how many ml in 2iu
1000
100
80
No. International units are different for each vitamin measured. There is an answer on this site that tells you a few of the equivalents. They are 3.33 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/retinol-1 = 1 μg; 40 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/vitamin-d = 1 μg; 1 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/tocopherol-1 = 1 mg. For more info, search international unit.
1mL equates to 1000µl
0.2 ml
This cannot be sensibly answered. A milliliter (mL or ml) is a measure of volume, mg is a measure of weight or mass.
1 milligram
4 iu in 0.6 ml
This depends on the age of the patient and the methodology used. To give you a general idea, I've listed the reference ranges used by my laboratory: • <1 year: 0-15 IU/mL • 1-5 years: 0-60 IU/mL • 6-9 years: 0-90 IU/mL • 10-15 years: 0-200 IU/mL • Adults: 0-100 IU/mL
No. International units are different for each vitamin measured. There is an answer on this site that tells you a few of the equivalents. They are 3.33 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/retinol-1 = 1 μg; 40 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/vitamin-d = 1 μg; 1 iu http://www.answers.com/topic/tocopherol-1 = 1 mg. For more info, search international unit.
1mL equates to 1000µl
1.5 ml
0.04
The standard insulin syringe is a total of 1 ml ( 1 cc), but if you are not sure ask someone who can tell you. Too much insulin can be fatal.
IU stands for Internation Unit, which is a unit of measurement. However it is based on the affect not a actual measurement. It is commonly used in pharmacy for some medication, vaccines, vitamins and hormones. The amount of the IU is regulated by an internation agreement for each substance. It is monitored by the Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization. The thing to remember is that 1 IU of vitamin B is not going to be the same as 1 IU of vitamin E.
Assuming you have a vial of 5000 iu's, and want to have 125 iu's per dose, follow the following: -add 4 ml's of the water, making a concentration of 1250 iu's per ml. - the tuberculin syringe is one milliliter. it is marked at intervals of one tenth of a milliliter (.1, .2, .3, etc.) A volume of solution of .1 milliliters will be a dose of 125 iu's.
0.2 ml
A single titre value of above 200 iu ml is considered raised
You cannot make a direct conversion of insulin IU to ml. It depends on the concentration of insulin in the vial you are using. One commonly used concentration is 100 IU/ml, (sometimes called "U100") but this is NOT true for all insulin. If the concentration is 100 IU/ml, then each ml contains 100 IU and the conversion is 100 units = 1 ml.