-3
0.07 = 7/100 or 7%
If the answers are being graded on a 10 point each scale the grade would equate to a 70%.
33 over 7 does not equate to a whole number.
Aspirin is acetylsalicylic acid. From the name you should expect a pH of less than 7. Exactly how much less depends on how much aspirin and how much water.
Between 3/10 and 7/10 are the fractions (expressed in tenths) 4/10, 5/10 and 6/10. All these can be simplified. In order they equate to 2/5, 1/2 and 3/5.
Yes - Excedrin has aspirin and aspirin is natural blood thiner. This is caused by Asprin making your platelets not stick to each other, and in doing so can cause the blood to ooze longer than normal. The effects of aspirin in your blood will last 7-10 days.. your body will naturally replace all platelets in this time. This is a main reason why if you are scheduled for a surgery they will tell you not to take aspirin 10 days prior to your surgery date
The pH level of Equate liquid hand soap is typically around 6-7, which is neutral to slightly acidic.
7 over 4 does not equate to a whole number.
To get what is equivalent to 7 a plus 4b plus three you have to equate them to an equal sign.
K-9 Cops - 2008 Guns Kill 1-10 was released on: USA: 7 January 2009
The Partridge Family - 1970 Aspirin at 7 Dinner at 8 3-14 was released on: USA: 5 January 1973
No. Aspirin prevents the synthesis of Thromboxane A2 which induces platelet aggregation (formation of a clot) and platelet release reaction. Aspirin inhibits this platelet aggregation for the life of the platelets, which is between 7-10 days. The cool thing with aspirin is that it thins your blood, the bad thing is that it thins your blood and if you want to stop taking aspirin (for any reason, even before surgery) you have a 3x increase of stroke or heart attack for 8-10 days because of its rebound effect. Aspirin is a light-weight compared to Heparin or Coumadin, but Heparin is easily reversed with Protamine-sulfate solution 1% and Coumadin with Vitamin K - something to think about. Maybe one day a drug will be created to reactivate Thromboxane A2 synthesis, but not yet. Trust your PA-C's.