Merck's 1899 Manual
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Chapter 137 : Chlorine Water.
Creolin.
Diaphtherin.
Ichthyol.
Pota.s.sa.
Sanguinaria: as injection.
Chlorine Water.
Creolin.
Diaphtherin.
Ichthyol.
Pota.s.sa.
Sanguinaria: as injection.
~Flatulence.~--_See also, Colic, Dyspepsia._
Abstention from sugar, starchy food, tea.
Acid, Carbolic: if without acidity, etc.
Acid, Sulphurous: if due to fermentation.
Alkalies: before meals.
Ammonia: in alkaline mixture a palliative.
Asafetida: in children; simple hysterical or hypochondriacal.
Belladonna: if due to paresis of intestinal walls.
Benzo-napthol.
Bis.m.u.th: with charcoal, in flatulent dyspepsia.
Calcium Saccharate.
Calumba: with aromatics.
Camphor: in hysterical flatulence, especially at climacteric.
Carbolated Camphor.
Carlsbad Waters: if due to hepatic derangement.
Carminatives.
Charcoal.
Chloroform: pure, in drop doses in gastric flatulence.
Creosote.
Essential Oils.
Ether: in nervousness and hypochondriasis.
Eucalyptol: at climacteric, if a.s.sociated with heat flus.h.i.+ngs, etc.
Galvanism.
Hot Water: between meals.
Ichthalbin.
Ipecacuanha: in constipation, oppression at epigastrium, and in pregnancy.
Manganese Dioxide.
Mercury: when liver is sluggish.
Muscarine: in intestinal paresis.
Nux Vomica: in constipation, pain at top of head.
Oleoresin Capsic.u.m.
Pepper.
Physostigma: in women at change of life.
Picrotoxin.
Podophyllin with Euonymin, Leptandra, Chirata and Creosote.
Pota.s.sium Permanganate: in fat people.
Rue: most efficient.
Sodium Sulphocarbolate.
Strontium Bromide.
Sulphocarbolates: when no acidity, and simple spasms.
Terebene.
Turpentine Oil: few drops internally, or as enema in fevers, peritonitis, etc.
Valerian.
Xanthoxylum.