Want this question answered?
750 mg potassium chloride is equivalent to 10 mEq
To convert Kg to grams, divide by 10. This will give the grams as needed. To convert grams to Kg, the number should be multiplied by ten.
1gm = mg
No. You'd need about 4 tablets of 99 mg KCl to equal 10 mEq of prescription-strength KCl, 8 tablets to equal 20 mEq.
Hold on here, I need to do some heavy calculation ... okay, done. One tablespoon of table salt contains 1.0 tablespoons of sodium chloride. Since the atomic weight of sodium chloride is 58.5, 1 meq of salt is 58.5 mg. Since one tablespoon = 14.8 ml and salt weights 1.02 g/ml, one tablespoon of salt weighs 15.2 g or 15,200 mg. So one tablespoon of salt = 15,200 / 58.5 = 260 mEQ.
2299 mg
1.95652
1mEq NaCl = 58,4 mg NaCl
To convert sodium (Na) in mg to mEq you divide the value by the molecular weight of sodium (23 mg/mM). In this case for example 157 mg of sodium equals 7 mEq. Usual low sodium diets contain less than 3000 mg or 130 mEq of sodium.
5220
fo potassium 60 mEq K = 60 millimoles 39.1 grams per mole ( 0.060moles) = 2.346 grams =2346 mg
The formula for this conversion is mEq = mg/atomic weight * valence. The atomic weight of sodium chloride is 23mg/mM.
1mEq NaCl = 58,4 mg NaCl
390 mg is 10 meq if dealing with 'elemental' Potassium 2350 mg is 10 meq if dealing with Potassium Gluconate
10 mg
750 mg potassium chloride is equivalent to 10 mEq
.008 meq