Dosimetric medicine

It is the Médecin Gantois Adolphe Burggraeve (1806 - 1902) which invented the dosimetric medicine .

According to the Larousse of the 20th century (1928),

“this method uses especially alkaloids of the plants; the active ingredients are built-in, with extremely weak but rigorous amounts, granules of which each one represents a split and consequently very handy amount thus. It is there one of the main advantages of dosimetry. The other is much more contestable. It supposes, indeed, that the pure active ingredients of the plants, and especially of alkaloids, are of all preferable points to the total extracts because the composition of those is variable. However pharmacological and clinical research established that total alkaloids and extracts always do not answer the same indications (for example digitalin, toni-cardiac, and powders digital the, diurétique one) and that, consequently, the doctor must, according to the circumstances, to use all and sundry. ”

Random links:Pierre Mac Orlan | Logny-lès-Aubenton | Zaghouan | Erdenet | Gukhoe | Francis_I_des_deux_Sicilies