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ARTICLE |

GLONOINISM.

JAMA. 1899;XXXII(12):671-672. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450390037005.
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ABSTRACT

While we are all more or less acquainted with the effects of nitroglycerin when introduced into the system in medicinal doses, we are perhaps not so familiar with the peculiar conditions it produces when absorption takes place by inhalation and through the skin in doses the size of which we have no means of ascertaining, but which may be enormous. Observations, therefore, of a class of patients of this kind, carefully made, and covering a considerable period of time, can not fail to prove interesting. In "International Clinics" for January (vide also Journal, Oct. 1898, p. 793), Dr. Geo. C. Laws has reported a number of cases of intoxication by this agent, to which condition he has given the name " glonoinism." His experience was obtained among the workers in a nitroglycerin factory during the past twenty years, where many of the employes are compelled to handle thousands of pounds of

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