Steroid injections provide faster relief, but the effects may not be permanent, but the effects of surgery should be more permanent
it's a steroid that has an antihistamine in it it's a steroid that has an antihistamine in it
P. Karlson has written: 'Saengmul hwahak' 'Warum sind so viele Hormone Steroide?' -- subject(s): Steroid hormones
stop doing steroids, antibiotics , you are killing your dog because those products kill good bacteria and just make it worse, go online and find something natural. I think the product nzym or something is good. look for dogallergies. Tell your vet no more steroid injections. Your vet is being lazy. Steroid injections are nothing but a quick fix that are doing nothing but shortening your dog's life. Ask your vet to give you give you oral steroids and use them at the lowest effective dose. Hint: If the itching completely goes away, you are using to high a dose. You want your dog to have some itching, but tolerable. Add in an antihistamine. There are inexpensive OTC antihistamines such as benadryl that can be used every 8-12 hours and chlorpheniramine also used every 8-12 hours. You could also try generic Claritan 10mg once a day. If these don't work, ask your vet if he has as antihistamine called Temaril-p. The p stands for prednisolone, steroid, but each tablet only has 2mg of steroid. This is a very low d
No you can not..it is steroid..Use antifungal cream for ringworm.. p/s=i am a doctor
First P(E|F) means the probability of E given F. Now, Bayes theorem gives us a way of calculating P(E|F) if we know P(F|E).P(F|E) =(E|F)P(F) divided byP(E|F)P(F) + P(E|F')P(F')E = the event that an anabolic steroid detection test gives a positive resultF = the event that the athlete uses steroidsthenP(E|F) = probability that the test is positive for an athlete who uses steroids.P(F|E) = probability that an athlete uses steroids given that the test is positive.A drug test will detect steroid use meaning it show positive for an athlete who uses steroid 95% of the time. A rugby player has just tested poositive. The probability that he uses steroids is:P(E|F) = 0.95 P(E|F') = 0.15 P(F) = 0.1 P(F') = 0.9 P(E|F)=(0.95)(0.1) divided by(0.95)(0.1) + (0.15)(0.9)
Evil has tainted her. <P> <P> <P>Involvement in the scandal could taint his reputation.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>His administration now has the taint of corruption.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>His achievements on the baseball field will be forever tainted by his steroid use.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>Mary's soul was never tainted by the evil of sin.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>A past tainted with drug arrests will keep you from winning the election.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>Tainted by sin and corruption, he was forced out of office.</P> <P> </P> <P></P> <P>I hate to allow vicious rumors to taint an otherwise spotless record.</P>
tae!! haha :P
Steroid hormones pass through the cell membrane and bind to a specific steroid hormone receptor protein. The combined steroid and receptor protein then bind to a specific sequence of bases in the DNA molecule. This sequence of bases is part of the promotor of a gene. Binding of the steroid - receptor complex either activates (switches on) or represses (switches off) the gene which is controlled by that promotor. If the gene is switched on then it will produce mRNA (transcription) which will lead to the sysnthesis of protein (translation). If the gene is switched off then mRNA will not be produced and no protein will be synthesised. In summary, steroid hormones can act to operate 'switches' for genes, switching protein synthesis on or off. See: http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/S/SteroidREs.html http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/P/Promoter.html http://biology.about.com/od/cellularprocesses/a/aa073004a.htm http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/endocrine/moaction/intracell.html
assignment is due on Tuesday :P HAHAHA! IMM students hey? Dont worry I was also looking for the answer!!! Good luck, Tuesday is Dday!!
James P. Rathmell has written: 'Regional anesthesia' -- subject(s): Administration & dosage, Conduction anesthesia, Local anesthetics, Methods 'Atlas of image-guided intervention in regional anesthesia and pain medicine' -- subject(s): Analgesia, Atlases, Conduction anesthesia, Drug therapy, Imaging, Injections, Medical Radiography, Methods, Pain, Radiography, Treatment
contribution by: Elizabeth Lorenzo 3/30/09 at 5:30 pm ;);););):):):):);p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p day after my dad birthday contribution by: Elizabeth Lorenzo 3/30/09 at 5:30 pm ;);););):):):):);p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p;p day after my dad birthday
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