25 gauge is the size of the needle not the syringe. they are measured in cc's
yes
Yes. I have and no many who use that exact combination when injecting Morphine
How full should a 1ml oral syringe be to have 2.5mg in it??
You insert it into a vein to draw blood.
23
To read a tuberculin syringe you simply have to look at the calibrations on the syringe. Make sure that your eye is level to avoid taking a wrong reading as a result of parallax.
Yes it can, for a period of time.
A 6 cc syringe typically has a series of marks to indicate different amounts. Each cc is marked with a line and a number to indicate the amount. Halfway in between will be a relatively large line that may be marked, indicating half a cc. In between the half mark and the whole mark are other lines, usually indicating a quarter cc, but sometimes it is done in tenths instead. Read the number from the tip of the syringe, where the needle goes, up to the other end to see how much is in the syringe.
The syringes used for insulin administration can be fit with many sizes of needles. The finer needles have a higher gauge number....a 28 gauge needle is bigger/fatter than a 31 gauge needle, which is considered ultra-fine. The size of the syringe depends on the amount of insulin to be injected.
Winchester did not make a shotgun chambered in 25 gauge,as a matter of fact there has never been a 25 gauge shotgun made.Available chamberings were 12 gauge,16 gauge,20 gauge,28 gauge,and 410 gauge.
The same way you read ANY syringe. From www.wikipedia.com (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syringes), if you click on the image of the 10ml syringe, you'll see the markings on the barrel. You measure the units of fluid from the needle side back to the plunger - so as you pull back the plunger you draw in "x" ml's of fluid as marked from the needle back. Standard safety procedures surrounding the use of a syringe should always be followed, and in no way is this short answer a full and complete explanation of how to correctly/safely use a syringe.
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