Oral Dosage: Liquid Medications
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.
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Liquid medications are the primary oral form for patients who cannot swallow tablets — including pediatric patients, the elderly with dysphagia, and anyone receiving medications through a nasogastric or gastrostomy tube. Unlike tablets where , liquid calculations require you to account for the concentration printed on the label. Misreading the concentration is one of the most common — and most dangerous — errors in nursing math.
Understanding Liquid Concentrations
Every liquid medication label states a concentration: the amount of drug dissolved in a specific volume of liquid. Common formats include:
| Label Format | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 250 mg/5 mL | 250 mg of drug in every 5 mL of liquid |
| 100 mg/mL | 100 mg of drug in every 1 mL of liquid |
| 125 mg/5 mL | 125 mg of drug in every 5 mL of liquid |
| 160 mg/5 mL | 160 mg of drug in every 5 mL of liquid |
From the label, you extract two values:
- = the amount of drug (numerator, e.g., 250 mg)
- = the volume that contains that amount (denominator, e.g., 5 mL)
The D/H x Q Formula for Liquids
Where:
- = Desired dose from the prescriber’s order
- = Have — the drug amount per labeled volume
- = Quantity — the labeled volume (e.g., 5 mL, 1 mL)
Types of Liquid Medications
Before measuring and administering, understand the three main liquid forms:
- Solutions — drug is completely dissolved in liquid; appears clear. No shaking needed. Examples: Diphenhydramine liquid, many elixirs.
- Suspensions — drug particles are suspended but not dissolved; appears cloudy or milky. Must be shaken well before measuring to ensure uniform drug distribution. Examples: Amoxicillin suspension, Ibuprofen suspension.
- Elixirs — solutions with an alcohol and sweetener base; appears clear. No shaking needed. Example: Acetaminophen elixir, Phenobarbital elixir.
Critical point for suspensions: If you pour from a suspension that has not been shaken, the first doses may contain mostly liquid (underdosed) and the last doses mostly settled drug (overdosed).
Measuring Liquid Medications
The device you use to measure determines precision:
| Device | Best For | Precision |
|---|---|---|
| Oral syringe | Doses under 10 mL, pediatric patients, tube administration | Varies by size: 1 mL syringes measure to 0.01 mL, 3 mL to 0.1 mL, 5-10 mL to 0.2 mL |
| Medication cup | Doses of 5 mL or more for patients who can drink | Nearest 2.5-5 mL |
| Calibrated dropper | Very small doses (less than 1 mL) | Medication-specific with varying calibrations |
Never use household teaspoons or tablespoons — they are inaccurate and vary widely. If a patient asks about spoons for home use: 1 teaspoon = 5 mL and 1 tablespoon = 15 mL, but always recommend a calibrated oral syringe.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Amoxicillin Suspension (Basic Calculation)
Order: Amoxicillin 500 mg PO TID Available: Amoxicillin 250 mg/5 mL oral suspension
Answer: Administer 10 mL three times daily. Shake the suspension well before measuring.
Reasonableness check: Amoxicillin 500 mg TID is a standard adult dose. The volume of 10 mL is easily measured in an oral syringe or medication cup.
Example 2: Acetaminophen Liquid (Pediatric Dose)
Order: Acetaminophen 240 mg PO q4h PRN for fever Available: Acetaminophen 160 mg/5 mL oral suspension
Answer: Administer 7.5 mL per dose as needed every 4 hours.
Reasonableness check: Pediatric Acetaminophen doses are based on weight, typically 10 to 15 mg/kg. A 240 mg dose corresponds to a child weighing about 16 to 24 kg (roughly 35 to 53 lb), which is reasonable for a toddler or young child. The volume of 7.5 mL is practical for measurement with an oral syringe.
Example 3: Diphenhydramine Liquid (Unit Conversion Needed)
Order: Diphenhydramine 0.025 g PO q6h PRN Available: Diphenhydramine 12.5 mg/5 mL oral solution
Step 1: Convert the order to milligrams.
Step 2: Apply the formula.
Answer: Administer 10 mL every 6 hours as needed.
Reasonableness check: Diphenhydramine 25 mg is a standard adult dose (equivalent to one 25 mg tablet). Administering 10 mL of the liquid form delivers the same amount. If you had forgotten to convert, you would have calculated mL — an impossibly small volume that should immediately trigger rechecking.
Rounding Rules for Liquid Medications
- Oral syringe: For volumes of 1 mL or greater, round to the nearest 0.1 mL (one decimal place). Example: 7.33 mL rounds to 7.3 mL. For volumes less than 1 mL, use a 1 mL syringe and round to the nearest 0.01 mL (two decimal places). Example: 0.667 mL rounds to 0.67 mL.
- Medication cup: Round to the nearest whole mL for practical measurement. Most cups are marked in 5 mL increments, so doses should ideally align with markings.
- Pediatric or critical doses: Some facilities require rounding to the nearest 0.01 mL for very small volumes measured with a tuberculin syringe.
When the calculated volume does not divide evenly, round according to the device being used and always round down for safety-critical medications (contact the pharmacist if you are unsure about rounding direction for a specific drug).
Common Mistakes
-
Forgetting to multiply by Q. If the label reads 250 mg/5 mL and you calculate , the answer is not 2 mL — it is mL. The ratio tells you how many “label units” to give; you must multiply by to convert to actual volume.
-
Not shaking suspensions. An unshaken suspension delivers an inconsistent concentration. The first pour may be nearly drug-free liquid, while settled material at the bottom is highly concentrated. Always shake the bottle vigorously before each measurement.
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Using household spoons instead of calibrated devices. Kitchen teaspoons vary from 2.5 mL to over 7 mL. A “teaspoon” dose measured with the wrong spoon could deliver half or 1.4 times the intended amount.
-
Misreading the concentration. Amoxicillin comes in multiple concentrations: 125 mg/5 mL, 200 mg/5 mL, 250 mg/5 mL, and 400 mg/5 mL. Using the wrong concentration in your calculation produces the wrong volume. Always read the specific label on the specific bottle you are using.
-
Ignoring unit mismatches. An order in grams with a label in milligrams will produce an answer that is off by a factor of 1,000. Always check and convert before calculating.
Practice Problems
Test your understanding with these clinical scenarios. Click to reveal each answer.
Problem 1: Order: Amoxicillin 400 mg PO TID. Available: Amoxicillin 400 mg/5 mL suspension. How many mL per dose?
Answer: Administer 5 mL per dose. When the desired dose equals the labeled strength, the volume equals one “label unit” — in this case, exactly 5 mL. Shake well before measuring.
Problem 2: Order: Acetaminophen 320 mg PO q6h. Available: Acetaminophen 160 mg/5 mL suspension. How many mL per dose?
Answer: Administer 10 mL per dose every 6 hours.
Problem 3: Order: Diphenhydramine 50 mg PO at bedtime. Available: Diphenhydramine 12.5 mg/5 mL solution. How many mL?
Answer: Administer 20 mL at bedtime. This volume is easily measured in a medication cup.
Problem 4: Order: Cephalexin 0.5 g PO QID. Available: Cephalexin 250 mg/5 mL suspension. How many mL per dose?
Step 1: Convert grams to milligrams.
Step 2: Apply the formula.
Answer: Administer 10 mL four times daily. Shake the suspension before each dose.
Problem 5: Order: Furosemide 30 mg PO daily. Available: Furosemide 10 mg/mL oral solution. How many mL?
Note that mL here because the concentration is expressed as mg per 1 mL.
Answer: Administer 3 mL daily. Use an oral syringe for accurate measurement at this small volume.
Key Takeaways
- For liquids, the D/H x Q formula gives you the volume in mL to administer:
- is the volume from the label — commonly 5 mL for oral suspensions or 1 mL for concentrated solutions
- Always shake suspensions before measuring to ensure uniform drug distribution
- Use calibrated devices (oral syringes, medication cups) — never household spoons
- Round liquid doses to the nearest 0.1 mL when using an oral syringe (or 0.01 mL for volumes under 1 mL using a 1 mL syringe). For medication cups (marked in 5 mL increments), use an oral syringe instead if the dose requires whole-mL precision
- If the calculated volume seems impossibly small or unreasonably large, recheck your units and your setup
Return to Math for Nurses for more topics.
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Last updated: March 29, 2026