¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Haemin
1. hemin [n -S] - See also: hemin
Medical Definition of Haemin
1. Same as Hemin. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Haemin
Literary usage of Haemin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Elements of the Comparative Anatomy of Vertebrates by Gustav Mann, Walther Löb, Henry William Frederic Lorenz, Robert Wiedersheim, William Newton Parker, Thomas Jeffery Parker, Harry Clary Jones, Sunao Tawara, Leverett White Brownell, Max Julius Louis Le Blanc, Willis Rodney Whitney, John Wesley Brown, Wi (1906)
"anilin-molecules which may be introduced into haemin, there is no doubt that ...
The compound resulting from the first interaction of haemin and anilin is ..."
2. A Manual of Physiology with Practical Exercises by George Neil Stewart (1910)
"The small black, or brownish-black, crystals of haemin will be seen (Fig. 16. p.
67). This is an important test where only a minute trace of blood is to be ..."
3. Commercial Organic Analysis by Alfred Henry Allen, Wm. A. Davis (1913)
"The change of haemin into haematin takes place according to the equation ...
Crystals of haemin separate on cooling. After repeating the above operation, ..."
4. Recent Advances in Organic Chemistry by Alfred Walter Stewart (1920)
"The parallel functions of the two compounds suggested that some similarity in
nature might be traced between chlorophyll and haemin; and from this point of ..."
5. A Manual of Clinical Diagnosis by Means of Microscopical and Chemical by Charles Edmund Simon (1904)
"lla>matin readily combines with one molecule of hydrochloric acid to form haemin.
This substance crystallizes in light- or dark-brown rhombic plates or ..."
6. Chemistry of the Proteids by Gustav Mann (1906)
"anilin-molecules which may be introduced into haemin, there is no doubt that ...
The compound resulting from the first interaction of haemin and anilin is ..."
7. Practical organic and bio-chemistry by Robert Henry Aders Plimmer (1920)
"If haemin be heated in a similar way it yields ... with the mesoporphyrin obtained
by Nencki and Zaleski from haemin by reduction with hydriodic acid. ..."