Neha Patil (Editor)

Boro glycerine

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit

Boro-glycerine is a transparent yellow, tasteless, compound of boric acid and glycerine. It is a powerful antiseptic and is used primarily in oral and dental applications. Historically, it was also used in the preservation of food.

Contents

Discovery

At a meeting of the Society of Arts, on March 29, 1882, Professor Barff delivered a lecture, in which he announced his discovery of boro-glycerine. Barff had been attempting to find a way in which boracic acid, a known antiseptic, could be used to preserve meats, at a time when beef prices were considered high. He hoped to find a suitable alternative to freezing, which would allow cheap imports to be obtained from around the world.

Food preservation

As early as 1883, scientific reports recommended boro-glycerine as a safe, suitable preservative for a range of foods, including meat, oysters, milk, and butter. Various experiments, including shipping meats dipped in a boro-glycerine solution on long sea voyages, proved Barff's technique.

Historical medical

The discovery of a safe means to apply boric acid drew much attention within the medical profession, and by 1835 various experiments, relying on the antiseptic properties of boro-glycerine, were being carried out. Ailments ranged from psoriasis, and other scaly conditions of the skin to chilblains, and the search for a treatment of cancer of the uterus.

Boro-glycerine found its way into many "medicinal" products, including shaving creams, in which it was considered a skin conditioner, and applied directly as a lip balm

Oral and dental

Boro-glycerine proved most effective as an oral and dental antiseptic. In particular, it is effective in the treatment of mouth ulcers, stomatitis and glossitis. It is also frequently used as a wash for the care of the mouth in unconscious patients. Preparation - It comprises 88% glycerin and 12% borax. Finely ground borax is dissolved in glycerin and the solution is ready for use (Ref. IP 66)

Boro-glycerine can also be used as a suitable base in controlling the setting time of Zinc Oxide pastes whilst taking a dental impression.

Other medical

Boro-glycerine, in solution, is used in the treatment of conjunctivitis, earache and ear infections, and is a suitable antiseptic lotion in cases of ophthalmia and diphtheria.

Various

Alfred P.Wire recommended boro glycerine as a mounting medium in the preparation of microscope slides.

References

Boro glycerine Wikipedia