278 Veterinary Medicine. 



decoctions of oak bark, oak galls, catechu, kino, rumex, sumac, 

 or even strong tea will serve to render it insoluble and non- 

 irritant. 



POISONING BY CORROSIVE SAI/TS OF MERCURY. 



Calomel with muriatic acid, corrosive sublimate, mercuric chloride, 

 iodide, nitrate, cyanide. Fatal dose. Symptoms : anorexia, salivation, 

 thirst, emesis, colic, diarrhoea, rumbling, debility, tremors, stupor, death. 

 Lesions : corrosive whitening of gastro-intestinal mucosa, congestion, ulcer, 

 ation, blackening, bloody, glairy ingesta. Treatment : albumen, emesis, 

 demulcents, chlorate of potash, bitters, iron sulphate. Test : copper and 

 muriatic acid. 



Calomel in itself cannot be looked on as corrosive, but in 

 ruminants in which it is retained in the system for 3 or 4 days it 

 is largely resolved into mercuric chloride by the free gastric acid 

 and alkaline chlorides. It has therefore been largely excluded 

 from the materia medica of these animals. When in these or 

 other animals it produces corrosive action, the operation is essen- 

 tially that of corrosive sublimate. 



The corrosive salts of mercury likely to be taken by animals 

 are corrosive sublimate now so largely used as an antiseptic, the 

 nitrates and iodides, and cyanides of mercury used as local appli- 

 cations or as antiseptics. 



Mercuric chloride may be taken as the type. It has proved 

 fatal to the horse in a dose of 2 drs. ; to the ox in 1 to 2 drs. ; to 

 the dog in doses of 4 to 6 grs. 



Symptoms. L,oss of appetite, salivation, thirst, emesis in vom- 

 iting animals, colics, diarrhoea, often bloody, weak perhaps im- 

 perceptible pulse, hurried breathing, much rumbling of the abdo- 

 men, debility, trembling, stupor and death. 



Lesions Escharotic whitening in patches of the mucosa of the 

 mouth, throat, gullet, stomach and intestines, with acute conges- 

 tion, ulceration and ecchymosis, and sometimes blackening by 

 the formation of the sulphide. The contents of the bowels may 

 be serous or bloody and more or less glairy. Eike arsenic, mer- 

 curic chloride concentrates its action on the intestinal canal by 

 whatever channel it may have entered the body. 



