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On certain Substances found in the Urine, which reduce the Oxide of Copper upon Boiling in the presence of an Alkali*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

Herbert H. Ashdown
Affiliation:
(From the Physiological Laboratory of University College, London, and the Laboratory of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh.)
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(abstract)

As the immediate result of the ingestion of certain chemical compounds—chloral, camphor, benzol, phenol, &c.—substances make their appearance in the urine which have long been known to possess the power of reducing the oxides of some of the metals when in solution in the presence of an alkali, if that mixture be raised to the boiling point, but considerable confusion has resulted from the difficulty of finding a short process whereby many of these substances may be readily recognised as not belonging to that comprehensive group of conditions generally styled as glycosuria.

Type
Proceedings 1889-90
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1891

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References

* A grant was given by the British Medical Association towards the expenses of this research.