no, a ml (or cc) is a liquid (volume) measurement and a mg is a measurement of weight usually pertaining to the amount of active ingredient in a medication. It is possible for a liquid medication to come in a strength of 250mg/5ml. That means in a volume amount of 5ml, there is 250mg of medication. Liquid medications come in many strengths per ml and that strength is in no means a standard, so directions must always be followed.
If you mean liters per minute than .5 is one half of a liter and that is 500 ml per minute.
Promethazine HCl 3.6 mg per 5 ml Codeine Phosphate 9 mg per 5 ml Ephedrine HCl 7.2 mg per 5 ml
5 g per mL = 5000 kg/m3
5 ml per TSP 15 ml per TBSP
0.2 ml
The rough conversion is 5 mL per teaspoon, with 3 teaspoons per tablespoon makes 15 mL. Using a conversion tool, you get 14.7868 mL per tablespoon.
The flow rate is 50 ml per 10 min = 5 ml per minute.
5 ml/100gms=5ml/100,000mg=1ml/20,000mg=1part of ml /20,000parts of grams 1part of ml /20,000parts of grams = Xparts of ml/1,000,000parts of gms (1,000,000parts of grams X 1 part of ml)/20,000parts of grams= 50 parts of ml/ parts per million 50parts/million
there are 30ml per ounce so 150ml in 5 ounces
0.5 grammes per millilitre or 500 milligrammes per millilitre that is 0.5g/ml or 500mg/ml
Twenty 250 mg tablets are needed to make 50 mL if the concentration is to be 500 mg per 5 mL.