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In a syringe, 120 mg would be equivalent to 0.12 mL if the concentration of the medication is 1 mg/mL. This is calculated by dividing the total amount of medication (120 mg) by the concentration (1 mg/mL). It is important to always double-check calculations and measurements to ensure accurate dosing.
It looks like the 3.5 ml may be extraneous information. If 1 ml yields 250 mg, then you need 400/250 = 1.6 ml, to get 400 mg.
1 liter of water weighs 1 kg so 1 ml of water weighs 1 mg so 5 ml of water weighs 5 mg
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
There is no level for 5 mg on a 1 ml syringe because micrograms (mg) are a measurement of mass and milliliters (ml) are a measurement of volume. You need to know what the concentration of the liquid medication is to convert the 5 mg to ml. At this point, you would be able to measure out the medication in your 1 ml syringe.
In a syringe, 120 mg would be equivalent to 0.12 mL if the concentration of the medication is 1 mg/mL. This is calculated by dividing the total amount of medication (120 mg) by the concentration (1 mg/mL). It is important to always double-check calculations and measurements to ensure accurate dosing.
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.
On a 1 ml Syringe the line marking .25 ml will be a longer hash mark between .20 ml and .30 ml. When measuring medication always use the syringe included with the medication.
It depends on the concentration of the solution. If the concentration is 25 mg per 1 ml, then there would be 25 mg in 1 ml.
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.
It's difficult with tablets. Methadose is a liquid form and to measure it look on the label to see mg/ml.. if it is 30 mg/ml, and your dose is 60 mg.......draw out two ml with a baby syringe. Or a marked dropper.
It can be measured using tuberculin syringe 1 ml.
To find out how many milligrams are in 1 milliliter, you can divide the total milligrams by the total milliliters. In this case, 25 mg ÷ 3 ml = approximately 8.33 mg per milliliter.
A 1.0 ml syringe will not hold 1.4 cc.
1 litre
Accordingly, 1 ml = 1/7.5 mg = 0.133 mg