Infants typically have about 70 to 80 milliliters of blood per kilogram of body weight. This can vary slightly based on factors such as gestational age and individual health conditions. For practical purposes, healthcare providers often use an average of around 75 ml/kg when estimating blood volume in infants.
Adult males 12 pints, adult females 9 pints. The standard answer to blood volume from most of my reference books is: adults - 70 ml/kg children - 80 ml/kg infants - 90 ml/kg
A horse has (Typically) 80 ml of blood per kg (hotblood breeds have 100ml per kg and coldblood breeds have 65ml per kg). Therefore and average 1,200 pound horse will have 12.3 gallons of blood. A horse must lose roughly 10% of it's blood to go into shock, which would be roughly 2 gallons of blood.
Infants have around 80ml per kilogram blood volume (although the range can be from 50-100ml'kg). This steadily drops to the adult values of 50-70ml/kg. A 6 month old infant weighing approx 6 kg would have about 480mls of blood. 10mls taken out for blood samples would represent around 2% of the total blood volume Repeated blood sampling in infants may result in loss of significant blood volume and so the reason why paediatric sampling bottles are used which require much smaller volumes than adults Happy new year! El Tango
13.77kg @1000g per kg
Between 70 and 110 ml of blood per kg of body weight.
cft=kg
To estimate blood volume of a new born baby the following calculation is used: EBV= weight (kg) * Average blood volume Average blood volume for a full term neonate is 85 mL/kg Average blood volume for a premature neonate is 95 mL/kg
Approximately 70 mls per kg, so if you weigh 110 pounds, which is 50 kg, then your blood volume is about 3500 mls or 3.5 liters.
There are 70mL/kg in the human body per male there are 65mL/kg in the human body per female Example A 60kg patient (or 132lbs) has 4,200mL of blood
Approximately 0.454 (0.453592) kg per pound.
not possible to answer unless given 300 kg per what volume
Blood volume is normally considered to be 65 mls per Kilogram for women and 75 mls per kilogram for men. Therefore the larger an individual is the higher the circulating blood volume. This is logical because, larger individuals have more body tissue (especially fat) and therefore require more blood to circulate, anmd provide oxygen and nutrients