Guest guest Posted July 26, 2006 Report Share Posted July 26, 2006 I don't think you need a math expert. If the gel caps have 99 mg per cap and a banana has 451 mg give him 5 gel caps with a little extra for measure. I don't understand why you are trying to convert ml to teaspoons. My thought is just get the potassium in him. Green Blessings Patty Corapi In a message dated 7/26/2006 7:15:45 PM Eastern Standard Time, buffywonder writes: Hi all, Hubby is sick - need to get potassium in him. Only measure I have is 15 ml equals 1 tablespoon. I have potassium gel caps, which contain 99 mg each. Dr. said one banana a day for 2 days. Since he has no appetite, this is getting problematic. I've only been able to get 1 banana down him in 1 1/2 days! I did find that 1 medium banana has 451 mg. Could someone please tell me how to convert the 99 mg. of potassium to ml (tablespoon)me how to some of the online converters and none of them are making sense to me. Too tired I guess. TIA, Hugs, Buffy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2006 Report Share Posted July 27, 2006 Hi all, Hubby is sick - need to get potassium in him. Only measure I have is 15 ml equals 1 tablespoon. I have potassium gel caps, which contain 99 mg each. Dr. said one banana a day for 2 days. Since he has no appetite, this is getting problematic. I've only been able to get 1 banana down him in 1 1/2 days! I did find that 1 medium banana has 451 mg. Could someone please tell me how to convert the 99 mg. of potassium to ml (tablespoon)? I tried some of the online converters and none of them are making sense to me. Too tired I guess. TIA, Hugs, Buffy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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