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Reconstitution Volume

Volume to draw up from a reconstituted vial for an ordered dose. Includes displacement volume. Free pharmacy calculator for reconstitution volume. TGA and FDA ref...

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Amoxicillin suspension script — the patient is picking up in 5 minutes and the bottle needs reconstituting correctly to ensure the labelled 125 mg/5 mL concentration.

Reconstitution Volume
Compounding
From product label — 0 if not stated
Total volume = Diluent added + Displacement volume Concentration = Vial mg ÷ Total volume Volume to give = Ordered dose ÷ Concentration Example: 500 mg vial, 9.6 mL diluent, 0.4 mL displacement
Total vol = 10 mL · Conc = 50 mg/mL · For 250 mg → 5 mL
💡 Displacement volume is often omitted and causes systematic underdosing — always check the product information leaflet.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the volume of water to add to a dry powder for oral suspension or injection to achieve the labelled concentration. Accounts for displacement volume. Works for both reconstitution to label concentration and for calculating the volume to draw up for a specific ordered dose after reconstitution.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Volume to add = Final volume − Displacement volume Final concentration = Label strength (mg) ÷ Final volume (mL) Dose volume = Ordered dose ÷ Final concentration

Powder for reconstitution contains the drug plus excipients as a dry powder. When water is added, the powder itself occupies volume (displacement volume), meaning the final volume is greater than the water added. The label states either the volume to add (for oral suspensions) or the final volume after reconstitution (for injections). Getting this wrong produces an incorrect concentration — too little water gives a more concentrated suspension, too much water dilutes it.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Amoxicillin oral suspension
Given: Label: add 68 mL water to produce 100 mL of 125 mg/5 mL
Working: Displacement: 100 − 68 = 32 mL · Conc after: 2500 mg ÷ 100 mL = 25 mg/mL = 125 mg/5 mL ✓
Answer: Add exactly 68 mL water in two portions
💡 Add approximately half the water first, shake vigorously, then add remaining water to the graduation mark.
Standard
Ceftriaxone injection — ordered dose volume
Given: Vial: 1 g · Reconstitute with 10 mL water for injection · Ordered dose: 750 mg
Working: Conc: 1000 mg ÷ 10 mL = 100 mg/mL · Volume: 750 ÷ 100
Answer: Draw up 7.5 mL
💡 Ceftriaxone — check compatibility before mixing with IV line. Do not mix with calcium-containing solutions.
Advanced
Vancomycin with displacement volume
Given: Vial: 500 mg · Add 10 mL to give 10.4 mL (0.4 mL displacement) · Ordered: 250 mg
Working: Conc: 500 ÷ 10.4 = 48.1 mg/mL · Volume: 250 ÷ 48.1
Answer: 5.2 mL
💡 Vancomycin reconstitute to ≥5 mg/mL before further dilution for infusion. Do not administer undiluted.

4 Sanity check

Oral suspensions
Add water in two portions — half first, shake, then to graduation mark
Single addition of all water before shaking makes a lump. Two-portion method ensures uniform dispersion.
After reconstitution
Shake well before each use (suspensions)
Unshaken suspension may deliver first doses at the wrong concentration.
Stability after reconstitution
Most oral suspensions: 7–14 days refrigerated
Check the label — most amoxicillin, flucloxacillin, azithromycin suspensions are stable 7–14 days at 2–8°C.
Label immediately after reconstitution
Expiry date, storage instructions, prepared by, date
Unlabelled reconstituted products must not leave the dispensary.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Adding water to the graduation mark without considering displacement Assuming displacement is negligible For suspension: no error if following the label instruction (label already accounts for displacement). For injections: may cause error if displacement volume is significant. For injections: check the product PI for displacement volume. For oral suspensions: always add to the graduation mark as labelled.
Using tap water instead of purified water for injections Convenience Particulate contamination, microbial risk Parenteral products: always use water for injection (WFI). Oral suspensions: use cooled boiled water or freshly boiled water as per label.
Not shaking the oral suspension before dispensing dose Omission Top of bottle may be less concentrated than bottom — inconsistent dose Shake vigorously for 10–15 seconds before measuring each dose. Advise patient the same.
Dispensing full bottle without advising on reconstitution Assuming patient knows Patient adds wrong amount of water, incorrect concentration Always demonstrate reconstitution to caregivers. Provide written instructions with the label.