Page:Treatise on poisons in relation to medical jurisprudence, physiology, and the practice of physic (IA treatiseonpoison00chriuoft).pdf/233

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  • tion of the oxide is subject to be converted into the sulphuret by

hydrosulphuric acid gas evolved in the stomach after death.[1] In every instance of the kind yet carefully examined a large proportion of the oxide has remained unacted on, although the intense colour of the mixed sulphuret makes it appear as if that were the only compound present.


7. Arseniuretted-Hydrogen.

This compound presents the form of a colourless gas, possessing a fetid garlicky odour, a density of nearly 2·7, and great virulence as a poison. It is mentioned here, because accidental poisoning with it has happened occasionally within a few years, chiefly owing to the occasional adulteration of sulphuric acid with arsenic, and the liability of the arsenic to form arseniuretted-hydrogen when such sulphuric acid is used to prepare hydrogen gas. Dr. O'Reilly has mentioned a melancholy instance of a young chemist losing his life in this way.[2] Dr. Schlinder of Greifenberg has related another, which did not prove fatal.[3] And it is well known that the German chemis Gehlen lost his life by accidentally breathing arseniuretted-hydrogen while engaged in examining its chemical properties.[4] It is an inflammable body; and its presence in any other gas is easily detected by burning it according to the method of Marsh.


Section II.—Of the Action of Arsenic and the Symptoms it excites in Man.

It is now generally admitted that arsenic produces in the living body two classes of phenomena,—or that, like the narcotico-acrids, it has a twofold action. One action is purely irritant, by virtue of which it induces inflammation in the alimentary canal and elsewhere. The other, although it seldom occasions symptoms of narcotism properly so called, yet obviously consists in a disorder of parts or organs remote from the seat of its application.

It is also the general opinion of toxicologists, that arsenic occasions death more frequently through means of its remote effects than in consequence of the local inflammation it excites. In some cases indeed no symptoms of inflammation occur at all; and in many, although inflammation is obviously produced, death takes place long before it has had time to cause material organic injury. Nevertheless in some, though certainly in comparatively few instances, the local action, it must be admitted, predominates so much, that the morbid changes of the part primarily acted on are alone adequate to account for death.

Its chief operation being on organs remote from the part to which it is applied, a natural object of inquiry is, whether this action re-*

  1. See subsequently Morbid Appearances.
  2. Dublin Journal of the Med. Sciences, xx. 422.
  3. Repertorium fur die Pharmacie, lxix. 271.
  4. Buchner's Toxicologie, 476.