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Seidlitz   Listen
adjective
Seidlitz  adj.  (Written also Sedlitz)  Of or pertaining to Seidlitz, a village in Bohemia.
Seidlitz powders, effervescing salts, consisting of two separate powders, one of which contains forty grains of sodium bicarbonate mixed with two drachms of tartrate of potassium and sodium and the other contains thirty-five grains of tartaric acid. The powders are mixed in water, and drunk while effervescing, as a mild cathartic; so called from the resemblance to the natural water of Seidlitz. Called also Rochelle powders.
Seidlitz water, a natural water from Seidlitz, containing magnesium, sodium, calcium, and potassium sulphates, with calcium carbonate and a little magnesium chloride. It is used as an aperient.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Seidlitz" Quotes from Famous Books



... contribute to the literature. Among exhibited specimens in 1941 were a powder paper-crimping machine, a portable drug crusher, an odd device for spreading plaster on cloth, a pill-coating apparatus, various suppository molds, a lozenge cutter, and an ingenious Seidlitz powder machine. The derivation of medicinal drugs from animal, vegetable, and mineral sources was also depicted, as were synthetic materials and their intermediates. Basic prescription materials were displayed, and rows of glass-enclosed cases held samples ...
— History of the Division of Medical Sciences • Sami Khalaf Hamarneh

... Seidlitz powders and all effervescent medicines should be packed in wide-mouthed, stoppered bottles, ...
— Ismailia • Samuel W. Baker

... baking powder in the first place. If two teaspoonfuls of baking powder to the quart of flour be used, we have remaining in the bread made with that amount of flour 165 grains of crystallized Rochelle salts, or 45 grains more than this to be found in a Seidlitz powder. It may be sometimes useful to take a dose of salts, but the daily consumption of such chemical substances in bread can hardly be considered compatible with the conditions necessary for the maintenance of health. These chemical substances are unusable by the system, and must ...
— Science in the Kitchen. • Mrs. E. E. Kellogg



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