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The specific conductivity of solutions of oxyhæmoglobin

Stewart, G. N.

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing papers of a biological character, 1912-08, Vol.85 (580), p.413-414

London: The Royal Society

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  • Título:
    The specific conductivity of solutions of oxyhæmoglobin
  • Autor: Stewart, G. N.
  • Assuntos: Conductivity
  • É parte de: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing papers of a biological character, 1912-08, Vol.85 (580), p.413-414
  • Notas: istex:3A728E9B4F16C8E47BA3116FA043601575BAC0AF
    ark:/67375/V84-C04DRVBF-G
    This text was harvested from a scanned image of the original document using optical character recognition (OCR) software. As such, it may contain errors. Please contact the Royal Society if you find an error you would like to see corrected. Mathematical notations produced through Infty OCR.
  • Descrição: When preparing a paper on the mechanism of hæmolysis two or three years ago my attention was accidentally called to a statement in a paper by the late Prof. A. Gamgee in the ‘Proceedings’ of the Royal Society, that “although solutions of oxyhæmoglobin possess a low conductivity this is very much higher than has been found in the previous observations of Stewart.” In a note appended to my paper I suggested that this could only mean “that either his (Gamgee’s) oxyhæmoglobin or his distilled water was less thoroughly freed from electrolytes than mine. In observations of this kind the error must appear as too high and not as too low a conductivity.” Prof. Gamgee having laid stress on the purity of his distilled water and oxyhæmoglobin, this result seemed very puzzling, all the more as my object in determining the conductivity of some specimens of oxyhæmoglobin was merely to control their suitability for addition to blood in the determination of the relative volume of corpuscles and plasma by a colorimetric method described in the paper, and no such effort has been made to carry the exclusion of foreign electrolytes to the practically possible limit as would have been deemed indispensable had the conductivity of hæmoglobin been investigated for its own sake.
  • Editor: London: The Royal Society
  • Idioma: Inglês

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