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ammonia
(redirected from Volatile alkali)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.07 sec.
ammonia /am·mo·nia/ (ah-mōn´yah) a colorless alkaline gas with a pungent odor and acrid taste, NH3. Ammonia labeled with 13N is used in positron emission tomography of the cardiovascular system, brain, and liver.
am·mo·nia (-mny)
n.
A colorless, pungent gas used to manufacture a wide variety of nitrogen-containing organic and inorganic chemicals.

ammonia (NH3)
[amō′nē·a/]
Etymology: Gk, ammoniakos, salt of Ammon, Egyptian god
a colorless pungent gas produced by the decomposition of nitrogenous organic matter. Some of its many uses are as a fertilizer, an aromatic stimulant, a detergent, and an emulsifier.

ammonia,
n a colorless aromatic gas consisting of nitrogen and hydrogen, produced by the decomposition of nitrogenous organic matter. Some of its many uses are as an aromatic stimulant, a detergent, and an emulsifier.
ammonia thiosulfate
n an ingredient of the photographic fixing solution that acts as a solvent for silver halides.

ammonia
a colorless alkaline gas, NH3, with a pungent odor and acrid taste, and highly soluble in water. See also ammonium.

blood ammonia
ammonia is a cerebrointoxicant and a high blood level causes a degenerative brain lesion. High blood levels of ammonia can occur in a number of diseases of the liver, in portacaval shunts, urea poisoning and liver dysfunction.
ammonia clearance
see ammonia tolerance test (below).
ammonia poisoning
ammonia gas may be released from artificial fertilizers or from decomposing manure and urine in slurry pits and silos and cause chronic poisoning manifested by conjunctivitis and coughing, sneezing and dyspnea. May cause dermatitis in animals bedded for long periods on deep litter. Acute poisoning causes heavy mortalities, as in urea poisoning. A secondary effect of chronic poisoning is hepatic encephalopathy. High ammonia content in water can cause deaths of fish, although additional factors such as high levels of suspended organic matter may be contributory.
ammonia pollution
of barn gases by production from fermentation of urine.
ammonia tolerance test (ATT)
assesses liver function and is particularly useful in detecting abnormalities of the hepatic portal vascular system. Blood ammonia levels are measured before and after the oral administration of ammonium chloride. See also portacaval shunt.

ammonia
NH3 Physiology NH3 is produced in the liver, intestine, and kidneys as endproduct of protein metabolism; the liver converts ammonia into urea, which is then excreted by the kidneys; in liver disease this conversion is diminished, resulting in ↑ serum ammonia; serial measurement of ammonia is used to follow the progression of hepatic encephalopathy in Reye syndrome and other conditions Ref range 15-49 µg/dL Abnormal values ↑ Hepatic coma, Reye syndrome, severe CHF, GI hemorrhage, erythroblastosis fetalis, drugs–eg, diuretics and antibiotics. See Hepatic encephalopathy.


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