YEs
Yes
Yes. Provided that the balsamic vinegar does not have any haraam additions (such as bacon flakes), there should be no reason that Muslims could not use balsamic vinegar.
For pickling, it is recommended to use white vinegar or apple cider vinegar. These types of vinegar have the right level of acidity needed for pickling and will help preserve the pickled items properly.
For Easter egg dyeing, you should use 1 tablespoon of vinegar for every cup of water when preparing the dye solution.
The National Cancer Institute has information about Renal Cancer (also referred to as kidney cancer) at http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/treatment/renalcell/patient. They describe the cancer, list risks and symptoms, and explain some tests doctors use to diagnose it. If you have concerns about cancer or are experiencing unusual symptoms, you should schedule a visit with your doctor for a diagnosis.
You can use the same amount of balsamic vinegar as the recipe calls for red wine vinegar as a substitute.
Patients who want to use marijuana to relieve side effects of cancer treatment should talk to their physicians and should carefully consider the benefits and risks, both medical and legal.
its not dangerous at all. cancer patients use it so why would it affect an STD more than a cancer patirent
A hypoglycemic patient should not use insulin. It will drop his glucose even further.
vinegar
it kills the patient faster is what i just read on a few different websites, but what if the patient dosen't want or was given without the family knowing anything about what the hospital is giving to the family member dying.
Is the action of the enzyme illustrated in the video is anabolic or catabolic please checked