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THE 


SYDENHAM. SOCIETY 


INSTITUTED 


MDCCCXLIII 





LONDON 


M DCCCXLV. 





ANIMAL CHEMISTRY 


WITH REFERENCE 7O THE 


PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF MAN 


BY 


DR. J. FRANZ SIMON 


FELLOW OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY AT BERLIN 
ETC. ETC. 


TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY 


GEORGE E. DAY, M.A. & L.M. Canras. 


LICENTIATE OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, 


IN TWO VOLUMES 


VOL. F 


LONDON 
PRINTED FOR THE SYDENHAM SOCIETY 


MDCCCXLY. 





PRINTED BY C. AND J. ADLARD, 
BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. 


EDITOR’S PREFACE. 


I wave much pleasure in presenting to the members of 
the Sydenham Society a translation of Simon’s ‘ Chemistry 
of Man,’ a work that obtained for its author a European repu- 
tation, and is universally regarded as by far the most complete 
treatise that has yet appeared on Physiological Chemistry. 
Until I became acquainted with this work in 1843, I enter- 
tained the idea of publishing a text-book of medical chemistry 
with the view of attempting to supply a deficiency in the medical 
literature of this country, which, I doubt not, has been felt by 
many of my brethren as much as by myself. But a careful 
perusal of the ‘Chemistry of Man’ convinced me that I should 
be doing better service to the profession by undertaking a 
translation of that work than by the publication of a separate 
treatise. Impressed with this feeling I wrote to the author, who 
immediately offered me all the assistance in his power, and 
promised me a considerable amount of original matter. I regret 
to say that his early and unexpected death in the autumn of 
the same year rendered this promise of comparatively little 
value. I have, however, freely availed myself of the permission 
granted me by the Council of the Sydenham Society to insert 
such additions as the progress of chemistry, since the original 


' Physiologische und pathologische Anthropochemie mit Beriicksichtigung der 
eigentlichen Zoochemie. Berlin, 1842. 


b 


v1 EDITOR'S PREFACE. 


publication of the work, has rendered necessary. These inter- 
polations, with the exception of one class, are distinguished by 
being included in brackets. I refer to the chemical essays of 
Simon, written with the view of filling up occasional deficiencies 
in his ‘ Chemistry of Man,’ and published in his ‘ Beitrage zur 
physiologischen und pathologischen Chemie und Mikroskopie.’ 
This exception was made at the request of Dr. Simon, and 
its expediency and fairness is unquestionable. The ‘ Chemistry 
of Man’ was preceded by a volume entitled ‘Chemistry of the 
Proximate Constituents of the Animal Body,’ which, being in 
fact a distinct work, (containing upwards of 500 closely printed 
pages,) it has been deemed unadvisable to translate in its 
original form. A brief Introduction,' in a great measure 
based upon it, has been drawn up by myself, with the view of 
facilitating the perusal of the work to those who have not paid 
much attention to the recent progress of organic chemistry ; 
and having written it with this object, I have intentionally 
excluded many topics which some of my readers may consider 
should have found a place there. 

The following sketch of the life and writings of the Author, 
brief though it be, cannot be read without interest. It affords 
a striking illustration of the results that combined energy and 
talent are capable of evolving. 

Franz Simon was the son of a surgeon residing at Frankfort 
on the Oder, and was born on the 25th of August, 1807. 
He distinguished himself at a very early age as a skilful 
apothecary ; and, in volume 382 of ‘ Brande’s Archiv,’ we find 
his essay on the preparation and properties of tinctures, to 
which one of the Hagen-Buchholz prizes was awarded in 1829. 
Even in this essay we can trace the germs of some of his future 


speculations in physiological chemistry. The following year he 


' In the compilation of the Introduction I am likewise much indebted to Lehmann’s 


‘Manual of Physiological Chemistry ;’ and to Mulder’s ‘Chemistry of Vegetable and 
Animal Physiology.’ 


- EDITOR’S PREFACE. mi 


obtained the first prize (the gold medal) for his essay on the 
best method of preparing infusions and decoctions (Brande’s 
Archiv, vol. 35), a treatise equally remarkable for the extreme 
accuracy and care with which his experiments were conducted, 
and for the judgment displayed in his conclusions. In the 
year 1832 Simon came from the Rhine, where he had been 
practising as apothecary in different towns (Cleve, Diisseldorf, 
Céln, and Deutz,) to Berlin, where he passed his examination 
as apothecary with the highest credit, and where, in addition 
to the practical department of his profession, he attended 
lectures on chemistry and pharmacy. He now published a 
small pamphlet entitled ‘A brief Examination of Professor 
Kranichfeld’s Treatise on the necessity of a Fundamental 
Knowledge of Pharmacy in relation to sound Medical Practice,’ 
one of the most argumentative. and -powerful reples that 
Kranichfeld’s absurd and unfounded accusation against the 
German apothecary system elicited. From this period till the 
year 1838 he devoted himself to study, having, with this view, 
given up his public pharmaceutical avocations in the year 1835. 
He attended, for six terms, lectures at the High School of Berlin, 
on natural history, physics, mathematics, history, and philosophy; 
he likewise published, conjoimtly with Dr. Meklenburg, a tabular 
view of chemistry (Berlin, Hirschwald.) Most of his leisure 
time at this period was devoted to toxicology, a subject on 
which he and his friend Dr. Sobernheim published a treatise 
which is regarded throughout Germany as the standard work 
on everything connected with poisons and poisoning. Some 
of the most important original investigations on which this 
work was based were originally published in Poggendorft’s 
Annalen, vol. 40. 

On the 3d of October, 1838, Simon received the degree of 
Doctor of Philosophy for his celebrated thesis ‘De Lactis 
Muliebris ratione chemica et physiologica,’ which, in the course 
of the same year, was published, with considerable additions, in 


Vill EDITOR’S PREFACE. 


the German language (Die Frauenmilch, u. s. w. Berlin, 
Forstner, 1838), and fully established his reputation as one of 
the most successful investigators of the age in the departments 
of organic chemistry and microscopy. It was regarded by 
Berzelius and others of our first chemists as the most perfect 
work on the subject of which it treats. 

In 1839 his tabular ‘ View of the Mineral Springs of Europe, 
arranged with especial regard to their chemical composition 
and their physical and chemical characters’ (Die Heilquellen 
Europas, u. s. w., Berlin, Forstner,) made its appearance, a work 
of very considerable labour, in which he collected and systema- 
tically arranged no less than 1045 analyses of European mineral 
waters; and in 1841 we find him an extensive contributor to 
Dr. Nicolai’s ‘Manual of Medical Jurisprudence, having, in 
fact, executed the whole of the chemical and toxicological portion 
of the work. About this time the first part of the ‘ Chemistry 
of Man’ appeared; it was not, however, completed till the 
summer of 1842, in consequence of Simon’s determination to 
render the work as rich as possible in original analytical obser- 
vations. With this view he was a constant attendant at 
Schonlein’s clinical class, where his chemical services were 
highly valued, as manifested by the frequent reference made 
to them by that distinguished physician in his published Clini- 
cal Lectures. Scarcely had Simon concluded the ‘ Chemistry 
of Man’ before he entertained the idea of editing a quarterly 
periodical devoted to his favorite pursuits, physiological and 
pathological chemistry. It appeared under the title of ‘ Beitrige 
zur physiologischen und pathologischen Chemie und Mikro- 
skopie, in ihrer Anwendung auf die praktische Medizin.’ He 
lived to edit only three numbers. The fourth (edited by his 
friend Dr. Minding) contained the melancholy tidings of his 
death, which took place at Vienna on the 23d of October 1843, 
after an illness of only four weeks. Though no longer amongst 
us, the good that he did died not with him; his works, no 


EDITOR'S PREFACE. ix 


less than his example, have stimulated others to follow in his 
track, and to build upon the solid basis that he has left them. 
Even the very periodical that he commenced so shortly before 
his death is still conducted (under a different title) by an able 
chemist, and is producing results worthy of its original founder. 

I gladly avail myself of this opportunity of expressing my 
obligations to the Council of the Sydenham Society for the 
promptitude with which they accepted my suggestion respecting 
the expediency of publishing an English edition of this work, 
and for intrusting me with the editorship of it; to one of that 
body, Mr. Ancell, I am very deeply indebted for the kind and 
valuable assistance that he has afforded me in the preparation 
of this volume for the press. Amongst the many other friends 
to whom my acknowledgments are due, I must especially men- 
tion Dr. Allen Thomson, Dr. Percy, Dr. Wright, and Dr. 
Golding Bird. 

GB: 


Southwick street, Hyde Park. 


AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 


Tue completion of the ‘Chemistry of Man’ has been una- 
voidably delayed beyond the time at which it was advertised 
to appear, in consequence of the large number of original ana- 
lyses that I found it requisite to institute. As, however, these 
analyses materially increase the value of the work, I trust 
that my apparent procrastination will be readily forgiven. 
The present volumes comprise physiological and pathological 
chemistry. They treat of the physical and chemical relations 
of the fluid and solid portions of the human body in a state of 
health, and of the modifications they experience in different dis- 
eases. Moreover, in every instance, the chemical examination 
of the fluids and solids of the lower animals is appended to 
each chapter. The order in which the various matters treated 
in these volumes are discussed must be regarded rather as natural 
than physiological. After the circulating fluids, viz., the blood, 
lymph, and chyle, with which I commence,—I treat of the 
secreted and excreted fluids, as, for instance, those of the chy- 
lopoietic system, of the female breast, of the mucous membranes 
and skin, of the kidneys, &c.: next in order, I take the feces 
and vomited matters. I then consider the various tissues that 
enter into the composition of the animal body, as, for instance, 
the bones, muscles, skin, and glands; and I conclude with a 
description of various solid and fluid morbid products, such 


AUTHOR’S PREFACE. x1 


as calculi, tubercular and carcinomatous matter, dropsical 
effusions, &c. 

I have made myself practically conversant with the most 
approved methods of analysing the different fluids and solids 
described in this work; and, as far as my resources permitted, 
I have endeavoured to determine the various physical and che- 
mical modifications they undergo in the course of different dis- 
eases. My attention has been especially directed to the study 
of those fluids that are of the greatest importance to the 
practical physician. Within the space of a few years I have 
made about 170 quantitative analyses of various animal matters, 
of which the very large majority refer to human blood, milk, 
and urine, and on which I lay the foundation for the patholo- 
gical chemistry of those fluids. In fact, without these analyses 
it would have been impossible to publish a work worthy of the 
name of ‘The Chemistry of Man;’ for the essays of Andral 
and Gavarret on the Blood, and of Becquerel on the Urine, did 
not appear until I had made considerable progress in my work. 
I have deemed it, in every case, my duty to incorporate the 
results of other chemists with my own, and if, in any instance, 
I have failed in acknowledging the sources from which my 
statements have been drawn, the fault is one of inadvertence, 
not of design. All purely physiological matter, not bearing 
directly on chemistry, has been omitted ; but microscopic in- 
vestigation, especially in those instances in which it strengthens 
the evidence of experimental chemistry, has been deemed legi- 
timately deserving of a place in this treatise. 

My views regarding the metamorphosis of the blood, and its 
relation to nutrition and animal heat, were first communicated, 
at Erlangen in the autumn of 1840, to the medical and chemi- 
cal section of Associated Naturalists; and my subsequent re- 
searches into the chemical constitution of the blood and urine 
confirm my belief in their general accuracy. These views may 
be summed up in the following terms: The blood is subjected 


Xi AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 


to a continuous metamorphosis, which may be regarded as the 
expression of its vitality. The nutrition of the peripheral sys- 
tem is effected by the liquor sanguinis, not by the blood-cor- 
puscles. The liquor sanguinis affords nutriment to the cells 
and organs, which possess an inherent power of selecting proper 
material, or of forming it from non-homologous matter, at the 
same time secreting the products of decomposition. The prin- 
cipal nutritive matters in the liquor sanguinis are albumen, 
fibrin, and fat. The chief products of this metamorphosis are 
the extractive matters and lactic acid, which occur in the ex- 
cretions, especially in the urine. Urea, bilin, and carbonic acid 
are either not products of the metamorphosis of the blood during 
the act of nutrition in the peripheral system, or at most they 
are only in part formed by it. They must be regarded as pro- 
ducts of the vital energy of the blood-corpuscles, which, doubt- 
less, possess the same power of attracting nutriment, and of 
throwing off decomposed products, as other living cells. The 
proper nutriment of these corpuscles is oxygen, albumen, and 
probably also fat, which are furnished them by the liquor san- 
guinis. The most important products of their metamorphosis 
are carbonic acid, urea, fibrin, extractive matters, and very pro- 
bably some of the constituents of the bile. The leading and 
most important object of this vital energy of the blood-corpus- 
cles is the production of animal heat, without which every 
function of the organism, nay even life itself, would be instan- 
taneously annihilated. The production of animal heat is due 
to the combination of oxygen with the carbon of the globulin ;1 
the principal products of this reaction are carbonic acid and 
urea, or uric acid, (which is excreted as a substitute for urea in 
most of those classes of animals in which elliptic blood-corpus- 


' [Simon’s views respecting the production of animal heat approximate closely 
to those expressed by ow countryman, Mr. Ancell, in his 11th lecture on the 
blood. See Lancet, 1840, vol. i. p. 829, or Dr. Posner’s German edition of the col- 
lected lectures, p. 200.] 


—— 


or 


AUTHOR’S PREFACE. xiil 


cles occur.) The urea excreted may thus be regarded as a 
measure or equivalent of the animal heat developed. 

The production of blood-corpuscles and the formation of blood 
are intimately connected with nutrition: when the food is too 
scanty and insufficient, the amount of blood, and especially of 
blood-corpuscles, is diminished ; when the nutriment is proper 
and abundant, the reverse takes place. In the former case, there- 
fore, the vital energy is depressed, the secretions and excretions 
are diminished, and the animal heat sinks; while in the latter 
case exactly the reverse is observed. In the normal state there 
is an equilibrium preserved between the production and con- 
sumption of blood-corpuscles. The food is prepared, and to a 
certain extent assimilated, before it enters the blood. The vital 
energy of the blood-corpuscles continues even during a perfect 
abstinence from food, and carbonic acid and urea continue to 
be formed, although their amount gradually diminishes in a 
direct ratio with the diminution of the blood-corpuscles. 

Moreover, the amount of carbonic acid and the formation of 
urea are lessened by a torpid, and increased by an excited cir- 
culation ; and in proportion to the amount of corpuscles and 
to the rapidity of the circulation, so much the higher is the 
animal temperature. Thus in birds we observe a high tem- 
perature, and the reverse in the amphibia. In chlorotic, and 
also in very aged persons we find a low temperature, and a 
diminished excretion of urea, while in inflammatory diseases, 
and after prolonged corporeal exertion the temperature rises, 
and there is either a relative or an absolute increase of urea; 
in the former case, even in the absence of all nitrogenous food. 
The capillary and cutaneous systems tend to regulate an ex- 
cessive rapidity of the circulation, and to prevent the animal 
heat from exceeding a certain limit. 

If we only knew whether, and in what manner, the pulmo- 
nary exhalation is changed in various diseases, (especially in rela- 
tion to the amount of carbonic acid contained in it,) whether 


xiv¥ AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 


the carbonic acid always increases relatively with the urea, or in 
certain cases with the uric acid, and if further, we possessed 
experiments illustrative of the effects of diseases, and of varied 
diet on the bile, we should then have a more solid basis than 
we now occupy, -on which to found our chemical inquiries, 
while the acquisition to the science of medicine would be po- 
sitive and incalculable. The questions here involved must, 
however, unfortunately, at the present time, be regarded as 
unanswerable. We cannot doubt that the pulmonary exhalation 
does vary, under different circumstances, in the amount of car- 
bonic acid; for instance, more carbonic acid is exhaled during 
prolonged corporeal exertion than when the body is in a state 
of repose; although, as far as I am aware, no experiments on 
this subject have yet been instituted.’ We have, however, con- 
clusive evidence that the amount of urea is increased under 
these circumstances. 

On the other hand, in the researches of Trommer regarding 
the passage of sugar into the portal blood of horses, this sub- 
stance could not be detected in the chyle nor in the arterial or 
venous blood, which renders it more than probable that the 
liver not only serves the purpose of modifying the composition 
of the blood, but likewise effects the object of altering or re- 
moving abnormal substances from it that have been absorbed 
by the mesenteric veins. Hence this organ appears, in a cer- 
tain degree, to take a share in the process of digestion, an 
opinion supported by Berzelius. Future investigations re- 
specting the functions of the liver may lead to very important 
results, and throw much light on many of the most obscure 
departments of physiology. 

Although very little has yet been done in physiological and 
pathological chemistry, the rational physician, who ventures to 
cast aside the trammels of dogmatism and empiricism, cannot, 


1 [The experiments of Scharling on this subject were made after the publication 
of the ‘Chemistry of Man.’ A brief notice of them is given in p. 129 of this volume. ] 


AUTHOR’S PREFACE. XV 


for an instant, doubt that pathology, therapeutics, and diag- 
nosis, are only safely based on chemistry, physiology, and morbid 
anatomy: he cannot entertain a doubt that the same chemistry 
with which he scans the changes in crude inorganic matter, 
will likewise enable him, if not at present, yet surely at some 
future period, to detect the variations in the composition of the 
animal fluids and solids, some of which are dependent on phy- 
siological, others on pathological causes, and will throw a new 
light on the normal functions of the organism, as well as on 
the various processes of disease. 

After contemplating the dependence of vital manifestations 
on the unceasing metamorphosis of the animal body, and the 
secretions and excretions as its products; after glancing at the 
physical and chemical modifications that these secretions and 
excretions undergo in numerous pathological conditions, and 
observing how these changes affect the structure and chemical 
conditions of the different organs, we can no longer entertain 
a doubt that all morbid phenomena are accompanied by me- 
tamorphoses in the organism, different from those that occur 
in the normal condition. But it will require an immense number 
of analyses in order to ascertain and determine these modifi- 
cations, to express them in definite terms, to connect them 
duly with functional disturbances in the organism, or with 
other symptomatic phenomena ; and, finally, as far as possible, 
to endeavour to discover their origi. In such researches 
the mere chemist can do little: in order to produce results really 
serviceable to science, physiology and pathology are as essential 
as chemistry itself, and no one can hope to advance this de- 
partment of scientific inquiry who does not include, in his own 
person, the chemist, the physiologist, and the pathologist. 

Every science is slowly and gradually developed. Physio- 
logical and pathological chemistry forms no exception to this 
rule: it is still a mere infant science, that has scarcely attained 
a self-dependent existence. The reader must therefore not 


XV1 AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 


require of this work more than the present state of the science 
will enable me to present him with. He will find in it che- 
mical facts which the physiologist and pathologist may render 
of further service: the few scattered ideas concerning the me- 
tamorphosis of the blood, and the probable connexion between 
various diseases and certain modifications in the composition 
of the different animal fluids, may serve as connecting links for 
further investigations. 

The materials for my analyses have been chiefly derived 
from the Charité (hospital) of this city, from some of the public 
cliniques, from private practice, and from the royal veterinary 
school. I gladly avail myself of this opportunity of publicly 
expressing my thanks to Drs. Schénlein, Wolff, and Romberg, ~ 
as well to Professors Gurlt and Hertwig, and the other pro- 
fessional friends who have favoured me with their advice and 
assistance. I must likewise express my obligation to Dr. 
v. Behr, who assisted me for a considerable time in my re- 
searches on the urine. 

That this work may succeed in encouraging a taste for a 
department of science, whose cultivation and further develop- 
ment is, at the present time, imperatively demanded by the 
medical public, is the most sincere wish of 


Tue AvutTHor. 


Beruin, April 1842. 


TABLE OF CONTENTS. 


INTRODUCTION. 


By Dr. Day. 


I. Mrnerat ConsTITUENTS. 
Class 1. Constituents useful by their physical properties 


2 
3 


. Constituents useful by their chemical properties 
. Incidental constituents 


Il. OrGANiIc CoNSTITUENTS. 


Class I. Nitrogenous constituents : 
1, Protein 
2. Albumen 
3. Fibrin 
4. Casein 
5. Pepsin ; 
6. Ptyalin 9 : 
7. Gelatin—chondrin and glutin 
8. Pyin ; 
9. Extractive matters 
10. Colouring matters 


11. 
12. 
13. 
14. 
15. 
16. 


a. Of the blood 
b. Of the bile 
ce. Of the urine 
Bilin 

Urea 

Uric acid 
Hippuric acid 
Uric oxide 
Cystin 


Class II. Non-nitrogenous constituents : 


1. 


Animal sugars 
a. Sugar of milk 
4. Diabetic sugar 


Page 


XVill CONTENTS. 


2. Saponifiable fats 
a. Fatty bases 
Glycerin 
Oxide of cetyl 
Cerain 
b. Fatty acids é 
Margaryl and its prides eteane aed margaric acids 
Oleic acid : 
Butyric and its allied acids 
Cerebric and oleophosphorie acids 
3. Non-saponifiable fats : 
a. Cholesterin 
6. Serolin 
4. Organic acids: 
a. Lactic acid 
6. Oxalic acid 
c. Acetic acid 


CHEMISTRY OF MAN. 


CHAPTER I. 


ON THE PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES 


CHAPTER II. 


THE CIRCULATING FLUIDS—THE BLOOD 


The general physical relations of the blood. 
Microscopic analysis of the blood 


The general chemical relations of the blood. 
The general chemical relations of the blood-corpuscles 


+ 5 + colouring matter of the blood 
” ” ” nuclei of the blood-corpuscles 
” *£ - plasma (liquor sanguinis) 


The retardation or prevention of coagulation 
Acceleration of the goagulation 


On the chemical physiology of the blood. 
On the formation of the blood 
On the forces that circulate the blood 
On the process of respiration ¢ 
Absolute quantity of expired carbonic acid 


Relations of the constituents of the expired air to the eee aa respiration 


Respiration of the foetus and of animals 
On the metamorphosis of the blood 


Page 
69 
70 
ib. 
ib. 
ib. 
71 
ib. 
74 
75 
81 


82 
83 


84 
85 
ib. 


87 


100 


102 


131 
136 
139 


CONTENTS. 


On animal heat ; 5 : 
Metamorphosis of the blood in ante nurition of the organism 
Active metamorphosis of the blood 


Special chemistry of the blood. 


Proximate constituents of the blood 
On the methods of analysing the blood 
Analysis of coagulated blood 


On. the healthy blood in relation to physiology. 


On the distinctive characters of arterial and venous blood 

Properties of the blood of the vena porte ; its comparison with arterial blond 

Properties of the blood of the aes vein; its comparison with the blood of 
the vena porte : 

Properties of the blood of fhe renal veins ; its comparison with the blood of 
the aorta : . r 

Comparison of yenous blood with ihe blood of the saints : 

Review of the modifications and changes that the blood undergoes in the 
course of the circulation 

On the absolute composition of healthy venous blood 

On the differences of the blood dependent on sex 


” ” ” on constitution 
” ” ” on temperament 
” ” ” on age 


ON DISEASED BLOOD. 


The pathological chemistry of the blood 
Andral and Gavarret’s method of analysis 
On the effect of repeated venesections on the blood 
First form of diseased blood: hyperinosis 
Blood in inflammatory affections generally 

“5 metrophlebitis puerperalis 

5 phlegmasia alba dolens 

oy carditis 


ns bronchitis 
3 pneumonia 
+ pleuritis 


7 angina tonsillaris Gansedalieis) 
55 hepatitis and lienitis 


% peritonitis 
nephritis and cystitis 
* rheumatismus acutus 


, erysipelas 

i phthisis tuberculosa 

a febris puerperalis 

- eclampsia 

is carcinoma medullare colli uteri 


xX 


CONTENTS. - 


Second form of diseased blood: hypinosis 
Blood in typhus abdominalis 


febris continua 

variola and varioloid disease 
rubeola 

scarlatina 

febris intermittens 
hemorrhagia cerebralis 


Third form of diseased blood: spanemia 
Blood in anemia and hydremia 


” 


carcinoma 

scrofulosis 

chlorosis 

scorbutus 

morbus maculosus Werlhofii dane aente 
hemorrhages : 

purpura hemorrhagica 

typhus petechialis putridus (yellow even Figo) 


Fourth form of diseased blood: heterochymeusis 
1. Blood containing urea; uremia 
Blood in morbus Brightii 


‘5 cholera 


2. Blood containing sugar: melitemia 
Blood in diabetes : 

3. Blood containing Wlesiigment cholemia 
Blood in icterus 


4. Blood containing fat : sian eants 


or 


- Blood containing pus: pyohemia 


6. Blood containing animalcules 


SUPPLEMENT TO THE BLOOD. 


Blood during pregnancy 
Menstrual blood 
Lochial discharge 
Blood of animals 


THE LYMPH 
THE CHYLE 


350 
354 


CHEMISTRY OF MAN. 


INTRODUCTION. 


Tue proximate constituents of the animal body may be divided 
into two great classes, the mineral and the organic ; each of 
which admits of several sub-divisions. 


I. MINERAL CONSTITUENTS. 


The Mineral Constituents may be advantageously classed in 
three groups, comprising, 1, Those which are of service in the 
animal body, in consequence of their physical properties; 11, 
Those which effect important objects in the system by their 
chemical actions; and 111, Those which, being only incidentally 
present, may be eliminated without exerting any unfavorable 
effect on the economy. 


CLASS I, CONSTITUENTS USEFUL BY THEIR PHYSICAL 
PROPERTIES. 


1. Water. "This substance is so universally diffused, and its 
uses are so obvious as to render any observations unnecessary. 
2. Phosphate of lime, in the importance of its physical proper- 
ties to the animal organism, undoubtedly ranks next to water. 
Phosphate of lime or, as it is often termed, bone-earth, consists 
of 8 eq. of lime and 3 eq. of phosphoric acid; its empirical formula 
therefore is 8 Ca O + 8 PO_; but there can be no doubt that 
] 


2 MINERAL CONSTITUENTS. 


it is a compound of two tribasic phosphates of lime, namely 
2Ca O, HO, PO, + 2(3Ca O, PO,). It consists of 51°55 
parts of lime, and 48°45 of phosphoric acid. It occurs in bone, 
blood, milk, urine, feeces, &e. 

3. Carbonate of lime forms the principal part of the skeleton in 
the invertebrata ; it also occurs in greater or less proportion in 
the bones of the higher animals and man, in the urine of the 
graminivora, and in certain morbid concretions. It contains 
56°29 parts of lime and 43°71 of carbonic acid. 

4. Phosphate of magnesia is very frequently associated with 
phosphate of lime. In a crystalline state its formula is HO, 
2 MgO, PO, + 2HO+12 HO. (Graham in Phil. Trans. 1837.) 
It occurs in bone, blood, milk, shell of eggs, wine of man and 
carnivora, intestinal concretions, feces, &c. After the removal 
of the water of crystallization it consists of 36°67 parts of mag- 
nesia, and 63°33 of phosphoric acid. 

Phosphate of magnesia and ammonia, or, as it is frequently 
termed, ammoniaco-magnesian phosphate, is a perfectly distinct 
salt. Like the former, it is a tribasic salt, of which the 3 atoms 
of base are, 1 atom of oxide of ammonium, and 2 atoms of 
magnesia, with 12 atoms of water of crystallization, 10 of which 
may be expelled without any loss of ammonia. Its formula 
therefore is NH,O, 2Mg0,PO,+2HO+410HO. Crystals 
of this salt have been observed in the excrements in typhus and 
other diseases; it is also present in certain states of the urme, 
and is a frequent constituent of urmary calculi. 

5. Fluoride of calcium occurs in the animal organism in very 
minute quantity. It is much more abundant in fossil than in 
recent bones. 


CLASS II. CONSTITUENTS USEFUL BY THEIR CHEMICAL 
PROPERTIES. 


1. Hydrochloric acid exists m the digestive fluid of man, of 
the mammalia generally, and of birds. It has been detected 
by Lehmann in morbid saliva. 

2. Hydrofluoric acid has only been detected in the gastric se- 
cretion of birds. 

3. Chloride of sodium exists in the blood, gastric juice, urine, 
bone, cartilage, &e. 


INCIDENTAL. 3 


4. Carbonate of soda is avery common ingredient in the ash 
of animal substances; in most cases it is derived from com- 
pounds of soda with organic acids, especially lactic acid. It 
is also found in the urine of the graminiyora. 

5. Phosphate of soda occurs in the blood, lymph, chyle, bile, 
milk, and urine. Its formula is HO, 2 Na O, PO, + 24 HO. 
On the addition of muriate of ammonia to a solution of this 
salt, we obtain the “sal microcosmicus ” of the older chemists, 
which is found in considerable quantity in decomposed animal 
fluids ; its formula is HO, NH, O, NaO, PO,+8 HO. The 
recent investigations of Enderlin tend to prove that the phos- 
phate of soda that most commonly occurs in the animal fluids 
and tissues, contains 3 atoms of soda, and may be represented 
by the formula 3 Na O, PO.. 

6. Chloride of calcium is found in the gastric juice and saliva. 

7. Chloride of iron (apparently the proto-salt) occurs in he 
gastric juice. 

8. Jron is found in considerable quantity in hematin, the prin- 
cipal colouring matter of the blood ; also in lymph, chyle, black 
pigment of the eye, hair, &c. In what state it exists, whether 
as a peroxide or protoxide, or either, is not known. It is also 
found in lesser proportion in bile, urine, sweat, milk, &e. In 
some of these fluids it is stated to exist as a phosphate. 


CLASS III. INCIDENTAL CONSTITUENTS. 


1. Chloride of potassium is found in almost all the animal fluids. 

2. Alkaline sulphates occur in small quantity in most of the 
animal fluids, in the blood, milk, urine, and sweat. Mitscherlich 
could not detect any alkaline sulphates in the saliva, and 
Lehmann has recently shown that they do not evist in the bile, 
although they may be produced in the ash. 

3. Carbonate of magnesia has been found in alvine concre- 
tions, urinary calculi, &., in man and the mammalia. It 
occurs in considerable quantity in the urine of the graminivora, 
and is a constituent of the shell of the egg. Berzelius suggests 
the probability of magnesia being contained in bone, not as a 
phosphate but as a carbonate, and that the phosphate of mag- 
nesia is produced during analysis. 

4. Manganese has been found in the hair; it has also been 


4 MINERAL CONSTITUENTS. 


detected in human gall-stones, (in one instance there was found 
as much as 0°32! of the protoxide of manganese,) and traces of 
it have been observed in the urinary calculi of the graminivora. 

5. Silica has been found in small quantity in the enamel of 
the teeth, in bone, ure, urinary, intestinal, and biliary calculi, 
hair, and saliva. It is found in considerable quantity in the 
excrements, the amount varying with the nature of the food. 
In the sheep the excrements have been observed to contain as 
much as 6:02 of silica. 

6. Alumina. Traces of this substance were detected by 
Vauquelin, in human bones; it has been found in considerable 
quantity in fossil teeth and horns. The circumstance of its 
being an occasional constituent of intestinal concretions coincides 
with Lehmann’s experiments, in which he found that when 
alumina was introduced into the system, it was carried off by 
the feeces. 

7. Arsenic was recently stated by Orfila to be a normal consti- 
tuent of human bone. This opinion has, however, since been 
withdrawn, and there is little doubt that there was some fal- 
lacy in his experiments. 

8. Copper is considered by Devergie, Lefortier, and Orfila, to 
be a normal constituent of all the soft parts, as well as of the 
blood of healthy persons. Devergie? analysed the viscera of 
five persons and found it in every instance. It has also been 
found in the sweat. 

9. Lead has been found by these chemists in the same cases 
as copper. 

10. Ammoniacal salts. In the blood, lymph, chyle, and milk, 
there are no appreciable ammoniacal salts. They have been 
observed in some cases in the sweat, and they occur in a small 
proportion in the urine. 


' The notation $ represents per centage. 

2 These observations have recently been confirmed by M. Barse, who succeeded in 
finding both copper and lead in the bodies of two persons to whom they could not 
have been given for poisons. It seems from the analyses of Signor Cattanei that 
neither of these metals exists in the bodies of new-born children or infants; and 
Rossignon has recently pointed out the sources from which the bodies of adults pro- 
hably derive their copper. He has found this metal in gelatin, chocolate, bread, 
coffee, sugar, &c. 


PROTEIN. 5 


II. ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The Organic Constituents may be arranged in two principal 
groups, the former embracing the nitrogenous, the latter the 
non-nitrogenous matters. In the nitrogenous group we have 
protein, and its various modifications—gelatin, bilin, and the pro- 
ducts of its metamorphosis—hzematin, urea, uric acid, &c.: in 
the non-nitrogenous we place the animal sugars, fats, lactic and 
acetic acids, &c. &e. 





CLASS I. NITROGENOUS CONSTITUENTS. 


1. Protein. 


Under this head we shall consider three very important com- 
pounds which are formed in the vegetable kingdom, and which 
are also found to constitute the greater part of the animal body. 
These are Albumen, Fibrin, and Casein. Two most important 
discoveries have recently been made regarding these substances. 
The first is the discovery made by Mulder that albumen, fibrin, 
and casein are nothing more than modifications of one com- 
pound to which he has given the name of Protein, (from 
mewrevw, I am first,) which may be regarded as the commence- 
ment and starting-point of all the tissues: the second is, that 
protein, in every respect identical with that which forms the 
basis of the three aforesaid animal principles, may be obtained 
from similar elements in the vegetable kingdom. When the 
newly-expressed juices of vegetables are allowed to stand, a 
separation takes place in a few minutes. A gelatinous preci- 
pitate commonly of a green tinge is deposited, and this, when 
acted on by liquids which remove the colouring matter, leaves 
a grayish white substance, which has been named vegetable fibrin. 
It separates from the vegetable juice in which it was originally 
dissolved exactly as fibrin does from blood. 

When the clarified juice of nutritious vegetables, such as 
cauliflower, asparagus, mangel-wurzel, or turnips, is made to boil, 
a coagulum is formed which it is absolutely impossible to dis- 
tinguish from the substance which separates as a coagulum, 
when the serum of blood, or the white of an egg, diluted with 
water, is heated to the boiling point. This is vegetable albumen, 


6 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Vegetable casein is chiefly found in the seeds of peas, beans, 
lentils, and similar leguminous seeds. Like vegetable albumen, 
it is soluble in water, but differs from it in this, that its solution 
is not coagulated by heat. When the solution is heated or 
evaporated, a skin forms on its surface, and the addition of an 
acid causes a coagulum just as in animal milk. 

“The chemical analysis of these three substances has led to 
the very interesting result that they contain the same organic 
elements united in the same proportion by weight ; and what is 
still more remarkable that they are identical in composition with 
the chief constituents of blood, anima! fibrm and albumen. 

They all three dissolve in concentrated muriatic acid, with the 
same deep purple colour, and even in their physical characters 
animal fibrin and albumen are in no respect different from ve- 
getable fibrin and albumen. It is especially to be noticed, that 
by the phrase identity of composition we do not here imply 
mere similarity, but that, even in regard to the presence and re- 
lative amount of sulphur, phosphorus, and phosphate of lime, no 
difference can be observed.” } 

When animal or vegetable albumen, fibrin, or casein is to be 
used for the extraction of protem in a state of purity, the fol- 
lowing steps are to be taken. The selected substance is suc- 
cessively washed with water, alcohol, and ether, for the purpose 
of removing extractive matter, fat, and soluble salts. It is then 
treated with dilute hydrochloric acid, which extracts the phos- 
phate of lime and any other insoluble salts that may happen to 
be present. We now dissolve it in a moderately strong solution 
of caustic potash, and keep the solution for some time at a tem- 
perature of 120°, whereby the sulphur and phosphorus that are 
present form phosphate of potash and sulphuret of potassium. 

The protein is then to be thrown down from the solution, after 
filtration, by acetic acid, which must be added only in very slight 
excess, as otherwise the precipitate would be redissolved. It 
must then be collected on a filter and carefully washed till every 
trace of acetate of potash is removed. 

In this state it occurs in the form of grayish white gelatinous 
flocks, which, when dried, become hard and yellow, and give an 
amber-coloured powder. It is insoluble in water, alcohol, and 


' Liebig’s Animal Chemistry, translated by Gregory; p. 47. 


PROTEIN. 7 


ether, and is devoid of odour and taste. It readily absorbs 
moisture, and swells up, but regains its original form upon being 
heated to 212°. 

Mulder has analysed protem from animal and vegetable albu- 
men, from fibrin, and from cheese or casein ; Scherer has analysed 
it from animal albumen and fibrin, from the crystalline lens, 
from hair, and from horn; and Dumas from animal albumen 
and casein. 

The formule which these chemists have assigned to it approxi- 
mate closely to each other, although they are not absolutely 
identical. As Muldev’s original formula has been confirmed by 
the recent investigations of Schréder and Von Laer, we shall adopt 
it as the correct symbol of the composition of this substance. 
According to this view the composition! of an atom of protein is 
represented by the formula C,, H,, N, O,,. Its atomic weight 
is 5529°5, oxygen being 100, and its symbol is Pr. It burns 
when exposed to the air, without leaving any ash. When boiled 
for a considerable time in water, with free exposure to the air, 
protein becomes slowly oxydised. We shall revert to this sub- 
ject presently. 

Protemm combines both with acids and bases. It dissolves 
in all very dilute acids, and forms with them a kind of neutral 
compound, which is insoluble or nearly so when there is an 
excess of the acid present. Hence if sulphuric, hydrochloric, 
or nitric acid be added to a solution of protein in a dilute acid, 
the protein is precipitated in an insoluble state ; if however the 
excess of acid is removed by careful washing, the precipitate 
becomes again dissolved. Acetic acid and the ordinary (tribasic) 
phosphoric acid constitute an exception to this rule as they dis- 
solve protein in all proportions. Protein may be precipitated 
from any of its acid solutions by ferrocyanide and ferridcyanide 
of potassium, by tannin, by anhydrous alcohol, by various me- 
tallic salts, and by the alkalies. 


The Metamorphoses of Protein. a. Sulphuric acid and 
protein. On the addition of concentrated sulphuric acid to 
protein or to any of its modifications (albumen, fibrin, or 


' Liebig’s formula for protein is C,, H,, N; O,,- The numerical results afforded 
by these formule approximate very closely. See Appendix I, Note 1. 


8 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


casein) a gradual swelling ensues, and the substance assumes 
a gelatinous appearance. On the addition of water it con- 
tracts, and it is found to be perfectly insoluble in that fluid. 
It must be collected on a filter and boiled im water as long 
as a solution of baryta indicates that any sulphuric acid is 
being given off: it must then be heated with alcohol, and 
dried at a temperature not exceeding 260°. This is su/pho- 
proteic acid. It appears as a yellow mass, is not easily pul- 
verized, and is insoluble in water, alcohol, and ether, but dis- 
solves in potash and ammonia. ‘The salts of silver, copper, 
lead, and iron yield precipitates with the alkaline solutions of 
this acid. Its formula is C,, H,, N, O,,, SO,. 

On the cautious addition of dilute sulphuric acid to an 
acetic acid solution of protein, we obtain Mulder’s sulpho-bi-pro- 
teic acid, which is then thrown down as a flocculent precipitate. 
After washing it, and drying it at a temperature not exceeding 
260°, it assumes a white appearance, and may be easily pulve- 
rized. With the alkalies it forms solutions from which many 
of the metallic salts throw down insoluble compounds. Mulder 
considers that it is composed of two atoms of protein, two of 
water, and one of sulphuric acid; hence it may be expressed 
by the formula C,, H,, N,, O,,4+ H, O,+SO,. 

If protein (or any of its modifications) be boiled in dilute 
sulphuric acid, a beautiful purple tint is evolved. 

3. Hydrochloric acid and protein. Mulder has formed a hydro- 
chloro-proteic acid in the same manner as the sulpho-proteic 
acid. Its formula is C,, H,, N,, O,,+H,O,+H Cl. When 
protein is boiled in strong hydrochloric acid the solution is at 
first yellow, but it gradually merges into a blue tint. This 
change of colour does not occur if the atmospheric air is ex- 
cluded. 

y. Nitric acid and protein. On the addition of nitric acid to 
protein or to any of its modifications, nitrogen and a little nitric 
oxide are evolved, oxalic acid and nitrate of ammonia are formed, 
and there remains undissolved a bright yellow matter, which on 
being dried assumes an orange tint, and which is known as 
Xantho-proteic acid. It is devoid of smell and taste, although 
it slightly reddens moistened litmus paper. It is insoluble 
in water, alcohol, and ether. It dissolves in strong mineral 
acids, but is precipitated on the addition of water; with the 


PROTEIN. 9 


alkalies it forms dark red soluble salts, and metallic salts throw 
down yellow precipitates. In a state of combination, the for- 
mula for this acid is C,, H,, N, O,,; when free it contains 
two atoms of water. 

The changes which occur in the production of this acid may 
be illustrated by the equation— 


1 At. Protein . 4.°C, Hoge Ne Ox, | cot Ate Oxalic acid npee O, 
2 At. Nitric acid - N, O,, | 1 At. Nitrogen . c N 
1 At. Water. : H O 2 At. Ammonia - H; No 
1 At. Hydrated xantho- 
proteic acid . SY (Gy LL INA OL, 
Cyo Hoo N; On; Cy, H;, N, Oo, 


6. Chlorine and protein. On passing a current of chlorine gas 
through a solution of any of the protein-compounds, (albumen, 
fibrin, or casein,) a white flocculent precipitate is thrown down. 
After washing it, and carefully drymg it at a temperature of 
212°, Mulder deduced from it the formula C,, H,, N, O,,+Cl10,. 
He termed it chloro-proteic acid. It appears from his investi- 
gations that the protein remains unchanged, but that a portion 
of the water is decomposed, and that its oxygen combines with 
chlorine to form chlorous acid (Cl O,) while its hydrogen com- 
bines with another portion of chlorine to form hydrochloric 
acid (H Cl) which remains in solution in the water.' 

When ammonia is added to the chlorod-proteic acid, the 
latter substance dissolves, and gives off a large amount of nitro- 
gen. The solution must be evaporated to dryness, and then 
treated with warm water, which takes up a portion of the residue. 
On the addition of alcohol to this aqueous solution, a precipitate 
is thrown down, while muriate of ammonia remains in solution. 
This precipitate is composed of a substance of great physiolo- 
gical interest. Its formula? is C,, H,, N, O,,+ HO. Mulder 
originally termed it ovyprotein, but he has recently given it the 
more descriptive name of tritoxide of protein, without however 
intending to imply anything more than that it contains three 
atoms more oxygen than protem. There is another and, in 


! That this compound is a chlorite of protein and not a chloride of tritoxide of 
protein seems certain from its analogy with a corresponding compound of gelatin. 
2 See Appendix I, Note 2. 


10 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


theory, a simpler method of obtaining this compound. When 
fibrin or albumen of inflamed or healthy blood, of serum of the 
blood, or of hen’s eggs, is boiled with water, after four hours’ 
boiling, principles are always obtained which are soluble in water, 
whilst the greater part remains undissolved. On repeating the 
ebullition every four hours with fresh water, fresh quantities of 
soluble matter are extracted, the imsoluble portion becoming 
poorer in carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen, but richer in oxygen, 
until the composition is finally constant. Moreover, the portion 
of albumen or fibrin soluble in water when evaporated, extracted 
with alcohol, and treated with cold water, is almost entirely so- 
Iuble in it, and likewise contains less carbon, hydrogen, and 
nitrogen, but more oxygen than protein. ‘The substances taken 
up by the alcohol are merely products of decomposition of the 
soluble portion of the fibrin or albumen. It is, moreover, the 
decomposition of this portion that gives rise to the ammonia 
that is produced on distilling albumen or fibrin with water. 

The soluble matter taken up from the fibrin or albumen by 
prolonged ebullition is in every respect identical with the trit- 
oxide of protein which we have already described ; it exists 
moreover ready-formed in the buffy coat of the blood. From 
whichever of these sources we procure it, whether from chloro- 
proteic acid, from albumen or fibrin, by prolonged ebullition, 
or from the buffy coat of the blood after a comparatively short 
ebullition, it possesses the same properties. It is soluble in cold 
water, but not in ether, alcohol, essential or fat oils ; it has nei- 
ther an acid nor alkaline reaction. It is always precipitated in 
the same manner from its aqueous solution by diluted nitric, 
sulphuric, hydrochloric, neutral and basic phosphoric, and tannic 
acids; by solutions of chlorine, bichloride of mercury, neutral and 
basic acetate of lead, nitrate of silver, sulphate of zinc, and 
peroxide of iron. It forms with metallic oxides a class 
of fee salts, which are composed according to the formula 
(Co. NO. + MO) + (C.. . UN. O|.+ HO). 

Tritoxide of protein is not pr ecipitated by dilute acetic acid, 
neutral salts of potash and soda, chloride of barium, hydrochlo- 
rate of ammonia, nor by that very delicate test for protein, fer- 
rocyanide of potassium. It dissolves gradually in solutions of 
potash, soda, and ammonia. When thoroughly dried, it occurs 
as an amber-coloured powder. Nitric acid converts it into 


PROTEIN. 11 


xantho-proteic acid, a change which is not produced by the action 
of that reagent upon chlorod-proteic acid. 

Let us now revert to the undissolved residue, which ultimate- 
ly assumes a uniform composition expressed by the formula! 
C,, H,, N, O,,. It is this which is first formed from protein by 
the influence of the oxygen of the atmosphere. The other sub- 
stance (tritoxide of protein) originates from it by the addition 
of another equivalent of oxygen. In this respect albumen and 
fibrin give different results. Albumen, without gomg through 
this preparatory change like fibrin, is at once converted into trit- 
oxide of protein by ebullition, the insoluble portion which re- 
mains being unaltered albumen. 

From the composition of this insoluble portion it has received 
the name of binoxide of protein. It exists ready formed in the 
buffy coat of the blood. Von Laer has obtained it from hair 
in the following manner. The protein is first thrown down 
by the addition of a little acetic acid to a solution of hair in 
potash. On the addition of a larger proportion of free acid, 
after the removal of the protein, another substance, previously 
in astate of solution, is thrown down. This is the binoxide of 
protem. Von Laer describes it as a bright yellow precipitate. 
After being carefully washed and dried it forms a black, glossy 
resinous mass, which on being pulverized forms a dark amber- 
yellow powder. 

It is insoluble in water and alcohol, but dissolves perfectly 
in dilute acetic, hydrochloric, nitric, and sulphuric acids. It 
does not assume so strong a yellow colour as protein, when 
treated with nitric acid. 

Ferrocyanide and ferridcyanide of potassium, and acetate of 
lead precipitate it from its acid solutions. It is soluble in potash 
and ammonia. 

Tf the binoxide of protein be treated with chlorine there is 
formed, at a loss of one atom of nitrogen, and a gain of three 
of oxygen, a new substance C,, H,, N, O,,, to which no name 
has yet been assigned. 

In order to obtain these products of oxidation of protein by 
boiling fibrin in water, it is essentially necessary that there 
should be free access to the atmospheric air. 


' See Appendix I, Note 3. 


12 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The products of the oxidation of protein occur constantly in 
the blood; they are formed in the lungs from fibrin, a sub- 
stance which has been shown by Scherer to possess the pro- 
perty of absorbing oxygen when in a moist state. The fibrin, 
oxidised in the lungs is, according to Mulder, the principal, if 
not the only, carrier of the oxygen of the air; it is especially 
this substance from which the secretions are formed. 

In inflammatory conditions, a considerably larger quantity 
of protein in an oxidised state, is contained in the bedy, than 
is found in a normal state.! 

These compounds (or at least one of them) are also found in 
pus, the substance termed pyin being in reality tritoxide of pro- 
tein; in false membranes, in cooked meat, and in vitelline sub- 
stance; in the last-named substance we meet with a sulphuret 
of the binoxide of protein. 

Mulder has recently obtained a third oxide of protein, repre- 
sented by the formula C,, H,, N, O,,, by boiling yeast in water. 
It occurs in a state of solution. 


1 The examination of the foregoing facts leads to some very important conclusions. 
We see, for instance, that, by the ebullition of meat, protein is converted into two 
oxides, and is thus no more presented to the organism as a means of nutrition in the 
form of protein, but one part is converted into binoxide, which is hard and sparingly 
soluble, while another portion is changed into the soluble tritoxide, and occurs in 
broth, extract of meat, &c. According to Mulder, the interior of roasted meat un- 
dergoes a change analogous to that which is produced by ebullition. As the effects 
of ebullition upon albumen differ from those on fibrin, in evolving only the tritoxide 
of protein, boiled albumen must be perfectly distinct from boiled or roast meat as a 
means of nourishment. 

The process of inflammation also appears essentially as a higher grade of oxida- 
tion. The albumen of the blood, which furnishes only tritoxide by ebullition, pro- 
bably takes no part in the change: we may conclude that it is effected by the fibrin 
alone, which, as we know, absorbs oxygen from the air, and is with so much compa- 
rative facility converted into binoxide and tritoxide of protein. During the height 
of inflammation, there is a great excess of the oxides of protein in the blood; in a 
state of health they are, doubtless, present, but in much smaller proportions. Between 
these extremes there may be many intermediate states induced by different disor- 
ders. Respiration may consequently be regarded as a true oxidation of the blood, 
or rather of the protein; and in inflammation, in which the blood contains a greater 
quantity of binoxide and tritoxide of protein than in the healthy state, this body 
becomes more thoroughly oxidised. Hence it occurs that, in the acceleration of the 
act of respiration, in fevers, for example, inflammation so easily supervenes after any 
violent or sustained efforts. Every paroxysm of fever must necessarily cause the 
formation of a greater quantity of oxidised protein in the system, and every augmen- 


PROTEIN. 13 


e. Potash and protein. On the addition of protein to a concen- 
trated solution of potash, and submitting the mixture to ebulli- 
tion decomposition takes place, and a crystalline substance, two 
distinct extractive matters, and formate and carbonate of am- 
monia are produced. After the alkaline solution has been neu- 
tralized as completely as possible by sulphuric acid ; the formic 
acid may be removed by gentle distillation. 

On evaporating the mixture to about one third of its volume, 
the greater part of the sulphate of potash will separate in a 
crystalline state. 

After its removal, the fiuid which is of a reddish brown 
colour must be reduced to the consistence of an extract, and 
then treated with boiling alcohol, which will take up everything 
except any sulphate of potash that may have escaped previous 
removal. As the alcoholic solution cools, erythroprotid is depo- 
sited, in the form of a reddish brown extract. It is readily solu- 
ble in water, and in boiling, but not in cold, alcohol; and it is 
precipitable from its aqueous solution by the salts of lead, silver, 
and mercury, of a rose-red colour: it is also precipitable by 
tannic acid. From an analysis of the combination of erythro- 
protid with oxide of lead, Mulder has estimated its composition! 
eeCe. ka NiO}. 

Subsequently to the deposition of erythroprotid, lewcin se- 
parates in a crystalline state. It occurs in brilliant plates or 
scales, somewhat resembling cholesterin. It cranches between 
the teeth, is inodorous and tasteless, and sublimes unchanged 


tation in the amount of oxidised protein must produce inflammation, which may in 
its turn determine fever. Hence also it happens that stimulating foods and drinks, 
which quicken the respiration, or cold air, which introduces more oxygen into the 
lungs, often give the first impulse to the development of inflammation in the organism. 
The buffy coat is formed when the oxides of protein predominate in the blood; when 
they accumulate in any particular part of the system, local inflammation is the result. 
In the latter case, morbid products, e.g. false membranes, &c., are evolved, which 
are found on analysis to be in a great measure composed of oxidised protein. Now 
inflammation must be combated by endeavouring to diminish the quantity of the 
tritoxide of protein, and to hinder its formation in the lungs. Venesection proves 
antiphlogistic by directly diminishing the tritoxide of protein: increased secretion 
of the alimentary canal indirectly produces the same effect by accelerating the change 
of substance in the body, and consequently also the consumption of a greater quan- 
tity of protein and its oxides. 

1 See Appendix I, Note 4. 


14 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


at about 340°. It contains no water of crystallization. It is 
soluble in water and in alcohol, but not in ether: its formula! 
is C,, H,, N O,. According to Mulder it must be regarded 
as an integral constituent of protein. It combines with nitric 
acid and forms a crystalline acid to which the term nitro-leucic 
acid has been given. 

We shall have occasion to revert to leucin in our observa- 
tions on gelatin. 

Protid isthe term applied to the extractive matter that re- 
mains in solution after the removal of the erythroprotid and 
leucin. It is of a bright yellow colour, easily pulverizable, and 
soluble in water and alcohol without colouring them. It is pre- 
cipitable by the basic acetate of lead, but not by any other me- 
tallic salts nor by tannin. The salts of lead serve to distinguish 
it from erythroprotid. If a mixture of these two substances be 
dissolved in water, the latter is precipitated by the neutral, the 
former by the basic acetate of lead. 

Its formula? is C,, H, NO.. 

The action of caustic potash on protein is evidently very com- 
plicated. Mulder endeavours to show by the following formula 
how these metamorphoses may occur. 


2 At. Erythroprotid Go, Hi, Ne Oip || 2) At. Rretein == 5 ORAS INE LOR 
2 At. Protid : + CG aN Ose | 9 At Water! ye 7: : Hy O, 
2 At. Leucin 5. (Cha Jb, NG ©; 
4 At. Ammonia . : Hy, N; 
2 At. Carbonic acid . C, O, 
1 At. Formic acid 5 (Cy. lel O, 

Cy H,, Nio O33 Cy Hy, Nio Os; 


According to Liebig, protein is produced by vegetables alone, 
and cannot be formed by animals, although the animal system 
has the power of converting one modification of protein into 
another ; it is never found as protein, in nature; but occurs in 
the shape of albumen, fibrin, or casein, both in vegetables and 
animals. These modifications of protein are employed in the 
formation of the different tissues, each of which bears a simple 
relation to that substance, as will be seen by the following 
table:— 


' See Appendix I, Note 5. ? Th. Note 6. 


ALBUMEN. 15 


Horny tissue 
Gelatinous tissue 


Albumen of the blood . 10Pr+S8,P 
Albumen of the egg é =10Pr+SP 
Fibrin : ; . =10Pr+SP 
Casein : : : =10Pr+S 
Globulin =15Pr+S 
Muscular flesh =Pr+HO+H 
Arterial membrane =Pr+2H0 

Mucus c : i =Pr+3HO 
Chondrin Ser +4HO+20 


bo 
ae 
+ 
oo 
or 
+ 
ay 
(2) 
+ 
~w 
° 


We do not mean to assert that these formule represent the 
actual constitution of the respective tissues, but only that they 
give the proportion of elements actually present, and show how 
they might give rise to those tissues. Some of these tissues con- 
tain protein, or at least yield it by the action of potash, whilst 
others, as for instance the gelatinous tissues, although doubtless 
derived from protein compounds, do not contain it, and conse- 
quently cannot yield it. 

Diagnosis of protein. Its insolubility in water, alcohol, and 
ether, and its precipitation from an acid solution by the ferro- 
cyanide and ferridcyanide of potassium are sufficient. 


2. Albumen. 


This important modification of protein forms the white of 
eggs, and occurs in large quantity in all the animal fluids that 
contribute to the nutrition of the organism. It is also found in 
most of the animal solids, and in nearly all morbid products. 
We have already adverted to its existence in the vegetable 
kingdom. 

Albumen is naturally soluble in water, and it is found dis- 
solved in the serum of the blood, in vegetable juices, &. But 
when it has once been submitted to a certain degree of tem- 
perature, or to the action of various chemical reagents, it assumes 
the coagulated state, and becomes insoluble in water. 

Soluble albumen. Soluble albumen may be obtained in a 
solid form by evaporating to dryness, at a temperature not ex- 
ceeding 120°, the serum of the blood, or white of egg. The dry 
mass is yellow, partially transparent, hard, and tough; it must 


16 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


be reduced to a fine powder, and treated successively with ether 
and alcohol. By these means we succeed in removing nearly 
all foreign bodies from the albumen, which when dried exhibits 
a white or pale yellow colour, is devoid of taste and odour, and 
presents a neutral reaction. If perfectly dry, albumen in this 
state may be exposed to a temperature of 212° without passing 
into the coagulated condition. When digested in cold water, 
it gradually swells up, and finally dissolves, forming a mucilagi- 
nous, colourless, and insipid fluid, which on being heated to 140° 
begins to give indications of coagulating: if the solution is 
very dilute, the temperature may be raised to 165° with the 
occurrence of this change, and when present in very small 
quantity the albumen may not separate till the fluid boils, or 
even until the ebullition has been prolonged for a short time. 

When albumen is analysed, it yields the same results as 
protein in regard to carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, 
but it also contains a small quantity of phosphorus and sulphur, 
(less than 1° together,) which are absent in protein. According 
to Mulder’s analyses,! the albumen of eggs may be represented 
by the formula C,,, H,,, N,, O,,, SP-+or 10 Pr+S8P, which, as 
we shall presently see, is identical with the formula for fibrin. 

The albumen of the blood differs from this, in contaiming one 
additional atom of sulphur ; its formula is 10 Pr + 8, P. 

Most of the chemical observations on protein apply equally 
to albumen, and therefore without entering into any description 
of the various chemical changes that occur upon the addition of 
reagents, we shall simply notice the physical appearances _pre- 
sented on the application of the ordinary tests. 

Albumen is precipitated from its fluid solutions by all the 
ordinary acids, with the exception of acetic, tartaric, and phos- 
phoric (tribasic) acids; which not only do not precipitate 
it, but check the ordinary precipitation induced by heat. It 
is precipitated from its solution im these acids by ferrocya- 
nide and ferridcyanide of potassium, the former of which 
yields a white, and the latter a yellow, precipitate. These pre- 
cipitates are soluble in alkalies but not in acids. When 
these two substances are used as tests, their action may be im- 
peded by the presence of free soda or its carbonate; the addition 


1 See Appendix I, Note 7. 


ALBUMEN. 17 


of a few drops of acetic acid is therefore always advisable in 
this case. Bichloride of mercury, and nitrate of the black 
oxide of mercury throw down whitish precipitates. Either of 
these tests will detect the presence of ,3, part of dry albumen. 
Precipitates of various colours and appearances are thrown down 
by sulphate of copper, nitrate of silver, the acetates of lead, 
protochloride of iron, alum, tannin, creosote, alcohol, &c. 

The precipitates which the metallic salts throw down with 
albumen are usually mixtures of two distinct substances, one a 
compound of albumen with the acid, the other a compound of 
albumen with the metallic oxide; the former is usually some- 
what soluble, the latter insoluble. 

The alkalies and their carbonates form soluble compounds 
with albumen, and frequently require to be neutralized before 
the ordinary tests can be efficiently used. 

The tests in most general use are heat, and nitric acid. 
When they both produce turbidity or a precipitate, the existence 
of albumen may be considered as proved." 

Coagulated albumen. Coagulated albumen may be obtained 
by submitting the white of egg or the serum of the blood toa 
temperature of from 160° to 180°; 167° according to Simon. 

The coagulated mass must be then rubbed in a mortar, and 
successively digested in water, alcohol, and ether, until all 
substances soluble in those fluids are removed: it must then be 
carefully dried. 

When obtained in this manner, it usually contains from 
1 to 2° of phosphate of lime, an earth which soluble albumen 
seems to have the power of dissolving. 

In order to obtain it free from this impurity, the following 
process may be employed. Coagulate albumen with dilute 
hydrochloric acid, wash the precipitate with water acidulated with 
the same acid, and then add so much cold water as may suffice 
to dissolve it. On the addition of carbonate of ammonia, co- 
agulated albumen is separated as a flocculent, white precipitate. 
To remove any fat that may be present, it should be digested 
in hot alcohol or ether. 

When dry, it is yellow and transparent ; it swells upon being 
placed in water, but is only very slightly soluble in it. In its 
ordinary chemical relations it resembles protein. 


1 An apparent exception in the case of the urine will be subsequently noticed. 


2 


18 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Albumen always contains more or less salts, phosphate and 
sulphate of lime, chloride of sodium, and probably some lactates. 
Their amount is variously estimated by different chemists: the 
average 1s about 4 to 8%. 

In the albumen of the egg Mulder found 0°32, and in 
that of blood, 0:42 of sulphate of lime. 

The development of the young animal in the egg of the 
bird during incubation affords a striking illustration of the 
physiological import of this substance. It is easily shown that 
the egg contains no nitrogenous compound except albumen. 
The albumen of the yelk has been proved, bythe analyses of Bence 
Jones and Scherer, to be identical with the albumen of the 
white ; and in addition to this the yelk only contains a yellow 
fat with traces of iron. Yet we see in the process of incuba- 
tion, during which no foreign matter, except atmospheric 
air, can be introduced, or can take any part in the development 
of the animal, that feathers, claws, blood-corpuscles, fibrin, 
cellular tissue, and vessels are produced. 

Diagnosis of albumen. It coagulates at 167°. It is not 
precipitated by acetic or dilute sulphuric acid, and from these 
acid solutions it is precipitated by ferrocyanide of potassium. 
Corrosive sublimate and nitric acid throw down copious de- 
posits. 


3. Mibrin. 


This modification of protem occurs in two forms, dissolved 
and coagulated. The former occurs in blood, lymph, chyle, 
juices of plants, &c., as long as these fluids form a part of the 
living organism ; on their withdrawal from the influence of the 
vital force, the fibrin speedily coagulates. It is found in both 
these states in the animal and vegetable kingdoms. 

The best method of obtaining it for chemical examination is 
either by briskly stirrmg newly-drawn blood with a little bun- 
dle of twigs, or else by shaking it in a stoppered bottle with a 
few bits of lead or tin. The fibrin adheres to these substances 
in the form of a nearly colourless coagulum. This must be 
washed in cold water till it ceases to give off any colour what- 
ever; it must then be treated with boiling ether, in order to 
remove the fat which is always associated with it. 

When dried, it assumes a pale yellow colour, is devoid of 


FIBRIN. 19 


taste and odour, and is insoluble in water, alcohol, and ether. 
When placed in water it sinks; it speedily absorbs a portion 
of the fluid, swells up, assumes its original bulk, and increases 
its weight threefold. 

The composition of fibrin is represented by the formula! 

Cyd oN OL NSP ornd0 Pr- SP: 

The observations which have been made respecting the action 
of acids and alkalies on protein apply equally to fibrin. 

Fibrin is stated to have the power of decomposing binoxide of 
hydrogen catalytically with the evolution of oxygen and heat. 
According to Scherer this action is induced by fresh fibrin 
from any source, but not by boiled fibrin. This power is not 
possessed by albumen. 

A concentrated solution of nitrate of potash dissolves humid 
fibrin in the course of twenty-four hours, and gives it the pro- 
perties of albumen. (Denis.) This observation requires further 
confirmation ; it has failed in the hands of Simon and other 
chemists, and it is not impossible that the phenomena described 
by Denis were due to the presence of some uncombined potash. 

The average quantity of fat associated with fibrin was found 
by Simon to vary from 2 to 4°, which agrees closely with the 
results of other observers. 

Fibrin always contains a certain amount of salts, especially 
of the phosphate and sulphate of lime: the former seems to be 
chemically combined with it. The amount, according to Simon, 
lies between 1:5 and 2°. 

Diagnosis of fibrin. Fibrin is distinguished by its spontaneous 
coagulation, by its solubility in water, alcohol, and ether, and 
by its precipitation from acid solutions by ferrocyanide and 
ferridcyanide of potassium. 


4, Casein. 


This substance constitutes the most important ingredient in 
the milk of the mammalia. We have already shown that it 
also exists in vegetables. 

Casein may be obtained with facility by either of the following 
methods. 


' See Appendix I, Note 8. 


20 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


a. Kvaporate milk to dryness in the water-bath ; triturate 
the solid residue and treat it with boiling ether, as long as it 
gives off any butter. When this ceases to be the case, remove 
the butter, and evaporate off the ether ; dissolve the residue in 
water, and filter. On the addition of alcohol to the clear filtered 
fluid, the casein is separated and thrown down. In order to 
remove any sugar of milk that may be entangled with the 
casein, the precipitate may be redissolved in water, and again 
thrown down by alcohol ; if it be now collected and dissolved in 
water, it affords a tolerably pure solution of casein. 

6. Casein may also be obtained by the addition of sulphuric 
(or any other) acid. Sulphate of casein is precipitated, which 
must be carefully washed in water, freed in the ordinary manner 
from butter, &c. and then digested with carbonate of lime. By 
careful and, if necessary, repeated filtration we obtain a clear 
solution, which however is not free from lime. 

A solution of casein prepared according to either of these 
methods is possessed of little flavour; on the application of 
warmth it evolves a milky odour, and during evaporation it 
becomes covered with a skin or film, which on being removed 
is speedily renewed. ‘This skin is due to the action of oxygen, 
for it does not form in an atmosphere of carbonic acid. 

By a continuance of the evaporation we ultimately obtain a 
residue of dry casein. It appears as a brittle yellow substance. 
It does not admit of being perfectly dissolved in water, in con- 
sequence of a portion of it having assumed an insoluble condi- 
tion during evaporation. 

According to Mulder! casein is represented by the formula 

C,H SON Oe Sor lO. Pres. 

The action of milk in the nutrition of young animals proves 
that casein is capable of being converted into albumen, and 
fibrin ; while the production of milk in an animal fed on albu- 
men or fibrin shows that these substances may be reconverted 
into casein. 

The alkalies exert a similar solvent power over casein as over 
protein and its other modifications. The metallic salts also 
form similar double compounds. It differs from albumen, in 
being precipitated by all acids. The latter reagents must be 


' See Appendix I, Note 9. 








CASEIN. 21 


applied cautiously, as casei is soluble in an excess of many 
acids. 

On the addition of ferrocyanide or ferridcyanide of potassium 
to a perfectly neutral solution of casein, a slight precipitate is 
observed ; if the solution is alkaline there is no perceptible effect, 
but if it is first rendered acid by a little acetic or dilute sul- 
phuric acid, a copious precipitate is thrown down by both tests. 

The casein of cow’s milk is thoroughly precipitated by the 
mucous membrane of the calf’s stomach ; on the addition of this 
reagent to woman’s milk, imperfect coagulation sometimes oc- 
curs ; in other cases no apparent action is produced ; the coagu- 
lation is never perfect. In this case the mucous membrane of 
the child’s stomach produces a more energetic effect than that 
of the calf. Ifa quantity of potash or ammonia be added to 
the milk, sufficient to give it a decidedly alkaline reaction, no 
coagulation is effected. 

Rochleder has recently attempted to show that pure casein 
is a substance nearly insoluble in water; that the so-called 
soluble casein is a combination of casein with potash, soda, 
or lime; and that the coagulation of the soluble casein by acids 
is nothing more than a separation of the casein, resulting from 
the combination of the acid with the base of the casein com- 
pound. In this manner, he explaims how solutions of potash 
prevent coagulation, when added in very small quantity to milk, 
and why (especially in warm weather) very slight causes are 
able to produce a coagulation of the milk; as only the smallest 
quantity of lactic acid is required to be formed, in order to 
neutralize the minute traces of soda, which are able to retain 
in a state of solution an enormous quantity of casein. 

Coagulated casein is found in the milk, constituting the walls 
of the butter-vesicles. For the purpose of chemical investiga- 
tion, it is best obtamed by the addition of anhydrous alcohol 
to a solution of casei. When dried, it is hard, yellow, and 
transparent. In its chemical relations it closely resembles coagu- 
lated albumen. 

The amount of ash left after the incineration of casein seems 
to vary considerably. Mulder estimates it at 3°8°, and Simon 
at 7°, in the casem of cow’s milk. Jn casein from the milk of 
woman, Simon estimated it at 5°. Rochleder, whose experi- 
ments were made under the direction of Liebig, found that pure 


22 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


casein left only 0:32. The ash contains phosphoric, carbonic, 
hydrochloric, and sulphuric acids, in combination with lime, 
and traces of magnesia and iron. 

Diagnosis of casein. Casein may be distinguished from albu- 
men by its not coagulating at 167°, and by the skin which 
forms on its surface during evaporation. It is precipitated by 
all dilute acids, and redissolves in an excess of the test. It 
is thrown down from its acid solutions by ferrocyanide and 
ferrideyanide of potassium. Casein of woman’s milk is less 
perfectly thrown down by dilute sulphuric, lactic, and hydro- 
chloric acids, than the casein of cow’s milk. 

Simon has obtained a modified form of casein from the crys- 
talline lens,! from tubercle, pus, and saliva. 

It may be recognized as casein by the diagnosis which has 
been given, but it differs from human casein in its thorough 
precipitation by all acids; and from the casein of human and 
cow’s milk byits greater solubilityin hot aleoholof 0-915—0:925. 

The globulin of Berzelius, which together with hematin forms 
the blood-corpuscles, is considered by Simon as a peculiar form 
of casein. Very little is known regarding it, further than that 
it isa protein-compound. Mulder? represents it by the formula 
15 Pr+S. 

It must not be confounded with Lecanu’s globulin, which 
is merely impure hematin mingled with some albumen. 


Pepsin, Ptyalin, Chondrin, Glutin, Pyin. 


5. Pepsin. This name (from qezotc, digestion) was given by 
Schwann, to a substance which constitutes the most essential 
portion of the gastric juice. The following directions for the 
preparation of pepsin are taken from Vogel’s essay on the sub- 
ject ; they correspond in nearly every respect, with the method 
which was given by Wasmann, who has the credit of first obtain- 
ing it in an isolated state. The glandular membrane of the 
fresh stomach of the hog, is separated, and after being cut into 
small pieces, is treated with cold distilled water; after twenty- 
four hours’ immersion, the water is poured off, and a fresh quan- 
tity added. This operation is repeated for several days, until 


' See Appendix I, Note 10. ? Ib. Note 11. 


PEPSIN. 23 


a putrid odour becomes perceptible. The aqueous infusion 
thus obtained is precipitated with acetate of lead, which causes 
a white flocculent deposit, containing the pepsin mixed with 
much albumen; this precipitate is diffused through the water, 
and must be decomposed by sulphuretted hydrogen. When the 
liquor is filtered, the solution contains pepsin and acetic acid, 
while coagulated albumen and sulphuret of lead remain on the 
filter. In order to obtain solid pepsin, the filtered liquid is 
evaporated to the consistence of a syrup, at a very moderate 
temperature (according to Wasmann, not higher than 95°), and 
absolute alcohol is then added to it. After some time a whitish 
bulky precipitate is formed, which is to be dried by exposure 
to the air; it then constitutes a yellowish viscid mass of a pecu- 
liar animal odour, and a disagreeable taste. Pepsin thus ob- 
tained has an acid reaction, because it always contains a small 
quantity of acetic acid. This is most efficaciously removed by 
heating the pepsin for some hours in a salt-water bath; by 
which means a white powder, soluble in water and possessing 
no acid reaction, is obtained. The action of a high temperature 
injures the digestive power of pepsin, but does not affect its 
chemical composition. 

From Vogel’s analysis! of this substance, it appears that it 
may be very nearly represented by the formula C,, H,, N, O,,. 
On comparing this with Liebig’s formula for protein, it appears 
that pepsin may be formed from protein by the subtraction of 
two atoms of water, and the addition of two atoms of nitrogen. 

The most remarkable property of pepsin is the power which 
its aqueous solution, when slightly acidulated, possesses of dis- 
solving the protem-compounds. A solution containing only 
snus Part of pepsin, and slightly acidulated, will dissolve coagu- 
lated albumen im six or eight hours. This property is appa- 
rently destroyed by the alkalies. 

Sulphuric, hydrochloric, and nitric acids, when added in very 
small quantity to a solution of pepsin, throw down white flocculi, 
which redissolve in an excess of the test: on the addition of 
still more acid the precipitate again occurs. 

Acetic acid throws down a precipitate which redissolves in an 
excess of the test ; no second precipitate is thrown down by the 
addition of more acetic acid. 


' See Appendix I, Note 12. 


24 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Pepsin is thrown down from its aqueous solution by bichloride 
of mercury, acetate of lead, the sulphates of iron, sulphate of 
copper, and perchloride of tin. Ferrocyanide of potassium 
throws down no precipitate from an acidulated solution of pepsin. 

Pepsin, which is precipitated from a concentrated aqueous 
solution by anhydrous alcohol, is said to lose its digestive power. 

According to Liebig, pepsin as a distinct compound does not 
exist ; he ascribes the solvent power of the gastric juice to the 
gradual decomposition of a matter dissolved from the mem- 
brane, aided by the oxygen introduced in the saliva. (Animal 
Chemistry, p. 109 et seq.) 

Diagnosis. Pepsin is soluble in water, insoluble in absolute 
alcohol and ether; it is known by its precipitation by dilute 
acids, by the precipitate being redissolved in a slight excess of 
the test, and by the non-occurrence of a precipitate on the ad- 
dition of ferrocyanide of potassium to the acid solution. It is 
further distinguished from albumen by its being precipitable by 
acetic and dilute hydrochloric acids. 


6. Ptyalin. This term has been applied to a peculiar animal 
matter that exists in the saliva. The following is the best me- 
thod of obtaining it. Fresh saliva must be neutralized with 
acetic acid, and then evaporated on the water-bath; the residue 
must be extracted first with alcohol,! and then with spirit. The 
ptyalin will remain undissolved amongst the proteim-com- 
pounds, and must be extracted from them by the addition of 
water, in which it is readily soluble, and with which it forms a 
viscid fluid. The evaporation of this aqueous solution yields 
ptyalin free from all animal matters, but containing a trace of 
salts. When dry it is colourless, transparent, and brittle, devoid 
of odour, but with rather a sickly taste. 

It is readily soluble in water, but is soluble in alcohol and 
ether. It is precipitated from its aqueous solution by alcohol, 
but not by the mineral acids, metallic salts, acetic or tannic 
acid. 

Our knowledge of this substance is by no means accurate ; 
no analysis has ever been published, and there is no doubt that 


"The term spirié is used to denote alcohol of spec. grav. °833, which contains 
about 858 of anhydrous aleohol; by alcohol, anhydrous alcohol of spec. grav. °792 is 
implied, 


GELATIN—CHONDRIN. 25 


all the animal fluids yield an extract to water, which strongly 
resembles, if it be not altogether identical with, ptyalin. 

Diagnosis. Ptyalin may be distinguished from the protein- 
compounds by its indifference to ferrocyanide of potassium ; and 
from pepsin by its non-precipitation by dilute acids. 


7. Gelatin—Chondrin and Glutin. Under the term gelatin 
we include the organic tissue of bone, cartilage, sinew, ligament, 
skin, cellular tissue, and serous membrane. All these substances 
dissolve by long continued boiling in water, and the solution on 
cooling assumes a consistent gelatinous mass. It is represented 
in various degress of purity by glue, size, and isinglass. Gelatin 
does not exist as gelatin in the animal tissues, but is formed 
from them by the action of boilmg water. Miiller has shown 
that there are two (if not three) distinct forms of gelatin. To 
that which is obtained from the permanent cartilages, the cornea, 
fungous bones, &c. the term chondrin is given, while glutin in- 
cludes those forms of gelatin which are obtained from skin, 
serous membrane, hoof, bone, tendon, fibrous and spongy carti- 
lage, cartilage of bone, &e. As chondrin and glutin differ not 
only in the sources from which they are derived, but also in 
many of their chemical characters, we shall consider them 
separately. 

Chondrin is most easily obtainéd by boiling any of the per- 
manent cartilages, as for instance those of the ribs, larynx, or 
joints, for about twenty-four hours, in water: the solution must 
then be strained, in order to remove any coagulated matters, and 
allowed to gelatinize; it must then be dried at a low heat. 

In this state it is hard and brittle, colourless and transparent. 
It sinks in cold water, and swells very much, without dissolving. 

Scherer has deduced from his analyses the following formula! 
for chondrin, C,, H,, N, O,,, which corresponds numerically 
with Pr+4 HO+O0,.? 

Its formula, according to Mulder, is C,,, H,,, N,, O,,, 8, or 
20 (C,, H,, N, O,)+8. When burned it leaves about 4° of 
phosphate of lime. 

Chondrin is precipitated from its solution, and not redissolved in 
an excess of the test, by acetic acid, tannin, the neutral and basic 


' See Appendix I, Note 13. 2 Deduced from Liebig’s formula. 


26 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


acetates of lead, sulphate of iron, chlorine, iodine, and bromine. 
The following substances also give well-marked precipitates, 
which are, however, soluble in an excess of the test, alum, sulphate 
of copper, nitrate of silver, perchloride of iron, and nitrate of the 
protoxide of mercury. Creosote produces an immediate tur- 
bidity, and renders a solution of chondrin gelatinous in the 
course of twelve hours. Alcohol throws down chondrin from 
a concentrated solution, in the form of a white, viscid, and 
tenacious mass. Ferrocyanide and ferridcyanide of potassium 
throw down no precipitates when added to an acid solution of 
chondrin. 

Glutin may be obtained in a state of purity from common 
glue, of which it forms the chief ingredient. On placing glue 
incold water it absorbs moisture, and swells into a tremulous jelly, 
but does not dissolve. The cold water must be changed as long as 
it continues to take up anything from the glue. The glue, after 
undergoing this purification, must be heated till it is perfectly 
fluid, and then strained through a cloth or coarse filter. It ge- 
latinizes on cooling, and when dried represents pure glutin. In 
its physical characters it is nearly identical with chondrin, but 
is usually rather more coloured. It is represented by the for- 
mula! C,, H,, N, O,. (Mulder.) Scherer assigns to it the 
formula C,, H,, N,, O,,, which is numerically. equal to 
2 Pr+3 NH,+HO+70, but recent investigations tend to show 
that this formula gives an excess of hydrogen. When burned, 
glutin leaves a slight ash, consisting chiefly of phosphate of lime. 
By long continued boiling, glutin loses its power of gelatinizing ; 
in this state its ultimate composition may be represented by the 
formula C,, H,, N, O,, or 4 (C,, H,, N, O,)+HO. In other 
words, it appears to be changed into a compound, in which four 
equivalents of glutin are united with one of water. If a stream 
of chlorine be passed through a solution of glutin, a compound 
of chlorous acid and glutin is obtained, which is analogous in 
type with the preceding substance. It is represented by the 
formula 4 (C,, H,, N, O,)+Cl0O,. This is the compound re- 
ferred to in the note to page 9. 

The most important test for gelatin (either glutin or chondrin) 
is tannin, which will precipitate it when diluted 5000 times. 


' See Appendix I, Note 14. 





GLUTIN. B7 


~ 


Three different compounds of glutin and tannic acid! have been 
discovered, and submitted to analysis ; they are, however, indi- 
vidually of no particular importance in a physiological point of 
view. The extreme facility with which tannin precipitates ge- 
latinous matters gives a clue to the medicinal action of astringent 
drugs on the human organism. They at once form insoluble 
compounds, (for tannin acts similarly on the proteim-compounds,) 
and do not enter the blood ; and this is the reason of their being 
comparatively innocuous. According to Mulder a less amount of 
tannin than is contained in one ounce of cinchona bark would, 
if conveyed directly into the blood, cause instantaneous death. 

Acetic acid produces a slight turbidity, which speedily dis- 
appears on the addition of an excess of the test. Alum either 
produces no visible effect, or else throws down a very slight 
precipitate, which soon disappears, and the other salts, which 
have been mentioned as reagents for chondrin, yield no (or at 
most, very slight) precipitates with glutin. Alcohol and creosote 
act much the same as on chondrin, and no precipitate is occa- 
sioned by the ferrocyanide or ferridcyanide of potassium. 

On boiling glutin in an excess of caustic alkali, till ammonia 
ceases to be developed, sugar of gelatin (glycicoll) and leucin 
are produced in the ratio of four parts of the former to one of 
the latter. In order to separate these substances, the alkaline 
solution must be saturated with sulphuric acid, evaporated to 
dryness, and the residue boiled with alcohol. The leucin being 
more soluble in alcohol than the glycicoll may be extracted from 
the evaporated alcoholic solution by cold alcohol; the glycicoll 
will remain in an impure condition in the residue. 

On treating glutin with concentrated sulphuric acid a colour- 
less fluid is obtained, which, after prolonged boiling and satu- 
ration with carbonate of lime, yields, in addition to certain un- 
investigated compounds, leucin and glycicoll. This method is 
stated by Mulder to yield a less quantity of glycicoll, im pro- 
portion to leucin, than the former. 

Glycicoll crystallizes in colourless prisms from a solution in 
alcohol, and in rhombs from a spirituous solution. These crystals 
possess a very sweet taste, are perfectly neutral, resemble 


cholesterin in their appearance, dissolve in 414 parts of water 
and in 931 of alcohol. 


‘Tt must be remembered that tannin and tannic acid are synonymous terms. 


28 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The composition of glycicoll is represented by the formula’ 
Cis Ni@rorC, i aN POR Eee Ox 

It is worthy of cemtark that on subtracting an equivalent 
of grape or diabetic sugar from two equivalents of glycicoll, we 
obtain the elements of two equivalents of urea: 

2 (C, Hf, N, O,) =e a ae 07 = 2 (C, H, ING O,) 

The origin of glutin im the animal organism is still unknown. 
As no traces of it have ever been discovered in the vegetable 
kingdom, we cannot suppose that (like protein) it arises from 
that source. In all probability it is formed by the action of 
alkalies on protein; since we know that protein, submitted to 
such influences, yields products which in their chemical compo- 
sition approximate closely to glutin, and that the blood is sufii- 
ciently alkaline to effect such, or similar, modifications. 

In the hair, we find, associated with bisulphuret of protein 
Pr+2 S, a connecting tissue, C,, H,, N, O,, which differs from 
glutin, C,, H,, N, O,, simply by one atom of nitrogen. 

Moreover protid, C,, H, N O,, and erythroprotid, C,, H, N O,, 
nearly resemble glutin in their composition, and both glutin and 
the protem-compounds yield leucin when treated with caustic 
potash. These facts render it in the highest degree probable, 
that glutin is formed in the organism, from the decomposition 
of protem by alkalies; much as protid and erythroprotid are 
produced in the laboratory. A reference to the symbolical 
illustration in page 14, will show that with every two equiva- 
lents of ammonia that are developed, there are produced one 
equivalent of protid, C,, H, N O,, and one of erythroprotid 
C,, H, N O,. If we add to each of these the elements of one 
equivalent of ammonia, we obtain 

CANO: and ©. Gis aN Os 
It only remains for us to assume that the oxygen which is con- 
tinually acting on the blood in the lungs, yields three equiva- 
lents of oxygen to the former, and one to the latter of these 
substances, and we have from the protid, 
C,, H,, N,O,+0, or C,, H,, N, 0O,+2 HO; 

and from the erythroprotid, 

Ce ANSO =40 or C,H NN; O-FHOs 


that is to say, elutin and water may be supposed to be formed 


' See Appendix I, Note 15. 





PYIN. 29 


from protid and erythroprotid by the ammonia, which the 
alkali of the blood evolves from the protein-compounds, with 
the cooperation of the oxygen of the atmosphere, in the lungs.! 
In the present state of organic chemistry, it is impossible in 
most cases, to state with certainty how changes such as these 
take place; we can only indicate the possible, and the most 
probable methods. That the gelatinous tissues are evolved from 
protei-compounds, in some manner or other, cannot admit of 
a doubt. From what other source can they be derived in the 
chick, but from the protein-compounds of the egg? 

That chondrin and glutin, the two principal forms of gelatin, 
are closely allied to protein, is sufficiently clear. They will 
not however yield protein, when acted on by potash; neither 
do they produce a purple colour with hydrochloric acid. Con- 
sequently they do not contain protein. Hence it is that ani- 
mals fed exclusively on gelatin, die with the symptoms of star- 
vation, for the gelatin cannot yield albumen, fibrin, or casein ; 
and the animal system, although it has the power of converting 
one protein-compound into another, does not possess the power 
of forming protein from substances which do not contain it. 
Consequently blood cannot be formed from gelatin, and the 
animal soon dies. The probable uses of a mixed gelatinous 
diet for convalescents, are pointed out by Liebig in his ‘ Animal 
Chemistry,’ pp. 98-9. 

Diagnosis. Chondrin and glutin may be recognized by 
their property of gelatinizing on cooling, and by the energetic 
action of tannin on their solutions. Ferrocyanide of potassium 
added to an acidulated solution of these substances, serves to 
distinguish them from the protein-compounds; and either acetic 
acid or alum will suffice to distinguish chondrin from glutin. 


8. Pyin. This term was applied by Giterbock to a pecu- 
liar substance which occurs in pus, and which he isolates in 
the following manner. He precipitates the pyin, together with 
albumen, from pus, by the addition of strong alcohol. The 


1 The recent investigations of Enderlin, showing that there is no free alkali in the 
blood, but that its alkaline reaction is due to tribasic phosphate of soda, tend to throw 
considerable doubt on the ingenious hypothesis of Mulder, given in the text. It must 


also be remembered that leucin, protid, and erythroprotid have never yet been detected 
in the animal organism. 


30 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


precipitate is treated with water, which dissolves the pyin: any 
albumen that may be dissolved at the same time, can be coagu- 
lated by heat, and removed by filtration; and in this manner 
a tolerably pure solution of pyin is obtained. Vogel did not 
succeed in obtaining it; and from Simon’s researches it would 
hardly appear to be a constant constituent of pus, and purulent 
sediments. 

Pyin is soluble in water and aqueous alcohol, but not in 
alcohol of 865, or stronger. It does not coagulate on boiling. 
When thoroughly dried it forms a gray powder, which does not 
admit of being perfectly redissolved in water. Acetic acid, 
tannin, and alum throw down precipitates, which are insoluble 
im an excess of the test. Ferrocyanide of potassium does not 
precipitate a solution of pure pyin; but on the addition of a 
little hydrochloric acid, a precipitate appears, which immediately 
vanishes on the addition of a little more of the acid. Accord- 
ing to Mulder, it is identical with tritoxide of protein. 

Diagnosis of pyin. Pyin may be recognized by its reactions 
with acetic acid and alum. It may be distinguished from the pro- 
tein-compounds (albumen, fibrin, casein,) in the same manner 
as pepsin and glutin. It differs from pepsin, by its acetic-acid 
precipitate not re-dissolving im an excess of the test, and from 
glutin and chondrin, by a similar behaviour on the part of the 
alum precipitate. 


9. Hxtractive Matters. 


After the removal of the protein-compounds from the animal 
fluids, there still remain certain salts, (lactates, chlorides, phos- 
phates, and sulphates,) together with organic nitrogenous matter, 
which after evaporation remain as an amorphous mass. It is to 
this organic nitrogenous matter, after the salts have been re- 
moved by their appropriate solvents, that the term extractive 
matter is applied. It is as generally diffused over the whole 
system as the protein-compounds ; we meet with it in blood, 
bile, milk, urine, mucus, pus, and all the soft tissues, and most 
abundantly in muscular flesh. Hence the extractive matter of 
flesh merits especial attention. The extractive matters from 
other sources, as from blood, urine, milk, &c., will be subse- 
quently noticed, and their leading characters contrasted with 
those of our standard extractive matter, the extract of flesh. 





EXTRACTIVE MATTERS. 31 


For the purpose of thoroughly examining the extract of flesh 
in all its chemical bearings, Simon experimented on eight 
pounds of the thickest part of a leg of pork, which he freed as 
much as possible from sinew, fat, cellular tissue, and every- 
thing that was not absolutely muscular flesh. It was then cut 
in small pieces, and cold water was poured over it. After being 
allowed to stand in water for some time, it was removed and 
boiled three successive times in fresh water. These boilings were 
collected, and a little fat skimmed off. The cold water in which 
it was first placed, was then boiled and mixed with the rest. 
The whole was then filtered, and appeared as a light yellow 
fluid, with a strong smell and taste of broth. This fluid was 
evaporated to the consistence of a thin syrup. After cooling, it 
did not gelatinize, and contained no glutin, or at most, a mere 
trace. 

Alcohol was added to this thin syrup, until all the constituents 
imsoluble in spirit, appeared to have separated, and deposited 
themselves at the bottom. 

We thus separate the extractive matter mto two distinct 
parts, one, soluble in water, but not in dilute alcohol, the other 
soluble in the latter menstruum. 

The former, when evaporated at a gentle temperature is of 
a brownish yellow colour, and is tolerably firm, tenacious, and 
tough; it is termed water-extract. 

The latter must be evaporated to the consistence of an 
extract, and treated with from twelve to sixteen times its 
volume of absolute aleohol. The mixture must then be heated, 
and well shaken, so as to mix the alcohol with the deposited 
portion as thoroughly as possible. The alcoholic solution clears 
on standing, and assumes a yellow colour. It must be 
removed from the insoluble residue, and gently evaporated to 
a clear brown syrup, which after cooling and standing for 
some time assumes a solid form; it dissolves freely both in 
water and absolute alcohol. By repeatedly treating the 
insoluble residue with hot absolute alcohol we remove all that 
is soluble in that fluid, and there is left a tolerably firm, tough, 
brown extract, which is soluble only in aqueous alcohol, and to 
which the term spirit-extract is given. We distinguish the 
portion which is soluble in absolute alcohol by the term alcohol- 
extract. 


32 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The extractive matter is thus separated into three distinct 
parts: these are— 

A. That which is soluble in water, but not in dilute alcohol : 
water-extract. 

B. That which is soluble in water and spirit, but not in an- 
hydrous alcohol: spirit-extract. 

C. That which is soluble in water, in spirit, and in anhydrous 
alcohol: alcohol-extract. 


A. The water-extract contains : 
a. Constituents precipitable by tannic acid: 

(a) A matter not precipitable by neutral acetate of 
lead, but by basic acetate of lead and bichloride 
of mercury. 

(6) A matter precipitable by neutral and basic acetates 
of lead, and by bichloride of mercury. 

3. Constituents not precipitable by tannic acid : 

(c) A gummy matter not precipitable by neutral 
acetate of lead, or bichloride of mercury, but by 
basic acetate of lead. 

(dq) A matter freely precipitable by basic acetate of 
lead, and very slightly by neutral acetate of lead, 
and bichloride of mercury. 

(ec) A matter precipitable by neutral and basic acetates 
of lead, but not by bichloride of mercury; the 
Zomidin of Berzelius. 


B. The spirit-extract contains : 
a. Constituents precipitable by tannic acid : 

(a) A matter not precipitable by neutral or basic acetate 
of lead, but by bichloride of mercury. 

(6) A matter not precipitable by neutral acetate of 
lead, or bichloride of mercury, but by basic 
acetate of lead. 

(c) A matter precipitable by neutral and basic acetate 
of lead, but not by bichloride of mercury. 

[3. Constituents not precipitable by tannic acid : 

(7) A matter rather indifferent towards reagents. 

(ce) A matter discovered and described by Chevreul ; 
Kreatin. 





EXTRACTIVE MATTERS. 33 


C. The alcohol-extract contains : 
a. Constituents precipitable by tannic acid : 

(a) A matter precipitable by basic acetate of lead, and 
bichloride of mercury, but not by neutral acetate 
of lead. 

(6) A matter precipitable by basic acetate of lead, and 
by an excess of bichloride of mercury, but not 
by neutral acetate of lead: it is crystalline. 

PB. Constituents not precipitable by tannic acid : 

(c) A matter precipitable by basic acetate of lead, but 
not by neutral acetate of lead, or bichloride 
of mercury. 


The substances Aa, Abd, Ba, &c., must be regarded as 
the proximate constituents of the three groups of extractive 
matters. 

We shall arrange them in two classes, according as they are 
or are not precipitable by tannin. 


Constituents of the extract of flesh, precipitable by tannin. 


Aa exists in very small quantity in the water-extract : 
it may be distinguished from the protein-compounds by its 
indifference towards ferrocyanide of potassium ; from pepsin and 
pyin, by its indifference to dilute acids; and from chondrin and 
glutin by its aqueous solution, not gelatinizing on cooling. 

Ab may be distinguished im the same manner as Aa, 
from the protein-compounds, pepsin, &c.!_ It differs from Aa 
in being precipitated by protochloride of tm. When isolated 
it is tolerably soluble in alcohol, although that fluid will not 
extract it directly from the water-extract. 

Ba occurs in minute quantity in the spirit-extract. It 
may be distinguished from the preceding compounds by its 
solubility in spirit, and by its reaction with the acetates of 
lead. 

These three substances, Aa, Ad, and Ba, differ so shghtly in 
their reactions with various tests, that we may conclude that 
in all probability they are merely modifications of one and the 
same matter. 


! The same observation applies equally to all the following constituents of extractive 
matter. 


3 


34 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Bd may be distinguished from the preceding compounds 
by its indifference towards bichloride of mercury. 

Be is freely precipitated by the addition of sulphate of 
copper, but the deposit which is of a brownish colour, readily 
dissolves in an excess of the test. If just a sufficient quantity 
of the solution of sulphate of copper to dissolve the precipitate 
be added, and heat applied, a green precipitate forms, and the 
supernatant fluid is likewise green. Alum, cautiously added, 
throws down a brownish yellow flocculent precipitate, which 
dissolves in an excess of the test. Infusion of galls, added in 
small quantity scarcely produces any turbidity in a solution of 
this constituent, but when added freely, a copious precipitate 
is deposited, which disappears on the application of heat, but 
returns as the solution cools. Be may be distinguished from 
Aa, and Ad, by its indifference towards bichloride of mercury ; 
from Ba, and Bd, by its behaviour with neutral acetate of lead, 
and sulphate of copper. 

Ca is precipitable by protochloride of tin. This, to- 
gether with the reactions it displays towards bichloride of 
mercury and infusion of galls, and its solubility in anhydrous 
alcohol, is sufficient to distinguish it from any of the preceding 
constituents. 

The characteristics already mentioned are sufficient to 
distinguish Cd. 


Constituents of the extract of flesh not precipitable by tannin. 


Ac is remarkable for its indifference towards reagents. 
The only important tests have been already mentioned. 

Ad is freely precipitated by bichloride of platinum ; 
moreover the precipitate thrown down by basic acetate of lead 
is increased by heat. 

Ae (zomidin) yields a very copious green or grayish 
green deposit, on the addition of acetate of copper. This pre- 
cipitate does not dissolve in an excess of the test, but dissolves 
freely in acetic acid: on boiling this precipitate in caustic 
potash it is rendered brown, while the supernatant fluid assumes 
a faint purple red tint. Infusion of galls renders a solution of 
zomidin slightly turbid, and after some hours a few flocculi are 
deposited, possibly m consequence of the existence of some 
impurity in the zomidin. 


EXTRACTIVE MATTERS. 35 


Berzelius considers that the savour of boiled and roasted 
meat depends on this constituent. 

Bd yields a yellow precipitate to bichloride of plati- 
num, a white deposit to the acetates of lead, and its solution 
is rendered slightly turbid by infusion of galls: the turbidity 
however disappears on the application of heat. 

Be (kreatin) is distinguished from all the preceding sub- 
stances by its property of separating in rectangular crystals, and 
by its indifference towards the ordinary reagents. 

Ce yields a copious white precipitate (which soon darkens) 
to nitrate of silver, and a chocolate-brown deposit to a solution 
of iodine. 

There can be no doubt from the recent mvestigations of 
Mulder, that the binoxide and tritoxide of protem occur in 
the constituents of the water-extract, and are probably identical 
with some of them. 

The relative proportions of water-, spirit-, and alcohol-extract 
in flesh, blood, urine, and milk, appear to fluctuate. Simon 
found that, in the extractive matter of flesh, the water-extract 
predominates, while he could only obtain a very small amount 
of spirit-extract ; in the extractive matter of blood, the water- 
extract is also the most abundant, but here the amount of 
alcohol-extract is less than that of spirit-extract ; mm the ex- 
tractive matter of urine, the water-extract was the most scanty, 
and the alcohol-extract the most abundant; and in the ex- 
tractive matter of milk, the aleohol-extract was the least of the 
three. 

Extractive matter of blood. Simon gives the following 
directions for the exhibition of the extractive matter of blood. 
A quart of blood is heated to the boiling point, and a sufficient 
quantity of water is then added to reduce it to a thin pulta- 
ceous state. After standing for some time, it is strained, and 
the red fluid which passes through is again boiled. In this 
manner we obtain a clear yellow fluid, which no longer becomes 
turbid on the application of heat. On evaporation, this fluid 
assumes a dark green colour; and on further concentration to 
the consistence of a syrup, it changes toa brown tint. At the 
same time a film forms on the surface, which leads to the con- 
clusion that a caseous matter (in this case globulin) is present. 
The extract exhibits an alkaline reaction. 


36 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


When the extract has been reduced to the consistence of a 
syrup, it is treated with alcohol of 833, which throws down a 
copious brown precipitate. The clear alcoholic fiuid is removed 
and evaporated. It forms a brown extract, which is devoid of 
the aromatic odour that is perceptible in the spirit-, and alcohol- 
extract of flesh. The residue is evaporated to the consistence 
of a thin extract, and then treated with absolute alcohol, which, 
when evaporated, leaves a very small amount of alcohol-extract. 

Water-extract of blood. Itis of a dark brown colour, and 
possesses a strong taste of salt. Its reaction is slightly alkaline, 
and there is nothing remarkable about its odour. On incine- 
ration it leaves an alkaline ash, which effervesces on the addi- 
tion of an acid. 

The following are its most important chemical relations. 

Acetic acid produces a turbidity which only disappears in a 
great excess of the test: ferrocyanide of potassium throws down 
a slight precipitate from the clear acid fluid, consisting of 
albumen. 

Neutral and basic acetate of lead produce a copious brown 
precipitate ; bichloride of mercury, even in excess, produces no 
apparent change. Infusion of galls induces merely a slight 
turbidity. 

Spirit-extract of blood is of a dark brown colour, and a 
strongly salt taste. During evaporation it becomes covered with 
a coating of salts; and, after a certain degree of concentration, it 
solidifies, in consequence of the amount of the salts. It leaves 
a porous coal, which does not very easily burn to a white ash. 
This ash is strongly alkaline, and effervesces briskly on the 
addition of an acid. 

The aqueous solution of the spirit-extract has a very feeble 
alkaline reaction. 

Acetic acid produces a slight turbidity, which disappears on 
the addition of a considerable excess of the test. 

Neutral and basic acetates of lead and infusion of galls pro- 
duce copious precipitates; bichloride of mercury effects no 
apparent change. 

Alcohol-extract of blood. When the alcohol in which this 
substance is contained is evaporated to the consistence of an 
extract, and then warmed with ether, we obtain a greenish 
brown matter, which, after the evaporation of the ether, is 


EXTRACTIVE MATTERS. 37 


soluble in water. Its amount is very minute ; it has a feeble, 
alkaline reaction, and possesses a very disagreeable and nau- 
seous taste. It is precipitated by perchloride of tin and 
nitrate of silver, but not by neutral or basic acetate of lead, 
bichloride of mercury, or infusion of galls. 

Extractive matter of urine. The urine must be evaporated 
in order to precipitate the salts as much as possible, and then 
placed in a freezing mixture for the same purpose. When it 
is reduced to the consistence of a thick syrup, alcohol of °833 
must be added to it as long as any additional precipitate is 
thrown down. This precipitate consists of salts, and contains 
hardly any extractive matter; it must be separated from the 
supernatant fluid, washed with alcohol of °833, dissolved 
in water, and precipitated again by alcohol. In this manner 
the spirituous solution assumes a yellow colour, while the salts 
are rendered colourless. By the evaporation of this yellow 
spirituous solution we obtain the water-extract of urine. It 
exists in very minute quantity. Infusion of galls produces 
hardly any marked effect, neither does bichloride of mercury ; 
neutral and basic acetates of lead yield a copious precipi- 
tate. 

Spirit-extract of urine is obtained by evaporating the 
spirituous solution to the consistence of a thick extract; it is 
then treated with a little anhydrous alcohol, and subsequently 
with ether. By shaking, and the application of a gentle warmth, 
the ether assumes a yellow colour, and a lght brown matter 
separates ; this must be washed in ether, and then treated with 
absolute alcohol, which throws down a brown extractive matter, 
while the alcohol assumes a nearly similar tint. This precipi- 
tate must be washed with absolute alcohol, dissolved in water, 
and evaporated. Its ash contaims a considerable amount of 
chlorides. Infusion of galls, bichloride of mercury, and neutral 
acetate of lead do not affect its solution, but basic acetate 
of lead throws down a copious precipitate. 

Alcohol-extract of urine is obtained by the evaporation of 
the brown alcoholic solution referred to a few lines back. On 
the addition of anhydrous alcohol it is reduced to a yellow fluid, 
from which urea separates on slow evaporation. After the 
removal of this substance, we have the substance known as 
alcohol-extract of urine. Infusion of galls, bichloride of mer- 


38 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


cury, and neutral acetate of lead do not influence its solution; 
it is, however, precipitated by basic acetate of lead. 

Extractive matter of milk. For the purpose of investi- 
gating the properties of this substance, Simon evaporated a 
quart of woman’s milk (partly colostrum and partly during the 
early weeks of lactation) to about eight ounces, and he then 
removed the casein and butter by the addition of alcohol. After 
filtration, some water was added; the fluid was again evapo- 
rated to aresidue of a few ounces, treated with alcohol of °833, 
and allowed torest for some time. Sugar of milk of a slightly 
yellow colour was deposited, and the supernatant fluid had 
nearly the same tint. The latter was evaporated on the water- 
bath to the consistence of a syrup, and then treated with 
anhydrous alcohol, which reduced nearly the whole syrup to a 
solid consistence, while the alcohol above it, which contained the 
alcohol-extract, was hardly tinged yellow. The precipitate which 
is thrown down by the anhydrous alcohol contains the spirit- 
extract, and the water-extract is contained in the yellow-coloured 
sugar of milk. 

The water-extract of milk is obtaimed by treating the pre- 
cipitated sugar of milk with water, and allowing it to stand, 
well covered, for some days. In this manner we obtain a yellow, 
almost clear, and viscid fluid, standing above the white sugar 
of milk. On removing this fluid, and allowing it to evaporate 
spontaneously, a fresh quantity of sugar of milk is deposited ; 
in fact, it appears impossible to remove all traces of this consti- 
tuent of the milk from the water-extract. Alcohol throws down 
a yellow, glutinous, tough extract, which exhibits a feeble 
alkaline reaction towards litmus paper. This is the water- 
extract. When burned, it leaves a porous coal, from which a 
white alkalme ash, containing carbonates, may be obtained 
without much difficulty. 

It is precipitated from its solution by infusion of galls, basic 
and neutral acetates of lead, but not by bichloride of mercury. 

The spirit-extract of milk is obtaied from the precipi- 
tate which was thrown down by the anhydrous alcohol; it 
must be dissolved in a little water, and treated with alcohol of 
°833, which usually causes the separation of a little sugar of 
milk. The spirituous solution must now be evaporated to a very 
small residue, and some distilled water added, which produces 


COLOURING MATTERS. 39 


a considerable turbidity, and ultimately causes a shght white 
precipitate. The nature of this precipitate remains doubtful. 
The spirit-extract is thrown down from its solution by infusion 
of galls and basic and neutral acetates of lead, but not by 
bichloride of mercury. 

The alcohol-extract of milk is obtained by the evapora- 
tion of the yellow anhydrous alcoholic solution that has been 
already referred to. It exists im very minute quantity, is of a 
yellow colour, and is not materially affected by infusion of galls, 
basic or neutral acetates of lead, or bichloride of mercury. 

Ptyalin and pyin may be regarded as water-extracts of saliva 
and pus. 


10. Colouring Matters. 


I. THE BLOOD. 


a. Hematin. ‘This colouring matter is inclosed in thin sacs 
or vesicles, composed of a protein-compound, globulin: these 
vesicles exist in countless numbers in the circulating fluid, and 
are termed blood-corpuscles. 

It has been generally assumed that this pigment exists in two 
distinct chemical states in arterial and venous blood, having in 
the former an excess of oxygen, in the latter an excess of carbon 
or carbonic acid. Mulder has, however, shown that its ele- 
mentary composition is the same, whether obtained from arterial 
or from venous blood, and that it may be represented by the 
formula! C,, H,, N, O, Fe. Its composition seems likewise to 
be identical in all vertebrated animals.” 

Various methods have been proposed for the exhibition of 
pure hematin. The following, adopted by Simon, is perhaps 
the simplest. Whipt and thoroughly dried blood must be 
pulverized, and its fat removed by repeated extraction with 
ether. It must then be boiled with anhydrous alcohol, and 
during the process of ebullition a quantity of sulphuric acid, di- 
luted with cold alcohol, must be added, sufficient to communicate 


' See Appendix I, Note 16. 

2 Lecanu examined hematin from human blood, and from that of the ox, domestic 
hen, duck, frog, carp, and mackerel. The only difference was in the proportion of 
peroxide of iron left when the hematin was incinerated. 


40 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


a marked acid taste to the mixture. In this manner a blackish 
brown solution of sulphate of hematin is obtained, which must 
be saturated with carbonate of ammonia. If the mixture be 
allowed to stand for some time, the sulphate of ammonia may 
be separated by filtration ; the greater part of the alcohol must 
then be removed by distillation. This part of the process re- 
quires much caution, and the distillation must be conducted 
very gently, as the action of the fluid is often violent. The 
hematin, which is ultimately precipitated, must be carefully 
washed with water, in order to remove any traces of sulphate of 
ammonia. It must then be dried on the water-bath, pulverized, 
and treated with ether as long as it continues to communicate 
a dark tint to that menstruum. The ether takes up a certain 
amount of heemapheein associated with fat. The hzmatin must 
be boiled in distilled water, as long as it continues to give off 
salts and alcohol-extract, and then in alcohol, till everything 
soluble in that fluid is removed. The substance that is left may 
be regarded as pure heematin. 

We can only isolate it in this coagulated and insoluble con- 
dition. In the blood-corpuscles it exists in a state of solution. 

When obtained by the process that we have just described, 
it is of a blackish brown colour, is devoid of taste and odour, 
is insoluble in water, ether, fatty and ethereal oils, and in bi- 
sulphuret of carbon. It is usually stated to be msoluble in 
alcohol, but, according to Simon, boiling alcohol takes it up 
slightly. It is freely soluble in alcohol acidulated with sulphuric, 
hydrochloric, nitric, or acetic acid, and communicates a tint to 
that menstruum varying from a brown to a light red, according 
to the strength of the solution. On the addition of water the 
hematin gradually precipitates. Hzematin dissolves freely in 
water or alcohol rendered alkaline by ammonia, potash, or soda: 
but the alkalme reaction is not in any degree neutralized by 
the hematin. On the application of a strong heat hematin 
swells up, gives off an animal odour, and burns with a clear 
flame. It leaves a voluminous coal, which is ultimately reduced 
to a dark red ash. | When heated in a test tube it develops 
ammonia, and gives origin to a reddish empyreumatic oil. 

Mulder has carefully examined the action of chlorine on 
hematin. He found that if a current of chlorine be transmitted 
through water containing hematin in suspension, the iron leaves 








COLOURING MATTERS. AI 


the other elements, and forms a chloride of iron, while the 
atom of metal thus removed is replaced by six atoms of chlorous 
acid, and a compound is formed, which is represented by the 
formula C,, H,, N, O,+6 Cl O,. 

During this process the red colouring matter is destroyed, 
and the new compound appears as a white flocculent precipitate. 
It must not, however, be assumed from this experiment that the 
red colour of the blood is dependent on the iron, for that con- 
stituent may be removed from the hematin without materially 
affecting its tint, as may be shown in the following manner. 
Let some dried blood be mixed with concentrated sulphuric 
acid, and after standing for some days let water be added. 
Hydrogen gas is evolved by the action of the acid on the 
dried blood, and sulphate of the protoxide of iron is formed. 
If the blood, after this process, be carefully washed, a mixture 
of alcohol and sulphuric acid will extract from it red hematin 
in combination with sulphoproteic acid, but perfectly free 
fromiron. Van Goudoever has deduced the following formula 
for this compound : 


Cy, H57 Ng On, SO;=C,, H., N, O, (the organic part of hematin,) 
+C,, H,, N; 0,., SO, (sulphoproteic acid,) 
+4 HO. 


Although this experiment affords conclusive evidence that 
the red colour of the hematin is not dependent on the iron, 
yet this metal is very firmly combined with the four organic 
elements of this constituent. Well prepared hematin may be 
submitted for several days to the action of dilute hydrochloric 
or sulphuric acid, without the iron diminishing im the slightest 
degree. 

Hematin treated in this manner, left after incineration 
949° of peroxide of iron,’ the amount that is always yielded 
by well-purified hematin. 


Peroxide Metallic 
of Iron. Iron. 


' In 100 parts of hematin from human blood, Lecanu found . 10:00 = 6-93 
A 59 from blood of ox 5 5 . 12°35 = 8:90 
F =e from arterial blood of ox, Mulder found, 9°60 = 6°66 
7 . fomEvenouUs/DIOOd/OL/OxXI5;) 5, -6) 9:82.=) 6775 
-f ¥ from bloed of ox, Simon found a) LOR e7-90 
<i: * from blood of sheep, Mulder found . 9°30 = 6°45 


42 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The condition in which the iron exists in hematin (whether 
as an oxide,! a carbonate, a carburet, or in the metallic state) 
has long been disputed. 

The probability of its existence in a metallic state is strongly 
supported by the evolution of hydrogen that occurs when the 
clot is digested in sulphuric acid, and water is added; and 
Mulder suggests that this metal probably exists as an integral 
constituent of hematin, in just the same manner as iodine occurs 
in sponge, sulphur in cystin, or arsenic in the kakodyl series. 

Numerous attempts have been made with the view to ascer- 
tain the proportions in which hematin and globulin combine, 
but the results have been very discordant. According to 
Berzelius, the hematoglobulin of human blood contains 100 
parts of globulin, and 5:8 of hematin. Simon found the ratio 
to be 100 of globulin to 6°5 of hematin in the blood of a healthy 
young man, and 100 of globulin to 5:3 of hematin in the healthy 
blood of a stout girl. In disease, the variations are much 
greater. Simon has found as the limits 8:5 and 3:3 of hematin, 
corresponding to 100 of globulin. 

Regarding the origin of hematin, it must clearly be 
generated in the organism, since it does not exist in the 
vegetable kingdom. Mulder conceives that it is generated 
from the normal constituents of the blood in the course of 
the circulation. Its destination also is obscure. In common 
with all the constituents of the body, it must be generated, 
consumed, and reproduced; but in respect to the actual 
metamorphoses that it undergoes in the organism, or their 
object, we are perfectly in the dark. Mulder suggests that the 
products of the decomposition of hematin may possibly be 
traced to the bilifulvin of the bile. 

Diagnosis. Hzematin may be known, both in its coagulated 
and soluble state, by its colour. When combined with 
globulin, in the blood-corpuscles, it may be recognized by the 
microscope. In its coagulated state it may be recognized by 
its insolubility in water, alcohol, and ether. 

b. Hemaphein. This term is applied by Simon to the brown 
colouring matter which seems to be associated with hematin in 

' Tron is not separated from hematin by ammonia, potash, or soda; nor is its pre- 


sence indicated by tannin or ferrocyanide of potassium, reagents which are so capable 
of detecting the presence of oxide of iron in ordinary cases. 


COLOURING MATTERS. 43 


the blood of the vertebrata, and is apparently identical, or 
uearly so, with the yellow colouring matter described by 
Sanson.’ 

It may be distinguished by its solubility in water, alcohol, 
and ether, and by the intense brown-red colour that it com- 
municates to its alcoholic solution. When exposed to heat on 
a platinum spatula, it does not melt, but develops ammoniacal 
vapours, burns with a clear flame, and leaves a very trifling ash, 
which is perfectly free from peroxide of iron. Marchand 
remarks that hemaphein is nothing more than hematin 
modified by an alkali, just as O’Shaughnessy’s swbrubrin, and 
Golding Bird and Brett’s chlorohematin and xanthohematin 
are products of the action of nitric acid on hematin.’ 

c. Hemacyanin, or a blue colouring matter, has been detected 
by Sanson in healthy blood, by Lassaigne and Lecanu im the 
blood of icteric patients, and by Chevreul in the bile. Simon 
never succeeded in detecting it. For the method of isolating 
it, and for a description of its chemical characters we must 
refer to Sanson’s paper. It is sufficient to remark that it is 
described as being insoluble in water, alcohol, and ether, but 
slightly soluble in boiling alcohol, from which, however, it 
separates on cooling. On the addition of ammonia to its 
alcoholic solution, a green colour is evolved, but on the addition 
of an acid, the blue colour is restored. It contains no iron. 


II. THE BILE. 


a. The most important colourmg matter of the bile is that 
to which it owes its characteristic brownish yellow tint. It is 
termed cholepyrrhin by Berzelius, and biliphein by Simon. 
We shall adopt the latter term. On the gradual addition of 
nitric acid to a fluid that contains this substance in solution, 
a very characteristic series of tints are evolved. The fluid 
becomes first blue, then green, afterwards violet, and red, and 
ultimately assumes a yellow or yellowish brown colour. 


1 Journal de Pharmacie, Adut 1835, p. 420. 

2 The discovery of the true nature of subrubrin is due to Drs. Brett and Golding 
Bird, who showed that it is merely hematin mixed with a little albumen. Their 
chlorohzmatin is hematin partly oxidised by nitric acid, as Marchand observes ; and 
their xanthohzmatin is at present supposed by Dr. G. Bird to be identical with some 
of the products of the oxidation of protein recently described by Mulder. 


44 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


All attempts to isolate this substance from the bile, by 
chemical means, have failed; it is apparently decomposed by 
the processes that are adopted in the analysis of this compli- 
cated fluid. We sometimes, however, find it deposited in the 
form of a yellow powder, in the gall-bladder, or concreted, with 
a little mucus, constituting a biliary calculus. 

In this manner we have an opportunity of examining its che- 
mical reactions. Biliphein is of a bright reddish-yellow colour, 
and is only slightly soluble in most fluids; it is devoid of taste 
and odour, and yields ammonia on dry distillation. Water 
takes up an extremely minute trace of biliphzein, just sufficient 
to communicate a faint yellow tinge. Alcohol dissolves more 
than water, but only a very inconsiderable quantity. Its best 
solvent is a solution of caustic potash or soda, both of which 
are more efficient than ammonia. On exposing this solution 
to the atmosphere, oxygen is absorbed, and the yellow colour 
becomes gradually green. On the addition of an acid to this 
yellow or green solution, there is a precipitation of green flocculi 
which possess all the properties of chlorophyll, or the green 
colourmg matter of leaves. In this state it is termed diliverdin 
by Berzelius. It is no longer biliphein (or cholepyrrin), but a 
product of its metamorphosis. 

The colourmg matter of the bile may be separated from a 
composite animal fluid, by evaporation to dryness; by successive 
extractions with alcohol of :845, ether, and water; by dissolving 
the colouring matter in a solution of potash, and then precipi- 
tating it, as biliverdin, by hydrochloric acid. 

Diagnosis. The action of nitric acid affords a certain test 
of the presence of bilipheein. 

6. After the separation of the biliphzin, by conversion into 
biliverdin, another colourmg matter remains, to which Berzelius 
has given the name of bilifulvm. It is a double salt of lime 
and soda, combined with an organic nitrogenous acid, to which 
the term bilifulvic acid has been applied. When isolated, this 
acid is insoluble in water and in alcohol, and separates in pale 
yellow flocculi when it is precipitated from an aqueous solution 
of its salts by a stronger acid. Whether bilifulvin is an actual 
constituent of the bile, or whether it is a mere product of meta- 
morphosis, is unknown. 


COLOURING MATTERS. 45 


III. THE URINE. 


a. Uroerthyrin. In certain pathological conditions (espe- 
cially in intermittent fevers) the urine possesses an intensely 
red colour, and deposits a dark red precipitate. Proust, who 
was the first that carefully examined this class of sediments, 
discovered in them a peculiar acid, to which he gave the name 
of rosacic acid. He subsequently found that this acid was 
merely a compound of uric acid with a red colouring matter. 
This red colouring matter has been observed by Landered in 
the sweat from the axillary region of a girl with fever. 

In order to isolate this pigment, we must boil a sediment 
of this nature in spirit, which will take up the colouring matter 
and a little uric acid. This uric acid must be removed by con- 
centration and cooling, and then by evaporation to dryness, we 
obtain uroerythrin. It yields a vividly scarlet powder, is devoid. 
of odour, possesses but little taste, and is tolerably soluble in 
water and spirit: these solutions are faintly acid. 

6. The blue and black pigments that have been described 
by various authors (Braconnot,! Spangenberg,? Granier and 
Delens,? Marcet, Prout,+ &c.) and have received the names of 
cyanurin and melanurin, are not of sufficient importance to 
require any observations. 


ll. Bilin. 


Bilin is the name given by Berzelius to the substance which 
he considers as the principal and most important constituent 
of the bile. 

The following is the most simple process for its exhibition :° 

Acidulate perfectly fresh filtered ox-gall with a few drops of 
acetic acid, and precipitate it with neutral acetate of lead. The 
bilifellinie acid, which still remains in solution, must then be 
precipitated, as a plastery mass, by basic acetate of lead, and 
the filtered or decanted liquid, in which there is usually a little 


1 Ann. de Chem. et de Phys. t. xxix, p. 252. 

? Schweigger’s Journal, t. xlvii, p. 487. 

S Ib. t. xxiii, p. 262. 

4 Medico-Chirurgical Transactions of London, v. xii. 

° Lehmann, Lehrbuch der Physiologischen Chemie, t. i, p. 309. 


46 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


bilfulvin, must be decomposed by an excess of carbonate 
of soda. The precipitate is then to be extracted with absolute 
alcohol, and the soda carefully precipitated from this solution 
by dilute sulphuric acid. On evaporating the alcoholic solu- 
tion to dryness, we obtain Jilin. 

The composition of bilin is not accurately determined. It 
is easy to show that it contains nitrogen, by heating it with 
an alkali, in which case it develops ammonia. Lehmann always 
found traces of sulphur in it. 

Bilin forms a gummy, pale yellow mass, which when quickly 
dried and pulverized, yields a white powder, devoid of odour 
and possessing a singular sweetish-bitter taste, most perceptible 
at the base of the tongue and on the posterior fauces. Berzelius 
suggests that the sweetness may be owing to the admixture of 
a little glycerin.’ It is freely soluble in water and in alcohol, 
but not in ether; in fact it may be precipitated by ether from 
its alcoholic solution. When recently prepared, it is perfectly 
neutral. Heated to 212°, it begins to swell; at a higher tem- 
perature it becomes brown, develops a peculiar odour, and 
when inflamed, burns with a bright clear flame, leaving a 
porous ash. 

An aqueous solution of bilin is not affected by acids, nor by 
earthy or metallic salts; neither does chlorme seem to imduce 
any peculiar change. A concentrated solution of potash sepa- 
rates an oleaginous tough mass, (a compound of bili and 
potash,) which is soluble in water and in alcohol. 

Bilin is remarkable for the facility with which it undergoes 
metamorphoses. An aqueous or alcoholic solution i vacuo 
soon assumes an acid reaction. Its decomposition is accelerated 
by warmth, by the presence of organic matters, as mucus, &c., 
and more especially by the action of the mineral acids. 


Metamorphoses of Bilin. Bilin and hydrochloric acid. On 
digesting bilin with dilute hydrochloric acid, five distinct sub- 
stances are ultimately obtained, three of which are insoluble in 
water, and have received from Berzelius the names of fellinic 
acid, cholinic acid, and dyslysin; the remaining two being 


1 As the bile contains oleate, margarate, and stearate of soda, there is no difficulty 
in accounting for the presence of glycerin. 





BILIN. 47 


soluble in water, viz. fawrin and hydrochlorate of ammonia. 
—The evaporation of an aqueous solution of the above mix- 
ture leaves as a residue a crystalline mass of taurin and hydro- 
chlorate of ammonia; the latter may be removed by alcohol of 
838, and the taurin may then be recrystallized from a solution 
in hot water. 

Taurin forms colourless regular six-sided prisms, terminated 
by four- or six-sided pyramids. It is hard, craunches between 
the teeth, has a cooling taste, but is neither bitter nor salt, dis- 
solves in about sixteen times its weight of water at 60°, and is 
more soluble at a higher temperature. It is very slightly solu- 
ble in alcohol. It is dissolved without decomposition im con- 
centrated sulphuric and nitric acids, and gives no reaction with 
the ordinary reagents. Its composition is represented by the 
formula C, N H, O,,.. Hence, as Lowig remarks, it may be 
regarded as a combination of bmoxalate of ammonia and water, 
for C, N H, O,, =2C,0,+N H,+4 HO. 

On treating the resinous mass, which is insoluble in water, 
with alcohol, dyslysin is left, and the two acids are dissolved. 
Dyslysin dissolves with some difficulty in boiling alcohol, and 
falls again on cooling as an earthy powder. It has not been 
further investigated. 

Cholinic and fellinic acids are associated in the alcoholic 
solution. In many respects they closely resemble each other : 
they are almost insoluble in water, they dissolve in all propor- 
tions m alcohol, and they form nearly similar compounds with 
the alkalies, earths, and metallic oxides. Their salts of am- 
monia and baryta, however, differ in several respects, and by 
means of these reagents we can isolate the acids. If we evapo- 
rate a solution of their ammoniacal salts, cholinate of ammonia 
separates as a white soapy mass, while fellinate of ammonia 
remains in solution, and appears after due evaporation as a soft, 
greasy, yellowish substance. 

When an aqueous solution of cholinate of ammonia is decom- 
posed by hydrochloric acid, cholinic acid separates in light 
white floceuli, which after drying form a brown pulverizable 
mass. It is only slightly soluble in ether. The cholinate of 
baryta is almost insoluble in alcohol. 

Fellinic acid may be exhibited in a similar manner. It sepa- 
rates from its solution in snow-white flocks, and after drying 


48 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


forms a white, earthy, inodorous and bitter mass, which fuses 
at 212° without decomposition. In boiling water it undergoes 
fusion, and dissolves to a small extent ; in this respect it differs 
from cholinic acid, which fuses but is wholly insoluble in hot 
water. It is soluble in ether, and its baryta salt dissolves 
freely in alcohol. 

Fellinic and cholinic acids possess the property of combining 
and forming acid compounds with undecomposed bilin, to 
which Berzelius has given the names of bilifellinic and bilicho- 
hinic acids. 

Bilifellinic acid apparently exists as such in fresh bile: it 
may be obtained either from bile after the removal of mucus, 
colouring matters, and other acids, by neutral acetate of lead, 
or from pure bilin. 

In either case we add a solution of basic acetate of lead, 
which throws down a flocculent precipitate which soon collects 
into a soft, tenacious, plastery mass. The salt of lead must be 
decomposed by carbonate of soda, and the soda-salt in its turn, 
by sulphuric acid: we thus obtain a very soft, almost oily, 
yellow mass, from which the free sulphuric acid must be 
removed by carbonate of lead, and free fellinic and cholinic 
acids, by ether. We then obtain bilifellinic acid in the form 
of a thick syrupy fluid soluble in every proportion of water, 
and possessing a bitter taste. If this acid be digested with 
oxide of lead, or decomposed by basic acetate of lead, a plastery 
bilifellinate of lead is again precipitated, while at the same 
time pure bilin is found in the supernatant fluid. Hence it 
appears that bilin combines with fellimic acid in more than one 
proportion. Bilicholinic acid appears to resemble bilifellinic 
acid in almost every respect. 

A mixture of these two bilin-contaiing acids constitutes 
Demargay’s choleic acid,! and forms the principal part of 
Thénard’s biliary resin. (Berzelius.) 

On cooling bilin in a solution of caustic potash till ammonia 
ceases to be developed, we obtain, on evaporation, a clotty 
matter, which, when dissolved in water and treated with 
acetic acid, precipitates a peculiar acid, the cholic acid of 
Gmelin. It forms fine silky acicular crystals, of which the taste 


' This substance is described in the chapter on the Bile. 


UREA. 49 


is at once sharp and sweet. It is slightly soluble in cold, 
but more so in hot water; it dissolves readily in alcohol: its 
solution reddens litmus. Most of the cholates are soluble, and 
possess a sweetish taste. Dumas assigns to this acid the 
formula! C,, H,, O,,- 

There is no subject in the whole domain of animal chemistry 
that is more perplexing and intricate than the bile and its 
constituents. In the preceding pages we have adopted the 
views of Berzelius, but upon this point (cholic acid) he is very 
undecided. In the edition of his ‘ Animal Chemistry,’ pub- 
lished in 1840, he states that he conceives it probable that 
cholic acid is produced by bilin alone, and that any fellinic or 
cholinic acids that may be simultaneously present take no part 
in the metamorphosis. In his article ‘ Bile,’ in Wagner’s 
‘ Handworterbuch,’ published two years later, he states that 
bilin in a state of purity undergoes only a very slight change 
by boiling with hydrated potash, and that he could not convert 
it into cholic acid in that manner. Cholic acid certainly does 
not pre-exist in the bile. 

Diagnosis of bilin. Bilin may be detected by its peculiar 
taste. It is distinguished from the previous substances by its 
solubility in water and absolute alcohol, and by its insolubility 
inether. Although absolutely pure bilin is said by Berzelius to 
be unaffected by metallic salts, basic acetate of lead and per- 
chloride of iron throw down white precipitates from an 
aqueous solution; the latter, on the application of warmth, 
assumes a cinnamon tint: these reactions are probably owing 
to the presence of bilifellinic acid. 


12. Urea. 


Urea forms the principal constituent of the solid residue 
of normal human urine. It is found in considerable quantity 
im the blood after extirpation of the kidneys, also in certain 
pathological conditions in which the renal functions are not 
properly discharged, as in diabetes, cholera, ischuria, and 
Bright’s disease. That it does exist in healthy blood as a 
constant, although very minute constituent, has also been 
recently proved by Marchand and Simon. Rees has detected 


1 See Appendix I, Note 17. 


50 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


it in the liquor amniu and in milk; Kiihn and Lehmann in 
bile and biliary concretions ; Golding Bird in sweat ; Wright in 
saliva, Maclagan in the serous effusion into the ventricles in cer- 
tain forms of fever; and various chemists in dropsical fluids, &c. 

Urea may be obtained from urine in a state of purity by 
any of the following methods. 

a. The urine must be evaporated to the consistence of a 
syrup, and mixed when quite cold, with an equal volume of 
pure nitric acid of specific gravity 1:42. If the evaporation 
has been carried sufficiently far, the whole will form a thick 
crystalline mass, consisting of a compound of nitric acid and 
urea, which is sparingly soluble in nitric acid. All increase of 
temperature must be carefully avoided lest the nitric acid 
with the aid of heat, acting on the chlorides in the urine, 
should develop chlorine and nitrous acid, both of which, as we 
shall presently show, act powerfully in destroying urea. The 
impure crystals of nitrate of urea are to be carefully washed in 
dilute nitric acid, strongly pressed between folds of blotting paper, 
dried on a porous tile, redissolved in warm water, and neu- 
tralized with carbonate of lead. The residue after evaporation, 
must be treated with alcohol. In this manner we obtain an 
alcoholic solution of urea, from which sulphuretted hydrogen, 
and animal charcoal, will suffice to remove any traces of lead 
and colouring matter ; after due evaporation it will yield crystals 
of nearly pure urea. 

b. O. Henry mixes the urme with hasic acetate of lead, 
and then adds sufficient sulphuric acid to convert all the 
acetates into sulphates. After filtration through animal charcoal 
the fiuid will yield on evaporation crystals of nearly pure urea. 

c. Berzelius recommends that the alcohol-extract of urine 
should be dissolved in water, treated with animal charcoal, 
filtered, and warmed to about 120°, and that then as much 
oxalic acid should be added as the warm fluid will dissolve. 
Crystals form of sparingly soluble oxalate of urea, which must 
be dissolved, filtered through animal charcoal, recrystallized, 
and decomposed by carbonate of lime. 

Urea may also be obtained artificially by the decomposition 
of certain cyanates. The followmg is the best method for 
obtaining it in this manner on a large scale. Twenty-eight 
parts of ferrocyanide of potassium, and 14 of peroxide of 





UREA. 51 


manganese, are to be thoroughly mixed, and heated on an iron 
plate to a dull red heat. The mixture smoulders into a brown 
mass which contains cyanate of potash, carbonate of potash, and 
sesquioxide of manganese. When cold it is to be repeatedly 
digested in cold water, and the solution mixed with 20°5 parts of 
crystallized sulphate of ammonia dissolved in water. Sulphate 
of potash and cyanate of ammonia are formed; and this latter 
substance, on the application of a slight heat, is converted into 
urea. Sulphate of potash usually separates at once, in crystals ; 
but, without stopping to remove them, we may evaporate the 
fluid on the water-bath to dryness, and remove the urea by a 
small quantity of water. On evaporating this aqueous solution 
to dryness, the urea may be extracted with boiling alcohol of 
80 or 90%, whilst the sulphate of potash remains undissolved. 
The alcohol is allowed to evaporate, and the urea separates 
from it in crystals. In this manner a pound of ferrocyanide of 
potassium will furnish one third of a pound of pure urea. 

The composition of urea is represented by the formula! 
C, H, N, O,. It contains a larger proportion of nitrogen 
(46°728°) than any other organic compound. 

Urea when pure and in crystals is white and transparent : 
when deposited from a concentrated hot solution it is in the 
form of fine silky needles, but by very slow or spontaneous eva- 
poration it separates in colourless flattened four-sided prisms of 
specific gravity 1:35. It is soluble in its own weight of cold, 
and in every proportion of hot water; in 4°5 parts of cold, and 
im 2 parts of boiling alcohol; it is slightly soluble in ether, 
about | part in 60, at a temperature of 62°. 

It deliquesces in a very moist atmosphere only, and even then 
its chemical properties remain unchanged. In dry air it is per- 
fectly permanent. It fuses at 250° into a colourless liquid, and 
is decomposed by a higher temperature into ammonia, cyanate 
of ammonia, and dry solid cyanuric acid. A concentrated watery 
solution may be boiled and preserved for a long time without 
any change, but if albumen, glutin, mucus, or especially ferment, 
should be present, it is speedily converted into carbonate of 
ammonia. The possibility of this transformation is obvious 
from the formula 


C, H, N, O, (urea) +2HO = 2 (CO,, NH,). 


3 


"See Appendix I, Note 18. 


52 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


With most concentrated acids it gives crystalline salts, espe- 
cially with nitric and oxalic acids. It is not precipitated from 
its aqueous solution by metallic salts, ferrocyanide of potassium, 
or tannic acid. With hyponitrous acid it is instantly decom- 
posed into nitrogen and carbonic acid gases, which are evolved 
in equal volumes ; with chlorine it forms hydrochloric acid, ni- 
trogen, and carbonic acid. ‘These decompositions are rendered 
obvious by the formule 

C, H, N, 0, + 2NO, =4N + 2C0, + 4HO 
C, H, N, 0, + 2HO + 6Cl=2N + 2CO, + 6HCI. 

Compounds of urea. Nitrate of urea is obtained by the 
direct addition of nitric acid in excess, to a concentrated solu- 
tion of urea. Its formula is C, H, N, O,4+NO,+HO. It 
most commonly crystallizes in large colourless leaves, but some- 
times in small solid prisms. It dissolves im eight parts of cold, 
but more freely in hot water. It is sparingly soluble in nitric 
acid, with which it may be boiled without decomposition. This 
salt effloresces with great rapidity.’ 100 parts of nitrate of 
urea correspond to 48:945 of urea. (Regnault and Percy.) 

Oxalate of urea is obtamed by the mixture of concen- 
trated hot solutions of urea and oxalic acid. Its formula is 
C, H, N,O,+C, O,+ HO. It crystallizes in long slender plates 
or prisms, as the fluid cools, since it is much less soluble in cold 
than in hot water. 

At a temperature of 61° water dissolves only 4°379, and 
alcohol 1:62, of the oxalate of urea. Oxalic acid displaces 
nitric acid from its combination with urea. 100 parts of oxalate 
of urea correspond to 62°564 of urea. (Berzelius.) 

Sulphate of urea may be obtained by the double decomposition 
of oxalate of urea and sulphate of lime. 

' Nitrate of urea, when heated to about 316°, decomposes, and disengages a con- 
siderable quantity of carbonic acid and nitrous oxide, in the exact proportion of two 
volumes of the first to one of the latter; the residue consists of free urea and of 
nitrate of ammonia. Nitrate of ammonia and urea crystallize successively out of an 
aqueous solution of the residue. These changes are shown by the formula 
4 (C, H, N, O,, NO,, HO) = 4 CO+ 2NO+42 (C, H, N, 0,)+3 (NH,, NO,, HO). 

The nitrate of ammonia subsequently changes into water and nitrous oxide, and 
the urea into carbonic acid and ammonia. 

During the decomposition of the nitrate of urea a new acid is formed in extremely 
minute quantities. It crystallizes in grayish white brilliant lamella, reddens litmus 


paper, and is very slightly soluble in water, which allows of its being separated from 
urea and nitrate of ammonia. Pelouze has assigned it the formula C, H, N, O,. 





URIC ACID. 53 


Hydrochlorate of urea has been formed by the direct combi- 
nation of dry urea with hydrochloric acid gas. It is a very 
unstable compound, and when exposed to the air dissolves into 
a very acid liquid, from which hydrochloric acid is disengaged. 

Lactate, hippurate, and urate of urea have been described 
by Cap and Henry; who in fact assert that in human urine the 
urea exists as a lactate. Pelouze has, however, disproved the 
existence of all these compounds. 

Prout has examined certain compounds of silver and lead, in 
which the urea seems to combine with the oxides of those metals 
as bases. They are of no importance in a practical point of view. 

The presence of urea modifies the solubility and crystalline 
form of certain salts; it causes common salt to crystallize in 
octohedra, instead of in cubes; but it has been observed that if 
these octohedra are dissolved in pure water they recrystallize in 
cubes. ‘This peculiarity affords a common microscopic test for 
the presence of urea. 

Diagnosis of urea, Urea is distinguished by its solubility in 
water and in alcohol, and by its behaviour with nitric and 
oxalic acids. 


13. Uric acid. 


Uric acid is a constituent of the urinary secretion in appa- 
rently all classes of animals; it is found in man and the car- 
nivora, m graminivora (Fownes),! in birds, amphibia, serpents, 
insects, and mollusca. It is the most common ingredient (in 
combination with a base) of urinary calculi and gouty concre- 
tions; it has been detected in the saliva (Wright), in sweat 
(Wolf),” and on the surface of ulcers in arthritic persons 
(Schonlein.) 

Uric acid may be obtained in a state of purity, by the fol- 
lowing process, from the excrement of the boa constrictor,3 


‘ London and Edinburgh Phil. Mag. xxi, p. 139. 

* Dissertatio sist. casum Calculositatis; Tubing. 1817. 

* The excrements of the boa constrictor have been found by Prout to yield more 
than 90§ of uric acid. (Annals of Philosophy, t. v, p. 413.) The excrements of the 
rattlesnake have been examined by Simon. He found in 100 parts of the dried 
residue—free uric acid, with a little fat and extractive matters, 56-4; urate of am- 
monia, 31-1; urate of soda, with some chloride of sodium, 9°8; urate of lime, 14; 
phosphate of lime, 1:3. Although we have retained the term “excrements” in ac- 
cordance with popular usage, the substance is in reality the urine of the serpent. 


54 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


which contains a very large proportion of uric acid and urate of 
ammonia. ‘To powdered boa constrictor’s excrement add an 
equivalent proportion, or slight excess, of caustic potash. (We 
assume that the excrement is entirely urate of ammonia in this 
calculation.) Boil in water (in the proportion of Ib. of ex- 
crement to 2 quarts of water) till the mass is reduced to dif- 
fused gelatinous floccules, which speedily settle, leaving a dark- 
brown supernatant fluid. Remove this fluid by decantation or 
filtration, and wash the urate of potash, which is collected, with 
cold water. It must then be heated in water, and more caustic 
potash must be added, till the solution becomes clear. While 
still hot it must be poured into dilute hydrochloric acid, and 
allowed to stand. In this manner pure crystals of uric acid 
will be obtained.’ The slight excess of caustic potash used in 
the first instance seems to keep the colourimg matter in solution. 

Uric acid is represented bythe empirical formula? C, H, N, O,, 
or C,, H, N, O,, or C,, H, N, O,; it is highly probable that 
it contains one atom of water in this state, and may be consi- 
dered as a hydrate, C,, N, H, O,4+ HO. 

Uric acid crystallizes in fine scales of a brilliant white colour 
and silky lustre, is tasteless, imodorous, heavier than water, 
almost insoluble in cold, and very slightly soluble in boiling 
water.? It is imsoluble im alcohol and ether. It dissolves in 
dilute nitric acid, with the evolution of equal volumes of car- 
bonic acid and nitrogen: on evaporating the solution a pink 
tint is produced, which, on the addition of ammonia in excess, 
changes to a purple-red colour. This is a characteristic test of the 
presence of uric acid. Boiled with peroxide of lead in water it is 
decomposed into oxalic acid and allantoin, and urea is separated. 

Several of the compounds of uric acid, with the alkalies and 
alkaline earths, are of practical importance. 

Urate of potash is a frequent constituent of urinary calculi : 
it may be obtaimed by boiling urate of ammonia with potash. 
On cooling, the urate of potash yields a mass of very minute aci- 


' The various forms under which uric acid crystallizes are noticed under the head 
ot Urinary sediments. 

2 See Appendix I, Note 19. 

5 According to Liebig, uric acid requires 15,000 parts of cold, and 1,932 parts of 
boiling water, for its perfect solution. It dissolves in all alkaline fluids, in solution 
of phosphate of soda and of borax, but not in solutions of the bicarbonates of potash 
or of ammonia. 





URIC ACID. 55 


cular crystals, or else separates in granules or scales. It dissolves 
in 140 parts of cold, and in 85 parts of boiling water. 

Urate of soda may be obtained in a similar manner, or by 
boiling uric acid in a solution of borax. It is far less soluble 
than the former salt ; one part of it requiring for its solution 
372 parts of cold, and 124 parts of boiling water. In other 
respects it closely resembles it. It occasionally constitutes a 
very peculiar stellar form of deposit in the urme. Liebig has 
shown that uric acid dissolves with great facility in a solution 
of common phosphate of soda, that the fluid from being al- 
kaline becomes acid, and that there are formed a urate of soda, 
and an acid phosphate of soda. It is in this condition that he 
supposes uric acid to exist in the urine. 

Urate of ammonia, in a state of purity, invariably crystallizes 
in needles, but if a little chloride of sodium be added to its so- 
lution we no longer obtain, on evaporation, a crystalline acicular 
deposit, but the peculiar amorphous form in which urate of am- 
monia occurs in urine. On the addition of chloride of sodium 
to water, in the proportion of 2°59 to 1000, the solubility of 
urate of ammonia is increased in the proportion of 1000 to 450, 
or is more than doubled. (Dr. Bence Jones, in Trans. of the 
Medico-chirurgical Society, 1844.) 

According to Liebig, this salt requires for its solution 1727 
parts of cold, and 243 parts of boiling water. 

Urate of magnesia may be obtained by the addition of sul- 
phate of magnesia to a boiling saturated solution of urate of 
potash. On cooling, and after the fluid has been allowed to 
stand for some time, urate of magnesia is deposited in fine 
needles of a silky lustre, and arrayed in stellar groups. At 
212° these crystals lose 5 atoms of water. Urate of magnesia 
dissolves in 3593 parts of cold, and 263 parts of boiling water. 

Urate of lime forms white glittering needles or leaves, which 
dissolve pretty readily in hot water, but are thrown down again 
on cooling. 

Diagnosis of uric acid. Urie acid is distinguished by the 
form of its crystals under the microscope, by its insolubility in 
water and in alcohol, and by its behaviour towards nitric acid 
and ammonia. 


The Metamorphoses of Uric Acid. Allantoin. One part 
of uric acid is boiled in 20 parts of water, and freshly prepared 


56 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


peroxide of lead is gradually added to the boiling liquid, as long 
as its colour is observed to change. The hot liquid is then 
filtered and evaporated till crystals begin to form on its surface ; 
on cooling they form in considerable quantity, and constitute 
allantoin or allantoic acid, while urea remains in the mother 
liquid, and oxalate of lead on the filter. 

The following symbolical representation may elucidate this 
decomposition. 


ivav. Uricacia’ . “Oy, H, N,O; 1 At. Allantoin. C, H, N, O, 
2 At. Peroxide of lead O, Pb, | 1 At. Urea Cy HN DOS 
7 At. Water é H, 0, 2 At. Hydrated ox- 


alate of lead! C, H, Oe bS 





C,, H,, N,O,, Ph, Ci) Hy, Ny O17 Phy 


It is on this reaction that Liebig founds his theory of uric 
acid. He considers it to contain ready-formed urea and a hy- 
pothetical substance, for which he proposes the term uwri/ Ul, or 
cyan-oxalic acid.? 


For 1 At. Uric acid (C,, H, N, 0,)—1 At. Urea (C, H, N, O,) =2 (C,NO,) =2 UL 
Hence the rational formula for uric acid appears to be—~ 
1 At. Uric acid (C,) H, N, 0.) =2 U1+ 1 At. Urea (C, H, N, O,). 


In the production of allantoin from uric acid, the urea is 
supposed to be set free, whilst the uril combines with oxygen 
and water in order to form oxalic acid and _ allantoin. 
The change may be illustrated in the following manner: 
20 Co Ne Oj CO oe CyNY 

By the addition of 2 at. oxygen to the former term, C, O,, 
we obtain 2C, O, (oxalic acid), and by the addition of 3 at. 
water to the latter, C, N,, we obtain C, H, N, O, (allantoin.) 

This substance allantoin, or as it is frequently termed allantoic 
acid, occurs ready formed in the allantoic fluid of the calf, from 
which it crystallizes spontaneously on cooling, when the fluid 
has been evaporated to one fourth of its volume. It then re- 
quires to be purified by recrystallization. 

The crystals are colourless and transparent, tasteless and 


' 2 At. Hydrated oxalate of lead = 2 (Pb O, C, O,, 2 HO) 
iE OrauDs 
? This name is suggested by its constitution; for 1 at. Uril—=C, NO,=C, 0,, Cy, 
a formula that represents oxalic acid in which an equivalent of oxygen is replaced by 
one of cyanogen. 











ALLOXAN. aA 


inodorous, and exert no action on vegetable colours. They are 
usually prisms of the right rhomboid system, have a glassy lustre, 
and at 68° are soluble in 160 times their weight of cold, but 
in a much less quantity of hot water: they dissolve in hot alco- 
hol, but recrystallize as it cools. At a high temperature allan- 
toin is converted by the caustic alkalies, and also by most concen- 
trated acids (with the exception of nitric acid) into ammonia and 
oxalic acid. This change may be illustrated by the formula 


1 At. Allantoin : . C,H, N, 0, | 2 At. Oxalicacid . 5 Gy, Os 
3 At. Water . : : H, O, | 2 At.Ammonia. : H, N, 
C, Hg No O¢ C, Hg N, O¢ 


If we compare the composition of allantoin with that of uric 
acid and urea, we find that these substances bear a highly inte- 
resting relation to each other; if we add to one atom of uric 
acid, one atom of urea and one atom of water, we obtaim a 
formula exactly corresponding with that of allantoin. 


1 At. Uricacid . Crp eteNG. OG 
1 At. Urea . : on LCG NSO 
1 At. Water . : H O 


C,, H, Ng 0,=3 (C, H, N, 05) 
i.e. == 3 At. Allantoin. 

“ According to this,” as Liebig observes, ‘it is evident that 
the product of the secretion of the non-respiring foetus of the 
cow is, in a certain sense, identical with the products secreted 
by the kidneys of the breathing animals. Urea represents 
carbonate of ammonia from which the elements of two atoms 
of water have separated; allantoin represents oxalate of am- 
monia, from which the elements of three atoms of water have 
separated.” 

We now proceed to the consideration of a few of the most 
important products of nitric acid with uric acid. 

Allovan. One part of dry uric acid is gradually added to 
four parts of nitric acid of spec. grav. 1:42—1-5, by which it 
is dissolved with effervescence, and the production of heat. 
The whole liquid is soon converted into a solid crystalline mass 
of alloxan. Its formula is C, H, N, O,,. It is very soluble 
in water, reddens vegetable colours, and causes a purple stain 
on the skin. Its formation may be explained in the following 
manner. We have already shown (see Urea,) that urea is con- 


58 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


verted by hyponitrous acid into water, carbonic acid, and 
nitrogen. Hence, if we suppose that the 2 atoms of uril 
(bearing in mind that uric acid — 2U].+1 at. urea,) take up 
the 2 at. of oxygen, which the nitric acid has given off in the 
formation of hyponitrous acid, and 4 at. of water, we obtain 
the formula of alloxan, for 

2Ul1 (= C, N, 0.) +4HO+2 O = C,H,N, 0... 

Parabanic acid is obtained by treating one part of uric acid, 
or one part of alloxan in eight parts of nitric acid, evaporating 
to the consistence of a syrup, and allowing it to stand for some 
time, when it yields colourless crystals which may be purified 
by recrystallization. Its formula is C, N, O,+2HO. 

It is formed by the action of hyponitrous acid on the urea 
of the uric acid; the 2 at. of uril take up 4 at. of oxygen, and 
2 at. of water, and yield 2 at. of carbonic acid, and | at. of 
hydrated parabanic acid: thus 

2U1+2HO+40=—2CO, + (C, N, 0,+2HO.) 
Or it may be regarded as produced by the action of oxygen on 
alloxan, for 

C, H, N, 0,,+20=2CO;+2HO-4 (C, N,’0,+2H0.) 

Ovaluric acid is obtaimed by boiling parabanic acid in a solu- 
tion of ammonia. If the mixture be evaporated and allowed 
to cool, crystals of oxalurate of ammonia will separate them- 
selves. On the addition of an acid to a concentrated solution 
of this salt, oxaluric acid is separated as a crystalline powder. 
Its formula is C, H, N, O,4+ HO. It is formed by the addi- 
tion of 2 at. of water to the constituents of parabanic acid: it 
contains further the elements of 2 at. of oxalic acid, and 1 at. 
of urea, and by boiling in water is completely decomposed into 
free oxalic acid, and oxalate of urea. 

Liebig observes that “when uric acid is subjected to the 
action of oxygen, it is first resolved into alloxan and urea; a 
new supply of oxygen acting on the alloxan causes it to resolve 
itself either ito oxalic acid and urea, or into oxaluric and 
parabanic acids, or into carbonic acid and urea,” (Animal 
Chemistry, p. 137.) The reactions which we have already 
given are sufficient to explain this statement. We have 
shown that— 

Uric acid = 2Ul + urea, and alloxan=2U1+ 0, +4 HO; 
consequently, 
Urie acid + O, + 4 HO =alloxan + urea. 


ee 





MUREXAN. 59 


Moreover, 

Alloxan =urea + C, O, (see their respective formule) ; 
therefore, 

Alloxan + O =urea + C, O, == urea + 3 at. oxalic acid, 
and 

Alloxan + O,= urea + C, O,;,= urea + 6 at. carbonic acid. 
Also, 

Alloxan + O, = parabanic acid + 2 HO + 2 CO, 

= oxaluric acid + 2 at. carbonic acid. 

Hence, 


Uric acid + 4HO + O,=2 at. urea + 3 at. oxalic acid. 

Uric acid + 2HO + O,=2 at. urea + parabanic acid + 2 at. carbonic acid. 
Uric acid + 4HO + O,= 2 at. urea + oxaluric acid + 2 at. carbonic acid. 
Uric acid + 4HO + O,= 2 at. urea + 6 at. carbonic acid. 


These formule express laws of much importance in urinary 
pathology ; they show us that if an abundant supply of oxygen 
be given to the uric acid, carbonic acid and urea may be ob- 
tained ; if a smaller quantity, oxalic acid and urea; and if none 
be given the acid remains unchanged. 

Murexid (Purpurate of ammonia.) The best method of exhi- 
biting this substance is to evaporate a solution of uric acid in 
dilute nitric acid, until it acquires a flesh-red colour: after it 
has cooled to 160° a dilute solution of ammonia must be added, 
till the presence of free ammonia is remarked by the odour. 
The solution is then to be diluted with half its volume of boiling 
water and allowed to cool: it crystallizes in short four-sided 
prisms, two faces of which reflect a green metallic lustre. 
It is insoluble in alcohol; sparingly soluble in cold, but 
more readily in boiling water, on the coolmg of which it 
crystallizes unchanged. It is soluble in caustic potash with a 
beautiful indigo-blue colour, which disappears with the evolu- 
tion of ammonia on the application of heat. The difference 
between the views of Prout and Liebig regarding this substance 
is, that the latter considers it a distinct principle, while the 
former regards it as a combination of a peculiar acid (purpuric) 
with ammonia. Prout’s view has been strongly confirmed by 
the researches of Fritzsche, which are published in the Transac- 
tions of the Academy of Sciences of St. Petersburgh, for 1839. 

The formula assigned to this substance by Liebig and Wohler 
is C,, H, N,O,. Fritzsche gives it the formula C,, H, N,O,,, or 
eH NO. NEO. 

Murexan or purpuric acid is prepared by dissolving murexid 
in caustic potash by the aid of heat, which is to be applied till 


60 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


the blue colour disappears: dilute sulphuric acid is then to be 
added in excess. It falls in crystalline scales of a silky lustre ; 
is insoluble in water and dilute acids, but is taken up by 
ammonia and the fixed alkalies. 

If a solution of murexan in ammonia be exposed to the air, 
it acquires a purple-red colour and deposits crystals of murexid: 
with an excess of ammonia it again becomes colourless, and is 
then found to contain oxalurate of ammonia. 

Its formula, according to Liebig and Wohler, is C, H, N, O,; 
according to Fritzsche it is C,, H, N, O,,. 

The substances which have been described are only a few of 
the products of nitric acid on uric acid ; they have been selected 
as having a more practical bearing than the others. The fol- 
lowing table exhibits the principal results of Liebig and Wohler’s 
admirable paper on this subject. 


(a) On treating uric acid with cold concentrated nitric acid, 
we obtain alloran, C, H, N, O,, or 2U1+0,+ 4HO. 

(6) On treating uric acid with cold dilute nitric acid, we obtain 
alloxantin, C, H, N, O,,, or 2U1 +O+ 5HO. 

(c) On treating alloxan with sulphurous acid, we obtain thion- 
uric yactd, CRED IN. (O88 

(d) On treating thionuric acid, or thionurate of ammonia, with 
hydrochloric, or sulphuric acid, we obtain wramil, 
C, H, N, O, or 2U1+NH,+2HO. 

(e) On treating ‘alloxan with sulphuretted hydrogen, we ob- 
tain first, alloxantin, and subsequently dialuric acid, 
CatigNa@ sqor 201-+4H0. 

(f) On warming uric acid in eight parts of nitric acid we ob- 
tain parabanic acid, C, N, O,+2HO. 

(g) On boiling parabanic acid in ammonia, oxvalurate of ammo- 
nia is generated, from which we can obtain ovxaluric 
acid, C, N, H, O,4 HO. 

(h) On the addition of an alkali to a concentrated solution of 
alloxan, we obtain allowanic acid, C, H, N, O,4+2HO. 

(?) By the precipitation of a solution of alloxan with boiling 
acetate of lead, we obtain mesowalic acid, C, O.,,. 

(7) By heating a solution of alloxan with ammonia, we obtain 
mycomelinic acid, C, H, N, O.. 

(k) On heating uramil w ith dilute sulphuric acid, we obtain 
uramilic acid, C,, H,, N, O,,.. 





HIPPURIC ACID. 61 


(7) On warming uric acid with nitric acid and saturating it 
with ammonia, we obtain murewxid, C,, H, N, O,,. 

(m) On dissolving murexid in caustic potash and adding dilute 
sulphuric acid, we obtain murexan, C, H, N, O.. 


14. Hippurie Acid. 

Hippuric, or urobenzoic acid, is an ordinary, although not a 
constant, ingredient of the urine of the graminivora. It has 
been observed by Lehmann, Ambrosiani, and Reich, in the 
urine of diabetic patients, and Bouchardat has found it in the 
same secretion in certain anomalous cases to which he has ap- 
plied the term “ hippurie.” Liebig has recently asserted that 
it is a constant ingredient of healthy human urine; and even 
if this statement be too general, there can be no doubt that it 
does very frequently occur in minute quantity in this secretion. 

Hippuric acid is readily obtained by evaporating the urine 
of the horse or cow to about one tenth of its volume, and adding 
sufficient hydrochloric acid to give it a decidedly acid reaction. 
Yellow or brown crystals of hippuric acid are almost immedi- 
ately deposited, which must be collected, dissolved in a hot 
solution of carbonate of soda, and filtered through animal char- 
coal. By the addition of hydrochloric acid to this solution, 
(which must be concentrated, if requisite,) we obtain tolerably 
pure crystals of hippuric acid. 

This acid forms long transparent four-sided prisms, acumi- 
nated at the extremities; it is destitute of odour, and has a 
faintly bitter, but not an acid taste. It dissolves in about 400 
parts of cold water, and in a much larger proportion in hot 
water, from which it recrystallizes on cooling. It 1s freely 
soluble in alcohol, less so in ether. A cold aqueous solution 
strongly reddens litmus. At a moderate heat, hippuric acid 
melts (without yielding water) into a colourless oily fluid, which, 
on cooling, solidifies into a crystalline milk-white mass. Ata 
higher temperature the acid undergoes decomposition, and yields 
a crystalline sublimate composed of benzoic acid and benzoate 
of ammonia, while, at the same time, some red oily drops are 
produced, which develop a peculiar odour, resembling that of 
the Tonquin bean. Hydrocyanic acid is subsequently formed, 
and the previous odour is replaced by a bitter-almond smell. 
The action of perchloride of iron on this acid is worthy of 
notice. On the addition of this reagent to a solution of hip- 


62 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


puric acid, a well-marked yellow colour is produced; no such 
change is effected on the addition of this test to a solution of 
uric acid. On its addition toa solution of hippurate of potash, 
a copious orange-coloured deposit is thrown down, which, on 
the application of heat, forms a red resinous mass, soluble in 
alcohol, but insoluble in water; when added to a solution of 
urate of potash, a precipitate is likewise thrown down, which 
is at first of a brownish red colour, but rapidly becomes yellow. 

The composition of this acid is represented by the formula! 
C,, H, NO,+HO. In its physical characters it strongly re- 
sembles benzoic acid, and there can be no doubt that these two 
acids have been often confounded: there is, moreover, a close 
analogy betweenthem. They both belong to the benzoyl series, 
although the exact place of hippuric acid cannot be at present 
assigned to it with certainty. Oxidising agents (as nitric acid, 
or sulphuric acid and binoxide of manganese) convert hippuric 
into benzoic acid; and a similar change occurs in the urine if 
it be kept for any time. Conversely, benzoic and cimnamic 
acids are converted in the organism into hippuric acid.” 

Hippuric acid forms soluble crystallizable salts with the 
alkalies and alkaline earths. 

Diagnosis. Hippuric acid may be distinguished by its crys- 
talline form, its solubility in alcohol, its behaviour when heated, 
and its reaction with perchloride of iron. Nitric acid will suffice 
to distinguish it from uric acid. 


15. Uric Oxide. 


Uric oxide, xanthic oxide, urous acid. This substance is a 
very rare ingredient in vesical calculi. It was discovered by 
Marcet, who gave it the name wanthic oxide ; it has since been 
met with by Laugier, Stromeyer, and Dulk, and it is said to 
have been recently detected in guano, by Unger. 

Urinary caleuli which contain this ingredient are dissolved 
in caustic potash ; the uric oxide is precipitated from the filtered 

1 See Appendix I, Note 20. 

2 Erdmann has sometimes found hippuric, and at other times benzoic acid, in the 
urine of the same horse. In all probability an excess of nourishment favours the 
production of this acid, for the urine of well-fed horses usually contains hippuric 
acid, while only benzoic acid can be discovered in the urine of horses employed for 
agricultural purposes: sometimes, however, the latter contains hippuric acid on some 


days and not on others, without any perceptible cause. For Liebig’s theory of the 
origin of hippuric acid, see ‘ Animal Chemistry,’ pp. 82, 140. 


URIC OXIDE. 63 


solution by a stream of carbonic acid. It forms a white pre- 
cipitate, which, when dried, constitutes a pale yellow hard mass. 
It is represented by the formula’ C,, H, N, O,. It differs 
from uric acid in containing two atoms less oxygen, hence 
the name of uric oxide. It dissolves in the alkalies, in small 
quantity in hot water, hydrochloric and oxalic acids, it is in- 
soluble in alcohol and ether, and produces no effect on test 
paper. It dissolves also in concentrated sulphuric acid with a 
yellow colour, and no precipitate is caused by the addition of 
water to the solution. It is soluble in hot nitric acid without ef- 
fervescence,? and more slowly than uric acid. On carefully eva- 
porating this solution, a lemon-yellow residue is left, which is 
not reddened by the vapour of ammonia, but which is dissolved 
with a reddish yellow colour by caustic potash, and leaves, on 
evaporation, a red residue. Muriate of ammonia throws down 
a yellow precipitate from the potash solution. Uric oxide 
differs from uric acid in being insoluble in a dilute solution of 
carbonate of potash; by this property these two substances 
may be separated from one another when they occur together. 

Dulk conceives that he has effected the metamorphosis of 
uric oxide into uric acid. The yellow nitric-acid solution of 
uric oxide was evaporated on a watchglass to a thick consist- 
ence. After a few days, small, hard, and transparent crystals 
appeared. A little of the portion which remained fluid, when 
heated on a platinum spatula over the flame of the spirit-lamp, 
assumed a blood-red tint, and in a few days the fluid which 
remained in the watchglass, exposed to the atmosphere, under- 
went a similar change of colour. He considers the small crystals 
which were formed to consist of alloxantin; and, in support of 
his view, he alleges the following facts. Cold water poured 
over them assumes a red tint, but does not dissolve them ; they 
are, however, perfectly soluble in boilmg water, and, on the 
addition of ammonia to a hot concentrated solution, a reddish 
colour manifests itself, which disappears on cooling. On con- 
centrating a portion of the solution to a few drops, mixing it 
with nitric acid, and then adding ammonia, a greenish salt 
separated itself. 

Lehmann instituted a series of experiments with the view of 


1 See Appendix I, Note 21. 
2 Dulk states that, in his case, the uric oxide did slightly effervesce. 


64 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


obtaining uric oxide from uric acid by the action of deoxidising 
agents, but he failed in his attempt. 


16. Cystin. 

Cystin, cystic oxide. Cystin is an occasional constituent of 
urinary calculi, and is sometimes found as a crystalline deposit 
in the urme. It may be obtained by dissolving a portion of 
one of these calculi in caustic potash, and adding acetic acid to 
the boiling solution. As the fluid slowly cools, the cystin sepa- 
rates in six-sided, colourless, transparent scales. It may also 
be obtained in crystals from a solution in caustic ammonia, if 
left to evaporate slowly. The scales are then thicker, and may 
be considered as regular six-sided prisms. 

Cystin has an extraordinary composition. It contains 
25°52 of sulphur. Its formula’ is C, H, N O, §.. 

It has neither an acid nor alkaline reaction ; when heated, 
it does not melt; takes fire with a blueish flame, and gives off 
a very characteristic odour; is very slightly soluble in water, 
and quite insoluble in alcohol; dissolves in dilute sulphuric, 
nitric, hydrochloric, phosphoric, and oxalic acids, the saturated 
solutions yielding, on gentle evaporation, salt-like compounds 
of cystin and the acid ; these compounds separate in diverging 
crystalline needles, which have an acid taste, and are not very 
durable. Cystin dissolves readily im the fixed alkalies, and forms, 
on evaporation, granular crystals. It dissolves im caustic 
ammonia, but does not combine with it. Carbonate of ammonia, 
is the best reagent for throwing it down from its acid solutions, 
as it does not dissolve cystin. It may be removed from an 
alkaline solution by acetic, citric, or tartaric acid, with none of 
which it enters into combination: acetic acid is generally used. 

Diagnosis of cystin. Cystm may be recognized by the 
peculiar crystalline form? (six-sided plates) in which it separates 
from its solutions ; by its insolubility in water and alcohol; by 
its behaviour towards acids; and by its peculiar odour on 
burning. Its crystalline form and its behaviour towards acids 
distinguish it clearly from uric acid: these tests, as well as its 
solubility im hydrochloric and oxalic acids distinguish it from 
uric oxide, 

1 See Appendix I, Note 22. 

2 T once observed an amorphous deposit of urate of ammonia yield, on the addition 
of acetic acid, perfectly regular hexagons. This form is also depicted by Rigby, in 
his work on Dysmenorrheea. 


ANIMAL SUGARS. 65 


CLASS II. NON-NITROGENOUS CONSTITUENTS. 


1. Animal Sugars. 


a. Sugar of milk is an integral constituent of the milk of 
the mammalia, and is a very rare ingredient of any other fluid. 
It has never been detected with certainty in the blood ; although 
Simon was led to believe, from the taste, and the carbonization 
with sulphuric acid, that he had once separated it from calves’ 
blood. Prout once found it in the liquor amnii of a cow, but 
this is the only instance in which it has been detected in that 
fluid. A more remarkable case is recorded by Koller,! who 
removed a milky-looking fluid from between the tunics of the 
testicle, which contained sugar of milk. 

Sugar of milk may be obtained by evaporating whey to the 
consistence of a syrup, and setting it aside for some weeks in 
a cool place. Granular crystals of sugar of milk will be spon- 
taneously deposited. In order to procure them in a state of 
purity they require several solutions and recrystallizations. 

Sugar of milk is white, and crystallizes in right four-sided 
prisms usually terminated by four-sided pyramids, which are 
semi-transparent, and havea spec. grav. 1°543. It dissolves in 
5 or 6 parts of cold water, and in 2°5 parts of boiling water, 
without forming a syrup. A solution communicates a more 
decidedly sweet taste to the tongue than the crystals them- 
selves. Sugar of milk is unaltered by the air, loses nothing 
at 212°, and is msoluble in alcohol and ether. At a high 
temperature it fuses, swells up, and develops a sweetish but 
very pungent odour. It burns with a palish blue flame, and 
leaves after incineration, an ash consisting of the carbonates, 
sulphates, and phosphates of lime and potash, amounting to 
about *1° of the sugar. According to Simon, the sugar of 
woman’s milk does not melt on being exposed to a high tem- 
perature, but only becomes tough and fibrous. 

By digestion in dilute sulphuric or hydrochloric acid, or in 


' This fluid contained in 1000 parts: Butter 16-49—casein 20°31—sugar of milk 
31:50—chloride of sodium 2°78—lactate of soda 0°74—sulphate of potash 1°51—sul- 
phate of soda 0°37—carbonate of lime 0°38—carbonate of magnesia 0°47—phosphate 
of magnesia 0°89. (Wagner’s Handworterbuch, t. i, p. 25.) 


~ 


v 


66 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


acetic or citric acid, sugar of milk becomes converted into sugar 
of grapes. By nitric acid it is decomposed into mucic,! oxalic, 
saccharic, and carbonic acids. 

On the addition of casein, animal membrane, diastase, &c. 
to a solution of sugar of milk, lactic acid is formed and the 
fluid begins to ferment. 

Crystals of sugar of milk may be represented by the formula 
C,, H,, O,,. At a temperature of 212° the crystals lose 11-98, 
or two equivalents of water. Consequently the formula for 
anhydrous sugar of milk is C,,H,,0,,- 

2. Diabetic sugar exists in the blood and urine, and occa- 
sionally also in the sweat? of persons suffering from diabetes. 

It may be obtained by adding basic acetate of lead to the 
urine, filtermg, precipitating any excess of lead by sulphuretted 
hydrogen, evaporating, extracting the syrupy residue with 
alcohol, and allowing the alcoholic solution to crystallize. It 
requires several crystallizations to obtain the sugar in a state of 
purity. Diabetic sugar usually crystallizes in wart-like knots, or 
plumose groups, of minute, rhombic, transparent crystals. It is 
white, devoid of odour; mm sweetness and in solubility in water? 
it ranks between cane sugar and sugar of milk. It is more 
soluble in dilute alcohol than sugar of milk, but is insoluble in 
absolute alcohol and ether. 

Diabetic sugar in a crystalline state is represented by 
the formula C,, H,, O,,; im this condition it contains 
two equivalents, or 9° of water, so that its correct formula is 
C,, H,, O,,1+2 HO. It is identical in its chemical compo- 
sition with sugar of grapes. 

Diabetic sugar forms a beautiful crystallizable compound 
with chloride of sodium. On saturating diabetic urime with 
common salt, and leaving it to spontaneous evaporation, 
crystals three fourths of an inch in diameter may be ob- 
tained. They are not very regular in their form, but most of 
them are six-sided double pyramids. These crystals are hard, 
easily pulverizable, transparent, of a combined saltish and sac- 


' Tt is worthy of remark that sugar from different sorts of milk yields varying quan- 
tities of mucic acid. 

2 A case in which sugar was detected in the sweat of a diabetic patient is recorded 
by Nasse, Rhein. Corresp. Blatt. 1842. Nr. 6. 

° Simon found that one part of diabetic sugar dissolved in 1°3 of water at 53°. 


ANIMAL SUGARS. 67 


charine taste, and dissolve in about 3’7 parts of cold water, 
and slightly in alcohol. The formula for this combination is 
Cer Oe rOs Cine © 5 Nah: 

Tests for Diabetic Sugar. a. Htinefeld’s test. Place 4 oz. 
of the suspected urine in a glass exposed to the sun’s rays, 
and add about 6 drops of a tolerably strong solution of chromic 
acid. In a few minutes if sugar be present, the mixture, 
previously orange red, becomes brownish, and soon after as- 
sumes a bistre-brown colour. These changes take place much 
more quickly if the mixture of urime and chromic acid be 
gently warmed before exposure to light. 

This test depends for its action upon the deoxidizing power 
of the sugar, by which the chromic acid is reduced to oxide of 
chromium ; for, after warming the mixture, the addition of a 
few drops of liquor potasse produces a copious deposit of the 
green oxide. 

There is an important objection to this test which renders all 
its indications liable to serious fallacy, depending upon the fact, 
that all urine containing a normal proportion of colouring 
matter deoxidizes chromic acid ; and consequently urine, whether 
saccharine or not, will partially convert this acid into the oxide. 
This change certainly does not occur so readily in non-saccha- 
rine urine as in a diabetic state of that fluid, but still is suffi- 
ciently marked to prevent Hiinefeld’s test being regarded in 
any other light than a fallacious one. 

b. Runge’s test. Allow athin layer of the suspected urine to 
evaporate on a white surface, as the bottom of a white plate, 
and, whilst warm, drop upon the surface a few drops of sulphuric 
acid, previously diluted with 6 parts of water. With healthy 
urine, the part touched with the acid becomes merely of a pale 
orange colour, from the action of the latter upon the colouring 
matter of the urine ; whilst if sugar be present the spot becomes 
deep brown, and soon black, from the decomposition of sugar 
by the acid, and consequent deposition of carbon. This test is 
stated to be so delicate, that 1 part of sugar dissolved in 1000 

' The following observations are principally taken from an excellent paper, by Dr. 
G. Bird, on the detection of a diabetic state of the urine, in the London Medical 
Gazette for 1843. We have omitted to notice the test afforded by the rotatory 


power of a solution of sugar on a ray of polarized light, as it has been shown by 
Dr. Leeson to afford very fallacious results. Memoirs of the Chemical Society, Part 7. 


68 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


of urine can be readily detected; and even when mixed with 
2000 parts the indications are tolerably distinct. 

According to Dr. G. Bird, the presence of albumen causes the 
acid to yield a tint nearly resembling that produced by sugar. 

c. Moore’s test depends on the conversion of diabetic sugar 
into brown melassic (or perhaps sacchulmic acid) under the in- 
fluence of a caustic alkali. Place in a test tube about two 
drachms of the suspected urine, and add nearly half its bulk of 
liquor potasse. Ueat the mixture over the spirit-lamp, and 
allow it to boil for a minute or two; the previously pale urme 
will become of an orange-brown or even bistre tint, according 
to the proportion of sugar present. This reaction has been long 
known, but Mr. Moore deserves the credit of bringing it pro- 
minently forward. 

d. Trommer’s test. Add to the suspected urme contained 
in a large test tube, a few drops of a solution of sulphate of 
copper ; a very inconsiderable troubling generally results, pro- 
bably from the deposition of a little phosphate of copper. 
Sufficient Aquor potasse should then be added to render the whole 
strongly alkaline; a grayish green precipitate of hydrated oxide 
of copper falls, which, if sugar be present, wholly or partly re- 
dissolves in an excess of the solution of potash, forming a blue 
liquid, not very unlike the blue ammoniuret of copper. On 
gently heating the mixture nearly to ebullition, the copper falls 
in the state of suboxide, forming a red and copious precipitate. 
If sugar is not present, the copper is deposited in the form of 
black oxide. 

This test is founded on a fact long known, but not previously 
applied to the detection of sugar, of the power possessed by 
some organic matters of reducing oxide of copper, as well as 
some other oxides, to a lower state of oxidation. It certainly 
is the most delicate of all the chemical tests hitherto proposed 
for the detection of sugar in the urine, and will readily detect 
it in diabetic ure, even when very largely diluted. 

It is important in using this test that no more of the solution 
of sulphate of copper be used than is sufficient to afford a de- 
cided precipitate on the addition of the liquor potasse. If 
this precaution be not attended to, a part only of the black oxide 
will be reduced to red suboxide, unless a very large quantity of 
sugar is present, and thus the indications afforded by this test 
will be rendered indistinct. 


FATS. 69 


e. Fermentation test. The development of the vinous fermen- 
tation on the addition of a little ferment or yeast to a fluid, has 
long been applied as a test for the detection of sugar. It was suc- 
cessfully emploved by Professor Leopold Gmelin of Heidelberg ' 
for the detection of sugar in the animal fluids after the inges- 
tion of amylaceous food. Dr. Christison has the merit of 
particularly suggesting the application of fermentation for the 
discovery of a diabetic state of the urine. 

When a little yeast is added to healthy urme exposed to a 
temperature of about 80°, no other change occurs for some 
time, except the development of a portion of carbonic acid me- 
chanically entangled in the yeast. When sugar is present in 
the urine thus treated, it soon becomes troubled, a tolerably 
free disengagement of bubbles of carbonic acid takes place, and 
a frothy scum forms on the surface of the fluid, which evolves 
a vinous odour. These changes take place with great rapidity, 
even when the quantity of sugar present is very small. If the 
evolved carbonic acid is collected, the quantity of sugar in the 
urine may be determined by measuring it, as a cubic inch? of 
the gas very nearly corresponds to a grain of sugar. 

In the absence of a mercurial trough, the carbonic acid may 
be determined by the increase of weight? of Liebig’s bulb-appa- 
ratus, charged with a solution of potash. 

Sj. Test afforded by the growth of the torula. If urine 
containing the smallest proportion of sugar be exposed for a few 
hours to a temperature above 70°, and a drop taken from the 
surface be examined under the microscope, numerous very mi- 
nute ovoid particles will be discovered. In the course of afew 
hours more they become enlarged, and appear as distinct oval 
vesicles, which rapidly become developed into that species of 
confervoid vegetation, to which the term foru/a has been applied. 


2. Fats. 


Under the name of “ fats,’ we include various non-nitro- 


genous compounds, which are insoluble in water, but soluble 
in hot alcohol and ether. 


1 Recherches Expérimentales sur la Digestion. Paris, 1826. Part I, p. 202. 

2 100 cubic inches of carbonic acid gas correspond with 106°6 grains of diabetic 
sugar. 

3 100 grains of carbonic acid indicate 225 grains of diabetic sugar. The gas must 
be passed through a tube containing chloride of calcium. 


/ 


70 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Some of these fats possess the property of bemg decomposed 
by strong bases, especially by the alkalies, and by oxide of lead ; 
in this case one of the two principal constituents separates 
itself, while the other (an acid) combines with the base, forming 
a soap with the alkalies and a plaster with oxide of lead. 
Hence it follows that those fats which, on account of this pro- 
perty, are termed saponifiable, are, like the salts, formed of an 
acid and of a base; these acids and their bases being themselves 
the oxides of compound radicals, probably of hydro-carburets. 

There are other fats which cannot be decomposed in this 
manner: they are termed non-saponifiable fats. 

We shall commence with the consideration of the former 
class, the saponifiable or true fats. 


a. Fatty Bases. We are acquainted with three bodies, oxides 
of different radicals, which act the part of bases in the animal 
fats. These are glycerin, the owide of cetyl, and cerain: the 
first of these three is the most widely distributed, and forms 
the base of the fats of the human body ; the oxide of cetyl exists 
in spermaceti, and cerain in bees’ wax. We shall restrict our 
remarks to glycerin. 

Glycerin’ is separated from the fats by the act of saponifica- 
tion, when the acid with which it was combined enters into 
combination with the new base. The best method of obtaming 
it in a state of purity is to boil an animal fat with oxide of 
lead. The salt of lead which is formed is msoluble in water, 
(it is, in fact, a plaster,) while the glycerm remains in solution. 
After removing any excess of lead by a current of sulphuretted 
hydrogen, we must evaporate the fluid iz vacuo over sulphuric 
acid. 

The glycerin, prepared in this manner, is a clear uncrystal- 
lizable fluid, of spec. gray. 1:28, of a yellowish colour, devoid 
of odour, of a marked sweet taste, very soluble in water and 
alcohol, but msoluble in ether. It burns with a clear blue 
flame. It is considered as the hydrate of an oxide of a radical, 
glyceryl (C, H.), which has not yet been isolated. Its compo- 
sition is expressed by the formula’ C, H,O,+HO. Stenhouse 

' This substance, glycerin, is united in each fat with a different acid, and hence the 


fats may be considered as salts of glycerin. 
? See Appendix I, Note 23. 


FATS. 71 


assigns the formula C, H, O, or C, H,+0O, and Redtenbacher 
C, H, 0,44 HO, to this substance. At an elevated tempera- 
ture, a portion of the glycerin is distilled without change, while 
the rest is converted into empyreumatic oils, acetic acid, and 
combustible gases, leaving a carbonaceous residue. 

Diagnosis. Glycerin may be recognized by its taste, by its 
solubility in water and alcohol, but not in ether, by the absence 
of crystallization, and by the strong white precipitate which is 
formed upon the addition of nitrate of mercury. 


3. Fatty Acids. We shall now proceed to consider the fatty 
acids, which, in combination with glycerin, constitute the various 
fats and oils. Two simple fats, stearin and margarin, and a 
simple oil, o/ein, with their respective acids, the stearic, margaric, 
and oleic, are especially deserving of notice. 

The researches of Redtenbacher, Varrentrap, and Bromeis, 
have shown that the two former of these acids are in reality 
constituents of the same radical, im different stages of oxidation. 
This radical is termed margary/, and its constitution is expressed 
by the formula C,, H,,. 

In addition to these acids, we find certain fatty acids in 
butter, which, in combination with glycerin, form distinct fats. 
Frémy has likewise described a peculiar acid of this nature as 
existing in the brain, to which he has given the name cerebric 
acid. We omit the consideration of various other fatty acids, 
which are only met with in particular animals and in the vege- 
table kingdom. 

a. Margaryl and its oxides—stearic and margaric acids. On 
saponifying mutton-fat with potash, dissolving the soap which 
is thus formed in six parts of hot water, and then adding 
forty-five parts of cold water, and allowing the solution to rest 
at a temperature of 60°, we obtain, after some little time, a 
lamellar precipitate of bistearate of potash, mixed with bimar- 
garate, and a little oleate of the same base. On neutralising the 
free potash in the supernatant fluid with an acid, and proceeding 
as before, we obtain a precipitate of the margarate and stearate 
of potash. After this process has been repeated several times, 
nothing but oleate of potash remains in solution. ‘The preci- 
pitates must be washed, dried, and dissolved in boiling alcohol. 
On cooling, the stearate of potash, which is the least soluble, 


72 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


separates first, mixed with a small quantity of the margarate. 
The more frequently the solution is repeated the more certain 
are we that ultimately the whole of the margarate will be re- 
tained in solution. 

The pure stearate of potash is decomposed by warm dilute 
hydrochloric acid; and the stearic acid which precipitates is to 
be washed in water and dissolved in boiling alcohol, from which 
it crystallizes, on cooling, in white brilliant scales. By the 
same process the margaric acid is separated from the pure mar- 
garate of potash. Margaric acid is obtained most easily from 
human fat, which contains a very large amount of margarin. 
Stearic acid melts at 158°. The specific gravity of the acid in 
its solid state is 1:01. It is perfectly insoluble in water, but 
dissolves readily in ether as well as in boiling alcohol, in which, 
on cooling to 122°, crystals begin to form. Its solution exhibits 
a mild acid reaction towards litmus; in the solid form it burns 
with a clear flame, hike wax. 

The leading difference between margaric and stearic acids 
is the greater fusibility of the former, which becomes liquid at 
140°. Its crystals assume an acicular form, and are smaller 
and less brilliant than those of stearic acid. 

Stearic acid is represented by the formula! C,, H,, O,. In 
its crystalline state it is combined with 2 atoms of water (forming 
the hydrate of stearic acid), which it gives up on uniting with 
a base. 

Margaric acid is represented by the formula C,, H,,O,. The 
hydrate contains only 1 atom of water. 

The radical of these two acids, margaryl, is represented by 
the formula C,, H,, (M) 

Hence, margaric acid = M+O, 
and stearic acid = 2M+O0, 

If we treat stearic acid for some time with nitric acid at a 
temperature of 212°, it becomes completely converted into 
margaric acid. 

A similar, although not so perfect an effect is produced by 
sulphuric and chromic acids. 

The stearic and margaric are very weak acids ; at an elevated 
temperature they have the power of expelling carbonic acid 


' See Appendix I, Note 24. 


FATS. 73 


from its combinations; most of the other acids, however, de- 
compose their salts. The alkaline and neutral stearates and 
margarates are soluble in water; the acid salts (for there are 
bi- and even quadri-stearates of potash and soda) are not 
soluble in this fluid, neither are the salts formed with other 
bases. The stearates of baryta, strontia, and lime are white, 
insipid, and inodorous powders. The neutral stearates of potash 
and soda occur in many of the animal fluids, especially in the bile. 

We have already observed that most of the fats are formed 
by a combination of stearic and margaric acids with glycerin. 
The bisteurate of glycerin, or, as it is usually termed, stearin, 
is best obtained from mutton suet, either by washing it with 
ether as long as anything is dissolved, or by mixing up melted 
suet with six times its volume of ether, and subjecting the 
mass, when cold, to strong pressure. In both these processes 
the olein, which is fluid at the ordinary temperature, is removed, 
and the stearin remains behind, although seldom in a state of 
purity. Stearin melts at 144°. It is soluble in water, and 
only dissolves in alcohol with the aid of heat. It dissolves 
very readily in boiling ether; but, as the ether cools, nearly 
the whole of the stearim is again precipitated, and at 59° it 
only retains the one hundred and twenty-fifth part of its weight 
in solution. It is also soluble in the fatty and volatile oils, 
and in pyroacetic spirit. The stearin, after being melted down, 
and allowed to reassume its solid form, appears as a white, 
semitransparent, uncrystalline mass, not unlike wax. Acids 
and bases convert it into stearic acid and glycerin. The for- 
mula for stearin is C,,, H,,, O,,; it is equivalent to 


1 Atom of glycerin . . C, H, O, 
2 Atoms of stearic acid . Cy55 Hy5. 01 f= Creo: 
2 Atoms of water. . Har O> 


The bimargarate of glycerin, or margarin, is obtained by 
submitting to spontaneous evaporation the ethereal solution 
from which the stearm has been separated. ‘The flocculi of 
margarin that separate themselves must be freed from olein by 
pressure. Margarin melts at 118°. Its solubility in ether is 
much greater than that of stearin; at 74° it is perfectly soluble 
in 5 parts of ether. It is nearly as soluble in alcohol at the 
ordinary temperature as at the boiling point. In other respects 
it closely resembles stearin. 


74 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The formula for margarin is C,, H,, O,,, corresponding with 


1 Atom glycerin . Bega dale. 0). 
2 Atoms margaric acid . . C,. H6, 0, f= Cre Ore 
1 Atom water : JP yc HAO 


6. Oleic acid. This acid is obtained from the oleate of 
potash, which is produced during the preparation of the stearate 
and margarate of potash, and remains in solution. It must 
be separated by the addition of a mineral acid, and then well 
washed and shaken in hot water. It is an oily fluid, of a clear 
yellow colour, and does not assume a solid form until it is 
cooled several degrees below the freezing point of water. At 
about 19° or 20° it congeals into white acicular crystals. It 
is very acid, and has a rancid odour and taste. Its specific 
gravity is 0°898. It is not soluble in water, but dissolves in 
alcohol in all proportions, and the spirituous solution acts freely 
on litmus paper. It combines with stearic and margaric acids 
in all proportions, and the perfect separation of the acids in 
such cases is not very easy. Its composition, according to 
Varrentrap, is represented by the formula C,, H,, O,+ HO. 

Oleic acid may be distilled in vacuo without undergoing any 
change; but if atmospheric air be admitted, a small portion 
only passes over unaltered, while the greater part is decom- 
posed, and some carbon remains in the retort. 

1 At. sebacic acid C,, H, O, 
3 At. carbonic acid C, O; 
Hydrocarburet C,, Hy, 
Residual carbon C, 


2 Atoms hydrated oleic acid, C,, Hz) O19, produce 


Sebacic acid was formerly considered as a product of the 
destructive distillation of all fatty bodies, but it has been shown 
by Redtenbacher to arise only from oleic acid. Oleic acid 
removes carbonic acid from bases. ‘The oleates do not crys- 
tallize ; those which are soluble appear as soft, easily fusible 
bodies, and are more soluble in alcohol than in water. The 
oleates of potash and soda, if treated with a sufficient quantity 
of water, become reduced to binoleates, and a portion of the 
base is freed. The oleate, as well as the stearate of soda, 
exists in the bile. The dinoleate of glycerin, usually termed 
olein, exists in small quantity in the various solid fats, but 
forms the principal mass of the liquid fixed oils. It exists as an 
oleaginous fluid, and varies in some respects, especially im regard 


FATS. 75 


to the point of fusion in the fats of different animals. Chevreul 
describes the olein of human fat as a colourless oil, devoid of 
odour, and of a sweetish taste, which retains its fluid state at 
25°. At a lower temperature it assumes a crystalline acicular 
form. Its specific gravity at 59° is 0-913. One hundred parts 
of boiling alcohol dissolve 123 of olen; when the solution 
cools to 170°, it becomes turbid. It is readily soluble in ether, 
but perfectly insoluble in water. It burns with a clear flame. 
It dissolves camphor, phosphorus, selenium, the ethereal oils, 
benzoic and many other organic acids. Its composition is re- 
presented by the formula C,, H,, O,,, and is composed of 


1 Atom glycerin . . COC, H, O, 
2 Atoms oleic acid 5 Ge lbs 0} Guz He O15 
2 Atoms water os H, O, 


c. Butyric and its allied acids. Butter contains four volatile 
acids, which stand in a very simple relation to each other, 
namely, butyric acid = C, H, O,, caproie acid = C,, H,, O,, 
capryllic acid — Cy H,, O,, and capric acid — C,, H,, O,. 
Butter sometimes affords, instead of butyric and caproic acids, a 
distinct acid, vaccinic acid, which appears to be equal to the 
sum of those two acids, minus 1 atom of oxygen, and is very 
readily decomposed into them. Two of these acids, the capryllic 
and vaccinic, were discovered only a few months ago, by Lerch, 
a German chemist. The following isthe method that he gives 
for their separation : 

“ Fresh butter is completely saponified with potash in a still, 
the soap decomposed in the vessel with dilute sulphuric acid, 
the head then luted on, and the aqueous liquid drawn off to 
within a fourth. Fresh water is then added to it, which is 
again distilled off, and this operation continued as long as the 
water which passes over possesses any acid reaction. In this 
manner the volatile fat acids are carried over just as the essen- 
tial oils ; the action of the atmosphere is moreover entirely ex- 
cluded. From four to five pints of a milky liquid are obtained 
from a pound of butter, on the surface of which float drops of 
oil and particles of hard or smeary fat. The distilled water is 
immediately saturated in the receiver with barytic water, and 
allowed to stand well closed till the end of the distillation. When 
the distillation is finished, the still is cleansed, and the liquid 
saturated with barytic water, evaporated in it, with the head on, 


76 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


to about the twentieth part, and the still hot concentrated ley 
then reduced to dryness in a retort. 

“The saline mass obtained in this manner consists of two por- 
tions, one easy, the other difficult of solution. The more so- 
Inble portion consists, according to circumstances, of butyrate 
and caproate of baryta, or solely of the barytic salt of vaccinic 
acid ; but in this case there is little or no butyric or caproic 
acid present. The portion difficult of solution consists of the 
baryta salts of two distinct acids, which Chevreul described to- 
gether as caprate of baryta. The more insoluble portion 
amounts to about the twentieth part of the soluble, and the en- 
tire mass to about the tenth part of the saponified butter. To 
separate the different salts, the residuary saline mass is boiled 
with about 5 or 6 parts of water ; one portion dissolves, the other 
remains behind. The solution of the readily soluble salts is set 
aside to crystallize; if, on the first crystallization, the crystals 
which separate have the appearance of benzoate of lime, and do 
not effloresce, 7. e. if they are caproate of baryta, the butyrate of 
baryta has still to be sought for in the solution ; but if nests of 
small crystals form, which quickly effloresce, and resemble nests 
of the native carbonate of lime, it is vaccinate of baryta, and it 
is then unnecessary to look for butyrate and caproate of baryta. 

“The circumstances under which butter contains vaccinic acid 
or butyric and caproic acids are not known. ‘The butter of 
1842, and likewise that of the following winter, contained, in 
several experiments, not a trace of any other easily soluble salt 
of baryta than the vaccinate ; while the butter in the summer 
of 1843 contaimed no vaccinic acid, but only the other two. 

“The soluble saline mass, containing the butyric and caproic 
acids is dissolved in water and evaporated to crystallization, in 
order to separate them. Long silky needles, aggregated in 
bundles, separate even in the first crystallizations ; and if the 
solution has been sufficiently concentrated, nearly the whole of 
the caproate salt is deposited. The entire solution solidifies to 
a paste of minute needles, which are separated by pressure from 
the mother-ley, and purified by recrystallization. The remaining 
ley is now allowed to crystallize spontancously, which is best 
effected by exposure to the sun; at first a little caproate of ba- 
ryta still separates, the form of the crystal then changes, laminze 
of mother-of-pearl lustre make their appearance, and all the 


FATS. a7 


subsequent crystallizations are nearly pure butyrate of baryta, 
which is purified by recrystallization. 

“The saline mass of difficult solution is dissolved in just so 
much boiling water as is requisite for complete solution, and is 
filtered while hot. During the cooling, the liquid becomes filled 
with minute scales of caprate of baryta, of a fatty lustre, which 
subside in the form ofa crystalline precipitate. The decanted 
mother-ley is again evaporated one fourth, when a fresh quan- 
tity of caprate of baryta separates. This salt is purified by re- 
crystallization. The mother-ley now contains the capryllate in 
solution ; it is evaporated by exposure to the sun, when the salt 
separates in minute granules and verrucous masses, which are 
obtained pure by recrystallization. 

“This is the best method of separating these salts from each 
other ; an absolute separation is impossible, for there always re- 
main mixed crystals and leys, which in small quantities are not 
worth while working.””! 

The butyrate of baryta is much the most soluble of these 
salts, requiring only 2°77 parts of water. On decomposing it 
by adding dilute sulphuric acid to its solution we obtain butyric 
acid, in the form of a colourless or faintly yellow oleaginous 
fluid. 

Butyrie acid possesses an unpleasant odour, which calls to 
mind at the same time that of acetic acid and of rancid butter. 
It is soluble in every proportion in water and alcohol, and more 
soluble in ether than the other acids of the same group. Its 
specific gravity is 0-963 at 59° ; it evaporates easily in the open air, 
boils under ordinary pressure at about 327°, and distils without 
undergoing any perceptible alteration. Its vapour is inflam- 
mable, and burns with a blue flame. A continued cold of 4° 
does not produce any change in the state of the butyric acid ; 
its taste is strongly acid and burning ; it attacks and disorga- 
nizes the skin in the same manner as the strongest acids. 

The chemical relations of this acid have been made an object 
of especial research by Chevreul, Pelouze and Gelis, and Lerch ; 
and numerous butyrates and butyric ether have been formed, 
and submitted to careful investigation and analysis. 


1 Ann. der Chem. und Pharm. xlix, p. 212, as translated in Number 45 of the 
Chemical Gazette. 


78 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


The only compound of butyric acid that concerns us at present 
is the butyrate of glycerin, or butyrin, the essential fatty matter 
of butter. In order to isolate butyrin from the various com- 
pounds with which it is associated in butter, we must adopt the 
following method. Purified butter must be kept for some days 
at a temperature of about 66°. At that temperature olein and 
butyrin are liquid, while the solid stearin forms a mass by 
degrees, so that the liquid portion may be decanted off. On 
this decanted oily matter its own bulk of absolute alcohol must 
be poured, the mixture must be left for twenty-four hours, and 
the temperature be regulated to 66°. On distilling off the al- 
cohol from this alcoholic solution a residue of butyrin is left, 
mixed with a little olem. A slightly acid reaction is usually ob- 
served, in consequence of the decomposition of a little of the 
butyrin into butyric acid. This may be removed by digesting 
the butyrin in a mixture of magnesia and water. A butyrate 
of magnesia, soluble in water, is formed, and the butyrin may 
then be obtained perfectly neutral. The removal of all traces 
of olen from butyrin is nearly impossible. 

Butyrin occurs as a colourless oil, which solidifies at 32°, is 
soluble in cold alcohol, but not im water, is devoid of odour, 
and produces no effect on litmus. In a warm atmosphere it 
speedily decomposes, and yields butyric acid. M M. Pelouze 
and Gelis have recently shown that by a peculiar process of 
fermentation butyric acid may be obtained from sugar. They 
recommend the following as the best process for obtaming the 
largest possible amount of butyric acid from this source. 

« A small quantity of casein is mixed with a solution of 
sugar, indicating 10° on the saccharometer, and sufficient chalk 
to saturate the whole of the butyric acid which subsequently 
forms. This mixture is left at a constant temperature of from 
77° to 86°. It soon undergoes very considerable alterations ; 
the fermentation, at first viscous, subsequently lactic, gradually 
becomes butyric. These decompositions are sometimes successive, 
sometimes simultaneous, without its bemg possible to regulate 
their course. The disengagement of gases becomes more abun- 
dant, and analyses show that a period arrives when the free 
hydrogen amounts to a third of the volume of the carbonic 
acid. At this period the butyric fermentation is in all its 
vigour ; when at last, at the end of some weeks, all disengage- 


FATS. 79 


ment of hydrogen has ceased, the operation is at an end, and 
the solution then contains only butyrate of lime.” 

The composition of butyric acid, its proportion which 
amounted in several experiments to above the third of the 
weight of the sugar, the liberation of free hydrogen, and of 
carbonic acid (independent of that which is disengaged from 
the chalk,) admit of our supposing that, under the prolonged 
influence of ferments, sugar is decomposed in the following 
manner : 

Grape-sugar. Butyric acid. 
Co Hi, 01, = C,H, O,+HO+4C0, + 8H +2 HO. 

This formula is merely intended to exhibit the final result, 
for several chemical processes! precede the formation of butyric 
acid. 

By combining the butyric acid formed in this manner with 
glycerin, they obtained a fatty matter that seemed in all 
respects identical with butyrin, as described by Chevreul. 

Fibrin yields butyric acid as one of the products of its 
decomposition: the other products of its putrefaction are 
albumen, carbonic and acetic acids, and ammonia. It may like- 
wise be obtained by heating this substance with potash at a tem- 
perature of from 320° to 356°. A small quantity of a volatile 
fatty acid forms, which remains in combination with the potash, 
whilst ammonia and other volatile products are disengaged. 
This acid has not yet been analysed, but it seems to possess all 
the properties of butyric acid. (Wurtz.) 

Caproic acid is obtained from the caproate of baryta, which 
crystallizes in long silky needles, aggregated into bundles. 

It is an oily limpid liquid with the odour of sweat, and a 
sharp acid taste. Its spec. grav. is 0°922 at 72°; it evaporates 
in the open air ; its boiling point is above 212°, and it is soluble 
in 96 parts of water at 44°°6. It dissolves in alcohol and 
ether. 


' Tt is well known that if a small quantity of casein be introduced into a solution 
of cane-sugar or sugar of milk, lactic acid begins very soon to be formed. The 
butyric acid may be supposed to be formed in the following manner : 

20 eq. of lactic acid (C,,, Hjy) Ojo) == 15 eq. of butyric acid (C15) Hy.) Ogo) + 60 0. 

These 60 eq. of oxygen decompose 6 eq. of lactic acid, and we have— 

6 (C, Hg Og) +60 O=C,, Hy, O,,= 3 CO, + 12 H + 24 HO 
when the carbonic acid is exactly three times the volume of the hydrogen produced. 


80 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


Capryllic acid, at the ordinary temperature, forms a smeary 
mass ; below 50° it crystallizes in needles, which are of difficult 
solution in water, have an acid and acrid taste, and a peculiar 
disagreeable odour. The baryta salt separates from hot solu- 
tions in brilliant lamin, but on spontaneous evaporation in 
white granules. It is anhydrous, is not affected by exposure 
to the air, does not fuse at 212°, and is very sparingly soluble 
in water. 

Capric acid resembles capryllic acid in its properties. The 
baryta salt crystallizes from hot solutions in minute fatty 
needles and scales, and on spontaneous evaporation likewise in 
scales, arranged in dendritic groups; it is very difficult of 
solution, is anhydrous, and is not affected by exposure to 
the air. 

Vaccinic acid. Vaccinate of baryta separates in nests of 
crystals, which have already been described; they contain 
water of crystallization, effloresce very readily in the air, 
become very similar in appearance to chalk, and diffuse a 
strong odour of butter, while pure caproate and butyrate of 
baryta do not effloresce in the least, and have scarcely any 
odour. Vaccinate of baryta is soluble in water to about the 
same extent as butyrate of baryta; the saturated solution is 
thick like oil. When vaccinate of baryta is dissolved in 
water, and again evaporated in a retort, it crystallizes from the 
solution unaltered; but if the crystals are exposed for some 
time to the air, they at last lose nearly all their odour, and 
no longer when dissolved crystallize on evaporation, but in 
their stead crops of caproate and butyrate of baryta are ob- 
tained. The same happens when a solution is exposed to the 
air for any length of time, or boiled in an open dish. No 
baryta separates in this change, no acid vapours are given off, 
and the solution remains perfectly neutral. Vaccimic acid 
therefore saturates exactly the same amount of baryta as the 
two acids which have originated from it; the relative quantity 
of the caproate and butyrate of baryta formed is proportionate 
to the atomic weights of these two salts. If vaccinate of 
baryta is decomposed by sulphuric acid, with free access of air, 
and the separated acid removed by distillation, saturated with 
baryta, and set aside to crystallize, a mixture of caproate and 
butyrate of baryta only is obtained. On adding some solution 


FATS. 81 


of silver to a solution of vaccinate of baryta, a white caseous 
precipitate is formed, which is soon reduced, and smells strongly 
of butyric acid. 

Vaccinic acid has, therefore, evidently the same capacity of 
saturation as caproic and butyric acids together, but probably 
contains less oxygen. 

In all probability these acids form compounds with glycerin, 
and exist in butter as distinct fats. 

The brain contains several distinct fats which have been 
examined by different chemists (Kiihn, Couerbe, Frémy,) and 
found to contain phosphorus and sulphur. Couerbe has given 
to these the names of eleencephol, cerebrot, cephalot, and 
stearaconot. Cephalot is the only one that is saponifiable, 
and which, therefore, comes under the category of the true fats. 
Its fatty acid is unknown; in fact the whole subject of the 
brain-fats requires an entire revision. 

Frémy' has described two fatty acids that exist in the brain 
in combination with soda, to which he has applied the names 
of cerebric and oleophosphoric acids. 

Of the bodies just described, those which act the part of 
bases, never occur naturally in an isolated state; and those 
which act as acids, very seldom. Butyric acid occasionally 
exists in a free state in the urine, and, according to Gmelin, 
in the gastric juice, and occasionally m the cutaneous trans- 
piration. Lecanu states that the margaric and oleic acids 
exist in a free state in the blood. Some of the fatty acids, as 
already observed, exist in the bile and in the cerebral matter, 
in combination with soda, but they are most commonly found 
united with glycerin. 

The contents of the cells of ordinary adipose tissue are a 
mixture of stearin, margarin, and olein; and the marrow of 
the bones has a very similar composition. The relative propor- 
tions of these three substances varies in the fat of different 
animals, which is the reason of the different consistence of 
various fats, The more olein present, the softer and more 
liquid will the fat be: and those fats in which the olein forms 
the principal ingredient are called oils. Those of a mean con- 
sistence are most properly termed fats, while the harder ones 


! Annales de Chimie, 1841. 


82 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


are known as suet. Stearin is the principal constituent of suet ; 
margarin of fat or lard. Human fat affords a good illustration 
of the proper fats. It solidifies at 62°; but the consistence is 
not constant even in the same person—for instance, the fat of 
the kidneys is perfectly solid at 62°, while the fat of the sub- 
cutaneous tissue remains fluid as low as 59°. 


The non-saponifiable fats. 


a, Cholesterin is a normal constituent of the bile, of the 
brain, and of the spinal cord. It has been found by Lecanu, 
Denis, Boudet, Marchand, and Simon, in the blood; by 
Fromherz and Guggert in the vernix caseosa; by Breschet, 
Wohler, and Marchand in hydrocele; by Stromeyer in an 
encysted tumour in the abdomen of a woman; by Breschet 
and Barruel in the ovary and testicle in a diseased state; by 
Caventou in an abscess of the tooth; by Lassaigne in a scirrhous 
structure in the mesocolon; by Guggert in fungus medullaris ; 
by Marchand in medullary sarcoma ; and by Drunty in a vesical 
calculus extracted from a dog. It sometimes exists im a state 
of solution, while in other cases it floats on the surface, either 
in the form of brilliant scales, or of solid masses. It has 
never been found in any of the plants which are used for food; 
but Dumas has found a substance of a similar composition in 
the resin of the pine. 

In order to obtain it from biliary calculi, we must first treat 
these with boiling water, then triturate, dry and pulverize the 
residue, treat it with boiling alcohol, filter it while still hot, and 
allow it to cool very gradually. The cholesterin separates itself 
in the form of white, sparkling, transparent scales. These 
should be collected in a filter, again dissolved in hot alcohol, 
and allowed to recrystallize. In this state it will be tolerably 
pure. Berzelius recommends the previous addition of a few 
drops of caustic potash or ammonia, in order to saponify any 
stearic or margaric acid that may be present. 

In order to obtain it from the brain, that organ must first 
be deprived of all its water, by being finely triturated and then 
placed upon the water-bath. This being fully accomplished it 
’ must be treated with ether, and afterwards with boiling alcohol, 
until these fluids cease to abstract anything more. As the 
alcoholic solution cools, a white powder is precipitated. By 


FATS. 83 


gently distilling the ethereal solution, a residue remains, from 
which cholesterm may be taken up by boiling alcohol; on 
mixing the two alcoholic solutions, evaporating to one fourth, 
and allowing the mixture to cool, a portion of the fat separates 
in the form of a white powder, which consists not merely of 
cholesterin, but also of a substance which is insoluble in cold 
ether, the cerebrot of Couerbe. If, therefore, we treat this fat 
with ether, the cholesterin dissolves, while the cerebrot remains 
unacted on. By evaporation we obtain the cholesterin in a 
crystalline state, and by dissolving it in boiling alcohol and 
allowing it to recrystallize on cooling, we obtain it in a state 
of purity. 

On slowly cooling its alcoholic solution, cholesterin crystal- 
lizes in delicate white nacreous scales. It is devoid of taste 
and smell, is insoluble in water, but dissolves in alcohol and 
in ether. According to Chevreul, 100 parts of boiling alcohol 
of 0°816 dissolve 18 of cholesterin ; if alcohol of 0-840 be used 
only 11-24 parts are taken up: on cooling, the greater part is 
deposited. Kihn states that 1 part of cholesterin is soluble 
in 12-1 of ether at 32°, in 3°7 parts at 59°, and in 2:2 parts of 
boiling ether. Cholesterin is perfectly neutral, of about the 
same specific gravity as water, and at 280° melts into a colour- 
less fluid without undergoing any decomposition. Crystallized 
cholesterin contains about 5:2° of water. It burns with a clear 
flame, like wax, and one of its most striking characteristics is, 
that it is not affected by a solution of caustic potash. 

Its composition is represented by the formula C,. H,, O. 

6. Serolin. This name was given by Boudet to a fatty 
matter which he discovered in the blood. It has been more 
recently found and described by Lecanu and Sanson. In order 
to exhibit it, blood must be first evaporated to dryness on 
the water-bath, and the residue treated with water as long 
as anything continues to be taken up. It must then be dried, 
pulverized, treated with boiling alcohol, and filtered while hot. 
On cooling, the alcohol deposits this fat in flocculi. It must 
be collected on a filter, and washed with cold alcohol. Boudet 
assigns the following characteristics to serolin. It forms flocks 
of a fatty nacreous appearance, is perfectly neutral, and melts 
at 97°. On exposing it to a higher temperature, a portion 
is distilled unchanged, while another part is decomposed into 


84 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


ammoniacal vapour. In water it is perfectly insoluble, in hot 
alcohol of *833 it is only slightly soluble, and separates on cool- 
ing into its original flocculent appearance, since cold alcohol 
exerts no solvent influence over it. It dissolves readily in ether. 
It does not form a soap with caustic potash. Lecanu describes 
the serolin obtained from human serum, as a white, but not 
nacreous, substance, which melts at 95°, is soluble im ether, but 
not in watery alcohol. 

It may be distinguished from other fats by its insolubility in 
cold alcohol; from cholesterin, by its lower poit of fusion. 

Diagnosis. 'The different fats and fatty acids are distin- 
guished by their fusing points, and by their varying degrees of 
solubility in alcohol and ether. 


Lactic, Oxalic, and Acetic Acids. 


1. Lactic acid is regarded by most chemists as a constituent 
of almost all the fluids of the animal body. 

The following is the method recommended by Mitscherlich,! 
for the exhibition of pure lactic acid. Sour whey must be 
evaporated to about one sixth of its volume, and filtered ; the 
phosphoric acid precipitated by lime, and any excess of lime 
separated by oxalic acid. 

After filtration, the liquid must be evaporated to the consis- 
tence of a thick syrup, and the lactic acid extracted with 
alcohol. The alcohol must be removed by evaporation, and the 
residue dissolved in water mixed with carbonate of lead. In 
this manner a solution of lactate of lead is obtained, which, 
after filtration, must be decomposed by sulphate of zine. 
Sulphate of lead is immediately precipitated, and lactate of 
zinc remains in the solution, which must be filtered and evapo- 
rated to incipient crystallization. In this manner we obtain 
crystals of lactate of zinc, a salt only slightly soluble in cold 
water. Lactic acid may be obtained by converting the lactate 
of zine into a lactate of lime or baryta, carefully removing the 
base by the addition of sulphuric acid, and cautious evaporation. 

Pure lactic acid is a colourless liquid, soluble in every pro- 
portion in water and alcohol, of a purely acid taste, and so 
strong and biting as to be almost insupportable. Its formula? is 

CeO; vor (Cr 0.420; 
' Lehrbuch der Chemie, 1837, p. 512. 2 See Appendix I, Note 25. 


ACETIC ACID. 85 


Ata red heat lactates with fixed bases are converted into 
carbonates : 100 parts of the carbonates of potash and soda cor- 
respond to 180-9 and 201-1 parts of the respective lactates of 
those bases. 

There is no ready test by which we can detect the presence 
of lactic acid: it is chiefly distinguished by its negative pro- 
perties. Rules for the quantitative determination of this acid 
and its salts will be found in the chapters on the different fluids 
in which it occurs ; they are founded with various slight modi- 
fications on the method that we have given for the exhibition 
of the acid. 


2. Ovalic acid is not one of the normal constituents of the 
animal organism; it is however, when combined with lime, a very 
common ingredient of morbid urine, and of urinary calculi. 

Oxalate of lime, when obtained by the addition of a soluble 
oxalate to a salt of lime, occurs as a white amorphous powder, 
insoluble in water, alcohol, oxalic and acetic acids, but soluble in 
hydrochloric and nitric acids without effervescence. It leaves, 
when heated to incipient redness, a white residue of carbonate 
of lime, from which the amount of oxalate may be easily calcu- 
lated, for 100 parts of carbonate of lime correspond with 128-9 
of oxalate of lime. After a prolonged exposure to a higher tem- 
perature, the carbonic acid is expelled, and caustic lime remains. 

The occurrence of oxalate of lime in a crystallme state im 
urinary sediments has been shown, by Dr. G. Bird, to be 
much more frequent than was formerly supposed; in fact, 
although the beautiful octohedral forms in which it occurs 
had been noticed some years ago by Vigla, Donné, and other 
French observers, it was not until the appearance of Dr. G. 
Bird’s papers in the ‘ London Medical Gazette’ for 1842, that 
their chemical nature was fully established. 


3. Acetic acid has been found by Tiedemann and Gmelin in 
the gastric juice, by Thenard in the sweat, by Simon in the 
fluid of pemphigus and im saliva, and is asserted by some 
chemists to be a constituent of urine. For its chemical cha- 
racters we must refer to any of our systematic treatises on 
Chemistry : it is sufficient to notice the means by which it may 
be recognized, and its amount determined. Acetic acid may 


86 ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS. 


be detected by its peculiar odour, which is rendered more obvious 
by the application of a gentle warmth. ‘The presence of an 
acetate may be determined by the addition of a little sulphuric 
acid ; the odour of the liberated acetic acid is at once rendered 
perceptible. The addition of perchloride of iron to free 
acetic acid produces hardly any visible change, but if it be 
added to a solution of an acetate, a deep blood-red colour is 
produced. When acetates and free acetic acid are mixed up with 
a large quantity of other animal matters, the best method of 
proceeding is to separate the free acetic acid by distillation. 
The residue must be evaporated, extracted several times with 
alcohol, and the alcoholic residue mixed with a little sulphuric 
acid, and distilled. The first distillation gives the free acetic 
acid, the second the acetic acid im a state of combination. 
The amount of acetic acid may be determined by saturating 
the distilled fluids with potash, evaporating to dryness, and 
taking up the acetate of potash with alcohol of °833. The 
acetate of potash obtained by the evaporation of the alcoholic 
solution is frequently mixed with a little chloride of sodium, 
the amount of which (if appreciable) may be determined by 
nitrate of silver. 

At a red heat the combinations of acetic acid with non- 
volatile bases are converted into carbonates. 


END OF INTRODUCTION. 


CHEMISTRY OF MAN. 


CHAPTER I. 


ON THE PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF COMPOUND ANIMAL 
SUBSTANCES. 


Zoochemical analyses are instituted for the purpose of ascer- 
taining, either quantitatively or qualitatively, the proximate or 
ultimate constituents of animal substances. It is requisite in 
physiological and pathological chemistry that equal attention 
should be paid te both these modes of investigation, for there 
is this great distinction between the chemistry of inorganic and 
of organic bodies, that in the former case the determination of 
the proximate principles can be inferred from that of the ulti- 
mate constituents, while in the latter case no such rule holds 
good, and the two species of analyses (the proximate and ulti- 
mate) must be conducted separately and distinctly. In the in- 
vestigation of the variations in the constitution of the blood, 
whether dependent during health upon age, sex, or temperament, 
or during disease upon various pathological states of the system ; 
in the determination of the constituents of milk, sweat, or pus ; 
in the detection of sugar, urea, or bilin, in the various fluids, 
in which normally they are absent ; in these and all similar cases 
ultimate analysis will avail us nothing, and we must have re- 
course to tests for the substances themselves, or for some of 
their proximate principles. Investigations of this nature will, 
moreover, do very little for the advancement of pathological or 
physiological knowledge, unless they are viewed in relation to 
a considerable number of similar analyses, conducted under pre- 
cisely corresponding circumstances; for in consequence of the 
necessary variation that is constantly occurring in the animal 
fluids, each analysis can only be regarded as the representative of 


88 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


one of innumerable varieties, all of which (within certain limits) 
are equally likely to occur. It is by such a course alone that we 
can hope to be able to deduce important and trustworthy con- 
clusions regarding the state of the animal fluids in health, and 
their various deviations from the normal standard, in different 
states of disease. 

A large number of perfectly distinct substances enter into the 
composition of the blood and urme ; neither of these fluids can, 
however, be regarded as true chemical combinations, but as 
mixtures of many such combinations, which in their turn are 
further subject to much variation. The study of these variations 
in the blood and urme constitutes one of the most important 
branches of animal chemistry ; but in consequence of the im- 
mense labour attendant upon a complete analysis of these fluids, it 
becomes expedient to confine our attention to their most impor- 
tant constituents, In the same manner as the mineralogist seeks 
only to determine the proportion of ore in a given quantity of a 
mineral, or the vegetable analyst to ascertain the proportions of 
sugar, gum, starch, and albumen, while he neglects the non-nu- 
tritive substances, the fibre, acids, resins, colourmg matters, &c. 

All compound animal substances that can fall within the 
range of our investigation must be embraced in one of the fol 
lowing classes, the solid, the flmid, or the gaseous. 

The animal fluids (to which we shall first devote our atten- 
tion) differ extremely in their composition, but a general scheme 
may be laid down for their investigation, if we previously know 
that certain substances are not present, and therefore need not 
be sought for. Thus, neither urea, uric acid, pepsin, nor bilin 
will usually be sought for in the milk or im the brain, because 
it is well known that their formation is limited to certain organs ; 
neither will hematin, globulin, nor butyrin be looked for in the 
bile, nor fibrin in the sweat or in the saliva, nor glutin nor 
chondrin in any of the normal fluids. 

The principle upon which these investigations are conducted 
is dependent on certain questions, which are to be answered by 
the analysis. Thus in the analysis of the blood, the principal 
component parts, the water, albumen, hematin, globulin and 
fibrin, are usually determined; but if it be requisite that the 
analysis should be more fully carried out, we must separate the 
hematin from the globulin, isolate the fats, extractive matters, 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES. 89 


and salts, and determine their individual proportions. This is 
the plan that I have usually adopted, and in some cases I have 
added the determination of sugar, urea, and hemaphein. The 
execution of such a comparatively simple scheme as this is a 
matter requiring considerable time and labour; and if it were 
required that we should carry out the analysis still further, and 
separate the various fats, the different combinations of the fatty 
acids, the varieties of extractive matter, and finally the different 
salts, our task, in the present state of our knowledge, would be 
one of great difficulty ; and in consequence of the minute pro- 
portions in which some of these substances exist in the blood, 
it would be necessary for us to operate upon a much larger 
quantity of the fluid than we are usually able to obtain. This 
method of investigation will probably in ashort time be deemed 
insufficient, for as soon as we have an accurate knowledge of 
the mode of formation of the extractive matter, its separation and 
determination will be of the highest importance in explaining 
many of the phenomena of the metamorphoses of the blood. 

The same is the case with respect to the urme. The forma- 
tion of a perfect quantitative analysis of this complicated fluid 
is an extremely difficult (if not an impossible) task, in conse- 
quence of the facility with which new products are developed 
during the progress of the investigation. The course usually 
pursued has been, therefore, the separation of those constituents 
which are apparently most important, the urea, uric acid, salts, 
and extractive matter; im some cases the estimation of sugar 
and albumen has been added. The instances in which the se- 
paration of the extractive matter imto its three principal groups, 
and the individual analysis of the salts, have been undertaken, 
are still more rare. 

It has been already observed that a single isolated analysis 
is of very little intrinsic value, in substances of so varying a na- 
ture as the blood or urine. The only method by which we can 
hope to throw any light upon the leading alterations that occur 
in these fluids is by the comparison of the results obtained 
from a series of analyses; and if we were desirous of merely 
ascertaining so simple a fact as the determination of the pa- 
thological states in which either an excess or a deficiency of 
fibrin and blood-corpuscles occurs in the blood, and the relation 
that exists between such pathological states and such modifica- 


90 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


tions of the vital fluid, science would be more benefited by the 
investigation, than by the performance of a few very perfect 
analyses, which did not tend to elucidate any particular point. 

The best methods for the analysis of the various animal sub- 
stances which are treated of in this volume, will be found in 
their proper places. We will, however, give a preliminary 
sketch of the course that should be adopted, if a fluid, of whose 
nature we are ignorant, be placed in our hands for analysis. 

Such a fluid may contain, 

1. The protein-combinations: fibrin, albumen, casein, glo- 
bulin.1 

11. Pyin. 

11. Extractive matters: water-extract, spirit-extract, alco- 
hol-extract, and their proximate constituents. 

tv. Sugars: Diabetic sugar, and sugar of milk. 

v. Bilin, with the products of its metamorphosis. 

vi. Urea. 

vit. The fats: olein, stearin, margarin, butyrin, cholesterin, 
and serolin. 

vit. Colouring matters : the pigments of the blood and bile. 

tx. The acids of the animal body : 

a. Fatty acids. 
3. Other organic acids. 
. Inorganic acids. 
x. The bases of the animal body. 


General physical analysis. 


1. If the fluid contain flocculi or coagulated matters, they 
are generally composed of fibrin, which by its spontaneous 
coagulation frequently includes other substances in a state of 
mechanical suspension. The whole fluid will sometimes as- 
sume a gelatinous consistence, as has been observed in certain 
products of exudation; in other cases it presents an appearance 
of separation, one portion assuming the form of a cake or clot, 
whilst the remainder continues fluid, as in the well-known in- 
stance of the blood. On placing these clots, &c., in distilled 


' Crystallin, or the modification of casein that occurs in the crystalline lens, is not 
included in this scheme, since it is not known to occur in any of the animal fluids. 

2 [Pyin being tritoxide of protein, must now be regarded as a true protein-com- 
pound. The binoxide of protein must also be included in the same category. ] 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES. 91 


water, the substances which are inclosed by the fibrin gradually 
separate themselves from it, as for instance albumen, blood- 
corpuscles, &c., and the fibrin remains devoid of colour, very 
small in proportion to the clot from which it has been obtained, 
and forming a membranous, stringy, or flocculent mass. 

If the fluid has an acid reaction, the flocculi may arise from 
coagulated casein, or caseous substances. In this case dis- 
tilled water has no effect on them. The existence of casein 
in milk is universally known. Other fluids which contain 
caseous principles, as for imstance, mucus and saliva, usually 
maintain an alkaline reaction for a considerable period, and 
thus hold the casein in solution. Pus has usually a neutral 
reaction, occasionally however pus from the lungs is acid. 

If the flocculi are observed to be floating on the surface of 
the fluid, if they exhibit a frothy appearance, or seem more or 
less globular, are of a whitish or yellow colour, and possessed 
of little tenacity, they are composed of mucus, and the micro- 
scope will reveal the presence of mucus-granules. A tenacious 
substance of a yellow or brownish colour, and not unfrequently 
containing blood, is occasionally found to be deposited in cer- 
tain animal fluids, for instance, in the urme during phthisis 
vesice. It is possessed of more elasticity than mucus, and is 
very probably composed partially of fibrin, although it is usually 
regarded as pus. 

2. If with the aid of the microscope we can detect blood- 
corpuscles in the fluid, we may infer the presence of globulin 
and hematin. We recognize the blood-corpuscles, and dis- 
tinguish them from other objects by their discoid form, and 
their yellow colour. When blood is mixed with a serous or 
watery fiuid, it frequently happens that the discoid form is no 
longer apparent ; if however a solution of common salt, or of 
muriate of ammonia be added to a portion of the fluid, the 
characteristic shape of the blood-corpuscles will be again ren- 
dered perceptible. Fluids in which blood-corpuscles are found, 
are always of a reddish tinge, and invariably contain albumen. 

3. The microscope further enables us to detect the follow- 
ing solid forms in fluids: a, fat-vesicles; 4, chyle-corpuscles ; 
c, mucus-corpuscles ; d, pus-corpuscles ; e, epithelium-cells ; 
f, saliva-corpuscles ; g, various crystalline forms of salts, uric 
acid, cholesterin, &c. 


92 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


If the fluid be very viscid and tenacious, mucus-corpuscles 
are sure to be detected by the microscope: should it yield an 
ammoniacal odour as if decomposition were going on, the 
viscidity may be due to the action of the ammonia that has 
been formed. 

4. If the fluid have an acid reaction, a free acid must be 
present. In most cases this is lactic,’ occasionally however 
acetic acid. The latter acid may be recognized by the pe- 
culiar odour evolved on the application of heat. It may 
also be recognized (if the fluid be not very deeply coloured) by 
the blood-red tint that is produced by the addition of the 
perchloride of iron, after the free acid has been thoroughly 
neutralized by ammonia. If acetic be the only free acid, by 
the time the fluid has been evaporated nearly to dryness, all 
acid reaction will have disappeared ; if however free lactic acid 
be present, the residue which is left after evaporation will still 
have an acid reaction. 

If the fluid have an alkaline reaction, either a free alkali or 
an alkaline carbonate must be present. Free ammonia may 
be recognized by its peculiar odour, and by the vapour which 
is developed on the approximation of a glass rod moistened 
with hydrochloric acid. 

5. If the fluid have a sweetish taste, it contains sugar. 
The sweetness is however sometimes not preceptible until the 
fluid has been evaporated to the consistence of a syrup, or even 
till the syrup has been treated with alcohol of -900, and the 
alcoholic solution evaporated. When the presence of sugar 
is suspected, the various tests mentioned in page 67, more 
especially Trommer’s test, should be applied. If the fluid has 
a bitter taste, more or less resembling that of bile, it contains 
either Jilin or the products of its metamorphosis. The indica- 
tions afforded by a well-marked saline or acid taste are 
sufficiently obvious. 

6. If the fluid be of a blood-red colour, we may conclude 
that hematin is present ; and if blood-corpuscles are detected 
by the microscope, we have certain proof of the existence of 
hematin, globulin, and albumen. Globulin and hematin may 


' [The presence of this acid in the animal fluids has been recently disputed by 
Liebig and Enderling; there are, however, too many chemists who assert that they 
have detected it, to allow us to regard the question as settled in the negative. ] 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES, 93 


however be occasionally present, when, even after the addi- 
tion of a solution of salt, sugar, or iodine no blood-corpuscles 
can be detected; in this case the latter are in a state of 
perfect solution. 

When the fluid is of a dark brown, or blackish-red colour, 
hematin is the colouring constituent. If the fluid be of a 
clear brown or yellow colour, hemaphzin is almost sure to be 
the origin of the tint, especially if any taste of bile be percep- 
tible- Biliphein will also communicate a yellow, brown, or 
ereenish-brown colour ; in this case there is frequently a bitter 
taste, and on the addition of nitric acid, there is always a 
change of colour into green or blue, and yellow. 


Qualitative analysis. 


Having poured the fluid into proper test-glasses, we carry on 
our investigations in the following manner : 

1. If, on the addition of very dilute hydrochloric acid, a 
precipitate be thrown down, we see whether it will dissolve in 
an excess of the test.1. Assuming that the solution is effected, 
ferrocyanide of potassium is added ; if this test instantly throws 
down a white or yellow precipitate, one or more of the protein- 
compounds (enumerated in 1) are present. 

In order to ascertain which of the protein-compounds 
has yielded these indications,” a portion of the fluid is boiled : 
if it become turbid, and if the turbidity commence and be 
most distinct at the surface, or if the fluid coagulate, then 
albumen is present; in this case nitric acid and bichloride of 
mercury will throw down copious precipitates. If the fluid 
become turbid on the application of heat, and the coagulum 
assume a red tint, then globulin and hematin are also present, 
although the microscope may have failed in detecting blood- 
corpuscles: in this case, however, the fluid is always of a 
rather pink or reddish tint. 

If the fluid does not coagulate on the application of heat, 
casein, or one of the caseous substances must be present. 


1 If very dilute hydrochloric acid be employed, the albumen will not be precipi- 
tated. (See p. 18.) I prefer hydrochloric to acetic acid, because the latter throws 
down pyin with the protein-compounds. 

2 Fibrin is recognized by its spontaneons separation, and need not be sought for in 
the manner indicated in the text. 


94 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


In this case heat will develop a pellicle on the surface, and 
acetic acid will throw down a precipitate, which is soluble 
in an excess of the test: the acid must therefore be added 
with caution. 

It must not however be forgotten that if much albuminate 
of soda, and at the same time no free albumen be present in 
the fluid, no coagulation will occur on the application of heat, 
but a pellicle will be formed on the surface. ‘This is however 
a case of very rare occurrence, and the difficulty may be 
readily solved by the addition of acetic acid which will precipi- 
tate casein but not albumen. If a fluid which contains 
casein presents a whitish turbid appearance (as for imstance, 
milk, the milky fluid which is found in the breasts during the 
later stages of pregnancy, the urme in certain pathological 
states, &c.) the presence of butter, and in most instances, of 
sugar, may be inferred. 

If the ferrocyanide of potassium does not produce any tur- 
bidity in the fluid which has been previously acidulated with 
dilute hydrochloric acid, no protein-compound is present. 

2. If the addition of acetic acid to the fluid renders it 
turbid, or throws down a precipitate, which does not redissolve 
in an excess of the test, then pyim or mucin! is present. In 
this case, a copious precipitate, insoluble in an excess of the 
test, is thrown down by alum. Im order to show that the 
precipitate contains no casein, we may dissolve it in dilute 
hydrochloric acid, and add ferrocyanide of potassium: no pre- 
cipitate will be thrown down.? 

3. If allantoin, uric acid, or hippuric acid are suspected 
to be present, a considerable quantity of the fluid must be 
boiled in order to coagulate any albumen that may be present, 
and must then be filtered and evaporated to one fourth of its 
original volume. Fluids of this nature are generally of a 
yellowish colour, may be either clear or turbid, and may or 
may not contain albumen. 

In the examination of the allantoic fluid, crystals of allan- 
toin are gradually formed, which, after being purified by 


! [Mucin is the peculiar animal matter of mucus; a brief notion of its leading cha- 
racters is given in the chapter on the “ Secretions of Mucous Membranes.” ] 

* As chondrin and glutin are not constituents of any of the animal fluids, we have 
deemed it unnecessary to notice them in the text. 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES. 95 


recrystallization, and dissolved in water, cannot be precipitated 
by acetate of lead, nitrate of silver, or nitrate of the black 
oxide of mercury. 

If the fluid, during evaporation, gives off an urimous odour 
some hydrochloric acid must be added, and it must be allowed 
to stand for some time. [I acicular crystals are formed, which, 
after being purified by recrystallization, and dissolved in water 
containing enough alkali to neutralize the acid of the crystals, 
give a white precipitate with the above-named tests, an orange 
with the perchloride of iron, and when moistened with nitric 
acid, and warmed, do not assume a purple-red colour, they 
consist of hippuric acid. 

If however the crystals are very minute, are not readily 
dissolved in water, and give, when moistened with nitric acid 
and warmed, a purple-red stain, they are uric acid crystals. 

4. If the fluid which we are examining is of a brownish 
yellow colour, and if on treating a little of it with an excess 
of nitric acid, the colour successively changes to green, blue 
and red, then biliphzein is present. 

5. On evaporating a portion of the fluid to dryness, pulver- 
ising it, and boiling it with ether, we obtain, by the evaporation 
of the ethereal solution, a fatty residue. If it be fluid, it is 
composed of olein, if it have a tendency to be solid, either 
stearin or margarin, or both are also present. The fatty 
acids, and probably free lactic acid, with traces of other sub- 
stances may be present, especially if the ether contained any 
alechol or water. These substances remain in solution, on 
washing the fatty residue with water. The lactic acid may be 
easily recognized by its acid reaction ; and the fatty acids may 
be detected by the addition of acetate of lead or acetate of 
copper to their alcoholic solutions. They are completely pre- 
cipitated in this manner, and a residue of pure fat is left, which 
must be again washed and the water removed by evaporation. 
The fat must then be saponified ; if a portion of it resists this 
process, cholesterin or serolin, or both, must constitute a por- 
tion of the fatty residue. They must be taken up by ether, 
after the saponified portion has been evaporated to dryness. 
Serolin is less soluble in alcohol, and melts at a lower tem- 
perature than cholesterin,’ by which means the two fats may 


1 [Serolin melts at 95°, cholesterin at about 275°.] 


96 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


be distinguished. The soaps which have been formed must 
be decomposed by hydrochloric acid. If, on the addition of 
the acid, a smell of rancid butter is developed, then butyric, 
and also capric and caproic acids are present. The vari- 
ations in their melting points will enable us to determine 
approximately the proportions of oleic, margaric, and stearic 
acids. 

6. The residue not taken up by ether, must be treated 
with anhydrous alcohol, which will take up the following 
substances: salts of the fatty acids, especially soda-salts, as 
well as any fat that had escaped the action of the ether, 
also urea, bilin and the acids of the bile, biliverdin, alcohol- 
extract, heemaphzein, acetates, and lactates, a class of substances 
which it is by no means easy to distinguish, and is still more 
difficult to isolate. If a spirituous solution of chloride of 
barium be added to the alcoholic solution, and a green precipi- 
tate is thrown down, then biliverdin is present ; we may also 
calculate with tolerable certainty (especially if the alcoholic 
solution has a bitter, bilious taste) on the presence of bilin, 
and the acids of the bile. An alcoholic solution of sulphuric 
acid must now be added to the alcohol-solution that we are 
testing, as long as any sulphates are precipitated. The solution 
must now be filtered, and the alcohol, which still has an acid 
reaction if any acetates are present, must be removed by dis- 
tillation. On treating the residue with water, the fatty acids, 
if they existed in combination with saline bases, will remain 
undissolved, and must be removed by filtration. A portion 
of this watery solution must be evaporated to the consistence 
of a syrup, and allowed to cool; if, on the addition of an 
excess of nitric acid, there are formed, either at once or after 
some time, leafy or stellar crystalline groups, then urea is 
present. Another portion must be treated with dilute sul- 
phuric acid, and allowed to digest for some time. If bilin, 
and the products of its metamorphosis, are present, a viscid or 
oily acid, (insoluble in the acid fluid,) and a precipitate of an 
extremely unpleasant bitter taste, are formed. The fluid sepa- 
rated from these substances must be digested with pounded 
marble, or (which is better) with carbonate of baryta, in order 
to remove the sulphuric acid. It must then be boiled with 
carbonate of zinc; if it contain lactic acid, crystals of lactate 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES. 97 


of zinc will be obtained by evaporation. The extractive matter 
and hemaphein will be left as a residue. 

Tf neither bilin, biliverdin, nor the acids of the bile are pre- 
sent, the investigation may be much simplified. The soda may 
be separated from the alcoholic solution as a sulphate ; we may 
evaporate, separate the fatty acids by means of water, boil the 
residue with carbonate of zinc, and filter the solution. By this 
means we can separate the lactic acid. The urea may be se- 
parated from the alcohol-extract by oxalic acid, of which any 
excess may be removed by digestion with carbonate of lead. 

We may be easily convinced of the presence of the alcohol- 
extract by observing the precipitates which are thrown down 
by the addition of infusion of galls and a solution of iodine. 

The bases, which were present in the alcoholic solution in 
combination with acids, are now combined with sulphuric acid. 
They usually are soda and potash. 

7. The residue of (6), which was not taken up by absolute 
alcohol, must now be treated with alcohol of :883, which will 
take up sugar of milk, diabetic sugar, spirit-extract (which is 
usually of a brown colour in consequence of the presence of 
hemaphein,) chloride of sodium, phosphates, and probably lac- 
tates. If the quantity of sugar (of either of the above kinds) 
is not very minute, a portion of it will usually crystallize either 
on the cooling of the spirituous solution or by spontaneous 
evaporation. The presence of the sugar may, however, be easily 
recognized by the sweet taste of the spirituous solution after 
evaporation. If the solution be evaporated to the consistence 
of an extract, and then treated with cold alcohol of -850, the 
greater part of the sugar will remain undissolved, while most of 
the extractive matter will be taken up. The presence of the 
extractive matter may be determined partly by the brown colour 
of the spirituous solution, and more decidedly by the precipi- 
tates which are caused by the addition of bichloride of mercury, 
acetate of copper, and tannin. The spirit-extract usually evolves 
during evaporation a peculiar odour, somewhat resembling that 
of toasted bread. On evaporating a portion of the spirituous 
solution to dryness, and incinerating the residue, the ash will 
be found to consist of chloride of sodium, phosphates, and (if 
any lactates are present) carbonates of potash and soda. These 
may be separated in the ordinary manner. 


Y 
‘ 


98 PROXIMATE ANALYSIS OF 


8. The residue not acted on by alcohol of *850 must be 
dissolved in water, in which, if no protem-compounds are 
present, it will dissolve without leaving a residue, although the 
solution may not be clear. In this solution there will be con- 
tained pyin, ptyalin, water-extract, phosphates, and perhaps 
some chloride of sodium. The pyin is recognized by the 
precipitate afforded by acetic acid. The ptyalin, when it is 
present only in small quantities, and is mixed with extractive 
matter, is not easily detected; the only course we can adopt 
is to precipitate the whole of the extractive matter of the 
water-extract with the basic acetate of lead. A stream of sul- 
phuretted hydrogen must then be passed through the fluid in 
order to precipitate the lead. The liquid, after filtration or 
decantation, must be evaporated to the consistence of a syrup, 
and the ptyalin precipitated by alcohol. 

I may here remark that, in pursuing the directions laid 
down in (7), we do not succeed in obtaining all the spirit- 
extract that exists in the residue of (6). Hence in practice it 
is better to dissolve the residue of (6) in a little water, so as to 
reduce it to the consistence of a syrup, and then to precipitate 
with alcohol of ‘833. The salts may be obtained by incinerat- 
ing a portion of the evaporated fluid. 

In the last six paragraphs we have assumed that no protein- 
compounds are present. If, however, this should not be the 
case,—if some of the constituents of the blood, as, for instance, 
globulin or hematin, exist in the fluid, a different course must 
be pursued. The presence of globulin and hematin, and, con- 
sequently, of albumen, may be easily ascertained. The fluid 
must be boiled, evaporated on the water-bath to dryness, and 
the residue reduced to a fine powder. The fat must be taken 
up with ether, and the urea, alcohol-extract, bilin, with its 
acids, and any hemaphein and lactates that may be present, 
with anhydrous alcohol. The residue must be boiled im spirit 
of -915 until it ceases to communicate any additional red colour- 
ing matter to that fluid. In this way we shall obtain the 
globulin, hematin, hemapheein, sugar, extractive matters, and 
several salts, in a state of solution. The greater portion of the 
globulin and hematin is thrown down as the fluid cools; the 
turbid supernatant fluid is then evaporated on the water-bath 
to a small residue, and treated with alcohol, which precipitates 


COMPOUND ANIMAL SUBSTANCES. 99 


the remaining portion of those two constituents. Other sub- 
stances are contained in the spirituous solution, which may be 
distinguished and separated by the rules already given. 

The residue not taken up by the alcohol of -915 must be 
treated for some time with water, by which pyin, ptyalin, and 
water-extract will be taken up. The albumen remains as a 
residue, usually more or less reddened by a little hematin. 

If the fluid be very rich in albumen, this course does not 
succeed, inasmuch as we are unable to obtain a complete sepa- 
tion of those substances which are soluble in dilute alcohol, as 
sugar, urea, salts, and extractive matters. The following simple 
modification may in that case be adopted. The protein-com- 
pounds must be precipitated by anhydrous alcohol. A spiritu- 
ous solution is thus obtained, which, even when concentrated, 
holds the urea, sugar, &c., in solution, while the protein-com- 
pounds (at least the albumen) are reduced to an insoluble con- 
dition. The coagulated protein-compounds are always mixed 
up with a certain amount of foreign matters, as, for instance, 
water-extract, which cannot be easily separated. After the 
removal of the albumen, &c., the spirituous solution must be 
evaporated to the consistence of a syrup. On the addition of 
anhydrous alcohol, sugar, spirit-extract, any albumen that had 
escaped the former process, and some other substances, will be 
precipitated. The alcoholic solution must be evaporated, and 
the residue dissolved in water, by which means the fat will se- 
parate itself. The fat is, however, difficult to remove, in con- 
sequence of the slow and torpid manner in which the fluid 
permeates the filter. It is better, therefore, to evaporate the 
alcoholic solution, at a very gentle temperature, to dryness, and 
then to take up the fat with pure ether. 

In searching for minute quantities of urea in alcoholic solu- 
tions of concentrated animal fluids, it frequently happens that, 
after evaporation of the alcohol, the removal of the fat, and the 
solution of the residue in water, the action of nitric acid on the 
urea is much impeded by the presence of compounds of the 
fatty acids. I therefore usually remove the bases from the 
alcoholic solution by means of sulphuric acid, which liberates 
the fatty acids, and allows of their removal with the fat by 
means of ether. The sulphuric acid should be much diluted 
with strong alcohol; and as it is of importance that there 


100 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


be no excess of the acid, it must be added guttatim, and only 
so long as it produces a precipitate, which sometimes is not 
observed for several hours after the addition of the acid. The 
effect of the sulphuric acid should first be tried on a small 
portion of the fluid. 

If it is difficult to lay down general rules for the quali- 
tative analysis of all the proximate constituents that can 
by any possibility occur in the fluids of the animal body, it 
may easily be conceived that an attempt to lay down similar 
rules for quantitative analysis would involve much greater diffi- 
culties. Such a general quantitative scheme is, however, not 
required, since quantitative analyses are always preceded by, 
and based on, qualitative investigations. The fluids most 
troublesome to analyse are the blood and the urine, on ac- 
count of the large number of different substances that always 
occur in them. ‘The rules for the quantitative analysis of the 
various fluids will be found in the respective chapters on the 
blood, milk, urine, &c. 


CHAPTER II. 
THE CIRCULATING FLUIDS. 


The Blood. 


Tue following scheme will explain the arrangement which 
we have adopted for the general consideration of the blood. 


1. The General Physiological Chemistry of the Blood. 

Its general physiological and chemical relations ; the deve- 
lopment of the blood-corpuscles ; the phenomena of circulation 
and respiration; the metamorphosis of the blood, and animal 
heat. 


2. The Special Chemistry of the Blood. 
The method of analysing the blood. 
Healthy blood. 

Diseased blood. 


BLOOD. 10) 
1. The general physiological chemistry of the blood. 


General physical relations of the blood. 

The blood, while moving in the living body, consists princi- 
pally of a nearly colourless fluid, in which the blood-corpuscles 
are swimming; in consequence, however, of these corpuscles 
being too minute to be distinguished by the naked eye, it 
appears, among the higher classes of animals, as an opaque 
and intensely red fluid. 

In the majority of the lower (invertebrate) animals, the 
blood is white ; it is however red in the annelida, colourless in 
most of the mollusca, but in many of the snails of a milk-white 
colour; in the Helix pomatia of a sky-blue, and in the Pla- 
norbis corneus, of a dark amethyst colour. In the dorsal 
vessels of insects it is usually transparent, and of different 
colours ; it is, for mstance, green in the Orthoptera, yellow in 
the silkworm, orange in the caterpillar of the willow-moth, 
and of a dark brown colour in most of the beetles.1. The 
blood-corpuscles of red blood contain within their coat, or 
shell, a fluid impregnated with globulin and hematin, and a 
nucleus, which may be easily recognized in the larger cor- 
puscles. 

The blood of the mammalia is a somewhat thick, viscid 
fluid, with a specific gravity which varies, according to dif- 
ferent authors, from 1041 to 1082. In a large number of 
experiments made upon the blood of man, the ox, and the 
horse, I found it to be between 1051 and 1058. The average 
was 1042, which corresponds very nearly with the statement 
of Berzelius. 

[The average specific gravity of human blood may be fixed 
at 1055 according to Nasse,? and at 1056 according to Zim- 
mermann.? The blood of man is always thicker, and at least 
one thousandth heavier than that of woman; in a state of 
health it is always above 1053 in man, while in woman it is 
frequently not above 1050. Robust men will not unfre- 
quently yield blood of spec. grav. 1058 or even 1059, while in 
pregnant women the specific gravity is sometimes as low as 


' Burdach’s Physiologie. 
2 Article ‘ Blut,’ in Wagner’s Handworterbuch, vol. 1, p. 82. 
°? Hufeland’s Journal, 1843. 


102 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


1045. In very young infants the blood is thin, and of low 
specific gravity ; according to Denis the blood of the umbilical 
arteries has a specific gravity of 1075. The specific gravity of 
the blood of numerous animals has been determined by Dr. 
J. Davy! and by Nasse. | 

1 found that the blood, as it issues from the aorta, has 
a temperature of 103° im the ox, and 99°°5 in the pig. 
Thackray places the temperature of the blood of the horse 
at 96°°8, of the ox at 99°°5, of the sheep at 101°°3, and 
of the duck at 105°°8. The temperature is always higher in 
birds than in the mammalia. The observations of J. Davy, 
Becquerel, Breschet, Mayer, and Saissy, tend to show that 
the temperature of arterial is about 1°°8 higher than that of 
venous blood. 


Microscopic analysis of the blood. 


If the blood be examined with the microscope (either in a 
transparent living part, or immediately after its removal from 
the body), it will be seen to consist of a great number of 
yellow corpuscles swimming in a colourless fluid. In the 
higher animals the form of these corpuscles is either circular 
or elliptic, and invariably flattened. 

Under a magnifying power of 300 diameters, they assume 
the appearance of fig. la in the blood of man and the mam- 
malia, of fig. 16 in the blood of birds, and of fig. le in 
the blood of fishes and amphibia. Miller? found the greatest 
degree of flattenmg in reptiles, amphibia, and fishes. He 
found that in frogs the thickness does not measure more than 
one eighth to one tenth of the long diameter, and that im man 
it measures about one fourth or one fifth of the transverse 
diameter. 

In addition to the blood-corpuscles, lymph-, chyle-, and 
sometimes oil-globules are present. The first two are round, 
of a finely granular appearance, and about the size of the 
blood-corpuscles, from which they may be distinguished by 
their want of colour, their more perfect sphericity, and their 
granular appearance. 


' Anatomical and Physiological Researches, p. 24. 
* Wandbuch der Physiologie des Menschen, vol. 1, p. 100. 


BLOOD. 103 


These distinctions are sufficient to prevent them from 
being mistaken for blood-globules. Globules of oil may be 
immediately recognized by their well-defined dark edge, and 
by their great refractive power. They do not rotate, and are 
not granular, but perfectly transparent. 

The size of the blood-corpuscles varies in different animals. 

In man, the diameter varies, according to Wagner,! from 
‘0004 to ‘0002 of a French inch; according to Miiller,? from 
00035 to -00023, and according to Schultz®, from -00036 
to -00031. The thickness, according to the last observer, 
may be estimated at ‘000085 of the same measure. Of all 
the mammalia, the ruminants seem to possess the smallest 
blood-globules. Wagner has given the following proportions : 


In man and monkeys ;4,th of a line = 3. 
Carnivora. ep athefa Se} —) 4. 
Ruminantia 20h het a -hnet—=-5- 


500 


In addition to these admeasurements, the following are de- 
serving of notice: Nasse fixed their average diameter at ‘00033, 
the maxima and minima being ‘00036 and -0003; Bowerbank 
places their average diameter at from ‘00035 to -00027, the 
extreme limits being ‘00054 and ‘00021 respectively ; Owen 
at ‘00028 ; and Gulliver at ‘0003 of an inch. 

The dimensions of the blood-corpuscles in the following 
animals have been measured : 

Ape (Simia callitrix) -00037* (Prevost and Dumas). 

Cat -00028; dog ‘00031 (Schultz); rat and mouse about 
‘00025 (Wagner). 

Sheep -0002 (Schultz and Wagner) ; ox -0002 (Schultz) and 
‘00024 (Wagner); goat ‘00017; chamois ‘0002 (Prevost and 
Dumas ); horse -00031—-00027 (Schultz). According to Wag- 
ner, the diameter in rats, mice, hares, and squirrels, varies 
from *00025 to -00020. 

The blood-corpuscles of birds, fishes, and amphibia are el- 
liptical. The following are the results of some of the best 
authenticated measurements : 

Common fowl: length -00062; breadth -00036 ; thickness 
‘00013 (Schultz). According to Dumas and Prevost, the long 


' Nachtrage zur Physiologie des Blutes, 1838, p. 5. 
* Physiologie des Menschen, vol. 1, p. 106. 

’ System der Cirkulation, p. 14. 

* French inches. 


104 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


diameter in the pigeon, duck, and goose, varies from ‘0008 to 
"00044; the short diameter from ‘0004 to :00029. Wagner 
estimates the two diameters, in the pigeon, at ‘0008 and -00033 
respectively. 

We find the largest blood-corpuscles in fishes. According 
to Wagner! the largest corpuscles, at present observed, are 
those of the torpedo, their long diameter being ‘002; in the 
skate he found them to vary from 001 to ‘0012 in length; in 
the loach the long diameter was ‘0005; in the eel-pout, 
‘00057 ; in the barbel ‘00066, the short diameter in this case 
being -0004. 

In the carp the long diameter is ‘0005, and the nucleus 
measures ‘00012. 

In the plaice, Schultz estimated the long and short diameters 
at ‘00062, and -00043 respectively, and the thickness at ‘00007. 

In the naked amphibia the corpuscles are very large. In 
the triton, Dumas and Prevost estimated the diameters at 
"00128 and 00078 respectively. In the Salamandra cristata, 
Schultz found that the diameters were -00138 and -000804 
and that the thickness was ‘000315. In the frog, the same 
observer estimated the length, breadth, and thickness at -00108, 
and -00058, and ‘000017. 

Of all the amphibia, the water-snakes appear to possess the 
smallest blood-corpuscles.? 

The instantaneous effect of water upon the blood-corpuscles 
is very remarkable, and is easily seen under the microscope : 
they swell, become globular, lose their distinct contour, and (if 
much water be added,) altogether disappear. If however the 
blood-corpuscles have nuclei of sufficient magnitude to admit 
of examination (as in the blood of fishes, reptiles, &c.), these 
nuclei will be seen swimming in the water after the disappear- 
ance of the capsules. 

The nuclei may be separated in a similar manner, by the 
addition of a little acetic acid. The acid in a few minutes 
dissolves the heemato-globulin, and assumes a yellow colour. 


1 Zur vergleichenden Physiologie des Blutes, 1833, p. 14. [The largest blood- 
corpuscles do not occur in fishes, as stated in the text, but in some of the naked am- 
phibia. See Wagner’s Physiology, p. 236, English edition. ] 

* A very complete account of the sizes of the blood-corpuscles of different animals, 
as far as they had been then ascertained, may be found in Wagner’s Nachtrige zur 
Physiologie des Blutes, 1839, p. 31. 


BLOOD. 105 


If, upon the addition of water, the blood-corpuscles have 
swelled to such a degree as to be imperceptible under the mi- 
croscope, they may be restored to their pristine form by the 
addition of a solution of sugar, of common salt, of nitrate of 
potash, or of muriate of ammonia. Schultz! explains this 
phenomenon by the supposition that the capsule of the blood- 
corpuscle is an organic structure, which is stimulated to con- 
traction by the above solutions, but which is relaxed or ex- 
panded by water. In confirmation of this view, he observes 
that the hemato-globulin is not precipitated by the action of 
the sugar or salts. Schultz has also shown that when the 
capsules have even fallen to pieces in the water, the addition 
of a little tincture of iodine, diluted with water, will render 
their fragments visible. 

The blood-corpuscles do not always present a regular num- 
mular and flattened appearance; they are sometimes plicated 
and bent in. 

The cause of this phenomenon is not known, but it is pro- 
bably due to a contraction of the capsule at different points. 
One of the most peculiar of these forms is that in which the 
edge of the blood-corpuscle appears as if it were studded with 
minute pearls. In the blood of a patient suffering from 
Bright’s disease, I found that nearly all the corpuscles had 
undergone this modification. On the addition of a solution 
of muriate of ammonia, the appearance it presented under the 
microscope was very striking. I immediately made a counter- 
experiment with my own blood, but it did not exhibit the 
phenomenon in question. 

Ascherson? has offered the following explanation of this 
peculiarity in the form of the corpuscle, viz., that it is due to 
the exudation of fat which exists in a fluid state in the blood- 
corpuscle. 

In opposition to this view, it may be urged, that if each 
individual corpuscle contained a separable portion of fat (how- 
ever minute it might be), we should obtain in our analyses a 
much larger quantity of fat than in reality we do. It is true 
that the dried clot yields a larger proportion of fat than an equal 


1 Ueber die gehemmte und gesteigerte Auflosung der verbrauchten Blutbliaschen. 
Hufeland’s Journal, April 1838, p. 18. 
2 Miiller’s Archiv, 1840. Ueber die Bedeutung der Fettstoffe. 


106 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


weight of serum, but the difference is by no means so striking 
as it would have been if Ascherson’s theory were correct. 

Hiinefeld! has observed a similar appearance on treating 
the blood-corpuscles of the frog with putrid serum, in which 
granules were present. The granules seemed to form a sort 
of girdle round the corpuscle, and he conceives that they 
penetrated into minute depressions upon the surface of the 
capsule. If this statement be correct, it is strongly opposed 
to the observations of Ascherson and Wagner respecting the 
lubricity and evenness of the blood-corpuscles. 

On mixing the blood of a carp with a solution of sugar, 
and on the cautious addition of water, I observed that the 
blood-corpuscles assumed a stellar appearance. 

On treating frog’s blood with bilin, an agent which usually 
dissolves the corpuscles, I observed that some of them resisted 
this action for a considerable period, and ultimately assumed 
a pyriform appearance, while others became narrowed at the 
centre, and extended at both extremities. Others, again, 
seemed to undergo an internal change, and appeared as if 
their inner surface were studded with minute vesicles. 

Hiinefeld made a similar observation on treating frog’s 
blood with carbonate of ammonia.? 

The same chemist observed a remarkable peculiarity in the 
corpuscles of human blood, on the addition of sulphate of 
quinine. In the course of a few minutes they assumed an 
irregular, angular form, and appeared as if their sides were 
drawn together. 

Schultz? has made the following important microscopic ob- 
servation. On examining the blood-corpuscles of a salaman- 
der which had been suffocated in carbonic acid gas, they were 
found to be of a darker colour than usual; the darkness was 
particularly marked on some spots, so that they exhibited a 
sort of chequered appearance. 

On shaking the blood with oxygen gas, the corpuscles be- 
came brighter and more transparent. 


' Der Chemismus in der thierischen Organisation, p. 101. 
710K Os (ih WOE 
3 System der Cirkulation, p. 27. 


BLOOD. 107 


a. The general chemical relations of the blood. 


The general chemical relations of the blood-corpuscles. 

Miiller and Schultz have examined the action of various 
tests on the blood-corpuscles. Hiinefeld' has also recently 
paid much attention to the apparent effect produced on them 
by numerous medicinal agents. According to the last-named 
author, the corpuscles and their nuclei are soluble in the fol- 
lowing substances: caustic ammonia, potash, soda, lime, and 
baryta, soap, bile, acetic acid, hydrocyanic acid, alcohol, ether, 
oil of turpentine, ethereal oil, and sulphuret of carbon. 

The capsules, but not the nuclei, are soluble in water, in all the 
salts of ammonia, the carbonates of potash and soda, cyanate 
of potash, borax, chloride of barium, chloride of calcium, the 
salts of oxalic and hydrochloric acids, concentrated vinegar, and 
the phosphoric, arsenic, oxalic, citric, and hydrochloric acids. 

Phosphorus, chlorine, and iodme produce a similar effect, 
probably by the formation of an acid. 

An imperfect solution is effected by flowers of sulphur, tartrate 
of ammonia, borate of ammonia, bromide of potassium, and 
malic acid. 

The corpuscles are not dissolved by carbonate of magnesia, ve- 
ratrine, strychnine, acetate of morphine, hydrochlorate of coneine, 
boracic acid, carbonic acid, nitrate of potash, nitrate of soda, 
tartrate of soda, phosphate of soda, chloride of sodium, sugar, 
gum, sulphate of potash, sulphate of magnesia, sulphate of soda, 
tartar emetic, camphor, anemonine. 

Hiinefeld also tried the effects of several of the animal fluids 
on the blood. Saliva, phthisical sputa, and healthy pus pro- 
duced no well-marked changes. Gastric juice, added to an 
excess of blood, induced a slight coagulation, and changed the 
red colour into a brown. The extractive matter of the flesh of 
rabbits and calves produced no change on the corpuscles, but 
the colour assumed a more vermilion tint, and the corpuscles 
sank sooner than usual. Acid whey, concentrated by evapo- 
ration, produced no effect, neither did the pancreatic juice or 
gouorrheeal discharge. Sweat, taken from the axilla, changed 
the colour to a lighter red, and, in the course of some hours, 


' Der Chemismus, u. s. w., p. 43-84. 


108 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


dissolved the corpuscles, (possibly through the influence of the 
ammoniacal salts.) 

Pure urea, prepared artificially, induced no change in the 
colour, but dissolved the corpuscles, with the exception of the 
nuclei and a few fragments of the capsules. 

The action of putrid blood and serum has been already 
noticed. 

Human blood does not appear to be influenced by admixture 
with the blood of birds or frogs. 

The bile of man, quadrupeds, birds, fishes, and amphibia, 
exerts an active soluble influence upon the corpuscles. In 
some observations on frog’s blood, Hiimefeld noticed that the 
capsules were immediately dissolved, and that the nuclei re- 
mained unchanged for some time, but ultimately broke up into 
minute granules and disappeared. 

The effects produced by coneia appear, from Hiinefeld’s ob- 
servation, to be very singular. 

Coneine, either in a state of solution or vapour, reduces the 
blood to a dirty red greasy mass, which, under the microscope, 
resembles dark melted wax, and in which no corpuscles can be 
detected. If diluted blood be treated with a little coneine, it 
remains fluid, but, after a short time, becomes discoloured, and 
throws down a brown sediment. The blood of a rabbit, poi- 
soned with coneine, exhibited no peculiarity. 

Arsenic acid produces no material effect upon the blood, nor 
could Himefeld detect any alteration in the corpuscles of a frog 
destroyed by this agent. 

On passing hydrocyanic acid, in a state of vapour, into the 
blood of a pig, the colour became more vivid, and the corpuscles 
remained uninjured for a very considerable time. A large 
quantity of blood, which was treated in a similar manner, gave 
off a strong odour of the acid after the lapse of a year and a 
half, and did not exhibit any symptoms of putrefaction. No 
change could be observed in the blood of a rabbit poisoned 
with this agent. 

Chlorate of potash does not produce any apparent effect for 
the first few minutes ; subsequently, however, the blood assumes 
a brighter red tint, which ultimately passes into a brown. An 
ounce of fresh human blood was mixed with eight grains of 
chlorate of potash. Just at first the colour became rather 


BLOOD. 109 


brighter, but, after the lapse of from fifteen minutes to an 
hour, it became darker than it previously was. It then became 
of a reddish brown colour, and, after from eight to sixteen 
hours, it was converted into a pulpy brownish-black matter. 
The blood of a cat which had taken a drachm of this salt, and 
had afterwards been killed with cyanogen, exhibited no peculiar 
appearance. 

Hiinefeld, and some other microscopists, assert that acetic 
acid dissolves the whole of the corpuscle, with the exception of 
the nucleus. Miller, on the contrary, maintains that in 
frog’s blood the colouring envelope is not wholly dissolved, 
but may still be frequently observed in a pale fine line surround- 
ing the nucleus. 

The following are my own observations with respect to this 
test. Ifa sufficient quantity of acetic acid be added to freshly 
drawn blood, so as to give it a decidedly acid reaction, and if the 
vessel in which it is contained be submitted to a temperature 
of about 88° for half an hour, the blood becomes changed 
into a thick tar-like mass of a blackish brown colour. 

If water be now added, and the mixture carefully stirred 
until it is reduced to a magma of an equal consistence through- 
out, we find that, on examining a portion of this mixture under 
the microscope, the addition of some more water does not dis- 
solve the corpuscles; in fact, they are no longer soluble in 
water, in consequence of the insoluble compound that has 
been formed by the acetic acid, and the (casein-like) globulin. 
If a great excess of water be added, the corpuscles sink ; the 
albumen, and a great portion of the hematin, which enter into 
their composition, are dissolved, and they become almost per- 
fectly clear. They may even be boiled in water, without any 
change in their form being produced. 

When boiled in acetic acid (unless it be very dilute), they 
become perfectly dissolved, with the exception of their nuclei.! 

According to Miller and Schultz, a solution of caustic am- 
monia dissolves the corpuscles more rapidly than a similar 
solution of caustic potash. The same observers state that 
alcohol does not dissolve them, but merely produces a slight 
contraction or puckering, and that the granules of albumen 


1 F, Simon’s Beitrage zur Kenntniss des Blutes, in Brandes’s Archiv, vol. 18, p. 35. 


110 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


coagulated by this reagent cloud the field of vision, and render 
the corpuscles indistinct. I have also found that neither abso- 
lute alcohol, nor alcohol of 835, effect the solution of the cor- 
puscles. 

It has been found by Schultz, Hinefeld, and myself, that 
the blood-corpuscles dissolve upon the addition of a small quan- 
tity of ether. A quantity corresponding in volume to from 
one third to one half of the blood is perfectly sufficient. This 
experiment has been successfully repeated upon the blood of 
man, the ox, the frog, and the carp. 

If the experiment be performed in a test-glass, it will be 
observed that the colour of the blood very soon becomes deep- 
ened, but that ultimately the whole fluid becomes transparent. 
The ether does not separate during this process. 

If a portion of this mixture be covered with a slip of thin 
glass, and examined under the microscope, no corpuscles, but 
simply the nuclei, are discernible. The nuclei in the blood of 
man and the ox cannot be clearly seen on account of the colour- 
ing matter that is always present ; they may, however, be always 
distinctly observed in the blood of the frog or the carp for a 
considerable time. 

A mixture of ether and blood, kept in a stoppered vessel for 
some time, became thick, assumed a greasy appearance, and 
was no longer fit for the experiment; neither could a satis- 
factory result be obtained on shaking blood with an excess of 
ether ; for then the ether took up the water of the blood, and 
thus reduced that fluid to a state of thickness. 

On pouring off the ether from a known quantity of blood 
with which it had been continuously stirred for twenty-four 
hours, and submitting the blood to a single washing with ether, 
I was astonished to find that from the two ethereal solutions 
I obtained quite as large a quantity of fat as I should have done 
by the repeated extraction of a corresponding portion of dried 
and finely-powdered blood with boiling ether. On treating 
pure liquid serum of the same blood in a similar manner, the 
quantity of fat obtamed did not differ from the quantity 
obtained from the perfect blood, in a ratio sufficient to justify 
the supposition, that the capsules are composed of fat. 

I can also confirm Hinefeld’s observation respecting the 
influence of bile upon the blood. On the addition of fresh bile, 


BLOOD. 111 


the blood immediately becomes clear, and the corpuscles dis- 
appear. In consequence of the viscidity of ordmary bile, I 
experimented with pure bilin. 

Upon the addition of a little partially dried bilin to the 
blood of man, the calf, the tench, or the frog, the fluid becomes, 
after a little stirring, thick, almost gelatinous, capable of being 
drawn out into threads, and no corpuscles can be seen init. If 
a minute drop of frog’s blood, in which the corpuscles have 
been thus dissolved, be brought in contact, and suffered to mix 
with a fresh drop of blood from the same animal, an interesting 
microscopic object is afforded. After the first intense action is 
over, the corpuscles are seen to move about slowly, or to be in 
a state of rest, and gradually to disappear. The solution of 
the capsule (not of the nucleus) occurs so instantaneously that 
the eye cannot trace the reaction. The nucleus always remains 
as a granular mulberry-like corpuscle. It becomes gradually paler 
and paler, enlarging itself visibly at the same time, and at last its 
existence can only be ascertained by its brightness. I have 
never succeeded in observing the decomposition of the nucleus 
into its constituent parts, which has been described by Htnefeld, 
although I have carefully repeated his experiments. I usually 
observed, however, that at those points where many corpuscles 
had disappeared, numerous minute points were visible, of which 
the larger ones displayed a lively molecular motion. In those 
instances in which the corpuscles resisted the solvent power of 
the bilin for a considerable time (possibly in consequence of 
the reagent being applied in too dilute a state), they often as- 
sumed very peculiar forms; appearing as if they were twisted, 
and extended longitudinally in one direction, or variously 
coloured in the interior. (Vide supra, p. 106.) 

I have formerly noticed the solvent power of olive oil upon 
the corpuscles.1. I shook a quantity of the blood of a calf, which 
had been allowed to flow from the vein into a vessel one quarter 
full of olive oil, until the blood was perfectly cool. No cor- 
puscles could then be detected. Whipt blood exhibits the same 
phenomenon; but in this case it is requisite that the oil should 
remain for a longer period in contact with the blood. This 
fact has also been noticed by Magendie.” 


1 Pharmaceutisches Centralblatt, 1839, p. 672. 
2 Lecons sur le Sang, et les alterations de cet liquide, par Magendie. Bruxelles, 
1839. p. 244. 


Liz CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


B. The general chemical relations of the colouring matter of 
the blood (Hematin.) 


The red colouring matter of the blood is contained, in all 
probability, in a state of solution in the corpuscles, an opinion 
which is also supported by Miiller, Schultz, and Reichert. If, 
in the examination of frog’s blood, one corpuscle be observed to 
move over another, the lower can be distinctly perceived through 
the upper one. Moreover, the instantaneous solution of the 
corpuscles by means of bilin supports this view; for, if their 
contents were gelatinous or solid, the act of solution would be 
observed to progress from the circumference to the centre, and 
would admit of being observed by the microscope. 

Hiinefeld’ seems to support the opinion that the colouring 
matter exists in an insoluble form, attached to the inner surface 
of the capsules. If, however, this were the case, the blood- 
corpuscles would appear more opaque than they do. The 
observations of Hiinefeld and others show that the follow- 
ing substances heighten the red colour of the blood: cold 
water-extract of the flesh of rabbits and calves (having an acid 
reaction) communicates a vermilion colour to the blood. It 
becomes of a deep garnet red by the carbonate, cyanate, and 
nitrate of ammonia, and less intensely by the saliva, phthisical 
sputa, gonorrhceal matter, sweat, hydrocyanic acid, the carbo- 
nates of soda and potash, and bicarbonate of soda. 

A brown tinge may be produced by the agency of several 
substances ; for instance, by all free acids, by sugar of milk, 
oil of bitter almonds, ammonia, boracic acid, carbonate of mag- 
nesia, tartrate of potash, bromide of potassium, sulphate of 
magnesia, chloride of strontium, nitrate of strontia, lactate of 
iron, phosphorus, iodine, &e. 

The alkalies, alkaline earths, and sulphuret of potassium 
produce a green tint. It becomes entirely decolorized by the 
action of coneine and oil of turpentine. 


c. The general chemical relations of the nuclei of the 
blood-corpuscles. 


The similarity of the constitution of the nuclei to coagulated 
fibrin has been long observed. Hiinefeld,? however, conceives 


1L. c., p. 104. ? Der Chemismus, u. s. w., p. 108. 


BLOOD. 113 


that corpuscles, instead of consisting of fibrin, are mainly 
composed of fatty matter (either cholesterin or some allied 
substance), combined with albumen, as occurs in the yelk 
of eggs. In this view I cannot coincide, although I fully 
believe that albumen and fat do take a very active part in 
the formation of all the animal tissues, and, consequently, 
in the production of the blood-corpuscles. In this stance, 
the formative process has advanced so far that we can expect 
to find the original materials of formation present in only very 
small quantities. It is true that the fibrin and the blood- 
corpuscles contain a greater relative proportion of fat than the 
other constituents of the blood; yet even in fibrin the propor- 
tion amounts to only 5°, and the fat cannot therefore be re- 
garded as a preponderating constituent of this substance. That 
the fat is not actually cholesterin seems pretty clear from the 
fact of the ready solubility of the corpuscles in caustic potash. 

The diameter of the nucleus is usually about one-fourth or 
one-fifth of the diameter of the blood-corpuscle. In the 
amphibia it varies from 002 to :005; in fishes, from ‘0016 to 
0025 ; in birds, its length is about :002, and in the mammalia 
‘0008 of a Ine. 

I have made the following observations with regard to the 
nuclei in the blood of man,' the carp, and the frog. The 
nuclei in the frog appear, after the solution of the capsule and 
hemato-globulin, as partly elliptical and partly cylindrical. 
After washing them for a day or two in order to remove the 
colouring matter and albumen, they assume a more spherical 
form, and most of them present a granulated appearance on 
the surface. I cannot, however, positively assert that granular 
cells were present, nor did I observe the nuclei separate into 
distinct portions during this treatment. The nuclei, even 
when moist, were not soluble in boiling ether. When dried, 
moistened with water, and then observed under the micro- 
scope, several nuclei were seen floating about, apparently un- 
altered ; many were, however, connected together in such a 
manner as to prevent their whole outline from being apparent. 
Upon treating the dry nuclei with ether, appearances similar 


"T allude to the nearly colourless sediment which may be obtained by washing 
blood with a large quantity of water, and whichis found to contain lymph-corpuscles 
and fragments of capsules. 


8 


114 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


to those already described were perceived. Moist nuclei dis- 
solved readily in caustic potash; if the solution be supersatu- 
rated with concentrated acetic acid, and heated, an imperfect 
solution of the matter, precipitated by the acid, occurs ; a very 
small quantity of dilute hydrochloric acid will, however, readily 
dissolve the whole. On treating the filtered solution with 
tannin, a copious precipitate was thrown down; ferrocyanide 
of potassium caused a mere turbidity, or very slight deposit. 
Similar observations were made on the nuclei of carp’s blood, 
but the ferrocyanide of potassium caused less turbidity than in 
the former case. The nuclei of human blood are scarcely dis- 
cernible in the viscid sediment. The effect of reagents was 
much the same as in the former cases. 

Hence we are led to infer that the blood-corpuscles are 
chiefly formed of a substance closely related to the protein- 
compounds, although not identical with any of them: possibly 
the nuclei may be converted into fibrin, soluble in the liquor 
sanguinis, after the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles has 
been accomplished. On heating the nuclei on platina foil, a 
fatty smell is first observed, and then an odour resembling that 
of burning albumen. Upon heating them im a test-tube, and 
applying litmus paper, the red colour is soon changed to a 
strongly-marked blue. The ash has a reddish appearance, and 
consists of peroxide of iron, lime, and phosphoric acid. 


pv. The general chemical relations of the plasma (liquor 
sanguinis). 


The plasma of living blood exists as a clear fluid, in which 
the corpuscles are seen to float. If the blood has been 
removed for some time from the body, the fibrin separates 
from the plasma. This separation appears to take place simul- 
taneously and uniformly throughout the whole of the blood. 
As the fibrin contracts, it entangles the corpuscles ; the subse- 
quent contraction tends to expel the serum, and thus the clot 
is produced. The clot, at first soft and gelatinous, becomes 
gradually more consistent, and ultimately appears as a mass, 
capable of a certain degree of resistance, and floating in the 
serum. 


There are certain pathological conditions, under which the 


BLOOD. 115 


blood cannot hold the corpuscles in suspension. There is 
then formed, previously to the separation of the fibrin, a layer 
of yellow plasma above the sunken blood-corpuscles, in which 
(i.e. in the plasma), upon the subsequent coagulation, a cer- 
tain quantity of fibrin separates (crusta inflammatoria). 

In some observations on the blood of a cachectic horse, 
made during the summer, I found that the corpuscles sunk so 
rapidly in the tumbler in which the fluid was received, that a 
layer of plasma was formed, amounting to nearly two thirds 
of the whole volume of the blood, previously to the coagulation 
of the fibrin. The fibrin, which was present in large quantity, 
then began to coagulate, and after some time a solid cylinder 
of coagulated plasma was formed, which resisted a consider- 
able degree of pressure, and under which the uncoagulated 
blood-corpuscles were distributed. 

In some pathological states the blood contains mere traces 
of fibrin ; in these cases no clot is formed; we observe merely 
the separation of a few dark gelatiniform flocculi. 

The coagulation of the plasma is a consequence of the 
cessation of the vitality of the blood; hence it occurs not 
merely in blood abstracted from the lving body, but after 
death, and under some peculiar circumstances, in the vessels 
themselves. It is independent of external influences, for it 
occurs equally in ordinary air, 7m vacuo, and in various gaseous 
atmospheres. It may be accelerated or impeded by certain 
agents, and may even be altogether prevented; the blood, 
however, when prevented from coagulating in this manner, is 
in a state very different from that in which it previously existed 
in the body, the fibrin having undergone a chemical change. 


The retardation or prevention of coagulation.' 


Fresh blood becomes solid below 32°, without the coagula- 
tion of the fibrin, which however occurs after thawing. 


1 [A full account of the various experiments by John Hunter, Davy, Prater, Scuda- 
more, and others, on the effects of various agents upon the coagulation of the blood, 
to the period it was written, may be found in Ancell’s seventh lecture “ on the Phy- 
siology and Pathology of the Blood.” Lancet, 1840.] 


116 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood of frozen and apparently dead frogs remains fluid, 
and the same is the case in hybernating animals, in which the 
temperature of the blood is reduced to that of cold-blooded 
animals.! 

The coagulation of the blood is retarded by contact with 
animal membranes ; it will remain fluid in tied arteries for the 
space of three hours. Blood which has been infused into the 
cellular tissue will remain fluid for weeks. Schultz has ob- 
served that blood which has collected in the intestines remains 
fluid for a long time; moreover, the blood which has been 
abstracted by leeches does not coagulate, as long as it remains 
in the body of the animal.? 

Gerhard, Hufeland, and Kielmeyer have shown that blood 
through which an electric current is continuously passed re- 
mains fluid for a long time. Schubeler also showed that 
positive electricity hinders the coagulation of the blood ; more- 
over, the blood of animals killed by electricity or lightning 
does not coagulate. 

The following salts hinder the coagulation of the fibrin, 
according to Hewson,? Schultz,4 and Hamburger’s’ observa- 
tions: sulphate of soda, chloride of sodium, nitrate of potash, 
chloride of potassium, acetate of potash, and borax, if they be 
added in the proportion of half an ounce to six ounces of 
blood. Ifhowever the blood be diluted with double the quan- 
tity of water, the fibrm coagulates. (Hewson.) The carbo- 
nates and acetates prevent the coagulation of the blood, in 
all degrees of concentration. With regard to the action of 
the sulphates, a concentrated solution appears to retard the 
coagulation ; a dilute solution, on the contrary, to accelerate it. 
(Hamburger.) The same appears to be the case with respect 
to the tartrates and borates. 

The followimg metallic salts impede the coagulation of the 
fibrin : sulphate of copper, ammoniaco-sulphate of copper, sul- 
phate of the protoxide of iron, chloride of iron, ferrocyanide 


' Schultz, op. cit. p. 80. 

? L. c., pp. 64 and 81. 

* Disquisitio experimentalis de sanguinis natura. L. B. 1785. 

4 Op. cit. 

* Experimentorum circa sanguinis coagulationem specimen primum diss. inaug. 
auct. Hamburger. Berolini, 1839. 


BLOOD. LUZ 


of potassium, acetate of lead, and tartrate of antimony and 
potash. ' 

Magendie’s? observations differ considerably from the above. 
He arranges in a tabular form’ the following salts which tend 
to impede the coagulation of the blood: the alkaline car- 
bonates, nitrate of potash, and nitrate of lime. All observers 
agree that the free alkalies completely prevent the coagulation. 

The observations of Schultz, Magendie, and Hamburger 
show that dilute mineral and vegetable acids prevent the 
coagulation of the blood, which however thickens, and assumes 
a syrupy or oily appearance. These statements have been 
confirmed by myself. 

The following non-mineral reagents have been observed by 
Magendie to prevent or impede the coagulation of the fibrin: 
nitrate of strychnine, nitrate of morphine, and nicotine. This 
statement, as far as regards the nitrate of strychnine, has been 
denied by Hamburger.3 

Hunter observed that the coagulation was retarded by the 
addition of a solution of opium, a statement however which is 
not confirmed by Hamburger. The latter observer notices 
the effect which is produced by the addition of bile, in pre- 
venting the coagulation. 


Acceleration of the coagulation. 


The coagulation of the fibrin is accelerated, or at any rate 
not impeded, by a temperature higher than that of the living 
blood. According to Hewson, it takes place most rapidly at 
from 114° to 120°. Scudamore and Schréder van der Kolk 
assert that the coagulation is accelerated by electricity and 
galvanic currents, which however is opposed to the previous 
observations of Kielmeyer and others. Contact with atmo- 
spheric air hastens the coagulation. 

According to Hamburger, no influence, either in accele- 


' Schultz remarked that hydrochlorate of ammonia, sulphate of potash, and sul- 
phate of magnesia, retain the blood in a state of fluidity, and that even the addition 
of a large quantity of water does not produce coagulation. After the addition of 
sulphate of soda, the blood could only be prevented from gelatinising by constant 
stirring, a step that was not requisite with the other salts. 

? Lecons sur le Sang. Bruxelles, 1839. 

3 Op. cit. p. 249. 3 Tb. p. 45. 


118 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


rating or impeding the coagulation, is exerted by sulphate of 
lime, chlorate of potash, or iodide of iron.! 

According to Magendie and Hamburger, the coagulation is 
accelerated by acetate of morphine. The former observer states 
that water, a watery solution of sugar, the fluid of dropsy, 
Seidlitz and Vichy waters, alcohol, ether, and mannite; and 
the latter, that decoctions of digitalis, and tobacco, solution of 
tannin, iodine, solution of sugar, gum arabic, starch, and fresh 
urine, have a similar effect.? 


ON THE CHEMICAL PHYSIOLOGY OF THE BLOOD. 
On the formation of the blood. 


The formation of the blood, and especially of the blood- 
corpuscles, has been made a subject of careful and laborious 
research by many of the best microscopic observers of the 
present age, amongst whom we may enumerate the names 
of Schultz, Baumgartner, Valentin, Reichert, Wagner, and 
Schwann. 

[As the physiological details connected with this subject 
belong strictly to the physiology rather than to the chemistry 
of the blood, we shall content ourselves with a brief statement 
of all that is known with any degree of certainty regarding 
this obscure and intricate process. 

Capillary vessels are developed by the stellated union of a 
certain set of blastodermic or germinal cells; and no sooner 
are capillary or other vessels formed, than a kind of blood is 
found in them. The corpuscles of that blood differ from those 
of the adult in being considerably larger, more spherical and 
granular, and in containing a distinct nucleus. There is pro- 
bably an external envelope. The granules unite or amalga- 
mate, so as to form the coloured or clear part of the blood- 
corpuscle, while the nucleus remains. See fig. 2.] 

Although niuch light has recently been thrown on the 
formation of the blood-corpuscle in the embryo, we are still 


' Magendie observed that the coagulation is hastened by the addition of the chlo- 
rides of potassium, sodium, ammonium, and barium; of bicarbonate of soda, sulphate 
of magnesia, borax, nitrate of silver, iodide of potassium, and the cyanides of gold 
and mercury. 

2 [A summary of Mr. Blake’s experiments on the effects of various salts, &c. on the 
blood, is given in Williams’s Principles of Medicine, page 99.] 


BLOOD. 119 


unfortunately almost entirely deficient in positive information 
regarding the formation of the blood-corpuscles in the mature 
individual. That blood-corpuscles are formed in adults, cannot 
admit of a doubt; for we see that the mass of the blood, and 
consequently of the blood-corpuscles, is continually increasing 
from the moment that blood is first produced in the embryo, 
up to the period of full corporeal development. Moreover, in- 
dependently of any considerations founded on the increased 
mass of the blood, a continuous formation of blood-corpuscles 
is obviously necessary to compensate for the waste and 
consumption of blood dependent on the exercise of the vital 
functions. The immense quantities of extractive matters 
(abounding in nitrogen and carbon),—of urea, uric acid, 
bile, mucus, and fat, which are daily secreted in the urine, 
feeces, and mucous discharges, together with the considerable 
amount of carbon which is given off as carbonic acid in 
the process of respirationn—must all be refunded to the 
system by the blood. To this it may be objected, that the 
supply takes place on the part of the plasma, which alone 
therefore would require to exist in a state of continuous in- 
crease, while the corpuscles coexist, and are coeval with the 
individual in whose blood they occur. Such a view is, how- 
ever, at variance with all the phenomena of the higher stages 
of existence; for no tissue or portion of the body, solid or 
fluid, is allowed to remain unchanged or unendowed with vi- 
tality. The necessity for the consumption and reproduction 
of the blood-corpuscles has never yet been disputed, but various 
theories have been propounded by different physiologists re- 
garding the seat of their formation and their mode of organic 
development or metamorphosis. 

Hewson endeavours to show that the spleen is the principal 
organ in which the blood-corpuscles are formed, and that they 
are produced from lymph-granules. Although the functions 
of the spleen are not even at the present day properly deter- 
mined, it is an established fact that the spleen may be extir- 
pated, and the formation of blood not be impeded; moreover, 
the red colour of the lymph, upon which Hewson strengthens 
his opinion, has not always been observed.! Schultz? con- 


1 J. Miller’s Handbuch der Physiologie, vol. 1, p. 573. 
? System der Cirkulation, p. 37. 


120 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


siders that the blood-corpuscles are formed in the lymphatic 
glands, and conveyed by the ductus thoracicus into the blood. 
He states that the chyle which is found in the vessels issuing 
from the glands, contains clear, round, oily vesicles, and 
granular lymph-corpuscles. The diameter of the granular 
lymph-corpuscles in horses and rabbits varies from *0005 to 
‘0008 of a line ; and they are so similar to the nuclei of the blood- 
corpuscles, as torender it very probable that the latter are de- 
rived from them. In the lymph of the ductus thoracicus of 
rabbits and horses, we find actual blood-corpuscles, as well as 
the transparent and granular lymph-corpuscles; these blood- 
corpuscles, however, possess more tender, and not perfectly 
flattened capsules, and a much smaller amount of colourmg 
matter than when they have arrived at maturity. They are 
consequently paler and more transparent than at a subsequent 
period, and the nucleus may be inclosed more or less closely 
in the capsule. . The lymph-corpuscles and the nuclei of the 
blood-corpuscles present a very close analogy, for they both 
vary Im size, and, to use Schultz’s own words, “ it cannot be 
doubted that the blood-corpuscles are produced by the forma- 
tion of a coloured capsule around the lymph-globules.”’? 
These blood-corpuscles could not have been transmitted 
there by blood-vessels; their difference from the mature cor- 
puscle, and their slight amount of colourmg matter, are opposed 
to such a supposition. Since lymph-corpuscles also pass into 
the blood, the formation of blood-corpuscles from them in the 
blood-vessels cannot be denied; it may however happen that 
they are again conducted by the blood to the lymphatic glands, 
where their metamorphosis is completed. In a more recent 
work on the Blood,? Schultz states that the coloured capsule of 
the blood-corpuscle is principally formed in the process of re- 
spiration. There is much in favour of this view, for we know 
that the blood can only obtain its nutriment through the 
ductus thoracicus, and it seems obvious that the conditions 
necessary for the formation of the blood-corpuscles must be as- 
sociated with the circumstance of the derivation of the nutriment 
from this source. Moreover, there can be no doubt that im conse- 


Gs Cros cay, 
2 Ueber die gehemmte Auflosung und Ausscheidung der yerbrauchten Blutblaschen. 
Hufeland’s Journal, April 1838. 


BLOOD. 121 


quence of the continuous supply of chyle which is afforded to the 
blood, the lymph-corpuscles would speedily predominate, unless 
they underwent some metamorphosis, and assumed another form ; 
but in reality the number of lymph-corpuscles in the blood is 
comparatively small. Although the lymphatic glands may be 
regarded as in some degree the seat of formation of the blood- 
corpuscles, it must by no means be supposed that the latter issue 
from these glands in a perfectly developed state ; their ultimate 
maturity is obtained in the blood, and they aid in the support 
of its independent vitality. Henle, who lkewise coincides in 
the view just given, as I know from a personal communication 
with him, has minutely studied the formation of the blood- 
corpuscle from the lymph-corpuscle, and the transitions of 
the latter to a state of maturity. He regards the lymphatic 
glands as the chief, although not the exclusive seat of 
formation of the blood-corpuscles. Although the chyle 
does not contain a sufficient number of matured blood-cor- 
puscles to allow us to recognize their presence by its external 
appearance, we must remember that during its contimuous dis- 
charge into the subclavian vei, a considerable number of 
blood-corpuscles may in a certain time be conveyed into the 
blood: that the blood-corpuscles which are contained in the 
chyle are formed in the organs of chylification, and are not 
conveyed thither by arteries or veins, is clear from our knowledge 
of the connexions between the vascular and capillary systems. 

It is pretty generally allowed that the process of respiration 
is essentially requisite for the further development of the 
young blood-corpuscles, after their formation in the lymphatic 
glands. J. Miller, in his chapter on the formation of the 
blood, expresses himself to the effect that the contents of the 
lymphatics, namely the clear lymph and the whitish chyle, are 
the materials for the formation of the blood, and that this 
formation is carried on not im any one particular organ, but 
under the combined influence of the vital functions generally. 
This view corresponds with the former, if in the materials for 
the formation of the blood we understand the young blood- 
corpuscles, (i.e. the lymph- and chyle-corpuscles which are to 
be changed into blood-corpuscles,) and the plasma, which is 
still almost destitute of fibrm. If, however, the lymph- and 
chyle-corpuscles are regarded as having no connexion with the 


122 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


genesis of the blood-corpuscles, then it is distinct from the 
previous views. Reichert in his work on Development, has 
said nothing respecting the formation of blood-corpuscles in 
the adult ; but from a personal communication, I find that he 
regards the liver as the blood-preparing organ in adults, and 
the preparation of the blood as the principal function of that 
gland; the secretion of bile must then be regarded as a conse- 
quence of the metamorphosis that occurs during the above process. 


On the forces that circulate the blood. 


The due performance of the functions of circulation and 
respiration is as essential to the metamorphosis of the blood 
as it is to life itself. 

Circulation commences in the fetus with the rhythmic 
movements of the heart. 

Reichert! has observed in the incubated egg, that the only in- 
dependently formed canals for the blood are the great vascular 
trunks directly connected with the heart; the other blood-vessels 
are, as it were, excavated by the force of the heart’s action on 
the blood-cells in the loose cellular mass of the early embryo. 

The action of the heart is the primum movens of the cir- 
culation. Burdach? observes that the vital action of the heart, 
which acts mechanically on the blood, and propels it in certain 
directions and courses, indicates most clearly that the heart 
comprehends within itself the elements of the circulating 
power, and that mdependently of its vital activity, the whole 
circle of phenomena appertaining to it results from its mere 
mechanical relations. The cause of the heart’s action must be 
referred to the irritation produced in it by the living blood. 
Miiller 3 also considers that the blood is chiefly propelled by 
the rhythmic action of the heart. 

The view taken by Schultz+4 is different: he considers that 
the motion of the blood in the living body results from the 
joint influence of the blood and of the vessels reciprocally 
acting on each other, whose true nature can only be seen in 
the vital relations, and its aim in the circle of organic functions. 

R. Wagner? is inclined to believe that the blood is propelled 


1 Op. cit. p. 142. ? Op. cit. vol. 4, p. 163. 
3 Op. cit. vol. 1, p. 163. 4 Op. cit. p. 244. 
5 Zur vergleichenden Physiologie des Blutes, 1833, p. 70. 


BLOOD. 123 


not merely by the heart’s action, but also by a certain electric 
attraction of the organs, by the influence of the nerves, and 
by a motive power inherent in the blood itself. Since the 
heart’s action is occasioned by the irritation exercised upon 
that organ by the living blood, there can be no doubt that 
the reciprocating action of the organs and of the blood must 
influence the circulation. Schultz evidently undervalues the 
influence of the rhythmic motion on the circulation, when he 
limits the functions of the heart to the conveyance of arterial 
blood to the peripheral system, and to the conduction of 
venous blood back again, and regards the blood in the peri- 
pheral system as moving entirely independent of it. 

The circulation is usually divided into the greater and 
the lesser. There is however, in fact, but one circulation ; and 
this is divided into the greater course, which proceeds from 
the left heart through the arteries of the body, and through the 
veins to the right heart, and into the lesser course, which recon- 
ducts the blood through the lungs from the right to the left heart. 


On the process of respiration. 


Respiration takes place through lungs, gills, trachez, or the 
integument. 

Oxygen is indispensable for the process, although pure 
oxygen is less conducive to health than a mixture of oxygen 
with a gas not detrimental to life, as nitrogen or hydrogen. 

The proportions of oxygen and nitrogen that occur in atmo- 
spheric air are doubtless the most suitable for the respiration 
of the higher animals; viz. 21 parts of the former, and 79 of 
the latter gas. In an atmosphere of pure hydrogen or nitro- 
gen, a man would run the risk of suffocation in a very few 
seconds, not because these gases are themselves poisonous, 
but simply from the absence of oxygen. 

Many gases produce a directly poisonous effect, and cannot 
be breathed even when mixed with oxygen; as, for imstance, 
arseniuretted hydrogen, sulphuretted hydrogen, phosphoretted 
hydrogen, carburetted hydrogen, carbonic oxide, cyanogen, 
chlorine, ammonia, and many others. 

As a consequence of the process of respiration, the blood 
becomes chemically changed; this change is almost entirely 
confined to the blood-corpuscles, which in this independent 


124 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


act of metamorphosis represent exactly what we understand by 
the vitality of the blood. 

Respiration in man and the mammalia is effected by the 
dilatation and contraction of the cavity of the thorax. 

Since the diaphragm in a state of relaxation is arched, and 
in a state of contraction durimg inspiration becomes flattened, 
the cavity of the thorax is increased during inspiration, the 
surface of the lung follows the retreating walls, its volume 
becomes enlarged, and the atmospheric air rushes into its 
cells. The branches of the air-tubes ramify to an extraor- 
dinary degree in the parenchyma, and their most minute ex- 
tremities terminate in vesicular dilatations, which do not com- 
municate with each other, and whose walls are covered with 
the peripheral capillary network. From a calculation of Lie- 
berkuhn,! it would appear that the whole surface of the ramify- 
ing air-tubes in man amounts to 1400 square feet, on which 
extraordinary surface the blood and atmospheric air are in 
contact with each other, (being separated merely by a moist, 
permeable membrane,) and the former absorbs the required 
amount of oxygen. 

Davy calculates that the human lung after the strongest 
expiration, still contains 35 cubic inches of air; after an 
ordinary expiration 108 cubic inches; after an ordinary inspi- 
ration 118, and after a very deep inspiration 240 cubic inches. 

In ordinary inspiration and expiration (about 26 or 27 
in the minute) the amount of air that is changed varies from 
10 to 18 cubic inches. 

According to Herbst, full-sized adults usually imspire from 
20 to 25 cubic inches; persons of smaller stature from 15 to 
20. The volume of air inspired during each respiratory act is 
fixed by Allen and Pepys at 16:5, by Abilgaard at from 3 to 6, 
and by Thomson at 40 cubic inches. 

The quantity of air that enters the lungs in the course of 
24 hours is calculated by Davy at from 400,000 to 500,000 
cubic inches, by Allen and Pepys at from 460,800 to 475,200, 
and by Thomson at as much as 1,152,000, or 52:5 pounds, the 
respirations in this case being 20 in the minute.? 

Atmospheric air once respired is lessened in volume; and 


' Schultz, op. cit. p. 288. 
* Gmelin’s Handbuch der theoretischen Chemie, vol. 2, p. 1519. 


BLOOD. 125 


the loss has been variously estimated by Berthollet, Pfaff, and 
Davy at from 1-27th to 1-100th of its bulk. Allen and Pepys, 
however, found the loss not more than 1-166th, or about 0-62, 
and they looked upon the former as a mere error of obser- 
vation. 

The most important experiments regarding the changes 
which atmospheric air undergoes in respiration, are those of 
Allen and Pepys,! of Dulong,? and of Despretz.3 

The earlier experiments of Allen and Pepys showed that 
the quantity of oxygen lost was exactly replaced by the car- 
bonic acid generated, and that nitrogen was given off. 

In their later experiments, it appeared that more oxygen 
was absorbed than the quantity of earbonic acid expired ac- 
counted for; they were also further convinced of the accuracy 
of their former observations respecting the increased quantity 
of nitrogen which is expired. They caused animals to breathe 
an atmosphere of pure oxygen, and likewise of oxygen mixed 
with three times its volume of hydrogen. In the latter case 
a portion of the hydrogen disappeared, and was replaced by an 
equal volume of nitrogen. 

The experiments of Dulong were conducted with great ac- 
curacy, and by means of apparatus expressly prepared for the 
purpose. They showed that more oxygen is consumed than is 
replaced by the carbonic acid formed. The quantity of oxygen 
thus lost, and not replaced by carbonic acid, amounted in the 
case of herbivorous animals to about 10° of the oxygen which 
was changed into carbonic acid; in carnivorous animals the 
minimum excess amounted to 20, and the maximum to 502. 

The observations of Despretz confirm the results obtained 
by Dulong, and lkewise show that nitrogen is developed 
during respiration. 

The following table presents a sketch of the results of the 
observations made by Despretz; the calculations are founded 
on the French litre :— 


1 Schweiger’s Journal, vol. 1, p. 182; and vol. 57, p. 337. Phil. Trans. 1809, 
p- 410. 

2 Tb. vol. 38, p. 505. 

3 Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 26, p. 337. 


126 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 

















Bin beter] the Ex- Air after the Experiment. Excess of 
periment. Oxygen 3 
ee ne Nitrogen 
Carbonic | bonic Acid | veloped. 
Nitrogen.| Oxygen. | Nitrogen. Oxygen. end: ynieil 
Rabbits. . 37°914 | 10:079 | 38°743 | 6:023| 3:°076 0-980 0°839 
Leverets . 39:085 | 10°389 | 39°517 | 6:216| 2°955 1-218 0:432 
Guinea-pigs 37:957 | 10:089 | 39:023 | 6°790| 2°588 0°707 1:066 
Dog a. 37:649 | 10:008 | 39°022 | 4:424] 3°768 1:806 1:374 
Puppies. . | 37176 | 9:882 | 38-273 | 3:649| 4-018 | 2-215 | 1-097 
Tom Cat . | 37:830 | 10:055 | 38°354 | 7:125| 2-060 0:870 0°524 
Pigeons. . 37:662 | 10:012 | 38°372 | 6:°826| 2-451 0°735 0:710 
Great Owl . | 38-027 | 10:109 | 38°754 | 7-483] 1-601 1:025 0:727 











The quantity of carbonic acid formed in the process of re- 
spiration in twenty-four hours in adults, and the amount of 
carbon contained therein, have been calculated as follows: 





Expired Carbonic Acid} Carbon. Consumed Oxygen. 

Cubic in. | Grains. Grains. Cubic in. Grains. 
Lavoisier and Seguin . | 14930 8584 2820 46037 | 15661 French. 
Menzies : : Shae = ao Bc 51480 | 17625 English. 
Davy . A 3 . 31680 | 17811 4853 45504 | 15751 _ ss, 
Allen and Pepys . - | 39600 | 18612 5148 39600 | 13464 _,, 








The large amount of carbon, from 11 to 13 ounces, (Davy, 
Allen, and Pepys,) that is thus carried off by the lungs in the 
twenty-four hours, does not accord with the other phenomena 
of nutrition ; and Berzelius has calculated that it would require 
61 pounds of solid food daily to make up for the carbon that is 
separated by the lungs alone, without taking into consider- 
ation the very considerable amount that is also removed by 
the urimary secretion. And further: when we consider that in 
most sorts of food the portion which is converted into chyle is 
much less than that which is carried off by the intestinal 
canal in the form of feces, it becomes the more wonderful how 
so many persons can exist on a few pounds of daily food, the 
solid constituents of which must be very small, and of which 
only a still smaller part admits of assimilation ; and we cannot 
help agreeing with Berzelius, that so large an excretion of 
carbon is inconceivable, and that in all probability there is 
some fallacy in the experiments. 

Prout has made some interesting observations respecting 
the development of carbonic acid from the lungs at different 


BLOOD. 127 


periods of the day. He found that durimg equal spaces of 
time the minimum occurred during the middle of the night ; 
towards morning it increased, and attained its maximum be- 
tween 11 and 1 o’clock; it then gradually diminished till 
about 9 p.m., when it remained fixed at its minimum till 
3a.m. The quantity of carbonic acid was likewise found to 
imerease by gentle exercise, especially at its commencement, 
and when the barometer was low. 

The mean amount of carbonic acid per cent. was 3°45. 
[A series of similar experiments has been published by Mr. 
Coathupe, which differ in several respects in their results from 
those of Prout. They were continued for a week. The fol- 
lowing is the result obtained : 


Carbonic acid per cent. 
of air expired. 


From 8 a.m. to 93 - r - ; 4°37 

10 am. to 12 : : - : 3°90 

12 noon to 1 - : : : 3°92 

2 p.m. to 53 5 . - 5 4-17 

7pmato 82  ~ , : ; 3°63 
9p.m. to midnight . ; : 4:12—Mean 4:02. 


Macgregor ascertained that the air expired by persons ill of 
confluent smallpox contained as much as 82 of carbonic acid. 
During the eruptive fever of measles, it amounted to from 4 to 
5¢; and in proportion as the health was restored, the per cent- 
age was diminished to its natural standard. In chronic skin 
diseases an augmentation was likewise observed ; and, in a case 
of ichthyosis, the mean per centage was 7:2; in typhus, ac- 
cording to Dr. Malcolm,' the formation of carbonic acid is di- 
minished; in diabetes, no deviation from the normal standard 
could be detected. 

The question of the quantity of carbonic acid expired by a 
person in twenty-four hours has lately become of peculiar inte- 
rest, im consequence of its association with several problems of 
high physiological importance. Liebig has endeavoured indi- 
rectly to estimate the quantity by comparing the amount of 
carbon contained in the food consumed in the twenty-four 
hours, with the carbon of the excretions during the same period, 
and estimating the difference as the quantity separated by the 
respiratory process. He thus found that an adult, taking 
moderate exercise, expires daily on an average 13:9 ounces of 
carbon (more than double the quantity found by Lavoisier.) 


‘London and Edinburgh Monthly Journal of Medical Science, 1843, page 1. 


128 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


Experiments have recently been made by Andral ana 
Gavarret, Scharling, and Brunner and Valentin, with the view 
of ascertaining this point, and of elucidating the chemical 
bearings of this department of physiology. We shall endeavour 
to give, as briefly as possible, their most important results. 


Absolute quantity of expired carbonic acid. 


Andral and Gavarret expressed their results per hour. They 
are contained in the following table: 


MALE SEX. 


Carbon Carbon 

exhaled exhaled 

Age. Muscular development. per hour. Age. Muscular development. per hour. 
8 Moderate ; : 67-0 37. +Moderate : : 164-7 
10 ~=~*Very great , el O47) AQ Wery great; Seals ore 
12 Moderate : = 3:9 45 Very slight (mean of 4) 132-4 
12 Great . , 27-8 48 Good . : 5 illenloy 
14 Moderate 5 . 1262 50) Good ~~: : 5 lee 87/ 
16} Good . : a UY) 54 ~+Very great : 5) GBP} 
18 Good : ; ~ 694 59 Moderate : . 154:0 
20° ‘Good ~~ : . 1663 60  Extraordinarily great 209-4 
24 Moderate (mean of 2) 176°6 63 _Extraordinarily great 190-9 
f ees 2M 64 Slight . :  el33°9 
26  ~=Extraordinarily great { o17-1 fai reas 1478 
26 Moderate : . 169-4 76 «Slight . : ~ 92:4 
28 Good . . 5, USE 92  Extraordinarily great 135°5 
SoeGOOd aan : . 176°6 102 Extremely diminished 90°8 


33 Moderate (mean of 6) 164°7 


FEMALE SEX. 


Periods Muscular Carbon Periods Muscular Carbon 

of develop- exhaled of develop- exhaled 

life. Age. ment. per hour. life. Age. ment. per hour. 
Prior to the -10 Good . ‘92-4 (38 Moderate 120°3 
appearance | 11 Good . 95-4 42 Good . 127°8 
of the 13 Great . 97-0 44 Verygreat 152-4 
catamenia. 15} Verygreat 109°3 After 49 Moderate 113-9 
15} Moderate 97:0 cessation 52 Moderate 115°5 
19 Verygreat 107°8 of 56 Moderate 109°3 
During 22 Good . 103-1 catamenia. 163 Moderate 106°2 
menstrual + 26 Slight . 92-4 | 66 Moderate 104°7 
life. 26 Moderate 97:0 E Very great 101-4 
32 Moderate 95:4 82 Moderate 92:4 
45 Moderate 95-4 3 months } 42 .Gacd. Lee 

pregnant. 


5 smowdo.) 132) Good) 4. el2677, 
74mo.do. 18 Slight . 112°4 
84mo.do. 22 Good . 129°3 


BLOOD. 129 


It is thus seen that, in general, the amount of carbonic acid 
expired by both sexes increases with age up to a certain point— 
the 40-45th year, and then diminishes; that the quantity of 
carbonic acid expired increases with the development of the 
muscular system; that women expire less carbonic acid than 
men; that the formation of carbonic acid attains its max- 
imum at the commencement of menstruation, and then expe- 
riences no further increase, except in the pregnant state, until 
the cessation of menstruation, when an increase again takes 
place. On an average, an adult male, of moderate constitution, 
exhales from 160 to 170 grains of carbon per hour; an adult 
female in the unimpregnated state, from 100 to 110 grains ; 
during pregnancy, 125 grains; and after the cessation of the 
catamenia, from 116 to 180 grains. Dumas also found 154 
grains per hour as the average quantity of carbon exhaled by 
an adult male. 

Scharling’s experiments were made on the following indi- 
viduals: Ist, a male, et. thirty-five, weighing 131 lbs.; 2d, 
a male, et. sixteen, weighing 115!lbs.; 3d, a soldier, et. 
twenty-eight, weighing 164 lbs.; 4th, a girl, et. nineteen, 
weighing 111! lbs.; 5th, a boy, et. nine and three-quarters, 
weighing 441bs.; and 6th, a girl, et. ten, weighing 46 lbs. 
The carbon exhaled per hour amounted to— 


No.cf Amount | No.of Amount 
the of carbon. Remarks. | the of carbon. Remarks. 
person. grains. | person. grains. 
l. 145 ‘Fasting ene 137°3 Asleep 
In June After breakfast and a | In 111:9 Fasting 
when she { walk October. 159-4 { Fasting, after break- 
very 130 Hungry fast and work 
hot. 165 2 hours after dinner | 188-9 After dinner 
160 After tea | 194:7. 3 hours after dinner 
100 Whilst asleep i 178°3. After work 


H 122-3. Whilst asleep 





PIN a baw oad Rad: 68-9 Whilst eating 
In June 1442 Fasting Thi 91:3. Fasting 
pan BO9-6) hr Basngcand Hungry October. 92°6 After supper 
ve 177 . re rast Dee 1338 1 hour after breakfast 
hot. fant 117:0 1 hour after dinner 
167-7 [ete BOD Ge 108-9 Whilst eating 





180'°8 2 mis after dinner 


130 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


No. of Amount No. of Amount 
the of carbon. Remarks. the of carbon. Remarks. 
person. grains. person. grains. 
5. 76:2 Fasting 6. 65°5 Whilst asleep 
In 94:8 Whilst at breakfast In 95:3. After breakfast 
Autumn. 113°8 After breakfast Autumn. 103°0 After dinner 
119-3 1 hour after dinner 99:0 Shortly after tea 
84:5 2 hours after supper 75:1 Whilst asleep 


74°38. Whilst sleepy 


Supposing that adults sleep seven and children nine hours 
per day, the amount of carbon consumed is on an average— 


In twenty-four hours. In one hour. 
ile 3380 grains. 141 grains. 
Zs 3455 144 
3. 3692 154 
4. 2555 106 
5. 2050 86 
6. 1932 80 


It is thus evident that the quantity of carbonic acid ex- 
pired is very variable, and that it may be altered by many 
circumstances. Hunger and rest diminish, satiety and labour 
increase it. It is greater during the day than the night, in 
the proportion of 1:237 to one. If the expired carbonic acid 
be estimated in relation to the weight of the body, it is found 
that children give off a proportionally greater amount of this 
gas than adults. In some forms of disease, the amount of 
expired carbonic acid falls below the standard; it seems, in a 
state of health, to vary directly with the activity of the circu- 
lation. 

The influence of muscular activity on the amount of carbon 
consumed, has been clearly shown by some experiments made 
by Dr. Hofmann during a pedestrian tour. His diet was simple 
and scanty, he took no drink, walked durmg the whole day, 
weighed all his food and every excretion that could be weighed 
(even the nasal mucus), as well as himself; he then found that 
the weight lost by the body was never equalled by the excess 
of the excrements over the food, and that there was a constant 
loss of matter by the skin and lungs, which amounted to more 
than 1lb. We must pass over the details of his experiments. 
Brunner and Valentin found that the weight of carbon they 
consumed per hour varied from 134 to 170 grains, and averaged 
160. The volume of expired carbonic acid per hour, on an 


BLOOD. 13] 


average, was equal to 21°8 litres,! and the entire volume of 
the air expired per hour on an average equal to 540 litres. 
These results agree well with those of the earlier observers. 
When the corrections for moisture are made, the quantity of 
carbon expired per hour is equal on an average to 172 grains, 
and of carbonic acid 23-5 litres. 


B. Relations of the constituents of the expired air to the 
theory of respiration. 


On this point Brunner and Valentin only have experimented. 
They found— 


Volume per cent. in relation 
to the atmosphere. 


Mean of CO,,. O. N. Disappeared O. Difference of N. 

ae ee exp. Istseries 4:°356 16:°007 79-547 4-720. + 0°362 
4exp.2d ,, 3°825 16-306 79-869 4508 + 0°683 

Thomas . 4exp.Ist ,, 4:673 15°895 79-432 4:920 +  0°329 
zs 

oe 

a 


Individual. No. of experiments. Volume per cent. 


Zexp. Ist ,, 4:316 167143 79-541 4°671 0°356 

Wexp.2d ,, 4:641 15-783 79:576 5°032 0°391 

Total average 4°380 16:033 79-587 4-783 0-402 
Weight per cent. 


Valentin 


Brunner J 12 exp. Ist series 67522 17:428 76-050 5582 — 0:940 
4exp.2d ,, 5°749 17-735 76516 5275 — 0-474 

Thomas . 4exp. Ist ,, 6:975 17:165 75:860 5845 —  1:130 
Valentin 2exp. Ist ,, 6458 17-481 76-061 5529 — 0:929 
W2Zexp.2d ,, 6:945 17-089 75-965 59920 — _  1:025 

Total average 6546 17°373 76:081 5637 — 0°909 


It is thus evident that the variations observed in the 
amount of nitrogen are entirely within the errors of observa- 
tion, and the nitrogen may be disregarded in the process. 

Again, the expired air contains a volume of carbonic acid, 
which is but little less than the volume of oxygen which has 
disappeared (therefore the weight per cent. of the carbonic acid 
is necessarily somewhat greater than that of the absorbed oxygen, 
and thus also the difference of nitrogen appears positive as 
regards volume, but negative as regards weight); so that all 
the oxygen absorbed reappears as carbonic acid, except a small 
quantity consumed in the body for other purposes. Now, 
according to Graham’s law of the diffusion of gases, when they 
are separated by an animal membrane and are under equal 
pressure, they become mixed inversely as the square roots of 


[' The litre is a little larger than the English wine quart; the litre being equal to 
*1-028, and the quart to 57°75 cubic inches. ] 


132 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


their densities; consequently, 1:17585 volume of oxygen is 
absorbed for one volume of expired carbonic acid. Comparison 
of the figures shows us that the mixture of the two gases in 
respiration takes place entirely according to the law of diffusion 
of gases ; for the most accurate method of experimenting gave 
results, in which the figures obtained for the carbonic acid and 
absorbed oxygen, almost exactly agreed with those reckoned 
according to the law of the diffusion of gases : 


Volume per cent. of the Oxygen Carbonic acid Dim 
expired air. absorbed. calculated. Peron 

Cosi: N. 

3850 16270 79:185 4-690 3-994. + 0:144 per cent. 
3°593 16:034 79°185 4°93] 4199 - . 0:606 .,, 
3°949 16°090 79°185 4°887 AV62055-=" (0:23 7. 
3:777 16:090 79°185 4914 492" a 10:45.) 
3-759 16095 79:185 4-922 A929.) A aos es 
4:483 15°328 79°185 5698 e803 ean 0:3 700 8 ay 
4°752 14:733 79185 6°362 5418 + 0:660 ,, 
4588 14:°852 79°185 6°253 BidZo) “= 2 O0as. iiss 


In respiration, which is thus a purely mechanical process, 
the inspired air is first warmed to 99°:5, and saturated with 
moisture at this temperature, which is rapidly accomplished on 
account of its extensive distribution. It then experiences a sim- 
ple diffusion ; the nitrogen remains entirely unaffected ; 1:1742 
volume of oxygen is absorbed, and replaced by 1 volume of car- 
bonic acid which is expired ; or for each volume of oxygen ab- 
sorbed ‘8516 volume of carbonic acid appears. In consequence of 
the accuracy with which the law of diffusion is here observed, the 
most minute portion only of other gases is absorbed or expired. 

That hydrogen, carburetted hydrogen, and carbonic oxide 
gases are not contained in the expired air, the authors have 
shown by some direct experiments; but small quantities of 
organic matters are evolved during respiration, as is shown by 
sulphuric acid, through which expired air has been made to 
pass, being always coloured red.]! 

Various opinions have been promulgated respecting the 
formation of carbonic acid in the blood. The most natural and 
probable is that of Lagrange and Hassenfratz, who maintain 
that the blood takes up oxygen in the lungs and retains it in a 

‘ [For further information on this subject, the reader is referred to Valentin’s 


Lehrbuch der Physiologie, 1844, vol. 1, pp. 507-580, or to an excellent abstract 
that appeared in the Chemical Gazette. ] 


BLOOD. 133 


state of solution. The blood-corpuscles absorb from this con- 
stant source a due supply of oxygen for their change. 

The metamorphosis occurs in the peripheral system, and, for 
the most part, in certain organs, as, for instance, the kidneys. 
The blood-corpuseles give up the carbonic acid, thus formed, 
to the blood, and it is thrown off by the lungs. It must 
be remembered that blood always contains carbonic acid and 
oxygen, but arterial contains more of the latter and less of the 
former than venous blood ; also, that the whole of the carbonic 
acid is not separated by the lungs, although, when the blood 
reaches those organs, it is perfectly free from oxygen. 

Although the atmospheric air and the circulating fluid are 
not brought into absolute contact, there is no impediment to 
their mutual action. ‘The absorption of the air through the 
humid membrane that surrounds the parenchyma of the lungs 
is facilitated by the immense extent of surface presented, 
over the whole of which a thin stratum of blood is distributed, 
and simultaneously exposed to the atmospheric influence. The 
permeability of the soft tissues, especially of the membranes, 
by fluid and gaseous substances, is a well known fact. It 
is in accordance with this law that atmospheric air finds its 
way into the blood. Dark red blood, mclosed in a moist 
bladder, soon assumes a bright red tint; a gas inclosed in a 
similar receptacle is found, after some time, to be partly dis- 
placed by atmospheric air. These are mere illustrations of the 
same principle. If the opinion that has just been given be 
correct, then carbonic acid and oxygen must be present both 
in venous and arterial blood. Numerous experiments have 
been instituted with the view to determine this point. 

By submitting 12 ounces of the venous blood of a calf to a 
heat of 200°, Sir H. Davy obtained 1:1 cubic inch of carbo- 
nic acid, and 0-7 of oxygen, and the experiment has been con- 
firmed by Brande and Vogel. Stromeyer, Bergemann, Miller, 
and others have failed in obtaining carbonic acid from blood 
in this manner. Brande and Vogel found that blood placed im 
vacuo developed a gas which contained some carbonic acid, and 
their statement is confirmed by Home, Bauer, and Reid Clanny, 
while J. Davy,! Mitscherlich, Tiedemann, Gmelin, and Muller 

1 [Dr. Davy has recently shown that gas is frequently, although not invariably, 


disengaged both from venous and arterial blood in vacuo. Researches, Physiol. and 
Anat. vol. 2, p. 153.] 


134 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


failed in observing any development of carbonic acid under the 
air-pump. 

Hoffmann and Stevens could not obtain carbonic acid either 
by the application of heat or by the air-pump; but they ob- 
served that if freshly-drawn blood be shaken with hydrogen, 
carbonic acid is then evolved. Another experiment in favour 
of the existence of carbonic acid in the blood has been insti- 
tuted by Miiller. Nysten and Collard de Martigny made 
animals inhale gases entirely devoid of oxygen, and observed 
the formation of carbonic acid. Miller and Bergemann made 
frogs breathe pure hydrogen and nitrogen, and observed that, 
after the animals had remained in these gases from 6 to 22 
hours, they had expired a quantity of carbonic acid, varying 
from 0:25 to 0°83 of a cubic inch. 

Magnus has published a series of accurate experiments which 
must be regarded as quite decisive respecting the amount of 
carbonic acid and oxygen in arterial and venous blood. He 
passed a current of hydrogen through recently drawn blood, 
and found that carbonic acid was given off in a constantly de- 
creasing ratio. He likewise analysed the whole of the gas that 
he obtained from the blood, and found its composition as 
follows : 


Volumes in cubic centimeters. Gas. 
Blood of ahorse . ‘ é : 125 é yielded 9°8 
Venous blood of a horse 4 205 - : 5 UE 
Ditto : 3 > : é 195 < é ty pile toy 
Arterial blood of a horse ; ‘ 130 : : » 16:3 
Ditto : 3 : ; ; 122 : : - 10:2 
Venous blood of the same horse. 170 é : . 18-9 [ 2°50 


40 N 


9:4 CO, 
Arterial blood of the calf ¢ A 123 F F : us 35 O 
16N 


BLOOD. 135 


Volumes in cubic centimeters. Gas. 7:0 CO, 
Arterial blood of the calf é ~ 108 . yielded 126 3:00 
276 N 

10-2 CO, 
Venous blood of the same calf ; 153 : - : 199 180 
1:3N 

6:1 CO, 
Ditto : : é : F 140 3 ‘ ; i 1:00 
06 N 


From these experiments, it follows, Ist, that carbonic acid, 
oxygen, and nitrogen exist both in arterial and in venous blood ; 
and, 2dly, that the quantity of oxygen is greater, and the quan- 
tity of carbonic acid less in arterial than in venous blood, a fact 
which confirms the opinion we have expressed regarding the 
formation of carbonic acid and the theory of respiration generally. 

The bright colour which is communicated to the blood by 
oxygen, as well as the dark shade that is induced by the trans- 
mission of carbonic acid through it, are the actual shades of 
colour that we see in arterial and venous blood. Moreover, 
when blood has been rendered artificially venous in this way, 
it may be rendered arterial in its colour by agitation with a 
certain quantity of oxygen, and we can then obtain from it a 
mixture of oxygen and carbonic acid. 

We have now enumerated the most interesting phenomena 
in reference to the expired air. We have already noticed the 
circumstance that nitrogen is expired. It follows naturally 
that this gas, which forms the principal constituent of the 
atmosphere, should be inhaled; and, according to Edwards, 
there is a sort of compensation between the amount of exhaled 
and inspired nitrogen, so that the quantity of this gas in the 
atmosphere remains fixed, the amount of expired nitrogen pre- 
dominating at one time, and of inspired nitrogen at another. 
According to Berzelius, the portion of nitrogen taken up by 
the blood is only changed when the blood comes in contact 
with a gas which either contains no nitrogen or which possesses 
it in a greater ratio than atmospheric air. Nitrogen is there- 
fore evolved from the blood during the inspiration of oxygen 
or hydrogen, and the circulating fluid is then found to contain 
a greater proportion than usual of oxygen or hydrogen; but if 
nitrogen is inhaled, an excess of this gas is found in the blood, 
while oxygen and carbonic acid are evolved in accordance with 
the known law of the diffusion of gases. 


136 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In the air after expiration we always find a greater or less 
amount of watery vapour. According to Menzies, an adult 
man, in the course of twenty-four hours, gets rid, in this man- 
ner, of 2880 grains of water. Abernethy fixes the amount at 
4320; Thomson at 9120; Hales at 9792; and Lavoisier at as 
much as 13,704 grains. This water exhales from the blood 
which is circulating in the bronchi and cavity of the throat, 
and contains some animal matter which causes it to decompose 
speedily. Alcohol, ether, and substances of that nature are 
removed from the blood by the lungs, at least in part ; for after 
they have been taken, their odour may be distinctly recognized 
in the breath. Sulphuretted and phosphoretted hydrogen, if 
injected into a vein, are easily recognized in the breath by the 
odour ; and if phosphoretted oil is applied in a similar manner, 
dense white vapours of phosphorous acid are speedily exhaled. 


Respiration of the fetus and of animals. 


As the function of respiration in the embryo of the mam- 
malia cannot be carried on by the lungs, an equivalent is 
supplied to them by the influence of the maternal fluids on 
those of the foetus, in the placenta. Anatomical investigations 
have shown, that it is impossible for the blood of the mother 
to be transmitted unchanged into the foetus; nutriment and 
arterial blood can only make their way into the foetal system 
through the medium of cells. 

In the umbilical cord there are two vessels which convey 
venous blood from the fcetus to the placenta, and there is one 
that conducts arterial blood from the placenta to the foetus. 
The changes which are effected im this manner in the fetal 
blood are not so obvious as if they had occurred in the ordinary 
manner in the lungs: in fact it is by no means easy, or in- 
deed always practicable, to detect any difference in the colour 
of the arterial and venous foetal blood. The change, however, 
such as it is, is of the highest importance to the foetus, since 
it dies if the umbilical cord be tied before birth. The anato- 
mical peculiarities in the circulating system of the foetus are 
too well known to require any description. 

In the embryo of birds the respiration is carried on during 
the later stages of development, by the allantdis, an extremely 
vascular membrane, over which the left umbilical artery is 


BLOOD. 137 


especially distributed. The embryo is ultimately entirely in- 
closed in the allantoide (the chorion of V. Baer,) and is inti- 
mately connected with the membrane of the shell. The mutual 
action of the allantoide and the atmosphere, takes place directly 
through the membrane of the shell, and the shell itself, and 
thus it may be regarded as a proper respiratory organ, whose 
development has corresponded throughout with that of the 
embryo. 

In birds, the lungs do not occupy the whole of the thoracic 
cavity, but are placed in its furthest extremity: the thoracic 
and abdominal cavities are not separated by a diaphragm. 
Openings are situated on the surface of the lungs which admit 
the air from those organs into the large cells situated around 
the pericardium and between the viscera of the abdomen: the 
air can pass from these cells even into the cavities of the bones. 

Respiration is conducted in fishes much on the same prin- 
ciple that it is in the foetus of the mammalia. The venous 
blood is conveyed to the gills, where it circulates in the capil- 
laries, and absorbs oxygen and nitrogen from the air which is 
contained in the water, and in this way it becomes arterialized. 
Humboldt and Provencal have carefully studied the process of 
respiration in fishes, and have proved that they take up oxygen 
and nitrogen from the air which is diffused through the water, 
and that they exhale carbonic acid ; that the quantity of oxygen 
which they absorb is more than is replaced by the carbonic acid 
expired; that fishes absorb oxygen from boiled water which has 
been subsequently impregnated with half its volume, but that 
they only survive in it for a short time; and, lastly, that they 
die in water from which the air has been removed, or in which 
they have respired for any time. 

The water (from the Seine) in which these experiments were 
conducted contained from ‘0266 to ‘0287 of its volume of atmos- 
pheric air, of which from ‘306 to °314 was oxygen. The amount 
of carbonic acid varied from :06 to ‘11 of the volume of atmos- 
pheric air. 

The water was inclosed in bell-glasses over mercury, through 
which the fishes were introduced into it. In experiments with 
tenches they observed, that from 100 parts of atmospheric air 
there were abstracted 22°8, 13:6, 23:4, 15°5, 17:4, 22°8 parts, 
the variations depending on the duration of the experiment 


138 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


and the number of the fishes. The ratios of the consumed 
oxygen to the carbonic acid formed, were as 1 to °57, -80, -91, 
*20, and ‘50, while the ratios of the consumed oxygen to the 
consumed nitrogen were as 1 to ‘43, °87, -40, 19, ‘71, and °63. 
The inequality of these ratios indicates, as Berzelius remarks, 
the varying power with which fishes act upon the air on dif- 
ferent days, at different seasons, and possibly in different con- 
ditions of health.! 

The amount of oxygen consumed by fishes is much less than 
would be required for warm-blood animals of equal bulk,? and 
their temperature is very little above that of the surrounding 
medium. When breathing free atmospheric air, they do not 
consume more oxygen than in their native element. 

Fishes absorb oxygen and exhale carbonic acid, not merely 
with their gills but with the whole surface of their body, as 
long as they are surrounded with water impregnated with at- 
mospheric air. This fact was proved by Humboldt in the fol- 
lowing manner. He passed a cork collar, covered with waxed 
cloth, over the head of a fish, which was then introduced into 
a vessel filled with water, the vessel being closed by the cork 
collar, which was so adjusted that the head and gills of the fish 
did not come in contact with the water in the vessel. Fishes 
thus treated lived five howrs, and the water in the vessel under- 
went the changes usually produced by respiration. 

Ermann found that the air, in the swimming bladder of lake 
fish, is deprived of a considerable portion of its oxygen. Biot, 
on the contrary, found in the swimming bladder of those marme 
fishes that inhabit deep waters, more oxygen than nitrogen. 
Humboldt and Provencal observed that after the removal of 
the swimming bladder fishes continued to absord oxygen, but 
that they did not form any carbonic acid; they regard it, how- 
ever, as doubtful whether this phenomenon is due to the pa- 
thological condition of the animal, or to the absence of the 
swimming-bladder. 

Insects can live for a long time under the receiver of the 
air-pump, in avery rarified atmosphere; if, however, their stig- 


! Thierchemie, p. 140. 

2 Treviranus estimates the amount at about 509 less than warm-blood animals of 
equal bulk would consume. His conclusions are based on the experiments referred 
to in the text. 


BLOOD. 139 


mata be closed with oil, they speedily die. The researches of 
Scheele, Vauquelin, and Hausmann show that in the respira- 
tion of insects a portion of the oxygen of the atmospheric air 
is converted into carbonic acid. 

Treviranus has observed that the amount of oxygen which 
is taken up is frequently twice as great as is required for the 
production of the carbonic acid formed, and that insects always 
develop nitrogen. Thus a honey-bee, confined in an atmosphere 
of 272 cubic inches, consumed 13°5 of oxygen, while it only 
yielded 8°3 of carbonic acid and 5:3 of nitrogen. 

The experiments of Spallanzani and Hausmann tend to 
prove that the changes produced by worms on the atmospheric 
air in which they are confined are similar to those effected by 
insects. 


On the metamorphosis of the blood. 


All our conceptions of organic life are associated with the 
idea of continuous change of substance. A constant metamor- 
phosis is going on in the living blood, which, in fact, may be 
regarded as the most obvious manifestation of its vitality. 

When it ceases to undergo this metamorphosis, it dies ; indeed 
the very act of vital annihilation is attended with a change in the 
blood, which we regard as an indication of its plastic power. As, 
however, life in every manifestation of its varying forms is depen- 
dent on certain conditions, and cannot exist when they are in- 
fringed, so it is with the vitality of the blood ; for although there 
is doubtless an actual inherent power in the blood, it can no 
longer act when it is deprived of the condition requisite for its 
maintenance, namely, the reciprocal action of the organism. The 
blood is not the only portion of the body that undergoes this 
change ; every organ and tissue is subjected to a similar meta- 
morphosis, which is presented to us under the general phenomena 
of nutrition and consumption, (or waste,) and which is dependent 
on, and effected by, the blood alone ; but since the various tissues 
present a different chemical composition, and since the different 
organs separate different matters from the blood, it is obvious that 
they cannot all modify the circulating fluid in the same manner, 
but that the metamorphosis must vary in some degree with the 
influence of the nervous system. Two conditions are essentially 
requisite for the metamorphosis of the blood, namely, circulation 


140 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


and respiration, inasmuch as, without them, the blood would 
not be brought in contact with the oxygen, which is necessary 
for the existence of life; and the more completely these func- 
tions are discharged, the more perfectly will the due changes 
in the blood be effected; if, on the contrary, the blood is de- 
tained in any part of the body, or cannot enter the sphere of at- 
mospheric action in the lungs, the metamorphosis can be only 
imperfectly effected. 

We know, from the investigations of Schwann and Reichert, 
that all the tissues of the animal body are composed of cells, and 
that nutrition and growth of the organs and tissues is conducted 
by the production of new cells, appropriate for each individual 
organ, developing themselves at every point where the substance 
from which they are formed, viz. the blood, is conveyed; that 
these cells, by their organic formation, effect a change in the 
nutritious plasma, by appropriating from it matters homologous 
to themselves, and that the cells are finally consumed or dis- 
solved, as is obvious from the general phenomena of the circu- 
lation. The nutrition and consumption of the tissues of the 
animal body in the general process of life is, consequently, the 
product of the nutrition and consumption of the cells which 
constitute those tissues. Since the capillaries are distributed 
over every particle of each individual tissue, and since their walls 
are composed of cells, which can communicate and impart the 
plasma to the adjacent cells, the plasma can be universally dis- 
tributed, and the reciprocal action between it and the cells of 
the various organs ensured. 

In what manner the cells act upon the nutrient fluid we are not 
able to understand, but there can be little doubt that they, or 
(which amounts to the same thing) the organs and tissues which 
they constitute, produce adialytic, catalytic, or, as Schwann terms 
it, ametabolic change on the plasma of the blood. The products 
of these influences must necessarily consist of certain chemical 
compounds, formed in very different ways, and varying in their 
nature in accordance with the activity of the nervous power. 
The high atomic numbers of those animal substances which are 
of the most importance in nutrition, as the protein-compounds 
and fats, render the existence of numerous decompositions ex- 
tremely probable. In vegetable chemistry we find whole classes 
of substances transmutable, one into the other, in which the 


BLOOD. 141 


same radical, consisting of carbon and hydrogen, is combined 
with different atoms of water, or of water and oxygen; I need 
only refer to woody fibre,’ starch, gum, sugar, and lactic acid. 
We have sufficient grounds for assuming the existence of simi- 
lar radicals in the chemical compounds of the animal body; and 
if we knew more of the composition of the extractive matters, 
we should doubtless find a radical common to all of them. In 
many of these decompositions, which are extremely varying in 
their nature, oxygen is undoubtedly absorbed, and carbonic 
acid evolved, as indeed we see in the process of respiration. 
Oxygen combines not merely with carbon ; it may also enter 
into combination with hydrogen and form water, or with a bi- 
nary or ternary radical, which it would oxidize. Hydrogen 
and oxygen may, further, be either separated from or taken up 
by these compounds, in the proportions in which they form 
water. Thus quaternary compounds may be split into several 
quaternaries with the same or a different radical, or into quater- 
nary and ternary compounds, &c. These must, however, be re- 
garded as mere possibilities, which, unless kept in check by 
experiment, are capable of indeterminate extension. 

One of the most important conditions for the reciprocal ac- 
tion between the cells of organs and the nutrient fluid is a 
proper degree of warmth; the requisite temperature varies in 
different classes of animals, but its range is limited within 
very narrow bounds, above or below which the action is im- 
peded, or even destroyed, and death then ensues. If, there- 
fore, we should regard the conditions of temperature as inde- 
pendent of the organism, and unconnected with the phenomena 
of life, these phenomena would be unavoidably and perpe- 
tually disturbed, and the due course of the organism altogether 
destroyed. 

The conditions for the production of a due temperature are 
therefore based on the vital phenomena themselves, and in ac- 
cordance with the principles of adaptation that are observed 


1 [Woody fibre (lignine) 5 (Gra lils, —=i (Cr ROP 
Starch : : : of (Gre tal Ole =(C,. H,) 0, + 2HO 
Gum . : : : 3 (Oh HB Ore =(C,, H,) O, + 3HO 
Cane sugar - : » C,H,0,+ HO=(C,, H,) 0,4+3HO 
Grape or diabetic sugar eC Hy, O77 -- aHO= (C,, H,) 0,-- 60 


2 eq. Lactic acid : ~ Cro Hip O19 + 2HO=(C,, Hy) O, + 4HO-] 


142 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


in the animal organism, it is developed by those very processes 
for which its existence is indispensably necessary. 


On animal heat. 


The temperature of every animal is higher than that of the 
surrounding medium. ‘The temperature of the human body in 
those internal parts which are most easily accessible, such as the 
mouth and rectum, is usually between 97°:7 and 98°-6. The 
temperature of human blood varies from 100°-6 to 101°°75 in a 
state of health, but in disease it may rise to 106° or 107°. In 
morbus cceruleus and in cholera the temperature falls consider- 
ably : in the former the hand could only raise the thermometer 
to 78°°8, and in the latter, the heat of the mouth raised it only 
to 78°-8, and in another experiment to 77°. In healthy persons 
the temperature is said to attain its maximum during the day, 
and to fall from 1°8 to 2°7 degrees during sleep. In warm cli- 
mates Dr. Davy found the temperature of the interior of the 
body 2°:7-3°:6 higher than in temperate climates. 

Tiedemann! has given the following table regarding the tem- 
perature of birds, which is higher than that of any other class 
of animals. 


Degrees. 
Great titmouse ; Z : o) hTe25 
Swallow : : : : a Eos 
Fringilla, different species - - 111°25 to 107 
Anas, different species. : 2 LLL oS to L06 
Common hen A 4 - - 109-94 to 102:99 
Falco, different species . : - 109-74 to 104°5 
Pigeon . 4 . ; ° - 109°58 to 106-7 
Raven . “ “ , : - 109-23 to 105-99 
Vulture : . 3 - - 107:49 
Common cock ‘ - : - 103°78 to 102-99 
White game . : : - 102 
Gull . 6 4 : : - 100 


Tiedemann and Rudolphi have also made an extensive series 
of observations regarding the temperature of the mammalia. 
The following is derived from their tables : 


Degrees. 
Bat (Vespertilio pipistrellus) . - 106 to 105 
Squirrel ° * . . - 105 
Sheep . - A 5 : - 104 to 100-4 





1 Tiedemann’s Physiologie, vol. 1, p. 454. 


BLOOD. 143 


Degrees. 


Ox . : - - : los ta) 99 
Rabbit - “ - . 104 to 99°46 
Ape (Simia aigula) c - - 103-86 

Cat - - - ; : . 103°6 to 98°6 
Bat (Vespertilio noctula) - - 102 

Dog . - : - - 101-3 to 99:3 
Guinea-pig . ¢ > - - 100-4 to 96°37 
Hare. < - 5 - 7 100 

Elephant - . : - = 99:25 
Horse. - : - - - 98°24 to 97 


There is no very great difference between the cetacea and the 
other mammalia in respect to their temperature. The tempe- 
rature of the seal and of the Greenland whale has been deter- 
mined at 104°, and that of the porpoise has been found to vary 
from 99°5 to 95°-9. The temperature of the amphibia differs 
very slightly from that of the surrounding medium. Czermack! 
found that the temperature of a proteus was 63°5° when that 
of the air was 55°-4, was 68°25 when the temperature of the 
air was 63°°5, and was 65° in water at 55°; in water of which 
the temperature was 44°-4, the temperature of a frog was 48°. 
Dr. Davy found the temperature of a snake 88°-46 in air of 
81°°5, and 90° in air of 82°-94; the temperature of testudo 
midas was 84°, while that of the air was 79°5. 

The temperature of fishes appears, from the experiments of 
John Hunter, Dr. Davy, Broussinet, and others, to be from ‘7 
to 2°7 degrees above that of the surrounding water.? 

It must be regarded as an established fact, that a certain 
temperature is necessary for the continuance of animal life, and 
that the source of this temperature must be sought for within 
the organism, and must be looked upon as a consequence of 
life itself. The production of heat cannot, however, be so 
properly ascribed to any of the collective phenomena of life, as 
to the chemical processes, which are known to develop warmth, 
and the action of which we see in the metamorphoses ; and on 

’ Baumgartner’s und Ettinghausen’s Zeitschrift fiir Physik und Mathematik, vol. 3, 
p. 385. 

? [The theory of respiration, as the source of animal heat, invented by Lavoisier 
and Laplace, as well as the critical experiments by which that theory was tested by 
Dulong and Despretz, are too well known to require repetition; neither need we 
devote any space to the influence of the nerves on the generation of heat. The sub- 


ject is fully discussed in Miiller’s Physiology, translated by Dr. Baly, vol. 1, pp. 83-88 ; 
first edition. ] 


144 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


the other hand a certain degree of animal heat is indispensably 
requisite for those chemical processes which are the necessary 
consequences of the proper organic development of the cells of 
all tissues, and of their catalytic influence on the nutrient fluid, 
the plasma of the blood. The animal heat is therefore to be 
regarded as the product of those vital functions, for the due 
exercise of which it is essentially requisite. The organism is 
thus protected against the innumerable disturbing forces under 
which it would otherwise succumb, in consequence of the vary- 
ing temperature of the external world. The development of heat, 
therefore, decreases with the diminution of the vital powers, with 
the retarded circulation of the blood, with checked nutrition, 
and with imperfect metamorphosis, while all the phenomena of 
inanition, perfect destruction of power, and finally an asphyxiated 
condition, are the consequences. 

As this cellular action, which is collectively exhibited in the 
metamorphosis of the animal organism, may be regarded as 
purely chemical, so the heat that is engendered thereby may be 
considered as a consequence of these chemical processes, and 
therefore all those functions of the organism which are necessary 
for the preservation of life, contribute directly or indirectly to 
the production of animal heat, which must be regarded as de- 
veloped at every point at which metamorphosis is occurring, and 
therefore not merely in the lungs, but in the whole peripheral 
system. The absorption of oxygen, and its combination with 
the carbon of animal matter, not only in the lungs, but in the 
whole body, must, on that account, be regarded as the prin- 
cipal source of heat. In addition to the oxygen required 
for the formation of the carbonic acid, a certain amount is ab- 
sorbed, which probably enters into combination with hydrogen, 
or with binary or ternary radicals of carbon and hydrogen, of 
carbon and nitrogen, or of carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen, and 
in this manner, doubtless, contributes somewhat to the general 
production of heat. 

The theory of animal heat affords a simple explanation of many 
well-known phenomena, as, for instance, of the slight imde- 
pendent warmth of the fcetus, when removed from the uterus 
(as shown by Autenrieth and Schultz),! and of those young 


! Experimenta circa calorem fcetus et sanguinem. Tub. 1799. 


BLOOD. 145 


animals that are born in an imperfectly developed con- 
dition. 

The low temperature of persons with morbus cceruleus, in 
whom the metamorphosis of the blood is always imperfect, and 
the corresponding phenomena that are presented by aged, 
debilitated, sick persons, and those in whom (according to 
Edwards) a small quantity of blood circulates torpidly; as well as 
the increased temperature in inflammatory diseases when the 
blood circulates more rapidly than usual, and the metamorphosis 
is more rapid, are other illustrations of the same principle. 

The phenomena observed in hybernating animals are strongly 
corroborative of the mutual dependence of the animal heat and 
of metamorphosis, and also of the intimate connexion of the 
former with the processes of respiration and circulation. 

The observations of Pallas, Spallanzani, Mangili, Saissy, 
Czermack, and Berthold show that hybernation is prevented by 
a temperature of from 50° to 80°, whilst it is induced in those 
animals that are subject to it, even in summer, by means of arti- 
ficial cold: other observers, however, maintain, that there is a 
periodical deficiency of vital energy at the usual hybernating 
season. During this peculiar state the respiration becomes 
slow, and may even cease altogether ; the circulation is likewise 
almost stopped, for Saissy found that the capillaries of the exter- 
nal parts of the body were nearly empty, while the larger ves- 
sels were only half filled, and the undulatory motion of the blood 
was observable only in the principal trunks of the thorax and 
abdomen. He likewise found that the blood did not contain 
the usual amount of fibrin and albumen at this period, and that 
the bile had a peculiarly sweet taste. 

The production of heat is also dependent on the mass of 
the blood-corpuscles, and on the rapidity of the circulation,—a 
view that perfectly accords with the preceding statement, for 
the corpuscles are (as we shall presently show) undergoing a 
constant metamorphosis, which may be regarded as an evidence 
of the vitality of the blood, and which is intimately connected 
with the respiratory process. 

When there is a paucity of corpuscles, the necessity for the 
absorption of oxygen is diminished in a corresponding ratio, 
the circulation becomes slower, and there is less heat developed 
than in the normal state: on the other hand, blood with an 

10 





146 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


excess of corpuscles, but which is circulated slowly, develops 
less heat than blood which contaims a smaller proportion of 
corpuscles, but which is more rapidly circulated, for more 
oxygen may be consumed in the latter than im the former 
case. 

The following table, drawn up from the researches of Dumas 
and Prevost, and amplified by my own observations, affords 
some interesting data on this point : 


Animal. Blood-cor- Mean tem- Pulse. Respiration. 
puscles. perature. 

Pigeon . 4 : neocon 107°6 136 34 
Common hen . ; Sellar 106°7 140 30 
Duck fe. 5 ; » 15:01 108°5 110 21 
Raven . : : . 14°66 108°5 110 21 
Heron . ; : . 13°26 a2 200 22 
Ape (Simia Callitriche) . 14°61 95°9 90 30 
Man : ; : > 2292 98°6 72 18 
Guinea-pig. : - 12°80 100-4 140 36 
Dog “ 4 : . 12:38 99°4 90 28 
Cat 3 ; : a1 2-04: 101°3 100 24 
Goat : : “ ye LO:20 102°5 84 24 
Hare . : : vr oe DrRYS 100°4 120 36 
Horse . ; : . 9°20 98:2 56 16 
Sheep . , c e200 100-4 
Ox ; J : ; 10750 99°5 38 
Carp. : : a) 20 51:1 to 51-4 20 
Tench . : : 5) le) 52°8 to 51:4 
Green toad . ; ezi20 51:8 to 51:4 77 


The metamorphosis of the blood, and the general change of 
matter, lead to still another secondary source of animal heat. 
It has been shown by Poullet' that all solid bodies, organic 
and imorganic, undergo an elevation of temperature when 
moistened with different fluids. In organic substances it may 
amount to from 11° to 18°. Since the act of metamorphosis 
is always effected through humid membranes, this source of 
heat must be regarded as of great importance, even if it be 
not actually identical with the catalytic metamorphosis of the 
cells themselves. 

Becquerel and Breschet? have observed, by means of a 
thermo-electric multiplier, that each contraction of a muscle is 
accompanied by an increase of temperature, amounting to 


' Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 20, p. 141. 
2 Annal. des Science. Nat. 1835. 


BLOOD. 147 


from 1°8 to 2°-6, the increased temperature that succeeds 
violent exercise may probably be in part accounted for by this 
means. 


Metamorphosis of the blood in the nutrition of the organism. 


The conveyance of nutriment to the various parts of the 
organism is one of the most important functions of the blood ; 
and in order to discharge it efficiently, the blood must itself 
receive a constant supply of proper material. 

Regarding the blood physically, as composed of corpuscles 
and plasma, it is only from the latter that the organs can di- 
rectly obtain nourishment. This plasma is, however, a very 
complicated fluid; its principal constituents are albumen, 
fibrin, fatty compounds, salts, extractive matters, and a pe- 
culiar colouring matter, hemaphzin. The question now arises, 
Are all these constituents, or only some of them, employed in 
nutrition? Our analyses of ure, sweat, and mucus show 
that these secretions and excretions carry off, in addition to 
certain peculiar matters, the same pigment, the same salts, 
and the same (or similar) extractive matters as are contained 
in the plasma; hence we may infer that those substances 
which are removed from the body are effete products of the 
metamorphosis, and that they are not suited for nutriment, at 
any rate in the form in which they occur. Neither albumen, 
fibrin, nor fat! is found in urine, sweat, or mucus, and the 
presence of either albumen or fat is always regarded as a 
symptom of a morbid state. This fact tends to support the 
opinion that albumen, fibrin, and fat are the substances which 
are employed in the nutrition of the peripheral system. 

The blood, in its passage through the capillary network, 
permeates all organs and tissues, and their cells take up from 
the plasma those substances which they require for nutrition, 
and restore to it those which have become effete, and are no 
longer adapted for the process of nutrition. We may con- 


' The fat that is occasionally to be detected in the sweat does not arise from the 
true perspiration, but from the sebaceous glands of the skin. Perfectly normal 
mucus, such as occurs in some quantity in healthy urine, contains neither albumen 
nor fat. Pulmonary mucus and the saliva discharged with it often contain a little 
fat and albumen, but, in all probability, they belong to the saliva only, a fluid not 
intended to be excreted. 


148 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


clude that the act of nutrition is effected by the sole influence 
of a vital power inherent in the cells, and that the plasma is 
entirely passive. If the various tissues of the animal body, 
different as they are in their chemical constitution, obtain 
their nourishment from the proteim- and fat-compounds of the 
plasma (which contains the elements of the cells, but not the 
different cellular substances themselves,) it is clear that the cells 
and tissues must produce a metamorphic effect on that portion 
of the nutriment which is homologous with themselves. Their 
catalytic, or as Schwann2, in his theory of cells, terms it, their 
metabolic power, evolves from the plasma the materials that 
serve for the nutrition of the cells. The plasma is here the cyto- 
blastema, the catalytic or metabolic force lies in the cells and 
tissues. But although the plasma acts only passively in this 
nutritive process, we cannot deny it a peculiar vital power. This 
is first manifested in the formation of the cytoblastema, for the 
force that creates these forms cannot be regarded as inde- 
pendent of the plasma. If the nucleus is formed by the so- 
lidification of fibrm in the plasma, which from the similarity 
of their constitution is probable, its formation must be re- 
garded as the result of a purely plastic force in the liquor san- 
guinis. If, however, all the different portions of the body, 
the muscles, bones, cartilages, horny matter, serous mem- 
branes, sinews, neurilema, brain, &c.,—are nourished and 
formed by the proteim- and fat-compounds of the plasma, 
we must arrange these compounds into those which are, 
and those which are not, homologous to the tissues. Neither 
albumen, fibrin, nor fat can belong to the second division, 
since the tissues are formed from these substances. 

I have already mentioned, that those constituents of the 
plasma, that are excreted in the urine and the sweat, cannot 
reasonably be considered as any longer nutritious, for it would 
be at variance with our ideas of a consistent organization to 
suppose that substances which could be subservient to the pre- 
servation of the body should be removed from it ; it would be 
just as irrational to conceive that they were conveyed into the 
body in order to circulate therein, with the nutriment, with no 
definite object; it only remains then for us to conclude that 








! Mikroskopische Untersuchungen, p. 231 and 234. 


BLOOD. 149 


they are formed in the body, and in that case they can only be 
regarded as products of metamorphosis. The most important 
constituents of the secretions and excretions separated from the 
blood are urea, uric acid, bilin, hemaphein, biliphein, ex- 
tractive matters, lactic acid, salts, and mucus. Mucus must 
not, however, be regarded as a genuine excretion, for it plays 
an important part im the animal organism, and its removal is 
not a matter of vital necessity, but the urea, uric acid, and 
bilm are chemical combinations which, in a healthy condi- 
tion of the system, are removed by certain organs in a fixed 
quantity, but which are not met with in the blood itself: and, 
indeed, it is difficult to understand how these products of the 
metamorphosis of the plasma (constant in their amount, and 
determinate in their composition) are produced in the formation 
of tissues, which present entirely different chemical characters, 
and which are frequently developed in very changeable pro- 
portions. It seems more rational to conceive that the urea, 
uric acid, and bilin are products of the metamorphosis of a sub- 
stance of a fixed chemical composition, which, by the simplicity 
and uniformity of the changes to which it is subjected, gives 
origin to the formation of these products of decomposition. 
We shall revert to this subject in our observations on the me- 
tamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, and on the manner in 
which the production of heemaphzin may be explained. 

There still remain for our consideration the extractive mat- 
ters, the lactic acid of the urine, and the salts: all these sub- 
stances occur in no inconsiderable quantity in the blood, and 
their formation during the act of nutrition of the various tissues 
is consequently very probable. If the various tissues are formed 
from the plasma of the blood, and if, as is probably the case, 
their formation is accompanied by the absorption of oxygen and 
the liberation of carbon, the resulting products may be ex- 
tremely various: indeed there are so many different forms of 
extractive matter, of the true nature of which we are still ig- 
norant, that we are justified in the conclusion, that they un- 
dergo very complicated transformations during the nutrition of 
the tissues. While all the tissues may be considered as albu- 
minous, gelatinous, osseous, horny, or fatty, it must be re- 
membered that the various fats differ materially in their con- 
stitution, and that there are similar differences amongst the 


150 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


albuminous tissues. If we regard the extractive matters as the 
products of the nutrition and waste of the different tissues, the 
variety in which they exhibit themselves is not at variance 
with the conceptions we are led to form respecting the nature 
of metamorphosis. Another circumstance in support of this 
view is, that the formation of similar matters is observed in the 
vegetable kingdom, where there is a vital, reciprocal action be- 
tween the cells and the nutriment, combined either with the 
production of lactic, or of some allied acid. Although these 
extractive matters are, without doubt, entirely different from 
those that occur in the animal body, they correspond in many 
of their physical and chemical properties: both are inca- 
pable of being exhibited im a crystalline form, they dissolve 
readily in water and partially in alcohol, they are precipitated 
by many of the metallic oxides, and it is a matter of extreme 
difficulty to obtain them in a state of purity in consequence of 
their tendency to undergo transformation and to become che- 
mically changed. 

Until the extractive matters of the animal body have been 
accurately analysed, and the composition of the various tissues 
has been determined, it will be impossible to obtain a rational 
insight into the nature of these changes. 

It appears from the statements of Berzelius, as well as from 
my own investigations, that some of the extractive matters 
which occur in the blood and in the flesh are also met with in 
the urine. It still remains to be decided whether all the ex- 
tractive matters of the flesh pass unchanged into the blood and 
are thrown off by the urine, or whether they become changed 
in their passage ; or, lastly, whether they are not partially me- 
tamorphosed in certain organs, and again rendered fit to serve 
the purposes of nutrition. When we consider the wisdom that 
is universally obvious in the economy of the animal body, it 
seems probable that the last is the most correct view, and it 
is by no means improbable that the gelatinous tissues are sus- 
tained by a cytoblastema, allied to the extractive matters. 
The fact that some of the extractive matters of flesh are not 
only strengthening but very digestible, renders it more than 
probable that some of the matters of this class serve as nou- 
rishment; while others, incompatible with the purposes of nu- 
trition, are excreted. 


BLOOD. 151 


The plasma of the blood contains salts, some of which are pe- 
culiar to that fluid, and are transmitted from thence into the se- 
cretions and excretions, while others (especially the phosphates of 
lime and magnesia, fluoride of calcium, together with small quan- 
tities of the sulphates and carbonates of soda and lime), occur in 
the bones as actual constituents of the body. The latter are con- 
veyed into the body with the food, partly in the state of phos- 
phates, &c., while their formation is also in part due to the pro- 
duction of phosphoric and sulphuric acids by oxydation of the 
phosphorus and sulphur which occur in the protein-compounds, 
and the subsequent combination of those acids with bases. 
These salts are again found in the urine, for they are removed 
by the blood during the metamorphosis of the bones, and are 
excreted by the kidneys. In the present state of our chemical 
knowledge, it is impossible to assign with certainty any de- 
finite function, to the large quantity of salts, which enters the 
blood but is not transferred into any of the solid textures of 
the body. Hewson suggested that the object of the saline con- 
stituents of the serum was to enable the blood-corpuscles to 
retain their discoid form. Albumen, without salts, has as little 
power as pure water in hinderig the solution of the blood- 
corpuscles. Hewson’s view seems to be supported by the facts, 
that the alkaline salts which occur in only a very slight pro- 
portion in solid textures, are found in a very large quantity in 
the blood; and further, that when water is mixed with blood, 
by injection into a vein, in a sufficiently large quantity to dis- 
solve or modify the form of the corpuscles, a fatal result ensues. 
As these salts are continuously introduced into the blood with 
the food, a corresponding amount must be removed by the ex- 
cretions. The salts have, however, other functions than that 
assigned to them by Hewson. ‘The blood, as is well known, 
has always an alkaline reaction, and it might therefore be sup- 
posed that if a large quantity of an acid were taken, the reaction 
of the blood would be neutralized. This is, however, by no 
means the case, partly because only a certain quantity of the 
acid enters the blood, the remainder being carried off by the 
intestinal canal, and partly because the portion that does enter 
the circulating fluid is at once removed by the kidneys. Thus 
all the mineral acids may be detected in the urine after their 
administration ; the vegetable acids appear, however, to undergo 


152 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


a partial change, at least Wohler found that neutral potash, 
or soda salts, formed by a vegetable acid, were decomposed in 
the organism, and that the bases were removed by the urine 
in the form of carbonates. We thus see that the existence of 
basic salts in the blood is indispensably necessary; and as neutral 
or acid salts are usually contained in the food, it is clear that 
they must undergo such a change in the body as to permit of 
the removal of the acids by the urine while the bases are retained. 

There is every reason to suppose that the basic salts of pot- 
ash and soda in the blood serve for the purpose of combining 
with the lactie, fatty, uric, and probably carbonic acids that 
are continually secreted during metamorphosis. 

The salts of lactic and uric acid are in part excreted in that 
form; and in part, as has been remarked, are decomposed, 
so that the free acids are separated by the kidneys, while the 
bases are retained. The salts of the fatty acids appear to be 
secreted only in the liver. Whether chloride of sodium, which 
appears to be requisite for all the mammalia, serves merely for 
the purpose of preventing the solution of the blood-corpuscles, 
or whether it does not, like some other salts, act as a stimulant 
on the nerves, and in that manner influence the composition of 
the blood, is a question not easily answered. 


Active metamorphosis of the blood. 


As the plasma is subjected to a continuous change in the 
peripheral system during the nutrition of the tissues, it becomes 
a matter of necessity,that it should also receive a continuous 
supply. This is afforded to it by the chyle, a fluid generally 
only poorly supplied with blood-corpuscles, but abounding (at 
least at certain times) in lymph- and chyle-corpuscles, and oil- 
vesicles, and containing some fibrin. The chyle is therefore not 
blood, although closely allied to it ; if, however, as is generally 
believed, the chyle is the only nutriment of the blood, it must 
ultimately be changed into blood, and this transformation is 
effected by an increase of the blood-corpuscles, and by a dimi- 
nution of the lymph-, chyle-, and fat-corpuscles, while the fibrin 
is not only increased, but becomes more plastic. A change must 
therefore take place in the blood itself, and this must be not of 
a passive nature, as during nutrition in the peripheral system, 
but active; we must assume that there is a formation and de- 


BLOOD. 153 


velopment of certain substances in the blood, produced by a 
certain vital power inherent in this fluid, with the aid of neces- 
sary potential forces, as, for instance, of oxygen. This change 
or metamorphosis represents the real vitality of the blood, and, 
as far as we at present understand it, we may describe it as a 
process in which not only blood-corpuscles are formed, (by a 
consumption of lymph-, chyle-, and fat-globules,) and fibrin is 
produced, but further, in which the blood-corpuscles are again 
consumed ; for it is obvious that if there is a continuous process 
of formation while their total number remains nearly constant, 
there must be a corresponding consumption of them. 

The presence of atmospheric oxygen is indispensably re- 
quisite for this active metamorphosis of the blood, and one of 
the results of this change is an excretion of carbon, which com- 
bines with a portion of the absorbed oxygen, so as to develop a 
certain degree of warmth. The probability that the chemical 
process, which occurs during nutrition in the peripheral system 
by means of the plasma, involves the absorption of oxygen, has 
been already noticed. The importance of the presence of oxygen 
for the perfect metamorphosis of the blood, and indeed for life 
itself, is sufficiently obvious from the circumstance that the ces- 
sation of the respiratory process is followed by immediate death. 

Although the respiratory process is as necessary for the active 
metamorphosis of the blood as for the production of animal heat, 
yet neither of these processes is to be referred to the lungs 
alone, but to the whole peripheral system. If it were other- 
wise, the temperature of the lungs would be much higher than 
it actually is; whereas, in reality the excess of temperature of 
those organs is very slight, and may probably be sufficiently 
accounted for by the more energetic action of the atmospheric 
oxygen on the mass of the blood in these organs than in other 
parts of the body. 

I cannot give any description of the ‘manner in which the 
blood-corpuscles are formed from the consumption of lymph-, 
chyle-, and fat-corpuscles. Physiologists suppose that a capsule, 
which at first is very thin, but subsequently becomes thicker 
and thicker, is developed around the lymph-corpuscle : this cap- 
sule is filled with hematoglobulin, which at first is compara- 
tively colourless, but subsequently assumes a vivid red tint. 
We are perfectly unable to state where the first heematoglobulin 


154 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


is formed, but there is no doubt that the respiratory process is 
essential to its production. 

Schultz and Henle have examined the blood-corpuscles in 
their various stages of development, and have arrived at very 
similar conclusions. Schultz! observed that the young corpus- 
cles were poorer in colouring matter than the older ones, and 
that, consequently, the nucleus was much more distinct. The 
capsule becomes tumid in proportion to the age and development 
of the blood-corpuscle, whilst the nucleus becomes gradually 
smaller, and in some cases entirely disappears. Water acts very 
differently on blood-corpuscles in different stages of develop- 
ment. The younger and more delicate blood-corpuscles are 
quickly and readily dilated by a very small quantity of water ; 
they are soon entirely deprived of their colouring matter, and 
become perfectly clear and transparent ; whilst the older and 
more developed corpuscles entirely resist the action of water, or 
at the most only become rounded, and do not dissolve except 
on the addition of a large quantity of water. They remarked 
at the same time that the corpuscles most abundant in colour- 
ing matter frequently presented a minute nucleus up to their 
final disappearance ; while many of the most highly developed 
ones gave no indications whatever of a nucleus. 

That a metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles does occur can- 
not be for a moment doubted, but with respect to the peculiar 
circumstances under which it is conducted, and to the products 
that are then formed, we know scarcely anything: all that we 
have been able to ascertain with any degree of certainty is, that 
oxygen is absorbed, and carbon given off during the process ; 
and the following facts justify us in this conclusion : 

a. Dark blood, both within the system and out of it, as- 
sumes a lively reddish tint on being brought im contact with 
oxygen. ‘This change is probably based on a chemical change 
in the hematin. 

b. Blood taken from the body and agitated with oxygen 
absorbs a certain portion of the gas, while carbonic acid is 
formed. The mere serum, however, which contains no blood- 
corpuscles, absorbs only a very little oxygen, and develops car- 
bonie acid in a corresponding ratio. 

1 Ueber die gehemmte und gesteigerte Auflésung und Ausscheidung der verbrauch- 
ten Blutblischen. Hufeland’s Journal, 1838. 


BLOOD. 155 


c. The consumption of oxygen and the formation of carbonic 
acid stand in a direct ratio with the amount of blood-corpuscles, 
and with the number of respirations in a given period. 

Hence it is obvious that the oxygen taken up by the blood 
during the respiratory process, is, for the most part, consumed 
in the metamorphosis of the corpuscles.1 

The development of the blood-corpuscles is doubtless con- 
ducted on the same principle as that of other cells; i.e. the 
blood-corpuscles exert a transforming influence on the surround- 
ing plasma; they select from it the materials requisite for their 
development, and reject the non-homologous products that are 
formed in it. Amongst the matters that are taken up there 
must be always free oxygen. 

During the later stages of development of the blood-corpus- 


1 [There are two rival theories respecting the manner in which oxygen is taken up 
by the blood and conveyed to the peripheral system. Liebig maintains that this is 
effected solely by the iron in the corpuscles, while Mulder refers it entirely to the oxi- 
dation of protein-compounds. Liebig asserts that the corpuscles of arterial blood con- 
tain peroxide of iron; that, in their passage through the capillaries, they lose a portion 
of their oxygen and combine with carbonic acid, so that, in the venous system, they 
no longer contain peroxide, but carbonate of the protoxide of iron. When they reach 
the lungs, an exchange takes place between the carbonic acid of the blood and the 
oxygen of the atmosphere. Mulder, on the other hand, denies that the blood-cor- 
puscles are conveyers of oxygen, and that iron is oxidized during respiration, as 
assumed by Liebig, and he found his conclusions on the following grounds : 

a. The iron is so intimately connected with the other elements of hematin that 
it cannot be removed, even by long digestion of this constituent in dilute hydrochlo- 
ric or sulphuric acid. (Vide supra, p. 41.) Consequently it is highly improbable 
that it should be oxidized in the lungs. Liebig, indeed, observes that dilute acids 
remove iron from dried blood, but Mulder gets over this difficulty by showing that 
other constituents of the blood, besides the colouring matter, contain this metal, 
apparently in an oxidized state. 

6B. If, as Liebig asserts, peroxide of iron exists in arterial, and carbonate of prot- 
oxide of iron in yenous blood, almost any dilute acid would be capable of extracting 
the oxide, which we have shown not to be the case. 

y. Assuming, with Liebig, that the iron exists in arterial blood as a peroxide, 
the organic part of hematin would be different; instead of being C,, H.. N, Og, it 
would be 2(C, H,, N, O, Fe) — Fe, O,, or 2(C,, Ho. Nz O,-;)- 

6. The probability of its existence in a metallic state has been already shown. 
(Vide supra, p. 42.) 

é. The amount of hematin in the whole mass of the blood is far too inconside- 
rable to carry a due supply of oxygen to the whole system. 

Mulder’s theory has been alluded to in an early part of this work. (Vide supra, 
p- 12, note.) We shall have occasion to notice it at some length in our observations 
on the differences between arterial and venous blood. | 


156 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


cles up to their final solution, they must undergo so thorough 
a change as to leave no remains of their principal constituents, 
the hematoglobulin, the nuclei, and the capsules, for not a trace 
of these substances, is found either in the plasma or in any of 
the secreted or excreted fluids, in which we should naturally 
expect to find them. It is altogether impossible to state how 
this change takes place; this, however, is evident, that if the 
metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles terminates in their per- 
fect solution, both the capsule and the nucleus must be en- 
tirely dissolved, and neither hematin nor globulin can be 
contained in it at the moment of solution. What the products 
of this change actually are is very difficult to determine with 
any degree of certainty. 

Transitory combinations with a brief existence may be pro- 
duced, or compounds may be formed, which undergo a further 
decomposition in certain organs. It is very probable that 
substances closely resembling the extractive matters are formed 
in the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, by the decom- 
position of which urea or uric acid are produced, so that by 
the influence of a certain organ (the kidney) the compound is 
separated into those substances, and another form of extractive 
matter. It may further be presumed that the composition of 
hemapheein is such as to include the constituents of biliphein, 
and that the hepatic cells possess the power of secreting the 
biliphzein from it. 

Combinations may likewise be formed of which we know 
actually nothing; for the blood has not yet been sufficiently 
examined. These points need not engross our consideration 
at present; and I will only remark, that in my attempt to 
prove that the fibrin and hemaphzin of the plasma, the urea, 
uric acid, bilin and its acids, the biliphzein, and certain acid 
fats, are products of the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, 
I by no means conclude that they are the only products; in 
fact, I freely grant my assent to the possibility of many others. 

The blood contains a certain amount of fibrin, varying 
from 2 to ‘9, or according to Andral even to 1:08, which on 
whipping is separated in thickish, globular, elastic, stringy 
masses; the chyle appears from my analyses to contain not 
more than from ‘02 to ‘04° of fibrin, which, in consequence 
of its slight tenacity separates on whipping into loose and 


BLOOD. 157 


globular, or else into flocculent mucous masses. Fibrin is 
therefore obviously formed in the active metamorphosis of the 
blood ; and that portion which preexists in the chyle is modi- 
fied and rendered more plastic. It is a well-known fact that the 
respiratory process not only increases the plasticity of fibrin in 
the blood, but also its quantity, and that on the other hand the 
amount of fibrin diminishes in blood which is not efficiently 
brought in contact with oxygen. As the blood-corpuscles 
principally consume oxygen during their change, it appears 
very probable that the fibrin is produced during this process. 

This view is elucidated, and I may say confirmed, by my 
analyses of the blood, in which it appears that with very few 
exceptions, the amount of fibrin always varies inversely with 
the mass of the blood-corpuscles, or, in other words, that the 
more corpuscles there are, the less in quantity is the fibrin, 
and vice versd. This fact is readily explained by the adoption 
of the view that fibrin is formed from the blood-corpuscles ; for 
it is obvious that the quantity of fibrin in the plasma must in- 
crease during an extraordinary consumption of the corpuscles. 

Let us now inquire which of the constituents of the blood- 
corpuscles has been employed in the production of that most 
essential ingredient of the plasma, the fibrin? It can hardly 
be the globulin, for that forms from 4 to 102 of the blood, and, 
being a proteim-compound, is so intimately connected in its 
chemical relations to fibrin, that if we were to suppose that it 
were converted into fibrin, we should expect to meet with a 
much greater quantity of this latter constituent in the blood 
than we find actually existing ; still less can it be the hematin ; 
indeed, the use of this appears to be to facilitate and to maintain 
the independent metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, through 
its energetic capacity for the absorption of oxygen, and through 
ats own metamorphosis, instead of forming a product for the 
further nutrition of the plasma. The capsules and the nuclei 
still remain for consideration. Of the former we know very 
little, but the latter actually possess chemical characters which 
approximate them to fibrin, so that there is no impediment to 
the supposition that this important constituent of the blood is 
formed from the nuclei by a metamorphic process, accompanied 
probably by the absorption of oxygen and the separation of 
carbon. 


158 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The nuclei may be distinctly seen in young blood-corpus- 
cles, but in the process of development they become smaller, 
and, according to Schultz and Henle, as the final solution of 
the blood-corpuscles approaches, they altogether disappear ; 
hence the metamorphosis of the nuclei is by no means sudden, 
but progresses with the development of the blood-corpuscles. 

Burdach,! R. Wagner,? and Valentin? are of opinion, that 
as long as the blood-corpuscles circulate in the living body, 
they possess no nucleus, and that this is only formed at the 
instant that the blood-corpuscle is removed from the circulation. 
R. Wagner found that nuclei were formed by the mere con- 
tact of the blood-corpuscles with atmospheric air. This is a 
further point of analogy between the nuclei and the fibrin of 
the plasma; and if we could only succeed in observing the 
unequivocal reappearance of a nucleus in a blood-corpuscle 
removed from the body, and in which, on account of its ad- 
vanced development, the nucleus had undergone solution, we 
might then, in my opinion, consider that the change of the 
nuclei into fibrin was sufficiently established, especially when 
we reflect that no other constituent of the blood possesses the 
extremely characteristic property of being retained in solution 
in living blood, and of separating into an insoluble mass as 
soon as the vitality of the fluid is destroyed. 

If we assume that the fibrin is formed in this manner, it 
follows that the amount of fibrin must always stand im an in- 
verse ratio to that of the blood-corpuscles ; and this is in reality 
the case,—that whenever the activity of the metamorphosis is 
increased, the amount of fibrin must likewise increase; and 
further, that whenever the blood is hindered in its circulation, 
or its supply of oxygen is stopped or lessened, the amount of 
fibrin must diminish. All these consequences really take 
place. Blood that stagnates in the vessels loses fibrin, for it 
is consumed, while no fresh supply can be formed. Menstrual 
blood, and the blood in melzna contain no fibrin ;* and I shall 
subsequently refer to other similar cases. 


1 Physiologie, vol. 4, pp. 27 and 94. 

° Beitriige zur vergleichenden Physiologie des Blutes, 1838, p. 14. 

3 Handbuch der Entwickelungsgeschichte des Menschen, p. 296. 

* (That the menstrual discharge does occasionally contain fibrin will be shown in 
a future part of this work. ] 


BLOOD. 159 


Let us now proceed with the metamorphosis of the blood- 
corpuscles; the next question for consideration is this: What 
changes do the hematin and globulin undergo? It has been 
already shown that both these substances must undergo an 
entire change during the period of development of the blood- 
corpuscles, that terminates in their consumption or solution. 
The plasma contains a peculiar colourmg matter, hemaphzin, 
to which it owes its yellowish colour,’ and which cannot accu- 
mulate in it beyond a certain amount, because it is con- 
tinuously removed by the kidneys; it is, in fact, this consti- 
tuent that gives the yellow or yellowish-brown tint to the 
urine. 

It can hardly be doubted that the hemapheein is a product 
of the metamorphosis of the hematin ; especially, if it can be 
proved that it is formed solely from the blood-corpuscles, and 
that it is contamed in them to a large amount. We can 
obtain from the serum only slight traces of hemaphzin, but 
the clot yields a considerable amount of colouring matter, 
which must be therefore contained in the blood-corpuscles. 
The hemaphein is formed from the hematin during the de- 
velopment of the blood-corpuscles, and the change is probably 
accompanied by an absorption of oxygen and a separation of 
carbon ; the youngest blood-corpuscles must consequently con- 
tain less heemaphzein than those that are older; and when the 
act of development terminates in their solution, they no longer 
possess any hematin, but only hemaphem. In a normal 
state, the consumption and production of the blood-corpuscles 
must be nearly balanced, and consequently the proportion of 
the hematin to the hemaphzein will remain tolerably constant ; 
when the metamorphosis of the blood is accelerated (1. e. when 
the circulation is quickened, and the mutual action between 
the blood and oxygen is increased) more blood-corpuscles will 
be consumed in a given time than in the normal state, and 
the consumption will especially include the older ones which 
abound in colouring matter, and which in their development 
are approximating to the stage of solution. 


1 When the serum, after the separation of the clot, is of a reddish tint, which is 
not unfrequently the case, blood-corpuscles are suspended in it. In icterus the serum 
is often of a brownish red colour, in consequence of the presence of bilipheein; in 
this case the colour rapidly changes into a green, on the addition of nitric acid. 


160 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In these cases there is, therefore, not merely a diminution of 
the quantity of the blood-corpuscles, but likewise of the colouring 
matter contained therein, since the corpuscles that remain are 
young and deficient in colouring matter, containing, in addition 
to hematin, only a very small quantity of hemaphzin. If the 
circulation of the blood is impeded in any part of the body, and 
it is prevented from receiving its due supply of oxygen, the 
metamorphosis will likewise be impeded and rendered imperfect ; 
the matured blood-corpuscles which are approaching the stage 
of solution will not be dissolved, and there will consequently 
be an accumulation of colourmg matter, especially of hema- 
phein, which is the most abundant pigment in the matured 
corpuscles. 

All these appearances are actually observed. I shall be able 
to demonstrate that, in inflammatory affections, (when the me- 
tamorphosis of the blood is excited to increased activity in con- 
sequence of the accelerated circulation and the increased mutual 
action of the blood and oxygen,) there is only a small amount 
of colouring matter present in the blood, and that, in all pro- 
bability, heemaphzein constitutes but a minute portion of the 
little that does exist; while, on the other hand, in blood which 
is retained in the body without beimg submitted to the due 
action of oxygen, in which the perfect metamorphosis is checked, 
and the corpuscles are not dissolved, as in melena and in 
morbus maculosus, there is a great excess of heemaphzin. The 
colouring matter may also accumulate when organs that take an 
active part in the metamorphosis of the blood are affected, as 
I have observed in morbus Brightii. 

IT shall now proceed to show that it is much more probable 
that such substances as urea, uric acid, and bilin, which are 
definite compounds secreted in a nearly constant ratio by peculiar 
organs, should be products of the active metamorphosis of the 
blood-corpuscles, than that they should be formed during the 
metamorphosis of the plasma in connexion with the process of 
nutrition. 

It is but reasonable to infer that such substances as urea, 
uric acid, and bilin, which are separated in large quantity by 
the kidneys and liver from the blood, should be products of the 
metamorphosis of a substance of an invariably uniform compo- 
sition. In every class of animals, in the most varied forms of 


BLOOD. 161 


existence, under the most opposite kinds of food, we find that 
the bile is a secretion of the liver; whilst amongst all the 
higher classes of animals and many of the lower, urea and uric 
acid, or one of the two, occur as a constant secretion of the 
kidney. It seems opposed to all reason to imagine that in 
animals as different in structure as they are opposite in their 
habits of life, and under every possible variation of circum- 
stances, these fixed and definite compounds should be products 
of the metamorphosis of the plasma during the nutrition of 
every form of tissue. Itis, however, easy to conceive that the 
corpuscles which, although different in their form, are similar, 
if not identical, in their chemical constitution, in the blood of 
all these animals, should, under similar conditions, yield similar 
products as the result of their metamorphosis, and that these 
products should take the form of urea, uric acid, and bilin. 
This consideration alone is deserving of much weight in sup- 
port of the view that I am now advocating. If the urea, uric 
acid, and bilin were formed in accordance with the other hypo- 
thesis, their production would be increased, diminished, or 
stopped, according as nutrition was proceeding favorably, was 
deficient, or was entirely checked, as happens in certain dis- 
orders. But it is well known that the production of these 
substances is by no means dependent on such circumstances. 
The secretion of urea, uric acid, and bile proceeds, both in man 
and animals, when the tissues are gradually wasting from dis- 
ease, and when their nutrition is utterly suspended ; they are 
separated long after the body has ceased to take any food what- 
ever, in fact, as long as respiration and even life itself remains, 
the only necessary condition being the healthy state of the 
secreting organs. I have had several opportunities of examining 
the urine during inflammatory diseases, both before and during, 
or shortly after the height of the attack, and have found that, 
in the latter case, there was always a greater amount of urea 
than in the former. ‘This is easily explained by the conside- 
ration that the active metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles is 
accelerated by an excited inflammatory state, and that, conse- 
quently, a larger number of the corpuscles is consumed during 
a given time, than in the ordinary condition of the system. 


' Miller’s Handbuch der Physiologie, vol. 1, pp. 515 and 588. 


162 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


My analyses of the blood are even more confirmatory than 
any of the preceding statements, of the production of these 
substances during the active metamorphosis of the corpuscles. 

I analysed the blood of the aorta and vena renalis of one 
animal, and the blood of the vena portarum and vena hepatica 
of another animal, with the following results :! 


i a. Blood of aorta, b. Blood of vena renalis, 
in 1000 parts. in 1000 parts. 

Water ; F -  790:000 778°000 
Solid constituents .  210°000 222-000 
Fibrin 5 : : 8°200 mae 
Albumen . s ‘ 90°300 99:230 

oe a. Blood of vena portarum. b. Blood of vena hepatica. 
Water : ; -. 738°000 725:000 
Solid constituents . 262-000 275°000 
Fibrin = ; ; 37500 2°500 
Fat 5 5 : 1:968 1:560 
Albumen A ee 14-636 130-000 
Globulin . 5 Pe GsanS 112-580 
Heematin : : 4:920 4°420 
Hemaphein. : 1467 1-040 
Extractive matter : 16°236 17-160 


Here we observe that the arterial blood contains more water 
than the blood of the renal vein, and that the blood of the 
vena portarum contains more than that of the vena hepatica ; 
the arterial blood and the blood of the vena portarum contain 
a larger amount of fibrin than the blood from the renal and 
hepatic veins respectively. The blood of the renal vem con- 
tains more albumen and fewer blood-corpuscles than arterial 
blood, and a similar relation holds good between the blood of 
the hepatic vein and of the vena portarum. Passing over all 
other points of difference, the results at which we have already 
arrived afford an @ priori argument for, and a confirmation of, 
my theory respecting the formation of urea, uric acid, and bile, 


1 In the first analysis, the venous blood from both the renal veins was collected. 
The amount, although small, was sufficient for the required purpose. Professor Gurlt, 
of our veterinary school, had the kindness to obtain the blood for me. 

2 The whole amount of blood from both renal veins did not exceed sixteen grains, 
a quantity not sufficiently large to admit of the determination of the fibrin by whip- 
ping. I employed it in determining the ratio of the albumen to the dried residue, 
and found that while the aortic blood contained 43, the blood of the renal veins con- 
tained 44°75 of albumen. 


BLOOD. 163 


from the corpuscles during the active metamorphosis of the 
blood. 

Since the kidneys and the liver secrete fluids from the blood 
of less specific gravity than the blood itself, it is clear that in 
its passage through these organs it must become richer in solid 
constituents than before it entered them; moreover, as in its 
circulation through these organs it meets with no free oxygen, it 
must be poorer in fibrin when it leaves them than on its entrance. 

The change that the blood undergoes in these organs, is, 
however, by no means so simple as it might appear to be, and 
as, in fact, these analyses might lead us to conceive. There 
result from it the products of the metamorphosis of the cor- 
puscles, or of the compounds that are formed from them, as 
well as of the plasma, during the nutrition of these organs. 
The excess of albumen in the blood of the renal and hepatic 
veins is clearly opposed to the view that the urea and bilin are 
formed from the plasma. 

It is sufficiently established that the renal cells possess the 
power of removing an excess of salts and water from the blood, 
in the same manner as the hepatic cells separate fat. 

I beg expressly to repeat that I do not regard the urea, uric 
acid, and bilin, as the only substances that are formed, besides 
fibrin and hemaphein, during the active metamorphosis of the 
blood-corpuscles ; on the contrary, I am of opinion that other 
substances are likewise produced, regarding the formation of 
which we might speak with greater certainty if almost every- 
thing regarding them were not based on mere conjectures. It 
is, for instance, very probable that a portion of the globulin 
is converted into albumen, which, since both substances are 
protein-compounds, might happen in two ways, either by a 
portion of the phosphorus, or sulphur, being oxydised, if glo- 
bulin contain more of those elements than albumen; or if, on 
the other hand, it contain less, by the globulin dividing into, 
for instance, one half or one third of a protein-compound with 
all the phosphorus and sulphur, and into one half or two thirds 
of a protein-compound devoid of phosphorus and sulphur, which 
then undergoes further metamorphosis. The fat, which is more 
abundant in the blood-corpuscles than in the serum, must likewise 
undergo a change. The fat of the serum appears to be softer 
than that of the corpuscles, while that of the fibrin is firm and 


164 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


white. In all of them there is cholesterin, margaric and oleic 
acids. Berzelius could detect no phosphorus in the fat of fibrin ; 
neither did Lecanu find any in the fat of the serum. The fat 
containing phosphorus, which Boudet found in the blood, must 
belong to the corpuscles. We cannot form any very clear idea of 
the manner in which these metamorphoses are conducted ; it is, 
however, probable that the phosphorized fats are conducted to 
the brain. Since the fats that are taken as food consist, for 
the most part, of stearin, margarin, and olein, it would appear 
as if fatty acids were formed from them by a process of oxyda- 
tion during the succeeding formation of blood-corpuscles, and 
the consumption of lymph-, chyle-, and oil-globules. 

The elementary composition of many of the substances that 
are formed from the blood, and of some that occur in it, are 
known to us, but of the greater number of the matters that are 
produced during its metamorphosis, particularly of the extrac- 
tive matters, we are entirely ignorant. 

The extremely high atomic numbers of many of these sub- 
stances, as, for imstance, of the protein-compounds, renders it 
very probable that each atom is decomposed into various new 
atoms of less atomic weight. We are, however, at present en- 
tirely deficient in many of the requisite data, in our knowledge 
regarding the connecting links, as, for stance, of the compo- 
sition of the extractive matters, of the different tissues, &c., 
without which even a superficial insight into the nature of the 
metamorphosis of the blood cannot possibly be obtained. 

With the scanty materials in our possession, we may never- 
theless attempt an ideal sketch of the metamorphic action that 
goes on in the blood, the conditions being that there is an 
absorption of oxygen, and that carbon is given off; it will, at 
any rate, afford an illustration of the facility with which such 
equations may be deduced, and of the slight degree of confi- 
dence that should be placed on their interpretation, unless they 
are tested by established facts. 

We may, for instance, suppose that 4 equiv. of the organic 
portion of hematin (C,, H,, N, O,), by the absorption of oxygen, 
will be decomposed into choleic acid, uric acid, urea, and car- 
bonic acid. Thus— 


4 At. Hematin . . C,,¢ H,, Ni. On 


164 At. Oxygen \ = Cre Hyg Nye Ojg5 


164 


Likewise, 
2 At. Choleic acid 
1 At. Uric acid 
3 At. Urea k 
76 At. Carbonic acid . 


BLOOD. 165 


Cy, H,. N, 02, 
Cio Hy N, 05 
C5 H,, Ng 05 
Cr6 Oj52 


— Cis Hee Nie Orgs 


We can also show how chondrin may be supposed to be 
formed from protein by the addition of oxygen and hydrogen : 


for, 
4 At. Protein 


16 At. Oxygen 


We may, in a similar manner, conceive that 
and lactic acid are formed from protein by the 


Cie icy Noo O,3 
6G At. Water . . H, 


0; i 5 (C3, Hyg N, O,,) = 5 At. Chondrin. 
Oi 

glutin, urea, 
absorption of 


oxygen, and the liberation of carbonic acid; for 


2 At. Protein 
46 At. Oxygen 


Likewise, 


2 At. Glutin 

3 At. Urea 

6 At. Lactic acid 
12 At. Carbonic acid 


C 


7 


+, Lela INI 2 
50 He2 Nip Org } == (Cron Vaal Ob, 
O45 i 


Cy5 Hy N, Oro 
Cs Hy. Ng Og 
C56 Hy, O55 
Ci, O24 


= Cy Neo N19 Or 


If we conceive that the blood-corpuscles are formed of globulin 


(a protem-compound), hematin, and margarin, they may, by 
the absorption of oxygen and the development of carbonic acid, 
be decomposed into many other substances, as, for instance, 
into protein, cholesterin, margaric acid, urea, uric acid, and 
lactic acid ; for, 


LOPACPEOCEIN Ss ran Ozngsel ate Neg Ojon 
1 At. Hamatin Cle Ng OG 
7 =C A I : ; 
1 At. Margarin Cr) EL OF; Cs20 Maoz Nex Oars 
138 At. Oxygen Orns 


Likewise, 


5 At. Protein Cry Valves Nag Ola > 
2 At. Cholesterin . Cres O, 
2 At. Margaric acid . C,) He Os | 
10 At. Urea . we Oo ie Na Oen grag Hugs Nes One 
2 At. Uric acid Ope daly Wee Qns 
14 At. Lactic acid . Cran 18h OF 
52 At. Carbonic acid . C,, Oro: 


Many similar illustrations of possible metamorphic actions 
might be adduced; but, as they do not contribute to the ad- 
vancement of chemical science, we shall omit to notice them, 


166 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


2. Special chemistry of the blood. 


Prowximate constituents of the blood. 


The blood is a fluid of a very complicated nature, and has 
been proved to include the following constituents in man and 
in certain mammalia : 


Water. 


Fibrin. 
Protein-compounds . . | Albumen. 
Globulin. 
Heematin. 
Hemapheein. 
{ Alcohol-extract. 


Colouring matters 


Extractive matters Spirit-extract. 
Water-extract. 
( Cholesterin. 
Serolin. 
Fats - + » « +» 4 Red and white solid fats, containing phosphorus. 
Margaric acid. 
Oleic acid. 
Iron (peroxide.) 
Albuminate of soda. 
Phosphates of lime, magnesia, and soda. 
Sulphate of potash. 
Salts . oY Fe esa Carbonates of lime, magnesia, and soda. 
Chlorides of sodium and potassium. 
Lactate of soda. 
Oleate and margarate of soda. 


Oxygen. 
(CEI 85. p. 8A Orv “E { Simoen, 
Carbonic acid. 


Sulphur. 
Phosphorus. 


Traces of the following substances have also been detected 
in the blood in certain pathological states of the system : 


Sugar. 

Urea. 

Bilin and its acids (?). 
Biliphein. 

Glutin (?). 

Heemacyanin. 

Erythrogen. 

Hydrcechlorate of ammonia. 
Acetate of soda. 


BLOOD. 167 


Benzoate of soda. 
Margarin. 

Olein. 

Copper. 
Manganese. 
Silica. 


On the methods of analysing the blood. 


Although many of the proximate constituents of the blood 
may be recognized without difficulty, there are some (especially 
those which exist in only minute quantity) that cannot be 
readily detected. An exact quantitative analysis of the blood, 
including the determination of all the substances in the fore- 
going table, would, in the present state of chemistry, be almost 
an impossibility ; we must, therefore, content ourselves with the 
quantitative determination of the more important constituents, 
and arrange and determine the others, as, for instance, the 
fats, salts, extractive matters, &c. in groups. For this purpose 
fresh blood must be used: the clot must be allowed to sepa- 
rate from the serum, and the two (the clot and the serum) must 
then be analysed separately. 

The following method is given by Berzelius.!. Two known 
quantities of blood are taken, one of which is allowed to coagu- 
late spontaneously, while the other is evaporated for the pur- 
pose of ascertaining the quantity of water. The clot, when 
thoroughly separated, is removed from the first of these quan- 
tities, cut into pieces, and placed upon an open weighed filter, 
resting upon several folds of blotting paper; it must then be 
covered with a similar weighed filter, over which some more 
blotting paper must be placed, and the whole must be compressed 
by a stone or other weight. The blotting paper must be changed 
as long as any moisture is communicated to it, and the clot 
must be subsequently dried in vacuo over sulphuric acid, and 
carefully weighed. By deducting the known weight of the 
filters we obtain that of the fibrin and blood-corpuscles. 

The dried clot must now be frequently washed with water 
at from 75° to 85°, until the fibrin is left colourless. 

The dried blood which has been used for the purpose of as- 
certaining the quantity of water must be successively treated 


' Thierchemie, p. 93. 


168 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


with ether, alcohol, and boiling water. The ultimate resi- 
due consists of fibrin, blood-corpuscles, and albumen; by 
deducting the already determined weight of the fibrin and 
blood-corpuscles, we obtain the weight of the albumen. Ether 
takes up the fat; alcohol, certain extractive matters, and lac- 
tates; boiling water, certain extractive matters, chloride of 
sodium, &c. The serum (the quantitative relation of which 
to the clot is known) is gently boiled, by which means the 
albumen is coagulated, and all moisture is removed by eva- 
poration. 

The dried residue is pulverized and treated with boiling 
water, which leaves albumen and fat unacted upon ; the latter 
of which may be now taken up by ether. 

The water dissolves the salts, certain extractive matters, and 
some fat, or fatty-acid compounds. 

The watery solution must now be evaporated, and the residue 
treated with alcohol, which takes up the chlorides of sodium 
and potassium, the lactates, extract of flesh, and perhaps some 
fat, if any happens to be present. 

An objection may be raised against this method, that the 
separation of the blood-corpuscles from the serum is not suffi- 
ciently perfect. 

The complete removal of the serum is a matter of very con- 
siderable difficulty, in consequence of the formation of a dried 
surface, at those parts of the clot which are in contact with the 
paper, by which means a check is opposed to the egress of any 
moisture from the interior portions. Indeed, the moist clot 
can only be perfectly freed from hzematoglobulin with difficulty, 
and with the loss of some fibrin; if it were thoroughly dried, 
the difficulty would be confined to the washing out of the 
blood-corpuscles. But when fibrim remains for a considerable 
time in water, a small portion of it is dissolved, and a part of 
it is transformed into a viscid mass, consisting of very minute 
microscopic granules, which are not easily washed out. When 
all the blood-corpuscles are not inclosed by the coagulated 
fibrin, the serum assumes a reddish tint in consequence of their 
presence ; they must then be taken into estimation with the 
serum. In most cases, analyses made in this manner would 
yield too high a number for the blood-corpuscles ; in some few 
cases the assigned number would be too small. 


BLOOD. 169 


Lecanw’s method of analysing the blood is very similar to 
that of Berzelius. 

Denis! adopts a method of analysing this fluid which involves 
considerable time and manipulation; and, after all, does not 
give results of very great accuracy. 

Fresh blood is received into two vessels of known capacity, 
one of which is narrow and high. One portion is used for the 
determination of the water, the carbonate of soda, and the 
chlorides of sodium and potassium; the other for the estimation 
of the other constituents of the blood. 

1. The first portion is evaporated to dryness in the water- 
bath, pulverized in an agate mortar, again heated on the water- 
bath, and the quantity of evaporated water estimated. 

The residue is incinerated, digested in water, and filtered; the 
filtered solution is evaporated to dryness, and the residue is 
weighed, dissolved in water, and treated with nitrate of silver ; 
chloride of silver, and oxide of silver (?) are precipitated. This 
precipitate is dissolved in nitric acid, the solution is evapo- 
rated and crystallized ; the crystals are dissolved, decomposed, 
and neutralized by carbonate of soda. The solution which is 
thus obtained (of nitrate of soda) is filtered, evaporated to dry- 
ness, and incinerated with animal charcoal in a platinum cru- 
cible. It is then digested in water, and the carbonate of soda 
ascertained. Upon deducting the weight of the salt from that 
of the whole ash of the blood, we obtain as a residue the weight 
of the chlorides of sodium and potassium. 

11. The other portion is allowed to stand for twenty-four 
hours, in order to permit of the thorough separation of the clot 
from the serum. 

The latter is removed with a pipette, and the separation is 
continued until incipient signs of decay present themselves. 
The water is removed from the serum, im vacuo, at a tempera- 
ture of from 120° to 140°. The clot is placed in a small bag 
and washed with water until all the colouring matter is removed. 
The residue, consisting of fibrin, is then placed in the water 
that has been used for the washing of the clot. The fibrin 
is separated by decantation, the solution of colourmg matter 
being carefully poured off. It is then washed with fresh water. 


1 Recherches expérimentales sur le Sang humain, considéré a l’état sain, par S. 
Denis: Paris, 1830, p. 121. 


170 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In the separation of the hematoglobulin from the fibrin, ac- 
cording to this method, about the seventieth part of the clot 
is lost in the water. The solution of the colourmg matter is 
heated until the coagulation of the hematoglobulin is ef- 
fected, which is then separated and freed from moisture by 
pressure. 

The fluids are then evaporated to dryness. We have now 
four subdivisions : 

a. The fibrin which still contains fat and cruorin.} 

6. Albumen with cruorin, salts, and extractive matter. 

c. Hematoglobulin with fat, extractive matter, and salts of 
iron and the earths. 

d. The evaporated fluid separated from the hematoglobulin, 
containing salts and osmazome. 

These four portions are dried, weighed, put into glass flasks, 
and submitted for some minutes to the action of alcohol of 
-800-—820, at a temperature of 86°; they are then filtered, 
and the spirituous solutions united and evaporated. The re- 
sidue, consisting of extractive matters and salts, must be im- 
cinerated, by which means the quantity of extractive matter is 
determined. 

The four portions must now be treated with boiling water, 
by which cruorin and certain salts are removed. 

The portions a and d are now combined, and the three are 
treated with boiling alcohol of ‘800 for the purpose of ex- 
tracting the fat. The filtered solutions are united and evapo- 
rated, and the cholesterin separated by crystallization from the 
fats which contain phosphorus. The mixed portion of @ and d 
contains tolerably pure albumen; it is dried, weighed, and in- 
cinerated, and the ash is preserved. 

The second portion contains fibrin; this likewise is meine- 
rated, and the ash added to the former. 

Lastly, the hematoglobulin is dried, weighed, and incine- 
rated. The collected ashes are analysed with regard to the pro- 
portions of peroxide of iron, phosphates of ime and mag- 
nesia, &c. 


' Denis applies the term erworin to a substance obtained by boiling fibrin and 
albumen in water. Itis soluble in water, insoluble in alcohol and ether, of an agree- 
able taste, and precipitable by tannic acid. It appears to be produced by the action 
of the boiling water on fibrin previously affected by long contact with water. 


ee ie 


BLOOD. 171 


This method is objectionable, not merely on account of the 
time and labour required for its various stages, but further, 
because the whole of the water cannot be estimated by the in- 
dicated process. Moreover, the quantity of the hematoglobulin 
which is dependent upon the quantity of blood-corpuscles, will 
be given in excess, as it is certain that the whole of the serum 
cannot be separated from the clot, in the manner proposed by 
Denis. The determination of the fibrin may also be inac- 
curate in consequence of the continuous treatment of the clot 
with water, which has the effect of transforming a portion of it 
(i.e. the fibrin) into minute flocculi or granules which combine 
with a viscid substance. The estimation of the fat and of the 
extractive matters is also very inaccurate; the quantity of fat 
given by Denis in his analyses being much too large, and of 
extractive matter, too small. Finally, no certain results with 
respect to the separation of the salts can be obtained by this 
method. Whatever may be the faults of his process, he is at 
least deserving of praise for having conducted no less than 
eighty-three analyses in this laborious manner. 

The method that I pursue in the analysis of the blood, if 
not strictly correct, at least gives results that approximate nearer 
to the truth than those of Denis. In explaining it, I must enter 
a little into detail, in order to indicate certain necessary pre- 
cautions, and to explaim on what points it is deficient. 

a. I receive two, three, or at the most four ounces of blood, 
as it flows from the vein, in a thin glass, and stir it,! but not 
violently, till the fibrin separates. If it be stirred too vio- 
lently, a portion of the fibrin becomes separated in the form of 
finely-divided scum, which cannot be easily collected. When 
the blood has completely cooled, it is weighed, together with 
the rod and glass, im a good balance; it is then poured out, 
the glass is cleansed and dried, the rod is freed from the ad- 
herent fibrin, and is washed and dried: the glass and rod are 
then weighed, and the quantity of blood determined. 

6. Any fibrin that separates in flocculi from the blood must 
be collected, added to the former, pressed, and placed in water. 
If the water become strongly coloured, it must be poured off 


! [A bunch of fine twigs is generally used for this purpose, but the fibrin may be 
obtained with as much accuracy by shaking the blood ina stoppered bottle containing 
a few fragments of lead, to which it readily adheres. ] 


172 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


and renewed until the fibrin is found to be colourless, which is 
usually the case in from 18 to 24 hours. It is almost needless 
to mention that none of the flocculi of fibrim must be allowed 
to escape when we pour off the water. The decolorized fibrin 
is dried, cautiously broken up, pulverized in an evaporating 
basin, and then submitted to a temperature of 230° until it 
ceases to lose weight.! It is then weighed. It is again finely 
triturated, placed in a flask and heated, first with anhydrous 
alcohol, and then with ether, for the purpose of extracting the 
whole of the fat. The ether and alcohol must be evaporated in 
the water-bath, and the weight of the fat estimated. The quan- 
tity of fibrin and of fat associated with it must then be cal- 
culated in regard to the whole quantity of the blood. 

c. A quantity varying from 30 to 50 grains of defibrinated 
blood must be accurately weighed in a small basin, and cau- 
tiously heated over the flame of a spirit-lamp. This portion 
must then be triturated, submitted to the action of the water- 
bath, pulverized as completely as possible, and the heat conti- 
nued until it ceases to lose weight. Lastly, it must be heated 
in a chloride of zine bath to 230°. The loss of weight indicates 
the quantity of water. 

d. An optional quantity (say from 400 to 600 grains) of defi- 
brinated blood, must be boiled over the flame of a spirit-lamp, in 
order to coagulate the whole of the albumen, and subsequently 
placed on the water-bath for the purpose of removing all mois- 
ture. As soon as the blood has become sufficiently dry to ad- 
mit of being partially broken up, it must be carefully triturated 
in a mortar, and then again placed on the water-bath. All the 
tough coriaceous portions, which are not easily pulverizable, 
must be carefully removed: by further drying they become ge- 
latinous, tough, and ultimately brittle. The powdered blood 
ought, however, if the previous steps have been properly exe- 


1 J may observe that, in my analyses of blood, I always use small porcelain basins, 
weighing from 200 to 300 grains, and that I pulverize dried substances in the basins 
themselves with asmall pestle. As these substances, when thoroughly dry and warm, 
are apt to exhibit a strong electrical repulsion of their particles, it is advisable to 
place the basin on a sheet of glazed paper, by which precaution any portion that may 
escape from it can be easily replaced. Any particles adhering to the fingers or to 
the pestle may be swept off with a soft feather. The most scrupulous exactness and 
accuracy is requisite in these investigations. 


ee 


BLOOD. 173 


cuted, to assume a flocculent and bright-red appearance, even 
before it is perfectly dried, and should not exhibit any dark, 
glittering particles under the process of trituration. If it is 
black, or of a bad colour, brittle, very tough, and extremely dif- 
ficult to triturate, it is not fit for the purpose of analysis. 

e. This flocculent powder must be reduced to dryness (the 
trituration being at the same time kept up), and a small por- 
tion (8, 10, or at most 15 graims) weighed in a glass flask for 
further experiments. If the powder should appear to contain 
moisture, a small quantity (for instance about 8 grains) may 
be submitted to a temperature of 230° for a short time, and 
the whole error from this source may be thus estimated. 

I have found that when the powdered blood has been sub- 
mitted to too strong or too continuous a heat, the spirit-extract 
is only imperfectly taken up: hence it may be advisable not to 
reduce the whole of the powder to a state of absolute dryness, 
but rather to calculate from a small portion the quantity of 
retained moisture. 

This powder must now be treated with a little anhydrous 
alcohol. Some ether must then be poured over it, and it must 
be heated to the boiling point, in order to dissolve the fat as 
thoroughly as possible.! 

After the deposition of the powder the clear ether must be 
poured off, and the operation repeated two or three times. The 
ethereal solutions are then collected, the ether evaporated, and 
the residual fat submitted for a short time to a heat of 212°, 
and then weighed. 

J. The powdered blood, thus freed from fat, must now (after 


1 T use small and very thin glass flasks, containing from one and a half to two 
ounces (which, like all other apparatus, may be obtained from the establishment of 
Hoffmann and Eberhardt, of Berlin): at first I pour on the pulverized blood only 
about twice its volume of alcohol; I then heat the flask on the sand-bath, keeping 
it in almost continuous motion, in order that none of it may spirt over, until it boils; 
I then add a considerable quantity of ether, which precipitates the salts dissolved in 
the alcohol, so that nothing but fat remains in solution. If too much alcohol has 
been added, some of the salts remain dissolved, and the apparent weight of the 
fat is increased. If ether alone be used for the extraction of the fat, the process 
must be repeated five or six times; the ether should be heated in boiling water just 
removed from the fire. In using dilute spirit for the purpose of extraction, I heat 
the flask over the flame of a spirit-lamp. In both cases the flask must be kept in 
continual motion, in order to regulate the ebullition. 


174 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


the ether has been removed by evaporation) be boiled in the 
same flask with spirit! of ‘925—-935. This must be effected by 
gently moving the flask over the flame of a spirit-lamp. The 
spirituous solution must be allowed to boil freely for some time. 
All the constituents of the blood are taken up except the albu- 
men: for the salts, extractive matters, heemaphzin, and hemato- 
globulin are all soluble in boiling spirit of -935. The finely- 
divided albumen is gradually deposited from the clear, hot, 
deep-red solution, which becomes turbid on cooling. On care- 
fully examining a thin section or stratum of the fluid, the pre- 
sence of albumen or of deposited hematoglobulin in suspension, 
may be readily detected. In the first case, in addition to floc- 
culi of a larger or smaller size, there are fine, clearly-defined 
points to be seen. If the spirituous solution be too thick and 
consistent to allow of the free deposition of the suspended albu- 
men, the fluid must be cautiously decanted from the sediment 
into a large glass, and about double the quantity of spirit of 
°935 added. It must be heated until all the hematoglobulin 
is dissolved, and then gradually cooled. When the solution is 
perfectly cold, we find deposited at the bottom a small quantity 
of separated albumen, which must be again washed with alcohol 
into the flask. The residue in the flask must be boiled with 
spirit of -935 as long as any additional colouring matter is 
given off: five, six, or even eight boilings are requisite. What 
now remains is albumen. If the hematin has been removed 
as completely as possible, the albumen, while moist, appears of 
a grayish-green, and when dried, of a dirty-gray colour; and 
leaves on incineration a bright yellow residue, containing traces 
of peroxide of iron. It must be washed out of the flask with 
a little water, with the aid of a feather; the water must be re- 
moved by evaporation upon the water-bath, and the residue 
submitted to a temperature of 230°, and weighed. 

gy. The spirituous solutions are collected in a glass, and 
usually throw down a certain quantity of hematoglobulin, in the 
form of flocculi. After the decantation of the fluid, they must 
be dried upon the water-bath, triturated as finely as possible, 
rubbed with warm water to a uniform pulp, and washed 
with spirit of ‘925. They must be added to the floceuli, of 
which we shall speak directly. As much alcohol is now added 


1 IT mix equal parts of alcohol of 85 or 90$ with distilled water. 


BLOOD. 175 


as is sufficient to precipitate the dissolved hzematoglobulin in 
distinct flocks. If the whole is now allowed to stand for 12—18 
hours, all these flocks will be deposited at the bottom of the 
vessel, and there will remain above them a clear yellow fluid, 
which must be removed with a syphon, and the last remaining 
portion with a pipette. The flocks must be washed two or three 
times with fresh spirit of from -89 to ‘90, which must be re- 
moved by the same means. 

If these spirituous solutions are of a yellow or citron colour, 
we may assume that they contain only salts and extractive 
matters tinged with hemaphein: if they are of a reddish tint, 
then hematoglobulin is also present, which must be precipitated 
by the addition of stronger spirit. 

We have now to analyse (1) the floceuli, and (11) the spi- 
rituous solution. 


1. a. One or two ounces of alcohol of -83 or ‘80 (the 
stronger the better) are poured over the flocks; the mixture is 
then well stirred, and a sufficient quantity (usually from three 
to eight drops) of dilute sulphuric acid is added guttatim, until 
a decided change of colour of the flocks is observed. The flocks 
are now allowed to settle, and the deep red alcoholic solution is 
decanted. The decolorized flocks are then treated with pure 
alcohol until they cease to give off any more colouring matter. 
If, after this, the flocks have still a reddish tinge, they must be 
treated with a little more acidulated alcohol. If the fiocks are 
as free from hematin as possible, they assume a more or less 
clearly defined gray colour ; when dried, they appear as a dirty- 
gray powder, and on incineration they leave a yellow or orange- 
coloured ash. 

6. The flocks must be washed with alcohol until they 
cease to exhibit an acid reaction; they must then be washed 
out of the glass flask (with the aid of a feather and a little 
water) into a porcelain basin, be dried first upon the water- 
bath, and subsequently at a temperature of 230°, and then 
weighed. They are estimated as globulin. 

c. The red alcoholic solutions are mixed and saturated 
with ammonia to such an extent as to emit a decided ammo- 
niacal odour; they are allowed to stand for some hours, in 
order to allow of the separation of the sulphate of ammonia ; 


176 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


they are then filtered, the sulphate is washed with a little al- 
cohol, and the alcohol is subsequently evaporated. The re- 
sidue consists of hematin with hemaphein, a trace of fat, and 
perhaps a little sulphate of ammonia. The latter may be 
taken up by water, at the risk, however, of losing an almost 
unappreciable trace of hemaphzin, which is so far soluble in 
that fluid, as to communicate a yellow tint to it. 

d. There may be certain cases in which the perfect sepa- 
ration of the two colourmg matters, the hematin and hema- 
phzin, would be a matter of considerable importance. 

In all those cases in which I have found a large proportion 
of hematin, as in the blood in Bright’s disease, and in men- 
strual blood, a certain portion of hemaphein is always asso- 
ciated with it. The dark coloured blood of meliena contains a 
peculiarly large quantity of hemaphzin. The separation of the 
two colouring principles is best effected by alcohol, which dis- 
solves the hemaphein, but not the hematin. The alcohol 
should be warmed, but not allowed to boil. Upon the eva- 
poration of the alcohol the hemaphzin is obtained, and when 
thoroughly dried, may be weighed. 


11. a. By the evaporation of the alcoholic solutions, we ob- 
tain a yellow or brown residue, which has a saltish taste, 
and smells of extractive matters. It must be thoroughly 
dried, and then weighed. 

6. If we wish to carry the analysis further, a known 
weight of the residue must be incinerated. The quantity of 
ash from 8 to 16 grains of this residue, will be small, pro- 
bably from *3 to 1:0 grain. The residue likewise contains 
sugar, urea, and the colourmg matter of the bile; the former 
may sometimes be detected by the taste, and the presence of 
the biliphein may be recognized by the dark colour that it 
imparts to the serum. In so minute a quantity of material 
the urea cannot be easily traced. 

In my analyses of the blood, I have always followed this 
course, and I feel convinced that if all necessary precautions 
are taken, the results will be nearer the truth than those ob- 
tained by any previously described method. I do not, how- 
ever, intend to assert that my method will give exactly ac- 
curate results; and I shall at once proceed to point out,— 


BLOOD. 177 


1, Those errors against which we may guard by caution; and 
2, Those which, with all care, cannot be avoided. 


Water. This constituent may be determined with perfect 
exactness. 


Fibrin. Tf the blood be whipt with due care, the fibrin is 
obtained as a thick, coriaceous, fibrous mass, surrounding the 
twigs of the rod. It can be removed without loss, and can be 
easily and quickly washed. 

If it be stirred too rapidly, a portion of the fibrin becomes 
minutely subdivided, and after washing cannot be collected 
without some loss; on the contrary, if it be stirred too slowly, 
or not long enough, the fibrin incloses many blood-corpuscles, 
and must either lie for some time in water, during which it is 
liable to a certain degree of change, or else it must be tri- 
turated and broken up, which induces the formation of flocks 
and of a viscid matter, and occasions considerable loss. 

With a little experience and practice, the fibrin may be de- 
termined with great exactness. It is necessary to submit the 
dried fibrin to a temperature of 230°. 


Fat. The fat contained in the fibrim may be estimated 
with great accuracy. It is only necessary to boil the pulverized 
fibrin with ether, or (which is better) with a mixture of ether 
and anhydrous alcohol, for four, five, or six times. The deter- 
mination of the quantity of fat in the dried pulverized blood is 
much less certain and accurate. In an analysis in which I 
separated the hemaphein, I treated a large quantity of pul- 
verized blood, six successive times with boiling ether, in a 
retort ; yet I still found a considerable quantity of fat in the 
hematin. This may be due, partly to the compounds of mar- 
garic and oleic acids becoming decomposed by the sulphuric 
acid in the alcohol during the boiling of the powdered blood 
which had been treated with ether ; and partly, I believe, to a 
little free fat which had not been taken up by the ether. 

The fat appears to be extracted most perfectly when the 
powdered blood has been first loosened, as it were, with an- 
hydrous alcohol. A quantity of ether, just sufficient to pre- 
cipitate the salts dissolved by the alcohol, must then be added. 

12 


178 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


We may safely calculate that the whole of the free fat has been 
taken up, after six or seven extractions with ether. If, after- 
wards, the hematin should still be found to contain fat, some 
of the fatty acids must have been present, and acted upon by 
the acidified alcohol. 


Albumen. Errors may arise in the determination of the 
albumen. These may be due, in the first place, to want of 
care in drying and pulverizing the blood. If the powdered 
blood has been allowed to dry into a cracked, brittle, tough, 
hard mass, which can only be repulverized with difficulty, and 
usually with considerable loss, then, only a portion of the 
hematoglobulin is taken up by the spirit, some of it now ap- 
pearing of a yellow or gray-green colour, while another part of 
it occurs in the form of coarse black fragments, resisting the 
action of alcohol. This albumen has a somewhat red tint, and 
upon incineration leaves an ash, which is tolerably rich in iron. 

Another source of error may lie in the spirit, which may be 
either too strong or too weak. I have always found a mixture 
of equal parts of alcohol of 85—902, and of water, succeed 
best. I have occasionally found that with all precautions, and 
after boiling the residue with spirit until no more hzmato- 
globulin was taken up, the albumen has still retained its red 
tint, and left an ash abounding miron. I have never been able 
to ascertain the reason why diluted boiling alcohol should occa- 
sionally fail in the perfect extraction of the heematoglobulin. 

If, after continuous boiling with dilute alcohol, the albumen 
still retains a red tint, I heat it with alcohol of :80—-82, in 
the same flask, and during ebullition I gradually add one, 
two, or even four drops of dilute sulphuric acid. The alcohol, 
at first colourless, now assumes a red tint, and the albumen, 
which is deposited upon standing, is either free from colour, 
or becomes so after beg once more boiled in strong alcohol. 
It must then be boiled several times in alcohol of 0:925, which 
takes up the sulphate of globulin, and leaves the albumen.! 


1 As sulphate of albumen is insoluble in alcohol, we need not be apprehensive of 
losing any albumen by this extraction. I have convinced myself, by a special inves- 
tigation, that spirit of -925 takes up nothing but sulphate of globulin from the pul- 
verized residue of the blood. The fluid, while hot, is perfectly clear, but becomes 
rather turbid on cooling, in consequence of the separation of fat. 


BLOOD. 179 


The alcoholic solution of the sulphate of hematin which 
(unless the alcohol were too dilute) contains no globulin, may 
be poured into a flask, and united with the fluid, which is 
subsequently obtained on the separation of the hematin from 
the globulin. (1, ¢.) 

The sulphate of globulin separates pretty completely in the 
form of flocks from its alcoholic solution, on cooling. The 
supernatant spirit, which frequently has a slightly acid reaction, 
must be evaporated, till only a little is left; and we must then 
try whether upon the addition of strong alcohol, any globulin 
will still be precipitated. The whole of the sulphate of globulin 
must be added to that which is subsequently obtained from the 
heematoglobulin. 

If, im accordance with the methods of Berzelius and Denis, 
the clot is washed for the purpose of obtaining the fibrin, the 
nuclei and capsules of the blood-corpuscles are entangled in, 
and increase the apparent quantity of the fibrin; if however 
the fibrin is removed by whipping, according to my method, 
then the nuclei and capsules remain in the albumen, and in- 
crease its estimated quantity. 

I am not acquainted with any researches tending to show 
the degree in which the proportions of albumen and fibrin are 
modified by the adoption of one or other of these methods. 
Maitland,’ however, observes that the quantity of fibrin ob- 
tained by whipping is less than that obtained by washing the 
clot. Miiller,? on the contrary, thinks that the weight of the 
nuclei must be extremely small, and that the results obtained 
by the two methods are very nearly the same. My own opinion 
is, that the fibrin cannot be determined with accuracy from the 
washed clot. 


Globulin. The globulin can be calculated with considerable 
accuracy if the albumen has been perfectly freed from the 
hematoglobulin. I have never yet succeeded in entirely 
removing the hematin from the globulin. It is known that 
even nearly colourless globulin leaves, on incineration, an ash 
which is pretty rich in peroxide of iron. Whether globulin 
generally contains peroxide of iron or not, I cannot positively 


! An Experimental Essay on the Physiology of the Blood, 1838. 
* Physiologie des Menschen, vol. 1, p. 119. 


180 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


state. The globulin usually occurs in analyses of the blood as 
a sulphate, and as such I have always estimated it. It is of 
a grayish-white colour, forms a brownish solution in water, 
and on incineration leaves an ash, more or less abundant in 
iron. 

If after the separation of hzematin (in the manner already 
described), and after bemg washed in alcohol, the globulin 
retains a red tint, it must be again treated with a lukewarm 
mixture of sulphuric acid and alcohol, as before, which dis- 
solves the hematin that had remained attached to the glo- 
bulin. It must then be repeatedly washed with alcohol, until 
it no longer exhibits any acid reaction. 


Hematin. From the remarks which have been made re- 
specting the albumen and the globulin, the reader may con- 
clude that the hematin cannot always be determined with 
exactness; I conceive, however, that with all due care, the 
error in the determination of the hematin should be very 
trifling in 100 parts. It by no means necessarily follows that 
heematoglobulin should under all circumstances contain a con- 
stant proportion of hematin. Moreover, if the fat has not 
been previously entirely removed, a certain quantity may be 
associated with the hematin. If the heemapheein is separated 
from the hematin by means of warm alcohol, the fat dis- 
solves simultaneously with the former of these colouring mat- 
ters, and remains closely connected with it. If the alcohol 
used for the separation of the hematin from the globulin is 
not sufficiently strong; and if, after the saturation of the sul- 
phuric acid with ammonia, a sufficient time is not allowed 
for the sulphate of ammonia to separate, a portion of this 
salt will pass through the filter, and become mixed with the 
hematin upon the evaporation of the alcohol. If this is the 
case, the salt may be easily recognized in the hematin by its 
crystalline form; and it must be extracted with water. | It is 
always advisable to use strong alcohol, and to allow the satu- 
rated solution to stand for some hours before it is filtered. 


Hemaphein. The determination of this constituent is 
somewhat uncertain and difficult, on account of the minute 
proportion in which it exists. It is occasionally found to 





BLOOD. 181 


constitute only 0:12 of the weight of the dried blood. A 
portion of this colouring matter is taken up with the ex- 
tractive matters from which we cannot separate it; another 
portion may be lost if the alcohol used for the separation of 
the hzmatin from the globulin is not of sufficient strength. In 
this case, on saturating with ammonia, a sulphate of ammonia 
is precipitated, and its removal is associated with a further loss 
of hemaphein. The hemaphein always retains a little fat. 


Salts and extractive matters. These substances, with due 
caution and experience, may be determined with considerable 
accuracy. They must be separated from the hematoglobulin 
by the addition of dilute spirit, and to ensure a tolerably 
perfect separation, the whole should be allowed to stand from 
eighteen to twenty-four hours. I have already mentioned the 
course that must be adopted in case any of the hematoglo- 
bulin should be retained in the alcoholic solution. If the ex- 
tractive matters and salts are evaporated on the water-bath to 
a slight residue, and then treated with anhydrous alcohol, the 
alcohol-extract will be dissolved and may be estimated. I do 
not know how to separate hemaphein from the extractive 
matters. In order to determine the salts, the extractive 
matters must be mcimerated. By treating the (incinerated) 
residue with hot alcohol of ‘85, we take up the chloride of 
sodium. The residue must be dissolved in a little water, and 
rendered neutral by the addition of acetic acid. The acetates 
of potash and soda may now be taken up by alcohol. These 
salts correspond with the lactates.1 There still remain the 


! [The existence of lactic acid and the lactates in the animal fluids is denied in 
toto by the Giessen school. 

Enderlin’s conclusions regarding the recently incinerated ash of blood may be 
summed up in the following terms : 

1. The ash does not effervesce on the addition of an acid. 

2. Hot water poured on the ash becomes alkaline; it holds in solution alkaline 
phosphates and sulphates, chloride of sodium, and sometimes chloride of potassium, 
but no other salts. 

a. On the addition of a neutral solution of nitrate of silver to this fluid, there is a 
yellow precipitate, which is partly soluble in nitric acid; a portion, however, eon- 
sisting of chloride of silver, remaining undissolved. The addition of nitric acid 
causes no effervescence. On neutralizing the acid filtrate with ammonia, a yellow 
precipitate of tribasic phosphate of silver (3Ag O, PO,) is thrown down. 

b. On treating the aqueous solution of the ash with a solution of chloride of cal- 


182 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


phosphates and sulphates of lime, magnesia, potash, and soda. 
If they are dissolved in a little dilute nitric acid, the addition 
of ammonia induces the precipitation of the earthy phosphates, 
while the other salts remain in solution. 

There are some substances occurring only in very minute quan- 
tities, or in certain diseased states, which cannot be always 
easily detected. 


1. Urea. This substance has never yet been observed in 
any great quantity in the blood. 

I have detected a minute quantity of urea in the blood of a 
healthy calf. I allowed the blood (about fifteen or sixteen pounds) 
to run into a vessel filled with alcohol, and assiduously stirred 
the mixture. The alcohol was removed by pressure, evaporated, 
and the residue extracted with anhydrous alcohol. After filtra- 
tion, and a second evaporation, the residue was again dissolved 
in a little anhydrous alcohol, and the bases of the lactates and 
fatty acids precipitated with sulphuric acid. The filtered liquid 
was digested with carbonate of baryta, evaporated, dissolved in 
water, the fats and fatty acids removed by filtration, the aqueous 
solution concentrated, and nitric acid added. The greater part 
of the fluid was removed by being placed tn vacuo over strong 
sulphuric acid; alcohol was poured over the residue, and the 


cium, there is a copious gelatinous precipitate of phosphate of lime (3CaO, PO,), 
which dissolves in nitric acid without effervescence. On treating this acid solution 
with nitrate of silver, and neutralizing with ammonia, the tribasic phosphate of silver 
is precipitated as before. The addition of the chloride of calcium neutralizes the 
previously alkaline fluid. 

From 1, we see that the alkaline reaction is not due to the presence of alkaline 
carbonates ; and 2 shows it is not dependent on the presence of free potash or soda, 
for otherwise the fluid would not be neutralized by the chloride of calcium. Hence 
the albumen in the blood cannot exist as a soda-compound (albuminate of soda) ; 
neither can there be alkaline lactates, acetates, nor fatty-acid salts in that fluid; and 
on the above grounds, Enderlin conceives that we are justified in assuming that the 
alkaline reaction of the ash is dependent on the presence of tribasic phosphate of 
soda (3NaO, PO,); and as this is the only salt that remains tribasic at a red heat, 
he concludes that the alkalinity of the blood, as well as of the ash, is dependent on 
it. Enderlin is the only chemist who excludes carbonates from the ash of the blood 
and other animal fluids. The manner in which he accounts for the occurrence of 
these salts in the analyses of other chemists is very plausible. On exposing 3NaO, 
PO, to the atmosphere, it becomes conyerted into 2Na0O, HO, PO, and NaO, CO,, 
(Liebig and Wohler’s Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie; March 1844.)] 








BLOOD. 183 


solution submitted to spontaneous evaporation. The microscope 
then revealed the presence of nitrate of urea, which was recog- 
nized by its peculiar crystalline form. 

[Marchand got only slight microscopic pliguioge of urea 
from twenty pounds of the serum of the blood of a healthy cow; 
and as the urine of that animal contains a larger amount of 
urea (4° according to Sprengel) than that of man, the blood 
must likewise contain a larger proportion of this ingredient. 
He calculates (assuming that there are twenty pounds of blood 
in a man’s body, and that one ounce and a half of urea is eli- 
minated in twenty-four hours) that the blood contains only the 
15,360th part of its weight of urea, a quantity that could hardly 
be determined analytically, if it were increased thirty-fold.'] 

After the extirpation of the kidneys, and in Bright’s disease, 
it has been found in so large a proportion that its detection is 
accomplished with comparative ease. My method, in looking 
for urea, is to treat acertain quantity of the blood with alcohol 
for the purpose of throwing down the protein-compounds ; then 
to filter; and, subsequently, to wash the residue upon the filter 
with alcohol. The alcoholic solution (including the washings 
of the filter) must be evaporated to a small residue, and treated 
with anhydrous alcohol. The solution is decanted from the 
spirit-extract, which remains undissolved, is evaporated, and 
again treated with anhydrous alcohol. This process must, if 
necessary, be repeated until the residue is freely soluble in this 
menstruum. 

The alcohol must then be evaporated, and the residue dis- 
solved in water, which usually becomes slightly turbid in con- 
sequence of the separation of traces of fat. This fat is not 
easily separated by filtration ; if, however, this process is deter- 
mined upon, a considerable quantity of water is added ; it is 
heated, and allowed to stand for some time. The watery solu- 
tion will then pass through the filter tolerably clear, but slowly. 
It must be evaporated to a small residue, thoroughly cooled, 
and nitric acid then added. If the quantity of urea is not too 
minute, there are formed almost imstantaneously an immense 
number of glittering crystalline scales. If the quantity of urea 


! [That there is a peculiar difficulty in the precise determination of this constituent 
is shown by an experiment in which Marchand mixed one grain of urea with 200 of 
serum. He could only recover °2 of a grain. | 


184 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


is very minute, the crystallized nitrate of urea may not be per- 
ceptible for several hours, and even then probably not without 
the aid of the microscope. In order to avoid any errors that 
might arise through the crystalline form of other salts, I first 
made myself thoroughly acquainted with the appearance pre- 
sented under the microscope by alcohol-extract of urine (con- 
taining urea) when treated with nitric acid; then with the 
appearance presented by alcohol-extract of blood to which a 
httle urine had been added, on the addition of nitric acid; then 
with that of alcohol-extract of blood devoid of urea; and, lastly, 
with blood which contains urea in the natural proportions. In 
this manner I found that the salt which most commonly occurs 
in the alcohol-extract of blood, the lactate of soda, may be 
readily distinguished under the microscope from the nitrate of 
urea, and that very minute quantities of urea may be detected 
with certainty. 

Small quantities of urea may be recognized, by the peculiar 
and characteristic form of the nitrate, in fluids contaming those 
extractive matters and salts of urine or of blood that are soluble 
in anhydrous alcohol. The forms which are principally and most 
frequently observed are depicted in fig. 3: a represents the 
characteristic crystalline form of nitrate of urea; 4, c¢, d, e, 
groups that are formed in a somewhat dilute solution of urea ; 
J; groups that are formed in a very dilute solution, chiefly at 
the edge of the fluid. Fig. 4 exhibits the crystalline form which 
is produced by the addition of nitric acid to the alcohol-extract 
of blood, containing no urea. These crystals are not perceptible 
until the fluid is evaporated nearly to dryness. Fig. 5 shows 
the form of the nitrate of urea in blood containing a conside- 
rable quantity of urea. I have several times observed these 
appearances in Bright’s disease. With a little practice the 
commencement of the crystallization of the nitrate may be 
perceived ; it begins by exhibiting an appearance of numerous 
fine parallel lines or streaks. 

Oxalic acid may likewise be used in microscopic researches 
regarding the presence of urea in the blood. I have always, 
however, preferred the use of nitric acid, because, in the first 
place, it is not itself capable of crystallization as oxalic acid is ; 
and, secondly, because the nitrates of potash and soda are much 
more soluble than the corresponding oxalates. Fig. 6 shows 


BLOOD. 185 


the crystalline form of the oxalate of urea when alcohol-extract 
of urine, not very rich in urea, is treated with oxalic acid. In 
a, we see the characteristic crystalline form of the oxalate of 
urea; 0, represents various groups of it. If the alcohol-extract 
of blood containing no urea be similarly treated, the crystals of 
fig. 7 are produced. Lastly, fig. 8 shows the crystals of oxalic 
acid itself, which are very similar to those of pure crystallized 
urea. 

On treating the extractive matter of blood contaiming no 
urea with nitric acid, I have occasionally perceived crystals 
which, at first sight, appeared extremely similar to those of 
nitrate of urea, but which were in reality composed*of nitrate 
of soda. These crystals are exhibited in fig. 9. They possess 
a very remarkable degree of thickness, which I have endea- 
voured to represent in the plate. They may be distinguished 
from the similar form of nitrate of urea, by the circumstance 
that the former are not at all soluble in anhydrous alcohol, while 
the latter are readily dissolved in it. If nitrate of urea be pre- 
sent, it will recrystallize from its alcoholic solution in groups 
similar to those in fig. 10. 


2. Sugar. This substance, which I once discovered in the 
blood of a calf, is very seldom to be found in healthy blood, 
although in certain pathological states, especially in diabetes 
mellitus, it has frequently been detected. If the quantity be 
very small, its presence is not always easily recognized. It is 
found mixed with the extractive matters, if the blood is analysed 
according to my directions, and if it exists in any quantity, 
may be recognized by the taste. If only a very little sugar be 
present, it is advisable to precipitate the protein-compounds 
from a large quantity of blood, with spirit. The fluid must 
then be filtered and evaporated to a small residue, which must 
be treated with anhydrous alcohol. The sugar, if present, must 
be taken up by the alcohol. If, after due evaporation, the 
residue have a sweetish taste, a portion of the sugar may be 
obtained tolerably pure, since its quantity cannot be very incon- 
siderable. With this view we dissolve it in a little water, add 
alcohol of °883, and allow it to stand for some time; under 


! This is easily seen by slightly varying the focus. 


186 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


favorable circumstances, a portion of the sugar will crystal- 
lize. In consequence of its intimate mixture with a large 
quantity of extractive matter, an exact quantitative analysis of 
the sugar is extremely difficult. The best method is that 
of fermentation, and estimating the quantity of carbonic acid 
that is formed. If the quantity of sugar be very minute, it 
cannot be recognized by the tongue, in consequence of the 
sweetness being disguised by the taste of the salts and extractive 
matter; it may, however, in this case, be detected by sulphuric 
acid, although this test is fallacious in the hands of unpractised 
analysts. The method to be pursued in this case is the same 
as that previously indicated; the spirituous solution must be 
evaporated, treated with anhydrous alcohol, and the fluid de- 
canted. The precipitate which contains extractive matter, 
chloride of sodium, lactate of soda, and sugar, must be dissolved 
in water; and if (as is frequently the case) any heematoglobulin 
remains undisselved, the fluid must be filtered. The filtered 
fluid must be evaporated to dryness in a porcelain basin, on the 
water-bath, and one or two drops of dilute sulphuric acid (one 
part of acid to six of water) must be dropped upon the dried 
residue. Onagain submitting it to the heat of the water-bath, 
it is observed that those points which have been moistened by 
the acid at first assume a blue or violet tint, become gradually 
darker, and ultimately coal-black. When the quantity of sugar 
is very small, the colour is only sufficiently marked at the margin 
of the drop, or at pomts where the layer of extractive matter 
happens to be particularly thick. Unfortunately for the suc- 
cess of this test, a dark spot, varymg from a deep brown to a 
dark dirty-violet tinge, but never positively black, is produced 
in the same manner in the spirit-extract of blood, which con- 
tains no sugar; so that, without a well-practised eye, it is 
difficult to decide upon the absence or presence of sugar by this 
test. After the addition of one grain of diabetic sugar in 
solution, to 500 grains of blood, (which contained no sugar,) no 
decided sweetness could be observed in the spirit-extract. The 
sulphuric acid test indicated the presence of sugar by the for- 
mation of a coal-black spot; on the addition of the acid to a 
portion of the extract of the same blood in which there was no 
sugar, a dirty violet spot was produced. In examining the 
blood of diabetic patients I once found so large a proportion of 


BLOOD. 187 


sugar that it was readily detected by the taste; on another 
occasion, however, it was only rendered manifest on the addi- 
tion of sulphuric acid. But of all the tests for sugar in the 
blood, Trommer’s is certainly the best. The proteim-compounds 
are first precipitated with anhydrous alcohol, and dry carbonate 
of potash is then added to the filtered spirituous solution, 
which must be well shaken. On the addition of a little solution 
of sulphate of copper, and the application of heat, we observe, 
if sugar be present, a yellow or yellowish brown tint developed, 
produced by the reduction of the copper to a state of suboxide. 


3. Bile. In healthy blood we find neither bilin nor bili- 
phein. In icterus we meet with biliphein in the serum, which 
is more or less deeply coloured in proportion to the quantity 
of this pigment contained in it. It may be of a deep orange, 
or almost red colour, so as to lead to the suspicion of the 
presence of hematin in a state of solution. I found the serum 
nearly blood-red in a case of icterus ; but on shaking it against 
the sides of the vessel, the thin adhering layer appeared of a 
beautiful saffron colour. A similar colour was induced by the 
addition of water to the serum. 

If only so small a quantity of biliphein be present as to 
colour the serum slightly, it may be recognized by the addition 
of nitric acid, which produces a variety of tints, more or less 
green in their character. The albumen is at the same time 
precipitated in white flocks, upon which aslight tinge of green 
may be distinctly perceived.!. In the deep red serum already 
alluded to, the addition of nitric acid produced an intensely 
clear grass-green colour, which, at some points, passed into a 
blue, and, in the course of twenty-four hours, into a yellow 
tint. The quantity of biliphein varies directly with the intensity 
of the colour of the serum, and with the time required for the dis- 
appearance of the green tint, produced by the addition of nitric 
acid. Neither in the blood already alluded to, nor in another 
specimen which contained less biliphein, could I discover a 
trace of bilin. The alcohol-extract of the blood had a saltish, but 


1 [In consequence of the facility with which coagulated albumen assumes a green 
tint under these conditions, we are often enabled to detect biliphin (that would 
be otherwise unappreciable) in non-albuminous fluids, by the addition of a little 
albumen. | 


188 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


not a bitter taste. Iam not aware that bilin or bilifellinic acid? 
has ever been observed in the blood, and I hardly believe that 
they will be found, owing either to their not being taken up 
by the blood at all, or else to their speedy elimination by the 
urine. A large quantity of bilin would have a very dangerous 
effect upon the blood, since (as we have already shown) it dis- 
solves the blood-corpuscles. I treated 500 grams of blood with 
half a grain of inspissated ox-bile, and then precipitated the 
protei-compounds with spirit, evaporated the fluid, and treated 
the residue with anhydrous alcohol. It is clear that the bile 
must be contained in this residue. After the evaporation of the 
alcohol, there remained a rather dark-coloured extract, having 
a bitter bile-like taste, and which, when dissolved in water, and 
nitric acid was added, manifested a slight green tinge. If, there- 
fore, the bilin should constitute one-thousandth part of the blood, 
it would be easily detectible. 

If the analysis of the fats and of the extractive matters is to 
be thoroughly carried out, (as im many cases it certainly ought 
to be,) much larger quantities of blood must be taken than I 
have made use of. 

The various fats, however, as well as the different extractive 
matters, are at present too little known to enable us to attempt 
exact, or even approximating quantitative analyses. 


4, Fats. Boudet? has analysed the fats which are taken up 
by alcohol from dried blood, after all substances that could be 
extracted by water have been removed. The alcoholic solution 
deposits serolin on cooling, which must be separated, and the 
alcohol evaporated. There remains as a residue a mixture of 
several fats, which were separated by Boudet in the following 
manner. Cold alcohol of -833 leaves undissolved a crystalline 
fat which contains phosphorus, and is apparently similar to the 
brain-fat, denominated cerebrot by Couerbe. Cholesterin is 
deposited by the spontaneous evaporation of the cold alcoholic 
solution ; and on further evaporation, (after the removal of the 
cholesterin,) there is left a mixture of oleic and margaric acids, 


1 [Enderlin states that he has detected minute quantities of choleate of soda (pure 
bile, according to Demargay’s theory) on three occasions, in the blood of calves and 
oxen. (Annales der Chemie und Pharmacie, April 1844.)] 

? Annal. de Chim. et de Phys., vol. 52, p. 337. 


BLOOD. 189 


as well as some oleate and margarate of potash. In addition to 
these fats, there are certain coloured phosphorized and nitroge- 
nous fats, similar probably to those which have been described 
by Couerbe, as cephalot and eleencephol. ecanu found, in 
the fat of the serum, only cholesterin, serolin, margaric and 
oleic acids; he could detect no phosphorized fat. Berzelius! 
describes the fat of the fibrin, which may be taken up either 
by alcohol or ether, as solid and crystalline; when melted, of 
a yellow or light brown colour, readily soluble in cold alcohol, to 
which it imparts an acid reaction, indicating the presence of 
one or more of the fatty acids. Upon burning it, no acid ash 
is left. 

Denis,2 on the other hand, obtains from fibrin, as well as 
from albumen and hematoglobulin, a red phosphorized fat, 
which has an alkaline reaction. By digestion in caustic potash, 
a part is dissolved, while an insoluble portion remains, in the 
form of a white, saponified powder, readily soluble in ether, 
from which it may be again obtained, by spontaneous evapo- 
ration, in the form of delicate crystals, which burn like fat. 

The portion of saponified fat which is dissolved in the potash 
must be precipitated by hydrochloric acid, and cannot be melted 
in the acid fluid, even on raising the temperature to a boiling 
heat. After having been removed by filtration, it is found to 
be soluble in alcohol and ether, and we may obtain it, after 
evaporating the fluid in which it is dissolved, as a fat, which 
becomes fluid at a temperature of 97°-—104°, but is solid at an 
ordinary temperature. It has an acid reaction, and swells up, 
but is only very partially soluble in boiling water, from which, 
on evaporation, we obtain it (the dissolved portion) as a sort of 
film or coating. 

According to Berzelius, it is similar to the acid salts of 
stearic and oleic acids described by Chevreul; it differs from 
them, however, by its greater solubility in ether and cold alcohol. 


5. Extractive matters. These substances have been less care- 


fully analysed than the fats, and the proportions in which they 
occur, are so small, that even in the analysis of a large quantity 


' Thierchemie, p. 88. ? Recherches Expérimentales, &e. p. 101. 


190 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


of blood, their exact determination is no easy matter. All 
that is known upon the subject is already given in the Intro- 
duction. 

[ A simple method of determining some of the most important 
constituents of the blood has been recently given by Figuier. 
It is based on the fact, made known many years ago by 
Berzelius, that after the addition of a solution of a neutral salt 
to defibrinated blood, the globules do not (as before) pass through 
filtering paper. On the addition of two parts of a solution of sul- 
phate of soda of spec. gray. 1:180 to one of blood, Figuier found 
that the whole of the corpuscles remained on the surface of the 
filter. The following are the steps of his analysis. The fibrin 
is removed by whipping, dried, and weighed; the weight of the 
corpuscles is ascertained by the method indicated ; and that of 
the albumen by coagulating, by means of heat, the filtered 
solution. ‘The proportion of water is determined by evapo- 
rating a small known weight of the blood. ] 


Analysis of coagulated blood. 


It sometimes happens that we receive blood for analysis that 
has already coagulated. The process to be adopted in such 
cases, although not in reality more difficult, involves a greater 
amount of chemical manipulation than when the fibrin is sepa- 
rated by whipping ; and it appears to give less exact results. 

The directions that I shall now give for the analysis of co- 
agulated blood were published in a paper of mine some time 
ago;! I have, however, only once adopted this method, as I 
always prefer analysing the blood directly it is taken from 
the body. 

The whole of the blood must first be weighed as accurately 
as possible, the clot must then be removed, and if sufficiently 
consistent, dried between folds of blotting paper, and then 
weighed. <A portion of the clot (from 40 to 80 grains) is cut 
off, and its weight accurately taken; it is then thoroughly 
dried, and the loss of weight, which indicates the quantity of 
water, ascertained: the dried residue must be reduced to a 
spongy, bright-red fine powder, and treated with ether in order 
to remove the fat: it must subsequently be treated with boiling 


1 Brande’s Archiy, vol. 28. 


BLOOD. 19] 


alcohol of -925 until the spirit ceases to take up any addi- 
tional colouring matter, and the powder which remains has a 
dirty-gray or gray-green colour. This must be thoroughly 
dried, and estimated as fibrin and albumen. 'The reddened 
alcoholic solution, A, is set aside for further operation. 

Another portion of the clot must be weighed and placed in 
a porcelain mortar, which should be provided with a pestle of 
such a size as exactly to fill it. Moreover, the edge of the 
mortar should be about one third of an inch above the head of 
the pestle. By this arrangement none of the clot can be lost. 
It must be reduced to a fine pulp, which must be treated with 
water until the flocculi of fibrin become perfectly white: these 
must be carefully collected and dried. 

By the subtraction of the weight of the fibrin from that of 
the former residue, we obtain the weight of the albumen. 

Before analysing the serum, it must be well shaken in order 
to render its constitution uniform; a portion must then be 
weighed, coagulated at a boiling heat, thoroughly dried, again 
weighed, and the proportion of water thus estimated. The dried 
residue must be finely pulverized, the fat removed by ether, 
and it must be then boiled with alcohol of -925 until everything 
which is soluble in that fluid has been taken up. 

The residue consists of albumen, which must be dried and 
weighed. The alcoholic solution must be added to the solution 
a, and these mixed fluids analysed for the globulin, hematin, 
hzmaphein, extractive matters and salts, im exactly the same 
manner as described in page 175. 


ON THE HEALTHY BLOOD IN RELATION TO PHYSIOLOGY. 


(From my own analyses.) 


It is almost unnecessary to observe that the blood of one 
and the same individual may vary in its constitution at dif- 
ferent times, and under different circumstances. We shall 
proceed to investigate the causes upon which these variations 
depend. 

Amongst the most obvious causes we may place the proper 
supply, or the absence of sufficient nutrition. 

The blood will clearly abound in water, in proportion to the 
quantity of fluid with which it is supplied; it will abound in 


192 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


albuminous constituents, in fats, and salts, in proportion to the 
richness. of the nutriment that has been taken, and of the chyle 
that has been evolved from that nutriment. In order to coun- 
teract the evils that might arise from an excess of water in the 
blood, (which, if allowed to remain unchecked, would mduce 
too rapid a solution of the blood-corpuscles,) the kidneys, skin, 
and lungs exert an active agency; while, on the contrary, if 
there be a deficiency in the proportion of the water, caused 
either by too great exhalation, dependent upon excessive fatigue, 
or by a direct accumulation of the salts (which might impede 
the solution of the corpuscles) it is immediately mdicated by 
an urgent desire for drink. 

When substances, injurious to life, are taken into the sto- 
mach, only small quantities enter the blood, the great pro- 
portion being usually carried off by the intestinal canal, and by 
the organs of excretion and secretion. If the organism be 
unequal to the task of rejecting the injurious agent, the equi- 
librium of the system is destroyed, and death ensues. 

Another cause of the varying nature of the blood, inter- 
esting equally to the physiologist and the physician, may be 
referred to the modifications that it undergoes in the nutrition 
of the organism, and to the changes undergone by the cor- 
puscles, in connexion with the processes of secretion and 
excretion. 


On the distinctive characters of arterial and venous blood. 


The distinctive colours of arterial and venous blood are too 
well known to require any observation.’ 


' [From Scherer’s experiments it appears that, when fresh red ox-blood is deprived 
of its fibrin and diluted with twice or thrice its volume of water, it assumes a dark 
venous tint, which is not affected by the passage of a current of oxygen throngh it- 
On the addition, however, of a little milk, oil, finely-powdered chalk or gypsum, the 
original bright red colour is evolved. These experiments are sufficient to prove that 
the bright red colour is dependent on other causes than oxidation, and that the dark 
venous tint does not arise from carbonic acid or carbon; in fact Scherer conceives 
that they prove that the former is dependent on the presence of white particles of 
chyle suspended in the fluid, an opinion confirmed by the microscope. It was observed 
by Hewson that, when the colour of the blood is bright red, the corpuscles are always 
biconcave; they reflect a large amount of light, and in this respect act as the chalk, 
milk, &c. in Scherer’s experiments. When, on the other hand, the blood is of a 
dark colour, the corpuscles are biconyex, and the capsule is so thin as to admit ox 


BLOOD. 193 


Arterial blood, on being whipt, allows the fibrin to separate 
in short conglobate masses, more tenacious and compact than 
the fibrin of venous blood. 

The odour of arterial blood is considered to be stronger than 
that of venous. The temperature is also usually stated to be 
different, Jurine being the only experimentalist who assigns an 
equal temperature (i. e. 102°-2) to both forms of blood. Ac- 
cording to Scudamore the temperature of arterial blood in man 
is 1°-8, according to Kramer 2°-7, higher than venous blood. 
Dr. Davy found the difference in animals amount to 3°-6. The 
observations of Colemann, Cooper, and Martini are directly 
opposed to the above statement. (Lecanu, Etudes chimiques 
sur le Sang.) : 

The relative capacity for heat of arterial and venous blood 
is, according to Davy, as 839 to 852. 

There is considerable difference of opinion among physiolo- 
gists with respect to the specific gravity of arterial and venous 
blood: Hammerschmidt, Davy, Scudamore, and Letellier assert 
that the density of arterial is lower than that of venous blood ; 
the former being represented by 1039°8—1042°9, the latter by 
1053—1056. 


the easy passage of the whole light through it; moreover, on account of its attenu- 
ation, it bursts, and allows of the escape of its contents, as may be observed on the 
addition of water to red blood. If the blood remain in contact with water till a dark 
tint becomes apparent, and a saturated solution of a neutral salt be then added, the 
corpuscles again become biconcave, in consequence of their being partially emptied by 
the endosmosis called into play by the different fluids within and without the capsule ; 
and the capsules themselves, and the original bright red colour reappear. A current of 
carbonic acid gas passed through fresh red blood renders the corpuscles biconvex, 
and makes the blood assume a dark venous hue. 

Mulder explains the difference between the colour of arterial and venous blood in 
the following manner: Two oxides of protein are formed in the act of respiration ; 
they have a strong plastic tendency, and solidify round each corpuscle, making the 
capsule thicker and better qualified to reflect light. Each corpuscle of the arterial- 
ised blood is then in reality invested with a complete envelope of buffy coat, which 
gradually contracts, and speedily forms the cupped or biconcave surfaces, which, as 
we have already shown, are favorable to the reflection of light. On reaching the 
capillaries, the coating of the oxides of protein is removed, and the corpuscles, losing 
their opaque investment and their cupped form, can no longer reflect light, and the 
blood assumes a venous tint. (Mulder’s Versuch einer allgemeinen physiologischen 
Chemie, pp. 344-59; or Dr. G. Bird’s account of Mulder’s Researches, in the Medical 
Gazette, December 1844.) 

13 


194 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Boissier and Hamburger, on the contrary, found arterial 
denser than venous blood. 

The observations of Bellingeri! respecting the electric rela- 
tions of arterial and venous blood are very singular. 

In birds, horses, and occasionally in sheep and calves, both 
forms of blood are in the same electric state. In other animals 
the arterial blood is positively electric in relation to the venous. 
The reverse has never been observed. 

Observations have also been made regarding the comparative 
tendency to putrefaction of arterial and venous blood. Krimer 
and Kanig assert that arterial blood is the most prone to decay ; 
Thackrah, on the contrary, makes a similar statement respecting 
venous blood. 

In order to obtain any correct information with regard to the 
differences that undoubtedly exist in the composition of arterial 
and venous blood, it is necessary to have recourse to accurate 
chemical analyses. I have devoted much attention to this point, 
and fully coneur with Schultz, Dumas and Prevost, and others, 
in the belief that the two forms of blood present marked differ- 
ences of constitution. 

IT made use of the blood of horses in these experiments, and 
was kindly assisted by Professor Gurlt. The carotids, from 
which we obtained the arterial blood, were exposed, and opened 
in such a manner as to ensure the absence of any venous blood : 
the venous blood was obtained from the jugulars. 

The analyses were made according to my ordinary method 
(vide supra), and gave the following results.” 

1000 parts of blood contained : 


Analysis 1. Analysis 2. 

Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water : ‘ ; : 760°084 757°351 
Solid residue. 5 : 239°952 242°649 
Fibrin < : ‘ : 11°200 11°350 
Fat : 2 : : 1:856 2°290 
Albumen : ; : 78°880 85°875 
Globulin ; ; : 1367148 128:698 
Heematin ; ‘ : 4:872 5°176 
Extractive matter and salts 6:960 9-160 

100 parts of the blood-corpuscles | 100 parts of the blood-corpuscles 
contained 3°4 of hematin. contained 3°9 of hematin. 





' Quoted by Lecanu. Etudes Chimiques sur le Sang humain, p. 75. 
2 It must be observed that no sound horses were used for these experiments, but 
I 


BLOOD. 195 


The horse, which was suffering from malleus humidus, had 
taken its ordinary food up to the time of its death. 


Analysis 3. Analysis 4. 

Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water : ‘ ; é 789°390 786°506 
Solid residue. : : 210°610 213°494 
Fibrin , ; ; : 6:050 5°080 
Fat . ; : . 1:320 1°456 
Albumen 5 5 - 113°100 113°350 
Globulin : ‘ P 76°400 78°040 
Heematin i ‘ - 3°640 3°952 
Extractive matter and salts 10:000 10°816 


100 parts of blood-corpuscles | 109 parts of blood-corpuscles 
contained 4°5 of hzmatin., contained 4°8 of heematin. 


This was a meagre horse, killed in consequence of debility 
and old age. 

From these analyses we are led to the conclusion that arterial 
blood contains less solid residue generally than venous blood: it 
contains less fat, less albumen, less hematin, less extractive mat- 
ters and salts than venous blood. The blood-corpuscles of arterial 
blood contain less colouring matter than those of venous blood. 

There does not appear to be any fixed relation between the 
fibrin and globulin (or, which is nearly the same thing, the 
mass of the blood-corpuscles,) in the contrasted analyses ; for 
in Nos. 1 and 2 the fibrin in the venous exceeds that in the 
arterial blood, while in Nos. 3 and 4 we observe exactly the re- 
verse. The same fluctuation is observable with respect to the 
globules, or the mass of the blood-corpuscles. 

In an analysis of the blood of a healthy ox, made with the 
same object, I found the quantity of fibrin to be larger in the 
arterial than in the venous blood. In the former case it 
amounted to 4°90, and in the latter to only 4°82 in 1000 parts. 

I shall now give the results obtained by other chemists upon 
this subject: I must, however, observe that their methods of 
analysis differ considerably from mine, and that I consider some 
of their results questionable. 
only those intended for anatomical purposes. Some were too old and weak to be of 
any use; others were suffering from incurable disorders. Although it may be fairly 
questioned whether the composition of the blood in these animals is normal, the 
correctness of the comparative results must be unaffected as long as the lungs and 


other secreting and excreting organs remain healthy, provided there is no reason for 
supposing that the general metamorphosis of the blood is morbidly affected. 


196 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Denis analysed the blood of the hound. He found in 1000 
parts : 


Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water . : 5 4 ; 830°0 830°0 
Fibrin. : ‘ : ‘ 2°5 2°4 
Albumen ‘ ‘ ; : 57:0 58°6 
Hematoglobulin . : - 99-0 97-0 
Extractive matter and salts é 11:0 12:0 


In this instance both kinds of blood contain an equal pro- 
portion of solid residue: the former contains, as I have already 
observed in two out of three analyses, a larger quantity of fibrin. 
Denis found, as I have also done, that the quantity of albumen, 
and of extractive matters and salts, is less in arterial than in 
venous blood. 

Hering! has analysed both kinds of blood in the bullock, 
the sheep, and the horse. Inthe blood of the bullock he found 
in 1000 parts : 


Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water . ; 5 ‘ : 798°9 794°9 
Fibrin. ; * ; 5 7°6 6°6 
Albumen . é r : 26°1 25°8 
Hematoglobulin . . : 164°7 170°4 
Extractive matter and salts ; Ff PAR) 

Tn the blood of the sheep he found in 1000 parts : 

Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water . A : A 3 850°2 841:2 
Fibrin. ‘ A : 3 61 5:3 
Albumen ;. 5 A : 33°6 26°4 
Heematoglobulin 5 : : 106°1 124-4 
Extractive matter and salts : 4:0 2°7 


In the blood of the horse he found in 1000 parts : 


Arterial blood. Venous blood. 
Water . 5 § 5 5 839°5 831°6 
Ebina : : 4 5 4:6 6:9 
Albumen . ; : ; 22°0 26°7 
Hematoglobulin . : 5 130°0 131°1 
Extractive matter and salts 5 3°0 37/ 


These analyses correspond very well with each other, and 
corroborate our remark that arterial leaves a smaller amount of 


1 Physiologie mit steter Beriicksichtigung der Pathologie fiir Thieriirzte. Stutgart, 
1832, p. 118. 


BLOOD. 197 


solid residue than venous blood. In the bullock and sheep 
the fibrin in arterial exceeds that in venous blood ; in the horse 
the reverse is observed. ‘The same observation holds good with 
regard to the albumen, and in this respect (at least in the case 
of bullocks’ and sheep’s blood) Hering’s results differ from those 
of Denis and myself. 

Hermg invariably found the quantity of blood-corpuscles to 
be greater in venous than in arterial blood; the proportion of 
extractive matters and salts are, however, extremely fluctuating. 

Lecanu' has likewise analysed the blood of the horse, and 
found in 1000 parts : 


Blood of aorta. Blood of vena cava descendens. 

Water . A ; ‘ 783°83 795°679 
Blood-corpuscles_. , 122°68 106°759 
SS with its salts, nl 93-49 97-562 

tractive matter and salts 

Blood of carotid. Blood of jugular vein. 

Water . 5 . ~ 7855 804°55 
Blood-corpuscles_. : 125°6 111-03 
Albumen with its salts, ex- 838-9 84-45 

tractive matter and salts 


These analyses differ from my own, and from those of Denis 
and Hering, in assigning to arterial a larger solid residue than 
to venous blood. 

The quantity of blood-corpuscles is also greater in arterial 
than in venous blood, and Lecanu found the same to be the 
case with regard to the quantity of fibrin. The quantity of 
albumen fluctuated. 

Schultz? observed that the venous blood of hungry and starv- 
ing horses contained a larger amount of solid residue than 
the arterial, in the proportion of 186 to 155 in 1000 parts of 
blood: in a well-fed horse the reverse was the case, the solid 
residue of the arterial being to that of the venous blood, in the 
proportion of 229 to 195. The quantities of fibrin were very 
fluctuating : on one occasion the fibrin of the arterial was to the 
fibrin of the venous blood in the proportion of 5:3 to 8:1; on 
another occasion as 9:2 to 9:0. The hematoglobulin (which he 
considers identical with the colourmg matter of the blood) was 
found to vary directly with the darkness of the blood’s colour, 


' Etudes chimiques sur le Sang humain. Paris, 1837, p. 83. 
? System der Cirkulation, p. 138. 


198 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


and consequently to be more abundant in venous than in arterial 
blood.1. The reverse was the case with respect to the albumen. 

Autenrieth, and Prevost and Dumas,” found a greater 
proportion of solid constituents in arterial than in venous 
blood: Lassaigne, like myself, found just the reverse: whilst 
Letellier asserts that there is no fixed rule on the subject. 

Miiller3 and Berthold? observe that in the goat there is a 
larger proportion of fibrin in arterial than in venous blood : the 
latter chemist extends the statement to the blood of the cat and 
the sheep. The observations of Sigwart> and Lassaigne® are 
opposed to these statements. 

Prevost and Dumas obtained from arterial a larger propor- 
tion of blood-corpuscles than from venous blood, and in this 
respect they confirm the observations of Lecanu and Denis. My 
own analyses, and those of Letellier, tend, however, to show that 
the proportion is a fluctuating one. 

Hence we are led to the conclusion that there are certain dif- 
ferences in the composition of arterial and venous blood, which, 
however, are not constant, but vary according to circumstances. 

The most important of these circumstances are the general 
health of the individual, and the mode of nourishment, whether 
dependent upon or independent of the health. 

Let us now consider what must be the qualities of arterial 
and venous blood when all the functions of the organism are 
properly discharged, when the nutrition exactly corresponds with 
our actual wants, and when the blood undergoes the various 
changes that we have described in a former page. 

Under these circumstances we arrive @ priori at the con- 
clusion that the final result of the changes in the blood during 


1 In order to avoid the error that might arise in the determination of the heemato- 
globulin from the retention of sernm in the clot, Schultz proceeded in the following 
manner: He dried the clot, and subtracted from its residue the amount of solid matter 
left by a quantity of serum corresponding to the expelled moisture. The difference 
he regarded as hematoglobulin. We must not, however, forget that the hemato- 
globulin does not exist in a dry state in the blood; and, further, that there are ne 
grounds for assuming that the fluid in which it is held in solution is serum. 

? Annales de Chimie et de Phys., vol. 13. 

3 Physiologie des Menschen, vol. 1, p. 119. 

* Burdach’s Physiologie, p. 281. 

® Reil’s Archiy, vol. 12, p. 5. 

® Journal de Chimie Med. vol. 1, p. 34. 


BLOOD. 199 


the act of circulation must necessarily be this: there must be 
a substitution of fresh and proper nutriment to supply the 
place of those constituents of the blood which are beg perpe- 
tually consumed ; for it is obvious that if im each circulation 
the consumption of albumen or heematoglobulin exceeded the 
supply by the merest trace, after a certain period the blood 
would acquire an abnormal constitution. We know that al- 
bumen, fibrin, and salts are consumed in the nutrition of the 
peripheral system; if therefore the blood receives no fresh 
supply of these substances, before it arrives in the larger 
venous trunks, it is clear that the venous blood must be poorer 
in these substances than the arterial. 

The blood also conveys away from the peripheral system 
various products formed by the consumption of the tissues ; for 
instance, certain salts, extractive matters, &c., some of which 
are eliminated by the kidneys, in a state of great dilution, 
while others are removed by the skin. If the quantity removed 
exceed the supply, the venous blood will be poorer in ex- 
tractive matters and salts than the arterial; it will be richer 
in these substances if the reverse be the case. 

The venous blood will contain more or less water than the 
arterial, according as the elimination of water by the kidneys, 
liver, skin, and lungs, exceeds or is less than the quantity 
supplied by the fluid of nutrition. 

The blood-corpuscles, and the germs from which they are 
developed, are likewise supplied to the blood by the nutrient 
fluids. They are further developed, and ultimately dissolved 
during the course of the circulation, and their development 
and solution is especially facilitated at those points where the 
action of oxygen on the blood is the most powerful. 

It is obvious that the blood, immediately after having re- 
ceived the chyle, must contain more blood-corpuscles than 
before ; it depends however upon several circumstances whe- 
ther venous generally contains more or less corpuscles than 
arterial blood. 

The plasma receives a supply of fibrin from the solution of 
the blood-corpuscles ; if the supply exceeds the consumption of 
this constituent in the peripheral system, the venous blood 
may become richer in fibrin than the arterial. 

If any albumen should be produced by the solution of the 


200 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


blood-corpuscles, it may be regarded as a substitute for the 
portion of that constituent which has been taken up from the 
blood for the nourishment of the tissues. 

From these observations we are led to conclude that there 
is no necessary variation in the composition of venous and 
arterial blood. The organism, when free from disturbing in- 
fluences, possesses in itself various means of regulating the due 
admixture of its different juices, and more especially of that 
most important vital fluid, the blood. 

Amongst these means we may place the influence of the 
nervous system, its power of increasing or lessening the action 
of the secreting and excreting organs, and of inducing in them 
either co-operating or vicarious action. 

The differences in the constitution of arterial and venous 
blood cannot, however, by any possibility be very great. In 
my analyses they usually fluctuate between fractions of a 
hundredth part; and they appear to be less between analyses 
3 and 4, than hetween analyses 1 and 2, since the former 
(anal. 3 and 4) were made on the blood of an old decrepid, 
half-starved horse, in which the change and waste of tissue, 
and the consequent metamorphosis of the blood, would be very 
sight. That the difference must be small is obvious, when 
we consider that the whole course of the circulation may be 
accomplished in 25-30 seconds; that the plasma just con- 
veyed to the tissues must everywhere propel the nutrient mat- 
ter conveyed there by the preceding blood-wave, and that the 
tissues, everywhere saturated with nutrient plasma, only take 
up a supply proportioned to their consumption. The process 
of nutrition in the peripheral system is continuous and is sup- 
ported by the liquid plasma with which all the tissues are sur- 
charged; hence these tissues become the temporary recipients 
of far more nutrient matter than they can possibly consume, 
even as the rivulet contains infinitely more water than is ne- 
cessary for the refreshment of the soil on its banks. 

In both cases we found that the venous blood contained a 
larger proportion of solid constituents than the arterial ; hence 
we infer that more water was removed by means of the 
kidneys, liver, and skin, than had been supplied to the blood 
by the nutrient fluids. 

The quantity of fibrin in the venous blood in analysis 2 is 


BLOOD. 201 


greater than in the arterial blood, although, from our know- 
ledge of the fact that fibrim is employed in the process of nu- 
trition, we should have expected an opposite result. Hence 
we are led to attribute the excess of fibrin to the consumption 
of a large proportion of blood-corpuscles, a view which is con- 
firmed by the circumstance that the venous blood in this in- 
stance is poorer in blood-corpuscles than the arterial. 

The proportions are reversed in analysis 4, but whether 
from opposite causes or not, I cannot decide. It is singular 
that in both instances the quantity of albumen is greater in 
the venous than in the arterial blood, since there can be no 
doubt that this constituent is consumed in the nutrition of the 
tissues, and that a portion of the changed plasma enters the 
lymphatics. I do not see how this increase can be accounted 
for, unless we assume, as I have previously done, that a portion 
of the globulin of the blood-corpuscles is converted into albu- 
men during their metamorphosis. 

In the present state of our knowledge regarding the meta- 
morphosis of the blood, it is as difficult as it is hazardous to 
attempt to explain the various causes upon which the differ- 
ences between venous and arterial blood are founded. There 
are, as I shall proceed to show, decided differences between 
the blood of the renal arteries and veins, and between the blood 
of the hepatic vein and of the vena porte; and yet, as has 
been already shown, the differences between the blood of the 
aorta and of the vena cava are very immaterial and trifling. 
To produce this ultimate similarity, other changes (not yet 
heeded by the physiologist) must have largely contributed. 


Properties of the blood of the vena porte ;—its comparison 
with arterial blood. 


The blood of the vena ports in horses (the only animals in 
which I have examined it) is darker than ordinary venous 
blood ; the difference of the tint is however so slight, as to be 
observable only upon actual comparison. It coagulates more 
slowly than ordinary arterial or venous blood; the clot is less 
firm, more of a gelatinous appearance, and falls to pieces if an 
attempt be made to hft it. I analysed the blood of the vena 
ports of the two horses already alluded to. If arterial, ordi- 
nary venous, and vena porte blood are deprived of their fibrin 


202 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


by whipping, and are then allowed to stand, the blood-cor- 
puscles subside in nearly equal times; but while they occupy 
little more than one half of the volume of arterial or ordinary 
venous blood, in portal blood they form nearly three fourths of 
the whole volume. 

In portal blood, after the lapse of several hours, a delicate 
glittering film was formed upon the surface of the serum, which 
when seen under the microscope was found to contain fat-glo- 
bules ; I could not however discover any lymph-granules either 
in the serum or amongst the blood-corpuscles. The arterial 
and ordinary venous blood, on the contrary, exhibited lymph- 
granules, but no fat-globules. 

The blood of the vena porte not only contains less fibrin 
than arterial or ordinary venous blood, but the qualities of 
that constituent are also different; it is not so consistent as 
ordinary fibrin, and does not separate into the firm, globular, 
little masses that are obtained by whipping arterial blood. 

Our knowledge of the properties of this blood has been ma- 
terially increased by the researches of Schultz.! The follow- 
ing are his principal conclusions: It-is darker than ordinary 
venous blood, but the difference of tint is sometimes so slight, 
as to be hardly perceptible. It is darkest in fasting horses, 
but after a full meal, it becomes brighter. These differences 
are more striking than those between arterial and venous 
blood. Common salt, nitre, atmospheric air, and even oxygen, 
when shaken with the dark blood of the vena porti, have 
scarcely any effect upon the colour, whereas venous blood 
would be changed to a brighter red by these reagents. If the 
blood of the vena portz be not extremely dark, a slight change 
is perceptible. 

If a portion of this black blood be treated with a quantity 
of common salt or nitre sufficient to prevent it from coagu- 
lating, coagulation may still be induced (although not until after 
several hours, and then very slightly) by the addition of water, 
while venous blood similarly treated coagulates im the course 
of five or ten minutes. 

If the blood is very dark, it sometimes does not coagulate 
at all; if it 1s not very dark, it occasionally coagulates in the 
same time as ordinary venous blood ; the clot, however, is very 


1 System der Cirkulation, p. 140. 


BLOOD. 203 


soft, and either entirely, or at least its lower surface, dissolves 
in the course of from twelve to twenty-four hours. Schultz 
further observes that after the blood has been whipt, the cor- 
puscles sink very quickly; he ascribes this peculiarity to an 
excess of colouring matter attached to the capsules of the 
blood-corpuscles. 

As the blood of the vena porte that I analysed was taken 
from the same two horses from which I obtained the arterial 
and venous blood, a fair comparison may be instituted with 
respect to their differences of constitution. 

1000 parts contained : 


Analysis 1. Analysis 5. 
Arterial blood, Blood of vena porte. 
Water ‘ : , 5 760-084 724°972 
Solid residue . : A 239-952 257:028 
Fibrin ; A $ : 11°200 8°370 
Fat 4 E ‘ 5 1°856 37186 
Albumen : F ‘ 78°880 92-400 
Globulin . * : : 136°148 152°592 
Heematin zi j F 4°827 6°600 
Extractive matter and salts 6:960 11°880 
100 parts of blood-corpuscles | 100 parts of blood-corpuscles 
contained 3°4 of hematin. ! contained 4°1 of hematin. 
Analysis 3. Analysis 6. 
Arterial blood. Blood of vena porte. 
Water : , ; : 789°390 815-000 
Solid residue. : ; 210°610 185-000 
Fibrin - ; 4 : 6:050 3°285 
Fat : ; 5 ‘ 1°:320 1845 
Albumen : : a 113-100 92-250 
Globulin ; : : 76°400 72°690 
Hematin C : ci 3°640 3°900 
Extractive matter and salts 10-000 11°632 


100 parts of blood-corpuscles | 100 parts of blood-corpuscles 


contained 4°7 of hematin. | contained 5:3 of hematin. 


It is only in four respects that the results obtained by a 
comparison of these two analyses of the blood of the vena 
porte with arterial blood at all comcide: the former contains 
less fibrin, more fat, more extractive matter and salts than the 
latter, and lastly, the proportion of colouring matter to globulin 
is greater in the former. 

In order to give a better idea of the relative proportions of 
the colouring matter, I shall quote another analysis of the 


204 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


blood of the vena porte, which was made for the purpose of 
comparison with the blood of the hepatic vein. 

In this analysis the colouring matter is separated into he- 
matin and hemaphein. I obtained from 1000 parts : 


Analysis 7. 


Water . : : Z : : 801-500 
Solid residue ; ‘ é : 198°500 
Fibrin . , : ‘ ; é 6°200 
Fat : ; : A : 5 2:700 
Albumen : : : . : 90:000 
Globulin 5 ‘ : : ; 75°600 
Heematin A ‘: i A a 3°400 
Hemaphein : : 1-800 


Extractive matter, with some hemp 


14°400 
and with salts z 


This blood was very rich in colouring matter, there being 
no less a proportion of it than 6°8 in 100 parts of blood-cor- 
puscles, of which 4°5 were hematin and the remaining 2:3 
hemaphein. In addition to this, the extractive matters re- 
tained a considerable quantity of heemaphzein. 

The circumstance that the blood of the vena portze in analy- 
sis 6 contains less solid residue, and a smaller proportion both 
of albumen and blood-corpuscles than: arterial blood, while the 
reverse is observed in analysis 5, need not excite much’surprise 
when we remember that in analyses 3, 4, and 6 the blood was 
taken from an old, decrepid, starved animal. 

Schultz! has made some very important observations on the 
relative constitution of the blood of the vena porte, as contrasted 
with arterial and ordinary venous blood. 


Solid constituents. 


The blood taken from the vena porte of fasting horses gave, 
as a mean of three analyses, 16-902 of solid constituents, while 
arterial and venous blood gave 15:56° and 18°62 respectively : 


' Schultz’s analyses of the portal blood would, in my opinion, have yielded more 
important results, both as regards the absolute and the comparative composition of 
the fluid, if he had determined all the constituents from the same identical blood. 
He appears to have used the blood of different animals for the determination of the 
different constituents. The absolute composition of the blood is assuredly different 
in different animals, but there are also relative differences depending on age, nutri- 
tion, and other circumstances. 


BLOOD. 205 


it contained therefore (in this instance) a greater proportion of 
solid constituents than arterial; a less proportion than venous 
blood. This proportion, 16-902, is however less than is usually 
met with in arterial or venous blood. 

The blood of the vena portze of a horse fed with oats gave 
20:32 of solid constituents, while the arterial and venous blood 
of the same animal gave 22-91% and 19°52 respectively. Here 
the solid constituents of the blood of the vena porte bear an 
exactly opposite proportion to those of arterial and venous blood, 
for in this case they exceed those of arterial, and are less than 
those of venous blood. 

The amount of the per-centage of the solid residue, although 
still deficient, approximates very nearly to the ordinary average. 

My observations from analysis 5 are at variance with these 
remarks. 

Fibrin. 

As an average of three analyses, 32° of fibrin was obtained 
from the blood of the vena port, while the proportions obtained 
from arterial and venous blood were 1:04° and 1-092 respectively. 
Hence it may be concluded that this blood is poorer in fibrin 
than either arterial or venous blood—a point which is con- 
firmed by my own observations. 


Albumen with salts, and blood-corpuscles.\ 


The following results were obtained from his analyses : 


1. 2: i 2. 1. 2. 

Blood of vena porte. Arterial blood, Venous blood. 

Albumen - «8162 9672 9862 21-119 = 7-969 11-258 
Blood-corpuscles . 8°742 10°532 4-652 10-212 9-212 6-952 


The analyses 1 were made with the blood of fasting horses ; 
the analyses 2 with the blood of horses after a recent meal 
of oats. Hence it follows that the blood of the vena porte 
contains more blood-corpuscles and less albumen than arterial 
or venous blood. My own analyses do not exactly coincide 
with these remarks. 


Fat. 


The solid residue of the blood of the vena porte gave (as the 
mean of four analyses) 1:66° of fat, while the corresponding 


' Schultz’s method of analysis is described in note 1, p. 198. 


206 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


proportions of fat in arterial and venous blood amounted to only 
92° and :83° respectively. Hence it appears (and in this re- 
spect my own observations confirm those of Schultz) that this 
blood contains a larger proportion of fat than either arterial or 
venous blood. The albumen and the clot contain individually 
a larger quantity of fat in this than in ordinary blood. Schultz 
has observed a very striking difference between the quantity of 
fat contained in the fibrin of this and of arterial blood: the 
former yielded 10°72, while the latter gave only 2°34° of fat, 
which in the first case was brown and discoloured, in the latter 
was white and crystalline. 

It follows from these remarks that there is no constancy in 
the deviations of the blood of the vena porte from arterial or 
venous blood. The reason of the mutability of the composition 
of this blood is easily accounted for, if we consider the relation 
that the ramifications of the vena porte bear to the digestive 
organs, and the absorbent power of the veins, as shown by the 
experiments of Magendie,! Tiedemann, and Gmelin.” 

The rapid removal of water from the stomach can, moreover, 
only be explained by the agency of the vena porte. 

Hence it is evident, both from my own analyses and those 
of Schultz, that the blood which is conveyed to the liver by 
the vena porte differs in well-fed and in fasting animals. 

When fluids, containing a smaller proportion of solid residue 
than ordinary blood, are absorbed by well-fed animals, we may 
naturally infer that the blood of the vena portz will be more 
deficient in solid constituents than either arterial or venous 
blood. This view is confirmed by the observations of Schultz, 
excepting in the case of the horse that had been fed with oats 
shortly before its death, when a greater solid residue was left 
by this blood than by either the arterial or venous: in this in- 
stance, however, the residue was below the ordinary average of 
either venous or arterial blood. In fasting horses the residue 
is considerably below the average of ordinary blood. 

The remarkably small quantity of fibrin that is invariably 
found in the blood of the vena porte, as well as the large pro- 
portion of fat that is associated with the fibrin, is a point of con- 
siderable interest ; as also the large proportion of blood-corpuscles 


1 Précis élémentaire de Physiologie, par Magendie. Bruxelles, 1838, p. 328. 
? Miiller’s Physiologie des Menschen, vol. 1, p. 241. 


BLOOD. 207 


observed by Schultz, and which occurred, in rather a striking 
degree, in my analysis 5. 

It is of importance to trace the origin and development of 
these peculiarities, as we may thus be led to take clearer views 
of the functions of the liver and the preparation of the bile. 

Schultz! attributes the source of all these peculiarities to the 
intestinal canal, to the lymphatic glands, and to the spleen. 

The organization and vitality of the chyle, prepared in the 
intestinal canal, require (according to Schultz,) the co-operation 
of the plasma, which (being thus partially consumed) leaves a 
large proportion of blood-corpuscles, the majority of which ap- 
pear to have been deprived of their nuclei by absorption, and 
to have been converted into empty capsules impregnated with 
colouring matter. To this is attributable the preponderance 
of the clot. The large quantity of fat is ascribed by Schultz to 
absorption of the chyle, and he considers that its dark colour 
is in some way connected with the metamorphosis of the co- 
louring matter of the blood-corpuscles. 

My own views with respect to the causes of the peculiar 
constitution of this species of blood differ, in a few immaterial 
points, from the ingenious explanation of Schultz. 

There are two reasons for the very small quantity of fibrin 
in this blood. In the first place it may take up a quantity of 
fluid containing little or no fibrm, by which means the relative 
proportion of fibrin in a given quantity of blood must of course 
be diminished; and, secondly, it may be explained by the torpid 
motion in this part of the circulatory apparatus, and the de- 
ficiency of atmospheric oxygen: this latter reason may also 
account for some of its other peculiarities. In consequence of 
the deficiency of oxygen, the metamorphosis of the blood- 
corpuscles must be imperfect, deficient, and retarded, and the 
solution of the developed corpuscles will not be duly effected. 
To this cause we must ascribe not merely the diminished quan- 
tity of fibrin, but the retarded solution, and the accumulation 
of the corpuscles, especially of such as are fully developed and 
abound in hemaphein, the consequent accumulation of that 
colouring substance in the plasma, and the necessarily dark 
tint of the serum, which possesses no means of throwing off 
that constituent. 


Op; citapsia22. 


208 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The large proportion of fat is chiefly attributable to the 
fluids that are produced during the act of digestion, and which 
are conveyed into the portal vem. In examining this blood 
under the microscope, I have seen that it is rich m fat globules. 
The deep yellow (or sometimes even brown) tinge of the fat is 
produced by hemapheein, which is very soluble in fat and cannot 
easily be extracted from it. 

The fatty acids do not seem to undergo any change in the 
liver, for we find them, as well as the cholesterin of the blood, 
again in the bile. The cholesterm is particularly abundant, 
and is probably one of the products of the function of the liver. 


Properties of the blood of the hepatic vein ;—its comparison 
with the blood of the vena porte. 


I am not aware of any analyses of the blood of the hepatic 
vein having been made previously to my own. 

Very important conclusions might doubtless be drawn re- 
specting the constitution of the bile, by contrasting the analyses 
of the blood of the vena porte with that of the hepatic vein, 
if it were not that we had to take into consideration with the 
former the blood of the hepatic artery with which it mixes in 
the capillary system of the liver. 

As the contents of the hepatic vein are discharged into the 
vena cava inferior, immediately as it leaves the organ, it is no 
easy matter to obtain any considerable quantity of the blood in 
a pure and unmixed state. 

Professor Gurlt has kindly assisted me in collecting specimens 
of this blood from horses. 

The blood of the hepatic vein differs, in several respects, from 
any of the forms of blood that have been hitherto considered. 

It appears to be darker than the blood of the vena porte, 
(when contrasted with it,) but becomes of a somewhat brighter 
colour by continued stirring. 

The separation of the fibrin is more difficult and tedious than 
from the blood of the vena port, and this constituent, when 
deposited on the rod, is possessed of very little consistence, 
is soft, gelatinous, and difficult to wash, a portion of it falling 
to pieces and being distributed through the water. The 
blood, after the removal of the fibrin by whipping, continues 
to manifest a tendency to gelatinize; the blood-corpuscles de- 


BLOOD. 209 


posit themselves and form a dark coagulated ciotted mass under 
the surface of the serum, from which no additional fibrin can 
be obtained by further stirring; and upon allowing it to rest, 
the same phenomena are again exhibited. On placing a little 
of the blood, immediately after stirring, on a glass slip, the 
blood-corpuscles may be seen to collect into minute islets or 
spots ; at least I observed this to occur in three specimens of 
this sort of blood that I analysed at different times. 

In one instance I found that the blood had actually coagu- 
lated, but slowly, after the removal of fibrin by whipping, and 
upon renewed stirring I obtained a small quantity of stringy 
or coriaceous fibrin. 


Microscopic analysis. On examining a specimen of this 
blood, not diluted with the ordinary solution of salt, the swollen 
corpuscles were observed moving about; some were distinct, 
some partially united with others; these gradually attached 
themselves to one another and formed irregular groups of various 
sizes, in which the outlines of the individual corpuscles could 
no longer be recognized. It appeared as if the corpuscles 
exuded a plastic matter, which might possibly be the cause of 
their adhering to each other. 

On diluting the blood with a solution of hydrochlorate of 
ammonia, I once observed that the medium-sized corpuscles 
appeared studded with minute pearly beads, (vide supra, page 
105.) The followimg observation which I made upon two 
occasions interested me extremely. I saw a great excess of 
small blood-corpuscles, about one fourth or one sixth of the 
ordinary size, whose true nature could only be recognized 
by their well-marked yellow colour, and by their passing from 
a spherical into a flattened form, when rotation was excited. 
The motions of these minute blood-corpuscles resembled those 
of Brown’s molecules, and were much more active than those 
of the ordinary corpuscles in common blood. . 

The analysis of the blood of the hepatic vein gave in 1000 
parts— 


14 


210 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Analysis 6. Analysis 8. 
Blood of vena porte. Blood of hepatic vein. 

Water : : : é 815-000 814:000 
Solid residue . : ; 185-000 186-000 
Fibrin ; , ; : 3°285 2°650 
Fat : < : 5 1845 1408 
Albumen 5 : 5 92-250 103°283 
Globulin é ; ; 72°690 57°134 
Heematin : ‘ . 3°900 37000 
Extractive matters and salts 11:623 12°312 

100 parts of blood-corpuscles | 100 parts of blood-corpuscles 

contained 5:3 of hematin. contained 5:°2 of hematin. 


The blood was taken from the starved horse, who supphed 
the matter for analyses 3 and 4. 


Analysis 9. Analysis 10. 
Blood of vena porte, Blood of hepatic vein. 
Water : 5 c : 738:000 725:000 
Solid residue. : : 262:000 275°000 
Fibrin : é : d 3°500 2°500 
Fat : : : : 1:968 1560 
Albumen : : : 114°636 130°000 
Globulin . : ‘ : 116°358 112-000 
Heematin : 3 5 4:920 4:420 
Hemaphein  . 5 : 1-467 1-040 
Extractive matters and salt 16°236 17°160 
100 parts of blood-corpuscles | 100 parts of blood-corpuscles 
contained 5:4 of colouring contained 4°8 of colouring 
matter, of which 4:2 were matter, of which 3:9 were 
hematin and 1-2 hema- hematin and 0:9 hema- 
pheein. phein. 


From these analyses we deduce the following conclusions. 
The blood of the hepatic vein is richer in solid constituents 
than that of the vena porte, and consequently than either ar- 
terial or ordinary venous blood; it contains less fibrin, fat, 
globulin, and colouring matter, than the blood of the vena 
porte; the ratio of the colouring matter to the globulin is 
smaller, and the quantity of albumen larger in the former than 
in the latter form of blood. 

In consequence of the admixture of the blood of the hepatic 
artery with that of the vena porte in the capillary system sur- 
rounding the biliary ducts, and of the catalytic influence of the 
cells of the liver in the formation and secretion of bile, it is 
impossible for us to ascertain the relative parts which these two 
distinct forms of blood play in the production of this important 


BLOOD. 211 


secretion, or to state with certainty which constituents are 
drawn from the contents of the hepatic artery and which from 
those of the vena porte, or how the withdrawal of them is 
effected. 

These analyses are nevertheless of great importance, since 
they show that the blood-corpuscles are actively engaged in the 
secretion of the bile, a view which corresponds with and tends 
to explain other phenomena connected with this secretion. They 
show that the blood of the hepatic vein contains more albumen 
and less globulin, or (which is much the same thing) blood- 
corpuscles, than that of the vena porte. These differences 
favour the hypothesis that the corpuscles (or, at least, their 
principal constituent, the globulin,) have a greater share in the 
formation of the bile in the peripheral system of the liver than 
the albumen, the principal constituent of the plasma. 

Another corroborative circumstance is the small amount of 
colouring matter in the blood of the hepatic vein, from which 
we infer that some of it has been consumed in the formation of 
the bile, a view which accounts, with more probability, for the 
origin of its colour than the supposition that it is produced from 
a portion of the plasma.! 

If the liver were supplied with blood from the vena portze 
alone, there could be hardly a doubt entertained with regard 
to the correctness of my hypothesis ; the influence of the blood 
of the hepatic artery must not, however, be overlooked. If, 
for instance, the blood of the hepatic artery contained a much 
larger proportion of albumen and a smaller quantity of blood- 
corpuscles than the blood of the vena porte, the mixture of 
these would produce a fluid similar in constitution to the blood 
of the hepatic vem. But, upon comparing the blood of the 
vena porte with that of the hepatic artery, no such proportions, 
as those we have assumed, are observable. It is true that a 
mixture of the two bloods in a badly fed animal would contain 
more albumen, but, at the same time, more blood-corpuscles 
than the blood of the vena porte (see Analyses 3 and 6); and 
in the reverse case (see Analyses 1 and 5) the mixture would 


' [This view is corroborated by Mulder, who observes that if the blood-corpuscles 
undergo a metamorphic change prior to their development into living tissue, the 
products of the decomposition of the hematin may be probably traced in the dili- 
fulvin of the bile. (Versuch einer allgemeinen physiologischen Chemie, p. 358.) ] 


212 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


contain fewer corpuscles, but, at the same time, less albumen, 
than the blood of the vena porte. 

It is impossible to account for so large an amount of albumen 
in the blood of the hepatic vein, if we consider the quantity of 
bile which is secreted by the healthy liver, and attribute its 
formation to the elements of the plasma alone; whereas, if we 
consider the bile to be formed at the expense of the blood- 
corpuscles, the peculiarities in the blood of the hepatic vein are 
at once accounted for. 

In addition to the separation of the bile, the liver effects a 
further change in the blood by drawing from that fluid the 
sources of its own nutrition. These two processes merge into 
one, which may be regarded as the product of the development 
of the hepatic cells. The formation and secretion of such a 
complicated fluid as the bile, by the action of the hepatic cells 
on the plasma, may be dependent on various causes. The entire 
structure of an organ must necessarily correspond with its func- 
tions, and with every variety of internal organization there will 
be a corresponding variation in the secretion. The action of 
the hepatic cells on the plasma is different from that of the 
renal or other glandular ceils, in consequence of the difference 
of their chemical action on the blood. The nerves also seem 
to influence the secretions. 

Further, since the plasma has been modified in its progress 
through the liver by the solution of a large number of blood- 
corpuscles, a corresponding new product must be evolved from 
it by the hepatic cells. I have previously stated that the de- 
velopment, and especially the ultimate solution of the blood- 
corpuscles may occur in all parts of the peripheral system, if a 
sufficient supply of oxygen be present. I have shown that a 
large quantity of fully developed corpuscles accumulates in the 
blood of the vena porte, in consequence of its torpid motion 
and the want of a due supply of oxygen; if this blood mixes 
in the capillaries with the well-oxygenised blood of the hepatic 
artery, it is not difficult to conceive that a proportionably larger 
quantity of blood-corpuscles is thus dissolved in a given time 
than at many other parts of the peripheral system, that the 
plasma may thus become changed, and that the product of the 
general action of the hepatic cells may be different. 

It is well known that the liver is one of the most active 


BLOOD. 213 


organs of the animal economy. Even in the embryo, the de- 
velopment of its cells is wonderfully abundant, as has been 
shown by Reichert. In the adult the activity of the liver 
is exhibited by the increased secretion of the bile during di- 
gestion. The activity of an organ is represented by the in- 
tegral of the activity of its cells; and the increased activity of 
the cells is intimately connected with the facility of evolution 
and revolution. If, then, in consequence of the activity of 
the liver as a secreting organ, a large number of cells are con- 
sumed, it follows that a proportionably large number must be 
reproduced ; and we can thus explain the apparently incon- 
sistent phenomena of the blood of the hepatic vein containing 
less fibrin than that of the vena port, by the supposition that, 
although a large quantity of blood-corpuscles is consumed by 
the liver, the fibrin of the plasma supphes the materials for the 
formation of cytoblasts for new cells. 

All the other differences that are observable between the 
composition of the blood of the hepatic vein and of the vena 
porte may be accounted for by paying a little attention to the 
nature of the bile. 

The bile contains a smaller proportion of solid constituents 
than the blood; hence it is obvious that the blood, previously 
to the separation of the bile (?. e. the blood of the vena porte) 
must contain a smaller proportion of solid constituents than after 
this change has been effected (.e. the blood of the hepatic 
vein.) 

The blood of the vena porte contains more colouring matter, 
both hematin and hzemapheein, than that of the hepatic vein. 
It is impossible to decide with certainty upon the manner in 
which these colouring substances are consumed in the liver, as 
we are still deficient in correct ultimate analyses of bilphzein 
and hemaphein; we may, however, safely conclude that the 
biliphzin is produced by the metamorphosis of the colouring 
matter of the blood. 


Properties of the blood of the renal veins ;—its comparison 
with the blood of the aorta. 


The blood of the renal veins was drawn from a horse simul- 
taneously with the aortic blood; it was found, however, upon 
opening the body of the horse, bled to death, that the renal 


214 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


veins contained so small a quantity of blood that Professor Gurlt 
was unable to collect from them more than about 50 grains. 

The blood obtained in this manner was visibly darker than 
the aortic blood. I stirred it for a considerable time with a 
rod, but could obtain no fibrin ; on leaving it to stand, it became 
gelatinous, and resembled the blood of the hepatic vein after 
similar treatment. 


Microscopic analysis. Upon comparing the two sorts of 
blood under the microscope, the only perceptible differences 
were the following: In the unmixed blood of the renal vems 
the corpuscles united themselves into islets and amorphous 
groups, in which the individual globules could not be traced. 
Upon mixing some of this blood with a solution of salt, a 
larger quantity of small and middle-sized corpuscles were ob- 
served than in the aortic blood when similarly treated. The 
proportion, however, of the small corpuscles to the large ones 
was not so striking as in the blood of the hepatic vem. (Vide 
supra, p. 209.) 

In consequence of the small quantity of material, I resolved 
to determine only the most important of the constituents. I 
made an accurate estimate of the proportions of water and 
albumen, but was prevented by illness from ascertaming the 
quantities of globulin and hematin. 

1000 parts of blood contained : 


Analysis 11. Analysis 12. 

Aortic blood. Blood of renal vein. 
Water é a : 3 790:000 778:000 
Solid residue. j : 210-000 222-000 
Fibrin : : 5 ; 8-200 ? 
Albumen : ‘ : 90°300 99-230 


From these analyses it appears that the blood of the renal 
veins is more abundant in solid constituents and in albumen 
than the aortic blood, but that it contains less fibrin and fewer 
blood-corpuscles. 

The two latter inferences, respecting the quantity of fibrin 
and of blood-corpuscles in the blood of the renal vein, cannot 
be drawn from the analyses in the same certain manner as in 
the comparative analyses of the blood of the hepatic vein and 
of the vena portie. 


BLOOD. 215 


Although I cannot believe that this blood is entirely devoid 
of separable fibrin, it certainly contains less fibrin than arterial 
blood. In fact. it is more than probable that the quantity of 
fibrin which is formed during the course of the blood through 
the renal capillary system, where oxygen is taken up and not 
again supplied, does not exceedthe quantity consumed. Although 
no determination of the hematin and globulin was instituted, 
we may infer, analogically, from our former analyses, and from 
the necessary reciprocating proportions of the two principal 
constituents of the blood, that less hematoglobulin exists in the 
blood of the renal veins than in that of the aorta. If the albu- 
men in each be estimated in regard to equal quantities of the 
solid residue, the albumen in the aortic blood will be found to 
be to that in the blood of the renal vein in the ratio of 425 to 
446. The quantities of hzmatoglobulin will therefore be in 
an opposite ratio. 

These results throw considerable light upon the changes which 
the blood undergoes in the kidneys. It loses a certain quantity 
of water, which is accounted for by the urine. Hence this 
blood contains less water than the aortic blood. 

Urea appears to be formed from the corpuscles, under the 
cooperating influence of the plasma and oxygen of the blood, 
rather than from the albumen, which preponderates in the blood 
of the renal veins the same as in the hepatic vein. It cannot 
be positively asserted that the observations which were made 
regarding the trifling amount of fibrin in the blood of the he- 
patic vein, as compared with that in the blood of the vena porte, 
here hold good, but there are many reasons in favour of such 
an analogous view. 

It is highly probable that the activity of the excreting powers 
of the kidney is due to the activity of the organ itself, as has 
been already observed with regard to the liver, and that this 
activity corresponds with the energetic evolution and revolution 
of renal cells. 

That the kidneys do not separate bile, but urea, uric acid, 
and salts, is due partly to the chemical constitution of the renal 
cells and to the peculiarly directed cooperation of the nerves 
of these organs, and partly, perhaps, to the composition of the 
blood itself, which differs from that which supplies the liver. 

The separation of the water is caused by the peculiar internal 


216 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


structure of the organ; it cannot be regarded as a product of 
the development of the cells, or of the metabolic power of the 
cells acting on the plasma; but the water is separated in much 
the same manner as the various gases of the blood are re- 
moved by the lungs. 

But whether the salts which are separated by the kidneys, the 
combinations of chlorine, and of phosphoric, sulphuric and lactie 
acids, are, so to speak, mechanically carried away in the water 
in which they are held in solution, and which permeates the 
textures of the kidney, or whether their separation is to be re- 
garded as a true secretion of the renal cells, due to their organ- 
ised development, is a point which I have no means of ascer- 
taining. An accurate analysis of the kidneys would soon show 
whether the salts which have been mentioned do or do not 
belong to the constitution of the renal cells, a point which the 
analysis of Berzelius has left undecided. These salts, most of 
which preexist in the blood, at all events find their way into 
the renal cells, and either are or are not connected with their 
peculiar vital development. The former is far the more pro- 
bable; and in that case the secretion of the salts would not 
be a mere mechanical act, but would be due to organic causes. 

The kidneys separate hemaphzein from the colouring mat- 
ter produced by the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, 
and the proportion in which they separate it is larger than 
the proportion contained in the plasma, a circumstance which 
is obvious from the colour of the urine being generally deeper 
than that of the hquor sanguinis. Hence it is very probable that 
a portion of the colouring matter is formed by the metamor- 
phosis of the corpuscles in the peripheral system of the kidney. 
The kidneys likewise separate another colouring matter, uro- 
erythrin ; in a normal state, only in a slight proportion, but 
in certaim pathological conditions, in a comparatively large 
quantity. Uroerythrin, in all probability, owes its origin to 
the hematin of the blood-corpuscles. As the proportions of 
uric acid and of uroerythrin to urea are very small in normal 
urine, but are much increased in certain pathological conditions, 
we must infer that, in these latter cases, the blood undergoes 
some peculiar change. 


BLOOD. 217 


Comparison of the venous blood with the blood of the capillaries. 


It is well known that blood taken from the body by scari- 
fication does not materially differ in its physical properties 
from venous blood ; it takes about an equal time to coagulate, 
and separates into clot and serum. The blood which flows 
from leech-bites is also similar to venous blood. From com- 
parative analyses of venous blood and blood taken by leeches 
or cupping, Dr. Pallas! concludes that the (so termed) capillary 
blood is richer in solid and coagulable constituents than either 
venous or arterial blood. 

The ratios are represented by the following numbers : 

2°550 : 3°100 and 
2°550 : 2°630 

Denis? contradicts these statements; he observes that the 
blood of the capillaries, when taken by cupping, is of a bright 
red colour and very plastic if it is taken from the neighbour- 
hood of a large artery, but that it is dark and proportionally 
less plastic when drawn from the vicinity of large venous trunks; 
so that its characters always present a certain degree of simi- 
larity to either arterial or venous blood. Denis analysed blood 
drawn from the arm of a man aged 70, and blood taken by 
cupping from the left side of the thorax of the same individual, 
and compared the results. 1000 parts contained : 


Blood from the arm. Blood obtained by cupping. 
Water ; ; f : 790:0 790-0 
Fibrin 5 : : : oI 2-9 
Albumen. : : ; 56-0 54:0 
Hematin . : ; ‘ 131°6 133°4 
Oxide of iron : : : 0-7 0:7 
Phosphorized fat : ; 8-0 8:2 
Cruorin . . 5 : fe) | 1-0 
Carbonate of soda < : 1-0 1-0 
Chloride of sodium : : 4-0 40 
Chloride of potassium . ; P| 2:0 
Carbonate of lime : ; 13 eS 
Phosphates of lime and magnesia = 0°5 0°5 
Or, 
Water : : ‘ ‘ 790°0 790-0 
Blood-corpuscles : - 132°3 134°1 
Solid residue of serum : 7777 75°9 





' Journal de Chimie Médicale, Oct. 1828. * Recherches, p. 72. 


218 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Denis also analysed the blood of a girl, aged 27, in a similar 
manner, and obtained corresponding results from both forms of 
blood. (Recherches, pp. 152, 153, and 250.) 


REVIEW OF THE MODIFICATIONS AND CHANGES THAT THE BLOOD 
UNDERGOES IN THE COURSE OF THE CIRCULATION. 


Having in the previous section given my views respecting the 
probable changes that the blood undergoes in the course of the 
circulation, founded partly on numerous analyses of that fluid, 
and partly on conclusions deduced from the necessary connexion 
that exists between the phenomena of secretion and of meta- 
morphosis ; and having also endeavoured to explain the varia- 
tions that occur in the blood of the same individual, through 
the influence of nutrition and the secreting organs (as the liver 
and kidneys), I beg once more to call the attention of the 
reader to the subject under consideration. 

My views regarding the formation of the products of secretion 
from the changes that the blood undergoes in the organism re- 
quire a more searching investigation before confidence can be 
placed in them. There is nothing improbable in the supposition 
that the blood is changed in the manner that I have assumed ; 
I can as easily conceive that the urea and bilin are formed by 
the mutual action of the blood-corpuscles and the liquor san- 
guinis, as that their origin is dependent upon the liquor san- 
guinis alone; but for reasons already communicated, there is 
a greater degree of probability in the idea that these substances 
are produced by the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles. 
These reasons are founded more on the intimate connexion that 
exists between the products of secretion, change of matter and 
blood, and on the mutual adaptation and principle of compen- 
sation in the organism of the animal body, than on the phy- 
sical and chemical “momentum” of the circulation and of secre- 
tion ; and the question we have now to consider is, whether in 
the latter there is not something directly opposed to our views 
respecting the metamorphosis of the blood. 

Before proceeding to these investigations, I must in the first 
place revert to some of the poimts connected with this meta- 
morphic action. 

The first and principal object of the blood is the nutrition 


BLOOD. 219 


of the organism, and for this purpose the circulating fluid is 
modified and consumed in the peripheral system. We have 
conjectured that the extractive matters of the blood which are 
removed by the kidneys are thus formed. The constant mo- 
dification and consumption of blood dependent on the act of 
nutrition render the supply of fresh nutrient fluid, and the re- 
moval of effete matter, indispensably necessary, since a proper 
constitution of the blood is requisite for the due performance 
of the function of nutrition. The effete matters are replaced 
by chyle mixed with lymph; and this fluid must of necessity 
be converted into blood, as otherwise the blood would soon 
consist entirely of chyle. The change is effected by the for- 
mation of young blood-corpusles, (an act which is accompanied 
by the consumption of chyle-, lymph-, and oil-corpuscles,) and 
by the fibrin of the chyle becoming more plastic; all the other 
fluid constituents of the chyle are similar to those of the liquor 
sanguinis, except that there is an excess of water and of ex- 
tractive matters in the former. If therefore we suppose a con- 
tinuous formation of blood-corpuscles, the necessity for their 
consumption must be sufficiently obvious. I have assumed that 
fibrin is formed as a consequence of this consumption, and that 
this newly-formed fibrin supplies the place of that which is em- 
ployed for the purposes of nutrition in the peripheral vascular 
system. I have also shown, (page 163,) that there is no diffi- 
culty im the idea of the formation of albumen; and lastly, I 
attempted to show that, in all probability, urea, uric acid, and 
bilin are formed as a consequence of this consumption of the 
blood-corpuscles. For these substances must necessarily be 
formed as products of the changes which the constituents of the 
blood undergo in the circulation, and are not (as observations 
on starved and emaciated individuals show us) a consequence of 
the changes which the circulating fluid undergoes during the nu- 
trition of the tissues, but are dependent on the metamorphic 
action that is produced by the respiratory process. It is prin- 
cipally the blood-corpuscles, (as I have endeavoured to show, in 
page 155,) that are connected with the consumption of oxygen ; 
and when we reflect that this change in the corpuscles must 
take place under similar conditions in animals both high and 
low in the scale of development, we can understand how it is 
that urea, uric acid, and bilin occur in the renal and hepatic 


220 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


secretions of animals of nearly every form of structure, and 
under such varying phases of existence. 

I will now proceed seriatim with the objections that may be 
urged against my views respecting the metamorphosis of the 
blood. 

Analyses of the urme show us that it contains a greater 
amount of urea and uric acid than of extractive matters; as- 
suming that the former substances, and the bilin, are products 
of the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, and that the 
latter are the products of the change that the plasma under- 
goes in the nutrition of the peripheral system, the mass of the 
former is greater than the mass of the latter. If, moreover, 
a portion of the extractive matter is in reality not removed by 
the kidneys, but is, as I have already suggested, in page 150, 
again adapted in the circulation to the purposes of nutrition, 
(serving probably for the cytoblastema of the cells of the cartila- 
ginous and gelatinous tissues), then the separation of so consi- 
derable a quantity of the product of the metamorphosis of the 
blood-corpuscles ought still to surprise us, if its only purpose 
were to supply the fibrin, and possibly a part of the consumed 
albumen in the plasma. 

It can, however, be easily shown that another and a much more 
important final result must be considered in the consumption of 
the blood-corpuscles. For if, as I have shown, in page 155, 
the blood-corpuscles are principally concerned in the consump- 
tion of the atmospheric oxygen, then it is clear that the greater 
part of the carbon, which is exhaled from the lungs as carbonic 
acid, must originate from them, and the source of animal heat 
would thus be chiefly attributable to the metamorphosis of the 
blood-corpuscles. Consequently, the chemical modifications of 
the blood-corpuscles are of at least as much importance as the 
act of nutrition in the peripheral system carried on by the 
agency of the plasma, inasmuch as they are subservient to the 
most essential and indispensable requisite for animal life. The 
other purposes of the corpuscles appear also to be subservient 
to this great end. 

If the blood-corpuscles (from the period of their develop- 
ment up to their final solution) convert as large a quantity of 
carbon as is generally assumed, into carbonic acid, in order to 
maintain a proper degree of temperature, then we cannot be 
astonished at the amount of the products of secretion of the 


BLOOD. 221 


kidneys and liver, which we have assumed to be consequent on 
the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles ; for since the animal 
matters undergo a chemical change by the elimination of the 
carbon, the products which are then formed must be removed, 
in order that the blood may retain its normal composition. 

In opposition to the assertion that the urea, uric acid, and 
bilin are products of the metamorphosis of the blood-corpuscles, 
it may be urged that the daily amount of these secretions in- 
volves a larger daily consumption of blood-corpuscles than ap- 
pears to be consistent with the rate of their reproduction, as far 
at least as our knowledge of the act of formation of the corpus- 
cles would lead us to infer. 

I have mentioned, in page 155, that the blood-corpuscles are 
to be regarded as cells, whose development must be considered 
as perfectly analogous with the development of other cells. In 
absorbing from the plasma the substances requisite for their 
nutrition, and in rejecting the products that must be conse- 
quent upon the act of absorption, they obviously exert a modi- 
fying influence on that fluid. The blood-corpuscles do not, 
however, find their way into the circulating fluid in a matured 
form, but their cytoblasts enter it as germs of the future cor- 
puscles, and require the assistance of the atmospheric oxygen 
to attain their perfect development. The only hypothesis we 
can frame regarding the primary formation of the blood-cor- 
puscles is, that they are produced from the plasma, that their 
entire development and increase of bulk is due to the reciprocal 
action of the young blood-corpuscular cells and plasma on 
each other at the expense of the latter, and that up to the mo- 
ment when the blood-corpuscles cease to discharge their func- 
tions as independent organisms in the circulation, every change 
that occurs in them must be accompanied by a simultaneous 
alteration in their cytoblastema, the plasma. 

It may further be urged that, in order to account for the forma- 
tion and secretion of urea, uric acid, and bilin, there is no neces- 
sity for the assumption that there is a metamorphosis of the blood- 
corpuscles. These substances might as easily have been formed 
in the processof chylification, or during the conversion of the chyle 
into blood, or from the albumen, instead of from the corpuscles. 

I have already mentioned that it is by no means probable 
that these products of secretion are formed in the act of nutri- 


222 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


tion, since they are produced in fasting persons, and even when 
nearly all the soft tissues are wasted away. 

We do not, however, intend to assert that nutrition exercises 
no influence over these products, or that the peculiar structure 
of each secreting organ is not to be considered. Neverthe- 
less I cannot agree with certam physiologists who maintain 
that in granivorous animals, sugar formed in the chyle is the 
cause of the carbonic acid evolved from the lungs, or that urea, 
uric acid, and bilin are formed solely from the albumen, and 
that the blood-corpuscles take no part in this action; for the 
uniform and simultaneous formation of carbonic acid, urea, 
uric acid and bilin, in animals whose food is so varied, and whose 
habits and conditions of life are so diversified, renders it pro- 
bable that these substances are simultaneously formed, as a 
consequence of one and the same metamorphic act. On the 
other hand, we must not omit to notice that the occurrence of 
the non-nitrogenous hippuric acid in the ruminantia, the ex- 
cessive production of uric acid accompanied frequently with a 
total absence of urea in birds and amphibia, and the inverse 
ratio in which these substances occur im man, monkeys, &c., 
as likewise the different chemical relations of the bile in fishes 
and amphibia, poimt out the influence of nutrition and of the 
organization in general on these secretions. What is the ultimate 
purpose of the blood-corpuscles in the organism if they do not 
participate in the formation of these products, and if they ex- 
perience no real material change? The idea that the nutrition 
of the tissues 1s accomplished by the aggregation of blood- 
corpuscles is now abandoned, and the supposition that these 
molecules exert a vitalizmg influence on the organized tissues 
is perfectly unintelligible. I can form no conception of a 
blood-corpuscle that is not undergoing a continuous material 
change, and I regard this change as the ultimate object of its 
existence. 

Daily experience shows us that the fluids which are secreted 
by the principal glands take their origin from the blood: the 
question then arises whether these secretions exist in the blood 
itself, that is to say, whether the blood which enters a secreting 
organ, as the kidney or liver, indicates a difference of composi- 
tion as it leaves that organ. At first sight we should doubt- 
less answer this question in the affirmative; but taking into 


BLOOD. 223 


consideration the rapidity of the circulation, and the short space 
of time in which the same blood is supposed to remain in an 
organ, it is obvious that the detection of the changes in the 
blood, due to the removal of the secretions, will be a task, if not 
absolutely impossible, at least extremely difficult. 

The question whether the blood of the same individual pos- 
sesses anytraceable differences, is most intimately connected with 
the physico-chemical “momentum” of the circulation; although 
sufficient facts and experiments are still wanting to enable the 
point to be decisively settled, I believe from an estimate of all 
that is at present known on the subject, that we are warranted 
in the assumption that there does exist a difference in the 
blood of one and the same individual. 

According to Hering’s experiments,! (in which he injected 
ferrocyanide of potassium into the veins of horses,) the blood 
performs the circuit of the body im from 20 to 30 seconds. 
Several authorities are opposed to this statement. It is evident 
that the blood, as it issues from the heart, proceeds in smaller 
and larger circles; the smallest are those which it describes 
through the heart itself and the lungs, the larger are those 
through the extremities, and it must require different times to 
go over these different spaces, and besides this, its course is 
differently impeded in the capillary system of the different or- 
gans. Thus one portion of the blood may frequently pass 
through the heart and lungs, while another portion has only 
made one complete circuit, and traces of the injected ferrocy- 
anide of potassium which permeates uniformly the whole mass 
of the blood, may therefore be found after a short time in parts 
of the system remote from the heart, which have not gone the 
perfect cireuit through the heart, lungs, and all the organs. 
This appears to be very evident from the fact that some of 
those salts which are supposed to be rapidly elimimated by the 
kidneys, may be detected for a considerable period in the blood. 
Thus I observed,? that when iodide of potasstum was taken at 
four o’clock in the afternoon, its presence was traceable in the 
urine till nine the next morning ; and Hering? found ferrocy- 


! Treviranus Zeitschrift fiir Physiologie, 1832, p. 85. 

2 Simon, Die Frauenmilch nach ihrem chemischen und physiologischen Verhalten. 
Berlin, 1838, p. 75. 

3 Op. cit. p. 96. 


224 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


anide of potassium in the urine of a horse two days after it 
had been injected. Hence the whole mass of the blood occu- 
pies a considerable time in passing through the renal arteries, 
or else the kidneys do not remove all the foreign constituents 
from the blood that passes through them. 

Others have calculated the rapidity of the circulation by the 
quantity of blood projected by the heart at each systole. Reck- 
oning this quantity at from 1 to 2 ounces, and the whole amount 
of blood in the human body at 30 pounds, it would take from 
3 to 7 minutes (assuming the pulse to be 75 in the minute) for 
all this blood to pass through the heart. Since, however, the 
blood in the smaller circles passes more frequently through the 
heart in a given time than the blood in the larger circles, and 
since it is variously impeded and delayed in the different 
organs, we must not consider that the absolute mass of the 
blood of the whole body is represented by the identical 30 pounds 
which pass through the heart in from 3 to 7 minutes. The 
quantity of blood in an adult has likewise never been accurately 
determined. Hales places it at 25 pounds; the maximum is, 
however, calculated to amount to 80 pounds; and when we 
consider the extremely large quantity of blood that is retained 
in the capillary vessels, this estimate is probably too low. 

That the rapidity with which the blood circulates varies in- 
versely with the distance from the heart is an established fact. 
In the capillary system its progress is the most torpid. Omitting 
the consideration of the various mechanical impediments that 
meet the blood in the capillaries, it must be remembered that, 
if the blood is the real nutrient fluid of the body, there must 
be a necessary attraction between it and the organs it has to 
nourish. ‘The blood in the capillary network permeates the 
tissues, or (to speak more correctly) the cells of the tissues at- 
tract from the blood their proper nutriment. It is clear that 
this must delay the course of the blood in the peripheral sys- 
tem, to what amount it is impossible to say, but in all proba- 
bility the delay will vary directly with the intensity of the ac- 
tion between the blood and the tissues, and with the amount of 
the change of matter. The greatest delay will most probably 
occur in the kidneys and in the liver, since they afford the 
largest amount of secreted matters. Even if the amount of the 
secretions did not indicate a heightened cellular activity, it 


BLOOD. 225 


would be sufficiently proved by the structure of the organs 
themselves, for they are permeated by such an extremely abun- 
dant and dense capillary network, and such very delicate venous 
twigs closely encircle their excretory ducts, that the tissue is 
brought in contact with the blood at every point and in every 
direction. 

The chemical constitution of these organs is likewise so pe- 
culiar, that we might infer that the cells would exert a particu- 
lar influence; for the muscular tissue, serous membrane, lung, &c. 
when triturated with water, yield little else than some of the 
constituents of the blood from the capillary vessels, while the 
liver and kidneys by trituration yield a pappy mass, which is for 
the most part soluble in water, contains much fat in a state of 
suspension, and leaves only a small amount of solid residue 
(18-98 in the liver, and, according to Berzelius, even less in the 
kidneys), consisting of shreds of vessels and membranes. 

From the observations already made, we may infer that the 
blood undergoes a much more rapid metamorphosis in the kid- 
neys and liver than in the tissues of the muscles, bones, &e. If 
it were possible to determine the time during which the same 
blood remains in these organs, then we might decide with some 
degree of certainty whether the blood which emerges from them 
differs in its composition from that which enters them. We 
have seen that there are reasons for assuming that the circula- 
tion is delayed in these organs. If we suppose, with Haller,! 
that the eleventh part of the whole blood passes through the 
kidneys, and that, consequently, at each systole of the heart four 
scruples are driven into them, then, assuming that the kidneys 
contain from four to six ounces of blood, and that the rapidity 
of the circulation in them is the same as in the aorta, the same 
blood will remain in these organs for about one third or one 
half of a minute. But taking into consideration the various 
facts that we have adverted to regarding the impeded circulation 
in these organs, we can scarcely doubt that the blood is detained 
in them for a very considerable period. According to a calcu- 
lation made by Keil, and quoted by Hales in his ‘ Medical 
Statics,’ the blood remains in the kidneys for several hours. 

R. Wagner? measured the rapidity with which a blood-cor- 


' Elem. Phys., vol. 2, p. 467. ? Lehrbuch der Physiologie, part 2, p. 193. 
15 


226 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


puscle moves in the capillary system, and found that it tra- 
versed a course of from 12 to 15 lines in the course of a minute. 
If the motion of the corpuscles and of the blood is supposed to 
be equal, and if the blood progresses in the large vascular trunks 
at the rate of eight inches in one second, and consequently 480 
inches in one minute, then the rapidity of the blood in the 
larger trunks will be to the rapidity in the capillaries in the 
ratio of from 480—384.:1,; a calculation tending to show that 
the blood remains im the kidneys for a space of from one to 
two hours. 

To this it may be objected that the phenomena of resorp- 
tion are opposed to these results, and that if the renal veins 
convey away as much blood as is conducted to the kidneys by 
the renal arteries, this protracted delay would be impossible. 
We cannot, however, determine with certainty the amount 
of blood that enters the kidneys, for there is no necessity that 
the whole mass of the blood should flow through them as through 
the lungs; moreover, only one branch of the aorta enters this 
viscus, and while the tendency of the blood is to flow in the 
direction in which it meets with the least opposition, there is, 
perhaps, no organ in the whole body that offers a greater re- 
sistance than the kidney. The chemical change that the blood 
undergoes in the kidneys must lhkewise be much more rapid 
than in the capillary vessels of many other tissues, since, in ad- 
dition to the large amount of secretion that they yield, a por- 
tion of the consumed blood is carried away by the lymphatic 
vessels. 

Let us now endeavour to ascertain how long it would be ne- 
cessary for the blood to remain in the kidney, in order that the 
contents of the renal veins should exhibit chemical peculiarities 
dependent on the action of the gland. Assuming that a healthy 
man secretes about 40 ounces of urine in 24 hours, and that 
the change dependent on the secretion of 10 ounces of urine 
from 1000 ounces of blood may be detected by the changed 
proportion of the water, then, omitting all consideration of the 
lymphatic vessels, 4000 ounces of blood would pass through the 
kidney in 24 hours, in order to separate 40 ounces of urine. 
According to this calculation, 250 pounds of blood would pass 
through the kidneys in 24 hours, about 10 pounds in one hour, 
and 1 pound in six minutes; and assuming that both kidneys 


BLOOD. 227 


contain six ounces of blood, this blood must be retained in them 
for at least two minutes. This period is much shorter than 
those deduced by Keil and Wagner, in which it amounts to 
hours. 

I think we may fairly conclude, from the preceding ob- 
servations, that the changes which the blood undergoes in its 
composition while passing through the kidneys and liver, are 
appreciable ; for if we have shown the probability of the cor- 
rectness of the statement in the case of the kidneys, there can 
be no question that it is true in the case of the liver, which is 
everywhere permeated by the torpidly circulating blood of the 
vena porte. 


On the absolute composition of healthy venous blood. 


It cannot be doubted but that the blood of different indivi- 
duals in a state of perfect health will exhibit differences of com- 
position, and that it would be the merest chance if the compo- 
sition of the blood of two persons were found to be precisely 
the same. The circumstances capable of ducing a change in 
the composition of the blood are very numerous. Different 
methods of life, and various modes of nourishment, might cause 
such changes; but, independently of these external influences, 
there are others connected with the individual which must mo- 
dify, to a greater or lesser degree, the composition of the blood, 
as, for instance, the influences of sex, age, and temperament. 

It is extremely difficult to determine a formula for the com- 
position of normal blood that would serve as a standard, by 
comparison with which we might detect absolute deviations in 
other forms and specimens of blood, on account of the variable 
nature of the fluid, changing even in the same individual at 
different periods of the day, and in accordance with the food 
that has been taken. 

In a medical point of view, the composition of venous blood 
is the most interesting, because it is from the veins that blood 
is almost always taken in disease, and because venous blood 
can naturally only be compared with venous blood for the pur- 
pose of ascertaining any deviations that may occur. 

Before attempting to give a decided opinion on the normal 
composition of venous blood, it would be requisite that nume- 
rous accurate analyses of the blood of healthy males and females 


228 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


of different ages should be instituted. Possibly we should also 
regard the influence of their various modes of life, and (if we 
ascribe any influence to the circumstance) of their temperaments. 

Experiments of this nature are still wanted, and the contri- 
butions hitherto made with that object by no means meet the 
exigencies of the case. Many difficulties present themselves in 
such an investigation. 

It is not an easy matter to select individuals from whose state 
of health we can infer that the composition of the blood closely 
approximates to the normal standard, and after the selection 
is made it is still harder to convince them of the advantage or 
necessity of venesection in their own cases. 

I was obliged to content myself with two such analyses, one 
of the blood of a young man, the other of an unmarried female. 

Analysis 18. N—, aged 17 years, a servant, of sanguineous 
temperament, nearly full grown and properly developed, chest 
well arched, respiratory and digestive organs healthy, coun- 
tenance florid and blooming, was bled from the arm. The 
blood was apparently rather brighter than usual, and when al- 
lowed to stand, separated into a bright red, uniformly coloured, 
copious, and properly consistent clot, and a clear bright yellow 
serum. 

A portion of the blood was whipped as soon as it was drawn, 
and the analysis was conducted in accordance with my ordi- 
nary plan. 

1000 parts contained : 


Water . : ; , F A 791-900 
Solid residue ; ; j A 208°100 
Fibrin. : : : ‘ 2011 
Fat é é ‘ 3 ‘ é 1:978 
Albumen : , : : 2 75°590 
Globulin : i j ; ; 105°165 
Heematin : A a 7181 
Extractive matter tha salts 4 5 14:174 


100 parts of blood-corpuscles contained 6°3 of hematin and hemaphein. 


Analysis 14. S—, a servant girl, aged 28 years ; tempera- 
ment rather phlegmatic than sanguineous; tall, strong, and vigo- 
rous ; countenance healthy; digestion good; had menstruated a 
fortnight before. The blood from the arm appeared rather 
dark, and on being left to itself separated into a considerable 
clot, and bright, clear yellow serum. 


BLOOD. 229 


1000 parts of this blood contained: 


Water é : y ‘ - 798°656 
Solid residue 2 ; ‘* 3 201°344 
Fibrin : 5 ‘ , 5 2°208 
Fat A . é ‘ ‘é ‘ 2:713 
Albumen. ‘ : - ‘ 77°610 
Globulin ; , : c : 100°890 
Hematin . ; z 4 : OLB 
Extractive matter and salts 3 9-950 


100 parts of blood-corpuscles contained 5:2 of hematin and hemapheein. 


These two analyses indicate a great similarity between the 
blood in both sexes in a state of health; and if, in the absence 
of other and better experiments, we venture to take these as 
descriptive of the composition of normal blood, we may give its 
leading features in the following terms. Jt contains about 20° 
of solid constituents ; not much more than 0:22 of fibrin, and 
about an equal quantity of fat ; the blood-corpuscles considerably 
exceed the albumen in quantity, and contain about 5° or 6° of 
colouring matter. 

Lecanu, although his method of analysing the blood is dif- 
ferent, obtains similar results. He has given in his Thesis,! 
ten analyses of healthy venous blood, which I shall here com- 
municate. 


Extractive matter, 


Age. Water. Solid residue. Albumen. Blood-corpuscles. salts, and colouring 
matter. 
45 780°210 219°790 72°970 132°820 14-000 
26 790-900 209-100 71560 128-670 8°870 
30 782-271 217°729 66:090 141°290 10°349 
38 783°890 2167109 67°890 148°450 9-770 
48 805°263 194°757 65°123 1177484 12°120 
62 801°871 198-129 65°389 1217640 11:100 
32 785°881 214:119 64°790 139°129 10°200 
26 8 778°625 221°375 62°949 146°885 11°541 
30 =788°323 211°677 71:061 131°688 8:928 
34 =795°870 204°130 78°120 115°850 10:010 
The mean of these analyses would give— 
37 = 789-320 210°680 68°059 132°490 10-688 


From these analyses we therefore obtain about 212 of solid 
residue, and a larger proportion of blood-corpuscles than albu- 


men. Lecanu assigns to the fibrin rather a larger proportion 
than I do, viz. °298. 


' Etudes chimiques sur le Sang humain, etc., p. 62. 


230 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The analyses of Denis, (although from the very different 
manner in which they were conducted, their results cannot 
very well be compared with mine,) upon the whole, support my 
statements with regard to the proportions in which the most 
important constituents occur. 

I shall give some of his analyses in a condensed form, re- 
ducing them to the relative proportions of water, solid residue, 
fibrin, blood-corpuscles, and albumen. 

The venous blood of healthy men contained in 1000 parts : 


ae 2 Age. Water.  Solidresidue. Fibrin. Albumen. Blood-corpuscles. 
Denis’s work. 

46 2) 733°0 267:0 2:3 55:0 182°9 
56 25 7320 268°0 2:5 60-0 1814 
13 31 766-0 234°0 2-1 62:2 149-2 
42 36 758°0 242°0 2:0 62-0 1550 

9 40 733°0 267°0 27 52°3 186-0 
38 50 748-0 252:0 2°5 55:0 170°6 
57 54 770-0 230°0 23 57:0 145°3 
14 65 800-0 200°0 31 60-0 114°8 
15 70 790°0 210-0 2-7 560 131°6 
4] 78 781°0 219-0 2°5 61-0 130-4 


The venous blood of women gave, in 1000 parts: 


2 22 780:0 220:0 2°5 60-0 1334 
47 33 773°0 227:0 2:9 59-0 140°0 
48 48 786-0 214:0 31 60-0 126°0 
35 50 795-0 205-0 271 58°4 110°3 


The venous blood of virgins gave, in 1000 parts : 


39 22 814-0 186:0 2°7 60:0 100°C 
33 38 774:0 226°0 27 68-4 131°5 
29 48 760°0 240°0 2:7 50-0 162°4 


In my observations on Denis’s method of analysing blood I 
pointed out the reasons why some of the constituents would 
not be correctly determined. It is obvious that, in these 
analyses, two of my characteristics of healthy venous blood, 
namely, the proportions both of the solid constituents and of 
the blood-corpuscles are given in excess. I fix the proportion 
of the solid residue by an exact determination of the water, at 
about 208, whereas these analyses would bring it up to 26°88. 
Still greater discrepancies occur in the relative proportion of 
the albumen to the blood-corpuscles. In my analyses the pro- 
portion of the albumen to the hematoglobulin (the principal 


BLOOD. 231 


constituent of the blood-corpuscles) is as 75: 100 or 1: 15. 
The proportion assigned by Lecanu is much the same, but ap- 
proximates to the ratio 1:2; whereas Denis’s proportion is 
usually 1:3 and often higher. Denis’s amount of fibrin is 
larger than mine, but less than Lecanu’s, for if the mean of 
the first 10 of his analyses be taken, the result is *24°. 

In the estimation of the colouring matter there are, as might 
have been anticipated, considerable differences. The mean of 
my two analyses gives it as 6-2 in 1000 parts of blood; and in 
100 parts of hematoglobulin the average is 5°7. 

This quantity of colouring matter, when estimated, according 
tomy method, from an analysis of 8—12 grains of dried blood, 
contains, moreover, hemaphzein and some fat ; im consequence 
of the very small proportion in which the two latter occur, 
(the former being frequently not more than from ‘14 to ‘3, 
and the latter about ‘3 of a grain,) I seldom attempted their 
separation unless I had reason to believe that a consider- 
able quantity of hemaphzin was present. The quantity of 
hematin, in my two analyses, is therefore placed rather too high. 
Lecanu estimates the hematin in 1000 parts of blood at 2°27, 
which is considerably less than half my average, ‘This dif- 
ference is owing partly to the circumstance of Lecanu’s analyses 
being made with blood-corpuscles not thoroughly deprived 
of their fibrin, and which possibly retained a _ portion of 
moisture, and partly to the fact that Lecanu, by working on 
larger quantities, was enabled to remove all the hemaphein 
and fat. The average quantity of peroxide of iron in Denis’s 
experiments amounted to ‘09°, which would correspond (accord- 
ing to my own and Lecanw’s analyses,) with about 0:9 of 
hematin. 

From the 10 analyses of man’s blood, the mean quantity of 
blood-corpuscles is 15°8°. Hence Denis perfectly agrees with 
me in the consideration that the blood-corpuscles contain 5°7? 
of hematin. 

I have not attempted any separation of the salts: Denis 
has, however, in all his analyses, determined the carbonates, 
phosphates, and chlorides. 

It results from his important and elaborate observations, 
that although the relative proportions of the salts vary con- 
siderably, the limits to which they are restricted are not very 


232 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


extended. I shall now give the quantity of the salts in the 
10 analyses of man’s blood, preserving the same order of suc- 
cession as before. 

1000 parts of healthy venous blood in a man contained : 


Carbonate Chloride Chloride Carbonate Phosphate of lime, 


Laie a Age. of of of of with traces of i 
soda. sodium. potasssium. lime. phosphate of magnesia. 
46 23 2°0 4-9 3°9 2°8 0°6 
56 25 2:0 4:2 3°6 2°6 0:8 
13 31 1:2 4:0 2-1 1:2 0°7 
42 36 10 4-0 3'1 2:0 0°3 
9 40 2°1 5°2 2:3 1:8 0-4 
38 50 13 4°9 2°5 13 0-5 
57 54 2:0 4:2 3°5 2°7 0-5 
14 65 21 5°0 1:0 1:3 0-2 
15 70 1-0 40 2°1 13 0°5 
4] 78 15 4:2 3°2 i7 0°5 
The mean deduced from these 10 analyses is— 
47 16 4:4 2°7 1:8 0-5 


And the average proportion of the salts, collectively, would 
be 11:1 in 1000 parts of blood. 


[Nasse has analysed human blood, and found in 100 parts : 








Water é ; A 5 A 798402 
Solid constituents ; ; ; 201°598 
Fibrin ; ; : : : 2:233 
Fat P : : ‘ : 1/970 
Albumen “ ; 3 f ‘ 74:194 
Blood-corpuscles ; , : 116529 
Soluble salts * : a ‘ 6°672 
The soluble salts consisted of— 
Alkaline phosphates 4 5 : 0°823 
Alkaline sulphates. . : . 0:202 
Alkaline carbonates ‘ : i 0:957 
Chloride of sodium : é : 4-690 
6°672 
The insoluble salts were also estimated as follows : 
Peroxide of iron : ; 0°834 
Lime : ; : : , : 0-183 
Phosphoric acid : ; ; : 0201 
Sulphuric acid 5 3 3 5 0-052 
1-270 


The insoluble salts and extractive matters are probably in- 
cluded, in Nasse’s analysis, in the albumen. 


BLOOD. 


233 


Becquerel and Rodier have recently published an elaborate 
memoir on the composition of the blood in health and disease. 
Their method of analysis is founded on nearly the same prin- 
ciples as that of Andral and Gayarret, which will be found at 
the commencement of our section on Diseased Blood. 

The following table is drawn up from the analyses of the 
blood of 11 men, varying in age from 21 to 56 years, all of whom 
were considered by the experimenters to be in perfect health. 


Mean. Max. 
Density of defibrinated blood. 1060:2 1062-0 
Density of serum. - : 1028-0 1030-0 
Water ‘ : F : ; 799-0 800-0 
Solid constituents . : 3 201-0 240:°0 
Fibrin : : : ‘ P 2-2 Dio 
Fat! ‘ : j ; ‘ 3°2 6°6 
Albumen , : : F 69-4 73°0 
Blood-globules : P : 141°1 152-0 
Extractive matters and salts , 6°8 8:0 
1000 parts of mcinerated blood contained : 

Mean. Max. 
Chloride of sodium . F i 3°10 4:20 
Other soluble salts 3 : 2°50 3°20 
Earthy phosphates. : : 0:33 0°70 
Tron 5 0°56 0°63 


Min. 
1058:0 
1027:0 

760°0 

200-0 

15 
2:0 
62-0 
1310 
5:0 


Min. 
2°30 
2:00 
0:22 
0°51 


The composition of the blood in the healthy female, as 


deduced from eight analyses, is given in the following table : 
Max. 


Mean. 
Density of defibrinated blood. 1057°5 
Density of serum : : : 1027-4 
Water A ; : : : 791-1 
Solid constituents. : ; 208°9 
Fibrin . . , : : 2:2 
Fat? A = . 5 “ 2:2 
Albumen : : 5 : 70°5 
Blood-globules é : : 127°2 
Extractive matters and salts A 74 
1 This fat contained : Mean. 
Serolin A : : 0:020 
Phosphorized fat . ; 0°488 
Cholesterin . ; : 0:088 
Saponified fat : C 1:004 
2 This fat contained : 
Serolin ‘ ‘ 3 0:020 
Phosphorized fat. ; 0°464 
Cholesterin . : : 0-090 


Saponified fat : : 1:046 


106 
103 
81 
22 


0-0 
0:0 
3°0 
7:0 
2:5 
57 


75°5 


13 


Max. 

0:080 
1:000 
0:175 
2:000 


0-060 
0-800 
0°200 
1°300 


75 
8°5 


Min. 
1054°0 
1026°0 

773°0 

187:0 

1:8 
2:0 
65:0 
113°0 
6:2 


Min. 
inappreciable. 
0:270 
0°030 
0-700 


inappreciable. 
0°250 
0-025 
0°725 


234 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


1000 parts of the incinerated blood contained : 


Mean. Max. Min. 
Chloride of sodium . : : 3°90 4-00 3°50 
Other soluble salts . 3 : 2°90 3°00 2°50 
Earthy phosphates. . . 0°35 0°65 0°25 
Tron ; ‘ 0°54 0:57 0:48 


The salts have been analysed by Marchand. They amount 
(he observes) to 6:28—6-82° of the dried residue. The four 
following analyses are given in his ‘Lehrbuch der Physiolo- 
gischen Chemie :’ 


VE 2: 3. 4. 

Chloride of sodium : 3°91 3°42 3°81 3°82 
Chloride of potassium 0°32 0°21 0°31 0°38 
Carbonate of soda : 0°62 0°52 0°72 0-61 
Sulphate of soda. : 0°31 0°52 0°38 0:42 
Phosphate of soda . : 0°56 0°72 0°68 0°59 
Phosphate of lime . - 0°25 0-31 0:28 0°30 
Phosphate of magnesia. 0-21 0-20 0°25 0-28 
Lactate of soda : : 0°32 0°28 0°35 0°34 
Lactate of ammonia ; 0:12 0:10 0:00 0:08 

6°62 6°28 6°78 6°82 


In 100 parts of the ash of human blood there are contained, 
according to Enderlin : 
Tribasic phosphate of soda (3Na,PO;) . 22:100 


Chloride of sodium : - : . 54°769 i 

Chloride of potassium : . - 4416 == 85-740) solnblecalte- 
Sulphate of soda : : 5 . 2°46] 

Phosphate of lime : : : - 93°036 

Phosphate of magnesia SOL. SS RaORKGS farsa insoluble salts. | 
Peroxide of iron and phosphate of iron . 10°770 


On the differences of the blood, dependent on sex. 


Lecanu! concludes from his analyses that the venous blood 
of males is richer in solid constituents than that of females, but 
that the quantity of albumen in both is the same. The follow- 
ing are the maxima, minima, and mean results of his analyses : 


Water in venous blood Ditto in that 

of men. of females. 
Maximum . P é d 805°263 853°135 
Minimum . ‘ : 4 778°625 790°394 
Mean 2 A : é 791°944 821°764 

Albumen in ditto. Albumen in ditto. 

Maximum . : : : 78°270 74:740 
Minimum . 5 ; : 57°890 59°159 


Mean : ¢ : : 68-0380 66°949 





1 Etudes chimiques, ete., p. 65; or Journal de Pharmacie, vol. 18, p. 991. 


a 


BLOOD. 235 


Having only made two analyses of the blood of healthy persons, 
I am not in a position to draw any inferences regarding differ- 
ences in its composition, dependent upon sex. I have, however, 
deduced, from Denis’s analyses, a table indicating the differences 
that exist between male and female blood, at the same age. 


Blood of Males : Water. Blood-corpuscles. | Albumen. Fibrin. 
Maximum . . 790:0 18771 63:0 2°9 
Minimum . : 733°3 102:0 52°3 21 
Mean 5 : 758°0 147:0 57°5 2°5 

Blood of Females : 

Maximum . - 820-0 162-4 66°4 30 
Minimum . - 750°0 88:1 50:0 0:25 
Mean : - 7730 138-0 61:2 0°27 


Hence it appears that the analyses of Denis! bear out 
Lecanw’s statement with regard to the smaller proportion of 
water in male than in female blood: the albumen, however, 
appears to be rather more abundant in female than in male 
blood. The proportion of blood-corpuscles is smaller, and of 
fibrin rather larger than in the blood of the male. 


[From the analyses of Beequerel and Rodier, it appears that 
the influence of sex is so great, that, in order to arrive at any 
correct conclusions respecting the deviation of morbid blood 
from the healthy standard, diseased male and female blood must 
be always contrasted with the respective male and female blood 
in a state of health. The mean differences may be seen by a 
glance at the following table : 


Male. Female. 
Density of defibrinated blood é . 1060-0 1057°5 
Density of serum : : - : 1028-0 1027-4 
Water F A , P - ‘ 779°0 79171 
Fibrin ; Z - : : 2-2 2-2 
Sum of fatty matters : : : 1-60 1-62 
Serolin 2 ‘ . - 0:02 0:02 
Phosphorized fat : : A 0-488 0-464 
Cholesterin 2 - A ‘ 0:088 0:090 
Saponified fat - - J 1-004 1-046 
Albumen ‘ 5 : : ; 69°4 70°5 
Blood-corpuscles ; 3 5 141-1 127-2 
Extractive matters and alts 5 E 6°8 74 
Chloride of sodium ; : . 371 3°9 
Other soluble salts . : : 2:3 2°9 
Earthy ean : : : 0°334 0°354 
Iron . ; ; ; 0:566 0°541 





1 Op. cit. p. 290. 


236 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Hence female blood differs materially from the blood of the 
male in the amount of water and of blood-corpuscles. | 


On the differences of the blood, dependent on constitution. 


Denis concludes from his analyses that, generally speaking, 
the stronger the constitution is, the greater will be the amount 
of solid constituents, and especially of blood-corpuscles. If 
age is also taken into consideration, my observations confirm 
those of Denis. At equal ages, the blood in weak constitutions 
is less abundant in solid constituents and hematoglobulin than 
in stronger constitutions. 


On the differences in the blood, dependent upon temperament. 


According to Lecanu,' temperament has an influence upon 
the composition of the blood. He infers from his analyses that 
the blood of lymphatic persons is poorer in solid constituents, 
and especially in blood-corpuscles, than that of persons of san- 
guineous temperament, while the quantity of albumen is much 
the same in both. The following table will illustrate these 
views. 


1000 parts of blood contained on an average : 


Men of sanguineous Men of lymphatic 

temperament. temperament. 
Water . . : . 786°584 800-566 
Albumen. : : Z 65°850 71:781 
Blood-corpuscles : : 136°497 116°667 

Women of sanguineous Women of lymphatic 

temperament. temperament. 
Water : : : . 793°007 803°710 
Albumen : : 5 71°264 68°660 
Blood-corpuscles : : 126-174 117:300 


On the differences in the blood, dependent on age. 


My own observations, which, however, chiefly refer to dis- 
eased blood, lead to the conclusion that the blood of young 
persons contains a larger proportion of solid constituents, and 
especially of blood-corpuscles, than that of older persons. Lecanu 
and Denis have, however, made this a poirt of especial inquiry, 
and have extended their analyses over a wide range of ages. 


1 Op. cit. p. 66. 


BLOOD. 237 


I have drawn up the following table from the numerous 
analyses of Denis, the blood being considered healthy. 
1000 parts of healthy blood of males contained : 


Age. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Albumen. 
14 years. 750°4 249°6 4:0 162:2 58°0 
23 7330 267-0 2°3 182°9 55:0 
25 732:0 268-0 2°5 181-4 60:0 
31 766°0 234°0 271 150°1 62:2 
33 783°0 217°0 2°9 129°3 60:0 
40 750°0 250°0 2°5 167°8 55°] 
46 769-0 231°0 2°5 156°9 48°5 
50 748-0 252°0 2°5 170°9 55°0 
53 790-0 210°0 2°6 100-0 63:0 
54 798-0 202°0 30 111:0 63°0 
65 800-0 200-0 a1 1148 60-0 
70 790-0 210-0 2-7 132°3 56:0 
80 781:0 219:0 2°5 130°4 61:0 


1000 parts of healthy blood of females contained : 


A 833°0 1670 2°8 80°5 64-0 

6 820°0 180°0 2°5 97°6 59-0 
12 787:0 213°0 2°3 130-0 57°0 
15 774:0 226-0 2°5 135°7 65-0 
20 772-0 228:°0 2°5 144°2 57:0 
22 780°0 220°0 2°5 133-4 60-0 
32 750-0 250°0 3°0 173°4 51:0 
38 7740 226°0 2°7 131°5 68-4 
48 7860 214:0 31 126-0 60-0 
52 820-0 180°0 2°9 88:1 638°0 
74 745°0 255°0 2°5 171-1 55:0 


It appears from these tables, especially from the second, 
that the blood is less abundant im solid constituents, and par- 
ticularly in blood-corpuscles in early life, than at the period of 
maturity. From the latter period (or rather sooner) to middle 
life the proportions of the corpuscles and of the solid constitu- 
ents continues large; from that time to an advanced age they 
are subject to a decrease. [Becquerel and Rodier observe that, 
after the age of 40 or 50, there is a decided and progressive in- 
crease of cholesterin in the blood. ]_ 

Denis has made a comparative analysis of the blood of 
the mother and of the fetus; he found that the latter was 
richer in solid constituents and in blood-corpuscles than the 
former. 


238 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The two following analyses, one of the venous blood of the 
mother, the other of the placental blood as it issued from the 
artery of the cord, may serve as an additional illustration of 
the point. 

The blood of the umbilical artery was of a brown-red colour, 
smelled of the liquor amnii, and became of a brighter colour on 
being exposed to the air. 


Venous blood of Blood of 
mother. umbilical artery. 
Water . F : : : 781:0 701°5 
Solid residue . , 4 5 219°0 298°5 
Fibrin. ; A 5 : 2°4 2:2 
Albumen y ; : é 50:0 50:0 
Blood-corpuscles. . > 139°9 222-0 
Peroxide of iron 5 5 c 0°8 2:0 
Phosphorized fat. : : 9-2 75 
Ozmazome and cruorin . é 4:2 ea) 
Salts 5 4 . : c 12°5 12°1 


The difference in the solid constituents and in the blood- 
corpuscles is obviously very considerable ; the same is the case 
with the iron, the ratio being 1 to 2:5. 

The mass of the blood in the foetus increases in a very rapid 
ratio with the development. The proportion of corpuscles is 
more augmented, and the quantity of water is less than occurs 
at any subsequent period of life. Even for some time after 
birth the mass of the blood is relatively large, and the propor- 
tion of blood-corpuscles and of iron contained in them is con- 
siderably above the ordinary standard. 

Denis has made some experiments on the difference between 
the blood of very young animals and those of mature age, 
which confirm the observations already made. His experi- 
ments were instituted on dogs. 


Blood of a dog, Blood of a puppy, 

3 months old, 1 day old. 
Water. : : ‘ : 830:0 780-0 
Solid residue . : : 170°0 220-:0 
Fibrin. ‘ : 5 2 2-4 2:0 
Albumen : 5 ‘ 5 58°6 46:0 
Blood-corpuscles. : : 97:0 165:0 
Extractive matter and salts - 12-0 7:0 


When the skin of the new-born animal loses its red tint, 
the blood becomes more watery, the blood-corpuscles and the 
quantity of iron are diminished, and it becomes relatively, but 


BLOOD. 239 


not absolutely, poorer, for its quantity at the same time in- 
creases. Subsequently, however, when the generative powers 
begin to be developed, the corpuscles and the iron increase, and 
the relative proportion of water diminishes. At the period of 
full development the excess of corpuscles and iron serve in 
maintaining the necessary energy of that part of the system, 
and till the generative powers begin to flag the blood remains 
abundant in solid constituents, and more especially in corpuscles. 

These observations are suggested by the results obtained by 
Denis,! as will be clearly seen by the following table, which 
was drawn up by that chemist himself. 

The mean amount of solid constituents and of blood-corpus- 
cles at different ages are given in the following proportions. 


Solid constituents. | Blood-corpuscles. 


In 5 individuals between 5 months and 10 yrs. 170 1l 
13 + 10 years and 20yrs. 200 14 
11 3 20 30 240 17 
12 7 30 40 240 17 

6 3 40 50 240 17 
8 Br 50 60 220 15 
2 $3 60 70 210 14 


The following table shows that Lecanu’s analyses confirm 
those of Denis and myself. 


Age. Water. Solid residue. Blood-corpuscles. Albumen. 
26 778°625 221°375 146°885 62-949 
30 788°323 211°677 131-688 71:061 
34 795-870 204°130 115-850 78°120 
38 7837890 2167110 148-450 67°890 
45 780-210 219-790 132°820 72:970 
48 805-263 194°737 117-484 65°123 
62 801°871 1987129 121-640 65°389 


ON DISEASED BLOOD. 
The pathological chemistry of the blood. 


The question whether there exists such a thing as diseased 
blood is easily answered. The material deviations from its 
normal condition exhibited by the blood in its physico-chemical 
relations, in certain morbid conditions of the system, have long 
been recognized by pathologists. 


! Recherches, pp. 289, 299. 


240 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The quantity of the fibri is sometimes found to be very 
much increased, while in other cases it is present only in such 
very small proportions that no clot is formed. The blood will 
sometimes be found to be very rich in solid constituents, and 
especially in blood-corpuscles ; while at other times it will be 
so poor as to resemble coloured water. In some instances the 
' corpuscles will sink rapidly in whipped blood; while in others 
they will only deposit themselves slowly and imperfectly, so that 
merely a thin layer of serum remains above them. It will also 
sometimes contain substances which are not found in it in a nor- 
mal state, as colouring matter of the bile, sugar, or urea. All these 
are deviations from the normal state of the blood; and if we 
term that blood healthy, which is constituted in the ordinary 
manner, and properly discharges its various functions, we are 
perfectly justified m considering blood as diseased which does 
not fulfil these conditions. 

The analyses published by Andral and Gavarret,! in their 
elaborate essay upon this subject, correspond in their results, 
generally speaking, with those instituted by myself. They, 
however, usually assign a higher proportion to the corpuscles 
(especially in the blood during inflammatory diseases) than I 
have found to occur. It is hardly probable that such differences 
should arise from the geographical positions of the observers, 
although, generally speaking, the blood may be richer in solid 
constituents and in corpuscles, in southern than in northern 
regions: it is more likely that they are caused by the different 
methods of analyses pursued by the French observers and my- 
self. I have tried both methods, and consider it useful, if not 
necessary, to state the results of my trial. 

In the analyses of Andral and Gavarret, the blood is received 
into two six-ounce vessels. The first and fourth quarters are 
received in one vessel, the second and third in the other. In 
one, the blood is allowed to coagulate spontaneously ; in the 
other, it is whipped, in order to obtain the fibrin, which must 
be carefully washed. When the coagulation is effected, the clot 
must be carefully removed from the serum, and we must dry 
(a) the fibrin which has been obtained by whipping one portion 
of the blood; (4) the serum; and (c) the clot. By weighing 


' Annal. de Chimie et de Phys. vol. 75, p. 225. 


j 





BLOOD. 241 


the dried fibrin we know the quantity of that constituent con- 
tained in the clot. By weighing the dried serum we know the 
proportions of water and of solid constituents contained in it. 
Lastly, we weigh the dried clot: the quantity of water which it 
gives off is estimated as serum, and the solid residue due to it is 
readily calculated. By deducting from the weight of the dried 
clot the weights of the fibrin and of the solid residue of the 
serum contained in the clot, we obtain the amount of the 
globules. Hence we have (1) the weight of the fibrin; (2) the 
weight of the globules; (3) the weight of the solid residue of 
the serum; and (4) the weight of the water. 

This method is simple, and easy of application, in cases in 
which it is unnecessary to ascertain the proportions of hematin, 
globulin, fat, hemaphein, extractive matters, and salts, sepa- 
rately. I shall, however, show that an error may easily arise in 
the determination of the blood-corpuscles, if the drying has not 
been perfectly effected. 

Tn order to ascertain what would be the amount of differences, 
I analysed the same blood by their method, and by my own. 
About eight ounces of blood were received in a glass, from the 
arm of a woman, aged 35 years. It was rapidly stirred; about 
a fourth part of it was poured into a small glass, and the 
fibrin removed in the ordinary manner, by whipping. The 
larger portion was left to coagulate. 


1. Analysis of the defibrinated blood. 


The blood, including the fibrin, weighed 950 grains, of which 
the fibrin, when washed and thoroughly dried, weighed 1:9 gr. 
Hence 1000 parts of blood contain 2-0 of fibrin. 

112-42 grains of defibrinated blood left, after the thorough 
removal of the water, a solid residue, amounting to 20°33 grs. 

Hence 1000 parts of blood contained 180 of solid constitu- 
ents; 7:7 grains of the dried residue were boiled in spirit of 
925, to which three drops of dilute sulphuric acid were subse- 
quently added, as long as the spirit continued to take up any- 
thing more, and until a bright gray-green residue was left. 
This residue, which is composed of the albumen of the blood, 
when dried, weighed 3°31 grains. 

The red alcoholic solution was saturated with ammonia, and 
evaporated to a small residue. The hematoglobulin, which se- 

16 


242 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


parated perfectly in this way, was then washed several times with 
water, dried, and weighed. Its weight amounted to 4 grains. 
The extractive matters and salts (including loss) may therefore 
be estimated at °39 of a grain. 

Now since 1000 parts of the defibrinated blood contain 180 
of solid residue, the blood must contain : 








Water A : : A i . 818-00 
Solidresidue  . ; ; i . 182-00 
Fibrin 5 : , 5 ; F 2:00 
Albumen : ; ‘ ‘ 5 ED) 
Hematoglobulin : - 93°60 
Extractive matters, salts, aiid ide : 9:00 

1000-00 


t1. Analysis of coagulated blood, according to the method of 
Andral and Gavarret. 


a. The serum weighed 1406 grains. 

6. The clot weighed 1228 grains. 

In order to ensure a greater degree of accuracy in my re- 
sults, I evaporated only a portion of this quantity. 

375°14 grains of the clot when dried, cautiously pulverised, 
and again heated, left 112-54 grains. Hence 100 parts of the 
clot contained 30:0 of solid constituents. 449°98 grains of 
serum left 42°66 of solid residue, which corresponds therefore 
with 9°52. 

1000 parts of blood consist of 533°8 of serum and 466-2 of 
clot, of which the serum gives a residue of 50:7, and the clot of 
139°86 parts. The solid residue of 1000 parts amounts there- 
fore to 190:56. 

From the residue of the clot we deduct 2-0 for fibrin, and 
31:0 for the solid residue of the serum contained in it, which 
must be added to the 50°7. Consequently 1000 parts of blood 
contain : 





Water , j ; : , . 809-44 
Solid residue . 3 , F . 190°56 
Fibrin 2 A 2 ; 2°00 
Solid residue " serum ; ; e920 
Blood-corpuscles . - : - 108°86 





1000-00 


BLOOD. 243 


The differences between these analyses are obvious. The 
solid constituents obtained by Andral and Gavarret’s method are 
8°5 higher, in 1000 parts of blood, than by mine; moreover, the 
quantity of corpuscles obtained by them considerably exceeds 
the hematoglobulin separated by my method. If we assume 
that the 8:5 parts of water which Andral and Gavarret’s method 
did not succeed in removing, were retained in the clot, the cor- 
puscles would be reduced from 108°86 to 98:3; in which case 
the discrepancy between the two analyses would be much less 
striking. 

1000 parts of blood would then contain : 


According to Simon. |  Aecording to Andral and Gavarret. 

Fibrin : - - . 2:00 | Fibrin . 5 . pee 00 

Albumen, with extractive matters, Solid residue of serum . 80°50 

and salts - . . 86:40 | Blood-corpuscles : - 99-50 
Hematoglobulin - . 93°60 


It must, however, be remarked, that the sum of the hematin 
and globulin, in my analyses, can never represent the absolute 
quantity of blood-corpuscles. As has been previously remarked, 
the nuclei and capsules of the blood-corpuscles have been esti- 
mated as albumen by my method, as fibrin by Berzelius, and 
as appertaining to the corpuscles by Andral and Gavarret. 

Their absolute weight has never been accurately ascertained,! 
but it cannot be larger, since the quantities of fibrin obtained 
by washing the clot, and by whipping fresh blood differ very 
little. Further, a portion of fat separated by my method, be- 
longs to the blood-corpuscles, and we cannot deny the possi- 
bility of the corpuscles containing albumen. 

My analyses, moreover, aim not merely at the determination 
of the proportion of the fibrin, of the corpuscles, and of the 
solid residue of the serum, but they are intended to embrace 
the determination of the most important proximate constituents 
of the blood; and if the hzematoglobulin, or possibly the glo- 
bulin be regarded as constituting the principal mass of the cor- 
puscles, I can succeed in tracing their increase or decrease 
by means of the proportion of the hematoglobulin or globulin. 

The following objections may likewise be brought against 
Andral and Gavarret’s method. 


' Nasse (Das Blut in mehrfacher Beziehung, &c., Bonn, 1836, p. 109) has attempted 
to form a quantitative analysis of the nuclei. 


244 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In cases where no consistent clot is formed, but where there 
is merely a slight gelatinous coagulation, as frequently occurs 
in blood deficient in fibrin, the serum and the clot cannot be 
separated with any degree of exactness. If the clot be allowed 
to stand for some hours in order to induce a more perfect se- 
paration of the serum, the water partially evaporates, and the 
ratio of the solid constituents of the clot to the water becomes 
changed, and consequently too high a number is assigned to 
the corpuscles. The difficulty of thoroughly removing the water 
varies in a direct proportion with the quantity of the blood 
submitted to evaporation. Serum, comparatively poor in solid 
constituents, gives only a slight residue, from which the water 
can be more readily expelled, than from the more abundant 
residue left by the clot: in proportion to the water remaining 
in the clot, the quantity of corpuscles found by this method 
will be increased, as will be clearly seen by the following 
illustration. 

1000 parts of blood are composed of 500 parts of serum and 
500 of clot. 

The serum leaves a solid residue of 50, or 102; the clot of 
150, or 30°. 

The 350 parts of water in the clot are to be estimated as 
serum, and thus give a residue of 35 parts; so that 1000 parts of 
blood, (the fibrm not being taken into consideration) consist of: 


Water . : ; : : 800 
Solid residue : : g 200 
Blood-corpuscles . : : 115 
Residue of serum. é , 85 


If, however, the clot had not been perfectly dried, and if 
only 1 per cent. of water in relation to the weight of the whole 
blood had been retained, we should have obtained the follow- 
ing result : 

500 parts of clot would then give 160 of solid residue, and 
there would therefore be 340 of water, which, estimated as 
serum, would yield 34 of residue ; consequently the corpuscles 
would be estimated at 126, and 1000 parts of blood would 
consist of : 


Water . : : : : 790 
Solid residue ° ; : 210 
Blood-corpuscles . : rk 126 


Residue of serum. : : 84 


BLOOD. 245 


In all other methods of analysing the blood in which the water 
is determined by a separate process, and the dried residue is 
used for further investigation, an error in its estimation will 
simply increase the absolute quantity of the solid constituents, 
without disturbing their relative proportions. But in the ap- 
plication of their method it is easy to see that each per-centage 
of retained water not only increases the absolute quantity of 
the solid constituents to the amount of 12, but also the weight 
of the corpuscles, not only by the addition of the retained water, 
but also by the weight of the residue of the serum, due to an 
equal quantity of water, and which amounts to 1°12. 

Moreover, the supposition of Andral and Gavarret, that the 
humidity of the clot should be considered as serum is totally 
devoid of foundation. The corpuscles cannot be supposed to 
swim in the plasma as dry molecules, and it has not been 
proved that the fluid, with which they are filled, is the fluid of 
the serum. 

These observations are sufficient to show that Andral and 
Gavarret’s method, and my own, give somewhat different re- 
sults: the differences, however, are not very material, and are 
easily explicable on the grounds already stated. 

The changes which the composition of the blood may expe- 
rience in its various pathological conditions, are either de- 
pendent upon the quantity of solid residue generally, or upon 
the changed relative proportions that the various proximate 
constituents bear to each other. 

If we assume the composition of healthy blood, (as deduced 
from the mean of my analyses) to be represented by 


Water : : ‘ 5 795:278 
Solid residue . : ; 204-022 
Fibrin 4 : : ; 27104 
Fat : P : 2 2°346 
Albumen : ‘ ‘ 76°600 
Globulin F ; : 103°022 
Heematin 5 : : 6°209 
Extractive matters and salts 12°012, 


the following differences will be found to occur among the 
specimens of diseased blood which I have analysed. The 
quantity of— 


246 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Water . : 5 may vary from 8880 to 750-0 
Solid residue : : x 250°0 112:0 
Fibrin : : : “5 91 a trace 
Fat : : ‘ ; 4:3 0-7 
Albumen : : ; e 131-0 551 
Globulin : 3 A 106°6 30°8 
Heematin 3 : ‘ Pr 8°7 14 
Hematoglobulin . s ; 115°4 31:2 
Extractive matters and salts - 16°5 76 


The analyses of the French chemists gave the following 
results, with regard to this subject. 

Taking the mean of Lecanu’s analyses of healthy blood as a 
standard, and contrasting with it the extreme results which 
were found by Andral and Gavarret in diseased blood, we have 
the following results: 


Lecanw’s Analysis. 


Water . ; , : : 790 
Solid residue - : 5 210 
Fibrin 3 : ‘ : 3 
Organic residue of serum : 72 
Inorganic ditto : : : 8 
Blood.corpuscles —. ‘ ° 127 


Andral and Gavarret’s Deviations. 


Water . : : from 915:0 to 725-0 
Solid residue . : - 275°0 85:0 
Fibrin A : + 10°5 0:9 
Solid residue of serum a 114:0 57:0 
Blood-corpuscles : Bs 185:0 21:0 


From these data, it appears, that although the proportions of 
all the constituents are subject in disease to a certain amount 
of change, the variation is the most striking with regard to 
the fibrin and globulin. 

The former is found in my analyses occasionally to exceed 
four times the average quantity, and in Andral and Gavarret’s, 
three and a half times ; while the latter may diminish, accord- 
ing to my analyses, to a mere trace; and according to Andral 
and Gavarret’s, to one sixth of the normal quantity. 

These determinations must not, however, be regarded as ab- 
solute: they are dependent on various causes, and can be ex- 
plained in more ways than one. 


BLOOD. 247 


For instance, the 21 parts of blood-corpuscles were observed 
by Andral and Gavarret in blood which left a residue of only 
85, while the 185 of corpuscles occurred in blood which gave a 
residue of 275. Hence the per-centages of the corpuscles in 
these two cases, in regard to the solid residue, are 252 and 
67° respectively. 

The deviations in the proportions of the various constituents 
do not occur singly, for instance, we do not find the other con- 
stituents in normal proportions, and the blood-corpuscles alone 
very low; neither are they all found simultaneously deficient or 
in excess: but there exists, as we shall soon see, a certain an- 
tagonism between the proportions of the individual constituents. 
Thus we find that when the fibrin is much increased, the cor- 
puscles are diminished in quantity, and vice versd. 

In every 100 parts of the residue of healthy blood, we have 
1 of fibrin and 53 of hzmatoglobulin. In diseased blood I 
have observed the following proportions : 


Fibrin. Hematoglobulin. 
14 43 
16 40 
ie 7/ 40 
2-0 42 
2:0 39 
21 36 
3°0 28 
6:0 22 


A similar relationship is exhibited in the analyses of Andral 
and Gavarret; the range of the corpuscles is, however, not so 
extensive. 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. 

Healthy blood : C 15 61 
Diseased blood ; : 2°5 60 
3 on2 57 

” 4:1 57 

es 4:2 54 

a5 4:8 52 

5:0 50 


The connexion between the fibrin and blood-corpuscles is 
still more strikingly exhibited in some of the analyses of Andral 
and Gavarret, in which blood was taken several successive times 


248 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


from the same patient. We select four cases by way of illus- 
tration: 


Venesection, Fibrin. ae. Fibrin. peas Fibrin. Sah nae Fibrin. Sean 
Ist 6:3 130 671 123 4:0 111 5°6 133 
2d 77 106 v2 120 5°5 107 5°5 131 
3d 8:2 112 78 112 6°5 101 9°} 128 
4th 9°3 103 10-2 101 9:0 83 9-4 102 


In the following table drawn up from Andral and Gavarret’s 
analyses, the first column gives the proportions of fibrin and of 
corpuscles in 100 parts of solid residue. The second column 
does the same, only that in this case the quantity of fibrin is 
considered constant, and is represented by 1:5, and the propor- 
tion of corpuscles is estimated accordingly: an arrangement 
which makes their increase more obvious. 


Fibrin. Corpuscles. Fibrin. Corpuscles. 
Healthy blood : : 15 61 15 61 
Diseased blood A - 15 64 15 64 
~ . : 15 65 15 65 
~ - : Id 60 15 69 
os > ; 1] 53 15 72 
= 4 : 1:2 59 15 74 
os “ : ei 60 15 81 
es : - 1:0 60 15 90 
“ny : : 0:9 60 1°5 90 
x : 5 1-0 61 15 91 
es : : 1:0 64 15 96 
os - 4 0-9 63 15 105 
» : 2 0°5 60 15 180 


[Becquerel and Rodier have laid it down as a general law 
that “ bleeding exerts a remarkable influence on the composition 
of the blood, the greater the oftener the bleeding is repeated.” 
The three following tables show the mean results of the first, 
second, and third venesections, performed on a certain number 
of Cruveilhier’s patients. Ten patients were bled twice, and 
ten thrice, so that we have 20 first, 20 second, and 10 
third bleedings. 


BLOOD. 249 


Mean composition of the blood of twenty persons bled twice. 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 


Density of defibrinated blood . : 1055°0 1051°2 
Density of serum ; ; : - 1026°1 1025°3 
Water : : c c § P 796°2 812°0 
Solid residue : : : - 203°8 188-0 
Fibrin : ‘ 5 ; F ; a7 3°8 
Albumen 3 : F % : 66:2 62°5 
Blood-corpuscles : c : 125°4 112°0 
Extractive matters and salts : : 6°38 7°6 
Fat : ; é 1657 1-560 
Gonsisting P= Sezotin : 7 0:027 0-047 
Phosphorized fat : 0°490 0465 
Cholesterin A A 0°178 0:150 
Saponified fat : 0-962 0-900 
The salts in 1000 parts of blood were : 
Chloride of sodium. é ; ‘ 2°8 34 
Other soluble salts. : F d 27 2°5 
Phosphates : ; : : : 0°435 0°417 
Tron : ‘ . , : 3 0°527 07488 


Mean composition of the blood of ten persons bled three times. 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 3d Venesection. 
Density of defibrinated blood. 1056°0 1053-0 1049°6 
Density of serum 3 : F 10288 1026°3 1025°6 
Water : : 3 ; ‘ 793°0 807°7 833°1 
Solid residue. ; 3 : 207:0 192°3 176°9 
Fibrin : 2 : ; : 3:9 3°8 3°4 
Albumen ‘ : : ; 65:0 63°7 64°6 
Blood-corpuscles 6 c : 129-2 116°3 99°2 
Extractive matters and salts ; (él 6°9 8:0 
Fat 3 = : 1°662 1°584 1°530 
Consisting of—Serolin 0:026 0:088 0-012 
Phosphorized fat 0°637 0:489 0:450 
Cholesterin . 0°106 0°156 0°149 
Saponified fat 0°893 0-851 0-919 
The salts contained in 1000 parts of blood were: 
Chloride of sodium : : 2°8 3°5 30 
Other soluble salts. : : 2°6 2°5 2-7 
Phosphates : : : . 0°404 0-493 0°348 
Tron : 5 ; ‘ A 0°513 0°471 0°468 


From these tables they draw the following conclusions. “In 
proportion to the number of venesections the blood becomes im- 
poverished and more watery; hence the fall in the density of the 
defibrinated blood. The albumen diminishes, but only slightly ; 


250 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


hence the density of the serum is not much affected. The 
fibrin is quite uninfluenced by venesection, and its amount is 
determined by the nature and intensity of the disease. The 
extractive matters and salts are unaltered. There is a slight 
diminution in the amount of fat. The various salts are un- 
affected, and the iron, in consequence of its relationship to the 
corpuscles, is diminished. In short, the effect of venesection is 
to cause a great diminution of the corpuscles, while it only 
slightly lessens the amount of albumen.”’] 


THE FIRST FORM OF DISEASED BLOOD, HYPERINOSIS.! 


Chemical characters of the blood. 


The blood contains more fibrin than in the normal state, and 
the corpuscles decrease in proportion to the excess of fibrin; 
the fat is also increased. In proportion to the increase of the 
fibrin and fat, and the decrease of the corpuscles, the whole 
solid residue will be diminished. 


Physical characters of the blood. 


The blood coagulates more slowly than in the normal state ; 
the clot is usually not small, but very firm and consistent, and 
does not break up for a considerable time. It is almost in- 
variably covered with a true buffy coat, (which is produced by 
the sinking of the corpuscles before the occurrence of coagu- 
lation, and by the subsequent coagulation of the fibrin in the 
layer of serum.)? This buffy coat is firm, tough, and intimately 
connected with the clot; its edge is often turned upwards, and 
its surface uneven.4 If the clot is small, the buffy coat and 


! Derived from izep and 1, tvoe, the fibre of flesh. 

? Nasse (Das Blut in mehrfacher Beziehung, &c.) has arrived at similar conclusions ; 
for he observes that the corpuscles and the fibrin are generally in an inverse ratio, 
and that blood exhibiting a decided genuine buffy coat is usually of low specific 
gravity, that is to say, the amount of water is increased. 

3 [The buffy coat does not consist of true fibrin, but of the binoxide and tritoxide 
of protein. (See page 10.)] 

4 The buffy coat is not exclusively connected with an inflammatory state of the 
blood; it occurs in other diseases, as, for instance, in chlorosis, but its properties 
are then very different. A very elaborate disquisition on the formation, and the 
proximate and remote causes of the buffy coat, ocewrs in Nasse’s work, pp. 36-57 
and 204-240. 


BLOOD. 251 


the surface of the clot are more or less cupped ; the serum is of 
a pure lemon colour, not tinged red. When subjected to 
whipping, the fibrin separates in thicker and more solid masses 
than in ordinary blood. After the removal of the fibrin the 
corpuscles quickly sink, and frequently occupy only one fourth 
of the whole fluid, while, in healthy blood, they sink very im- 
perfectly or not at all. The blood has always an alkaline re- 
action, and is of a higher temperature than in the ordinary state. 

Lauer! found the temperature of the blood in pneumonia as 
high as 100°, and in bronchitis it reached 101°-6. These tem- 
peratures are, however, not higher than are met with in healthy 
blood. 

According to Becquerel the temperature may rise to 5°4 in 
inflammatory diseases and fevers. 

According to Coupil it amounts, in inflammatory disorders, 
to 106°—111°7, and at the inflamed region to 112°-4. 

The microscope has not yet succeeded in detecting any con- 
stant peculiarities. 

The blood occurs in a state of hyperinosis in all inflamma- 
tory disorders (Phlogoses). 

In proportion to the firmness of the clot, the concavity of its 
surface, (the cupping,) and the toughness, and thickness of the 
buffy coat, is the degree of inflammation; and conversely the 
thinner and more friable the clot is, the less intense is the dis- 
order. We also find, accompanying these physical symptoms, 
an excess of fibrin, and a diminution of hematoglobulin, as 
well as of the solid constituents of the blood generally, and in 
proportion to the degree in which these phenomena are ob- 
served, we may infer a greater or lesser amount of inflammatory 
action. 


[Before proceeding to the consideration of individual dis- 
eases, we may observe that Becquerel and Rodier have deduced 
the following law from their numerous analyses of morbid 
blood. ‘The development of an inflammatory disorder pro- 
duces remarkable modifications in the composition of the blood, 
of which the most striking is the increase of fibrin.””? 


1 Queedam de sanguinis different. in Morb. p. 15. 
2 The authors merely regard this as a confirmation of the law established by Andral 
and Gavarret, not as an original discovery. 


252 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The following table, extracted from their memoir, gives the 
mean results obtained from the analyses of blood in a number 
of cases of well marked inflammation. 


Males. Females, 
Density of defibrinated blood : : 1056°3 1054°5 
Density of serum ‘ - ; : 1027:0 1026°8 
Water F : a : E 791°5 801°0 
Solid Lansetuents F : j : 208°5 199-0 
Fibrin 5 ° 3 : , ; 58 57 
Albumen . , ; 5 ‘ ‘ 66:0 65°8 
Blood-corpuscles : ; : : 128-0 118°6 
Extractive matters and salts A 3 70 (fe 
Fat - ; 5 1°742 1:669 
Danmrane of ser olin . 5 0-020 0°024 
Phosphorized fat Z 0°602 0-601 
Cholesterin j ; 0:136 07130 
Saponified fat . 0°984 0:914 
The salts in 1000 parts of blood were : 
Chloride of sodium =. ‘ H : 31 3°0 
Other soluble salts. : : : 2°4 Padi 
Phosphates F ; : : : 0°448 0°344 
Iron ; : P ; : : 0°490 0°480 


By a comparison of these results with the formule for healthy 
blood, (vide supra, p. 233,) we see that only three constituents, 
fibrin, cholesterm, and albumen, deviate from the normal 
standard. The first two of these constituents are increased, 
the last is diminished. | 


I. PHLOGOSES OF THE CIRCULATING SYSTEM. 


a. Metrophlebitis puerperalis. 


In most of the cases of metrophlebitis puerperalis that have 
occurred in our lying-in institution as well as in the hospital, 
the blood exhibited all the symptoms of hyperinosis. Accord- 
ing to Ebert’s observations the clot was rather large, and so 
consistent that sections of it still displayed a powerful and 
well-marked tenacity. The surface, which was more or less con- 
cave, was either covered with a thin true buffy coat, or more fre- 
quently, with a rather thick, and often discoloured stratum of 
gelatinous substance, forming, what is termed, a false buffy 
coat. Gelatinous coagula, of a similar nature, were also fre- 
quently seen floating in the serum. 


BLOOD. 253 


The microscope often detects pus in the blood, during the 
course of this disease. If, however, the quantity of pus is 
only small, its detection may be attended with much diffi- 
culty.!. As the presence of pus in the blood has also been 
recognised in other pathological conditions, and many obser- 
vations have recently been made upon the subject, I shall refer 
to this point more particularly when I speak of the presence of 
foreign substances in the biood. 

I have analysed the blood of two women suffering from me- 
trophlebitis puerperalis. The analyses gave: 


Analysis 15. Analysis 16. 
Water : ; , : 8367360 785:560 
Solid residue : : ; 1637640 214-440 
Fibrin ; : : : 7°640 4:440 
LAR ic : 3 3 : 3°120 4°320 
Albumen. : : - 103°358 112-770 
Globulin. : : : 40-000 74130 
Hematin . : : . 2-080 3°440 
Extractive matters and salts . 7°649 12-390 
100 parts of hematoglobulin con- | 100 parts of heematoglobulin con- 
tained 5:0 of colouring matter. tained 4°6 of colouring matter. 


The blood in analysis 15 was taken from a woman aged 
20 years, who was attacked in our lying-in institution with 
violent phlebitis uterina the day after her delivery. The pulse 
was full and hard, and 140 in the minute, previous to the bleed- 
ing. The post-mortem examination revealed a high degree of 
inflammation of the veins and of the uterus itself, with a co- 
pious deposition of pus. 

In analysis 16, the blood was taken from a woman aged 20, 
who was seized fourteen days previously to the bleeding with a 
violent attack of phlebitis uterina, from which, however, she 
recovered by the use of venesection and mercury. Violent 
fever afterwards came on, accompanied by pain in the region 
of the uterus. The pulse was somewhat full and hard, and 
132 in the minute. She died soon after, and the post-mortem 
examination proved the accuracy of the diagnosis. 


[In a case of plegmasia alba dolens, accompanied with fever, 
occurring in a woman aged 21 years, six weeks after delivery, 


! According to Gendrin, when there is pus in the blood, the serum deposits a viscid 
urinary-like sediment, or else is turbid and cloudy. 


254 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Becquerel and Rodier found a considerable diminution of the 
blood-corpuscles (92°6,) and an augmentation of the fibrin (4°2.) 
The cholesterin was in excess, (‘223,) and the phosphates were 
abundant. | 


B. Carditis. 


Lecanu! analysed the blood of three men and five women, 
who were suffermg from angiocarditis and endocarditis. Un- 
fortunately he has made no observations on the physical cha- 
racters of the blood, and the quantity of fibrin was also not ascer- 
tained. The analysis seems to have consisted simply in the 
separation of the clot from the serum, and then ascertaining 
the solid residue of each. 

The blood of men gave the following results : 


Water. Solid residue. Residue ofserum. Blood-corpuscles. 
1 821-02 178°98 77°59 101°39 
2 880-48 119°52 77°62 41:90 
3 807:27 192-73 96°35 96°38 
The blood of women gave: 
4 873°45 126°55 86:10 40°45 
5 868-62 131°38 79°89 51:49 
6 866°61 133°39 89°69 43°70 
7 877°51 122-49 77°00 45°49 
8 845°14 15486 85°80 £9-06 
Healthy blood 790-00 210-00 80:00 130:00 


It is much to be regretted that the fibrin was not deter- 
mined in these researches, as the proportions of the solid re- 
sidue, and especially of the corpuscles, indicate a high degree 
of hyperinosis. 

Blood taken by repeated venesections from the same patient 
during carditis, differs in the following respect from blood simi- 
larly taken in cases of bronchitis, pneumonia, peritonitis, rheu- 
matism, &c.; in these latter it becomes gradually poorer in 
solid constituents, and especially in corpuscles, while in the 
former, at least if we may judge from two analyses of Lecanu, 
the reverse takes place. 

The man whose blood formed the object of the second analysis, 
on venesection being repeated 12 hours afterwards, yielded 
blood which left a solid residue of 139°1, and the woman from 


' Etudes chimiques, ete., p. 110. 


BLOOD. 255 


whom the blood in the eighth analysis was derived yielded, on 
a repetition of the venesection, blood which contained : 


Water - : A ¢ 841°62 
Solid residue ‘ - A 158°38 
Residue of serum ; ? 81:79 
Blood-corpuscles . : 76°58 


Lecanu noticed in the blood of one of these men a solid 
floating mass, (which, when dried, weighed about 100 grains.) 
It had a fleshy appearance, and on a section being made it ex- 
hibited a solid, loosely attached nucleus, of a brick-red colour, 
in the centre, which slowly dissolved in water. On the second 
occasion of this patient being bled, the clot presented even a 
more singular appearance. Itwas almost entirely formed of agglo- 
merated clusters of small, round, white, grape-like masses, which 
were composed centrally of a bright red gelatinous substance. 


[In a case of pericarditis with effusion, occurring in a woman 
aged 40 years, in which the blood was analysed by Becquerel 
and Rodier, the following results were obtained : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 3d Venesection. 

Density of defibrinated blood 1045°8 1042°4 1045°5 
Density of serum 2 : - 1023°0 1021°8 1024°3 
Water ; ; 3 3 831:0 847°0 
Solid constituents , : : 169-0 153°0 
Fibrin - 3 2 ¢ ‘ 2°3 2°3 3°4 
Fat 3 : 2 3 1:094 1:094 

Albumen . : 2 : 5 53°0 51:0 60°4 
Blood-corpuscles : - - 1050 92:0 78-0 


In the first analysis the phosphates were in excess (0°684); 
in other respects the salts occurred in their normal proportions. 

At the period of the third venesection, the heart-symptoms 
were much alleviated. The most remarkable feature in this 
blood is the extreme diminution of the albumen. There was no 
albumen in the urine. | 


II. INFLAMMATION OF THE RESPIRATORY ORGANS. 


a. Bronchitis. 
The blood usually exhibits, at least when the symptoms are 
at all urgent, decided indications of hyperimosis. ‘The buffy 
coat is scarcely ever absent, the serum is clear, and the clot 


256 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


firm and consistent. The fibrin and fat are always more or 
less increased, and the hematoglobulin diminished. 


Analysis 17. Analysis 18. 
NWiaters a. : : : 797°500 757°831 
Solid residue. : : 202-500 242°269 
Fibrin : . : : 4-320 
Fat . : . 5 3°650 3°393 
Albumen : : 4 96-890 109-080 
Globulin : A : 76°530 106°650 
Hematin : : . 3°200 8°762 
Extractive matters and salts 11:560 14°500 
100 parts of hematoglobulin con- | 100 parts of heematoglobulin con- 
tained 4:0 of colouring matter. tained 8-4 of colouring matter. 


In analysis 17 we observe, in a decided degree, the character 
of inflammatory blood, as far as regards the large quantities of 
fibrin and fat. The quantity of hematoglobulin, 79°73, is not 
so much diminished in proportion to the albumen in this case, 
as in those of phlebitis uterina. 

The patient was a robust man, of about thirty years of age, 
who had only been suffermg from the disease three days; pulse 
hard and very frequent. The blood of analysis 18 was taken 
from a child three years of age, by leeches, which is the reason 
why the fibrin was not determined. 

Andral and Gavarret’ have analysed the blood in six cases 
of bronchitis, and in all the instances in which fever was present, 
they found that well-marked character of inflamed blood, an 
increased quantity of fibrin. The maximum was 9:3, the mi- 
nimum 5°7, in 1000 parts of blood. 

I shall now give the results of their analyses. 


Venesection. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Solid portion of serum. 


1st'Case { 1 763°3 236°7 73 148°8 80°6 
2 793°6 206°4 9:3 110:2 86°9 
organic. inorganic. 
2d Case 1 789°6 210°4 6:3 117°6 78:0 8°5 
Ba Caxe { 1 769°5 230°5 5°9 139°6 767 8°3 
2 782°2 217°8 5°9 129-4 76°3 6:2 
4th Case 1 821°8 178-2 5'8 114°3 58:1 
sth Case { 1 800-2 199°8 6:0 PSIES 62°5 
2 808°1 191°9 7s 125°5 59°3 
6th Case 1 808°3 191°7 5°7 98-2 87°8 
Healthy blood, 
according wf 790°0 210°0 30 127°0 80-0 
Lecanu 


‘ Annal. de Chim. et de Phys., vol. 75, p. 225. 


BLOOD. 257 


The decreasing ratio of the corpuscles, and the increasing 
ratio of fibrin is less striking in this disease than in pneumonia 
and rheumatism. Andral and Gavarret give the following ex- 
planation of the first case, in which the high number 148°8 is 
assigned to the blood-corpuscles. This individual exhibited 
symptoms of typhoid fever at the period at which he was re- 
ceived into the hospital. In the second analysis the number 
is less by 38°6 than before. The symptoms of typhoid fever 
had now disappeared, and made way for those of bronchitis: 
the increase of fibrin from 7:3 to 9:3 sufficiently indicates the 
progress of inflammation. 

In the fourth case the small quantity of solid constituents in 
the serum was coincident with a highly albuminous state of the 
urine; the patient, who was about 30 years of age, had for 
some time been in a weak and emaciated state. The urine in 
the fifth case, (a debilitated person 28 years of age, whose 
lower extremities were cedematous,) also contained albumen. 

Andral and Gavarret have likewise analysed the blood in 
chronic bronchitis. They state that, as the febrile symptoms 
disappear, and the disease assumes the chronic form, the blood 
ceases to exhibit a large excess of fibrin, and in fact does not 
differ in any respect from ordinary healthy blood. 

The same is the case if the chronic bronchitis is combined 
with pulmonary emphysema. 

The average of five analyses made on the blood of four per- 
sons suffering in this way, scarcely differs from ordinary blood. 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Soud poms 


of serum. 
Mean of five analyses . 792°7 207°3 3°0 121-0 83:0 
Healthy blood (Lecanu) 790-0 210°0 3:0 127-0 80-0 


In one of these cases a second venesection was ordered, in 
consequence of the severity of the dyspnea. The blood exhi- 
bited a diminution of 11 in the corpuscles, of -6 in the fibrin, 
and of 22 in the solid constituents. 


[Scherer has published an analysis of the blood of a woman 
in the seventh month of pregnancy, “who was suffering from 
bronchitis, and probably from tubercular phthisis. The serum 


had a specific gravity of 1022-69, and contained in 1000 parts: 
Water - - 911:516 
Solid residue. : : 88484 
i 


258 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The solid residue consisted of : 


Albumen . 5 - 2 77978 
Extractive matters. ; 0:977 
Salts , : - : 9-529 
The whole blood contained, in 1000 parts : 
Waterss. = , : 825°698 
Solid residue - : 174°302 
Fibrin - “ A 4°568 
Albumen : - : 70°636 
Blood-corpuscles  . 3 71-069 
Extractive matters 2 20°178 (2) 
Soluble salts : - 6°399 
Earthy phosphates ‘ 1825 


The serum presented a singular milky appearance, arising 
from the presence of numerous minute granules in suspension. 
No fat-vesicles could be recognized by the microscope. 

Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood in eight cases 
of acute bronchitis, four males and four females. The mean 
results are expressed in the following table: 


Males. Females. 
Density of defibrinated blood : z 1056°7 1056°6 
Density of serum 5 ¢ : ‘ 1027°1 1027°7 
Water 5 : - : . “ 793°7 803°4 
Solid constituents 3 2 z ° 206°3 196°6 
Fibrin 2 5 2 , : ; 4:8 3°5 
Rati). a 3 : p a : 1-621 1715 
Albumen . ; 3 : ; = 64:9 68°8 
Blood-corpuscles : ; . 129°2 115°3 
Extractive matters and salts - 58 “3 

The salts consisted of : 

Chloride of sodium . 5 ¢ . 534 3:3 
Other soluble salts - “ : ; 29 2°83 
Phosphates ; : : ; 2 0°346 0°309 
Tron 3 2 F é ; : 0-513 0-479. | 


3. Pneumonia. 


The blood usually exhibits the characters of hyperinosis, 
more decidedly in pneumonia than in most other inflammatory 
diseases, it also retains its heat for a longer period.! The clot 
is rather below the ordinary size, very consistent, and does not 


1 Lauer found that blood, which, as it flowed from the vein, had a temperature of 
97°:7, raised the thermometer to 83°°6 thirteen minutes after its removal from the 
body. 


BLOOD. 259 


break down for a considerable time. It admits of being sliced, 
and the sections retain their consistency for some time. Its 
surface is covered with the buffy coat, and is more or less cup- 
ped. The serum is of a pure yellow colour. The quantity of 
solid constituents is usually less than in healthy blood. 

The maximum of fibrin in my analyses was 9°15, which is the 
largest quantity that I have ever discovered in inflamed blood. 
The minimum was 3'4, and the mean of four analyses was 6:0. 
Andral and Gavarret found the maximum of fibrin to be 10°5 ; 
the minimum 4; and the mean to fluctuate between 7 and 8. 
They never met with more than 10°5 of fibrin in the whole 
course of their analyses. 

The maximum of hematoglobulin, occurring in my re- 
searches, was 78, and the minimum 36, which is very far 
below the amount in healthy blood. Andral and Gavarret 
differ from me considerably on this point, (see my remarks on 
our comparative methods of analysis, page 241.) They make 
the maximum of the blood-corpuscles 137, and the mimimum 
83:7. We find, however, in the course of 58 analyses, made 
by them on the blood of 21 persons labouring under pneumonia, 
that the amount of corpuscles just reached the normal propor- 
tion in 5 cases, in 6 cases exceeded it, and in the 47 remaining 
cases fell below it. The average of these cases was 113, which 
is 14 below the normal quantity in healthy blood, according to 
Lecann’s analysis. 

The maximum of fat, in my analysis, was 4°3, and the mi- 
nimum (in a man aged 60 years) was °7. 

The maximum of solid residue was 202; the minimum was 
160. In 51 out of the 58 analyses, made by Andral and 
Gavarret, the solid constituents exceeded the ordinary normal 
proportion. 

In all these cases the quantity of the blood-corpuscles was 
very high: the fibrin, in two cases, reached 9:1 ; and in one case 
9:0: in the others it was low, or amounted to only the mean of 
the fibrin in pneumonia. 

The two highest amounts of solid residue found by Andral 
and Gavarret was 230, and 227; in these cases the maxima of 
corpuscles also occurred. The smallest amount of solid residue 
was 166, which corresponded with the minimum of blood-cor- 
puscles. The mean quantity of solid residue, as deduced from 


260 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


these 58 analyses, was 201, or 9 less than Lecanu’s average for 
healthy blood. 
I have made four analyses of the blood in pneumonia: 


Analysis 19. Analysis 20. Analysis 21. Analysis 22. 


Waterss. - - 839°848 798-500 803-179 803°400 
Solid residue . - 160°152 201-7500 196°821 196-600 
Fibrin. : : 9-152 6:020 5°632 3°443 
Fat : : ; 2°265 4-100 4-336 0:697 
Albumen . - 100-415 100-280 121:721 1027100 
Globulin ‘ - 34°730 74°880 52°071 74948 
Hematin : ; 1800 3°120 2°752 2°466 
eo and} 8-003 10-500 10-309 11-258 
salts . : - 
100 parts of hematoglo- | 4°9 4:0 5-2 3:2 

bulin contained : of colouring matter. 


The blood in analysis 19 was taken from a woman aged 40, 
who died a few days after the venesection. Dissections exhi- 
bited exudation, and tubercles in the lungs. 

The blood in analysis 20 was taken from a vigorous man 
aged 30, who recovered; and in analysis 21, from a vigorous 
man aged 40, who also recovered. 

The blood in analysis 22 was taken from a man 60 years of 
age, who suffered from cough, thoracic oppression, &c., and 
whose pulse was hard and full. I am ignorant of the result 
in this case. 

The following are the maxima, minima, and average results, 


obtained by Andral and Gavarret : 


Solid residue 


Water. Solidresidue. Fibrin. Corpuscles. éf serum 
Maximum . - 834°4 229°5 10°5 137°8 95:2 
Minimum . : 770°5 165-6 4:0 83-2 66°7 
Average. : 799-0 201°0 73 1141 81:0 


The following table indicates the differences that are found 
in pneumonic blood during repeated bleedings. It is drawn 
up by Andral and Gavarret,’ and corresponds generally with 
the table already given for the blood taken in a similar 
manner during bronchitis. It is, however, entirely at variance 
with Lecanu’s statement regardmg the blood in carditis. 
(See page 254.) 


' Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 75, p. 254. 


BLOOD. 261 


Day of Solid residue 
Venesection. disease. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Corpuscies. of serum. 
1 a 818:0 182-0 4:0 111°3 66°7 
ish: Case 2 3 818°5 181°5 5°5 107°7 68°3 
a 5 820°9 1791 6°5 101°1 71:5 
t 7 834-4 165°6 9-0 83°2 73°4 
1 3 773°0 227:0 5:2 137°8 84:0 
od Cause 2 4 782°3 PAN /O7/ 73 125°5 84°9 
3 5 795°0 205°0 69 117-4 80°7 
4 6 800-4 199°6 8:0 111°5 80°6 
1 4 7815 218°5 55 129°8 83:2 
3d owe} 5 788°3 21177 6°38 116°3 88°6 
3 9 823°9 176'1 64 95°7 74:0 


This table is sufficient to show that the blood taken from the 
same individual in different consecutive bleedings varies con- 
siderably. The blood taken at the later bleedings contains 
less solid constituents, less blood-corpuscles, more fibrin, and 
more solid residue of serum' than the blood which is taken 
earlier. 

This statement is, however, only true within certain limits ; 
if the bleedings are carried beyond a certain extent, the fibrin, as 
well as the corpuscles, are diminished; the whole quantity of solid 
residue becomes less, whilst the residue of the serum increases. 
In the third case this proportion is seen on comparing the 
blood taken on the third, with that taken on the second bleed- 
ing; but it is much more strikingly shown in the analyses 
made by Andral and Gavarret, of the blood in acute rheu- 
matism, as will be seen by the following numerical data.” 


Day of Solid residue 
Bleeding. Disease. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. of serum. 
1 8 778'8 221°2 61 [2321 92-0 
2 9 780°9 219-1 7:2 120°7 91:2 
3 10 788°0 212°0 7°8 112°8 91-4 
4 13 799:0 201-0 10°2 101°0 89°8 
5 17 813-9 186°1 9:0 89°2 87°9 
6 28 826:2 173°8 7:0 83°3 830 


My own observations regarding the blood taken by re- 
peated venesections during peritonitis, give perfectly similar 
results. I shall endeavour to give an explanation of the origin 
of these changes at the end of the section on hyperinosis. 

Dr. J. Davy* has instituted numerous researches on the 


1 [This conclusion is not very obvious. | 2 Op. cit. p. 246. 
3 Edinb. Med. and Surg. Journal, 1839. 


262 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


blood found in the body after death: in a case of pneumonia, 
he found a large quantity of fluid blood, clot, and fibrous co- 
agula in the heart. The fluid portion did not coagulate after 
exposure to the air for 24 hours. In another instance, the 
fluid portion when exposed to the air, coagulated rapidly and 
formed a buffy coat. 


[Dr. Rindskopf' has published several analyses of the blood in 
pneumonia. 

1, A young man, with a very severe attack of pneumonia : 
delirium, and all the signs of arachnitis. After death, a con- 
siderable effusion of pus was found on the membranes of the 
brain. Two venesections were instituted during the last thirty- 
six hours. The first gave fibrin 5-470. The second analysis 
was more perfect, and yielded : 


Water ps ‘ : A : 4 828°566 
Solid constituents ‘ - 4 - 171°434 
Fibrin A : 5 : ‘ : 6°674 
Albumen and blood-corpuscles_ . : 150°103 

oluble salts : : , ¢ 7 8°302 
Insoluble salts : i . 5 1:107 
Extractive matters . 6 : 5°248 


2. A man, aged 60 years, who had suffered for a considerable 
period from chronic bronchitis and emphysema, was attacked 
with broncho-pneumonia. The blood was taken shortly before 
his death, and contained, in 1000 parts : 


Water . ‘ : - - 812°566 
Solid constituents 3 F < é 187°434 
Fibrin : : 2 : A : 12°726 
Albumen and blood-corpuscles . : 160°300 
Salts : : 5 5 A ; 10°930 
Extractive matters . : 4 : 3°478 


3. In the blood of a young man, aged 19 years, suffering 
from pneumonia, Rindskopf found : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 
Water : . : - 775°448 783°944 
Solid constituents A : 224°552 216:056 
Fibrin 4 : . = 6°702 7723 
Albumen . - : : 79°021 65°744 
Blood-corpuscles ; ; 1227097 120°682 
Salts : : di : 9°201 10:416 
Extractive matters , A 7531 11°661 


' Ueber einige Zustinde des Blutes. 


BLOOD. 263 


4, In a case of pneumonia after catarrh, four analyses were 
made, the blood taken at the first venesection apparently not 
having been examined. In addition to the bleedings, tartarized 
antimony and calomel were administered : recovery. 


2d Venes. 3d Venes. 4th Venes. 5th Venes. 
Water : r 796494 793°362 807:699 809-650 
Solid constituents . : 203°506 206°638 1927301 190°350 
Fibrin. i < 5°919 7715 10°384 8°155 
Albumen and blood-corpuscles 173°605 169°883 165-960 160°522 
Soluble salts. : 4 10°188 7°952 11531 
Insoluble salts : 2 1°340 1:404 } 15°957 4°151 
Extractive matters . : 11°454 19-684 5:99] 


5. In a case of pneumonia of four weeks’ standing, accom- 
panied with catarrh and delirium tremens, in which tartar emetic 
was administered, and recovery took place, the following results 
were obtained : 


2d Venesection. 3d Venesection. 4th Venesection. 
Water : 5 , 793°237 797-915 
Solid constituents . 206°763 202:085 
Fibrin P 5 7°893 9:087 9:478 
Albumen and corpuscles 157-916 164:451 
Salts ; : A 10:978 8:291 
Extractive matters . 29:975 20°256 


Heller! has analysed the blood of a powerful young man, 
aged 21 years, suffering from pneumonia, the left lung being 
perfectly hepatized. 

The colour of the blood was rather dark. As it flowed from 
the vein, its reaction was perfectly neutral. The serum, after 
the separation of the clot, had an alkaline reaction, a specific 
gravity of 1025, and was of a darker yellow colour than usual, 
although the addition of nitric acid disproved the presence of 
biliphein. The blood was composed of 600 parts of clot and 
400 of serum. It contained, in 1000 parts: 


Water ; ; , ; 773°266 
Solid constituents . é 226°744 
Fibrin A ; : : 4°320 
Blood-corpuscles : : 145°574 
Residue of serum é ; 76°850 


Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood of five women 


' Archiv fir physiologische und pathologische Chemie und Mikroskopie. Wien, 
1844, vol. 1, p. 3. 


264 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


suffering from pneumonia, two of whom were bled only once, 
while in three venesection was repeated. 

The mean composition of the blood is expressed in the fol- 
lowing table : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 


Density of defibrinated blood : “ 1052°6 1050-2 
Density of serum 5 : . Z 1025°0 1025°0 
Water : : ‘ : é - 801:0 808:0 
Solid constituents : : . 1990 1920 
Fibrin : - ; ; - - 74 6:3 
Fat ; 3 : 5 : : 1687 1618 
Albumen . : 5 5 : : 61-1 59°7 
Blood-corpuscles - . . - 122°5 113°9 
Extractive matters and salts é : 6:4 74 


The following salts were contained in 1000 parts of blood : 


Chloride ofsodium . . «.~ . 28 31 
Other soluble salts. . 5 ; oh 2°4 
Phosphates : : : : . 0°308 0°445 
Tron ‘ ; a : e 5 0°493 0°512 


Zimmerman! has found the specific gravity of the blood in 
this disease as high as 1065. 
The following ultimate analyses of dried pneumonic blood 
have been recently published :? 
Ash. Cc H 


Blood buffed, Ist Venesection ‘ . 4°365 57°428 8-615 
- 2d ditto : : 4081 52-280 = 
a Ist ditto : : 3°880 51-966 8543 
- 2d ditto P : 3°784 51:149 7°832 


Two analyses of the blood in cases of pneumonia biliosa have 
recently appeared, one by Scherer, the other by Heller. 

The individual whose blood was analysed by Scherer was a 
robust young man, aged 29 years. 

The clot was tolerably firm and tough, and covered with a 
greenish yellow buffy coat. The serum exhibited a similar tint, 
and nitric acid indicated the existence of biliphzein in the urine. 
The conjunctiva was coloured yellow, and there was considerable 
gastric disturbance. 


1 Hufeland’s Journal, 1843. 

2 Hoffmann, Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie, April 1844. According to Macaire 
and Marcet (Mem. de la Societé Phys. et d’Hist. Nat. de Genev., vol. 5, p. 223) 
healthy venous blood contains C 55-7, HI 6°4, N 16:2, and O 21°7. 


BLOOD. 265 


The blood drawn at the first venesection yielded : 


Water 5 . : . 779°00 
Solid constituents = r 221-00 
Fibrin : ; : 5 9-70 
Blood-corpuscles - : 124-60 
Albumen . - - - 72°26 
Salts ‘ 5 P 9°57 
Extractive matter: . - 4°83 


Blood was again taken, in consequence of further symptoms 
of congestion. It yielded: 


Water : - ; A 785:00 
Solid constituents ‘ . 21500 
Fibrin 4 5 - 9°40 
Blood-corpuscles : : 122°26 
Albumen . > ‘ 5 65°36 
Salts 5 : - A 8°31 
Extractive matters - : 9°67 


Three days after this venesection the patient was again bled. 
The blood contained : 


Water 6 é : F 780°00 
Solid constituents : ; 220-00 
Fibrin : 3 W272 
Blood-corpuscles : ; 118-47 
Albumen . A : = 69°83 
Salts F 3 5 . 7°63 
Extractive matters A : 11°35 


The blood obtained by a fourth venesection contained : 


Water “ - 5 796:00 
Solid constituents c - 204-00 
Fibrin E - 3 3 8°87 
Blood-corpuscles : : 106°26 


In Heller’s case the blood was taken from a robust man, 
aged 31 years. The clot was firm, and slightly buffed; the 
serum was of a deep yellowish-red colour, very alkaline, of 
specific gravity 1023, and, on the addition of nitric acid, a 
blue coagulum was formed, indicative of the presence of bili- 
pheein. 

The blood consisted of 521 parts of clot and 479 of serum. 
It contaimed, in 1000 parts: 


266 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Water : A 4 ; 5 781°659 
Solid residue - ; : ; 218°351 
Fibrin ; 6 4 67113 
Blood-corpuscles 5 : ; 147°114 
Residue of serum (with biliphzein) 65°124 


Heller observes that he has often been able to detect bili- 
phein in the blood of pneumonic patients when there have 
been no other indications of a disordered state of the hepatic 
functions. 

In pneumonia venosa the buffy coat is absent. (Schonleim.) | 


y: Pleuritis. 


Never having analysed pleuritic blood, I shall merely give 
the results obtained by Andral and Gavarret. 

That the blood in this disease may exhibit considerable dif- 
ferences, will be seen by the following cases. 


Ist stage. Pleuritis in its early stage, before any effusion has 
occurred. In two cases of this nature, Andral and Gavarret 
found the quantity of fibrin increased to 5°8 and 5:9. 

2d stage. Pleuritis not yet advanced, but effusion. 

Andral and Gavarret found that the quantity of fibrin varied 
from 4 to 6 in eight cases of this nature. 

3d stage. Pleuritic effusion of some duration; no fever. In 
four cases of this nature, in which effusion had occurred during 
well-marked pleuritis, from two to four months previously, the 
quantity of fibrin was increased, less certainly than im the pre- 
ceding cases, but still in one instance rising as high as 4°8, and 
averaging about 4. 

Hence it follows that the fibrin is increased in the blood in 
pleuritis, especially in the acute form, accompanied with fever ; 
the increase, however, is not so decided as in pneumonia, bron- 
chitis, and (as we shall presently see) m acute rheumatism. 

Nasse! states that the buffy coat is particularly characteristic, 
and seldom absent in pleuritic blood.? 


! Das Blut, ete., p. 61. 
? The buffy coat was absent 9 times in 35 cases in which blood was extracted 
during pleuritis, 3 times in 11 cases of pneumonia, and twice in 5 cases of bronchitis. 


BLOOD. 267 


Andral and Gavarret’s analyses gave the following results. 


Venesection. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Solid residue of serum, 


Ist Case 1 7742 225°8 59 127-7 92-2 
Odes. * ie 7894. 310-6 54 90-4 1148 
3d, 1 8456 154-4 5-0 68°3 811 
4th , 1 7820 218-0 5-2 1229 89-9 
poe el 81540, Isao 5-0 91°5 88-9 
6th , {} 8026 197-4 5-0 107-4 85-0 

2 8076 192-4 5:0 102-5 84:9 
i ee eh a) 41 84:7 781 
aie, LF 763-3 236-7 4-9 141-1 90-7 
9th , 1  861:3 198-7 4:8 120°8 731 
10th {2 7835 2165 3-9 128°8 83°8 

1 7803 219-7 5:8 118-9 95-0 
Withee, LC Si69 163-1 38 92-8 86-5 
ne ft 783-0 217-0 3°5 135°4 781 

2 7985 201°5 42 124-2 731 
Healthy blood 7900 210-0 3-0 127-0 80-0 


Lauer! states that he has found the serum turbid in pleuritis. 

Caventou? analysed the blood in a case of chronic pleuritis, 
accompanied with vertigo. It was turbid, of a dirty-red colour, 
and covered with a soft light-coloured buffy coat. The clot was 
moderately large, and floated in a yellowish-white, milky serum, 
which was perfectly neutral, devoid of smell or taste, coagu- 
lable by heat, but not by acids or alcohol, and scarcely at all by 
corrosive sublimate. 


[Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood of five men 
attacked with uncomplicated and acute pleuritis. The mean 
composition of the blood is given in the following table. 


Density of defibrinated blood. . 1055:0 
Density of serum. - 2 , 1026-0 
Water . : : ; : : 798°6 
Solid constituents . 4 : 5 201°4 
Fibrin , é A r 5 s 671 
Fat : A 5 - ; : 1:905 
Albumen 3 A A 5 ; 65-4 
Blood-corpuscles —. : : : 120°4 
Extractive matters and salts. , 76 
The salts consisted of : 
Chloride of sodium : 5 f 3°0 
Other soluble salts " 5 : 2°0 
Phosphates. : . : - 0°478 
Tron ‘ é ‘ , : ; 0461 





* Quedam de Sanguine diff., ete. ? Annal. de Chim. et de Phys. yol. 39, p. 288. 


268 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood-corpuscles and the albumen are considerably dimi- 
nished while the fibrin is increased. | 


III, INFLAMMATION OF THE CHYLOPOIETIC VISCERA. 
a. Angina tonsillaris (amygdalitis). 
Andral and Gavarret analysed the blood of four persons suf- 
fering from angina vera, and they always found, in a greater or 


less degree, the distinctive characters of hyperinosis. They ob- 
tained the following results. 


Day of Blood- Solid residue 
Venesection. disease. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin, corpuscles. of serum, 

1 4 782°6 217°4 6:1 111°0 100°3 

Ist Case 
2 5 793°6 206°4 7:2 105°3 93:9 
2d ” 1 6 777°9 222-1 5°4 126°0 90°7 
3d { 1 2 819°5 180°5 4°4 90:0 881 
were 3 830-2 169°8 6-4 79°5 83:9 
Achiaanss 1 — 779°6 220°4 3°8 120°3 96°3 
Healthy blood 790°0 210°0 3°0 127-0 80:0 


With the exception of the 4th case, which was one of chronic 
angina, and in which the blood presents no striking deviations 
from the healthy standard, and of the 2d case, in which the 
blood is extremely rich in solid constituents, the remainder ex- 
hibit a decided decrease in the quantity of the corpuscles!, and 
a less marked increase of fiction. 


(3. Hepatitis and lenitis. 


Accurate quantitative analyses of the blood in these inflam- 
matory diseases are still wanted. It has been frequently observed 
that the proportion of fat is considerably increased in the blood 
during hepatitis, and Trail has found the serum milky on several 
occasions ; Nasse? has occasionally seen it so highly coloured 
with biliphein as immediately to tinge paper on being dipped 
in it; and Lauer® has observed that a yellow-coloured sedi- 
ment is deposited by the serum upon the buffy coat, during this 
disease. 


1 Tn the blood obtained by the second venesection in Case 3, they fall even below 
the solid residue of the serum. Andral and Gavarret, however, attribute the low 
amount of corpuscles in this instance to the circumstance of the patient having been 
for some time under the poisonous influence of lead. 

2 Das Blut, ete., p. 78. 

> Quedam de Sanguinis different. in Morbis, p. 34. 


BLOOD. 269 


In the milky serum to which we have adverted, Trail’ found 
21:12 of solid constituents, which were composed of fatty oil 4:5, 
albumen 15:7, soluble matter ‘9. The water amounted to 
789°. The specific gravity of the serum was 1-087; it was 
of a creamy consistence, and became thinner when exposed to 
a gentle warmth ; when left to itself, even for weeks, it did not 
deposit any sediment. 

In another instance the specific gravity was 1:025, and the 
solid constituents amounted to 15°22, of which a considerable 
portion was oil. 

The serum has been observed by Cullen, Testa, and Heu- 
singer to be turbid in lenitis (Nasse). 


y. Peritonitis. 

The blood in peritonitis, and especially in the form denomi- 
nated puerperal fever, exhibits in a tolerably well marked de- 
gree the characters of hyperinosis. I made two analyses of the 
blood of a patient suffermg from peritonitis puerperalis, and 
found that the fibri amounted to twice as much as in healthy 
blood. Andral and Gavarret obtained similar results. 

My analyses yielded ; 


Analysis 23. Analysis 24. 
Water ean. ; ; A 784:941 787-064 
Solid residue. 5 5 215:059 212°936 
Fibrin : . : : 4:459 4°366 
Fat : . - 4:035 3°350 
Albumen 2 ; : 107°406 109°714 
Globulin . : < : 84°623 837532 
Heematin . : 2 3591 3°733 
Extractive matters and salts 10°350 9-440 
The hematoglobulin contained | The hematoglobulin contained 
4-09 of colouring matter. 4-2° of colouring matter. 


The blood in these analyses were taken from a woman aged 
33 years, who, according to Dr. Ebert’s report, exhibited the 
first symptoms of peritonitis on the evening of the second day 
after her confinement. 

The belly was somewhat swelled, and tender to the touch. 
There was extreme heat, violent thirst, and rapid respiration. 
The pulse was quick, hard, and full, 130 in the minute. The 
blood formed a tolerably firm clot, and was covered with a buffy 
coat of a line and a half thick. There was violent exacerbation 


1 Rdinb. Med. and Surg. Journal, vol. 17. 


270 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


on the evening of the third day: the countenance was much 
flushed, there was delirium, the pulse was 140, and hard. It 
was at this period that the blood referred to in analysis 23 was 
taken. 

On the fourth day the abdomen was tympanitic: the head- 
symptoms were comparatively gone: the countenance was pale, 
pulse 140, soft and small. The composition of the blood now 
taken is given in analysis 24. The patient died. Dissection 
showed that the thoracic organs were healthy, but that there 
was exudation in the abdomen, with flocculent and purulent 
matter: the same was found in the uterus and intestines. The 
vessels on the peritoneal surface were fully injected; and on 
cutting into the uterus, milky pus was observed to exude in 
pearly drops from the distended lymphatic vessels. 

In relation to the chemical constitution of the blood taken 
at the second venesection, we may observe (vide supra, p. 261) 
that there is a diminution not only of the quantity of the solid 
constituents, but also of the hematoglobulin or blood-corpus- 
cles. The fibrin, however, instead of being increased, is dimi- 
nished by ‘01, which may probably be accounted for by the cir- 
cumstance of the pulse not having increased in frequency, and 
having even become less hard. 

Andral and Gavarret’ have made eight analyses of the blood 
of four persons suffermg from peritonitis: one was a case of 
simple peritonitis ; the others were instances of metroperitonitis. 
Two of the cases terminated fatally, and in these a large quan- 
tity of pus was found in the abdominal cavity. 


Their analyses gave the following results : 
Venesection. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Solid residue of serum. 


Ist Case 1 787°2 212°8 5°5 122°8 84:5 
1 822°9 Wael 5'4 88°3 83°4 
Bde ss, ? 8316 168°4 53 73°6 89°5 
3 851:0 149-0 3°6 60°5 84:9 
dh) Pte 786°4 213°6 7:2 117:0 89-4 
1 789°4 210°6 38 120:0 86°8 
AN, pg !? 802°7 197°3 4-7 109°5 83°1 
3 8135 186°5 61 100°3 80°71 
Healthy blood 790:0 210-0 30 127°0 80:0 


Andral and Gavarret make the following observations on 
these analyses. Two of them exhibited a considerable decrease? 


1 Annal. de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 75, p. 261. 
2 They do not, of course, refer to an absolute decrease below the healthy standard, 
but merely below the ordinary standard of the blood in inflammatory disorders. 


BLOOD. 271 


in the quantity of fibrin. In one of these cases (the third vene- 
section of the second case) it amounted only to 3°6 in 1000 
parts of blood. The blood for this analysis was taken at a period 
when the patient was much reduced by marasmus. 

Dissection revealed the existence of pus in the cavity of the 
abdomen, a consequence of the previous inflammation. 

The second instance is that of the 1st venesection of the fourth 
case, in which 3°8 of fibrm were found. This case was that of 
a woman labouring under suppression of the catamenia, who was 
seized with violent pains in the abdomen, which were attributed 
to mere uterine congestion: there was no fever present. The 
blood contained 8:8 of fibrin, little more than the normal pro- 
portion. At the expiration of two days the pain became more 
acute, and the blood taken at the second venesection contained 
4-6 of fibrin. From this rapid increase of the fibrin it was in- 
ferred (although there was no fever) that something more than 
simple hyperemia of the uterus was present; and, in point of 
fact, on the following day all the symptoms of metroperitonitis 
were established. 

At the third venesection, 6:1 of fibrin were found in the 
blood. After this time the patient began to improve. 

This case is of much interest, as affording an illustration of 
the importance of chemical research in the formation and esta- 
blishment of diagnosis. 


[A singular case of peritonitis, in which milky serum was ob- 
served, has been recently published by Heller. It occurred in 
a robust but not corpulent man, aged 40 years. The blood, 
when first drawn, was of the ordinary colour, and on standing, 
the clot and serum separated perfectly, the former not exhibit- 
ing a buffy coat. 

In 1000 parts of blood there were : 

Hibriny. o7Aaer see: 4-72 
Blood-corpuscles : : 80°13 


In 1000 parts of the serum there were: 


Water ~ r 829°515 
Solid residue . A 5 170°485 
Fat ‘ F ‘j . 50-473 
Albumen A 108°791 


Extractive matters and salts 11:221 


272 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The fat was perfectly saponifiable with potash, and yielded 
no traces of cholesterin. 

After the separation of the clot, the serum exactly resembled 
milk : its reaction was alkaline, and its specific gravity 1024°35. 

In the blood of a girl, aged 18 years, suffering from a slight 
attack of peritonitis, Becquerel and Rodier found a marked di- 
minution of the blood-corpuscles, and an increase of the fibrin 
(5); the albumen remained normal, the phosphates and the cho- 
lesterin were increased. 

The serum was abundant, limpid, and yellow; the clot large 
and firm. 

Ina woman, aged 24 years, attacked with metroperitonitis, 
Scherer observed a tolerably large buffy coat, apparently more 
gelatinous than tough. The clot was rather large, but not very 
firm. The serum was neutral. 

The blood contained in 1000 parts : 


Water : é i ; 814°53 
Solid constituents - : 185°47 
Fibrin ‘ : ; : 5°32 
Albumen ‘ 5 : 96°35 
Blood-corpuscles : : 70°16 
Fat and extractive matters . 6:02 
Salts 5 ; 4 ; 7°13 


Two days afterwards the blood contained : 


Water : 4 : , 832°58 
Solid constituents 4 5 167°42 
Fibrin 2 5 5 A 4-02 
Albumen . é . 5 100-25 
Blood-corpuscles 5 : 52°30 
Salts and extractive matters 11:42 


The buffy coat had a more gelatinous appearance, and the 
serum was redder than on the former occasion. Death occurred 
two days after the second venesection. 

In a case of metroperitonitis, in which the blood was analysed 
by Heller, the clot was soft, and exhibited a well-marked buffy 
coat. The serum was clear, but of a deep yellow colour, and 
contained a large quantity of biliphein. Its specific gravity 
was 1024. The blood consisted of 486°5 parts of clot and 513°5 
of serum, and contained : 


BLOOD. 273 


Water ‘ : ; : - 820-02 
Solid constituents : : ‘ 179-98 
Fibrin a : : - é 7°78 
Blood-corpuscles_ . : : ; 87°12 
Residue of serum (with biliphein) . 85:08 | 


IV. INFLAMMATION OF THE UROPOIETIC VISCERA. 


Nephritis and cystitis. 


Very little has been done in the chemistry of the blood in 
these diseases. 

Lauer! found that the blood taken from a man sufferig from 
nephritis, and who speedily fell a victim to the disease, strongly 
resembled milk. 

Andral and Gavarret? analysed the blood of a man suffermg 
from inflammation of the bladder, and found it to be composed of 


Water : F . ‘ 785°8 
Fibrin 5 4 : ‘ 5°4 
Blood-corpuscles : : 111°4 
Solid residue of serum . : 97°4 


The increase of the fibrin and the diminution of the corpus- 
cles show that this blood is similar in its constitution to the 
blood in other inflammatory diseases. 


The blood in acute rheumatism, erysipelas, tubercular phthisis, 
puerperal mania, &c., is so strongly impressed with the ordi- 
nary characters of hyperinosis, that we shall consider it, in re- 
ference to those diseases, in the present place. 


a. Rheumatismus acutus. 


Tn acute rheumatism, accompanied by fever, the blood always 
exhibits, in a more or less marked degree, the characters of 
hyperinosis. 

The clot is rather small, consistent,* and sometimes covered 


1 Op. cit. p. 32. 2 Op. cit. p. 266. 

3 Nasse states that, in inflammatory rheumatism, he has observed a solid clot, 
although, when the buffy coat was very strong, its consistence was less on its lower 
surface. According to Haller, a thick clot is formed in acute rheumatism. (Stark, 
Allg. Patholog. p. 950.) Jennings, on the other hand, maintains that the clot under 
the buffy coat is so loose as to fall to pieces on the slightest touch. (Course of Lectures 
on the Physiology and Pathology of the Blood, by Ancell. ‘ The Lancet,’ 1840, p. 841.) 

18 


274 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


with a strong buffy coat, The serum is usually clear, and of a 
deep yellow colour. 

I have made only one analysis of the blood in acute rheu- 
matism accompanied with fever. I found that the quantity of 
fibrin was considerable, that the quantity of fat was sensibly in- 
creased, and of hematoglobulin much diminished in relation to 
the normal proportions. 

Andral and Gavarret have analysed the blood in 14 cases of 
acute rheumatism. They found that if the blood was taken 
during the period of acute pain and fever, the fibrin existed in 
much larger proportion than im normal blood. 

On the other hand, they found that the quantity of fibrm was 
even less than in normal blood, in the case of an individual who 
was bled after the subsidence of the pain and of the fever. 

In those cases in which the pain and fever returned, after 
an improvement had taken place, an increase of fibrin was again 
observed. 

My analysis gave the following results : 


Analysis 25. 


Water : : j : 801-500 
Solid residue ; 198-500 
Fibrin ; : A , 6°320 
Fat g ; ; j 3°150 
Albumen : : : 100°540 
Globulin ; : F 71:560 
Heematin ; ; : 3090 
Extractive matters and salts 11°860 


1e blood was taken fr é ed 35 years, in whom the 
The blood taken from a man aged 35 years, hom tl 
joints of the foot and knee were much swollen and very painful : 

ne joints of the hand w ess swollen, but very tender on 
the joints of the hand were less swollen, but very tend 
being touched. The febrile symptoms were not severe. 

fo) d 
The following table exhibits the maxima, minima, and mean 

of 43 analyses made by Andral and Gavarret upon the blood of 
14 individuals suffering from acute rheumatism : 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum, 


Maxima ‘ 839°6 228°4 10:2 130:0 104°8 
Minima P 771°6 160-4 2°8 7071 76:9 
Mean . 5 805°4 194°6 6:7 101°0 86:0 
Healthy blood . 790°0 210°0 3°0 127°0 80:0 


100 parts of the solid residue of the serum gave, on an ave- 
rage, 7°9 of inorganic constituents. 


BLOOD. 275 


The quantity of blood-corpuscles only once exceeded the quan- 
tity in normal blood, and this instance coincides with that in 
which the solid constituents generally attained their maximum, 
2280: in most instances it was considerably diminished, and 
hence we find that the average displays the corpuscles 16 below 
the ordinary proportion. In only four cases was the quantity of 
fibrin lower than 5:0. -Andral and Gavarret remark that the 
acuteness of the pain seems to have a greater influence on the 
increase of the fibrin than the stage or duration of the disease. 
The blood will be found to contain as large a proportion of fibrin 
at the commencement of a rheumatic attack which begins very 
severely, as at a much later period in a case commencing mildly, 
but in which acute pain gradually supervenes. This will be 
seen by the following analyses : 


Venesection. Day of disease. Water. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 

a 4 797°1 8-9 109-3 84°7 

| 2 5 796-9 98 107°5 81:8 

Ist Case. 3 6 812°5 8°5 95-4 83:6 
4 10 820-6 6°4 93°5 79°5 

L5 25 789°7 2:8 117-9 89-6 

1 8 778°8 61 123°1 92:0 

2 9 780-9 7:2 120°7 91:2 

Pd Case 3 10 788-0 78 112°8 91-4 
1 13 799-0 10-2 101-0 89°8 

Ee 17 813°9 9-0 89-2 87°9 

6 28 826-2 7-0 83°8 83:0 


In the first case, the maximum of fibrin is found in the blood 
taken at the second venesection, and as early as the fifth day of 
the disease. In the second case, on the contrary, it did not 
occur until the fourth venesection, upon the thirteenth day of 
the disease, when nearly all the joints were reported to be in a 
swollen and painful state. These symptoms began to diminish 
after the next two bleedings ; the fever, however, still continued. 

The minimum of fibrin im the first case occurred at the period 
of the fifth venesection, and is even less than the amount in 
normal blood: the corpuscles are now considerably increased. 
This venesection was performed on the eighteenth day of conva- 
lescence, after all pain had entirely disappeared, and after the 
patient had been put upon a nourishing diet. 

Andral and Gavarret show in the followimg table how the 
remission of the fever influences the quantity of fibrin. 


276 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Day since com- 


Venesection. mencement of Water. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum, 
disease. 
1 4 795°0 6:2 111°9 86°9 
2 19 801°5 all 102:0 82°8 
3 24 814°9 5°5 95°8 83°9 
4 34 833°8 5:8 81:5 78:9 


The second bleeding was ordered when the fever had com- 
pletely gone, and only a few slight pains remained; the third 
upon the occurrence of a relapse ; and the fourth during a con- 
tinuation of the pain and fever. 


[Dr. Rindskopf has analysed the blood of a woman suffering 
from rheumatism, accompanied with pneumonia. He found 
in 1000 parts : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 
Water 5 ; : : 809°973 
Solid constituents . ; . 190:°027 
Fibrin . ‘ A : ; 4°652 5°856 
Matters coagulable by heat. 166°954 
Salts 7 5 5 E : 12°188 
Extractive matters . . : 6°233 


Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood of four men 
suffermg from acute rheumatism. The mean composition of 
the blood is given in the following table : 


Density of defibrinated blood . ‘ 1055°5 
Density of serum . C : : 1025°8 
Water 3 3 : : . 798°9 
Solid constituents : : , 101-1 
Fibrin 5 5 : “ 5:8 
Fat - C ; : : . 1647 
Albumen : : : : ° 66°9 
Blood-corpuscles : : : 118-7 
Extractive matters and salts : : 8-1 ] 


Andral and Gavarret have analysed the blood of ten indivi- 
duals suffermg from chronic and subacute articular rheumatism. 
No peculiarly striking results were obtained. The proportion 
of fibrm in no instance exceeded 5:0, and in two cases was as 
low as 2°9 and 2°6. The blood-corpuscles in one instance 
amounted to no less than 154°3, and the solid constituents to 
259°1. In the other cases the corpuscles were below the healthy 
average. 

These results lead us to the conclusion that, provided there 


BLOOD. 277 


are no other disturbing influences, as the rheumatism loses its 
acute character, the blood gradually throws off the specific cha- 
racteristics of hyperinosis. 

The following table exhibits the maxima, minima, and mean 
results, as deduced from 10 analyses : 


Solid residue 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. of serum. 
Maximum : 826°8 259°9 5:1 154°3 102-0 
Minimum : 741°1 173°2 2°6 79:0 771 
Mean ° ° 782°7 217°3 3°8 108:2 95-2 
Healthy blood . 790°0 210°0 3°0 1270 80-0 


I add the results of some of the analyses, on account of the 
interesting remarks that Andral and Gavarret have made on them, 


Solid residue 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. of serum. 
1 826°8 173-2 4.8 79:0 89-4 
Zr 8183 181°7 4°6 89°1 88:0 
3 815°4 184°6 4-0 82:6 98-0 
4 741-1 259°9 2°6 154°3 102°0 


The blood in the first of these cases was taken from a colour- 
mixer under the influence of lead, to which circumstance Andral 
and Gavarret attribute the deficiency of the corpuscles. In the 
second of these cases, the blood was taken from a person who had 
suffered from an acute attack of rheumatism, for which he had 
been bled six times (!), besides having had 200 leeches (!) applied; 
a fully sufficient reason why the blood contained only 89-0 of cor- 
puscles. The blood in the third analysis was taken from a per- 
son suffering from incipient chlorosis. In the fourth case the 
blood was taken from a vigorous person, 20 years of age, which 
accounts for the unusually large quantity of corpuscles, as well 
as of solid constituents generally. 


B. Erysipelas. 

I have not made any analyses of the blood in erysipelas. 
Andral and Gavarret found that the blood, in ordinary erysi- 
pelas attended with fever, was so rich in fibrin, and the quan- 
tity of corpuscles so reduced, as to leave no doubt of the exist- 
ence of hyperinosis. 

It is by no means easy to detect the peculiar properties of 
the blood depending on this disease, for as soon as any inflam- 
matory fever is complicated with it, the blood will, from that 
cause alone, assume a state of hyperinosis. Moreover, the mere 


278 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


circumstances of temperament, age, &c. may induce a state of 
the blood partially approximating to hyperinosis, or to hypinosis. 
Contradictory results may also arise from variations im treat- 
ment, as far as venesection is concerned. We know, for in- 
stance, that in France the lancet is used with an unsparing 
hand ; and if venesection be ordered in a case of erysipelas in 
which no serious inflammatory affection is present, it is by no 
means impossible that the blood may exhibit the character of 
hypinosis. In Germany, on the contrary, venesection is seldom 
prescribed unless decided inflammatory symptoms present them- 
selves ; in this case the blood is sure to exhibit the characters 
of hyperinosis. Schénlein states that in erysipelas the serum 
is always tinged yellow by the colourmg matter of the bile; 
that the proportion of the serum to the clot is large; and that 
the consistence of the clot is inversely as its size. These cha- 
racters decidedly indicate a state of hyperinosis. 

Andral and Gavarret have made eight analyses of the blood 
of five persons, four of whom were suffering from erysipelas of 
the face, and one from inflammatory erysipelas of the foot. In 
seven of these cases the fibrin was materially increased ; in three 
instances it amounted to 5:0, in three to 6:0, and in one to 7:0. 
In a much shorter and milder case, in which there was but little 
fever, it amounted to only 3:6. 

Their analyses gave the following results : 


Day since com- Solid residue 

Venesection. mencement of Water. Solid Fibrin. Blood- of serum. 

disease. residue. corpuscles. oycanic. inorganic. 

Ist Case { 1 2 826°6 173°4 7°0 75°9 83:2 73 
2 3 836°0 164:0 61 64:4 87°3 6°2 
2d ie , 799°2 200°8 6:7 108°4 78°9 6:8 
Pes 3 S062) 193389 73) BOL9.” 782 6-4 
3d “5 1 3 831-2 168°8 5:0 73°6 83:0 77 
4th { a 5 788°7 PANES} 4:7 119°] 80°7 68 
2 8 796°9 203°1 5:0 110°7 80°5 6°9 
Binh, 1 3 762°9 230°4 36 =139°4 80°2 7:2 


The large amount of corpuscles associated with the slight 
increase of fibrin in the fifth case is explained by the cireum- 
stance of the attack being very mild, and the constitution par- 
ticularly strong. ‘The reverse is seen in the first case, in which 
the blood was taken from a woman who had been scrofulous 
from her youth. 


BLOOD. 279 


The serum contains, on an average, 7°8° of inorganic consti- 
tuents ; just the same amount as in acute rheumatism. 


[ Blood, in a case of erysipelas of the hand, analysed by 
Rindskopf, yielded 7:71 of fibrm. The blood-corpuscles were 
not determined. 

In a case of erysipelas in the face, occurring in a young man 
aged 20 years, recorded by Heller,the blood separated into 648-96 
parts of clot and 351-04 of serum. The clot was tolerably firm, 
and covered with a buffy coat. The serum was of a fawn 
colour, and turbid, in consequence of suspended hematoglobu- 
lin. It contained no biliphzein. 

The blood contained in 1000 parts : 


Water : : : : 762°44 
Solid constituents : : 237°56 
Fibrin : : ; c 5°45 
Blood-corpuscles 2 : 141°71 
Solid residue of serum . : 90-40] 


y: Phthisis tuberculosa. 


It is a well-known fact that the blood of phthisical patients 
exhibits the ordinary characters of inflammatory blood. 

The clot is usually rather small, consistent, and covered with 
a buffy coat: the serum is clear, and of a bright yellow colour. 
The blood differs considerably during the progressive stages of 
the disease. 

Andral and Gavarret observe that, whatever be the stage of 
the disorder at which the blood is analysed, the fibrin seems 
always on the increase, and the corpuscles on the decrease ; but — 
the proportion of the increase on the one hand, and decrease on 
the other, varies with the progress of the disease. If the tuber- 
cles are still in a crude, unsoftened state, the increase of fibrin 
is only small, and its whole amount may be estimated at about 
4; and the decrease in the amount of corpuscles, although 
perceptible, is by no means great. As the tubercles begin to 
soften, the quantity of fibrin usually increases to about 4°5, while 
the amount of corpuscles continues on the decrease. Sub- 
sequently, upon the formation of vomicze in the lungs, the fibrin 
rises to 5°5, and sometimes even to 5:9: it never, however, at- 
tains the height observed in pneumonia. In the very last stage 
of the disease, as the blood becomes poor, the fibrin diminishes 


280 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


in much the same ratio with the other solid constituents, and 
sometimes falls even under the healthy standard. Generally 
speaking, it seems that the amount of fibrin attains its maxi- 
mum about the period when the febrile symptoms are regularly 
established. 

I have made three analyses of the blood of phthisical per- 
sons, the results of which are not devoid of interest. 


Analysis 26. Analysis 27. Analysis 28. 
Water ; 5 : : 807°500 825-200 750:000 
Solid residue . : 5 192-500 174:800 250-000 
Fibrin 5 é - 4:600 6°500 a trace 
Kat : 5 A : 2°350 4:200 3°750 
Albumen ; i : 98°360 90°350 131-000 
Globulin : : - 71-230 61-110 94-500 
Heematin ; : A 3°110 2°690 2°750 
Extractive matters and salts 9-350 8-000 15°250 


The blood in analysis 26 was taken from a man aged 36 
years, in the second stage of tubercular phthisis, who afterwards 
sunk under the disease. The blood in analysis 27 was taken 
from a man aged 41, in the third stage of the disease, who suf- 
fered extremely from nocturnal colliquative sweats, and from 
feverish symptoms. In these two instances the blood exhibits 
the characters of hyperinosis, for the quantity of fibrin is in one 
instance twice, and in the other thrice the normal amount, and 
the amount of hzematoglobulin is below the healthy standard : 
moreover, the quantity of solid constituents is less than in 
healthy blood. Andral and Gavarret’s observations respecting 
the changes that the blood undergoes as the disease advances 
are here borne out. 

The 28th analysis gives results quite at variance with the two 
former. The blood in this instance was taken from a man 
about 30 years of age, who was treated in our hospital for tu- 
bercular phthisis. He had taken cod-liver oil for some time 
with much benefit ; subsequently, however, frequent attacks of 
hemoptysis came on, for which venesection was always imme- 
diately prescribed. The clot in these cases was seldom very 
firm. I analysed the blood taken at his last venesection. It 
was received into a shallow vessel, and amounted to between 
six and seven ounces. It did not coagulate, and it presented 
the appearance of a homogencous dark red fluid, in which some 
white gelatinous flocks of coagulated fibrin were swimming. 


BLOOD. 281 


The blood contained, much to my surprise, a larger amount 
of solid constituents than I have ever observed in any other 
analysis. The fat, when isolated, smelt strongly of the volatile 
fatty acid of the cod-liver oil, the odour of which was also 
strongly developed during the evaporation of the blood to dry- 
ness. A considerable quantity of heemaphzin was present, and 
deeply coloured the extractive matters and salts. It is very pro- 
bable that the peculiar changes in the blood in this instance are 
due principally to the cod-liver oil and to the repeated bleedings. 

Andral and Gavarret have analysed the blood in 21 cases of 
this disease, Their maximum of fibrin was 5°9, their minimum 
2-1. In only two instances did the amount of corpuscles ap- 
proximate to the normal standard, as fixed by Lecanu: in these 
two cases it was represented by 122-1 and 120-4: respectively. 
The amount was frequently below 100, and the decrease of cor- 
puscles was almost always found to be accompanied with a cor- 
responding increase of fibrin. 

The maxima, minima, and average of the various constitu- 
ents, as deduced from 22 analyses, made by Andral and Gavyarret, 


are given in the following table : 
Solid residue 


Water. Solidresidue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. of serum. 
Maxima ; 845°8 225°0 5°9 1221 105°4 
Minima - 775°0 154:2 7X! 76:7 65-1 
Mean . - 809°7 190°3 4:4 100°5 85°3 
Healthy blood 890-0 210°0 3:0 127-0 80:0 


This table shows the great difference that may exist between 
the quantities of the solid constituents, and of the corpuscles, 
in healthy and in diseased blood. 


[ Becquerel and Rodier examined the blood of nine persons 
affected with pulmonary phthisis, viz. five men and four women. 

The following table represents the mean composition of the 
blood of the men : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 3d Venesection. 


Density of defibrinated blood . 1056°7 1055°5 1050°3 
Density of serum A : 5 1028-0 1026°3 1025°5 
Water . : 2 : - 7948 799°8 821-0 
Solid constituents . : 2 205°2 200-2 179:0 
Fibrin : : 3 3 4:8 4:2 3°6 
Fat : - 2 - 2 1°554 1443 1:060 
Albumen : : ~ é 66°2 65:0 62-0 
Blood-corpuscles ; 3 : 125:°0 122°7 103°5 


Extractive matters and salts i led 6°7 8-9 


282 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


Mean composition of the blood of phthisical women : 


Density of defibrinated blood . c 1055-4 
Density of serum. : : : 1028-2 
Water . P ; : : : 7968 
Solid constituents. : : 5 203°2 
Fibrin. : : : ; : 4:0 
Fat : : : : ; : 1-729 
Albumen c : : : . 70°5 
Blood-corpuscles . : : 0 119-4 
Extractive matters and salts. 3 76 ] 


6. Febris puerperalis. 


[The blood in this disease has been analysed by Heller: it 
was of a very dark brown colour, but coagulated in the ordi- 
nary manner: the serum was turbid, but after standing for 
some time became clear; its reaction was alkaline, its specific 
gravity 1025, and it contained no biliphein. The clot was 
dark, of a loose consistence, and covered with a strong buffy 
coat, over which there was a delicate membrane, that presented 
under the microscope a finely granular appearance, and fat- 
vesicles. 

In 1000 parts of blood there were contained : 


Water : c ‘ : 4 833°85 
Solid constituents ‘ : : 166715 
Fibrin , 2 ; ‘ : 5°16 
Blood-corpuscles_ . , : - 77°52 
Albumen and extractive matters : 7747 
Fixed salts. ; : : : 6:00 


The blood has been partially analysed in two cases of this 
disease by Becquerel and Rodier. 

In the first case the blood, taken at the first venesection, 
yielded fibrin (4°3), albumen (55:6), and blood-corpuscles (77°38) : 
at the second venesection, the fibrin was (4°2,) the albumen 
(54), and the blood-corpuscles (66°6). The cholesterin and the 
phosphates exceeded the normal amount. 

In the second case, the fibrin was normal, the albumen 
(43), and the blood-corpuscles (70). ] 


e. Eclampsia. Convulsions. 


[The blood of a girl, aged 20 years, who frequently had 40 
or 50 attacks im the course of 24 hours, was subjected to several 
analyses by Heller. 


BLOOD. 283 


The blood taken on the first occasion was of rather a dark 
colour, the clot was loose, and the serum was turbid and light 
red, in consequence of the presence of hematin. The spe- 
cific gravity of the serum was 1030, and the relation of the 
clot to the serum as 446: 554. 

The blood contained in 1000 parts: 


Water ; ; ; P q 797-00 
Solid constituents ‘ ; : 203°00 
Fibrin : ‘ 4 ‘ ; 6:00 
Blood-corpuscles : ; : 92°36 
Albumen with extractive matters . 96°03 
Fixed salts. ; : é ; 8°35 


A second venesection was instituted 33 days afterwards. The 
physical characters of the serum were much as on the former 
occasion, except that its specific gravity was only 1025. The 
blood was taken partly from the arm, and partly from the foot. 

The blood from the arm separated into 598-4 parts of clot, 
and 401°6 of serum, and was composed of : 


Water ‘ : 2 ; : 800-06 
Solid residue ‘ 4 : : 199-94 
Fibrin : 5 ‘ ; , 4:44 
Blood-corpuscles_ . : : é 113716 
Residue of serum . ; : : 82°35 


The blood from the foot separated into 568-6 parts of clot, 
and 431-4 parts of serum, and was composed of : 


Water ; ‘ : : : 77843 
Solid constituents ; ; : 221°57 
Fibrin : F : : : 5°84 
Blood-corpuscles . : : A 125-80 
Residue of serum : ; ; 89-93 


In the blood from the foot, the clot was covered with a buffy 
coat of about two lines in thickness; in the blood from the arm 
there was no indication of that phenomenon. 

Heller likewise analysed the blood in a case of convulsions 
occurring a few hours after delivery. At the period of the 
venesection there were symptoms of metroperitonitis and 
endometritis. 

The blood was of a tolerably bright red colour, and sepa- 
rated on coagulation into 587°3 parts of clot, and 412-7 of 
serum. The specific gravity of the latter was 1026, and it 
contained a large quantity of biliphein. 


284 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood contained in 1000 parts : 


Water A : c : : 78820 
Solid residue : ‘ : : 211-80 
Fibrin ; , : : ‘ 5°87 
Blood-corpuscles . : ; - 124:07 
Residue of serum 3 g A 81 86 | 


2. Carcinoma medullare colli uteri. 


[The sanguineous discharge from the uterus of a woman, aged 
34 years, presenting all the characters of mtense anzmia, was 
analysed by Drs. Lenzberg and Morthier. It was of a dark 
red colour, and the separation mto clot and serum was not very 
perfect. There appeared, however, to be about 543 of the 
former, and 457 of the latter. 

The blood consisted of : 


Water : ‘ : A ‘ 832°46 
Solid constituents : 4 : 167°53 
Fibrin 4 A ‘ 3 ‘ 16°44 
Blood-corpuscles : : : 77:03 
Residue of serum 3 : ‘ 74:06 


Here we see that there is an enormous increase of fibrin, 
and a great diminution of the corpuscles, while the residue of 
the serum remains almost normal. | 


On the probable cause of the peculiar change in the composition 
of the blood in inflammatory diseases. 


Although, in consequence of the deficiency of our knowledge 
regarding the true nature of inflammation, an attempt to ex- 
plain the primary causes of the change undergone by the blood 
during this process may be deemed precipitate, yet the an- 
nouncement of an opinion (though it have no higher claim than 
a mere hypothesis) may be of service in directing the attention 
of other investigators to the subject. 

Numerous observations have shown us that blood retained 
for any length of time in an organ, and thus prevented from 
meeting with a due supply of oxygen, becomes poorer instead 
of richer in fibrin ; whereas there is undoubted evidence that in 
inflammation the fibrin is increased. Moreover, blood impeded 
in the course of the circulation becomes darker, (a sign that 
there is not a due supply of oxygen,) while blood in inflamma- 


BLOOD. 285 


tion is generally brighter than in the normal state. The solid 
constituents of inflamed blood are certainly diminished, but the 
increased amount of fibrin renders it more plastic ; so that we 
are not justified in comparing it (as Magendie has done) with 
blood in which the capacity of coagulating has been lessened 
by water, or alkaline carbonates, and which produced in the va~- 
rious organs, symptoms resembling those of inflammation. This 
defibrinated blood presents characters entirely the reverse of 
what we observe in inflammatory fluid, and resembles the con- 
dition of the circulating blood in typhoid fevers. We can, I 
think, scarcely doubt that the blood in an inflamed organ differs 
in its composition from the blood in the rest of the body, pro- 
vided we can assume that there is a stagnation of blood im the 
affected organ during the whole period of inflammatory action. 

Whether the blood is the first part of the system that becomes 
diseased, or whether it becomes modified in consequence of 
the pathological condition of the suffering organ, is a question 
not easily answered. This much, however, is certain, that what- 
ever be the inflamed organ, the blood invariably differs from 
its normal condition in the same manner, although with varying 
intensity. If we direct our attention to the reaction of the 
whole organism during inflammation, we see that all the organs 
essential to the well-being of the blood are disturbed ; the tem- 
perature of the whole body is heightened; the pulse is full, 
hard, tense, and frequent ; the urine scanty and loaded. Under 
all these circumstances, we must expect to find a considerable 
deviation of the blood from its normal condition. 

If, in this general reaction of the whole system, which cor- 
responds with a heightened amount of vitality in the blood, a 
more rapid circulation is induced, we shall, without much diffi- 
culty, be enabled to give a sufficient explanation of the manner in 
which thepeculiar changes already adverted to, are brought about. 

The vital activity of the blood is heightened, and its meta- 
morphosis hastened, by an increased rapidity of the circulation ; 
it remains, then, for us to consider what effect an accelerated 
metamorphosis will have on the composition of the blood. 

The metamorphosis of the plasma during the process of nu- 
trition in the peripheral system will not necessarily be increased 
by an accelerated circulation ; since (as I have endeavoured to 
show, in page 148,) the plasma remains virtually passive, and 


286 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


is only changed by the cells of the organs, through which it passes, 
possessing the inherent power of abstracting and appropriating 
from it the substances requisite for their nourishment. It is 
different, however, with the active metamorphosis of the blood, 
in which the corpuscles are changed at the expense of the 
plasma. If the general circulation be hastened, the blood will 
be urged more frequently through the lungs and other organs 
that exert a modifying influence on its composition. 

Hence the blood (passing more frequently through the 
lungs) gives off a larger amount of carbon in the form of car- 
boniec acid than in the normal condition. If, as I have endea- 
voured to show (pp. 155 and 219), the blood-corpuscles take 
an essential part in the respiratory process, and their vital 
activity, evolution, and revolution are only carried on with the 
cooperative agency of the atmospheric origin, then, in propor- 
tion to this increased cooperation, will their development be 
hastened, their vitality heightened, and more corpuscles be con- 
sumed than in the normal state. 

Two important conclusions may be drawn from my theory, 
regarding the production of fibri from the blood-corpuscles, 
viz. that the amount of fibrin is increased, and of blood-cor- 
puscles diminished. This is the more striking, since the in- 
crease of fibrin during the development of the corpuscles does 
not keep pace with its consumption in the act of peripheral 
nutrition, and since the supply of blood-corpuscles afforded by 
the chyle cannot be proportionate with the diminution produced 
by the accelerated circulation.} 

Hence, if we only assume that the circulation is increased 
by the reaction of the organism in inflammatory affections, an 
explanation is at once afforded us of the change that occurs in 
the composition of the blood in hyperinosis, and at the same 
time of its heightened temperature. We do not, however, mean 
to imply that the increased circulation is the sole cause of the 
change in the blood, for it can hardly be denied that the nerves 
exert an influence on its constitution; moreover, as we have 
already shown, venesection modifies its characters. 


1 It has been suggested that blood in which there is an excess of fibrin increases 
the energy of the heart’s action, while blood deficient in fibrin diminishes it. The 
rapid circulation of the blood in inflammations and its torpid condition in certain 
typhoid affections seems in favour of this view. 


oor  § ei 


BLOOD. 287 


SECOND FORM OF DISEASED BLOOD: HYPINOSTS.! 


I have shown, in speaking of hyperinosis sanguinis, what 
striking changes in the blood are due to the excessive accumu- 
lation of fibrin, and a corresponding diminution of blood-cor- 
puscles. These differences are easily seen, because it is usually 
necessary that blood should be taken at a period when these 
changes are most obvious. In hypinosis sanguinis the case is 
different : m many diseases of this nature it is not customary 
to abstract blood at all, or at any rate only when an inflam- 
matory affection is also present. Its distinctive characters 
are therefore seldom so decidedly marked as in the former 
case, and, in point of fact, less is known regarding this form of 
diseased blood. 


Chemical characters of the blood. 


The quantity of fibrin is frequently less than in healthy 
blood, or if it amounts to the normal quantity, its proportion to 
the blood-corpuscles is less than is found in a state of health 
(2°1: 110 Simon, or 3: 110 Lecanu); the quantity of cor- 
puscles is either absolutely increased, or their proportion to 
the fibrin is larger than in healthy blood: the quantity of solid 
constituents is also frequently larger than in the normal fluid. 


Physical characters of the blood. 


The clot is most commonly large (but sometimes small), soft, 
diffluent, and of a dark, almost black red colour: occasionally no 
clot is formed. The buffy coat is seldom seen, and when it does 
occur it is thin and soft, or forms a gelatinous particoloured 
deposit on the clot. The serum is sometimes of a deep yellow 
tinge, from the colouring matter of the bile, or red, from blood- 
corpuscles in suspension: the blood has always an alkaline 
reaction. 

From the numerous analyses of Andral and Gavarret, and 
from the observations of others, it appears that the blood occurs 
in a state of hypinosis in fever; if, however, the reaction as- 
sumes the synochal type, or if inflammation of the respiratory 


' Formed from wzro and te, voc, the fibre of flesh. 


288 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


or other organs supervene, then the fibrin will increase in a cor- 
responding degree, and the blood-corpuscles decrease, so that 
the blood will approximate in its constitution to the normal 
standard, or even partially assume the characters of hyperinosis. 


a. Typhus abdominalis. 


The blood in this disease exhibits the characters of hypi- 
nosis perhaps more distinctly than in any other affection: 
but the statements regarding its qualitative and quantitative 
composition are still very contradictory, arismg, probably, in 
part, from its varying in different stages of typhus: thus, in 
the period of excitement, it may incline towards a state of 
hyperinosis ; in the stage of depression, the fibrin gradually 
decreases ; and lastly, in the stage of collapse, the quantity of 
blood-corpuscles and of solid constituents decreases so remark- 
ably, that in the case of putrid abdominal typhus the blood (in 
consequence of the liquor sanguinis being too watery, and de- 
ficient in salts) assumes the state of spanemia. ‘The same 
appears to occur in petechial typhus. 

One source of difference is therefore evidently dependent 
upon the stage of the disease at which the blood is taken: the 
presence of any inflammatory symptoms will also modify its 
constitution. 

The blood in typhus is found to be very deficient in fibrin, 
and frequently also in albumen: it coagulates imperfectly, and 
often remains in a semi-fluid state: the clot is soft, friable, of 
a very dark, almost black red colour, and is very rarely covered 
with a buffy coat: this form of blood becomes putrid sooner 
than the healthy fluid. 

I have made two analyses of the blood in rather mild forms 
of the disease. The results do not by any means give a good 


idea of hypinosis sanguinis. 
Analysis 29. Analysis 30. 


Water ; F ‘ ; ‘ y 816°875 792°340 
Solid residue b F : 5 é 183-125 207°660 
Fibrin A , 4 é 3 : 2°525 2°010 
Pat ves : 5 ; : r 4 2°233 2°200 
Albumen 5 : : " ‘ 90-650 80°330 
Globulin 4 4 : 4 ‘ 75°205 99-510 
Heematin ; : : : 3°985 5-300 


Extractive matters and salts F js 9-678 12°670 


BLOOD. 289 


The disease diagnosed in both instances (which occurred in 
our hospital) was dothinenteritis. 

In both cases venesection was ordered at an early stage of 
the disease, when there was a good deal of vascular excitement 
present, which may account for the partial decrease of the fibrin 
and increase of the corpuscles. 

The blood in analysis 29 was taken from a man 30 years of 
age ; the tongue was furred, abdomen tender on pressure, mind 
tolerably clear; pulse rather full, 95 in the minute. 

The blood in analysis 30 was taken from a man 38 years of 
age, in whom there was a good deal of nervous excitement, gid- 
diness, and buzzing of the ears; the abdomen was tender on 
being pressed, the tongue thickly coated, and the pulse quick, 
rather hard and full. Both cases turned out favorably.} 

The most comprehensive researches on the blood in typhoid 
fever (fievres typhoides?) are those of Andral and Gavarret, 
who made 50 analyses of blood taken from 20 persons suffering 
under this affection. 

The following are their principal results : 

The fibrin never rises perceptibly above the normal standard 
in true typhoid fever. It often remains at the normal height, 
and is still more frequently below it. 

In inflammatory disorders it is pretty clear that the fibrin 
increases with the increased intensity of the disease: here we 
observe just the reverse: the fibrin decreases in proportion to 
the advancement of the disorder. 

Andral and Gavarret observe that this cannot be ascribed to 
the repeated bleedings, or to the continued low diet, for these 
circumstances induce no change in the amount of fibrm in other 
diseases. As soon, however, as any symptoms of convalescence 
appear, the fibrin begins to increase, even before the organiza- 
tion could contribute a supply by increased nutriment. ‘This 
continues to be the case during the progress of convalescence, and 
as the patient improves the corpuscles simultaneously decrease. 

In inflammatory diseases we observed a general tendency to 


' [In an analysis of the blood in typhus abdominalis, made subsequently to the 
publication of his Chemistry, Simon found, water 887°5, solid constituents 112°, 
fibrin none, albumen 54, hematoglobulin 47°25. ] 

2 Fiévre continue qui reconnait pour caractére anatomique |’inflammation exanthé- 
mateuse, puis ulcéreuse, des follicules intestinaux. (Andral.) 


19 


290 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


diminution in the corpuscles: here we have just the reverse, 
for the more frequently we analyse blood soon after the out- 
break of the disease, the more frequently shall we find instances 
in which the corpuscles, instead of being diminished, are consi- 
derably increased, and, even in the more advanced stages, the 
amount of the corpuscles is frequently found to exceed, or at 
any rate to equal, the normal quantity. 

The absolute increase of the corpuscles is not, however, so 
decided as the increase of the fibrin in inflammatory diseases ; 
neither is it so essential a condition for the existence of the disease, 
for even in those cases in which the amount is much increased 
at the commencement of the disorder, it may become diminished 
during its course, and even when it is getting more severe. 
However, when the absolute quantity of the corpuscles is dimi- 
nished, its proportion to the fibrin is still greater than is ever 
observed in the normal state. 

The leading characteristic of the blood in this disease is the 
decrease of the fibrin, which diminishes in proportion to the 
violence of the attack, and from which another character is de- 
rived, namely, the increased amount of corpuscles. During 
the early period the diminution of the fibrin is not absolute ; it 
is only relative in relation to the corpuscles ; but as the disease 
approaches its height, the diminution becomes absolute. 

Researches instituted in mild cases may give perfectly nega- 
tive results. 

Their maximum of fibrin was 3°7; their minimum ‘9. _ It is 
true that in one case they found 4°2 of fibrin, but the blood was 
taken during convalescence. 

The maxima, minima, and average results of 41 analyses are 
given in the following table : 


Solid residue 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. of serum. 
Maximum A 862°3 243°7 4:2 149°6 98-0 
Minimum : 7563 137°7 0-9 66°7 66°38 
Average , 7960 204°0 2°6 116-0 779 
Healthy blood . 790°0 210°0 3'0 127-0 80:0 


This average of 41 analyses (I have omitted some, as giving 
no definitively clear result) does not give the general characters 
of the blood, as it is expressed in the majority of the analyses. 
The amount of fibrin is certainly less than in healthy blood, but 
the corpuscles do not attain their normal height. If, however, 


BLOOD. 291 


the fibrin is estimated at 3:0, the proportion of the corpuscles is 
134, which is higher than in healthy blood. 

The quantity of the residue of the serum, and of solid con- 
stituents generally, approximates closely to the normal standard. 

The inorganic constituents of the residue of the serum amount, 
on an average, to 7°6°, which is very little lower than the corre- 
sponding number in erysipelas or rheumatism. 

Reid Clanny states, however, that the quantity of salts is 
materially diminished in typhoid blood. 

The following table contains the numerical results of Andral 
and Gavarret’s researches on the blood in typhoid fever. In 
order to make the proportion of the corpuscles to the fibrin 
more striking, I have given not merely the numbers obtained 
from the analyses, but the relative numbers on the assumption 
that the fibrin is constantly represented by 8. 


Date of Solid Blood- Blood- Residue 
Venesection. attack. Water. constituents. Fibrin. corpuscles. corpuscles. of serum. 
(Fibrin = 3.) 
1 5 756°3 243°7 2°0 145°3 180:0 96°1 
2 7 769°7 230°3 Zl 135°8 193:0 92°4 
Ist Cases 3 8 785°2 214°8 1°8 126°2 210°0 86°8 
+ 10 798°6 201°4 es 116:2 268:0 83°9 
5 15 827°4 272°6 1:0 91-7 273°0 79:9 
6 I ae | g 819-7 180°3 0:9 93-1 310°0 86°3 
od; 1 752°9 247-1 2°4 146°7 183-0 98-0 
1 766°5 233°'5 2:3 143°6 172:0 87°4 


5 
7 
4th ,, 2 9 777°6 222°4 3°7 136-2 110-0 82°5 
2 
8 


3 ait 7821 217-9 36 134-5 1120 79-8 
fal 767°6 232:4 50 =—-139°3 83:0 88-1 
12 10 7773 229-7 54 (129-7 72:0  87°6 
Mee a 2 3] 760-4. 819-6) 0) 121 760 855 
£14k 791-7 2083 40  123°6 92:0 80-7 


210) 784-7 915-3 29 1253 1290 = 871 
GH joc :3.) 1 V2.0 804-3 195-7 23 123-7 1610 69:7 
E 15 831-1 168-9 19 103-0 1630 64:0 


E 9 769°5 230°5 3°6 149°6 124-0 77°3 


5 33 8455 154-5 3°7 79-6 64:0 712 
al 9 8103 189-7 3-4 102-4 90:0 83-9 
12 10 8162 1838 35 105-0 90:0 = 798 
7th <3 12 8256 174-4 2-3 93-9 1220 782 
| A Vie 5G: 0 1163-2 1:7 86:3 1520-752 
L\5 24 847-8 152-2 21 76-0 108-0 746 


From these two columns of the blood-corpuscles we see that 
the decrease of the fibrin is almost always connected with the 


292 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


merease of the corpuscles, so that the proportion between the 
two gradually differs more and more from the normal mixture. 

The exceptions to this rule are caused either by some in- 
flammatory complication, as in the fifth case, where an acute 
attack of bronchitis accompanied the fever, or by the patient 
being im a state of convalescence as in the fifth analysis, im 
cases 6 and 7. 

Andral and Gavarret offer no explanation of the peculiarities 
in the fourth case. 

The solid constituents of the blood are more frequently above 
than below the normal standard, but the proportion is a fluc- 
tuating one, and dependent, as we shall presently see, on the 
progress of the disease. 

Lecanu has analysed the blood of two persons suffermg from 
typhoid fever. As he did not determine the amount of fibrin, 
the proportion of that constituent to the corpuscles cannot be 
shown. Their absolute quantity is less than in normal blood. 
Lecanu also states, that he thinks that a paucity of corpuscles 
may be inferred from the smallness and friability of the clot,! 
a statement at variance with the researches of Andral and 
Gavarret. 

Lecanu also found a diminution of the solid constituents 
generally : 





'T may take this opportunity of saying a few words regarding the possibility of 
drawing a correct inference respecting the amount of fibrin and of corpuscles from 
the clot. We are justified in assuming the existence of a great quantity of fibrin 
from a large and very firm clot, and a small amount froma small diffluent clot. We 
cannot, however, with the same accuracy, draw similar influences respecting the 
amount of corpuscles. On receiving the blood of a cachectic horse into a high 
cylindrical glass and into a shallow vessel, a large and very firm clot generally forms 
in the latter (unless, as is sometimes the case, the blood-corpuscles sink during coagu- 
lation), and little serum is expressed; while, in the other vessel, two distinct layers 
are observed, a large one, consisting of firmly coagulated fibrin, containing serum, 
below which there is a much smaller layer, consisting of semifluid blood-corpus- 
cles. As the albumen inclosed in the coagulated fibrin in the high glass forms a very 
solid mass resembling a pseudopolypus or buffy coat, we see that, independently of the 
corpuscles, a very firm clot may be formed; indeed, in inflammatory blood, this is 
often observed to a greater or lesser degree. There may, consequently, be as many 
blood-corpuscles in a small and loose clot as in a large and firm one; moreover, we 
usually find numerous corpuscles suspended in the serum and deposited at the bottom 
of the vessel, in addition to those contained in the clot, in blood deficient in fibrin. 
The relative amount of corpuscles and of fibrin in clots of different size and con- 
sistence is a subject worthy of investigation. 


BLOOD. 293 


Water. ‘ : ‘ 805°20 795°88 
Solidresidue  . ‘ ; c 194-80 204-20 
Blood-corpuscles ; : , 115-00 105-00 
Residue of serum : ‘ : 79:00 99°12 


Chomel does not consider that the diminution of fibrin is a 
specific character of the blood in typhoid fever, because he 
found that in 6 out of 30 cases, the blood formed a solid clot, 
covered with a buffy coat, but differing in thickness and colour 
from the inflammatory clot; while in 2 cases there was a 
slight film, beneath which the clot was diffluent, im 2 the blood 
remained perfectly fluid and slightly lumpy, and in 20 the blood 
formed a firm clot, but no buffy coat. 

The blood in all these cases was taken during the first or 
the commencement of the second stage, never in the third. 
The peculiarities in Chomel’s statement may be partly due to 
the blood being taken at a period before the fever had reached 
its height, partly to the association of some inflammatory symp- 
tom, or to a more synochal type of the disease. 

According to Jennings,! the blood in the first stage of ty- 
phoid fever (depression) is generally thick and dark; it coa- 
culates rapidly and forms a soft, large, dark-coloured clot. 
In the second stage (excitement) it flows readily, is of a scarlet 
colour, does not coagulate so quickly as, and forms a more 
solid clot than the former. It is also occasionally covered with 
a slight buffy coat. In the third stage (collapse) it flows very 
readily, is thin, watery, and of a dark colour: the clot is loose 
and flocculent, and occasionally appears more as a sediment 
of colouring matter than as a clot. In thoroughly developed 
typhus, Dr. Armstrong found the blood of the temporal artery 
as dark as that of the vein. Dr. Clanny also states that the 
watery portion of the blood increases with the intensity of the 
disease, and that not merely the solid constituents generally, 
but also the salts and carbonic acid are diminished. The water 
begins to decrease, and the solid constituents to increase in 
favorable cases after 12 or 18 days. According to Stevens, the 
salts of the blood (especially the chloride of sodium) are di- 
minished in all typhoid fevers. 


' Course of Lectures on the Physiology and Pathology of the Blood, by H. Ancell. 
The Lancet, 1840, p. 338. 


294 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


[ Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood of 13 persons 
attacked with typhoid fever, 11 men and 2 women. Of the 
11 men, 6 were bled once, 4 twice, and 1 thrice; of the 
2 women, 1 was bled once, and 1 thrice. 

The following table exhibits the mean composition of the 
blood of the male patients, obtained at the first venesection : 


Density of defibrinated blood . : ; : 1054-4 
Density of serum. c : : : : 1025-4 
Water. . : i . ; : : 797°0 
Solid residue. é : , > : : 203°0 
Fibrin. > : : ; : - 2 2°8 
Fat . : : : , : : : ; 1773 
Albumen : : : 4 . j ‘ 64:8 
Blood-corpuscles : : ; ‘ : 1274 
Extractive matters and salts’. ; ‘ ‘ 6:3 


The salts consisted of : 


Chloride of sodium . : 5 , : . 2°9 
Other soluble salts . E : 5 5 2D 
Phosphates. : ; ; ‘ : 5 0-497 
Tron : 5 E P : ; 5 0°555 


The fibrin varied considerably, the maximum being 4:9, 
while in three cases it was considerably below the normal 
standard. The albumen and blood-corpuscles were, in most 
instances, diminished. 

Four of the same men were bled a second time, and the fol- 
lowing table gives the mean results of the blood obtained in 
these four cases, on both occasions : 


Ist Venesection. 2d Venesection. 
Density of defibrinated blood : : 1054:0 10514 
Density of serum . P : é 1025-0 1024-7 
Water : : ; ; : : 801°0 814°5 
Solid constituents A d é : 199-0 185°5 
Fibrin - : é : ; ; 2°3 13 
Fat 3 ; 3 P ; : 52a 1-408 
Albumen : ; ‘ : 4 64:4 62:0 
Blood-corpuscles : ; : c 124°5 113°5 
Extractive matters and salts : 3 6:0 ico 

The salts consisted of 

Chloride of sodium 4 ° ’ , 3°6 3°5 
Other soluble salts j : : : 2-6 P27 
Phosphates : < : : : 0°544 0°255 
Tron : ‘ , : : : 0°581 0°519 


A comparison of the two columns shows that the blood ob- 


BLOOD. 295 


tained by the second venesection contains a considerably smaller 
mean amount of fibrin than the blood previously taken. The 
albumen and corpuscles are likewise diminished. 

The case in which venesection was performed three times 
offered no peculiarity ; neither did the analyses of the blood of 
the two women. 

In all these analyses the clot was found to present no strik- 
ing peculiarity. There was none of the softness and diffluence 
on which the older writers laid so much stress. 

Scherer has analysed the salts of the blood in a case of 
typhoid fever. In 1000 parts of blood there were 176°3 of 
solid residue, which on incineration yielded 11:92 of fixed salts. 
These consisted of : 


Chloride of sodium : é : : 6°82 
Carbonate of soda : P . : 1-41 
Sulphate of soda . : : : : 0-84 
Phosphate of soda : : : ; 0-94 
Carbonate of lime . : : : 0-16 
Phosphate of lime 2 ; : : 0°60 
Sulphate of lime : : : . 0°22 
Peroxide of iron . : : f : 0°60] 


2B. Febris continua. 


1. Prodromi febris continue. The blood exhibits similar 
changes in the progress of continued fever, as in typhus. 
Andral and Gavarret have carefully analysed the blood im this 
disease, and give the following account of their researches. 

They made nine analyses of the blood of six persons. The 
fibrin did not exceed the normal amount in any instance, (in 
one, however, it amounted to 3:2) ; in three cases it was a little 
below the standard, but exceeded 2; in two cases it was rather 
less than 2; and in one case as low as 1°6. The amount of 
blood-corpuscles was lower im only two cases than in normal 
blood; in the others it was more or less increased, and in the 
blood in which the fibrin amounted to only 1:6, the corpuscles 
amounted to 157°7, which, if the fibrin were estimated at 3, 
would give the enormous amount of 296. We have only one 
instance in typhoid blood of so high a proportion. The amount 
of the residue of the serum is increased, rather than diminished, 
and the same is the case with the solid constituents of the 
blood generally. 


296 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Their analyses gave the following results : 


Date of Blood- Residue 

Venesection. the disease. Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum. 
Ist Case 1 7 766°2 233°8 3°0 143°5 87°3 
ZAM AMER 1 8 769°5 230°5 1°8 136°4 92°3 
sd, 01 8 761°3 238-7 2:9 142-7 93-1 
ath», 1 15 770°8 229-2 3:2 137-9 88-1 
1 785°6 213°4 2:3 125°4 86°7 
5th case] 2 788°3 211°7 oe 124:0 85:5 
3 790°8 209°2 271 123°0 84:1 
] 744:2 255°8 16 157°7 96°5 
Re eae { 779°7 220°3 21 129°3 88-9 


The inorganic constituents of the residue of the serum 
amounted on an average to 7°5°, which corresponds with the 
proportion in typhoid fever. 


2. Febris continua. Andral and Gavarret made 21 analyses 
of the blood of 11 persons suffering from continued fever. 
They divide their analyses into two series, one containing the 
results obtained when the blood was taken nearly at the ter- 
mination of the disease; the other, when certain inflammatory 
states, as for instance angina, bronchitis, erysipelas, &c. had 
supervened. 

These researches exhibit less of the characters of hypinosis 
than those instituted on the blood at the commencement of 
continued fever, which, in the first series may be due to the 
circumstance of the disease being on the decline; and in the 
second, to the inflammatory complication. 

In both series the fibrin exceeds the normal amount, and in 
both, the amount of corpuscles is, in part, also below the 
standard. 


The following analyses are taken from the first of these tables : 


Date of Blood- Residue 

Venesection. disease. Water. Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum. 

{ 1 4 725°6 3°3 18571 86:0 
Dieta 789-3 3:3 1283 79:1 
1 8 824-9 3°2 82°5 89-4 
ad, \ 2 11 833-7 31 77-2 86:0 
3 Wy 85179 4:2 62:4 81:5 


The blood in the first of these cases was taken from a man 
aged 58 years. ‘The amount of the corpuscles, especially when 
the age of the patient is considered, is very surprising; it is 


BLOOD. 297 


the highest amount ever found by Andral and Gavarret. In 
the second case, the patient was at the same time suffering from 
chlorosis, which accounts for the small number of corpuscles. 

The second table does not give very clear results, on account 
of the inflammatory complications. 


Date of Blood- Residue 

Venesection. disease. Water. Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum, 

1 9 793°8 4°3 114:7 87:2 

1st case} 2 12 801°9 3°6 109°8 85:0 
3 19 810°0 5:0 95°9 89-1 

PAG Soe 1 15 758°9 3°8 160°7 76°6 
BL op 1 20 784°2 2°6 131°0 83:2 
4th ,, 1 804°8 5°4 94:1 95-7 
1 791°4 31 118°6 86:9 

Sule; 2 810-1 4:0 101°8 83°1 
3 824°3 ake 86°9 85'1 


In the first of these cases the fever was complicated with a 
rather severe attack of angina. In the third analysis in this 
case, the blood contained a large quantity of fibrin due to a re- 
newal of the inflammatory symptoms in a rather violent form. 
Slight erysipelas of the face was present in the second case; in 
the third there was swelling and redness of the tonsils; in the 
fourth the fever was complicated with acute bronchitis; in the 
fifth the blood was taken from a woman three months after 
delivery: at the period of the second venesection, some slight 
symptoms of meningitis had appeared. 

Jennings! has analysed the blood of a girl aged 14 years, 
suffering from continued fever. He found it composed of: 


Water : : 3 ‘| 856°0 
Solid residue. : j 144:0 
Fibrin c 6 : : 2°0 
Fat F . : : 30 
Albumen : ‘ : 37°0 
Blood-corpuscles : : 91:0 
Extractive matter : - 3°0 
Alkaline salts. : ; 3°8 
Earthy salts : : : 1:0 


[ Becquerel and Rodier have analysed the blood of 3 men and 
2 women suffermg from ordinary continued fever. The mean 


' Course of Lectures on the Physiology and Pathology of the Blood, by H. Ancell. 
The Lancet, 1840, p. 339. 


298 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


composition of the blood of the 3 men is given in the following 
table : 


Density of defibrinated blood j . : 1056°8 
Density of serum : ; : . 1025°5 
Water ‘ : ; Z ‘ ; 7816 
Solid constituents j ; ; : 218-4 
Fibrin : : : : : i 2°38 
Fat ; : : ; : ; Ley 
Albumen " ; : ; : 65°7 
Blood-corpuscles : ‘ 5 : 142°4 
Extractive matters and salts ; : : 58 


Here we see that the fibrin and albumen remain nearly nor- 
mal, while the corpuscles, instead of diminishing, are slightly 
above the average (their numbers being 146, 142, and 138.) 
The fatty matters and salts offered no peculiarity. 

They give the following particulars regarding the blood of 
the two female patients. 

The corpuscles were augmented (135°5) m the first case; 
normal (125°5) in the second: fibrin normal (1:9) in the first; 
doubled (3°6) in the second: albumen normal (73 and 70) in 
both. The serum was turbid in both cases. In the case in 
which the corpuscles were 125, the clot was firm and resisting, 
in the other it was soft and diffluent. | 


In the followmg exanthemata, which, with true erysipelas, 
constitute Schénlein’s family of Erysipelacea, we find that the 
composition of the blood is very similar to what it is m con- 
tinued fever; the characters of hypimosis are much less marked 
than in the typhoid form. Some analyses give negative results, 
while in others the tendency of the constitution of the blood is 
more towards hyperinosis than hypinosis. 

The maximum of fibrin amounts to only 4:4, against which 
there is a minimum of 1:1. In the majority of cases it does 
not differ much from Lecanu’s normal average 3. 

The blood-corpuscles are increased in a less degree in variola 
and varioloid, than in scarlatina and rubeola. 


Variola et morb. varioloid. 


The blood was analysed by Andral and Gavarret in 5 cases of 
true variola and 2 of varioloid disease. 
In all the cases of variola the eruption was confluent. The 


BLOOD. 299 


blood-corpuscles differed but little from their normal standard, 
but the quantity of fibrin varied considerably, although the in- 
crease above the normal mean was only small. It is worthy 
of remark that the quantity of fibrin appears to increase, al- 
though only slightly, by repeated bleeding; a circumstance which, 
according to Andral and Gavarret, characterizes the phlogoses. 

This may be due to the inflammatory state of the skin in 
this disease, although we do not perceive a similar occurrence 
in typhoid fever, in which the mucous surface of the intestine 
is in a somewhat similar state. 

Their analyses gave the following results : 


Venesection. Water. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 
1 771°5 4-4 120°6 103°5 
Ist ewe 780°8 2:9 110°2 10671 
3 820-2 3:2 94°6 82:0 
1 CIES 3°0 114°3 91-4 
2 803°9 3:2 92°6 100°3 
Ht Sasa es 811:8 3-0 88-4 96:8 
4 817°3 3°3 87:0 92°4 
Sd 1 781°4 2°6 127:9 88°1 
2 792°0 3°5 124°4 80:1 
ae 1 796°0 4°] 126°5 76°4 
2 792°7 2°0 124-9 80:4 
BN or MT 805°0 29 98°8 92°3 


The residue of the serum contained on an average 7:0° of 
inorganic constituents. 

In the first case, the first bleeding was ordered at the com- 
mencement of the disease, during the febrile period ; the second 
at the commencement, and the third at about the middle of 
the eruptive stage. In the second case, the first bleeding was 
ordered some days before the appearance of the disease; the 
second during the fever; the third on the third day of the 
eruption, and the fourth on the sixteenth day of the eruption. 
In the third case, the first bleeding was ordered at the com- 
mencement of the eruption; the second during the suppurative 
stage. In the fourth case, both venesections were prescribed 
during the height of the eruption. In the fifth case the pus- 
tules were filled with blood (variole hémorragique:) the bleed- 
ing was ordered when the eruption was at its height. 


The analyses of blood in varioloid gave the following results : 
Water. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 
785°6 23 120°3 91°8 
78271 2°4 125°8 89°7 


300 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The residue of the serum contained 7-62 of inorganic matter 
in the second analysis. 

In the first instance the bleeding was performed on the 3d 
day; and in the second case on the 2d day of the eruption. 


Rubeola. (Morbilli.) 


Andral and Gavarret found that in the measles the fibrin 
never exceeded, nor did it ever fall much below Lecanuw’s aver- 
age. In most cases the corpuscles were above the normal 
standard. I quote the following analyses from their researches : 


Day of Blood- Residue 
Venesection. eruption. Water. Fibrin. corpuscles, of serum. 
Ist Case 1 3 760-2 2°6 146-6 90°6 
AGL Meg 2 766:9 3°0 140-9 89-2 
Bl gg ih 3 781°6 2°6 1371 78°7 
1 2 786°7 2°5 137°5 73°4 

4th _,, 
2 = 795°8 2°7 131-6 70-1 
1 2 192-1 2°4 118°6 86:9 

in 
2 ~ 823-2 34 93°3 801 


The residue of the serum contained on an average 8°42 of in- 
organic constituents, which was one of the highest amounts 
that occurred in the course of their researches. 

The patient in case 3 had also been bled on the first day of 
the eruption: the second bleeding in case 4 was performed on 
the second day after the disappearance of the eruption. 

The young woman from whom the blood in case 5 was taken, 
presented so strongly the general appearances of anzmia in 
consequence of excessive menstruation, that the amount of cor- 
puscles, 118°6, may be regarded as very high: the second ve- 
nesection was performed after the disappearance of the eruption, 
and when symptoms of tubercular phthisis were very apparent. 


Scarlatina. 


Andral and Gavarret have made four analyses of the blood 
of three persons suffering from scarlatina. Two of these ana- 
lyses decidedly indicate the character of hypinosis, although 
not in a very marked degree. The two other cases present 
differences which will be presently explained : 


Venesection. Water. Fibrin. Blood-corpuseles. | Residue of serum. 
ist Case { 1 761°5 371 146-0 89°4 
2 782°6 4:0 124°3 89-1 
ZL, 1 776°3 3°5 136°1 84°] 


say 798°3 6'8 112:2 82°7 


BLOOD. 301 


The first bleeding in the first case was ordered on the second 
day of the eruption; the second during convalescence. At this 
period a number of boils had appeared, and there was consi- 
derable fever, to which two circumstances the change in the blood 
is attributable. 

The bleeding in the second case was ordered on the second 
day of the eruption. 

Lecanu! has also made two analyses of the blood in this dis- 
ease, and has obtained nearly similar results. 


Blood of aman _ Blood of a man 


aged 35 years. aged 18 years. 
Water : ; ; : 776°55 770°41 
Blood-corpuscles . : : 144°55 146°80 
Residue of serum _.. ‘ , 78°90 82°79 


The quantity of fibrin was not determined by Lecanu. 


Febris intermittens. 


From the analyses made by Andral and Gavarret of the 
blood in this disease, we are led to conclude that instead of being 
in a state of hypimosis, the blood exhibits rather a tendency to- 
wards hyperinosis. Andral and Gavarret themselves remark, 
that in consequence of the absence of all disturbance in the 
normal functions of the organism during the remission of the 
febrile symptoms, it might be concluded @ priori that no pe- 
culiar changes would be exhibited in the blood. 

The fibrin rises a little above the normal average; the cor- 
puscles, however, with the exception of one case in which the 
bleeding was ordered at the commencement of a second attack, 
fall below the normal proportion. The blood in most of these 
cases was, however, taken from persons suffering from long 
standing tertian or quotidian fever. 

The period at which the blood was taken, whether during 
the remission, the hot or the cold stage, seemed to exert no 
influence on the composition of the fluid. 

It will be sufficient to give the maxima, minima, and mean 
of their researches. 


' Etudes chimiques, ete., p. 97. 


302 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Maximum ; 847°9 221°9 3°8 127°9 91:0 
Minimum 2 7781 15271 30 68°8 71:6 
Mean of 7 analyses 811-4 188°6 33 104°3 80:0 


The loss of a considerable quantity of blood by hemorrhage 
must necessarily influence the composition of the blood re- 
maining inthe system. This will be shown (as we have already 
seen in the Phlogoses) by the diminution of the corpuscles, and 
in most cases of the fibrin also. 

From the blood taken from the body we can usually draw a 
pretty safe inference regarding the composition of the blood 
remaining in the system: a thick, readily coagulating blood 
usually indicates an abundance of the circulating fluid, and 
especially a considerable quantity of corpuscles and fibrin, while 
a thin non-coagulating blood implies a deficiency of those two 
constituents. 

The blood does not, however, exhibit the same changes of 
composition in all the diseases that are classed as hemorrhages. 
On the contrary, it has been shown by Andral and Gavarret 
that the composition of the blood im spontaneous cerebral 
hemorrhage is similar to that which is so characteristic im 
typhoid fever. 


Hemorrhagia cerebralis. 


Andral and Gavarret found that the quantity of fibrin in the 
majority of cases of apoplexia cerebralis, and of the cerebral 
congestion known as the forerunner of that disease, was less than 
in healthy blood; the amount of corpuscles was, however, fre- 
quently absolutely increased, and, excepting in a few cases, was 
larger, in proportion to the fibrin, than in the healthy fluid. 
The solid constituents were generally rather increased; circum- 
stances which all correspond with a state of hypimosis. 

These points are most strikingly seen in certain cases of 
of spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage, when, for instance, in cor- 
respondence with the small amount 1°9 of fibrin no less than 
175°5 of corpuscles were found. 

Andral and Gavarret have made eight analyses of the blood 
of 7 persons suffermg from this affection. Their results are 
given in the following table :— 


BLOOD. 303 


Period from 


Venesection. commencement Water. Solid Fibrin. Blood- Residue 
of disease. residue. corpuscles. of serum, 

Ist Case 1 1 790°9 209°1 2-2 135°9 71:0 
ae se 3 742°3 257°7 19 175°5 80°3 
2 6 779°2 220°8 370 137°7 79°6 

3d 9 1 3 770°8 229°2 2°6 140°6 86:0 
4the 5, 1 4 7918 208°2 3°9 126°5 77°8 
Sth... 1 8 8069 1931 20 1208 70°3 
6the =; 1 - 791°3 208°7 27 122°4 84:2 
4 eee 5 4740 2260 32 123-4 99-4 


The residue of the serum contained, on an average, 7°92 of 
inorganic constituents, which shows that the quantity of salts is 
not diminished. 

The blood in the first case was taken from a woman aged 
60 years, whose feet had been cedematous for six months, in 
consequence of hypertrophy of the heart. 

The second case was that of a woman aged 59 years, who, 
two days before the bleeding, had a severe apoplectic fit: the 
blood exhibited decided symptoms of hypinosis, the fibrin being 
diminished, and the corpuscles and (to a very considerable de- 
gree) the solid constituents being increased. The bleeding was 
repeated three days afterwards, when consciousness had re- 
turned, and at this period the corpuscles were found to have 
diminished in a very striking degree, being about 25° less than 
on the former occasion: the fibrin in the meantime increased 
in a still more rapid proportion. 

Andral and Gavarret observe, in regard to this case, that 
the slight cerebral hemorrhage is not sufficient to account sa- 
tisfactorily for the change in the composition of the blood that 
was observed on the second occasion ; moreover, since the loss 
of blood is not always necessarily followed by a diminution of 
fibrin, it may be asked whether the changed composition of the 
blood, instead of being a consequence, may not have been a 
cause of the disease, since blood deficient in its proper quantity 
of fibrin has always a tendency to escape from the vessels.! 

The change in the composition of the blood is proportional 

1 In opposition to this view it may be stated that blood containing uninjured cor- 
puscles cannot be effused unless there are orifices in the parietes of the vessels, and 
it is questionable whether blood abounding in fibrin can escape through such pores 
at all, while blood deficient in that constituent can pass through with facility. The 


only constituent that can permeate the walls of uninjured yessels is hematoglobulin 
dissolved in liquor sanguinis ; and this solution is not produced by a diminution in 


304 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


to the violence of the attack, as is seen in the third case, where 
the fibrin is only slightly diminished, although the corpuscles 
are considerably increased. 

Consciousness remained in the fourth and fifth cases. The 
increase of the fibrin, while the corpuscles remained stationary, 
is deserving of notice in the former of these cases. In the sixth 
case the hemorrhage had occurred three weeks before the vene- 
section, and was followed by entire hemiplegia of the left side. 
In the seventh case the patient had previously been bled on the 
third day of the attack ; she had retained her consciousness. 

Andral and Gavarret have made 21 analyses of the blood of 
15 persons suffermg from cerebral congestion (the usual pro- 
dromus of spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage). Its symptoms 
are intense headache, giddiness, and a tendency towards epistaxis. 

In the majority of these cases the fibrin was found to be below 
the normal quantity. It twice rose to 3°7, once to 3°5, and once 
to 3:2; im all the other cases it was below the normal amount, 
and it occurred as low as 1°6. 

The amount of blood-corpuscles was pretty near the standard 
average ; in two instances it rose to 152 and 154; and in two 
other cases, (the one a woman of weakly condition, and the 
other a person under the noxious influence of lead,) it fell to 88. 

I shall only give the maxima, minima, and mean of these 


researches : 
Water. Solid constituents. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Maximum . 820°3 259°8 ab7/ 152°3 104°8 
Minimum 5 740°2 179°7 16 88:3 76°4 
Mean . 7871 212-9 2°6 120-0 89-7 
Healthy Mood 790°0 210-0 30 127°0 80:0 


The residue of the serum contained, on an average, 7°9° of in- 
organic constituents, the same amount as in cerebral hemorrhage. 


No causes can be assigned with any degree of certainty to 
the peculiar modification of the blood to which I have assigned 
the term hypinosis. 


the amount of fibrin, since the corpuscles are insoluble in defibrinated serum, pro- 
vided a sufficient amount of chloride of sodium be contained in it. On the other 
hand, the solubility of the heematoglobulin in the liquor sanguinis and its consequent 
property of escaping through the walls of the vessels may arise from an absolute de- 
crease of salts or from an increased amount of water in the blood. Jn the analyses 
quoted in the text the salts were not diminished. 


BLOOD. 305 


The composition of the blood in hypinosis is essentially the 
reverse of that in hyperinosis. The amount of corpuscles is in- 
creased, that of fibrin diminished, and the solid constituents 
generally are increased rather than diminished ; while in the 
phlogoses they are most commonly below the normal standard. 
We have seen in the previous analyses that in proportion as 
the febrile symptoms assumed the form of erethismus, the cha- 
racters of hypinosis became less marked; and, on the other hand, 
that when they took on a torpid type these characters were more 
strikingly developed. 

If we assume that the circulation of the blood is accelerated 
in inflammatory fever, we may regard it as impeded in torpid 
fever. In the one case, the blood abounding in fibrin acts 
as an increased stimulus to the heart ; in the other, the heart 
partially loses its power of action. Its contractions succeed each 
other, it is true, with increased rapidity, but the blood-wave, 
propelled at each systole, is diminished and powerless, and the 
pulse, although much quickened, is small and wiry. 

In consequence of the delay thus occasioned in the motion of 
the general mass of the blood, oxygen cannot act so efficiently 
on it as in the normal state of the circulation, and consequently 
the blood does not possess the bright red colour observed in in- 
flammatory affections, but is dark, and the temperature, in- 
stead of being increased, is often diminished, as has been ob- 
served by Schénlein, in typhus. Hence the metamorphosis of 
the blood, instead of being accelerated, as in hyperinosis, is 
impeded, and consequently the ratio of the corpuscles to the 
albumen is reversed. In abdominal typhus, the amount of the 
corpuscles is rendered more striking, by the diminution of albu- 
men, which constituent is removed from the blood by the profuse 
diarrhoea that accompanies this disease. 

From these observations it is very probable that the primary 
cause of this modification of the blood may, in a great measure, 
be referred to the impeded circulation, and to the deficient 
energy of the heart’s action, which may be regarded as indica- 
tions of the depressed vitality of the blood itself; but at the 
same time the influence of the nerves on its composition and 
on the circulation (although how they act we know not) must 
not be overlooked. 

Finally, it must be observed that the state of hypinosis is 

20 


306 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


not a permanent one; it lasts only for a brief period, till the 
blood either begins to exhibit more vital activity, and to return 
towards its normal condition; or, if its vitality be still more 
depressed, till it assumes the character of spanemia. The pre- 
ponderance of the corpuscles is not absolute (as in plethora!), 
but merely relative, and is due, partly to their hindered con- 
sumption, and partly (as is seen in abdominal typhus) to an 
absolute diminution of the water and the albumen. If the 
fever assume a malignant torpid character, the hypinosis spee- 
dily merges into spanzemia. 


THIRD FORM OF DISEASED BLOOD: SPANAEMIA.2 


The chemical and physical relations of the blood in those 
states in which it is deficient in solid constituents, and especially 
in fibrin and blood-corpuscles, are not yet accurately known. 

We have less frequent opportunities of examining this con- 
dition of the blood, for some of the diseases in which it occurs 
are of rare occurrence, and in the other more common forms, 
the prudent physician avoids as much as possible increasing by 
venesection the general want of blood in the system. 


Chemical characters of the blood. 


The amount of fibrin and of corpuscles is diminished: the 
amount of residue of serum is either normal or diminished: the 
proportion of water is higher than in healthy blood: the amount 
of salts in the serum is sometimes normal, sometimes diminished. 


Physical characters of the blood. 


The blood is very fluid; it is sometimes of a dark or even 
violet, and sometimes of a bright colour; it usually coagulates 
imperfectly, sometimes not at all. The clot is small, soft, diffluent, 
and neither covered with a true nor false buffy coat. The serum 
is generally of a bright yellow colour, but sometimes of a dark 
yellow or even red tint. The specific gravity of the blood is 
considerably diminished. 

' [Becquerel and Rodier have recently shown that this opinion is erroneous, and 
that, in plethora, the amount of the blood is increased, while its composition is un- 


affected. ] 
2 From aipa, blood, and oavdc, or ordvtioc, poor; spanemia, poverty of the 
blood. We prefer this term to anemia, because the latter is used to represent a 


morbid condition of the blood subordinate to spanzemia. 


BLOOD. 307 


This form of diseased blood appears capable of being subdivided 
into two classes: one embracing diseases primarily dependent 
upon the chylopoietic viscera, such as are due to bad food, de- 
ficient and improper formation of chyle, atmospheric influences, 
protracted action of poisonous mineral agents (lead, mercwry and 
its compounds, chlorine, iodine, &c.) ; and finally, to mordinate 
consumption of the blood througha deficiency of the animal fluids. 

The corpuscles, which, as we have seen, are of the utmost 
importance in the blood, are either not produced in sufficient 
quantity, or are consumed in a quicker proportion than they are 
reproduced. The liquor sanguinis, although poor in fibrin, may yet 
contain asuflicient quantity of albumen and salts toprevent the re- 
latively increased quantity of water from dissolving the corpuscles. 

All the diseases arranged by Schonlein under the family 
cyanoses belong to this subdivision. 

The other subdivision embraces certain diseases characterized 
by the peculiar composition of the blood, but in which the pri- 
mary causes of its change of composition are quite distinct from 
those which act in the cyanoses, and are probably dependent 
upon the central nervous system. A peculiar state of the at- 
mosphere (most likely due to certain changes in its chemical 
composition), protracted wars, the effluvia of decaying animal 
matter, &c., are assigned as the external causes of the production 
of these disorders, the principal of which are abdominal typhus, 
petechial typhus, the yellow fever, and the plague. 

In the cyanoses, as also in the malignant (putrid) form of 
typhus, passive hemorrhages are by no means rare. 

It has been asserted that the deficiency of fibrin and of cor- 
puscles renders the blood liable to exude through the walls of the 
vessels. It is clear, however, that the colouring matter cannot 
escape through the walls of the capillaries, unless such a change 
occurs as to render the hematoglobulin soluble in the liquor 
sanguinis, since perfect corpuscles are not capable of passing 
through the uninjured walls of the vascular system. As the blood 
which is discharged by epistaxis in the morbus maculosus Werl- 
hofit (as well as menstrual blood) contains corpuscles, the walls 
of the vessels must be imperfectly closed. Such a form of blood 
appears to occur in the putrid form of abdominal or petechial 
typhus. The hematoglobulin becomes soluble in the liquor 
sanguinis, in consequence of a deficiency in the due proportion 


308 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


of salts, and an excess of water; in this case we may therefore 
speak of a red, bloody transudation. 


I. CYANOSES. 


Anemia and hydremia. 


The blood in anemia is essentially different from the normal 
composition. If the anemia has arisen from excessive loss of 
blood, we may fairly assume that the total mass of that fluid has 
diminished. This, in fact, constitutes true anemia. The com- 
position is, however, also changed ; it is poor in corpuscles and 
in fibrin, because these constituents are not so easily supplied 
as the albumen, which may be obtained at once from the lym- 
phatics. The quantity of the solid constituents is also found 
to be diminished, if the quantity of the corpuscles is (either 
absolutely or relatively) decreased: the quantity of water is there- 
fore increased, which induces the state of the blood known as 
hydreemia. Anzmia and hydremia cannot be well separated, 
as a decrease in the solid constituents is usually produced by 
every loss of blood. 

If the anemia is caused by abnormal or deficient chylifica- 
tion, the proper quantity of liquor sanguinis may be present, 
while the corpuscles and fibrin are diminished: in this case, 
also, the absolute quantity of solid constituents is lessened. 

The decrease of the solid constituents will probably attain 
its maximum under the combined influences of an unhealthy 
humid atmosphere, and improper, unsuitable nourishment. 
Under these circumstances the blood will resemble a viscid, 
light-coloured watery fluid. 

I have not analysed the blood in any cases of anemia, but 
it is usually described as clear, watery, and viscid. The clot, if 
it forms at all, is small, soft, and diffluent; the fibrin, after it 
has been separated by whipping, is not tough and firm, but soft 
and viscid, and in the same state as it occurs in the chyle. The 
serum is slightly coloured and transparent. It has not been 
accurately ascertamed whether the salts are decreased or in a 
normal proportion. 

In hydremia, the serum (as has been observed by Ancell’), 
is usually transparent, and contains only a small quantity of 


' Course of Lectures on the Blood. The Lancet, 1540, p. 667. 


BLOOD. 309 


colouring matter, and probably only a slight amount of salts.’ 
Geddings2 observes regarding the inhabitants of the morasses 
of the Carolinas, in whom anemia, or, more correctly speaking, 
hydremia, is developed in a high degree, that the temperature 
of the body is reduced, that the respiration is short and la- 
borious, and that the pulse is small, tremulous, and frequent. 
In the examination of the heart and larger vessels of anzemic 
persons he found either scarcely any coagulated blood, or else a 
clear red, or greenish dirty-looking fluid, almost entirely devoid 
of solid or colouring constituents, containing but few blood-cor- 
puscles, and which could not be coagulated either by heat or 
by nitric acid. This watery fluid was frequently present in 
considerable quantity. 


Carcinoma. 


In a case of cancer of the left lobe of the liver, and of the 
pylorus, accompanied with atrophy of the spleen, occurring in 
a man, aged 53 years, the blood contained : 

Analysis 31. 


Water 887°2 
Solid constituents : ‘ 112°8 
Fibrin j ; ‘ d 3:0 
Albumen F : : F 55°1 
Blood-corpuscles . : . 45°8 
Extractive matters and salts. 8°9 


Scrophulosis. 

In scrofulous affections the blood is deficient in solid consti- 
tuents, especially in fibrin and in corpuscles. The primary 
causes are probably due to a deficient formation of chyle, and 
to the influence of a moist unhealthy atmosphere. 

Dubois? has analysed the blood of scrofulous persons. The 
blood coagulates slowly, the clot is small, soft, and diffluent ; the 
serum is thin, and often of ared colour. When examined under 
the miscroscope, some of the corpuscles appeared devoid of colour 
at the edges only, some entirely colourless. Their size was not 
materially changed, but they appeared flattened, spherical, or 
cylindrical. Hence we may also infer that there is a deficiency 
in the quantity of salts in the blood of scrofulous persons. 

! The blood-corpuscles would, however, be dissolved in this case. 


? Baltimore, Med. and Surg. Journal, 1834, No. 4. 
° L’Expérience, 1839, No. 87. 


310 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Chlorosis. 


The blood in this disease possesses the general characters of 
this fluid in anemia. The clot is small, sometimes soft, but 
frequently of the normal consistence: the serum is bright, 
slightly coloured, and tolerably clear. The fibrin (separated by 
whipping) is not so dense and consistent as in normal or m inflam- 
matoryblood. Its quantity is normal, or only slightly diminished, 
while the amount of the corpuscles is considerably decreased, and 
the solid constituents generally are less than in healthy blood. 

Golding Bird! states, however, that the blood in chlorosis forms 
just as solid a clot as in inflammatory diseases, and Jennings? 
observed even a buffy coat on the clot of chlorotic persons in the 
absence of all inflammatory symptoms. He accounts for this 
phenomenon by supposing that as, in chlorosis, the amount of 
fibrin is normal, but that of the corpuscles much diminished, 
the ratio of the fibrin to the corpuscles may be the same as in 
inflammatory disorders. 

Andral and Gavarret state that the blood in chlorotic persons 
forms a clot similar to the coagulum in healthy blood, and that 
a buffy coat is not unfrequently observed on it. 

T found, on the contrary, that the clot in chlorosis was very 
soft, and that the fibrin was not so firm as in inflammatory dis- 
eases. These contradictions are easily explained by supposing 
that the chemico-physical characters of the blood change during 
the progressive development of the disease. We can obtain a 
more accurate knowledge of the stage of development of the 
disease from the blood than from many other diagnostic signs. 

I am indebted to Dr. Vetter for the following specimen of 
the blood of a chlorotic girl, which gave, on analysis, the fol- 
lowing results : 


Analysis 32. Healthy blood. 
Water 871:500 795278 
Solid constituents 128-500 204:022 
Fibrin 2:080 2°104 
Fat 27530 2°346 
Albumen 79°820 76°660 
Globulin 30°860 103-022 
Heematin : ‘ 3 1°431 6°209 
Extractive matters and salts 11-000 12-012 


The heematoglobulin contained 4°49 of colouring matter. 





1 Ancell, Course of Lectures, &c. 


The Lancet, 1840, p. 887. 


2 [bid. 


BLOOD. 31] 


The girl was 19 years of age, moving in a respectable station, 
and tall; she exhibited all the symptoms of unmixed, long- 
standing chlorosis, which appeared in this instance to have 
reached its highest development. 

On contrasting it with healthy blood, we find little difference 
in the absolute quantity of fibrin; this constituent is, however, 
extremely large when considered relatively with the corpuscles, 
or with the solid constituents generally. 

The quantities of albumen and of extractive matters and 
salts do not differ very much from the quantities in healthy blood. 

Andral and Gavarret have analysed the blood in several cases 
of this disease. It is different in the incipient and in the fully- 
developed stages of chlorosis. 

In the former the appearance of the patient hardly indicates 
the presence of the disease ; the face is blooming, rather than 
pale, and the blood merely exhibits a very considerable decrease 
of the corpuscles. 

The following numbers give the maxima, minima, and mean 
of 8 analyses, made during this stage. 


Solid Blood- Solid residue 
Water. constituents. Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum. 
Maximum : 816°3 210-0 5:3 112-7 94-1 
Minimum : 790-0 183°7 2°4 iii 76°5 
Mean - . 801-0 199-0 3°5 106°8 88-0 
Meee: Mase at 790-0 210-0 3-0 127-0 80-0 
cording to Lecanu 


When the disease is fully developed the fibrin is slightly di- 
minished, but the quantities of blood-corpuscles, and of the 
solid residue generally are very much lessened. 

Andral and Gavarret have made 12 analyses of the blood of 
9 cases of confirmed chlorosis. 

I shall give the maxima, minima, and mean results of these 
analyses ; omitting, however, the cases that were complicated 
with inflammatory symptoms. 


Water. Solid residue. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Maximum ° 868-7 181°3 3°6 95°7 100°9 
Minimum : 818-5 1315 2°1 38°7 754 
Mean . . 853°2 146°8 2°9 56°7 88:0 


The blood in which the corpuscles attained their minimum, 
had the following composition : 


312 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Water ‘ : , i 868°7 
Solid constituents : ; 131°3 
Fibrin : 5 , : 3°5 
Blood-corpuscles . : . 38°7 
Solid residue of serum P 891 


The amount of corpuscles exceeds, in only three cases, the 
number 60: and in five cases it remains below 50: the fibrin 
remains in five cases below 3, and in the other five cases it 
amounts to or exceeds 8, the maximum being 3°6. The amount 
of the solid residue of the serum is in almost every case rather 
above the normal standard. It follows from 4 analyses, in two 
of which, however, the chlorosis was combined with tubercular 
phthisis and rheumatism, that the residue of the serum contains 
on an average 8°2 of inorganic constituents. The two cases of 
pure chlorosis gave the inorganic constituents of the residue of 
the serum at 8:9, while the two complicated cases gave only 
7:6, so that it appears as if the salts were rather increased than 
diminished in this disease. Others, however, assert that there 
is a diminution of the salts. 


[The following table gives the mean composition of the blood 
of six chlorotic girls, as determined by Becquerel and Rodier : 


Density of defibrinated blood. 1045°8 
Density of serum. . : 10281 
Water ‘ ; 5 : 828°2 
Solid constituents . ; c 171°8 
Fibrin : : : . : 374 
Fat ‘ : : : : 15 
Albumen : , 3 : 72°1 
Blood-corpuscles : : 4 86:0 
Extractive matters and salts ‘ 8-8 


The salts consisted of : 


Chloride of sodium 5 : 31 
Other soluble salts. , : 2°3 
Phosphates : : : : 0°441 
Iron aber tie 0319 | 


My own observations, as well as those of Andral and Gavarret, 
on the blood of chlorotic persons who had been taking ferru- 
ginous medicines, are especially interesting. 

The girl from whom the blood of analysis 32 was taken, took 
2 ounces of the tincture of iron and 64 grains of metallic iron, 
during a period of seven weeks, commencing with the day of 
the first venesection. 


BLOOD. 313 


The blood which was then analysed had the following con- 
stitution : 


Analysis 33. 
Water : 5 , : 8067500 
Solid residue. : 2 193°500 
Fibrin # ‘ : : 1200 
Fat F : ; : 2:299 
Albumen : ‘ ‘ 81-230 
Globulin : . ‘ 90-810 
Hematin : : ; 4-598 
Extractive matters and salts 9°580 


The hematoglobulin contained 4°89 of colouring matter. 


This change in the composition of the blood is truly sur- 
prising, and affords an excellent illustration of the wonderful 
effects of certain remedies. The amount of solid constituents 
is increased by nearly one half, and the increase of the hzema- 
toglobulin is likewise extraordinary. In this, as well as in 
Andral and Gavarret’s observations, the quantity of the fibrin 
is diminished: the proportion of the hematin to the globulin 
is however slightly, although not materially, increased. 

The changes in the condition of the patient kept pace with 
those of the blood. Before, she was pale, and her lips colour- 
less ; now she presented a really blooming appearance. Andral 
and Gavarret have arrived at perfectly analogous results. 

They give two cases, in one of which the iron was admini- 
stered for four weeks, in the other for only three weeks. 


lst Case. 
Previous to use After use 
of the iron. of the iron. 

Water : : : 866°5 818°5 
Fibrin. 3 ; : 3°0 eo 
Blood-corpuscles. é 46°74 95°7 
Residue of serum. 83°9 83°3 

2d Case. 
Water c F 4 852°8 831°5 
Fibrin ‘ ‘ F 3°5 ata 
Blood-corpuscles . c 49°7 64°3 
Residue of serum. : 94:0 100°9 


(The two following analyses were made by Herberger.’ The 
blood in (1) was taken from a chlorotic girl aged 20 years ; in 


' Buchner’s Repertorium, 2d series, vol. 29. 


314 


CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


(2) it was taken from the same girl after an eight weeks’ course 


of chalybeates. 


In both instances the blood formed a tolerably large clot, 
but no buffy coat. 


1. Pe 
Water ‘ 868°340 807-080 
Solid constituents 131-660 192°920 
Fibrin 3°609 1:950 
Fat 4 2°310 2°470 
Albumen 78°200 81°509 
Globulin 36°470 94-290 
Heematin 2 1:590 4:029 
Extractive matters and salts . 8-921 8-236 | 


Andral and Gavarret have likewise analysed the blood of a 


chlorotic man. They made three analyses of it at mtervals of 
four weeks each. During this time he had been taking iron, 


but without any marked advantage : 


Venesection. Water. Fibrin, Blood-corpuscles,. Residue of serum. 
1 81071 3°6 87:9 98-4 
2 8315 3°4 C12 87:9 
3 819-4 37 86:9 90:0 


The blood of chlorotic persons has also been analysed by 


Lecanu! and Jennings.” 


The following are the results of their 


analyses. 
Lecanu. Jennings. 
le 2. Ile 2. 

Water : 862-40 861:97 871:0 852:0 
Fibrin : 5:0 3°0 
Blood-corpuscles . 55°15 51:29 48°7 52°0 
Residue of serum . 82°45 86°74 

Albumen 60-0 78°0 
Raven. 4 - MEE 20 
Extractive matters 30 2°0 
Alkaline salts 76 70 
Earthy salts 1:8 2:0 


Andral and Gavarret consider that the great rarity of cases 
of hemorrhage in chlorotic persons is due to the amount of fibrin 
remaining normal, while the blood-corpuscles are considerably 
diminished. I cannot, however, think that the primary cause 
of ordinary hemorrhage is only to be sought for in the pecu- 
liarities of the blood. That a lesion of the vessels occurs in 


! Etudes chimiques, etc., p. 113. 
2 The Lancet, 1839-40, p. 887. 


BLOOD. 315 


the majority of cases of hemorrhage is obvious from the cir- 
cumstance of blood-corpuscles being found in the effused fluid. 
I cannot easily conceive how blood, deficient in fibrin, should 
more readily escape from the vessels than blood abounding in 
that constituent. 

In passive hemorrhages, the relations of the tissues them- 
selves ought to be taken into account as much as the quality 
of the blood. 


[Becquerel and Rodier analysed the blood of two girls, in 
whom all the symptoms of chlorosis existed, (including the 
bruit de diable in the carotids,) and yet there was no diminution 
of the corpuscles, or of the solid constituents generally. 


Ist Case. 2d Case. 
Density of defibrinated blood =. A 1055:4 1055-4 
Density of serum C . ‘ 1027°9 1027°2 
Water P = : 2 : : 798°6 792°7 
Solid constituents r “ ‘ 5 201:4 207°3 
Fibrin : ‘ 5 5 : . 2°9 aio 
Fat é A 5 < 5 . 1-287 1-980 
Albumen . 5 5 . “ 66:8 70°5 
Blood-corpuscles : 3 3 : 123°8 126°4 
Extractive matters and salts 4 : 6°6 5°8 

The salts consisted of, 

Chloride of sodium c “ o 2°6 39 
Other soluble salts. : “ - 2:2 34 
Phosphates “ “ : : 5 0329 0°427 
Iron Ak saietteiihe tant 0-492 0516 | 


Scorbutus. 


[The blood has been analysed by Mr. Busk in three well- 
marked cases of scurvy that occurred in the Dreadnought Hos- 
pital Ship. Its composition is represented in the following 
table: 


ale ae 3. 4, 
Healthy blood. 

(Busk.) 
Water 5 849°9 835°9 846°2 788°8 
Solid constituents. 150-1 164°1 153°8 2112 
Fibrin c : 6°5 4:5 59 33 
Albumen F 84:0 76°6 74:2 67:2 
Blood-corpuscles . 47°8 72°3 60°7 133°7 


Salts . : 3 9°5 115 10°9 6:8 


316 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


These analyses are sufficient to disprove the general notion 
that in this disease the corpuscles are dissolved in the serum. 
In the blood taken from these scorbutic patients, the separation 
into serum and clot was as perfect and took place as rapidly as 
in healthy blood. In two of the cases the clot was buffed and 
cupped. | 


Morbus maculosus Werlhofii. 


[Porphyra hemorrhagica (Mason Good.) Land-scurvy.] 


I have analysed the sanguineous fluid discharged from the 
mouth of a girl aged 20 years. She was pale and weak, the 
pulse rather excited, breath fetid, and there were red spots on 
the gums and above the uvula, from which blood had appa- 
rently escaped. ‘This sanguineous fluid contained much saliva, 
and some flocculi of mucus, but no fibrin. It had a faint, dis- 
agreeable smell, was of a very dark (almost black) red colour, 
transparent, and deposited an almost clear sediment. The de- 
canted fluid exhibited no blood-corpuscles under the microscope, 
and only a few membranous granules. The sediment was com- 
posed of blood-corpuscles, which, for the most part, were changed 
from the flattened into a spherical form, and of which a small 
quantity were of a pale yellow colour, while the majority were 
almost, if not quite, colourless. Moreover, I observed a con- 
siderable quantity of epithelium-scales and mucus-granules, the 
latter of which were especially visible in the flocculi deposited 
at the bottom. After thoroughly stirring the fluid, it was 
boiled; upon which it coagulated perfectly. I found that it 
was composed of— 


Analysis 34. 
Water 5 ; 4 ; : 948-889 
Solid residue : ‘ ; : STE 
Fat 2 i ; ; , 1377 
Albumen and mucus. 5 ; 34:032 
Globulin ; ‘ : ‘ : 5:610 
Hematin . : : ; A 0-102 
Alcohol-extract, bilin, and salts —. 4:635 
Water-extract, ptyalin, and salts . 2°555 
Biliverdin . ‘ : ‘ P 0°366 


The presence of the bile in this blood, although I was as- 


BLOOD. 317 


sured, both by the patient and the nurse, that there had been 
no vomiting when the blood was discharged, appeared to me of 
importance, since it is well known that a very small quantity 
of bile is sufficient to dissolve a considerable quantity of blood- 
corpuscles. 


[Some observations on the sanguineous contents of the sto- 
mach, and on the blood found in the heart after death from 
this disease, occur in Heller’s Archiv, vol. i, p. 10.] 


Hemorrhages. 


I have already observed that continuous and excessive loss 
of blood must necessarily produce a change in the composition 
of that portion which remains in the system, and that there will 
be a more or less marked degree of spanzemia in proportion to 
the quantity of blood that has been lost. 

Some researches have already been made regarding the 
chemico-physical condition of the blood which is separated from 
various organs in the different forms of hemorrhage. 

T analysed the blood of a woman who was suffering from 
melena. It was a thick fluid, of a dark red colour (nearly 
black), and gave off only a slight feecal odour: dilute acid 
heightened the colour, and caustic potash developed an odour 
of ammonia: it had a strong alkaline reaction, coagulated only 
imperfectly on heating, and threw out an unpleasant smell, not 
however resembling the odour of feces. It did not coagulate 
upon standing, and contained no fibrin. No blood-corpuscles 
could be observed under the microscope, but merely some yellow 
particles floating in a clear fluid. It was very rich in fat and 
in hemaphei. ‘The fat resembled in odour the fat of putrid 
blood. The alcohol-extract, which contained a considerable 
quantity of fat, had a very bitter taste, but when treated with 
sulphuric acid no bilifellinie acid was separated ; consequently 
the presence of bile was undecided. Upon heating the dried 
residue a considerable quantity of ammonia was given off. 


318 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood contained in 1000 parts : 
Analysis 35. 


Water - 5 : : - 2 886-200 
Solid residue 5 5 a . 3 113°800 
Brown fat . s 5 ‘ és : A 9-000 
Albumen S é ; 3 5 : : 39°830 
Globulin “ 3 - 3 ; . 3 36°530 
Hematin . - 0 A : F 3018 
Hemaphein 4 . - C : 5 2°220 
Hemaphein with alcohol-extract, and salts. 9°673 
Water-extract and salts = . 3 F 10°355 


The hemaphzin left upon incineration a trace of peroxide of 
iron, and some carbonate of soda; the alcohol-extract left 
chloride of sodium and carbonate of soda; and the water-extract 
left chloride of sodium, carbonate of soda, sulphate of soda, and 
phosphate of lime. 

The blood discharged in hematemesis is, according to Schén- 
lein’s observations, either clear and very fluid, or black and 
coagulated ; sometimes the two forms are mixed. The taste of 
the blood is bitter if any bile is mixed with it, acid if the spleen 
is affected. 

Ancell! states that vomited blood is often coagulated, of a 
dark brown or blackish colour (in consequence of the acids of 
the stomach) ; in other cases it resembles coffee-grounds. 

In a girl, who brought up enormous quantities of blood, I 
found that it occurred, for the most part, in rather large brownish 
red coagula: the fluid had a faintly acid reaction, but on 
touching a section of a clot with red litmus paper, a blue tint 
was produced. The microscope revealed the presence of cor- 
puscles in a state of good preservation. 

In hematuria the blood is mixed with urine. If the quan- 
tity of the blood is very small, all the blood-corpuscles may be- 
come dissolved, as I have frequently observed. The urine, how- 
ever, coagulates on heating, and the colour disappears after 
boiling, while discoloured flocculi are thrown down. ‘The cor- 
puscles are frequently preserved entire, and form a sediment, 
on allowing the urine to stand for some time. In this case 
they can be detected by the microscope. 


1 The Lancet, Sept. 1840, p. 842. 


BLOOD. 319 


Lecanu! quotes an opinion of Delarive, that a change occurs 
in the colouring matter of the blood that escapes in hematuria, 
since sulphuric acid produces a brown-red instead of a black-red, 
and nitric and muriatic acids produce a white instead of a black- 
red precipitate: alcohol also produces a white deposit. These 
peculiarities in colour (especially the white precipitate) may pro- 
bably be explained by the precipitation of the albumen, while in 
consequence of the dilution of the blood the hematoglobulin 
escapes precipitation. 


Purpura hemorrhagica. 


[The blood has been analysed in a case of this disease by 
Routier2. In 1000 parts he found : 


Water : : 5 : 795:°244 
Solid constituents . : 204°756 
Fibrin é : : . 0:905 
Blood-corpuscles : - 121-701 
Residue of serum ; 5 83°405 


From this analysis it appears that the blood does not assume 
the form of spanzemia. It is placed here im consequence of the 
analogy between purpura hemorrhagica and the preceding 
diseases. | 


Typhus petechials putridus. Yellow fever. Plague. 


The blood in these diseases is described as watery, very poor 
in fibrin, and of a dark colour. If any clot be formed, it is 
diffluent, and very soft : the serum is frequently of a deep yellow 
or brown-red colour, partly from the colourmg matter of the 
bile, and partly from dissolved hematoglobulin. It possesses 
a very peculiar smell, which probably differs in each disease. It 
is by no means improbable that this smell may be produced by 
a volatile salt of ammonia. 

Schonlein has directed attention to the formation of a pecu- 
liar gas that escapes with the blood in the post-mortem exami- 
nation, on opening the large vascular trunks, and which is pro- 
bably developed in the blood during the last stage of the disease. 

Chomel also speaks of the development of a gas in the in- 
terior of the veins. 


1 Etudes chimiques, etc., p. 95. 
* Gazette des Hopitaux, vol. 6, No. 90. 


320 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Ancell! remarks, that in the first stage of the endemic yellow 
fever of the West Indies the blood is of a brighter red, contains 
more salts, and is hotter than in a state of health. As the 
disease progresses, its characters become changed, and towards 
the termination of the malady it loses its saline and animal 
principles, and becomes black and thin; in which state sangui- 
neous effusions occur from the different outlets and tissues. 

Balard and Rochet? have made some observations on the 
properties of the blood in the plague. 

Balard is of opinion that the lymphatic system is first disor- 
dered, and that inflammation, degeneration, and suppuration of 
the lymphatic ganglia and vessels follow. It is not until sup- 
puration in these structures has fairly set in that the venous 
system begins to suffer, and a change in the composition of the 
blood to ensue. 

The blood, when the disease is fully established, exhibits in- 
variably the same properties, whether it is obtained by bleeding, 
or taken from the vessels after death. The arterial and venous 
blood have both the same dark colour; the blood generally 
appears in a peculiar state of solution, and oily drops are fre- 
quently seen on its surface. It frequently has a peculiar smell, 
but never the buffy coat. 

In three patients, aged 19, 23, and 27 years respectively, and 
in whom the blood was drawn between the third and fifth days, 
it was of a dark-brown colour, and in the course of two hours 
a good clot was formed. This, however, is frequently not the 
case, especially when the oily globules appear. The serum was 
reddish, and developed a gas which soon browned sugar of lead 
test-paper, and which therefore contained sulphuretted hydrogen. 
The clot constituted about 40°, and contaimed 33°5 of water, 
‘6 of fibrin, 3°8 of cruor, *25 osmazome, ‘9 of chlorides of sodium 
and potassium, and ‘2 of carbonate of soda and fat. 

Lachéze,? who observed the plague in Egypt, states that the 
blood never coagulates, that it is greasy, and of a black colour. 


1 Course of Lectures on the Physiology and Pathology of the Blood. The Lancet, 
1840, p. 837. 

2 Casper’s Wochenschrift, 1838, No. 12. 

3 Magendie, Lecons sur le Sang. Bruxelles, 1839, p. 200. 


BLOOD. 321 


THE FOURTH FORM OF DISEASED BLOOD: HETEROCHYMEUSIS.! 


I arrange under this form all those states of the blood in 
which a substance is present that does not exist in the normal 
fluid: when, for instance, the blood contains urea (in appreci- 
able quantity), sugar, colouring matter of the bile, fat, or pus. 
The circumstances that lead to the establishment of this diseased 
condition of the blood are far less natural than those which are 
connected with the production of the three former classes. The 
arrangement is artificial, and merely adopted for convenience, 
since this class of diseases has simply this property in common, 
that the composition of the blood is here qualitatively changed, 
whilst in the three former it was only altered quantitatively. 
The putrid form of typhus, the yellow fever, and the plague, 
certainly might have been placed in this class, since colouring 
matter of the bile, and a salt of ammonia, are often found m 
the serum. I have, however, thought it best to place these dis- 
eases in the third class, because, in the first place, the presence 
of the abnormal constituents is not constant; and because, se- 
condly, in consequence of the deficiency in the solid constitu- 
ents of the blood in these disorders, they naturally occur under 
the class spanzemia. 


I. BLOOD CONTAINING UREA: URAEMIA. 


a. Morbus Brighti. 

Andral and Gavarret describe the blood in this disease as 
characterized by a deficiency of albumen in the serum. 

It is evident, however, both from my own and from Christison’s 
researches, that the decrease of the solid constituents of the 
serum is not always the leading character in this disease. I 
have thought it right, therefore, to arrange this disease, on ac- 
count of the nearly constant presence of urea in the blood, 
under the form heterochymeusis. 

Christison,? who has attentively studied the blood in this dis- 
ease, describes it in the following manner: The blood in the 
first stage of the disease coagulates with a thick, firm, and cupped. 
buffy coat. The serum is usually rather turbid, and when shaken 

1 From érepoc and yéipevore. 


* On the Granular Degeneration of the Kidneys, etc., by R. Christison. Edin. 1839. 
21 


322 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


with ether yields a small quantity of solid fat. The decrease in 
the density of the serum at this stage is very remarkable. While 
in healthy blood it is estimated at 1029—1031, it now sinks to 
1020, or even 1019; and im connexion with this circumstance 
we find a large quantity of albumen in the urine. 

Another very remarkable peculiarity is the presence of a cer- 
tain quantity of urea in the serum. 

The following changes occur in the progress of the disease : 
(1.) There is an excess of serum, the clot often constituting not 
more than one fourth of the blood. (2.) The density of the 
serum returns to its normal state, or even exceeds it; some- 
times, however, it remains low, even in the advanced stages. 
(3.) The urea disappears as the disease advances, but usually 
reappears, towards the termination of the case, in even a larger 
amount than previously. (4.) The fibrin, which is increased 
in the first stage, returns to its normal amount as the disease 
advances, and only becomes considerable again during inflam- 
matory complication. (5.) The most remarkable character of 
the blood in the advanced stage is the great decrease of blood- 
corpuscles, which frequently amount to only one third of the 
normal proportion. 

I have analysed the blood in four cases of Bright’s disease, 
and obtained the following results : ; 


Analysis 36, Analysis 37. Analysis 38, Analysis 39, 
Water 830°590 826°891 823-461 839-700 
Solid constituents 169°420 173°109 176°539 160°300 
Fibrin : : 7°046 3°060 5°000 3°500 
Fat 4 : ; 4 2°403 1:860 2°520 2°680 
Albumen 103-694 109°432 97-010 63°400 
Globulin 40°15] 41°300 54°090 71°300 
Heematin : 3°808 4°377 5°100 4:910 
Extractive matters and salts 12°348 13°280 12°819 11°380 


The blood in analysis 36 was taken from aman aged 40, who 
had been treated for some time in our hospital for this disease : 
traces of urea were detected in the extractive matters, by the 
method given in page 183.—The blood in analysis 37 was taken 
from a man aged 20, whose feet and arms were so cedematous 
as to render venesection a matter of some difficulty. Consider- 
able quantities of urea were found in the blood.—The blood in 
analysis 88 was taken from a man aged 30, in whom the dis- 
ease was not so advanced as in the former cases. A consider- 


BLOOD. 323 


able quantity of urea was found in the serum, which exhibited 
a remarkable milk-white turbidity, not caused by fat in a state 
of suspension, but (as shown by the microscope) produced by 
numerous minute solid granules, which, by diluting the serum, 
and then allowing it to rest, were collected, washed, and analysed. 
They were not soluble in alcohol or in ether, but dissolved 
after a continuous digestion in dilute acetic acid, from which 
they were precipitated by ferrocyanide of potassium. Hence I 
concluded that they were fibrin. 

The blood in analysis 39 was taken from a man 36 years of 
age, at the commencement of the disease. Hzematuria had oc- 
curred a few days previous to the venesection. The quantity of 
urea in this blood was very considerable-—The urine was albu- 
minous in all these cases, especially in the last two. 

It is worthy of remark that I have found the hematoglobulin 
more abundant in hematin in these than in ordinary cases. It 
varied from 8% to 9°59. 

Christison gives the following results of analyses of blood in 
Bright’s disease : 


Water. Solid constituents. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


1 8638 136-2 2:8 574 76-0 
2 844-1 155°9 44 57:7 93:8 
3 8083 191°7 3-0 133°9 54:8 
4 831-0 169°0 2°8 VE 55°1 
5 8363 163°7 27 104-6 56°4 
6 8252 174°8 4:3 95°5 75°0 
7 = 859-2 140°8 8-2 75°5 57-2 
8 8853 114-7 6-2 56-4 521 
9 862°8 137°2 3°2 7271 61:9 
10 855°5 144°5 45 42-7 97°3 
11 862°6 137-4 8:5 72:8 5671 
12 887-0 113-0 5°6 49:1 58:3 
13. 841°6 158-4 34 91:6 63-4 
Christison’s average composition of healthy blood being : 
7757 2243 38 1371 83-4 


The blood in the 3d analysis was taken from a robust man, 
aged 55 years, in the first stage of granular degeneration, and 
suffering from anasarca. The urine was very albuminous, but 
not bloody : the serum was milky, and abounded in urea. 

The blood in the 5th analysis was taken from a man aged 48, 
suffermg from anasarca and continued fever. The kidneys were 
in the first stage of granular degeneration; the urine contained 


324 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


a considerable quantity of albumen.—TIn the 6th case, the dis- 
ease had reached the middle stage: the patient was at the same 
time sufferimg from anasarca and chronic catarrh: the blood 
contained urea.—In the 7th case, the disease was in the first 
stage; the patient (a man aged 42) was also suffering from 
peripreumonia and anasarca: the blood contained urea, and 
the urine was albuminous. 

8th analysis. . Blood of a youth aged 16 years, suffering 
from dropsy ; kidneys in the middle stage of granular degene- 
ration. The serum was peculiarly rich in solid constituents, 
and contained a considerable quantity of urea. 

9th analysis. Blood of aman aged 23. The granular degene- 
ration was more advanced, the blood contained urea. 

10th analysis. Blood of a man aged 238, after having re- 
covered from scarlatina. The disease in the kidneys was in an 
advanced stage: the blood was remarkable for the small quantity 
of corpuscles. 

11th analysis. Blood of a woman aged 25 years, suffering 
from anasarea, catarrh, and chronic rheumatism. The dege- 
neration of the kidneys was in a very advanced stage. The 
blood contained urea, and the urme was albuminous. 

12th analysis. Blood of a man aged 32, suffermg from 
pleuritis and anasarca; kidneys in an advanced stage of the dis- 
ease. Blood remarkable for the small quantity of corpuscles, 
and for the large amount of urea. 

13th analysis. Blood of a woman aged 56, with anasarca 
and ascites ; the disease of the kidneys was in a very advanced 
stage. 

These observations entirely coincide with my own, as far as 
regards the decreased quantity of solid constituents, the small 
amount of blood-corpuscles, as the disease advances, and the 
presence of urea in the blood. 

Andral and Gavarret have analysed the blood of three per- 
sons with Bright’s disease. 

The following are their results: 


Venesection. Water. Solid constituents. Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Ist Case 1 801-0 199-0 1:6 127°6 69:1 
Dd Fs Lele ai BOTsG 133-0 2:3 61-6 68-4 
1 849-0 151-0 3:2 82-4 64:8 
ade 1? 836-0 164-0 3-0 88-2 72-7 
3. 845-9 1541 4-2 71-0 78:9 


BLOOD. 325 


The second venesection in the 8d case was ordered at a 
time when the urine was less albuminous than it had been: the 
third was prescribed after a considerable interval, and when the 
urine contained no albumen. 


B. Cholera. 

The researches of trust-worthy observers have shown that 
the blood in cholera exhibits the following peculiarities. The 
quantity of water is decreased, and consequently there is an 
increase in the amount of solid constituents arisimg, in all pro- 
bability, from the watery alvine evacuations; the amount of 
fibrin, as well as the alkaline reaction, is diminished, and urea 
is found inthe serum. ‘The search after this substance has not 
always been successful, but its presence has been clearly shown 
by Rainy,! O’Shaughnessy,? Marchand, and myself. 

The following are the leading physical characters of the blood 
in this disease. It appears to be thicker than usual, and either 
forms a soft, friable clot, or else coagulates very imperfectly. 

Wittstock has made a careful analysis of the blood during 
cholera. In its external characters it resembled healthy blood : 
the clot was of a scarlet red colour on the surface, but darker 
than usual in the interior. 

His analysis gave the following results: serum 36:5, clot 63°58. 
The specific gravity of the serum was 1:0385, and 100 parts 
left 13°75 of solid residue. The clot, when treated with ab- 
solute alcohol, left a residue of 312; the alcohol took up solid 
crystalline, and thin fluid fat, chlorides of sodium and potassium, 
lactates of soda and ammonia, extract of flesh, and traces of 
phosphate of lime. By washing the clot, 68 of fibrin were ob- 
tained. Hence, if we consider the fluid of the clot to be serum, 
we have the composition of this blood expressed as follows : 


Water : ; ‘ 5 740:00 
Solid residue 5 A 260-00 
Fibrin : 5 2 F 11:00 
Albumen . , , ‘ 110°42 
Blood-corpuscles : c 124:46 
Extractive matters and salts 14°10 





1 London Medical Gazette, Jan. 1838. 
2 Ancell’s Lectures on the Blood. The Lancet, 1840, p. 840. 
3 Poggendorf’s Annalen, vol. 49, p. 328. 


326 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


The blood-corpuscles, therefore, fall below Lecanu’s average, 
while the albumen and solid constituents, generally, are consi- 
derably increased. 

Lecanu! has made several experiments upon the quantity of 
solid constituents in the blood in cholera, and has arrived at 
the following results : 

Solid constituents . . 340 251 520 330 
Water 5 660 749 480 670 

O’ Seen hniessy2 in phi ba the serum of the blood in this 
disease, and has detected a considerable quantity of urea in it. 

1000 parts were composed of, 


Water . ‘ : as ‘ 5 3 A 854:0 
Albumen 5 E 5 ; : 3 133°0 
Urea < : : : . A 14 
Crystalline acid’ fluid fat : . : : 1°4 
Chlorides of sodium and potassium . ; : 4:0 
Sulphates and muriates_. ; 2 . 16 
Extractive matter and albuminate of math : 4°8 


I analysed the blood of a woman labouring under a severe 
attack of sporadic cholera. 


1000 parts of blood contained : Aaakyaie dd: 
Water 5 : . 750°530 
Solid syenatients . s 249°470 
Fibrin : ; ? 2:470 
Fat ; : : ; 5°434 
Albumen ‘ ‘ ‘ 114°114 
Hematoglobulin ; : 108°529 
Extractive matters and salts 10°631 


The salts amounted to only 5:41, the average quantity being 
from 7 to 8 in 1000 parts of blood. We see that the water is 
decidedly diminished, but the ratio of the blood-corpuscles to 
the albumen is not such as was formerly supposed.* In con- 
sequence of the suppression of the urinary and biliary secre- 
tions, the blood contained a quantity of urea and of the con- 
stituents of the bile, (bilin and biliverdin.) 


[Heller examined the blood taken after death from the ca- 
rotids of a man who died of sporadic cholera. 


1 Etudes chimiques, etc., p. 106. 

2 Ancell’s Lectures on the Blood. Lancet, 1840, p. 840. 

3 It was conceived that the thick and often imperfectly coagulated blood must be 
very rich in corpuscles, in consequence of the amount of serum thrown off by the 
intestinal canal. 


BLOOD. 327 


It was of a very dark colour and of a tolerably thick con- 
sistency. 

Under the microscope the blood-corpuscles appeared hacked 
at the edges, as if the capsules were partially destroyed, and 
many fat-vesicles were seen. 

The blood was very rich in albumen, in fat, and in urea. 
The fixed salts, especially the chlorides, were increased,’ and the 
fibrin appeared to be beneath the normal standard. There was 
no trace of bilipheein. } 


II. SUGAR IN THE BLOOD: MELITAMIA. 


The blood in diabetes has been found by several observers, 
and in one instance by myself, to contain a larger proportion of 
solid constituents than healthy blood: others, as Lecanu and 
Henry, state that the amount is smaller. According to the 
latter, the quantity of blood-corpuscles is diminished, while 
others assert that they are increased. The fibrin remains at 
about the normal quantity. Rollo was, I believe, the first who 
proved the presence of sugar in the blood during diabetes. 
Gueudeville,?, Vauquelin, Segalas,3 Wollaston, Henry and 
Soubeiran, could not detect it. Bouchardat,t however, directs 
attention to the important consideration that the presence of 
sugar in the blood can only be incontestably proved when ve- 
nesection has been performed two or three hours after dinner, 
and that if blood is drawn in the morning, no traces of it can 
be found: I have corroborated this observation. 

I have analysed the blood in three cases of diabetes. The 
sugar was sought for in the manner described in page 185. 


Analysis 41. Analysis 42. Analysis 43. 
Water é : : : 794°663 789°480 802-000 
Solid constituents 3 : 205°337 210°510 198-000 
Fibrin : ; : ; 2-432 2°370 2:030 
Kate : : ; : 2:010 3°640 2°250 
Albumen. ; : : 114-570 86:000 97°450 
Globulin. ; : ‘ 66°300 98-500 74°350 
Hematin . : : : 5°425 5100 3°700 
Sugar : 2 : 2°500 a trace a trace 
Extractive matters and salts . 9-070 14-900 12-680 





' In consequence of the torpidity of the urinary secretion. 
* Annal. de Chimie, vol. 44, p. 45. 

° Journal de Chimie Médicale, vol. 1, p. 1. 

* Revue Médic. 1839, p. 321. 


328 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood in analysis 41 was obtained from a man aged 50 
years, who had taken a full meal of animal food two hours pre- 
vious to being bled. The 2°5 parts of sugar were not perfectly 
pure; they contained extractive matter, and some salts. 

The blood in analysis 42 was taken before dinner from a 
girl aged 20 years. The presence of sugar was only just per- 
ceptible by the taste, by the sulphuric acid test, and by the 
odour evolved on burning it. The disease in this case was far 
advanced, and it is worthy of remark that, six or eight days pre- 
vious to dissolution, the diabetes sapidus became converted into 
diabetes insipidus. 

This patient made an extremely large quantity of water, which 
was not very abundant in sugar; while the man, aged 50, 
passed only two or three quarts of urine daily, containing a large 
proportion of sugar. 

The blood in analysis 43 was taken before dinner from a 
man aged 30 years, who passed a very large quantity of water, 
which, however, did not contain much sugar. 

I give, in the following table, the analyses of other observers:} 


Bouchardat. Henry and Soubeiran. Lecanu. 
Water : 4 : 808-76 816-50 848°35 
Solid constituents : 191-24 183-50 151765 
Fibrin : : : 1:95 2°43 
Albumen . : : 62°54 55°48 58°47 
Blood-corpuscles : 118-25 120°37 85°18 
Salts - . 8°52 5°57 8-00 


I further add the following analysis of the serum in diabetes, 
made by Rees.?2 


Water . : : : : . ; A : 908°50 
Albumen, with a trace of phosphate of lime and peroxide ofiron 80°35 
Fat : é : : : : : ‘ : 4 0:95 
Diabetic sugar - : : - > 5 ; . 1-80 
Alcohol-extract and urea A ; - : - : 2°20 
Albuminate of soda, alkaline chlorides and carbonates, with 

a trace of sulphates and phosphates. : - - 0°80 


[Some very important additions to our knowledge of the 
pathology of this obscure disease will be found in Dr. Percy’s 
‘Observations and Experiments concerning diabetes mellitus.’ 
Med. Gaz. vol. 1, 1843.] 


1 In addition to those quoted in the text, there is an analysis of diabetic blood by 
Miller in the Archiv d. Pharm., vol. 18, p. 55. Its extreme peculiarity renders its 
correctness doubtful. 

? Ancell’s Lectures on the Blood. The Lancet, 1840, p. 889. 


BLOOD. 329 


III. BILE-PIGMENT IN THE BLOOD: CHOLEMIA. 


Very contradictory statements exist regarding the composi- 
tion of the blood in icterus. 

Orfila! found bile, or at least, biliary resin, in the blood of 
three persons suffering from icterus ; and Collard de Martigny? 
and Clarion3 obtained similar results. Lassaigne* and Thenard,” 
on the contrary, declare that they could never detect any con- 
stituent of the bile in such cases. Chevreul found, in the blood 
of children with icterus, the colourmg matter of the bile, but 
not picromel ; and Boudet and Lecanu have likewise found the 
bile-pigment present in these cases. 

I was fortunate enough to obtain a specimen of the blood 
of a woman in our hospital who was jaundiced to a degree not 
often witnessed. The skin over the whole body was of a yel- 
lowish brown colour, the urine was of a deep, dark brown tint, 
and deposited a considerable quantity of brown and yellow sedi- 
ment. The blood was drawn from the arm in my presence, and 
was immediately whipt. It hardly differed in appearance from 
normal blood, but contained very little fibrin, and the corpus- 
cles speedily sunk. The serum was of an almost blood-red 
colour, but, when only a thin stratum was viewed, it appeared 
of a bright amber tint. Its taste was hardly at all bitter; 
when treated with nitric acid, a whitish yellow coagulum was 
first formed, (consisting of albumen,) which rapidly assumed a 
deep grass-green colour, then, after a short interval, changed 
into a blue, and afterwards intoa pale red; and from that toa 
yellow. 

I precipitated the protein-compounds, by means of alcohol, 
from a large quantity of serum, evaporated the fluid, again 
treated the residue with alcohol, evaporated, and then dissolved 
the residue in water. This aqueous solution must have con- 
tained bilin or bilifellinic acid (if they had been present), besides 
the alcohol-extract of the blood and certain salts, but it neither 
tasted bitter, nor, when digested with sulphuric acid, did it yield 
a resinous substance (a compound of fellinic and cholinic acids 


1 Fléments de Chim., vol. 2, p. 313. 

2 Journ de Chim. Méd., vol. 3, p. 423. 
3 Théses d’Ecole de Médecine, 1811. 

4 Journ. de Chim. Méd., vol. 1, p. 266. 
5 Traité de Chim., vol. 5, p. 111. 


330 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


and dyslysin) ; neither did it contain bilin nor any of the pro- 
ducts of its metamorphosis. On the other hand, I found, in the 
urine of this person, which was brown, very acid, and contained 
a large quantity of uric acid, a very appreciable quantity of 
biliary resin. 

We can only account for the occurrence of this product of 
the metamorphosis of bilin in the urine, by recollecting the 
facility and rapidity with which noxious matters are eliminated 
from the blood. 

My analysis of the blood in icterus gave the following results : 


Analysis 44. 
Water : 5 : : : : 770-000 
Solid residue : . : 5 : ° 230-000 
Fibrin . 4 ‘ : ; : : 1-500 
Fat ° : : 5 ; : : : 2°640 
Albumen. 3 : : : : 4 126:500 
Globulin : : , : : . - 72°600 
Hematin . ° : : : : 4°840 
Hemaphein, with buon 3 : 2°640 
Extractive matters and salts, with bilipheein : 16:500 


The peculiarities of this blood are, its large amount of solid 
constituents, due to an increase, not of the corpuscles, but of 
the albumen, the diminished quantity of fibrin, and the excess 
of colouring and extractive matters and salts. In other analyses 
of the lead I have frequently found it impossible to separate 
the hemaphzein from the hematin, in consequence of the small 
amount of the whole colouring matter; in this instance, how- 
ever, I was able to effect their separation, and it appears that 
the amount of the hemaphzin is about one half of that of the 
hematin, a proportion which is probably larger than occurs in 
healthy blood. The fat was not particularly increased. 

The researches of Denis and Lecanu give, to a certain degree, 
similar results: they show a decrease of the blood-corpuscles, 
but not an increase of the solid constituents. 


Lecanu. Denis, 
Uy Pep 

Water : 5 : : 828-660 830°0 815-00 
Solid constituents : 5 171°340 170°0 185-00 
Fibrin : 5 : : 9:50 
Fat . - : : : 6:00 
Albumen. : : : 76°800 65:0 53:00 
Blood-corpuscles : : 79°620 97-0 93°95 
Salts : ‘ 8:00 
Yellow and blue sumrent : 14°55 


Salts, extractive matters, and fat 14:900 8:0 


BLOOD. 331 


The large amount of fibrin and of fat is remarkable in Denis’s 
analysis: the 14°5 parts of colouring matters were probably 
combined with extractive matter. 

Tiedemann and Gmelin observed that the clot of icteric blood 
was of the ordinary colour. The clear yellow serum contained 
biliphein, and gave, when treated with a small quantity of 
hydrochloric acid, a hyacinth-red colour, which, in the course 
of the night, became green; if an excess of acid was used, a 
hyacinth-red colour was at once produced, which, in the course 
of the night, turned to a blue. When treated with a quantity 
of nitric acid not sufficient to precipitate the albumen, it became 
of a greenish yellow colour; when treated with an excess of the 
acid, it gave a green precipitate, which afterwards became blue, 
and subsequently violet, red, and yellow. 


[Becquerel and Rodier observe that, in icterus, there may 
be a continued secretion and flow of bile, or there may be 
perfect retention arising from biliary calculi, &c. 

In the first case, no peculiar modification is observable in the 
blood, and it is, therefore, unnecessary to quote their analyses ; 
in the second case, there is an accumulation of cholesterin and 
of the other fatty matters in the blood. 

The following analysis was made of the blood of a young 
man, aged 23 years, in whom icterus was developed as a conse- 
quence of indigestion. There was constipation, and no appear- 
ance of bile in the feces. The blood contained, in 1000 parts : 


Water : 740°509 
Solid constituents 259-491 
Fibrin 1:900 
Fat 3°646 
Albumen 66°300 
Blood-corpuscles 164300 
Extractive matters and salts 23°345 


The fatty matters amount to more than double the normal 


quantity, and consisted of : 


Serolin ‘ 0:070 
Phosphorized fat 0°810 
Cholesterin 0°627 
Saponified fat 2°139 


The fatty acids that enter into the composition of the sapo- 
nified fat occur in the bile, combined with soda. The salts 


were normal, 


332 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In another case of a similar nature, the fat amounted to 
4176, consisting of : 


Serolin . : : 3 0128 
Phosphorized fat 5 : 1-159 
Cholesterin ; ‘ é 0°556 
Saponified fat. : 2°333 


In adddition to the large amount of fat in the blood in these 
cases, Becquerel and Rodier observed that the serum was always 
tinged with bile-pigment. ] 


IV. FAT IN THE BLOOD: PIARHAMIA, 


It is well known that free fat in the form of globules is not 
ordinarily seen in healthy human blood. The greater part 
exists in a saponified state, with the exception of cholesterin 
and serolin, which do not saponify with potash. As, however, 
the chyle contains a large quantity of free fat soon after the act 
of digestion, we must conclude that durig the process of me- 
tamorphosis of the blood the greater part becomes converted 
into fatty acids. In certain pathological states of those organs 
which play an active part in the metamorphosis of the blood, 
and whose cells contain a considerable quantity of fat, as the 
liver and kidneys, and during inflammatory affections of the 
peritoneum and of the lungs, so large a quantity of both free 
and combined fat is sometimes found in the blood, that the 
serum appears turbid, opaque, and even milky. 

Marcet found the serum milky in diabetes, Trail in hepatitis, 
Zanarelli in pneumonia, Christison in dropsy, icterus, and ne- 
phritis; moreover, in cholera the blood has been found to be 
very abundant in fat. 

It is hardly necessary to observe that if in such cases the 
serum appear turbid, whey-like, or milky, fat-globules will be 
perceptible under the microscope. 

Christison and Lecanu! have found that this, like most of the 
animal fats, consists of olem, margarin, and stearin: there is 
little doubt but that fatty acids are also present; in fact, Lassaigne 
detected a fat of this nature in the blood, similar to the fatty mat- 


ter of the brain. 
Zanarelli? found the blood of a man with pneumonia similar 


1 Etudes chimiques, p. 116. 
? Journal de Chimie Médic., vol. 2, p. 551. 


BLOOD. 333 


to milk : it separated into a thicker and a thinner portion. Blood 
taken some days afterwards separated into a red clot and into 
amilky serum. Zanarelli is of opinion that this milky blood is 
chyle, which has not been converted into proper blood, in con- 
sequence of the affection of the lungs. Bertazzi analysed it, 
and his results are given below. 

Bertazzi’s Analysis of Milky Blood. 


Water . 3 : . ¢ ; C 3 9050 
Solid constituents . 3 A < ; ; 95°0 
Crystalline fat : : c : : 4:0 
Non-crystalline fat : 4 6:0 
Extractive matter, lactates, and euibeidés 4 : 5:0 
Carbonates, phosphates, and sulphates : : 4:0 


Dr. Sion! observed an instance of milky blood in a case of 
mammary abscess. It contained no fibrin, and when allowed 
to stand a small quantity of colouring matter was deposited. 
The fluid was analysed by Lecanu, and the following are the 
results he obtained : 

Lecanw’s Analysis of Milky Blood. 


Water : : 3 : . : 5 794-0 
Solid constituents : : 4 0 2 206°0 
Albumen . c . : 64:0 
Fat; cholesterin, margarin, sats and fatty acids 117:0 
Salts and extractive matter c . : 25:0 
Hematoglobulin : : : . : a trace. 


In a case of milky serum, which occurred during hepatitis, 
Trail found : 


Water : A : 789 
Albumen . ‘ F . 157 
Oily fat : ; : : 45 
Chlorides and lactates . : 9 


V. PUS IN THE BLOOD: PYOHAMIA. 


According to Gulliver,2 pus is found, and probably is also 
formed, in the blood im all diseases in which there is suppura- 
tion, or even inflammatory swelling, accompanied with hectic 
fever. According to Blandin, blood of this nature, in issuing 
from the vein, does not differ much in appearance from ordinary 
blood ; it is frequently, however, rather darker and more fluid. 
When the blood is inflamed and purulent, a muddy or greenish 


' Lancette fran¢. 1835, No. 49. 
? Lond. and Edin. Phil. Mag. 1838. 


334 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


yellow inflammatory coat is formed, in which, according to Piorry, 
gray granulations of a puriform appearance occur. 

Ammonia has been recommended by Donné as a test for the 
presence of pus in the blood. Blood treated with ammonia dis- 
solves into a clear fluid, while pus similarly treated forms a stiff 
jelly. If, therefore, blood contains pus, it will become more or 
less gelatinous upon the addition of ammonia, and if only a very 
small quantity of pus is present, then we shall only find stripes of 
this stringy substance deposited at the bottom of the vessel. I 
have obtained favorable results from this method when the 
quantity of pus has not been very minute; I will not, however, 
venture to assert that certain results can be obtained by this 
method when the amount of pus is extremely small. 

Gulliver,! Gluge,? and many others have availed themselves 
of the microscope for the detection of pus in the blood, and I 
am inclined to believe that this method gives the most certain 
results. The blood contains, in addition to its own corpuscles, 
the so-termed chyle-corpuscles, which are one half, or even quite, 
as large again as the blood-corpuscles. They do not possess 
the yellow colour of the latter ; they are gray, only slightly gra- 
nular, and possess a sharp, dark, circumscribed edge; their 
rolling motion, on inclining the stage of the microscope, shows 
that they are perfectly spherical, and they do not, like the 
blood-corpuscles, dissolve in water. If, however, the chyle-cor- 
puscles remain in contact with water for some time (from half 
an hour to an hour), they undergo a change; they increase a 
little in size, become clearer, their edge appears less sharp, their 
shape is no longer spherical, but oblong or irregular, and they 
become more distinctly granular, or else dark poimts become 
apparent in the interior, as indications of nuclei. In this con- 
dition the chyle-corpuscles may be easily mistaken for pus-cor- 
puscles ; the latter are, however, usually rather larger than the 
tumefied chyle-corpuscles, and they are paler, their edge is granu- 
lar, or tuberculated, and often very uneven, their shape is round, 
or oblong, occasionally irregular, and they appear slightly gra- 
nular in the interior, indicating from three to five nuclei. In 
very many cases we see two, three, five, or even more pus-cor- 


1 Op. cit. 
2 Fragmente zur Pathologie des Blutes. Anatomisch-Mikroskopische Untersuch- 
ungen. Heft 1. 1839. 


BLOOD. 335 


puscles lying closely attached to each other, while the chyle- 
corpuscles almost always swim about separately. By this means 
I have recognized pus in the blood, both when it has been arti- 
ficially placed there, and on analysing the blood which I took 
from the inflamed vein of a person who had died from phlebitis. 

In one instance, in which I found a considerable quantity of 
pus in the blood, taken from the inflamed vein in a case of 
traumatic phlebitis, I could detect no traces of pus in the blood 
taken from the vena cava and from the heart. 

This is all that I can state from my own experience regard- 
ing the detection of pus in the blood. 


VI. ANIMALS IN THE BLOOD. 


Early authors speak of living animals in the blood. Dr.Chiaje,! 
of Naples, has recently stated that he found the polystoma san- 
guiculum in the expectorated blood of two phthisical patients 
who were attacked with hemoptysis. Some of these small flat 
worms, which are similar to leeches, were floating about in 
the serum, others attached themselves to the sides of the vessel. 
Chiaje characterizes the polystoma in the following terms: “ Cor- 
pus teretiuscnlum, seu depressum, pori sex antici ventrales, et 
posticus solitarius ; habitat in venoso systemate hominis, et pre- 
sertim in ejusdem pulmonali parenchymate.” 


[ Dr. Goodfellow has latelyrecorded a case in which an immense 
number of animalculz were found in the blood of a fever-patient. 
They varied in length from 1-5000th to 1-3000th of an inch, and 
in diameter, which was the same throughout, from 1-40,000th 
to 1-20,000th of an inch. A singular case was observed by 
Mr. Bushman, in which worms of about half an inch in length 
were found in the blood of a boy labouring under influenza. 
—Ancell’s Lectures on the Blood. ‘ Lancet,’ 1840, p. 778.] 


SUPPLEMENT. 


The following analyses of the blood of a pregnant woman (in 
her fifth month), and of menstrual blood, could not be naturally 
inserted among either of our four forms of diseased blood, and 
will find a proper place in a supplement. 


! Omodei, Annali universal., Oct. 1837. 


336 


CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The blood of the pregnant woman formed a slight buffy coat, 
but otherwise differed in no respect physically from normal blood. 
It was composed of : 


Analysis 45. 
Water : , j 5 806-898 
Solid constituents A : 193:102 
Fibrin : ; : ; 2°102 
Fat ; j : 5 3°040 
Albumen . ’ j 5 72°200 
Hematoglobulin : c 96-900 
Extractive matters and salts 7:980 


The chief point of difference between this and normal blood 
is that, in this case, the amount of solid constituents is some- 


what below the standard. 


The proportion of the hematoglo- 


bulin to the albumen is normal; the quantity of fat is rather 


increased. 


[Becquerel and Rodier analysed the blood of nine pregnant 
women, viz. one at the fourth month, five at the fifth month, 
one at five months and a half, one at six months, and one at 


seven months. 


The maxima, minima, and mean results are given in the fol- 


lowing table : 


Mean. Max. 
Density of defibrinated blood : 1051°5 1055°1 
Density of serum 1025°5 1026°8 
Water 801°6 
Fibrin 3°5 4-0 
Albumen 66:1 68°8 
Blood-corpuscles 111°8 1271 
Extractive matters and salts : 6°6 8°7 
Fat : : : : 1:922 2°519 
Consisting of—Serolin . : variable 0108 
Phosphorized fat 0°646 0-863 
Cholesterin : 0-061 0°225 
Saponified fat . 1°195 1323 
The salts in 1000 parts of blood consisted of : 
Chloride of sodium. : ; oye 39 
Other soluble salts. . : 2°4 2°8 
Phosphates 0°425 0°690 
Iron 0°449 0-490 


2°3 
1:8 
0°282 
0°370 


From these analyses they conclude that pregnancy exercises 
a marked influence on the composition of the blood. The 
density both of the defibrinated blood and of the serum is 


BLOOD. 337 


diminished, the water, the fibrin, and the phosphorized fat! are 
increased, while the corpuscles and the albumen are diminished. | 


The menstrual blood was obtained at a period at which it 


contained no epithelium scales. 


It did not coagulate ; it con- 


tained some vaginal mucus, but it was not putrid nor of an 


unpleasant smell. 
It was composed of : 


Analysis 46. 
Water ‘ 785:°000 
Solid constituents 215:000 
Hatea 2°580 
Albumen ; 767540 
Hematoglobulin 120-400 
Extractive matters and salts 8°600 


The most striking peculiarities of this blood are, the total 
absence of fibrin, and the increase of the solid constituents 
caused by the excess of the blood-corpuscles. The hzmato- 
globulin was found to be very rich in hematin, combined, un- 
doubtedly, with a considerable amount of hemaphzin; the 
colouring matter amounted to 8°32 of the hematoglobulin. 


[In an analysis made by Denis, and quoted by Raciborski 
in his Essay on Menstruation, (in Expérience, No. 333,) the 
menstrual fluid was found to consist of : 


Water 825:0 
Solid constituents : : 175°0 
Fibrin ; : ‘ , ; 0°5 
Phosphorized fat. < : : 3°9 
Albumen 48°3 
Blood-corpuscles 63-4 
Mucus ; : 453 
Osmazome and cruorin. : : 11 
Soluble salts. ; : 9°5 
Earthy phosphates and tdi bth: ; 25) 
Peroxide of iron : : 0:5 


Rindskopf analysed the eae tral discharge of a vigorous 
and healthy girl. It was extremely acid, and contained : 


Ist Analysis. 2d Analysis. 
Water 820°830 Water 822-892 
Solid residue 179-170 Albumen and hanatoglobulin 156°457 
Salts 107150 Extractive matters and salts 20°651 





' The phosphorized fat is always abundant in impoverished blood. 


22 


338 CIRCULATING FLUIDS : 


Vogel analysed the menstrual discharge in a case of pro- 
lapsed uterus. It was of an intensely red colour, thick, and 
viscid ; it did not coagulate, but, after standing for some time, 
a colourless serum separated. The fluid obtained at the com- 
mencement of the flux yielded 83-9 parts of water and 16:1 of 
solid materials, and that obtained near the termination yielded 
83°7 of water and 16:3 of solid materials. The serum contained 
93°53 parts of water and 6°47 of solids, of which 0°64 were fixed 
salts. There can be little doubt that there is fibrin in the 
menstrual secretion ; its determination is, however, usually ren- 
dered impossible by the presence of a large amount of mucus, 
which seems to deprive the blood of its power of coagulating. 

Lochial discharge. Scherer has carefully investigated this 
subject. The following is a summary of his results. 

During the first day the discharge was of a brownish red 
colour, viscid, formed no coagulum, but, when collected in a 
vessel, threw down a slimy deposit, consisting of normal blood- 
corpuscles, with which a few partially-dissolved and broken-up 
corpuscles, together with mucus-corpuscles and epithelium scales 
were interspersed. The supernatant serum was clear and yel- 
low, and the microscope revealed in it a large number of fat- 
vesicles. It was devoid of odour, perfectly neutral, and contained 
in 1000 parts : 


Water . ; : : : 740 
Solid constituents i ; 260 


On the second day there were still blood-corpuscles, but they 
were fewer and less perfect, most of them being irregular and 
indentated at the edges; there were mucus-corpuscles and epi- 
thelium scales, but in less number than on the preceding day. 
The fluid still deposited a viscid sediment, but the serum was 
more highly coloured than on the previous day. The reaction 
was neutral; there was afaint odour. 1000 parts consisted of: 


Water : 5 ; P 812-2 
Solid constituents : j 187°8 


The residue, on incineration, yielded 9°35 of alkaline ferru- 
ginous ash. 

On the third day the secretion resembled arterial blood. The 
blood-corpuscles were, for the most part, perfect, and normal 
mucus-corpuscles were observed. 


BLOOD. 339 


In 1000 parts there were : 


Water . 5 3 ; : 760 
Solid constituents. 3 a 240 


The ash amounted to 12:2. There.was an appreciable quan- 
tity of fibrin in this day’s secretion, arising possibly from a 
slight hemorrhagic effusion. 

On the fourth day the secretion was of a dirty brown colour, 
the corpuscles were more or less injured, and there was a dis- 
tinct odour of ammonia. ‘There were numerous mucus-cor- 
puscles, but no epithelium. 1000 parts yielded 191 of solid 
residue, and 9°5 of alkaline salts. 

On the fifth day the discharge was of a greenish yellow colour ; 
it contained very few blood-corpuscles, most of which were more 
or less injured, but numerous mucus-corpuscles arranged in 
groups of 5—-10 together. The reaction of the fluid was alka- 
line, there was a strong odour of ammonia, and 1000 parts 
yielded 93°5 of solid residue. 

On the sixth day the fluid was of a brown colour, smelled 
like putrid cheese, and developed ammonia freely. 1000 parts 
gave 76 of solid residue. For other analyses and further infor- 
mation on this subject the reader is referred to ‘Scherer’s 
Chemischeund Mikroskopische Untersuchungung zur Pathologie.’ 
Heidelberg, 1843. | 


Blood of animals. 


In addition to the 12 analyses of horse’s blood which have 
already appeared, I may communicate the three following : 


Analysis 47. Analysis 48. Analysis 49. 
Water -. : ; : 800°562 818-900 808-809 
Solid constituents : : 199°437 182-100 191-191 
Fibrin : : : 4°747 5100 9-011 
Fat . ; é ; : 5149 2°214 4820 
Albumen . : : 62°276 62°140 103-740 
Heematoglobulin : : 100-291 96:100 58-960 
Extractive matters and salts 12°454 12°310 14°650 


The blood in all these analyses was taken from horses suf- 
fering from malleus humidus. Analyses 48 and 49 refer to 
the same horse, but in the latter case the animal was kept for 
four days without food, being merely allowed water during that 
period. Taking into consideration the deprivation of nutriment, 


340 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


we cannot help feeling surprised at the large amount of solid 
constituents that occur in this analysis ; it can only be explained 
by supposing that a larger amount of fluid was removed from 
the blood by secretion and excretion than was supplied to it by 
the drink. Another peculiarity is the increase of fibrin and of fat, 
and the diminution of blood-corpuscles; this change may, how- 
ever, be readily explained, for as long as the organs of respiration, 
secretion, and excretion, continue to discharge their functions, 
the blood must obviously be changed by them, and this change 
will especially affect the corpuscles. The horse passed little 
urine during this time, but this little was tolerably saturated. 
It was by no means strong at the commencement of the expe- 
riment, but at its termination it was much exhausted, and the 
respiration became gasping. The blood formed a very strong 
inflammatory crust. 

The blood of a healthy ox,! and of a healthy calf, yielded 
the following results : 


Analysis 50. Analysis 51. 
Water . ; ; é 795:000 777°279 
Solid constituents . : 205:000 Pyaar Pal 
Fibrin |. 4 ; : — 2°600 
Fat : ; 4 5 5590 4:19] 
Albumen : 3 ‘ 95°050 83:°925 
Hematoglobulin : 91:710 105-925 
Extractive matters and salts 117181 24°444 


In the former of these analyses, the fluid which was examined, 
was a mixture of arterial and venous blood, from which the 
fibrin had been previously removed: in the latter case the ex- 
tractive matter was not separated from hematin. The number 
105-925 represents the globulin perfectly free from colouring 
matter. ‘ 


[Andral, Gavarret, and Delafond, have published a valuable 
essay on the blood of some of our domestic animals in health 
and disease. They made no less than 222 analyses of the blood 
of 155 animals, viz. 41 analyses of the blood of dogs, 31 of 
horses, 110 of sheep, 2 of goats, 23 of oxen and cows, and 7 
of swine. 


! Berzelius (Thierchemie, p. 98) found, in the serum of the blood of oxen—water 
905, albumen 80, albuminate of soda and lactate of potash 6°2, chloride of potassium 
2°6, and modified albumen with carbonate and phosphate of potash 1°5. 


BLOOD. 341 


In order to give an idea of the composition of the blood in 
the different species of animals, we shall communicate the 
average, maxima, and minima numbers that were obtained. 
For the principles on which the analyses are founded, see p. 241. 
Analyses of the blood of 17 horses gave the following results: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 
Mean . - 4:0 102°9 82°6 810°5 
Maximum. 5:0 112:1 91-0 833°3 
Minimum . 3°0 81°5 74:6 795°7 


Analyses of the blood of 14 neat cattle yielded: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 
Mean . ; 37 99°7 86:3 810°3 
Maximum. 4°4 117-1 93-6 (?) 824°9 
Minimum : 3°0 85°1 82°9 799°0 


The mean results of the blood of 6 bulls (1), and of an equal 
number of milch cows (2), indicated no important differences. 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum, Water. 
(1.) 5 z 3°6 97°4 85'S 813°2 
(2.) : : 3°8 101-9 86°8 807°5 


Analyses of the blood of 6 swine of the English breed yielded : 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 


Mean . 3 4°6 105°7 80°1 809°6 
Maximum . 5-0 120°6 88:7 816°9 
Minimum : 4°] 92:1 73°6 793°9 


The blood of 2 goats gave: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum, Water. 
Mean . c oe 101°4 91-4 804-0 
Maximum . 3°5 105°7 92:0 . 809-2 
Minimum ; 2°6 97:2 90°8 798°8 


Sheep of various breeds appeared to differ slightly in the 
composition of the blood. 


Analyses of the blood of 19 sheep of the Rambouillet' breed 
yielded : 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 
Mean . : 31 981 83°5 815°3 
Maximum . 3°8 109°6 96°6 830°3 
Minimum - 2°6 82°5 74:7 808-7 


The blood of 11 sheep of a crossed variety, (the Naz-Ram- 
bouillet breed,) yielded :— 


‘A variety of the Merino sheep. 


342 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 


Mean . : 2°8 106°1 80°3 810°8 
Maximum 34 123°4 87°7 827-2 
Minimum . 2°3 94°6 74:7 789°8 


The mean results from the blood of these 30 sheep were : 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 


3°0 101°] 82°4 813°5 


The blood of 13 English sheep yielded somewhat different 
results: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 
Mean . : 2°6 95:0 92°4 810-0 
Maximum . 3°3 110°4 97°0 822°1 
Minimum 2-0 83:8 ' 82°6 795°3 


From the blood of 16 dogs! they obtained : 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 
Mean . : 21 148°3 HSS) 7741 
Maximum . 3°5 176°6 88°7 795°5 
Minimum 3 16 127°3 60°9 744°6 


The blood was found to offer considerable differences in 
breeding animals before and after delivery : 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residueof serum. Water. 


Sheep 36 hours before delivery . 2:3 95:0 81:7 821-0 
», 66 hours after delivery . 3°0 106:2 78:2 812°6 
» 24 hours before delivery . 2:9 92-9 84°5 819-7 
»  @2 hours after delivery . 3°5 102°6 86°3 807°6 
Cow 5 days before delivery 5) Oki] 90°9 75°2 830-2 
» 2 days after delivery . ae ok 98°8 73°7 822°4 


That the blood of the lamb differs considerably from the 
blood of the parent sheep, is obvious from the following analyses: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 


Male lamb, aged 3 hours. 5 UY) 108°6 63°3 826-2 
- 24 hours. 5 Us!) 117-0 74:2 806°9 
Bt 48 hours . . 25 103°3 80°7 813°5 
3 96 hours. . 3:0 109°1 68°6 819°3 


The maxima, minima, and average numbers quoted above, 
are sufficient to prove that the blood of different species of ani- 
mals varies in its composition from that of man and of each 


‘Gmelin (Handbuch der theoretischen Chemie, vol. 2, p. 1387) found, in the 
arterial blood of a dog—water 898, and fibrin 2:09; the dried serum contained, 
albumen 88-3, and salts 11:7; the venous blood contained, water 843, and fibrin PARIS 
the dried residue of the serum consisting of albumen 87:5, and salts 12:5. 


BLOOD. 343 


other. This is a point of no slight importance, for it indicates 
the necessity that exists for the determination of the consti- 
tution of the healthy blood in every individual class of animals 
before we can venture to draw any conclusions regarding the 
blood in a morbid state. 

The mean amount of fibrin in one class of animals is as low 
as 2:1, while in another it rises to 4°6 per mille, one being 
considerably lower, the other much higher, than in man. 

The largest amount of fibrin observed by Andral, Gavarret, 
and Delafond, was in swine, the maximum being 5:0, and the 
minimum 4:1; the animals were from 2 to 6 months old, and 
had been restricted for some time to a diet of horse-flesh. In 
a two-year old sow that had been fed purely on vegetables, and 
was very fat, the fibrin did not exceed 4:0. The blood of 
horses ranks next to that of swine in the amount of fibrin, the 
observed mean being 40, the maximum 5:0, and the mmimum 
3:0. Next to horses come neat cattle, the mean amount of 
fibrin in their blood being 3°7, the maximum 4°4, and the mi- 
nimum 3:0. The blood of the bull does not contain a larger 
amount of fibrin than the blood of the cow or the ox. The 
blood of the Merino sheep contains on an average the same 
amount of fibrin as human blood,! namely, 3:0; in the blood of 
English sheep a smaller amount of fibrin was obtained. The 
smallest quantity of fibrin was found in the blood of dogs, the 
mean being only 2-1, the maximum 3:5, and the minimum 1:6. 
The minimum occurred in dogs feeding on an exclusive animal 
diet. From these observations it is evident that each class of 
animals contains in its blood its own standard amount of fibrin. 
The blood-corpuscles are found to occur, for the most part, in 
an inverse ratio to the fibrin ; that is to say, in blood that con- 
tains a large amount of fibrin, the amount of the corpuscles is 
small, and vice versd. It was shown by special experiments 
that there is no connexion between the strength of the animal 
and the amount of fibrin. The amount of fibrin varies consi- 
derably before delivery and immediately afterwards, during the 
milk-fever; in the former case it is at its minimum, in the 
latter it attams its maximum. 

The amount of solid residue of the serum varies between 
75:5 and 92:4. The former number occurs in the blood of the 


! Andral and Gavarret always refer to Lecanu’s standard. 


344 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


dog; the blood of swine, oxen, and Merino sheep, contains 
from 80:0 to 86:0, and the maximum occurs in the blood of 
the English sheep. 

The investigations of these chemists relating to the blood of 
domestic animals in a morbid state, were principally confined 
to sheep suffering from watery cachexia.! We extract the fol- 
lowing analyses from their essay, as illustrative of the changes 
that the blood undergoes in pure hydremia without any 
complication. 


Blood- Residue 

Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum. Water. 

A 5-year old sheep: Ist Venesection . 3:1 44°8 52°7 899-4 
* 2d * 7 oe!) 42:2 50°9 903°9 

A 6-year old sheep: Ist “ 2 ana) 46°7 69:5 880°3 
+ 2d BA A aye 46°6 70°7 879:2 

A 6-year old sheep: 1st A 5) PHS) 491 59°1 889-0 
HA 2d 6% 26 42-4 55°9 899-1 

as 3d “ 5. eeu) 4071 58°1 898-1 

7 4th Ay 2S 67:7 66°6 862°9 

A 5-year old sheep: Ist 5 “) $24 39°4 63°4 894°8 
- 2d 6 Zio 33°3 55°8 908-6 

7 3d = 13°0 29°3 52:1 915°6 

a 4th 1 . 30 14:2 51°9 930°9 


The sheep, whose blood formed the subject of the last ana- 
lyses, died shortly after the 4th venesection. 

In those cases in which the hydremia was associated with 
inflammatory affections, the blood presented very different cha- 
racters, as the following analyses will show: 


Blood- Residue 

Fibrin. corpuscles, of serum. Water. 

A 5-year old sheep: Ist Venesection . 9°6 32°9 Ashi 8784 
a 2d i oh yG:4 30:0 78:6 885:0 

A 4-year old sheep: Ist ap UPS 39°5 94°] 853°8 
Ae 2d An . 10°4 34:2 891 866°3 

be 3d =f 7 877 25:3 92°3 873°7 

A 4-year old sheep: Ist + 5) ky) 60-1 39a 835°1 
“ 2d - ee ak} 54°6 95-9 845°2 


The first of these animals had, in addition to the hydrzmia, 
pneumonia and pulmonary abscess ; the second, acute hepatitis 
and peritonitis; and the third, acute bronchitis. 

The following analyses of the blood of sheep, with various 
disorders, were made by the same chemists : 


' Commonly known as the rot. 


BLOOD. 345 


Blood- Residue 

Fibrin. corpuscles. of serum. Water. 

Sheep with acute bronchitis . , 5 bE 61:0 109-4 824-4 
Ram with softened tubercles 4 Aca: 88°8 101°8 805-0 
Sheep with tubercular pulmonary cavity . 6°2 64:5 106°7 822°6 
Ram with acute enteritis : é 5 GAY 100°7 96°6 796°7 
Ewe with acute metritis ¢ , Ors 100°4 85°4 807°9 
Sheep with chronic peritonitis: Ist Venes. 3:3 63:2 57°6 875°9 
Ft - PAO ay 3) 58°8 52°2 885°8 

3 .; By n 371 52°8 52°6 891°5 


They remark that the changes which the blood of these 
animals undergoes in disease, precisely correspond with those 
of human blood in similar disorders. Thus, in inflammatory 
diseases, there is always an excess of fibrin, and they observe 
that in those animals in which the normal mean amount is 
highest, the fibrin is increased in the greatest proportion; thus 
in the blood of a cow with inflammation of the respiratory or- 
gans, the fibrin rose to 13:0, the normal amount in that animal 
being 3°8. In dogs that were reduced to a very anzmic con- 
dition, the blood-corpuscles fell from the normal mean 148, to 
104, and even down to 83. 

Their attention was, however, principally directed to the 
watery cachexia, or rot in sheep. The most prominent phe- 
nomena of the disease were extreme debility, paleness of the 
mucous membranes, and very frequently serous infiltration of 
the conjunctiva, and of the cellular tissue of the integument of 
the feet. No albumen was detected in the urine. From 
27 analyses made with the blood of 11 sheep, they conclude 
that the amount of fibrin is shghtly affected, but that the blood- 
corpuscles are excessively diminished ; from 78, their normal 
average, they fall to 40, 25, and even 14. The solid residue 
of the serum is diminished, (a point in which this disease differs 
from chlorosis m the human subject,) and the water is consi- 
derably increased. 

The deficiency in the amount of blood-corpuscles appeared 
to vary with the progressing weakness of the animal. By 
proper food, and due attention to atmospheric influences, the 
corpuscles were observed to increase; in one instance they rose 
from 49 to 64. 

From 14 analyses of the blood, im which this affection was 
associated with inflammatory disorders, it appeared that the 


346 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


fibrin increases, and the blood-corpuscles diminish, as in simple, 
uncomplicated inflammations. 

Lastly, they observed that when venesection was frequently 
had recourse to in inflammatory affections, each venesection 
tended to increase the amount of fibrin and of water, and to 
diminish the quantity of blood-corpuscles. 

The following are the results of the first and last venesec- 
tions of a horse that was bled seven times in 24 hours: 


Fibrin. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. Water. 


The Ist Venesection gave. 31 104:0 90°8 802°1 
7th 5 PEG 38°3 60-1 894-2 
Nasse has likewise taken up this subject since the publica- 
tion of Simon’s Chemistry. 
In the following analyses, which are extracted from his paper, 
the extractive matters of the blood and the insoluble salts ap- 
pear to be included with the albumen : 


Water. Fibrin. Fat. are a Albumen. Soluble salts. 
Dog . - 790°50 1:93 2°25 123°85 65:19 6:28 
Cat ; - 810-02 2°42 2°70 113°39 64°46 7°01 
Horse. . 804°75 2°41 on 117713 67°85 6°82 
Ox : . 799°59 3°62 2°04 121°86 66:90 5°98 
Calf 5 5 PARAL 5°76 161 102°50 56°41 7:00 
Goat 3 - 839°44 3°90 0-91 86°00 62°70 7°04 
Sheep. . 827°76 2°97 1:16 92°42 68°77 6°91 
EE 
Rabbit . > 817°30 3°80 1:90 170°72 6°28 
Swine . . 768:94 3°95 1:95 145°35 72°78 6°74 
Goose. . 814°88 3°46 2°56 121°45 50°78 6°87 
Hen - 793°24 4°67 2°03 144°75 48°25 6:97 


The following table represents the composition of the soluble 
and insoluble salts occurring in 1000 parts of the blood of these 


animals : 
Soluble salts : 


Alkaline Alkaline Alkaline Chloride 

phosphates. sulphates. carbonates, of sodium. 
Dog ; - 0730 0:197 0°789 4°490 
Cat : = 10-607 0:210 0:919 5°274 
HOKse yur . 0°844 0°213 1:104 4659 
Ox : - 0-468 0°181 1071 4:321 
Calf a 0997 0:269 1:263 4°864 
Goat . . 0:402 0°265 1:202 5°176 
Sheep. am 20:395 0:348 1-498 4:895 
Rabbit. 5 . OeRYy 0°202 0:970 4:092 
Swine . ‘ 1362 0°189 1-198 4281 
Goose. é 1135 0-090 0°824 4°246 


Hen : ow O:925 0-100 0°350 5°392 


BLOOD. 347 


The insoluble salts were found by Nasse to be combinations 
of peroxide of iron, lime, magnesia, silica, and phosphoric and 
sulphuric acids. The magnesia and silica were not determined 
quantitatively. 

In 1000 parts of blood there were : 


Insoluble salts : 


Peroxide of iron. Lime. Phosphoric acid. Sulphuric acid. 
Dog : OF 14 0117 0-208 0-013 
Cat . 02516 0°136 0:263 0°022 
Horse. . 0:786 0°107 07123 0:026 
Ox ° Oso 0:098 0123 0-018 
Calf : . 0°631 0°130 0-109 0-018 
Goat : . 0°641 07110 07129 0-023 
Sheep. . 0589 0°107 0113 0°044 
Swine . . 0°782 0-085 0°206 0041 
Goose. - 0°812 0-120 0:119 0:039 
Hen : O43 0-134 0°935 0:010 


The only animals in a state of disease whose blood was ana- 
lysed by Nasse were sheep with chronic rot (hydremia or watery 
cachexia), and horses with the glanders. The blood of three 
sheep affected with the disease in question gave the following 
results : 


IN B. Cc: 
Water : : - 952-00 932°30 916-00 
Fibrin ; ; : 2400 3°84 3:90 
Fat P é F B 0°23 0°25 0°30 
Blood-corpuscles . . 10:20 23°40 31°25 
Albumen : 5 : 27°52 32°02 39°45 
Soluble salts F : 7°30 8°19 7°10 


The sheep a was very much reduced, and the blood had 
much the appearance of reddened serum. ‘There was effusion 
into the peritoneum. The sheep B was pregnant, and in bad 
condition ; while the sheep c had been delivered about 10 weeks 
previously, and had been since attacked with dropsy. The salts 
were determined individually, but they presented no peculiar 
deviation from the normal standard. 

The following analyses refer to the blood of two horses a and 
B, suffering from chronic ozcena (the glanders) : 


A. B. 
1. 2. Ss if 2, 
Water . : -. 833°00 860°00 842-00 859:00 816-00 
Fibrin . . : 8:90 7°50 6°60 8°70 7°90 
Blood-corpuscles_ . 65°50 43°30 68-20 44°20 88-50 
Albumen and fat . 86°58 83°68 76°70 82°27 81°65 


Soluble salts . 6:02 9°52 6°50 5°38 5°95 


348 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The individual salts did not differ in any remarkable degree 
from the normal standard. 

We have already had occasion to refer to the labours of 
Enderlin, in connexion with the chemistry of the blood. He 
has recently published the following analyses of the ash of the 
blood of various animals, which are confirmatory of the views 
to which we have more than once alluded, respecting the non- 
existence of lactates in the blood. 

The analyses are calculated for 100 parts of ash: 


Salts soluble in water : 


Ox. Calf. Sheep. Hare.' 
Tribasic phosphate of soda (3Na0O,PO,) 16°769 30°180 13:296 28°655 
Chloride of sodium . ; : : ps E . 
Chloride of potassium : - é 6:120 B68 6G oie tees 
Sulphate of soda : ; F , 3°855 2°936 5°385 3°721 

Salts insoluble in water : 

Phosphates of lime and magnesia 3 4/190 Set 13-920 
Peroxide of iron and phosphate of ditto 8°277 9°277 \ 16°509 
Sulphate of lime, and loss . ’ : 1:449 0829 


The alkaline carbonates in Nasse’s analyses are easily ac- 
counted for by Enderlin’s explanation of the action of the 
atmosphere on the tribasic phosphate of soda. | 


I have analysed the blood of the carp and of the tench. In 
both fishes it was tolerably clear, contained oil-globules visible 
to the naked eye, formed a loose gelatinous clot, from which 
scarcely any serum separated, and yielded, on whipping, a viscid 
sort of fibrin, possessed of little tenacity, and which, on the ad- 
dition of water, separated into minute flocculi, consisting (ac- 
cording to microscopic investigation) of granular masses and of 
minute vesicles far smaller than the nuclei of the blood-cor- 
puscles. The blood coagulated imperfectly on boiling, and was 
remarkable for its small amount of hematoglobulin. The blood 
of bufo variabilis presented exactly similar phenomena; but on 
a chemical examination it was found to be richer in solid con- 
stituents, especially in albumen, than the blood of fishes. It 
was impossible to form a quantitative determination of the fibrin 
or of the colouring matter in the blood of these animals, in 


' In another analysis he found bibasie phosphate of soda. 


BLOOD. 349 


consequence of the aplastic character of the former constituent, 
and the minute quantity of blood that could be obtained. 
The analyses gaye : 
Analysis 52. Analysis 53. Analysis 54. 


Blood of 
Carp’s blood, Tench’s blood. bufo variabilis. 

Water - i c C . 872-000 900-000 848°200 
Solid constituents . : -  128:°000 100-000 151°800 
Fibrin > Z ; : a trace a trace a trace 
Fat - 6 : 5 . 2°967 4°670 9-607 
Albumen : ; a : 83°850 68-800 112°330 
Hematoglobulin : : : 24°635 15-650 29°753 
Extractive matters and salts ; 6°129 2°770 2°429 


On boiling the dried residue of the blood with spirit, after the 
removal of the fat, I obtained tinctures of a deep red colour, 
such as would have been yielded by the blood of the mammalia, 
but they differed in this respect, that they did not become 
turbid on cooling, and the hematoglobulin, instead of being 
deposited in flocks, had to be determined by evaporation. As 
the flesh of these animals differs from that of the mammalia, it 
is by no means impossible that there are corresponding differ- 
ences in the globulin and hematin. The large amount of al- 
bumen in the blood of bufo variabilis may perhaps be attributed. 
to the unavoidable mixture of the blood with lymph, and per- 
haps with mucus. 

Dumas and Prevost analysed the blood of numerous animals. 
The blood was allowed to coagulate, the clot and serum were 
separately dried, and the serum that remained entangled in the 
clot was deducted, and added to the serum that spontaneously 
separated. The fibrin was not determined. 


Water. Solid constituents. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Ape: Simia Callitriche 776:0 224-0 146°1 77°9 
Dog : :  SLOe7 189°3 123°8 65°5 
Cat : : Oo 204:7 120°4 84°3 
Horse . : . 818-3 181°7 92:0 89°7 
Calf : 20:0 174:0 91-2 82°8 
Sheep . : 5 tPA): 170°7 93°5 772 
Goat 2 5 Pe OLa-6 185-4 102-0 83-4 
Rabbit . : 5 tery (AY) 162°1 93°8 68°3 
Guineapig : - (84:8 215°2 128°0 87:2 
Rayen . . 5 ZY 203°0 146°6 56°4 
Heron . ; . 808-2 191°8 132°6 59-2 
Duck. : : 765°2 234°8 15071 84:7 


Hen - : 5 ey 22071 157-1 63:0 


350 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Water. Solid constituents. Blood-corpuscles. Residue of serum. 


Pigeon . 3 5 LYRE 202°6 155°7 46:9 
Trout. : 2 BBs. 136°3 68:8 72°5 
Eelpout . .  886:2 113°8 48-1 65°7 
Eel 3 : . 846°0 154°0 60:0 94:0 
Land-tortoise . 5 hehehe} 221°2 150°6 80°6 
Frog = : . 884°6 115°4 69-0 46°4 


[We have already alluded to the occurrence of animalcules 
in human blood: in the blood of the lower animals such cases 
are very frequently observed. 

Cercaria have been discovered in the blood by Mayer, and 
in his ‘ Dissertatio de Organo Electrico et de Hzematorosis ; 
Bonn. 1843,’ he mentions the following: (1,) Paramcecium 
loricatum s. costatum, in frogs; (2,) Amoeba rotatoria in fishes.1 
Polystoma-like animalcules were described by Schmitz as oc- 
curring in the blood of the horse. (Dissertatio de Vermibus in 
Sanguine. Berol. 1826.) 

Gruby and Delafond have described a peculiar animalcule of 
frequent occurrence in the blood of the dog, and numerous ob- 
servers have noticed similar phenomena in the blood of the horse 
and the ass. | 





The Lymph. 


Our knowledge of the chemical characters of the lymph is 
very deficient. It is described as a viscid yellow, greenish 
yellow, and occasionally red fluid, devoid of odour, possessing 
a slightly saltish taste, an alkaline reaction, and containing from 
3 to 5°72 of solid constituents. The lymph of the human sub- 
ject is described by Miiller, Wurtzer, and Nasse as clear and 
of a yellow colour, while others assign to it the same tint, but 
assert that it is opalescent. It coagulates in the course of 10 
or 15 minutes into a clear, tremulous, colourless jelly, and de- 
posits an arachnoidal coagulum of fibrin, which was previously 
held in solution, as in the liquor sanguinis, and is usually co- 
lourless, although Tiedemann and Gmelin have observed it of 
a reddish tint. The fluid left after coagulation is rather 
thick, resembles almond oil in appearance, and under the mi- 
croscope exhibits, even when perfectly clear, a number of colour- 


1 Valentin (Miiller’s Archiv, 1841, p. 436,) frequently detected this animalcule in 
the blood of the salmon, and once met with it in the fluid of the cerebral ventricles. 


LYMPH. 351 


less corpuscles, apparently smaller than human blood-corpus- 
cles, and far less numerous in it than the blood-corpuscles are 
in the blood. (Miiller.) In addition to albumen, the serum of 
the lymph contains extractive matters and salts: the latter are 
the same as the salts of the blood. 

Gmelin found in 1000 parts of human lymph : 


Water ; F ‘ ; ‘ 2 : 3 961:0 
Solid constituents , : ‘ : ‘ . 39°0 
Fibrin 3 : : : 3 i ; : 2°5 
Albumen . : ; PH 
Chloride of spain, ahowpltates of Notun and soda, 

and salivary matter A F ; j 7 | 
Extractive matters and lactate of aid : é z 6°9 


Marchand and Colberg have analysed lymph obtained from 
a wound on the dorsum of a man’s foot. They found in it : 


Water Z é - - . E . 969-26 
Solid eauiatitiente : 3 i 3 : . 30°74 
Fibrin : ; j 3 , 2 * 5°20 
Albumen . 3 , . 3 : : A 4:34 
Extractive matter ‘ 5 = A ‘ : 3°12 
Fluid and crystalline fat a ; i 2-64 


Chlorides of sodium and potassium, alkaline aulphiates 
and carbonates, sulphate and phosphate of lime, 
and peroxide of iron : . - ; : 15°44 


The amount of fibrin has doubtless been overrated in both 
these analyses, since the coagulum contains lymph-corpuscles, and 
some albumen, in addition to that constituent. In Marchand’s 
analysis it amounts to double the quantity in healthy blood. 
The quantity of albumen is also incorrectly stated, for a fluid 
containing -43° of albumen does not perfectly coagulate on 
heating, as this fluid is reported to have done, but merely be- 
comes turbid, and deposits a few flocculi. The salts in 
Marchand’s analysis amount to more than double the amount 
in the blood. 


[L’Heretier (Traité de Chimie Pathologique, p. 18,) analysed 
the lymph obtained from the thoracic duct of a man who died 
from softening of the brain, and who took nothing but a little 
water for 30 hours preceding his death. It contained in 1000 
parts : 


352 


CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


Water : 
Solid constituents 
Fibrin 

Patan 

Albumen 

Salts 


924°36 
75°64 
3°20 
5°10 
60:02 
8°25] 


Dr. Rees has published an analysis of the lymph taken from 


the absorbents of a young ass immediately after death. 


states its constituents to be: 


Water 

Solid residue 
Fibrin 
Albumen 


965°36 


Extractive matter soluble in alcohol and in water 


Extractive matter soluble in water only 


Salts 
Fat 


34°64 


1:20 


12:00 


2°40 
13°19 
5°85 


a trace. 


He 


The salts were alkaline chlorides, sulphates, and carbonates, 
with traces of phosphates, and of peroxide of iron. 

Lassaigne analysed lymph collected from the absorbents of 
the neck of a horse. He found in it, water 925-00, fibrin 3:30, 
albumen 57°36, chlorides of sodium and potassium, soda, and 
phosphate of lime 14°34. 


[The lymph collected from the absorbent vessels of the neck 
of a horse has been recently analysed by Nasse. He obtained 
in 1000 parts: 


Water ‘ : ; : 5 P 950-000 

Solid residue : : é : 5 50°000 
Albumen, with fibrin : 3 ‘ , 397111 
Water-extract ; F : ; : 3°248 
Spirit-extract : ‘ : : : 0°877 
Alcohol-extract : ‘ ; ; ; 0°755 
Ethereal extract . : : : ‘ 0-088 

Oleate of soda : ‘ ‘ : ; 0:575 
Carbonate of soda . ; : ; ; 0-560 
Phosphate of soda . : : : : 0°120 5611 
Sulphate of potash . : ; é - 0°233 
Chloride of sodium : 4 eal ae 4123 J 
Carbonate of lime : : : : 0-104 
Phosphate of lime with some iron . : 0-095 
Carbonate of magnesia : : . 0-044 £910 


Silica . : 4 a ‘ ; , 0°067 


LYMPH. 353 


It yielded no microscopic indications of urea. Nasse compared 
the lymph with the serum from the blood of a healthy horse, and 
found a remarkable coincidence in the salts of the two fluids : 





Serum. Lymph, 
Alkaline chlorides : ; : 4:055 4-123 
Alkaline carbonates! 3 : : 1130 1°135 
Alkaline sulphates - 2 : 0311 0°233 
Alkaline phosphates : : : 0-115 07120 

5°611 5611 


The lymph, therefore, is a dilute serum, and the salts of the 
blood which make their escape along with the colourless liquor 
sanguinis from the capillaries, either return again in the same 
proportions to each other as they were secreted, into the capil- 
laries, or, which is most probable, they only penetrate into the 
lymphatic vessels. Besides, there bemg more water in the 
lymph than in the serum (in the ratio of 950 to 922) the two 
fluids differ in the ratio of their solid constituents to the salts; 
in the lymph, the salts amount to 11:22, and in the serum to 
9:°65° of the solid residue. It is probably this circumstance 
that causes the much greater viscidity of the serum, which is 
by no means solely dependent on the larger quantity of albumen 
in solution. | 


All investigations with respect to the motion of the lymph 
in the absorbents, and to the origin and formation of the lymph- 
corpuscles, have hitherto been comparatively fruitless. Since 
the primitive cells of the tissues are now regarded as organized 
individuals possessing self-dependent powers of selecting their 
own nutriment, and of discharging the function of secretion, 
we can no longer refer the passage of the lymph into the ter- 
minal points of the absorbents to mere physical endosmosis and 
exosmosis. I do not believe that we can altogether satisfactorily 
refer the motion of the lymph to a vis a tergo. Whether the 
lymph is propelled by a progressive contraction of the absorbent 
vessels, as is maintained by some physiologists, is uncertain ; 
thus much, however, is undoubted, that there are numerous 
valves in the interior of the lymphatics to prevent the regur- 
gitation of their fluid contents. From Weber’s observations, 
it appears that in the tadpole the motion of the lymph is from 
10 to 20 times slower than that of the blood. 


' The oleate of soda is calculated as a carbonate. 
. 


ri) 


2 
v 


354 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


The Chyle. 


True chyle, that is to say, the emulsive fluid that is found 
after digestion in the lymphatic vessels of the intestinal canal, 
is usually turbid, and of a white or pinkish tint, but I once 
observed it of a blood-red colour. It is usually obtained for the 
purpose of analysis from the thoracic duct, when, although 
termed chyle, it is in reality a mixture of lymph and true chyle. 
Chyle, like lymph, coagulates in the course of from 8 to 15 
minutes. The clot is soft, gelatinous, and either white (from 
the entangled fat-vesicles) or red (in consequence of the pre- 
sence of blood-corpuscles.) The fibrm obtained by whipping 
fresh chyle is deficient in consistence, being sometimes merely 
gelatinous, and cannot be washed without suffering loss. The 
serum of the chyle appears, from my observations, (which were 
instituted with the chyle of horses) to contain four different 
sorts of corpuscles, viz. (a) fat-vesicles which occur in large 
numbers in milky chyle; (4) blood-corpuscles, which may be 
numerous, few, or absent, according to circumstances; (c) round, 
colourless, transparent, rarely granular globules, from one half 
to three fourths the size of blood-corpuscles; I have never ob- 
served them in the blood ; they are the true lymph-corpuscles ; 
and (d) round, gray or colourless granular corpuscles, with a 
clearly defined, and not tuberculated outline, half as large 
again, or occasionally even twice as large as the blood-cor- 
puscles ; these are the chyle-corpuscles, which are always found 
in the blood. Fig. 12 exhibits chyle containing numerous 
blood-corpuscles as seen under the microscope. 

Human chyle has never yet been analysed, but several ana- 
lyses of the chyle of the lower animals have been made. Through 
the kindness of Professor Gurlt I have had several opportunities 
of examining the chyle of horses, and I have made three careful 
quantitative analyses of it. The method of analysis was pre- 
cisely the same as for the blood. The fibrin was removed in 
the usual manner, and washed. A known quantity of the serum 
was reduced to dryness, and the water thus determined ; the 
residue was finely pulverized, and a portion repeatedly treated 
with ether, and afterwards with spirit of -915 in order to 
remove the fat. It was then boiled in water. The residual 
albumen was dried and weighed. The spirituous and aqueous 


CHYLE. 355 


solutions were mixed and evaporated, and the residue treated 
with water and dilute spirit, which took up the salts and extractive 
matters, and left the hematoglobulin. The extractive matters were 
dried, weighed, and incinerated, and the salts thus determined. 

The thoracic duct of a horse that had been kept without food 
for some time contained only a very small quantity of a reddish 
fluid, with an alkaline reaction, from which a slight fibrinous 
coagulum separated, and which, on standing, deposited a red 
sediment, while the supernatant fluid was clear and yellow. 
Blood-corpuscles were detected in the sediment, but they were 
not numerous, and, for the most part, altered in form. Lymph- 
corpuscles and a very few chyle-corpuscles were observed ; some 
of the latter were of a remarkable size, and presented a resem- 
blance to conglomerate fat-cells. 1000 parts of this chyle left 
a solid residue of 39°5, of which 20 consisted of albumen, and 
3°2 of oily fat. 

In order to obtain a larger supply of chyle, a horse was fed 
on peas steeped in water; it was shortly afterwards bled to 
death, and the chyle collected from the thoracic duct. 

I obtained upwards of 600 grains of a reddish yellow alka- 
line fluid, which was immediately stirred, in order to separate 
the fibrin. In the serum there was comparatively little fat, 
and only a small number of blood-corpuscles ; while, on the 
other hand, the lymph- and chyle-corpuscles were abundant. 
None of the large conglomerate cells observed in the former 
chyle could be detected. 

The analysis of this chyle yielded : 


Analysis 55. 


Water 5 3 ‘ ‘ . é : .  940°670 
Solid constituents 3 e : 5 , : 59°330 
Fibrin ‘ j ‘ ‘ 3 f F : 0°440 
Fat 5 3 : c F - ; r 1°186 
Albumen . { ; 3 , : ‘ : 42°717 
Hematoglobulin : : : : : ; 0°474 
Extractive matters and salts ‘ F : 8°360 
Ptyalin, and globulin or casein, with gaara of 

sodium and laetate of soda : : : : 1-780 


The analysis of the salts was not carried out. The amount 
of solid constituents, and especially of albumen, is considerably 
larger than in the former instance, but the quantity of fat is 
remarkably small. 


356 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


On a subsequent occasion I fed two horses with oats soaked 
in water, and analysed the chyle thus formed. Both spe- 
cimens were stirred, in order to remove the fibrin: they had 
an alkaline reaction, but one was turbid and milky, containing 
an extraordinary amount of soft but firm fat, while the other 
was of a blood-red colour, and contained a considerable number 
of blood-corpuscles. Both specimens contained lymph- and 
chyle-corpuscles. I have endeavoured, in fig. 12, to represent 
the corpuscles that were observed in the blood-red chyle. 

The analyses of these fluids yielded the following results : 


Analysis 56. Analysis 57. 
Milky chyle. Blood-red chyle. 
Water : 6 : : : - 928-000 916-000 
Solid constituents : . : : 72°000 84-000 
Fibrin “ c 4 é : : 0°805 0-900 
lin) OMe : - : : : : 10-010 37480 
Albumen with lymph- and chyle-corpuscles 46°430 60-530 
Hematoglobulin ; : : : traces 5691 
Extractive matters S - ; c 5°320 5°265 
Alkaline lactates and muriates, with traces 
of lime. : F : : : 7°300 6°700 
Sulphate and phosphate of lime and perox- 
ide of iron 5 ; : : 3 1-100 0°850 


These analyses yield a much larger amount of solid consti- 
tuents than those quoted above: the increase is especially ob- 
servable in the amount of fat in the former, and in the con- 
jomed amount of albumen and hematoglobulin in the latter of 
these analyses. There can be no doubt that these variations 
are due partly to the nature of the food, and partly to the 
manner in which chylopoiesis goes on in aged or diseased ani- 
mals. The salts approximate closely, both in quality and quan- 
tity, with those that occur in the blood. 

Dr. Rees analysed the chyle of the same ass to which refer- 
ence has been already made in page 352. It contained: 


Wateraae ; . ; ‘ : , ; ‘ 5 902 aa 
Solid constituents . : é ; 3 ; : : 97°63 
Fibrin. ‘ A Z : a 2 ‘ ; : 3°70 
Fat F P ; , ;: : . ; : : 36:01 
Albumen ‘ ¢ ; ; 5 : , ‘ ; 35°16 
Extractive matter soluble in alcohol and water : , 3°32 
Extractive matter soluble in water only . : : - 12°33 


Salts (similar to those in the lymph) . f j Z Fall 


CHYLE. 357 


[Nasse! has instituted the following analysis of the chyle of 
the cat. It contained in 1000 parts : 


Water . : : : ‘ ‘ ‘ : - a 90D" / 
Solid constituents : : : F 3 ; : 94°3 
Fibrin : é - i s : : : : es 
Fat : 2 3 : i : : : 32°7 
Albumen, blood-corpuscles, and extractive matters 7 48°9 
Chloride of sodium : é F x : ‘ ; (fos! 
Other soluble salts : : : : ; : : 2°3 
Tron 2 : : : : ‘ F . : : traces 
Earthy salts. : . : : : : - : 2-0 ] 


The elaborate treatise of Tiedemann and Gmelin affords much 
information respecting the influence of diet on the qualities of 
the chyle, and on the modifications that it undergoes in its 
passage through the mesenteric glands. 

Their analyses of the chyle of the horse are given in the 
following table : 


Solid Spirit-extract, Water-extract, 
Water. constituents. Clot. Albumen. Fat. with salts. with salts. 
1 924°3 75°7 17°5 44°45 a trace 7:97 3°60 
2 949°8 50°2 4°2 34°27 a little 8°41 2°33 
3 918°3 81:7 7°38 42°86 16°12 11°83 2°04 
4 967°9 oul 1-9 19°32 a little 9:19 0:94 
5 948°6 57°4 aie | 24:27 12°34 8°33 1°36 
KY 
6 871:0 129-0 small 35°75 87:07 ae 
HY 
7 959-0 41-0 24-60 (2) 16:40 (2) 3-22 


The first four analyses were made with chyle taken from the 
thoracic duct. The chyle in these cases separated into a bright 
red clot, and opaque, milky serum. The fifth analysis was made 
with chyle (taken from the same horse as in analysis 4) 
after its passage through the mesenteric glands, and the sixth 
analysis, with chyle, previous to its passage through them. In 
the former case, the chyle was of a bright red colour, and co- 
agulated perfectly, forming a pale red clot, and a reddish white 
serum ; in the latter, it was white, and coagulated very imper- 
fectly ; in fact, instead of there being a clot, there was merely 
a transparent yellowish film; the serum was white and milky. 


' Wagner’s Handworterbuch, vol. 1, p. 235, article ‘ Chylus.’ 


358 CIRCULATING FLUIDS: 


In the seventh analysis, the chyle was collected from the ab- 
sorbents of the colon. 

The fat in these various specimens of chyle was partly solid, 
and partly fluid; the salts were apparently the same as in the 
lymph. The albumen left about 2° of ash, which consisted of 
equal parts of carbonate and sulphate of lime, together with a 
little carbonate, hydrochlorate, and sulphate of soda. The dried 
clot in analysis 2, yielded 9-072 of brownish red ash, consisting 
of carbonate, sulphate, and muriate of soda, carbonate and 
phosphate of lime, and peroxide of iron. 


Tiedemann and Gmelin have communicated the following 
data regarding the influence of diet on the chyle. Their expe- 
riments were made on dogs, and the chyle was taken from the 
thoracic duct. 

1. After taking cheese the chyle coagulated very slightly. 
The clot was little more than a pale red transparent film, and 
the serum was slightly milky. The chyle contained water 
950°3, clot 1:71, residue of serum 48-0. 

2. After the use of starch, the chyle was of a pale yellowish 
white colour, and coagulated rapidly. It contained water 930-0, 
clot and residue of serum 70:0. The clot was of a pale red 
colour. 

3. After taking flesh, and bread and milk, the chyle was 
of a reddish white colour, and coagulated rapidly, the clot being 
of a pale red tint and the serum very milky. It consisted of 
water 915°3, clot 2°7, and residue of serum 83°8. 

4. After the use of milk, the chyle presented a milky ap- 
pearance, and the clot was transparent and of a pale red colour. 

5. After bread and milk, the chyle contained water 961-1, 
clot 1:9, and residue of serum 37:0. 

6. After flesh, bread, and milk, the chyle was of a yellowish 
red colour, coagulated firmly, (separating into a bright red clot, 
and turbid yellow serum,) and contained water 933°5, clot 5°6, 
residue of serum 60:9. 


Any explanation of the results of these investigations would 
be superfluous, since it is obvious from them, that the food 
best adapted to dogs, viz. a mixture of flesh, bread, and milk, 


CHYLE. 359 


yields the richest chyle, and increases the amount of clot. That 
the fibrin is formed in the chyle from the constituents of the 
food is perhaps less probable than that it is separated from the 
blood in the lymphatic glands; possibly, chyle of different 
qualities may react with varying energy on the lymphatic 
glands. 


END OF VOL. I. 


Fig. 1. 


EXPLANATION OF PLATE I. 


Blood-corpuscles of men, birds, and amphibia. 


. The formation of the blood-corpuscles, from Reichert. 
. Urea precipitated from an alcoholic solution by nitric 


acid. 


. Crystals produced in the alcohol-extract of blood 


devoid of urea, after the addition of nitric acid. 


. Nitrate of urea from blood in morb. Brightii. 
. Urea precipitated from an alcoholic solution, by 


oxalic acid. 


. Crystals produced in the alcohol-extract of blood 


devoid of urea, after the addition of oxalic acid. 


. Crystals of oxalic acid, resembling pure urea. 
. Nitrate of soda. 
. Crystalline groups of nitrate of urea, as it crystallizes 


from an alcoholic solution. 


1. Pus in blood. 
. Chyle from the thoracic duct. 


PRINTED BY C. AND J. ADLARD, 
BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE, 














Eel set 


OF THE 


OFFICERS AND MEMBERS 


OF 


THE SYDENHAM SOCIETY 


FOR THE YEAR ENDING 


MARCH 250n, 1845. 








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Lis. 


OF THE 


OFFICERS AND MEMBERS 


OF 


THE SYDENHAM SOCIETY 


FOR THE YEAR ENDING 


MARCH 25ru, 1845. 


PrestVent : 
JOHN AYRTON PARIS, M.D.,F.R.S., President of the Royal College of Physicians 


Vice-Prestvents ; 
WILLIAM PULTENY ALISON, M.D., F.R.S.E., Professor of Medicine in the 
University of Edinburgh. 
JOHN BLACKALL, M.D., Physician to the Devon and Exeter Hospital. 
Sir BENJAMIN C. BRODIE, Bart., F.R.S., Serjeant-Surgeon to the Queen. 


Str WILLIAM BURNETT, M.D., F.R.S., K.C.H., Inspector-General of the Fleets 
and Hospitals. 


JOHN BURNS, M.D., F.R.S., Professor of Surgery in the University of Glasgow. 


WILLIAM FREDERIC CHAMBERS, M.D., F.R.S., K.C.H., Physician to the Queen 
and to the Queen Dowager. 


Sir JAMES CLARK, Bart., M.D., F.R.S., Physician to the Queen and to H.R.H. 
Prince Albert. 


Sir PHILIP CRAMPTON, Bart., F.R.S., Surgeon-General to the Forces in Ireland. 

ROBERT J. GRAVES, M.D., M.R.I.A., Physician to the Meath Hospital, Dublin. 

Sm JAMES M‘GRIGOR, Bart., M.D., F.R.S. L. & Ed. Director-General of the 
Medical Department of the Army. 

JOHN HAVILAND, M.D., Regius Professor of Physic in the University of 
Cambridge. 

JOSEPH HODGSON, F.R.S., Surgeon to the General Hospital, Birmingham. 

HENRY HOLLAND, M.D., F.R.S., Physician Extraordinary to the Queen, and 
Physician to H.R.H. Prince Albert. 

JOHN KIDD, M.D., F.R.S., Regius Professor of Medicine in the University of 
Oxford. 

BENJAMIN TRAVERS, F.R.S., Surgeon Extraordinary to the Queen, and Surgeon 
in Ordinary to H.R.H. Prince Albert. 


4 OFFICERS. 


Council : 
HENRY ANCELL, Esq. DREWRY OTTLEY, Esq. 
JOHN CLENDINNING, M.D., F.R.S. | JONATHAN PEREIRA, M.D., F.R.S. 
JAMES COPLAND, M.D., F.R.S. BENJAMIN PHILLIPS, F.R.S. 
JOHN DALRYMPLE, Esq. J. FORBES ROYLE, M.D., F.R.S. 
WILLIAM FARR, Esq. WILLIAM SHARPEY, M.D., F.R.S. 
ROBERT FERGUSON, M.D. HENRY SMITH, Esq. 
WILLIAM FERGUSSON, Esq. SAMUEL SOLLY, Esq., F.R.S. 
JOHN FORBES, M.D., F.R.S. THEOPH. THOMPSON, M.D. 
WILLIAM AUGUSTUS GUY, M.B. ROBERT WILLIS, M.D. 
THOS. HODGKIN, M.D., E.R.S. ERASMUS WILSON, Esq., F.R.S. 
SAMUEL LANE, Esq. CHAS. J. B. WILLIAMS, M.D., F.R.S. 


Sir GEORGE LEFEVRE, M.D., Knt.| THOS. WATSON, M.D. 


Treasurer : 


B. G. BABINGTON, M.D., F.R.S., 31, George Street, Hanover Square. 


Secretary for London: 


JAMES RISDON BENNETT, M.D., 24, Finsbury Place. 


To whom all Communications (post paid) are to be addressed. 


Collector for London : 


Mr. J. CanverzLey, 10, Noel Street, Wardour Street, Soho. 


OFFICE OF THE SOCIETY, 
45, Frith street, Soho. 


W. PAMPLIN. Clerk. 


ABERDEEN 


ABERGAVENNY 

Acton, Middlesex . 
ALCESTER 

ALCONBURY, near Huntingdon 
ALDERMASTON 

ALLENHEADS 

ALTON 

AMBLESIDE, Cumberland 


AMERSHAM 
APPLEBY 
ARDROSSAN . 2 
ARMAGH, Ireland . 


ARUNDEL 

ASKERN SPA, Doncaster! 
AuGHNACLOY, Jreland 
AXMINSTER . 

AYLESBURY . 

Bappow, Essex 
BALLATER, Vberdeenshire 
BALLyGAwLey, Co. Tyrone 
Bampton, Devon . 


BANBURY 

Bannon, Co. Cork 
BANFF . 

BARNES 
BARNSTAPLE, Deven 


Barton, near Litchfield 


BaAsINnGSTOKE, Hants 


MEMBERS. 


Adams, Francis, esq. 
Dunn, Robert, m.p. 

Dyce, Robert, m.p. 
Gordon, Peter L. esq. Craigmyle 
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Kilgour, Alexander, M.p. 
Medico-Chirurgical Society 
Robertson, Andrew, esq. 
Williamson, Joseph, M.p. 
Steele, Elms Yelverton, esq. 
Spiers, W. M.p. 

Wyman, George, esq. 
Newton, Lancelot, esq. 
Cox, Francis, esq. 
Maughan, John B. esq. 
White, John Grove, M.p. 
Davey, John, M.p. 

Fell, William, esq. 
Rumsey, James, M.D. 
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Chase, E. Henry, esq. 


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Chippenfield, W. N. esq. 
Rye, A. B. esq. 

Hornibrook, William B. m.p. 
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Emslie, Leith, M.p. 

Scott, — M.p. 

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6 SYDENHAM SOCIETY.‘ 


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BrrMINGHAM ... JLocalSec. FLETCHER, BELL, M.D. 
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LIST OF MEMBERS. 


BIRMINGHAM (continued) 


BisHop AUCKLAND 
BisHor’s WALTHAM 


BLACKBURN 
BLANDFORD . Local See. 
BLETCHINGLEY 


Bopmin, Cornwall 


Bognor B 3 : 
Boupon, Newcastle-on- Tyne 
Boiton-LE-Moors 


BoresDALe, Suffolk 
Bourne, Lincolnshire 
BRADFORD, Yorks . 


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Bray, County of Dublin 


Local See. 


. Loeal See. 


Local See. 


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Dufton, William, esq. 
Elkington, Francis, esq. 
Evans, G. F. M.p. 

Freer, Walter Careless, esq. 
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Hodgson, Joseph, esq. 
Lawrence, Joseph, esq. 

Lee, Rev. James Prince, a.m. 
Melson, John B. M.p. 
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Parker, Langton, esq. 
Pemberton, Oliver, esq. 
Percy, John, M.p. 

Russell, James, M.p. 
Ryland, Frederick, esq. 
Sandys, James, m.p. 
Solomon, John Vose, esq. 
Tarleton, William, esq. 
Taylor, Thomas, esq. 
Tildersley, Henry William, esq 
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Watts, William Croydon, esq. 
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Wright, Samuel, m.p. 
Canny, George, jun., esq. 
Ainge, James, esq. 
MartTLAND, RICHARD, M.D. 
Barlow, Richard, B. esq. 
Cort, John, esq. 

Pickop, Eli, esq. 

Srooner, Epwarp O. esq. 
Boulger, Edward, esq. 
Kempthorn, John, esq. 


Tyerman, D. F. esq., County Lunatic Asylum 


Ward, John, esq. 

Thompson, William, esq. 

Tate, R. esq. 

SHarp, HENRY, esq. 

Ferguson, Fergus, esq. 

Mallett, George, esq. 

Robinson, John Marshall, esq. 
Scowcroft, William, esq. 

Harris, Robert, esq. 
Bellingham, Francis James, esq. 
Meraper, Richarp HENRY, esq. 
Casson, Edwin, esq. 

Casson, Edwin, esq., for Medical Library 
Douglas, James, esq. 

Kay, David, m.p. 


‘Robinson, T. esq. 


Taylor, William, m.p. 
Graham, John, M.D. 
Darby, Thomas, m.p. 


~ 


8 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


BRIDGENORTH 
Bripeort, Dorset 


BRIGHTON . . Local Sec. 


BRISLINGTON, near Bristol 


BRISTOL ; . Local See. 


Broventon, near Manchester 


Thursfield, William, esq. 

Cory, Samuel S. esq. 

Gunn, J. M. esq. 

Keddle, S. S. m.p. 

Selwood, John Henry, esq. 

JENKS, GEORGE SAMUEL, M.D. 

Allen, Thomas, m.p. 

Blaker, H. M. jun., esq. 

Davis, W. St. George, M.D. 
Drummond, George, esq. 

Furner, Edmund, esq. 

Franz, J. C. A. M.D. 

Hood, W. C. m.p. 

Lawrence, John, jun., esq. 

Lowdell, George, esq., for Sussex County Hospital 
Oldham, James, esq. 

Pickford, James H. M.D. M.R.1.A. 
Philpott, Richard P. esq. 

Pocock, Gavin Elliot, esq. 

Plummer, Andrew, M.D. 

Seabrook, B. T. esq. 

Tennent, James, esq. 

Vallance, Benjamin, esq. 

Watson, William Scott, esq. 
Whitehouse, E. O. Wildman, esq. 
Willis, Thomas, M.p. 

Wilson, James William, m.p. 

Wilton, William, esq. 

Winter, Thomas Bradbury, esq. 

Fox, Francis Ker, M.p. 

Fox, Charles Joseph, m.p. 

Swayne, J. G. esq. M.B., Berkeley square 
Bompas, Charles Smith, esq. 
Burroughs, J. B. esq., West Mall 
Clark, Henry, esq. 

Colthurst, John, esq., 11, Mall 

Davis, Theodore, esq. 

Godfrey, James, esq., 13, Bridge street 
Green, Thomas, m.p., 19, Queen square 
Greig, Charles, esq., Infirmary 

Greig, Charles, esq., for Bristol Infirmary 
Hawkins, Thomas, esq., 28, Paul street 
Hetling, George H. esq. 

Humpage, Edward, esq., King square 
Kelson, J. esq., Park row 

Neild, John C. esq. 

Norton, Robert, esq., Dispensary 
O’Brien, John, m.p. 

Rogers, George, esq., 38, Park street 
Sheppard, William Y. esq., 6, Brunswick square 
Smerdon, Charles, esq., 9, Mall 
Surrage, T. L. esq., York buildings 
Symonds, J. A. m.p., 7, Berkeley square 
Tredwyn, — esq. 

Trotman, Dr., York place 

Trotman, Dr., for Medical Library 
Wayte, Charles, M. esq. 

Willett, — esq. 

Wilson, John G. esq. 

Nursaw, Thomas, esq. 


LIST OF MEMBERS. Y 


BupLEIGH SALTERTON, Devon 


Buneay, Suffolk 
BuRFoRD, Oxon 
Burnuam, Norfolk 
BuRNUPFIELD 

BuRNLEY, near Manchester 


Bury St. Epmunps. Loe. Sec. 


Bury, Lancashire 


Buxton 
CaLNE . 
CAMBORNE, Comma 


CAMBRIDGE . . Local See. 


CANTERBURY . Local See. 


CARDIFF 
CARLISLE 


CARSHALTON 

CasTLeBaR, Mayo. 
Castie Town, Isle of Man 
CastLetown, Navan 
Castries Carey, Somerset 
CastLE Doucras . 
CAVAN. 

CHATHAM 


Hunter, Thomas, esq. 

Kendal, Walter, esq. 

Walker, D. Grant, esq. 

Curie, John, esq. 

Cooke, W. R. esq. 

Dennis, A. V. esq. 

Watson, U. esq. 

Coultate, William Miller, esq. 
Dugdale, David, esq. 

Lord, James, esq. 

Thompson, J. M.p. 

Situ, CHARLES C. esq. 

Coe, Thomas, esq. 

Hake, Thomas Gordon, M.p. 

Image, William Edmund, esq. 
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Probart, Francis George, M.D. 
Ranking, William H. m.p. 

Wing, Henry, esq. 

Chadwick, John, esq. 

Fletcher, Matthew, esq. 

Robertson, W. H. m.p. 

Greenup, Richard, m.p. 

Gurney, Edwin Godfrey Scholey, esq. 
James, John, esq. 

Lanyon, R. esq. 

Vivian, Nicholas Duncan, esq. 
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Haviland, John, m.p. 

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ScupDAMORE, EDWARD, M.D. 
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Long, John, esq., Barham 
Matthews, D. esq., Cathedral gate 
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Evans, Thomas, esq. 

Barnes, Thomas, M.D. 

Cartmell, — M.p. 

Elliott, William, m.p. 

Page, W. B. esq. 

Wallace, Edward, esq. 

Dillon, J. M.p. 

Underwood, T. m.p. 

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Taylor, James, M.D. 

Smyth, C.S. m.p. 

Roe, George, M.D. 

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Ely, George, esq. 

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Martin, Richard, W. M.D. 

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10 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


CHEADLE, Staffordshire . - Bourne, John E. esq. 
Newbury, B. esq. 
Tomkinson, Richard, esq. 
CHEADLE, near Manchester . Ockleston, R. esq. 
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Acworth, E. M.p. 
Allardyce, J. M.D. 
Bagnall, G. m.p. 
Bernard, W. R. esq. 
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Cary, Walter, esq. 
Comyn, S. E. m.p. 
Conolly, William, m.p. 
Copeland, G. F. esq. 
Eves, A. W. esq. 
Fowler, Charles, esq. 
Goodlake, Henry Cox, esq. 
Hawkins, Clement, esq. 
Murley, Stephen H. esq. 
Pinching, Charles J. esq. 
Shaw, C. S., esq. 
Thomas, R. C. m.p. 
Thorpe, Disney L. m.p. 


CHERTSEY . 5 - . Harcourt, George, esq. 
CuesHam, Bucks . c . Hodgson, John Bolton, esq. 
CHESTER , . Local Sec. M‘Ewen, W. esq. 


Jones, Phillips, m.p. 
Harrison, John, esq. 
Weaver, John, esq. 
Willmott, A. M.p. 
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Holland, John, esq. 
Walker, Hugh Eccles, m.p. 
CHICHESTER . Local See. Tyackr, NICHOLAS, M.D. 
Buckell, Leonard, esq. 
Caftin, William Chart, esq. 
Duke, Abraham, esq. 
Gruggen, John Price, esq. 
Gruggen, H. M. esq. 
M‘Carogher, J. M.p. 
Woodman, James, m.p. 


CHILCOMPTON : j . Flower, Farnham, esq. 
CHIPPENHAM A - . Colborne, Wm. esq. 
CIRENCESTER 5 ; . Warner, Thomas, esq. 
Cray, Norfolk j ; . Cooke, Corbett, Charles, esq. 
CLITHEROE . ¢ : . Garstang, J. esq. 
CLoGHJORDAN : 5 . Purefoy, — M.p. 

CLONMEL A : : - Kemphill, — jun., m.p. 
COLCHESTER . . Local Sec. Witt1amMs, EDWARD, M.D. 


Bewick, Robert, esq. 

Johnson, Walter, esq. 

Philbrick, Samuel A. esq., for Medical Library. 
CoLERAINE, Jreland, Local Sec. BABINGTON, THomAs H. M.D. 

Macaldin, J. J. m.p. 
Cotton, County of Meath . Mac Loughlin, Edward P. esq. 


CoNGLETON . . Local Sec. Haru, JOHN, esq. 
ConisBorovueH, near Doncaster Fisher, Henry, esq. 
Cork . : Local Sec. PopHam, JOHN, M.D. 


Finn, Eugene, M.p. 


LIST OF MEMBERS, 


Cork (continued) : - Harvey, J. R. m.p. 
Harris, Walter, m.p. 
O’Connor, Denis Charles, M.p. 
Osborn, Thomas, jun., M.D. 
Townsend, E. R. m.p. 


Cotrorp, near Sudbury . . Bailey, W. R. esq. 
CovE . : J . Meade, Horace, N. m.p. 

Scott, David H. m.p. 
CovENTRY . . Local Sec. TRoUGHTON, NATHANIEL, esq. 


Arrowsmith, Robert, m.p. 

Barton. F. W. esq., for Medical Library 

Laxon, William, m.p. 

Peach, William, m.p. 

Phillips, E. esq. 

Tierman, — esq. 
CowEs, Isleof Wight. . Cass, William, esq. 

Hoffmeister, William Carter, m.p. 
CowsrinGe, Glamorganshire . Sylvester, Charles, M.p. 


CowFrotp, near Horsham . Gravely, Thomas, esq. 
CRANBOURNE, Dorset . - Hobson, Smith, esq. 
Smart, Thomas William, esq. 
CRANBROOK, Kent : . Ranger, Frederick, esq. 
CRAWLEY .. ‘ ‘ . Smith, Thomas, esq. 
Crayrorp, Kent . F . Grantham, John, esq. 
CREWKERNE : . . Bowdage, Emanuel, esq. 
CrickLaDE, Wiltshire . - Taylor, Thomas, esq. 
Croypon . : - - Berry, Edward, esq. 
Westall, Edward, esq. 
CUCKFIELD . c : . Byass, Thomas Spry, esq. 
CuLLomPTon, Devon . . Maunder, William H. esq. 
DARLINGTON. : : . Harper, Alfred, m.p. 


Piper, Stephen Edward, esq. 
Strother, Arthur, esq. 


DartrmoutH, Devon . . Burrough, R. F. esq. 
DawuisH  . : - . Cann, W. Moore, esq. 
DERBY . : . Local Sec. Fox, Doueuas, esq. 


Evans, Samuel, esq. 
Fearn, S. W. esq. 
Greaves, Augustus, esq. 
Heygate, James, M.v. 
Johnston, Whittaker, esq. 
Rudkin, J. C. esq. 
Worthington, Henry, esq. 


DEVONPORT . : : . Crossing, T. esq. 
Swaine, P. esq. 
DEVIZES ‘ . Local Sec. SEAGRAM, Wo. B. m.p. 


Trinder, Charles, esq. 

Montgomery, Ronald, esq. 

Anstie, Thomas Brown, esq. 
DISS. : : : . Ward, Henry, esq. 
DONCASTER . : ‘ . Scholfield, Edward, esq. 

Storrs, Robert, esq. 

Hindle, James, esq., Norton 


DorkKING.. : 5 . Curtis, George, esq. 
Dovetas, Isle of Man . . Sutherland, Patrick, m.p. 
Oswald, H. R. esq. 
DownHAM MARKET. . Wales, Thomas G. esq. 
Dover . : - Local See. AstiEyY, EDWARD, M.D. 


Coleman, Thomas, esq. 
Heritage, O. F. esq. 


12 


~ 


Dover (continued) 


SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Droitrwicnu, Worcestershire . 


DROGHEDA 


DronFiELp, Derbyshire 


DuBLIN 


DupDLEY 


DuLWwIicH 
DuMFRIES 


Local See. 


epeesers 


Hutchinson, Scrope, m.p. 

Jones, Edward, esq. 

Mercer, Thomas, esq., Deal. 

Rutley, G. E. esq. 

Soulby, J. m.p. 

Stolterforth, Sigismund, M.p. 

Edkins, Clement, esq. 

Topham, John, M.B. 

Fogarty, — M.D. 

Clarke, Thomas H. esq., Cliff House 
Nicholson, J. esq. 

Law, Ropert, m.p., 54, Rutland square 
Aicken, Thomas, m.p., 68, Marlbro’ street 
Bankes, John T. M.D. M.R.1.A. 

Barker, William, m.p. 

Benson, C. m.p. 

Bevan, Philip, esq., 1, Hatch street 
Bindon, H. Vereker, esq. 

Brady, Thomas, m.p. 

Carmichael, Richard, esq. 

Crampton, Sir Philip, Bart. 

Carte, Alexander, m.p., 62, Upper Bagot street 
Cooke, Howard, m.p., 72, Blessington street 
Cusack, James, M.D. 

Croker, Charles P. m.p. 

Duncan, J. F., M.p. 

Dwyer, Henry L. m.p. 

Evans, John, m.p. 

Green, George, M.D. 

Graves, Robert J. m.p. 

Hargrave, William, m.p. 

Harvey, J. M.p. 

Hutchinson, William, m.p. 

Hutton, — m.p. 

Hunt, P. m.p. 

Irvine, H. esq. 

Kennedy, H. m.p. 

Mollan, J. m.p. 

Marsh, Sir Henry, Bart. 

M‘Donnel, J. m.p. 

Neligan, J. M. m.p. 

O’ Keefe, Cornelius, esq. Regist. of Coll. of Surgeons 
O’Reardon, John, m.p. 

O'Reilly, Richard, esq. 

Patten, J. esq., Kildare street, Royal Dublin Society 
Sargent, Richard J. m.p. 

Smyly, Joshua, esq. 

Steel, W. Edward, m.s. 

Walsh, Albert, m.p. 

Cartwright, Cornelius, esq. 

Fereday, Samuel, esq. 

Houghton, John H. esq. 

Tinsley, William, esq. 

Ray, Edward, esq. 

Browne, W. A. F. m.p. 

Barker, William L. m.p. 

Grieve, James, M.D. 

M‘Culloch, James M. m.p. 

M‘Lachlan, James, m.p. 

M‘Lellan, R. H. m.p. 


LIST! OF MEMBERS. 13 


DUNDEE ; . Loe. Sec. Monro, WILLIAM, M.D. 
Aitkin, William, esq. 
Arnott, James, M.D. 
Bell, Alexander, M.p. 
Cocks, Robert, M.p. 
Nimmo, Matthew, esq. 
Osborne, G. M. M.p. 


DUNDONALD . c : . Alexander, William, M.p. 
DuNGANNON, County Tyrone . Nevill, William, esq., M.B. 
DurHAM . . Loe. See. Jerson, C. Epwarp, esq. 


Alexander, — M.D. 

Boyd, William, esq. 
Caldcleugh, S. esq. 

Carnes, John, esq., Blackgate 
Croudace, George, esq., Rainton gate 
Cuninghame, W. esq. 

Dodd, — esq. 

Green, William, esq. 

Hepple, Matthew, esq. 

Stoker, W. esq. 

Hopton, — esq. 

M‘Larin, — esq. 

Trotter, John, M.D. 

Oliver, N. esq. 

Robson, Robert. esq 

Tyler, Edwin, esq. 

Watkin, Thomas Laverick, M.p. 


East GrinsteD, Sussex . Covey, George, esq. 
East Rupuam, Norfolk . Manby, Frederick, esq. 
Upjohn, Francis Robert Smith, esq. 
Easr SronreHouseE, Devon . Sheppard, James, esq. 
EDINBURGH . . Local Sec. Sprrrau, Ropert, M.v., 16, Howe street 


Abercrombie, John, m.p., The late, 19, York place 
Alison, W. P. m.p., 44, Heriot row 

Ballingall, Sir George, m.p., 13, Heriot row 
Beath, John, esq., 19, Castle street 

Begbie, James, m.p., 6, Ainslie place 

Bennett, John Hughes, m.p., 5, Scotland street 
Black, Francis, m.p., 19, Lynedoch place 

Brown, John, m.p., 51, Albany street 

Combe, J. 8. M.p., 35, Charlotte street, Leith 
Cormack, John Rose, m.p., 131, Princes street 
Cumming, William, m.p., 15, Elder street 
Davidson, Joshua H. m.p., 19, Abercrombie place 
Dickson, A. W. esq., 14, Great King street 
Douglas, Haliday, m.p., 15, Drummond place 
Duncan, James, M.p., 12, Heriot row 

Gilchrist, William, M.p., 53, Constitution st. Leith 
Goodsir, H. D. 8. esq., 21, Lothian street 
Haldane, Daniel R. esq., 24, Drummond place 
Hamilton, Robert, m.p., 7. Nelson street 

Hardie, Gordon, K. 19, Salisbury street 
Henderson, William, m.p., 63, Northumberland st. 
Henderson, M. W. m.p., Corstorphine 

Holden, Ralph, esq., 15, Dundas street 

Hunter, Adam, m.p., 18, Abercromby place 
Jackson, Alexander, m.p., 20, Clarence street 
Johnstone, James, W. F. m.p., 22, Albany street 
Keith, G. S. m.p., 22, Albany street 

Keiller, A, m.p., 18, St. Patrick square 


14 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


EDINBURGH (continued) 


Exein, North Britain 
Evine, near Southampton 
Evuanp, Halifax . 


E.truam, Kent 

ELy 5 5 
Emswortu, Hants 

ENFIELD, Middlesex 
Eppine. 

Epsom . 


EvresHAM 


Exeter, Devon . Local Sec. 


Exmoutu, Devon . 


Kennedy, John, m.p., the late, 29, Broughton street 
Laud, George, m.p., 271, Clarence street 
Lonsdale, Henry, m.p., 2, Teviot row 
Macfarlane, John, F. esq., 17, North Bridge street 
Mac Lean, John, m.p. 17, Queensferry street 
Malcolm, R. B. m.p., 76, George street 
Marshall, Henry, esq., 25, Albany street 
Mercer, James, M.p., 50, Northumberland street 
Millar, James S. esq., 9, Roxburgh street 
Miller, James, esq., 22, St. Andrew square 
Moir, John, m.p. 52, Castle street 

Pagan, Samuel Alexander, m.p. 3, Melville street 
Paterson, R. m.p., 8, Quality street, Leith 
Pattison, P. H. m.p., 1, Leopold place 
Robertson, James, esq., Westfield, Cramond 
Scott, John, m.p., 45, Queen street 

Simpson, James Y. m.p., 22, Albany street 
Smyttan, George, m.p., 20, Melville street 
Sommerville, Samuel, m.p., 17, Hart street 
Stiven, W. S. m.p., Pennicuick 

Tait, W. m.p., 37, Nicolson street 

Taylor, John, m.p., 1, Abercrombie place 
Treasurer of Royal Coll. of Phys., 119, George st. 
Treasurer of Royal Med. Soc., Surgeon’s square 
Treasurer of Hunterian Med. Soc. University 
University of Edinburgh Library 

Walker, W. esq., 47, Northumberland street 
Waters, Edward, esq., 14, Elder street 
Wilkinson, D., m.v., 5, Howe street. 

Paul, John, m.p. 

Spear, William, esq. 

Hamerton, John, esq. 

Scholefield, John B. esq. 

Guillemard, Isaac, m.p. 

Muriel, John, esq. 

Miller, George, esq. 

Miller, John, esq. 

Taylor, William G. esq. 

Merriman, Charles, A. esq. 

Allan, John, esq. 

Jones, Arthur O’Brien, esq. 

Stillwell, George, esq. 

Martin, Anthony, esq. 

Porter, John H. m.p. 

PENNELL, RicHarD LEWIN, M.p. 

Blackall, John, m.p. 

Delagarde, P. C. esq. 

Empson, William, esq., Clist-Hydon 

Granger, F. M.B. 

Hall, William, m.p. 

Kingdon, W. D. m.p. _ 

Marsden, James, M.D. 

Merry, W. H. esq., Broad Clyst 

Miles, Erasmus, m.p., Heavitree 

Parker, J. B. esq. 

Shapter, Thomas, m.p. 

Shaw, Henry, esq. 

Black, Glass, M.p. 

Kane, William, esq. 

Land, William H. esq. 

Spettigue, John, esq. 


LIST 


FarrForD, Gloucestershire 
FALKIRK 

FALMOUTH 

Fanet, Jreland 

FARRINGDON, Berks. ; 
FARNINGHAM, near Dartford 


FaRNHAM, Surrey . 


Finey, near Scarboro’, Yorks. 

FINCHINGFIELD, Essex . 

FoLKESTONE, Kent 

FORFAR ‘ : 

Fowey, Cornwall . - A 

FRAMPTON-ON-SEVERN, Glou- 
cestershire . 

FuLBeck, Grantham 

GRAMPOUND, Cornwall . 

GarstTaAne, Lancashire . 

GATESHEAD . 


GEDDING, Woolpit, Suffolk 
GLASGOW 


GuassLouGH. Co. of Monaghan 
Local Sec. 


GLOUCESTER . 


Local See. 


OF MEMBERS. 15 
Cornwall, Charles, esq. 
Espie, J. esq. 
Bullmore, F. C. esq. 
Fullerton, J. W. esq. 
Mantell, George, M.p. 
Harris, Henry, esq. 
Hunt, F. B. m.p. 
Knowles, E. Y. esq. 
Newnham, William, esq. 
Cortis, William S. esq. 
Owen, W. B. esq. 
Minter, — esq. 

Steele, William, esq. 
Bennet, William P. esq. 


Watts, Thomas, esq. 
Smith, Christopher B. esq. 
James, R. esq. 

Bell, William, m.p. 
Barkus, B. esq. 

Brady, H. esq. 

Dixon, G. esq. 

White, W. Middleton, m.p. 
FLEMING, J.G. M.p. 121, West Regent street 
Adams, J. M. esq. 
Anderson, Andrew, m.p. 
Anderson, A. D. m.p. 
Black, J. W. esq. 

Brown, James, M.D. 
Burns, John, m.p. 
Couper, John, m.p. 
Findley, John, m.p. 
Frazer, D. R.N. 

Gowdie, John, esq. 

Hall, Alfred, m.p. 
Hutcheson, William, m.n. 
Jeffray, James, M.p. 
Lancey, Thomas, esq. 
Laurie, J. A. M.p. 
Macewan, John, m.p. 
Macfarlane, John, m.p. 
Macneil, Neil, m.p. 
Mackie, Andrew, M.p. 
Maund, John, esq. 

Orr, R. S. M.D. 

Pagan, J. M. m.p. 

Parker, Robert, esq. 
Pollock, John, esq. 
Pritchard, Thomas, esq. 
Rainey, Harry, M.p. 
Smith, David, M.p. 
Thomson, William, m.p. 
University Library, per Questor 
Watson, James, M.D. 
Weir, William, m.v. 
Wright, William, esq. 
Maffett, Richard, m.p. 
Hirceu, S. m.p., Lunatic Asylum 
Cockin, John, esq. 


16 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


GLOUCESTER (continued) 


GoDALMING : 
Gook, Yorkshire . 
Gosport 


GRANTHAM 

GRAVESEND . ‘ 5 : 
Great GrimsBy, Lincolnshire 
GREAT YARMOUTH 


GREENOCK 

GREENWICH . 

GUILDFORD 

GUERNSEY . . Local Sec. 
Happineton, N.B. : 


Haxirax, Yorks. . Local Sec. 


HALsTEAD, Essex . 
Han.ey, Staff. 
HANWELL, Middlesex 
Harewoop, near Leeds 
Har.ineron, near Exeter 
Harrow-on-Hitu 


HAaRROWGATE 


Hasxar, Portsmouth 


HASTINGS . : - 


HATFIELD. . Local Sec. 
Haverrorpwest, South Wales 
Hawkuurst, Kent 
HAWARDEN, Flintshire 
Hewtmstey, York . 

Hemet Hempsteap, Herts 


Cookson, John, esq. 

Hicks, Thomas, esq. 

Rumsey, H. W. esq. 

Wood, Alfred, esq. 

Chandler, A. Thomas, esq. 

Cass, William Eden, esq. 
Jenkins, John, esq. 

Richardson, John, esq., Haslar Hospital 
Rundle, William John, m.p. 
Brown, Joseph, M.D. 
Armstrong, John, esq. 

Keetley, Thomas Bell, esq. 
Worship, Harry, esq. 

Spiers, John, m.p., Killblain square 
Maceall, T. S. m.p. 

Barclay, Henry, esq. 

Burton, J. M. esq., Croom’s Hill 
Greenwich Hospital 

Purvis, P. m.p. 

Sells, Thomas Jenner, esq. 
Stedman, James, esq. 

OZANNE, Jos. esq. 

Howden, Thomas, M.D. 
Lorimer, Robert, mM.p. 
Gar.ick, JoHN WILLIAM, M.D. 
Alexander, William, M.D. 
Bramley, Lawrence, esq. 

Inglis, James, M.p. 

Jubb, Abraham, sen. esq. 
Kenny, Mason Stanhope, M.D. 
Robertshaw, Thomas, esq. Sowerby Bridge 
Robinson, John, esq., Ripponden 
Stansfield, Geo. esq. 

Tucker, F. Hosken, esq. 

Gilson, Benjamin, esq. 

Dale, James, esq. 

Begley, W. C. m.p., T. C.D. 
Smith, Gregory, esq. 
Cheesewright, William, esq. 
Curtis, H. Charles, esq. 
Hewlett, Thomas, esq. 

Berry, Grove, esq. 

Kennion, George, M.D. 

Stead, H. C. esq. 

Anderson, — M.D. 

Allen, James, M.D. 

Salmon, James, esq. 

Stewart, Alexander, esq. 

Duke, William, m.p. 

Hobson, Smith, esq, 

Mackness, James, M.D. 

Moore, George, M.D. 

Ranking, Robert, esq. 

Savery, John, esq. 

Tuomas, Witi1AM Luoyp, esq. 
Warlow, William, esq. 

Young, Francis Ayerst, esq. 
Moffat, John, M.p. 

Ness, John, esq. 

Merry, Robert, esq. 


HENFIELD, Sussex . 
HENLEY-1IN-ARDEN 


HEREFORD 


HERTFORD 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


Local Sec. 


Local See. 


HeEywoop, near Bury, Lane. 


HEXHAM 
HitTcHIn 


HoLBEeAcn 


Horsory, near Wakefield 


HornSEY 


HorsrortuH, near Leeds 


HorsHAM 


HouGHTON-LE-SPRING, Durham 


Hounslow 
Hutz 


geal Sec. 


Hume, near Manchester 


HuNTINGDON 


HURSTPIERPOINT 
HyprE 


Local See. 


Morgan, Frederick, esq. 
Birman, H. F. m.v. 

Ings, John, esq. 
BRAITHWAITE, FRANCIS, esq. 
Archibald, Robert, esq. 

Bull, Henry Graves, M.p. 
Cam, Thomas, esq. 

Farmer, John, esq. 

Gilliland, William L. m.p. 
Hanbury, George, esq. 
Lingen, Charles, esq. 

Lye, John Bleek, m.p. 
Scriven, John Barclay, esq. 
Smith, Robert, esq. 

Taylor, Theophilus, esq. 
Vevers, H. jun. esq. 

Waudby, Samuel, esq. 
Wright, Henry Goode, esq. 
Daviess, JOHN, M.D. 

Phillips, George Marshall, esq. 
Reed, Frederick George, esq. 
Towers, G. A. esq., Infirmary 
Leach, Jesse, esq. 

Nicholson, John, esq. 

Foster, Oswald, esq. 

Shillitoe, R. R. esq. 

Vise, E. B. esq. 

Robinson, Charles, esq. 
Hands, Benjamin, esq. 
Wilson, William M. esq. 
Bourn, Thomas, esq. 

Martin, Thomas, esq. 
Coleman, W. T. m.p. 

Green, Samuel, esq. 
Tweddell, William, esq. 
Emmott, C. B. esq. 

Cooper, HENRY, M.D. 

Clark, J. H. esq., Aldbrough 
Gordon, W. m.p. 

Hardey, Robert I. esq., Charlotte street 
Horner, F. R. m.p. 
Huntingdon, Frederick, esq. 
Locking, Jos. Agar, esq. 
Lunn, Wm. Jos. M.p. 

Riggall, Edward, esq. 
Sandwith, H. m.p. 

Sandwith, G. esq. 

Sharpe, Richard, esq., 9, Castle row 
Sharp, William, esq. Fr.r.s., Humber Bank 
Sleight, R. Leadam, esq. 
Twining, Edward, esq. 

Wallis, Edward, esq. 

West, Charles Turner, esq., 8, North street 
Bowman, D. esq. 

Foster, MIcHAEL, esq. 
Foster, M., for Medical Library 
Isaacson, Wootton, esq. 
Wilson, Josiah, esq. 

Holman, Henry, esq. 

Tinker, William, esq. 


17 


18 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


INGATESTONE 
INVERNESS 
IpswicH 


IRONBRIDGE . 


JARROW 

KEITH, Banffshire . 
Kenton, Devon 
KETTLETHORPE, Vncolnsh: 


KippERMINSTER . Local Sec. 


KILMARNOCK . Local See. 


KINGSBRIDGE, Devon 
KinGSTON-ON-THAMES . 
Kineton, Herefordshire 
Kinestown, Jreland 
KirKatpy, Fifeshire 
KIRKHAM 


KirKsTALL, near Leeds 
KNARESBOROUGH . 
KNOWLE 

KNUTSFORD, Cheshire 


LANCASTER : Local See. 


LEAMINGTON 
LEATHERHEAD : : 
LEEDS : . Local Sec. 


Butler, C. H. esq. 

Walker, John, m.p. 

Baird, A. W. M.p. 

Beck, Edward, m.p. 

Bullen, G. esq. 

Durrant, C. H. m.p. 

Scott, Walter, esq. 

Webster, W. H. B. esq. 
Roden, Sergeant, esq. 
Rowland, J. W. esq. 

Brown, W. W. esq. 

Christie, John, m.p. 

Day, J. A. esq. 

Waddington, Edward H. esq. 
RopEN, WILLIAM, M.D., F.L.S. 
Bradley, Thomas, esq. 
Jotham, George William, esq. 
Philbrick, Cornelius James, esq. 
Roden, Thomas Clarke, esq. 
Taylor, Thomas, esq. 
Thursfield, Thomas, esq. 
Ward, the Lady, Himley Hall 
Hoop, ALEXANDER, esq. 
Aitkin, James M. C. esq. 
Mitchell, John, esq., Mauchline 
Paxton, John, M.p. 

Rodger, William, esq., Galston 
Thompson, John, esq. 

Young, Robert, esq. 

Elliott, John, esq. 

Cox, Abram, M.p. 

Marshall, G. Henry, esq. 
Adams, William, M.D. 

Philp, John, esq. 

Gradwell, William, esq. 

Shaw, Thomas, esq. 

Bishop, Edward, esq. 

Newton, Isaac, esq. 

Kimbell, J. H. esq. 

Gleeson, E. M. esq. 
GASKELL, SAMUEL, esq. 

De Vitré, — M.D. 

Howitt, Thomas, esq. 
Ricketts, Charles, esq. 
Beesby, Ralph A. esq. 
Ebbage, Thomas, esq., Portland street 
Franklin, Francis, M.p. 
Jephson, J. M.p. 

Jones, Richard, esq. 

Starr, T. H. m.p. 

Nash, William L. esq. 

TEALE, T. P. esq. 

Allanson, James, esq 
Bearpark, G. E. esq. 
Braithwaite, W. esq. 

Brown, C. F. esq. 

Bulmer, George, esq. 

Cass, W. R. esq. 

Chadwick, Charles, m.p. 
Chorley, Henry, esq. 


Leeps (continued) 


LEEK 


LENHAM 


Lerwick, Shetland 


LEICESTER 


LEWISHAM 
LIFF 
LINCOLN 


LIMERICK 
LitcHam, near Sw 
LIvEeRPOOL 


LIST OF MEMBERS, 


Local cee 


Local See. 


affham 
Local See. 


Drennan, J. S. m.p. 

Evans, Evan, esq. 

Garlick, J. P. esq. 

Hall, Matthew, esq., Wortley 
Hay, William, jun. esq. 

Hey, Samuel, esq. 

Hey, William, esq. 

Hopper, R. 8. M.p. 

Hobson, Richard, m.p. 

Irvine, G. W. m.p. 

Jackson, Matthew, esq. 

Land, Thomas, esq. 

Leeds School of Medicine 

Mayne, George, M.D. 

Morley, George, esq. 

Nunneley, Thomas, esq. 

Price, William, esq. 

Radcliffe, C. B. esq. 

Rickards, G. H. L. esq. 

Smith, Pyemont, m.p. 

Smith, Thomas, m.p. 

Staniland, Samuel, esq. 

Teale, Joseph, esq. 

Cooper, Richard, esq. 

Heaton, Charles, esq. 

Stickings, George, esq. 

Cowie, John, esq. 

Barciay, JOHN, M.D. 

Buck, John, esq. 

Harding, Henry, esq. 

Harding, H. esq., for Leicester Infirmary 
Macaulay, Thomas C. esq. 

Paget, Thomas, esq. 

Seddon, William, esq. 

Stallard, J. H. esq. 

Swain, Thomas, esq. 

Steel, C. W. esq. 

Archibald, David, esq. 
HAINWORTH, JOHN, esq. 
Broadbent, Edward Farr, esq. 
Hadwen, Samuel, esq. 

Hewson, John, esq. 

Hill, R. Gardiner, esq. 

Griffin, William, m.p. 

Raven, Peter, esq. 

VosE, J. M.D. 

Anderton, Henry, esq. (Woottom) 
Bainbrigge, W. H. esq. 
Bickersteth, Robert, esq. 

Byerly, Isaac, esq., 93, Prescot street 
Chalmers, D. esq. 

Chapman, M. J. m.p. 

Dickinson, Joseph, M.v. 
Drysdale, J. J. m.p., 44, Rodney street 
Dudgeon, Robert, m.p., 17, Oxford street 
Ellison, King, esq. 

Inman, Thomas, M.B. 

Lewis, Thomas, esq., 2 Rodney street 
Liverpool Medical Institution 


20 


LiveRpPoon (continued) . 


LuanpiLo, South Wales. 


Abraham, Thomas, esq. . 
Adams, John, esq. 
Adcock, Christopher, esq. 
Addison, Thomas, M.D 
Adlard, C. & J., Messrs. 
Allchin, W. H. esq. 
Allen, W. esq. 

Allnatt, Richard H. m.p. 
Ancell, Henry, esq. 
Ansell, Thomas, esq. 
Appleton, H. esq. 
Archer, William, esq. 
Arnott, Neil, m.p. 
Ashley, W. H. esq. 
Ashwell, Samuel, m.p. 
Atkinson, John Charles, esq. 
Ayre, William, esq. 
Babington, B. G. m.p. 
Babington, R. esq. . 
Baker, Frederick M. esq. 


Balfour, Thomas Graham, M.D. 


Ball, R. de Champs, esq. 
Ballard, Thomas, esq. 
Ballard, Edward, m.p. 
Barff, F. esq. 

Barnes, Alfred, esq. 
Barnett, Thomas, esq. 
Bartlett, William, esq. 
Basham, William R. m.p. 
Bateman, H. esq. 
Baxter, Henry F. esq. 
Baylis, Edward, esq. 
Beale, Miles, esq. 

Bean, Edward, esq. 
Beane, Joseph M. esq. 
Beck, J. S. esq. 

Bell, Jacob, esq. 

Bennett, James Risdon, m.p. 
Bently, Edward, esq. 
Berry, Edward Unwin, esq. 
Bevan, Thomas, M.p. 
Bibby, Samuel, esq. 

Bird, James, esq. 


SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Liverpool Infirmary 
Long, James, esq., 10 Rodney street 
Pearson, J. Armitage, esq. (Wootton) 


Smith, John Bromley, esq., 59, Great George street 


Swinden, Edward, esq., Wavertree 
Prothero, — m.p. 
Samuel, William, esq. 


LONDON LIST. 


49, Old Broad street, City 

31, New Broad street, City 

28, Charles terrace, New Cut, Lambeth 
24, New street, Spring gardens 
Bartholomew close 

University College 

9, Albion place, Hyde park 

4, Parliament street 

3, Norfolk crescent, Oxford square 
Bow 

Lower Clapton 

1, Montague street, Portman square 
38, Bedford square 

1, Grove villa, Loughboro’ road, Brixton 
16, Grafton street, Bond street 
Romney terrace, Westminster 
Hackney 

31, George street, Hanover square 
London University Hospital 

11, North place, Kingsland road 
St. James’s square 

12, Bloomsbury square 

81, Connaught terrace 

2. King Edward terrace, Islington 
Portland place, Clapton 

Gloster house, King’s road, Chelsea 
72, Fore street, Limehouse 

19, Notting hill terrace 

17, Chester street, Pimlico 

9, Church row, Islington 

5, George street, Hanover square 
30, Sackville street, Piccadilly 
Bishopsgate street 

Camberwell 

Peckham 


53, Upper Marylebone street, Portland place 


338, Oxford street 

24, Finsbury place, north 

35, Trinity square, Borough 

7, James street, Covent Garden 
Finsbury circus 

9, North Audley street 

16, Orchard street, Portman square 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 





Bird, Golding, M.p. - - Myddleton square 

Bird, Henry, esq. . - - Mi'an cottage, Hampstead road 
Birkett, John, esq. : . 2, Broad street buildings 

Birkett, E. L. M.B. é - Cloak lane 

Blenkarne, Henry, esq. . - 39, Dowgate hill 

Blewitt, Octavian,esq. . . 73, Great Russell street, Bloomsbury 
Blundell, James, M.p. .. . Great George street, Westminster 
Bompas, Joseph C. esq. . University College 

Bostock, John, m.p. : . 22, Upper Bedford place 

Boyd, Robert, m.p. : . Marylebone Infirmary 

Bristowe, John Syer, esq. . Camberwell 


Brodhurst, B. Edward,esq. . 4, St. Helen’s place, Bishopsgate. 
Brodie, Sir Benjamin C. Bart. 14, Saville row 


Brodribb, W. P. esq. . - 12, Bloomsbury square 

Brown, C., Blakley, m.p. . 3, John street, Berkeley square 
Brown, Isaac Baker, esq. . 39, Connaught terrace 

Brown, J. Hallett, m.p. . . 7, St. George’s place, Walworth road 
Brown, R. F., esq. : . 2, St. Mary Axe 

Brown, Robert, esq. ; . 37, Euston square 

Brown, Thomas, esq. . . 13, William street, Knightsbridge 
Brown, Robert, esq. é . Brixton hill 

Brown, William, esq. . . 22, Russell place, Fitzroy square 
Bryant, Walter, J. esq. . . 50, Edgeware road 

Buchanan, G. A.esq. . . 50, Myddleton street, St. John street road 
Buckland, J. Pelham, ou . 84, Watling street 

Bull, Thomas, m.p. . 27, Finsbury place 

Burnett, Sir W. m.p. K.c.H. . The Admiralty 

Burton, Henry. m.p. c . 41, Jermyn street 

Bush, — M.p. : : . Kensington House 

Butler, James, esq. . Seething lane, Tower street 
Callaway, Thomas, esq. . . Wellington street, London bridge 
Campbell, Alex. Elliott, m.p.. First Life Guards 

Camplin, John, esq. . . 11, Finsbury square 

Camps, W. M.p. : . 50, Green street, Grosvenor square 
Camps, W. M.p. - for Parisian Medical Society 
Carr, James Thomas, esq. . St. Thomas’s Hospital 
Cartwright, Samuel, esq. . 32, Old Burlington street 
Chambers, William F.,m.p. . 46, Lower Brook street 
Chepmall, E.C.m.p. . . 17, Hanover square 

Chichester, J. H. R. ae . 3. Stone buildings, Lincoln’s inn 
Child, G. C. M.p. . Mortimer street 

Cholneley, W. esq. : . St. Bartholomew’s Hospital 
Chowne, W.D.,mM.p._ . . Princes street, Cavendish square 
Churchill, J. esq. . . Princes street, Soho 

Clark, Fred. Legros, esq. . Finsbury square 

Clark, Sir James, Bart. . . 22 8, Lower Brook street 

Clarke, J. F. esq. 4 . 23, Gerrard street, Soho 

Cleland, A. esq. : . 118, Cock hill, Ratcliff 
Clementson, F. L. esq. . . 6, Warwick Villas, Maida hill 
Clendinning, John, m.p. . 16, Wimpole street 

Clifton, N. H. esq. ; . 38, Cross street, Islington 
Clissold, Rev. Augustus . . Stoke Newington 

Cochrane, J. G. esq. : . London Library, 29, Pall Mall 
Colebourne, Henry, esq. . 28, Harleyford place, Kennington 
Collyer, G.esq. . - . 24, Old street road 

Conquest, J. T. m.p. : . 13, Finsbury square 

Cook, William, esq. : . St. Thomas’s hospital 

Cooke, R. H. esq. 3 . Church street, Stoke Newington 
Cooke, William M. m.p. . Trinity square, Tower hill 


Cooper, Bransby B. esq. . 2, New street, Spring Gardens 


Ds) SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Copland, James, M.p. . . Old Burlington street 

Cotton, R. Payne, esq. . - 11, Kensington square 

Coulthred, James,esq. . . 4, Melton street, Southwark Bridge road 
Courtenay, John, esq... . 5, Finsbury terrace 

Covey, Wm. Henry, esq. . 42, Charing Cross 

Coward, G. W. esq. : . 2, North Road, Hoxton 

Cox, W. Travers, M.D... . 2, Stanhope place 

Craigie, J. L. esq. . 5 . Finsbury square 

Crawford, Mervyn, M.p. . . 62, Upper Berkeley street 

Crisp, Edwards, esq. : . 31, Beckford row, Walworth 
Crompton, T. L. esq. . 29, Howland street, Fitzroy square 
Crowdy, Charles Whitton, es Brixton hill 

Crowther, J. R. esq... 6, Lansdown place, Brunswick square 
Culpeper, William M. esq. . Marylebone Infirmary 

Currie, Paul Francis, m.p. . 30, Brook street 

Curtis, J. W. esq. ; . Finsbury pavement 

Dalrymple, John, esq. « . 56, Grosvenor street 

Davies, Robert, esq. ; . 126, Holborn Hill 

Davies, David, esq. : . St. Thomas’s Hospital 

Davis, J. Jones, M.B. . 4, Poplar terrace, Poplar 

Davis, Thomas, esq. : . Hampstead 

Davis, Richard Sladen, oe . 13, Chancery lane 

Day,G.E.m.p. . . 93, Southwick street, Oxford square 
De Morgan, Campbell, esq. . 17, Manchester street 

Dendy, Robert, esq. : . 2, Grafton street east, Tottenham Court road 
Dendy, Walter C.esq.  . . 10, Tillotson pl., Waterloo rd., for Lond. Med. Soc. 
Derry, T. M. esq. . . Westminster Hospital 

Dewsnap, M. esq. 5 Hammersmith 

Domeier, E. A. m.p., the late . 39, University street 

Dover, Frederick, esq. . . 54, Great Coram street 

Duncan, Edward, esq. . . 3, Leadenhall street 

Dunn, Robert, esq. i . 15, Norfolk street, strand 

Duthoit, Thomas John, esq. . 22, Trinidad place, Islington 
Eddowes, J. H. esq. : . St. Thomas’s Hospital 

Edwards, Henry, esq... . 67, Edgeware road 

Edwards, Vertue, esq. - . St. Thomas’s Hospital 

Edwards, Daniel, esq. . . 18, Queen street, Cheapside 

Ellam, John, esq. : . 320, Rotherhithe street 

Erichsen, John, esq. ; . 48, Welbeck street 

Evans, J. O. esq. . : . University College 

Eyles, John Brown, esq. . 1, St. Andrew’s court, Holborn 
Eyles, Richard Strong, esq. . 1, St. Andrew’s court, Holborn 
Eyre, Stratford A. esq. . . 3, Fitzroy street, Fitzroy square 
Farr, William, esq. : . Registrar-General’s Office 

Farre, Arthur, m.p. ‘ . Curzon street, May Fair 

Farre, Frederick, M.D. . . 35, New Bridge street, Blackfriars road 
Ferguson, Robert, M.p. . . 9, Queen street, May Fair 
Fergusson, William, esq. . 8, Dover street 

Fidler, J. esq. 5 , . 4, Camden row, Camberwell 

Finch, Richard S. esq. . . Marylebone Infirmary 

Fincham, George, M.D. . . 38, Curzon street, May Fair 

Fisher, J. W. esq. - . Argyll street 

Fitton, W. John, esq... . 52, Upper Harley street 
Fitzpatrick, Francis, esq. . 27, Lisson street, New road 

Foote, John, esq. : . 36, Tavistock street, Covent Garden 
Forbes, John, M.D. . 12, Old Burlington street 

Fox, Charles Games, M.D. . 13, New Broad street, City 
Frampton, Algernon, M.D. . 29, New Broad street, City 

France, John, esq. : . 88, Cadogan place 


Fraser, Patrick S. M.p. . . 62, Guildford street 


French, J. G. esq. 
Fuller, Hugh, esq. 
Fuller, J. esq. 
Galton, Francis, esq. 
Gardiner, John, esq. 


Gardiner, Roger Cooper, esq. . 


Garrett, Mark B. esq. 
Garrod, A. B. M.p. 
Gavin, Hector, m.p. 

Gay, John, esq. 

George, J. D. esq. 
Gibson, John R. esq. 
Gillespie, Patrick, esq. . 
Girdwood, Gilbert F. esq. 
Godrich, Francis, esq. 
Goodfellow, S. J. m.p. 
Goodwin, J. M. esq. 
Goolden, R. H. m.p, 
Gordon, Adam, esq. 
Grainger, R. D. esq. 
Grant, N. M.p. 

Grant, John, esq. ; 
Gray, John, esq. : 
Greenhalgh, Robert, esq. 
Greenwood, Henry, esq. . 
Griffith, J. W. m.p. 
Grimsdale, Thomas F. esq. 
Guazzaroni, John, esq. 
Guest, Edmund, esq. 
Gull, W. W. .s. 
Gulliver, George, esq. 


Gunthorpe, George John, esq. 


Guy, W. A. M.B. 

Hakes, J. esq. : 

Hall, Marshall, m.p. 
Hamilton, Alfred, esq. 
Hanson, Sidney, m.p. 
Harding, J. F. esq. 
Hardwick, Alfred, m.p. 
Hardwicke, William, esq. 
Harper, Robert, esq. 
Harris, Wintow, esq. 
Harris, Michael, esq. 
Harston, A. D. esq. 
Hastings, John, M.p. 
Haviland, — M.p. . : 
Hawkins, Cesar, esq. .. 
Hawkins, James, esq. 
Hawkins, Charles, esq. 
Headland, Edward, esq. . 
Heberden, W. m.p., the late 
Heming, G. O. M.p. 
Henry, Alexander, esq. 
Hensley, L. esq. 

Hering, William, esq. 
Herring, William, esq. 
Heisch, Frederick, jun., esq. 
Hilton, John, esq. 

Hilton, John, esq. 

Hird, Francis, esq 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 2 


Marlborough street 

53, King William street, City 

48, Hertford street, May Fair 

16, King street, Covent Garden 

49, Great Portland street 

Cheyne walk, Chelsea 

3, New Road, St. George’s East 
Charterhouse square 

Thurlow place, Hackney road 

12, Finsbury Pavement 

32, Old Burlington street 

115, Holborn hill 

Lisson Grove north 

177, Maida hill 

Little Chelsea 

London Fever Hospital 

Streatham, Surrey 

8, John street, Adelphi 

Surgeon R.N., 22, Surrey street, Strand 
St. Thomas’s Hospital 

21, Thayer street, Manchester square 
Bengal Army, 71 a, Grosvenor street 


- 7, Upper George street, Portman square 


66, Upper Charlotte street, Fitzroy sq. 
Horsleydown lane 

9, St. John’s square 

Univsrsity College 

3, Terrace, Kensington 

College street, Chelsea 

Guy’s Hospital 

Roy. Reg. of Horse Guards 

51, Newington place, Kennington 
Bloomsbury square 

28, Duke street, Manchester square 

14, Manchester square 

Broad street Buildings 

17, Hanover square 

13, Spencer street, Northampton square 
Kensington 

12, Calthorpe street, Gray’s Inn road 

2, Conduit street, Westbourne terrace, Hyde park 
1, New Dorset place, Clapham road 
Paradise row, Hackney 

Trinidad place, Islington 

14, Albemarle street 

177, Maida hill 

for Roy. Med. Chirurg. Soc. Berners street 
36, Collett place, Commercial road 
Albany Court yard 

32, Guildford street 

28, Cumberland street, Bryanstone square 
7 8, Manchester square 

4, Caroline street, Bedford square 

3, Great James street, Bedford square 
14, Foley place 

74, Sun street, Bishopsgate 

16, America square 

for Medical Library, Guy’s Hospital 
Guy’s Hospital 

Cleveland row, St. James’s 


24 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Hitchman, J. esq. 

Hoar, W. esq. 

Hocken, Edward, m.p. 
Hodgkin, Thomas, m.p. 
Hodgson, Joseph, esq. 
Holland, Henry, M.p. .. 
Holman, William H. zn 
Holman, J. R. esq 

Holman, Charles th. esq. 
Hopkins, John Morgan, M.D. 
Houlton, Joseph, jun. esq. 
Hovel, Thomas, esq. 

Howell, C. W. H. esq. 
Hughes H. M. m.p. 

Hulm, Edwyn St. James, M.p. 
Humby, Edwin, esq. : 
Humphreys, William, esq. 
Hunt, Henry, m.p. > 
Hutchinson, W. Barclay, esq. 
Hutchinson, Francis, esq. 
Huxtable, William, esq. . 
Jackson, Alfred, esq. 
Jackson, Thomas Carr, esq. 
Jacob, William, esq. 

James, W. P. esq. 

James, Henry, esq. 

Jay, Henry, esq. 

Jeaffreson, Henry, M.p. 
Jeaffreson, John F. esq. . 
Jenkins, James, esq. 

Jervis, Thomas, esq. 

Jervis, George H. J. esq. 
Johnson, James, M.D. 
Johnson, Cavendish, esq. 
Jones, Thomas, M.D. ‘ 
Jones, Henry Derviche, esq. 


Jones, John Darlington, esq. . 


Tiff, William T. esq. 
Illingworth, Henry, esq. . 
Kaye, W. G. esq. 

Keen, Thomas, esq. . 
Kelsall, Thomas E. esq. . 
Kesteven, William, esq. . 
Keyser, A. esq. 

Kilner, John, esq. 

King, Osman, esq. 
Kinnis, J. M.p. 
Lambert, H. esq. 
Lammiman, R. W. esq. 
Lane, Samuel, esq. . 
Langmore, H. esq. 
Langmore, William, m.p. 
Langstaff, J. esq. : 
Lankester, Edwin, M.p. . 
Latham, P. Mere, m.p. 
Lauder, William P. m.p. 
Law, Charles, esq. . 
Leeson, H. B. M.p.. 
Lefevre, Sir George, M.D. 
Leonard, Thomas, esq. M.B. 


Sanatorium, New road 
78, Blackfriars road. 
13, Bloomsbury square 
Brook street 
1, Spital square, Bishopsgate street Without 
25, Lower Brook street 
10, John street, America square 
ditto 
ditto 
1, Elizabeth street, Eaton square 
87, Lisson grove North 
Five Houses, Clapton 
Stratford-le-Bow 
14, St. Thomas’s street 
1, Tonbridge place, Burton crescent 
Warwick villa, Maida hill 
21, Upper Southwick street 
68, Brook street 
40, Guildford street 
92, Farringdon street 
1, Well’s row, Hackney 
London University College 
St. Thomas’s Hospital 
31, Cadogan place 
37, Euston square 
4, City road 
42, Sloane street 
2, Finsbury square 
Canonbury square, Islington 
Royal Navy, 13, Clements lane 
23, Edward street, Portman square 
7, Kingsland green 
8, Suffolk place, Haymarket 
3, Norfolk crescent 
19, Finsbury pavement 
23, Soho square 
1, Queen’s road, Dalston 
18, Canterbury row, Newington Butts 
1, Arlington street 
Royal Navy 
15, Manor place north, King’s road, Chelsea 
Great Winchester street, City 
Upper Holloway 
21, Norfolk crescent, Burwood place 
33, Gower place, Euston square 
37, Bernard street, Russell square 
Army 
St. Luke’s Hospital, Old street road 
118, Cock hill, Ratcliff 
1 Grosvenor place 
15, Upper George street, Portman square 
Finsbury square 
9, Cambridge square, Hyde Park 
19, Golden square 
36, Grosvenor street 
8, Sloane street 
3, Artillery place, Finsbury square 
St. Thomas’s Hospital 
60, Lower Brook street, Grosvenor square 
14, Aske terrace, Hoxton 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


Letheby, Henry, m.p. 
Lever, J.C. W. M.p. 
Lewis, David T. esq. 
Lewis, W. A. esq. 

Lister, Bryan, esq. 
Liston, Robert, esq. - 
Little, W. J. M.v. ‘ 
Lloyd, W. W. esq. 

Lobb, William, esq. 
Lockley, Thomas, esq. 
Locock, Charles, M.p. 
Luke, James, esq. 
Lonsdale, Edward, esq. 
Mackintosh, James, esq. . 
Macmeikan, John, esq. 
Maclachlan, Daniel, M.p. 
M‘Gill, William, M.p. 
M‘Gregor, Sir James, Bart. 
M‘Intyre, William, m.p. . 
Maillardet, J. W. esq. 
Mann, John, esq. 
Marshall, John, esq. 
Marson, J. F. esq. 

Martin, J. R. esq. 
Mathew, Charles Reeve, esq. 


Mathew, James Edward, esq. . 


Mathews, R. N. B. jun. esq. 
Mercer, Thomas E. esq. . 
Meridith, E. F. esq. 


Merriman, Jas. Nathaniel, esq. 


Merriman, John, esq. 
Merriman, S. W. J. mp. . 
Metcalfe, James B. esq. . 
Miles, John, esq. 

Miles, John Shirley, esq. 
Miller, C. M. esq. 

Milroy, Gavin, M.D. 
Moger, Robert, esq. 
Moore, Joseph, M.D. 
Morley, Atkinson, esq. 
Munk, William, m.p. 
Murdock, William, m.p. 
Muriel, Charles, esq. ; 
Murphy, Edward W. m.p. 
Nairne, Robert, M.p. 
Nasmyth, Alexander, esq. 
Nelson, Duckworth, esq. 
Newell, H. A. esq. . 
Newton, Edward, esq. 
Nicolson, Thomas, esq. 
North, John, esq. - 
North, Robert Exton, esq. 
Noys, G. H. m.p. : 
Nussey, John, esq. 
Olding, George, esq. 
Oldham, Henry, m.p. 
Ottley, Drewry, esq. 
Owen, Richard, esq. 
Page, William E.m.p. , 
Pardoe, George, M.D. 


London Hospital 

Wellington street, Borough 

182, Brick lane, Spitalfields 

18, Stratford place, Cavendish square 
University College 

Clifford street 

Finsbury square 

62, Great Russell street, Bloomsbury 
12, Aldersgate street 

6, St. George’s place, Hyde Park corner 
7, Hanover square 

39, Broad street buildings 


- for Library, Middlesex Hospital 


32, Wilton place, Knightsbridge 
London Hospital 

Chelsea Hospital 

2, Bentinck terrace, St. John’s Wood 
13, St. James’s place 

84, Harley street 

8, St. Martin’s place, Charing cross 

63, Bartholomew close 

8, Crescent place, Mornington crescent 


Resident Surgeon, Smallpox Hospital, Charing cross 


71 a, Grosvenor street 
London University College 


Church Cottage, De Beauvoir square, Kingsland 


18, Canterbury row, Newington Butts 
University College, London 

15, Charles street, Westbourne terrace 
Kensington 

Kensington 

34, Brook street 

Church street, Hackney 

84, Harley street 

8, Victoria square, Pimlico 

1, Claremont terrace, Stoke Newington 
30, Fitzroy square 

Highgate 

10, Saville row 

Burlington Hotel, Cork street 

2, Finsbury place, south 

320, Rotherhithe street 

4, Wellington street, London bridge 
12, Henrietta street, Cavendish square 
44, Charles street, Berkeley square 
13 a, George street, Hanover square 
London Hospital 

13, Warwick court, Holborn 

26, Howland street 

53, Berkeley square 

18, King street, Portman square 

26, Cheyne walk, Chelsea 

Moorgate street 

4, Cleveland row, St. James’s 

159, High street, Borough 

13, Devonshire square, Bishopsgate 
38, Hart street, Bloomsbury 

College of Surgeons 

43, Curzon street, May Fair 

53, Russell square 


26 


Paris, John Ayrton, m.v. 
Peacock, Thomas B. m.p. 
Percivall, W. esq. 
Pereira, Jonathan, m.p. 
Perigal, Frederick, esq. 
Perkins, Dodd, esq. 
Perkins, Houghton, a 9 
Perry, James, esq. 


Pettigrew, William V. m.p. 


Philp, Francis R. m.p. 
Phillips, Benjamin, esq. . 
Phillips, James, esq. 
Phillips, Thomas, esq. 
Pilcher, George, esq. 
Pitman, H. A. M.p. . 
Poland, Alfred, esq. 
Pout, George, esq. . 
Powell, Henry, m.p. 
Powell, David, esq. 

Pyle, John, esq. 

Quain, Richard, M.p. 
Quain, Richard, esq. 
Redfearn, P. esq. 

Ree, Henry P. esq. 

Reed, Septimus, esq. 
Rees, Henry, esq. 
Reynolds, H. esq. 

Rhys, Thomas, esq. 
Ridge, Joseph, m.p. 
Riding, Roger, m.p. : 
Roberts, Charles I. m.p. . 
Roberts, John, esq. 
Robins, William, esq. 
Robinson, James, esq. . 
Robinson, Richard R. esq. 
Roods, Henry C. esq. 
Roots, H. S. M.p. 

Rose, C. esq. . 

Ross, Daniel, esq. 

Rowe, J. esq. 

Rowley, R. m.p. 

Royle, J. Forbes, m.p. 
Rust, Thomas, esq. 
Rygate, John James, esq. 
Samwell, Francis, esq. . 
Sandon, James H. B. esq. 
Saunders, E. esq. 

Savage, Henry, esq. 
Savory. John, esq. . 
Sawer, Thomas, esq. 
Scott, John, M.p. 

Searle, G. C. esq. 

Seaton, Edward, m.p. 
Self, James, esq. 

Sharpe, Rd. esq. 
Sharpey, William, m.p. 
Shute, Robert Greber, esq. 
Skey, Fred. C. esq. 

Smee, Alfred, esq. . 
Smith, Henry, esq. . 


SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Dover street 

2, South place, Finsbury 

First Life Guards 

Finsbury square 

33, Torrington square 

St. Thomas’s Hospital 

Mortimer street, Cavendish square 
4, Eaton square, Pimlico 

30, Chester street, Grosvenor place, Pimlico 
28, Grosvenor street 

17, Wimpole street 

White House, Bethnal green 

44, Albion street, Hyde Park 

7, Great George street, Westminster 
Montague place, Russell square 

21, Bow lane, Cheapside 

65, High street, Borough 

31, Finsbury square 

21, Garnault place, Spa Fields 

1, Middlesex place, New road 
University College Hospital, Gower street 
23, Kepple street 

135, Newington Causeway 

Union place, City road 

41, Jewin street, City 

45, Finsbury square 

42, Moorgate street 

University College Hospital 

37, Cavendish square 

36, Euston square 

31, New Bridge street, Blackfriars 
34, Finsbury circus 

16, Upper Southwick street 

7, Gower street 

4, Camden row, Camberwell 

67, Great Russell street, Bloomsbury 
Russell square 

10, Barnes place, Mile end 

56, High street, Shadwell 

41, Upper John street, Fitzroy square 
37, King William street, City 

4, Bulstrode street, Cavendish square 
39, Connaught terrace 

London Hospital 

Margaret street, Cavendish square 
36, Albemarle street 

16, Argyle street 

34, Dorset place, Dorset square 

143, New Bond street 

1, Lyon terrace, Maida hill 

12, Bedford square 

42, Cumming street, Pentonville 

77, Sloane street 

Mile end road 

Grange road, Bermondsey 

35, Gloucester crescent, Regent’s Park 
27, Mecklenburgh square 

13, Grosvenor street 

Finsbury circus 

17, Henrietta street, Cavendish square 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


Smith, Ebenezer, esq. . . Billiter square 

Smith, John Simm, esq. . . 17, Trinity square, Tower hill 
Solly. Samuel, esq. : . 1, St. Helen’s place, Bishopsgate 
Squibb, George James, esq. . 6, Orchard street, Portman square 


Squire, William, esq. . - Wandsworth road 

Statham, Hugh, esq. : . Wandsworth road 

Staunton, Charles F. m.p. - Royal Engineers, 40, St. Martin’s lane 
Stephen, T. esq. . . - King’s College Library 

Stewart, A. P. m.p. : - 130, Mount street, Berkeley square 


Stewart, Haldane, esq. . - 55, Cadogan place 
Stewart, Wm. Edward, jun. esq. Weymouth street, Portland place 


Stewart, Wim. esq. : . 1, Wells row, Hackney 

Stocker, James, esq. ‘ b Guy’ s Hospital 

Stokoe, Richard, esq. ; . Peckham Rye 

Storks, Robert, esq. : . 44, Gower street 

Stott, Thomas B. esq. . . Aldersgate Dispensary 

Stowers, Noel, esq. : . 26, Albion street, Hyde Park 
Strickland, John,esq. . . 22, North Audley street 
Sutherland, Alex. J. m.v. . 19, Fludyer street, Westminster 
Swaine, W. E. m.p. : . 41, Foley place 

Synnett, —M.p. . . 8, Westbourne place, Eaton square 
Tanner, Thomas Hawkes, esq.. King’s College 

Taunton, John C. esq. . - 48, Hatton garden 

Taylor, Edward, esq. A - Clapham Common 

Taylor, W.esq. . : - London University Hospital 
Taylor, C. esq. : - 18, Holland place, Clapham road 
Taylor, Jas. Eastwood, esq. . 4, Caroline street, Bedford square 
Teavers, James, esq. : . 307, Rotherhithe wall 

Teevan, William, esq. . . 23, Bryanstone square 

Tegart, Edward, jun. esq. . 37, Bryanstone street, Portman square 
Thompson, Theophilus, M.p. . 3, Bedford square 

Thompson, Richard, esq. . For London Institution, Finsbury 
Thomson, Anth. Todd, m.p. . 30, Welbeck street 

Thwaites, Thomas B. esq. . University College Hospital 
Tibson, Arthur, esq. ‘ - 1, Spring street, Paddington 
Todd, Robert B. m.p. . 26, Parliament street 

Tomkins, C. Joseph, esq. . 9, Huntley street, Bedford square 
Toulmin, Frederick, esq. . Upper Clapton 

Townsend, John A. esq. . . 48, Finsbury circus 

Toynbee, John, esq. . . Argyll place 

Travers, Benjamin, esq. . . Bruton street 


Treasurer of Medical Society . University College, London 
Treasurer of St. George’s Sg sala Library 


Tripe, John William, esq. 7, King’s place, Bath street, Commercial road 
Tulloh, James St. m.p. . . 93, Agar street, Strand 

Turner, John, esq. . ; . 10, Bedford place, Russell square 
Tweedie, Alexander, M.p. . 30, Montague place, Bedford square 

Ure, Alexander, esq. Fs . 13, Charlotte street, Bedford square 
Vade, John Knox, M.p. . . 8, Upper Seymour street, Portman square 
Varicas, R. A. esq. : . 29, Wobourne place, Tavistock square 
Vaux, J. M.p. ; ; . Elm Cottage, Elm Grove, Hammersmith 
Vincent, George, esq. . 109, Sloane street 

Vinen, Edward Hart, esq. . 164, Blackfriars road 

Waggett, John, M.p. . 1, Norland terrace, Nottinghill 

Waite, Charles, esq. é . 3, Old Burlington street 

Walcott, Robert Bowie, esq. . 8, York street, Portman square 

Walker, George A. esq. . . 101, Drury lane 

Wall, John P. esq. F . 5, Mount street. Grosvenor square 
Wallace, R. esq. « : . ‘ John’s terrace, Hackney road 


Walsh, Charles R. esq. . . 42. Half Moon street 


28 


Ward, Nathaniel, esq. 
Ward, N. Bagshaw, esq. 
Warder, A. W. esq. 

Ware, James T. esq. 
Waterworth, Charles, esq. 
Watson, Thomas, M.D. 
Weatherhead, Hume, m.p. 
Weber, Frederick, m.p. 
Webster, George, esq. 


Wells, Thomas Spencer, esq. R. N. 


Weston, Philip King, esq. 
Westwood, John, esq. 
White, E. Stillingfleet, esq. 
White, George, esq. 4 
White, Frederick B. m.p. 
Whitney, W. U. esq. 
Whitwell, Francis, esq. 
Wilks, G. A. F. M.p. 
Williams, Allen, jun. esq. 
Williams, James, esq. 


Williams, Charles J. B. u.p. 


Williamson, David, esq. . 
Willis, Robert, m.p. 
Wilson, J. A. M.D. . 
Wilson, Erasmus, esq. 
Wilson, Walter, esq. 
Winstanley, O. S. esq. 
Woodfall, J. Ward, m.p. 
Wordsworth, J.C. esq. 
Wylie, John, esq. R.N. 
Yeldam, Stephen, esq. 
York, James, esq. 

Young, James Forbes, esq. 
Young, Robert, m.p. 


LONDONDERRY < 
Lone Sutton, I fabench 


Loveusorovuen, Woodhouse, nr. 


Lourn, Lincolnshire 
LOWESTOFFE 


LUTTERWORTH 
Lypp, Kent 


Lynn Recrts, ‘Norfolk 


LyYTHAM 
MACCLESFIELD 
MAIDSTONE . 


Local Sen 


Local Sec. 


SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


7, Wellclose square, St. George’s 
Ditto 

1, Upper York place, Fulham road 
51, Russell square 

New Kent road, 5, Bengal place 
16, Henrietta street, Cavendish square 
63, Guildford street 

8, Grosvenor street 

78, Connaught terrace 

36, Strand 

11, Dalston terrace 

Stepney 

35, Edward square, Kensington 

50, Edgeware road 

30, Nottingham place, Regent’s Park 
11, College street, Westminster 
Marylebone Infirmary 

19, Hart street, Bloomsbury 

St. Thomas’s street, Southwark 
Dalston terrace, Dalston 

7, Holles street, Cavendish square 
26, Finsbury place 

Dover street 

Dover street 

Charlotte street, Fitzroy square 

10, Everett street, Russell square 
7, Poultry 

Dean’s yard, Westminster 

London Hospital 

2, Aldermans walk, Bishopsgate 

9, Stamford street, Blackfriars road 
Maida hill 

Upper Kennington lane, Vauxhall 
Camberwell 


Miller, Joseph Ewing, m.p. 
Ewen, Henry, esq. 
Kennedy, James, M.D. 
Banks, John Tatam, M.D. 
Worruineton, W.C., esq. 
Prentice, John, esq. 
Buszard, Marston, esq. 
Walton, William, esq. 
Plomley, F. m.p. 

De Mierre, Albert, m.p. 
Hunt, R. esq. 

Whiting, Joseph B. esq. 
Houghton, Edward, esq. 
Holland, Loton, esq. 
TAyLor, GEORGE, M.D. 
Fry, Frederick, esq. 
Oates, T. V. esq. 

Ottley, John, esq. 
Prance, J. C. esq. 
Sanders, Godfrey, esq. 
Sibbald, William, m.p. 
Whatman, James, esq. 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 29 


MaALtTon : . Local Sec. Wricur, JoHN JAMES, M.D. 
Bartliff, George, esq. 
Exley, John, m.p. 

MANCHESTER . Local Sec. NoBie, DANIEL, esq., Piccadilly 
Aikenhead, John, m.p., Oxford street 
Ainsworth, R. F. M.p. 
Allen, Richard, esq. 
Bardsley, James L. m.p. Chatham street 
Barrow, Peter, esq., Clifford street 
Barton, Samuel, esq., Moseley street 
Beevor, William Watson, esq., 43, Gt. George st. 
Birks, G. esq., Rosholme road 
Black, James, M.p., St. Peter’s square 
Crompton, Samuel, esq., Grosvenor street 
Dorrington, Thomas, esq., Oxford road 
Goodlad, William, esq., the late, 46, Mosely street 
Greaves, George, esq. Hulme 
Hardy, Frederick, M.p. 
Henry, Mitchell, esq., Woodlands 
Holland, P. H. esq., Grosvenor street 
Howard, R. B. m.p. 
Hulme, J. D. m.p. 
Kerr, H. W. esq., Store street 
Mellor, Thomas, esq., Greenhays 
Noble, D. esq. for Medical Society 
Radford, Thomas, M.p., King street 
Richmond, Thomas Goodier, esq. 
Satterthwaite, Michael, m.p., Grosvenor street 
Turner, Thomas, esq., Mosely street 
Walker, John, esq., Princes street 
Watts, T. H. m.p., Dale street 
Welsh, W. H. m.p., Eccles 
Whitehead, James, esq., Oxford road 
Wilkinson, M. A. E. m.p., George street 
Williamson, W.C. esq. Upper Brook street 
Windsor, John, esq., Piccadilly 

Marpen, Kent : : Perrey, Robert, esq. 

Market Bosworth, Leicester Evans, George, esq. 
Greary, Henry, esq. 
Lee, John, esq. 

Market WeicutTon, Yorkshire Jackson, Matthew, esq. 


MarisorovcH . Local Sec. Maurice, David P. esq. 
Mayo . Clendinning, G. M.D. 
MELFORD, Lone, Suffolk . Jones, Robert, esq. 
Metron Mowsray : Woodcock, Edward, esq. 
Metron, near Woodbridge, Suff. Kirkman. — M.D. 
Mexsoroueu, Rotherham . Woollam, George, M.v. 
Mitton, Gravesend ‘ . Hawkins, Henry, m.p. 
Ray, George, esq. 
MINCHINHAMPTON F . Smith, Daniel, esq. 
Turner, Charles W. esq. 
MoneyGAL., Jreland . . Bindon, John Vereker, M.D. 
MONTROSE . : : . Lawrence, Samuel, esq. 


Poole, R. M.D. 

Steele, George, M.D. 
Mosstey, near Lees, Manchester Halkyard, Henry, esq. 
Mucu Hapuam, Ware, Herts. Smith, Francis, esq. 
MUSSELBURGH. . Scott, Thomas Rennie, M.D. 
NAILSWORTH, Gloucestershire Stokes, Thomas, esq. 

Wells, James Henry, esq. 


30 


Navan, County Meath . 
NEEDHAM MARKET 


New Assey, Dumfries . 
NEWCASTLE EMLYN j 
Newcast ie, Staffsh. . Loc. Sec. 


NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE . Loc. Sec. 


NewMarket, Suffolk 3 
NEWMARKET ON FERGUS, Clare 
NEWTYLE 


NorTHAMPTON Local See. 


NortuH TAUNTON . 
Norrucurry, Jaunton . 


NorwicH Local See. 


SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Byron, — M.D. 

Hudson, Alfred, esq. 

Beck, Henry, esq. 
Pennington, James, esq. 
Morrison, — M.D. 

Thomas, James, esq. 
WILson, EDWARD, M.D. 
Ball, Daniel, esq., Burslem 
Dale, James, esq., Hanley 
Davenport, Charles, esq., Tunstall 
Seddon, Joshua, esq., Shelton 
Spark, James, esq. 

Turner, 8. M. esq. 

Gover, R. M., m.p. 
Bulman, Darnell, M.p. 
Cargill, John, M.p. 

Carter, Charles, esq. 

Clark, G. esq. 

De Mey, W. m.p. 

Dawson, W. esq. 


Glover, R. M. m.v. for Medical and Surgical Society 


Greenhow, Thomas M. esq. 
Houseman, J. M.D. 

Heath, H. esq. 

Trons, George, esq. 

Miller, A. esq. 

Potter, Henry, esq. 

Shiel, H. esq. 

Taylor, H. esq. 

Tulloch, B. esq. 

White, D. B. esq. 

Faircloth, R. esq. 

Evans, F. P. m.p. 

Langlands, Robert. esq. 
Farrcyorta, J. M. C. esq. 
Bryan, J. M. esq. 

Kerr, W. m.p. 

Mash, J. esq., for Library of General Dispensary 
Olive, George, esq. 

Percival, W. jun. esq. 
Robertson, A. M.D. 

Terry, Henry, esq. 

Lane, Charles H. Butler, esq. 
Plowman, Thomas, esq. 
Marchant, Robert, esq. 
DaALRYMPLE, DONALD, esq. 
Brownfield, John, esq. 
Cooper, W. H. esq. 
Copeman, E. esq., Coltis hall 
Crosse, J. G. esq. 

Crosse, J. G. esq., for Medical Library 
Dalrymple, A., esq. 

Gibson, George, esq. 

Hull, Robert, m.p. 

Johnson, John Goodwin, esq. 
Lubbock, Edward, m.p. 
Masters, Alfred, esq. 

Scott, P. N. esq. 

Spencer, Christopher John Miles, esq. 
Tawke, Arthur, M.D. 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


Norwoop , j 5‘ 
NorrinGHAM . Local See. 


OprHAM 

OLLERTON 

Orrorp, Suffolk ; 
Osset, near Wakefield . 


OUNDLE 

Over DARWEN 

Overton, Flintshire ‘ 
OxForpD : . Loeal See. 


PAISLEY 

Park, Aberdeenshire : 
PENZANCE . . Local See. 
PETERSFIELD 


Pinner, near Harrow, Midse. 
PLYMOUTH . . Local See. 


Street, William, esq. 
Hurcurinson, RicHarp 8S. m.p. 
Eddison, Booth, esq. 

Furness, —, esq. 

Higginbottom, John, esq. 
Martin, Thomas Duirs, esq. 
Payne, Henry, m.p. 

Stanger, George E. esq. 

Storer, M.p. 

Taylor, — M.p. 

Taylor, Henry, m.p. 

Williams, J. Calthorpe, m.p. 
Wright, John, esq. 

Wright, Thomas, m.p., Pelham street 
M‘Intyre, John, m.p. 

Ward, William Squire, esq., Wellow hall 
Randall, Samuel, esq. 

Collins, O. W. esq. 

Wiseman, William Wood, esq. 
Cowdell, Charles, esq. 

Linton, Charles, esq. 

Wraith, S. H. esq. 

Parker, Henry, esq. 
GREENHILL, W. A., M.D. 
Barlow, W. F. esq. 

Freeborn, J. J. 8. esq. 
Gardiner, Henry, esq. B.A. 
Jackson, Robert, M.p. 

Kidd, John, M.p. 

Ogle, James A. M.D. 

Owen, Edwin R., esq. 

Parker, Charles Lewis, M.A. 
Rusher, William, esq. 

Symonds, F. esq. 

Wingfield, Charles, esq. 

Wintle, F. T. m.v., Warneford Lunatic Asylum 
Wootten, John, M.p. 
M‘Kechinie, William, m.p. 
M‘Kinlay, D. m.p. 

Torbet, John, esq. 

Kinloch, Alexander Low, m.p. 
Wian, L. R., M.B. M.L. 
Branwell, Richard, esq. 

Lech, Edward, esq. 
Montgomery, James, M.D. 
Moyle, Richard, esq. 

Joliffe, George, esq. 

Peskett, William, esq. 

Whicher, James, esq. 

West, George, esq. 

WELLS, JosEPH, esq., 2, Sussex place 
Armstrong, Robert, m.p. 
Butter, John, M.pD., F.R.S., F.L.S. 
Derry, Samuel, esq. 

Devonport Medical Society 


3l 


Dickson, Sir David J. H. Knt., M.p., F.R.S., F.L-S. 


Fuge, John, esq. 
Hampton, J. S. esq., R.N. 
Harper, Thomas, esq. 


oe SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


PiyMmoutH (continued) 


PocKLINGTON 
PONTEFRACT 


PonTersBury, Salop 
Poouer, Dorset 


PoRTARLINGTON, Queen’s Co. 
Treland é 

PoRTSEA 

PorTSMOUTH 

Prescot, Lancashire Q 

Preston, Lane. Local See. 


RAMSEY 
RAMSGATE 


RaTHKEALE, /reland - 
READING . . Local Sec. 


REDBRIDGE, Southampton 
ReprutH, Cornwall 6 
REIGATE : . Local See. 
RETFORD A . Local Sec. 
RicHMoNnD, Surrey 


Ripiey, Surrey . c 
RocHDALE . . Local See. 


ROCHESTER 


RomMFoRD 
RoMSEY 


Roscrea, Tipperary 
» Lipp y 


Hingston, Charles, m.p. 
Knight, H. esq. 

Mackay, — m.p. R.N. 
Magrath, Sir George, m.p. 
Miller, Thomas, esq., Royal Marine Division 
Molesworth, — m.p. 
Proctor, George, esq. 
Hornby, Thomas, esq. 
Simpson, J. H. esq. M.B. 
Oxley, Robert, m.p. 
Eddowes, William, esq. 
Lacey, Edward, esq. 
Salter, Thomas, esq. 


Tabuter, — esq. 

Scott, Edward J. m.p. 
Engledue, N.C. m.p. 

Welsby, J. esq. 

Brown, Rosert, esq., Winckley square 
Dandy, C. esq. 

Harrison, James, esq. 
Heslop, Ralph C., m.p. 
Norris, J. H., m.p. 

Spencer, Lawrence, esq. 
Wilson, R. esq. 

Bates, C. P. esq. 

Curling, Henry. esq. 
Snowden, G. S. esq. 
Patterson, Charles, M.p. 
Watrorp, T. L. esq., for Reading Med. Library 
Cowan, Charles, M.D. 
Maurice, T. B. esq. 

May, George, esq. 
Woodhouse, R. J. M.v. 
Warwick, Richard, esq. 
Michell, Samuel Vincent Boyce, esq. 
Martin, THOMAS, esq. 
Steele, John, esq. 

Hatt, J. C. m.p. 

Dowler, Thomas, M.b. 

Grant, George, M.D. 

White, William Todd, esq. 
Gall, A. C., esq. 

Bower, RoBert, esq. 
Barker, Robert, esq. 

Beal, William John, esq. 
Buckley, Nathaniel, m.p. 
Coates, John, esq. 

Crowther, Robert, esq. 
Coventry, Alexander, esq. 
Sellers, William Burdett, esq. 
Taylor, Charles Crimes, esq. 
Wood, Abraham, esq. 

Ely, G. E., m.p. 

Jacob, P. W. esq. 

Martin, A., M.p. Starr hill 
Butler, Charles, esq. 
Beddome, John R. m.p. 
Buckell, Francis, esq. 
Kingsley, W. m.p., Valley House 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


RorHESAY . . Local See. MACLACHLAN, THOMAS, M Dv. 
Ford, Charles, m.p. 
Gibson, Thomas, M.». 
Orr, James, M.p. 


RoTHERHAM 2 F . Shearman, E. J., m vo, 
Ruesy . s : - . Paxton, James, M.p. 
RuTHIN : : - Jones, Thomas, esq. 
Rype, J/s/le of Wight ; - Phené, HH. esq. 

SABDEN, near Blackburn - Hindle, Richard, esq. B.m. 
SAFFRON WALDEN, Essex - Jones, Edgar, esq. 
SALFORD, Manchester . . Brownbill, Thomas F. esq. 


Gardom, George, esq. 
Jepson, William, m.p. 
Middleton, Thomas, esq. 
Southam, George, esq. 
SALISBURY . : ; - Hewson, — m.p. 
Moore, Thos. R., esq. 
SANDFORD, near Crediton, Devon Stevens, T. H. esq. 


SANDGATE, Kent . - . Clark, Thomas, esq. 
George, — M.D. 
Murchison, Simon, esq. 

SARROW ¢ : Brown, W. W. esq. 

SCARBOROUGH . oral Sen: Dunn, JoHNn TRAVIS, M.B. 


Cross, William, esq. 

Hebden, John, esq. 

Smart, John C., M.p. 

Taylor, Wilham, esq., Queen street 
Seaton Carew, Durham  . Stamp, Thomas, esq. 


SEATON, Devonshire 5 - Cann, Thomas, esq. 
SEDGEFIELD, Durham . . Ruddock, — esq. 
Sesy, Yorkshire . : - Burkitt, John, esq. 


Fothergill, — jun., esq. 
Serre, Yorkshire. Local Sec. Burrow, Tuomas D., esq. 
Harrison, Edward, esq. 


SEVEN Oaks, Kent “ Crichton, Sir Alexander, m.p. 
SHALDON, ur. Teignmouth, Devon Scarbrough, John L. esq. 
SHEFFIELD . . Local Sec. BRANSON, FERGUSON, M.D. 


Dé Bartolomé, Martin M. Mm.p. 
Favell, Charles Fox, m.r. 
Gleadall, James, esq. 
Harwood, Henry Paul, m.p. 
Holland, George Calvert, m.v. 
Jackson, William, esq. 
Jackson, Henry, esq. 
Martin, Edward, esq. 
Overend, Wilson, esq. 
Parker, Samuel, esq. 
Porter, John Taylor, esq. 
Ray, James, esq. 
Reedall, Gabriel, esq. 
Roper, Robert, esq. 
Skinner, William, esq. 
Thomas, Henry, esq. 
Thompson, Edward, esq. 
Thompson, Corden, M.p. 
Turton, George, esq. 
Wild, James, esq. 
SHERBORNE, Dorse/ ; . Highmore, William, esq. 
Saipevey, Derbyshire. . Beardsley, Amos, esq. 


33 


34 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


SHREWSBURY . Local Sec. Woov, SAMUEL, esq. 
SIDMOUTH . , . Cullen, William H. m.p. 
SITTINGBOURNE, Kent : . Grayling, John esq. 

Imlach, Henry, M.p. 

Imlach, Charles, m.p., E.1L.C.S. 


SKERRIES . . Thornhill, — m.p. 
SoHam, Cambridgeshire . . Addison, William, esq. 
SonNNING : . Taylor, James, esq. 
SouTHAM, Warwickshire . Smith, H. L., esq. 
SourHampton . Local Sec. Gores, G. T. esq. 


Buckle, R. Kemp, esq. 
Bullar, William, m.p. 
Clarke, Henry, m.p. 
Corfe, G. B. esq. 
Dayman, Henry, esq. 
Fowler, R. S. esq. 
Girdlestone, Henry, esq. 
Orsborne, Thomas, esq. 
Purdy, Charles, esq. 
Sabine, W. Townsend, esq. 
Spranger, Stephen, esq. 
Stace, I. Alfred, esq. 
Steed, G. m.p. 
Stone, Daniel, esq. 
Ward, Thomas, esq. 
Wiblin, John, esq. 
Williams, W. O. m.p. 
Wood, G. E. Wilmot, m.p. 
SouTHBOROUGH, Tunbridge WellsColebrooke, H. m.v. 


SOUTHEND, Essex . Warwick, W. R. esq. 
SouTHErRY, Downham Mar. ket, 

Norfolk. ; . Sayle, George, esq. 
SoutH Herron, Dur ham . Bishop, William, esq. 
SoutH PETHERTON : . Norris, Henry, esq. 
SourH SHIELDS . : . Kennedy, 8. J. esq. 


Robson, — esq. 
Toshach, James, esq. 
Wallis, Robert, esq. 


SPALDING . : : . Cammack, Thomas, m.p. 
Sr. ALBANS . - : . Lipscomb, John T.N. m.v. 
St. ANDREWS . Local Sec. Rew, JOHN, M.D. 


Adamson, John, M.D. 
Smith, Maidstone, M.D. 
University Library 


St. ASAPH . E : . Roberts, O. m.p. 

St. Ngots  . : : . Sole, William, esq. 
STAINES : : : . Simpson, John Nixon, esq. 
STALYBRIDGE : : . Barker, D. esq. 
STAMFORD . : : . Barber, Edward, esq. 


Brown, Alexander R. M.D. 
STAPLEHURST, near Maidstone Adams, Richard Dering, esq. 

Joy, Henry William, esq. 
STAVELEY, near Chesterfield . France, Edward, esq. 


STEVENAGE, Herts. : . Cooper, George, esq. 
STEYNING . - : . Trew, Richard N. esq., Chantry House 
STIRLING. . Local Sec. Forrest, Wiii1am H. esq. 


Beath, Andrew, esq. 

Johnston, Alexander, esq. 
Moodie, Alexander L. esq. 
Smith, John, esq., Denny 


Srocxrort, Cheshire 


SrockToN-oN-TEES 


STOKESLEY 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


Local Sec. 


SronEeHousE, Gloucestershire 


SroneHouseE, Devon 
STOWMARKET 


STRADBROKE 


STRATFORD-ON-AVON 


Srroop, near Rochester, Kent 


Srroup, Glouc. 


Local Sec. 


SUMMERHILL, Tenterden, Kent 


SUNDERLAND 


Surron, Surrey 
Sutton on TRENT 
SwarrHam, Norfolk 
TapcasteEr, Yorkshiy 
TAUNTON 


TEIGNMOUTH 
TENBURY 


Trensy, South Wales 
TENTERDEN, Kent . 


Local See. 


[Cas 


Local See. 


Flint, Richard, esq. 

Turner, George, M.D. 
KEENLYSIDE, R. H. m.p. 
Dixon, Henry, esq. 

Foss, William, esq. 
Longbotham, Jonathan, esq., Greatham 
Potts, W. R. esq., Norton 
Richardson, William, esq. 
Richmond, John Weems, esq. 
Trotter, Charles, esq. 
Whiteside, J. H. m.p. 

Crummy, F. L. esq. 

Holbrow, Anthony, esq. 
Burrows, J. esq. 

Bree, C. R. esq. 

Beddingfield, — m.p. 

Freeman, Spencer, esq. 

Snape, Richard Forth, esq. 
Coveney, James H. esq. 
Mayhew, G, esq. 

Burman, Thomas Southam, esq. 
Rice, David, esq. 

Thomson, Thomas, m.p. 
Brown, J. esq. 

Goocn, WitL1AM Henry, M.D. 
Armstrong, William, esq. 
Goddard, Charles, esq. 

Harris, C. Mears, esq., Moreton Valence 
Jones, John Taylor, esq., R.N. 
Uthwatt, Edolph. Andrews, esq. 
Canham, J. A. esq. 

Brown, J. M.p. 

Bowman, — M.D. 

Cay, Charles Vidler, esq. 

Dodd, William, esq. 

Maling, E. Haygarth, esq. 
Parker, Thomas, esq 

Smith, James, esq. 

Wilkinson, George, esq. 

Clark, Willington, esq. 

Gilby, Charles Otter, esq. 

Rose, Caleb, esq. 

Upton, Thomas S. esq. 
KINGLAKE, HAMILTON, M.D. 
Alford, Richard, esq. 

Alford, Henry, esq. 

Cornish, C. H. esq. 

Gillett, Edward William, esq. 
Higgins, C. H. esq. 

Kelly, William, m.p. 

Phippen, Arthur, esq., Widmore 
Rossiter, F. W. esq. 

Siddon, Henry, esq. 

Woodford, F. H. m.p. 

Walker, E. Dering, m.p. 

Davis, Henry, esq. 

Thompson, F. F. esq. 

Falconer, R. W. m.p. 
Newington, — esq. 

Saunders, E. D. esq. 


36 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


TeTRURY : 5 - - Williams, John Brooks, esq. 
TEWKESBURY : . . Dick, J. Paris, m.p. 
THAME, Oxon : 4 . Lupton, Harry, esq. 
Tuorp, near Norwich . . Nells, Robert John, esq. 
Tuetrorp, Norfolk : . Baily, Henry, esq. 

THIRSK : : : . Hutton, Jno. esq. 


Ryot, William H. m.p. 
THoRNBuRY, Gloucestershire. Jones, James, esq. 


Tuorn Hiix, Dumfries . . Grierson, T. B. esq. 
Russell, — m.p. 

THRAPSTON, Nothampton  . Leete, John Griffith, esq. 

TINTERN, near Chepstow . Audland, John, esq. 

TIPTON 5 Underhill, William, esq. 

TOLLERTON, near Easingwold 

Yorks. ‘ : . Bird, George, esq. 
TONBRIDGE West, W. J. esq. 


TONBRIDGE Aarts Moen? Ree: Powe .t, Henry, M.p., Monson place 
Gream, R. Righton, esq. 
Hargraves, Isaac, esq. 
Sharp, J. esq. 
Sopwith, H. L. esq. 
Wilmot, J. B. m.v., for Medical Library 
Yate, Thomas, esq. 
ToRBOLTON, dyrshire . . Gibson, John, esq. 
Torquay . - é . Madden, William H. m.p. 
Statham, S. F. esq. 
Tetley, James, M.p. 
Walker, John, esq. Cliff House 
ToTNEss, Devon . ‘ . Barry, John Milner, m.p. 
Cheesewright, William, esq., Hartington 
Derry, John, esq. 
Gillard, Wm. esq. 


TOTTENHAM . A - Moon, William, esq. 

Tramore, Wa aterford : . Waters, George A. esq. 

Trine, Herts. . : . Pope, Edward, esq. 

TIMSBURY, near Bath . . Crang, James, esq. 

TROWBRIDGE ; : . Taylor, Christopher, esq. 

TRURO . < . Local Sec. WINN, J. M. M.D 
Bull, H. esq., for Cornwall Infirmary 
Bullmore, William, esq. 


Kirkness, J. L. esq. 
Moyle, John, esq., Chasewater 
Michell, S. esq. 
Williams, R. esq. 
TyLpEsLey, near Manchester Manley, William Eckersby, esq. 


TYNEMOUTH . : . Greenhow, E. H. esq. 
Upton Woopsipe, Cheshire . Hilbers, J. G., esq. 
UXBRIDGE . : . . Stilwell, James, esq. 
UTToxETER . . c . Chapman, James, esq. 
VENTNOR : 4 ; . Martin, G. A. m.p. 
Martin, J. B. esq. 
WAKEFIELD . : : - Millner, Wm. Ralph, esq. 
Naylor, George Fred., esq., Lunatic Asylum 
WAKERING, Great Essex - Miller, C. esq. 
WALMER : . M‘Arthur, Duncan, m.p. 
WALSALL, nr. Birmingham . Duncalfe, H. esq. 


Edwards, F. A. esq. 

Moore, David Smith, esq. 
WALTON-ON-THAMES . Mott, Charles, esq. 
Warton, Herts. : . Dalgleish, William, esq. 


LIST OF MEMBERS. 


WaREHAM, Dorset : . Cope, Joseph Staines, esq. 
Flower, Frederick, esq. 
WARMINSTER, Wilts . Vicary, George, esq. 
WARRINGTON . Local Sec, Harvy, G. W., esq., Bewsey street 
Davies, John, mM.p. 
Hunt, William, esq. 
Kendrick, James, M.p. 
Okell, William, esq. 
Robson, John, esq. 
Sharp, John, esq. 
Wilson, Henry, esq., Runcorn 


WarwIcK . : : - Blenkinsop, H. esq. 
Hyde, F. O. esq. 

WATERINGBURY . - - Gould, H. Merton, esq. 

Warrorp, Herts . : - Ward, Thomas A. esq. 


WEAVERTHORPE, near Malton Dowsland, Francis M. esq. 
WELLINGTON, Salop : - Webb, Mathew, esq. 
Wetts, Norfolk . Loe. Sec. YounG, JAMEs, esq. 

Rump, Hugh, esq. 

Ward, Marmaduke Philip Smith, esq. 


WELLs, Somerset . ¢ - Lindoe, R. F. m.p. 
WELWYN, Herts . : . Clifton, Anthony, esq. 
Wem. - : - - Gwynn, S. S. esq. 
Gwynn, Edward, esq. 
West Auckianp, Durham . Kilburne, John, esq. 
West BromMwic#H . Dickinson, W. B. m.p. 


West MEon, Bishop Waltham Rogers, Francis, esq. 
Rogers, Joseph, esq. 


WESTERHAM : ; . Thompson, Charles M. esq. 
WESTON-SUPER-MARE . . Burke, W. M. esq. 
WEYHILL, near Andover . Ryder, Henry, esq. 

Smith, John, esq. 
Wuitsy, York . : . Dowson, John, m.p. 
WHITEHAVEN . : - Churchill, Jno. esq. for Library. 


King, R. F. esq. 
Wilson, Joseph, m.p. 
WuitwELL, near Welwyn, Herts. Butler, Thomas, esq. 


WIMBORNE . : : . Rowe, John, esq. 
WINCHESTER . Local Sec. WHITE, ARTHUR, M.D. 


Butler, Frederick, esq. 

Crawford, Andrew, M.D. 

Wickham, W. John, esq. 
WINDSOR . : Local Sec. MAITLAND, CHARLES, M.D. 

Holderness, Wm. Brown, esq. 

Soley, T. A. esq., Thames street 
WinTERTON, near Brigg, Linc. Sadler, B. esq. 


WirRKSWORTH : : . Poyser, Thomas, esq. 
WISBEACH . - - . England, W. m.p. 

Ewen, Henry, esq., Long Sutton 
WIsBOROUGH GREEN. - Boxall, Henry, esq. 


Wosurn, Beds. : . Parker, T. esq. 
WotverHampton . Local Sec. DEHANE, EDWARD FRANCIS, esq. 
Griffith, Samuel Hallett, esq. 
WoopgrincGE, East Soham . Gross, Edward, esq. 
WootwicH . . Local Sec. DENNE, WILLIAM, esq. 
Allinson, John Hiram, esq. 
Bisshipp, James, esq. 
Bossy, Francis, M.p. 
Butler, John, esq. 
Caryl, William Asylum, esq. 


37 


38 “SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Woo.wicu (continued) . 


WORCESTER . . Local See. 


Wrenbury, near Namptwich, 
Cheshire : 5 
WREXHAM 


Wrotuam, Kent 

WycomseE, Bucks . 

YALDING, near Maidstone 
Yaron, near Bristol 
YarmourTH, Isle of Wight 
York Town, Bagshot, Surrey 


WORK .« s . Local See. 


YouGua.t, Co. Cork 


Dakin, William, esq. © 

Farr, George, esq. 

Gant, Robert, esq. 

Halifax, — m.p. 

Stuart, William, esq. 
Turner, James Samuel, esq. 
Webb, Sir John 

STREETEN, Rost. J. N. m.p. 
Addison, William, esq., Malvern 
Day, Edmund, esq. 
Hastings, Charles, m.p. 
Hill, Richard, esq. 

Jones, Walter, esq. 

Malden, Jonas, m.p. 

Nash, James, m.p. 
Sheppard, James P. esq. 
Turley, Edward A. esq. 


Thomson, David P. m.p. 

Griffith, Thomas Taylor, esq. 
Rowland, William, esq. 

Williams, Edward, esq., Holt street 
Kent, T. esq. 

Rose, William, jun. esq. 

Turner, John, esq. 

Pout, Henry, esq. 

Lang, J. L. esq. 

Hollis, Charles Wise, m.p. 

Davies, William, esq. 

Simpson, Frederick, esq. 

Laycock, THOMAS, M.D. 
Alderson, Septimus R. esq., Lunatic Asylum 
Alderson, Richard R. esq. 

Allen, Edmund T. esq. 

Allen, Edward, esq. 

Allen, James, esq. 

Barker, Thomas H. esq. 

Brunton, George, esq. 

Dodsworth, Benjamin, esq. 

Goldie, George, M.p. 

Hodgson, Henry B. esq., Acomb House 
Husband, William D. esq. 
Keyworth, Henry, esq. 

Library of York County Hospital 
Matterson, William, jun. esq. 
Morris, Beverley R. m.p. 

Proctor, William, esq. County Hospital 
Reed, William, esq. 

Russell, Henry, esq. 

Scawin, William, esq. 

Shann, George, M.p. 

Simpson, Thomas, M.p. 

Swineard, Frederick, esq. 

Thomas, Richard, esq. 

Thurnam, John, m.p., The Retreat 
Walker, T. Kaye Lambe, esq. 
Williams, Caleb, esq. 

Desmond, John, m.p. 


LIST OF MEMBERS - 


Allen, A. M. m.p. 
Alexander, J. B. M.p. 
Babington, W. F. esq. 
Bee, — M.D. 


Beck, J. R. M.p. Local Sec. 
Bellingham, Wm. Henry, m.p. 


Boerstler, — M.p. 

Bowen, W. S. esq. 

Boyle, Alexander, M.p. 
Branham, R. H. m.p. 
Brooks, J. W. M.p. 

Burns, Robert, m.p. 
Carpenter, — M.D. 

Carter, — M.D.  . 
Chamberlaine, 8. m.p. 
Chermside, Sir Robert, m.p. 
Cheyne, — M.D. A 
Clapp, — esq. 

Curwen, — M.D. 
Dandridge, — M.D. : 
Downie, Sir Alexander, M.p. 
Duncan, Edward, esq. 


Dunglison, Robley, m.p. L. See. 


Ermerins, — M.D. ; 
Esby, William, esq. 
Fox, — M.D. 

Georgia Medical Society. 
Giudice, Vittorio, M.D. 
Green, H. m.p. 

Hart, Samuel, esq. 

Hay, Isaac, M.D. 
Hecker, J. F. C. M.p. 
Hodge, — m.p. 
Huxton,—™M.p. . 
Innes, Charles, M.D. 
Johnstone, John M. — 
Jones, — M.D. - 
King, Charles R. M.p. 
Lajus, — M.D. 

La Roache, — m.p. 

Lea and Blanchard 


Lee, Charles, M.p. Local Seed 


Louis, P. C. A. m.p. 
Maclean, George, M.D. 
Macneven, W. H. m.p. 
Macready, B. M. esq. 
M‘Pheeters, Wm. M. m.p. 
Meigs, — M.D. : 
Mills, Maddison, m.p. 
Mills, Charles S. esq. 
Mitchell, — m.p. 

Moore, J. Wilson, M.D. 


FOREIGN LIST. 


Indiana 
Indiana 
Bombay 

Tyro, Ohio 
Albany 

Pisa 

Lancaster, Ohio 
New York 


St. John’s, New Brunswick 


Eatonton, Georgia 
Norwich 

Frankford, Pennsylvania 
Lankaster, Pennsylvania 
Montreal 

Baltimore, Maryland 
Paris 

Brizata, Columbia 


- for Pennsylvania Hospital 


Philadelphia 
Cincinnati, Ohio 
Frankfort-on-Maine 
Winchester, Kentucky 
Philadelphia 
Groningen 
Washington 
Philadelphia 


Como 

New York 
Charleston 
Philadelphia 

Berlin 
Philadelphia 
Philadelphia 
Easton, Pennsylvania 
Georgetown, Demerara 
Philadelphia 
Philadelphia 
Philadelphia 
Philadelphia 
Philadelphia 

New York 

Paris 

New York 

New York 

New York 

St. Louis, Missouri 
Philadelphia 

New York 
Richmond, Virginia 
Philadelphia 


. for College of Physicians, Philadelphia 


39 


40 SYDENHAM SOCIETY. 


Morris, Casper, M.D. : . Philadelphia 
Mower, T. G. esq. 
Mitter,J.mp. . Philadelphia 
M‘Vicar, John Augustus, M.D. New York 
Neville, — m.p. ce -. Hamburgh 
New York Hospital 
Norris, G. W. M.p. : . Philadelphia 
Oliver, Joseph, esq. New York 
Oppenheim, F. C. M.p. . . Hamburgh 
Overstreet, James, esq. . . Washington 
Pancoast, — M.D. ; . Philadelphia 
Parker, W. esq. . : . New York 
Patterson, H.S.m.p. . . Philadelphia 
Pepper, W. M.D. . 0 . Philadelphia 
Perry, H.S.m.p. . : . Madeira 
Roby, Joseph, M.D. Maryland 


Ross, Archibald Colquhoun, M.D. Madeira 
Rutherford, Henry Charles, m.p. Caen, Normandy 


Salter, Richard Henry, M.p. . Boston 
Sands, A. B. m.v. A . New York 
Sargent, D. F. m.p. : Philadelphia 
Sewall, Thomas, m.p. Loc. See. Washington 
Sieveking, Edward, m.p. . Hamburgh 
Stewardson, — M.D. : . Philadelphia 
Stillé, Alfred, m.p. : . Philadelphia 
Stillé, Moreton, m.p. Philadelphia 
Surgeon-General, United ‘States. 

Taylor, Isaac E.mM.pD. . New York 
Taylor, Isaac E.M.p. . New York 
Teulan, W. F. esq. : . Halifax, N.S. 
Tomes, Robert, M.D. 3 . New York 
Tripler, Charles . . esq. 

Wallace, Ellerslie, M.p. . . Pennsylvania 
Washington, James A. M.p. . New York 
Wiley and Putnam, Messrs. . New York 
Wood, G. B. M.p. : . Philadelphia 
Wood, Stephen, M.D... . New York 


*,* Although considerable pains have been taken to render this list as correct as 
sacs it is feared that some errors will be found. Of these the Secretary will be 
glad to receive information, in order that they may be corrected in future lists. 


Cc. AND J. ADLARD, PRINTERS, BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. 





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BINDING SZ -T. MAY 11 196/ 


QP Simon, Johann Franz 

514 Animal chemistry with 
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