This depends entirely on the concentration of the liquid medication you are trying to draw into the syringe. If you have a question about a medication for your pet, you should call your vet's office and see if they can help you.
That would depend on how many mg's are in 1 cc. 2 ml is equal to 2 cc if that is what you meant to ask
The 50 mg is the dose for whatever you are taking. Whatever you are taking should say or you should know what the dose is for example 25 mg/ml therefore you would have to take two ml or 2 cc, if it was 100 mg/ml you would have to take 1/2 ml or cc. ml and cc are the same but mg is what the dose is.
1/2 of a cc/ml
It is equal to 1/2 of 10 cc.
One cubic centimeter (cc) is the same as one milliliter (ml). Obviously, these are volume measurements. The doctor ordered 2 ccs of Demerol by IV administration. The cough medicine read 5 mg (of the active drug) per 1 ml as the rate of medication in 1 ml or 1 cc. A syringe contains ccs or mls; pills contain mg.
It depends on the density of the substance in question. In general, 1 cc is equal to 1 ml, so 500 mg would be equivalent to 0.5 cc for water, which has a density of 1 g/ml. If the substance has a different density, the conversion would vary.
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.
my baby has to take 3 mg daily of medication. It is to be administered by syringe. How many ml should she have
On a 1 ml syringe, 2.5 mg would depend on the concentration of the solution being measured. If you know the concentration (for example, if it’s 1 mg/ml), 2.5 mg would be indicated at the 2.5 mark on the syringe, which is halfway between the 2 ml and 3 ml marks. Always ensure you confirm the concentration of the medication to ensure accurate dosing.
10 mg/2 mg = 5 Five 2 mg warfarin pills would equal 10 milligrams of warfarin.
12.5 mg * 2 = 25.0 mg.
1 US tablespoon is approximately equal to 15 cc. Therefore, 2 tablespoons would be equivalent to about 30 cc.