Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison
CHAPTER VIII.
1807 words | Chapter 83
OF POISONING WITH NITRATE OF POTASS.
The _nitrate of potass_ [nitre, saltpetre, sal-prunelle], is a dangerous
poison. It has been often mistaken for the saline laxatives, especially
the sulphate of soda, and has thus been the source of fatal accidents.
SECTION I.—_Of the Chemical Tests for Nitrate of Potass._
It exists in commerce and the arts in two forms, fused and crystallized.
The fused nitre [sal-prunelle] is sold in little button-shaped masses,
spheres of the size of musket-balls, or larger circular cakes, of a
snow-white tint. The crystallized salt [sal-petre] is sold in whitish,
sulcated crystals, which are often regular and large. They are six-sided
prisms, more or lest flattened, and terminated by two converging planes.
In both forms nitre has a peculiar, cool, but sharp taste.
Its chemical properties are characteristic. In the solid form, it
animates the combustion of burning fuel, and yields nitrous fumes when
heated with strong sulphuric acid. In solution it is precipitated yellow
by the chloride of platinum, and yields, when not greatly diluted, a
crystalline precipitate with perchloric acid. The crude salt of commerce
contains chloride of sodium; and hence the odour disengaged by sulphuric
acid may be mixed with that of chlorine or hydrochloric acid gas. When
mixed with any vegetable or animal infusion by which it is coloured,
crystals may sometimes be easily procured in a state of sufficient
purity by filtration and evaporation. But if not, then the same process
must be resorted to with that formerly recommended for nitric acid (p.
143), the first step of neutralization with potass being of course
dispensed with.—A process nearly the same with this has been suggested
by M. Kramer of Milan. He proposes to free the liquid in part of animal
matter by adding acetate of lead, transmitting sulphuretted-hydrogen
through the filtered fluid to remove any excess of lead, boiling the
fluid after another filtration, and then proceeding with acetate of
silver to remove chlorides, as in the process I have adopted. In this
way he found nitre even in the blood.[447]
SECTION II.—_Of the Action of Nitrate of Potass and its Symptoms in
Man._
This substance forms an exception to the general law formerly laid down
with regard to the effect of chemical neutralization on the local
irritants. Both its acid and its alkali are simple irritants; yet the
compound salt, though certainly much inferior in power, is still
energetic. Nay, the experiment of Orfila and the particulars of some
recently published cases tend even to prove, that the action of its
alkali and acid is materially altered in kind by their combination with
one another; for, besides inflaming the part to which it is applied,
nitre has at times produced symptoms of a secondary disorder of the
brain and nerves.
The experiments of Orfila upon dogs show that on these animals it has a
twofold action, the one irritating, the other narcotic. He found that an
ounce and a half killed a dog in ninety minutes when the gullet was
tied, and a drachm another in twenty-nine hours: that death was preceded
by giddiness, slight convulsions, dilated pupil, insensibility and
palsy; that after death the stomach was externally livid, internally
reddish-black, and the heart filled in its left cavities with florid
blood; that when the gullet was not tied the animals recovered after
several attacks of vomiting, and general indisposition for twenty-four
hours; and that when the salt was applied externally to a wound it
excited violent inflammation, passing on to gangrene, but without any
symptom which indicated a remote or indirect operation.[448] Mr. Blake
found that this salt, when injected into the veins of a dog in the dose
of fifteen grains dissolved in twenty-four parts of water, causes sudden
depression and arrestment of the action of the heart, and death in less
than a minute; but that, like other salts of potash, it has no influence
on the capillaries of the lungs, though a powerful effect in obstructing
the systemic capillary system.[449]—When taken in the ordinary way, it
is absorbed in the course of its action, and has been detected both in
the blood and the urine by Kramer of Milan.[450]
As to its effects on man, it must first be observed, that considerable
doses are necessary to cause serious mischief. In the quantity of one,
two, or three scruples, it is given medicinally several times a day
without injury; and Dr. Alexander found by experiments on himself, that
an ounce and a half, if largely diluted, might thus be safely
administered in the course of twenty-four hours.[451] Sometimes, too,
even large single doses have been swallowed with impunity. A gentleman
of my acquaintance once took nearly an ounce by mistake for Glauber’s
salt, and retained it above a quarter of an hour: nevertheless, except
several attacks of vomiting, no unpleasant symptom was induced. M.
Tourtelle has even related an instance where two ounces were retained
altogether and caused only moderate griping, with considerable purging
and flow of urine.[452] Resting on such facts as these Tourtelle, with
some physicians in more recent times,[453] has maintained that nitre is
not a worse poison than other saline laxatives; and some practitioners
of the present day have consequently ventured to administer it for the
cure of diseases, in the quantity of half an ounce in one dose.[454] It
is not easy to say, why these large doses are at times borne by the
stomach without injury,—whether the cause is idiosyncrasy, or a
constitutional insensibility engendered by disease, or some difference
in the mode of administering the salt. But at all events, the facts
which follow will leave no doubt that in general it is a dangerous and
rapid poison in the dose of an ounce.
Dr. Alexander found that, in the quantity of a drachm or a drachm and a
half, recently dissolved in four ounces of water, and repeated every
ninety minutes, the third or fourth dose caused chilliness and stinging
pains in the stomach and over the whole body; and these sensations
became so severe with the fourth dose, that he considered it unsafe to
attempt a fifth.[455]
Two cases which were actually fatal have been described in the Journal
de Médecine for 1787, the one caused by one ounce, the other by an ounce
and a half. In the latter the symptoms were those of the most violent
cholera, and the patient died in two days and a half;[456] in the former
death took place in three hours only, and in addition to the symptoms
remarked in the other there were convulsions and twisting of the
mouth.[457] In both the pulse failed at the wrist, and a great tendency
to fainting prevailed for some time before death. Dr. Geoghegan has
communicated to Mr. Taylor a case where an ounce and a half taken by
mistake caused severe pain in the stomach, vomiting, and death in two
hours.[458]
Similar effects have been remarked in several cases which have been
followed by recovery. A woman in the second month of pregnancy,
immediately after taking a handful of nitre in solution, was attacked
with pain in the stomach, swelling of the whole body and general pains;
she then miscarried, and afterwards had the usual symptoms of gastritis
and dysentery, united with great giddiness, ringing in the ears, general
tremors and excessive chilliness. She seems to have made a narrow
escape, as for three days the discharges by stool were profuse, and
composed chiefly of blood and membranous flakes.[459] Dr. Falconer has
related another instance, where also the patient’s life seems to have
been in great danger. The quantity taken was two ounces, and it was
swallowed in half a pint of warm water by mistake instead of a laxative
salt. Violent pain in the belly was immediately produced, in half an
hour frequent vomiting, and in three hours a discharge of about a quart
of blood from the stomach. After the administration of gruel and butter
the symptoms began to subside; but they receded slowly; and even six
months afterwards the man, though otherwise in good health, had frequent
pain in the stomach and flatulence.[460] In the case of a female in the
second month of pregnancy, described by Dr. Butter, miscarriage did not
take place, although the symptoms were very violent and lasting. The
quantity taken was two ounces. The symptoms were first bloody vomiting,
afterwards dysentery, which continued seven days; and on the tenth day a
nervous affection supervened exactly like chorea, and of two months’
duration.[461] The effects of the poison in the latter period of this
woman’s illness tend to establish the existence of a secondary operation
on the nervous system. But this kind of action is more strongly pointed
out by the following cases. Three puerperal women in the Obstetric
Hospital of Pavia got each an ounce of nitre by mistake for sulphate of
magnesia. Two, who vomited immediately, did not suffer. The third, who
retained the salt fifteen minutes, had pain in the stomach and vomiting,
followed by paleness of the countenance, stiffness of the jaw, some
stupor, and convulsive movements of the limbs; which symptoms continued
till next day, when she gradually recovered.[462] A German physician,
Dr. Geiseler, met with an instance, in which the only disorder produced
appeared to depend on derangement of the cerebral functions. A woman,
after swallowing an ounce of nitre instead of Glauber’s salt, lost the
use of speech and the power of voluntary motion, then became insensible,
and was attacked with tetanic spasms. This state lasted till next day,
when some amelioration was brought about by copious sweating. It was
not, however, till eight days after, that she recovered her speech, or
the entire use of her mental faculties; and the palsy of the limbs
continued two months.[463] Her case resembles the account given by
Orfila of the effects of nitre on animals.
SECTION III.—_Of the Morbid Appearances caused by Nitrate of Potass._
The morbid appearances observed in man are solely those of violent
inflammation of the stomach and intestines. In Laflize’s case, which
proved fatal in three hours, the stomach was distended, and the contents
deeply tinged with blood; its peritonæal coat of a dark-red colour
mottled with black spots; its villous coat very much inflamed and
detached in several places. The liquid contents gave satisfactory
evidence of nitre having been swallowed; for a portion evaporated to
dryness deflagrated with burning charcoal. In Souville’s patient, who
lived sixty hours, the stomach was every where red, in many places
checkered with black spots, and at the centre of one of these spots the
stomach was perforated by a small aperture. The whole intestinal canal
was also red. In Dr. Geoghegan’s case, the stomach contained bloody
mucus, and its villous coat was brownish-red, and here and there
detached. He could not detect any nitre in it.
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