526 



INDEX. 



SCHUTZENBERGEK, M. P., his researches on 

 the primary cleavage products when 

 albumin is boiled with dilute sulphuric 

 acid, 116 ; his method of decomposing 

 albuminous bodies by heating with 

 barium hydrate, under pressure, at tem- 

 peratures between 100 and 200 C., 235 ; 

 the amounts of tyrosine which he ob- 

 tained by his method, 246 ; the primary 

 and secondary products obtained by his 

 method, 260 



SCHWANN, TH., on fermentation and putre- 

 faction, 5; on the action of saliva on 

 starch, 36 ; discovery of pepsin, 70, 85; 

 researches on digestion, 81, 82 ; first 

 made biliary fistulae, 267 



SCOTT, G., on the action of calomel upon 

 the secretion of bile, 371 



Secretory and trophic nerve-fibres con- 

 trasted, 13 



Serous and mucous salivary glands, con- 

 trasted, 11 



SHERRINGTON, C. J., on the growth of 

 micro-organisms in culture media con- 

 taining bile, 356; on the passage of 

 bacteria into the bile, 376 



SIEBEK, Mrs Dr (see Nencki and), on rela- 

 tion of bilirubin to haematin, 349 (see 

 Macfadyen, Nencki and Sieber) 



SIEBEB and SCHONBENKO, on methyl-mer- 

 captan, 506 



SIEGFRIED, MAX, obtains amido-valerianic 

 acid as a product of the decomposition 

 of ' reticulin ' (foot-note), 244 ; obtains 

 a small quantity of glutamic acid from 

 the same, 252 ; on lysine and lysatinine 

 as products of the decomposition of 

 conglutin, gluten- fibrin, hemiprotein, 

 Maly's oxyproto-sulphonic acid and egg- 

 albumin, 255, 259 ; discovery of reticu- 

 lin, 402 



' Sinistrin,' 473 



SJOGVIST'S method of determining HC1 in 

 the gastric contents, 500 



Skatol, 424 ; methods of preparation of, 

 424; always accompanies indol(?), 425; 

 physical and chemical characters of, 

 425 ; characteristic reactions of, 426 ; 

 fate and transformation of, in economy, 

 426 



Skatol-carbonic acid, 426 ; mode of pre- 

 paration of, 426 ; properties and re- 

 actions of, 427 ; occurrence in the 

 urine (?), 428 



SOCOLOFF, effects on the composition of the 

 bile, of introducing sodium glykocho- 

 late into the stomach and blood of dogs, 

 281 ; contradiction of his results by 

 Provost and Binet, 281 



' SOLERA'S Keaction ' for sulphocyanic acid 

 in saliva, 19 



Solidungula, digestion in, 476 



SONITSCHEWSKY, on leucine and tyrosine in 

 phosphorus poisoning, 234 



SPALLANZANI, his investigations on diges- 

 tion, 69, 474, 475 



SPIRO, on the relation between the nitrogen 

 and sulphur of the food and the nitro- 

 gen and sulphur excreted in the bile, 

 348 



STADELMANN, E., his researches on pro- 

 teolytic enzymes in normal urine quoted, 

 18 ; formation of ammonia in the 

 pancreatic digestion of fibrin, 260 ; on 

 tryptophan, 263 ; effects of injecting 

 NaCl into the blood on the colour of 

 the bile secreted, 282 ; on the increase 

 in the excretion of bilirubin in the bile 

 when bilirubin is introduced into the 

 blood, as well as when solution of 

 haemoglobin is injected, 364 ; researches 

 of on toluylendiamin and its action on 

 the body, 364 ; presence of bile acids in 

 urine in cases of poisoning with ictero- 

 genic drugs, 365 



STADELER, G., tyrosine from horn, 246 ; 

 researches of, on the colouring matters 

 of the bile, 315 ; his analysis of bili- 

 rubin, 318 ; on the conversion of the 

 latter into biliverdin, 324 ; first observed 

 formation of, and endeavoured to sepa- 

 rate bilieyanm, 328 ; on bilifuscin and 

 biliprasin in gall-stones, 382 

 Starch, action of diastatic enzyme of 

 saliva on, 36 et seq. ; changes which it 

 undergoes in the stomach, 155 ; action 

 of dilute acids upon, 156 

 STENO, duct of, 23 ; insertion of cannulae 



into, 23 



1 Stercobilin,' 458 

 ' Stercorin,' 459 



STERN, H., experiments of, shewing that 

 when all the blood-vessels of the liver 

 as well as the bile ducts are ligatured 

 no bile colouring matter accumulates 

 in tissues, 365 

 STEVENS, the researches of, on gastric 



digestion, 69 



STOKVIS, researches of, on the bile colour- 

 ing matters, 328 



Stomach, structure of, 60 ; glands of the 

 fundus of, 63 ; the glands of the pylorus, 

 63 ; the pyloric glands and the pyloric 

 juice, 100 ; the glands of the fundus, 

 the cells which produce pepsin and the 

 cells which produce acid, 105 ; the 

 gastric glands during fasting and diges- 

 tion, 106 ; the process of digestion in 

 the living, 151 ; duration of the digestive 

 process in, 159 ; non-digestion of, by its 

 juice, 160 ; survival of animals after 

 removal of, 163 ; the experiments of 

 Czerny and his pupils, 163 ; the experi- 

 ments of Ogata, 164 ; amyloid degenera- 

 tion of, 177; cancer of, 177; changes in 

 the HC1, the pepsin and the rennet- 

 enzyme of the gastric juice in, 177 ; 

 chronic atrophy of, 177 



