10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «RHIGOLENE»
Discover the use of
rhigolene in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
rhigolene and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Eastern Medical Journal
cocaine, have, from time to time, found place in our journals, and must
necessarily be welcomed as enhancing the value of the drug by increasing our
knowledge of the rules which govern its action. How different is the action of
rhigolene as ...
2
Yearbook of Pharmacy: Comprising Abstracts of Papers ...
If nothing but the oils, alcohol, water and sugar be present, about 100 c.c. should
be taken diluted with about 500 c.c. of distilled water and the mixture then
saturated with salt; 50 c.c. of rhigolene are then added, well shaken with the
liquid and ...
3
YEAR-BOOK OF PHARMACY COMPRISING ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS ...
at Lardarello escaped the epidemic, whilst a village three kilometres distant lost a
third of its population. Rhigolene as an Anaesthetic. Dr. Richardson. (Chem. and
Drugg., Feb., 1885.) Rhigolene is the cru<Je or impure hydride of amyl, the ...
This production of anaesthesia by freezing was originally introduced by Dr.
Bigelow, the discoverer of rhigolene, and it has been almost the sole use to
which this article has been put. Rhigolene is entirely insoluble in the blood at an
ordinary ...
The difficulty of procuring ether which will bear the necessary tests of purity, such
as boiling in the warm hand, leaving no odor on evaporation, and being neutral
in its reaction, has induced the use of rhigolene, obtained by distillation of ...
J. D. White, John Hugh McQuillen, George Jacob Ziegler, 1867
6
The Therapeutic Gazette: A Monthly Journal of General, ...
Resorcin is insoluble in rhigolene, but dissolves in olive oil to the amount of
nearly five per cent. The mixture will hold about three per cent. in solution. Every
oil thus far tried seems to be readily miscible with the rhigolene and sweet oil, so
that ...
William Brodie, Carl Jungk, Francis Edward Stewart, 1887
7
American Journal of Pharmacy and the Sciences Supporting ...
RHIGOLENE AS A LOCAL ANZESTHETIC. BY JOHN D. Jacxson, M.D., of
Danville, Ky. A brief record of a few observations I have made upon rhigolene,
may perhaps not be deemed amiss as supplemental to the paper on Local
Anaesthesia, ...
8
The Popular Science News and Boston Journal of Chemistry
RIIIOOLENE. Rhigolene, which is again attracting attention in England as an
anaesthetic, is the crude or impure hydride of amyl, the lightest fluid of the
petroleum series (vapor density, 36; H = 1), with faint but pleasant odor and a
slight taste, ...
9
British Journal of Dental Science
anaesthetic. It is then employed as a spray for an apparatus similar to that used
for ether spray. Rhigolene is, however, difficult to manage by itself, as its action is
so rapid that the cuticle becomes frozen into a hard parchment-like sheet, which,
...
10
Quarterly Compendium of Medical Science
another agent of this kind. I allude to rhigolene. Although no record of its use in
intra-nasal surgery has come under my notice, rhigolene has yielded excellent
results in my hands. For the present I must content myself with a brief account of
the ...