Skip to calculator
Reconstitution Free · No login

Reconstitution Calculator

Volume to draw up after adding diluent to a powdered vial. Enter displacement volume if stated on the label. Free nursing calculator for reconstitution. AU and US...

🧪
🎯

Powder for injection in one hand, the drug chart in the other. You know the vial is 250 mg but displacement volume isn't listed anywhere obvious.

Reconstitution Calculator
Reconstitution
Leave 0 if not stated
Concentration = Vial mg ÷ (Diluent + Displacement) Volume to give = Ordered dose ÷ Concentration
💡 Always check the label for displacement volume — omitting it leads to underdosing.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the volume to draw up from a reconstituted powdered vial for a given ordered dose. Accounts for displacement volume — the volume the powder itself contributes to the final solution, which changes the true concentration if ignored.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

True concentration (mg/mL) = Label strength (mg) ÷ (Diluent added + Displacement volume) Volume to draw up = Ordered dose ÷ True concentration

When you add diluent to a powder vial, the powder itself occupies space and increases the final volume beyond the diluent you added. Ignoring displacement volume produces a concentration lower than expected, meaning you draw up more than ordered. Displacement volumes range from ~0.1 mL (small peptides) to ~3 mL (benzylpenicillin 3 g). The figure is listed in the manufacturer's data sheet or AMH.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
No displacement volume listed
Given: Vial: 500 mg · Diluent added: 10 mL · Displacement: 0 · Ordered dose: 250 mg
Working: Conc: 500 ÷ (10 + 0) = 50 mg/mL · Volume: 250 ÷ 50
Answer: 5 mL
💡 If displacement volume is unknown and not on the label, treat as 0 or contact pharmacy.
Standard
Piperacillin-tazobactam with displacement
Given: Vial: 4.5 g (4500 mg) · Diluent added: 20 mL · Displacement: 4.4 mL · Ordered: 4500 mg
Working: Conc: 4500 ÷ (20 + 4.4) = 4500 ÷ 24.4 = 184.4 mg/mL · Volume: 4500 ÷ 184.4
Answer: 24.4 mL (full vial)
💡 Full vial dose — draw up entire reconstituted volume. Label and use immediately or per product stability guidelines.
Advanced
Partial vial with significant displacement
Given: Vial: 1 g (1000 mg) · Diluent: 9.6 mL · Displacement: 0.4 mL · Ordered: 600 mg
Working: Conc: 1000 ÷ (9.6 + 0.4) = 1000 ÷ 10 = 100 mg/mL · Volume: 600 ÷ 100
Answer: 6 mL
💡 Manufacturer deliberately chose 9.6 mL diluent to produce exactly 100 mg/mL after 0.4 mL displacement. Always check the product PI.

4 Sanity check

Displacement volume on label
Often expressed as 'add X mL to give Y mL/Z mg'
If label states 'add 9.6 mL to give 10 mL of 100 mg/mL' — displacement is already factored in.
Volume to draw up
Should be ≤ the total reconstituted volume
If answer > total vial volume, check your inputs.
Always use immediately after reconstitution
Unless product stability data supports storage
Check AMH or product PI for stability at room temperature and refrigerated.
Stability after reconstitution
Most β-lactams: use within 30 min to 4 hours at room temp
Some products stable longer if refrigerated. Check each drug's product information.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Ignoring displacement volume Assuming volume = diluent added only True concentration lower than expected — draw-up volume larger than ordered Always check the product PI or AMH for displacement volume. Even 0.5 mL displacement on a small vial changes concentration significantly.
Confusing 'add X mL' vs 'results in X mL' Misreading reconstitution instructions Adding too much diluent, diluting beyond intended concentration 'Add 9.6 mL to give 10 mL' means displacement is 0.4 mL. Read the whole instruction carefully.
Using reconstituted vial beyond stability window Preparing in advance for convenience Drug degradation — reduced potency or toxic breakdown products Reconstitute only when needed. Label with time prepared. Discard per product guidelines.
Vigorous shaking of protein-based drugs Habit Protein denaturation, foaming, reduced potency Roll vials gently for proteins (e.g. immunoglobulins). Reserve vigorous mixing for crystalline powders.