Refering to prescription tablets does "mg" refer to mass or volume. Can someone l insist on me ?Bill?



Answers:
"mg" refers to the counterweight, surrounded by milligrams, of the 'involved ingredient' in the tablet or tablet, and NOT the TOTAL immensity of said tab or cap ! ! !
Weight. Milligrams.

Ha ha! It's a guess of immensity, mate. One thousandth of a gram.
Milligrams deal beside amount very soon counterbalance. 10 mg of Morphine is the amount of Morphine in the pill or injection.
mg is milligrams. it is mass--not weight--i know i.e. logical, but i be a science lecturer...freight includes gravity, which would be measured in Newtons (for metric). You probably didn't call for to know adjectives of that info, but...

If your medication said mL, consequently to be precise volume.
It refers to the live ingredient in the tablet. e.g. I am on 60 mg ADALAT tablets which vehicle that within are 60 milligrams of neifdepine in respectively tablet. Obviously the greater the number of milligrams of something in the tablet the larger the tablet is going to be anyway.
it refers to immensity, mg : microgram.

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