You only take morphine if your doctor has prescribed it, and then exactly as prescribed. Morphine is extremely dangerous and WILL kill you if you take it wrong. I've lost several patients to morphine overdose, so don't play around with it.
3 dollars
no not quit.only 400 mg!
30 mg of Morphine IR is equal to approximately 8 mg of Diluadid, so there is about a 4mg morphine to 1 mg of dilaudid ratio. So 45 mg of morphine would be equal to 5.6 mg of dilaudid. To answer your question, 45 mg of Morphine IR would stronger than taking the 4 mg of dilaudid.
can you spit a 5 mg tablet in half
The strength of Morphine depends on the concentration of the drug. If 6 mg Morphine is the prescribed strength, a little over 1/2 a cc of Morphine 10 mg needs to be administered. Morphine is supplied in 5 mg/ml and 10 mg/ml ampules. CW: For water, a cc is (just about) a mg. For stuff dissolved in water, a cc is about a mg. For Hg, doesn't hold.
which is stronger morphine 5 or morphine 60
The concentration of morphine can vary, so it's important to know the specific concentration of the morphine solution. However, for a standard concentration of 1 mg/mL, 2 mg of morphine would be equal to 2 mL.
No MST tablets should never be split in half, they are a time release tablet usually over 12 hours and break down from the outside in, by breaking tablets in half your exposing the whole inner half of the tablet that could ultimately up the rate of break down causing a non efficient and non reliable rate of absorption.
200 mg. once daily. (or half a 200 mg. pill twice daily - 100 mg. in the morning and 100 mg. in the afternoon). Anything overt that would be taking too much. It is somewhat time-released and should be effective all day.
By noon, 4.5 half-lives have passed since 6:30 am (5.5 hours total). With a half-life of 110 min, fluorine-18 would have decayed 4.5 times, reducing the initial 200 mg. So, the amount of active isotope remaining would be 200 mg * (1/2)^4.5.
A millilitre (mL) is a unit of volume. A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass."20 mL" of morphine would imply that the morphine is suspended in a liquid, and depending on morphine's solubility in this liquid and so forth, there can be a different amount of morphine per mL. Usually a liquid suspension like this will be "X mg per mL" or "X mg/mL" as labelled on an ampoule or something similar.For example, you one may find an ampoule that contains 4 mg/mL of morphine (in which case the answer would be 80 mg) or one that contains 20 mg/mL (in which case the answer would be 400 mg), etc.There is no fixed answer, *but* you should know that a morphine dose is measured in mg and not mL, so if all you know is the amount of mL, it's not safe to measure out a dose.
In terms of measurement, milligrams (mg) and milliliters (ml) represent different quantities: mg measures mass, while ml measures volume. Morphine's density varies depending on its formulation, but generally, morphine solutions contain a specific concentration that can be converted between these units. Therefore, whether mg is "higher" than ml depends on the concentration of morphine in the solution being referenced.