The number of cups in 300 mg of liquid depends on the density of the liquid. For water, which has a density of 1 g/mL, 300 mg is equal to 0.3 mL. Since 1 cup is approximately 240 mL, 300 mg of water would be roughly 0.00125 cups. However, for liquids with different densities, the conversion would vary.
The conversion from milligrams (mg) to milliliters (ml) in this case is based on the density of the liquid medication. Without knowing the density, it's not possible to give an accurate answer. You would need to know the density of the liquid in order to calculate the volume in milliliters needed to deliver 10 mg of medication.
NO ! There's no way to know how many milligrams of medicine may be in solution in eachmilliliter of liquid, unless it's clearly indicated on the packaging. Nobody who would ask thisquestion has any business fooling around with his own or anybody else's dose of medicine.PLEASE consult a pharmacist before you put anything that you improvised into anyone's body.
The specific volume of liquid that corresponds to 75 mg will depend on the density of the substance. To calculate, you need to know the density of the liquid in question.
The conversion between mg and cc are given .On finding the relation we get as follows . 1 cc =1000 mg. so, 10 mg =0.01 mg . 0.01 cc in 10 mg of morphine.
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
25 mg of liquid =
80 mg is what I'm on, at it measures at almost exactly 10ccs or 10mL maybe 11, but your little medicine cup should read the bottom of the meniscus right at the dash for 10 ccs
That is probably the strength of a liquid medicine. It means that in 1 mL of the liquid, there are 5 mg of the actual drug.
A mL of most water-based liquids is about a gram. However, it's more complicated than that, because liquid cough medicines are not pure "medicine" ... they're mostly water and sugar. You'd need to read the box to see how many mg of actual "medicine" there is in a mL of the syrup.
1000
One cubic centimeter (cc) is the same as one milliliter (ml). Obviously, these are volume measurements. The doctor ordered 2 ccs of Demerol by IV administration. The cough medicine read 5 mg (of the active drug) per 1 ml as the rate of medication in 1 ml or 1 cc. A syringe contains ccs or mls; pills contain mg.
Provided you know he density of the substance it can be converted
0.05 mg medicine is twice as strong as 0.025 mg.
This is not a proper conversion. Cubic centimeters (cc) is a measure of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
The number of cups in 300 mg of liquid depends on the density of the liquid. For water, which has a density of 1 g/mL, 300 mg is equal to 0.3 mL. Since 1 cup is approximately 240 mL, 300 mg of water would be roughly 0.00125 cups. However, for liquids with different densities, the conversion would vary.
1 g = 1,000 mgA . . . 0.2 g = 200 mgB . . . 100 mg = 100 mgC . . . 0.025 g = 25 mgA + B + C = 325 mg