Ksan_of_Tongass
Ksan_of_Tongass t1_ivd2cbm wrote
Reply to comment by Jertob in Insects get stuck in a spider's web, why doesn't a spider get stuck in its own web? by Koning_Health
Our little brains can determine where a moving object will be in time and space while performing actions to accurately put ourselves on an intercept course. This takes advanced math on paper but we do it instinctively.
Ksan_of_Tongass t1_ity81jp wrote
Reply to comment by loki-is-a-god in [homemade] snickerdoodles by Ok-Explanation-8056
Fair
Ksan_of_Tongass t1_itxw8ml wrote
Reply to comment by PutinBoomedMe in [homemade] snickerdoodles by Ok-Explanation-8056
But a bad snickerdoodle is soul crushing.
Ksan_of_Tongass t1_j6ect7i wrote
Reply to Can you (roughly) determine the dosage of a drug taken based off of the blood concentration? by bynarie
As most of the answers have said, it depends. When monitoring a patient on certain medications, we will test what is called "peak and trough." Peak is when the medication should be at its highest concentration in the bloodstream, which is typically an hour after dose, although this can vary a little with some drugs. Trough is when the concentration should be at its lowest, which is typically just before the next dose. I believe drug half-life has been mentioned previously, so i wont rehash that. Drug interactions, disease, and things like grapefruit can interfere with drug metabolism rates. Most drugs dosing is calculated using amount of drug/weight of patient/time. Blood volume is assumed. Again, not all drugs are the same, and not all humans react the same, but you could roughly guesstimate the initial dose, which was your actual question. This information isn't terribly useful in most clinical settings. I am a clinical laboratory scientist, so this is a bit of what I do.