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10meq=800mg or 1 meq=80mg
1meq = 74.5 mg 10meq = 745mg ( or 0.745grams) hope to have answered the question.
According to the information on the drug itself, 10mEq of potassium citrate = 1080mg, therefore 60 mEq would be 6 times this, or 6480 mg. that's a lot of potassium!
There is NO sodium in an orange. I found this on dietbites.com. All I did was type in "how much sodium is in strawberries" on google. Then I clicked on the first link. There was a whole list of fruits with there sodium levels too. Hope this helps!!
MEG on a script means milliequivalent & doesn't really tell you the measurement, it must be for potassium; it's very thought provoking I too have been trying to figure this out. you just want to know the mg huh? Evie mEq is used to denote an amount of a solute in a liter of solvent (i.e. the blood).For instance, potassium (K) is often measured as mEq/L or mEq/dL. 10 mEq is equivalent to 750 mg, USP. -See related link: DailyMed.After some research using various websites, the typical K intake per day is ~ 3.5 grams (3500 mg.). At the same time the usual K intake is stated elsewhere as 50-100 mEq/day. So, 1 mEq is somewhere in the range [70 mg, 35 mg.] (i.e., 3500/50 to 3500/100). Using the mid-point of the 50-100 mEq range (75), we get: 1 mEq ~ 46.7 mg -or-10mEq ~ 467 mg.A harder question is: If you start taking an additional 20 mEq of K today, how long does it take to show up in a blood test ?