The Toxicity of Caffein: An experimental study on different species of animals

audiobook

The Toxicity of Caffein: An experimental study on different species of animals

by William Salant, J. B. (John Benjamin) Rieger

EN·~5 hours·9 chapters

Chapters

9 total

THE TOXICITY OF CAFFEIN: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON DIFFERENT SPECIES OF ANIMALS.

0:23

LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL.

1:06

INTRODUCTION.

11:12

HISTORICAL REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE ON THE TOXICITY OF CAFFEIN.

28:00

ACUTE CAFFEIN INTOXICATION.

2:49:43

CHRONIC CAFFEIN INTOXICATION.

1:28:23

DISCUSSION OF RESULTS.

11:16

GENERAL SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS.

3:33

CAFFEIN BIBLIOGRAPHY.

5:14

Description

Step back to the early 1900s, when the U.S. Department of Agriculture began a systematic inquiry into the hidden dangers of everyday stimulants. This detailed report follows pioneering chemists as they compare how caffeine and related compounds move through the bodies of dogs, cats, rabbits, and even frogs, revealing striking differences in metabolism and excretion. By blending careful laboratory work with vivid observations, the authors lay a foundation for modern toxicology and food‑safety regulation.

Listeners will hear the meticulous experiments that measured how each species processes caffeine, from the amount eliminated in urine to the role of specific organs like liver and kidney. The narrative also touches on broader themes of comparative physiology, showing why a substance harmless to one animal can be lethal to another. As the investigation unfolds, it invites reflection on how early scientific rigor continues to shape our understanding of everyday chemicals.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (306K characters)

Series

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Chemistry, Bulletin No. 148

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Bryan Ness, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2014-07-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

WS

William Salant

A pioneering pharmacologist, he helped shape early American research on drug effects and is best remembered for careful experimental studies of caffeine. His work also helped establish pharmacology as a research-focused discipline at Georgetown in the early 1910s.

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JB

J. B. (John Benjamin) Rieger

b. 1886

Best known for early research on caffeine, this little-known scientific writer co-authored a careful experimental study that still circulates in public-domain collections. The surviving record is slim, but his work points to a strong connection with laboratory medicine and pharmacology in the early 1900s.

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