Hi,
1 milliLITER is equal to 1 cc. This is a FLUID measurment !!! Milligrams is a measure of weight not volume. A CC of water will have a differnet milligram weight than a CC of Alcohol.
It depends on the density of the liquid. Pure water at 4 degree C has a density of .9999720 g ml-3, so 2cc (more correctly 2ml) would have a mass of about 2 g. Other liquids have other densities. I know no liquid with a density of 12.5 mg ml-3.
cc = ml if you assume that density is 1 g / ml, you assume a gram is a millilitre then 300 mg / ml = 300,000 mg per kilogram
no
That would depend on how many mg's are in 1 cc. 2 ml is equal to 2 cc if that is what you meant to ask
No. 1cc = 1cm3 = 1mLAnswer:A gram of water is 1 cc. A mg of water is 1/1000 of a cc. (These numbers change slightly as the water changes in temperature.)
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.
You cannot directly convert milligrams (mg) to cubic centimeters (cc). The milligram is a unit of mass (or weight), whereas the cubic centimeter is a unit of volume. You can convert milliliters, however, to cubic centimenters. In fact, they are equivalent; that is, 1 ml = 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.
1 cc is equal to 1 ml. You can not say that it is equal to a certain mass (for example, a certain amount of milligrams), unless you know what specific substance you are talking about. Different substances have different densities.
1000 mcg = 1 mg so 25 mcg = 25/1000 = 0.025 mg. Simple!
If 60 mg is the concentration of a dose then the correlation to cc or ml has no bearing. 1 ML = 1 CC Do not confuse the concentration to quantity The prescription could read 20 mg per 5 ml. This means that the drug concentration is 4 mg per 1 ml or 1 CC.
CC, meaning cubic centimeters, or cm3 can not be converted to milligrams, as milligrams are a unit of weight, without a conversion factor. You see, 1 cc of gold is more milligrams than 1 cc of cotton, or 1 cc of air in weight. Therefore, unless you know what substance you are converting from cc to mg, you can not do a conversion from size to weight.
It will depend upon the strength of the solution. 1cc could be equivalent to 5mg or 10 mg or even 125 mg!. Check the bottle for amount of fluid required for dilution and its strength per cc of the solution.