NO..... capacity and weight, never !
no
No
Mg for measuring crime. Ml is the volume measure.
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.
2.5 ml
Accordingly, 1 ml = 1/7.5 mg = 0.133 mg
no
No
Mg for measuring crime. Ml is the volume measure.
1 ml is equal to 1,000 mg.
Only if the density or concentration is 1 mg/ml
To convert milliliters (mL) to milligrams (mg) for water, it would be a 1:1 conversion where 1 mL of water is approximately equal to 1 mg. Therefore, the mass of 538 mL of water would be approximately 538 mg.
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.
One milliliter is equal to one gram (1 mL= 1 g), and there are 1,000 milligrams in a liter, so 3 mL is equal to 3,000 milligrams and 100 mg is equal to .1 mL.
To determine how many 400 mcg tablets equal 1 ml, you need to know the concentration of the substance in mg/ml. If we assume that 400 mcg is equivalent to 0.4 mg, then if the concentration is 1 mg/ml, it would take 2 tablets (0.4 mg x 2 = 0.8 mg) to equal 1 ml. However, without specific concentration information, we cannot provide an exact answer. Please check the product's labeling for accurate dosing.
2.5 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.