Posted by: Benzine
Posting time: 1.4 years ago on 6/29/2019 1:31:01 AM
Last edit time: never edited.
Archived on: 9/27/2019 10:00:00 AM
Views: 62
SCP: 14
14 upvotes, 0 downvotes (100% upvoted it)
~2 user(s) here now
Please try to post direct links to journals. Biased articles and sensational titles will be deleted.
Other Science Subs:
/v/labrat
/v/chemistry
/v/biochemistry
/v/microbiology
/v/neuroscience
/v/computationalbiology
/v/psychology
/v/archaeology
/v/herpetology
/v/OldScience
The rules can be found here. Please read the full post for specifics.
An abridged version is available below:
NSFW: No Authorized: No Anon: No Private: No Type: Default
Content violates spam guidelines
Content contains or links to content that is illegal
Content contains personal information that relates to a Voat users real world or online identity
Content or User violates User Agreement
Hi, it looks like you're new. Welcome to Voat!
Voat is a censorship-free community platform where content is submitted, organized, moderated and voted on (ranked) by the users.
Archived Concrete examples of how the microbiome can interfere with a drug's intended path through the body. (humanbioscience.org)
submitted 1.4 years ago by Benzine
view the rest of the comments →
[–] WORF_MOTORBOATS_TROI 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) 1.4 years ago
This is just one more reason why suppositories are superior
view the rest of the comments →
[–] WORF_MOTORBOATS_TROI 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
This is just one more reason why suppositories are superior