This may not be the answer you're looking for exactly, but evolution doesn't exist. Maybe the organisms have changed slightly over time (natural selection) but they did not completely evolve. God created them as they are.
This is the open system. It allows for evolution taking place in order to have the world look and act in the way that it does now.
You have a population of bacteria that are all variant, morphologically and, rather redundantly, genetically. The antibiotic is applied and some of these bacteria are resistant ( this is simplistic, but valid ) and survive to reproduce. They have been naturally selected and their alleles, which conferred their resistance, are represented in the next generation of bacteria. This is evolution; the change in allele frequency over time in a population of organisms.
open system
Mutation in fruit flies
Wisdom teeth are vestigial organs, which are organs that have lost their original or primary function. Wisdom teeth were used when humans had a primarily vegetative diet and needed to chew through thick vegetation. Rather than an example of evolution taking place, wisdom teeth reveal the remains of evolution.
Tetracycline is an antibiotic, which kills bacteria. It is not an anti-inflammatory medication, but if it treats the underlying problem that requires the antibiotic in the first place, then technically one could say that it could "act" as a medication that will help the inflammation go down simply by treating the infection.
No! Antibiotics will make thrush worse. Anti-biotics work by killing all bacteria, both good and bad. Thrush is caused by candida bacteria. Anti-biotics will kill the bacteria that opposes the candida bacteria and keeps the body in harmony, so taking anti-biotics will make your thrush worse or will have been the root cause of your thrush in the first place. You must use an anti-fungal medication either on the source of the problem - like a pessary or cream or take action systemically - by taking oral anti-fungal medication.
Yes. Evolution is a continuous process. It happens to all populations of living things, even to human populations. However, it may occur at varying rates, depending on the size of the population and other circumstances, so it may not be immediately apparent that evolution is, in fact, happening.
There is no such thing as devolution, it is always evolution taking place, devolution is just a new word that usually spreads a very naive misconception about the evolution of man. About problems, can you please clarify your question? I personally find it incomprehensible.
There could be many possibilities depending of the reaction. Some of them are change in colour, odour, evolution of gases, formation of precipitate etc
Yes, to a degree. In bacteria where there can be several generations in a day, we see a lot of evolution take place. In humans and elephants and other animals with longer generational turnover, we will only see slight variations because we don't live long enough. Antibiotics such as penicillin that are no longer working is an example of the evolution of bacteria. Answer A different influenza vaccine has to be made almost every flu season because of natural selection choosing mutations that confer greater chances for survival on influenza.
it's amoxicillin 875mg and clauvulanic acid 125mg, aka Augmentin. the clauvulanic acid binds up bacterial penicillin binding proteins and allows the amoxicillin to work in most penicillin-resistant bacteria.