Nursing

Concentration and Dilution

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.

Before you start

You should be comfortable with:

Real-world applications
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Nursing

Medication dosages, IV drip rates, vital monitoring

In clinical practice, nurses work with solutions every day — IV fluids, wound irrigations, topical preparations, and injectable medications. Understanding concentration tells you exactly how much active ingredient (solute) is dissolved in a given amount of solution. Getting this wrong can mean giving a patient too much or too little medication.

What Concentration Means

Concentration describes the amount of solute (drug or substance) dissolved in a total volume of solution. It can be expressed in several ways:

FormatMeaningExample
Percent strength (w/v)Grams of solute per 100 mL of solutionNS 0.9% = 0.9 g NaCl per 100 mL
mg/mLMilligrams of solute per milliliterMorphine 2 mg/mL
Ratio strength1 g of solute in a given volume of solutionEpinephrine 1 mg/mL (historically written as 1:1000)
g/LGrams of solute per literD5W = 5 g dextrose per 100 mL = 50 g/L

Percent Strength

Percent strength (weight/volume or w/v) means grams of solute per 100 mL of solution:

Percent Strength (w/v)=Grams of soluteTotal mL of solution×100\text{Percent Strength (w/v)} = \frac{\text{Grams of solute}}{\text{Total mL of solution}} \times 100

Common Clinical Solutions

SolutionPercentWhat It Contains
NS (Normal Saline)0.9%0.9 g NaCl per 100 mL
Half-Normal Saline (1/2 NS)0.45%0.45 g NaCl per 100 mL
D5W5%5 g dextrose per 100 mL
D10W10%10 g dextrose per 100 mL
Lidocaine1%1 g (1000 mg) lidocaine per 100 mL
Lidocaine2%2 g (2000 mg) lidocaine per 100 mL

Example 1: How Much NaCl Is in a 1-Liter Bag of NS?

NS is 0.9%, meaning 0.9 g NaCl per 100 mL. A 1-liter bag contains 1000 mL.

NaCl=0.9 g100 mL×1000 mL=9 g\text{NaCl} = \frac{0.9 \text{ g}}{100 \text{ mL}} \times 1000 \text{ mL} = 9 \text{ g}

Answer: A 1 L bag of NS contains 9 grams of NaCl.

Ratio Strength

Ratio strength is written as 1:X, meaning 1 gram of solute in X mL of solution.

  • Epinephrine 1:1,000 = 1 g per 1,000 mL = 1 mg/mL
  • Epinephrine 1:10,000 = 1 g per 10,000 mL = 0.1 mg/mL

Safety alert — ratio expressions are obsolete for epinephrine. The ratio notations 1:1,000 and 1:10,000 were officially eliminated by FDA labeling requirements and USP standards beginning in 2016 because they caused fatal medication errors — clinicians confused the two concentrations, which differ tenfold. Epinephrine must now be labeled by mass concentration: 1 mg/mL (for IM/subcutaneous use, formerly 1:1,000) and 0.1 mg/mL (for IV use, formerly 1:10,000). You may still encounter the old ratio notation on exams, in older references, or on legacy stock in some facilities. Always verify the mg/mL concentration on the actual vial label before administering.

To convert ratio strength to mg/mL:

mg/mL=1000 mgratio denominator (mL)\text{mg/mL} = \frac{1000 \text{ mg}}{\text{ratio denominator (mL)}}

Example 2: Concentration of Epinephrine 1 mg/mL (Formerly 1:1,000)

Using the ratio-to-mg/mL conversion for reference:

mg/mL=1000 mg1000 mL=1 mg/mL\text{mg/mL} = \frac{1000 \text{ mg}}{1000 \text{ mL}} = 1 \text{ mg/mL}

Answer: Epinephrine at this concentration is 1 mg/mL. Modern labels state the concentration directly rather than using the legacy 1:1,000 ratio notation.

The Dilution Formula: C1V1=C2V2C_1 V_1 = C_2 V_2

When you need to dilute a stronger (more concentrated) solution to create a weaker one, use the dilution formula:

C1V1=C2V2C_1 V_1 = C_2 V_2

Where:

  • C1C_1 = concentration of the stock (original) solution
  • V1V_1 = volume of the stock solution you need
  • C2C_2 = concentration of the desired (final) solution
  • V2V_2 = volume of the desired solution

This formula works because the total amount of solute stays the same — you are only adding diluent (usually sterile water or NS).

Example 3: Diluting a Lidocaine Solution

Problem: You have Lidocaine 2% and need to prepare 50 mL of Lidocaine 1%. How much of the 2% solution do you need, and how much diluent do you add?

Step 1: Identify the variables.

  • C1=2%C_1 = 2\%, V1=?V_1 = ?
  • C2=1%C_2 = 1\%, V2=50 mLV_2 = 50 \text{ mL}

Step 2: Solve for V1V_1.

V1=C2×V2C1=1%×50 mL2%=25 mLV_1 = \frac{C_2 \times V_2}{C_1} = \frac{1\% \times 50 \text{ mL}}{2\%} = 25 \text{ mL}

Step 3: Calculate the diluent volume.

Diluent=V2V1=5025=25 mL\text{Diluent} = V_2 - V_1 = 50 - 25 = 25 \text{ mL}

Answer: Mix 25 mL of Lidocaine 2% with 25 mL of diluent to make 50 mL of Lidocaine 1%.

Converting Between Concentration Formats

Nurses frequently need to convert between percent strength and mg/mL:

1%=1 g100 mL=1000 mg100 mL=10 mg/mL1\% = \frac{1 \text{ g}}{100 \text{ mL}} = \frac{1000 \text{ mg}}{100 \text{ mL}} = 10 \text{ mg/mL}

Quick rule: To convert percent to mg/mL, multiply by 10.

Percentmg/mL
0.1%1 mg/mL
0.5%5 mg/mL
1%10 mg/mL
2%20 mg/mL
5%50 mg/mL

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Confusing percent with mg/mL. Remember that 1% = 10 mg/mL, not 1 mg/mL. This is one of the most common and dangerous errors in concentration math.
  2. Mixing up ratio strength directions. When ratio notation is used, a larger denominator means a weaker solution — 1:1,000 (1 mg/mL) is ten times more concentrated than 1:10,000 (0.1 mg/mL). This exact confusion is why FDA/USP eliminated ratio expressions for epinephrine labeling.
  3. Forgetting that C1V1=C2V2C_1 V_1 = C_2 V_2 requires the same units. Both concentrations must be in the same unit (both as %, both as mg/mL, etc.) before you solve.
  4. Calculating the diluent volume incorrectly. The diluent volume is V2V1V_2 - V_1, not V2V_2 alone. You are adding diluent to the stock volume to reach the total final volume.

Practice Problems

Test your understanding with these problems. Click to reveal each answer.

Problem 1: How many grams of dextrose are in 500 mL of D5W?

D5W is 5%, meaning 5 g per 100 mL.

Dextrose=5 g100 mL×500 mL=25 g\text{Dextrose} = \frac{5 \text{ g}}{100 \text{ mL}} \times 500 \text{ mL} = 25 \text{ g}

Answer: There are 25 grams of dextrose in 500 mL of D5W.

Problem 2: An older reference lists Epinephrine 1:10,000. What is the concentration in mg/mL? (Note: modern labels express this as a mass concentration directly.)

mg/mL=1000 mg10,000 mL=0.1 mg/mL\text{mg/mL} = \frac{1000 \text{ mg}}{10{,}000 \text{ mL}} = 0.1 \text{ mg/mL}

Answer: Epinephrine 1:10,000 = 0.1 mg/mL. Current FDA-compliant labels state this as “0.1 mg/mL” rather than using the legacy ratio notation.

Problem 3: You have a 10% Dextrose solution (D10W). You need 250 mL of D5W. How much D10W do you need, and how much sterile water do you add?

C1V1=C2V2C_1 V_1 = C_2 V_2

10%×V1=5%×250 mL10\% \times V_1 = 5\% \times 250 \text{ mL}

V1=5×25010=125 mLV_1 = \frac{5 \times 250}{10} = 125 \text{ mL}

Diluent: 250125=125250 - 125 = 125 mL

Answer: Mix 125 mL of D10W with 125 mL of sterile water to make 250 mL of D5W.

Problem 4: Convert Lidocaine 0.5% to mg/mL.

0.5%=0.5×10=5 mg/mL0.5\% = 0.5 \times 10 = 5 \text{ mg/mL}

Answer: Lidocaine 0.5% = 5 mg/mL.

Key Takeaways

  • Concentration tells you how much solute is in a given amount of solution
  • Percent strength (w/v) means grams per 100 mL — to convert to mg/mL, multiply by 10
  • Ratio strength (1:X) means 1 g of solute in X mL of solution — a larger denominator means a weaker solution
  • The dilution formula C1V1=C2V2C_1 V_1 = C_2 V_2 lets you calculate how to mix a desired concentration from a stock solution
  • Always verify that both concentrations are in the same unit before applying the dilution formula
  • When in doubt about a concentration, verify with the pharmacist before administering

Return to Math for Nurses for more topics in this section.

Last updated: March 29, 2026