
| Dr. Chark Cilantrologist Jr. Tough Bun |
| If your veterinarian provides you with the concentration of a drug, to calculate the amount of medicine to administer to your bunny, divide the dose obtained from Dr Chark's drug dose calculator by the concentration of medicine, usually written on the bottle. Make sure that the units from the bottle are the same as those computed by the drug dose calculator. For example: Dr. Chark's Drug Calculator computes 17 mg of ibuprofen for a 5-pound bunny. If the children's Ibuprofen concentration is listed as 100 mg per tsp on the label, then to obtain the amount in cc (ml), divide the dose by the concentration and perform units conversion (1 tsp = 5 cc, according to the Measures and Conversions table below): Amount of liquid = dose / concentration Amount of liquid = 17 mg / [ (100 mg/tsp) * (1 tsp/5 cc) ] Amount of liquid = 17 mg / (20 mg/cc) Amount of liquid = 0.85 cc If you administer the wrong dose to your bunny, it could be fatal! |
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REFERENCES
| Donald C. Plumb, Pharm.D.: Veterinary Drug Handbook, Pocket Edition. ISBN 0-8138-2353-6, Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press, 1999, 853 pp. | |
| Elizabeth V. Hillyer, ed., Katherine E. Quesenberry and Sandra Valkoff: Ferrets, Rabbits, and Rodents: Clinical Medicine and Surgery, 1st ed. ISBN 0-7216-4023-0, New York: WB Saunders Co., 1997, pp 396-397. | |
| Patrick J. Manning, Daniel H. Ringler and Christian E. Newcomer, eds.: The Biology of the Laboratory Rabbit, 2nd ed. ISBN 0-12-469235-4, New York: Academic Press, 1994, pp 468-469. | |
| Ronald Arky, MD, et al.: Physicians' Desk Reference, 53rd ed. ISBN 1-56363-288-8, Montvale, NJ: Medical Economics Company, Inc., 1999, 3,000 pp. |

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