A medication order calls for 750 mg from a solution with 300 mg/5 mL. How much volume should be given to the patient?

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To determine the correct volume to be administered, start by calculating the concentration of the medication in the solution, which is 300 mg in 5 mL. This means for every 5 mL, there are 300 mg of the medication available.

Next, set up a proportion to find out how much volume is needed to provide the required 750 mg:

  1. Establish the ratio of the available medication to the required dosage:
  • 300 mg corresponds to 5 mL.

  • To find out how many mL correspond to 750 mg, you can set up a conversion factor based on these known amounts.

  1. Use the formula:

[

\text{Volume} = \left( \frac{\text{Desired dose in mg}}{\text{Dose per mL}} \right) = \left( \frac{750 \text{ mg}}{300 \text{ mg/5 mL}} \right)

]

  1. First find the concentration per mL:
  • 300 mg / 5 mL = 60 mg/mL.
  1. Now calculate how much mL are needed to obtain 750 mg:

[

\text{Volume

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