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solvent
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solvent

Substance, usually a liquid, that will dissolve another substance (see solution). Although the commonest solvent is water, in popular use the term refers to low-boiling-point organic liquids, which are harmful if vapour from them is breathed in as a result of their use in a confined space, or from skin contact with the liquid. They can give rise to respiratory problems, liver damage, and neurological complaints.

Typical organic solvents are petroleum distillates (in glues), xylol (in paints), alcohols (for synthetic and natural resins such as shellac), esters (in lacquers, including nail varnish), ketones (in cellulose lacquers and resins), and chlorinated hydrocarbons (in paint stripper and dry-cleaning fluids). The fumes of some solvents, when inhaled (glue-sniffing), affect mood and perception. In addition to damaging the brain and lungs, repeated inhalation of solvent from a plastic bag can cause death by asphyxiation.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
A seafarer would add a fish sample to a dissolving agent, then put drops of the mixture into coated wells on a test plate.
In the past few years, clot dissolving agents have become one of the most important treatments for combatting stroke, an event that is most often caused by a blood clot in a brain artery.
 
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