Browsing Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology (MU) by Thesis Advisor "Greene, Charles Wilson, 1866-1947"
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
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The absorption of fat by the mammalian stomach
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1913)A proper analysis of the function of the stomach in alimentation involves not only those factors which produce chemical and mechanical changes in the foods during its stay in the gastric cavity; but also, the extent to ... -
The determination of the lecithans in the tissues and fluids of the animal body
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1905)The Hoppe-Seyler method not offering a means of separation of the lecithins from the kephalins was not experimentally investigated. In attempting to apply the method of Koch to other tissues than the brain and spinal cord, ... -
On the pharmacological action of certain organic derivatives of arsenic with special reference to salvarsan and sodium cacodylate
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1913)Since the introduction of Salvarsan by Ehrlich in the latter part of 1910 many facts have been brought out concerning its reactions in the body. The most important of these pharmacologically are the deaths which have been ... -
Pharmacological action of acetanilide, antipyrine & acetphenetidin on cardiac muscle
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1911)It is a well-known fact that acetanilide and the antipyrine series, when administered in clinical cases, for antipyretic purposes, often have untoward and unexpected accompanying actions. These associated influences have ... -
The pharmacological action of certain bromide salts
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1913)The purpose of the work on which this paper is based has been to study the effects of some of the bromide salts upon the isolated heart of a frog as revealed by substituting the bromides of potassium, sodium, and calcium ... -
Some factors influencing the lipase content of the blood
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1915)From the review of the literature of the lipase content of the blood it appears that no consistent series of determinations have been made through a period of time sufficient to learn under just what conditions the variation ... -
A study of the chemistry of nerve degeneration
(University of Missouri--Columbia, 1905)It has been pointed out by a number of experimentors, that after section of a nerve, certain chemical changes are demonstrable. A notable example is the presence of fat, formed by degenerative processes and shown by Marchi's ...