10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ANTIAR»
Discover the use of
antiar in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
antiar and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Pharmaceutical Journal ...: A Weekly Record of Pharmacy ...
show that the ligature or excision of the heart has not the same influence as the
Antiar, inasmuch, as in the first case the muscles and nerves are found irritable
six or seven hours, and more, after the experiment has been made. Therefore it ...
2
Edinburgh Medical Journal
The first action of the antiar on frogs is, therefore, paralysis of the heart, exactly as
Sir Ben. Brodie had observed it to act on mammalia in 1812, though Schnell
supposed the antiar first to act on the spinal cord. As complete cessation of ...
... and the functions of the brain may be wholly suspended without the circulation
being at all disturbed. In proof of the first of these propositions, I may refer to my
former experiments on the upas antiar,in which the sensibility of the animal ...
4
The Retrospect of Medicine
ways, through a wound of the back, I found that, with the exception of the heart,
the antiar acts in the first instance upon the muscles. This is shown by the fact,
that in the second hour, at the time when the muscles of the poisoned parts have
lost ...
William Braithwaite, 1858
5
The London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and ...
with Antiar are simply dependent on the paralysis of the heart caused by it. With
reference to the irritability of the muscles and nerves, on the contrary, it is easy to
show that the ligature or excision of the heart has not the same influence as the ...
6
The Retrospect of Medicine
.ways, through a wound of the back, I found that, with the exception of the heart,
the antiar acts in the first instance upon the muscles. This is shown by the fact,
that in the second hour, at the time when the muscles of the poisoned parts have
...
7
The Chemist: A Monthly Journal of Chemical and Physical ...
acted upon by the Antiar ; but this inference would be erroneous. In fact, the
experiments just mentioned, if followed a little longer, show that in the third or
fourth hour the sacral plexus also becomes inactive, at a time whenjthe muscles
of the ...
8
Dublin Hospital Gazette
The Antiar, therefore, paralyses also the nervous trunks, but later than the
muscles. From all these experiments, it seems to follow that the Antiar is a poison
which acts principally upon the muscular system (the heart and the voluntary
muscles), ...
9
Companion to the Botanical Magazine: Being a Journal, ...
General d'Entrecasteaux, observed and ascertained the tree which affords the
Upas Antiar at Java, and has given some information in the first volume of Travels
respecting it, which is correct, so far as it goes, but is deficient in details. M. Des- ...
Sir William Jackson Hooker, 1835
10
A General System of Toxicology; Or, A Treatise on Poisons, ...
Death takes place somewhat later if the Antiar has been injected into the pleura,
or into one of the veins of the mesentery; but in every instance are observed
vomitings, purging, cries, and convulsions. Experiment 5th. When a few drops of
...
Matthieu Joseph Bonaventure Orfila, 1821
3 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «ANTIAR»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
antiar is used in the context of the following news items.
The life of the world's most mysterious tribe in Vietnam
Both men and women tied their hair behind them, covering their bodies with antiar bark. They slept sitting up. The Ruc have left the cave, but ... «VietNamNet Bridge, Oct 14»
Cheltenham Festival: Queen's horse Barbers Shop out to buck Gold …
Indeed, for all her dedicated attendants the Queen Mother only once led up a winner at Cheltenham, when Antiar took the Spa Hurdle at the ... «Telegraph.co.uk, Mar 09»
Queen enters Cheltenham Gold Cup for first time with Queen …
It was the Queen Mother who owned the sole royal winner at the Festival since the Second World War when Dave Dick rode Antiar to victory in ... «Telegraph.co.uk, Mar 09»