There is no level for 5 mg on a 1 ml syringe because micrograms (mg) are a measurement of mass and milliliters (ml) are a measurement of volume. You need to know what the concentration of the liquid medication is to convert the 5 mg to ml. At this point, you would be able to measure out the medication in your 1 ml syringe.
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It depends on the graduation of the syringe which, in turn, depends on its cross sectional area.
Read the bottle for how mg/(per) mL is in the bottle and divide 100mg by how many mg/mL. That number is the number of mL you should put in the syringe. Ie. If bottle says 5mg/mL then divide 100/5=20. Suck up 20mL into syringe. Have fun.
less than a tenth of a teaspoon
my baby has to take 3 mg daily of medication. It is to be administered by syringe. How many ml should she have
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.
This depends entirely on the concentration of the liquid medication you are trying to draw into the syringe. If you have a question about a medication for your pet, you should call your vet's office and see if they can help you.
5 mg.
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.
0.2 or one fifth.
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.