Hemendra Nath Chatterjee was an Indian scientist from West Bengal, who gave a dilute salt and glucose solutions both rectally and orally to a small percentage of pre-selected mildly ill cholera patients. He did not measure intake and output and presented no balance dated confirming absorption. Orally Rehydrated Saline (ORS) for diarrhea management. His paper regarding this finding was published in Lancet of November 1953. In that paper he states that Avomine can stop vomiting during cholera and then oral rehydration is possible. Patients also received a leaf decoction of Coleus aramaticus, a folk anti-diarrheal, along with several other medications. The formulation of the fluid replacement solution was hypotonic sodium chloride, 25 g of glucose and 1000 ml of water. See also:Nalin, DR.http
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| - Hemendra Nath Chatterjee was an Indian scientist from West Bengal, who gave a dilute salt and glucose solutions both rectally and orally to a small percentage of pre-selected mildly ill cholera patients. He did not measure intake and output and presented no balance dated confirming absorption. Orally Rehydrated Saline (ORS) for diarrhea management. His paper regarding this finding was published in Lancet of November 1953. In that paper he states that Avomine can stop vomiting during cholera and then oral rehydration is possible. Patients also received a leaf decoction of Coleus aramaticus, a folk anti-diarrheal, along with several other medications. The formulation of the fluid replacement solution was hypotonic sodium chloride, 25 g of glucose and 1000 ml of water. See also:Nalin, DR.http (en)
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| - Hemendra Nath Chatterjee was an Indian scientist from West Bengal, who gave a dilute salt and glucose solutions both rectally and orally to a small percentage of pre-selected mildly ill cholera patients. He did not measure intake and output and presented no balance dated confirming absorption. Orally Rehydrated Saline (ORS) for diarrhea management. His paper regarding this finding was published in Lancet of November 1953. In that paper he states that Avomine can stop vomiting during cholera and then oral rehydration is possible. Patients also received a leaf decoction of Coleus aramaticus, a folk anti-diarrheal, along with several other medications. The formulation of the fluid replacement solution was hypotonic sodium chloride, 25 g of glucose and 1000 ml of water. See also:Nalin, DR.https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/7/3/50/htm (en)
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