Page:Treatise on poisons in relation to medical jurisprudence, physiology, and the practice of physic (IA treatiseonpoison00chriuoft).pdf/589

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breathe air saturated with its vapour, the first died in one second, the second also in a single second, the cat in two, one dog in five, and the other dog in ten seconds.[1]

The effects of the diluted acid are the same when the dose is large, but somewhat different when inferior doses are given. These effects have been observed by many physiologists; but the most accurate and extensive experiments are those of Emmert published in 1805,[2] those of Coullon in 1819,[3] and those of Krimer in 1827.[4] They found that when an animal is poisoned with a dose not quite sufficient to cause death, it is seized in one or two minutes with giddiness, weakness and salivation, then with tetanic convulsions, and at last with gradually increasing insensibility; that after lying in this state for some time, the insensibility goes off rapidly and is succeeded by a few attacks of convulsions and transient giddiness; and that the whole duration of such cases of poisoning sometimes does not exceed half an hour, but may extend to a whole day or more.—When the dose is somewhat larger the animal perishes either in tetanic convulsions or comatose; and death for the most part takes place between the second and fifteenth minute. I have seen the diluted acid, however, prove fatal with a rapidity scarcely surpassed by the pure poison. Thus in an experiment with Vauquelin's acid, made on a strong cat at the same time with the second and third of the experiments with the pure acid detailed above, I found that thirty-two grains, which contain one of real acid, began to act in fifteen seconds, and proved fatal in twenty-five more. According to Schubarth's experiments death may be sometimes delayed for thirty-two minutes;[5] but if the animal survives that interval, it recovers. He farther states, that during the course of the symptoms the breath exhales an odour of hydrocyanic acid.[6] Coullon once saw a dog die after nineteen hours of suffering; but cases of this duration are exceedingly rare.[7] When the dose is very large Mr. Macaulay, as will afterwards be mentioned (p. 590), has found death take place in a few seconds, exactly as when the pure acid is given.

The body presents few morbid appearances of note. The brain is generally natural. Yet occasionally its vessels are turgid; and Schubarth once found even an extravasation of blood between its external membranes in the horse.[8] The heart and great vessels are distended with black blood, which is commonly fluid, but occasionally coagulated as usual. The lungs, according to Schubarth, are sometimes pale, but much more generally injected and gorged with blood.[9] The pure acid, according to Magendie, exhausts the irritability of the heart and voluntary muscles so completely, that they are insensible

  1. Annales de Chimie, xcii. 59.
  2. Diss. Inaug. de Venenatis Acidi Borussici in Animalia effectibus. Tubingæ, 1805.
  3. Recherches et Considérations sur l'Acide Hydrocyanique. Paris, 1819.
  4. Journal Complementaire, xxviii. 33.
  5. Bemerkungen über die Wirkungen der Blausaure. Hufeland's Journal der Praktischen Heilkunde, lii. 88.
  6. Bemerkungen, &c. 85.
  7. Recherches, &c. p. 136.
  8. Bemerkungen, &c. 81.
  9. Ibid. 82.