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.
It can be measured using tuberculin syringe 1 ml.
How would you draw up 0.18 in a 1ml syringe
A 1.0 ml syringe will not hold 1.4 cc.
1 litre
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.
On a 1 ml Syringe the line marking .25 ml will be a longer hash mark between .20 ml and .30 ml. When measuring medication always use the syringe included with the medication.
It depends on the strength of the medication. Look on the container. If it says something like 1mg/ml (or 5mg/5ml, etc), then that means for every 1ml of the product contains 1mg, therefore 0.3mg would be equal to 0.3ml. However, if it says something else, for example, 5mg/ml, then you can set up a proportion to get the answer. 5mg/ml = 0.3mg/xml Cross multiply and you get 5x=0.3 x=0.06 ml Hope that helps!
1cc = 1ml. So on the syringe marked in ccs, it should be 1cc.
1 ml (millileter) is defined as one cubic centimeter (1 cc) so a 3 ml mark is also a 3 cc mark and hence 1cc is equal to 1/3 of the 3 ml syringe or the 1 ml mark.
How do you draw up 0.7 ml on a 3 ml syringe?
The cubic centimeter and the milliliter are equivalent units. 1 cc = 1 mL.
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.