Originally Posted by robertva
Your pharmacist should be willing to calculate the correct dosage for you. The manufacturer can't know know the patients weight, so the dosage has to be determined by the physician and the pharmacist. As the doctor should know the patient's weight he/she should be indicating the needed amount of active ingredient on the prescription. The pharmacist should be labeling the container with the volume of solution that would administer that amount.
CALL THE PHARMACIST to have him/her verify our calculations!
Since most dosages would be measured by volume, the 300mg/100ml shows the amount of active ingredient in 100ml of the solution.
Let's divide both sides of that ratio by 300.
300mg/100ml:1mg/0.333ml, so you need 1/3 ml to administer a mg of the active ingredient.
11 times 1/3 would be 11/3 otherwise known as 3 2/3 or 3.666ml