MEDICINES. SQ1 



which the oil of turpentine and laudanum may be administered in ca.jes of 

 cholic. 



MvKRH may be used in the form of tincture, or it may be united to the 

 tuicture of aloes as a stimulating and digestive application to wounds. 

 Diluted with an equal quantity of uater, it is a good application for canker 

 in the mouth, but as an internal medicine it seems to be inert. 



NiTKE. — See Potash. 



Nitrous ^Etiier, Simuit of, is a very useful medicine in the advanced 

 stages of fever, for wliile it to a certain degree rouses the exhausted powers 

 of the animal, and may be denominated a stimulant, it never brings back 

 the dangerous febrile action which was subsiding. It is given in doses of 

 three or tour drachms. 



Oils. — The farrier's list contains many of them, but the scientific prac- 

 titioner has discarded the greater part ; those that are worth retaining will 

 be found under the names of the vegetables from which they are extracted. 



Ointments. — These have been fully described under the accidents and 

 diseases in which their use is required. 



Olives, Oil of. — Tiiis is sometimes given as a purgative when aloes 

 or other aperients cannot be obtained. It is useless to give it in a less 

 quantity than a pint, and then it is uncertain in its operation, although 

 harmless. In all liniments and ointments, spermaceti, or even linseed oil, 

 may be substituted without detriment, and the peculiar smell of the latter 

 may be subdued by oil of aniseseed or origanum. 



Opium. — However underrated by some, there is not a more valuable drug 

 on our list. It does not often act as a narcotic except in enormous doses ; 

 but it is a powerful antispasmodic, sedative, and astringent. As an anti- 

 spasmodic, it enters into the cholic drink, and it is the sheet-anchor of the 

 veterinarian in the treatment of tetanus or locked jaw. As a sedative, it 

 relaxes that universal spasm of the muscular system, which is the charac- 

 tkjristic of tetanus ; and perhaps it is only as a sedative that it has such 

 admirable effect as an astringent; for when the irritation about the mouths 

 of the vessels of the intestines and kidneys is allayed by the opium, undue 

 purging and profuse staling are necessarily arrested. It should, however, 

 be given with caution. It is its secondary effect which is sedative, and, if 

 given in cases of fever, its primary effect in increasing the excitation of the 

 frame is marked and injurious. In the early and acute stage of fever, it 

 would be bad practice to give it in the smallest quantity ; but when the 

 fever has passed, or is passing, there is nothing which so rapidly subdues 

 the irritability that accompanies extreme weakness ; and it becomes an 

 excellent tonic, because it is a sedative. 



If the blue or green vitriol, or cantharides, have been pushed too far, 

 opium soonest quiets the disorder they have occasioned. It is given in 

 doses of one or two drachms ; either the powdered opium being made into 

 a ball, or the crude opium dissolved in hot water, and given with its sedi- 

 ment. Other medicines are usually combined with it, according to the cir- 

 cumstances of the case. 



Externally, it is useful in opthalmia. In the form of decoction of the 

 poppy head it may constitute the basis of an anodyne poultice ; but it must 

 not he given in union with any alkali, with the exception of chalk, in over- 

 Durging ; nor with the superacetaie of lead, by which its powers are mate- 

 rially impaired, nor witli sulphate of zinc, or copper, or iron. 



From its high price it is much adulterated, and it is rare to meet with it 

 m a state of purity. Tiie best tests are its smell, its taste, its toughness 

 ami pliancy, its fawn or l)rown colour, and its weight, for it is the heaviest 

 af all the vegetable extracts, except gum arable; yet its weight is often 



