The "UL" is a typewriter abbreviation for Mucro Liter or 1/1 000 000 of a Liter.
Properly a Greek letter is used in place of the "U".
40 UL is 40/1 000 000 of a Liter at full capacity.
100 UL is 100/1 000 000 of a Liter at full capacity.
Perhaps this is enough for the questioner.
IU is international units and it's same whether it's of 40 IU or 100 IU insulin. But one is supposed to use 40 iu syringe for 40 IU and 100 IU syringe for 100 IU insulin. You take 30 units in corresponding syringe, dose is gonna remain same. If you interchange the syringe then things get complicated and need to do some math. So for 30 units of 40 IU insulin and want to use 100 IU/ml syringe then you need to use 75 units of 40 IU in 100 IU syringe. Avoid interchange of syringe to be safe.
By defining what is 100%. So if 1 is 100% then you have 40 and 60% difference being 20%. Now if its 100 then you have .4 and .6 being a difference of 0.2%.
They are made for administration of specific measurements of either insulin or the antigen for TB testing called PPD (Purified Protein Derivative). Both types of syringes are calibrated into "units". Unit measurements are fixed measures but specific to each type of medicine/solution as to their volume. A unit of insulin is not the same thing as a unit of TB antigen, so the TB syringe can not be used in the place of an insulin syringe. Insulin is administered with the insulin syringe "subcutaneously" (under the skin) in the subcutaneous (sub Q) tissue. The needle is slightly longer than that on a TB syringe. The antigen solution is administered in the TB test "intradermally" (within the skin/between the layers of the skin) instead of under the skin, so the needle is shorter. The amount of liquid in a dose of TB antigen is much smaller than the amount usually given of insulin. Therefore, the barrel of the TB syringe is smaller in diameter to allow such very small amounts (drops) of antigen to be measured. In addition, insulin syringes come in two scales of measurement: U-100 and U-40. This on the label of the syringes indicates which type of insulin they are made to measure and administer. The insulin vial will also be marked either "U-100" or "U-40". One strength is 100 units of insulin per mL and the other is 40 units of insulin per mL. A different insulin syringe is need to measure U-100 than the type used to measure U-40. Unit calibration on the syringe used must be matched to the "strength" of the insulin being used. U-100 insulin has 1/100 of a mL volume per unit (equal also to 1/100 of a cc). U-40 insulin has 1/40 of a mL volume per unit.
1 min 40 sec or 100 sec.
The difference between 144 and 40 is 104.In other words, 144 - 40 = 104
The difference between 43 and 40 is 3.
You cannot. 40 is 40 and 34 is 34: there is a difference of 6 between the two and you cannot get rid of that difference.You cannot. 40 is 40 and 34 is 34: there is a difference of 6 between the two and you cannot get rid of that difference.You cannot. 40 is 40 and 34 is 34: there is a difference of 6 between the two and you cannot get rid of that difference.You cannot. 40 is 40 and 34 is 34: there is a difference of 6 between the two and you cannot get rid of that difference.
Start: 40, End: 54, Difference = +14 Percentage increase = Difference / Start x 100% = +14/40 x 100% = +35% exactly
60 + 40 + 100 = 200 60 - 40 - 100 = -80
Of course not! A 0.5 ml syringe contains 40% more volume (0.5 - 0.3 = 0.2 ml) than a 0.3 ml syringe.
the maker.
9mm = .355 40 cal = .40