There are 295.74 drops in 0.5 fluid ounces.
There aren't a definite amount of drops in a volume. there are a few ways to control the size of a drop but it's not reproducible.
0.135 fluid ounces equates to 80 drops.
0.5 fluid ounce = 14.787 ml (rounded)
0.5mL = 10 drops
8 oz.
16 drops of water or any water soluble substance makes 1 ml
20 drops per mL, therefore 20drops/mL x 10 mL = 200 drops.
20 drops equals one mL
Assuming a drop of water, it's about 50,000 micrograms (or 50 milligrams)
gtt stands for "drops" in medical terminology. you need to determine the type of solution [fluid] that you are refering to in order to determine the number of drops. So, for instance, a crystaloid solution [e.g. normal saline] has 20 drops per ml Therefore 8mls would form 8 x 20 drops = 160 drops A colloid solution should as [gelofusine or blood] has only 15 drops per ml therefore 8mls would form 8 x 15 drops = 120 drops Hope this helps.
Eight mL is 160 drops.
120 drops. 20 drops / mL.
There are approximately 240 drops in 10 ml. Therefore 2.5 ml contains about 60 drops.
20 drops per mL
~60 drops solution: 20 drops/mL * 3 mL = 60 drops
There is around 15 to 20 drops in one ML. The liquid viscosity will change this answer. You may consider that there is 80 to 100 drops in a 5ml bottle.
11mL is 220 drops (20 drops per mL).
50*10 = 500 drops.
It really depends how you define a drop, as it is pretty ambiguous. If we use a pretty accepted conversion of 1 drop = 0.05 mL, then: 1 L = 1000 mL 1000 mL x (1 drop / .05 mL) = 20,000 drops
150mL is 3,000 drops.
1mL is 20 drops.
16mL is 320 drops.