100.7 is how many cc of liquid ivermectin
Executive summary
One hundred point seven micrograms (100.7 mcg) of ivermectin corresponds to a very small fractional volume of common veterinary or pharmaceutical ivermectin solutions; the exact cc (cubic centimeter, equivalent to mL) depends on the concentration of the liquid formulation being used, because different products (1%, 0.08%, 1.87%, etc.) contain very different amounts of ivermectin per cc [1] [2] [3]. Below are conversions for the common concentrations found in the provided reporting so the reader can pick the correct one for their product.
1. If the liquid is a 1% (10 mg/mL) ivermectin solution — the straightforward veterinary injectable standard
A 1% ivermectin solution contains 10 mg (10,000 mcg) per milliliter, meaning 100.7 mcg equals 100.7 ÷ 10,000 = 0.01007 mL, which is 0.01007 cc (about 0.01 cc) — a volume roughly one hundredth of a milliliter; several sources explain that 1% equals 10 mg per mL and that 1 mL = 1 cc for these products [1] [4] [5].
2. If the formulation is 0.08% (e.g., some diluted sheep drench examples cited)
A 0.08% solution contains about 800 mcg per cc according to the dilution example cited, so 100.7 mcg ÷ 800 mcg/cc = 0.125875 cc, approximately 0.126 cc — an order of magnitude larger than the 1% calculation because the drug concentration is lower [2].
3. If the reference product is a 1.87% paste or concentrated formulation
Some ivermectin pastes are labeled 1.87%, which equates to roughly 18.7 mg (18,700 mcg) per mL; using that concentration, 100.7 mcg ÷ 18,700 mcg/mL = 0.00539 mL, or about 0.0054 cc — roughly half a hundredth of a milliliter [3].
4. Practical implications, measurement precision, and caveats
These calculations show that 100.7 mcg is a very small liquid volume regardless of common ivermectin strengths, and the practical ability to measure such volumes depends on syringe graduations and how the product has been diluted; multiple sources emphasize that people dilute concentrated ivermectin to make dosing easier and warn about mixing consistency and accuracy [6] [7] [1]. The reporting does not supply a single “correct” cc because the original question did not specify which concentration or product is being used; therefore the conversions above must be applied to the specific labeled concentration of the liquid available [1] [2] [3]. Medical or veterinary dosing should follow product labeling or a licensed professional’s instructions rather than informal conversions [5] [8].
5. Closing note on safety and verification
Converting micrograms to volume is straightforward arithmetic once the concentration (mcg per mL) is known, but the consequences of dosing errors can be significant; the provided sources include official product concentration details for veterinary injectables and practical dilution advice from user and specialist forums, demonstrating both the technical conversion bases and the real-world measurement challenges — for any real-world administration, consult the product label or a veterinarian/clinician to confirm concentration, intended route, and safe dose [5] [8] [6].