1000 micrograms = 1 milligram.
Half a milligramme = 0.5 milligramme
There are 1,000 microgrammes in 1 gramme.
The purest form of copper isotope costs approximately $ 3.5 per milligramme. by Biju Kallatte
Divide by 1000
35 mg or 35 milligramme
1 kg = 1,000,000 mg, thus 1.2 kg = 1,200,000 mg
That's a mixed-units question, a bit like asking how many litres are in a hectare. Please rephrase your query and post a new question.
"mg" stands for milligram, a unit of measurement used for mass in the metric system. It is equal to one-thousandth of a gram.
Since grams (and micrograms) are a unit of mass, and liters (and milliliters) are a unit of volume, they measure different things. Therefore, there is no standard conversion between one and the other - a certain amount of microgrammes (mass) will not always occupy the same volume.
Not much at all.3.3 microgrammes in 3 oz (85g) of pan fried beef liver.That's 3.3 against a daily recommendation of about 85 microgrammes.For people on Warfarin/Coumadin (or any other vitamin K antagonist anti-coagulant) its a pretty insignificant source.Source: USDAhttp://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/Data/SR18/nutrlist/sr18w430.pdfDownload the pdf (Adobe Acrobat/Reader document) and search inside the document on your computer for the word 'liver'.This version of the data is sorted by the amount of Vitamin K.Warfarin patients should know about the things on the first couple of pages (the Vitamin K rich foods). Beef liver is low down on page 6. (Liver sausage is on page 10, chicken liver on page 19 - among the really insignificant stuff.When looking at the data, be sure to look at the portion size.3 oz of fried liver is reasonable.And a whole cupful of boiled spinach is a rather massive portion.However 4 spears of asparagus is only a tease, not a portion! And yet it provides 48 microgrammes - half a day's worth!And one last point. With Warfarin, etc, patients should STABILISE NOT MINIMISE their vitamin K intake. An unstable INR is often due to too little (and thus too variable) vitamin K intake. Much better to take 100 ±20 microgrammes daily (20% variability) than to take 40 ±20 microgrammes (50% variability).
"Legal alcohal limit is 35 microgrammes/100 millilitres of breath or 80 milligrams/100 millilites of blood. Individuals will register differently even after consuming equal amounts of alcohol." I have taken it from myd river instructor's website. Link is below in case you want to look at some other FAQs
one-to-one relationship in adatabase