Nothing - dogs are very sensitive to the side effects of Tylenol and you could kill your dog with it. The same is true for adult Tylenol in a pill form, aspirin, ibuprofen, Advil, Aleve, and all other human over-the-counter pain medications.
If you think your dog would benefit from pain medication, you should talk to your veterinarian. There are safe daily pain medications for dogs, but you have to get a veterinary prescription to get them.
The dosage per pound in a piglet is 3000 units or 1.0ml for each 100 pounds of body weight once daily. Continue this dosage until recovery is made.
It depends entirely upon what is being administered to the cow. Dosage varies wildly among different pharmaceuticals.
For benadryl the dosage is 1mg per pound in mild cases, if there is a severe reaction such as swelling after vaccination you can use 2mg per pound.
I searched for our 5 lb. Chihuahua and found an average dose recommendation of 1/4 tsp of liquid Children's Benadryl (the one that says 12.5 mg on bottle)once in the morning and in the evening. This was recommended by an online vet. I will start out with only 1/8 tsp at first, though.
Consult your veterinarian. Do not administer medication to a dog, unless you have specific directions on dosage.
they both weigh one pound
1 pound of anything = 15.337782696563 ounce [US, liquid] 1 pound of anything = 16 ounce [weight]
You would need to ask your vet.
None, unless prescribed by a vet.
The pound is a unit of weight, so anything that weighs one pound, regardless of whether it is a solid, a liquid, or anything else, has the same weight.
5200 mg
a pound of water will weigh the same as a pound of chocolate