Weight-based dosing is routine but error-prone, especially when units switch between mg/kg and mcg/kg or when a maximum cap applies. This calculator computes the single and total daily dose against the body weight you choose — actual, ideal, or adjusted — and flags when a dose exceeds its ceiling.
How it works
The core calculation is one multiplication, with options layered on:
dosing weight (kg) = actual, ideal (Devine), or adjusted body weight
single dose = dosing weight x dose per kg (mg or mcg)
total daily dose = single dose x doses per day
Ideal body weight uses the Devine formula: 50 kg + 2.3 kg per inch over 5 ft
for men, 45.5 kg + 2.3 kg per inch over 5 ft for women. Adjusted body weight
is IBW + 0.4 x (actual - IBW), used for drugs that distribute partly into
adipose tissue. If a maximum total dose is entered, the tool caps the result and
warns you.
Example
A 70 kg adult prescribed 15 mg/kg twice daily: single dose
70 x 15 = 1050 mg, total daily 2100 mg. If the drug caps at 1000 mg per
dose, the tool flags the 1050 mg dose and shows 1000 mg as the value to give.
Notes
This tool does arithmetic only. Drug choice, the correct dosing weight, route, renal and hepatic adjustment, and the maximum are clinical decisions that must follow an authoritative reference. Double-check high-risk doses with a pharmacist.