These proteids can be nothing but a mixture of proto- and deutero-albumoses with peptones.
The hydrolysis never leads to the stage of peptone, but only to the formation of albumoses which give biuret-reaction.
The solutions of albumoses introduced by this method into the organism produced an enormous œdema, which, in from six to eight hours, extended along the whole side of the abdomen containing the sponge charged with poison.
Albumoses and peptones are obtained by peptic digestion, the latter being termed peptic- peptones; tryptic digestion also produces peptones.
Albumoses and peptones are white powders, readily soluble in water, with the exception of the hetero-albumoses--a subdivision of primary albumoses.
This chemical phenomenon is a breaking-down process that is analogous to the peptonization of proteids, although in addition to the peptones and albumoses characteristic of peptic digestion, amido-acids and ammonia are to be found.
In this digestive action, only albumoses and higher peptones are produced.
The albumosespresent in this disease are probably due to the secretory toxin.
In the membrane a ferment is probably produced which, unlike the localised bacilli, passes throughout the body and by digestion of the proteids produces albumoses and an organic acid which have the toxic influence.
Now, fever is produced by the action of the albumoses (bodies allied to the proteids) upon the heat-regulating centres in the brain.
Sidney Martin suggests that anthrax produces albumoses and an alkaloidal substance, the former producing fever, the latter stupor.
The proteids are converted by digestion into albumoses and peptones, ultimately entirely into peptones; these in their turn are reconverted into proteids, and become assimilated as part of the living organism.
In some respects they resemble the albumoses formed in ordinary digestion; but in others they show peculiarities which render them quite unique, so that they merit the specific name of atmidalbumoses, as suggested by Neumeister.
Albumoses and peptones injected into the jugular vein likewise produce fever, presumably through some action on the nervous system by which the equilibrium of tissue-metamorphosis is interfered with.
It is also claimed that when albumoses are injected subcutaneously, neither albumoses nor peptones are to be detected in the urine.
Here we see that two of these primary albumoses formed by the action of superheated water, like the previously described antialbumid, show a loss of nitrogen with a marked increase in the content of carbon.
Further, Politzer found that all of the albumoses either delayed or prevented altogether the coagulation of the blood, in conformity with the observations of Schmidt-Mülheim and Fano.
In all of these actions the primary albumoses appeared most effective, deuteroalbumose least so.
He designates all of the peculiar albumoses formed by these bacilli as acrooalbumoses.
Many of these observations made with the albumoses I have repeated with several of the proteoses and peptones more recently studied, as protocaseose, protoelastose, the globuloses, and others.
The same observer also claims that blood-serum, in the case of dogs, is able to transform albumoses into ordinary serum-globulin.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "albumoses" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.