Procaine penicillin is designed to delay the absorption of drug. So that effective level persists for twenty four hours. It should not be taken orally. You can take benzyl penicillin or crystalline penicillin orally, which again is destroyed by gastric juice and partially absorbed.
No, because penicillin is not acid resistant and will be broken down by gastric juices. Acid resistant pencillins are e.g. amoxiciilin.
Methadone is not intended for injection and should be taken orally as prescribed.
To answer this question, a few facts have to be established. It is generally known that oil and water do not mix (one can see this when attempting to shake up a bottle of oil and vinegar salad dressing). With this, the human body's blood is like water and the drug in injection is like oil. When an intramuscular injection is giving, the oil-like drug sits in the muscle as water-like blood passes by. The drug does not want to readily dissolve into the blood so it will sit in the muscle. Over time though, the blood will "wash" some of the drug from the muscle into the blood where the drug can reach its intended destination and thus carry out its effect.
Injection
Because of the effectiveness of the blood-brain barrier in preventing the passage of substances into the brain, medications must be delivered directly into the patient's veins (intravenously, or by IV), at very high doses.
Assuming both are working as intended, probably none.
No, a tuberculin syringe is intended for use in intradermal injections and the flu shot is given intramuscularly. The needle on a tuberculin syringe is not the right size.
Clavubactin M is the trade name of a veterinary formulation of clavulonic acid and amoxicillin; it is a penicillin-class drug combined with a beta-lactamase inhibitor that is intended for use in treating bacterial infections in companion animals.
Assuming you swallow the contents of an ampule intended for IV injection (using that as the dosage), really nothing at all. Sodium bicarbonate is used in baking a lot. It's a salt and therefore an electrolyte, but the dosage you've described is so small it should have no observable effect on an unremarkable patient if delivered orally.
press alt and print screen at the same time. if you need to edit or save the pic open paint and then press paste button in paint, edit go to file save as and save... simple!
There have been a surprising number of significant, popular and occasionally humorous accidental inventions and discoveries. Perhaps most notably of all these include Penicillin where Fleming did not keep his workstation tidy and some fungus started growing on his experiments. Radioactivity and pacemakers were both discovered by accident as was cola (coke was originally intended as a headache drug), viagra (intended as a treatment for angina) and saccharin.
There is an experimental gel injection called Reversible Inhibition of Sperm Under Guidance (RISUG) which is intended to temporarily sterilize a male for ten years by neutralizing all sperm he produces. It is currently still undergoing testing.
Most of the flu vaccines for injection are designed to be given in the muscle tissue. If your injection was given with the wrong length needle and it ended up in the subcutaneous tissue instead of the muscle, it may still provide some immunity. Check with the clinician who gave you the shot, or with your doctor or pharmacist to find out if you will need another vaccination to be fully protected. There is a new form of flu vaccine that is made to be injected intradermally (within the layers of the skin). It comes with its own micro-injection system that should assure the injection is in the correct tissue. This would be a type that would likely work better than the IM formulation if given subcutaneously, but the vaccines are not intended to be given by that route.