1. What is an effervescent tablet?
Effervescent tablets are tablets containing effervescent disintegrants, which are over-the-counter drugs. There are aspirin effervescent tablets, vitamin C effervescent tablets and Jinlian Qingre effervescent tablets on the market. The most common is vitamin C effervescent tablets, which are sweet and sour, have a moist aesthetic feeling after brewing, can supplement vitamin C for the body, and are deeply loved by children and young men and women, and have a certain effect of enhancing resistance.
2. Eat before or after meals.
As long as you don't drink effervescent tablets on an empty stomach, there is not much difference between drinking before and after meals. Drinking one hour after meals is beneficial to the digestion and absorption of vitamin C, while drinking before meals can appropriately promote the secretion of gastric juice and have an appetizing effect. However, if you drink on an empty stomach, it will lead to excessive gastric acid secretion, corrosion of gastric mucosa and gastrointestinal diseases.
3. Can effervescent tablets be used as drinks?
You can't. Vitamin C effervescent tablets are sweet and sour, easy to carry, beneficial to brewing and can enhance immunity. Deeply loved by parents and children. Many parents have bought vitamin C effervescent tablets for their children, which they think is healthy and can replace drinks. Children also like to drink them. Actually, effervescent tablets can't be used as drinks. They are nutritional pills. They should not drink it often, but only once, every 3-5 days. If you take it continuously, it will appear after stopping taking it.
4. How much does effervescent tablet soak at a time?
An effervescent tablet can be soaked at most once. The recommended intake of vitamin C for adults is 100mg and the maximum tolerance is 2000-3000mg. Generally, one effervescent tablet is about 1g, and one tablet can be soaked in 200-400 ml of water at a time. Don't drink it every day, but once every 3-5 days.
Step 5: Skills
Effervescent tablets should not be taken directly, which will produce a lot of carbon dioxide gas in the stomach, causing gastrointestinal discomfort and serious life-threatening, so parents with children at home must tell their children not to eat effervescent tablets.
6. What kinds of effervescent tablets are there?
Vitamins such as vitamin C and vitamin E effervescent tablets, and cold medicines such as aspirin and acetaminophen effervescent tablets.
Anti-inflammatory effervescent tablets, such as Carboxymethyl tin (Combibli), Compound Potassium Chloride (Dijia) effervescent tablets, and gynecological drugs, such as methoxazole effervescent tablets for female private parts.
Effervescent tablets for supplementing trace elements and macroelements: zinc gluconate, calcium gluconate, ferrous lactate, and multi-dimensional mineral effervescent tablets.
Effervescent tablets disintegrate to produce a large amount of foam, which increases the direct contact between drugs and affected parts and can better exert the curative effect, so effervescent tablets can also be used as drugs for preventing and treating oral diseases.