A behavior repeated so often it becomes almost automatic
Answer & Explanation:
1:
One reason you may feel tired is because your body is fighting off the disease/infection/sickness. There are many ways the body fights it off, 1 way being fever. Fever makes the infection burn itself to death. A side effect of fever is tiredness and chills.
2:
Drinking lots of fluids and taking the right medication. For example: if you have fever take a Tylenol or Panadol.
Colds:
The common cold is an infection that affects the upper respiratory tract (esophagus throat, mouth, nose area). It causes issues with mucus and may cause throat aches. There is no cure for the cold but it can be treated with citrus (oranges, cough drops, etc). The average person has about 2-3 colds a year, they can be brought on by weather changes, especially in the fall. The body can get over the cold in anywhere from 1-5 days. Some individuals will have worse symptoms than others.
Hope that helps
typically if it is your first time drinking it normally takes a shorter time getting to your system because its your first time and your body isn't used to it, butttt if this is like you 20th time drinking your body is more immune to the alcohol so it takes longer for you to get drunk. 0.6 ounces is a different thing it will not get you drunk.
breakdown of gluclose and emzyme
I am a medical student (graduating this month) and although I have not particularly heard the set of terms "revised package insert style" I can tell you that regardless you will ALWAYS find the dosage forms whether it be p.o. (my mouth), renal (suppository) etc. Medication strength (example 2mg, 5mg, 10mg) under the section that is labeled DOSAGE and ADMINISTRATION.
This section will always contain what the medication strength (dosage) comes in and the different types of forms it is available to be administered by.