Citations:etheromania


 * 1891 Harold Havelock Kynett, Samuel Worcester Butler & D G Brinton, Medical and surgical reporter, volume 64, p70
 * The man in front of me was “Ether-Fritze,” the well-known victim of etheromania.
 * 1900 Dietetic and hygienic gazette, volume 16, The Gazette Pub. Co., p720
 * The passion for ether (etheromania) is not marked by the same degree of irresistible craving for the drug, and its deprivation is not accompanied with the distress or the serious dangers and disturbances of function as in morphinism.
 * 1971 Soviet law and government, volumes 8-9, International Arts and Sciences Press, p374
 * Etheromania, the inhalation of sulfuric ether, sometimes used as an anesthetic in surgery, should also be mentioned.
 * 1974 Enid Rhodes Peschel, Intoxication and literature, Yale University, p82
 * The epidemic of "etheromania" was, however, brief: rising incomes, governmental controls, and clerical denunciations — combined with spectacular instances of those who carelessly lit a pipe while taking ether— led to a decline in the practice.
 * 1985 Sidney Cohen, The substance abuse problems, volume 2, Routledge, p181
 * It accounts for the etheromania in certain countries in Ireland over a hundred years ago, the large-scale sniffing of shoemakers’ glue in the prison in Monterrey, Mexico, and for many other epidemics of intoxicant abuse by a large portion of the exposed population.
 * 1998 Louis Lewin, Phantastica: a classic survey on the use and abuse of mind-altering plants, Inner Traditions / Bear & Company, p167
 * It is not considered as becoming in the female sex to consume large quantities of concentrated alcohol habitually, and for this reason women contribute a large contingent to etheromania.