as long as prescribed by the vet
If you own a dog with long hair then you should use a brush with long bristles or if you have a dog with short hair then you should use short bristle brushes to brush them.
No, a tuberculin syringe is intended for use in intradermal injections and the flu shot is given intramuscularly. The needle on a tuberculin syringe is not the right size.
Syringe.................Some people use a syringe with drugs
Use the syringe until the holes in your mouth fill up and they are no longer at risk of infection from food caught up in the sockets.
The easiest way I have found is to pull the plunger out of a large syringe (60 cc works great). Drop the tablet(s) into the front of the syringe and put the plunger back in. Run tap water from a faucet and stick the tip of the syringe into the running water. Pull back on the plunger to get 20-30 ccs of water in the syringe - it should be about half full. Turn off the faucet and place your index finger over the tip of the syringe. Shake until the tablets are dissolved, then use the syringe to "inject" the slurry into your dog's mouth.
You cannot use a gas syringe for this experiment.
By CC or mL. In a syringe, since dogs can't drink it out of a cup. If it is dry medicine like a pill, consider putting it in some moist dog food. If it is moist, it is best to use a syringe.
People with diabetes should use the smallest syringe that holds their largest daily dose. The BD syringe with markings at every unit is recommended for those taking whole unit doses of less than 30 units.
A 3 cc syringe is the best size.
The nurse used a syringe to administer the patient's medication.
you should use youtube all the time and you should feed your dog amount
The same way you read ANY syringe. From www.wikipedia.com (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syringes), if you click on the image of the 10ml syringe, you'll see the markings on the barrel. You measure the units of fluid from the needle side back to the plunger - so as you pull back the plunger you draw in "x" ml's of fluid as marked from the needle back. Standard safety procedures surrounding the use of a syringe should always be followed, and in no way is this short answer a full and complete explanation of how to correctly/safely use a syringe.