10 units(8cc/hr)=80/1000=0.08 U/hr
7 liters
0.36 litres as there are 1000ml in a litre
1 L = 1,000 ml2.3 L = (2.3 x 1,000) = 2,300 ml
Yes. There are 1000mL per liter.
I assume you mean millilitres, and if so, there are 1000ml in a litre
I am not offering this as a medical answer, but I believe the math is as follows. 100 units = 100,000 milliunits. Diluted 10:1 this makes 1,000,000 milliunits of solution. Since you want 50 milliunits of pitocin per minute, this would be 500 milliunits of solution per minute, or 0.5ml (1/2 ml)per minute.
1.67mEq Potassium per hour
1000mL equates to 100cL
1000ml is the same as 1 us.gal
1000ml 1000000ul 1000000000nl 1000000000000pl 1000000000000000fl
50ml Way to find: 5/100 * 1000ml
1000mL = 1L For every 1000mL we have 1 L. So- 400mL x 1L/1000mL = 0.4L
No
1L = 1000mL 0.36L x 1000mL/L = 360mL
1L = 1000mL 600mL x 1L/1000mL = 0.6L
1L = 1000mL 1000mL x 3/4 = 750mL
1000mL = 1L 8.23L * 1000mL/L = 8230mL Save