No, 0.5 ml is half a milliliter.
2.5 ml is two and a half milliliters.
My doctor actually put me on .05 mg of Lorazapam and 20 mg of Lexapro at night. and I take Lorazapam in the morning same dose.
1000microliters per mL, so .05x1000 = 50 microliters
The Name's the Same - 1951 1955-05-05 was released on: USA: 5 May 1955
The Name's the Same - 1951 1953-05-05 was released on: USA: 5 May 1953
A dose of 0.1 is stronger than a dose of 0.05. This is because 0.1 is greater than 0.05, indicating a higher quantity of the substance. Therefore, if comparing two doses, the one with the higher numerical value is the stronger dose.
05 is the same as 5.0
The recommended pitch rate for US-05 yeast is 1 million cells per milliliter of wort per degree Plato for optimal fermentation results.
05 is the same as 5 which is greater than 0.33
Same Direction was created on 2004-10-05.
Same Girl was created on 2007-05-29.
2.5 mL is equal to one teaspoon. Many times, when prescribing different types of liquid drugs, doctors will refer to mLs.
The Name's the Same - 1951 1955-05-02 was released on: USA: 2 May 1955