No
Antibiotics target specific structures or processes unique to bacterial cells that are not present in human eukaryotic cells. For example, tetracycline interferes with bacterial protein synthesis by binding to bacterial ribosomes, while erythromycin inhibits the bacterial ribosome's ability to make proteins. Since human cells do not have the same type of ribosomes or protein synthesis mechanisms, antibiotics like tetracycline and erythromycin do not affect human cells the same way they do bacterial cells.
ribosomes are created from the nucleus (protein synthesis) so ribosomes of bacterica will have different genetic information....and remember the cells can communicate with each other .e.g hormones
Yes, pathogens can directly affect the human body by causing infections or diseases when they invade tissues and cells. They can disrupt normal physiological processes, leading to symptoms such as fever, inflammation, and tissue damage. The body's immune response is activated to fight off the infection caused by pathogens.
A skin mutation in human skin cells cannot be passed on to another person because these mutations occur in somatic cells, which are not involved in reproduction. Only genetic changes in germ cells (sperm and egg) can be inherited. Therefore, while skin mutations can affect an individual's health or appearance, they do not affect the genetic material that is transmitted to offspring.
Human nerve cells are eukaryotic cells, just like every other human cell.
Antibiotics target specific structures or processes unique to bacterial cells that are not present in human eukaryotic cells. For example, tetracycline interferes with bacterial protein synthesis by binding to bacterial ribosomes, while erythromycin inhibits the bacterial ribosome's ability to make proteins. Since human cells do not have the same type of ribosomes or protein synthesis mechanisms, antibiotics like tetracycline and erythromycin do not affect human cells the same way they do bacterial cells.
There are no known drug interactions between erythromycin and the birth control pill
No. The shot is not affected
Yes, it can cause cancer.
There are no known drug interactions between erythromycin and Depo Provera.
ribosomes are created from the nucleus (protein synthesis) so ribosomes of bacterica will have different genetic information....and remember the cells can communicate with each other .e.g hormones
It depends on if the plant or animal is sick or poisonous.
There are few combinations, which may contain erythromycin. They are not rational combinations. Erythromycin is itself an antibiotic on the merit. Other antibiotics do not or should not contain the erythromycin.
Computer virus' attack switches whereas human virus' affect cells.
u eat plant cells all the time but there dead
can you take co codamol with erythromycin
erythromycin, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, cefuroxine, flucloxacillin erythromycin, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, cefuroxine, flucloxacillin erythromycin, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, cefuroxine, flucloxacillin erythromycin, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, cefuroxine, flucloxacillin