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b. The diuretic remedy undergoing decomposition IN TRANSITU.

The digestive organs appear to possess the power of readily decomposing all saline compounds into which vegetable acids enter as ingredients, and of eliminating their alkaline base, which, being in the course of the circulation, carried to the kidneys, excites them into action, and promotes the excretion of urine; and it is probably in this way that the Acetate, Citrate, Super-tartrate, and other analogous combinations of Potass and Soda prove diuretic: on the other hand, it is equally evident that salts containing the mineral acids are not under the control of the decomposing powers of the chylo-poietic organs, and consequently do not undergo any changes in transitu, although some of these salts, as I have just stated, especially the more soluble ones, are absorbed entire, and prove diuretic. Sulphate of Potass, from its insolubility, is not readily absorbed, and its composition will not allow the developement of its base; we perceive therefore that it has not any tendency to produce an influence upon the urinary secretion.

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