In the metric system, a microgram or microgramme is a unit of mass equal to one millionth (1×10−6) of a gram. The unit symbol is μg according to the International System of Units (SI); the recommended symbol in the United States and United Kingdom when communicating medical information is mcg. In μg, the prefix symbol for micro- is the Greek letter μ (mu).

Microgram
A nutrition facts label displaying, for example, the amount of folic acid in micrograms
General information
Unit systemSI
Unit ofmass
Symbolμg

Abbreviation and symbol confusion

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When the Greek lowercase "μ" (mu) is typographically unavailable, it is occasionally – although not properly [citation needed] – replaced by the Latin lowercase "u".

The United States–based Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommend that the symbol μg should not be used when communicating medical information due to the risk that the prefix μ (micro-) might be misread as the prefix m (milli-), resulting in a thousandfold overdose. The ISMP recommends the non-SI symbol mcg instead.[1] However, the abbreviation mcg is also the symbol for an obsolete centimetre–gram–second system of units unit of measure known as millicentigram, which is equal to 10 μg.

Gamma (symbol: γ) is a deprecated non-SI unit of mass equal to 1 μg.[2]

A fullwidth version of the "microgram" symbol is encoded by Unicode at code point U+338D SQUARE MU G for use in CJK contexts.[3] In other contexts, a sequence of the Greek letter mu (U+03BC) and Latin letter g (U+0067) should be used.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "ISMP's List of Error-Prone Abbreviations, Symbols, and Dose Designations". ISMP. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  2. ^ NIST Handbook 133 - 2018, Appendix E. General Tables of Units of Measurement, page 159 (17)
  3. ^ Unicode Consortium (2019). "The Unicode Standard 12.0 – CJK Compatibility ❰ Range: 3300—33FF ❱" (PDF). Unicode.org. Retrieved May 24, 2019.