The dosage per pound in a piglet is 3000 units or 1.0ml for each 100 pounds of body weight once daily. Continue this dosage until recovery is made.
This will vary depending upon the concentration of the penicillin, the location and type of infection and the overall health status of the dog. If you believe your dog has a condition that needs treatment with penicillin, you should take your dog to your veterinarian.
5 cc per 100 lbs
For benadryl the dosage is 1mg per pound in mild cases, if there is a severe reaction such as swelling after vaccination you can use 2mg per pound.
Yes, but the dosage has to be prescribed based on the child's weight. The usual dose for children is 10 - 20 mg per pound a day, divided into 2 - 3 doses. This is a penicillin drug, so be sure your child is not allergic to penicillin before administering this drug, and ONLY give this to your child if prescribed by a doctor.
Don't give penicillin to a beef cow unless it's absolutely necessary You will need to carefully read the label as to the dosage rate (in cc's per cwt or 100 lbs) for that animal, since dosage is highly dependent on the weight of that animal.
an average dosage rating would be 1 pound of calcium hypochlorite per 10,000 gallons
1ml per 100 lbs of body weight (10 pound dachshund would need 1/10th of a mL) 2nd answer-- It depends on which type of penicillin you are using, if you are talking about the Penicillin injectable 300,000 units per ml, it is dosed at 1ml per 10-20 lbs of body weight. IM or SUBQ--More commonly 1 ml per 20 pounds, given once a day, for at least 3 days. Do not exceed more than 3ml per injection site. So if you have a 100 pound dog, you should give a total of 5ml but not all in the same injection site, I'd probably do 2.5ml in one location, and then another 2.5 in a different location.
Yes. Diazepam for dogs is the same formula used for humans. The dog dosage is .25-1mg per pound.
There should be accurate dosage instructions one the bottle of penicillin, but in general 100mL per 100 pounds of body weight is the usual dose. Always ask your Equine vet before giving any medications to a horse.
Don't guess at the dosage and call your vets (there is no charge.) Guessing by the size of the dog can cause risks.
The correct dosage is 5 to 10mgs per day.
You need to divide the price per pound by the price per kilogram. (Price per pound)/(Price per kilogram) = Kilograms per pound Alternatively, I could just tell you that 1 pound = 0.45359237 kilograms