is cefizal antiobotic have sulfur in it
Bacitracin does have a sulfur molecule in its structure. If you are asking if bacitracin is a sulfa drug, then no, it is not a sulfa drug and can be used in patients with sulfa allergies for burns when silver sulfadiazene cannot be used.
No, for a variety of reasons. First and foremost, there's no such chemical as sodium hydrochloric acid.However, there's sodium. And there's hydrochloric acid. And you could theoretically mix the two, though what you'd get would be salt water and probably a fire when the hydrogen that's being given off ignites, but there wouldn't be any sulfur in it. (Also, it's sulfa drug (short for sulfonamide), not "sulfur drug" ... though that's a minor point; they do in fact contain sulfur.)
We used to get it at Corner Drug, which was a pharmacy. Any compounding pharmacist should have it.On the Net or in drugstores.
SCl4 is the chemical formula for sulfur tetrachloride.
Sulfur ions are sulfur atoms that have gained two electrons.
Clarithromycin is not a sulfur or sulfa drug because it lacks the sulfonamide group. It is a drug in the group of macrolide antibiotics.
sulfur
Meth
At the drug store
Bacitracin does have a sulfur molecule in its structure. If you are asking if bacitracin is a sulfa drug, then no, it is not a sulfa drug and can be used in patients with sulfa allergies for burns when silver sulfadiazene cannot be used.
Keflex is not a sulpha drug.
No, for a variety of reasons. First and foremost, there's no such chemical as sodium hydrochloric acid.However, there's sodium. And there's hydrochloric acid. And you could theoretically mix the two, though what you'd get would be salt water and probably a fire when the hydrogen that's being given off ignites, but there wouldn't be any sulfur in it. (Also, it's sulfa drug (short for sulfonamide), not "sulfur drug" ... though that's a minor point; they do in fact contain sulfur.)
I am allergic to sulpha and told this to the ER doctor and they prescribed this for me. I am not a medical expert and have now knowledge of medicine, but with that information I don't think they would prescribe this medicine with full knowledge the person taking it was allergic to sulpha. Took it for the 10 days with no problems.
We used to get it at Corner Drug, which was a pharmacy. Any compounding pharmacist should have it.On the Net or in drugstores.
The correct term is "sulfa" drug. It's a drug that contains the sulfonamide moiety. Most sulfa drugs are antimicrobials, though some are used for other purposes (some diuretics contain sulfonamide, for example).
Nitroglycerin does not contain any Sulfur and therefore can never form Sulfuric Acid.
Sulfur is available at health food and drug stores in various potencies in the form of tinctures, tablets, and pellets.