yes of course ur docter should have told u that
Yes, that's perfectly normal and typical, and won't change effectiveness.
I have the depo shot given in the muscle at the top of my buttock and it can be painful in the area of the injection site, sometimes for 24 hours but it doesn't hurt anywhere in my leg. Hope that helps.
Swelling at the site of an injection is completely normal. The affected area may also turn red and be tender to touch. Anti-inflammatory medication such as Ibuprofen may help.
When a metal is repeatedly worked by hammering, or bending for example - it becomes brittle and will eventually break. Work hardening changes the properties of the metal in the area of the hardening
The total area under a normal distribution is not infinite. The total area under a normal distribution is a continuous value between any 2 given values. The function of a normal distribution is actually defined such that it must have a fixed value. For the "standard normal distribution" where μ=0 and σ=1, the area under the curve is equal to 1.
It is 1.17
That is pressure. It is the force over an area applied to an object in a direction perpendicular to the surface.p = F / A where:p is the pressure,F is the normal force,A is the area.
The normal distribution is symmetric about its mean; it increases from an asymptote with the x-axis below the mean until the mean whereupon it decreases until another asymptote with the x-axis the same distance above the mean. (This is not a linear increase/decrease, but a "bell" shape.) As the distribution is symmetric about its mean, only tables up to the mean need be calculated/given in a table. The area under the curve between any two points can then be calculated. For a normal distribution with mean µ and standard deviation σ, a z value is calculated for a given point x: z = (x - µ) / σ This z value is then used to look up the area in the given "half" tables, giving the area (probability) of the value lying between the mean and the given z value. If negative, z is below the mean, but for the table, the sign is ignored. This can be expressed as: area = normal(|z|) where normal(z) is the value in the normal table at the given (positive) z value. To calculate the area between two points (ie the probability that a value lies between two given values), their corresponding z values (z₁ and z₂) are first calculated and then combined viz: If they are both on the same side of the mean (ie z₁ and z₂ have the same sign) then the area is given by:area = | normal(|z₁|) - normal(|z₂|) | If they are on opposite sides of the mean (ie z₁ and z₂ have different signs) then the area is given by:area = normal(|z₁|) + normal(|z₂|) Almost all of the normal distribution lies between ±4 standard deviations of the mean.
The Normal curve is a graph of the probability density function of the standard normal distribution and, as is the case with any continuous random variable (RV), the probability that the RV takes a value in a given range is given by the integral of the function between the two limits. In other words, it is the area under the curve between those two values.
In the muscle. Or in room temper area
Certainly. This tender area has been handled in an unaccustomed way, plus maybe punctured with an injection. It usualyy wears off in one day, two for sure.
Look in any standard normal distribution table; one is given in the related link. Find the area for 2.43 and 1.52; then take the area for 2.43 and subtract the area for 1.52 and that will be the answer. Therefore, .9925 - .9357 = .0568 = area under the normal distribution curve between z equals 1.52 and z equals 2.43.