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:
As soon as possible, immediately
Explanation:
If you don't the patient will loose more blood than they should, you should apply pressure as soon as possible.
This is any dive that you make before you have completely offgassed from any previous dive or dives. Residual Nitrogen Time (RNT) This is the amount of time you must consider as already having been spent at a given depth for a planned repetitive dive.
Im not sure if this is a true or false question but if so its true
Answer:
Phagocytosis - pseudopods are used to engulf large molecules or entire cells; performed specialized white blood cells and amoeba, not specific
Pinocytosis - cell membrane pinches inward and surrounds fluid containing solutes, not specific
Receptor-mediated endocytosis - chemical (LDL carrying cholesterol) binds to receptor protein before being brought into the cell; specific