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No. A "cc" (cubic centimeter) is an old term for a milliliter (ml) which is a unit of volume. A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass.
depends on what you are weighing. 5 mg of waters is the same volume as 5 mg of mercury.
This is not a proper conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
This is not a proper conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
This is not a valid conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
cc and mg are the same so it would be the same amount
No. A "cc" (cubic centimeter) is an old term for a milliliter (ml) which is a unit of volume. A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass.
No. 1 mL is.
1 millilitre is 1 cubic centremetre if that helps.
3 CC = HOW MANY MG
it depends on the concentration of the medication... in mg/ml... you can convert mg/ml to mg/cc as 1 ml = 1 cc. If your medication is at a concentration of 10 mg/ml, then you have 10 mg in 1 cc. You can calculate 1 mg in 0,1 cc.
it depends on the concentration of the medication... in mg/ml... you can convert mg/ml to mg/cc as 1 ml = 1 cc. If your medication is at a concentration of 10 mg/ml, then you have 10 mg in 1 cc. You can calculate 1 mg in 0,1 cc.
This is not a proper conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
depends on what you are weighing. 5 mg of waters is the same volume as 5 mg of mercury.
You are comparing apples and oranges. mg is a mass, cc is a volume. In order to answer your question, you would need to either know the substance or the density of the substance. For example, 50 mg of a dense liquid would take up less volume than 50 mg of a less-dense liquid. One cc of water weighs 1.0 gram (the same as 1,000 milligrams), so 50 mg (of water) is equivalent to 0.05 cc. The algebraic formula would be: 1 cc/1000 mg = x cc/50 mg; and x = 0.05.
The 50 mg is the dose for whatever you are taking. Whatever you are taking should say or you should know what the dose is for example 25 mg/ml therefore you would have to take two ml or 2 cc, if it was 100 mg/ml you would have to take 1/2 ml or cc. ml and cc are the same but mg is what the dose is.
there is none. mg is a measure of weight, cc a measure of volume. however, one cc is equal to one mL