I believe an iu (international unit) is equivelant to a mg (milligram).
roughly 180 iu in 60 mg of gh
By dividing by 400 mg/oz - which is a very odd, and wrong, conversion between metric and imperial measurements: The milli- prefix means one thousandth (1/1000) →1 mg = 1/1000 g → 1000 mg = 1 g 1 oz = 28.3495 g = 28.3495 × 1000 mg = 28349.5 mg → 1600 mg = 1600 mg ÷ 28349.5 mg/oz ≈ 0.056 oz
1.25 mg is the equivalent of 50,000 IU.
That depends on the substance. IU is different for all substances.
10,000 IU of vitamin A is equivalent to 3,000 mcg.
Ans: 0.3 mg = 1,200 i.u...... 1 mg = 40,000 iu
how can convert 100 mcg B12 in mg
30.12 mgFom IU to mcg: 50000 IU/1.66 = 30120 mcgFrom mcg to mg: 30120 mcg/1000 = 30.12 mg Final AnswerFrom USDATo convert Vitamin A as beta-carotene:From IU to mcg: IU/1.66 = mcgFrom mcg to IU: mcg * 1.66 = IUSource http://dietarysupplementdatabase.usda.nih.gov/ingredient_calculator/help.php#q2Ther are 1000 mcg in a mg so to convert to miligrams you have to divide the micograms by 1000.
To convert 300 mg to 2000 IU you need to first convert the milligrams to micrograms (1,000 mcg is equal to 1 mg). Next, you need to determine what one IU represents.
Divide by 1000
converter 1mg vitamin B6 to IU ?
How can I convert from international units (IU) to milligrams or micrograms?Generally speaking, you can't. IU's measure the potency of a drug, not its mass or weight.
"http://wiki.answers.com/Q/You_would_like_to_convert_1000_IU_of_Asparaginase_to_mg"
http://www.robert-forbes.com/resources/vitaminconverter.html
15 I.U. Vitamin E = 10mg, so 400 I.U. would =266.67 mg. (400/15x10=266.67). The World Health Organization sets the I.U. (International Units) for some medications, and vitamins, each of these has a different I.U. to mg ratio, and you have to find a reference to this ratio to be able to convert I.U to milligrams. It depends on hat the Vitamin E is as, example dl-alpha tocopheryl or dl-alpha tocopheryl acetate, check the chart on the following link for more info
Keep in mind that conversions from IU to mg are specific for each vitamin, so this formula/answer is only applicable for Vitamin D. You first have to convert the 2,000 IU into mcg. Each IU of Vitamin D is equal to 40 mcg, so you divide 2,000 by 40 which equals 50. Then you have to convert the mcg amount into mg which you do by dividing the mcg amount by 100. In this case 50 divided by 100, which equals 0.5, which means that 2,000 IU of Vitamin D is 0.5 mg
roughly 180 iu in 60 mg of gh