(1) The dried plant, reduced to a powder, is a sternutator , ideal for headaches and sinusitis.(2) The comparison of the analytical results with and without derivatization shows that the sternutators in the investigated samples are partly metabolized.(3) The whole plant is antiecchymotic, antiphlogistic, nervine, sternutatory and vulnerary.(4) Powders, however, often scatter resulting in uneven application and undesirable sternutatory effects.(5) From his theory of the action of the air through the nose on the contents of the ventricles of the brain is explained his use of sternutatories , and his belief in the efficacy of sneezing.(6) A solution has not yet been found for the disposal of explosives mixed with sternutators or irritants, e.g. TNT with adamsite, which can neither be disposed of through explosive demolition nor burned, but need careful separation of components.(7) In addition, the dispensing is carried out without generating any cloud of liquid particles which might be inhaled by the user, with a sternutatory effect.(8) Gases are classified by their principal effects as lachrymators (spelled lacrimators by the military), sternutators , vesicants, lung irritants, vomiting gases or systemic poisons.(9) Although these authors were primarily concerned with the isolation and chemistry of the condensation products of malononitrile and various aldehydes, sternutatory and irritant properties on the part of some of the compounds were reported.(10) In the medical lore of Europe during the Middle Ages, pastes, emetics, purgatives, emmenagogues, sternutators , convulsants, clysters, physical maneuvers, and pessaries are mentioned.
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