Nursing

Comprehensive Nursing Math Review

Last updated: March 2026 · Intermediate

Educational Use Only

This content is for educational purposes only and does not substitute for clinical training, institutional protocols, or professional medical guidance. Always verify calculations with your facility's protocols and a licensed pharmacist before administering medications to patients.

Real-world applications
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Nursing

Medication dosages, IV drip rates, vital monitoring

This page is a comprehensive assessment that tests your knowledge across every nursing math module. Rather than introducing new concepts, it puts all your skills to the test in a single, mixed-format exercise — just like a real clinical shift where a tablet calculation, an IV rate adjustment, and a critical care titration can happen in the same hour. Use this review to identify your strengths and pinpoint the topics that need more practice before an exam or clinical rotation.

Quick Formula Reference

Before jumping into the problems, here is a compact summary of the key formulas you have learned. Each links back to the page where the concept is taught in full.

Basic Dosage (Three Calculation Methods)

The D/H x Q formula: divide the desired dose by what you have on hand, then multiply by the quantity (tablets or mL).

Amount to Give=DH×Q\text{Amount to Give} = \frac{D}{H} \times Q

Ratio-Proportion (Three Calculation Methods)

Set up equivalent ratios and cross-multiply to solve for the unknown.

HQ=Dxx=D×QH\frac{H}{Q} = \frac{D}{x} \quad \Rightarrow \quad x = \frac{D \times Q}{H}

Dimensional Analysis (Three Calculation Methods)

Chain conversion factors so all unwanted units cancel, leaving only the desired unit.

IV Flow Rate — mL/hr (IV Drip Rate Calculations)

mL/hr=Total Volume (mL)Time (hours)\text{mL/hr} = \frac{\text{Total Volume (mL)}}{\text{Time (hours)}}

IV Drip Rate — gtts/min (IV Drip Rate Calculations)

gtts/min=Volume (mL)×Drop Factor (gtts/mL)Time (min)\text{gtts/min} = \frac{\text{Volume (mL)} \times \text{Drop Factor (gtts/mL)}}{\text{Time (min)}}

Weight-Based Dosing — mg/kg (Weight-Based Dosing)

Dose (mg)=Dose (mg/kg)×Weight (kg)\text{Dose (mg)} = \text{Dose (mg/kg)} \times \text{Weight (kg)}

Convert pounds to kg first: kg=lb2.2\text{kg} = \frac{\text{lb}}{2.2}

BSA — Mosteller Formula (Dosage by BSA)

BSA (m2)=Height (cm)×Weight (kg)3,600\text{BSA (m}^2\text{)} = \sqrt{\frac{\text{Height (cm)} \times \text{Weight (kg)}}{3{,}600}}

Mean Arterial Pressure (Hemodynamic Calculations)

MAP=SBP+(2×DBP)3\text{MAP} = \frac{\text{SBP} + (2 \times \text{DBP})}{3}

Cockcroft-Gault — Creatinine Clearance (Renal Dose Adjustments)

CrCl=(140Age)×Weight (kg)72×Serum Creatinine(× 0.85 for females)\text{CrCl} = \frac{(140 - \text{Age}) \times \text{Weight (kg)}}{72 \times \text{Serum Creatinine}} \quad (\times\ 0.85 \text{ for females})

Holliday-Segar 4-2-1 Rule (Pediatric Fluid Maintenance)

Weight RangeHourly Rate
First 10 kg4 mL/kg/hr
Next 10 kg (11-20 kg)2 mL/kg/hr
Each kg above 20 kg1 mL/kg/hr

Critical Care — mcg/kg/min to mL/hr (Critical Care Drip Calculations)

mL/hr=Dose (mcg/kg/min)×Weight (kg)×60Concentration (mcg/mL)\text{mL/hr} = \frac{\text{Dose (mcg/kg/min)} \times \text{Weight (kg)} \times 60}{\text{Concentration (mcg/mL)}}

Critical Care — mcg/min to mL/hr (Critical Care Drip Calculations)

mL/hr=Dose (mcg/min)×60Concentration (mcg/mL)\text{mL/hr} = \frac{\text{Dose (mcg/min)} \times 60}{\text{Concentration (mcg/mL)}}


Mixed Practice Problems

These 15 problems span all difficulty levels and all modules, presented in random order — not grouped by topic. Work each problem completely before checking the answer. The solution identifies which formula or method applies, so you can trace any gaps back to the right review page.

Problem 1: Order: Metoprolol 50 mg PO BID. Available: Metoprolol 25 mg tablets. How many tablets per dose?

Method: D/H x Q (basic tablet calculation)

Tablets=50 mg25 mg×1=2 tablets\text{Tablets} = \frac{50 \text{ mg}}{25 \text{ mg}} \times 1 = 2 \text{ tablets}

Answer: Administer 2 tablets per dose.

Reasonableness: The ordered dose is exactly double the available strength, so 2 tablets makes sense. No splitting required.

Review if missed: Three Calculation Methods

Problem 2: A provider orders 1,000 mL of NS to infuse over 8 hours. What rate do you set on the IV pump (mL/hr)?

Method: mL/hr flow rate formula

mL/hr=1,000 mL8 hr=125 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{1{,}000 \text{ mL}}{8 \text{ hr}} = 125 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: Set the pump to 125 mL/hr.

Reasonableness: A 1-liter bag over 8 hours is a common maintenance rate. 125 mL/hr is a typical value — not too fast, not unreasonably slow.

Review if missed: IV Drip Rate Calculations

Problem 3: A child weighs 44 lb. The order is Amoxicillin 40 mg/kg/day PO divided TID. Available: Amoxicillin 250 mg/5 mL suspension. How many mL per dose?

Method: Weight-based dosing + D/H x Q

Step 1: Convert weight to kg.

442.2=20 kg\frac{44}{2.2} = 20 \text{ kg}

Step 2: Calculate total daily dose.

40×20=800 mg/day40 \times 20 = 800 \text{ mg/day}

Step 3: Divide into individual doses. The order says “divided TID,” meaning the total daily dose is split into 3 equal parts.

8003266.7 mg per dose\frac{800}{3} \approx 266.7 \text{ mg per dose}

Step 4: Calculate volume using D/H x Q.

266.7 mg250 mg×5 mL5.3 mL\frac{266.7 \text{ mg}}{250 \text{ mg}} \times 5 \text{ mL} \approx 5.3 \text{ mL}

Answer: Administer 5.3 mL per dose, three times daily.

Reasonableness: A 20 kg child receiving 40 mg/kg/day is getting 800 mg total. Each dose of roughly 267 mg from a 250 mg/5 mL suspension should be just over 5 mL. This checks out.

Important distinction — TID vs. “divided TID”: TID means “three times a day” and refers to frequency, not division. An order of “50 mg TID” means give 50 mg each time, three times a day (150 mg total daily). By contrast, “divided TID” (as in this problem) means the stated total daily dose is split into 3 equal parts. Here, 800 mg/day divided TID = 266.7 mg per dose. Confusing the two can cause a three-fold dosing error.

Review if missed: Weight-Based Dosing

Problem 4: The provider orders Dopamine at 5 mcg/kg/min. The patient weighs 80 kg. The available concentration is 400 mg in 250 mL. At what rate (mL/hr) do you set the pump?

Method: Critical care mcg/kg/min to mL/hr

Step 1: Convert concentration to mcg/mL.

400 mg250 mL=1.6 mg/mL=1,600 mcg/mL\frac{400 \text{ mg}}{250 \text{ mL}} = 1.6 \text{ mg/mL} = 1{,}600 \text{ mcg/mL}

Step 2: Apply the formula.

mL/hr=5×80×601,600=24,0001,600=15 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{5 \times 80 \times 60}{1{,}600} = \frac{24{,}000}{1{,}600} = 15 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: Set the pump to 15 mL/hr.

Reasonableness: Dopamine at 5 mcg/kg/min is a moderate (cardiac) dose. For an 80 kg patient with a standard 400 mg/250 mL concentration, pump rates of 10 to 20 mL/hr are typical. 15 mL/hr falls right in that range.

Clinical note: Older references classify low-dose dopamine (1-3 mcg/kg/min) as a “renal dose” that was once thought to protect kidney perfusion. Current evidence (including KDIGO and Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines) does not support low-dose dopamine for renal protection, and “renal dose dopamine” is considered a historical concept. Dopamine dosing is now described by its hemodynamic effects: low dose (1-5 mcg/kg/min) primarily stimulates dopaminergic receptors, moderate dose (5-10 mcg/kg/min) adds beta-1 (inotropic) effects, and high dose (greater than 10 mcg/kg/min) adds alpha-1 (vasopressor) effects.

Review if missed: Critical Care Drip Calculations

Problem 5: A patient’s blood pressure is 96/62 mmHg. Calculate the MAP. Is this above the ICU target of 65 mmHg?

Method: MAP formula

MAP=96+(2×62)3=96+1243=220373.3 mmHg\text{MAP} = \frac{96 + (2 \times 62)}{3} = \frac{96 + 124}{3} = \frac{220}{3} \approx 73.3 \text{ mmHg}

Answer: MAP is approximately 73 mmHg — this is above the ICU target of 65 mmHg.

Reasonableness: MAP should fall between the systolic and diastolic values, closer to diastolic. A value of 73 is between 62 and 96 and is weighted toward the diastolic, which is correct.

Review if missed: Hemodynamic Calculations

Problem 6: An order reads: 500 mL D5W to infuse over 6 hours using 15 gtts/mL tubing. Calculate the drip rate in gtts/min.

Method: gtts/min formula

Step 1: Convert time to minutes.

6 hours×60=360 minutes6 \text{ hours} \times 60 = 360 \text{ minutes}

Step 2: Apply the drip rate formula.

gtts/min=500×15360=7,50036020.821 gtts/min\text{gtts/min} = \frac{500 \times 15}{360} = \frac{7{,}500}{360} \approx 20.8 \approx 21 \text{ gtts/min}

Answer: Set the drip rate to approximately 21 gtts/min.

Reasonableness: For a 500 mL bag over 6 hours with standard 15 gtts/mL tubing, a rate in the low 20s is expected. This is a common, manageable drip rate for a gravity infusion.

Review if missed: IV Drip Rate Calculations

Problem 7: A 72-year-old male patient weighs 85 kg. His serum creatinine is 1.8 mg/dL. Calculate his creatinine clearance using the Cockcroft-Gault equation.

Method: Cockcroft-Gault equation

CrCl=(14072)×8572×1.8=68×85129.6=5,780129.644.6 mL/min\text{CrCl} = \frac{(140 - 72) \times 85}{72 \times 1.8} = \frac{68 \times 85}{129.6} = \frac{5{,}780}{129.6} \approx 44.6 \text{ mL/min}

Answer: Estimated CrCl is approximately 44.6 mL/min.

Clinical interpretation: A CrCl of 44.6 mL/min indicates moderate renal impairment (CKD Stage 3). Medications cleared by the kidneys — such as vancomycin, enoxaparin, and many antibiotics — will likely need dose reduction or extended intervals. Check the drug reference for renal dosing guidelines. Note: KDIGO sub-stages (3a vs 3b) are defined by eGFR, not CrCl — see the staging table on the Renal Dose Adjustments page for the distinction.

Review if missed: Renal Dose Adjustments

Problem 8: Order: Morphine Sulfate 4 mg IV push. Available: Morphine 10 mg/mL vial. How many mL do you draw up?

Method: D/H x Q (parenteral dosage)

mL=4 mg10 mg×1 mL=0.4 mL\text{mL} = \frac{4 \text{ mg}}{10 \text{ mg}} \times 1 \text{ mL} = 0.4 \text{ mL}

Answer: Draw up 0.4 mL from the vial.

Reasonableness: 4 mg is less than half the concentration of a 10 mg/mL vial, so a volume of less than 0.5 mL is expected. Use a 1 mL syringe for accuracy at this small volume.

Review if missed: Parenteral Dosage

Problem 9: Calculate the hourly maintenance fluid rate for a 25 kg child using the Holliday-Segar 4-2-1 rule.

Method: Holliday-Segar 4-2-1 rule

Step 1: First 10 kg at 4 mL/kg/hr.

10×4=40 mL/hr10 \times 4 = 40 \text{ mL/hr}

Step 2: Next 10 kg (11-20 kg) at 2 mL/kg/hr.

10×2=20 mL/hr10 \times 2 = 20 \text{ mL/hr}

Step 3: Remaining 5 kg (21-25 kg) at 1 mL/kg/hr.

5×1=5 mL/hr5 \times 1 = 5 \text{ mL/hr}

Step 4: Add all three components.

40+20+5=65 mL/hr40 + 20 + 5 = 65 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: The maintenance fluid rate is 65 mL/hr.

Reasonableness: For a 25 kg child, a rate between 60 and 70 mL/hr is typical. This is well below adult rates and well above infant rates, which matches a school-age child’s weight.

Review if missed: Pediatric Fluid Maintenance

Problem 10: Order: Norepinephrine at 12 mcg/min. Available: 4 mg in 250 mL NS. Calculate the pump rate in mL/hr.

Method: Critical care mcg/min to mL/hr (non-weight-based)

Step 1: Convert concentration to mcg/mL.

4 mg250 mL=0.016 mg/mL=16 mcg/mL\frac{4 \text{ mg}}{250 \text{ mL}} = 0.016 \text{ mg/mL} = 16 \text{ mcg/mL}

Step 2: Apply the formula.

mL/hr=12×6016=72016=45 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{12 \times 60}{16} = \frac{720}{16} = 45 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: Set the pump to 45 mL/hr.

Reasonableness: Norepinephrine dose ranges are typically 2 to 20 mcg/min. At 12 mcg/min with a standard 4 mg/250 mL mix, pump rates of 30 to 60 mL/hr are expected. A rate of 45 mL/hr is within range.

Review if missed: Critical Care Drip Calculations

Problem 11: A patient is 170 cm tall and weighs 68 kg. Calculate their BSA using the Mosteller formula. If a chemotherapy drug is dosed at 75 mg/m², what is the dose?

Method: Mosteller formula + BSA-based dosing

Step 1: Calculate BSA.

BSA=170×683,600=11,5603,6003.2111.79 m2\text{BSA} = \sqrt{\frac{170 \times 68}{3{,}600}} = \sqrt{\frac{11{,}560}{3{,}600}} \approx \sqrt{3.211} \approx 1.79 \text{ m}^2

Step 2: Calculate the drug dose.

Dose=75 mg/m2×1.79 m2134.3 mg\text{Dose} = 75 \text{ mg/m}^2 \times 1.79 \text{ m}^2 \approx 134.3 \text{ mg}

Answer: BSA is 1.79 m² and the chemotherapy dose is approximately 134 mg.

Reasonableness: Average adult BSA is 1.7 to 1.9 m², so 1.79 is within the expected range for a 170 cm, 68 kg individual. A dose of 134 mg from a 75 mg/m² order with a near-average BSA seems reasonable.

Review if missed: Dosage by BSA

Problem 12: Order: Furosemide 60 mg PO. Available: Furosemide 40 mg scored tablets. How many tablets do you administer?

Method: D/H x Q (tablet calculation)

Tablets=6040×1=1.5 tablets\text{Tablets} = \frac{60}{40} \times 1 = 1.5 \text{ tablets}

Answer: Administer 1.5 tablets (one whole tablet plus one half of a scored tablet).

Reasonableness: 60 mg is 1.5 times the 40 mg available strength. Since the tablets are scored, half-tablet dosing is appropriate. If the tablets were not scored, you would need to contact the pharmacy for an alternative formulation.

Review if missed: Three Calculation Methods

Problem 13: A 65-year-old female patient weighs 60 kg. Her serum creatinine is 1.2 mg/dL. The provider orders Vancomycin. Standard-interval dosing (e.g., q12h) typically requires a CrCl above 50 mL/min. Calculate CrCl and determine whether dose adjustment is needed.

Method: Cockcroft-Gault equation (with female correction)

CrCl=(14065)×6072×1.2×0.85=75×6086.4×0.85=4,50086.4×0.85\text{CrCl} = \frac{(140 - 65) \times 60}{72 \times 1.2} \times 0.85 = \frac{75 \times 60}{86.4} \times 0.85 = \frac{4{,}500}{86.4} \times 0.85

52.08×0.8544.3 mL/min\approx 52.08 \times 0.85 \approx 44.3 \text{ mL/min}

Answer: CrCl is approximately 44.3 mL/min. This is below 50 mL/min, so standard-interval Vancomycin dosing (q12h) is not appropriate. The provider should be notified — Vancomycin can still be given at this CrCl, but requires extended-interval dosing (e.g., q24h or q48h) guided by trough levels.

Reasonableness: An elderly female patient with a creatinine of 1.2 (which appears only mildly elevated) actually has significantly reduced kidney function when age and sex are factored in. This is a classic example of why serum creatinine alone is misleading — the Cockcroft-Gault equation reveals the true picture.

Review if missed: Renal Dose Adjustments

Problem 14: Order: Heparin 18 units/kg/hr IV infusion. Patient weighs 176 lb. Available: Heparin 25,000 units in 500 mL D5W. Calculate the pump rate in mL/hr.

Method: Weight-based dosing + IV rate calculation

Step 1: Convert weight to kg.

1762.2=80 kg\frac{176}{2.2} = 80 \text{ kg}

Step 2: Calculate the hourly dose.

18 units/kg/hr×80 kg=1,440 units/hr18 \text{ units/kg/hr} \times 80 \text{ kg} = 1{,}440 \text{ units/hr}

Step 3: Find the bag concentration.

25,000 units500 mL=50 units/mL\frac{25{,}000 \text{ units}}{500 \text{ mL}} = 50 \text{ units/mL}

Step 4: Calculate the pump rate.

mL/hr=1,440 units/hr50 units/mL=28.8 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{1{,}440 \text{ units/hr}}{50 \text{ units/mL}} = 28.8 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: Set the pump to 28.8 mL/hr (or 29 mL/hr per facility rounding policy).

Reasonableness: Heparin infusion rates of 20 to 35 mL/hr are common for standard-weight adults on a 25,000 units/500 mL concentration. A rate of 28.8 falls squarely in this range.

Review if missed: Weight-Based Dosing and IV Drip Rate Calculations

Problem 15: A provider titrates Dobutamine from 5 mcg/kg/min to 7.5 mcg/kg/min for a 70 kg patient. Available: Dobutamine 250 mg in 250 mL NS. What was the old pump rate, and what is the new pump rate?

Method: Critical care mcg/kg/min to mL/hr (titration)

Step 1: Convert concentration to mcg/mL.

250 mg250 mL=1 mg/mL=1,000 mcg/mL\frac{250 \text{ mg}}{250 \text{ mL}} = 1 \text{ mg/mL} = 1{,}000 \text{ mcg/mL}

Step 2: Calculate the old rate at 5 mcg/kg/min.

mL/hr=5×70×601,000=21,0001,000=21 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{5 \times 70 \times 60}{1{,}000} = \frac{21{,}000}{1{,}000} = 21 \text{ mL/hr}

Step 3: Calculate the new rate at 7.5 mcg/kg/min.

mL/hr=7.5×70×601,000=31,5001,000=31.5 mL/hr\text{mL/hr} = \frac{7.5 \times 70 \times 60}{1{,}000} = \frac{31{,}500}{1{,}000} = 31.5 \text{ mL/hr}

Answer: The old rate was 21 mL/hr. The new rate is 31.5 mL/hr. The pump rate increases by 10.5 mL/hr, which represents a 50% increase in dose.

Reasonableness: Dobutamine is typically dosed at 2.5 to 20 mcg/kg/min. Both rates fall within this therapeutic range. A 50% dose increase (from 5 to 7.5 mcg/kg/min) produces a 50% increase in pump rate (from 21 to 31.5 mL/hr), which confirms the math is internally consistent.

Review if missed: Critical Care Drip Calculations and Titration Calculations


What to Review

Use your results to identify which areas need more practice. Here is a guide based on which problems you missed:

Problems MissedSkill GapReview Page
1, 12Basic dosage calculations (D/H x Q)Three Calculation Methods
8Parenteral dosage calculationsParenteral Dosage
2, 6IV flow rates and drip ratesIV Drip Rate Calculations
3, 14Weight-based dosing (mg/kg, units/kg)Weight-Based Dosing
5MAP and hemodynamic parametersHemodynamic Calculations
7, 13Renal function (Cockcroft-Gault)Renal Dose Adjustments
9Pediatric fluids (4-2-1 rule)Pediatric Fluid Maintenance
11BSA-based dosing (Mosteller formula)Dosage by BSA
4, 10, 15Critical care drip calculationsCritical Care Drip Calculations

Scoring guide:

  • 13 to 15 correct — Excellent. You are well prepared for clinical rotations and nursing math exams. Focus your remaining study time on the specific topic(s) you missed.
  • 10 to 12 correct — Good foundation. Review the specific pages listed above for the problems you missed, then re-attempt those problems.
  • 7 to 9 correct — Moderate gaps. Prioritize the review pages above, rework the relevant practice problems on each page, and then return to this review.
  • 6 or fewer correct — Significant review needed. Start from the beginning of the Math for Nurses curriculum and work through each module systematically before re-attempting this assessment.

Key Takeaways

  • Nursing math is not about memorizing 12 different formulas — it is about recognizing which formula fits the clinical scenario in front of you
  • The most common errors are unit conversion mistakes (pounds vs. kg, mg vs. mcg, minutes vs. hours) — slow down and label every unit
  • Always perform a reasonableness check: does the number of tablets, the pump rate, or the calculated clearance make clinical sense?
  • If a calculated dose seems unusually high or low, recalculate before administering — catching your own errors is a safety skill, not a weakness
  • Mixed practice like this page provides better exam preparation than studying one topic at a time, because real clinical practice requires rapid context-switching between problem types

Return to Math for Nurses for more topics.

Last updated: March 29, 2026