The hypothetical radical ofsalicylic acid and of certain related compounds.
Lloyd found it to be a liquid consisting of a solution of sulphate of morphine andsalicylic acid, in alcohol and glycerine, with suitable coloring matter.
But the antipyretic influence of alcohol is so feeble in comparison with the proper application of water to the surface, or with the internal administration of sulphate of quinia, salicylic acid, digitalis, etc.
Salicylic acid, aside from its remedial value, is used largely as a preservative, either in a dry state or in the form of a solution in water or alcohol.
The addition of the salicylic acid delays secondary fermentation in stock and export beers, which may then be kept for any length of time without becoming unsound or of unpleasant flavor.
The larger the amount of sugar in proportion to the alcohol the more salicylic acid will be required.
An individual living on a salicylated diet would not absorb so much of the salicylic acid per diem as that which is prescribed to be taken for the prevention of epidemics and other ailments, such as gout, rheumatism, catarrhal affections, etc.
I take of nitrate of potassium, of salicylic acid, and of chloride of sodium, each 1 ounce.
Dissolve 3/4 of an ounce of salicylic acid in a gallon of cider, and then add this amount to each barrel of cider.
To keep meat for several days from becoming high or tainted: Place it for twenty or thirty minutes in an aqueous solution of 8 drachms of salicylic acid to one gallon of water.
Are successfully preserved for a length of time from decomposition or deterioration by means of salicylic acid.
The use of salicylic acid will thus be found highly remunerative to all tanners, as it has proved in the industries already alluded to.
The ones most commonly used are boric and salicylic acids and formaldehyde; the two former can only be detected by chemical tests too delicate and intricate to be used by the housewife.
The preservatives sometimes used, namely, boric andsalicylic acids and formaldehyde, can only be detected by chemical tests.
The presence of preservatives, salicylicand boric acids, the benzoates, etc.
Quite as much to be condemned is the more modern process of keeping fruit by adding to it some preserving agent, like salicylic acid or other chemicals.
Salicylic acid is an antiseptic, and like many other substances, such as carbolic acid, creosote, etc.
Salicylic acid holds the preference over other drugs of this class, because it imparts no unpleasant flavor to the fruit.
Salicylic Acid and Borax: equal parts, in water and glycerin, for sweating and tender feet.
Thickened or horny layers on the palms and soles may be covered with salicylicplaster (ten per cent strength), which is removed after two days, and the whole part soaked in warm water, when the horny layer is to be peeled off.
The two drugs of most value are some form of salicylic acid and an alkali.
It is used as a remedy against fevers and rheumatism, causing less digestive disturbances than the salicylic acid which is the oxidation product of saligenin and which is sometimes used as a remedy for rheumatism.
Quinin and salicylic acid in 1-dram doses will lower the temperature, but too continuous use of the former in some cases increases the depression.
Later, however, we should give quinin or salicylic acid in 1-dram doses two or three times a day.
Salicylic acid and salicylate of sodium have proved useful in certain cases; also phosphate of sodium.
Salicylic acid may be given in 1 or 2 dram doses every few hours.
Fusion with alkalis converts it into salicylic acid.
On boiling with concentrated caustic potash it yields the potassium salt of coumaric acid, whilst when fused with potash it is completely decomposed into salicylic and acetic acids.
Remove the extract and test it forsalicylic acid with dilute ferric chlorid.
After it has cooled, acidify with sulfuric acid, extract and test for salicylic acid with 2 or 3 drops of ferric chlorid solution, letting the solutions come together slowly.
A white crystalline compound of acetyl and salicylic acid used as a drug for the salicylic acid liberated from it in the intestines.
A crystalline derivative of salicylic acid, used as an antiseptic and antirheumatic.
Therefore it certainly does not tend to prevent rheumatic endocarditis; hence for this complication alone salicylic acid is not indicated.
On the other hand, the endocarditis occurs during the second or third week of acute rheumatism, after the blood has been thoroughly saturated with salicylic acid.
This may be given with the salicylic acid treatment, and also when the salicylic acid has been stopped.
While salicylic acid will not prevent endocarditis, it should he continued, if it is of benefit with regard to the arthritis.
If some other form of salicylic acid is preferred, novaspirin, which is methylene-citryl-salicylic acid and contains 62 percent of salicylic acid, is perhaps the least irritant to the stomach of the salicylic preparations.
Quinin has not been shown to be of value, and salicylic acid is rarely of value unless the cause is rheumatism.
Not only the fever process, but also the salicylic acid tends to prevent the healthy normal growth of red corpuscles.
The necessary diminished diet, catharsis, hypnotic, salicylic acid and alkalies all tend to quiet the circulation and diminish any strenuosity of the heart that may be present.
This drug is decomposed in the intestine into its component parts, salicylicacid and methylene-citric acid.
Corfield said he had found salicylic acid in the lighter wines and beers.
Mr. Walter Collingwood Williams, a public analyst, had found salicylic acid in a number of temperance, non-alcoholic drinks.
It is also utilised in the preparation of certain colouring matters or dyes, and during the last few years has had another application in the manufacture of salicylic acid.
Dragendorff's process, and such substances as digitalin, picric acid, salicylic acid, antipyrin and others separated in this way and identified.
On the other hand, the replacement by methyl of an atom of hydrogen in the aromatic oxyacids weakens their action; methyl salicylic acid O.
On warming with sulphuric acid and bichromate of potash, a smell of salicylic acid is developed.
The substances most frequently utilized are salicylic acid, formaldehyde and boracic acid.
Borax or boric acid, formaldehyde, salicylic acid, and other chemical bodies are used for this purpose.
These substances, then, can be added to milk in quantities not recognisable to the taste (salicylic acid about .
Still greater durability is imparted to the fat by adding in remelting a small quantity of salicylic acid (2¾ drachms of the acid to 2 lbs.
Perkin has recently succeeded in artificially preparing cumarin from salicylic acid.
The former is a mixture of acetic anhydride, salicylic acid and cumarin; in distilling, the latter passes over last (at 554° F.
On the other hand, according to medical opinions, dentifrices containing salicylicacid cannot be recommended, the acid, it is claimed, being very injurious to the enamel of the teeth.
If now we treat salicylic acid with concentrated acetic acid we get "aspirin.
Treat this to soda-water and it is transformed into salicylic acid, a white odorless powder, used as a preservative and as a rheumatism remedy.
The making of medicines from coal tar began in 1874 when Kolbe made salicylic acid from carbolic acid.
Salicylic acid is a rheumatism remedy and had previously been extracted from willow bark.
Strong salicylic-acid ointment; a half to one drachm of salicylic acid to the ounce of lard.
The paste-like ointment, referred to as useful in acute eczema, may also be used with a larger proportion (20 to 60 grains to the ounce) of salicylic acid.
State frequency and types of eruption resulting from the ingestion of salicylic acid.
Salicylic acid, either alone as an ointment, ten to thirty grains to the ounce; or it may often be added with advantage, in the same proportion, to the sulphur or ammoniated mercury ointment above named.
The repeated application of a saturated alcoholic solution of salicylic acid is often curative, the upper portion being pared off from time to time.
Oehlschlager, of Dantzig, who first contended that we possessed in salicylic acid one of the most reliable remedies for neuralgia.
This cannot astonish us if we remember that the action of salicylic acid is, in more than one respect, and especially in its influence on the nervous centers, analogous to quinine.
There are many pointed examples of the direct method, and we will glance at the case of salicylic acid.
Germany had monopolised the production of the important synthetic drugs, including the derivatives of salicylic acid, of which aspirin had developed wide use in Allied countries.
A lapse of a week witnessed another contract with the Heyden Chemical Works, a branch of the German house, by which this phenol was purchased for conversion into salicylic acid and other products.
Use for a dusting powder one part of salicylic acid and nineteen parts of starch on it.
Mix the wax in a tin cup, then add the lard, when all is melted remove from the fire and stir till cool, then add the salicylic acid and continue stirring until cold.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "salicylic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.