. SMALT. Azure. When the impure oxide of_cobalt. obtained by roasting the native arse- niuret of that metal, is heated with sand and potassa, the mixture melts, and a beautiful blue glass results, which, when reduced to powder, receives the name of smalt or azure. It is used chiefly in painting. W. SOAP BARK. This is the product of Quillaya Saponaria, an evergreen tree, growing in the mountains of Chili, in South America, and known to the inhabitants by the jiame of quillay, said to be derived from the Chilian word quillean, which signifies to wash. It is the liber or inner bark that is employed, the outer dead layers being rejected. When bruised, and macerated in .water, it imparts to that liquid the property of frothing like soap, when agitated. This has been found by M\I. Fleury jun. and Boutron Chalard to be owing to the existence of saponin in the bark, the same principle as that which gives a similar property to Saponaria officinalis. The bark contains neither tannic acid nor any bitter principle. It is much used along the western coast of South America, where it constitutes an article of commerce; and we are informed that it is also imported into this country; being employed for cleansing cloth from grease. According to Mr. Charles Raymond, the people of Chili use it in washing silken and woollen stuffs, when it is desirable not to change their colour, and still more for cleansing the hair, which it is supposed to beautify and preserve. On the same authority, it is stated to be sometimes given as a febrifuge, and as a remedy in colds in the head. For the latter purpose, its powder is snuffed up the nostrils. It causes sneezing and profuse nasal discharge. (Journ. de Fharm., xxxii. 220; also Am. Journ. of l'harm., xxix. 104.) W. SOLUBLE MERCURY OF HAHNEMANN. This is prepared by adding, drop by drop, a dilute solution of ammonia to an equally dilute solution of nitrate of protoxide of mer- cury, until the precipitate begins to be paler than at first. It is a black powder, which has usually the composition, expressed by the formula NH40,8Hg0 -j- N05. It is, therefore, an ammoniated nitrate of protoxide of mercury. When it has a gray colour, the fact shows that too much ammonia has been employed in its precipitation. This preparation is in- cluded in the French Codex. It has been used in syphilitic diseases. B. SOOT. Fuligo Ligni. This well-known substance has a peculiar smell, and a bitter, em- pyreumatic, and disagreeable taste. Its composition is very complex. Reduced to powder, and treated with water, it affords an infusion of a deep-yellow or brown colour, which is deeper if heat is employed. The insoluble portion amounts to about 44 per cent. The solu- ble part consists chiefly, according to Berzelius, of a pyrogenous resin united with acetic acid [acidpyretin), saturated with potassa, lime, and magnesia. It also contains sulphate of lime, chloride of potassium, acetate of ammonia, and traces of nitric acid. When the solution is evaporated to dryness, it furnishes a black extract. This forms with water a blackish-brown solution, which, when treated with any free acid except the acetic, lets fall the acid pyretin, in the form of a black mass resembling pitch; while the acid em- ployed remains in solution with the bases previously in combination with the pyretin. Braconnot thought he had discovered in pyretin a peculiar principle, which he named as- bolin; but Berzelius believed he was mistaken. Besides these substances, Braconnot ascex- tained the existence in soot of an azotized extractive matter to the amount of 20 per cent. This matter, when submitted to dry distillation, afforded a considerable proportion of py- rogenous oil. Soot itself, when subjected to a similar distillation, furnishes one-fifth its weight of empyreumatic oil. To the above ingredients of soot must be added creasote, to the presence of which it is supposed to owe its medicinal properties. Soot was formerly officinal with the Edinburgh College, and the Scotch physicians were in the habit of frequently prescribing it as a tonic and antispasmodic in the form of tinc- ture. It went very much out of use in regular practice; but came again into vogue after the discovery of creasote, which is one of its ingredients. At present it is chiefly used as an external remedy in the form of decoction or ointment. In the Revue Med. for June. 1834, M. Blaud details a number of cases of various affections, such as obstinate tetters, porrigo favosa, psora, fistula, cancerous and venereal ulcers, chronic irritations of the lining membrane of the mouth, exudations from the mucous membrane of the nose, her- petic eruptions of the genital organs, and pruritus of the vulva, in which the use of soot effected cures. The decoction is made by adding two handfuls of soot to a pint of water, boiling for half an hour, and filtering. It is applied as a lotion to the affected parts, or injected into the fistulas several times a day; and, in the intervals, the part, if accessible, is dressed with an ointment, made by rubbing up a drachm of finely powdered soot with an ounce of lard. In cases of porrigo, the crusts must be removed by poultices before the soqf is applied. In treating obstinate cases of chronic eczema, M. Bougard, of Belgium, has oeen very successful with the use of a mixture of equal parts of soot and glycerin. In bcrofulous ophthalmia, M. Caron Duvillards and M. Baudelocque have found a collyrium, 1602 Sorbus Aucuparia.—Sorghum Saccharatum. PART III. made according to the following formula, very useful. Infuse two ounces of soot in boiling filter the solution, and evaporate it to dryness. Dissolve the dry residue, with the assistance of heat, in strong white wine vinegar, and add extract of roses in the proportion of twenty-four grains to twelve fluidounces of the liquid. It is prepared for use by adding a few drops of the liquid to a glass of water. [Bull. Gen. de Therapeutique, March, 1834.) This formula is not very satisfactory: as it does not indicate the proportion of vinegar to* be employed. In a case of severe and extensive burn, in which, after the separation of the sloughs, the patient began to sink from the profuse discharge, Dr. Ebers, of Bordeaux, found advantage from, the application, to the granulating surface, of lint soaked in a decoc- tion of soot. It reduced the discharge in a surprising manner, and promoted cicatrization. The late Dr. Hewson, of this city, found an infusion of soot an efficacious remedy, em- ployed by injection, in cases of ascarides. In one case of long standing in an adult, in which a number of remedies had been tried unsuccessfully, injections of soot daily, persevered in for two weeks, effected a complete cure. The injection was made by adding a cupful of soot to a pint of boiling water, and straining the solution. An infusion of hickory ashes and soot is used in this city as a popular remedy for dyspepsia. It is made by infusing a pint of clean hickory ashes and a gill of soot in half a gallon of boiling water, allowing the liquor to stand for twenty-four hours, and then decanting. Of this a small wineglassful is taken three or four times a day. No doubt this infusion has been useful in acidity of stomach; but its indiscriminate use in the various gastric affections, popularly confounded under the name of dyspepsia, is calculated to do much harm. Soot is decidedly antiseptic A few shovelfuls of it, thrown into privies or drains, effectually destroy their foul exhalations. B. SORBUS AUCUPARIA. Mountain Ash. A small European tree, of the family of Rosaceae, distinguished by its pinnate leaves, somewhat resembling that of the ash, and by its beau- tiful clusters of scarlet fruit, about as large as peas, which give it a striking appearance, and have caused it to be cultivated in gardens and ornamented grounds. We have an Ame- rican species, S. Americana, which is similarly characterized, and is highly ornamental to our mountain regions in autumn and winter by its bright scarlet fruit. The fruits of the European plant, and the same is probably the* case with our own, contain a peculiar kind of sugar called sorbin, susceptible of the vinous fermentation; and an alcoholic drink has been prepared from them. They seem to have been used for preparing malic acid; and Dr. Ilofmann has recently discovered in them two new acids, which he designated as sorbic and parasorbic acids. (See Pharm. Journ., May, 1859, p. 573.) They have been used in scurvy, and, in infusion, as a remedy in hemorrhoids and strangury. All parts of the tree are astringent, and may be employed in tanning, and dyeing black. W. SORGHUM SACCHARATUM. Sorghum. Chinese Sugar-cane. This most valuable plant, indigenous in India, China, and other parts of the East, has within a few years been intro- duced into Europe and the United States. It was not till 1851 that the seeds were first sent to France from China; and so late as 1855 only a few acres were cultivated. In 1854 some seeds were brought to the United States by Mr. D. Jay Browne, for the Patent Office, from France, and were distributed to different persons through the country. [11. S. Olcott.) The sorghum is now very largely cultivated in this country and in France, and there has proba- bly been no instance in which a plant has more rapidly grown into general favour, as an object of agriculture, than this. Barth, in his Travels in Africa (Am. ed , ii. 339), states that it is extensively cultivated in the interior of that continent. It ranks botanically with the Grammacese, and belongs to Polygamia Monoecia in the Linnaean system. It is an annual plant, with a jointed stem from eight to fifteen feet or more in height, furnished with alter- nate, sheathing, ensiform leaves, two or three feet long by about, two inches or more in breadth, and ending in a panicle of flowers arranged in spikelets, each composed of from three to five flowers, of which one only is fruitful. The glumes, which envelope the fruit at maturity, are of a deep-brown colour, which is characteristic of the species. The seeds, which are about as large as millet seeds, are planted in the spring in rows, like Indian corn, and the plant attains maturity in September or October. It is valued chiefly for the saccha- rine product of its stems, but other parts also are used. The seeds, though not fitted as food for man, answer well for poultry and domestic animals generally; the leaves, stripped from the stem and dried, make an excellent winter fodder for cattle; and we have been informed that the stems, when deprived of their juice, are sold to the paper-makers. Prof. H6tet, of the Medical School of Toulon, has found in the glumes of the seeds two colouring prin- ciples, ohe red, only slightly soluble in water, but readily dissolved by alcohol, ether, and acid and alkaline solutions, the other yellow, very soluble in water and the other menstrua mentioned, both of which may be used in dyeing, and might be substituted for madder [Journ. de Pharm., Avril, 1859, p. 262.) The stem abounds in juice, which becomes more and more saccharine with the growth of the plant. The proportion of juice is 80 or 90 •per cent., and of sugar on the average about 7, though it may reach 10 or 15 per cent. (H4tet, Ibid., p. 258.) According to M. Leplay, who has been largely concerned in the manufacture of alcohol and sugar from the sorghum, the period at which the stein yields most sugar is when the seeds are quite ripe yet not hardened, and before the stem has PART in. Spartium Junceum.—Sponge. lost its green colour. He also determined by bis experiments that, though the juice before this period is less rich in proper sugar of cane or crystallizable sugar, which in solution turns the plane of polarization to the right, yet it contains uncrystallizable sugar capable of conversion into alcohol, and may be profitably employed for this purpose. M. Leplay thinks that the whole of the saccharine matter of the juice, when the seeds are perfectly ripe, is crystallizable, and exists in a proportion often exceeding 15 per cent. Another important fact stated by M. Leplay, is that the sorghum stalks, if carefully dried, lose none of their sugar, and may thus be advantageously carried from various points of pro- duction to central manufacturing establishments. (Ibid., 3e ser., xxxiii. p. 342.) If these facts shall be found applicable to the sorghum as cultivated in this country, there is little doubt that the plant will some time be largely employed for the preparation of sugar, should the supply of that from the cane be from any cause insufficient to meet the demand. From experiments by Dr. C. M. Wetherill, the results of which are published in the official U. S. Patent Office Report for 1862 (p. 523), it appears that 17 different specimens of juice, from different parts of the U. States, yielded an average of 4-82 per cent, of crystallizable sugar, 6-46 per cent, of uncrystallizable sugar, and 11-25 per cent, of both kinds. But we are not informed at what period, precisely, in reference to the maturity of the seeds, the juice was expressed; so that there are no grounds for comparison with the results obtained by M. Leplay. At present the sorghum is used almost exclusively in the preparation of mo- lasses, vast quantities of which are made in the United States, sufficient in many instances to meet the wants of the whole neighbourhood. The molasses is prepared by expressing the stems, between rollers, in a machine worked either~by the hand, or by horse or steam power, and submitting the juice to ebullition, in order to concentrate it sufficiently, and at the same time coagulate any albuminous matters that may happen to be contained in it. The addition of a little lime to the juice before boiling will prove useful, both by neutral- izing acid, which would give a tendency to the sacchai'ine matter to pass into glucose, and by combining with organic principles which interfere with clarification. From what has been above stated, it will be inferred that, when molasses merely is wanted, or when the object is to obtain alcohol or vinegar, it will not be necessary to wait till the seeds are perfectly ripe; and thus a late crop may be made useful, though insufficiently advanced to ripen before frost. For the manufacture of sugar, the stems should not be pressed until the maturity of the fruit. Another plant, called imphee or African sugar-cane, has been recently cultivated to a con- siderable extent for the same purposes as the sorghum. It is a native of Africa, where it is said to be cultivated by the Kaffirs. Its botanical characters do not seem to be well de- termined, though considered by Mr, Leonard Wray as a Holcus, and specifically designated as Holcus saccharatus. (Olcott, Sorgho and Imphee, 6th ed., p. 201.) This, however, as defined by Linnaeus, is considered by some botanists as a mere synonyme of Sorghum saccharatum; and it is highly probable that the two plants are mere varieties of the same species. The seeds of the imphee were brought to this country in 1856 or 1857, and first planted in South Carolina; but we have not learned how far its cultivation has extended, nor what relative proportion it bears to that of the Chinese plant. Still another variety of sorghum has recently been introduced from the islands of the South Pacific, under the name of Ota- heitan sugar-cane, and cultivated to some extent in the West. It is distinguished by its long heads, from 7 to 12 inches in length, and from 1 to 2 in thickness. This variety, however, has not yet become generally diffused. (Patent Office Report, 1862, p. 515.) Credit is due to Mr. J. S. Lovering, of Philadelphia, for first demonstrating, in this coun- try, that sugar might be advantageously made from the Chinese sugar-cane; and his pamphlet on the subject will be found useful by those who may purpose to engage practi- cally in its manufacture. W. SPART1UM JUNCEUM. Spanish Broom. A small indigenous in the south of Eu- rope, and cultivated in our gardens as an ornamental plant. The flowers are large, yellow, and of an agreeable odour. The seeds are in moderate doses diuretic and tonic, in large doses emetic and cathartic, and have been used advantageously in dropsy. The dose is from ten to fifteen grains three times a day. They may also be given in tincture. W. SPONGE. Spongia. Spongia officinalis. U. S. 1850. This, being no longer recognised in the Pharmacopoeias, is transferred to this place from Part I. The sponge is now generally admitted to be an animal. It is characterized as “a flexile, fixed, torpid, polymorphous ani- mal, composed either of reticulate fibres, or masses of small spires interwoven together, and clothed with a gelatinous flesh, full of small mouths on its surface, by which it absorbs and ejects water.” More than two hundred and fifty species have been described by naturalists, of which several are probably employed, though Spongia officinalis is the only one designated in the Pharmacopoeias. Sponges inhabit the bottom of the sea, where they are fixed to rocks or other solid bodies; and are most abundant within the tropics. They are collected chiefly in the Mediterranean and Red Seas, and in those of the East and West Indies. In the Gre- cian Archipelago many persons derive their support altogether from diving for sponges. When collected they are enveloped in a gelatinous coating, which forms part of the animal, Sponge.—Staphisagria. PART III. ana is separated by first rubbing them with fine sand (Landerer), and then wa-hing them with water. Large quantities of the coarser kinds are imported from the Baham as; but the finest, and most esteemed are brought from the Mediterranean. Sponge, as found in commerce, is in yellowish-brown masses of various shapes and sizes, light, porous, elastic, and composed of fine, flexible, tenacious fibres, interwoven in the form of cells and meshes. It usually contains numerous minute fragments of coral or stone, «r small shells, from which it must be freed before it can be used for ordinary purposes. Sponge is prepared by macerating it for several days in cold water, beating it in order to break up the concretions which it contains, and dissolving what cannot thus be separated of the calcareous matter by muriatic acid diluted with thirty parts of water. By this process it is rendered perfectly soft, and fit for surgical use. It may be bleached by steeping it in water impregnated with sulphurous acid, or by exposure in a moist state to the action of chlorine. When intended for surgical purposes, the softest, finest, and most elastic sponges should be selected; for forming burnt sponge, the coarser will answer equally well. Accord- ing to Mr. Hatchett, the chemical constituents of sponge are gelatin, coagulated albumen, common salt, and carbonate of lime. Magnesia, silica, iron, sulphur, and phosphorus have been detected in it; as also have iodine and bromine, combined with sodium and potassium. From the experiments of Mr. Croockewit, it would appear that sponge is closely analogous to, if not identical with the fibroin of Mqjder, differing from it only in containing iodine, sulphur, and phosphorus. (Annul. der Chem. und Pharm , xlviii. 43.) Fibroin is an animal principle, found by Mulder in the interior of the fibres of silk. Medical Properties and Uses. Sponge, in its unaltered state, is not employed as a medicine; but, in consequence of its softness, porosity, and property of imbibing liquids, it is very useful in surgical operations. From the same qualities it may be advantageously applied over certain ulcers, the irritating sanies from which it removes by absorption. Compressed upon a bleeding vessel, it is sometimes useful for promoting the coagulation of the blood, especially in hemorrhage from the nostrils. In the shape of sponge tent it is employed for dilating sinuses. This is prepared by dipping sponge into melted wax, compressing it be- tween two flat surfaces till the wax hardens, and then cutting it into pieces of a proper form and size. By the heat of the body the wax becomes soft, and the sponge, expanding by the imbibition of moisture, gradually dilates the wound or sinus in which it may be placed. After having been partially charred by heat, sponge has long been used as a remedy in goitre. Its efficacy in this complaint, formerly considered doubtful by many physicians, has been generally admitted since the discovery of iodine. Spongia Usta. U. S. 1850. Burnt Sponge. This was an officinal preparation of'the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. The following was the formula for its preparation. “Take of Sponge a con- venient quantity. Cut it into pieces, and beat it that any extraneous matters may be sepa- rated; then burn it in a close iron vessel until it becomes black and friable; lastly, rub it into very fine powder.” U. S. The sponge is decomposed, the volatile matters being driven off by the heat, and a black friable coal remaining. Preuss found that, of 1000 parts of sponge submitted to calcination, 343-848 were dissipated; and the residue consisted of 327 parts of carbon and insoluble matters, 112-08 of chloride of sodium, 1G-43 of sulphate of lime, 21-422 of iodide of sodium, 7-57 of bromide of magnesium, 103-2 of carbonate of lime, 35-0 of phosphate of lime, 4-73 of magnesia, and 28-72 of protoxide of iron. [Pharm. Cent. Blatt, 1837, 1G9.) Herberger found in burnt sponge 1 per cent, of iodide of potassium, and 0-5 per cent, of bromide of potassium. [Annul, der Pharm , xx. 204.) As the remediate value of burnt sponge depends chiefly upon the presence of iodine, it cannot be esteemed good unless it afford purple fumes when acted on by sulphuric acid assisted by heat. It is said that the preparation is most efficient as a remedy, when the sponge is kept on the fire no longer than is necessary to render it friable. The powder is then of a much lighter colour. Guibourt recommends that»the sponge selected for burning should be unwashed, of a strong odour, firm, and compact, that it should be put into a roaster like that used for coffee, and heated over a moderate fire till it becomes of a blackish-brown colour, that it should then be removed, powdered, and enclosed in a well-stopped glass bottle. It is best when recently prepared; as the iodine is dissipated by time, and the specimens, at first richest in this principle, contain little of it at the end of a year. [Journ. de Chim. Med., Dec. 1831.) According to Herberger, the fine and coarse sponges do not materially differ in the proportion of their organic constituents; so that the coarse may be selected for this ope- ration. Burnt sponge has been highly recommended in goitre, glandular swellings of a scro- fulous character, and obstinate cutaneous eruptions. It is most conveniently administered mixed with syrup or honey, in the form of an electuary, with the addition of some aromatic, as powdered cinnamon. The dose is from one to three drachms. W. STAPIIISAGRIA. Stavesacre. The seeds of Delphinium Staphisagria. This officinal of the late London and Edinburgh Pharmacopoeias has been discarded in the British. For the cha- racters of the genus Delphinium, the reader is referred to Delphinium Consolida, in Part I Delphinium Staphisagria, or stavesacre, is a handsome annual or biennial plant, one or two feet high, with a simple, erect, downy stem, and palmate, five or seven-lobed leaves, 'iup PART III. Sterculia Acuminata.—Succinic Acid. ported on hairy footstalks The flowers are bluish or purple, in terminal racemes, with pedicels twice as long as the flower, and bracteoles inserted at the base of the pedicel. The nectary is four-leaved and shorter than the petals, which are five in number, the uppermos. projected backward so as to form a spur, which encloses two spurs of the upper leaflets 01 the nectary. The seeds are contained in straight, oblong capsules. The plant is a native oi' the south of Europe. Stavesacre seeds are about as large as a grain of wheat, irregularly triangular, wrinkled, externally brown, internally whitish and oily. They have a slight but disagreeable odour, and an extremely acrid, bitter, hot, nauseous taste. Their virtues ar* extracted by water and alcohol Analyzed by MM. Lassaigne and Feneulle, they yielded ;* brown and a yellow bitter principle, a volatile oil, a fixed oil, albumen, an azotized sub - stance, a mucilaginous saccharine matter, mineral salts, and a peculiar organic alkali called delphine or delphinia, which exists in the seeds combined with an excess of malic acid. It is white, puTveruIenF, inodorous, of a bitter acrid taste, fusible by heat and becoming hard and brittle upon cooling, slightly soluble in cold water, very soluble in alcohol and ether, and capable of forming salts -with the acids. It is obtained by boiling a decoction of the seeds with magnesia, collecting the precipitate, and treating it with alcohol, which dissolves the delphinia, and yields it upon evaporation. According to M. Couerbe, it is impure as thus obtained, consisting of three distinct principles; one of a resinous nature, separated from its solution in diluted sulphuric acid by the addition of nitric acid; another distinguished by its insolubility in ether, and named by M. Couerbe staphisain; and the third soluble both in alcohol and ether, and considered as pure delphinia. (Journ. de Pharm., xix. 519.) Medical Properties and Uses. The seeds were formerly used as an emetic and cathartic, but have been abandoned in consequence of their violence. Powdered and mixed with lard, they are employed in some cutaneous diseases, and to destroy lice in the hair. An infusion in vinegar has been applied to the same purpose. A preparation made by mixing three parts of the seeds in fine powder with five parts of lard, and maintaining the mixture at the tem- perature of 212° for twenty-four hours, is recommended by Dr. Bourguignon as very effica- cious in the itch. [Journ. de Pharm., Se ser., xviii. 421.) M. Bazin has obtained good effects from the external and internal use of stavesacre in eczema. He gave the extract in the dose of a grain and a half from four to twelve times a day. (Ann. de Therap., 1851, p. 18.) A strong tincture has been employed as an embrocation in rheumatism. In some countries the seeds are used to intoxicate fish in the same manner as Cocculus Indicus. Delphinia is highly poisonous, exerting its effects chiefly on the nervous system. Experi- ments made by Drs. Falck and Rorig on the lower animals show that, introduced into the rectum, the cellular tissue, or the veins, it produces death by asphyxia, preceded by symp- toms of local irritation, convulsive movements, and extreme anaesthesia, without apparent disturbance of the cerebral functions until the moment before death. Introduced into the stomach, it caused salivation, vomiting, and diarrhoea, without other signs of absorption. (Arch. Gen., 4e ser., xxx. 482.) Similar results were subsequently obtained by Dr. Van Praag. who found also that the nerves of motion were paralyzed as well as those of sensa- tion. After death, congestion of the cerebral membranes, heart, great veins, and liver was observed. Dr. Turnbull, in his work “On the Medical Properties of the Ranunculacese,” states that pure delphinia may be given to the extent of three or four grains a day, in doses of half a grain each, without exciting vomiting, and without producing much intestinal irrita- tion, though it sometimes purges. In most instances it proves diuretic, and gives rise to sensations of heat and tingling in various parts of the body. Externally, it acts like vera- tria; but, according to Dr. Turnbull, produces more redness and burning, and less tingling than that substance. He has employed it in neuralgia, rheumatism, and paralysis. It may be applied by friction, in the form of ointment or alcoholic solution, in proportions varying from ten to thirty grains of the alkaloid to an ounce of the vehicle; and the friction should be continued till a pungent sensation is produced. W. STERCULIA ACUMINATA. This is a large African tree, known as the source of the kola nuts of Guinea. As this page was going to the press, we saw the announcement, in the Pharmaceutical Journal (Feb. 1865, p. 407), that Dr. Daniell has discovered in these nuts a crystallized alkaloid, which he believes to be thein, or as it is now generally called caffein. He was induced to make the examination by noticing that, after taking a decoction of the seeds, he was affected with long-continued loss of sleep. W. SUCCINIC ACID. Acidum Succinicum. This acid is obtained by distilling amber. (See Succinum.) The product is an aqueous solution of impure succinic acid, associated with empyreumatic oil. (See Oleum Succini.) By filtering the liquor the solution of the impure acid passes through, while the oil is absorbed by the paper. The acid may be purified by boiling the solution with nitric acid, diluted with twice its bulk of water, and then evapo- rating to crystallize. Should the crystals not be colourless, the treatment with nitric acid must be repeated until they are so. Succinic acid is formed artificially by the action of ritric acid on the fatty acids, and under various other circumstances. M. Desaignes ob- >.ained it from malate of lime, subjected to fermentation excited by casein. The malate was converted into succinate of lime, which was then decomposed by sulphuric acid, so as to Sulphate of Alumina and Iron.-—Sulphate of Nickel, part lit, yieM a i-cml.i acid. For the details of the process for obtaining succinic acid from malata )f Km-, see the paper of E. J. Kohl, in the American Journal of Pharmacy for July, 1856. Succinic acid, when pure, is a white, transparent solid, crystallizing in prisms, and hav- ing a somewhat acrid taste. It dissolves in five times its weight of cold, and twice its weight of boiling water. It is soluble also in alcohol, but very sparingly so in ether. Nitric acid is without action on it. It melts at 365°, and boils without alteration at 473°. It sublimes, however, at a much lower temperature. According to Wackenroder, it is sometimes adul- terated with tartaric acid, soaked in oil of amber. Crystallized from its solution in water, its formula is C4II2Os-j- HO. The sublimed acid has the formula 2C4H203-f- 110. Some che- mists double the equivalent of this acid, and make its formula Cgll406. Succinic acid, though formerly officinal, is at present seldom used in medicine. It has been ascertained to be a product of vital action, having been detected by M. Heintz in the colourless liquid found in hydatid cysts of the liver. (See Journ. de Pharm., Sept. 1850.) One of its salts, succinate of ammonia, has been used with great alleged success in delirium tremens. This salt is occasionally used as a precipitant of sesquioxide of iron. 13. SULPHATE OF ALUMINA AND IRON. This double salt was brought forward by Sir James Murray, of Dublin, as an astringent, styptic, and vermifuge. His method of pre- paring il is not very clearly expressed; but it may be presumed to be formed by dissolving alumina and carbonate of iron, both recently precipitated, in sulphuric acid, and duly eva- porating the solution. Sir James recommends it in chronic dysentery, diarrhoea, fluor albus, and the colliquative sweats and diarrhoea which attend hectic fever and consumption. Externally he found it a powerful styptic, useful as a gargle in relaxation of the tonsils and uvula, and in salivation, as an injection in hemorrhages, and as a wash for foul and flabby ulcers. The dose for internal exhibition is from five to ten grains, dissolved in some aromatic water. This salt probably consists of tersulphate of alumina, combined with ter- sulphate of sesquioxide of iron. It is, therefore, not an alum. B. SULPHATE OF BARYTA. Bauyt.e Sulphas. Ed., Dub. Having been omitted in the British Pharmacopoeia, this salt is no longer officinal; but, from its former position, re- quires a brief notice here. The native sulphate of baryta is used in pharmacy with the same view as the native carbonate; namely, to obtain chloride of barium. The U. S. Pharmacopoeia directs for this purpose the carbonate of baryta; but the Ed. and Dub. Colleges gave a separate formula for the use of either the carbonate or sulphate, at the option of the operator. (See Barii Chloridum.) Sulphate of baryta is a heavy, lamellar, brit- tle mineral, varying in sp.gr. from 4-4 to 4-6. It is generally translucent, but sometimes transparent or opaque, and its usual colour is white or flesh-red. When crystallized, it is usually in very flat rhombic prisms. Before the blowpipe it strongly decrepitates, and melts into a white enamel, which, in the course of ten or twelve hours, falls to powder. It is thus partially converted into sulphuret of barium, and, if applied to the tongue, will give a taste like that of putrid eggs, arising from the formation of sulphuretted hydrogen. It consists of one eq. of acid 4it, and one of baryta 76-7 = 116-7. This salt, on account of its great insolubility, is not poisonous. Ground to fine powder, it is sometimes mixed with white lead, but impairs the quality of that pigment. The artificial sulphate of baryta, under the name of permanent white or blanc-fix, is much used in the arts as a water-colour. It is made from both the native sulphate and carbonate. It forms a dazzling white colour, unalterable bj light, heat, air, or sulphuretted hydrogen. It is used by the manufacturers of paper hang ings, and for mixing with other colours, the tone of which it does not impair. B. SULPHATE OF NICKEL. Niccoli Sulphas. This salt is formed by dissolving carbonate of nickel in dilute sulphuric acid, concentrating the solution, and setting it aside to crys- tallize. The carbonate is procured by dissolving the impure arseniuret of nickel, sold un- der the name of speiss, coarsely powdered and mixed with half its weight of iron filings, in raitromuriatic acid. The solution is evaporated to dryness, and the residue treated with water, which takes up the impure chloride of nickel, and leaves the arsenic in the form of the insoluble arseniate of iron. The liquid is then acidulated with muriatic acid, treated with sulphuretted hydrogen in excess, which precipitates the copper, and, after filtration, boiled with a little nitric acid to sesquioxidize any remaining iron. The cold liquid, largely diluted with water, is next treated with a solution of bicarbonate of soda, gradually added, which throws down the iron in the state of sesquioxide. Lastly, the filtered solution, contain- ing the chloride of nickel nearly pure, is boiled with carbonate of soda, which, by double decomposition, throws down a pale-green precipitate of carbonate of nickel. Sulj hate of nickel is in the form of emerald-green crystals, efflorescent in the air, soluble in three parts of cold water, but insoluble in alcohol and ether. It has a sweet, astringent taste. When crystallized in rhombic prisms, it consists of one eq. of sulphuric acid 40, one of protoxide of nickel 37-5, and seven of water 63 = 140 5. (NiO,SOs-f-7HO.) Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, has made some therapeutic trials with this salt, and foui d it to act as a gentle tonic, like the preparations of iron and quinia, yet somewhat differ- ently. He used it successfully in a case of severe and obstinate periodic headache The Sulphocyanide of Potassium.— Sulphuret of Iron. PART ill. dose is from half a grain to a grain three times a day, given in the form of pill, or of sim pie solution. In large doses it is liable to produce nausea and vomiting, especially on an empty stomach. (See Braithwaite’s Retrospect, xxvii. 446.) B. SULPHOCYAN1DE OF POTASSIUM. Potassii Sulphocyanidum. This salt is prepares by fusing in an iron vessel, at a low red heat, a mixture of two parts of dried ferrocyanido of potassium, and one part of flowers of sulphur. The mass, when cold, is dissolved in boiling water; and, to decompose some sulphocyanide of iron, the solution is treated with car- bonate of potassa, which throws down the iron as a carbonate, and gives rise to the forma- tion of a fresh portion of sulphocyanide of potassium. The whole is then boiled for a quar- ter of an hour, filtered to separate the precipitated iron, and evaporated that crystals may form. These are purified from carbonate of potassa by being dissolved in alcohol, which takes up the sulphocyanide and leaves the carbonate. The alcoholic solution is then al- lowed to crystallize. Sulphocyanide of potassium is in long, striated, anhydrous prisms, deliquescent in a moist atmosphere, very soluble in alcohol, and having a cooling, some- what biting taste. It has been proposed as a medicine by Soemmering, as a substitute for hydrocyanic acid and cyanide of potassium, on the ground that it possesses the same the- rapeutic properties, without their inconveniences. B. SULPHURET OF CALCIUM. Calcii Sulphur eturn. Hydro sulphate of Lime. This com- pound is formed by passing sulphuretted hydrogen, so long as it is absorbed, through water holding lime in suspension. It is in the form of a paste of a greenish-gray colour, and exhaling a strong odour of sulphuretted hydrogen. It is used as a depilatory, and is applied in a layer on the part which is to be deprived of hair. At the end of fifteen minutes it is removed with a wet sponge, which at the same time detaches the hairs. On account of this preparation giving out sulphuretted hydrogen, it must not be applied near the mouth or nose. An impure aqueous solution of sulphuret of calcium, necessarily containing hypo- sulphite of lime from the manner of its preparation, is used with great success, in Belgium, in itch, the cure of which it effects in a few hours. It is made by boiling toget her one part of sublimed sulphur, two of lime, and ten of water. The liquid is allowed to cool, and the clear part poured off, and kept in well-stopped bottles. For an explanation of the react.on which takes place, see Sulphur Frxcipitaturn, page-1359. The patient, after having been well washed with soap and tepid water in a bath, is rubbed over with the liquid, which is allowed to dry on the skin for a quarter of an hour. A second bath is then taken, which completes the cure. The preparation, when it dries, leaves on the skin a thin layer of the sulphur compound, which destroys the itch insect and its eggs. B. SULPHURET OF IRON. Ferri Sulphuretum. Ed., Dub. This former officinal of the Edinburgh and Dublin Colleges, merits and ought to have a place in the Pharmacopoeias, as the source whence sulphuretted hydrogen, so much used both in the preparation and testing of medicines, is most conveniently obtained. The following is the late Dublin process for preparing it. “Take of rods of Iron, of the size employed in the manufacture of nails, any convenient number. Having raised them to a strong red or white heat, apply them in succession by their heated extremities to sticks of Sulphur, operating so that the melted Sulphuret, as it is formed, may drop into a stone cistern filled with water, and be thus protected from oxidation. The water being poured off, let the product be separated from the Sulphur with which it is mixed, and, when dried, let it be enclosed in a well-stopped bottle.” (Dub.) Iron and sulphur form a number of sulphurets, among which the most im- portant are the protosulphuret and sesquisulphuret, corresponding with the protoxide and sesquioxide of iron, the bisulphuret or cubic pyrites, and magnetic pyrites, which is a com- pound of five eqs. of protosulphuret, and one of bisulphuret. When the sulphuret is ob- tained by the application of solid sulphur to white-hot iron, the product corresponds with magnetic pyrites; but, when procured by heating flowers of sulphur with an excess of iron filings, as directed in a former Edinburgh process, a protosulphuret is formed mixed with metallic iron. When sulphur is applied to white-hot iron over water, the metal ap- pears to become hotter, burns with scintillations in the vapour of the sulphur, and forms instantly the sulphuret, which, being comparatively fusible, melts into globules, and drops into the water, which serves to extinguish them. The sulphuret of iron, made according to the late Dublin process, has a yellowish colour and the metallic lustre. When obtained over water it is in the form of brownish-yellow glo- bules, having a somewhat crystalline texture. When pure it furnishes a yellow powder, and dissolves in dilute sulphuric or muriatic acid without leaving a residue of sulphur, and with the production of hydrosulphuric acid gas (sulphuretted hydrogen), free from admixture of hydrogen. It is not entirely soluble in dilute sulphuric acid, a portion of uncombined sul- phur being left The fused globules have the composition 5FeS-j-FeS2, or, according to some, 5FeS-j-Fe2S3. This sulphuret is employed solely as a pharmaceutical agent for the produc- tion of hydrosulphuric acid. It yields this gas by reaction with diluted sulphuric acid. Wa- ter is decomposed; its hydrogen combines with the sulphur to form hydrosulphuric acid, while the oxygen converts the iron into protoxide, with which the sulphuric acid unites Sumbul.—Swietenia Febrifuga. PART III Hydro sulphuric acid is a colourless gas, having a smell like that of putrid eggs. Its sp. gr. is 1 It saturates bases, with which it forms salts called hydrosulphalcs, sulphohydrales, or hydrosulphnrets. It consists of one eq. of sulphur 16, and one of hydrogen 1 = 17. B. SUMBT/L. Jatamami. Musk-root. Under the name of sumbul or jatamansi, a root has long been used in India, Persia, and other parts of the East, as a perfume, an incense in religious ceremonies, and medicinally. It is the product of an unknown plant, supposed to be umbelliferous, and, from the character of the root, to grow in low wet places. The plant is said to inhabit no part of British India, but the regions to the north and east of it, as Netjaul, Bootan, Bucharia, &c. The root is taken northward to Russia, and reaches the rest of Europe through St. Petersburg. The physicians of Moscow and St. Petersburg were the firR to employ it on the continent of Europe. Dr. Granville first introduced it to the notice of the profession in Great Britain and this country. It has recently also been imported into England from India, whither it was brought from a great distance in the interior. The medicine comes in transverse sections, from two to four inches in diameter, and front an inch to an inch and a half in length, with a dusky, light-brown, wrinkled epidermis, and an Interior porous structure, consisting of coarse, irregular, easily separable fibres. The fresh cut surface of a transverse section presents, within the epidermis, an exterior white and spotted layer, and an inner yellow substance which forms the greater part of the root. Examined by means of a microscope, it exhibits translucent points which probably repre- sent starch granules. Sumbul has a strong odour, very much resembling that of musk, which it retains even when long kept. The taste, at first feebly sweetish, becomes after a time bitterish and balsamic, but not disagreeable; and a strong aroma is developed under mas- tication, diffusing itself with a sensation of warmth through the mouth and throat, and ren- dering the breath fragrant. This effect, however, is much diminished by time. That brought from India differs somewhat from the Russian, being of closer texture, more dense and firm, and of a reddish tint. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxiv. 174, ft am Pharm Journ.) The root has been analyzed by Reinsch and other German chemists, and found to contain volatile oil, two balsamic resins, one soluble in alcohol, the other in ether, wax, gum, starch, a bitter substance soluble in water and alcohol, a crystallizable acid, which Reinsch pro- poses to call sumbulic acid, and saline matter. The musk-like odour seems to be connected with the balsamic resins, and probably depends on some principle associated with them not yet isolated. The volatile oil yielded by distillation has a taste like that of peppermint. The virtues of the drug appear to be those of a nervous stimulant. It is used by the Rus- sian physicians in low fevers of a typhous character, and in asthenic cases of dysentery and diarrhoea. It has also been employed by them with asserted success in malignant cho- lera. The authors, on the occasion of a visit in the summer of 1853 to St. Petersburg, were informed by Dr. Thielmann, physician to the Hospital of St. Peter and St. Paul, that he depended mainly on this remedy in the treatment of delirium tremens, having found it su- perior in its composing influence over that complaint even to opium. Dr. Granville recom- mends it in gastric spasms, hysteria, chlorosis, amenorrhoea, dysmenorrhoea, palsy of the limbs, epilepsy, and other nervous disorders. It is given in substance, infusion, decoction, and alcoholic and ethereal tincture. There seems to be no great precision in relation to the dose; but it is inferrible, from the accounts of the drug, that it may be used very much as we use valerian. The facts above stated are taken chiefly from a pamphlet by Dr. Granville, published in London, A. D. 1850. Dr. Murawieff, of Russia, prepares the resin, which he considers as the active principle, by macerating the root first in water, and then in a solution of carbonate of soda, washing it well with cold water, drying it, treating it with alcohol, filtering the tincture, adding a little lime and again filtering, separating the lime by sulphuric acid, agitating with animal charcoal, again filtering, distilling off nearly all the alcohol, mixing the residuum with water, driving off the remaining alcohol, and, finally, washing the precipitate with cold water, and drying it. The resin thus obtained is whitish, translucent, softening between the fingers, combustible without residue, of an acid taste, and an aromatic smell, like that of the root. Dr. Murawieff gives it in the dose of a grain or two, in the form of pill, three or four time* a day, with or without opium, and has found it useful in chronic bronchitis and pneumonia slow of resolution, in the moist asthma of old, anemic, and scorbutic patients, in atonic dysentery, leucorrhoea, hypochondriasis, and hysteria. (Dub. Quart. Journ., Feb. 1855, p 252, from Med. Zeit. Russland.) Prof. Procter has published a formula for a fluid extract, of which the dose is from 15 minims to a fluidrachm. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxvii. 233.) AV. SAA’IETENIA FEBRIFUGA. A large tree growing in the East Indies. The bark is the /-'part employed. It is smooth and red internally, rough and gray on the outer surface, of a feeble aromatic odour, and an astringent bitter taste. AVater extracts its virtues by infu- sion or decoction. It is said to have been much used in India as a substitute for Peruvian bark, to which it is somewhat analogous in medical properties. The dose of the powder is from thirty grains to half a drachm. The watery extract has the virtues of the bark. The Smetenia Mahagoni, or mahogany tree, which grows in the AA'est Indies and other parts PART III. Symphytum Officinale.— Tannate of Alumina. 1609 of tropical America, has also a bitter astringent bark, which resembles that of S. febrifuge in virtues as well as in sensible properties. The wood of this tree is the mahogany so mud used in ornamental wood-work. The bark of S. Senepalensis is used on the coast of Africa in the cure of intermittents; and M. CaventoiYKas extracted an alkaloid from it, which has been suggested as a cheap substitute for quinia. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., N. S., xx. 168.) W. SYMPHYTUM OFFICINALE. Comfrey. A perennial European plant, cultivated in our gardens for medical use. Its root, which is the part used, is spindle-shaped, branched, often more than an inch thick and a foot long, externally smooth and blackish, internally white, fleshy, and juicy. By drying it becomes wrinkled, of a firm horny consistence, and of a dark colour within. It is almost inodorous, and has a mucilaginous, feebly astringent taste. Among its constituents are mucilage in great abundance, and a small quantity of tannin. It was formerly highly esteemed as a vulnerary, but has lost its credit in this re- spect. Its virtues are chiefly those of a demulcent, and it may be advantageously used for all the purposes to which the marshmallow is applied. It is a very common ingredient in the domestic cough mixtures, employed in chronic catarrh, consumption, and other pecto- ral affections. The most convenient form of administration is that of decoction, u hich may be made either from the fresh or dried root. According to Lewis, comfrey root yields to water a larger proportion of mucilage than the root of Althaea. W. SYRINGA VULGARIS. Common Lilac. The leaves and fruit of this common garden plant have a bitter and somewhat acrid taste, and have been used as a tonic and febrifuge. In some parts of France, they are said to be employed habitually by the country people in the cure of intermittent fever; and they were recommended by Cruveilhier in the treat- ment of that complaint. The fruit was examined by MM. Petroz and Robinet, who found a sweet and a bitter principle. The latter was afterwards obtained pure by M. Meillet, who gave it the name of lilacin. The green capsules, which yield it in largest proportion, are boiled in water, the decoction is concentrated, subacetate of lead is added, the liquor is evaporated to the consistence of syrup, magnesia is added in excess, and the whole is evaporated to dryness. The residuum is powdered, digested in water at 90° or 100°, and then treated with boiling alcohol and animal charcoal. The alcoholic solution, being filtered and concentrated, yields lilacin upon cooling. This principle, though not alkaline, is thought by M. Meillet to exist in the fruit combined with malic acid. It is crystallizable, bitter, and insoluble in water. (Aw. Journ. of Pharm., xiv. 139, from Journ. de Pharm.) W. TACAMAHAC. Tacamahaca. The resinous substance, commonly known by this name, is supposed to be derived from the Fagara octandra of. Linn. (Elaphrium tomentosum, Jacq., Amyris tomentosa, Spreng.), a tree oT~considerable size, growing in the island of Curaijoa, and in Venezuela. The juice exudes spontaneously, and hardens on exposure. As brought into the market, it is in irregularly shaped pieces of various sizes, some not larger than a mustard seed, others as much as an inch or two inches in diameter. The colour is usually light-yellowish or reddish-brown; but in the larger masses is more or less diversified. The pieces are in general translucent, though frequently covered with powder upon their sur- face, so as to render them apparently opaque. They are heavier than water, brittle, and pulverizable, yielding a pale-yellow powder. Their odour is resinous and agreeable, their taste bitter, balsamic, and somewhat acrid. Exposed to heat they melt and exhale a stronger odour. Tacamahac is partially soluble in alcohol, and completely so in ether and the fixed oils. It consists of resin with a little volatile oil. Another variety is obtained from the East Indies, and called tacamahaca orientate, or taca- mahaca in testis. It is supposed to be derived from the Calophvllum Inophyllum, and comes into the market in gourd-shells covered with rush leaves. It is of a~pale-yeTlow colour in- clining to green, slightly translucent, soft, and adhesive, of an agreeable odour, and an aromatic bitterish taste. It is at present very rare in commerce. The tree which yields this resin produces a drupe, about as large as a plum, from the seeds of which 50 per cent, of a greenish-yellow fixed oil is obtained by expression, used in India for lamps, and as a local application in the itch. [Journ. de Pharm., Juillet, 1861 p. 23.) Guibourt describes several other varieties of tacamahac, which, however, are little known. Among them is a soft, adhesive, dark-green resin, said to be procured from the Calophyllum I'acamyhaca, growing in the islands of Bourbon and Madagascar. Tacamahac was formerly highly esteemed as an internal remedy, but is now employed medicinally only in the composition of ointments and plasters, and little even for this purpose. Its properties are analogous to those of the turpentines. It is sometimes used as incense. W. TANNATE OF ALUMINA. Alumime Tannas. Mr. Rogers Harrison, of London, has em- ployed an aqueous solution of a substance which he calls by this name, as an injection in gonorrhoea, after the acute symptoms have passed. He makes it of such a strength as to produce smarting. The substance is described to be in crystals, about the size of those of coarse sugar, of a dirty-yellowish colour, and readily soluble in hot water. (Lond. MecL Tannate of Iron.— Tea. PART III. Gaz , xiii. 853.) It is not easy to conjecture what is the substance employed by Mr. Har- rison. Tannate of alumina is nearly insoluble in water. Prof. Procter tried to make a soluble tannate of this earth, but without success: and, from the description of the sub- stance used by Mr. Harrison, he is inclined to think that it was a mixture of tannic acid ai.d alum. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Jan. 1853, p. 25.) ' B. TANNATE OF IRON. Ferri Tannas. This salt is prepared by dissolving 44 parts of precipitate 1 subcarbonate of iron, moderately dried, in a boiling solution of 9 parts of pure tannic acid, evaporating the solution at the temperature of 176°, in a porcelain vessel, until it becomes thick, pouring it out on a glass or porcelain plate, and drying it with a gentle heat. As thus obtained, tannate of iron is in flat pieces, of a crimson colour, without taste, and insoluble in water. It acts as an astringent and tonic, and may be given in chlorosis, in the dose of from eight to thirty grains, in the course of a day, made into pills. Ink is an aqueous solution of the tanno-gallate of iron, and probably possesses similar medical properties. It is a popular application to ringworm. B. TANNATE OF LEAD. Plumbi Tannas. This is obtained by precipitating a concentrated infusion of oak bark with acetate of lead, added drop by drop. It has been used as an external application with success by Dr. Fantonetti in two cases of white swelling of the knee-joint. He employed it at first mixed with a third of its weight of lard, and after- wards pure, the fresh precipitate admitting of application as an ointment. Autenrieth recommends it as a dressing to gangrenous ulcers; and it is probably peculiarly effica- cious in bed-sores. With this intention, the precipitate, either uncombined, or mixed in its dry state with simple ointment in the proportion of two drachms to the ounce, may be spread on linen, and applied to the sore. The preparation here described is a bitannate. Other tannates of lead exist. B. TARTRATE OF SODA. Sodas Tartras. This salt, in crystals, has been recommended by M. Delioux as an agreeable purgative, almost without taste, and acting with power equal to that of the sulphate of magnesia, in the dose of ten drachms. The soda powders, so much used in the United States, form an extemporaneous tartrate of soda, somewhat aerated with carbonic acid. (Seepage 1305.) B. TEA. The plant which furnishes tea — Thea Chinensis—is an evergreen shrub, belonging to the class and order Monadelphia Polyandria of the sexual system (Polyandria Mono- gynia, Linn.), and-to the natural order Ternstromiacem. It is usually from four to eight feet high, though capable, in a favourable situation, of attaining the height of thirty feet. It has numerous alternate branches, furnished with elliptical-oblong or lanceolate, pointed leaves, which are serrate except at the base, smooth on both sides, green, shining, marked with one rib and many transverse veins, and supported alternately upon short footstalks. They are two or three inches long, and from half an inch to an inch in breadth. The flowers are either solitary, or supported, two or three together, at the axils of the leaves. They are of considerable size, not unlike those of the myrtle in appearance, consisting of a short green calyx with five or six lobes, of a corolla with from four to nine large unequal snow- white petals, of numerous stamens with yellow anthers and connected at their base, and of a pistil with a three-parted style. The fruit is a three-celled and three-seeded capsule. It has not been certainly determined whether more than one species of the tea-plant exists. Linnaeus admitted two species—T. Bohea and T. viridis—differing in the number of their petals; but this ground of distinction is untenable, as the petals are known to vary very much in the same plant. Hayne makes three species—T. striejq, T. Bohea, and T. viridis— w hich are distinguished severally by the shape of their leaves and fruit, and the direction of the footstalk. De Candolle admits but one species, with two varieties—the viridis or green tea, w7ith “lanceolate flat leaves, three times as long as they are broad,” and the Bohea, with “elliptical oblong, subrugose leaves, twice as long as broad.” Lindley recog- nises the two Linnsean species, distinguishing them by the leaves, which in T. viridis are acuminate, and emarginate at the apex, and in T. Bohea are smaller, flatter, darker green, with small serratures, and terminate gradually in a point, but are not at all acuminate or emarginate. (Flora Medica, 120.) The tea-plant is a native of China and Japan, and is cultivated in both countries, but most abundantly in the former. In Japan it forms hedgerow's around the rice and corn- fields; in China, w'hence immense quantities of tea are exported, whole fields are devoted to its culture. It is propagated from the seeds, which are planted in holes at certain dis- tances, six or eight seeds being placed in each hole, in order to ensure the growth of one. In three years the plant yields leaves for collection, and in six attains the height of a man. When from seven to ten years old it is cut down, in order that the numerous shoots which issue from the stump may afford a large product of leaves. These are picked separately by the hand. Three harvests, according to Koempfer, are usually made during the year; the first at the end of February, the second at the beginning of April, and the third in June. As the youngest leaves are the best, the product of the first collection is most valuable, while that of the third, consisting of the oldest leaves, is comparativ ulj littlo PART III. Tea. esteemed. Sometimes only one or two harvests are made; hut care is always takeD to assort the leaves according to their age; and thus originate numerous commercial varie- ties of tea. The character of the plant, dependent upon the soil, situation, miniate, and culture, has also a great influence upon the value of the leaves. It is said that the best tea is procured from the shrubs which grow upon the sides of steep hills with a southern exposure. Though the plant grows both about Pekin in the north and Canton in the soutn of China, it is said to attain greater perfection in the intermediate country, in the neigh- bourhood of Nankin, for instance, where the climate is neither so cold as in the first-men- tioned vicinity, nor so hot as in the second. Some of the commercial varieties have their origin in this cause; and it is highly probable, though the fact has not been certainly proved, that difference in species may be another source of diversity. After having been gathered, the leaves are dried by artificial heat in shallow iron pans, from which they are removed while still hot, and rolled with the fingers, or in the palm of the hand, so as to be brought into the form in which they are found in commerce. The odour of the tea leaves themselves is very slight; and it is customary to mix with them the flowers of certain aromatic plants, as those of the orange, different species of jasmine, the rose, Olea fragrans, and Camellia Sasanqua, in order to render them pleasant to the smell. The flowers are afterwards sepa- rated by sifting or otherwise. (See Pharm. Journ., xv. 112.) The cultivation of tea has been successfully introduced into Brazil, and into the British possessions in India. In 1861, about 20,000 acres of land were under cultivation in Assam, and are said to have yielded 1,705,130 pounds of tea in that year. (Gallignani's Messenger, Jan. 20th, 1862, from the London Times.) Mrs. Ida Pfeiffer states, in her “ Second Journey round the World” (Am. ed., 1857, p. 127), that tea cultivated in Java is occasionally sent to Europe. Attempts have been made, under the auspices of the Government, to introduce the tea-culture into the U. States. Large numbers of the seeds were, through arrangements made by the Patent Office, imported from China, and, having been planted in the propagating garden at Wash- ington, germinated satisfactorily. At the time of publication of the Patent Office report, in 1859, the young plants continued to flourish, and there was every reason to hope that the experiment would eventuate successfully. Tea is brought to this country from Canton and other ports of China. Numerous varieties exist in commerce, differing in the shape communicated by rolling, in colour, in flavour, or in strength; but they may all be arranged in the two divisions of green and black teas, which, at least in their extremes, differ so much in properties, that it is difficult to conceive that they are derived from the same species. Properties. Green tea is characterized by a dark-green colour, sometimes inclining more or less to blue or brown. It has a peculiar, refreshing, somewhat aromatic odour, and an astringent, slightly pungent, and agreeably bitterish taste. Its infusion has a pale green- ish-yellow colour, with the odour and taste of the leaves. According to Mr. Warington, who examined numerous varieties of tea carefully both by the microscope and chemical tests, many of the green teas imported into Great Britain owe their colour to a powdery coating, consisting of sulphate of lime and Prussian blue; others to a mixture of these with a yel- lowish vegetable substance; and others, again, to sulphate of lime alone. [Pharm. Journ , iv. 37.) Black tea is distinguished by a dark-brown colour. It is usually less firmly rolled, and lighter than the green, and Contains the petioles of the plant mingled with the leaves. Its odour is fainter, and of a somewhat different character, though still fragrant. Its taste, like that of green tea, is astringent and bitterish; but is less pungent, and to many persons less agreeable. To hot water it imparts a brown colour, with its sensible properties of taste and smell. These vary exceedingly in degree in the different varieties; and some black teas are almost wholly destitute of aromatic or agreeable flavour. According to Mr. War- ington, the difference between green and black tea, in reference to their chemical and physical condition, arises from a kind of fermentation which the latter is made to undergo, before being roasted. [Ibid., x. 618.) A sophisticated tea is largely exported from China, consisting of powdered tea mixed with sand and other earth, and agglutinated with gum; that which is to pass for black being coloured with plumbago, and the green with the coat- ing above referred to. On analysis, these teas were found to afford from 35 to 45 per cent, of ashes, while the genuine yields only 5 per cent. They may be detected by not unfolding when steeped in boiling water. [Ibid.) Analyzed by G. J. Mulder, 100 parts of green Chinese tea afforded 0-79 of volatile oil, i!-22 of chlorophyll, 0-28 of wax, 2-22 of resin, 8-56 of gum, 17-80 of tannic acid of the variety contained in galls, 0-43 of thein (caffein), 22-80 of extractive, traces of apotheme, '43-60 of muriatic extract, 3-00 of albumen, 17-68 of lignin, and 5-56 of salts. The mu- riatic extract was the matter taken up by diluted mliriatic acid from tea, previously ex- nausted successively by ether, alcohol, and water, and consisted of artificial tannin. The same chemist obtained from 100 parts of black Chinese tea 0-60 of volatile oil, 1-84 of chlorophyll, 3 64 of resin, 7-28 of gum, 12-88 of tannic acid, 0-46 of thein (caffein), 19-88 of extiactive, 1-48 of apotheme, 19-12 of muriatic extract, 2-80 of albumen, 28-32 of lignia. and 5-24 of salts. [Annul, der Pharm., xxviii. 317.) Dr. Rochleder has found also a peculiar 1612 Tellurium.— Tephrosia Virginiana. PART III, Acirl, w hich he calls boheic acid. According to Stenhouse, the tannin of tea, though always accompanied with a little gallic acid, differs essentially from that of galls; not being like it a glucoside, but yielding, under the influence of sulphuric acid, a dark-brown substance, almost insoluble in water. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., May, 1862, p. 254.) M. Eug. Peligot obtained a much larger proportion of thein or caffein than was found by Mulder, the lowest quantity from green tea being 2 4 per cent, and the highest 4-1 per cent; but even this quan- tity is too small to represent all the nitrogen contained in tea. (Journ de Pharm., 8e ser., iv. 224.) M. Puccetti found about twice as much in black as in green tea. [Am Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 234.) The volatile oil is probably one of the principles upon which the effects of tea upon the nervous system depend. Hence old teas are less energetic than those recently im- ported; and it is said that the fresh leaves have often produced dangerous effects in China. Nevertheless, the tannic acid is not without influence upon the system: and it is not impro- bable that both the extractive and thein contribute to the peculiar influence of this valuable product. Of these active ingredients, the volatile oil, tannic acid, and extractive are found most largely, according to the analysis of Mulder, in the green tea. Thein is a crystallizable principle discovered by Oudry. It was afterwards proved by Jobst to have the same compo- sition as caffein, and is now generally considered as in all respects identical with that prin- ciple. It is also said to exist in the leaves of the Ilex Paraguaiensis or Paraguay tea, and in the seeds of Paullinia sorbilis. (See Coffee, Ilex, and Paullinia.) According to Mulder, thein exists in tea combined with tannic acid. Peligot obtained it by adding to a hot infusion of tea, first subacetate of lead, and then ammonia, filtering the liquid, passing sulphuretted hydrogen through it, again filtering, and evaporating with a moderate heat. On cooling, the liquid deposited thein abundantly, and yielded an additional quantity by a careful evaporation. [Journ. de Pharm., 3e ser., iv. 224.) It may be cheaply prepared by putting some old spoiled tea in an iron pot covered with filtering paper, enclosing the whole in a cylindrical paper cap, and cautiously applying heat. Thein rises in vapour, and condenses on the paper. (See Chem. Gaz., No. 178, p. 119.) Thein has a feebly bitter taste; is, in the state of crystals, dissolved by 93 parts of water, 158 of alcohol, and 298 of ether; melts at about 350° F., and at 723° sublimes in white vapours, which condense in minute nee- dles. From its watery solution few reagents precipitate it. Infusion of galls causes a de- posit of tannate of thein, which is again, however, dissolved by heating the water. Medical Properties and Uses. Tea is astringent and gently excitant, and in its finer vari- eties exerts a decided influence over the nervous system, evinced by the feelings of comfort and even exhilaration which it produces, and the unnatural wakefulness to which it gives rise, when taken in unusual quantities, or by those unaccustomed to its use. Its properties, however, are not of so decided a character as to render it capable of very extensive appli- cation as a medicine; and its almost exclusive use is as a grateful beverage at the evening and morning meals. Taken moderately, and by healthy individuals, it may be considered as perfectly harmless; but long continued, in excessive quantity, it is capable of inducing unpleasant nervous and dyspeptic symptoms, the necessary consequences of over-excitement of the brain and stomach. Green tea is decidedly more injurious in these respects than black, and should be avoided by dyspeptic individuals, and by those whose nervous systems ate peculiarly excitable. As a medicine, tea may sometimes be given advantageouslj' in diar- rhoea; and a strong infusion will often be found to relieve nervous headache. The mode of preparing it for use is too well known to require description. An extract is made from it in China, which is said to be useful in fevers. Though the effects of tea and coffee upon the system are probably in part owing to the thein or caffein they contain, there must be some other active ingredient; as the effects produced by different varieties are not proportionate to the amount of that principle contained in them. Thus coffee, which exerts a more power- ful influence on the system than tea, in any of its varieties, contains less caffein. W. TELLURIUM. Several of the combinations of this metal have been tried on the living organism by M. Hansen. Five grains of the tellurite of ootassa. given to dogs, produced stu- pefaction and vomiting, and the garlic-like odour of tellurium in the breath. The same salt, tried upon himself for seven successive days, in a dose daily of half a grain, afterwards in- creased to a grain, caused drowsiness at first, followed, after the seventh day, by a sense of oppression in the cardiac region, nausea, an increased flow of saliva, and loss of appetite. The breath had a garlic like odour throughout the experiment. [Chem. Gaz., March 1, 1854, p. 90.) Prof. Simpson, of Edinburgh, relates the case of a student, who inadvertently took a dose of tellurium, and exhaled so persistent, an odour that he had to sit apart from his fel- low students. (See Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., April, 1855, p. 496.) This disagreeable effect of tellurium precludes its employment in medicine. B. TEPHLtOSIA VIRGINIANA. Turkey Pea. Goat's Rue. Several species of Tephrosia are employed in different parts of the world, though unknown in general commerce. They are leguminous plants, shrubby or herbaceous, with leaves unequally pinnate, and flowers in axillary or terminal racemes. They are generally possessed of cathartic properties; their leaves or roots being employed. Tephrosia Virginiana grows in most parts of the United States. It is a foot ?r two high, with pubescent stems and leaves, and handsome ttermiaa. PART hi. Teucrium Chamsedrys.— Thlapsus Bursa Pastoris. 1613 flowers. (See Griffith’s Med. Bot., p. 237.) The roots, which are slender, long, and matted are tonic and aperient, and are said to have been used by the Indians as a vermifuge, given in the form of decoction. Dr. B 0. Jones, of Atlanta, Geo., has used the plant with advan tage, as a mild stimulating tonic and laxative, having a tendency to increase most of thr secretions, and has found it specially useful in typhoid fever. He prepares it by boiling eight ounces of the plant with two ounces of Rumex acutus in four quarts of water to a quart, and straining; adding, when the preparation is to be kept, an equal bulk of diluted alcohol or brandy, and half its weight of sugar, and macerating for several days. The dose is one or two tablespoonfuls. (Am. Journ. of 1'harm., xxviii. 218.) W. TEUCRIUM CIIAM2EDRYS. Germander. Chamsedrys. A small, didynamous, labiate, pe- rennial European plant, the leaves and tops of which have an agreeable aromatic odour, diminished by drying, and a bitter, somewhat astringent, aromatic, durable taste. They have been employed as a mild corroborant, in uterine, rheumatic, gouty, and scrofulous affections, and intermittent fevers; but are at present little used, and never in this country. Germander was an ingredient in the Portland powder, noted as a remedy in gout. This pow- der, according to the original prescription, consisted of equal parts of the roots of Aristo- lockia rotunda and Gentiana lutea, of the tops and leaves of Teucrium Chamsedrys and Ery- thrsea Centaurium, and of the leaves of Ajuga Chamsepytis, or ground pine. The dose was a drachm every morning before breakfast, for three months, then two scruples for three months, afterwards half a drachm for six months, and finally half a drachm every other day for a year. (Parr.) Two other species of Teucrium have been used in medicine;—T. Marum, cat thyme, or Syrian herb mastich, indigenous in the south of Europe, and T. Scordium, or water germander, growing in the higher latitudes of the same continent. The former is a warm, sti- mulating, aromatic bitter, and has been recommended in hysteria, amenorrhoea, and nervous debility: the latter has the odour of garlic, and a bitter, somewhat pungent taste, and was formerly highly esteemed as a corroborant in low forms of disease; but neither of them is now much employed. T. Marum, however, has been revived somewhat of late; having been given successfully, by Dr. Lucanus, in pertussis and other cases of spasmodic cough, in the forms of syrup and confection. (Revue Pharmaceut., 1858, p. 32.) This species also acts as an errhine, and was formerly an ingredient in the Pulvis Asari Compositus. The dose of either of the three species is about half a drachm. A plant said to have been used ad- vantageously in cholera in the Levant, a specimen of which was sent to Paris, proved to be Teucrium Polium. (Journ. de Pharm., xv. 352.) W. THALLIUM. This is one of the metals recently discovered by means of the spectrum analysis, and has been found to prevail widely in nature, and to yield itself readily to chemical agencies. The point about it principally interesting to the physician at pre- sent, is, that it has been ascertained to act energetically as a poison. M. Laury, having experienced, while making chemical investigations in reference to thallium, extreme gene- ral lassitude, with pains in the lower extremities, was disposed to consider these symp- toms as the result of a poisonous influence of the metal. To determine the point, he dis- solved 75 grains of sulphate of thallium in some milk, intending to try its effects on a couple of puppies, which, however, after tasting it, refused to swallow more. Accidentally it was placed where other animals had access to it; and the consequences were that the milk disappeared, ancka middle-sized dog, a hen, and six ducks died from having drank it. There was no vomiting or purging, but violent intestinal pains, and spasm of the posterior limbs, followed by paralysis; and this last seemed to be the most characteristic effect of the poison. Death took place in two or three days; and, what is of much importance, the two puppies which had only tasted of the milk, were seized with similar symptoms, and died at the end of four days. The poison, therefore, must be very energetic; and a cir- cumstance worthy of remark in relation to it is, that, even in a fatal dose, it may produce no sensible effect for a considerable time. M. Laury afterwards gave about a grain and a half to a puppy, which died in forty hours There seems to be a remarkable coincidence between the poisonous effects of thallium and those of lead. Connected with its deleterious action, it is an interesting circumstance that thallium is not unfrequently associated with metals used in medicine, as with copper and bismuth for example. Spectrum analysis affords an easy method of detecting the poison. M. Laury readily recognised it in the tis- sues of animals which perished with it, by subjecting small pieces to examination in the spectroscope. A sharply defined green line in the spectrum gave undoubted evidence of -he presence of the poison. (Journ. de Pharm., Oct. 1863, p. 285.) W. TIILAPSUS BURSA PASTORIS. Shepherd's Purse. Thlapsus is a genus of Cruciferous plants, of which several species grow in this country. In Europe, the T. bursa pastoris is a very common plant, growing everywhere upon walls, by the roadsides, in gardens, &c., and flowering nearly all the year. Like others of the same natural family, it yields by contact with water a volatile oil, which may be obtained by distillation. The plant is bitter and pun- gent, and is supposed to possess astringent properties; being employed with assert?d ad- vantage in hmmaturia and other hemorrhages. It is also thought to be specially antiscor Thuya Occidentalis.— Tin. PART III. t, a t ic, and been used in cases demanding expectorants and diuretics, as in humoral asthma,, dropsy, &c. The expressed juice is used in the dose of from two to four fluidounces. A tincture, extract, syrup, &c. have also been prepared, for which formulas may be found in the Annuaire de Therapeutique for 1854 (p. 216j. The fresh herb, bruised, is employed as a topical remedy in rheumatism. W. THUYA OCCIDENTALIS. Thuja Occidentals. Arbor Vitae. An indigenous evergreen tree, growing wild from Canada to the Carolinas, and cultivated for ornament in gardens. The leaves, or small twigs invested with the leaves, are the parts used. They have an agree- able balsamic odour, especially when rubbed, and a strong, balsamic, cainphorous, bitter taste. They were analyzed by A. Kawalier, of Vienna, and found to contain volatile oil, a bitter principle called pinipicrin, found also in Pinus sylvestris, sugar, gelatinous matter, a variety of wax, resin, and tannic acid. (See Chem. Gaz., Feb. 1, 1855, p. 45 ) In a more re- cent analysis, Kawalier discovered in the leaves a peculiar crystallizable colouring prin- ciple, which he names thvjine. It is of a citron-yellow colour and astringent taste, soluble in alcohol, inflammable, and separable, through the agency of sulphuric acid, into glucose, and another yellow substance, which he calls thvjetin. A third substance, thujegenine, was also obtained, apparently a result of some change in thujine. The formula of thujine is C4oH22024. The same chemist determined that the tannic acid of this plant is identical with that which he had previously obtained from the leaves of Pinus sylvestris' and to which he had given the name of pinitannic acid. (See, for the mode of preparing these principles, and a full account of their properties, the Chemical Gazette, Nos. 392 and 393, pp. 61 and 88, A. D. 1859.) In the form of decoction the leaves have been used in intermittent fever, and, ac- cording to Schoepf, in coughs, fevers, scurvy, and rheumatism. Dr. J. R. Learning, of New York, has employed a tincture of the leaves internally, with supposed advantage, in affec- tions believed to be cancerous; and the same remedy has been used locally with prompt effect in venereal excrescences. [N. Y. Journ. of Med., &c., N. S , xiv. 406.) Dr. Benedict has found a saturated tincture useful as an emmenagogue, given in the dose of a teaspoonful three times a day. (Ibid., Nov. 1856, p. 395.) Made into an ointment with lard or other animal fat, the leaves are said to form a useful local application in rheumatic complaints. The dis- tilled water is praised by Boerhaave as a remedy in dropsy. [Schoepf.) A yellowish-green volatile oil, which may be obtained from the leaves by distillation, has been used with suc- cess in worms. W. TIN. Stannum. This was recognised in the late Ed. and Dub. Pharmacopoeias, and in the U. S. of 1850; but is no longer officinal. It has, however, too long ranked among re- cognised remedies to be passed without notice. Tin is one of the metals which have been known from the earliest ages. It exists generally as an oxide [tin stone and wood tin), rarely as a sulphuret [tinpyrites), and is by no means generally diffused. It is found in England, Spain, Germany, Bohemia, and Hungary, in Europe; in the island of Banca and the Penin- sula of Malacca, in Asia: and in Chili and Mexico. Tin mines are particularly abundant and rich in the Tenasserim provinces of British India. [Dr. Royle.) A valuable tin ore has been discovered in the United States, at Jackson, New Hampshire. The Cornwall mines are the most productive, but those of Asia furnish the purest tin. The metal is extracted from the native oxide. When this occurs in its purest state, in detached roundish grains, called stream tin, the reduction is effected by heating with charcoal. When the common oxide, called mine tin, is melted, it requires to be freed, by pounding and washing, from the ad- hering gangue; after which it is roasted to drive off sulphur, arsenic, and antimony, and finally reduced in furnaces by means of stone coal. The metal, as thus obtained, is called block tin, and is not pure. The purest kind of tin, known in commerce, is called grain tin. Properties. Tin i3 a malleable, rather soft metal, of a silver-white colour. It may be beaten out into thin leaves, called tin foil. It undergoes a superficial tarnish in the air. Its taste is slight, and when rubbed it exhales a peculiar smell. Its ductility and tenacity are small; when bent to and fro, it emits a crackling noise, which is characteristic. Its sp. gr. is 7‘29, melting point 442°, equivalent number 59, and symbol Sn. It forms three oxides, a prot- oxide, sesquioxide, and deutoxide. The protoxide is of a grayish-black colour. When per- fectly pure it has, according to Dr. Roth, a red colour. The sesquioxide is gray. The deut- oxide acts as an acid, and exists in two isomeric states, called stannic and melastannic acid. Stannic acid may be prepared by decomposing bichloride of tin with water. The metastannic acid is formed by acting on tin with nitric acid, which converts it into a white powder. The native crystallized oxide is metastannic acid. These acids, though having the same compo- sition, Sn02, are perfectly distinct in chemical properties. The stannic acid is soluble, the metastannic insoluble in nitric acid and dilute sulphuric acids. One eq of potassa requires for saturation one eq. of stannic acid, but five of metastannic acid. Henoe the latter is some- times represented by Sn5O10. The tin of commerce is often impure, being contaminated with other metals, introduced by fraud, or present in consequence of the mode of extraction from the ore. A high specific gravity is an indication of impurity. When its colour has a Muish or grayish cast, the pre- sence. of copper, lead, iron, or antimony, may be suspected Arsenic renders it whiter, bit* PART III. Tonka Bean.—Trigonella Foenuwgraecum. 1615 at the same time harder; and lead, copper, and iron cause it to become brittle. Pure tin is converted by nitric acid into a white powder (metastannic acid), without being dissolved. Boiled with muriatic acid, it forms a solution which gives a white precipitate with ferro- cyanide of potassium. A blue precipitate with this test indicates iron, a brown one copper, and a violet-blue one both iron and copper. If lead be present, a precipitate will be pro- duced by sulphate of magnesia. The Malacca and Banca tin, and the English grain tin are the purest kinds found in commerce. Banca tin, from recent analyses by Mulder, appears to be particularly pure, containing only one-twenty-fifth of 1 per cent of foreign ipetals. Block tin and the metal obtained from Germany are always of inferior quality. Uses. Tin enters into the composition of bronze, bell-metal, pewter, and piumber’s solder. It is used also in making tin-plate, which is sheet-iron coated with tin, in silvering looking- glasses, and in forming the solution of bichloride of tin, a combination essential to the per- fection of the scarlet dye. It is employed in fabricating various vessels and instruments, useful in domestic economy and the arts. Being unaffected by weak acids, it forms a good material for vessels intended for boiling operations in pharmacy. We are told that a false tin foil is considerably used at present, made by coating lead with tin, and then rolling it out into thin sheets. As tin foil is employed for enclosing medicinal powders, and in other ways is brought into contact -with medicinal substances, care should be taken not to use this substituted preparation, lest the patient might be exposed to the poisonous action of lead. Stanni Pulvis U. S. 1850. Powder of Tin. The following directions were given for preparing powder of tin in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia of 1850. “Take of Tin a convenient quantity. Melt it. in an iron nes-sel over the fire, and, while it is cooling, stir it until it is reduced to a pow • der, which in to be passed through a sieve.” U. S. Tin, being very fusible, is easily granu- lated by fuiion, and subsequent agitation while solidifying. On a small scale, the granu- lation is most conveniently performed in a wooden box, the inside of which has been well rubbed with chalk. This should be afterwards washed away with water; and, as the granu- lated powder is of unequal fineness, the coarser particles must be separated by a sieve. Medicil Properties and Uses. Powder of tin is used exclusively as an anthelmintic, and is suppos-yl to act by its mechanical properties. It is considered particularly adapted to the expulsion of Ascaris lumbricoides, and is also employed to expel the tapeworm. For internal exhibition it should be free from oxidation. The dose is half an ounce, mixed with molasses, given for several successive mornings, and then followed by a brisk cathartic. Dr. Alston was in the habit of administering larger doses for the expulsion of the tapeworm. He began by giving an ounce on an empty stomach, which was followed, for two successive days, by half an ounce each day, and finally by a brisk purge. B. TONKA BEAN. The seed of Diyterix odorala of Willd., the Coumarouna odainta of Aublet, i large tree growing in Guiana. The fruit is an oblong-ovate pod, enclosing a single seed, from an inch to an inch and a half long, from two to four lines broad, usually somewhat compressed, with a dark-brown, wrinkled, shining, thin, and brittle skin, and a light-brown oily kernel. The bean has a strong, agreeable, aromatic odour, and a bitterish, aromatic taste. Its active constituent is a crystallizable, odorous substance, analogous to the vola- tile oils and camphor, and called coumarin by Guibburt. This substance is sometimes found in a crystalline state, between the two lobes of the kernel. It has been shown by M. Bleib- treu to be identical with the odorous principle of Asverula odorata. Trifolium melilotus. and Antkoxanthum odoratum. (See Cbem. Gaz., Feb. 16, 1852, p. 61.) Mr. W-UTLippitt, of Wil- mington, N. C., having noticed a crystalline exudation upon the leaves of Lialris odoratis- sima, growing in that neighbourhood, sent a specimen to Prof. Procter, of Philadelphia, who ascertained that it consisted of coumarin. According to Mr. Lippitt, thi3 product of the Liatris was collected for the purpose of protecting woollens against moths. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., Nov. 1859, p. 556.) Dr. Gossmann obtains coumarin in the following man- ner. The beans, cut finely, are heated for a long time with an equal bulk of alcohol of 9 863, nearly to boiling; and, the tincture being decanted, the residue is treated in the eame manner. The tinctures are mixed, the alcohol distilled off until turbidness appears, when four times the bulk of water is added, which precipitates coumarin and fatty matter. The precipitate is then heated to boiling, and the liquid passed through a moistened filter. The fatty matter remains on the filter, and the hot solution which passes deposits the cou- marin on cooling. More may be obtained by concentrating the liquid, and may be pui’ified by animal charcoal. One pound of the beans yielded 108 grains of coumarin. (Ibid., June 1, 1856, p. 211 ) The tonka bean is used to flavour snuff, being either mixed with it in the state of powder, or put entire into the snuff-box. W. TRIGONELLA FQ3NUMGRJECUM. Fenugreek. An annual plant, growing spontaneously in different parts of the south of Europe, and cultivated in France and Germany for the sake of its seeds. These are oblong-cylindrical, somewhat compressed, obliquely truncated at each extremity, one or two lines in length, brownish yellow externally, yellow internally, »nd marked with an oblique furrow running half their length. They have a strong peculiar ouour. and an oily, bitterish, farinaceous taste, and contain fixed and volatile oil, mucilage, bitter extractive, and a yellow colouring substance. An ounce of the seeds, boiled in a pint 1616 Trillium.—Tussilago Farfara. PART III. of water, renders it thick and slimy. They yield the whole of their odour and taste to alco- hol. Their virtues depend chiefly upon their oil and mucilage. On the continent of Europe they are employed in the preparation of emollient cataplasms and enemata, and enter into some officinal ointments and plasters. They are never used internally. W. TRILLIUM. This is an indigenous genus of pretty, little, herbaceous plants, growing generally in woods and shady places. The roots are reputed to possess valuable remedial properties. They were employed by the aborigines, have been long used in domestic prac- tice in some parts of the country, and were noticed as medicinal in Henry’s Herbal, pub- lished in 1812. Dr. S. W. Williams published a paper upon them in the New England Journ. if Mid, and Stirg., in the year 1820, and afterwards another in the N. Y. Journ. of Med. (viii. 94). The roots have a somewhat balsamic odour and taste, and produce, when chewed, a sense of heat and irritation, with an increased flow of saliva. A root received by Mr. E. S. Wayne, of Cincinnati, is described by him as an “oblong rhizome, with numerous rootlets attached to it, and of a yellowish-brown colour.” Upon the removal of the epidermis, it is white and starchy, and gives a deep blue with tincture of iodine. Mr. Wayne found in the root an acrid principle, analogous to senegin and saponin in the*property of frothing with water; half a grain in two ounces of water being sufficient to show this property. He ob- tained it by treating the powdered root with alcohol by percolation, distilling off the alco- hol and adding water as the alcohol escaped, separating an oleo-resin which floated on the surface of the remaining watery liquid, treating the latter with acetate and subacetate of lead so long as a precipitate was produced, filtering, separating the excess of lead by sul- phuric acid, again filtering, and setting the clear liquid aside. In the following day a gela- tinous precipitate had formed, which, being collected on a filter, washed, and dried, was redissolved in dilute alcohol, and recovered by spontaneous evaporation of the menstruum. A white, jtmorphous powder was thus obtained, of an acrid taste, soluble in alcohol, and, as above stated, giving in a high degree the frothing property to water. (Proceed. of Am. Yharm. Assoc, for 1856, p. 36, also Am. Journ. of Pharm.. xxviii. 512.) Besides this acrid principle, the Trillia roots are said to contain volatile oil, gum, starch, extractive, resin, and tannic acid. They are astringent; and tonic, expectorant, and alterative properties have been ascribed to them. They have been used by the vulgar to hasten parturition. The com- plaints in which they are said to have proved most advantageous are the hemorrhages; but they have been used also in cutaneous affections, and externally in obstinate ulcers. Dr. Williams gave a drachm of the powdered root three times a day. Of the different species T.erectum is generally esteemed most active. T.pendulum is referred to, in the Peninsulai and Independent Med. Journ. (Jan. 1859, p. 187), as among the most valued indigenous plants of Michigan; being used especially in menorrhagia. W. TRIPOLI. Terra Tripolitana. An earthy mineral, of a whitish, yellowish, or pale straw colour, sometimes inclining to red or brown, usually friable, often adhesive to the tongue, and presenting the aspect of argillaceous earth, though differing from clay by the rough- ness and hardness of its particles, and by not forming a paste with water. The Venice iripoli is said to come from Corfu. Tripoli is sometimes artificially prepared by calcining certain argillites. It is used for cleaning and polishing metals. W. TRITIOUM REPENS. Couch-grass. Dog-grass. Quickens. Chiendent, Fr. A perennial Eu- ropean plant, very common in gardens and cultivated grounds, where it is considered a troublesome weed. The root, which is the part medically used, is horizontal, creeping, jointed, about as thick as a straw or thicker, inodorous, and of an agreeable, sweetish, slightly pungent taste. It is used in some parts of Europe, in the form of decoction, as a slightly aperient and nutritive drink; and has been recommended of late in irritable blad der. Great quantities of it are said to be consumed in the hospitals of Paris. The infusion or decoction, in consequence of the sugar which it contains, is susceptible of the vinous fermentation, and alcohol has been obtained from it by distillation. W. TUSSILAGO FARFARA. Coltsfoot. Coltsfoot is a perennial herb, with a creeping root, which early in the spring sends up several leafless, erect, simple, unifloral scapes or flower- stems, five or six inches high, and bearing appressed scale-like bractes of a brownish-pink colour. The flower, which stands singly at the end of the scape, is large, yellow, com- pound, with hermaphrodite florets in the disk, and female florets in the ray. The latter are numerous, linear, and twice the length of the former. The leaves do not make their appearance until after the flowers have blown. They are radical, petiolate, large, cordate, angular, and toothed at the margin, bright-green upon their upper surface, white and downy beneath. The plant grows spontaneously both in Europe and North America. In this country it is found upon the banks of streams in the Middle and Northern States, and flowers in April. The whole of it is employed, but the leaves most so. They should be gathered after their full expansion, but before they have attained their greatest magnitude. The flowers have an agreeable odour, which they retain after desiccation. The dried root and leaves are inodorous, but have a rough, bitterish, mucilaginous taste. Boiling water extracts their virtues. Coltsfoot exercises little sensible influence upon the human system. PART III. Tutty.— Upas Antiar. 1617 It is, however, demulcent, and is sometimes used in chronic coughs, consumption, and other affections of the lungs. The expectorant properties which it was formerly though* to possess are not obvious. The leaves were smoked by the ancients in pulmonary com plaints; and in some parts of Germany they are at the present time said to be substituted for tobacco. Cullen states that he found the expressed juice of the fresh leaves, taken to the extent of some ounces every day, beneficial in several cases of scrofulous sores; and a decoction of the dried leaves, as recommended by Fuller, answered a similar purpose, though it often failed to effect a cure. The usual form of administration is that of decoc- tion. An ounce or two of the plant may be boiled in two pints of water to a pint, of which a teacupful may be given several times a day. W. TUTTY. Tutia. Impure Oxide of Zinc. This oxide is formed during the smelting of lead ores containing zinc. It is deposited in the chimneys of the furnaces, in the form of in- crustations, moderately hard and heavy, and studded over with small protuberances, of a brownish colour on the outside, and yellowish within. As it occurs in commerce, the pieces occasionally present a bluish cast, from the presence of small particles of metallic line. Sometimes a spurious substance is sold for tutty, consisting of a mixGxre of blue clay and copper filings, made into a paste with water, and dried on an iron rod. It is dis- tinguished from the genuine tutty by its diffusing in water and exhaling an earthy smell, and by its greater friability. Tutty is used as an external application only, being em- ployed as a desiccant in excoriations. To fit it for medicinal use it must be reduced to fine powder, which is dusted over the affected part, or applied in the form of ointment. It has been very properly dismissed from the Edinburgh officinal list; its use being superseded by that of the pure oxide. B. ULTRAMARINE. This fine blue pigment was formerly obtained from lapis lazuli, or lazu- lite, a mineral of Siberia. It is now prepared artificially by mixing equal parts of sulphur, carbonate of soda, and silica, adding enough solution of soda to dissolve the silica, and rapidly igniting the mixture. A bluish-green mass results, which becomes blue by ignition in contact with air. It is thought to be a compound of the silicates of alumina and soda with sulphuret of sodium. (Pharm. Journ., xi. 230.) It is very largely manufactured at Nuremberg, in Germany. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxviii. 416.) W. UMBER. Terra Umbria. A mineral of a fine compact texture, light, dry to the touch, shining when rubbed by the nail, and of a fine pale-brown colour, which changes to a peculiar beautiful deep-brown by heat. According to Klaproth, it contains 13 parts of silica, 5 of alumina, 48 of oxide of iron, 20 of manganese, and 14 of water in 100. Burnt umber, as well as the mineral in its unaltered state, is used in painting. The umber of com- merce is said to be brought chiefly from the island of Cyprus. W. UPAS ANTIAR and UPAS TIETJTE. Under these names, two poisons have long been used by the natives of Java and other East India islands for poisoning their arrow heads; and very exaggerated notions have prevailed among the people of the Western World in relation to the tremendously destructive power over animal life of the upas tree in Java, from which it was supposed that the poison was derived. The tale was told that birds and animals perished when within the influence of its exhalations, and that man came into its near vicinity at the peril of life. All such accounts have proved to be fabulous; but there is no doubt as to the exceedingly poisonous character of the arrow poison to which reference has been made. It seems now to be pretty well determined that the active ingredient of the upas anliar is a gum-resinous exudation proceeding from incisions in the trunk of the Antiaris toxicaria, a large tree belonging to the Urticacese, growing in Java, Celebes, and the neighbouring islands, and described in Lindley's Flora Medica (p. 301). Like certain species of Rhus, this plant exhales an aeriform matter, which very unplea- santly affects many of those who approach it, causing eruptions upon the skin and exte- rior swelling, while others seem altogether insensible to its influence. The juice is mixed with various substances which probably have little other effect than to give a due consist- ence to the poison. This, whether taken internally or introduced into the system through a wound, acts with extreme violence, producing vomiting, with great prostration, a feebly irregular pulse, involuntary evacuations, and convulsive movements, which are soon fol- lowed by death. Brodie, who made experiments with the poison on animals, could observe no sign of special action on the brain, and believed that death was produced by its action upon the heart, which ceased to beat before respiration ceased, and after death was found full of blood, differing in both these respects from its condition under ordinary narcotic poisoning. In other words, the poison seems to rank with digitalis, tobacco, and aconite, rather than with opium, belladonna, &c. From a chemical examination by Pelletier and Caventou, it appears that the antiar owes its activity to a peculiar principle which they named antiarin, crystallizable, soluble in water and alcohol, but scarcely so in ether, and consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, with the formula CuH100.. (See Am. Journ. of Pharm., Sept. 1863, p. 474.) TJrate of Ammonia.— Urea. PART III. The upas tieute is even more poisonous than the antiar. This is said to be obtained from a climbing woody plant, growing exclusively in Java, and belonging to the genus Strychnos, specially designated by Leschenault as Strychnos Tieute. It is from the bark of the root, according to this author, that the poison is prepared. A decoction of the bark is concen- trated to the consistence of syrup, then mixed with onions, garlic, pepper, &c., and allowed to stand till it becomes clear. Leschenault, having dipped the point of an arrow in the poison and allowed it to dry, pricked a chicken with it, which died in a minute or two in violent convulsions. MM. Delille and Magendie found that the poison had not lost its strength in four years. (Hammond, Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1860, p. 366.) A gentleman of Ber- lin took 3 grains of the poison, apparently for the relief of headache. This disappeared, but a feeling of oppression of the stomach came on, with stiffness along the spine, in half an hour, succeeded by a feeling as of a violent shock through the system, spasmodic con- traction and rigidity of the muscles, loss of speech, difficulty of deglutition; in short, with all the symptoms of a poisonous dose of nux vomica. He recovered under the use of eme- tics followed by opiates. (Chemist and Druggist, May 15, 1863.) In fact the poison has upon analysis been found to contain strychnia, as might have been suspected from its origin. Dr. Wm. A. Hammond made some experiments with a poisonous substance brought by Dr. Iluschenberger from Singapore, which proved to have the combined effects of the two poisons above mentioned, both diminishing directly the power of the heart, and causing tetanic spasms of the muscles; suggesting the idea that it might be a mixture of the antiar and tieute; but Dr. Hammond seems, from other considerations, to have been led to the opinion that it had a different origin from either. (Am. Journ. of Med. Sci., Oct. 1860, p. 371.) W. URATE OF AMMONIA. Ammonise Uras. (NH4O,HO-|-N4C10H2O4.) This is an acid salt, and may be formed by digesting uric acid in solution of ammonia. Uric acid is generally obtained from the dried and powdered excrement of the boa serpent, and of other large snakes, by dissolving it in a weak solution of potassa with the aid of heat, and precipi- tating the uric acid from the filtered solution by muriatic acid, added in excess. Urate of ammonia is a white, amorphous, very sparingly soluble salt. It is a constituent of some varieties of guano; and the medicinal properties of that substance are attributed by some to its presence. This salt has been used with good effects by Dr. Bauer, of Germany, as an external application, in the form of ointment, in chronic cutaneous eruptions, and in tuber- culous diseases of the lungs. The ointment is made of a scruple of the salt to an ounce of lard, and is applied to the eruptions night and morning, and, in the pectoral disease, by fric- tion, night and morning, alternately to the back and front of the chest. [Medico-Chirurg. Review, July, 1852, p. 207, from Buchner's Repert.) The urates should be given with caution internally, for fear of producing oxalic acid in the urine. When uric acid was given to rabbits in the dose of from thirty to forty-five grains in their daily food, Dr. Neubauer found that, the urea in the urine was considerably increased, showing that the acid was trans- formed into urea in the economy. When, however, a large quantity of uric acid was given, the urine, in addition to an increased amount of urea, contained some uric acid, and traces of oxalic acid. [Ranking's Abstract, July to Dec. 1857, p. 298.) B. UREA. (C2II4N202.) This substance, the characteristic organic constituent of urine, was shown by Wohler to be identical with the hydrated cyanate of ammonia (NH3,NC20-f- HO), which furnishes the first example of a complex organic product artificially formed. When obtained from urine, the most convenient process is that proposed by Dr. Gregory, which jonsists in saturating concentrated urine with oxalic acid, dissolving in water the oxalate of urea formed, decolorizing the solution with animal charcoal, digesting it with carbon- ate of lime, separating the precipitated oxalate of lime by filtration, and concentrating the filtrate that crystals may form. For the mode of obtaining artificial urea, the reader is re- ferred to chemical treatises. Urea is in the form of four-sided prismatic crystals, colourless and free from odour when pure, somewhat resembling nitre in appearance, and having a similar saline, cooling taste. It is soluble in its weight of cold water, and in every proportion in hot water. Though without acid or alkaline reaction, it is capable of uniting with several acids, forming crys- tallizable compounds, having all the characters of salts. Its action on the inferior animals has recently been investigated by M. Gallois. Given to rabbits in the dose of five drachms, it acted as a poison, producing accelerated respiration, weakness of the limbs, tremblings, convulsions, tetanus, and death. Administered in the daily dose of 75 grains for three days, it passed unaltered into the urine, appearing in the secretion in 30 or 40 minutes. [Chem. Gaz., July 1, 1857.) Urea was proposed many years ago by the French physicians as a diuretic; and its use in this way has been revived by Dr. T. H. Tanner, of London. In the few cases in which Dr. Tanner tried the remedy, it acted as a powerful diuretic, without giving rise to any unpleasant symptom whatever. Prof. Mauthner, of Vienna, also bears testimony to its diuretic properties, having found it, in two cases occurring in children, promptly to re- move the anasarca following scarlet fever. The dose for an adult to begin with is tea PART III. Urtica Dioica.— Verbascum Thapsus. grains every six hours, dissolved in water, flavoured with syrup; the action of the medi- cine being aided by the free administration of diluents, and by keeping the skin moueraiely cool. (See Braxthwaite's Retrospect, xxv. 161.) ’ B. URTICA DIOICA. Common nettle. A well-known perennial herbaceous plant, growing both in Europe and the United States, by the roadsides, in hedges, and gardens. The leaves, seeds, and roots were formerly officinal. They were deemed diuretic and astrin- gent, and were employed in nephritic complaints, hemorrhages, consumption, jaundice, worms, &c. The young shoots are boiled and eaten by the common people as a remedy in scurvy; and the fresh plant is sometimes used to excite external irritation in cases of tor- por and local palsy, the part being beaten with it till the requisite degree of action is pro- duced. The irritant effect of the nettle, applied to the skin, is said to be owing to the presence of free formic acid in the sharp hairs. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., xxii. 181.) U. urens„ or dwarf nettle, which is an annual plant, and smaller than the former species, has*similar properties, and is used for the same purposes. This species also grows wild both in America and Europe. The two plants were formerly distinguished by the names of urtica major, applied to U. dioica, and of urtica minor to U. urens. Dr. U. B. Johnson, of Marion, Alabama, has found U. urens very efficacious in uterine hemorrhage. (A”. Orleans Med. ana Surg Journ., vi. 452.) W. VALERIANATE OF BISMUTH. Bismuthi Valerianae. This salt is formed by double de- composition between solutions of ternitrate of bismuth and valerianate of soda. Valerianate of bismuth precipitates as a white powder, which is washed with water, and dried with a gentle heat. It has been recommended by Righini in neuralgia, and in painful affections of the stomach. The dose is from half a grain to two grains, repeated several times a day, and given in the form of pill. B. VALERIANATE OF IRON. Ferri Valerianas. Dub. This officinal of the late Dublin Pharmacopoeia has not been retained in the British. The following was the Dublin pro- cess. “ Take of Valerianate of Soda five ounces and 164 grains [avoirdupois]; Sulphate of Iron four ounces [avoird.]; Distilled Water one pint [Imperial measure]. Let the Sulphate of Iron be converted into a persulphate, as directed in the formula for Ferri Peroxydum Hydratum, and, by the addition of distilled water, let the solution of the persulphate be augmented to the bulk of eight [fluid]ounces [Imp. meas.]. Dissolve the Valerianate of Soda in ten [fluid]ounces of the Water, then mix the two solutions cold, and, having placed the pre- cipitate which forms upon a filter, and washed it with the remainder of the Water, let it be dried by placing it for some days rolled up in bibulous paper on a porous brick. This pre- paration should be kept in a well-stopped bottle.” The first step in this process is to con- vert the sulphate of protoxide of iron into the tersulphate of sesquioxide. Then by a dou- ble decomposition between this salt and valerianate of soda, sulphate of soda is formed in solution, and tervalerianate of sesquioxide of iron is precipitated. The proper proportion of the reacting salts is three equivalents of valerianate of soda, and one of tersulphate of sesquioxide of iron; and the resulting salts are three eqs. of sulphate of soda, and one of tervalerianate of sesquioxide of iron. Properties, Sjc. This salt is in the form of a dark tile-red, loose, amorphous powder, hav- ing a faint odour and taste of valerianic acid. It is insoluble in cold water, and decomposed by boiling water, which extracts all its acid, and leaves the sesquioxide of iron behind. It is soluble in alcohol. Citrate and tartrate of iron, impregnated with oil of valerian, have been fraudulently sold for valerianate of iron. The genuine salt may be distinguished from these substitutions by being insoluble in water and soluble in alcohol, and by the action of a little dilute muriatic acid, which sets free the valerianic acid, readily recognised by its disagreeable odour, which is quite distinct from that of the oil of valerian. In relation to the modes of distinguishing the true from the spurious valerianates, see Pharm. Journ. (viii. 577) Valerianate of iron has been given in hysterical affections, complicated with chlorosis. The dose is about a grain, repeated several times a day. B. VENETIAN RED. Bolus Veneta. A dull red ochrey substance used in painting. VERBASCUM THAPSUS. Mullein. This is a biennial plant, with an erect, round, rigid, hairy stem, which rises from three to six feet in height, and is irregularly beset with large, sessile, oblong or oval, somewhat pointed leaves, indented at the margin, woolly on both sides, and decurrent at the base. The flowers are yellow, and disposed in a long, close, cylindrical, terminal spike. The mullein is common throughout the United States, growing along the roadsides and in neglected fields, and springing up abundantly in newly cleared places, at the most remote distance from cultivation. It is, however, generally considered as a naturalized plant, introduced originally from Europe, where it is also abundant. It flowers from June to August. The leaves and flowers have been employed. Both have a slight, somewhat narcotic smell, which in the dried flowers becomes agreeable. Their taste is mucilaginous, herbaceous, and bitterish, but very feeble. They impart their virtues to water by infusion. Mullein leaves are demulcent and emollient, and are thought to pos- sess anodyne properties, which render them useful in pectoral complaints. On the Conti- Verbena Officinalis. — Viscum Album. PART nr. nent of Lftro] e, an infusion of the flowers, strained in order to separate the rough hairs, is considerably used in mild catarrhs. Dr. Home found a decoction of the leaves useful in diarrhoea. The infusion or decoction may be prepared in the proportion of an ounce of the leaves to a pint of water, and given in the quantity of four fluidounces. Dr. N. R. New- kirk, of Bridgeton, N. J., informed the author that he had found the smoking of dried mul- lein leaves useful in aphonia from irritation of the larynx. The leaves are also employed externally, steeped in hot water, as a feebly anodyne emollient. An ointment is prepared from them in the recent state, and used for the same purposes. It may be made in the same manner as ointment of stramonium, by boiling the leaves in lard. It will be found advantageous to moisten them with water previously to the boiling. W. VERBENA OFFICINALIS. Vervain. This is a common European weed, growing on the roadsides, in the vicinity of towns and villages. Its- sensible properties do not indicate the possession of medical virtues; as it is nearly inodorous, and has only a slightly astringent, bitterish taste. By the ancients it was highly esteemed both as a medicine, and as a sacred plant employed in certain religious rites. In modern times, superstitious notions in rela- tion to its virtues are still entertained; and the suspension of the root around the neck by a white riband, has been gravely recommended for the cure of scrofula. The leaves, bruised and made into a cataplasm, are used by the vulgar as a remedy in severe headache, and other local pains. The plant, however, is probably inert. An American species, V. hastata, is more bitter than the European, and is said to be emetic. It is not, however, used in regular practice. Schoepf states that the root of V. urticifolia, another indigenous species, has been advantageously used in poisoning from the RhusTloxicodendron. It is prepared by boiling it in milk and water along with the inner bark of the white oak. W. VERDITER. Two preparations of copper, employed as pigments, are known by this name in commerce, and are distinguished by the epithets of blue and green. Blue verdlter is pre- pared in London from the solution of nitrate of copper obtained in precipitating^silver by copper. According to Gray, this solution is poured hot upon whiting (carbonate of lime), and the mixture stirred every day till the liquor loses its colour, when it is decanted, and fresh portions added till the proper colour is obtained. By a process for procuring this pig- ment, invented by Pelletier, the solution of nitrate of copper is decomposed by quicklime, and the precipitate, after being washed, is incorporated intimately with another portion of quicklime. By the former process, a carbonate of copper is obtained; by the latter, a mix- ture of the hydrated oxide of copper and hydrate of lime. Green verditer is prepared by pre- cipitating a solution of nitrate of copper by chalk or a white marl, and consists of carbonate of copper mixed with an excess of the calcareous carbonate. W. VERONICA OFFICINALIS. Speedwell. Several species of Veronica, common to Europe and this country, have been medicinally employed. Of these V. officinalis, and V. Becca- bunga or brooklime, are the most conspicuous. V. officinalis has a bitterish, warm, and some- what astringent taste. Examined by Enz, it was found to contain, in the fresh juice and an extract from the herb, a bitter principle soluble in water and alcohol, but scarcely so in ether, and precipitated by the salts of lead but not by tannic acid; an acrid principle; red colouring matter; a variety of tannic acid producing a green colour with the salts of iron; a crystallizable fatty acid, with malic, tartaric, citric, acetic, and lactic acids; a soft, dark-green bitter resin; and mannite. Prof. Mayer, of N. York, in an examination of the herb, found evidences of the existence of an alkaloid, and a small quantity of a saponaceous principle. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1863, p. 2U9.) The plant has been considered diapho- retic, diuretic, expectorant, tonic, &c.; and was formerly employed in pectoral and nephritic complaints, hemorrhages, and diseases of the skin, and in the treatment of wounds. The beccabunga, which is very succulent, was used in the fresh state with the view of purifying the blood, and as a remedy in scurvy. Both plants, however, are at present out of use. W. VISCUM ALBUM. Mistletoe. A European evergreen parasitic shrub, growing on various trees, particularly the apple and other fruit trees, and forming a pendent bush from two to five feet in diameter. The plant is famous in the history of druidical superstition. In the religious rites of the Druids, the mistletoe of the oak was employed, and hence was after- wards preferred when the plant came to be used as a remedy; but it is in fact identical in all respects with those which grow upon other trees. The fresh bark and leaves have a pe- culiar disagreeable odour, and a nauseous, sweetish, slightly acrid and bitterish taste. The berries, which are white, and of about the size of a pea, abound in a peculiar viscid princi- ple, and are sometimes used in the preparation of bird-lime, of which this principle is the basis. Mistletoe is said to be capable of vomiting and purging when largely taken. A case has been recorded by M. Gampert, in France, in which a child three years old was poi- soned by eating the berries. Vomiting and prostration were produced, and on the arrival of the physician the patient was found insensible, with a fixed and somewhat contracted pupil, coldness of the skin, and convulsive movements of the extremities. An emetic brought away a considerable quantity of the berries, and the child recovered. (Ann. de Thdrap., 1859, p. 36.) The plant was formerly looked upon as powerfully antispasmodic, and was high1/ PART III. Whiting. — Winter's Baric. esteemed as a remedy in epilepsy, palsy, and other nervous diseases; hut it is now out of use. The leaves and wood were given in the dose of a drachm in substance, and of an oune# in decoction. One or more species of Viscum grow in the United States, but are little used. Dr. Henry Dye, of Texas, records several cases of children poisoned by eating the berries oi a species growing on the elm, probably Viscum jiavescens of Pursh, Phoradendron Jlavescent of Nuttall. (See Cray's Manual, p. 882.) The prominent symptoms were vomiting and great thirst, followed by frequent discharges of bloody mucus from the bowels, with tenesmus. One of the children was found in a collapsed state, in which death took place. Dr. Dye Btates also that, in other instances, as he had been informed, children had eaten the berries without any ill effect. (Memphis Med. Ricorder, iv. 344.) W. WHITING. This is essentially the same as prepared chalk, being made by the pulveriza- tion and elutriation of crude chalk. It is used as a coarse paint, and for various purposes in the arts, for which carbonate of lime is requisite. Paris white is a variety of the same material. ' W. WINE, AROMATIC. Aromatic Wine. The following formula for an aromatic wine, handed to us by Prof. Procter, merits notice, if only for its extensive use. “Take of Sage, Thyme, Hyssop, Spearmint, Wormwood, Origanum, each, in coarse powder, half a troy ounce; Alcohol afluidounce; Claret Wine two pints. Mix the Alcohol and Wine, and, having moistened the powders with a portion of the mixture, pack the mass in a percolator, and pour upon it the remainder of the menstruum. When the liquid has disappeared, add Alcohol diluted with three times its bulk of water, until a pint of filtered liquid has passed.” The alcohol is added to the claret wine to give it greater stability. Though not officinal, we are informed that this wine, the formula for which was introduced from France, is much employed in this neigh- bourhood, and to some extent elsewhere in the U. States. It no doubt possesses strong tonic and aromatic properties, and may be used in cases of enfeebled digestion, especially when accompanied with gastric pains and flatulence; but its chief .employment is externally by way of fomentation, and as a stimulant to feeble and unhealthy ulcers. It possesses the advantage over the aromatic and tonic tinctures that it is less stimulating. The dose may be from one to four fluidrachms. W. WINTER’S BARK. AYintera. U. S. 1850. The Bark of Drimys Winteri. The following is introduced from Part I., because the medicine is no longer recognised in the U. S. Pharma- copoeia. The genus Drimys belongs to Polyandria Tetragynia in the Linnasan system, and to the natural order Magnoliaceas (Juss.), Winteraceae (Bindley). The following is the generic character. “Calyx with two or three deep divisions. Corolla wTith two or three petals, some- times more numerous. Stamens with the filaments thickened at the summit, and anthers having two separate cells. Ovaries from four to eight, changing into the same number of small, many-seeded berries.” (A. Richard.) This plant, which is figured in Carson's Illustra- tions of Medical Botany (i. 11, pi. 5), is an evergreen tree, varying very much in size, some- times rising forty or fifty feet in height, sometimes not more than six or eight feet. The bark of the trunk is gray, that of the branches green and smooth. Its leaves are alternate, petiolate, oblong, obtuse, somewhat coriaceous, entirely smooth, green on their upper sur- face, of a pale bluish colour beneath, -with two caducous stipules at their base. The flowers are small, sometimes solitary, but more frequently in clusters of three or four, upon the summit of a common peduncle about an inch in length, simple, or divided into as many pedicels as there are flowers. The tree is a native of the southern parts of South America, growing along the Straits of Magellan, and extending as far north as Chili. According to Martius, it is found also in Brazil. The bark of the tree was brought to England, in the latter part of the sixteenth century, by Captain Winter, who attended Drake in his voyage round the world, and while in the Straits had learned its aromatic and medicinal properties. Since that period, a bark has been occasionally employed in medicine under the name of AVinter’s bark; but it is now believed not to have been derived from Drimys AVinteri; as it does not correspond with the specimens of the bark derived from that tree, still preserved in the cabinets of Europe. The origin of the commercial Winter’s bark is unknown. The fol- lowing is the description of a specimen which came into our possession many years since. It corresponds closely with Guibourt’s description of commercial Winter’s bark. It is in quilled pieces, usually a foot in length, and an inch or more in diameter, appearing as if scraped or rubbed on the outside, where the colour is pale-yellowish or reddish-gray, with red el- liptical spots. On the inside the colour is that of cinnamon, though sometimes blackish. The pieces are sometimes flat and very large. The bark is two or three lines in thickness, haid and compact, and when broken exhibits on the exterior part of the fracture a grayish colour, which insensibly passes into reddish or yellowish towards the interior. The powder resembles in colour that of Peruvian bark. The odour is aromatic, the taste spicy, pungent, and even burning. AVinter’s bark was found by M. Henry to contain resin, volatile oil, colouring matter, tannic acid, several salts of potassa, malate of lime, and oxidized iron. The presence of tannic acid and oxide of iron serves to distinguish it from canella alba, with which it has often been confounded. The bark above described as commercial AVin- Woorari. PART III. ter’s badestitute both of tannic acid and oxide of iron, and cannot, therefore, be the bark exanined by M. Henry.* Medical Properties and Uses. Winter’s bark is a stimulant aromatic tonic, and was em- ployed by Winter as a remedy for scurvy. It may be used for similar purposes with cin- namon or canella alba, but is scarcely known in the medical practice of this country. The dose of the powder is about half a drachm. Another species, the Drimys Chilensis of De Can- dolle, growing in Chili, yields a bark having similar properties. (Carson, Am. Journ. of Pharm., xix. 81.) W. WOORARI. Woorara. Woorali. Urari. Curare. This is a powerful poison, prepared by the aborigines in the interior of British Guiana, and used for arming the points of their weapons. Various opinions have been advanced in relation to its source and preparation; but the most probable account is that of Dr. Hancock, who states, from information derived from the natives, that it is a watery extract from the bark of a gourd-like plant. It has been stated that the plant producing it is a Strychnos, and Sir R. II. Schomburgk, who claims to have seen the plant, proposes to name it Strychnos toxifera. But the facts, that the poison acts in a mode directly opposite to that of strychnia in destroying life, and that chemists have been unable to detect that alkaloid in it, are, we think, sufficient proof that Schom- burgk must have been mistaken on this point. (See Pharm. Journ., xvi. 502.) It has also been conjectured that the poison from the fangs of serpents is mingled with, if it does not constitute the active ingredient of the woorari. But this is contradicted by those who have had the best opportunities of ascertaining its mode of preparation; and is also opposed by the fact, that, unlike the venom of snakes, this poison does not occasion local inflammation when inserted into a wound, but appears to act exclusively on the nervous system, through the medium of the blood. In order that it may act, it must find entrance into the circulation; and hence, when swallowed, it does not in general prove poisonous, either because it cannot penetrate the mucous membrane, or because it is altered in the stomach. It would not, how- ever, be altogether safe to rely on its innoxiousness when swallowed; for, in an empty con- dition of the stomach, and taken in large doses, it has b en found by Dr. John W. Green and others to cause death iD some animals. [Am. Med. Gaz., vi. 299.) It appears also, from the experiments of MM. Pelouze and Bernard, to be absorbed as quickly from the air-passages as when inserted into the cellular tissue, and. when thrown into the rectum, produces its peculiar effects, though very slowly. [Journ. de Pharm., Aout, 1856, p. 150.) When the poison is inserted in a wound, the animal speedily falls into stupor, and dies in a few minutes, the heart continuing to act for some time after respiration has ceased. If artificial respiration is resorted to before the heart has ceased to act, and is sustained, the animal recovers. From numerous experiments, performed by different persons, there is reason to believe that woorari acts by paralyzing the nervous centres of respiration and motion, without producing essentially any discoverable alteration in the blood or solid tissues. Its action is, therefore, directly opposite to that of strychnia; and it is said to serve as an antidote to that poison by producing relaxation of the contracted muscles. Its peculiar mode of action has even suggested its remedial use in tetanus. A horse suffering under tetanus was inoculated by Mr. Sewell with woorai’i. In ten minutes apparent death was produced, when the animal was revived by artificial respiration; and the symptoms of tetanus did not return, though death occurred next day, as was supposed, from over- eating. [Pharm. Journ., xvi. 506.) In several cases of tetanus in which it was tried by M. L. Vella, in an hospital at Turin, it appeared to afford relief in all, and in one instance recovery took place. [Arch. Gen., Oct. 1850, p. 1.) But as we have other medicines at least equally effectual, and of which the precise strength is better known, it would not be ad- visable to trust a case to this remedy. It is said that chlorine and bromine neutralize en- tirely the effects of the poison [Ibid., p. 504); and, from the experiments of Drs. Brainard and Green, there can be little doubt that iodine has the same effect. It was ascertained by them that woorari, mixed with solution of iodine and iodide of potassium, had no effect when introduced into a wound; and that, if introduced alone, its effects were quite neu- tralized by subsequent injection of the solution; a cupping-glass being applied so as to prevent the absorption of the poison before the iodine could be brought into contact writh *M. Gnibourt, in the third edition of his “Drogues Simples,” published in 1850, gives the following description of a specimen of the true Winter’s bark, presented to him by Robert Brown, and labelled “ Port Famine, Captain 1‘. King, Drimys Winteri.” The bark is 3 millimetres (1-18 of an inch) thick, and covered with a grayish-white, very thin, and rather smooth epidermis. It is of a deep reddish-brown colour internally, and has a spongy ap- pearance, especially in the part in contact with the wood, where it appears to be formed of longitudinal, radiating, ligneous layers, isolated one from the other. It has a strong odour, somewhat analogous to that of canella and slightly camphorous, and a taste in. like manner very aromatic, with considerable acrimony. Another specimen brought from the Straits of Magellan, in 1840, bears a close resemblance to the above, being in quills as large as the little finger, with a thickness of 2 millimetres, and an epidermis thin, smooth, and of a whiteness strongly contrasting with the reddish brown colour of the interior. Beneath the epidermis there is a certain number of very cr .tipaet con- centric layers: but most of the thickness of the bark is formed of radiating and distinct ligneous layers, nl'vgetl.f r like those of the preceding specimen. Guibonrt also describes the barks of two other species of Drimys, those of I>. Mexicana and D. Granatmsis, growing respectively in Mexico and New Granada, both of wlii-h liavr considerable resemblance to the preceding.—(Tom. iii. pp. C81, 682.) PART III. Wrightia Antidysenterica.—Zea Mays. it. [Am. Med. Gaz., vii. 305.) Attempts have -been made to isolate the poisonous principle of woorari, but without satisfactory results. Dr. Heintz succeeded in obtaining the poison in an exceedingly concentrated form, but does not appear to have separated the pure active principle. [Ibid., vii. 6.) Since the publication of the eleventh edition of the Dispensatory, elaborate and highly interesting experiments have been made by Drs. ffm. A. Hammond and S. Weir Mitchell on the woorari poison, of which we give a brief abstract, referring for a full account of them to a communication by those gentlemen to the American Journal of the Medical Sci- ences (July, 1859, p. 13). The specimens operated on were of two kinds, named respect- ively corroval and vao, and were brought by Drs. Ruschenberger and Caldwell, of the U. S. Navjq from New Granada, S. America. 1. Woorari, variety Corroval. This was in dark- brown lumps,.having the appearance of a vegetable extract, and of an intensely bitter and persistent taste. Under the microscope it presented the appearance of vegetable remains, but nothing animal. It yielded its active properties to water and alcohol, and was found to contain a peculiar alkaloid, which they propose to call corrovalia, and which they ascer- tained to produce on the system the same effects as corroval itself. These were to some extent similar to those obtained from woorari by preceding experimenters, yet with so much difference as to lead to the conclusion, that the poison was derived from a different source. In a few minutes after the introduction of the poison through a wound, paralytic phenomena became obvious, and the animal soon died, without preliminary spasm or con- vulsions. But the heart, instead of continuing to act after apparent death, had entirely ceased to beat, and had quite lost its irritability, so that it could not be excited by galva- nism. They inferred that the action of the poison is directly and primarily on the heart, possibly through the ganglia contained in its tissue. The capillary circulation was always arrested a minute or two before the heart’s actions, which the authors ascribe to paralysis of the sympathetic. There was no evidence whatever, whether chemical or physiological, of the presence of strychnia in the poison. 2. Woorari, variety Vao or Bao. This, like the preceding, had the characters of a vegetable extract, with a large proportion of vegetable but none of animal remains. It contained the same alkaloid as the corroval, but in smaller proportion; and its effects on the system, though much feebler than those of the other va riety, were of the same general character. They inferred from their observations that it was the same poison, but in a diluted state. W. WRIGHTIA ANTIDYSENTERICA. (R. Brown.) Nerium antidysentericum. (Linn.) An East India tree, belonging to the Apocynaceas, the bark of which was, about a century since, in some repute in Europe as a remedy in dysentery, diarrhoea, and febrile diseases. Though no longer used in Europe, it still retains its reputation in India among the native practitioners. Dr. Stenhouse has recently examined the seeds of this plant, and obtained from them, besides a fixed oil which they contain in large quantity, a peculiar principle called by him wriyhtine, which though uncrystallizable, and forming uncrystallizable com- pounds with the acids, has claims to be ranked with the alkaloids. Both wrightine and its salts have an extremely persistent bitterness. For further particulars in reference to it, the reader is referred to the Pharmaceutical Journal (April, 1864, p. 493). W. XANTHORRHCEA RESINS. Two resinous substances, the products of different species of Xanthorrhoea,'Kave been introduced into England from New Holland. They are obtained by spontaneous exudation from the stems of the plants, which are usually shrubs. One of the resins is yellow and the other red. The yellow variety is in tears, in flattish pieces having on one side the mark of the stem, or in masses of various size and irregular shape, xt has a reddish-yellow colour, resembling gamboge when broken, and when heated emits a fragrant odour like that of Tolu balsam. It contains resin, cinnamic and benzoic acids, and a trace of volatile oil, and may therefore be ranked among the balsams. When heated with nitric acid, it yields a large product of carbazotic acid. In medical properties it is said to bear a close resemblance to storax and the balsam of Tolu. A tincture, made in the proportion of two ounces to a pint of alcohol, may be given in the dose of one or two fluidrachms. The red variety resembles dragon’s blood in colour, and appears to be ana- logous to the other variety in properties. The above account has been abridged from that of Dr. Pereira in the third edition of his Materia Medica. W. ZEA MAYS. Indian Corn. Maize. The common Indian corn of this country, analyzed by Mr. Archibald Poison, of Paisley, Scotland, yielded as the average result from three varieties, 12-16 per cent, of water, 1-67 of ashes, 8-83 of gluten, 54-37 of starch, 15-77 of husk and vegetable fibre, 4-50 of fat, and 2-70 of gum and sugar. (Chem. Gaz., June 1, 1855, p. 211.) The late Dr. Gorham, of Boston, found 1-50 per cent, of sulphate and phos- phate of lime. The meal, in the form of mush, makes an excellent emollient poultice, much used in hospitals; and a gruel, may be prepared from it, which is sometimes more grateful to the sick than that made from oatmeal. A fungous product sometimes attends the growth of Indian corn, cummonly known as the smut, which was submitted to exami- nation by Mr G. II Oressler. and found to contain the alkaloid discovered by Winckler in Zedoary.—Zizyphus Vulgaris. PART III. ergot, and named by him secalin, now considered as a mere synonyme of propylamia. Be- sides the alkaloid, there were obtained a thick, viscid, fixed oil, a resin soluble in ether out not in alcohol, pectin, gluten, and a species of sugar. The morbid product may, there- lore, be considered as the ergot of maize. (Am. Journ. of Pharm., July, 1861, p. 306.) The fungus has received the title of Ustilaao maidis. It is said to produce abortion in cows, when the diseased grain is eaten by them; and six drachms of this ergot produced the same effect on two pregnant bitches to which it was given to test its abortefacient property. (Ibid., Sept. 1861, p. 413; from Annal. Med. Vet. Beige.) W. ZEDOARY. Radix Zedoarix. There are two ki*ds of zedoary, the long and the round, distinguished by the old officinal titles of radix zedoarix longx, and radix zedoarix rotundx; the former produced by the Curcuma Zedgaria of Roxburgh, the latter, as some suppose, by the Kxmpferia rotunda of Linn., but, according to others, by the Curcuma Zerumbet of Roxburgh. Both kinds come from the East Indies. The long zedoary is in slices, from an inch and a half to three inches in length, and from half an inch to an inch thick, obtuse at the extremities, and exhibiting the remains of the radical fibres. The round is also lsually in slices, which are the sections of a roundish root, ending in a point beneath, and livided longitudinally into two parts, each of which is flat on one side, convex on the other, and heart-shaped in its outline. Sometimes the root of the latter variety is entire, and sometimes in quarters instead of halves. It is marked with circular rings on the con- vex surface, and, like the former, with small projecting points which are the remains of radical fibres. Both are grayish-white on the outside, yellowish-brown within, hard, com- pact, of an agreeable aromatic odour, and a bitterish, pungent, camphorous taste. The round, however, is less spicy than the long. They yield a volatile oil when distilled with water. Zedoary is a warm, stimulating aromatic, useful in flatulent colic and debility of the digestive organs. It is not now employed, as it produces no effects which cannot be as well or better obtained from ginger. The dose is from ten grains to half a drachm. W. ZERUMBET. Cassumuniar. Under these names an East India root was formerly used, having some analogy in sensible and medical properties to ginger, and ascribed to the Zingiber Zerumbet of- Roscoe. Some consider the cassumuniar as a distinct root, and refer it to the Zingiber Cassumuniar of Roxburgh. The difference of opinion is of little importance, as neither of the roots, supposing them not to be the same, is at present to be found in the markets. By some authors the zerumbet has been erroneously confounded with the round zedoary. Geiger describes it as in pieces of the size of a fig or larger, externally grayish- brown and wrinkled,.internally yellowish, hard and tough, of a biting aromatic taste, and a spicy odour. IV. ZIZYPIIUS VULGARIS. Lamarck. Rhamnus Zizyphus. Linn. A shrub, or small tree, growing on the shores of the Mediterranean, and cultivated in Italy, Spain, and the south of France. The fruit is the part used. This consists of oval drupes, of the size of a large olive, with a thin, coriaceous, red or reddish-brown skin, a yellowish, sweet, acidulous pulp, and an oblong, pointed stone in the centre. These have the officinal name of jufubx. By drying, their pulp becomes softer and sweeter, and acquires a vinous taste, evincing the commencement of fermentation. They are nutritive and demulcent, and are used in the form of decoction in pectoral complaints. Jujube paste consists, properly, of gum arabio and sugar, dissolved in a decoction of this fruit, and evaporated to the proper consistence. As a demulcent, it is in no respect superior to a paste made with gum arabic and sugar alone; and the preparation commonly sold in this country under the name, contains in fact none of the fruit. The fruits of two other species of Zizyphus, Z. Lotus, growing in the north of Africa, and Z. Jujuba, a native of the East Indies, possess properties similar to those of the first- mentioned species, and are used as food by the inhabitants of the countries where they grow. W. APPENDIX. I. ART OF PRESCRIBING MEDICINES. The physician should be acquainted not only with the properties of medicines and the diseases to which they are respectively applicable, but also with the ari of prescribing them, so that they may be adapted to the peculiarities of individuaj patients, and, by the mode in which they are administered, may produce the greatest curative effect with the least possible inconvenience. In relation to these points, a few general rules will be useful for the guidance of the young prac- titioner, although much must be left to his own judgment and discretion. We shall compress the remarks which we have to offer, under the two heads of the quantity or dose in which medicines may be given, and the mode of their exhibition. 1. Dose of Medicines.—In the body of the work, the quantity has been stated in which each medicine must ordinarily be given to produce its peculiar effects in the adult patient. But there are various circumstances which modify the dose, and demand attention on the part of the practitioner. The age of the patient is the most important of these circumstances. The young require a smaller dose than those of maturity, to produce an equal effect; and the old, though their systems are, perhaps, less susceptible to the action of medicines than those of the middle-aged, cannot bear an equally forcible impres- sion. The following table of Gaubius, exhibiting the doses proportioned to the age, is frequently referred to. The dose for a person of middle age being 1 or 1 drachm, That of a person from 14 to 21 years will be | or 2 scruples, 7 to 14 " “ \ or 4 a drachm, 4 to 7 “ l or 1 scruple, of 4 years “ \ or 15 grains, 3 “ “ | or 10 grains, 2 “ “ |or 8 grains, 1 year “ T\j or 5 grains. We prefer the following simple scheme of Dr. Young, extracted from Paris’s Pharmacologia. “For children under twelve years, the doses of most medicines must be di- minished in the proportion of the age to the age increased by twelve; thus, at two 2 years to 4; viz.,-—— “4* twenty-one the full dose may be given.” Ji -J-" 1 2t To the above rule some exceptions are offered in particular medicines, which require to be given to children in much larger propoi’tional doses than those above stated. Such are castor oil and calomel, a certain quantity of which will in general not produce a greater effect in a child two or three years old than double the quantity in an adult. Sex, temperament, and idiosyncrasy have also an influence upon the dose, and should be kept in view in prescribing. Females usually require somewhat smaller doses than males, and persons of sanguine temperament than the phlegmatic. Constitutional peculiarities, called idiosyncrasies, often exist in individuals, ren- dering them more than usually susceptible or insusceptible to the action of cer- 1626 Appendix. tain remedies, the dose of which must be modified accordingly. Thus, in some persons a grain or two of calomel will excite salivation, while in others scarcely any quantity which can be safely administered will produce this effect. Some- times, moreover, a medicine operates on an individual in a manner wholly differ- ent from its ordinary mode. In all such cases experience is the only sure guide; but the occasional existence of these peculiarities indicates the propriety of making particular inquiries in relation to the idiosyncrasies of those patients, for whom we may be called for the first time to prescribe. Habit is another important circumstance which modifies the dose of medicines. Generally speaking, the susceptibility to the action of medicines is diminished by their frequent and continued use; and, in order to maintain a given impres- sion, the quantity must be regularly increased. This is especially true in regard to the narcotics, which are sometimes borne in enormous doses by those habit- uated to their use. It is a good practical rule in prescribing, when circumstances demand the continuance, for a considerable length of time, of some particular effect, to vary the medicine, and employ successively several with the same gen- eral powers, so as not too rapidly to exhaust the susceptibility to the action of any individual remedy. Another important practical rule connected with the in- fluence of habit is, when any medicine, which from its nature is of variable strength, has been employed for some time in increasing doses, to reduce the dose upon resorting to a new parcel, until its relative strength has been ascer- tained. A neglect of this precaution, in cases where the last parcel happened to be more powerful than that previously employed, has sometimes been followed by very serious consequences. 2. Mode of Administering Medicines.—This has reference both to the com- bination of medicines with one another, and the form in which they are exhibited. Simplicity in prescription is always desirable, when no object is to be gained by deviating from it. Remedies should never be mixed together without a defi- nite purpose, nor with the vague hope that, out of the number prescribed, some one may perchance produce a salutary impression. Those exceedingly complex prescriptions, formerly so much in vogue, of which the ingredients were so numerous as to render altogether impossible a reasonable estimate of their bear- ing on each other, or their effects on disease, have been generally abandoned by modern practitioners. The only ground upon which any of them can be justifiably retained is that, by very frequent trials, through a long course of years, and in various states of disease, their influence on the system may have been fully ascer- tained, so that they may be considered rather in the light of a single remedy than a compound of many. Upon this ground, however, no prudent physician would attempt to originate such combinations. In mixing medicines, we ought to pro- ceed no further than we may be justified in doing by a clear knowledge of thn properties and mutual relations of the several ingredients, and their fitness to answer some particular indication in the treatment of disease. There are certain principles upon which medicines may be advantageously combined, and which it may not be amiss to mention for the benefit of the young practitioner. Remedies of the same general character may be given in connection, in order to increase their energy, or to render their action more certain. It has been well ascertained that substances thus combined will often act vigorously, when, sever- ally, they would produce comparatively little effect; and it sometimes happens that, while their activity is augmented, they are at the same time rendered less irritating, as in the case of the drastic cathartics. (See Pilulse Cathartices Com- posite. ) Different medicines are very often mixed together, in order to meet different and coexisting indications, without any reference to the influence which they may reciprocally exert on each other. Thus, in the same patient we not uufre- quently meet with debility of stomach and constipation of the bowels, connected Appendix. with derangement of the hepatic function. To answer the indications presented by these morbid conditions, we may properly combine, in the same dose, a tonic, cathartic, and mercurial alterative. For similar reasons we often unite tonics, purgatives, and emmenagogues, anodynes and diaphoretics, emetics and cathar- tics, antacids, astringents, and tonics; and scarcely two medicines can be men tioned, not absolutely incompatible with each other, which may not occasionally be combined with advantage to counteract coexisting morbid conditions. Another very important object of combination, is the modification which is thereby effected in the actions of medicines differing from each other in proper- ties. In this way new powers are sometimes developed, and those previously existing are greatly increased. Examples of such a result are afforded in the officinal powder of ipecacuanha and opium, and in the combination of squill and calomel; the former operating as a diaphoretic, the latter as a diuretic, beyond the capabilities of either of their constituents. The effects of one medicine are, in numerous instances, increased by the influence of another in augmenting the natural susceptibility of the system to its action. Thus, bitters enable cathartics to operate, in smaller doses; purgatives awaken the dormaut susceptibility to the action of mercury; and stimulants excite the torpid stomach, so that it will receive impressions from various medicines before inoperative. In some instances, the action of one medicine is promoted by that of another apparently of a nature wholly opposite. Thus, when calomel and opium are given in colic, the purga- tive operation of the former is facilitated by the relaxation of intestinal spasm produced by the latter. Medicines, in addition to the effects for which they are administered, very frequently produce disagreeable symptoms, which may be moderated or altogether prevented by combination with other medicines; and this object may usually be accomplished, without in the least degree interfering with the remediate influence desired. Thus, the griping produced by cathartics, and the nausea by these and various other medicines, may often be corrected by the simultaneous use of aromatics. To cover the disagreeable taste or odour of certain medicines, and to afford a convenient vehicle for their administration, are also important objects of combination; as upon these circumstances often depend the acceptability of the medicine to the stomach, and even the possibility of inducing the patient to swallow it. Substances should be preferred as vehi- cles which are calculated to render the medicine acceptable to the palate and stomach, and in other ways to correct its disagreeable effects; as syrups for powders, the aromatic waters for medicines given in the form of mixture, and carbonic acid water for the neutral salts. But, in the mixing of medicines-, care should be taken that they are neither chemically nor physiologically incompatible; in other words, that they are not such as will react on each other so as to produce new and unexpected combi- nations, nor such as will exert contrary and opposite effects upon the system. Thus, when the operation of an acid is desired, an alkali should not be given at the same time, as they unite to form a third substance entirely different from either; nor should a soluble salt of lime, baryta, or lead be given with sulphu- ric acid or a soluble sulphate, as decomposition would ensue, with the produc- tion of an inert compound. So, also, in relation to physiological incompatibility, diaphoretics and diuretics should not, as a general rule, be united with a view to their respective effects; as these are to a certain extent incompatible, one being diminished by whatever has a tendency to increase the other. There are cases, however, in which we may advantageously combine medicines with a view co cneii chemical reaction, as in the instance of the effervescing draught; and circumstances sometimes call for the union of remedies apparently opposite, as in the case of colic before alluded to, in which opium may be advantageously combined with purgatives. Still, such combinations should never be formed, unless with a full understanding of their effects, and a special reference to them. 1628 Appendix. Thq form in which medicines are exhibited is often an object of consider- able importance. By variation in this respect, according to the nature of the medicine, the taste of the patient, or the condition of the stomach, we are fre quently enabled to secure the favourable operation of remedies, which, without such attention, might prove useless or injurious. Medicines may be given in the solid state, as in the form of powder, pill, troche, or electuary; in the state of mixture, in which a solid is suspended in a liquid, or one liquid is mechani- cally mixed with another in which it is insoluble; or in the state of solution, under which may be included the various forms of infusion, decoction, tincture, wine, vinegar, syrup, honey, and oxymel. Of these different forms we have already treated sufficiently at large, under their respective heads, in the second part of this work. In writing extemporaneous prescriptions, neatness, order, and precision should always be observed; as, independently of the pleasing moral effect inseparable from these principles in all things, a positive practical advantage results, in the greater accuracy which the habit of attending to them gives to the prescriber, and the comparative certainty which they afford that his directions will be strictly complied with. As a general rule, when medicines are combined in prescription, that should come first in order which is considered as the most prominent and important, next the adjuvant or corrigent, and lastly the vehicle. Sometimes, however, it is important to indicate to the apothecary the succession in which the substances should be combined, in reference to the perfection of the mix- ture; and this may render convenient a deviation from the order above men- tioned. The physician should always be careful either to write out the full name of the medicine, or to employ such abbreviations as are not likely, by the mis- understanding of an ill-formed letter, to lead into error. Yery serious and even fatal mistakes have been occasioned by a neglect of this precaution. The for- mulas of the several Pharmacopoeias which are detailed in this work, will serve as good examples for the guidance of the young practitioner. The following table explains the signs and abbreviations habitually used in prescriptions. The for- mulas afterwards given will serve to illustrate the ordinary mode of prescribing, while they exhibit combinations of medicines frequently employed in practice. W. Table of Signs and Abbreviations. R Recipe. Take. Collyr. Collyrium. An eye-water. a a Ana. Of each. Cong. Congius vel A gallon or gal lb Libra vel libras. A pound or congii. Ions. pounds. Decoct. Decoctum. A decoction. l Uncia vel unciae. An ounce or Ft. Fiat. Make. ounces. Garg. Gargarysma. A gargle. 3 Drachma vel A drachm or Gr. Granum vel A grain or drachmae. drachms. grana. grains. 9 Scrupulus vel A scruple or Gtt. Gutta vel guttae. A drop or droj s scrupuli. scruples. Haust. Haustus. A draught. 0 Octarius vel oc- A pint or pints. Infus. Infusum. An infusion. tarii. M. Misce. Mix. tg Fluiduncia vel A fluidounce or Mass. Massa. A mass. fluidunciae. fluidounces. Mist, Mistura. A mixture. Fluidrachma vel A fiuidrachm or Pil. Pilula vel A pill or pills fluidrachmae. fluidrachms. pilulae. "l Minimum vel A minim or Pulv. Pulvis vel pul- A powder or minima. minims. veres. powders. Chart. Chartula vel A small paper Q. S. Quantum suffi- A sufficient chartulae. or papers. cit. quantity. Coch. Cochlear vel A spoonful or S. Signa. Write. cochlearia. spoonfuls. Ss. Semis. * A half. Appendix. 1629 Examples of Common Extemporaneous Prescriptions. Powders. R Antimonii et Potassae Tartratis gr. i. Pulveris Ipecacuanhae Fiat pulvis. S. To be taken in a wineglassful of sweetened water. An active emetic. R Hydrargyri Chloridi Mitis, Pulveris Jalapae, aa, gr. x. Misce. S. To be taken in syrup or molasses. An excellent cathartic in the commence- ment of bilious fevers, and in hepatic con- gestion. R Pulveris Jalapae gr. x. Potassae Bitartratis gii. Misce. S. To be taken in syrup or molasses. A hydragogue cathartic, used in drop- sy, and in scrofulous inflammation of the joints. R Sulphuris gi. Potassae Bitartratis gii. Misce. S. To be taken in syrup or molasses. A laxative used in piles and cutaneous diseases. R Pulveris Rhei gr. x. Magnesias sjss. Fiat pulvis. S. To be taken in syrup or molasses. A laxative and antacid, used in diarrhoea, dyspepsia, &c. R Pulveris Scillae gr. xii. Potassae Nitratis gi. Fiat pulvis, in chartulas sex dividendus. S. One to be taken twice or three times a day in syrup or molasses. A diuretic employed in dropsy. R Potassae Nitratis gi. Antimonii et Potassae Tartratis gr. i. Hydrargyri Chloridi Mitis gr. vi. Fiat pulvis, in chartulas sex dividendus. S. One to be taken every two hours in syrup or molasses. A refrigerant, diaphoretic, and alterative, used in bilious fevers; usually called powders. R Pulveris Guaiaci Resinae, Potassae Nitratis, aa, £i. Pulveris Ipecacuanhae gr. iii. Opii gr. ii. Fiat pulvis, in chartulas sex dividendus. S. One to be taken every three hours in syrup or molasses. A stimulant diaphoretic, used in rheu- matism and gout after sufficient depletion. R Ferri Subcarbonatis, Pulveris Colombae, Pulveris Zingiberis, aa, gi. Fiat pulvis, in chartulas sex dividendus. S. One to be taken three times a day in syrup or molasses. A tonic, used in dyspepsia and general debility. Pills. R Pulveris Aloes, Pulveris Rhei, aa, g;ss. Saponis Misce, et cum aqua fiat massa in pilulas viginti dividenda. S. Two or three to be taken daily, at bedtime, or before a meal. An excellent laxative in habitual consti- pation. R Mass® Pilularum Hydrargyri, • Pulveris Aloes, Pulveris Rhei, aa, Misce, et cum aqua fiat massa in pilulas viginti dividenda. S. Three to be taken at bedtime. An alterative and laxative, useful in con- stipation with deranged or deficient hepatic secretion. R Pulveris Aloes, Extracti Quassise, aa, gi. Olei Anisi x. Syrupi q. s. Misce, et fiat massa in pilulas triginta dividenda. S. Two to be taken once, twice, or three times a day. A laxative, tonic, and carminative, useful in dyspepsia. R Pulveris Scillae Hydrargyri Chloridi Mitis gr. x. Pulveris Acaciae, Syrupi, aa, q. s. Misce, et fiat massa in pilulas decern divi- denda. S. One to be taken twice or three times a day. A diuretic and alterative, much used in dropsy, especially when complicated with organic visceral disease. R Pulveris Opii gr. iv. Pulveris Ipecacuanhae gr. xvnl. Pulveris Acaciae, Syrupi, aa, q. s. Misce, et fiat massa in pilulas duodeciia dividenda. Appendix. S. One to be taken after each stool. An anodyne diaphoretic, useful in dysen- tei y and diarrhoea after the use of laxatives. R Pulveris Opii, Pulveris Ipecacuanh®, aa, gr. iii. Hydrargyri Chloridi Mitis gr. vi. Pulveris Acaci®, Syrupi, aa, q. s. Misce, et fiat massa in pilulas tres divi- denda. S. One or more to be taken at bedtime, or according to circumstances. An anodyne, diaphoretic, and alterative, very useful in diarrhoea, dysentery, typhoid pneumonia, and various other diseases. R Plumbi Acetatis, in pulv. triti, gr. xii. Pulveris Opii gr. i. Pulv. Acaci®, Syrupi, aa, q. s. ut fiat massa in pilulas sex dividenda. S. One every two, three, or four hours. An astringent much employed in h®mo ptysis and uterine hemorrhage. Mixtures. R Magnesi® 31. Syrupi fgi. Tere simul, et affunde Aqu® Acidi Carbonici, f !|iv. Fiat haustus. S. To be taken at a draught, the mixture being well shaken. An agreeable mode of administering mag- nesia. Acaciam et saccharum cum paululo aqu» menth® tere; dein oleum adjice, et iterum tere; denique aquam reliquam paulatim in- funde, et omnia misce. S. A tablespoonful to be taken every hour or two hours till it operates, the mix- ture being each time well shaken. Used as a gentle laxative in dysentery and diarrhoea. It is usually known by the name of oleaginous mixture. R Mann® Foeniculi contusi zi. Aqu® bullientis f*iv. Fiat infusum et cola; dein adjice Magnesi® Carbonatis Ft. mist. S. One-third to be taken every three or four hours till it operates, the mixture being shaken. An excellent carminative and mild laxa- tive in flatulence and pain in the bowels. R Elaterii gr. i. Spiritus AStheris Nitrosi f^ii. Tinctur® Scill®, Vini Colchici Rad., aa, fgss. Syrupi f^i. Ft. mist. S. A tablespoonful to be taken three or four times a day in a little water. Diuretic, used by Ferriar in dropsy. R Copaib®, Spiritus Lavandul® Comp., aa, fzii. Mucilaginis Acaci® fjss. Syrupi f^iii. Simul tere; dein paulatim affunde Aqu® fjiv. Misce. S. A tablespoonful to be taken four times a day, or more frequently. Given in chronic catarrh, and chronic pe- phritic affections. The dose must be larger in gonorrhoea. R Olei Ricini f jji. Pulveris Acaci®, Sacchari, aa, gii. Aqu® Menth® Piperit® f^iii. Acaciam et saccharum cum fluiduncia di- midia aqu® menth® tere; dein oleum adjice, et contere; denique aquam reliquam paula- tim infunde, et omnia misce. S. To be taken at a draught, the mixture being well shaken. R Olei Ricini f Vitellum ovi unius. Tere simul, et adde Syrupi f;|ss. Aqu® Menth® Piperit® f?ii. Ft. haust. S. To be taken at a draught, the mix- ture being well shaken. 1 his and the preceding formula afford convenient modes of administering castor oil, when the stomach is irritable. Any other fixed oil may be given in the same way. Half the quantity will often answer. Neutral Mixture. R Acidi Citrici gii. Olei Limonis tr^i. Simul tere, et adde Aquae f Jiv. Liqua, et adde Potass® Carbonatis q. s. ad saturand. Misce, et per linteum cola. R Sued Limonis recentis fgiv. Potass® Carbonatis q. s. ad saturandum. Misce, et cola. S. A tablespoonful to be given, with an equal quantity of water, every hour or two hours. An excellent diaphoretic in fever Or, R Olei Ricini f^iss. Tinctur® Opii h^xxx. Pulv. Acaci®, Sacchari, aa, gii. Aqu® Menth® Yiridis foiv- Appendix. 1631 Effervescing Draught. S. One-fourth to be taken every three oi four hours. Hope’s mixture, used in dysentery, diar- rhoea, and cholera. R Potassae Carbonatis gii. Aquae f^iv. Liqua. R Camphora gi. Myrrha gss. Pulv. Acacia, Sacchari, aa, gii. Aqua f^vi. Camphoram cum alcoholis paululo in pul- verem tere; dein cum myrrha, acacia, et saccharo contere; denique cum aqua, paula- tim instillata misce. S. A tablespoonful to be taken for a dose, the mixture being well shaken. A convenient form for administering cam- phor. R Potassae Bicarbonatis giii. Aquae f^iv. Liqua. S. Add a tablespoonful of the solution to the same quantity of lemon or lime-juice, previously mixed with a tablespoonful of water; and give the mixture in the state of effervescence, every hour or two hours. An excellent diaphoretic and anti-emetic in fever with nausea or vomiting. Or, R Cretae Praeparatae Massae Pil. Hydrarg. gr. viii. Tincturae Opii gtt. viii. Pulveris Acaciae, Sacchari, aa, gi. Aquae Cinnamomi, Aquae, aa, f§i. Solida simul tere, dein liquida paulatim inter terendum adjice, et omnia misce. S. A teaspoonful to be taken for a dose, the mixture being well shaken. An antacid and alterative mixture, well adapted to infantile diarrhoea, with white stools. The dose mentioned is for a child a year or two old, and may be repeated four or six times in twenty-four hours. R Pulv. Extract. Glycyrrhiza, Pulv. Acacia, aa, Aqua ferventis f|jiv. Liqua, et adde Vini Antimonii fjii. Tinctura Opii h^xx. Ft. mist. S. A tablespoonful to be taken occasion- ally. Expectorant, demulcent, and anodyne, useful in catarrhal affections. Brown Mixture. R Antimonii et Potassa Tartratis gr. i. Syrupi Scilla, Liquoris Morphia Sulphatis, aa, Pulveris Acacia gii. Syrupi f i;ss. Aqua f^iv. Ft. mist. S. A tablespoonful to be taken occasion- ally. An expectorant and anodyne cough mix- ture. R Pulveris Kino gii. Aqua bullientis f^vi. Fiat infusum et cola; dein secundum artem admisce, Creta Praparata Tinctura Opii f^ss. Spiritfts Lavandula Compositi f|jss. Pulveris Acacia, Sacchari, aa, gii. S. A tablespoonful to be taken for a dose* the mixture being well shaken. Astringent and antacid, useful in diar- rhoea. R Acidi Nitrosi fgi. Tinctura Opii gtt. xl. Aqua Camphora Misce. Solutions. R Magnesia Sulphatis gi. Syrupi Limonis f^i. Aqua Acidi Carbonici fjvi. Misce. S. To be taken at a draught. An agreeable mode of administering sul- phate of magnesia. R Magnesia Sulphatis 3ji. Antimonii et Potassa Tartratis gr. i. Succi Limonis recentis f^i. Aqua f^iii. Misce. S. A tablespoonful to be taken every two hours till it operates upon the bowels. Useful in fevers. R Potassa Nitratis £i. Antimonii et Potassa Tartratis gr. i. Aqua f^iv. Liqua. S. A tablespoonful to be taken every two hours. A refrigerant diaphoretic, used in fevers. R Quinia Sulphatis gr. xii. Acidi Sulphurici Aromatici gtt. xxiv. Syrupi f^ss. Aquae Menthae Piperita fji. Misce. 1632 Appendix. S. A teaspoonful to be taken every hour or two hours. A good mode of administering sulphate of quinia in solution. R Sennae ziii. Magnesiae Sulphatis, Mannae, aa, Jjss. • Foeniculi zi. Aquae bullientis Oss. Macera per horam in vase leviter clauso, et cola. S. A teacupful to be taken every four or five hours till it operates. An excellent purgative in febrile com- plaints. Infusions. R Spigeliae !|ss. Sennae gii. Mannae Jji. Fceniculi zii. Aquae bullientis Oi. Macera per horam in vase leviter clauso, et cola. S. A wineglassful to be given to a child from two to four years old, three or four times a day. A powerful anthelmintic. R Colombae contusae, Zingiberis contusi, aa, Sennae Aquae bullientis Oi. Macera per horam in vase leviter clauso, et cola. S. A wineglassful to be taken morning, noon, and evening, or less frequently if it opeiate too much. An excellent remedy in dyspepsia with constipation and flatulence. R Pulveris Cinchonse Rubrae gi. Acidi Sulphurici Aromatici fsji. Aquae Oi. Macera per horas duodecim, subinde agi- tans. S. A wineglassful of the clear liquid to be taken for a dose. A good method of administering Peruvian bark in cold infusion. Appendix. 1633 II. TABLES OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. APOTHECARIES’ WEIGHT. U. S. Pound. Troyounces. Drachms. Scruples. Troy Grains. lb 1 = 12 = 96 = 288 = 5160 l 1 = 8 = 24 = 480 5 i = 3 9 1 = 60 = gr. 20 The Imperial Standard Troy weight, at present recognised by the British laws, corresponds with the Apothecaries’ weight in pounds, ounces, and grains, but differs from it in the division of the ounce, which, according to the former scale, contains twenty pennyweights, each weighing twenty-four grains. Pound. Ounces. Drachms. Troy Grains. lb 1 = 16 = 256 = 7000 oz. 1 = 16 = 437-5 dr. 1 = gr. 27-34375 AYOIRDUPOIS WEIGHT. Br. round. 1 Troy = Pounds. Pound. 0-822857 Avoirdupois = 0 Ounces. 13 Grains. 72-5 1 Avoirdupois = 1-215277 Troy = 1 2 280 Relative Value of Troy and Avoirdupois Weights. APOTHECARIES’ OR WINE MEASURE. U. S. Gallon. Pints. Fluidounces. Fluidrachms. Minims. Cubic Inches, Cong. 1 == 8 = 128 = 1024 = 61440 = 231 0 1 = 16 = 128 = 7680 = 28-875 fS 1 = 8 = 480 = 1-8047 *3 i = "l 60 = •2256 IMPERIAL MEASURE. Gallon. Pints. Fluidounces. Fluidrachmg. Minims. 1 = 8 = 160 = 1280 = 16800 1 = 20 = 160 = 9600 1 = 8 == 480 1 = 60 Adopted by the British Pharmacopoeia. Relative Value of Apothecaries’ and Imperial Measure. apothecaries’ measure. IMPERIAL MEASURE. Pints. Fluidounces. Fluidrachms. Minims. 1 gallon == 6 13 2 23 1 pint = 16 5 18 1 fluidounce = 1 0 20 1 fluidrachm = 1 2-5 1 minim = 104 IMPERIAL MEASURE. • apothecaries’ MEASURE Gallon. Pints. Fluidoz. I'luidr. Minims. 1 gallon = i 1 9 5 8 1 pint = 1 3 1 38 1 fluidounce = 7 41 1 fluidrachm == 58 1 minim = 0-96 1634 Appendix. Relative Value of Weights and Measures in Distilled Water at 60° Fahrenheit. 1. Yalue of Apothecaries’ Weight in Apothecaries’ Measure. Pints. Fluidoz. Fluidr. Minims. 1 pound = 0'1900031 pints = 0 12 5 1-2238 1 ounce = 1 0533316 fluidounces = 0 1 0 25-6020 1 drachm = 1-0533316 fluidrachms = 0 0 1 3-2002 1 scruple = 0 0 0 21-0661 1 grain = • 0 0 0 1-0533 2. Yalue of Apothecaries’ Measure in Apothecaries’ Weight. lb l 3 9 Gr. Grains. 1 gallon = 10*12654270 pounds = 10 1 4 0 8-88 = 58328-886 1 pint = 1-26581183 pounds = 1 3 1 l 11-11 = 1291-1107 1 fluidounce = 0-94936332 ounces = 0 0 1 l 15-69 = 455-6944* 1 fluidrachin 1 minim == 0-94936332 drachms == = 0-94936332 grains = 0 0 0 2 16-96 = 56-9618 •9493 3. Yalue of Avoirdupois Weight in Apothecaries’ Measure. 1 pound = 0-9600732 pints Pints. = 0 Fluidounces. Fluidrachms. Minims. 15 2 53-3622 1 ounce = 0-9600732 fluidounces = 0 0 7 40-8351 4. Yalue of Apothecaries’ Measure in Avoirdupois Weight. 1 gallon = 8-33269800 pounds. 1 pint = 1-04158725 pounds. 1 fluidounce = 1-04158725 ounces. 5. Yalue of Imperial Measure in Apothecaries’ and Avoirdupois Weights. Imperial Measure. Apothecaries’ Weight. Avoirdupois Weight. Grains. Cubic Inches. 1 gallon = 12 ft) 1 § 63 2 9 0 gr. = 101b 0 oz. = 70,000 = 277-27384 1 pint =1 6 1 2 10 = 1 4 = 8,750 = 34-65923 1 tiuidounce = 7 0 17-5 = 1 = 437-5 = 1-73296 1 fluidraehm = 2 14-69 = 54-69 = 0 21662 1 minim = •91 = 0-00361 In converting the weights of liquids heavier or lighter than water into mea- sures, or conversely, a correction must be made for specific gravity. In convert- ing weights into measures, the calculator may proceed as if the liquid was water, and the obtained measure will be to the true measure inversely as the specific gravity. In the converse operation, of turning measures into weights, the same assumption may be made, and the obtained weight will be to the true weight directly as the specific gravity. FORMER FRENCH WEIGHTS. Pound. Marc. Onces. ' Gros. Deniers. Grains. Troy Grains. Grammes. 1 Poids de Marc = 2 = 16 = 128 = 384 = 9216 = 7561 = 489-5058 1 Apothecary — 1*6 = 12 = 96 = 288 = 6912 = 6670-5 = 367 1294 1 = 8 = 64 = 192 = 4608 = 3780-5 = 244-7529 1 = 8 = 24 = 576 =x 472-5 = 30-5941 1 = 3 = 72 = 69-1 = 3-8242 1 = 24 1 = 19-7 == 1-2747 = 0-8 = -0530 * Dr. W. H. Pile, in a communication to the American Journal of Pharmacy, gives the fol- lowing weights of the fluidounce of water, on different authorities, at 60° F.: U. States standard 455-6216 grains; Sir G. Shuckburg (U. S. D.) 455-6944; P>ritish standard455-6910,' average weight 455-6690. Appendix. 1635 Relative Value of Old French and English Weights. Poids de Marc. Troy Weight. Avoirdupois. Troy Grains. 1 pound = 1-312680 lb = 1-080143 ft = 7561 1 once (ounce) = •984504 l = 1-080143 oz. = 472-5625 1 gros (drachm) = 1 grain = •954504 5 — 59-0703125 •820421 Troy. Poids de Marc. French Grains. 1 pound = 0-76180 lb = 7561 1 ounce — 1-01574 onces = 585-083 1 drachm — 1-01574 gros = 73135 1 grain = 1-219 Avoirdupois. Poids de Marc. french Grains. 1 pound = 0-925803 lb = 8532-3 1 ounce = 0-925803 once = 533-27 To convert French grains into Troy grains, divide by Troy grains into French grains, multiply by 1-2189. French ounces into Troy ounces, divide by Troy ounces into French ounces, multiply by 1015134. French pounds (poids de marc) into Troy- pounds, multiply by Troy pounds into French pounds, divide by 1-31268. FRENCH DECIMAL WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. The French metrical system is based upon the idea of employing, as the unit of all measures, whether of length, capacity, or weight, a uniform unchangeable standard, adopted from nature, the multiples and subdivisions of which should follow in decimal progression. To obtain such a standard, the length of one- fourth part of the terrestrial meridian, extending from the equator to the pole, was ascertained. The ten-millionth part of this arc was chosen as the unit of measures of length, and was denominated metre. The cube of the tenth part of the metre was taken as the unit of measures of capacity, and denominated litre. The weight of distilled water, at its greatest density, which this cube is capable of containing, was called kilogramme, of which the thousandth part was adopted as the unit of weight, under the name of gramme. The multiples of these mea- sures, proceeding in the decimal progression, are distinguished by employing the prefixes, deca, hecto, kilo, and myria, taken from the Greek numerals; and the subdivisions, following the same order, by deci, centi, milli, from the Latin nu- merals. The metre, or unity of length, at 32°, = 39-371 English inches at 62°. The litre, or unity of capacity, = 61 028 English cubic inches. The gramme, or unity of weight, = 15-434 Troy grains. Upon this basis the following tables, taken with some slight alterations from the Edinburgh New Dispensatory, have been constructed. It was ascertained by accurate examination at the London Mint, that the gramme is only 15 434 Troy grains, though sometimes stated at 15 444 grains. 1636 Appendix. MEASURES OF LENGTH. The metre being at 32°, and the foot at 62°. Millimetre Centimetre Decimetre = English Inches. •03937 •39371 3-93710 Miles. Fur. Yards. Feet. Inches. Metre — 39-37100 = 0 0 1 0 3-371 Decametre = 393-71000 = 0 0 10 2 9-710 Hectometre = 3937-10000 = 0 0 109 1 1100 Kilometre = 393U -00000 = 0 4 213 1 11000 Myriametre -^== 393710 00000 = 6 1 156 1 2 000 MEASURES OF CAPACITY. Millilitre English Cubic Inches. •061028 = Apothecaries’ Measure 16 2318 minims. Centilitre = •610280 = 2-1053 fiuidrachms. Decilitre = 6-102800 = 3-3816 fluidounces. Litre = 61-028000 = 2 1135 pints. Decalitre = 610-280000 = 2-6419 gallons. Hectolitre = 6102-800000 Kilolitre = 61028 000000 Myrialitre = 610280 000000 MEASURES OF WEIGHT. Milligramme = Centigramme = Decigramme = Gramme = Troy grains. •0154 •1543 1-5434 15-4340 lb £ s Gr. Decagramme = 154-3402 = 0 0 2 34-3 Hectogramme = 1543-4023 = 0 3 1 43 4 Kilogramme = 15434-0234 == 2 8 1 14 Myriagramme = 154340-2344 = 26 9 4 20 Though the decimal system of weights and measures was established by law in France, it was found impossible to procure its general adoption by the people, who obstinately adhered to the old poids de marc and its divisions; or, if they adopted the new weights, gave them the names of the old weights to which they most nearly approached. Thus, the kilogramme, which is equal to 18,827T\j% French grains, or 2 pounds 5 gros 35grains poids de marc, was divided into two parts, and the half of it called a pound. One reason for this adherence to the old weights was the convenience of division into halves, quarters, &c., of which the new were not susceptible. To obviate this difficulty the Imperial gov- ernment legalized the employment of the half kilogramme as the unit of weight, under the name of pound, and allowed this to be divided into half pounds, quar- ters, eighths, ounces, &c., as in the old poids de marc. The new pound is dis- tinguished by the name of metrical pound, and has been adopted to a consider- able extent; while the old weights are retained by some, particularly by the apothecaries and goldsmiths; so that three systems are now more or less in use in France—the original poids de marc, the decimal system, and the metrical pound with its divisions. The following table represents the relative value of these different weights. Appendix. 1637 Decimal System. Poids do Marc. Metrical Pound. lb OZ. dr. gr- lb oz. dr. gr- 1 centigramme = 0 0 0 0-19 = = 0 0 0 0-18 1 decigramme = 0 0 0 1-88 = = 0 0 0 1-84 1 gramme = 0 0 0 18-83 = = 0 0 0 18-43 1 decagramme = 0 0 2 44-27 = = 0 0 2 40-32 1 hectogramme = 0 3 2 10-71 = = 0 3 1 43-2 1 kilogramme = 2 0 5 35-15 = = 2 0 0 0 Poids de Marc. Grammes. 1 grain == 0 0531 24 grains or 9i = 1-2747 72 grains or 3i = 3-8242 1 ounce = 30-5941 1 pound = 489-5058 Metrical Pound. Grammes. 1 grain = 0 054 24 grains or 9i = l-302 72 grains or 5i = 3 906 1 ounce = 31-25 1 pound = 500 Value of Avoirdupois Weights, and Imperial Measures, in Metrical Weights and Measures, as stated in the British Pharmacopoeia. Avoirdupois Weights. Metrical Weights. 1 pound = 453-5925 grammes. 1 ounce = 28-3495 “ 1 grain = 0-0648 “ Imperial Measures. Metrical Measures. 1 gallon = 4-543437 litres. 1 pint =s 0 567936 “ 1 fluidounce = 0 028396 “ 1 fluidrachm == 0 003599 “ 1 minim == 0 000059 “ The following table is taken from Christison’s Dispensatory, and was calcu- lated chiefly from data contained in Soubeiran’s Traite de Pharmacie. Table of certain foreign Apothecaries' Weights, exhibiting the Value of their different Denominations in Troy Grains. French (old) i - _ Pound. - 5670 5 Ounce. 472-50 Drachm. 59-10 Scruple. 19-70 Grain. 0820 Spanish - - - 5320-4 443-49 55-44 18-47 0769 Tuscan - - - 5240-3 436 67 54-58 18-19 0-758 Roman - - - 5235 0 436-25 54-53 18-17 0-757 Austrian - - - 6495T 541-25 67-65 22-55 1127 German or"! Nuremberg } - 5524-8 460-40 57-55 19-18 0-960 Russian J Prussian > . - 5415-1 451-26 56-40 18-80 0-940 Dutch ) Belgian j Swedish - - - 5695-8 474-64 59-33 19-78 0-988 . * - 5500-2 458-34 57-29 19-09 0-954 Piedmontese - - 4744-7 395-39 49-45 16-48 0-824 Y enetian - - - 4661-4 388-45 48-55 16-18 0-809 Of these weights, all except the French, Spanish, Tuscan, and Roman (first named in the table), are divided into parts corresponding with those of the Eng lish Apothecaries’ weight. In these four, the drachm contains 12 instead of 60 grains, and the scruple 24 instead of 20 grains; but, as in the English, there are B scruples in the drachm, 8 drachms in the ounce, and 12 ounces in the pound. Appendix. APPROXIMATE MEASUREMENT. For the sake of convenience, in the absence of proper instruments, we often make use of means of measurement, which, though not precise nor uniform, afford results sufficiently accurate for ordinary purposes. Of this kind are cer- tain household implements, of a capacity approaching to uniformity, and cor- responding to a certain extent with the regular standard measures. Custom has attached a fixed value to these implements, with which it is proper that the practitioner should be familiar; although their capacity, as they are now made, with the exception of the wineglass, generally somewhat exceeds that at which they were originally and still continue to be estimated. A tea-cup is estimated to contain about four fluidounces, or a gill. A wineglass ----- two fluidounces. A tablespoon (cochlear magnum) - half a fluidounce. A teaspoon (cochlear parvum) - - a fluidrachm. Small quantities of liquid medicines are often estimated by drops, each of which is usually considered equivalent to a minim, or the sixtieth part of a fluidrachm. The drop of water and of watery fluids is, on an average, about that size; but the same is by no means the case with all medicinal liquids, and the drop even of the same liquid varies much in bulk, according to the circum- stances under which it is formed. This is, therefore, an uncertain mode of esti- mating the quantity of liquids, and should be superseded where minim measures can be had. The results stated in the following table were obtained by Mr. E. Durand, of Philadelphia. (See Journ. of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, i. 169.) They may be relied on as accurate, but should be considered as indicating only the relative number of drops afforded by the several liquids mentioned; for, under other circumstances than those of Mr. Durand’s experiments, entirely dif- ferent results might be obtained as relates to each liquid. The preparations ex- perimented with were those of the first edition of the U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Table, exhibiting the Number of Drops of different Liquids equivalent to a Fluidrachm. Acid, acetic (crystallizable) Drops. 120 Acid, hydrocyanic (medicinal) 45 Acid, muriatic 54 Acid, nitric 84 Acid, nitric, diluted (1 to 7) 51 Acid, sulphuric 90 Acid, sulphuric, aromatic Acid, sulphuric, diluted (1 to 7) 120 51 Alcohol (rectified spirit) 138 Alcohol, diluted (proof spirit) 120 Arsenite of potassa, solution of 57 Ether, sulphuric 150 Oil of aniseed, of cinnamon, of cloves, of peppermint, of sweet almonds, of olives 120* Tincture of assafetida, of fox* Drops. glove, of guaiac, of opium 120 Tincture of chloride of iron 132 Vinegar, distilled 78 Vinegar of colchicum 78 Vinegar of opium (black drop) 78 Viuegar of squill ,8 Water, distilled 45 Water of ammonia (strong) 54 Water of ammonia (weak) 45 Wine (Teneriffe) 78 Wine, antimonial 72 Wine of colchicum 75 Wine of opium 78 * See page 1247 for the results obtained by Professor Procter with the volatile oils, which give a considerably smaller number of drops to the tluidrachm than here stated, showing how different may be the results under different circumstances. Appendix. 1639 III. ALPHABETICAL TABLE OF PHARMACEUTICAL EQUIVALENTS.* Name. Acid, acetic .... Symbol or Formula.f c4h3o3 Equivalent. 51 crystallized - - c4hso3+ho 60 amylic. See Acid, valerianic, antimonic - Sb05 169 antimonious - - Sb04 161 arsenic - As05 115 arsenious - As03 99 benzoic - c14h503 113 crystallized - c14h5o3+ho 122 boracic .... bo3 34-9 crystallized - BOs+3HO 61*9 camphoric (hydrated) - Ca)H1406+2H0 200 carbonic - C02 22 chloric .... C105 T5-5 chlorous - C104 67 5 chromic Cr03 50-3 citric c12h5ou 165 crystallized ... C12H5Ou+4HO 201 cyanic .... CyO 34 gallic (dried at 212°) c,h3o6 85 hydriodic - HI 127-3 hydrocyanic (prussic acid) HCy 27 hydrosulphuric (sulphuretted hydrogen) - HS 17 hypochlorous ... CIO 435 hyponitric (formerly nitrous) - no4 46 hypophosphorous ... PO 40 hyposulphuric ... s,o. 72 hyposulphurous ... S202 48 iodic 10, 166-3 kinic (crystallized) 07H6Ob 96 lactic (monohydrated) - c6h5o5+iio 90 margaric - HO,C34H33Os 270 meconic (dried under 212°) - CuHOn + 3HO 200 metaphosphoric (glacial) HO,PO. 81 muriatic (hydrochloric acid) - - HC1 365 * This table includes all the elements, although several of them are not used in medicine. It also embraces a few compounds which are not used in pharmacy, but which are inserted on account of their general importance. Excluding aridium and donarium, which have not maintained their claim to be considered as distinct metals, the present number of the ele- ments is 66; three new metals having been discovered since the eleventh edition of the Dispensatory was published. f By modern chemists the elements are designated by letters, called symbols. The initial letter of the name is the symbol, whenever it is distinctive; but, when several elements have names beginning with the same letter, the plan adopted is to represent one of them by the initial letter, and the rest by the initial letter with some other associated with it. Thus C stands for carbon, Ca for calcium, Cd for cadmium, Ce for cerium, Cl for chlorine, Co for cobalt, Cr for chromium, Cu for copper, &c. The use of these symbols saves time and space in designating the composition of compounds. Where a single equivalent is in- tended to be designated, the symbol of the element is simply given; but where several equivalents are to be represented, the symbol is preceded by a figure indicating the num- ber. Thus C means one equivalent of carbon, 2C two equivalents, and so on. The number of equivalents is now generally denoted by a small depressed figure following the symbol; and this plan has been adopted in the above table. The group of letters and figures, thus used to denote the composition of any compound, is called the formula of such compound Tue symools given are those of Berzelius, and should not be varied from, for fear of de- stroying their usefulness by creating confusion. 1640 Appendix. Name. Symbol or Formula. Equivalent, Acid, nitric .... . NO, 54 monohydrated (nitrate of ws iter) HO, NO, 63 quadrihydrated (sp. gr. 1-42) H0,N05-f 3HO 90 nitrous (formerly hyponitrous) - N0S 38 oleic - c88ho 273 oxalic .... . cao3 36 crystallized ... - C,Os+3HO 63 sublimed - - ca+ho 45 permanganic - MA 1114 phosphoric - po5 72 phosphoric (tribasic) - - 3HO,PO, 99 monohydrated (glacial acid) - ho,po6 81 phosphorous prussic. See Acid, hydrocyanic. ■ P03 56 pyrophosphoric - - 2H0,P05 90 stearic .... - ho,c36hsa • 284 succinic - - caa+ho 59 sulphuric - - - - - so, 40 monohydrated (sulphate of water) HO,SO, 49 (Nordhausen acid) - H0,2S03 89 sulphurous ... - soa 32 tannic (tannin from galls) - - ChHA+3HO 618 tartaric .... . c4ha 66 crystallized - caa+ho 75 uric (lithic acid) - ncwha 150 hydrated ... - N4C10HA+2HO 168 valerianic (amylic acid) - c10h9os 93 hydrated - C HA+HO 102 Aconitia . CfflH NO 533 Alcohol - caa+ho 46 amylic .... - C10HuO+HO 88 cetylic .... - W+HO 242 methylic .... - c2h3o+ho 32 Aldehyd ..... - CAA 44 Alum, potassa- (common alum) - - A1 0,,3S0 +KO,SO, + 24HO 474 6 ammonia - Al203,3S03-fNH40,S03 + 24H0 453‘4 ammonio-ferric ... - Fe 0„,3S0 +N1I 0,S0,4-24H0 482 potassio-ferric - - Fe,03,3S03+K0,S03+24H0 503-2 Alumina - A1A 51-4 tersulphate (salt in alum) - - A1A,3S03 1714 Aluminium - . A1 13 7 Amidogen (amide) - - - - NH 16 Ammonia .... . nh3 17 acetate .... . nh4o,c4h3o3 77 crystallized - NH40,C4H303 + 6H0 131 benzoate .... - nh4o,c1(h6o3+ho 148 bicarbonate ... - NH40,2C0a 70 bihydrosulphate ... . NH3,2HS 51 carbonate - - nh4o,co2 48 hydrosulphate (hydrosulphuret) - nh3,hs 34 muriate (sal ammoniac) - nh3,hci 53-5 nitrate .... - nh4o,no. 80 phosphate (alkaline) - - 3NII40,P0. + 5H0 195 (neutralj - 2NH40,H0,P'0s+4H0 169 Appendix. 1641 Name. Symbal or Formula. Equivalent. Ammonia, sesquicarbonate (medicinal carbonate) 2NH 0,3C0„ 118 sulphate - - nh4o,so3 6ft urate .... - NH4O,HO+N4C10HsO4 185 valerianate ... - NH O,C10H8Os 119 Ammonium .... - nh4 18 Amyl - C10Hn 71 acetate of oxide (acetate of amylic ether) C..H 0,C,H 0 130 oxide (amylic ether) - - C10HuO 79 Antimony (Stibium) - Sb 129 oxychloride (powder of Algaroth) 2Sb03,SbCl3+H0 550-5 oxysulphuret, U. S. (kermes min eral) Sb03+2SbS3+6H0 561 tartrate of teroxide Sb03,C4H205 219 tercldoride (butter of antimony) SbCls 235-5 teroxide (medicinal oxide) - Sb03 153 tersulphuret (medicinal sulphuret) SbSs 177 Arabia (pure gum) - 171 Arsenic As 75 bisulphuret (realgar) - AsS2 107 terchloride - As Cl, 181-5 teriodide .... AsI3 453-9 tersulphuret (orpiment) AsS, 123 Atropia - C^NO, 289 sulphate .... c34h23no6,so3 329 Barium Ba 68-7 chloride - BaCl 104-2 crystallized - BaCl-f 2HO 122 2 Baryta BaO 76-7 carbonate - BaO,C02 98-7 hydrate - muriate. See Barium, chloride. BaO,HO 85-7 nitrate .... BaO,NO, 130-7 sulphate .... BaO,S03 116-7 Benzole c12h6 78 Benzyl o„h,6, 105 Bismuth Bi 213 carbonate of teroxide - Bi03,C02 259 nitrate of teroxide Bi03,N05 291 ternitrate of teroxide - Bi03,3N05 399 teroxide .... BiO, 237 Black oxide of manganese. See Manganese, deutoxide. Blue vitriol. See Copper, sulphate of protoxide. Borax. See Soda, biborate. Boron - B 10-9 Bromine Br 78-4 Brucia ----- CANA 394 Cadmium Cd 558 carbonate - CdCO 85-8 protoxide - CdO 63-8 sulphate of protoxide - CdO,SOs 103-8 Caesium Cae 123 Caffein (them and guaranin) c16h n4o4 Ca 194 Calcium 20 chloride .... CaCl 55-5 crystallized - - CaCl+6HO 109-5 Appendix. Name. Symbol or Formula. Equivalent. Calomel See Mercury, protochloride. Camphe»ie cmh 136 Camphor ------ c*>h16o2 152 Carbon c 6 bisulphuret - cs2 38 Caustic potassa. See Potassa, hydrate. • soda. See Soda, hydrate. Cerium Ce 46 Ceruse. See Lead, carbonate of protoxide. Cetin C82H330 233 Chalk. See Lime, carbonate. Chlorine Cl 35-5 Chloroform C2HC13 119-5 -Chromium Cr 263 sesquioxide - Cr203 76-6 hydrated - Cr203-f IOHO 166 6 Cinchonia CANA 308 bisulphate CJi24N202,2§03 388 sulphate C40H24N2O2,SO3 348 crystallized - CAN202,SO3+2HO 366 Cinchonidia (isomeric with cinchonia) c«h24n262 308 Cinnabar. See Mercury, bisulphuret. Cobalt Co 29-5 Codeia CANO, 299 Columbium (Tantalum)* Ta 185 Common salt. See Sodium, chloride. Conia c16h15n 126 Copper (Cuprum) - Cu 31 T acetate of protoxide - - - Cu0,C4H303 90-7 ammonio-sulphate - Cu0,S03+2NH3,H0 122-7 black or protoxide - - - CuO 39 7 diacetate of protoxide (verdigris) 2Cu0,C4H303 130-4 nitrate of protoxide - CuO.NO, 93-7 crystallized - - - - CuO,NO,+3HO 120-7 red or dioxide - - - - Cu20 71 4 sulphate of protoxide (blue vitriol) Cu0,S03 79-7 crystallized - - - - Cu0,S03+5H0 124-7 Corrosive sublimate. See Mercury, bichloride. Cream of tartar. See Potassa, bitartrate. Creasote CAO NC or Cy 108 Cyanogen 26 Didymium Di 48 Emetia cS7h27o10 329 Epsom Salt. See Magnesia, sulphate. Erbium E ? Elhal. See Alcohol, cetylic. Ether - - - c4h5o 37 acetic C*H50,C4H 0 88 hydriodic Acid, nitromuriatic 930 Acid, prussic 923 Acid pyretin 1601 Acid, pyroligneous 21 Acid solution of nitrate of mercury 1205 Acid, sulphuric 53 Acid, sulphurous 936 Acid, tannic 938 Acid, tartaric 59 Acid tartrate of potash 668 Acid, valerianic 942 Acida 915 Acids 915 Acidum aceticum 17 Acidum aceticum cam- phoratum 915 Acidum aceticum dilu- tum 17, 916 Acidum aceticum gla- ciale 17, 20 Acidum arsenicum 1466 Acidum, arseniosum 22 Acidum benzoicum 916 Acidum chromicum 35 Acidum citricum 36 Acidum gallicum 919 Acidum hydriodicum di- lutum 922 Acidum hydrochloricum 41 Acidum hydrochloricum dilutum 929 Acidum hydrocyanicum dilutum 923 Acidum lacticum 39 Acidum muriaticum 41 Acidum muriaticum di- lutum 929 Acidum nitricum 45 Acidum nitricum dilutum 930 Acidum nitrohydrochlo- ricum dilutum 932 Acidum nitromuriaticum 930 Acidum nitromuriaticum dilutum 932 Acidum oxalicum 1571 Acidum phosphoricum dilutum 932 Index. Aci lum phosphoi icum glaciide 51 Acidum teuccinicum 1605 Acidum sulphuricum 53 Atidum sulphuricum aroma ticum 934 Acidum sulphui’icum di- lutum 935 Acidum sulphurosum 936 Acidum tannicum 938 Acidum tartaricum 59 Acidum valerianicum 942 Acipenser huso 463 Acipenser ruthenus 463 Acipenser stellatus 463 Acipenser sturio 463 Aconella 65 Aconite leaf 63 Aconite root 63 Aconiti folium 63 Aconiti radix 63 Aconitia 65, 944 Aconitic acid • 65, 349 Aconitin 65 Aconitum 63 Aconitum anthora 63 Aconitum cammarum 63 Aconitum ferox 63, 945 Aconitum heterophyllum 63 Aconitum Japonicum 63 Aconitum lycoctonum 63 Aconitum napellus 64 Aconitum neomontanum 63 Aconitum Neubergense 64 Aconitum paniculatum 63 Aconitum Sinense 63 Aconitum Storckianum 63 Aconitum Tauricum 63 Aconitum uncinatum 63 Acorus calamus 181 Acrid lettuce 503 Acrolein* 566 Actaea alba 1453 Actaea Americana 1453 Actaea racemosa 250 Actaea rubra 1453 Actaea spicata 437, 1453 Adansonia digitata 1453 Adeps 67 Adeps praeparatus 67 Adhesive plaster 1074 Adiantum capillus ve- neris 1453 Adiantum pedatum 1453 Administering medi- cines. mode of 1626 iEgle marmelos 160 2Erugo 342 JEsculus hippocastanum 1453 2Ether 948 2Etbcr aceticus 1452 Alt her fortior 951 ASther hydriodicus 1529 iEther hydrocyani_ais 1630 2Ether muriaticus 1559 JSther sulphuricus 948 iEtherea 947 ASthiops vegetabilis 1517 African black pepper 339 African kino 498 African sugar-cane 1603 African turmeric 346 Agar agar 1517 Agaracin 1560 Agaric 1454 Agaric of the oak 1455 Agaric, purging 1454 Agaric, white 1454 Agaricus campestris 1560 Agathis Damarra 834 Agathosma 174 Agathotes chirayta 248 Agave Americana 1455 Agave Virginica 1455 Agedoite 422 Agrimonia eupatoria 1455 Agrimony, common 1455 Ailanthus glandulosa 1456 Aix la Chapelle water 131 Ajuga chamaepitys 1456,1613 Ajuga pyramidalis 1456 Ajuga reptans 1456 Alantin 467 Albizia anthelmintica 1556 Albumen as an antidote for corrosive subli- mate 1155 Albumen ovi 634 Albumen, vegetable 386 Albuminate of iron 1457 Albuminate of iron and potassa, syrup of 1456 Albuminate of iron and soda 1457 Al’ceae iEgyptiacm 1528 Alchemilla vulgaris 1457 Alcohol 69, 74 Alcohol, absolute 71, 73 Alcohol amylic 77 Alcohol amylicum 77 Alcohol as a poison 75 Alcohol, diluted 69, 76 Alcohol dilutum 69, 75 Alcohol fortius 69, 74 Alcohol, methylic 803 Alcohol, officinal 74 Alcohol, table of the sp. gr. of 72, 1651 Alcoholic extract of aco- nite 1087 Alcoholic extract of ar- nica 1089 Alcoholic extract of bel- ladonna 1090 Alcoholic extract of black hellebore 1098 Alcoholic extract of colo- cynth 1093 Alcoholic extract of digi- talis 1096 Alcoholic extract of hemlock 1095 I Alcoholic extract of hen- bane 1099 Alcoholic extract of ig- natia 1099 Alcoholic extract of nux vomica 1102, 1103 Alcoholic extract of rhu- barb 1105 Alcoholic extract of seneka 1106 Alcoholic extract of stra- monium 1107 Alcoholic extract of va- lerian 1108 Alcoholic fermentation 69 Alcoholic muriatic ether 1560 Alcoholic potassa 1278 Alcoholmeter, Gay-Lus- sac’s centesimal 1651 Alcoholmeter of Tralles 1651 Alcornoque 1457 Aldehyd 14, 1343 Aldehyd resin 14 Alder, American 1458 Alder, black G87 Alder, common Euro- pean 1458 Ale 859 Alembic 888 Aleppo scammony 757 Aletris 78 Aletris farinosa 78 Aleurites triloba 1457 Alexandria senna 770 Algarobia glandulosa 6, 1556 Alhagi Maurorum 533 Alisma plantago 1458 Alizarin 716 Alkalimetry 673 Alkanet 1458 Alkekengi 1583 Alliaria officinalis 1458 Allium 79 Allium Canadense 79 Allium cepa 1569 Allium porrum 1546 Allium sativum 79 Allspice 647 Allyl 8C; 781 Almond, bitter 107 Almond confection 1307 Almond emulsion 1228 Almond mixture 1228 Almond oil soap 746 Almond, sweet 107 Almonds, bitter 108 Almonds, sweet 108 Alnus glutinosa 1458 Alnus serrulata 1458 Aloe 81 Aloe Africana 83 Aloe arborescens 81 Aloe Barbadensis 81 Aloe Capensis 81 Aloe Commelyni 81 Aloe ferox 83 Index. 1655 Aloe multiformis 81 Aloe plicatilis 83 Aloe puriucata 969 Aloe purpurascens 81 Aloe Socotrina 81, 82 Aloe spicata 81 Aloe vulgaris 81, 82, 85 Aloes 81 Aloes, Barbadoes 81, 85 Aloes, Bethelsdorp 83 Aloes, caballine 86 Aloes, Cape 81, 83 Aloes, fetid 86 Aloes, hepatic 85 Aloes, horse 86 Aloes, India 86 Alo-es, Mocha 86 Aloes, shining 83 Aloes, Socotrine 81, 83 Aloetic pills 1265 Aloetin 87 Aloin 87 Alpinia cardamomum 218 Alpinia galanga 1518 Alsop’s infusion jar 1176 Alstroemeria ligtu 537 Alteratives 3 Althaea 89 Althaea officinalis 89 Althaea rosea "90 Alum 91 Alum, dried 969 Alum, preparations of 969 Alum slate 91 Alum spring, Rockbridge 132 Alum stone 91 Alum whey 95 Alumen 91 Alumen exsiccatum 969 Alumen ustum 970 Alumina 93 Alumina, acetate of 1452 Alumina and ammonia, sulphate of 92 Alumina and iron, sul- phate of 1606 Alumina and potassa, sulphate of 91 Alumina, sulphate of 92, 970 Alumina, tannate of 1609 Aluminae et Ammoniae sulphas 92 Aluminae sulphas 970 Aluminae tannas 1609 Aluminium 93 Aluminized charcoal 215 Aluminous schist 91 Alum-root 440 Alyon’s ointment 1424 Amadou 1455 Amalgamation 136 Amaranthus hypochon- driacus 1459 Amber 598 Amber eupion 1562 Amber varnish 599 Ambergris 1459 Amblygonite 516 Ambra grisea 1459 Ambrein 1459 Ambrosia artemisiaefolia 1459 Ambrosia trifida 206, 1459 Amelanchier vulgaris 109 American agave 1455 American aloe 1455 American centaury 722 American columbo 400, 401 American dittany 1607 American gentian 400 American hellebore 851 American ipecacuanha 378, 416 American ivy 1460 American poplar 518 American sanicle 440 American senna 228 American silver fir 830 American spikenard 135 American water hemlock 1495 Amide 109, 1173 Amidin 112 Amidogen 1173 Ammonia 95 Ammonia alum 92 Ammonia, aromatic spirit of 1347 Ammonia, arseniate of 1466 Ammonia, benzoate of 972 Ammonia, carbazotate of 1486 Ammonia, carbonate of 99 Ammonia, hydriodate of 1537 Ammonia, hydrochlo- rate of 102 Ammonia, hydrosulph- uret of 1530 Ammonia, muriate of 102 Ammonia, nitrosulphate of 1565 Ammonia, phosphate of 973 Ammonia, preparations of . 972 Ammonia, sesquicarbo- nate of 99 Ammonia, solution of 997 Ammonia, spirit of 1346 Ammonia, stronger wa- ter of 97 Ammonia, succinate of 1606 Ammonia, sulphate of 104 Ammonia, table of the preparations of 96 Ammonia, urate of 1618 Ammonia, valerianate of 974 Ammonia, water of 997 Ammonia-alum 92 Ammoniac 105 Ammoniac, mixture of 1228 Ammoniac plaster 1065 Ammoniacal ointment, vesicating 99 Ammoniacum 105 Ammoniae aqua 99/ Ammoniae aqua fortiir 97 Ammoniae arsenias 1466 Ammoniae benzoas 972 Ammoniae carbonas 99 Ammoniae hydrochloras 102 Ammoniae hydrosulpliu- retum 1580 Ammoniae liquor 997 Ammoniae liquor fortior 97 Ammoniae murias 102 Ammoniae phosphas 973 Ammoniae sesquicarbo- nas 99 Ammoniae sulphas 104 Ammoniae uras 1618 Ammoniae valerianas 974 Ammonia-meter 98 Ammoniated copper 1053 Ammoniated iron 1459 Ammoniated mercury 1172 Ammoniated tincture of guaiac 1397 Ammoniated tincture of valerian 1410 Ammonii iodidum 1537 Ammonio-chlori.de of iron 1459 Ammonio-chloride of silver 1493 Ammonio-citrate of iron 1128 Ammonio-ferric alum 1129 Ammonio-tartrate of iron 1130 Ammonium 95 Ammonium, chloride of 95, 103 Ammonium, iodide of 1537 Ammonium, oxide of 95 Amomum angustifolium 217 Amomum cardamomum 216 Amomum grana paradisl 217 Amomum maximum 216 Amomum melegueta 217 Amomum racemosum 216 Amomum repens 217 Amomum zingiber 870 Amorphous quinia 287, 1317 Ampelopsis quinquefolia 1460 Amygdala 107 Amygdala amara 107, 108 Amygdala dulcis 107, 108 Amydalse oleum 575 Amygdalic acid 109 Amygdalin 108 Amygdalus communis 107 Amygdalus Persica 1578 Amyl 78 Amyl, hydrated oxide of 77 Amyl, hydride of 78, 1460, 1582 Amyl, hydruret of 78, 1460 Amylen 78, 1460 Amylic acid 78 Amylic alcohol 77 Amylic ether, acetate of 1516 1656 Index. Amyilc ether, valerian- ate of 1516 Amylum 110 Amyris caranna 1486 Amyris commiphora 1470 Amyris Gileadensis 1469 Amyris kataf 557 Amyris tomentosa 1609 Anacahuite wood 1460 Anacardic acid 1461 Anacardium occidentale 1461 Anacyclus officinarum 691 Anacyclus pyrethrum 691 Anaesthetic compounds, chlorinated 1494 Anaesthetics 3 Anagallis arvensis 1461 Anagallis caerulea 1461 Anamirta cocculus 305 Anarcotina 619 Anchusa Italica 1461 Anchusa officinalis 1461 Anchusa tinctoria 1458 Anchusic acid 1458 Anda Brasiliensis 1567 Anda Gomesii 1567 Anda, oil of 1567 Anderson’s pills 89, 1265 Andira anthelmintica 1478 Andira inermis 1478 Andira retusa 1479 Andirin 1479 Andromeda arborea 1462 Andromeda mariana 1462 Andromeda speciosa 1462 Andropogon nardus 1579 Andropogon, oil of 597 Anemone Ludoviciana 1462 Anemone, meadow 1462 Anemone nemorosa 1462 Anemone pratensis 1462 Anemone pulsatilla 1462 Anemonic acid 697, 1462 Anemonin 697, 1462 Anethol 1248 Anethum 114 Anethum foeniculum 398 Anethum graveolens 114 Angelic acid 607 Angelica 115 Angelica archangelica 115 Angelica atropurpurea 115 Angelica officinalis ' 116 Angelicic acid 116 Angola weed 1549 Angustura 116 Angustura, false 118 Anhydrous alcohol 73 Anilia or aniline 1462 Animal charcoal 210 Animal charcoal, puri- fied 1034 AnimtS 1463 Anise 119 Anise camphor 1248 Aniseed, star 119 Anise-tree, Florida 1534 Anisic acid 1248 Anisum 119 Annotta 1464 Anodyne enema 1076 Anodyne liniment 1188 Anodynes 3 Antacids 2 Anteunaria margaritacea 1464 Anthelmintics 2 Anthemic acid 120 Anthemine or anthemia 120 Anthemis 120 Anthemis arvensis 120, Anthemis cotula 120, 331 Anthemis nobilis 120 Anthemis parthenoides 121 Anthemis pyrethrum 120, 691 Anthemis tinctoria 120 Anthoxanthum odoratum 1615 Anthracite 210 Anthrakokali 1464 Anthrenus 202 Anthriscus cerefolium 1464 Antiar 1617 Antiarin 1617 Antiaris toxicaria 1617 Antilithics 2 Antimonial ointment 1416 Antimonial powder 1307 Antimonial wine 1434 Antimoniate of quinia 288 Antimoniated hydrogen 1464 Antimonic acid 123 Antimonii et potassae tar- tras 976 Antimonii iodidum 1538 Antimonii oxidum 984 Antimonii oxysulphure- tum 985 Antimonii sulphuretum 124 Antimonii sulphuretum aureum 987 Antimonii sulphuretuna praecipitatum 987 Antimonii terchloridi li- quor 1192 Antimonious acid 123 Antimonium 122 Antimonium diaphoreti- cum 1510 Antimonium sulphura- tum 987 Antimonium tartaratum 976 Antimonium tartarizatum 976 Antimony 122 Antimony and potassa, tartrate of 976 Antimony ash 122 Antimony, compound pills of 1266 Antimony, crocus of 1506 Antimony, glass of 1519 Antimony, iodide of 1538 Antimony, oxide of 984 Antimony, oxychloride of 976, 1587 Antimony, oxysulphuret of 985 Antimony, precipitated sulphuret of 987 Antimony, preparations of 976 Antimony, prepared sul- phuret of 124 Antimony, suboxide of 123 Antimony, sulphuret of 124 Antimony, tartarized 976 Antimony, teriodide of 1538 Antimony, teroxide of 984 Antimony, tersulphuret of 124 Antirrliinic acid 351 Antirrhinum linaria 1465 Antispasmodics 2 Antozone 1580 Aperient effervescing powders 1306 Aperitive saffron of Mars 1145 Apiin 640 Apiol 640 Apis mellifica 237, 543 Apium petroselinum 640 Apocynin 126 Apocynum androsaemi- folium 125 Apocynum cannabinum 125 Aporetin 707 Apothecaries’ measure 1633 Apothecaries’ weight 1633 Apotheme 1078 Appert’s process 1359 Apple essence 1516 Apple whisky 801 Applicat ion of heat 884 Approximate measure- ment 1638 Aqua 126 Aqua acidi carbonici 994 Aqua ammoniaj 997 Aqua ammoniae fortior 97 Aqua amygdalae anmrae 999 Aqua anethi 1000 Aqua aurantii florum 1000 Aqua Binelli 1465 Aqua calcis 1196 Aqua camphorae 1001 Aqua carui 1002 Aqua chlorinii 1002 Aqua cinnamomi 1004 Aqua creasoti 1004 Aqua destillata 989 Aqua fluvialis 128 Aqua foeniculi 1004 Aqua fontana 128 Aqua fortis 45 Aqua lauro-cerasi 1005 Aqua luciae 746 Aqua menthae piperitae 1006 Index. 1657 Aqua menthse viridis 1006 Aqua phagedaenica 1153 Aqua picis liquid® 1182 Aqua piment® 1006 Aqua regia 931 Aqua ros® 1006 Aqua sambuci 1007 ‘Aqua sapphirina 344 Aquae 990 Aquae medicat® 990 Aquilegia vulgaris 1465 Arabic acid 10 Arabin 9, 10 Arachis hypogoea 1523 Aralia bark 135 Aralia hispida 135 Aralia nudicaulis 134 Aralia racemosa 135 Aralia spinosa 135 Araucaria Dombeyi 834 Arbor alba minor 577 Arbor vitae 1614 Arbutin 846 Arbutus, trailing 1512 Arbutus uva ursi 845 Arcanum duplicatum 684 Archangelica officinalis 115 Archil 1550 Arctium lappa 507 Arctostaphylos uva ursi 845 Arctuvine 846 Ardent spirits of com- merce 71 Areca catechu 233, 235,1465 Areca nut 235, 1465 Argel 770 Argemone Mexicana 1465 Argenti chloridum 1493 Argenti cyanidum 1007 Argenti iodidum 1538 Argenti nitras 1008, 1011 Argenti nitras fusa 1011 Argenti oxidum 1014 Argentine flowers of Antimony 123 Argentum 136 Argol 668 Arguel 770 Arica bark 272 Aricina 267, 284 Aristolochia clematitis 774 Aristolochia hastata 775 Aristolochia hirsuta 774 Aristolochia Indica 774 Aristolochia longa 774 Aristolochia pistolochia 774 Aristolochia reticulata 775 Aristolochia rotunda 774 Aristolochia sagittata 775 Aristolochia sempervi- rens 774 Aristolochia serpentaria 774 Aristolochia tomentosa 774 Armoracia 137 Arnica 138 Arnica montana 138 Arnicina 139 Arnotta 1464 Aromatic confection 1050 Aromatic powder 1309 Aromatic powder of chalk 1310 Aromatic powder of chalk and opium 1310 Aromatic spirit of am- monia 1347 Aromatic spirit of vine- gar 915 Aromatic sulphuric acid 934 Aromatic syrup of black- berry 718 Aromatic syrup of rhu- barb 1374 Aromatic vinegar 915 Aromatic wine 1621 Arrow-root 535 Arseniate of ammonia 1466 Arseniate of caft'ein 181 Arseniate of iron 1124 Arseniate of soda 1332 Arsenic 140 Arsenic acid 141, 1466 Arsenic, bisulphuret of 1590 Arsenic, iodide of 1016 Arsenic, preparations of 1015 Arsenic, teriodide of 1016 Arsenic, tersulphuret of 1571 Arsenical paste 25 Arsenical solution 1214 Arsenical solution of Pearson 1332 Arsenici iodidum 1016 Arsenicum 140 Arsenicum album 22 Ai’senious acid 22 Arsenious acid as a poison 26 Arsenious acid, tests for 30 Arsenite of potassa, so- lution of 1214 Arsenite of quinia 287 Art of prescribing med- icines 1625 Artanthe adunca 542 Artanthe elongata 541 Artemisia abrotanum 4 Artemisia absinthium 4 Artemisia Chinensis 4, 1558 Artemisia contra 743 Artemisia glomerata 743 Artemisia Indica 4, 1558 Artemisia Judaica 743 Ai’temisia moxa 1558 Artemisia Pontica 4 Artemisia santonica 4, 743 Artemisia vulgaris 1, 1558 Arterial stimulants 2 Artesian wells 129 Arthanitin 1508 Artichoke, garden 1509 Artificial bone-black 215 Artificial camphor 600 Artificial gum 111 j Artificial musk 1561 Artificial oil of bittei almonds 1472 Artificial Seltzer water 994 Artocarpus incisa 537 Arum 141 Arum esculentum 142 Arum maculatum 141, 142 Arum triphyllum 141, 142 Asagraea officinalis 721 Asarabacca 1466 Asarin 1466 Asarite 1466 1466 Asarum 143 Asarum camphor 1466 Asarum Canadense 143 Asarum Europaeum 1466 Asbolin 1601 Asclepias 144 Asclepias cornuti 1-467 Asclepias curassavica 1466 Asclepias, flesh-coloured 1467 Asclepias gigantea 1483 Asclepias incarnata 144, 146? Asclepias Syriaca 144,1467 Asclepias tuberosa 144 Asclepias verticillata 1467 Asclepias vincetoxicum 1508 Asclepione 1467 Ash, common European 1515 Ash-bark 267 Ash-coloured cantharis 206 Asiatic pills 26 Asparagin 90, 422, 1468 Asparagus 1467 Asparagus officinalis 1467 Asparamide 90 Aspargia hispida 828 Asparmic acid 90 Aspartic acid 90 Aspen 1586 Asperula odorata 1615 Asphaltum 1580 Aspidium athamanticum 396 Aspidium filix foemina 1468 Aspidium filix mas 396 Asplenium adiantum ni- grum 1453, 1468 Asplenium filix foemina 1468 Asplenium scolopendri- um 1597 Asplenium trichomanes 1453, 1468 Assacou 1528 Assafoetida 145 Assafetida, mixture of 1229 Assafetida plaster 1067 Assafoetida 145 Assay of alkaloids 1542 Aster puniceus 1468 Astragalus aristatus 839 Astragalus Creticus 839 Astragalus gummifer 839 Astragalus massiliensis 839 Astragalus strobiliferus 839 Index. Astragal us ,\agacantha 839 Astragalus verus 839 Astringent saffron of Mars 1146 Astringents 2 Atherosperma moschata 1468 Atberospermin 1468 Athyrium fllix feemina 1468 Atkinson’s depilatory 1571 Atropa belladonna 161 Atropa mandragora. 1552 Atropia 162, 1016 Atropia, sulphate of 1020 Atropiae sulphas 1020 Atropic acid 1019 Attaleh 7 Attar of roses 597 Aurantii amari cortex 148 Aurantii aqua 1000 Aurantii cortex 148 Aurantii dulcis cortex 148 Aurantii flores 149 Aurantii florum aqua 1000 Aurantii oleum 150 Aurum 1521 Australian gum 9 Australian sassafras 1468 Autumnal crocus 337 Ava 541 Avena 152 Avena sativa 152 Avence farina 152 Avens 415 Avens, purple 415 Avens, water 415 Avoirdupois weight 1633 Axungia 67 Aya-pana 375 Aydendron laurel 1584 Azedarach 153 Azulene 570 Azure 1601 B Bacher, tonic pills of 1098 Bacher’s pills 438 Badiane 119 Bael 160 Balaustines 426 Balm 544 Balm of Gilead 830, 833,1468 Balm of Gilead tree 830 Balsam apple 1557 Balsam, Canada 833 Balsam, Carpathian 830 Balsam, Hungarian 1594 Balsam of copaiva 322 Balsam of fir 833 Balsam of Gilead 1468 Balsam of Peru 153 Balsam of sulphur 1469 Balsam of Tolu 157 Balsam, Riga 1593 Balsam weed 1534 Balsam, white 155 Balsamina 1557 Balsamito 156 Balsamodendron Gilea- dense 1469 Balsamodendron myrrha 558 Balsamum Carpaticum 1593 Balsamum Gileadense 1468 Balsamum Libani 1593 Balsamum Peruvianum 153 Balsamum Tolutanuin 167 Balsamum tranquilans 1469 Balsamum traumaticum 1387 Balston Spa water 132 Banana essence —1516 Bancksia Abyssinica 170 Baneberry 1453 Bang 380 Baobab 1453 Baphia nitida 1483 Baptisia alba 1469 Baptisia tinctoria 1469 Barbadoes aloes 81 Barbadoes nuts 608, 1469 Barbadoes petroleum 1582 Barbary gum 7 Barberry 167 Barii chloridum 1022 Barii iodidum 1538 Barilla 788 Barium 158 Barium, chloride of 1022 Barium, iodide of 1538 Barium, preparations of 1022 Bark, Arica 272 Bark, ash 267 Bark, Bogota 280 Bark, Calisaya 252, 268 Bark, Carabaya 271 Bark, Caribbean 282 Bark, coquetta 280 Bark, crown 264 Bark, Cusco 271, 272 Bark, fluid extract of 1111 Bark, Fusagasuga 280 Bark, gray 266 Bark, hard Pitaya 280 Bark, Huamilies 267 Bark, Huanuco 266 Bark, Jaen 267 Bark, light Calasaya 270, 272 Bark, Lima 266 Bark, Loxa 264 Bark, Maracaybo 276 Bark, new 282 Bark of St. Ann 271-2 Bark of sassafras root 754 Bark, pale 263 Bark, Peruvian 252 Bark, Peruvian Calisaya 272 Bark, Pitaya 280 Bark, red 275 Bark, St. Lucia 282 Bark, Santa Martha 276 Bark, silver 266 Bark, soft Pitaya 280, 281 Bark, yellow 268 Barks, Carthagena 276 Barks, false 282 Barks, false Calisaya 270 Barks, non-officinal 276 Barley 445 Barley sugar 730 Barley water 1059 Baroselenite 159 Barosma betulina 174 Barosma crenata 174 Barosma crenulata 174 Barosma serratifolia 174 Barras 832 Baryta 158 Baryta, carbonate of 159 Baryta, sulphate of 159, 1606 Baryta water 158 Barytae carbonas 159 Barytas sulphas 159, 1606 Barytina 851 Basil 1566 Basilicon ointment 1043 Bassora gum 9, 1470 Bassorin 9, 11, 1470 Bastard dittany 1510 Bastard ipecacuanha 1466 Bateman’s drops 1405 Bath water 132 Baths 134 Baume de commandeur 1387 Baume de la Mecque 1468 Baume tranquille 1469 Baum6’s hydrometer 876 Baumti’s hydrometer, ta- bles of the value of the degrees of, in sp. gr. 1649, 1650 Bay berries 1546 Bay leaves 1545 Bay salt 795 Bay tree 1545 Bay-berry 1562 Bay-rum 802 Bdellium 558, 1470 Bead tree, common 153 Beaked hazel 1505 Bean of Calabar, ordeal 1480 Bean of St. Ignatius 465 Bearberry 845 Bear’s-foot 1527 Beaver tree 528 Bebeeriae sulphas 1023 Bebeeric acid 560 Bebeerin or bebeeria 560 Bebeeru bark 659 Beccabunga 1620 Bedeguar 1470 Bedford spring water 131 Beech-drops 1571 Beer 860 Beet sugar 724 Bela 160 Belgaum walnut oil 1457 Belladonna 161 Belladonnin 162 Beluga 463 Ben, oil of 568 Index. 1659 Bendee 1528 Bengal cardamom 216 Bengal opium 614 Bengal quince 160 Benic acid 1568 Benjamin tree 165 Benne leaf 776 Benne oil 598, 776 Benzin 1471 Benzene 1471 Benzine 1497 Benzinated lard 1415 Benzinated solution of alumina 971 Benzoate of ammonia 972 Benzoate of soda 1471 Benzoe amygdaloides 165 Benzoe in sortis 165 Benzoic acid 916 Benzoin 164 Benzoin, flowers of 917 Benzoin, odoriferum 1471 Benzoi'ne 573 Benzoinum 164 Benzole 573, 1471 Benzyl 573, 918 Berberin or berberina 168, 457, 1500 Berberin tree 1500 Berberis 167 Berberis aristata 167 Berberis Canadensis 167 Berberis lycium 167 Berberis vulgaris 167 Berbina 169 Bergamot pear essence 1516 Bertholletia excelsa 1477 Bestuchef’s tincture of iron 1395 Betel 1465 Betel-nut 233, 235, 1465 Bethelsdorp aloes 83 Betonica officinalis 1473 Betony, wood 1473 Betula alba 1473 Betula lenta 408, 1473 Betula papyracea 1473 Betulin 1473 Bevilacqua 1529 Bezoar 1473 Bibasic phosphate of soda 1338 Biborate of soda 787 Bibromide of mercury 1477 •Bicarbonate of ammonia 100 Bicarbonate of potassa 1285 Bicarbonate of soda 1333 Bichloride of ethylen 1494 Bichloride of mercury 1152 Bichromate of potassa 667 Bicolorata (cinchona) 282 Bicyanide of mercury 1162 Bidens bipinnata 1473 Bigaradia myrtifolia 149 Bignonia catalpa 1488 Bignonia sempervirens 409 Bilate of soda 1575 Bilifulvin 1575 Bilin 1575 Biliverdin 1575 Biniodide of mercury 1163 Binoxalate of potassa 1573, 1575 Birch, European 1473 Birch, sweet 1478 Bird-lime 1473 Bird-manure 1524 Bisenna 1556 Bismuth 169 Bismuth and ammonia, citrate of 1028 Bismuth, magistery of 1027 Bismuth, subcarbonate of 1024 Bismuth, subnitrate of 1025 Bismuth, teroxide of 169 Bismuth, valerianate of 1619 Bismuthi subcarbonas 1024 Bismuthi subnitras 1025 Bismuthi valerianas 1619 Bismutliic acid 169 Bismuthum 169 Bismuthum album 1025 Bistort 1473 Bisulpliate of potassa 1474 Bisulphate of quinia 1318 Bisulphuret of carbon 1476 Bisulphuret of iodine 1360 Bitartrate of potassa 668 Biting stone-crop 1598 Bitter almond 107 Bitter almond water 999 Bitter almonds 108 Bitter ash 692, 1475 Bitter candytuft 1533 Bitter cucumber 315 Bitter polygala 666 Bittera febrifuga 1475 Bittersweet 357 Bitumens 1580 Bituminous coal 210 Bixa orellana 1464 Bixin 1464 Black alder 687 Black ash 789 Black birch 1473 Black cantharis 206 Black cyanide of potas- sium 1295 Black draught 1184 Black drink 1534 Black drop 913 Black flux 670 Black hellebore 436 Black ipecacuanha 483 Black lead 1487 Black mustard seeds 779 Black nightshade 357 Black oxide of copper 1503 Black oxide of manga- nese 529 Black pepper 647 Black poplar 1586 Black poppy 610 Black salts 671 Black snakeroot 250. 1595 Black spleenwort i468 Black spruce 830 Black sulpkuret of mer- cury 1172, 1478 Black walnut 492 Black wash 1159 Blackberry 716 Blackberry root 716 Black-oak bark 694, 695 Bladder-senna 1501 Bladder-wrack 1516 Blanc-fix 160 Blanchard’s pills 1271 Blaud s ferruginous pills 1270 Blazing star 78 Bleaching powder 185 Blende 865 Blessed thistle 1490 Blistering cerate 1038 Blistering cloth 1041 Blistering paper 1041 Blistering plaster 1038 Blisters, use of 204 Block tin 1614 Bloodroot 739 Bloodweed 1466 Blooming spurge 377 Blue cohosh 1488 Blue flag 486 Blue gentian 413 Blue mass 1272 Blue pills 1272 Blue stone 343 Blue vitriol 343 Bog-bean 1555 Bogota bark 276, 280 Boheic acid 1612 Bole Armenian 1476 Boles 1476 Boletus fomentanus 1455 Boletus igniarius « 1455 Boletus laricis 1454 Boletus ribis 1455 Boletus ungulatus 1455 Bolus Yeneta 1619 Bondou gum 8 Bone 632 Bone-ash 633 Bone-black 211, 633 Bone-black, artificial 215 Bone-earth 633 Bone-oil 1510 Bone-phosphate of lime 633, 1032 Boneset 375 Bone-spirit 100,211 Bonplandia trifoliata 116 Boracic acid 787 Boracic acid, native 785 Boracic acid soluble cream of tartar 786 Borage 1476 Borago oflicinalis 1476 Index. Borate «f soda 784 Borax 784 Borax, artificial 785 Borax, octohedral 786 Borax, prismatic 786 Bordeaux turpentine 832 Borneo camphor 195 Boron 787 Boswellia serrata 1569 Botany Bay kino 499 Boudin’s solution 26 Boullay’s filter 895 Bouncing bet 1595 Box plant 1478 Brake, common 1468 Bran 385, 387 Brandy 805 Brasiletto 1477 Brass 866 Brayera 170 Bray era anthelmintica 170 Brazil nuts 1476 Brazil wood 1477 Brazilian sarsaparilla 751 Bread 386 Breadfruit tree 537 Breselin 1477 Brian9on manna 533, 831 Brighton water 131 Brimstone 813 British barilla 789, 790 British gum 111 British oil 602 British vinegar 15 Brittle gum 8 Broad-leafed laurel 1543 Bromide of ammonium 1477 Bromide of carbon 173, 1493 Bromide of iron 1477 Bromide of potassium 1291 Bromides of mercury 1477 Bromine 171 Bromine, chloride of 173, 1493 Brominii chloridum 1493 Brominium 171 Brooklime 1620 Broom 763 BrOom, Spanish 1603 Broom-rape 1571 Broussonetia tinctoria 1518 Brown mixture 1231, 1631 Brucea antidysenterica 118 Brucia 118, 662 Bryonia alba 1478 Bryonia dioica 1478 Bryonin 1478 Bryony 1478 Bryoretin 1478 Bubon galbanum 401 Bucco 174 Bucharian rhubarb 704, 706 Buchu 174 Buckbean 1555 Buckthorn 1592 Buckwheat 1474 Buena 253 Bugle, common 1456 Bugle-weed 522 Bugloss 1461 Bunsen’s gas burner, modified by Griffin 885 Burdock 507 Burgundy pitch 649 Burgundy pitch plaster 1070 Burmese naphtha 1582 Burnett’s disinfecting fluid 1443 Burning bush 373 Burnt alum 970 Burnt hartshorn 1526 Burnt sienna 1599 Burnt sponge 1604 Burnt umber 1617 Bursera gummifera 1486 Bush honeysuckle 1510 Butea frondosa 498 Butea gum 498 Butter of antimony 1193 Butter of cacao 603 Butter of zinc 1440 Buttercup 697 Butterfly-weed 144 Butternut 491 Button bush 1491 Button snakeroot 1512, 1546 Butyl hydride 1582 Butyrate of ethylic ether 1515 Butyric acid 1516 Butyric ether 1515 Butyric fermentation 1515 Butyrin 567 Buxus sempervirens 1478 Byttera febrifuga 1475 c Caballine aloes 86 Cabbage rose 711 Cabbage-tree bark 1478 Cacao 603 Cachibou 1486 Cade, oil of 1568 Cadmii sulphas 1029 Cadmium 176 Cadmium, iodide of 176 Cadmium, sulphate of 1029 Csesalpina Brasiliensis 1477 Csesalpina crista 1477 Csesalpina echinata 1477 Csesalpina sappan 1477 Caffea 177 Caffea Arabica 177 Caffeic acid 178 Caffein 178 Caffein, arseniate of 181 Caffein, citrate of 181 Caffeo-tannic acid 178 Cahinca 1479 Cahincic acid 1479 Cajeput oil 577 Cajeputene 678 Calabar bean 1480 Calamina • 1482 Calamine 1482 Calamine cerate 1044 Calamine, prepared 1483 Calamus 181 Calamus aromaticus 182 Calamus draco 1511 Calamus, fluid extract of 182 Calamus rotang 1511 Calcii chloridum 183 Calcii sulphuretum 1607 Calcination 898 Calcined magnesia 1225 Calcined mercury 1167 Calcis carbonas prasci- pitatus 1030 Calcis chloratae liquor 1197 Calcis hydras 1031 Calcis hyposulphis 1532 Calcis phosphas praeci- pitata 1031 Calcium 183 Calcium, chloride of 183 Calendula officinalis 1483 Calendulin 1483 Calico-bush 1543 California nutmeg 556 Calisaya bark 268 Calisaya bark, light 270 Calisaya bark, Peruvian 272 Calisaya barks, false 270 Callicocca ipecacuanha 480 Callitriche verna 1483 Calomel 1157 Calomel, iodides of 1540 Calomel pill, compound 1266 Calomel, precipitated 1159 Calomelas 1157 Calophyllum inophyl- lum 1609 Calophyllum tacamaha- ca 1609 Calotropis gigantea 1483 Calotropis madarii In- dico-orientalis 1483 Calumba 189 Calx 184 Calx chlorata 185 Calx chlorinata 185 Cam wood 1483 Oambogia 405 Cambogia gutta 407 Camellia sasanqua 1611 Camphene 195 Camphol 195 Camphor 192 Camphor, artificial 600 Camphor liniment 1187 Camphor liniment, com- pound 1187 Camphor oil 193, 579 Camphor ointment 197 Camphor tea 198 Camphor water 1001 Index. 1661 Camphora 192 Camphora ofiicinarum 193 Camphorated acetic acid 915 Camphorated soap lini- ment 1189 Camphorated tincture of opium 1405 Camphorated tincture of soap 1189 Camphoric acid 195 Canada balsam 833 Canada fleabane 372 Canada pitch 651 Canada snakeroot 143 Canada turpentine 828, 833 Canarium commune 364 Canary seed 1483 Canary weed 1549 Cancer-root 1571 Candytuft, bitter 1533 Cane sugar 724 Canella 198 Canella alba 198 Canna 199 Canna achiras 199 Canna edulis 200 Canna speciosa 200 Canna starch 200 Cannabene 381 Cannabin 381 Cannabis Indica 379 Cannabis sativa 379 Cantharidal collodion 1049 Cantharidese * 200 Cantharides 200 Cantharides plaster 1038 Cantharidin 202 Cantharis 200 Cantharis aeneas 206 Cantharis albida 207 Cantharis aszelianus 206 Cantharis atrata 206 Cantharis cinerea 206 Cantharis marginata 206 Cantharis Nuttalli 206 Cantharis politus 206 Cantharis vesicatoria 200 Cantharis vittata 205 Caoutchouc 1484 Caoutchouc, vulcanized 1484 Cap cement 892 Cape aloes 81, 83 Cape gum 9 Caper plant 1568 Caper-bush 1485 Caphopicrite 707 Capnomor 332, 652 Capparis spinosa 1485 Caprifi cation 395 Caproyl hydride 1582 Capryl hydride 1582 Capsicin 208 Capsicum 207 Capsicum annuum 207 Capsicum baccatum 207 Capsicum fastigiatum 207 Capsicum frutescens 207 Capsulaescic acid 1454 Capsules of ether 954 Capsules of gelatin 1521 Carabaya bark 271 Caracas kino 497 Caracas sarsaparilla 750 Caramania gum 1485 Caramel 730 Caranna 1486 Caraway 221 Caraway water 1002 Carbazotate of ammonia 1486 Carbazotate of iron 1486 Carbazotic acid 1486 Carbo 209 Carbo animalis 210 Carbo animalis purifi- catus 1034 Carbo ligni 213 Carbohydrogens 210 Carbolic acid 334, 1486 Carbon 209 Carbonate of ammonia 99 Carbonate of baryta 159 Carbonate of iron and manganese, saccha- rine 1554 Carbonate of iron, pills of 1269 Carbonate of iron, pre- cipitated 1145 Carbonate of iron, sac- charine 1125 Carbonate of iron with sugar 1125 Carbonate of lead 658 Carbonate of lime 209 Carbonate of lime, pre- cipitated 1030 Carbonate of lithia 515 Carbonate of magnesia 523 Carbonate of manganese 1553 Carbonate of potassa 1282 Carbonate of potassa from pearlash 1282 Carbonate of potassa, impure 670 Carbonate of potassa, pure 1284 Carbonate of soda 788 Carbonate of soda, dried 1335 Carbonate of zinc 1439 Carbonate of zinc, na- tive 1482 Carbonate of zinc, pre- cipitated 1439 Carbonated waters 130, 131 Carbonic acid 209, 996 Carbonic acid water 994 Carbonic oxide 1487 Carburet of iron 1487 Carburet of sulphur 1475 Cardamine pratensis 1488 Cardamom 216 Cardamomum 216 Cardamomum longum 216 Cardamomum majus 216, 217 Cardamomum medium 216 Cardamomum minus 216 Cardinal flower 621 Cardol 1461 Carduus benedictus 1490 Carduus marianus 1490 Caribaean bark 282 Carminative, Dalby’s 625 Carminatives 3 Carmine 309 Carminic acid 309 Carnation 1509 Carnuba 241 Carolina jasmine 409 Carolina pink 798 Carota 219 Carotin 220 Carpathian balsam 830 Caffpobalsamum 1469 Carrageen 249 Carrageenin 250 Carrara marble 638 Carron oil 1187 Carrot ointment 220 Carrot root 220 Carrot seed 219 Carthagena barks 276 Carthagena ipecacuanha 482 Carthamic acid 221 Carthamine 221 Carthamus 221 Carthamus tinctorius 221 Carui 221 Carum 221 Carum carui 221 Carvacrol 1249 Carvene 1248 Carvol 1248 Carya (hickory) 1488 Caryophyllatae radix 415 Caryophyllic acid 1249 Caryophyllin 223 Caryophyllus 222 Caryophyllusaromaticus 222 Cascarilla 224, 253 Cascarillin 226 Casein 386 Cashew nut 1461 Cassava 825 Cassia 227, 301, 304 Cassia acutifolia 768 Cassia iEthiopica 769 Cassia Brasiliana 228 Cassia buds 305 Cassia caryophyllata 1504 Cassia elongata 769 Cassia fistula 227 Cassia lanceolata 769 Cassia lignea 301 Cassia Marilandiea 228 Cassia obovata 708 Cassia obtusata 769 Cassia ovata 769 Cassia, purging 227 1662 Index. Cassia senna 768 Cassina 1534 Cassumuniar 1624 Cassuvium pomiferum 1461 Cast iron 390 Castanea 1488 Castanea pumila 1488 Castile soap 747 Castillon’s powders 1034 Castor 229 Castor fiber 229 Castor oil 692 Castoreum 229 Castorin 230 Cat thyme 1613 Catalpa cordifolia 1488 Catalpa tree 1488 Cataplasm of chlorinated soda 1037 Cataplasma carbonis 1036 Cataplasma conii 1036 Cataplasma fermenti 1036 Cataplasma lini 1037 Cataplasma sinapis 1037 Cataplasma sodse chlo- rinate 1037 Cataplasmata 1036 Cataplasms 1036 Cataria 231 Catawba brandy 805 Catawba grape 855 Catawba tree 1488 Catawba wine 855 Catch-fly 1599 Catechu 232 Catechuic acid 235, 236 Catechuin 235, 236 Catechus, non-officinal 234 Catechu-tannic acid 236 Cathartic clyster 1076 Cathartics 2 Cathartin 229, 772, 1593 Cathartocarpus fistula 227 Catmint 232 Catnep 231 Caucasian insect powder 15(57 Caulophyllum thalic- troides 1488 Caustic collodion 1048 Caustic potassa 1277 Caustics 2 Causticum commune acerrimum 1279 Causticum commune mitius 1279 Cayenne cinnamon 303 Cayenne pepper 207 Ceanothus Americanus 1489 Cedar apples 495 Cedar oil 495 Cedar, red 494 Cedrin 1489 Cedron 1489 Celandine 1491 Celastrus scandem* 1490 Cements 892 Centaurea benedicta 1490 Centaurin 1491 Centaurium 1490 Centaury, American 722 Centaury, European 1490 Centesimal alcoholmeter 877, 1651 Centigrade thermometer 1652 Cepa 1569 Cephaelis ipecacuanha 480 Cephalanthus occidenta- ls 1491 Cera 237 Cera alba 237, 238 Cera flava 237, 238 Cerain 239 Cerasin 9, 10, 1470 Cerasus lauro-cerasus 508 Cerasus serotina 689 Cerasus Virginiana 689 Cerata 1038 Cerate of cantharides 1038 Cerate of carbonate of zinc 1044 Cerate of extract of can- tharides 1042 Cerate of lard 1038 Cerate of Spanish flies 1038 Cerate of subacetate of lead 1042 Cerate, simple 1038 Cerated glass of anti- mony 1520 Cerates 1038 Ceratum adipis 1038 Ceratum calaminae 1044 Ceratum cantharidis 1038 Ceratum cetacei 1042 Ceratum extracti can- tharidis 1042 Ceratum plumbi subace- tatis 1042 Ceratum resinse 1043 Ceratum resinm compo- situm 1043 Ceratum sabinae 1043 Ceratum saponis 1044 Ceratum simplex 1038 Ceratum zincicarbonatis 1044 Cerevisiae fermentum 387 Cerin 239 Cerite, Cerium 1491 Cerium, nitrate of 1491 Cerium, oxalate of 1491 Cerotic acid 239 Cerotine 239 Ceroxylon Andicola 241 Ceroxylon carnauba 241 Ceruse 658 Cerussa 658 Cerussa acetata 656 Cervus elaphus 1526 Cervus Virginianus 1626 Cetaceum 242 Cetic acid 243 Cetin 243 Cetraria 243 Cetraria Islandica 243 Cetraric acid 244 Cetrarin 244 Cetyl 243 Cetylic alcohol 243 Cevadic acid 722 Cevadilla 721 Ceylon cardamom 216 Ceylon cinnamon 304 Ceylon gamboge 407 Ceylon moss 1517 Chaerophyllum sativum 1464 Chalk 335 Chalk mixture 1230 Chalk, prepared 1033 Chalybeate bread 1138 Chalybeate plaster 1068 Chalybeate waters 130, 131 Chamaedrys 1613 Chamaemelum 121 Chamaepitys 1456 Chamomile 120 Chamomile, German 542 Chamomile, wild 331 Charcoal 213 Charcoal, animal 210 Charcoal poultice 1036 Charcoal filtering paper 881 Charcoal, pure 209 Charcoal quilt 214 Charcoal respirator 215 Charpie 1548 Chaulmoogra 1525 Checker-berry 1557 Cheese rennet 1619 Chelae cancrorum 1505 Chelerythrin 1491 Chelidonic acid 1492 Chelidonin or chelidonia 1492 Chelidonium glaucum 612 Chelidonium majus 1491 Chelidoxanthin 1492 Chelone glabra 1492 Cheltenham salt, artifi- cial 1492 Cheltenham water 131, 132 Chemical food 1143 Chemical operations 892 Chenopodium 245 Chenopodium ambrosi- oides 246 Chenopodium anthelmin- ticum 245 Chenopodium botrys 246 Cherry birch 1473 Cherry-laurel 508 Cherry-laurel water 1005 Chervil 1464 Chestnut oak 695 Chian turpentine 831, 833 Chicory 828, 1495 Chiendent 1616 Chillies 208 Chimaphila 246 Chimaphila maculata 247 Index. 1663 Chimaphila umbellata 247 Chimaphilin ' 247 China root 749 China wax 239 Chinese camphor 193 Chinese cinnamon 304 Chinese galls 403 Chinese rhubarb 703 Chinese sugar cane 1602 Chinidine 284 Chinoidine 1317 Chinquapin 1488 Chiococca anguifuga 1479 Chiococca densifolia 1479 Chiococca racemosa 1479 Chirayta 248 Chiretta or Cliirata 248 Chironia angularis 722 Chironia centaurium 1490 Chlorate of potassa 674 Chlori liquor 1002 Chloric ether 959, 1348 Chloride of ammonium 103 Chloride of arsenic, so- lution of 1492 Chloride of barium 1022 Chloride of barium, so- lution of 1194 Chloride of bromine 173,1493 Chloride of calcium 183 Chloride of calcium, so- lution of 1195 Chloride of ethyl 1559 Chloride of gold 1522 Chloride of gold and so- dium 1522 Chloride of iron, tinc- ture of 1394 Chloride of lime 185 Chloride of magnesium 1493 Chloride of mercury and quinia 1493 Chloride of potassa, so- lution of 1493 Chloride of silver 1493 Chloride of soda, solu- tion of 1219 Chloride of sodium 795 Chloride of zinc 1440 Chlorinated anaesthetic compounds 1494 Chlorinated chlorohy- dric ether 1494 Chlorinated lime 185 Chlorinated lime, solu- tion of 1197 Chlorinated muriatic ether 1494 Chlorinated soda, solu- tion of 1219 Chlorine 1003 Chlorine poultice 1037 Chlorine water 1002 Chloroaurate of ammo- nia 1522 Ghlorodyn 966 Chloroform 956 Chloroform, commercial 249 Chloroform, methylic 958 Chloroform, solubility of the alkaloids in 960 Chloroformum 956 Chloroformum purifica- tum 956 Chloroformum venale 249 Chlorogenate of potassa and caffein 178 Chlorogenic acid 178 Chlorohydric acid 41 Chlorophyll 363 Chocolate 603 Chocolate nuts 603 Choke-cherry 689 Cholalic acid 1576 Choleic acid 1575 Cholepyrrhin 1575 Cholesterin 1575 Cholic acid 1575 Cholin 1576 Cholinic acid 1575 Choloidic acid 1576 Chondrus 249 Chondrus crispus 249 Christmas rose 437 Chromate of potassa 667 Chrome 1494 Chrome green 1495 Chrome yellow 1495 Chromic acid 35 Chromium 1494 Chromium alum 668 Chrysanthemum parthe- nium 121, 1589 Chrysen 698 Chrysophane 707 Chrysophanic acid 707 Chrysophyllum glycy- phlaeum 1557 Chrysoretin 773 Chulariose 725, 732 Church Hill alum water 132 Churrus 380 Cicer arietinum 1571 Cichorium endivia 1495 Cichorium intybus 828, 1495 Cicindela 200 Cicuta 318 Cicuta maculata 1495 Cicuta virosa 1495 Cider 860 Cimicifuga 250 Cimicifuga racemosa 250 Cimicifuga serpentaria 250 Cimicifugin 252 Cincholin 290 Cinchona 252 Cinchona acutifolia 253 Cinchona amygdalifolia 259 Cinchona asperifolia 259 Cinchona australis 259 Cinchona Boliviana 258 Cinchona caduciflora 259 Cinchona Calisaya 256 Cinchona Calisaya, var. morada 258 Cinchona Candollii 256 Cinchona Carabayensis 259 Cinchona cava 254 Cinchona Chomeliana 259 Cinchona cinerea 257 Cinchona Condaminea 256 Cinchona cordifolia 255, 258 Cinchona crassifolia 260 Cinchona dichotoma 259 Cinchona erythroderma 257 Cinchona flava 252 Cinchona glandulifera 259 Cinchona hirsuta 259 Cinchona Humboldtiana 259 Cinchona Josephiana 256 Cinchona lanceolata 259 Cinchona lancifolia 255, 258 Cinchona lucumaefolia 259 Cinchona macrocalyx 256,259 Cinchona macrocarpa 254 Cinchona magnifolia 253 Cinchona micrantha 257 Cinchona Mutisii 259 Cinchona Muzonensis 260 Cinchona nitida 259 Cinchona oblongifolia 253 Cinchona officinalis 253, 256 Cinchona ovalifolia 259 Cinchona ovata 257 Cinchona pallida 252 Cinchona pelalba 260 Cinchona Pitayensis 256 Cinchona pubescens 259 Cinchona purpurascens 259 Cinchona purpurea 259 Cinchona rotundifolia 259 Cinchona rubra 252 Cinchona scrobiculata 257 Cinchona stenocarpa 253 Cinchona succirubra 257 Cinchona, testing of 253, 294 Cinchona trees, planting of 254 Cinchona villosa 259 Cinclionia 283, 288 Cinchonia, kinate of 293 Cinchonia, sulphate of 289, 1045 Cinchoniae sulphas 1045 Cinchonic acid 292 Cinchonic red 283, 285 Cinchonicia 284, 291, 1317 Cinchonicine 284, 291 Cinchonidia 284, 289 Cinchonidine 284, 289 Cinchonine 283 Cincho-tannic acid 286 Cinchovatin 267, 284 Cinnabar 1171 Cinnabaris 1171 Cinnameine 156 Cinnamic acid 156, 581 Cinnamomum 300 1664 Index. Cinnamomum aromati- cum 302 Cinnamomum cassia 302 Cinnamomum culilawan S02, 1507 Cinnamomum Kiamis 302 Cinnamomum Loureirii 302 Cinnamomum nitidum 302 Cinnamomum rubrum 302 Cinnamomum sintoc 302 Cinnamomum tamala 302 Cinnamomum Zeylani- cum 301 Cinnamon 300 Cinnamon leaf oil 302 Cinnamon suet 302 Cinnamon water 1004 Cinnamyl 581 Cinquefoil 1587 Circulatory displacement 893 Cissampelina 638 Cissampelos glaberrima 638 Cissampelos pareira 637 Cistus Canadensis 436 Cistus Creticus 1543 Cistus ladaniferus 1543 Cistus laurifolius 1543 Citrate of bismuth and ammonia 1028 Citrate of caffein 181 Citrate of iron 1128 Citrate of iron and am- monia 1128 Citrate of iron and mag- nesia 1496 Citrate of iron and qui- nia 1132 Citrate of lithia 1222 Citrate of magnesia, solid 1208 Citrate of magnesia, so- lution of 1207 Citrate of potassa 1288 Citrate of potassa, solu- tion of 1216 Citrate of quinia 287 Citrate of soda 1496 Citric acid 36 Citrine ointment 1422 Citron 512 Citrullic acid 639 Citrullus colocynthis 315 Citrus acris 512 Citrus aurantium 149 Citrus bigaradia 148 Citrus bigaradia Sinen- sis 149 Citrus decumana 149 Citrus limetta 576 Citrus limonium 512 Citrus medica 512 Citrus vulgaris 148 Civet 1496 Claret 856 Clarification 884 Clarified honey 1226 Clarry 738 Cleansing of vessels 902 Cleavers 1518 Clematis crispa 1496 Clematis erecta 1496 Clematis flammula 1496 Clematis viorna 1496 Clematis Virginica 1496 Clematis vitalba 1496 Climbing staff-tree 1490 Cloudberry 716 Clove bark 1504 Clove pink 1509 Cloves 222 Club-moss 522 Clutia cascarilla 226 Clutia Eluteria 225 Clyster, cathartic 107 6 Clysters 1075 Cnicin 1490 Cnicus benedictus 1490 Cnicus marianus 1490 Coal-fish 584 Coal-gas liquor 100 Coal-naphtha 1471, 1497 Coal-tar 1496 Coal-tar acids 1497 Coal-tar alkaloids 1497 Cobalt blue 1499 Cobweb 1499 Coca 1513 Cocain 1513 Coca-tannic acid 1513 Coccoloba uvifera 497 Cocculus 305 Cocculus Indicus 305 Cocculus lacunosus 306 Cocculus Levanticus 306 Cocculus palmatus 190 Cocculus Plukenetii 306 Cocculus suberosus 306 Coccus 307 Coccus cacti 308 Coccus Ilicis 308 Coccus lacca 1544 Cochineal 307 Cochinilin 309 Cochlearia armoracia 137 Cochlearia officinalis 1499 Cocin 1500 Cocinic acid 1500 Cocoa 603 Cocoa butter 603 Cocoa-nut butter 603, 1500 Coco-nut oil 1500 Coco-nut. tree 1500 Coco-olein 1500 Cocos nucifera 1500 Cod, common 583 Codeia 620 Cod-liver oil 583 Ccelocline polycarpa 1500 Coffea Arabica 177 Coffee 177 Cohesion figures 595 Cohobation 1246 Cohosh 251 Cohosh, red ' 1453 Cohosh, white 1453 Coke 210, 1496 Colchiceine 312 Colchici cormus 310 Colchici radix 310, 311 Colchici semen 310, 314 Colchicia or colchicine 312 Colchicum autumnale 310 Colchicum root 310 Colchicum seed 310, 314 Colchicum variegatum 1527 Colcothar 29, 1141 Cold bath 134 Cold cream 1417 Cold seeds, greater 1607 Colic root 1510 Collecting of plants 873 Collinsonia Canadensis 1500 Collodion 1046 Collodion, cantharidal 1049 Collodion, ferruginous 1048 Collodion, iodized 1048 Collodion with cantha- rides 1049 Collodium 1046 Collodium cum cantha- ride 1049 Colloids 896 Colocasia esculenta 537 Colocynth 315 Colocynthin 316 Colocynthis 315 Cologne water 1253 Colomba, U. S. 1850 189 Colombin 191 Colophonic acid 699 Colophony 698, 832 Coloquintida 315 Colouring principles of plants, changes of 1536 Coltsfoot 1616 Colubrina 662 Columbic acid 191 Columbine 1465 Columbo 189 Columbo, American 400 Columbo, false 192 Columbo wood 192 Colutea arborescens 771,1501 Comfrey 1609 Commercial muriatic acid 41, 43 Commercial sulphate of iron 1147 Commercial sulphuric acid 63 Common caustic, milder 1279 Common caustic, strong- est 1279 Common salt 795 Compound calomel pills 1266 Compound camphor lini- ment 1187 Compound cathartic pills 1267 Index. 1665 Compound decoction of aloes 1056 Compound decoction of sarsaparilla 1061 Compound extract of co- locynth 1093 Compound fluid extract of sarsaparilla 1119 Compound galbanum plaster 1068 Compound infusion of catechu 1179 Compound infusion of flaxseed 1182 Compound infusion of gentian 1181 Compound infusion of Peruvian bark 1180 Compound infusion of roses 1184 Compound mixture of iron 1230 Compound mixture of liquorice 1231 Compound ointment of iodine 1425 Compound pill of assa- fetida 1272 Compound pill of colo- cynth 1268 Compound pill of gam- boge 1267 Compound pill of hem- lock 1264 Compound pills of aloes 1264 Compound pills of anti- mony 1266 Compound pills of gal- banum 1272 Compound pills of iron 1270 Compound pills of rhu- barb 1275 Compound pills of soap 1275 Compound pills of squill 1275 Compound pills of storax 1264 Compound plaster of galbanum 1068 Compound powder of almonds 1307 Compound powder of aloes 1305 Compound powder of alum 1305 Compound powder of catechu 1310 Compound powder of ipecacuanha 1311 Compound powder of jalap 1312 Compound powder of rhubarb 1312 Compound powder of scammony 1312 Compound powder of tragacanth 1312 Compound resin cerate 1043 Compound rhubarb pill 1275 Compound solution of iodine 1206 Compound spirit of ether 1340 Compound spirit of horseradish 1347 Compound spirit of ju- niper 1349 Compound spirit of lav- ender 1349 Compound squill pill 1275 Compound syrup of phosphate of iron 1143 Compound syrup of sar- saparilla 1376 Compound syrup of squill 1377 Compound tincture of benzoin 1387 Compound tincture of cardamom 1389 Compound tincture of cinchona 1390 Compound tincture of gentian 1396 Compound tincture of iodine 1400 Compound tincture of lavender 1349 Compound tincture of Peruvian bark 1390 Compound tincture of quinia 1406 Compound tincture of senna 1409 Comptonia asplenifolia 1501 Concrete oil of nutmeg 556 Concrete oil of wine 968 Confectio amygdalae 1307 Confectio aromatica 1050 Confectio aurantii corti- cis 1051 Confectio opii 1051 Confectio piperis 1051 Confectio rosae 1051 Confectio rosae caninae 1052 Confectio rosae Gallicae 1051 ' Confectio scammonii 1052 Confectio sennae 1052 Confectio sulphuris 1053 Confectio terebinthinae 1053 Confection, aromatic 1050 Confection of black pep- per 1051 Confection of dog rose 1052 Confection of opium 1051 Confection of orange peel 1051 Confection of rose 1051 Confection of scammony 1052 Confection of senna 1052 Confection of sulphur 1053 Confection of turpentine 1053 Confectiones 1050 Confections 1050 Conhydria 319 Conia 319 Conii fruotus 317 Coniic acid 31? Coniine. 319 Conium 317 Conium maculatum 317 Conserva amygdalarum 1307 Conserves 1050 Constantinople opium 614 Contrayerva 1501 Contusion 878 Convallamarin 1501 Convallaria majalis 1501 Convallaria multiilora 1502 Convallaria polygona- tum 1502 Convallarin 1501 Convolvulus batatas 110 Convolvulus jalapa 487 Convolvulus Orizabensis 489 Convolvulus panduratus 1502 Convolvulus scammonia 756 Cooper’s gelatin 464 Copaiba 322 Copaifera Beyricliii 322 Copaifera bijuga 322 Copaifera cordifolia 322 Copaifera coriacea 322 Copaifera Guianensis 322 Copaifera Jaquini 322 Copaifera Jussieui 322 Copaifera Langsdorffii 322 Copaifera laxa 322 Copaifera Martii 322 Copaifera multijuga 322 Copaifera nitida 322 Copaifera oblongifolia 322 Copaifera officinalis 322 Copaifera Sellowii 322 Copaiva balsam 323 Copaivic acid 324, 1268 Copal ’ 599, 1502 Copalchi bark 225 Copalm balsam 1548 Copper 340 Copper, acetate of 1452 Copper, ammoniated 1053 Copper as a poison 341 Copper, black oxide of 1503 Copper, nitrate of 1564 Copper, preparations of 1053 Copper, subacetate of 342 Copper, sulphate of 343 Copperas 1147 Coptis 326 Coptis teeta 327^ Coptis trifolia 326 Coquetta bark 280 Coral 1503 Coral root 1503 Corrallium rubrum 1503 Corallorhiza odontorhiza 1503 Cordia Boissieri 1461 Coriamyrtin 1504 Coriander 827 Coriandrum 327 Index. Coriandrum sativum 327 Coriaria myrtifolia 771, 1503 Coriaria ruscifolia 1504 Coriaria sarmentosa 1504 Coridalia 1505 Corinthian currants 844 Cork 1504 Corn poppy 709 Corn starch 113 Cornine 329 Cornu 1526 Cornu ustum 1526 Cornus circinata 328 Cornus Florida 329 Cornus sericea 330 Correspondence between different thermometers 1652 Corrosive chloride of mercury 1152 Corrosive sublimate 1152 Corsican moss 1517 Cortex caryophyllata 1504 Cortex culilaban 1507 Cortex franguloe 1593 Cortex mu sense 714 Cortex thymiamatis 811 Corydalia 1505 Corydalis formosa 1505 Corylus rostrata 1505 Coscinium fenestratum 192 Cotarnia or cotarnin 618 Cotomaster vulgaris 109 Cotton 423 Cotton, gun 1524 Cotton-seed oil 424 Cotula 330 Cotyledon umbilicus 1505 Couch-grass 1616 Coumarin 1615 Coumarouna odorata 1615 Court-plaster 1387 Court-plaster, caout- chouc 1485 Coury 235 Cowbane 1495 Cowdie resin 834 Cowhage 553 Cow-parsnep 1527 Cowrie resin 834 Coxe’s hive syrup 1377 Crabs’ claws 1505 Crabs’ eyes 1506 Crabstones 1606 Cranesbill 413 Crataegus oxycantha 109 Crawfish, European 1506 Cream nuts 1476 Cream of tartar 668 Cream of tartar, soluble 786 Cream of tartar whey 670 Cream syrups 1373 Cream vanilla syrup 1373 Creasote 331, 652 Creasote mixture 1230 Creasote water 1004 Creasotum 331 Cremor tartari 668 Creta 335 Creta praecipitata 1031 Creta praeparata 1033 Croeetin 1519 Crocin 1519 Crocus 336 Crocus of antimony 1506 Crocus orientalis 337 Crocus sativus 336 Croton balsamiferum 226 Croton benzoe 165 Croton cascarilla 225, 226 Croton Eluteria 224 Croton lacciferum 1544 Croton lineare 226 Croton malambo 1551 Croton oil 605 Croton oil liniment 1188 Croton pavana 608 Croton pseudo-china 225 Croton Sloanei 225 Croton suberosum 225 Croton tiglium 606 Croton water 130 Crotonic acid 607 Crotonin 607 Crotonis oleum 605 Crotonol 607 Crowfoot 697 Crown bark of Loxa 264 Crucibles 887 Crude pyroligneous acid 18 Crumb of bread 386 Cryolite 790 Crystal mineral 679 Crystalline 1462 Crystallization 897 Crystalloids 896 Crystals of tartar 669 Crystals of Venus 343, 1452 Cubeb 339 Cubeba 339 Cubeba Clusii 339 Cubeba officinalis 339 Cubebin 340 Cubic nitre 1565 Cubic pyrites 394 Cuckoo-flower 1488 Cucumber ointment 1506 Cucumber seeds 1507 Cucumber tree 529 Cucumis colocynthis 315 Cucumis melo 1507 Cucumis sativus 1507 Cucurbita citrullus 1507 Cucurbita lagenaria 1507 Cucurbita pepo 639, 1507 Cudbear 1550 Cudweed 1621 Cuichunchulli 1542 Culilawan 1607 Culver’s physic 610 Culver’s root 610 Cumin seed 1507 Cuminum 1507 Cuminum cyminum 1495,1507 Cumyl, hydruret of 1507 Cunila mariana 1507 Cunila pulegioides 435 Cupellation 136 Cupels 633 Cupri acetas 1452 Cupri nitras 1564 Cupri subacetas 342 Cupri sulphas 313 Cuprum 340 Cuprum aluminatum 345 Cuprum ammoniatum 1053 Curare 1622 Curcas multifidus 1470 Curcas purgans 1469 Curcuma 345 Curcuma angustifolia 536 Curcuma longa 345 Curcuma rotunda 346 Curcuma zedoaria 1624 Curcuma zerumbet 1624 Curcumin 346 Currant wine 860 Currants, Corinthian 844 Cusco bark 259, 271 Cusparia 116 CuSparia febrifuga 116 Cusparin 117 Cusso 170 Cutch 233 Cuttle-fish bone 1507 Cyanide of ethyl 1530 Cyanide of gold 1523 Cyanide of mercury 1162 Cyanide of potassium 1294 Cyanide of silver 1007 Cyanide of zinc 1508 Cyanogen 927 Cyanohydric acid 923 Cyanuret of ethyl 1530 Cyanuret of gold 1523 Cyanuret of mercury 1162 Cyanuret of potassium 1294 Cyanuret of silver 1007 Cyanuret of zinc 1508 Cycas circinalis 733 Cycas revoluta 733 Cyclamen Europaeum 1508 Cyclamin 1508 Cydonia vulgaris 346 Cydonin 847 Cydonium 346 Cymene 1507 Cyminum 1507 Cynanchum argel 770 Cynanchum Monspelia- cum 760 Cynanchum olesefolium 770 Cynanchum vincetoxi- cum 1508 Cynara scolymus 1509 Cynips Kollari 403 Cynips quercusfolii 403 Cynoglossum olficinale 1509 Cypripedin ?48 Index. 1667 Cypripedium 347 Cypripedium acaule 347 Cypripedium humile 347 Cypripedium parviflo- rum 347 Cypripedium pubescens 348 Cypripedium spectabile 347 Cystinea 1509 Cytisin 139, 1509 Cytisus laburnum 139, 1509 Cytisus scoparius 763 D Daffodil 1563 Dalby’s carminative 525 Damarra australis 834 Damarra turpentine 834 Dammar 599 Dandelion 826 Daniellia thurifera 1569 Daphne Alpina 547 Daphne gnidium 546 Daphne laureola 546 Daphne mezereum 546 Daphnetin 548 Daphnin 547 Darnel 1550 Datura ferox 810 Datura stramonium 808 Datura tatula 808 Daturia 809 Daucus carota 219 De Yalangin’s arsenical solution 1492 Deadly nightshade 161 Decantation 880 Decimal weights and measures 1635 Decocta 1055 Decoction 893 Decoction of aloes, com- pound 1056 Decoction of barley 1059 Decoction of barley, com- pound 1056 Decoction of bittersweet 1058 Decoction of broom 1062 Decoction of broom, com- pound 1056 Decoction of dandelion 1062 Decoction of dogwood 1058 Decoction of elm bark 1056 Decoction of flaxseed, compound 1056 Decoction of galls 1056 Decoction of guaiacum wood 1056 Decoction of Iceland moss 1056 Decoction of logwood 1059 Decoction of mezereon 1056 Decoction of myrrh 1056 Decoction of oak bark 1060 Decoction of pale bark 1056 Decoction of pareira brava 1060 Decoction of pipsissewa 1057 Decoction of pomegran- ate rind 1056 Decoction of pomegran- ate root 1059 Decoction of poppies 1060 Decoction of quince seed 1056 Decoction of red bark 1057 Decoction of red cin- chona 1057 Decoction of sarsapa- rilla 1060 Decoction of sarsaparilla, compound 1061 Decoction of seneka 1062 Decoction of taraxacum 1062 Decoction of tormentil 1056 Decoction of uva ursi 1063 Decoction of white oak bark 1060 Decoction of wintergreen 1057 Decoction of yellow bark 1057 Decoction of yellow cin- chona 1057 Decoction of Zittmann 1062 Decoctions 1055 Decoctum ad ictericos 1492 Decoctum aloes compo- situm 1056 Decoctum cetrarias 1056 Decoctum chimaphilae 1057 Decoctum cinchonse flavae 1057 Decoctum cinchonas ru- brae 1057 Decoctum cornds Flori- da 1058 Decoctum dulcamarae 1058 Decoctum granatiradicis 1059 Decoctum hasmatoxyli 1059 Decoctum hordei 1059 Decoctum papaveris 1060 Decoctum pareiraa 1060 Decoctum quercus 1060 Decoctum quercus albas 1060 Decoctum sarsae 1060 Decoctum sarsae compo- situm 1061 Decoctum sarsaparillas compositum 1061 Decoctum scoparii 1062 Decoctum senegas 1062 Decoctum taraxaci 1062 Decoctum uvae ursi 1063 Decoctum Zittmanni 1062 Deer-berry 408 ' Delaware water 130 Delphine or delpbinia 1605 Delphinic acid 943 De Lisle’s thermometer 1652 Delphinium 348 Delphinium consolida 348 Delphinium exaltatum 349 Delphinium staphisagria 1604 Demulcents 2 Denarcotized extract of opium 1104 Denarcotized laudanum 1404 | Dentelaire 1586 Dentellaria 1586 Deobstruents 6 Deodorized tincture of opium 1405 Depilatory, Atkinson’s 1571 Depilatory of sulphuret of calcium 1607 Deshler’s salve 1043 Dewberry 717 Dewberry root 716 Dextrine 111 Dextro-tartaric acid 62 Dhak-tree 498 Diachylon 1073 Dialysis, process of 896 Diamond 210 Dianthus caryophyllus 1509 Diaphoretic antimony 1510 Diaphoretics 2 Diastase 111, 446 Dictamus albus 1510 Diervilla Canadensis 1510 Diervilla trifida 1510 Diet drink, Lisbon 1062 Diffusate 897 Digestion 893 Digitaleic acid 351 Digitalia 352 Digitalic acid 351 Digitalide 351 Digitalierin 351 Digitalin 351 Digitaline 350, 1063 Digitalinic acid 351 Digitalinum 1063 Digitalinum fluidum 352 Digitaliretin 351 Digitalis 349 Digitalis purpurea 349 Digitalose 351 Digitasolin 351 Dill 114 Dill water 1000 Dilute nitrohydrochloric acid 932 Diluted acetic acid 916 Diluted alcohol 69, 75 Diluted hydriodic acid 922 Diluted hydrochloric acid 929 Diluted hydrocyanic acid 923 Diluted muriatic acid 929 Diluted nitric acid 930 Diluted nitromuriatic acid 932 Diluted phosphoric acid 932 Diluted solution of sub- acetate of lead 1211 Diluted sulphuric acid 936 Dinneford’s magnesia 525 Dinner pills 89, 1266 Dioscorea sativa 637 Dioscorea villosa 1510 Index. Dioscorein 1510 Dicsroa 174 Diosma crenata 165 Diospyros 354 Diospyros Virginiana 354 Diplolepis gall® tincton® 403 Dippel’s animal oil 1510 Dipterix odorata 1615 Dipterocarpus turbinatus 325 Dirca palustris 1611 Diserneston gummiferum 105 Disinfecting fluid, Bur- nett’s 1443 Disinfecting fluid, Le- doyen’s 661 Dispensing of medicines 899 Displacement, circulatory 893 Displacement, method of 893 Distillation 888 Distillation, apparatus for 888 Distillation in vacuo 891 Distilled glycerin 418 Distilled oils 569, 1244 Distilled verdigris 1452 Distilled vinegar 911 Distilled water 989 Distilled waters 990 Distylium racemosum 403 Disulphate of cinchonia 1045 Disulphate of quinia 1318 Dithionate of soda 1449 Dithionous acid 791 Ditoplaxis muralis 1600 Dittany, American 1507 Dittany, bastard 1510 Diuretic salt 1282 Diuretics 2 Divinum remedium 1535 Dixon’s antibilious pills 89 Dock, yellow 718 Dog rose 711 Dog-grass 1616 Dog’s-bane 125 Dog’s-tooth violet 1512 Dogwood 329 Dogwood, Jamaica 1585 Dogwood, round-leaved 328 Dogwood, swamp 330 Dolichos pruriens 553 Dolomite 526 Dombeya excelsa 834 Dombeya turpentine 834 Donovan’s solution 1193 Dorema ammoniacum 105 Dorscli 583 Dorstenia Brasiliensis 1501 Dorstenia contrayerva 1501 Dorstenia Drakena 1501 Dorstenia Houstonia 1501 Dode of medicines 1625 Double aquafortis 46 Dover’s powder 1311 Dracmna draco 1611 Draconin 1511 Dracontium 355 Dracontium foetidum 355 Dragon-root 142 Dragon’s blood 1511 Dried alum 969 Dried carbonate of soda 1335 Dried sulphate of iron 1148 Dried yeast 387 Drimys Chilensis 1622 Drimys Granatensis 1622 Drimys Mexicana 1622 Drimys Winteri 1621 Drops, table of 1638 Drugs and medicines not oflicinal 1451 Drying of plants 873 Drying oils 566 Dryobalanops aromatica 195 Dryobalanops camphora F 192, 195 Dugong oil 588 Dulcamara 357 Dulcin 725 Dulcite 725, 732 Dulcose 725 Dupuytren’s ointment of Spanish flies 1418 Dutch camphor 194 Dutch liquid 1494 Dutch pink 1511 Dwarf elder 135 Dwarf nettle 1619 Dyers’ alkanet 1458 Dyers’ broom 1519 Dyers’ oak 403 Dyers’ saffron 221 Dyers’ weed 1519, 1592 E East India arrow-root 637 East India kino 496 East India refined salt- petre 678 Eau de Javelle 1493 Eau de luce 746 Eau medicinale d’Hus- son 313, 851 Ecbalin 363 Ecbalium agreste 361 Ecbalium elaterium 361 Ecbalium oflicinarum 361 Ecbolina 368 Eczema mercuriale 455 Effervescing draught 1217 Effervescing powders 1305 Egg 634 Eglantine 1470 Egyptian opium 614 El Paso grape 856 Elmocarpus copalliferus 1502 Elai'date of glycerin 568 Elai'dic acid 668, 569 Elai'din 568, 569 Elam 567 Elais Guiniensis 1577 Elaphrium elemiferum 364 Elaphrium toinentosum 1609 Elaterin 363 Elaterium 360 Elatin 363 Elder 738 Elder ointment 1426 Elder-flower water 1007 Elecampane 466 Electric calamine 1482 Electrolytic test for ar senic 35 Electuaries 1050 Electuary, lenitive 1052 Elemi 364 Elemin 365 Eleoptene 571 Elettaria cardamomum 218 Elettaria major 216 Elixir cinchon® flav® 1391 Elixir of opium 1404 Elixir of valerianate of ammonia 975 Elixir of vitriol 934 Elixir, paregoric 1405 Elixir proprietatis 1385 Elixir sacrum 1407 Elixir salutis 1409 Ellagic acid 404 Ellis’s magnesia 1224 Elm bark 841 Elm, red 842 Elm, slippery 842 Elm, white 842 Elutriation 879 Emery 1511 Emetia 482 Emetic tartar 976 Emetics 2 Emmenagogues 2 Emollients 2 Emplastra 1063 Emplastrum adb®sivum 1074 Emplastrum ammoniaci 1065 Emplastrum ammoniaci cum hydrargyro 1066 Emplastrum antimonii 1066 Emplastrum arnic® 1067 Emplastrum assafoetid® 1067 Emplastrum belladonn® 1067 Emplastrum calefaciens 1070 Emplastrum cantharidis 1038 Emplastrum cymini 1507 Emplastrum de Vigo cum mercuric 1069 Emplastrum ferri 1068 Emplastrum galbani 1068 Emplastrum galbani compositum 1068 Emplastrum hydrargyvi 1068 Emplastrum lithargyri 1071 Emplastrum opii 1069 Emplastrum picis 1070 Emplastrum picis Bur- gundic® 1070 Index. 1669 x mplastrum picis Cana- densis 1070 Emplastrum picis cum cantharide 1070 Emplastrum plumbi 1071 Emplastrum resinaa 1074 Emplastrum roborans 1068 Emplastrum saponis 1075 Empyreumatic oils 888 Emulsin 108, 690, 780 Emulsion 1228 Emulsion, almond 1228 Emulsion of bitter almonds 1229 Endive 1495 Enema aloes 1076 Enema anodynum 1076 Enema assafoetidae 1076 Enema catharticum 1076 Enema magnesias sul- phatis 1076 Enema of aloes 1076 Enema of assafetida 1076 Enema of opium 1076 Enema of sulphate of magnesia 1076 Enema of tobacco 1077 Enema of turpentine 1077 Enema opii 1076 Enema tabaci 1077 Enema terebinthinae 1077 Enemata 1075 Enfleurage 1247 English court-plaster 465 English garlic 79 English port 859 English rhubarb 705 Ens martis 1460 Epidendrum vanilla 849 Epifagus Americanus 1571 Epigaea repens 1512 Epilobiumangustifolium 1512 Epispastics 2 Epsom salt 526 Equisetum hyemale 1512 Equivalents, table of pharmaceutical 1639 Erechthites hieracifolia 1512 Ergot 365 Ergot of maize 1624 Ergot of wheat 365 Ergot a 365 Ergotaetia abortifaciens 366 Ergotate of secalin 368 Ergotic acid 368 Ergotin 367, 371 Ergotina 368 Erigeron 371 Erigeron annuum 371 Erigeron Canadense 372 Erigeron heterophyllum 371 Erigeron Philadelphicum 372 Erigeron pusilum 373 Errhines 2 Erucic acid 780 firyngium aquaticum 1512 Eryngo, water 1512 Erysimum alliaria 1458 Erysimum officinale 1600 Erythrma centaurium 722, 1490 Erythrsea Chilensis 1491 Erythric acid 1549 Erythrocentaurin 1491 Erythronium America- num 1512 Erythronium lanceola- tum 1512 Ery throphleum Guineen- se 1597 Erythrophleum judiciale 1597 Erythroretin 707 Erythrose 708 Erythroxylon coca 1513 Escharotics 2 Esculetin 1454 Esculin 1454 Essence de petit grain 150 Essence de templine 830 Essence of ambergris 1349 Essence of bergamot 576 Essence of geranium, Turkish 597 Essence of lemon 1350 Essence of peppermint 1254, 1350 Essence of roses 597 Essence of spearmint 1255, 1350 Essence of spruce 830 Essences 1247 Essences, artificial fruit 1515 Essentia anisi 1384 Essentia carui 1384 Essentia cinnamomi 1384 Essentia fcenicuii 1384 Essentia menthae pulegii 1384 Essentia myristicae mos- chataa 1384 Essentia pimentae 1384 Essentia rosmarini 1384 Essential oils 569, 1244 Essential salt of lemons 1573, 1575 Ethal 243 Ethalic acid 243 Ether 948 Ether, acetic 1452 Ether, butyric 1515 Ether, capsules of 954 Ether,compound spirit of 1340 Ether, gelatinized 954 Ether, hydric 948 Ether, hydriodic 1529 Ether, hydrocyanic 1530 Ether, hyponitrous 1343 Ether, muriatic 1559 Ether, nitric 1344 Ether, nitrous 1343 Ether, oenanthic 857, 1516 Ether, pearls of 954 Ether, pelargonic 1516 Ether, pure 951 Ether, pyroacetic 158f> Ether, sulphuric 94fc Ethereal oil 966 Ethereal tincture of lobe- lia 1401 Etherine 968 Etherization 954 Ethcrole 968 Etherosulphuric acid 953 Ethers 947 Ethiops mineral 1172,1476 Ethyl 953 Ethyl, chloride of 1559 Ethyl, cyanide of 1530 Ethyl, iodide of 1529 Ethylamin 619 Ethylconia 319 Ethylen 958 Ethylen, bichloride of 1494 Ethylen, hydrocyanate of 1530 Ethylen, muriate of 1559 Ethylic ether 1515 Ethylic narcotina 61£ Eucalyptin 500 Eucalyptus dumosa 633 Eucalyptus mannifera 533 Eucalyptus resinifera 499 Eugenia caryophyllata 222 Eugenia pimenta 646 Eugenic acid 1249 Eugenin 224 Euonymin 374 Euonymite 374 Euonymus 373 Euonymus Americanus 373 Euonymus atropurpu- reus 374 Euonymus Europseus 373 Euonymus tingens 373 Eupatorin 376 Eupatorium 375 Eupatorium aya-pana 375 Eupatorium cannabinum 375 Eupatorium perfoliatum 375 Eupatorium pilosum 375 Eupatorium purpureum 375 Eupatorium teucrifolium 375 Eupatorium verbensefo- lium 375 Euphorbia antiquorum 1514 Euphorbia Canariensis 1514 Euphorbia corollata 376 Euphorbia hypericifolia 377 Euphorbia ipecacuanha 378 Euphorbia lathyris 1568 Euphorbia maculata 377 Euphorbia officinarum 1514 Euphorbia, oil of 1568 Euphorbia prostrata 377 Euphorbium 1514 Euphrasia officinalis 1514 Eupion 332, 652 European rhubarb 705 Euxanthic acid 1536 Index. E vapor atio l 887 Everitt’s salt 923 Exogonium pui ga 488 Exostemms. 253 Exostemma Caribaea 282 Exostemma floribunda 282 Expectorants 2 Expressed oils 565 Expression 883 Extemporaneous prescrip- tions, examples of 1629 Extract of aconite 1086 Extract of aconite, alco- holic 1087 Extract of arnica, alco- holic 1089 Extract of Barbadoes aloes 1088 Extract of bean of St. Ignatius 1099 Extract of belladonna 1089 Extract of belladonna, alcoholic 1090 Extract of bittersweet 1096 Extract of black helle- bore, alcoholic 1098 Extract of butternut 1101 Extract of chamomile 1088 Extract of cinchona 1091 Extract of colchicum 1092 Extract of colchicum, acetic 1092 Extract of colocynth, alcoholic 1093 Extract of colocynth, compound 1093 Extract of columbo 1090 Extract of dandelion 1107 Extract of digitalis, al- coholic 1096 Extract of gentian 1096 Extract of hellebore 1098 Extract of hemlock 1094 Extract of hemlock, al- coholic 1095 Extract of hemp 379 Extract of hemp, puri- fied 1090 Extract of henbane 1098 Extract of henbane, al- coholic 1099 Extract of hop 1102 Extract of iguatia, alco- holic 1099 Extract of Indian hemp 1090 Extract of jalap 1100 Extract of logwood 1097 Extract of may-apple 1105 Extract of nux vomica 1103 Extract of nux vomica, alcholic 1103 Extract of opium 1103 Extract of opium, de- narcotized 1104 Extract of poppy cap- sules 1104 Extract of quassia 1105 Extract of rhatany 1101 Extract of rhubarb 1105 Extract of rhubarb, alco- holic 1105 Extract of rose-leaf ge- ranium 1579 Extract of seneka, alco- holic 1106 Extract of Socotrine aloes 1088 Extract of stramonium 1106, 1107 Extract of stramonium, alcoholic 1107 Extract of stramonium leaves 1106 Extract of stramonium seed 1107 Extract of yellow bark 1091 Extract of valerian, alco- holic 1108 Extracta 1077 Extracta fluida 1108 Extractive 1077 Extracts 1077 Extracts, fluid 1108 Extractum aconiti 1086 Extractum aconiti alco- holicum 1087 Extractum aloes Barba- densis 1088 Extractum aloes Soco- trinse 1088 Extractum anthemidis 1088 Extractum arnicas alco- holicum 1089 Extractum belae liquid- urn 1109 Extractum belladonnae 1089 Extractum belladonnae alcoholicum 1090 Extractum buchu fluid- um 1109 Extractum calumbae 1090 Extractum cannabis 379 Extractum cannabis In- diem 379, 1090 Extractum cannabis pu- rificatum 381, 1090 Extractum cimicifugae fluidum 1110 Extractum cinchonae 1091 Extractum cinchonae fla- vae liquidum 1111 Extractum cinchonae fluidum 1111 Extractum colchici 1092 Extractum colchici ace- ticum 1092 Extractum colchici radi- cis fluidum 1111 Extractum colchici semi- nis fluidum 1112 Extractum colocynthidis alcoholicum 1093 Extractum colocyntliidig compositura 1093 Extractum conii 1094 Extractum conii alcoho- licum 1095 Extractum conii fluidum 1112 Extractum cubebae fluid- um 1260 Extractum digitalis al- coholicum 1096 Extractum dulcamarse 1096 Extractum dulcamarae fluidum 1113 Extractum ergotae fluid- um 1113 Extractum ergotaa liquid- urn 1113 Extractum filicis liquid- um 1114, 1260 Extractum gentianaa 1096 Extractum gentianae flu- idum 1114 Extractum glycyrrhizae 382 Extractum haematoxyli 1097 Extractum hellebori al- coholicum 1097 Extractum hyoscyami 1098 Extractum hyoscyami alcoholicum 1099 Extractum hyoscyami fluidum 1114 Extractum ignatiae alco- holicum 1099 Extractum ipecacuanhae fluidum 1115 Extractum jalapae 1100 Extractum juglandis 1101 Extractum kramerise 1101 Extractum lupuli 1102 Extractum lupulinae fluidum 1115 Extractum nucis vomicae 1 lb3 Extractum nucis vomicae alcoholicum 1102 Extractum opii 1103 Extractum opii liquid- urn 1116 Extractum papaveris 1104 Extractum pareiras li- quidum 1116 Extractum piperis fluid- um 1261 Extractum podophylli 1105 Extractum pruni Vir- . ginianae fluidum 1116 Extractum quassiae 1105 Extractum rhei 1105 Extractum rhei alco- holicum 1105 Extractum rhei fluidun 1117 Extractum sarsae liquid um 1118 Extractum sarsaparilla* fluidum 1113 Extractum sarsaparilla* fluidum coinpositum 1119 Index. 1671 Extractum senegm alco- holicum 1106 Extractum sennas fluid- urn 1118 Extractum serpentariae fluidum 1120 Extractum spigeliae fluid- um 1121 Extractum spigeliae et senuae fluidum 1119 Extractum stramonii 1106, 1107 Extractum stramonii al- coholicum 1107 Extractum stramonii fo- liorum 1106 Extractum stramonii se- minis 1107 Extractum taraxaci 1107 Extractum taraxaci flu- idum 1121 Extractum uvae ursi flu- idum 1121 Extractum Valerianae al- coholicum 1108 Extractum valerianae fluidum 1122 Extractum veratri viri- dis fluidum 1122 Extractum zingiberis fluidum 1123 Eyebright 1514 F Faba Sancti Ignatii 465 Fagara octandra 1609 Fahrenheit’s thermome- ter 1652 False angustura 562 False barks 282 False mannas 532 False sarsaparilla 134 False sunflower 1527 False tin foil 1615 False tragacanth 1485 False unicorn plant 1527 Farina 384 Fat lute 891 Fat manna 534 Febure’s remedy for can- cer 26 Fel bovinum 1575 Fel bovinum purifica- tum 1123 Fellinic acid 1575 Female fern 1468 Fennel, common 398 Fennel, sweet 398 Fennel water 1004 small 1564 Fennel-seed 398 Fenugreek 1615 fer reduit 1151 Fermentation, alcoholic 388 Fermentation, vinous 388 Fermentum 387 Fern, female 1468 Fern, male 396 Fernambuco wood 1477 Feronia elephantum 6 Ferrated elixir of cin- chona 1391 Ferri arsenias 1124 Ferri bromidum 1477 Ferri carbonas saccha- rata 1125 Ferri carburetum 1487 Ferri chloridi tinctura 1394 Ferri chloridum 1126 Ferri citras 1128 Ferri et ammonias citras 1128 Ferri et ammonias sul- phas 1129 Ferri et ammoniae tar- tras 1130 Ferri etmagnesioe citras 1496 Ferri et potassas tartras 1130 Ferri et quiniae citras 1132 Ferri ferrocyanidum 1131 Ferri ferrocyanuretum 1134 Ferri filum 393 Ferri iodidi syrupus 1369 Ferri iodidum 1135 Ferri lactas 1137 Ferri muriatis tinctura 1394 Ferri nitratis liquor 1198 Ferri oxidum hydratum 1139 Ferri oxidum magneti- cum 391, 1140 Ferri perchloridi liquor 1200 Ferri pernitratis liquor 1198 Ferri peroxidum 1141 Ferri peroxidum hydra- tum 1139 Ferri phosphas 1141 Ferri pulvis 1149 Ferri pyrophosphas 1143 Ferri ramenta 393 Ferri squamas 1141 Ferri subcarbonas 1145 Ferri sulphas 1146 Ferri sulphas exsiccata 1148 Ferri sulphas granulata 1149 Ferri sulphas venalis 1147 Ferri sulphuretum 394 Ferri tannas 1610 Ferri valerianas 1619 Ferric acid 391 Ferridcyanide of potas- sium 1514 Ferrocyanate of potassa 686 Ferrocyanate of quinia 287 Ferrocyanide of iron 1134 Ferrocyanide of potas- sium 686 Ferrocyanide of zinc 1515 Ferrocyanogen 687 Ferrocyanuret of iron 1134 Ferrocyanuret of potas- sium 686 Ferrocyanuret of zinc 1515 Ferro-manganic prepa- rations 1553 Ferroprussiate of potassa 686 Ferrugo 1139 Ferrum 389 Ferrum ammoniatum 1459 Ferrum redactum 1149 Ferrum tartaratum 1130 Ferula ammonifera 105 Ferula assafoetida 145 Ferula erubescens 401 Ferula ferulago 401 Ferula galbanifera 401 Ferula Persica 1594 Ferula tingitana 105 Fever-bush 1471 Feverfew 1589 Fever-root 841 Fever-wort 841 Fibrin, vegetable 385 Fibroin 1604 Fibyous Carthagena bark 278, 279 Ficus 395 Ficus carica 395 Ficus Indica 1544 Ficus religiosa 1544 Fig / 395 Figwort 1597 Filicic acid 397 Filix 396 Filix mas 396 Fillsea suaveolius 1597 Filter, Boullay’s 895 Filters 881 Filtration 880 Filtration by displace- ment 893, 894 Fine-leaved water-hem- lock 1567 ' Fire weed 1512 Fir-wool 829 Fir-wool oil 829 Fish glue 463 Fishery salt 796 Fixed oils 565 Flag, blue 486 Flag, sweet 181 Flake manna 534 Flammula Jovis 1496 Flavouring extracts 1515 Flax 514 Flax, purging 1548 Flaxseed 514 Flaxseed cataplasm 1037 Flaxseed meal 514 Flaxseed oil 582 Fleabane, Canada 372 Fleabane, Philadelphia 372 Fleabane, various-leaved 371 Fleawort 1585 Flesh-coloured asclepias 1467 Flies, potato 205 Flies, Spanish 200 Flint, powdered 1600 1672 Index. Flix wted 1600 Florence receiver 1246 Florentine orris 485 Flores martiales 1460 Florida anise-tree 1534 Florida arrow-root 637 Flour, wheat 384 Flowering ash 533 Flowers 891 Flowers of benzoin 917 Flowers of sulphur 814, 816 Flowers of zinc * 1444 Fluid extract of Ameri- can hellebore 1122 Fluid extract of bitter- sweet 1113 Fluid extract of black pepper 1261 Fluid extract of buchu 1109 Fluid extract of catechu 237 Fluid extract of cimici- fuga 1110 Fluid extract of cin- • chona 1111 Fluid extract of cocculus Indicus 307 Fluid extract of colchi- cum root 1111 Fluid extract of colchi- cum seed 1112 Fluid extract of cubebs 1260 Fluid extract of dande- lion 1121 Fluid extract of ergot 1113 Fluid extract of gentian 1114 Fluid extract of ginger 1123 Fluid extract of hem- lock 1112 Fluid extract of henbane 1114 Fluid extract of ipecacu- anha 1115 Fluid extract of jalap 1101 Fluid extract of lactu- carium 506 Fluid extract of lobelia 521 Fluid extract of lupulin 1115 Fluid extract of Pareira 638 Fluid extract of rhubarb 1117 Fluid extract of sarsa- parilla 1118 Fluid extract of savine 724 Fluid extract of Scutel- laria 765 Fluid extract of senna 1119 Fluid extract of serpen- tar ia 1120 Fluid extract of spigelia 1121 Fluid extract of spigelia and senna 1120 Fluid extract of taraxa- cum 1121 Fluid extract of uvaursi 1121 Fluid extract of valerian 1122 Fluid extract of vanilla 850 Fluid extract of wild- cherry bark 1116 Fluid extracts 1108 Flux 899 Fly-trap 1596 Foeniculum 398 Foeniculum dulce 399 Foeniculum officinale 399 Foeniculum vulgare 398 Folia Malabathri 302 Foliated earth of tartar 1281 Foreign weights, table of 1637 Formulas for calculating specific gravities cor- responding to BaumAs hydrometer, and vice versa 1650 Formulas for prescrip- tions . 1629 Formyl, terchloride of 960 Formyl, teriodide of 1540 Fossil salt 794 Fothergill’s pills 89 Fowler’s solution 1214 Foxglove 349 Frangulce cortex 1593 Frankincense 828, 1569 Frankincense of Sierra Leone 1569 Frasera 400 Frasera Carolinensis 400 Frasera Walteri 400 Fraxin 1453 Fraxinella, white 1510 Fraxinin 1515 Fraxinus Chinensis 240 Fraxinus excelsior 1515 Fraxinus ornus 533 Fraxinus parviflora 532 French berries 1593 French chalk 1515 French decimal weights and measures 1635 French measures 1636 French rhubarb 705 French vinegar 15 French weights 1636 Frfere Come, arsenical paste of 25 Friar’s balsam 1387 Frost-weed 436 Froswort 436 Fruit essences, artificial 1515 Fruit sugar 725 Fucus crispus 249 Fucus helminthocorton 1517 Fucus vesiculosus 1516 Fuligo ligni 1601 Fuligokali 1517 Fumaria officinalis 1518 Fumaric acid 1560 Fumarina or fumarin 1518 Fumigating pastiles 166 Faminella 338 Fuming sulphuric acid of Nordhausen 55 Fumitory 1518 Fungi 1560 Fungic acid 1560 Fungin 367, 1454, 1560 Fungus rosarum 1470 Funnel stands 882 Furnaces 884 Fusagasuga bark 280 Fused nitrate of silver 1011 Fusel oil 77, 801 Fusiform jalap 489 Fusion 898 Fustic 1518 G Gadic acid 586 Gaduin 685 Gadus iEglifinus 584 Gadus callarias 583 Gadus carbonarius 584 Gadus merluccius 464, 584 Gadus molva 584 Gadus morrhua 581 Gadus pollackius 584 Gaiaretine 430 Galam, gum 8 Galanga 1518 Galangal 1518 Galbanum 401 Galbanum officinale 401 Galbanum plaster 1068 Galbanum plaster, com- pound 1068 Galega officinalis 1518 Galega tinctoria 1536 Galega Virginian* 1518 Galena 653 Galipea cusparia 116 Galipea officinalis 117 Galipot 650 Galitannic acid 1519 Galium aparine 1518 Galium palustre 1519 Galium tinctorium 1519 Galium verum 1519 Galla 402 Gallic acid 919 Gallic acid fermentation 920 Galline 1590 Gallo-tannic acid 940 Galls 402 Galls, Chinese 403 Gallus Bankiva 634 Gambir or gambeer 234 Gamboge 405 Gambogia 405 Gambogic acid 407 Garbling of drugs 875 Garcinia cambogia 405 Garcinia morella 407 Garden angelica 115 Garden carrot-root 220 Garden endive 1495 Garden purslane 1587 Gardenia campanulata 1519 Gardenia grandiflora 1519 Garlio 79 Index. 1673 Gas burners 885 Gas liquor 102 Gastric juice 1590 Gaultheria 408 Gaultheria hispidula 1252 Gaultheria procumbens 408 Gaultherilen 1252 Gaultherin 1473 Gay feather 1546 Gayacol 430 Gayacyl, hydruret of 430 Gay-Lussac’s centesimal alcoholmeter 1651 Gein 129 Gelatin 464 Gelatin, capsules of 1520 Gelatinized chloroform 963 Gelatinized ether 954 Gelidium corneum 465 Gelose 465 Gelseminia 409 Gelseminum nitidum 409 Gelseminum sempervi- rens 409 Gelsemium 409 Gelsemium sempervirens 409 General remedies 2 Genista tinctoria 1519 Gentian 411 Gentian, blue 413 Gentiana 411 Gentiana Catesbasi 413 Gentiana chirayta 248 Gentiana lutea 411 Gentiana macrophylla 411 Gentiana Pannonica 411 Gentiana punctata 411 Gentiana purpurea 411 Gentiana quinqueflora 411 Gentiana saponaria 413 Gentianin 412 Gentiogenin 412 Gentiopicrin 412 Gentisic acid 411 Gentisin 411 Geoffroya inermis 1478 GeofFroya Surinamensis 1479 Geranium 413 Geranium maculatum 413 Geranium Robertianum 1519 Geranium, rose 1579 German chamomile 542 Germander 1613 Geum 415 Geum rivale 415 Geum urbanum 415 Gigartina helminthocor- ton 1517 Gigartina lichenoides 1517 Gillenia 416 flillenia stipulacea 416 Gillenia trifoliata 416 Gillenin 417 Ginger 870 Ginger syrup 1380 Ginseng 635 Glacial acetic acid 17, 20 Glacial phosphoric acid 51 Glass of antimony 1519 Glass of borax 786 Glass of lead 1520 Glauber’s salt 792 Glechoma hederacea 1520 Globularia alypum 1520 Glonoin 419 Glu 412, 1473 Glucic acid 730 Glucose 724, 732 Glucosides 725 Glue 1520 Gluten 385 Glycerate of aloes 1088 Glycerate of iodide of iron 1137 Glycerate of tar 1579 Glycerides 569 Glycerin 417 Glycerin ointment 421 Glycerina 417 Glycerinated tar 653 Glycerinum 417 Glycerized collodium 1048 Glycerole of aloes 1088 Glyceryl 419, 567 Glycion 422 Glycocholic acid 1575 Glycocine 1576 Glycocoll 464 Glycyrrhiza 421 Glycyrrhiza echinata 383,422 Glycyrrhiza glabra 383,421, 612 Glycyrrhiza lepidota 422 Glycyrrhizas radix 421 Glycyrrhizin 422 Gnaphalium margarita- ceum 1521 Gnaphalium polycepha- lum 1521 Goat’s rue 1518, 1612 Godfrey’s cordial 1405 Gold, in powder 1521 Gold, preparations of 1521 Golden sulphur of anti- mony 987 Golden-rod 797 Goldthread 326 Gollindrinera 377 Gombo 1528 Gomme d’acajou 1461 Gomme du pays 9 Gonaki6 gum 8 Gondret’s vesicating ointment 99 Goose-grass 1518 Gossypii radix 423 Gossypium 423 Gossypium album 423 Gossypium Barbadense 423 Gossypium herbaceum 424 Gossypium nigrum 423 Gossypium Peruvianum 423 Goulard’s cerate 104£ Goulard’s extract 1210 Gourd seeds ISO? Grain oil 77, 80j Grain tin 1614 Grains of paradise 216, 217 Grana Molucca 606 Grana moschata 1528 Grana paradisi 216, 217 Grana tiglia 606 Granati fructus cortex 425 Granati radicis cortex 425 Granati radix 425 Granulated powders 1305 Granulated sulphate of iron 1140 Granules 1264 Grape sugar 724 Grape, varieties of the 855 Grapes 855 Graphite 209 Gratiola officinalis 1528 Gratiolqcrin 1528 Gratiolin 1523 Gratiosolin 1523 Gravel-root 375 Gray bark . 257 Gray powder 1174 Greaves 686 Green iodide of mercury 1165 Green vitriol 1146 Green weed 1519 Greenheart 560 Griffes de girofles 223 Griffith’s antihectic myrrh mixture 1231 Grindelia hirsutula 838 Grinding 879 Groats 152 Gromwell 1649 Ground ivy 1520 Ground laurel 1512 Ground nuts 1523 Ground pine 1456 Groundsel, common 1599 Gruel, oatmeal 152 Gruffs 877 Guaco 1523 Guaiac 429 Guaiac mixture 1231 Guaiaci lignum 427 Guaiaci resina 429 Guaiacic acid 428, 430 Guaiacin 430 Guaiacum 427 Guaiacum arboreum 428 Guaiacum officinale 427 Guaiacum sanctum 428 Guaiacum wood 427 Guanin 1524 Guano 1524 Guarana 1577 Guaranin 1578 Guatemala sarsaparilla 751 Guayaquil, yellow bark of 273 1674 Index. Guiboi» nia copallifnra 1502 Guilan tina bonduc 249 Guilandina moringa 1568 Guinea grains 217 Guinea pepper 339 Guirila 1537 Gum 9 Gum animd 1463 Gum arabic 6 Gum, artificial 111 Gum, Australian 9 Gum, Barbary 7 Gum, Bassora 1470 Gum, Bondou 8 Gum, Cape 9 Gum caranna 1486 Gum elastic 1484 Gum galam 8 Gum gedda 7 Gum, Gonakid 8 Gum, India 8 Gum, mesquite 1556 Gum mezquite 1556 Gum pectoral 12 Gum, Senegal 8 Gum turic 7 Gum, Turkey 7 Gummi gutta 406 Gummi rubruin astrin- gens Gambinense 499 Gummic acid 10 Gummi-resinse 901 Gum-resins 901 Gun cotton 1524 Gun cotton, ethereal so- lution of 1046 Gunjak 380 Gurjun balsam 325 Gutta 432 Gutta percka 431 Gutta percha cement 892 Gynocardia odorata 1525 Gyromia Virginica 1554 H Haddock 584 Hasmatoxylon 434 Hsematoxylon Campe- chianum 434 Hagenia Abyssinica 170 Hair-cap moss 1586 Hake 684 Ilalecore australis 588 llalecore dugong ' 688 Hamamelis Virginica 1525 Hard Cartkagena bark 277, 278 Hard water 127 Hardback 800 Harris’s patent sieve 879 Harrowgate water 131 Hartshorn 1526 Harts-tongue 1597 Hashish 380 Hawkweed 1528 Heal-all 1500, 1589 Heat, application of 884 Heavy carbonate of mag- nesia 623 Heavy oil of wine 968 Heavy spar 159 Hebradendron cambo- gioides . 405 Hedeoma 435 Hedeoma pulegioides 435 Hedera helix 1526 Ilederia 1526 Hederic acid 1526 Hederin 1526 Hedge garlic 1458 Hedge hyssop 1523 Hedge mustard 1600 Hedysarum Alhagi 533 Helenin 467 Helenium autumnale 1527 Helianthemum 436 Helianthemum Cana- dense 436 Helianthemum corym- bosum 436 Helianthus annuus 1558 Hellebore, American 851 Hellebore, black 436 Hellebore, swamp 852 Hellebore, white 850 Helleborin 438 Ilelleborus 436 Helleborus foetidus 1527 Helleborus niger 437 Helleborus orientalis 437 Helleborus viridis 437 Helminthocorton 1517 Helonias dioica 1527 Helonias officinalis 721 Hematin 434 Hematoxylin 434 Hemidesmic acid 439 Hemidesmus 439 Hemidesmus Indicus439, 749 Hemlock 317 Hemlock fruit 317 Hemlock gum 651 Hemlock leaves 317 Hemlock, oil of 651 Hemlock pitch plaster 1070 Hemlock poultice 1036 Hemlock seed 318 Hemlock spruce 651 Hemlock water-drop- wort 1567 Hemp 379 Hemp, Indian 125, 379 Henbane leaves 459 Henbane seed 469 Henna 1546 Hennotannic acid 1546 Henry’s aromatic spirit of vinegar 915 Henry’s magnesia 1223 Hepar sulphuris 1303 Hepatic aloes 85 Hepatica 439 Hepatica acutiloba 440 Hepatica Americana 439 Hepatica triloba 439 Heptree 711 Heracleum gummiferum 105 Heracleum lanatum 1527 Herb Christopher 1453 Herb Robert 1519 Herba Britannica 718 Herbemont grape 855 Hermodactyls 1527 Hesperidin 513 Heuchera 440 Heuchera Americana 440 Heuchera cortusa 440 Heuchera viscida 440 Heudelotia Africana 1470 Hevea Guianensis 1484 Hibiscus abelmoschus 1528 Hibiscus esculentus 1528 Hickory 1488 Hickory ashes and soot, infusion of 1602 Hiedra 836 Hiera picra 1306 Hieracium venosum 1528 Himalaya rhubarb 706 Hips 711 Hircic acid 778 Hircin 778 Hirudo 441 Hirudo decora 441 Hirudo medicinalis 441 Hive-syrup 1377 Hoffmann’s anodyne li- quor 1340 Holchus saccharatus 1603 Holly 1533 Hollyhock 90 Homberg’s pyrophorus 93 Honduras sarsaparilla 750 Honey 543 Honey, clarified 1226 Honey of borate of soda 1227 Honey of borax 1227 Honey of roses 1227 Honey, preparations of 1226 Honeysuckle 1550 Hooper’s pills 89, 1265 Hops 447 Hordein 446 Hordeum 445 Hordeum distichon 445 Hordeum perlatum 447 Hordeum vulgare 445 Horehound 638 Horse aloes 86 Horse brimstone 814 Horse-balm 1500 Horsechestnut 1453 Horsemint 649 Horse-radish i37 Horse-radish tree 1568 Horsetail .512 Index. 1675 Horse-weed 1500 Hot bath 134 Hound’s tongue 1509 Houseleek, common 1599 Houseleek, small 1598 Howard’s hydrosubli- mate of mercury 1159 Huamilies bark 264, 267 Huanochine 292 Huanuco bark 264, 266 Humulin 449 Humulus 447 Humulus lupulus 447 Hundred-leaved roses 711 Hungarian balsam 1594 Hura Brasiliensis 1528 Hura crepitans 1528 Husband’s magnesia 1224 Huxham’s tincture of bark 1391 Hydrangea arborescens 1528 Hydrangea, common 1528 Hydrargyri ammonio- chloridum 1172 Hydrargyri bichloridum 1152 Hydrargyri binoxidum 1168 Hydrargyri chloridum corrosivum 1152 Hydrargyri chloridum mite 1157 Hydrargyri cyanidum 1162 Hydrargyri cyanuretum 1162 Hydrargyri et quiniae chloridum 1493 Hydrargyri iodidum 1165 Hydrargyri iodidum ru- brum 1163 Hydrargyri iodidum vi- ride 1165 Hydrargyri nitrico-oxi- dum 1166 Hydrargyri oxidum ni- grum 1168 Hydrargyri oxidum ru- brum 1166 Hydrargyri precipita- tum album 1172 Hydrargyri sulphas 1169 Hydrargyri sulphas fla- vus 1170 Hydrargyri sulphure- tum nigrum 1172 Hydrargyri sulphure- tum rubrum 1171 Hydrargyria 455 Hydrargyrum 450 Hydrargyrum ammonia- turn 1172 Hydrargyrum corrosi- vum sublimatum 1152 Hydrargyrum cum creta 1174 Hydrargyrum praecipi- tatum per se 1167 Hydrastia or hvdrastin 457 Hydrastina 457 Hydrastis 456 Hydrastis Canadensis 457 Hydrate of ethylen 948 Hydrate of potassa 1277 Hydrated oxide of amyl 77 Hydrated oxide of iron 1139 Hydrated sesquioxide (peroxide) of iron 1139 Hydric ether 948 Hydride of amyl 1460 Hydride of butyl 1582 Hydride of caproyl 1582 Hydride of capryl 1582 Hydride of oenanthyl 1582 Hydride of pelargonyl 1582 Hydride of rutyl 1582 Hydriodate of ammonia 1537 Hydriodate of arsenic and mercury, solution of 1193 Hydriodate of potassa 1298 Hydriodic acid 470, 922 Hydriodic acid, diluted 922 Hydriodic ether 1529 Hydrobromate of am- monia 1477 Hydrobryoretin 1478 Ilydrochinone 846 Hydrochlorate of ammo- nia 102 Hydrochlorate of lime 183 Hydrochlorate of mor- phia 1239 Hydrochlorate of mor- phia, solution of 1208 Hydrochloric acid 41 Hydrochloric acid, com- mercial 44 Hydrochloric acid, di- lute 929 Ilydrocotyle Asiatica 1529 Hydrocyanate of ethylen 1530 Hydrocyanic acid, anhy- drous 927 Hydrocyanic acid, dilu- ted 923 Hydrocyanic ether 1530 Hydrogen 867 Hydrometer, Baumd’s 876, 1649 Hydrosublimate of mer- cury 1159 Hydrosulphate of am- monia, solution of 1530 Hydrosulphate of lime 1607 Hydrosulphuret of am- monia 1530 Hydrosulphuric acid 394, 1608 Hydruret of amyl 1460 Hydruret of benzyl 573 Hydruret of cumyl 1507 Hydruret of phenyl 1471 Hydruret of salicyl 231 Hymensea courbaril 1463 Hymensea verrucosa 1502 Hyoscyami folium 459 Hyoscyami semen 459 Hyoscyamia 400, 461 Hyoscyamin 460 Hyoscyamus 459 Hyoscyamus albus 460 Hyoscyamus niger 459 Hyperantkera moringa Hypericum perforatum 1530 Hyperiodic acid 470 Ilypermanganate of po- tassa 681 Hypermanganic acid 530 Hyperoxymuriate of po- tassa 674 Hypochlorite of lime 185 Hypochlorite of soda 1220 Hyponitric acid 45 Hyponitrous ether 1343 Hypophosphite of am- monia 1532 Hypophosphite of iron 1532 Hypophosphite of lime 1531 Hypophosphite of po- tassa 1532 Hypophosphite of quinia 287, 1532 Hypophosphite of soda 1531 Hypophosphites 1531 Hypophosphorous acid 1532 Hypopicrotoxic acid 306 Hyposulphite of lime 1532 Hyposulphite of soda 791 Hyposulphite of soda and silver 1532 Hyposulphuric acid 816 Hyposulphurous acid 816 Hyraceum 1532 Hyrax Capensis 1533 Hyssop 1533 Hyssopus officinalis 1533 I Iberis amara 1533 Iceland moss 243 Iceland moss paste 12 Ice-plant 1556 Ichthyocolla 463 Icica icicariba 364 Ictodes foetidus 355 Idrialin 598 Igasuria 563 Igasuric acid 562 Ignatia 465 Ignatia amara 465 Ilex 1533 Ilex aquifolium 1473, 1533 Ilex cassina 1534 Ilex dahoon 1534 Ilex mate 1534 Ilex opaca 1534 Ilex Paraguaiensis 1534 Ilex vomitoria 1534 llexanthin 1474, 1533 Ilicic acid 1538 Index. Ilicin 1533 Illiciuri anisatum 119, 1534 Illicium Floridanum 1534 Illicium parviflorum 1534 Impatiens balsamina 1534 Impatiens fulva 1534 Impatiens noli-me-tan- gere 1534 Impatiens pallida 1534 Imperatoria ostruthium 1534 Imperatorin 1534 Imperial 670 Imperial measure 1633 Imphee 1603 Impure carbonate of po- tassa 670 Impure oxide of zinc 1617 Incineration 898 lncitants * 2 Indelible ink 1535 India aloes 86 India gum 8 India myrrh 658 India opium 614 India rhubarb 703 India senna 771 Indian corn 1623 Indian cucumber 1554 Indian hemp 125, 379 Indian physic 416 Indian poke 852 Indian red 1535 Indian rubber 1484 Indian sarsaparilla 439 Indian tobacco 519 Indian turnip 142 Indian yellow 1535 Indican 1636 Indigo 1536 Indigo, sulphate of 1536 Indigo, wild 1469 Indigofera anil 1536 Indigofera argentea 1536 Indigofera tinctoria 1536 Indigotin 1536 Infusa 1175 Infusion 893 Infusion jars of Alsop and Squire 1176 Infusion of angustura 1177 Infusion of bearberry 1185 Infusion of buchu 1178 Infusion of calumbo 1178 Infusion of capsicum 1179 Infusion of cascarilla 1179 Infusion of catechu 1179 Infusion of catechu, com- pound 1179 Infusion of Cayenne pepper 1179 Infusion of chamomile 1177 Infusion of chiretta 1179 Infusion of cloves 1179 Infusion of columbo 1178 Infusion of cusparia 1177 Infusion of dandelion 1185 Infusion of digitalis 1181 Infusion of dulcamara 1181 Infusion of ergot 1181 Infusion of flaxseed, compound 1182 Infusion of gentian, compound 1181 Infusion of ginger 1186 Infusion of hickory ashes and soot 1602 Infusion of hops 1182 Infusion of juniper 1182 Infusion of kousso 1180 Infusion of matico 1182 Infusion of orange peel 1178 Infusion of pareirabrava 1182 Infusion of Peruvian bark, compound 1180 Infusion of quassia 1183 Infusion of red bark 1180 Infusion of red cinchona 1180 Infusion of rhatany 1182 Infusion of rhubarb 1183 Infusion of roses, acid 1184 Infusion of roses, com- pound 1184 Infusion of sage 1184 Infusion of sassafras pith 1243 Infusion of seneka 1184 Infusion of senna 1184 Infusion of serpentaria 1185 Infusion of slippery elm bark 1244 Infusion of spigelia 1185 Infusion of tar 1182 Infusion of thorough- wort 1181 Infusion of tobacco 1185 Infusion of valerian 1185 Infusion of wild-cherry bark 1183 Infusion of yellow bark 1179 Infusion of yellow cin- chona 1179 Infusions 1175 Infusum angustur* 1177 Infusum anthemidis 1177 Infusum aurantii 1178 Infusum bucco 1178 Infusum bucbu 1178 Infusum calumb* 1178 Infusum capsici 1179 Infusum caryophylli 1179 Infusum cascarill* 1179 Infusum catechu com- positum 1179 Infusum chirat* 1179 Infusum cinchon* 1179,1180 Inlusum cinchon* com- positum 1180 Infusum cinchon* flav* 1179 Infusum cinchon* ru- br* 1180 Infusum colomb* 1178 Infusum cuspari* 1177 Infusum cusso 1180 Infusum digitalis 1181 Infusum dulcamar* 1181 Infusum ergot* 1181 Infusum eupatorii 1181 Infusum gentians© com- positum 1181 Infusum humuli 1182 Infusum juniperi 1182 Infusum krameri* 1182 Infusum lini compositum 1182 Infusum lupuli 1182 Infusum matic* 1182 Infusum pareir* 1182 Infusum picis liquid* 1182 Infusum pruni Virgini- an* 1183 Infusum quassi* 1183 Infusum rhei 1183 Infusum ros* acidum 1184 Infusum ros* composi- tum 1184 Infusum salvi* 1184 Infusum sassafras me- dull* * 1243 Infusum seneg* 1184 Infusum senn* 1184 Infusum serpentari* 1185 Infusum spigeli* 1185 Infusum tabaci 1185 Infusum taraxaci 1185 Infusum ulmi 1244 Infusum uv* ursi 1185 Infusum valerian* 1185 Infusum zingiberis 1186 Ink 1010 Inkomankomo 396 Inosite 725, 732 Insect powder, Persian 1537 Inspissated infusions 1177 Inula 466 Inula helenium 466 Inulin 467 Inverse sugar 725, 732 Iodate of potassa 1537 Iodic acid 470 Iodic alimentation 475 Iodide of ammonium 1537 Iodide of antimony 1538 Iodide of arsenic 1016 Iodide of arsenic and mercury, solution of 1193 Iodide of barium 1538 Iodide of cadmium 176 Iodide of ethyl 1529 Iodide of gold 1522 Iodide of iron 1135 Iodide of iron, solution of 1369 Iodide of iron, gyrup o* 1369 Iodide of lead 1276 Iodide of manganese 1552 Iodide of mercury 1165 Iodide of potassium 1296 Iodide of silver 1538 Iodide of sodium 1538 Index. 1677 Iodide of starch 1539 Iodide of sulphate of quinia 1319 Iodide of sulphur 1360 Iodide of zinc 1539 Iodides of calomel 1540 Iodine 467 Iodine baths 476 Iodine, bisulphuret of 1360 Iodine caustic 476 Iodine, compound solu- tion of 1206 Iodine, compound tinc- ture of 1400 Iodine inhalation 478 Iodine, liniment of 477, 1188 Iodine lotion 476 Iodine, Lugol’s solutions of 476 Iodine, oxide of 470 Iodine, rubefacient solu- tion of 476 Iodine, tincture of 1399 Iodinium 467 Iodism 472 Iodized camphor 479 Iodized collodion 1048 Iodized glycerin 419, 477 Iodized oil 475 Iodochlorides of mer- cury 1540 Iodoform # 1540 Iodoformum 1540 Iodohydrargyrate of po- tassium 1541 Iodo-quinia, sulphate of 1319 lodo-tannin 470, 1542 lodous acid 470 lodum 467 lonidium ipecacuanha 484 lonidium marcucci 484, 1542 lonidium microphyllum 484 lonidium parviflorum 484, 1542 Ipecacuan 480 Ipecacuanha 480 Ipecacuanha, American 378, 416 Ipecacuanha, amyla- ceous 483 Ipecacuanha, black 483 Ipecacuanha, Peruvian 483 Ipecacuanha spurge .378 Ipecacuanha, striated 483 Ipecacuanha, undulated 483 Ipecacuanha, white 483 Ipecacuanhas, non-offici- nal 483 Ipecacuanhic acid 482 Ipomsea jalapa 488 Ipomsea macrorrhiza 487. Ipomaea purga 488 lpomaea turpethum 1170 Iridin or irisin 487 Iris Florentina 485 Iris foetidissima 485 Iris Germanica 485 Iris pseudo-acorus 485 Iris tuberosa 485, 1527 Iris versicolor 486 Irish moss 249 Iron 389 Iron, albuminate of 1457 Iron alums 1129 Iron, ammoniated 1459 Iron, ammonio-chloride of 1459 Iron, ammonio-citrate of 1128 Iron, ammonio-tartrate of 1130 Iron and alumina, sul- phate of 1606 Iron and ammonia, sul- phate of 1129 Iron and magnesia, ci- trate of 1496 Iron and potassa albu- minate of 1456 Iron and potassa, sul- phate of 1129 Iron and potassa, tar- trate of 1130 Iron and quinia, citrate of 1132 Iron and soda, albumin- ate of 1457 Iron, arseniate of 1124 Iron, black oxide of 391 Iron, bromide of 1477 Iron by hydrogen 1149 Iron, carbazotate of 1486 Iron, carbonate of, with sugar 1125 Iron, carburet of 1487 Iron, chloride of 1126 Iron, citrate of 1128 Iron, commercial sul- phate of 1147 Iron, dried sulphate of 1148 Iron, ferrocyanide of 1134 Iron filings 393 Iron, granulated sul- phate of 1149 Iron, impalpable powder of 393, 1149 Iron in fine powder 393 Iron, iodide of 1135 Iron, lactate of 1137 Iron, magnetic oxide of 1140 Iron, perchloride of 1126 Iron, peroxide of 1141 Iron, phosphate of 1141 Iron plaster 1068 Iron, potassio-tartrate of 1130 Iron, powder of 1149 Iron, precipitated car- bonate of 1145 Iron, preparations of 1123 Iron, protoxide of 390 Iron, Quevenne’s 1149 Iron, red oxide of 1145 Iron, reduced 1149 Iron, saccharated carbo- nate of 1123 Iron, sesquichloride of 1120- Iron, sesquioxide of 391, 1141, 1145 Iron, solution of citrate of 1198 Iron, solution of iodide of 1309 Iron, solution of nitrate of 1198 Iron, solution of per- chloride of 1200 Iron, solution of subsul- phate of 1202 Iron, solution of tersul- phate of 1203 Iron, subcarbonate of 1145 Iron sulphate of 1146 Iron, sulphuret of 1607 Iron, syrup of iodide of 1369 Iron, table of the prepa- rations of 392 Iron, tannate of 1610 Iron, tartarated 1130 Iron, tartrate of protox- ide of 1131 Iron, teroxide of 391 Iron, tincture of acetate of 1452 Iron, tincture of chloride of 1394 Iron, tincture of muriate of 1394 Iron, valerianate of 1619 Iron, wine of 1436 Iron wire 393 Isatis tinctoria 1542 Isinglass 463 Isis nobilis 1503 Isonandra gutta 431 Issue-peas 150, 486, 1527 Ivory-black 211 Ivraie 1550 Ivy 1526 Ivy gum 1526 J Jaen bark 264, 267 Jaggary 726 Jalap 487 Jalap, fusiform 489 Jalap, light 489 Jalap, male 489 Jalap, overgrown 490 Jalap, resin of 1325 Jalap, rose-scented 490 Jalapa 487 Jalapse resina 1325 Jalapic acid (note) 490 Jalapin 488 Jalapinol (note) 490 Jamaica dogwood 1585 Jamaica ginger 871 Jamaica kino 497 Index. Jamaica pepper 647 Jamaica sarsaparilla 750 Jamaicina 1478 James’s powder 1307 Jamestown weed 808 Janipha manihot 536, 825 Japan camphor 194 Japan sago 733 Japan varnish 1456 Japan wax 241 Japanese isinglass 465 Japanese pepper 864 Jargonelle pear essence 1516 Jasmine, common white 1569 Jasminum grandiflorum 1569 Jasminum officinale 1568 Jasminum sambac 1569 Jatamansi 1608 Jatropha curcas 1469 Jatropha elastica 1484 Jatropha manihot 825 Jatropha multifida 1470 Jatropha oil 1470 Java cardamom 216 Javelle’s water 1493 Jeffersonia diphylla 1542 Jellies 1543 Jelly, vegetable 220 Jerusalem cherry 358 .Jerusalem oak 245, 246 Jervina 851 Jesuits’ drops 1387 Jesuits’ powder 297 Jewell’s hydrosublimate of mercury 1159 Jewel-weed 1534 Juglans 491, 1488 Juglans cathartica 492 Juglans cinerea 492 Juglans nigra 492 Juglans regia 491 Juices 1358 Juice of broom 1358 Juice of hemlock 1358 Juice of taraxacum 1358 Jujubae 1624 Jujube paste 12, 1624 Juniper 493 Juniperin 494 Juniperus 493 Juniperus communis 493 Juniperus depressa 493 Juniperus lycia 1569 Juniperus oxycedrus • 1568 Juniperus sabina 723 Juniperus Virginiana494, 723 K Kaempferia rotunda 1624 Kali purum 1277 Kalium 666 Kalmia angustifolia 1543 Kalmia glauca 1543 Kalmia latifolia 1543 Kameela 713 Kassu 235 Kava or kawa 541 Kawine 541 Kekune oil 1457 Kelp 468, 789 Kempferid 1518 Kentish’s ointment 1190 Kermes mineral 985 Kiew 1559 Kinate of cinchonia 283, 292 Kinate of quinia 283, 292 King’s yellow 1571 Kinic acid 283, 292 Kino 495 Kino, African 498 Kino, Botany Bay 499 Kino, Caracas 497 Kino, East India 496 Kino, Jamaica 497 Kino, South American 497 Kino, West India 497 Kinoic acid 497 Kinoile 293 Kinol 1462 Kinone 293 Kino-red 497 Kinovic acid 285, 293 Kinovic bitter 285, 293 Kinovin 293 Knot-grass 1474 Knot-root, 1500 Knotty-rooted fig wort 1597 Kola nuts 1605 Koossine 171 Koosso 170 Krameria 500 Krameria ixina 501 Krameria-tannic acid 502 Krameria triandra 501 Krameric acid 602 Krimca rhubarb 705 Kukue oil 1457 L Labarraque’s disinfect- ing liquid 1219 Labdanum 1543 Labrador tea 1546 Laburnic acid 1509 Laburnin 1509 Laburnum 1509 Lac 1544 Lac ammoniaci 1228 Lac assafoetid® 1229 Lac sulphuris 1359 Lacca in placentis 1544 Laccin 1544 Lachryma scammony 758 Lacmus 1549 Lactate of iron 1137 Lactate of lime 40 Lactate of manganese 1553 Lactate of quinia 287 Lactate of zinc 40, 1545 Lactic acid 39 Lactide 40 Lactin 725, 732 Lactose 732 Lactuca 503 Lactuca altissima 503 Lactuca elongata 503 Lactuca sativa 503 Lactuca scariola 507 Lactuca virosa 503, 612 Lactucarium 503 Lactucerin 506 Lactucic acid 500 Lactucin 505 Lactucone 505 Ladanum 1543 Ladies’ mantle 1457 Ladies’ slipper 347 Lady Webster’s pills 1265 Laevo-tartaric acid 62 Lake water 129 Lakes 309, 1545 Laminaria bulbosa 468 Laminaria digitata 468 Laminaria saccharina 468 Lampblack 212 Lamps, alcoholic 885 Lana philosophica 1444 Lancaster blackdrop 913 Lapilli cancrorum 1506 Lapis bezoar occidentals 1473 Lapis bezoar orientalis 1473 Lapis calaminaris 1482 Lapis divinus 345 Lapis infernalis 1011 Lapis lazuli 1617 Lappa 507 Lappa major 507 Lappa minor 507 Larch bark 831 Larch, European 831 Lard 67 Lard, benzinated 1415 Large-flowering spurge 376 Larix cedrus 533 Larix Europaea 533, 830 Larixine 831 Larixinic acid 831 Larkspur 348 Laudanum 1403 Laudanum, denarcotized 1404 Laudanum, Rousseau’s 1437 Laudanum, Sydenham’s 1436 Laurel 1543 Laurie acid 607 Lauro-cerasus 508 Laurus benzoin 1471 Laurus camphora 192 Laurus cassia 301, 302 Laurus cinnamomum 301 Laurus culilawan 1507 Laurus nobilis 1545 Laurus pichurjm 1584 Laurus sassafras 754 Lavandula 609 Index. 1679 Lavandula spica 509 Lavandula vera 609 Lavender 509 Lavender water 1349 Lawsonia inermis 1546 Lazulite 1617 Lead 653 Lead, acetate of 656 Lead, as a poison 655 Lead, carbonate of 658 Lead, diluted solution of subacetate of 1211 Lead, dioxide of 654 Lead, glass of 1520 Lead, iodide of 1276 Lead, nitrate of 661 Lead, oxide of 662 Lead plaster * 1071 Lead, preparations of 1276 Lead, protoxide of 654, 662 Lead, red 654, 663 Lead, red oxide of 654, 663 Lead, semivitrified oxide of 662 Lead, sesquioxide ot 654 Lead, solution of sub- acetate of 1209 Lead, sugar of 656 Lead, table of the pre- parations of 655 Lead, tannate of 1610 Lead, white 658 Lead-water 1211 Leadwort 1586 Leather flower 1496 Leather wood 1511 Lecanora tartarea 1549 Lecanoric acid 1549 Lecithin 1576 Ledoyen’s disinfecting fluid 661 Ledum latifolium 1546 Ledum palustre 1546 Leech, mechanical 445 Leeches 441 Leeches, danger from 445 Leek 1546 Lee’s New London pills 89 Lee’s Windham pills 89 Lemon juice 512 Lemon peel 512 Lemon syrup 1372 Lemons 512 Lenitive electuary 1052 Lentisk 539 Leontice thalictroides 1488 Leonurus cardiaca 1546 Leontodon taraxacum 826 Leopard’s bane 139 Lepidolite 516 Lepra mercurialis 455 Leptandra 510 Leptandra purpurea 510 Leptandra Virginica 510 Leptandrm 511 Lettuce 603 Lettuce, acrid 503 Lettuce opium 505 Lettuce, strong-scented 503 Lettuce, wild 503 Leucol 1462 Levigation 879 Levant wormseed 743 Levulose 532, 732 Liatris odoratissima 1615 Liatris scariosa 1546 Liatris spicata 1546 Liatris squarrosa 1546 Lichen Islandicus 243 Lichenin 244 Lichstearic acid 244, 1560 Liebig’s distillatory ap- paratus 889 Life-everlasting 1464, 1521 Light Calisaya bark 270 Light jalap 489 Light magnesia 1223 Light oil of wine 968 Lignum colubrinum 562 Lignum vitae 428 Ligulin 1547 Ligusticum levisticum 1546 Ligustrin 1547 Ligustrum vulgare 1547 Lilac, common 1609 Lilacin 1609 Lilium bulbiferum 1547 Lilium candidum 1547 Lily, common white 1547 Lily of the valley 1501 Lima bark 264, 267 Limatura ferri ' 393 Lime 184 Lime, bone-phosphate of 1032 Lime, carbonate of 336 Lime, chloride of 183 Lime, chlorinated 185 Lime, hydrosulphate of 1607 Lime, hypochlorite of 185 Lime liniment 1187 Lime, muriate of 183 Lime ointment 184 Lime, precipitated car- bonate of 1030 Lime, precipitated phos- phate of 1031 Lime, preparations of 1030 Lime, saccharate of 1197 Lime, solution of chlo- rinated 1197 Lime, solution of mu- riate of 1195 Lime, syrup of 1197 Limes 512 Limestone ’ 336 Lime-water 1196 Limones 512 Limonis cortex 512 Limonis oleum 581 Limonum succus 512 Linaria vulgaris 1465 Ling 584 Lini farina ■ 514 Lini oleum 582 Lini semen 514 Liniment, anodyne ,188 Liniment, mercurial ll88 Liniment of aconite 1186 Liniment of ammonia 1186 Liniment of belladonna 1187 Liniment of camphor 1187 Liniment of cantharides 1187 Liniment of chloroform 1188 Liniment of croton oil 1188 Liniment of iodine 1188 Liniment of mercury 1188 Liniment of opium 1188 Liniment of turpentine 1189 Liniment of turpentine and acetic acid 1190 Liniment, volatile 1186 Linimenta 1186 Liniments 1186 Linimentum aconiti 1186 Linimentum ammonias 1186 Linimentum arcaei 1419 Linimentum belladonnae 1187 Linimentum calcis 1187 Linimentum camphorae 1187 Linimentum camphorae compositum 1187 Linimentum cantharidis 1187 Linimentum chloroformi 1188 Linimentum crotonis 1188 Linimentum hydrargyri 1188 Linimentum iodi 1188 Linimentum opii 1188 Linimentum saponis 1189 Linimentum saponis camphoratum 1189 Linimentum terebin- thinae 1189 Linimentum terebinthi- nae aceticum 1190 Linin 1548 Linolein 683 Linseed 514 Linseed meal 514 Linseed oil 582 Linseed poultice 1037 Lint . 1547 Linum 514 Linum catharticum 1548 Linum usitatissimum 514 Lion’s foot 1587 Liquefaction 887, 898 Liquid extract of bael 1109 Liquid extract of ergot 1113 Liquid extract of fern 1114 Liquid extract of opium 1116 Liquid extract of pareira 1116 Liquid extract of yellow cinchona 1111 Liquid storax 811, 1548 Liquidambar altingia 1549 Liquidambar orientale 811 Liquidambar styraciflua 812, 1548 Index. Liquidamber 1548 1190 Liquor ammoniae 997 Liquor ammoniae aceta- tis 1190 Liquor ammonias for- tior 97 Liquor antimonii ter- cbloridi 1192 Liquor arsenicalis 1214 Liquor arsenici chloridi 1492 Liquor arsenici et hy- drargyri iodidi 1193 Liquor atropiae 1194 Liquor barii chloridi 1194 Liquor bismuthi 1028 Liquor calcii chloridi 1195 Liquor calcis 1196 Liquor calcis chloratas 1197 Liquor calcis sacchara- tus 1197 Liquor chlori 1002 Liquor ferri citratis 1198 Liquor ferri iodidi 1369 Liquor ferri nitratis 1198 Liquor ferri percliloridi 1200 Liquor ferri pernitratis 1198 Liquor ferri subsulpha- tis 1202 Liquor ferri tersulpha- tis 1203 Liquor gutta-perchae 1204 Liquor hydrargyri ni- tratis 1205 Liquor hydrargyri ni- tratis acidus 1205 Liquor iodinii composi- te 1206 Liquor magnesiae citra- tis 1207 Liquor morphiae hydro- chloratis 1208 Liquor morphiae muri- atis 1208 Liquor morphiae sulpha- tis 1209 Liquor opii composi- te 1404 Liquor plumbi subace- tatis 1209 Liquor plumbi subace- tatis dilutus 1211 Liquor potassae 1211 Liquor potassae arseni- tis 1214 Liquor potassae chlori- natae 1493 Liquor potassae citratis 1210, 1231 Liquor potassae perman- ganatis 1217 Liquor sodae 1218 Liquor sodae arseniatis 1218 Liquor sodae chlorinatae 1219 Liquor strychniae 1221 Liquorice 382 Liquorice root 421 Liriodendrin 518 Liriodendron 517 Liriodcndron tulipifera 517 Lisbon diet drink 1062 Lisbon sarsaparilla 751 Litharge 662 Litharge plaster 1071 Lithargyrum 662 Lithia 516 Lithia, carbonate of 515 Lithia, citrate of 1222 Lithise carbonas 515 Lithiae citras 1222 Lithium 516 Lithospermum officinale 1549 Lithospermum tinctori- um 1458 Litmus 1549 Litmus-paper 1550 Live oak 695 Liver of sulphur 1302 Liverwort 439 Lixiviation 893 Lobelia 518 Lobelia cardinalis 621 Lobelia inflata 519 Lobelia syphilitica 521 Lobelic acid 519 Lobelina 519 Loblolly pine 829 Local remedies 2 Locust tree 1594 Logan’s plaster 1073 Logwood 434 Lolium temulentum 1550 Long pepper 649 Long-leaved pine 829 Lonicera caprifolium 1550 Loosestrife 1551 Lotio flava 1153 Lotio nigra 1159 Lovage 1546 Loxa bark 264 Lozenges 1411 Lunar caustic 1011 Lungwort 1589 Lupulin 448, 521 Lupulina 448, 521 Lupuline 449 Lupulite 449 Lupulus 447 Luteolin 1592 Lutes 891 Lycia, lycin, or lycina 1551 Lycium 167 Lycium barbarum 1550 Lycoperdon proteus 1561 Lyctipodium 521 Lycopodium clavatum 522 Lycopus 622 Lycopus Europaeus 522 Lycopus Yirginicus 622 Lythrum salicaria 1551 Lytta 200 Lytta Nuttalli 207 M Mace 554, 657 Maceration 893 Macis 554, 557 McMunn’s elixir 1404 Macropiper methysticum 541 Macrotys racemosa 250 Madagascar cardamom 217 Madar 1483 Madder 715 Madeira wine 856 Mafurra tallow 604 Magenta 1498 Magistery of bismuth 1027 Magnesia 1222 Magnesia, acetate of 1452 Magnesia alba 523 Magnesia, calcined 1225 Magnesia, carbonate of 523 Magnesia, Dinneford’s 525 Magnesia, Ellis’s 1224 Magnesia, heavy carbo- nate of 523 Magnesia, Henry’s 1223 Magnesia, Husband’s 1224 Magnesia levis 1223 Magnesia, muriate of 1493 Magnesia, preparations of 1222 Magnesia, solution of citrate of 1207 Magnesia, sulphate of 526 Magnesiae acetas 1452 Magnesias carbonas 523 Magnesiae carbonaspon- derosum 523 Magnesiae citratis liquor 1207 Magnesiae sulphas 526 Magnesii chloridum 1493 Magnesite 527 Magnesium 1225 Magnetic oxide of iron 1140 Magnetic pyrites 394 Magnolia 528 Magnolia acuminata 528 Magnolia glauca 116, 52a Magnolia grandiflora 528 Magnolia tripetala 529 Maguey 1455 Mahogany tree 1608 Mahy’s plaster 1074 Maidenhair 1453 Maize 1623 Malabathri folia 302 Malambo bark 1551 Malamide 90 Malamidic acid 90 Malate of iron 711 Malate of lime 1515 Malate of manganese 711, 1553 Male fern 390 Male jalap 489 Male nutmeg 656 Male orchis 1594 Malegueta pepper 217 Index. 1681 Malic acid 711 Mallaguetta pepper 217 Mallow, common 1551 Malt 446 Malt vinegar 15 Maltha 1580 Malva 1551 Malva alcea 90 Malva moschata 553 Malva rotundifolia 1552 Malva sylvestris 1551 Malwa opium 615 Mandarin orange 149 Mandioca 825 Mantlragora 1552 Mandragora officinalis 1552 Mandrake 664, 1552 Manganese 529, 1552 Manganese, carbonate of 1553 Manganese, iodide of 1552 Manganese, lactate of 1553 Manganese, malate of 1553 Manganese, oxide of 529 Manganese, phosphate of 1553 Manganese, sulphate of 531 Manganese, tartrate of 1553 Manganesii binoxidum 529 Manganesii oxidum ni- grum 529 Manganesii peroxidum 529 Manganesii sulphas 531 Manganesium 1552 Manganic acid 530 Mangostana mangifer 1536 Manna 532 Manna canulata 534 Mannite 535, 732 Maple sugar 726 Maracaybo bark 276 Maranta 535 Maranta allouya 536 Maranta arundinacea 535 Maranta galanga 1518 Maranta Indica 536 Maranta nobilis 536 Marble 538 Marchantia 440 Margaric acid 567, 744 Margarin 68, 567, 568, 744 Marine acid 41 Marjoram, common 1570 Marjoram, sweet 1570 M armor 538 Marrubium 538 Marrubium vulgare 538 Marseilles vinegar 915 Marsh parsley 1599 Marsh rosemary 806 Marsh tea 1546 Marsh trefoil 1555 Marsh water 129 Marsh water-cress 1564 Marsh’s test for arsenic 33 Marshmallow 89 Martial ethiops 1140 Martin’s cancer powder 1571 Maruta cotula 331 Marygold 1483 Massicot 663 Massoy bark 302 Masterwort 1527, 1534 Mastic 539 Mastiche 539 Masticin 540 Matias bark 1551 Maticin 541 Matico 540 Matonia 217 Matricaria 542 Matricaria chamomilla 121, 542 Matricaria parthenium 1589 Matricaria parthenoides 1589 Matrimony vine 1550 May-apple 664 May-apple, resin of 1326 Mayflower 1512 May-weed 330 Mead 860 Meadow anemone 1462 Meadow-saffron 310 Meadow-sweet 800 Mealy starwort 78 Measurement, approxi- mate 1638 Measures and weights 875, 1633 Meat biscuit 1554 Meat-juice, preserved 1554 Mecca senna 772 Mechanical division 877 Mechanical leech 445 Mechoacan 489 Meconic acid 623 Meconin 623 Medeola Yirginica 1554 Medicated prunes 1053 Medicated syrups 1363 Medicated vinegars 910 Medicated waters 990 Medicated wines 1433 Medicinal hydrocyanic acid 925 Medicines and drugs not officinal 1451 Mel 543 Mel boracis 1227 Mel depuratum 1226 Mel despumatum 1226 Mel rosae 1227 Mel sodae boratis 1227 Melaleuca cajuputi 577 Melaleuca hypericifolia 577 Melaleuca latifolia 577 Melaleuca leucadendron 577 Melaleuca minor 578 Melaleuca viridifolia 577 Melampodium 438 Melampyrite 726 Melampyrum nemoro- sum 725 Melassic acid 730 Melia azedarach 15* Melilot 1555 Melilotus officinalis 1555 Melissa 544 Melissa officinalis 544 Melissic acid 23S- Melissine 239 Melitose 533, 725, 732 Melizetose 533, 725, 732 Mellita 1226 Meloe majalis 201 Meloe niger 206 Meloe proscarabseus 201 Meloe trianthemae 201 Menispermin 306 Menispermum Cana- dense 1555 Menispermum cocculus 305 Menispermum palinatum 180 Mentha piperita 545 Mentha pulegium 545 Mentha viridis 546 Menthene 1254 Menyanthes trifoliata 1555 Menyanthin 1555 Mercurial liniment 118S Mercurial ointment 1419 Mercurial pills 1272 Mercurial plaster 1068 Mercurialin 1556 Mercurialis annua 1556 Mercurialis perennis 1556 Mercurius 450 Mercury 450 Mercury, acid nitrate of 1205 Mercury, ammoniated 1172 Mercury and quinia, chloride of 1493 Mercury, bibromide of 1477 Mercury, bichloride of 1152 Mercury, bicyanide of 1162 Mercury, biniodide of 1163 Mercury, binoxide of 1168 Mercury, bisulphuret of 1171 Mercury, black oxide of 1168 Mercury, black sulphu- ret. of 1172, 1476 Mercury, bromides of 1477 Mercury, corrosive chlo- ride of 1152 Mercury, cyanide of 1162 Mercury, cyanuret of 1162 Mercury, effects of 453 Mercury, green iodide of 1165 Mercury, hydrosubli- i mate of 1159 Mercury, iodide of 1165 Mercury, mild chloride of " 1157 Mercury, preparations of 1152 Mercury, protiodide of 1165 Mercury, protobromide of 1477 Mercury, prussiate of 1162 1682 Index. Mercury, red rodide of 1163 Mercury, red oxide of 1166 Mercury, red sulphuret, of 1171 Mercury, solution of per- nitrate of 1205 Mercury, sulphate of 1158, 1169 Mercury, table of the preparations of 455 Mercury with chalk 1174 Mercury, yellow sul- phate of 1170 Mesembryanthemum crystallinum 1556 Mesenna 1556 Mesquite gum 1556 Metacinnameine 156 Metagummic acid 10 Metamorphia 617 Metaphosphoric acid 52 Metastannic acid 1614 Methyl 804 Methylamin 619 Methylated spirit 805 Methylbrucia 1356 Metkylcaprinol 1257 Methylconia 319 Methylic alcohol 803 Metliylic chloroform 958 Methylic narcotina 619 Methylsalicylic acid 1252 Methylstrychnia 1356 Methysticin 541 Metroxylon sagu 733 Mezereon 546 Mezereum 546 Mezquite gum 1556 Mica 616 Mica panis 386 Microderma 13 Mikania guaco 1523 Mild chloride of mer- cury 1157 Milder common caustic 1279 .Milfoil 16 Milium solis 1549 Milk of ammoniac 1228 Milk of assafetida 1229 Milk of lime 184 Milk of sulphur 1359 Milk-weed 377, 1467 Mimosa Nilotica 6 Mimo-tannic acid 236 Mimulus Moschatus 553 Mindererus, spirit of 1190 Mineral, ethiops 1476 Mineral, kermes 985 Mineral tar 1580 Mineral, turpeth 1170 Mineral warfer 995 Mineral waters 130 Mineral yellow 1577 Minium 654, 663 Mint 546 Missouri grape 855 Mistletoe 1620 Mistura ammoniaci 1228 Mistura amygdalae 1228 Mistura assafoetidaa 1229 Mistura chloroformi 1230 Mistura creasoti 1230 Mistura cretae 1230 Mistura ferri composita 1230 Mistura glycyrrhizae composita 1231 Mistura guaiaci 1231 Mistura potassae citratis 1217, 1231 Mistura scammonii 1231 Mistura spiritus vini Gallici 806 Misturae 1228 Mitchella repens 1557 Mithridate 1051 Mixture, brandy 806 Mixture, brown 1231 Mixture, chalk 1230 Mixture, creasote 1230 Mixture, guaiac 1231 Mixture, neutral 1218, 1630 Mixture of almond 1228 Mixture of ammoniac 1228 Mixture of*assafetida 1229 Mixture of citrate of po- tassae 1216, 1231 Mixture of iron, com- pound 1230 Mixture of liquorice, compound 1231 Mixture, oleaginous 1630 Mixture, scammony 1231 Mixtures 1228 Moccasin plant 347 Mocha aloes 86 Mocha senna 771 Mode of administering medicines 1626 Molasses 724, 729, 731 Mole-plant 1568 Momordica balsamina 1557 Momordica elaterium 361 Monarda 649 Monarda punctata 549 Monesia 1557 Monesin 1557 Monkshood 63 Monohydrated nitric acid 45 Monolein 568 Monomargarin 568 Monsel’s solution 1202 Monsel’s persulphate of iron 1202 Montpellier scammony 760 Moonseed 1555 Mori succus 549 Morin 1518 Moringa aptera 1568 Moringa pterygosperma 1568 Moritannic acid 1518 Morphia 617, 1232 Morphia, acetate of 1238 Morphia, hydrochlorate of 1239 Morphia, muriate of 1239 Morphia, preparations of 1232 Morphia, solution of mu- • riate of 1208 Morphia, solution of sul- phate of 1209 Morphia, sulphate of 1241 Morphia suppositories 1362 Moi'phite acetas 1238 Morphiae liydrochloras 1239 Morphias murias 1239 Morphiae sulphas 1241 Morrhua Americana 583, 584 Morrhua vulgaris 583 Morrhuse oleum 583 Mortars 878 Morus alba 550 Morus nigra 549 Morus rubra 550 Morus tinctoria 1518 Moschus 550 Moschus factitius 1561 Moschus moschiferus 550 Motherwort 1546 Mountain ash 1602 Mountain damson 778 Mountain laurel 1543 Mountain mahogany 1473 Mountain rhubarb 719 Mountain-tea 408 Moussache 826 Moxa 1558 Mucedineae 388 Mucilage 514, 1242 Mucilage of gum arabic 1242 Mucilage of sassafras 1243 Mucilage of slippery elm bark 1244 Mucilage of starch 1243 Mucilage of tragacanth 1243 Mucilages 1242 Mucilagines 1242 Mucilago acaciae 1242 Mucilago amyli 1243 Mucilago sassafras 1243 Mucilago tragacanthae 1243 Mucilago ulmi 1244 Mucuna 553 Mucuna pruriens 553 Mucuna prurita 554 Mudar 1483 Mugwort 4 Mulberry juice 549 Mullein 1619 Murexide 1559 Muriate of ammonia 102 Muriate of baryta 1022 Muriate of baryta, solu- tion of 1194 Muriate of berberina 168,191 Muriate of ethylen 1559 Muriate of Iron, linctuie of 1394 Index. 1683 Muriate of lime 183 Muriate of lime, solution of 1195 Muriate of magnesia 1493 Muriate of morphia 1239 Muriate of morphia, so- lution of 1208 Muriate of soda 795 Muriatic acid 41 Muriatic acid, commer- cial 41, 43 Muriatic acid, diluted 929 Muriatic acid gas 44 Muriatic acid, table of the specific gravity of 42 Muriatic ether 1559 Musena bark 714 Musenna 1556 Mushrooms 1560 Musk 550 Musk, artificial 1561 Musk, vegetable 553 Muskmelon seeds 1507 Musk-root 1608 Must 854 Mustang grape 856 Mustard 780 Mustard poultice 1037 Mustard seeds, black 779 Mustard seeds, white 779 Mustard, volatile oil of 780 Mycose 368, 725, 732 Mylabris cichorii 200 Mylabris pustulata 201 Mynsicht’s acid elixir 935 Myrcia acris 802 Myrica cerifera 241, 1562 Myricin 239 Myricinic acid 1562 Myristic acid 607 Myristica 554 Myristica fatua 556 Myristica fragrans 555 Myristica moschata 554 Myristica officinalis 554 Myristicm adeps 554, 557 Myristicse oleum 588 Myristicic acid 556 Myristicin 556, 589 Myrobalani 1563 Myrobalans 1563 Myronate of potassa 780, 781 Myronic acid 138, 780, 781 Myrospermumfrutescens 154 Myrospermum of Sonso- nate 154 Myrospermum Pereirse 155 Myrospermum peruife- rum 153 Myrospermum pubescens 154 Myrospermum toluiferum 157 Myrosyne 138, 780, 781 Myroxocarpin 156 Myroxylon balsamiferum 154 Myroxylor Pereira 155 Myroxylon peruiferum 154 Myroxylon toluiferum 157 Myrrh 557 Myrrha 657 Myrrhic acid * 559 Myrrhin 559 Myrtle wax 241 Myrtus acris 802, 1504 Myrtus caryophyllata 1504 Myrtus pimenta 646 N Napellina 65 Naphtha 1580, 1582 Naphtha, coal 1471 Naphthalin 1563 Naples yellow 1563 Narcein or narceina 622 Narcissus pseudo-narcis- sus 1563 Narcotics 2, 3 Narcotin 617, 618 Narcotina 618 Nard 1564 Nardus celtica 1564 Nardus Indica 1564 Nardus montana 1564 Narthex assafoetida 145 Nasturtium amphibium 1564 Nasturtium officinale 1564 Nasturtium palustre 1564 Native oil of laurel 1584 Native soda 788 Natron 788 Nauclea Brunonis 234 Nauclea gambir 234 Navel-wort 1505 Neat’s-foot oil 577 Nebuel 8 Nectandra 559 Nectandra puchury 1584 Nectandra Rodiei 560 Nectandria 560 Nepaul cardamom 216 Nepeta cataria 232 Nepeta glechoma 1520 Nephrodium filix mas 396 Nereck 8 Nerium antidysenteri- cum 1623 Nerium odorum 1564 Nerium oleander 1564 Neroli 150 Nettle, common 1619 Nettle, dwarf 1619 Neutral mixture 1217, 1231, 1630 New bark 282 New Jersey tea 1489 New York petroleum 1582 Nicaragua wood 1477 Niccoli sulphas 1606 Nickel, sulphate of 1606 Nicotia 819 Nicotiana fruticosa 818 Nicotiana pauiculata 818 Nicotiana quadrivalvis 81b Nicotiana rustica 818 Nicotiana tabacum 818 Nicotianin 819, 820 Nicotin 819, 820 Nicotina 820 Nigella sativa 1564 Nigellin 1564 Nightshade, black 357 Nightshade, common 357 Nightshade, deadly 161 Nightshade, woody 358 Nihil album 1444 Nitrate of cerium 1491 Nitrate of codeia 620 Nitrate of copper 1564 Nitrate of iron, solution of 1198 Nitrate of lead 661 Nitrate of mercury, acid solution of 1205 Nitrate of potassa 676 Nitrate of silver 1008 Nitrate of silver, fused 1011 Nitrate of silver, in crys- tals 1008 Nitrate of soda 1565 Nitrate of strychnia 1355 Nitrate of water 45 Nitre 676 Nitre, cubic 1565 Nitre-beds, artificial 677 Nitric acid 45 Nitric acid, anhydrous 49 Nitric acid, diluted 930 Nitric acid of the arts 46 Nitric acid, table of the specific gravity of 49 Nitric oxide 45 Nitric starch 1539 Nitrification 677 Nitrite of amyl 1460 Nitrite of ether 1344 Nitrite of soda 1342 Nitrobenzide 1472 Nitrobenzole 573 Nitrobenzule 1472 Nitroglycerin 419 Nitromuriatic acid 930 Nitromuriatic acid, di- luted 932 Nitromuriatic oxide of antimony 16G7 Nitropicric acid 1486 Nitroprussic acid 156oi Nitroprusside Of sodium 1565 Nitrosulphate of ammo- nia 1565 Nitrosulphuric acid 1565 Nitrous acid 45 Nitrous acid of the shops 47 Nitrous ether 1343 Nitrous oxide 45, 1566 Nitrous oxide water 1566 Nitrous powders 680, 1629 1684 Index. Nopal 308 Nordhausrn, fuming sul- phuric acid of 55 Norway spruce 650 Nutgall 402 Nutmeg 654 Nutmeg, concrete oil of 654, 556 Nutmeg-flower 1564 Nux moschata 655 Nux vomica 561 Nymphsea alba 1566 Nymphsea odorata 1566 0 Oak bark 695 Oakum 1548 Oatmeal 152 Oatmeal gruel 152 Oats 152 Ochres 1566 Ocotea pichurim 1584 Ocuba 241 Ocymum basilicum 1566 (Enanthe crocata 1567 (Enanthe fistulosa 1567 (Enanthe phellandrium 1567 (Enanthic ether 857, 1516 (Enanthin 1567 (Enanthyl hydride 1582 (Enothera biennis 1567 Officinal directions, ge- neral 903 Officinal medicines, meaning of the term 1451 Oidium abortifaciens ' 366 Oil, benne 598, 776 Oil, cajeput 578 Oil, castor 592 Oil, cedar 495 Oil, cod-liver 583 Oil, croton 605 Oil, ethereal 966 Oil, flaxseed 582 Oil, linseed 582 Oil, neat’s-foot 577 Oil of aleurites triloba 1457 Oil of almonds 575 Oil of amber 598 Oil of amber, rectified 1257 Oil of anda 1567 Oil of anise 1248 Oil of ben 1568 Oil of benne 598, 776 Oil of bergamot 576 Oil of bitter almonds 573 Oil of bitter almonds, ar- tificial 573 Oil of black pepper 1261 Oil of cade 1568 Oil of cajeput . 577 Oil of camphor 196, 579 Oil of Canada fleabane 1251 Oil of caraway 1248 Oil of cassia 580 Oil of chamomile 676 Oil of cinnamon 580 Oil of cloves 1249 Oil of copaiba 1250 Oil of coriander 327, 1250 Oil of cubeb 1251 Oil of dill 114 Oil of ergot 367, 371 Oil of euphorbia 1568 Oil of fennel 1251 Oil of fern 398, 1260 Oil of gaultheria 1252 Oil of hedeoma 1252 Oil of hemlock 651 Oil of horsemint 1255 Oil of jasmine 1568 Oil of juniper 1253 Oil of lavender 1253 Oil of lemons 581 Oil of mace 556 Oil of marjoram 1570 Oil of massoy 302 Oil of mustard 780 Oil of mustard, volatile 780 Oil of nutmeg 588 Oil of nut meg, expressed 556 Oil of origanum 1255 Oil of partridge-berry 1252 Oil of pennyroyal, Ame- rican 1252 Oil of peppermint 1254 Oil of pimento 1256 Oil of rosemary 1256 Oil of roses 597 Oil of rue ' 1256 Oil of sassafras 1257 Oil of sassafras (pichu- rim) 1584 Oil of savine 1257 Oil of spearmint 1254 Oil of spike 1254 Oil of spruce 651 Oil of sweet almond 575 Oil of sweet marjoram 1255 Oil of tar 652 Oil of tar, heavy 1462 Oil of tar, light 1462 Oil of theobroma 603 Oil of thyme 605 Oil of tobacco 1258 Oil of turpentine 599 Oil of valerian 1258 Oil of vitriol 53 Oil of wine camphor 968 Oil of wine, concrete 968 Oil of wine, heavy 968 Oil of wine, light 968 Oil of wormseed 1250 Oil, olive 689 Oil, palm 1577 Oil-cake 515 Oi’ed paper 583 Oilnut 492 Oils 565 Oils, distilled 569, 1244 Oils, drying 566 Oils, empyreumatic 888 Oils, essential 569 Oils, expressed 565 Oils, fixed 565 Oils, volatile 569, 1244 Ointment, antimonial 1416 Ointment, citrine 1422 Ointment, elder 1426 Ointment, mercurial 1419 Ointment of aconitia 1416 Ointment of ammonia- ted mercury 1422 Ointment of antimony 1416 Ointment of atropia 1417 Ointment of belladonna 1417 Ointment of benzoin 1417 Ointment of bromide of potassium 1293 Ointment of calomel 1417 Ointment of cantharides 1418 Ointment of carbonate of lead 1426 Ointment of cocculus 1418 Ointment of creasote 1418 Ointment of elemi 1418 Ointment of galls 1419 Ointment of galls, with opium 1419 Ointment of iodide of potassium 1426 Ointment of iodide of sulphur 1427 Ointment of iodine 1424 Ointment of iodine, compound 1425 Ointment of lard 1416 Ointment of mezereon 1425 Ointment of nitrate of mercury 1422 Ointment of nitric acid 1424 Ointment of nutgall 1419 Ointment of oxide of zinc 1428 Ointment of red iodide of mercury 1422 Ointment of red oxide of mercury 1424 Ointment of resin 1043 Ointment of rose water 1416 Ointment of savine 1043 Ointment of Spanish flies 1418 Ointment of stramonium 1426 Ointment of sulphur 1427 Ointment of tannic acid 1415 Ointment of tartrated antimony 1416 Ointment of tobacco 1427 Ointment of turpentine 1428 Ointment of veratria 1428 Ointment of white pre- cipitate 1422 Ointment, simple 1416 Ointment, spermaceti 1418 Ointment, tar 1425 Ointment, tartar emetic 1416 Ointment, tobacco 143? Index. 1685 Ointment, tutty 1428 Oinm-ents 1415 Okra 1528 Old field pine 829 Olea 565 Olea destillata 1244 Olea Europoea 589 Olea fixa 565 Olea fragrans 1611 Olea infusa 1427 Olea iatifolia 589 Olea longifolia 589 Olea volatilia 569 Oleaginous mixture 1630 Oleander 1564 Oleate of glycerin 568 Oleic acid 567, 744 Oleic acid as a solvent 568 Olein 68, 567, 744 Oleoresin of black pep- per 1261 Oleoresin of capsicum 1259 Oleoresin of cubeb 1260 Oleoresin of fern 1260 Oleoresin of ginger 1261 Oleoresin of lupulin 1261 Oleoresina capsici 1259 Oleoresina cubebae 1260 Oleoresina filicis 1260 Oleoresina lupulinae 1261 Oleoresina piperis 1261 Oleoresina zingiberis 1261 Oleoresinae 1259 Oleoresins 1259 Oleo-saccharum 730 Oleum absinthii 4 Oleum aethereum 966 Oleum amygdalae 575 Oleum amygdalae amarae 573 Oleum amygdalae dulcis 575 Oleum anethi 114 Oleum anisi 1248 Oleum anthemidis 576 Oleum bergamii 576 Oleum bubulum 577 Oleum cadinum 1568 Oleum cajuputi 577 Oleum camphorae 579 Oleum cari 1248 Oleum carui 1248 Oleum caryophylli 1249 Oleum chenopodii 1250 Oleum cinnamomi 580 Oleum copaibas 1250 Oleum coriandri 327, 1250 Oleum cornu cervi 1510 Oleum crotonis 605 Oleum cubebae 1251 Oleum erigerontis Cana- densis 1251 Oleum foeniculi 1251 Oleum gaultheriae 1252 Oleum hedeomae 1252 Oleum hyperici 1531 Oleum jecoris aselli 583 Oleum juniperi 1253 Oleum lavandulae 1253 Oleum limonis 581 Oleum lini 582 Oleum menthas piperitse 1254 Oleum menthas viridis 1254 Oleum monardaa 1255 Oleum morrhuae 583 Oleum myristicas 588 Oleum olivas 589 Oleum origani 1256 Oleum phosphoratum 643 Oleum pimentae 1256 Oleum ricini 592 Oleum rosae 597 Oleum rosmarini 1256 Oleum rutae 1256 Oleum sabinae 1257 Oleum sassafras 1257 Oleum sesami 598, 776 Oleum succini 698 Oleum succini rectifica- tum 1257 Oleum sulphuratum 1469 Oleum tabaci 1258 Oleum tartari per deli- quium 1283 Oleum terebinthinas 599 Oleum theobromae 603 Oleum thymi 605 Oleum tiglii 605 Oleum valerianae 1258 Olibanum 1569 Olivae oleum 589 Olive oil 589 Olive oil, table of, as solvent of the alka- loids 590 Olivile 590 Onion 1569 Ophelia chirata 248 Opiania 622 Opianic acid 618 Opianine 622 Opiate pills of lead 1274 Opium 609 Opium, Bengal 614 Opium, Constantinople 614 Opium, Egyptian 614 Opium, India 614 Opium, Malwa 615 Opium, Patha 614 Opium, Persia 615 Opium plaster 1069 Opium, Smyrna 613 Opium, table of strength of 616 Opium, tests of 625 Opium thebaicum 612 Opium, Turkey 613 Opobalsamum 1469 Opodeldoc 1189 Opoidia galbanifera 401 Opopanax 1570 Opopanax chironium 1570 Opuntia cochinillifera 308 Orange berries 150 Orange-flower water 1000 Orange flowers 149 Orange mineral 1570 Orange peel 148 Orange red 1570 Orange-root 45* Oranges 149 Orchil 1560 Orchilla weed 1549 Orchis mascula 1584 Ordeal bean of Calabai 1480 Orenburgh gum 831 Orgeat, syrup of 1367 Origanum 1570 Origanum majorana 1255 Origanum majoranoides 1570 Origanum vulgare 1255,1570 Orleana 1464 Ornus Europoea 532 Ornus rotundifolia 532 Orobanche Americana 1571 Orobanche uniflora 1571 Orobanche Virginiana 1571 Orpiment 1571 Orpiment, artificial 1571 Orris, Florentine 485 Orsellic acid 1549 Oryza sativa 1571 Os 632 Os sepiae 1507 Ossa 632 Ostrea edulis 835 Otaheitan sugar-cane 1603 Otolithus regalis 464 Otto of roses 597 Overflowing wells 129 Overgrown jalap 490 Ovum 634 Oxalate of potassa 1573 Oxalate of quinia 291 Oxalate of quinidia 291 Oxalhydric acid 1343 Oxalic acid 1571 Oxalis acetosella 1574 Oxalis crassicaulis 1575 Oxalis violacea 1575 Ox-gall 1575 Ox-gall, refined 1576 Oxide of antimony 984 Oxide of ethyl 948 Oxide of gold 1521, 1522 Oxide of lead 662 Oxide of manganese 529 Oxide of silver 1014 Oxide of zinc 1444 Oxide of zinc, impure 1617 Oxycanthin 169 Oxychloride of antimony 976, 1587 Oxychloride of sodium 1220 Oxymel 1227 Oxymel of squill 1227 Oxymel scillse' 1227 Oxymuriate of lime 185 Oxypicric acid 1536 Oxyquinia 287 Index. Oxy strychnia 1356 Oxysulphuret of anti- mony 985 Oyster 835 Oyster-shell 835 Oyster-shell, p-epared 1034 Ozone 54, 1580 P Pa-douk tree 496 Paeonia officinalis 1576 Pagliari’s styptic 166 Pain du porceau 1508 Pale bark 263 Pale rose 711 Palm oil 1577 Palm soap 746 Palm Bugar 726 Palma Christi 592 Palmic acid 595 Palmin 595 Palmitic acid 569, 1577 Palmitin 567, 669, 1577 Panacea lapsorum 140 Panacon 636 Panaquilon 636 Panax 635 Panax quinquefolium 635 Panax schinseng 635 Panis 636 Panna 396 Pansy 862 Papaver 636 Papaver orientale 609 Papaver rhoeas ' 709 Papaver somniferum 609 Papaveric acid 710 Papaverina 621 Papaverin 621 Pappoose root 1488 Paraffin 331, 652 Paraffin oil 331, 1498 Paraguay tea 1534 Paramenispermin 306 Paramorphia 621 Parasorbic acid 1602 Paratartaric acid 62, 843 Parchment-paper 897 Paregoric elixir 1405 Pareira 637 Pareira brava 637 Parietaria officinalis 1577 Pariglin 752 Parillinic acid 752 Paris white 1621 Parsley root 640 Parsnep, rough 1570 Parthenium integrifo- lium 1577 Partridge-berry 408, 1557 Pastel 1542 Pastiles, fumigating 166 Pastinaca opopanax 1570 Patent yellow 1577 Patna opium 614 Paullinia 1577 Paullinia cupana 1577 Paullinia sorbilis 1577 Peach brandy 1578 Peach leaves 1578 Peach wood 1477 Pea-nuts 1523 Pearl barley 447 Pearl powder 1679 Pearl sago 734 Pearl tapioca 826 Pearl white 1579 Pearlash 670 Pearls of ether 954 Pearson’s arsenical solu- tion 1332 Peat charcoal 210 Pectase 920 Pectic acid 220 Pectin 220 Pectoral gum 12 Pectose 220, 920 Pegu catechu 234 Pe-la 239 Pelargonate of ethylic ether 1516 Pelargonic acid 1516 Pelargonic ether 857, 1516 Pelargonium capitatum 1579 Pelargonium odoratissi- mum 1579 Pelargonium roseum 1516, 1579 Pelargonyl hydride 1582 Pellitory 691 Pellitory, wall 1577 Pemmican 1554 Penrna mucronata 1596 Penaea sarcocolla 1596 Pennsylvania sumach 710 Pennyroyal 435, 545 Pennyroyal, American 435 Pennyroyal, European 645 Pennywort 1505 Pennywort, thick-leaved 1529 Peony 1576 Pepo 639 Pepper, black 647 Pepper, Cayenne 207 Pepper, long 649 Pepper, Malegueta 217 Pepper, white 648 Peppermint 645 Peppermint water 1006 Pepsin 1591 Pepsine 1590, 1591 Perchloride of carbon 960 Percolation 894, 905 Percolator 895 Periploca Indica 439 Periploca secamone 758 Permanent white 160, 1606 Permanganate of po- tassa 681 Pernambuco wood 1477 Pernitrate of iron, solu- tion of 1198 Peroxide of hydrogen 1579 Peroxide of iron 1141 Peroxide of manganese 529 Perry 860 Persia opium 615 Persian galbanum 402 Persica vulgaris 1578 Persicaria mitis 1474 Persicaria urens 1474 Persimmon 354 Peruvian Park 252 Peruvian calisaya 272 Peruvian ipecacuanha 483 Peruvine 156 Petalite 516 Peter’s pills 89 Petinin 1511 Petroleum 1580 Petroselinum 640 Petroselinum sativum 640 Peucedanin 1535 Peucedanum montanum 1599 Peucedanum officinale 1535 Phaeoretin 707 Phalaris Canariensis 1483 Pharmaceutical equiva- lents, table of 1639 Pharmacopoeias 909 Phaseomannite 725 Phasianus gallus 634 Phellandrium aquati- cum 1567 Phene 1471 Phenic acid 1486 Phenol 334, 1486 Phenyl, hydrated oxide of 334, 1486 Phenyl, hydruret of 1471 Phenylic acid 334, 1486 Philadelphia fleabane 372 Phloretin 1583 Phloridzin 690, 1583 Phoenix farinifera 733 Phoradendron flaves- cens 1621 Phosphate of ammonia 973 Phosphate of iron 1141 Phosphate of lime, pre- cipitated 1031 Phosphate of lime, syrup of 1033 Phosphate of manganese 1553 Phosphate of potassa 1583 Phosphate of quinia 287 Phosphate of soda 1336 Phosphate of soda, medi- cinal tribasic 1336 Phosphate of zinc 1583 Phosphorated oil 643 Phosphoric acid 51 Phosphoric acid, diluted 932 Phosphorus 641 Phosphorus, amorphous 642 Phosphorus, red 812 Index. Photosantonic acid 1330 Phycite 725 Phyllanthus emblica 1563 Phyllocyanin 363 Phyllonanthin 363 Physalin 1583 Physalis alkekengi 1583 Physalis viscosa 1584 Physeter macrocephalus 242, 1459 Physic nuts 1469 Physostigma venosum 1480 Physostigmin 1480 Phytolacca decandra 645 Phytolacc* bacc* 645 Phytolacc* radix 645 Picamar 332, 652 Pichurim beans 1584 Picolin 648, 1511 Picr*na excelsa 692 Picric acid 1486 Picroglycion 359 Picrotoxic acid 307 Picrotoxin 306 Pig iron 390 Pill, compound calomel 1266 Pill, compound rhubarb 1275 Pill, compound squill 1275 Pill of assafetida, com- pound 1272 Pill of Barbadoes aloes 1265 Pill of colocynth and hy- oscyanus 1268 Pill of colocynth, com- pound 1268 Pill of gamboge, com- pound 1267 Pill of iodide of iron 1271 Pill of iodide of manga- nese 1552 Pill of lead and opium 1274 Pill of opium 1275 Pill of Socotrine aloes 1265 Pills 1262 Pills, Asiatic 26 Pills, assafetida 1266 Pills, blue 1272 Pills, compound cathar- tic 1267 Pills, mercurial 1272 Pills of aloes 1265 Pills of aloes and assafe- tida 1265 Pills of aloes and mastic 1265 Pills of aloes and myrrh 1266 Pills of aloes, compound 1264 Pills of antimony, com- pound 1266 Pills of assafetida 1266 Pills of Barbadoes aloes 1265 Pills of calomel and opium 1264 Pills of carbonate of iron 1269 Pills of copaiba 1268 Tills of galbanum, com- pound 1272 Pills of iodide of iron 1271 Pills of ipecacuanha and squill 1264 Pills of iron, compound 1270 Pills of lead, opiate 1264 Pills of mercury 1272 Pills of mild chloride of mercury 1264 Pills of opium 1274 Pills of rhubarb 1275 Pills of rhubarb and iron 1264 Pills com- 1275 Pills of soap, compound 1275 Pills of Socotrine aloes 1265 Pills of squill, compound 1275 Pills of sulphate of iron 1264 Pills of sulphate of quinia 1274 Pills, Plummer’s 1266 Pills, Vallet’s ferrugin- ous 1269 Pilula aloes Barbadensis 1265 Pilula aloes Socotrinae 1265 Pilula assafoetid* com- posita 1272 Pilula calomelanos com- posita 1266 Pilula cambogi* com- posita 1267 Pilula colocynthidis composita 1268 Pilula colocynthidis et hyoscyami 1268 Pilula ferri iodidi 1271 Pilula hydrargyri 1272 Pi\ula opii 1275 Pilula plumbi cum opio 1274 Pilula rhei composita 1275 Pilula scillae composita 1275 Pilul* 1262 Pilulae aloes 1265 Pilulae aloes et assafoe- tidae 1265 Pilulae aloes et mastiches 1265 Pilulae aloes et myrrhae 1266 Pilulae antimonii com- positae 1266 Pilulae assafoetidae 1266 Pilulae cathartic* com- posit* 1267 Pilul* copaib* 1268 Pilul* de cynoglosso 1509 Pilul* ferri carbonatis 1269 Pilul* ferri composit* 1270 Pilul* ferri iodidi 1271 Pilul* galbani compo- . sit* 1272 Pilul* hydrargyri 1272 Pilul* opii 1274 Pilul* quini* sulphatis 1274 Pilulae rhei 1275 Pilul* rt*i composit* 1275 Pilul* saponis compo- sit* 1275 Pilul* scill* composit* 1275 PAul* stomachic* 126»r Pimenta 64(1 Pimento 646 Pimento water 1006 Pimpernel, scarlet 1461 Pimpinella anisum 119 Pimpinella saxifraga 1584 Pinckney a pubens 1585 Pine nuts 830 Pine-apple essence 1515 Pines 829 Pinic acid 699 Pinipicrin 1614 Pinitannic acid 1614 Pinite 533, 725, 830 Pink, Carolina 798 Pink, clove 1509 Pink, wild 1599 Pinkroot 798 Pinus abies 650 Pinus australis 829 Pinus balsamea 830 Pinus Canadensis 651 Pinus cembra 830, 1593 Pinus Damarra 834 Pinus Lambertiana 533 Pinus larix 533, 830 Pinus maritima 829 Pinus nigra 830 Pinus palustris 652, 829 Pinus picea 830 Pinus pinaster 829 Pinus pinea 830 Pinus pumilio 829, 1594 Pinus rigida 652, 830 Pinus sylvestris 829 Pinus t*da 829, 831 Piper 647 Piper Afzelii 339 Piper angustifolium 541 Piper anisatum 339 Piper betel 237, 1465 Piper caninum 339 Piper cubeba 339 Piper elongatum 541 Piper longum 649 Piper methisticum 541 Piper nigrum 647 Piperic acid 648 Piperidin 648 Piperin 648 Pipsissewa 246 Piscidia erythrina 1585 Pistacia lentiscus 539 Pistacia terebintkus 828 Pitaya bark 276 Pitaya bark, hard 280, 281 Pitaya bark, soft 280 Pitaya condaminea bark 280 Pitayna 283 Pitch 652 Pitch, black 652 Pitch, Burgundy 649 Pitch, Canada 651 Pitch pine 652, 830 Pitch plaster 1070 1688 Index. Pittacnl 832, 652 Pix 652 Pix arida 652 Pix Burgundica 649 Pix Canadensis 651 Pix liquida 651 Pix nigra 652 Plantago lancifolia 1585 Plantago major 1585 Plantago media 1585 Plantago psyllium 1585 Plantain 1585 Plantain, water 1458 Plants, collecting of 873 Plants, drying of 873 Plaster, adhesive 1074 Plaster, blistering 1038 Plaster machine 1064 Plaster measurer 899 Plaster, mercurial 1068 Plaster of aconite 1087 Plaster of ammoniac 1065 Plaster of ammoniac with mercury 1066 Plaster of antimony 1066 Plaster of arnica 1067 Plaster of assafetida 1067 Plaster of belladonna 1067 Plaster of Burgundy pitch 1070 Plaster of Canada pitch 1070 Plaster of carbonate of lead 1073 Plaster of iron 1068 Plaster of lead 1071 Plaster of myrrh 559 Plaster of opium 1069 Plaster of pitch with cantharides 1070 Plaster of Spanish flies 1038 Plaster, strengthening 1068 Plaster, warming 1070 Plasters 1063 Plate-sulphate of po- tassa 685 Platinum 1585 Pleurisy-root 144 Plosslea floribunda 1569 Plumbagin 1586 Plumbago 210, 1487 Plumbago Europma 1586 Plumbi acetas 656 Plumbi carbonas 658 Plumbi iodidum 1276 Plumbi nitras 661 Plumbi oxidum 662 Plumbi oxidum rubrum 663 Plumbi oxidum semivit- reum 662 Plumbi tannas 1610 Plumbum 653 Plummer’s pills 1266 Plum-tree 688 Plunket’s caustic 25 Poaya 480 Podalyria tinctoria 1469 Podophylli resin® 1326 Podophyllin 665 Podophyllum 664 Podophyllum peltatum 664 Podophyllum, resin of 1326 Poison-oak 836 Poison-vine 836 Poke berries 645 Poke root 645, 852 Polishing rouge 55 Pollock 584 Polychroi'te 337 Poly gala amara 666, 765 Polygala, bitter 666, 765 Polygala paucifolia 1252 Polygala polygama 666 Polygala rubella 666 Polygala senega 765 Polygala vulgaris 765 Polygalic acid 766 Polygonatum multiflo- rum 1502 Polygonatum uniflorum 1502 Polygonum aviculare 1474 Polygonum bistorta 1473 Polygonum fagopyrum 1474 Polygonum hydropiper 1474 Polygonum hydropiper- oides 1474 Polygonum persicaria 1474 Polygonum punctatum 1474 Polygonum tinctorium 1536 Polypodiumfilix foemina 1468 Polypodium filix mas 396 Polypodium vulgare 1586 Polypody, common 1586 Polytrichum juniperi- num 1586 Pomegranate rind 425, 426 Pomegranate root, bark of 425, 426 Pompholix 1444 Pompona 850 Pontefract cakes 384 Poplar 1586 Poppy 636 Poppy, black 610 Poppy capsules 636 Poppy, corn 709 Poppy,red 709 Poppy, whiter 609 Poppy-heads 636 Populin 1586, 1587 Populus 1586 Populus balsamifera 1586 Populus nigra 1586 Populus tremula 736, 1587 Populus tremuloides 1587 Porphyrization 879 Porphyroxin 623 Porrum 1546 Port, English 859 Port wine 856 Portable soup * 633 Porter 860 Portland arrow-root 142 Portland powder 1401 Portland sago 142 Portulaca oleracea 1587 Potash 672 Potash, kinds of 672 Potassa 1277 Potassa, acetate of 1280 Potassa, alcoholic 1278 Potassa alum 92 Potassa and soda, tar- trate of 1289 Potassa, bicarbonate of 1285 Potassa, bichromate of 667 Potassa, binoxalate of 1575 Potassa, bisulphate of 1474 Potassa, bitartrate of 668 Potassa, carbonate of 1282 Potassa, caustic 1277 Potassa caustica 1277 Potassa, chlorate of 674 Potassa, citrate of 1288 Potassa cum calce 1279 Potassa, dry 667 Potassa, ferrocyanate of 686 Potassa, hydrate of 1277 Potassa, hydriodate of 1298 Potassa, hypermanga- nate of 681 Potassa, impure carbo- nate of • 670 Potassa, nitrate of 676 Potassa, permanganate of 681 Potassa, phosphate of 1583 Potassa, preparations of 1277 Potassa, pure carbonate of 1284 Potassa, quadroxalate of 1575 Potassa, red prussiate of 1514 Potassa, sesquicarbonate of 1287 Potassa, solution of 1211 Potassa, sulphate of 684 Potassa sulphurata 1302 Potassa, supertartrate of 668 Potassa, tartrate of 1290 Potassa with lime 1279 Potassae acetas 1280 Potass® biantimonias 1510 Potass® bicarbonas 1285 Potass® bichromas 667 Potass® bisulphas 1474 Potass® bitartras 668 Potass® carbonas 1282 Potass® carbonas impura 670 Potass® carbonas pura 1284 Potass® chloras 674 Potass® citras 1288 Potass® et sod® tartras 1289 Potass® nitras 676 Potass® permanganas 681 Potass® phosphas 1583 Potass® sulphas 684 Potass® tartras 1290 Potass® tartras acida 668 Potassii bromidum 1291 Index. 1689 Potassii cyanidum 1294 Potassii cyanuretum 1294 Potassii ferrocyanidum 686 Potassii ferrocyanure- tum 686 Potassii iodidum 1296 Potassii sulpkocyani- dum 1507 Potassii sulpkuretum 1302 Potassio-ferric alum 1129 Potassio-tartrate of iron 1130 Potassium 666 Potassium, bromide of 1291 Potassium, cyanide of 1294 Potassium, cyanuret of 1294 Potassium, ferridcyan- ide of 1514 Potassium, ferrocyan- ide of 686 Potassium, iodide of 1296 Potassium, iodokydrar- gyrate of 1541 Potassium, sulpkocyan- ide of 1607 Potassium, sulpkuret of 1302 Potassium, teroxide of 667 Potato 357 Potato flies 205 Potato spirit oil 77 Potato starek 113, 537 Potentilla reptans 1587 Potentilla tormentilla 836 Potkos 355 Potus imperialis 670 Poultices 1036 Powder antimonial 1307 Powder, aromatic 1309 Powder, Dover’s 1311 Powder folder 90D Powder of Algarotk 976,1587 Powder of aloes and ca- nella 1306 Powder of catecku, com- pound 1310 Powder of ckalk, aro- matic 1310 Powder of ckalk, aro- matic, witk opium 1310 Powder of ipecacuanka and opium 1311 Powder of ipecacuanka, compound 1311 Powder of iron 1149 Powder of jalap, com- pound 1312 Powder of kino and opium 1312 Powder of rkubarb, com- pound 1312 Powder of scammony, compound 1312 Powder of tin 1615 Powder of tragacantk, compound 1312 Powder, Portland 1613 Powdering, metkods of 877 Powders 1304 Powders, effervescing 1305 Powders, granulated 1305 Powders, nitrous 680, 1629 Powders, Seidlitz 1306 Powders, soda 1305 Prairie dock 1577 Prairie indigo 1469 Precipitate per se 1167 Precipitated calomel 1159 Precipitated carbonate of iron 1145 Precipitated carbonate of lime 1030 Precipitated carbonate of zinc 1439 Precipitated extract of bark 1317 Precipitated pkospkate of lime 1031 Precipitated sulpkur 1359 Precipitated sulpkuret of antimony 987 Precipitating jars 880 Precipitation 884 Prenantkes alba 1587 Prenantkes serpentaria 1587 Prepared calamine 1482 Prepared ckalk 1033 Prepared lard 67 Prepared oyster-skell 1034 Prepared storax 811 Prepared suet 777 Prepared sulpkuret of antimony 124 Prescribing medicines, art of 1625 Prescriptions, formulas for 1629 Preservation of medi- cines 874 Preserved juice of tarax- acum 1358 Preserved meat-juice 1554 Preserved vegetable juices 1383 Preston salts 101 Prickly ask 135, 864 Prickly poppy 1465 Pride of Ckina 153 Pride of India 153 Primrose tree 1567 Prince’s featker 1459 Prinos 687 Prinos verticillatus 687 Privet 1547 Proof spirit 71, 75 Proof vinegar 15 Propyl 1497 Propylamia or propyla- min Ap8, 586, 619, 1588 Propylic harcotina 619 Protectives 2 Protein 386 Protiodide of mercury 1165 Protococcus vulgaris 725 Protosulphuret of car- bon 1475 Prunella vulgaris 206, 158? Prunes 688 Prunes, medicated 105> Prunum 688 Prunus domestica 688 Prunus lauro-cerasus 508 Prunus spinosa 7 Prunus Virginiana 689 Prussian blue 1134 Prussiate of mercury 1162 Prussiate of potassa 686 Prussic acid 923 Pseudomorphia 617, 623 Psychotria emetica 480, 483 Psyllii semen 1585 Pteris aquilina 1468 Pteritannic acid 397 Pterocarpus 742 Pterocarpus draco 1511 Pterocarpus erinaceus 498 Pterocarpus marsupium 496 Pterocarpus santalinus 742 Puccoon 739 Puce oxide of lead 654 Puff ball 1561 Pulegium 545 Pulmonaria officinalis 1589 Pulsatilla 1462 Pulveres 1304 Pulveres effervescentes 1305 Pulveres effervescentes aperientes 1306 Pulverization 877 Pulverization, table of loss by 878 Pulverized silex 1600 Pulvis Algarotlii 1587 Pulvis aloes et canellae 1306 Pulvis amygdalae oom- positus 1307 Pulvis antimonialis 1307 Pulvis aromaticus 1309 Pulvis Capucinorum 722 Pulvis catecbu composi- tus 1310 Pulvis commitissae 297 Pulvis creue aromatibus 1310 Pulvis cretae aromaticus cum opio 1310 Pulvis liydrargyri cine- reus 1169 Pulvis ipecacuankae com- positus 1311 Pulvis ipecacuankae cum opio 1311 Pulvis ipecacuankae et opii 1311 Pulvis jalapae composi- tus 1312 Pulvis kino compositus 1312 Pulvis kino cum opio 1312 Pulvis rkei compositus 1312 Index. P llvis scammonii com- posite 1312 P ulvis tragaeanthse com- positus 1312 Pumex 1589 Pumice stone 1689 Pumpkin seeds 639 Punica granatumV 425 Punicin ' 426 Pjfnicum malum 426 Pure carbonate of po- •iassa 1284 Pure Prussian blue 1134 Pure water 127 Purging agaric 1454 Purging cassia 227 Purging flax 1548 Purging nuts 1469 Purified aloes 969 Purified animal char- coal 1034 Purified chloroform 956 Purified extract of hemp 1090 Purified ox-bile 1123 Purified pyroligneous acid 18 Purified sugar 729 Purple avens 415 Purple willow-herb 1551 Purpurate of ammonia 1559 Purree 1535 Purreic acid 1536 Purslane, garden 1587 Pyrethrum 691 Pyrethrum carneum 1587 Pyrethrum parthenium 121, 1589 Pyrethrum roseum 1537 Pyretin 652 Pyretin, acid 1601 Pyrites, cubic 1607 Pyrites magnetic 1607 Pyrmont water 131 Pyroacetic ether 1589 Pyroacetic spirit 1589 Pyrodextrin 111 Pyrogallic acid 921, 1590 l’yrogalline 1690 Pyrogayic acid 430 Pyroguaiacine 430 Pyrola umbellata 247 Pyroligneous acid 652 Pyroligneous acid, crude 18, 21 Pyroligneous spirit 803 Pyroligneous vinegar 19 Pyrolusite 529 Pyrophosphate of iron 1143 Pyrophosphate of soda 1338 Pyrophosphoric acid 52 Pyroxylic alcohol 803 Pyroxylic spirit 803 Pyroxylin 1524 Pyrrol 998, 1462, 1511 Pyrus cydonia 347 Pyrus malus 109 Q Quadrihydrated nitric acid 46 Quadroxalate of potassa 1575 Quaker’s black drop 913 Qualitative tests 1446 Quantitative tests 1449 Quassia 692 Quassia amara 692 Quassia bark 693 Quassia excelsa 692 Quassia simaruba 692 Quassin 693, 778 Queen of the meadow 800 Queen’s delight 807 Queen’s root 806 Quercetin 696 Quercin 695 Querci-tannic acid 940 Quereite 696 Quercitric acid 696 Quercitrin 696 Quercitron 696 Quercus 694 Quercus segilops 403 Quercus alba 694, 695 Quercus cerris 403 Quercus excelsa 403 Quercus falcata 695 Quercus ilex 403 Quercus infectoria 403 Quercus montana 695 Quercus occidentalis 1504 Quercus pedunculata 694 Quercus prinus 695 Quercus robur 403, 694 Quercus suber 1457, 1504 Quercus tinctoria 694, 695 Quercus virens 695 Quevenne’s iron 1149 Quickens 1616 Quicklime 184 Quicksilver 450 Quillay 1601 Quillaya saponaria 1601 Quince essence 1516 Quince seed 846 Quinia 286 Quinia, acetate of 287 Quinia, amorphous 1317 Quinia, antimoniate of 288 Quinia, arsenite of 287 Quinia, bisulphate of 1318 Quinia, citrate of 287 Quinia, ferrocyanate of 287 Quinia,iodide of sulphate 1319 Quinia, kinate of 283, 293 Quinia, lactate of 287 Quinia, phosphate of 287 Quinia, preparations of 1313 Quiniae sulphas 1313 Quinia, sulphate 1313 Quinia, tannate orW 287 Quiniae valerianas 1825 Quinia, valerianate of 1824 Quinic acid 292 Quinicia 284, 291, 1317 Quinicine 284, 291 Quinidia 284, 289 Quinidia, commercial 290 Quinidia, sulphate of 291 Quinidine 284, 289 Quinium 1092 Quinoidia 292 Quinoidine 1317 Quinolein 290 Quino-quino 154 R Racemic acid G2, 843 Radcliff’s elixir 89 Radical vinegar 20 Radices colubrinae 562 Radix caryophillatae 415 Radix zedoarise 1624 Ragweed 1459 Ragwort 1599 Rain water 128 Raisins 843 Rangoon petroleum 1582 Rangoon tar 1582 Ranunculus 697 Ranunculus acris 697 Ranunculus bulbosus 697 Ranunculus fiammula 697 Ranunculus repens 697 Ranunculus sceleratus 697 Raspberry 716 Raspberry syrup 1372 Rattlesnake weed 1528 Rattlesnake’s master 1455, 1546 Realgar 1590 Rectification 888 Rectified oil of amber 1257 Rectified pyroxylic spi- rit 803 Rectified spii’it 69 Red bark 253 Red cedar 494 Red chalk 1590 Red chromate of potassa 667 Red cohosh 1453 Red coral 1503 Red elm 842 Red iodide of mercury 1163 Red lead 663 Red oak 695 Red ochre 1535 Red oil 1531 Red oxide of iron 1145 Red oxide of lead 663 Red oxide of mercury 1166 Red pepper 208 Red poppy 709 Red precipitate 1166 Red prussiate of potar:s4 ,514 Red rose 712 Red saunders 742 Index. Red sulphuret of mer- cury 1171 Red tartar 668 Red wine 854 Red wine vinegar 15 Reddle 1590 Redhead 1466 Redoul 1503 Red-root 1489 Reduced iron 1149 Reduction 899 Refrigerants 3 Refrigeratory 889 Regulus of antimony 122 Renealmia cardamo- mum 218 Rennet 1590, 1591 Reseda luteola 1592 Resin 698 Resfn cerate 1043 Resin cerate, compound 1043 Resin of jalap 1325 Resin of may-apple 1326 Resin of podophyllum 1326 Resin of scammony 1327 Resin oil 699 Resin plaster 1074 Resin, white 698 Resin, yellow 698 Resina 698 Resina alba 698 Resina flava 698 Resina jalapse 1325 Resina podophylli 1326 Resina scammonii 1327 Resinae 1325 Resine de chibou 1486 Resine de Gomart 1486 Resins 1325 Rhabarbaric acid 706 Rhabarbarin 707 Rhabarbarum 699 Rhamnin 1593 Rhamnoxanthin 1593 Rhamnus catharticus 1592 Rhamnus frangula 1593 Rhamnus infectorius 1593 Rhamnus zizyphus 1624 Rhapontic rhubarb 705 Rhapontic root 705 Rhapontic root, Siberian 706 Rhatania-tannic acid 502 Rhatany 500 Rhein 707 Rheum 699 Rheum australe 701 Rheum Caspicum 702 Rheum compactum 701 Rheum crassinervium 702 Rheum emodi 700 Rheum hybridum 702 Rheum leucorrhizum 702 Rheum Moorcraftianum 702 Rheum palmatum 701 Rheum rhabarbarum 700 Rheum Rhaponticum 701 Rheum Russicum vel Turcicum 704 Rheum Sinense vel Indi- cum 703 Rheum speciforme 702 Rheum undulatum 701 Rheum Webbianum 702 Rheumin 707 Rhodeoretin 488 Rhodeoretinic acid 489 Rhodeoretinol 489 Rhododendron, yellow- flowered 1593 Rhododendrum crysan- thum 1593 Rhoeadic acid 710 Rhoeas 709 Rhubarb 699 Rhubarb, Batavian 704 Rhubarb, Bucharian 704, 706 Rhubarb, Canton stick 704 Rhubarb, Chinese 703 Rhubarb,Dutch-trimmed 704 Rhubarb, English 705 Rhubarb, European 705 Rhubarb, French 705 Rhubarb, Himalaya 706 Rhubarb, India 703 Rhubarb, Krimea 705 Rhubarb, Rhapontic 705 Rhubarb, Russian 704 Rhubarb, Taschkent 704 Rhubarb, Turkey 704 Rhubarb, white 706 Rhus coriaria 1519 Rhus cotinus 1518 lthus diversiloba 838 Rhus glabrum 710 Rhus lobata 838 Rhus pumilum 838 Rhus radicans 836 Rhus succedanum 241 Rhus toxicodendron 837 Rhus venenata 837 Rhus vernix 837 Rib-grass 1585 Rice 1571 Richardsonia Brazili- ensis 483 Richardsonia emetica 483 Richardsonia scabra 483 Richweed 1500 Rieinelaidic acid 595 Ricinelaidin 595 Ricini oleum 592 Ricinia or ricinin 593 Ricinoides elaeagnifolia 226 Ricinoleic acid 595 Ricinus Africanus 592 Ricinus communis 582 Riga balsam 1593 River water 128 Robinia mjmudoacacia 1594 Robin’s !ye 1586 Roccella tinctoria 1549 Roche alum 93 Rochelle salt 1289 Rock oil 1580 Rock rose 486 Rock salt 795 Rockbridge alum spring 132 Roll sulphur 814 Roman alum 93 Roman cement 891 Roman chamomile 12C Roman vitriol 343 Rosa canina 711 Rosa centifolia 595, Rosa damascena 595 Rosa Gallica 712 Rosa moschata 595 Rosae oleum 595 Rose, dog 711 Rose geranium 597, 1579 Rose water 1006 Rose water, artificial 1007 Rosemary 713 Roses, hundred-leaved 695, 711 Roses, red 712 Rose-scented jalap 490 Rosin 698 Rosmarinus 713 Rosmarinus officinalis 713 Rosmarinus sylvestris 1546 Rotten stone 1594 Rottlera 713 Rottlera Schimperi 714 Rottlera tinctoria 714 Rottlerin 714 Roucou 1464 Rouge 221 Rough parsnep 1570 Round cardamom 216 Round-leaved dogwood 328 Rousseau’s laudanum 1437 Rubefacients 2 Rubia 715 Rubia tinctorum 715 Rubichloric acid 1519 Rubigo ferri 1141 Rubus 716 Rubus Canadensis 717 Rubus trivialis 717 Rubus villosus 717 Rue 719 Rufus’s pills 1266 Rumex 718 Rumex acetosa 718 Rumex acetosella 718 Rumex acutus 718 Rumex Alpinus 718 Rumex aquaticus 718 Rumex Britannica _ 718 Rumex crispus 718 Rumex hydrolapathum 718 Rumex obtusifolius 718 Rumex patientia 718 Rumex sanguineus 718 Rumex scutatus 718 Rumicin 719 Russian rhubarb 704 1692 Index. Rust of iton 29, 1141 Ruta 719 Ruta giaveolens 719 Rutic add 1474 Rutin 1474 Rutinic acid 720 llutulin 736 Uutyl hydride 1582 ftye 1598 s Sabadilla 721 Sabadillia 722, 1431 Sabadillic acid 722 Sabadillin 722, 1431 Sabbatia 722 Sabbatia angularis 722 Sabina 723 Saccharate of Hme 1197 Saccharated carbonate of iron 1125 Saccharic acid 730, 1343 Saccharine carbonate of iron 1125 Saccharine carbonate of iron and managanese 1554 Saccharine fermentation 70 Saccharine iodide of iron 1370 Saccharum 724 Saccharum album 724 Saccharum lactis 732 Saccharum officinarum 726 Saccharum saturni 656 Sacchulmic acid 730 Sacchulmin 730 Sack 856 Sacred elixir 1407 Sadra-beida gum 8 Safflower 221 Saffron 336 Saffron of antimony 1506 Saffron of Mars, aperitive 1145 Sagapenum 1594 Sage 737 Sago 733 Sago meal 734 Sago palm 733 Sago, pearl 734 Saguerus ltumphii 733 Sagus laevis 733 Sagus Ruffia 733 Sagus Rumphii 733 Saint John’s wort 1530 Saint Lucia bark 282 Sal absinthii 5 Sal aeratus 1287 Sal aeratus, soda 1334 Sal alembroth 1154 Sal ammoniac 102 Sal de duobus 684 Sal diureticus 1282 Sal enixum 47, 1572 Sal gemmae 795 Sal prunelle 679 Salabreda gum 8 Salep 1594 Salicin 736 Salicornia 788 Salicyl 736 Salicylous acid 736 Saligenin 736, 1587 Saline mixturo 1217 Saline waters 130, 132 Saliretin 736 Salix 735 Salix alba 735 Salix Babylonica 735 Salix helix 736 Salix nigra 735 Salix pentandra 735 Salix purpurea 735 Salix ltusseliana 735 Salseparine 752 Salsola 788 Salt, common 795 Salt of sorrel 1575 Salt of tartar 1284 Salt of wisdom 1154 Salt of wormwood 5 Saltpetre 676 Salvia 737 Salvia officinalis 737 Salvia pratensis 738 Salvia sclarea 738 Sambucus 738 Sambucus Canadensis 738 Sambucus nigra 738 Samovey isinglass 463 Sampfen wood 1477 Sandal wood 1595 Sandaraca 1595 Sandarach 1595 Sandaracin 1595 Sand-bath 887 Sandix 1570 Sanguinaria 739 Sanguinaria Canadensis 739 Sanguinarina 740 Sanguis draconis _ .1511 Sanguisuga interrupta | 442 Sanguisuga medicinalis ' 441 Sanguisuga officinalis 441 Sanguisuga troctina 442 Sanicle 1595 Sanicula Marilandica 1595 Santa Martha bark 276 Santalin 743 Santalum 742 Santalum album 1595 Santalum citrinum 1595 Santalum freycinetianum 1595 Santalum rubruui 1595 Santonica 743 Santonici semen 743 Santonin 743, 1328 Santoninum 1328 Santoniretin 1330 Sap green 1593 Sapo 744 Sapo durus 744 Sapo guaiacinus 431 | Sapo mollis 744, 747 Sapo vulgaris 745, 747 Sapogenin 767 Saponaria officinalis 1595 Saponification 744 Saponin 1595 Sappan wood 1477 Saratoga water 132 Sarcocolla 1596 Sarcocollin 1596 Sarcolactic acid 1576 Sarracenia 1596 Sarracenia flava 1596 Sarracenia purpurea 1596 Sarracenia variolaris 1596 Sarsa 748 Sarsaparilla 748 Sarsaparilla beer 753 Sarsaparilla, false 134 Sarsaparilla, Indian 439 Sarsaparillin 752 Sassa 1596 Sassa gum 1596 Sassafras medulla 754 Sassafras officinale 754 Sassafras pith 754, 755 Sassafras radicis cortex 754 Sassafras root, bark of 754, 755 Sassafrid 755 Sassy bark 1596 Satureja hortensis 1597 Satureja montana 1597 Saunders 1595 Saunders, red 742, 1595 Saunders, white 1595 Saunders, yellow 1595 Savanilla rhatany 501 Savine 723 Savine cerate 1043 Savory 1597 Saxifraga 1584 Scabiosa arvensis 848 Scabiosa succisa 848 Scabious 848 Scales of iron 1141 Scammoniae radix 755 Scammoniae resina 1327 Scammonium 755 Scammony 755 Scammony, Aleppo 757 Scammony, factitious 760 Scammony in shells 757 Scammony, lachryma 757, 758 Scammony mixture 1231 Scammony, Montpellier 760 Scammony, resin of 1327 Scammony root 755 Scammony, Smyrna 757, 758 Scammony, virgin 757 758 Scandix cerefolium 1464 Scarlet pimpernel 1461 Schuylkill muscadel grape 855 Schuylkill water 129 Scilla '60 Index. 1693 Scilla maritima 761 Sciltitin 761 Sclerotium clavus 366 Scolopendrium officina- rum 1597 Scoparin 764 Scoparius 763 Scotch fir 829 Scouring rush 1512 Scrophularia nodosa 1597 Scrophularin 1597 Scrophularosmin 1597 Scullcap 764 Scullcap, European 1598 Scuppernong grape 856 Scurvy-grass 1499 Scutellaria 764 Scutellaria galericulata 764, 1598 Scutellaria hyssopifolia 764, 1598 Scutellaria integrifolia 764, 1598 Scutellaria lateriflora 764, 1598 Scutellarine 765, 1598 Sea salt 795 Sea water 133 Sealing wax 1545 Searle’s oxygenous aera- ted water 1566 Sea-side balsam 226 Sea-side grape 497 Sea wrack 1516 Secale cereale 365, 1598 Secale cornutum 365 Secalia or secalin 368 Sedum acre 1598 Sedum album 1599 Sedum rupestre 1599 Sedum telephium 1599 Seed-lac 1544 Seidlitz powders 1306 Seidlitz water 132 Seiguette’s salt 1290 Selinic acid 1599 Self-heal 1589 Selinum palustre 1599 Seltzer water 131 Seltzer water, artificial 994 Semen abelmoschi 1528 Semen contra 743 Semen cynae 743 Semen nigellae 1564 Semen psyllii 1585 Semivitrified oxide of lead 662 Sempervivum tectorum 1599 Seneca oil 1582 Senecin 1599 Senecio aureus 1599 Senecio vulgaris 1599 Senega 765 Senegal gum 8 Senegin 766 Seneka 765 Senna 768 Senna, American 228 Senna figs 1053 Senna paste 1053 Separation of liquids 884 Separation of mixed sub- stances 880 Separation of solids from liquids 880 Separatory 884 Sepia 1508 Sepia officinalis 1507 Septfoil 836 Serpentaria 773 Sesami folium 776 Sesamum Indicum 777 Sesamum orientale 777 Sesquicarbonate of am- monia 99 Sesquicarbonate of po- tassa 1287 Sesquicarbonate of soda 788 Sesquichloride of iron 1126 Sesquiodide of mercury 1164 Sesquioxide of iron 1141, 1145 Seven barks 1528 Sevum 777 Sevum praeparatum 777 Shaddock 149 Sharon spring water 131 Sheep-laurel 1543 Shell-lac 1544 Shepherd’s purse 1613 Sherry wine 856 Shining aloes 83 Sialagogues 2 Siberian Rkapontic root 706 Siberian rhubarb 706 Siberian stone pine 830 Side-saddle plant 1596 Sienna 1599 Sieves 878 Signs and abbreviations, table of 1628 Silene Pennsylvanica 1600 Silene Virginica 1599 Silex contritus 1600 Silex, pulverized 1600 Silica 1600 Silicate of soda 1600 Silicate of zinc 1482 Silicic acid 1600 Silicon 1600 Silk-weed, common 1467 Silurus glanis 463 Silver 136 Silver, ammonio-chloride of 1493 Silver bark 257 Silver, chloride of 1493 Silver, cyanide of 1007 Silver, cyanuret of 1007 Silver fir, #inerican 830 Silver fir, European 830 Silver, fused nitrate of 1011 Silver, iodide of 1538 Silver, nitrate of 1008 Silver, oxide of 1014 Silver, preparations of 1001 Simaba cedron 1489 Simarona 850 Simaruba 778 Simaruba amara 778 Simaruba excelsa 692 Simaruba officinalis 778 Simple cerate 1038 Simple syrup 1365 Sinapic acid 782 Sinapin 782 Sinapis 779 Sinapis alba 779 Sinapis nigra 779 Sinapisin 780. 781 Sinapisms 783 Single aqua fortis 46 Sipeerina or sipeerin 560 Sipbonia cahuchu 1484 Siphonia elastica 1484 Sipiri 560 Sirop de capillaire 1453 Sirop de Cuisinier 1376 Sisymbrium murale 1600 Sisymbrium nasturtium 1564 Sisymbrium officinale 1600 Sisymbrium sopkia 1600 Sium latifolium 1600 Sium nodiflorum 1600 Sium sisarum 1600 Skirret 1600 Skunk cabbage 355 Slaked lime 1031 Slippery elm bark 842 Small burnet saxifrage 1584 Small fennel-flower 1564 Small kouseleek 1598 Small spikenard 134 Smalt 1601 Smart-weed 1474 Smilacin 752 Smilasperic acid 439 Smilax aspera 439, 749 Smilax China 749 Smilax Cumanensis 749 Smilax medica 750 Smilax officinalis 749 Smilax papyracea 749 Smilax sarsaparilla 749 Smilax syphilitica 749 Smooth sumach 710 Smyrna opium 613 Smyrna scammony 757 Snake-head 1492 Snakeroot, black 250, 1595 Snakeroot, button 1512,1546 Snakeroot, Canada 143 Snakeroot, seneka 766 Snakeroot, Virginia 773 Sneezewort 1527 Snow water 128 Soap 744 Soap, almond oil 746 Index. Soap, amygdaline 746 Soap balls 746 Soap bark 1601 Soap, beefs marrow 746 Soap, Castile 747, 748 Soap cerate 1044 Soap, common 745, 747 Soap, common yellow 746 Soap, grain 745 Soap liniment 1189 Soap liniment, camphor- ated 1189 Soap, marbled 745 Soap of guaiac 431 Soap, palm 746 Soap plaster 1075 Soap, rosin 746 Soap, soft 744, 745, 747 Soap, Starkey’s 746 Soap, transparent 746 Soap, Windsor 746 Soaps, insoluble 745 Soaps, soluble 744, 745 Soapwort 1595 Socotrine aloes 83 Soda, acetate of 784 Soda and silver, hypo- sulphite of 1532 Soda, arseniate of 1332 Soda, artificial 789 Soda ball 789 Soda, benzoate of 1471 Soda, biborate of 784 Soda, bicarbonate of 1333 Soda, borate of 784 Soda, carbonate of 788 Soda, caustic 783, 1331 Soda caustica 1331 Soda, citrate of 1496 Soda, dried carbonate of 1335 Soda, dry 783 Soda, hydrate of 783 Soda, hypochlorite of 1220 Soda, hyposulphite of 791 Soda, impure 788 Soda, medicinal tribasic phosphate of 1336 Soda, muriate of 795 Soda, native 788 Soda, nitrate of 1565 Soda of vegetable origin 788 Soda, phosphate of 1336 Soda powders 1305 Soda, preparations of 1331 Soda sal aeratus 1331 Soda, sesquicarbonate of 788 Soda, silicate of 160C Soda, solution of 1218 Soda, solution of chlo- rinated 1218 Soda, sulphate of 792 Soda, sulphite of 791 Soda, tartarized 1288 Soda, tartrate of 161( Soda, valerianate of 1338 loda, vitriolated 792 3oda waste 789 Soda water 995 Soda-ash 789, 790 Sodse acetas 784 Sodae arsenias 1332 Sodse benzoas 1471 Sodae bicarbonas 1333 Sodae boras 784 Sodae carbonas 788 Sodae carbonas exsicca- ta 1335 Sodae chloratae liquor 1219 Sodae chlorinatae liquor 1219 Sodae citras 1496 Sodae et argenti hypo- sulphis 1532 Sodae et potassae tartras 1289 Sodae hyposulphis 791 Sodae liquor 1218 Sodae murias 795 Sodae phosphas 3 336 Sodae potassio-tartras 1289 Sodae silicas 1600 Sodae sulphas 792 Sodae sulphis 794 Sodae tartras 1610 Sodae valerianas 1338 Soda-pyrophosphate of iron 1144 Sodii chloridum 795 Sodii iodidum 1538 Sodium 783 Sodium, chloride of 795 Sodium, iodide of 1538 Sodium, nitroprusside of 1565 Sodium, teroxide of 783 Soft soap 744, 745, 747 Soft water 127 Solania or solanin 358 Solanidia or solanidin 359 Solanum dulcamara 358 Solanum lycopersicum 358 Solanum nigrum 357 Solanum pseudocapsicum 358 Solanum tuberosum 357 Solidago 797 Solidago odora 797 Solidago virgaurea 797 Solomon’s seal 1502 Soluble cream of tartar 786 Soluble glass 1600 Soluble iodide of starch 1539 Soluble mercury of Hahnemann 1601 Soluble tartar 1290 Solutio solventis mine- rals 1492 Solution 892 Solution of acetate of ammonia 1190 Solution of acetate of cop- per (test) 1447 Solution of acetate of po- tassa (test) 1447 Solution of acetate of soda (test) 1447 Solution of albumenf test) 1447 Solution of ammonia 997 Solution of ammonio-ni- trate of silver (test) 1447 Solution of ammonio-sul- phate of copper (test) 1147 Solution of arseniate of soda 1218 Solution of arsenite of potassa 1214 Solution of atropia 1194 Solution of bichloride of platinum (test) 1447 Solution of boracic acid (test) 1447 Solution of bromine (test) 1447 Solution of carbonate of ammonia (test) 1447 Solution of chloride of arsenic 1492 Solution of chloride of barium 1194 Solution of chloride of calcium 1195 Solution of chloride of calcium, saturated (test) 1447 Solution of chloride of potassa 1493 Solution of chloride of soda 1219 Solution of chloride of tin (test) 1447 Solution of chloride of zinc 1443 Solution of chlorinated lime 1197 Solution of chlorinated soda 1219 Solution of chlorine 1002 Solution of citrate of iron 1196 Solution of citrate of magnesia 1207 Solution of citrate of potassa 1216 Solution of corrosive sub- limate (test) 1447 Solution of ferridcyanide of potassium (test) 1447 Solution of ferrocyanide of potassium (test) 1447 Solution of gelatin (test) 1448 Solution of gutta-percha 1204 Solution of hydriodate of arsenic and mercury 1193 Solution of hydrochlorate of ammonia (test) 1448 Solution of hydrochlo- rate of morphia J208 Solution of hydrosulphu ret of ammonia '.630 Index. 1695 Solution of hydrosulphu- ret of ammonia (test) 1448 Solution of iodate of po- tassa (test) 1448 Solution of iodide of ar- senic and mercury 1193 Solution of iodide of iron 1369 Solution of iodide of po- tassium (test) 1448 Solution of iodine, com- pound 1206 Solution of lime 1196 Solution of muriate of baryta 1194 Solution of muriate of lime 1195 Solution of muriate of morphia 1208 Solution of nitrate of iron 1198 Solution of nitrate of mercury 1205 Solution of nitrate of mercury, acid 1205 Solution of oxalate of ammonia (test) 1448 Solution of perchloride of iron 1200 Solution of permanga- nate of potassa 1217 Solution of pernitrate of iron 1198 Solution of persulphate of iron 1202, 1203 Solution of phosphate of soda (test) 1448 Solution of potassa 1211 Solution of soda 1218 Solution of strychnia 1221 Solution of subacetate of lead 1210 Solution of subacetate of lead, diluted 1211 Solution of subsulphate of iron 1202 Solution of sulphate of indigo (test) 1448 Solution of sulphate of iron (test) 1448 Solution of sulphate of lime (test) 1448 Solution of sulphate of morphia 1209 Solution of tartaric acid (test) 1448 Solution of terchloride of antimony 1192 Solution of terchloride of gold (test) 1448 Solution of ternitrate of sesquioxide of iron 1198 Solution of tersulphate of iron 1203 Solutions 1190 Soot 1601 Sophora tinctoria 1469 Soporifics 3 Sorbic acid 1602 Sorbin 725 Sorbite 724, 732 Sorbus Americana 1602 Sorbus aucuparia 1602 Sorbus hybrida 109 Sorbus torminales 109 Sorghum 1602 Sorghum saccharatum 1602 Sorrel 719 Sorrel-tree 1462 South American kino 497 South American salt- petre 679 Southernwood 4 Southernwood, Tarta- rian 743 Sowbread 1508 Spa water 131 Spanish barilla 788 Spanish broom 1603 Spanish brown 1566 Spanish flies 200 Spanish needles 1473 Spanish oak 695 Spanish soap 747 Spartein 764 Spartium junceum 1603 Spartium scoparium 763 Spearmint 546 Spearmint water 1006 Specific gravity 876 Specific gravity bottle 877 Speediman’s pills 89 Speedwell 1620 Speiss 1606 Speltre 866 Spermaceti 242 Spermaceti cerate 1042 Spermaceti ointment 1418 Sphacelia segetum 366 Sphserococcus crispus 249 Spice-bush 1471 Spiced plasters 1310 Spiced syrup of rhubarb 1375 Spice-wood 1471 Spider’s web 1499 Spigelia 798 Spigelia anthelmia 798 Spigelia Marilandica 798 Spikenard 1564 Spikenard, American 135 Spikenard, small 134 Spindletree 374 Spiraea 800 Spiraea lobata 1252 Spiraea tomentosa 800 Spiraea ulmaria 231,800,1252 Spirit lamps 885 Spirit of ammonia 1346 Spirit of ammonia, aro- matic 1 1347 Spirit of anise 1347 Spirit of cajeput 1347 Spirit of camphor 1348 Spirit of chloroform 1348 Spirit of cinnamon 1349 Spirit of ether 1340 Spirit of ether, com- pound 1340 Spirit of hartshorn 1526 Spirit of horse-radish, compound 1347 Spirit of juniper 1349 Spirit of juniper, com- pound 1349 Spirit of lavender I 349 Spirit of lavender, com- pound 1349 Spirit of Mindererus 1190 Spirit of mustard 783 Spirit of myrcia 802 Spirit of nitre 45 Spirit of nitrous ether 1341 Spirit of nutmeg 1350 Spirit of peppermint 1350 Spirit of rosemary 1351 Spirit of sea-salt 41 Spirit of spearmint 1350 Spirit of turpentine 599 Spirit of wine 69 Spirit, proof 69 Spirit, pyroacetic 1589 Spirit, pyroxylic 803 Spirit, rectified 69 Spirits 1339 Spiritus 1339 Spiritus aetheris 1340 Spiritus aetheris compo- situs 1340 Spiritus setheris nitrici 1341 Spiritus aetheris nitrosi 1341 Spiritus ammoniae 1346 Spiritus ammoniae aro- maticus 1347 Spiritus anisi 1347 Spiritus armoraciae com- positus 1347 Spiritus cajuputi 1347 Spiritus camphorae 1348 Spiritus chloroformi 1348 Spiritus cinnamomi 1348 Spiritus frumenti 801 Spiritus juniperi 1349 Spiritus juniperi com- positus 1349 Spiritus lavandulae 1349 Spiritus lavandulae com- positus 1349 Spiritus limonis 1350 Spiritus menthae piper- itrn 1350 Spiritus menthae viridis 1350 Spiritus Mindereri 1190 Spiritus myrciae 802 Spiritus myristicae 1350 Spiritus nitri dulcis 1341 Spiritus pyroxilicus rec- tificatus 803 Spiritus rectificatus 69, 74 1696 Index. 'Stone-root 1500 Storax 811 Storax bark 811 Stoved salt 796 Strainers 881 Stramonii folium 807 Stramonii semen 807 Stramonium 807 Strasburg turpentine 830,834 Strengthening plaster 1068 Striated ipecacuanha 483 Strong chloric ether 1348 Strong solution of am- monia 97 Stronger alcohol 69, 74 Stronger ether 951 Strongest common caus- tic 1279 Strong-scented lettuce 503 Strychnia 562,1351 Strychnia, sulphate of 1357 Strychnia, tests of 1353,1354 Strychnise sulphas 1357 Strychnos colubrina 562 Strychnos Ignatia 465 Strychnos nux vomica 118, 561 Strychnos tieute 1618 Strychnos toxifera 1622 Sturgeon 463 Styracin 813, 1549 Styrax 811 Styrax benzoin 164 Styrax calamita 812 Styrax officinale 811 Styrax prseparatus 811 Styrol 813 Styrone 813 Subacetate of copper 342 Subacetate of lead, di- luted solution of 1211 Subacetate of lead, so- lution of 1209 Subcarbonate of bismuth 1024 Subcarbonate of iron 1145 Suber 1504 Suberic acid 1504 Suberin 1504 Sublimate 891 Sublimation 891 Sublimed sulphur 813, 816 Subnitrate of bismuth 1025 Succi 1358 Succi spissati 1077 Succinate of ammonia 1606 Succinic acid 598, 1605 Succinum 598 Succory 1495 Succus conii 1358 Succus scoparii 1358 Succus taraxaci 1358 Suet 777 Sugar 724 Sugar, barley * 730 Sugar, brown 727, 731 Sugar, Havana 727 Spiritus rosmarini 1351 Spiritus tenuior 69, 75 Spiritus vini Gallici 805 Spleenwort, black 1468 Spleenwort, common 1468 Spleenwort fern 1501 Spodumene 516 Sponge 1603 Sponge, burnt 1604 Sponge tent 1604 Spongia 1603 Spongia officinalis 1603 Spongia usta 1604 Spongy Cartliagena bark 278 Spotted winter-green 247 Spring water 128 Spruce beer 830 Spruce, essence of 830 Spunk 1454 Spurge, ipecacuanha 378 Spurge, large flowering 376 Spurge laurel 547 Spurred rye 365 Squill 760 Squilla maritima 761 Squire’s infusion jar 1176 Squirting cucumber 361 Staff-tree, climbing 1490 Stalagmitis cambogioi- des 405 Stanni pulvis 1615 Stannic acid 1614 Stannum 1614 Staphisagria 1604 Staphisain 1605 Star aniseed 119, 1534 Star grass 78 Starch 110 Starch, iodide of 1539 Starch, nitric 1539 Starkey’s soap 746 Star-wort 1527 Statice 806 Statice Caroliniana 806 Statice limonium 806 Stavesacre 1604 Steam-bath 887 Stearic acid 567, 744 Stearin 68, 567, 568, 744 Stearoptene 571 Steel 391 Sterculia acuminata 1605 Sterlet 463 Stibium 122 Stick-lac 1544 Stick rhubarb 705 Still and worm, common 888 Stillingia 806 Stillingia sebifera 806 Stillingia sylvatica 807 Stimulants 2 Stizolobium pruriens 553 St. John’s wort 1630 St. Lucia bark §82 Stone-crop, biting iH598 Stone-pine r 830 Sugar, inverse 725 Sugar, maple 726 Sugar of ergot 368( Sugar of gelatin 464 Sugar of grapes 844 Sugar of lead 656 Sugar of milk 732 Sugar of muscle 725 Sugar of mushrooms 1560 Sugar, palm 726 Sugar, purified 724, 729, 731 ' Sugar, uncrystallizable . 725, 732 Sugar, white 724, 729, 731 Sugar-candy 729 Sugar-cane 726 Sugar-cane, African 16(j3 Sugar-cane, Chinese 1602 Sugar-cane, Otaheitan 1603 Sugar-house molasses 729, 731 Sulphate of alumina 970 Sulphate of alumina and ammonia 92 Sulphate of alumina and iron 1606 Sulphate of alumina and potassa 91 Sulphate of ammonia 104 Sulphate of atropia 1020 Sulphate of baryta 1606 Sulphate of bebeeria 1023 Sulphate of cadmium 1029 Sulphate of cinchonia 1045 Sulphate of copper 343 Sulphate of indigo 1536 Sulphate of iodo-cincho- nia 1319 Sulphate of iodo-cincho- nidia 1319 Sulphate of iodo-quinia 1319 Sulphate of iodo-quini- dia 1319 Sulphate of iron 1146 Sulphate of iron and am- monia 1129 Sulphate of iron and po- tassa 1129 Sulphate of iron, com- mercial 1147 Sulphate of iron, dried 1148 Sulphate of iron, gra- nulated 1149 Sulphate of magnesia 526 Sulphate of manganese 531 Sulphate of mercury 1158, 1169 Sulphate of morphia 1241 Sulphate of morphia, so- lution of 1209 Sulphate of nickel 1606 Sulphate of potassa 684 Sulphate of quinia 1313 Sulphate of quinidia 291 Sulphate of soda 792 Index. 1697 " ilphate of strychnia 1357 lphate of water 55 ’.phate of zinc 867 julphite of soda 794 Sulphocyanide of po- tassium 1607 Sulphocyanide of sina- pisin 782 Sulphohydric acid 816 Sulpho-salts 816 Sulpho sinapisin 781, 782 Sulphovinic acid 953 Sulphur 813 Sulphur auratum anti- monii 987 Sulphur, black 816 Sulphur, crude 814 Sulphur, crummy 815 Sulphur, flowers of 814, 816 Sulphur, insoluble 815 Sulphur, iodide of 1360 Sulphur lotum 813 Sulphur, milk of 1359 Sulphur, native 813 Sulphur, octohedral 815 Sulphur ointment 1427 Sulphur praecipitatum 1359 Sulphur, precipitated 1359 Sulphur, preparations of 1359 Sulphur* prismatic 815 Sulphur, red 816 Sulphur, roll 814 Sulphur, soft 815, 817 Sulphur sublimatum 813 Sulphur, sublimed 813, 816 Sulphur, viscid 815 Sulphur vivum 814 Sulphur, volcanic 813 Sulphur, washed 813, 817 Sulphurated antimony 987 Sulphurated oil 1469 Sulphurated potash 1302 Sulphuret of antimony 124 Sulphuret of calcium 1607 Sulphuret of carbon 1475 Sulphuret of iron 394 Sulphuret of potassium 1302 Sulphuretted hydrogen 816, 1607 Sulphuretted waters 130, 131 Sulphuric acid 53 Sulphuric acid, aromatic 934 Sulphuric acid, commer- cial 63 Sulphuric acid, diluted 935 Sulphuric acid, table of the specific gravity of 57 Sulphuric ether 948 Sulphuris iodidum 1360 Sulphurous acid 936 Sumach 710 Sumach, swamp 836 Sumatra camphor 195 Sumbul 1608 Sumbulic acid 1608 Summer savory 1597 Sun-flower 1558 Superphosphate of iron 1142 Supertartrate of potassa 668 Suppositer (note) 1362 Suppositoria 1361 Suppositcria acidi tan- nici 1362 Suppositoria morphias 1362 Suppositories 1361 Suppositories of mor- phia 1362 Suppositories of tannic acid 1362 Swallow-wort, white 1508 Swamp dogwood 330 Swamp hellebore 852 Swamp laurel 1543 Swamp sassafras 528 Swamp sumach 836 Sweet almonds 107, 108 Sweet bay 528 Sweet birch 1473 Sweet brier 1470 Sweet fennel 398, 399 Sweet fern 1501 Sweet flag 181 Sweet gum 1548 Sweet marjoram 1570 Sweet principle of oils 418 Sweet spirit of nitre 1341 Sweet-scented golden-rod 798 Sweet-scented life-ever- lasting 1521 Sweet-scented virgin’s bower 1496 Sweet-scented water-lily 1566 Swietenia febrifuga 1608 Swietenia mahagoni 1608 Swietenia Senegalensis 1609 Swift’s drug-mill 879 Sydenham’s laudanum 1436 Sylvie acid 699 Symphytum officinale 1609 Symplocarpus foetidus 355 Synaptase 108, 690 Syrian herb mastich 1613 Syringa vulgaris 1609 Syrup 729, 1365 Syrup, ginger 1380 Syrup, lemon 1372 Syrup of albuminate of iron and potassa 1456 Syrup of almond 1367 Syrup of assafetida 1229 Syrup of blackberries 1372 Syrup of blackberry root 1376 Syrup of bloodroot 741 Syrup of buckthorn 1593 Syrup of carnation 1510 Syrup of citric acid 1367 Syrup of coffee 180 Syrup of conium seeds 321 Syrup of currants 1372 Syrup of fruits, prepa- ration of 1372 Syrup of garlic 1367 Syrup of ginger 1380 Syrup of gum arabic 1367 Syrup of hemidesmus 1371 Syrup of liypopliosphite of lime 153s? Syrup of hyposulphite of lime 1533 Syrup of Indian sarsa- parilla 1371 Syrup of iodide of iron 1369 Syrup of iodide of iron and manganese 1553 Syrup of iodide of man- ganese 1552 Syrup of iodide of starch 1539 Syrup of iodide of zinc 1540 Syrup of iodo-tannin 1542 Syrup of ipecacuanha 1371 Syrup of lactucarium 1372 Syrup of lemon 1372 Syrup of lime 729, 1197 Syrup of mulberries 1372 Syrup of nitrate of iron 1199 Syrup of orange flowers 1368 Syrup of orange peel 1368 Syrup of orgeat 1367 Syrup of phosphate of iron 1143, 1370 Syrup of phosphate of iron, compound 1143 Syrup of phosphate of lime 1033 Syrup of phosphate of manganese 1553 Syrup of pineapples 1372 Syrup of poppies 1373 Syrup of pyrophosphate of iron 1144 Syrup of raspberries 1372 Sysup of red poppy 1375 Syrup of red roses 1375 Syrup of rhatany 1371 Syrup of rhubarb 1374 Syrup of rhubarb, aro- matic 1374 Syrup of sarsaparilla, compound 1376 Syrup of seneka 1378 Syrup of senna 1379 Syrup of squill 1377 Syrup of squill, com- pound 1377 Syrup of strawberries 1372 Syrup of tar 653 Syrup of tolu 1379 Syrup of vanilla 850 Syrup of violet 862 Syrup of wild-cherry bark 1374 Syrup, simple 1365 Syrupi 1363 Syrups 1363 Syrups, cream 1373 Syrupus 1365 Syrupus acacise 1367 1698 Index. Syrupus aceti 1365 Syrupus acidi jitrici 1367 Syrupus allii 1367 Syrupus althss 1365 Syrupus amygdalae 1367 Syrupus aurantii 1368 Syrupus aurantii cor- ticis 1368 Syrupus aurantii florum 1368 Syrupus cocci 1365 Syrupus croci 1365 Syrupus ferri iodidi 1369 Syrupus ferri phospha- tis 1370 Syrupus hemidesmi 1371 Syrupus ipecacuanhas 1371 Syrupus krameriae 1371 Syrupus lactucarii 1372 Syrupus limonis 1372 Syrupus mori 1372 Syrupus papaveris 1373 Syrupus pruni Virgini- ans 1374 Syrupus rhamni 1365 Syrupus rhei 1374 Syrupus rhei aromaticus 1374 Syrupus rhoeados 1375 Syrupus rosae 1365 Syrupus rosae Gallics 1375 Syrupus rubi 1376 Syrupus sarss 1365 Syrupus sarsaparills compositus 1376 Syrupus scills 1377 Syrupus scills composi- tus 1377 Syrupus senegs 1378 Syrupus senns 1379 Syrupus simplex 1365 Syrupus tolutanus 1379 Syrupus viols 1365 Syrupus zingiberis 1380 T Tabacum 817 Table of drops 1638 Table of foreign weights 1637 Table of pharmaceutical equivalents 1639 Table of signs and ab- breviations 1628 Table of the correspond- ence of the degrees of Baunni’s hydrometer with those of Tralles’ alcoholmeter 1652 Table, Tralles’ alcohol- metrical 1651 Tables of the value in sp. gr. of Baum6’s hy- drometer degrees 1649, 1650 Tables of weights and measures 1633 Tacamahac 1609 Tacamahaca 1609 Tacca fecula 537 Tacca oceanica 636 Tacca pinnatifida 636 Talcahuana arrow-root 536 Tallow, vegetable 806 Tamai’ind 823 Tamarindus 823 Tamarindus Indica 823 Tamarix Gallica 632 Tanacetic acid 825 Tanacetum 824 Tanacetum vulgare 824 Tannaspidic acid 397 Tannate of alumina 1609 Tannate of iron 1610 Tannate of lead 1610 Tannate of quinia 287 Tannic acid 938 Tannin 939 Tannin lozenges 1411 Tannin suppositories 1362 Tansy 824 Tapioca 825 Tapioca meal 826 Tar 651 Tar beer 663 Tar ointment 1425 Tar water 652, 1182 Taraxacin 827 Taraxacum 826 Taraxacum dens-leonis 827 Tartar 668, 1285 Tartar, cream of 668 Tartar, crude 668 Tartar, crystals of 668 Tartar emetic 976 Tartar emetic ointment 1416 Tartar, red 668 Tartar, salt of 1285 Tartar, soluble 1290 Tartar, white 669 Tartarated antimony 976 Tartarated iron 1130 Tartarian moss 1649 Tartarian southernwood 743 Tartaric acid 59 Tartarized antimony 976 Tartarized soda . 1289 Tartarum vitriolatum 684 Tartrate of antimony and potassa 976 Tartrate of iron and am- monia 1130 Tartrate of iron and po- tassa 1130 Tartrate of manganese 1553 Tartrate of potassa 1290 Tartrate of potassa and magnesia 1290 Tartrate of potassa and soda 1289 Tartrate of protoxide of iron 1131 Tartrate of soda 1610 Tartrate of soda and po- tassa 1289 Taschkent rhubarb 704 Tasteless ague drop 1214 Taurine 1576 Taurocholic acid 1675 Tea 1610 Tea-berry 408 Tegeneria domestica 1499 Tegeneria medicinalis 1499 Tela aranes 1499 Tellurite of potassa 1612 Tellurium 1612 Teneriffe wine 856 Tephrosia Apollinea 770 Tephrosia Yirginiana 1612 Tepid bath 134 Terchloride of antimony solution of 1192 Terchloride of formyl 960 Terebinthina 828 Terebinthina Canadensis 828, 833 Terebinthina Chia 833 Terebinthina Veneta 833 Terebinthina vulgaris 832 Terebinthins oleum 699 Teriodide of antimony 1538 Teriodide of formyl 1640 Terminalia bellirica 1563 Terminalia benzoin 165 Terminalia chebula 1663 Ternitrate of sesquioxide of iron 1200 Ternitrate of sesquioxide of iron, solution of 1198 Teroxide of antimony 984 Terra cariosa 1694 Terra di sienna 1599 Terra Japonica 234 Terra Tripoli tana 1616 Terra umbria 1617 Terras sigillatae 1476 Tersulphuret of anti- mony 124 Testa 835 Testa ovi 634 Testa praeparata 1034 Tests 1446 Tetrathionate of soda 792 Tetrathionic acid 1449 Teucrium chamsdrys 1613 Teucrium marum 1613 Teucrium polium 1613 Teucrium scordium 1613 Texas sarsaparilla 1665 Thallium J613 Thallochlor 244 Thea Bohea 1610 Thea Chinensis 1610 Thea stricta 1610 Thea viridis 1610 Thebaina or thebain 621 Thein 1611 Tlieobroma cacao 603 Theobromin 608 Index. 1699 Theriaca 1051 Theriaca, Br. 724 Thermometers, compa- rative value of the degrees of 1652 Thick-leaved pennywort 1529 Thieves’ vinegar 915 Thlapsus bursa pastoris 1613 Thornapple 808 Thoroughwort 375 Thridace 504 Thuja occidentalis 1614 Thujigenine 1614 Thujine 1614 Thus Americanum 828 Thuya articulata 1595 Thuya occidentalis 1614 Thyme 605 Thyme, oil of 605 Thymol 605 Thymus serpyllum 605 Thymus vulgaris 605 Tieute 1618 Tiglii oleum 605 Tin 1614 Tin, powder of 1615 Tincal 785 Tinctura aconiti 1384 Tinctura aconiti folii 1384 Tinctura aconiti radicis 1384 Tinctura aloes 1385 Tinctura aloes composi- ta 1385 Tinctura aloes et myr- rh® 1385 Tinctura ammoni® com- posita 1384 Tinctura arnic® 1386 Tinctura assafoetid® 1386 Tinctura aurantii 1386 Tinctura belladonn® 1387 Tinctura benzoini com- posita 1386 Tinctura bucco 1387 Tinctura calumb® 1387 Tinctura camphor® 1348 Tinctura cannabis 1388 Tinctura cannabis Indi- c® 1388 Tinctura cantharidis 1388 Tinctura capsici 1388 Tinctura cardamomi 1389 Tinctura cardamomi composita 1389 Tinctura cascarill® 1389 Tinctura cassi® 1384 Tinctura castorei 1389 Tinctura castorei ammo- niata 1384 Tinctura catechu 1390 Tinctura cnirat® 1390 Tinctura cinchon® 1390 Tinctura cinchon® com- posita 1390 Tinctura cinchon® fer- rata 1391 Tinctura cinchon® flav® 1390 Tinctura cinchon® pal- lid® 1384 Tinctura cinnamomi 1391 Tinctura cinnamomi com- posita 1384 Tinctura cocci 1392 Tinctura colchici 1392 Tinctura colchici com- posita 1384 Tinctura colchici semi- nis 1392 Tinctura conii 1392 Tinctura croci 1393 Tinctura cubeb® 1393 Tinctura cuspari® 1384 Tinctura digitalis 1393 Tinctura ergot® 1393 Tinctura ferri acetatis 1452 Tinctura ferri chloridi 1394 Tinctura ferri muriatis 1394 Tinctura ferri perchlo- ridi 1394 Tinctura gall® 1396 Tinctura gentian® com- posita 1396 Tinctura guaiaci 1397 Tinctura guaiaci ammo- niata 1397 Tinctura guaiaci com- posita 1397 Tinctura hellebori 1397 Tinctura humuli 1398 Tinctura hyoscyami 1398 Tinctura iodi 1400 Tintura iodinii 1399 Tinctura iodinii compo- sita 1400 Tinctura jalap® 1400 Tinctura kino 1400 Tinctura krameri® 1401 Tinctura lactucarii 1384 Tinctura lavandul® com- posita 1349 Tinctura limonis 1401 Tinctura lobeli® 1401 Tinctura lobeli® ®the- rea 1401 Tinctura lupuli 1398 Tinctura lupulin® 1402 Tinctura matico 1384 Tinctura melampodii 1398 Tinctura myrrh® 1402 Tinctura nucis vomic® 1402 Tinctura olei menth® piperit® 1350 Tinctura olei menth® viridis 1350 Tinctura opii 1403 Tinctura opii acetata 1404 Tinctura opii ammonia- ta 1384 Tinctura opii camphora- ta 1405 Tinctura opii deodorata 1405 Tinctura quassi® 1406 Tinctura quassi® com- posita 1384 Tinctura quin® compo- sita 1406 Tinctura rhei 1406 Tinctura rhei composita 1384 Tinctura rhei et aloes 140” Tinctura rhei et genti- an® 1384, 1407 Tinctura rhei et senn® 1408 Tinctura sabin® 1408 Tinctura sanguinari® 140? Tinctura saponis cam- phorata 1180 Tinctura scillae 1408 Tinctura seneg® 1408 Tinctura sennae 1409 Tinctura sennae compo- sita 1384, 1409 Tinctura sennae et ja- lapae 1384 Tinctura serpentariae 1409 Tinctura stramonii 1409 Tinctura thebaica 612, 1403 Tinctura tolutana 1409 Tinctura Valerianae 1410 Tinctura valerian® am- moniata 1410 Tinctura valerian® com- posita 1410 Tinctura veratri viridis 1410 Tinctura zingiberis 1410 Tinctur® 1380 Tincture, Bestuchef’s 1395 Tincture of acetate of iron 1452 Tincture of aconite, Fleming’s 1385 Tincture of aconite leaf 1384 Tincture of aconite root 1384 Tincture of aloes 1385 Tincture of aloes and myrrh 1385 Tincture of American hellebore 1410 Tincture of arnica 1386 Tincture of artificial musk 1562 Tincture of assafetida 1386 Tincture of bean of St. Ignatius 466 Tincture of belladonna 1386 Tincture of benzoin, compound 1387 Tincture of black helle- bore 1397 Tincture of bloodroot 1408 Tincture of buchu 1387 Tincture of camphor 1348 Tincture of cantharides 1388 Tincture of capsicum 1388 Tincture of cardamom 1389 Tincture of cardamom compound 1389 Tincture of cascarilla 1389 Tincture of castor 1389 Index. Tincture of catechu 1390 Tincture of Cayenne pep- per 1388 Tincture of chiretta 1390 Tincture of chloride of iron 1394 Tincture of chloroform 1348 Tincture of cinchona 1390 Tincture of cinchona, compound 1390 Tincture of cinnamon 1391 Tincture of cloves 224 Tincture of cochineal 1392 Tincture of colchicum 1392 Tincture of colchicum seed 1392 Tincture of columbo 1387 Tincture of conium 1392 Tincture of cubeb 1393 Tincture of digitalis 1393 Tincture of ergot 1393 Tincture of foxglove 1393 Tincture of galls 1396 Tincture of gentian, compound 1396 Tincture of ginger 1410 Tincture of guaiac 1397 Tincture of guaiac, am- moniated 1397 Tincture of hemlock 1392 Tincture of hemlock fruit 1392 Tincture of hemp 1388 Tincture of henbane 1398 Tincture of hops 1398 Tincture of hyoscyamus 1398 Tincture of ignatia 466 Tincture of Indian hemp 1388 Tincture of iodine 1399 Tincture of iodine, com- pound 1400 Tinct ure of jalap 1400 Tincture of kino 1400 Tincture of lactucarium 1384 Tincture of lemon peel 1401 Tincture of litmus 1550 Tincture of lobelia 1401 Tincture of lobelia, ethe- real 1401 Tincture of lupulin 1402 Tincture of muriate of iron 1394 Tincture of myrrh 1402 Tincture of nutgall 1396 Tincture of nux vomica 1402 Tincture of oil of pep- permint 1350 Tincture of oil of spear- mint 1350 Tincture of opium 1403 Tincture of opium, ace- tated 1404 Tincture of opium, cam- phorated 1405 Tincture of opium, deod- orized 1405 Tincture of orange peel 1386 Tincture of Peruvian bark 1390 Tincture of Peruvian bark, compound 1390 Tincture of quassia 1406 Tincture of quinia, com- pound • 1406 Tincture of rhatany 1401 Tincture of rhubarb 1406 Tincture of rhubarb and aloes 1407 Tincture of rhubarb and gentian 1407 Tincture of rhubarb and senna 1408 Tincture of saffron 1393 Tincture of savin 1408 Tincture of seneka 1408 Tincture of senna 1409 Tincture of senna, com- pound 1409 Tincture of serpentaria 1409 Tincture of soap 746 Tincture of soap, cam- phorated 1189 Tincture of Spanish flies 1388 Tincture of squill 1408 Tincture of stramonium 1409 Tincture of tolu 1409 Tincture of valerian 1410 Tincture of valerian, am- moniated 1410 Tincture of Virginia snakeroot 1409 Tincture of yellow cin- chona 1390 Tinctures 1380 Tinder 1454 Tin-foil 1614 Tin-foil, false 1614 Tinkalzite 784 Tinnevelly senna 772 Toad-flax, common 1465 Tobacco 817 Tobacco ointment 1427 Tolene 167 Tolu, balsam of 167 Toluifera balsamum 157 Tonics 2 Tonka bean 1615 Toot plant 1604 Toot poison 1504 Toothache-tree 136 Tormentil 835 Tormentilla 835 Tormentilla erecta 836 Tormentilla oflScinalis 836 Torreya California 556 Torula aceti 13 Torula cerevisise 388 Touch-me-not 1534 Touchwood 1454 Tourmaline 516 Tous les mois 199 Tow 1648 Toxicodendron *836 Tragacanth 839 Tragacantha 839 Tragacantkin 840, 1470 Trailing arbutus 1512 Tralles’ alcoholmetrical degrees corresponding with the degrees of Baum6 1652 Tralles’ alcoholmetrical table 1651 Tralles’ centesimal alco- holmeter 1651 Travellers’ joy 1496 Treacle 724 Tree primrose 1567 Trehalose 533, 725, 732 Trifolium melilotus 1615 Trigonella foenumgrse- cum 1615 Trillium 1616 Trillium erectum 1616 Trillium pendulum 1616 Triolein 568 Triosteum 841 Triosteum perfoliatum 841 Triphane 516 Triphylene 616 Tripoli 1616 Tripoli senna 771 Triticum mstivum 385 Triticum compositum 385 Triticum hybernum 384 Triticum repens 1616 Triticum vulgare 110, 384 Trituration 879 Troches 1411 Troches of bicarbonate of soda 1414 Troches of bismuth 1412 Troches of catechu 1412 Troches of chalk 1412 Troches of cubeb 1412 Troches of ginger 1414 Troches of gum arabic 1411 Troches of ipecacuanha 1413 Troches of lactucarium 1411 Troches of liquorice 1411 Troches of liquorice and opium 1413 Troches of magnesia 1413 Troches of morphia 1414 Troches of morphia and ipecacuanha 1414 Troches of peppermint 1413 Troches of subcarbonate of iron 1412 Troches of tannic acid 1411 Troches of tartaric acid 1411 Trochisci 1411 Trochisci acidi tannici 1411 Trochisci bismutbi 1412 Trochisci catechu 1412 Trochisci cretse 1412 Trochisci cubebas 1412 Index. 1701 Trofchisci ferri subcar- bonatis 1412 Trochisci glycyrrhizae et opii 1413 Trochisci ipecacuanhae 1413 Trochisci magnesias 1413 Trochisci menthae pipe- ritae 1413 Trochisci morphiae 1414 Trochisci morphiae et ipe- cacuanhae 1414 Trochisci opii 1413 Trochisci sodas bicarbo- natis 1414 Trochisci zingiberis 1414 Trona 788 Tropia 1019 Tub camphor 194 Tulip-tree bark 617 Tunbridge water 131 Turkey corn 1505 Turkey gum 7 Turkey myrrh 558 Turkey opium 613 Turkey pea 1612 Turkey rhubarb 704 Turlington’s balsam 1387 Turmeric 345 Turmeric paper 346 Turner’s cerate 1044 Turnsole 1549 Turpentine 828 Turpentine, Bordeaux 832 Turpentine, Canada 828, 833 Turpentine, Chian 831, 833 Turpentine, common American 831 Turpentine, common European 832 Turpentine, Damarra 834 Turpentine, Dombeya 834 Turpentine, oil of 599 Turpentine, Strasburg 830, 834 Turpentine, Venice 831, 833 Turpentine, white 831 Turpentinic acid 600 Turpeth mineral 1170 Turtle-head 1492 Tussilago farfara 1616 Tutia 1617 Tutty 1617 Tutty ointment 1428 Twin-leaf 1542 u Ulmic acid 842 Ulmin 129, 842 Ulmus 841 Ulmus alata 374 Ulmus Americana 842 Ulmus campestris 841 "Jlmus fulva 842 Ulmus rubra 842 Ultramarine 1617 Umber 1617 Umbrella tree 629 Uncaria gambir 234 Uncomocomo 396 Uncrystallizable sugar 725 Undulated ipecacuanha 483 Unguenta 1415 Unguentum acidi tan- nici 1415 Unguentum aconitise 1416 Unguentum adipis 1416 Unguentum antimonii 1416 Unguentum antimonii tartarati 1416 Unguentum aquae rosae 1416 Unguentum atropiae 1417 Unguentum belladonnoe 1417 Unguentum benzoini 1417 Unguentum calomelanos 1417 Unguentum cantharidis 1418 Unguentum cetacei 1418 Unguentum citrinum 1422 Unguentum cocculi 1418 Unguentum conii 1415 Unguentum creasoti 1418 Unguentum cupri sub- acetatis 1415 Unguentum elemi 1418 Unguentum gallae 1419 Unguenutm gallae cum opio 1419 Unguentum hydrargyri 1419 Unguentum hydrargyri ammoniati 1422 Unguentum hydrargyri iodidi 1415 Unguentum hydrargyri iodidi rubri 1422 Unguentum hydrargyri nitratis 1422 Unguentum hydrargyri nitratis mitius 1415 Unguentum hydrargyri oxidi rubri 1424 Unguentum iodinii 1424 Unguentum iodinii com- positum 1425 Unguentum mezerei 1425 Unguentum opii 1415 Unguentum picis 1415 Unguentum picis liqui- ds 1425 Unguentum plumbi ace- tatis 1415 Unguentum plumbi car- bonatis 1426 Unguentum plumbi iodi- di 1415 Unguentum plumbi sub- acetatis 1042, 1426 Unguentum populeum 1586 Unguentum potassii io- didi 1426 Unguentum precipitati albi 1422 Unguentum resinm 1043,1426 Unguentum sabinse 1043,1426 Unguentum sambuci 1426 Unguentum simplex 1416 Unguentum stramonii 1426 Unguentum sulphuris 1427 Unguentum sulphuris compositum 1415 Unguentum sulphuris iodidi 1427 Unguentum tabaci 1427 Unguentum terebinthi- nse 1428 Unguentum tutias 1428 Unguentum veratriae 1428 Unguentum zinci oxidi 1428 Unicorn plant, false 1527 Unona polycarpa 1500 Upas antiar ’ 1617 Upas tieute 1617 Upland sumach 710 Upright virgin’s bower 1496 Upward filtering 883 Urari 1622 Urate of ammonia 1618 Urate of quinia 287 Urea 1618 Urginea scilla 760 Ursin 846 Ursone 846 Urtica dioica 1619 Urtica major 1619 Urtica minor 1619 Urtica urens 1619 Ustulation 898 Uva passa 843 Uva ursi 845 Uvm 843 Uvse passse minores 844 Uvic acid 62 V Vaccinium myrtillus 293 Yaccinium vitis Idaea 845 Valeren 1460 Valerian 847 Valeriana 847 Valeriana Celtica 1564 Valeriana dioica 848 Valeriana jatamensi 1564 Valeriana officinalis 847 Valeriana phu 848 Valeriana tuberosa 1564 Valerianate of ammonia 974 Valerianate of amylic ether 1516 Valerianate of atropia 1021 Valerianate of bismuth 1619 Valerianate of iron 1619 Valerianate of quinia 1324 Valerianate of soda 1338 Valerianate of zinc 1445 Valerianic acid 449, 739, 848, 942 1702 Index. Valeric acid 848, 943 Vallet’f ferruginous pills 1125, 1269 Vanilla 849 Vanilla aromatica 849 Vanilla guianensis 849 Vanilla palmarum 849 Vanilla planifolia 849 Vanilla pompona 849 Vanilla syrup, cream 1373 Vapour bath 134 Varec 788 Variolaria 1549 Various-leaved fleabane 371 Varvicite 530 Vateria Indica 1463, 1502 Vegetable albumen 385, 386 Vegetable charcoal 213 Vegetable ethiop's 1517 Vegetable fibrin 385 Vegetable jelly 220 Vegetable juices, pre- served 1383 Vegetable musk 553 Vegetable sulphur 522 Vegetable wax 241 Vegeto-animal sub- stances 385 Vegeto-mineral water 1211 Vellarine 1529 Venetian red 1619 Venice sumach 1518 Venice tripoli 1616 Venice turpentine 831, 833 Vera Cruz sarsaparilla 750 Veratria 721, 1428 Veratric acid 722 Veratrin 1431 Veratrum 850 Veratrum album 850 Veratrum officinale 721 Veratrum sabadilla 721 Veratrum viride 851 Verbascum thapsus 1619 Verbena hastata 1620 Verbena officinalis 1620 Verbena urticifolia 1620 Verdigris 342 Verdigris, distilled 1452 Verditer 1620 Vereck 8 Verjuice 843 Vermilion 1171 Veronica beccabunga 1620 Veronica officinalis 1620 Veronica Virginica 510 Vervain 1620 Vesicating ammoniacal ointment 99 Vesicating taffetas 1041 Vesicatories 2 Viburnic acid 739 Vichy water 181 Vienna caustic 1279 Vina medicata 1433 Vincetoxicum 1508 Vinegar 13 Vinegar, distilled 911 Vinegar generator 13 Vinegar of bloodroot 914 Vinegar of colchicum 912 Vinegar of lobelia 912 Vinegar of opium 913 Vinegar of squill 914 Vinegar, radical 20 Vinegars 910 Vinetina 168 Vinous fermentation 69 Vinum album 854 Vinum aloes 1434 Vinum antimoniale 1434 Vinum antimonii 1434 Vinum colchici 1435 Vinum colchici radicis 1435 Vinum colchici seminis 1435 Vinum ergotse 1436 Vinum ferri 1436 Vinum gentianae 1433 Vinum ipecacuanhas 1436 Vinum opii 1436 Vinum Portense 854, 856 Vinum rhei 1437 Vinum rubrum 854 Vinum tabaci 1437 Vinum veratri albi 1433 Vinum Xericum 854, 856 Viola 861 Viola odorata 861 Viola ovata 861 Viola pedat.a 861 Viola tricolor 862 Violet 861 Violine or violia 862 Virgin scammony 757 Virgineic acid 766 Virginia creeper 1460 Virginia snakeroot 773 Virgin's bower, com- mon 1496 Virgin’s bower, sweet- scented 1496 Virgin’s bower, upright 1496 Viscin 1473 Viscum album 1473, 1620 Viscum flavescens 1621 Vitellin 634 Vitellus ovi 634 Vitis vinifera 843 Vitriol, blue 343 Vitriol, green 1146 Vitriol, white 867 Vitriolated soda 792 Vitriolated tartar 684 Vitriolic acid 53 Vitrum antimonii 1519 Viyerra civetta 1496 Viverra zibetha 1496 Volatile alkali 95 Volatile liniment 1186 Volatile oils 569, 1244 Volatile oils, table of drops of 1247 Volumetric solution of bichromate potassa 1449 Volumetric solution of hyposulphite of soda 1449 Volumetric solution of iodine 1450 Volumetric solution of nitrate of silver 1450 Volumetric solution of oxalic acid 1450 Volumetric solution of soda 1450 Vulcanized caoutchouc 1484 w Wade’s balsam 1387 Wahoo 373 Wake-robin 142 Wall pellitory 1577 Walnut, black 492 Walnut, European 491 Walnut, white 492 Warm bath 134 Warm plaster 1070 Warming plaster 1070 Warner’s condenser 890 Warner’s gout cordial 1408 Warner’s upward filter 883 Warren’s safety lamp 886 Washed sulphur 813, 817 Water 126 Water avens 415 Water, distilled 989 Water eryngo 1512 Water germander 1613 Water hemlock 1495 Water hemlock, Ameri- can 1495 Water of ammonia 997 Water of ammonia, table of the strength of 999 Water plantain 1458 Water-bath 887 Watercress 1564 Water dropwort, hem- lock 1567 Water-hemlock, fine- leaved 1567 Water-lily, sweet- scented 1566 Water-lily, white 1566 Watermelon 1507 Water-parsnep 1600 Water-pepper 1474 Water-radish 1564 Waters 990 Waters, distilled 990 Waters, medicated 990 Water-starwort 1483 Wax myrtle 241, 242 1562 Wax, vegetable 241 Wax, white 237 Wax, yellow 237 Waxed cloth 1041 Index. 1703 Weak fish 464 Weights and measures 875 Weights and measures, tables of 1633 Weights, foreign 1637 Weld 1592 Well water 129 West India kino 497 Whale, spermaceti 242, 1459 Wheat, common winter 110, 384 Wheat flour 384 Wheat starch 110 ,113 Whey 732 Whisky 801 White agaric 1454 White arsenic 22 White balsam 155 White bay 528 White bismuth 1025 White bryony 191, 1478 White cohosh 1453 White elm . 842 White flux 670 White fraxinella 1510 White hellebore 850 White horehound 538 White ipecacuanha 483 White lead 658 White lily 1566 White mustard seeds 779 White oxide of bismuth 1025 White pepper 648 White poppy 609 White precipitate 1172 White resin 699 White rhubarb 706 White saunders 1595 White swallow-wort 1508 White turpentine 831 White vitriol 867 White walnut 492 White water-lily 1566 White wax 237 White wine 854 White-oak bark 694, 695 White-sulphur water 131 White-wine vinegar 15 Whiting 1033 Wild brier 711 Wild cardamom 216 Wild carrot 219 Wild chamomile 331 Wild cucumber 361 Wild ginger 143 Wild horehound 375 Wild indigo 1469 Wild ipecac 841 Wild lemon 665 Wild lettuce ,503 Wild nutmeg 556 Wild pink 1599 Wild potato < 1502 Wild rosemary 226 Wild sarsaparilla 134 Wild senna 229 Wild senna of Europe 1520 Wild thyme 605 Wild yam-root 1510 Wild-cherry bark 689 Willow 735 Willow-herb 1512 Windsor soap 746 Wine . 854 Wine, antimonial 1434 Wine, aromatic 1621 Wine, claret 856 Wine, madeira 856 Wine measure 1633 Wine of aloes 1434 Wine of antimony 1434 Wine of colchicum root 1435 Wine of colchicum seed 1435 Wine of ergot 1436 Wine of ipecacuanha 1436 Wine of iron 1436 Wine of opium 1436 Wine of rhubarb 1437 Wine of tar 653 Wine of tobacco 1437 Wine, port 854, 856 Wine, red 854 Wine, sherry 854, 856 Wine, teneriffe 856 Wine vinegar 15 Wine, white 854 Wines, acidulous 855 Wines, astringent 855 Wines, dry 855 Wines, light 855 Wines, medicated 1433 Wines of different coun- tries 855 Wines, rough 855 Wines, sparkling 855 W ines, spirituous 854 Wines, sweet 855 Wines, table of the strength of 858 Wine-whey 861 Winter savory 1597 Wintera 1621 Winter-berry 688 Winter-cherry, common 1583 Winter-clover 1557 Winter-green 247, 408 Winter-green, spotted 247 Winter’s bark 1621 Wistar’s cough lozenges 1413 Witch-hazel 1525 Witherite 159 Wo ad 1542 Wolfsbane 63 Wood alcohol 803 Wood betony 1473 Wood naphtha 803 Wood oil 325 Wood spirit 803 Wood vinegar 18, 21 Wood-sorrel 1574 Woody nightshade 358 Woorali 1622 Woorara 1622 Woorari 1622 Worm tea 800 Wormseed 245 Wormseed, European 743 Wormwood 4 Wriglitia antidysenter- ica 1623 Wrightia tinctoria 1536 Wurrus 714 X Xanthochymus ovalifo- lius 405 Xanthopicrite 168, 864 Xanthorrhiza 863 Xantkorrliiza apiifolia 863 Xanthorrhiza tinctoria 863 Xanthorrhoea resins 1623 Xanthoxylene 864 Xanthoxylin 864 Xanthoxylum 864 Xanthoxylum alatum 864 Xanthoxylum American- um 864 Xanthoxylum Carolinia- num 865 Xanthoxylum clava Her- culis 865 Xanthoxylum fraxineum 864 Xylobalsamum 1469 Xyloidin 112 Y Yam ' 537 Yarrow 16 Yeast 387 Yeast poultice 1036 Yellow bark # 252, 259, 268 Yellow bark of Guaya- quil 273 Yellow Carthagena bark, common 277 Yellow dock 718 Yellow gentian 411 Yellow jasmine 409 Yellow ladies’ bedstraw 1519 Yellow parilla 1555 Yellow pine 829 Yellow prussiate of potash 686 Yellow puccoon 457 Yellow resin 699 Yellow saunders 1595 Yellow sulphate of mer- cury 1170 Yellow wash 1153 Yellow wax 237 Yellow-dye tree 1500 Yellow-flowered rhodo- dendron 1593 Yellow-root 457, 863 1704 Index. z Zanna arrow-root 537 Zamia integrifolia 536 Zamia lanuginosa 733 Zea mays 1623 Zedoary 1624 Zerumbet 1624 Zibethum 1496 Zinc 865 Zinc, acetate of 1438 Zinc, butter of 1440 Zinc, carbonate of 1439 Zinc, chloride of 1440 Zinc colic 866 Zinc, cyanide of 1508 Zinc, ferrocyanide of 1515 Zinc, flowers of 1444 Zinc, granulated 865 Zinc, impure oxide of 1617 Zinc, iodide of 1539 Zinc, lactate of 1545 Zinc, oxide of 1444 Zinc, phosphate of 1583 Zinc, precipitated car- bonate of 1439 Zinc, preparations of 1437 Zinc, silicate of 1482 Zinc, solution of chlo- ride of 1438, 1443 Zinc, sulphate of 867 Zinc, table of the prepa- rations of 867 Zinc, valerianate of 1445 Zinci acetas 1438 Zincicarbonas 1439 Zinci carbonas prsecipi- tata 1439 Zinci chloridi liquor 1443 Zinci chloridum 1440 Zinci cyanidum 1508 Zinci ferrocyanidum 1515 Zinci iodidum 1539 Zincilactas 1545 Zinci oxidum 1444 Zinci pliosphas 1583 Zinci sulphas 867 Zinci valerianas 1445 Zincum 865 Zingiber 870 Zingiber cassumuniar 1624 Zingiber officinale 870 Zingiber zerumbet 1624 Zittmann’s decoction 1062 Zizyphus jujuba 1624 Zizyphus lotus 1624 Zisyphus vulgaris 1624 THE END. As the Metric System will be used in this Journal, the following Tables, for reference, are given for those not yet familiar with the system : METRIC WEIGHTS. 1 Millimetre 0.001= .039 inches 1 Centimetre 0.01 = .393 “ x Decimetre 0.1 = 3.937 “ 1 Metre x. =39.370 “ 1 Kilometre 1000. = .62 miles METRIC MEASURES OF LENGTH. I Milligram . . . gr. 1 Centigram . . . 0.01 =-$• “ 1 Decigram . . . o. 1 =i£ “ 1 Gram 1. =15.432 1 Kilogram . . 1000. =2.7 lb. APPROXIMATE EQUIVALENTS. TEMPERATURE. ITU or I gr = .06 grams 1 f 3 or 1 3 • • • =4. if 3 =30. =31. 1 f 3 Glycerine . . =37. 1 f 3 Syrups . . . =40. 370 Cent gS°.6 Fahr. 38° “ .... 100°.4 “ 390 “ 102°.2 “ 40°“ .... 104°. “ 410 “ io5°.8 “ i° C.=i°.S F. Multiply C. by 1.8, add 32=F.