This is a badly phrased question. 3 cc = 3ml. a millilitre is a centimetre cubed and that is exactly what cc means. if the syringe takes a max of 3ml, then 3.125 is a full syringe and a 1/24th of a syringe
0.34 ml on a syringe represents 34 units on the syringe's scale. To measure it, draw the plunger up until the liquid reaches the 0.34 ml mark on the syringe.
A milliliter (mL) and a cubic centimeter (cc or cm3) have the same value in terms of volume.
To draw up 0.18 ml in a 1 ml syringe, you would pull the plunger to the 0.18 ml marking on the syringe barrel while making sure there are no air bubbles. Make sure to read the measurement at eye level for accuracy. If the syringe does not have a 0.18 ml marking, estimate between the closest incremental markings.
the equal the same. 1cc means cubic centimetre, cm3, it equals 1ml
"mL" stands for milliliters, which is a unit of volume measurement often used in medicine. "M" typically stands for milligrams, which is a unit of weight measurement. The syringe may have markings for both volume (mL) and weight (M) measurements to accurately measure and administer medications.
1/2 of a cc/ml
The volume of a 3cc syringe is 3 milliliters (mL), which is equivalent to 3,000 microliters. The amount of substance it can hold in milligrams depends on the density of the liquid being measured. For example, 3 mL of water weighs approximately 3,000 milligrams since the density of water is about 1 gram per milliliter.
0.3 ml in a 1.875 ml syringe is equal to 16% of the syringe's capacity.
3 cc's = 3 cubic centimeters = 3 mL of fluid in a syringe to be administered to a patient, be it human or animal.
A 1.0 ml syringe will not hold 1.4 cc.
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.
The 50 mg is the dose for whatever you are taking. Whatever you are taking should say or you should know what the dose is for example 25 mg/ml therefore you would have to take two ml or 2 cc, if it was 100 mg/ml you would have to take 1/2 ml or cc. ml and cc are the same but mg is what the dose is.
To determine how much 0.125 mL is in a 100 unit syringe, you can use the following calculation: (0.125 mL / 100 units) * 100 units = 0.125 units So, 0.125 mL is equal to 0.125 units in a 100 unit syringe.
Of course not! A 0.5 ml syringe contains 40% more volume (0.5 - 0.3 = 0.2 ml) than a 0.3 ml syringe.
0.34 ml on a syringe represents 34 units on the syringe's scale. To measure it, draw the plunger up until the liquid reaches the 0.34 ml mark on the syringe.
It can be measured using tuberculin syringe 1 ml.
I dnt know