Nanogram per liter (ng/L) and milligram per liter (mg/L) are both units of measurement used to express the concentration of a substance in a liquid. The main difference is in their scale: nanogram per liter is a smaller unit of measurement than milligram per liter. 1 milligram (mg) is equal to 1,000,000 nanograms (ng), so if a substance is measured in ng/L, it would be a much smaller concentration compared to if it were measured in mg/L.
There is 1 milligram in one milligram.
How many micrograms (µg, ug or mcg) in a milligram(mg)? 1000 micrograms = 1 milligram, and 1000 milligrams = 1 gram.
There are approximately 5 million red blood cells in a microliter of blood. Therefore, there would be 5 billion red blood cells in a liter of blood.
In 1 liter of blood plasma, there are 900 milliliters of water. This is because 90% of 1 liter is equal to 0.9 liters, which is 900 milliliters.
This cannot be sensibly answered. A liter is a measure of volume, milligrams is a measure of weight or mass.
Given that a liter of water does weight about a kilogram, there would be a million milligrams of water per liter, so yes, one milligram per liter does work out to be one part per million (ppm).
Nanogram per liter (ng/L) and milligram per liter (mg/L) are both units of measurement used to express the concentration of a substance in a liquid. The main difference is in their scale: nanogram per liter is a smaller unit of measurement than milligram per liter. 1 milligram (mg) is equal to 1,000,000 nanograms (ng), so if a substance is measured in ng/L, it would be a much smaller concentration compared to if it were measured in mg/L.
No. A mg (milligram) is a measure of weight; a liter is a measure of volume.
There is 1 milligram in one milligram.
1 liter = 2.11 pints 1 pint = 0.47 liter
Divide by 1000.
380 milligram/liter of Zithromax is equal to 0.38 milligram/mL of Zithromax. It is impossible to convert mg to ml because milligrams measure mass and milliliters measure volume.
7000 to 12000
No. As far as I know, there is no such thing as a "cubic milligram" - it doesn't make much sense to take the cube of a mass.
One milligram, if the water is at 4 degrees Centigrade. At any other temperature, the water will weigh a bit less.
Normal test results are CRP levels of less than one milligram (mg) per liter of blood. The ideal result is a CRP level of zero.