2.5 ml
10
Mg for measuring crime. Ml is the volume measure.
1
No
To administer 2 g in 150 ml over a specific time period, you need to find the concentration in mg per ml. First, convert 2 g to mg (2000 mg). Then, divide the total amount (2000 mg) by the total volume (150 ml) to find the concentration: 2000 mg / 150 ml = 13.33 mg/ml. This is the concentration you need to administer per minute.
The concentration of lidocaine is given as 1%, which means that there is 1 gram of lidocaine in 100 ml of solution. To calculate how many milligrams of lidocaine are in 1 ml of solution, we can convert 1% to milligrams per milliliter (mg/ml): 1% = 1 gram per 100 ml 1 gram = 1000 milligrams So, 1% = 10 mg/ml Now we can use this information to calculate how many ml of the lidocaine solution contain 40 mg of lidocaine: 40 mg รท 10 mg/ml = 4 ml Therefore, you will need to use 4 ml of the 1% lidocaine solution to obtain 40 mg of lidocaine.
2 mg per 1 ml is more concentrated but that means that you will need a bigger quantity of the 0.2 mg per 1 ml mixture for the same amount of the active ingredient.
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.
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.
2.5 ml
There are 90 mg of saline per 1 ml of 9% saline solution.
No, 300 mg per cc does not equal 25 mg per kg. To convert 300 mg per cc to mg per kg, you need to know the weight of the individual in kg. If you're looking for a general conversion, you would typically need to know the volume of the substance in cc and the weight of the individual in kg to determine how many mg per kg 300 mg per cc would be.
I was confused by this too when I first was prescribed Cyp from my Dr.. I found out that it depends. What I mean by this is there are different mixtures for cypionate. Some bottles come as 100mg per ML and some come as 200mg per ML. What you need to do is look at the bottle to see what your bottle says. If it says 200mg per ML then you need only 1 ML. If it says 100 mg per ML then you need to ML. Hope this helps
If you need 1 gm of salt for a 2 ml solution, that means the concentration is 0.5 g/ml. To make a 3 ml solution, you would need 1.5 mg of salt (3 ml * 0.5 g/ml).
10
20 lb times 10 mg equals total dose of 20 X 10 or 200 mg.... 1 ml is 100 mgs 200 mgs is 2 ml....assuming you have given the right data...