REFERENCES 317 



GRADWOHL-BLAIVAS: The Newer Methods of Blood and Urine Chemistry, 

 C. V. Mosby Co., St. Louis, 1917. 



Digestion 



BEAUMONT: Physiology of Digestion, 1847. 



PAVLOV: The Work of the Digestive Glands, Trans, by Thompson, 1910. 



BABKIN: Die Aiissere Sekretion der Verdauungsdriisen, Springer, Berlin, 

 1914. 



BERNARD: Memoire sur le pancreas, Paris, 1856. 



BAYLISS AND STARLING: Enterokinase, Journal of Physiology, 1903, xxx, 61. 



BAYLISS AND STARLING: Secretin, Journal of Physiology, 1902, 29 and 31. 



CARLSON, ET AL.: Journal American Medical Association, 1916, Ixvi, 178. 



WOHLGEMUTH: Composition of Pancreatic Juice, Biochemische Zeitschrift, 

 1912, xxxix, 321. 



MELLANBY AND WOOLLEY: Trypsin and Trypsinogen, Journal of Physi- 

 ology, 1914, xlvii, 339. 



MELLANBY AND WOOLLEY: Ferments of the Pancreas, Journal of Physiol- 

 ogy, 1915, xlix, 246. 



HAMMARSTEN: Bile, Ergebnisse der Physiologic, 1905. 



PREGL: Cholic Acid, Zeitschrift fiir physiologische Chemie, 1910, Ixv, 157. 



LIF.CHUTZ: Cholic Acid, Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft, 

 1914, xlvii, 1459. 



FISCHER AND ROSE: Composition of Bilirubin, Zeitschrift fiir physiol- 

 ogische Chemie, 1914, Ixxxix, 262. 



GRINDLEY AND MACNEAL: Bacteria and Chemistry of Feces of Healthy 

 Men, Studies in Nutrition, Vols. 3, 4, and 5, University of Illinois, 

 1912. 



Urine 



NEUBERG: Der Harn, Springer, Berlin, 1911. 



FOLIN: Laws Governing the Chemical Composition of the Urine, Amer- 

 ican Journal Physiology, 1905, xiii, 66, 45; Also numerous other pa- 

 pers by Folin in the Zeitschrift fur Physiologische Chemie, Journal 

 of Biological Chemistry, American Journal of Physiology, and else- 

 where. 



GRADWOHL-BLAIVAS: The Newer Methods of Blood and Urine Chemistry, 

 C. V. Mosby Co., St. Louis, 1917. A short volume giving some of the 

 more recent analytical methods. 



Metabolism 



The literature of metabolism is enormous. The following brief list 

 will serve as the handle of the fan, from which the usually abundant ref- 

 erences will lead out into the broader or more specialized aspects of the 

 field. 



