Questioning skin absorption: explore a rigorous study that challenges long‑held ideas about how medicines pass into the body.
This nonfiction work revisits a controversial claim about cutaneous absorption and presents a careful series of experiments and observations. It examines early theories, analyzes classic demonstrations, and argues that a large portion of so‑called absorption may come from other sources, like the lungs or ambient water, rather than the skin itself. The author seeks to separate proven results from conjecture through detailed methodology and transparent discussion.
- Learn how the author critiques historical experiments and what methods are used to test absorption from the external surface.
- See how experiments with gases, turpentine, camphor, and other substances are interpreted, with attention to controls and possible confounding factors.
- Understand the broader goal of clarifying how medicines produce effects far from the point of application.
Ideal for readers of medical history and those curious about the development of physiological ideas, this edition offers a measured, evidence‑based look at a debated topic.