REFERENCES 199 



Principles of Humari Physiology (Lea & Febiger, Phila- 

 delphia) ; G. N. Stewart : A Manual of Physiology (Wil- 

 liam Wood & Co., New York) ; M. Kahn : Functional 

 Diagnosis (W. F. Prior Co., Hagerstown, Maryland) ; and 

 H. G. Wells: Chemical Pathology (W. B. Saunders & Co., 

 Philadelphia). 



VITAMIKES Ain) HORMONES. The possible relationship 

 or identity of these two substances has been urged, more 

 particularly, by Voegtlen and Myers, and by Butcher 

 (American Journal of Physiology, volume 49, page 124, 

 1919; Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Thera- 

 peutics, volume 13, page 301, 1919; and Journal of Bio- 

 logical Chemistry, volume 39, page 63, 1919). This the- 

 ory has met with opposition; see, for example, Anrep and 

 Drummond's paper on "The Supposed Identity of the 

 Water-Soluble Vitamine B and Secretin" (Journal of 

 Physiology, volume 54, page 249, 1921). A possible con- 

 nection between vitamine B and adrenaline has been sug- 

 gested by MacCarrison (see the Indian Journal of Medical 

 Research, volume 6, pages 275 and 550, 1919, and the 

 Proceedings of the Royal Society, section B, volume 91, 

 page 103, 1920). Kellaway's paper on "The Effect of 

 Certain Dietary Deficiencies on the Suprarenal Glands" 

 (Proceedings of the Royal Society, section B, volume 92, 

 page 6, 1921) should also be consulted. 



THE THYROID. (See also the "general" references 

 above.) A number of books dealing more specifically with 

 this gland have been published. R. McCarrison's The 

 Thyroid in Health and Disease (Balliere, Tindall & Cox, 



