Formulary for the preparation and mode of employing several new remedies : namely, morphine, iodine, quinine ... / with an introduction, and copious notes, by the late Charles Thomas Haden ; translated from the French of the third edition of Magendie's "Formulaire."
- François Magendie
- Date:
- 1824
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Formulary for the preparation and mode of employing several new remedies : namely, morphine, iodine, quinine ... / with an introduction, and copious notes, by the late Charles Thomas Haden ; translated from the French of the third edition of Magendie's "Formulaire.". Source: Wellcome Collection.
47/174 (page 27)
![to be inverted over the mouth of the matrass, and the heat of a charcoal chaffer being applied5 iodine will sublime in great abun¬ dance. It must be washed out of the globe with alcohol, then drained and dried on plates of glass, and purified by a second sublimation from dry quicklime.] POTASSÆ ET SODÆ HYDRIODATES. The Hydriodates of Potash and Soda. If a solution of soda or of potash be poured on iodine in its metallic state, an iodate and a hydriodate are formed, which may be sepa¬ rated by means of alcohol, which only dis¬ solves the latter of these salts. The hydriodate may then be obtained by evaporation. The hydriodates of soda and of potash may also be obtained, like other neutral salts, by directly combining the acid with the oxide. The hydriodates of soda and of potash are deliquescent salts, and therefore very soluble in water. Their solutions are still capable of dissolving iodine: thus forming an ioduretted hydriodate. ACTION OF IODINE ON MAN AND ON ANIMALS. M. Gay-Lussac, soon after the publication](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30796568_0047.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)