Yes
It is the body's immune response to raise body temperature in order to fight the infection and by reducing the fever, the aspirin inhibits part of the body's immunological response. +The latest discoveries show that taking aspirin may help reduce the risk of potentially deadly bacterial infections.
Bayer, excedrin, I think goodys. Some store brands. If you go to one of the drug sites like the one i listed below and type in aspirin, popular brands you'd probably recognize will come up. but just remember aspirin is not the same as ibuprophen or acetaminophen. http://www.drugstore.com/templates/stdplist/default.asp?catid=42&aid=333181&aparam=sespider&PLStart=15&trx=CTRL-0-PG&trxp1=999&trxp2=4 If you werent looking for the kind sold in the US then this info is probably useless to you
what part of an animal cell contains water and dissolve and dissolve minerals?
Oral medication is coated for a few reasons, but the most prevalent is that the medication is intended to dissolve in a certain part of your body. For instance, your stomach resists acids a lot better than your mouth or esophagus, so aspirin, which is an acid, it typically enterically coated so as to not release the medication until it's in an area where the aspirin will do the least damage. Holding an aspirin in your mouth until it dissolves isn't likely to increase the efficacy of the medication -- in fact it may reduce it -- as well as hurting your mouth. For non-coated meds, they'll typically dissolve very fast in your stomach, so the onset of the medication's effects will differ by almost no time at all. In a very few meds you might get a faster onset of the medication's effects, but this is rarely the case, and in some cases may be quite dangerous. So -- in summary -- usually no appreciable difference, and where there is, it may be dangerous.
Stitches that normally dissolve sometimes do not completely dissolve because: 1) You haven't waited long enough (common) 2) the doctor used the wrong kind of thread (very unlikely) 3) part of the tissue has grown over part of the stitch (common) 4) your body has not acted on the stitch material as expected (common)
Aspirin is a derivative of salicylic acid, which is a type of carboxylic acid. The carboxylic acid group in the structure of salicylic acid is essential for the formation of aspirin through acetylation. So, aspirin can be thought of as an acetylated form of salicylic acid that retains its carboxylic acid functionality.
all metals on the periodic table don't dissolve obviously and the part on the right labelled non metals do dissolve
Pharmacological class of aspirin isNSAIDs (Non Steroidal anti Inflammatory Drugs)
the acid part
Urine screens are looking for drug metabolites. The human body breaks down the drug and the part your body can't use is eliminated in waste. The urine screen will not detect dissolved medications.
It is part of TBC Brands, the largest marketer of private brands in North America.
Dissolve 1 part of this chemical in 50 parts water.