ok have 10iu vial og hgh, how many ml of water is needed to be added to keep that vial at 10 ius
iu to ml ?? help
Started By genuyne31, Mar 13 2008 12:43 AM
8 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 13 March 2008 - 12:43 AM
#2
Posted 13 March 2008 - 01:36 AM
10iu`s is still going to be 10iu`s no matter how much water you add.
If you add say 1 cc of water you will then have 10iu`s in 1cc.
If you add 10cc of water you will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s.
You see what I am saying, the iu`s dont change with the amount of water. Your concentration of iu`s per cc will change.
Lets say you add 1cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s at 1cc. You would also have 5iu`s at 1/2cc.
Lets say to make it easy math and use big whole numbers you add 10cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s. You would also have 5iu`s in 5cc`s, and also 2iu`s in 2cc`s and 1iu in 1cc.
Divide your iu`s by your water and that will tell you the concentration of iu`s to cc`s.
DGAF
If you add say 1 cc of water you will then have 10iu`s in 1cc.
If you add 10cc of water you will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s.
You see what I am saying, the iu`s dont change with the amount of water. Your concentration of iu`s per cc will change.
Lets say you add 1cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s at 1cc. You would also have 5iu`s at 1/2cc.
Lets say to make it easy math and use big whole numbers you add 10cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s. You would also have 5iu`s in 5cc`s, and also 2iu`s in 2cc`s and 1iu in 1cc.
Divide your iu`s by your water and that will tell you the concentration of iu`s to cc`s.
DGAF
#3
Posted 13 March 2008 - 03:41 AM
10iu`s is still going to be 10iu`s no matter how much water you add.
If you add say 1 cc of water you will then have 10iu`s in 1cc.
If you add 10cc of water you will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s.
You see what I am saying, the iu`s dont change with the amount of water. Your concentration of iu`s per cc will change.
Lets say you add 1cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s at 1cc. You would also have 5iu`s at 1/2cc.
Lets say to make it easy math and use big whole numbers you add 10cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s. You would also have 5iu`s in 5cc`s, and also 2iu`s in 2cc`s and 1iu in 1cc.
Divide your iu`s by your water and that will tell you the concentration of iu`s to cc`s.
DGAF
Exactly- its a matter of fractions- 1cc in 10 iu vial is perfect- if you use a 1cc slin pin its divided by 10ths so its ez to measure each iu out evenly.
#4
Posted 13 March 2008 - 03:48 AM
10iu`s is still going to be 10iu`s no matter how much water you add.
If you add say 1 cc of water you will then have 10iu`s in 1cc.
If you add 10cc of water you will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s.
You see what I am saying, the iu`s dont change with the amount of water. Your concentration of iu`s per cc will change.
Lets say you add 1cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s at 1cc. You would also have 5iu`s at 1/2cc.
Lets say to make it easy math and use big whole numbers you add 10cc of water to your 10iu vial. You will have 10iu`s in 10cc`s. You would also have 5iu`s in 5cc`s, and also 2iu`s in 2cc`s and 1iu in 1cc.
Divide your iu`s by your water and that will tell you the concentration of iu`s to cc`s.
DGAF
Exactly- its a matter of fractions- 1cc in 10 iu vial is perfect- if you use a 1cc slin pin its divided by 10ths so its ez to measure each iu out evenly.
Yup.
DGAF
#5
Posted 13 March 2008 - 09:27 AM
be careful some insulin pins are 60ius make sure for the correct math you use a 100iu slin pin.
#6
Posted 13 March 2008 - 09:46 PM
Human insulin (U-100) syringes are graduated so that 1iu = 0.01ml
That should make things very very simple.
That should make things very very simple.
#7
Posted 16 March 2008 - 05:02 AM
Some slin pins are 50iu- there are no 60iu slin pins, but I like the 1ml/100iu ones better, myself.
#8
Posted 16 March 2008 - 06:03 AM
thanks i get it. i get so confused sometimes when it comes down to it!! its just the consentration strength it will be. you guys are great!!
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