Hmm... Well that is a question you should never really be asking the internet, or trying to make guesswork. Usually Streptococcus infections are tested for a variety of features and then dosages are prescribed based on progression and strain of the bacteria. One thing is for certain though, you follow a doctors dosage and specific medication requirement. If you are asking this question because you think you might have a Strep infection, and you do happen to have left over antibiotics... do not take them, If the medication hasn't been tainted in the first place, it's a good way to get certain antibiotic resistant infections.
Toss them in the trash, see your doctor for a prescription and dosage requirements, and follow through with that current prescription.
Because weight varies from different things such as water intake, muscle mass, etc. When you just focus on the amount of body fat you get a clearer picture. Hope this helps!
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As history takes its course most all of the “revolutionary movements” came to an end. One such movement was Reconstruction. Reconstruction was a time period in America consisting of many leaders, goa main objectives to their cause. First, they were mad at the south, blaming them for the Civil War that had just ended. Ergo, they wanted to punish them and make them pay. Secondly, they wanted to help all of the near four million slaves who were now free men after the war. They felt these “men” needed protection, and it was their job to do so. There were three main Radical Republican leaders. These men were Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner, and the formally inaugurated president Andrew Johnson. Thaddeus Stevens was a very political man, holding a place in the House of Representatives. His main concern was the economic opportunity for slaves. He wanted them to be able to make a living on their own, and not depend on the “white man” as they had done all their lives. Thinking almost on these same lines was Charles Sumner. He was a senator who fought mainly for political rights for African Americans, as well as for their citizenship. He felt that the “all men are created equal” part of the constitution really should hold up for everybody. Well, for men that is. Finally there was President Andrew Johnson. Probably due to the fact that he had been Lincoln’s vice president, Johnson had in mind a Reconstruction plan that almost mirrored the former presidents. Many of the Radicals did not approve of Johnson’s plan, though. They felt he went over the limit with 13,000 pardons, and that he wasn’t paying enough attention to the major issue, the rights of slaves. In 1868 Andrew Johnson was impeached. All though he was not removed from office at this time, he was basically without authority.
It was at this point that Congress really stepped in with their own plan of Reconstruction. The Reconstruction Act finally passed by congress had two main points to it. First, troops were required to move in and take up residence in the confederate states of the south. Secondly, any state that wanted back into the union was only allowed to do so when and if they changed their 14th amendment. They had to agree that all men born in the U.S. were citizens, and that because of that they were guaranteed equal treatment by the law. Later, in 1870, black men were also granted the vote…but this would come later.