200
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some math now? Okay, so technically speaking, 200 mg/mL is the same as 200 mg per 1 mL. Since 1 cc is equal to 1 mL, you can say that 200 mg/mL is also equal to 200 mg/cc. It's like they're all hanging out in the same club, just different names for the same thing.
Yes, (3) 200 mg of Ibuprofen are the same as 600 mg.
Nope because 1cc = 1ml Therefore, 600cc = 600ml So if you were asking is 1cc is the same as 1ml Then yes they are Hope this helps.
1cc is 1ml, or .001 liters. 1cc of water also has a mass of 1g
A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are the same measurement.
There are 1 mL in 15 mg of Toradol. Therefore, 60 mg of Toradol would be equivalent to 4 mL.
No. 1 cc equals 1 g (not mg) of water. The gramme is defined as being "the mass of one cubic centimetre of water". Strictly speaking, the kilogramme is defined as being the mass of one cubic decimetre of water. ... but 1cc = 1 mg? Definitely not, unless you are talking 1 cc of a material with a density of 1 mg per cc.
They are the same volume.
200 mg is 2 g
There are approximately 0.000441 pounds in 200 mg.
1 g = 1,000 mg, thus 0.2 g = 200 mg