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- Antidote
- Expectorant
- Respiratory stimulant
- Astringent
Explanation: Aromatic spirit of ammonia is a respiratory stimulant. It is used to treat or prevent fainting.
- sodium bicarbonate
- sodium carbonate
- sodium fluoride
- acacia
Explanation: Fluoride as sodium fluoride or stannous fluoride is used as anticaries agent.
- Lewis
- Hamilton
- John
- Raman
Explanation: Acid-base theory was given by Gilbert N Lewis.
- NaOH
- HCl
- CaCO7
- I2
Explanation: Caustic soda is synonym for sodium hydroxide (NaOH).
- Diarrhea
- Hyperacidity
- Achlorhydria
- Fever
Explanation: HCl is used in acid deficiency achlorhydria.
- Red
- Blue
- Black
- Orange
Explanation: Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) is used as anesthatic agent in dentistry and supplied in blue coloured cylinders.
- Nitrogen oxide
- Ethylene
- Oxygen
- Sulphur dioxide
Explanation: sulphure dioxide (SO2) is a fumigating gas.
- Antidote
- Emetic
- Astringent
- Buffer
Explanation: Emetics are used to induce vomiting. Antimony potassium tartarate syrup of Ipecac and CuSO4 are used as emetics.
- Ammonium chloride
- Sodium chloride
- Potassium chloride
- Ammonium hydroxide
Explanation: Ammonium chloride is also known as Amchlor, used as diuretic and expectorant.
- Sodium chloride
- Sulphur
- Potassium iodide
- Calcium carbonate
Explanation: potassium Iodide (KI) forms KI3 (polyiodides) with I2. KI3 is soluble in water.
- Sodium chloride
- Potassium iodide
- sodium thiosulphate
- sodium bicarbonate
Explanation: sodium thiosulphate, amyl nitrite, sodium nitrite etc. are used in cyanide poisoning.
- Curie
- Cm
- Litre
- Gm
Explanation: The unit of radioactivity is Curie and BcQurel.
- α- particles
- β-particles
- γ-particles
- All of the above
Explanation: γ particles have no charge and mass. They have lowest ionising power among the three particles.
- Suspension of magnesium oxide
- suspension of magnesium hydroxide
- suspension of magnesium carbonate
- none of the above
Explanation: suspension of magnesium hydroxide is known as milk of magnesia. It is used as laxative and antacid.
- Sodium sulphate
- Potassium sulphate
- Magnesium sulphate
- none of the above
Explanation: Magnesium sulphate is commonly known as epsom salt. It is used both externallyas in aches and pains and internally as saline laxative.
- sodium hydroxide
- sodium chloride
- Potassium chloride
- Potassium carbonate
Explanation: Solution of table salt is known as Brine.
- Strong iodine solution
- weak iodine solution
- Aqueous iodine solution
- none of the above
Explanation: Tincture of iodine (2 - 7%) is an antiseptic. It is also called weak iodine solution.
- Heating to constant weight
- Keeping in air
- Drying over desicant
- All of the above
Explanation: ammonium chloride is dried over a desicant. Direct heating decomposes ammonium chloride to ammonia and HCl.
- Sulphur
- Selenium sulphide
- yellow mercuric oxide
- none of the above
Explanation: Selenium sulphide is used as antifungal agent in treating dandruff.
- increase activity
- precipitation of protein
- Reduce toxicity
- none of the above
Explanation: Alum is used in vaccines to increase the activity.
- Zinc oxide
- Zinc oxide with traces of magnesium oxide
- Zinc oxide with traces of ferric oxide
- Zinc carbonate
Explanation: Calamine is a mixture of zinc oxide with 0.5% ferric oxide. It is used as anti-pruritic agent.
- Potassium
- Sodium
- magnesium
- calcium
Explanation: Potassium is a major intracellular cation and sodium is a major extracellular cation.
- Potassium parmangnate
- cerric ammonium sulphate
- sulphuric acid
- none of the above
Explanation: Ferrous sulphate is assayed with cerric ammonium sulphate (redox titration I.P. 1996).
- Make the arsine gas
- Develop the yellow colour
- Trap the hydrogen sulphide gas
- none of the above
Explanation: Lead acetate wool or paper are used to trap hydrogen sulphide gas which may be involved along with arsine gas. The hydrogen sulphide gas also react with mercuric chloride paper to give yellow colour.
- Flask
- Test Tube
- Nesslar cylinder
- none of the above
Explanation: Nesslar cylinder also known as colour comprison cylinders are used to perform limit tests.
- clean, dry white bottles
- lead free white bottle
- amber colourd bottle
- neutral glass bottle
Explanation: Silver nitrate should be protected from light. So must be stored in amber coloured bottles.
- sulfamethoxazole
- silversulphadiazine
- Salazopyrine
- Sulfadiamidine
Explanation: Silver sulphadiazine (silvadine) is a topical antibacterial used as topical cream or burns (antiseptic cream).
- Calcium carbide
- Liquid nitrogen
- calcium cyanamide
- sodium nitrite
Explanation: Liquid nitrogen is used as cryotherapeutic agent for removing malignant skin lesions such as warts and keratosis.
- Ammoniated mercury
- Yellow mercuric oxide
- Potassium permangnate
- none of the above
Explanation: a very low concentration of HgO is used in eye infections.
- Sodium nitrite
- liquid nitrogen
- Calcium carbide
- sodium thiosulphate
Explanation: sodium nitrite is an effective rust inhibitor and is used as an additive in industrial greases.
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