Oh honey, it's simple math. 1 mg is equal to 1000 mcg, so to find out how many 800 mcg tablets equal 1 mg, you just divide 1000 by 800. The answer is 1.25, but since you can't exactly chop a tablet into quarters, you'd need to take 2 tablets to get 1 mg. Math is a sassy little devil, isn't it?
One hundred 200mcg tablets are needed to equal 20mg
To determine how many tablets are equivalent to 62.5 mcg, you need to know the dosage of the tablets. For example, if each tablet contains 25 mcg, then 62.5 mcg would be equal to 2.5 tablets. If the tablet dosage is different, you would divide 62.5 mcg by the amount of mcg per tablet to find the equivalent number of tablets.
375 200mcg tablets are required to equal 75mg
I say 2.5 because 1 milligram = 1000 mcg and if you think about it 400 mcg (1 pill) +400 mcg (1 pill) = 800 mcg + 200 mcg (1/2 pill)= 1000 mcg
Yes, 800 micrograms (mcg) is equal to 0.8 milligrams (mg), since 1 mg is equal to 1000 mcg. Therefore, 800 mcg is less than 1 mg. To convert mcg to mg, you divide the number of mcg by 1000.
40 tablets of 250mcg each to equal 10mg
six and two thirds tablets of 750 mcg = 5mg
5mg/30mcg = 5000mcg/30mcg = 5000/30 = 166.66...
Yes. 0.25 mg is equal to 250 mcg, so you would take 2 of the 0.25 mg tablets to get a dose of 500 mcg.
A huge number. Doses of vitamin D are usually measured in mcg (micrograms), not mg (milligrams). You would have to take eight hundred thousand 5000 IU tablets of vitamin D to be one hundred thousand MG. That's 800,000 5000 iu tablets of vitamin D = 100,000 mg. Even if you mean micrograms (mcg) it would require eight hundred (800) 5000 iu tablets of vitamin D to be 100,000 mcg. 800 5000 iu tablets of vitamin D = 100,000 mcg.
I say 2.5 because 1 milligram = 1000 mcg and if you think about it 400 mcg (1 pill) +400 mcg (1 pill) = 800 mcg + 200 mcg (1/2 pill)= 1000 mcg
1 mg is equal to 1000 mcg