mg, or milligrams is a measure of weight where milliliters is a measurement of volume. One cannot convert a measurement of weight to a measurement of volume or vice versa without a knowing the density of the material being measured in volume.
This question therefore does not have enough information to enable it to be answered definitively.
This is not a valid conversion. Milliliters (mL or ml) and liters (L) are measures of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
Benadryl is a medication intended for humans not animals. There is a risk of a slow and painful death if given to a cat or any other animal.
You should follow the same instructions for administration and dosage amounts that the box recommends for humans. Benadryl is completely safe to use on dogs.
I was going to give my 10lb cat 1.25 ml of Benadryl. I got one little drop on the back of his tongue and he went BALLISTIC! I don't recommend the liquid. I went back and purchased the pill form. If you have trouble with that, they make medicine pouches you can purchase at PetSmart. It's a small treat with a whole for the pill. The cat gobbles it down without realizing he has taken any medication. Plus, this way it is far less tramatic for him.
The average amount of blood loss during a normal menstrual period is 40 to 50 ml. With Menorrhagia, a woman may lose 80 ml or more
how to dilute 40mg/ml of kenalog to 10mg/ml
34 tsp = 170 ml
5.5 ml of a 10mg/ml solution
.3ml
8ml
100μg/ml x 100 concentration = 10mg/ml you don't specify the the starting volume. if it is 1ml then you add 99ml. if it is a litre then you add 99 litres.
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
10mg/5ml. 100mg/1ml so you add 50 ml of bac or wat ever you used would make it 100mg/50ml which is 2mg/1ml so 5ml is 10mg
No. There is 12.5 mg/5ml in Benadryl syrup. That is 2.5mg per 1 ml. That is more than 2 and a half times.
1ml of benadryl can have a dog for each pound.
Something doesn't sound right. If you double check the label and it is indeed 10mg/15mL. You will need 300mL.
We typically use 1 mg/kg every 6 hrs as needed. Number of mls will depend on the type of benadryl you are using. So the child weights 12 kg, and if you are using regular children's benadryl which has 12.5 mg/5 ml the math is easy. The child can have 5 ml or 1 tsp. Gary M.D.