The last answer told you to: assuming the same pharmacy produced both doses, in other words, assuming that what you have is actually 'folic acid', then 400mcg is the same as .4 milligrams which is equal to 4/1000th of a gram.
Yet they still failed to answer the question: 1 milligram = 1000 mcg
if this is for the Flintstones vitamins just take either 2.5 or 3 of them and you should be fine.
yes
A fetus gets all of it's nutrition from their mother. The mother has all of the nutrients and passes them along to the fetus.
It should be OK. Folic acid is water soluble, which means you will use what you need and urinate the rest out. My concern is why are you taking both? If you do not have a folic acid deficiency, you should be fine taking the over the counter pre-natal vitamin with the 800 mcg (and that is all) OR you can ask your doctor to prescribe a prescription pre-natal vitamin with 1 mg of folic acid plus other vitamins/minerals and take that alone. Pregnant women do not require more than 800 mcg of folate/day even though there is that 1 mg prescription formulation - unless you have a deficiency! You may want to run this by your doctor - ask if he/she thinks it is necessary for you to be on the extra folate and if not, can you just take the over the counter supplement. I would not change what you are doing until you talk to your doctor, however. Hope this is helpful!
because they work in thje kitchen
The type of anemia that is linked to a deficiency of folic acid is called megaloglastic anemia. It is characterized by large red blood cells that are immature, and thus don't function properly, and by neutrophils that have more segments in their nuclei than they should have (normally they have 3-4 segments). People with megaloblastic anemia also have a higher level of homocysteine in their blood.
Folic Acid is entirely its own substance, and cannot be substituted for by anything other than itself. Many Obstetricians prescribe supplements which assist in pregnancy, such as Metafolin or Neevo but these are used in conjunction with folic acid supplements. * As a note: As with any medical advice, follow the recommendations of your doctor, this information was provided with the intention of helping to clarify generic questions and is not to be used as professional medical advice.*
The pH of an acid is higher than 7.
Spina Bifida is an NTD (Neural Tube Defect) affecting the spinal column/cord. Folic Acid, also known as Vitamin B9 is known to help the develop the neural tube (spinal cord and brain) during fetal development. Women of child rearing age who are trying to get pregnant/are pregnant are encouraged to take higher than normal quantities of Folic Acid to help reduce the chances that their baby could have spina bifida. Women should start taking the higher dose at least 3 months before getting pregnant and then throughout their pregnancy, this is especially important for women who have a family history of spina bifida or have spina bifida themselves.
Ideally they like you to start taking them 3 months before you even get pregnant. so unless you have now started a regular prenatal vitamin, keep taking the folic acid. it's better than nothing.
Saliva has a higher pH (around 6.5 to 7.5) than stomach acid, which typically has a pH of 1.5 to 3.5.
Yes, the pH of a 25% acetic acid solution is higher than that of a 0.25M hydrochloric acid solution. Acetic acid is a weak acid, so its pH will be higher compared to hydrochloric acid, which is a strong acid.
Soap is usually caustic not acid. Higher than ph7, not lower.