200
That depends on the size of each dose. They're all different, depending on exactly what the drug is, what it does, and usually how big the person is who's taking it.
200 doses
200
150 doses.
Just divide the 34 by 0.00055. So 34 / 0.00055 = 61818 doses.
There are 1000 mg in 1g. Thus there are theoretically 1000/25 doses, that's 40.
For many drugs, a person's body forms a tolerance to a regularly abused drug which means higher doses of the same drug are needed to produce the same effects.
A half gallon is equivalent to 64 tablespoons. Since there are 3 teaspoons in a tablespoon, this means there are 192 teaspoons in a half gallon. So, there would be 96 two teaspoon doses contained in a half gallon of suspension.
5g is 5000mg, 5000/25 is 200
Yes, if you do the drug search, many different doses show up
20 grams = 20,000 milligrams 20,000/100 = 200. So, 20 grams yields 200 doses of 100 mg.
The answer depends on the medicine. 1000 mg of calcium carbonate, or 1000 mg of acetaminophen, are normal doses, and there are many other examples. For some other medications, the doses are measured in micrograms instead of milligrams.