It simply means the volume of a liquid that is necessary to be injected in an animal. "cc" stands for cubic centimeters, which equivalent to mililitres, or mL: 1 cc = 1 mL. So if you are drawing up 3 cc's of medicine, you are drawing up 3 mL's of liquid. In context to litres, that is 0.003 litres you are giving to an animal (1 L = 1000 mL).
because all the space in the syringe is taken up by water. If you squeeze the syringe it will break.
To expel an air bubble from a syringe, first hold the syringe with the needle pointing up. Then gently tap the side of the syringe to move the air bubble towards the needle. Finally, push the plunger slowly to expel the air bubble out of the syringe.
It is used to hold a gas syringe in place when carrying out an experiment. The gas syringe will fill up with gas and you can read the amount of gas within it using the measuring lines. Hope it helped. Ask for any other queries that need answering.
Air pressure helps in pulling medicine from a syringe by creating a difference in pressure between the inside of the syringe and the atmosphere outside. When the plunger is pulled back, it increases the volume inside the syringe, reducing the pressure. This lower pressure allows the higher atmospheric pressure to push the liquid medicine into the syringe, facilitating the withdrawal of the medication. Essentially, the pressure gradient created by the plunger movement enables the liquid to flow into the syringe easily.
We can't squeeze a sealed plastic syringe full f water because all the space in the syringe has already been occupied by water and as a result, there is no space left to squeeze. If we attempt to do so , then the syringe will burst or crack.
It depends on the graduation of the syringe which, in turn, depends on its cross sectional area.
It is much easier to just use a insulin syringe and withdraw to .21/2 or .2 and 5 small lines
How many millimeters of whatever medication is in the syringe
On a 3ml syringe, 0.125ml is located between the 0ml and 0.2ml markings. Since the syringe is typically marked in increments of 0.1ml, you would estimate the 0.125ml mark as halfway between the 0.1ml and 0.2ml lines. It is important to ensure accuracy when measuring small volumes like this.
it is spelt 'syringe'
On a syringe, 0.15 milliliters would typically be represented by a small marking between the 0.1 mL and 0.2 mL lines, depending on the syringe's calibration. If using a standard 1 mL syringe, it may not have a precise mark for 0.15 mL, as these syringes often have increments of 0.1 mL. In that case, you would estimate by filling the syringe just slightly past the 0.1 mL mark, but before reaching the 0.2 mL mark. It's important to ensure accuracy, especially in medical contexts.
Syringe.................Some people use a syringe with drugs
plunger's tip to accurately measure the volume of liquid being dispensed or drawn into the syringe. The measurement is typically indicated in milliliters and should be read at eye level for precision.
I don't know how you mean by defend with a syringe but im assuming yes, if it is a ^dirty^ needle? I highly advise that wouldn't be a good idea, we have aids to much already
Syringe compatibility is simply whether you can mix medications in the same syringe
0.3 ml in a 1.875 ml syringe is equal to 16% of the syringe's capacity.
Hypodermic is of or relating to the region immediately beneath the skin or a hypodermic syringe or injection.