precursors
vitamin c
Due to the bio-degradable packaging the vitamin in the melon is evaporated inside its packaging, but the vitamin inside is vitamin X a rare vitamin which is also found in cheese, cats, guinea pigs and human hair. I hope this answers your question.
A whole orange contains vitamin C and not just the inside of it. So when you make fruit juice and use only the inside part of the fruit, it is essentially not getting all the vitamin C out of the orange. And you don't always get all of the inside of the orange either, so there are bits and pieces that contain the vitamin that you won't get when making orange juice.
Capecitabine is actually a pro-drug, meaning it is converted to an active form of a drug once inside your body. Consequently, capecitabine is not present for very long. However, capecitabine is converted to 5-Fluorouracil which has a half-life of about 10-20 minutes.
YES!!! Inside is a compound word, because both 'in' and 'side' can act as separate words.
The fruit that is orange inside and commonly associated with being a good source of vitamin C is an orange.
Carrots have Vitamin A which make the eyes see more clearly. Carrots are known for Vitamin A and beta carotene but is famous for Vitamin A
inside
inside is the compound word. in and side.
The pulp inside the orange is loaded with vitamin C.
well it means you discover the vitamins you see what is inside them
Some cancer therapy prodrugs include: cyclophosphamide capecitabine dacarbazine - is ONLY converted to active form by the liver 5-Fluorouracil etoposide phosphate gemcitabine irinotecan - therapy relies on strongly active metabolites in addition to an active parent compound. These must be metabolized into an active metabolite in order to kill a cancer cell. Sometimes this occurs in the liver, but most of the above medications can be activated inside any cancer or normal cell also, so the expose their full anti-cancer effect locally, and hopefully avoid as many body-wide side effects. No drug is 100% safe.