LAUDANUM - translation to arabic
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LAUDANUM - translation to arabic

TINCTURE OF OPIUM
Lodnum; Laudenum; Lodinum; Laudinum; Opium tincture; Tincture of Opium; Opium Tincture; Tincture of opium; Laudanine; Dropizol
  • Italian Sydenham laudanum tincture from the 1950s
  • ''Confessions of a laudanum drinker'', [[The Lancet]], 1866

LAUDANUM         

ألاسم

اللودنوم مستحضرأفيوني

laudanum         
‎ صِبْغَةُ الأَفْيون‎
laudanum         
مستحضرات أو صبغة الأفيون

Definition

Laudanum
·noun Tincture of opium, used for various medical purposes.

Wikipedia

Laudanum

Laudanum is a tincture of opium containing approximately 10% powdered opium by weight (the equivalent of 1% morphine). Laudanum is prepared by dissolving extracts from the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) in alcohol (ethanol).

Reddish-brown in color and extremely bitter, laudanum contains several opium alkaloids, including morphine and codeine. Laudanum was historically used to treat a variety of conditions, but its principal use was as a pain medication and cough suppressant. Until the early 20th century, laudanum was sold without a prescription and was a constituent of many patent medicines. Today, laudanum is recognized as addictive and is strictly regulated and controlled as such throughout most of the world. The United States Controlled Substances Act, for one example, lists it on Schedule II, the second strictest category.

Laudanum is known as a "whole opium" preparation since it historically contained all the alkaloids found in the opium poppy, which are extracted from the dried latex of ripe seed pods (Papaver somniferum L., succus siccum). Today, however, the drug is often processed to remove all or most of the noscapine (also called narcotine) present as this is a strong emetic and does not add appreciably to the analgesic or antipropulsive properties of opium; the resulting solution is called Denarcotized Tincture of Opium or Deodorized Tincture of Opium (DTO).

Laudanum remains available by prescription in the United States (under the generic name "opium tincture") and in the European Union and United Kingdom (under the trade name Dropizol), although today the drug's therapeutic indication is generally limited to controlling diarrhea when other medications have failed.

The terms laudanum and tincture of opium are generally interchangeable, but in contemporary medical practice, the latter is used almost exclusively.

Examples of use of LAUDANUM
1. One chemist in Wisbech was found to have 40 gallons of laudanum in stock.
2. Certainly not that adulterous, alcohol and laudanum addict George IV, who banned his blameless wife from his coronation.
3. This way we can find out, once and for all, whether Fletcher Robinson was murdered, as we suspect, with a massive dose of laudanum, said Mr Spiring, a former police officer who teaches biology and physics at the European School in Karlsruhe, Germany.
4. The first was volume two of Richard Holmes‘s superb and harrowing Coleridge biography (just say no to laudanum). The second was Kazuo Ishiguro‘s accomplished and unremittingly miserable Never Let Me Go (put me off Norfolk for life). Advertiser links Webfeeds Comment is free About webfeeds Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006.
5. The forensic tests on the remains will be carried out by Susan Paterson, the head toxicologist at Imperial College London, using the technique of liquid gas chromatography to establish precisely whether, or when, the dead man was given laudanum, and how much.