Kerbside Motors is no more
Robert Myers
rmyers1 at charter.net
Wed Feb 2 18:14:14 EST 2005
By assuming the density of blood to be 1 g/mL. This is commonly done in
medical calculations. In the old days the unit would have been reported as
0.08 milligrams per cent (mg/100 ml of blood)
At 06:06 PM 2/2/2005, Richard J Lebens wrote:
>I hate to keep posting about this reminding Phil of his plight but, how
>do you convert grams (a mass) to liters (a volume)?
>
>--- Huw Powell <audi at humanspeakers.com> wrote:
>
> > In metric, there are no conversions necessary... 80 mg/100 ml = .08%
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