In studies, dose is often expressed in mg/day. It is calculated as follows: Dose=Concentration*Intake Rate. The units of concentration and intake rate vary. Concentration can be in units of w/w, w/v, v/v (e.g. %, ppm). Intake rate can be in units of weight or volume (e.g. 1 L/day or 1 g/day) but dose is often mg/day. I am confused about when to correct for density and when not, and I wondered whether there were any general rules about this or some tables that relate the units of concentration to intake units in terms of density correction.
Here are two examples: In this example I've used the density of the entire solution.
Calculate the mg/day dose of 100 mL of a 10 ppm w/w solution of ciprofloxacin in pure glycerin.
10 ppm w/w= 10 mg/kg. The density of the entire solution is 1.26 g/mL at 20oC. Thus, 1 kg of the solution would have a volume of 793.65 mLs and 100 mL of this solution will contain 1.26 mg of ciprofloxacin and the dose would be 1.26 mg/day.
In this example, I've used the density of the solute:
Calculate the mg/day dose of 100 mL 40%v/v solution of pure ethanol in pure water.
40%v/v ethanol=40 mL ethanol made up to 100 mL of water. Ethanol density=0.789 g/mL at 20oC. Thus, 100 mL of this solution will contain 31.572 g (40 mL *0.789 g/mL=31.572 g) of ethanol. At an intake of 100 mL per day, the daily dose would be 31.572 g/day.
Not sure what would happen if you have a concentration in w/v and an intake in units of weight. Anyway please let me know if there are any errors (above) or general rules about this.