i think the liquid gels because it is in liquid to begin with
equate tablets because they have a thin coating
While I am not intimate with the raw data for this, you can be certain that a major pharmaceutical firm would not provide pills or gel caps at the identical dose unless there were certainty that the two are equally bioavailable. ---- In fact, the difference is in pharmacokinetics.. Liquigel are absorbed 10 minutes faster than regular ones.. this means an absorption in 15-20 minutes instead of 25-30 minutes. This 10 minutes is not very important... but in migraines.. every minute counts! ---- I am intimate with the raw data. The big issue is is your stomach affected by Advil? Advil tablets are designed not to dissolve until they reach the intestine. This resolves stomach issues. Although people taking broken or chipped tablets can get around this unknowingly. The Liquid Gel Advil designed by Robert Dicianni, and George Van Parys along with Banner Pharmacaps our the originators of the liquid gel concept.
i think advil dissolve the fastest
Advil has an extra coat of median on it
Nothing really as far as how they work. It is the dose you need to know about not the type of pill. They are just shaped different.
advil is more concentrated than tylenol, plus it is a different type of pain reliever
YES!! I am an Advil girl all the way for everything!! although i prefer the Advil liquid gels they seem to work faster.
Advil is fastest. Tylonol and Aleve have extra coatings.
If you bite it in half before swallowing it, it will kick in faster. Similar to how you might chew up Advil tablets before swallowing them, if you are really in excruciating pain and you can't wait 30 minutes for it to start feeling better.
400 mg x 1 g/1000 mg = 0.4 g for each tablet0.6 g x 1 table/0.4 g = 1.5 tablets needed to make 0.6 grams.
You drop advil in a cup of water and advil in a cup of water then wait to see which pill begins to disolve. Tylenol disolved in about 5-7 minutes while advil took 10-12
i dont know yet but im gonna do the experiment and find out
Just today I did an experiment for my chemistry class testing the rates at which Advil tablets, caplets, gel caplets, and Liquid-gels dissolve in simulated stomach acid. I used diluted Hydrochloric acid to simulate the stomach acid. I assume in water each will take longer to dissolve, but they will still dissolve in the same order.In the acid, Caplets and Tablets both opened completely and were a fine powder on the bottom of the container after 10 minutes.After 30 minutes, the Liquid-gel had gotten soft and the contents leaked out from two spots. It took over an hour and a half for all of the contents to leave the gel coating.The Gel Caplets I really recommend taking only if the three above are not available. After and hour and a half, the coating became soft but was not open anywhere. When I finally removed it from the acid, the coating tore and inside was the ibuprofin powder, completely dry and shaped just like the original pill.So quickest to slowest dissolving rate:Caplets/Tablets, Liquid-Gels, Gel Caplets