1.33
I think what you mean to ask is how many milliliters (ml) are in a teaspoon, there are 5ml per teaspoon. Milligrams refers to the concentration of the medication as in how many milligrams per milliliter and that will vary from medication to medication
Milligrams can't be converted to milliliters. Milligrams measure mass, while milliliters measure volume.
Milligrams measure weight and milliliters measure volume, so it depends on the density of the measured thing.
A milligram is a unit of mass, a milliliter is a unit of volume. These two are incomparable.
This depends on what you want to do. If you are making a solution, how many milligrams per milliliter do you want the solution to be (or g/L as the case may be)? If you have a liquid and were told to take X milligrams but can only measure in milliliters, then you need to know the density of the liquid. For example, in standard conditions (room temperature and pressure) water is 998.23 milligrams per milliliter. So you'd use about 0.33 milliliters of water to get 325 milligrams of it.
Only if you have pure water in mind, then: 1 milliliter of pure water weigh 1 gram or 1000 milligrams. 0.001 milliliters of pure water weigh 1 milligram. Forget syrup, oil, or cat medication. For that calculations you need the specific weight (density) of the material.
Milligrams and milliliters measure different things. For a specific substance, you can convert the milligrams to grams (dividing by 1000), then divide by the density of the substance (expressed in grams / milliliter), to get the volume (in milliliters).
Mg (milligrams) is a measure of weight or mass while ml (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
I'M NOT SURE THERE IS a way to convert milligrams to milliliters . Milligrams measure weight and milliliters measure liquid. That would sort of be like asking how many pounds are in a quart. In certain liquid medication, the prescription will specify "10 mg per ml". (also an ml is equal to a cc). Anyone else with a better answer?? <> Hi there, I believe you're asking how many ML would i have to give if I have to give x amount of mg.., I use a ratio proportion, for example if you have a medication that says 10mg per 1ML and you need to give oh i don't know 50mg, you have 10mg/1mL = 50mg/X so cross multiply and you get 10x=50 solve for x and you have to give 5mL of that medication Also remember most medications have a x amount of milligrams per y amount of milliliters, and you need that information first!
1cc = 1 milliliter, so 8cc = 8mL
2
600 milliliters + 400 milliliters = 1000 milliliters = 1 liter