BRi (MANIL 





BRON< Mil ■« I ASIS 



of bromin, ami is much u antipyretic, in i 



1 5 - 

 Bromanil '"]. 



tund obtained b) heating phenol 

 with l>i n in water. It i I golden- 



■r thick plates that melt and 



Bromated Antifebrin 



Bromatography | food; 



gj. A description of <>r treatise on 



Bromatology 



1 he - 

 Bromethv. S mid. 



Bromid. or Bromide or -mid) [ 



I bromin; those oi calcium, 

 um, and sodium arc the ones 

 . in medicim I hey alia) nervous ex< 



largely employed 



B. of Ethyl. See Hydrobromic Ether. 



Bromidia a stench]. An 



American nostrum containing in each fluid dram 



chloral hydi -nun bromid, each L, r r. 15, ex- 



and extract of hyoscyamus, 

 half. 1 »ose 5J. 

 Bromidrosiphobia -mid-ros-e-fo 1 '-be-aft) [jfyu/* 



I Insane dread of 

 il smells, with hallucinations as to the 

 i them. 

 Bromidrosis .a stench ; 11 



1 1 -■ .. 1 »is; an affection of the sweat-glands 



in which tin sweat has an offensive odor. It is usu- 



ith chronic local hyperidrosis, especially 



The odor i> due to a specific decomposi- 



t from the presence of the bacterium 



Brorr.idum bro* '-mid-urn) [ipu/iog, a stench]. Bromid ; 



■ of bromin. 



Bnmin, Bromine, or Bromum {bro-min, or -muni) 



nch]. Mr 80; quantivalence 1. A 



mi liquid, which, at ordinary temperatures, 



iting vapor. In its elementary 



very active escharotic, and internally a 



It is used by inhalation and as an 



gtt. ij, largely diluted. The salts 



and cardiac depressants, and 



ghly valui I ■ salts of the alkaline 



tmonly used. They are 

 I spinal also alterative, anti- 



hypnotic. Ammonii bromidum, 

 NH 4 Br, Is. Dose gr. v-xx, Auri 



bromidum. \urum. Calcii bromidum, 



,i Dose gr. v-jjj. 

 thyl bromid, l ,HjBr, useful in spasmodic coug 



- Ethylene bromid. See Ethylene. 

 Ferri bromidi, Syr., contains ten per cent, of the 

 3 Lithii bromidum, l.il'.r, granular 



r. v-xx. Nickel bro- 

 midum- ~ Potassii bromidum, KBr, 



v- 3 j. Sodii 

 bromidum, NaBr, i-ds. 



- Zinci bromidum. ZnBr 2 , granular, 

 jr. ' ,-ij. 

 ninism, Bromism 



tain peculiar phenomena 

 administration of the 

 ; m ire heada 

 co ' eart's 



the soft 



in, and a peculiar 

 en ' rid most 



constant symptoms. There i> also anorexia with less 



of sexual power and atroph) ol the testes or mam- 

 mae. The patient may become almost imbecile. 



Bromo-Caffein [bro-mo-kaf -e-in) [bromin; caffein\. 

 A proprietary effervescing preparation containing cai 

 fein. li 1- used for the relief oi headaches. 



Bromochloralum [bro-mo-klo-raV -uni) [(JpStfwg, 

 stench; chloral"]. A proprietarj antiseptic and disin 

 fecting compound, containing the bromid and chlorid 

 of aluminum. 



Bromoform [bro* -mo-form) \fipofiog, a stench; forma. 

 form], CHBr„. A bromid having a structure like 

 that of 1 hlorofonn, CHC1 S ; it i- an active anesthetii 

 It- useis not followed by vomiting. It causes irrita- 

 tion of the conjunctiva an<l respiratory organs, li is 

 used in whooping cough in doses ofgtt. ij— v in a mix- 

 ture of wine and water. Unof. 



Bromography [bro-mog* -ra-fe) . Same as Broma 

 raphy. 



Bromoiodism [bro-mo-i' '-o-dism) [Bromism; iodisml. 

 Poisoning 1>\ bromin and iodin compounds together. 



Bromol {bro'-mol ), ( ' t; l I.. I li .< )l I. Tribromophenol ; an 

 antiseptic substance used in the fOrmoi a powder, solu- 

 tion (1 : 30 olive oil), or ointment 1 1 : 10). Internally 

 it is used in cholera infantum and typhoid fever. I 

 gr. fo-%. Unof. 



Bronchadenitis {brongk-ad-en-i' '-tis) [ >i>"-/x in , tne 

 bronchial tubes; adqv, gland; trig, inflammation]. 

 Inflammation of the bronchial Iymphati< glands. 



Bronchaphrosia [brongk-af-ro' -ze-aft) [/ip6] \ta, bron- 

 chial tubes; a$p6q, loam]. Obstruction due to the 

 presence of froth in the bronchioles. 



Bronchi [brong'-kt) [ -t/ioyxoc, the windpipe]. The 

 two tubes into which the trachea divides opposite tin- 

 third dorsal vertebra, called respectively the right and 

 the left bronchus. 



Bronchia (bron gf-ke-aft) \ \p6] roc, the windpipe]. The 

 bronchial tubes, especially those that are smaller than 

 the two bronchi. 



Bronchial [prong* -ke-al) [ fyoy;t C\ the windpipe]. 

 Relating to the bronchi or to their branches, or to the 

 smaller air-passages in the lungs. B. Arteries, 

 branches of the thoracic aorta, three or four in num- 

 ber. They are the nutrient vessels of the lung-. See 

 Arteries, Table of . B. Catarrh, the simplest form of 

 acute inflammation of the bronchi. It is the so called 

 " cold on the chest.'''' The feeling of oppression and 

 constriction, with slight mucous discharge, is due to 

 hyperemia and swelling oi the mucous membrane of 

 the larger bronchi. B. Fluke. See Distoma ringeri. 

 B. Glands, the chain of glands running beside the 

 bronchi. They frequent!) undergo pathologic enlarge- 

 ment and give rise to a group of symptoms — cough, 

 pain, spasmodic dyspnea, dysphagia, and change in 

 the voice. The enlargement is usually tuberculous in 

 nature. 



Bronchiectasis [brong-ke-ek' -tas-is) [ i' ; >", i-», the 

 windpipe ; enroots, dilatation]. A term denoting the 

 dilatation or relaxation of tne walls of the bronchi, 

 arising from inflammation and other causes. It is 

 very rare as a primary condition, but i-- frequently 

 associated with some chronic pulmonary disease. It 

 occurs mosl frequently in pulmonary tuberculosis at the 

 apex of the lung, but is also frequently seen in the 

 bronchi at the base of the lung. It may involve a 

 tube uniforml) for some distant e, producing the cylin- 

 drical form; or it ma) occui irregularly in sac- or 

 kets, the sacculated form. If the whole lung be 

 involved in the change we have produced the so-called 

 turtle lung. The chai symptom of bron- 



chiectasis i> paroxysmal coughing, with the expectora- 

 tion of large quantities oi muco purulent, often fetid, 



