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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.
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.
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 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