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IN PREPARATION, 



A TEXT-BOOK, 



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OF THE 



PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY 



OF 



THE ANIMAL BODY,. 



INCLUDING THE CHANGES WHICH THE TISSUES AND 

 FLUIDS UNDERGO IN DISEASE. 



By ARTHUR GAMGEE, M.D., F.R.S., 



Crackenbury Professor of Physiology in Owens College, Manchester, and 

 Examiner in Physiology in the University of Edinburgh. 



The auth'r seeks to fill up an important gap at present existing in English 

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 chemical processes of the organism, and of the methods of studying them. 



The work will primarily be a didactic and systematic treatise in which the 

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 as to render superfluous a separate laboratory treatise on Chemico- 

 Physiological Analysis. 



It is the object of the author to prepare a work which will not only 

 be useful to specialists in physiology, but to physicians, by whose 

 researches many of the most important facts in the chemical history of the 

 body have been discovered in the past, as they doubtless will be in the 

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Now ready, Vol. I., Nos. IV. and V., Pnce 14s 



THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY. 



EDITED 



(\Vith the co-operation in England of Professors Gamgee, Rutherford, 



and Sanderson; and in America of Professors H. P. Bowditch, H. N. 



Martin, and H. C. Wood) by 



MICHAEL FOSTER, M.D., F.R.S. 



Contents. 



S. Ringer and W. Murrell.— The Action o£ Arseniate of Soda and 



Arsenious Acid on Frogs. 

 S. Ringer and W Murrell. — Concerning the Action of Aconitia on the 



Nervous and Muscular System of Frogs. 

 S. Ringer and W. Murrell.— The Action of Tartar Emetic, Hydrocj-ani 



Acid, and Veratria on the Animal Body. 

 Emily A. Nunn.— The Structural Changes in the Epidermis of the Frog, 



brought about by Poisoning with Arsenic and with Antimony. 

 G. F. Dowdeswell. — On the Structural Changes which are produced in th 



Liver under the Influence of the Salts of Vanadium. 

 \V. H. Gaskell.— Further Resefcrches on the Vasomotor Ner>-es cr 



Ordinary Muscles. 

 G. L. Walton. — The Function of the Epiglottis in Deglutition ant: 



Phonation. 

 H. Sewall. — The Development and Regeneration of the Gastric Gkndula.' 



Epithelium during Foetal Life and after Birth. 

 W. Stirling and E. Skinner. — On the Epithelium of the Cornea. 

 J. N. Langley. — On the Physiology of the Salivary Secretion. 

 H. Newell Martin and W. D. Booker.— The Influence of StimulaticB 



of the Midbrain upon the Respiratory Rhythm of the Mammal. 

 S. Ringer and W. Murrell.— On Pituri. 

 H. Kronecker and W. Stirung. — The Genesis of Tetanus. 

 H. Kroneckkr and W. Stirling.— On the so-called "Initial Con- 

 traction." 

 List of Titles of Books and Papers of Physiological Interest, No. III. 

 MACMILLAN & CO., Londtn, Cambridge, and New York. 



