Answer:
Azithromycin will be in your system for <u>around 15.5 days</u>, after the last dose.
Explanation:
Azithromycin has an elimination half-life of 68 hours. The prolonged terminal half-life is thought to be due to extensive uptake and subsequent release of drug from tissues. It takes around 5.5 x elimination half life's for a medicine to be out of your system. Therefore it would take 374 hours about 15.5 days (5.5 x 68 hours) for it to be eliminated from the system. So it'll be in your system for that period of time, after the last dose.
Answer:
Explanation:
Their course of action in altering metabolism is very similar because both of them interact with intracellular receptors (primarily the cytosolic receptors present in cytoplasm of the cell) and translocate into the nucleus for performing their desired goal (likely to synthesize a mRNA which can then be turned into a protein to get a desired action going)
a. front of the upper arm between the shoulder and the elbow
b. upper arm, lies deeper than the biceps brachii
c. external body
d. beneath the skin
e. back of the upper limb
f. arm; runs from shoulder to elbow
g. beneath the skin, lowermost layer of the integumentary (skin) system in vertebrates
h. upper limb
i. upper limb
j. posterior arm and posterior forearm
k. upper arm; continues down the ventral surface of the arm until it reaches the cubital fossa at the elbow
hope this helps :)