1 ml measures out to 1,000 th part of a litre.
1 tablespoon (15 ml) is a single dose3 tablespoons (45 ml) is the maximum suggested dose in a 24 hour period
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.
2.5 ml for baby from 1 to 6 year
It looks like the 3.5 ml may be extraneous information. If 1 ml yields 250 mg, then you need 400/250 = 1.6 ml, to get 400 mg.
1 ml / 0.08 ml = 12 doses, with a half dose left over.
There would be 4 drops per dose.
A milliliter, mL is a unit for the measurement of volume. 473 mL = 1 US pint Metric cups contain 250 mL compared to ~ 237 mL in an 8 oz. cup One teaspoon holds ~ 5 mL 1 oz = ~ 30 mL 1 mL is a small volume compared to the ounce.
1kg = 100g (grams 1kg= 1 litre = 100 ml (millilitres)
150 L 1 liter = 1000 ml 1 ml = 0.001 L
It's difficult with tablets. Methadose is a liquid form and to measure it look on the label to see mg/ml.. if it is 30 mg/ml, and your dose is 60 mg.......draw out two ml with a baby syringe. Or a marked dropper.
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.
1 ml is 0.001 L. The other way to look at it is that there are 1000 ml in 1L10001 L = 1000 ml