The volume of blood loss in a typical menstruation is between 30 and 40 ml. Blood loss of 60 to 80 ml is considered to be heavy menstrual bleeding.
Normal blood loss. If it will exceed 500 ml then you will received a blood transfusion.
There are 1500 mL in 1 and a half liters.
1.5 liters is 1,500 mL (1 liter = 1,000 mL).
15 liters is 15,000 milliliters.
900ml of blood loss is quite a lot of blood loss, but it depends on what surgery has been done. Routine surgery and Laparoscopic surgery, the loss is minimal maybe a few hundred mls. Open surgery for rupture Aortic aneurysm, trauma, stab and bullet wound you can easily over a litre of blood.
1500 mL = 1.5 LTo convert from mL to L, divide by 1000.
30 litres is twenty times 1500 ml
1500 ml is the same as 1.5 Litre He has just asked about "1500" NOT '1500 ml'
1500 milliliters is more than 1 liter, because 1500 ml is actually 1 liter with 500 milliliters.
For a child weighing 3 stone (approximately 19 kg), critical blood loss is typically around 25% of their total blood volume. Children have an average blood volume of about 70 mL per kg, so the total blood volume for a 19 kg child would be around 1,330 mL. Therefore, critical blood loss would be approximately 330 mL, which can lead to significant hemodynamic instability and requires immediate medical intervention.
1500 ml equals 1.5 liters.