Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- From: "Lee M." <lmacmil@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2005 18:33:05 -0500
Since tissue is mostly water and since 1cc of water weighs 1 gram, I think
the conversion is assumed to be about 1 to 1. Urologists estimate weight
from the DRE but it's just a guess based on experience. I had one uro tell
me mine was 50g, another 30-35g, and the ultrasound said 21 cc.
"Tom Harms" <tomharms@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:paFmf.77577$2k5.4594@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sorry if this is a repeat, but my prostate is 60 cc ~ what does that
> convert to in grms. I did a search and couldn't anything. It seems to me
> to ccs are referring to size and grms are referring to weight. Is this a
> conversion of the weight of ccs of water? Thanks for any clarification.
> Tom
>
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- From: Pete
- Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- References:
- Grms/ccs conversion
- From: Tom Harms
- Grms/ccs conversion
- Prev by Date: Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- Next by Date: Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- Previous by thread: Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- Next by thread: Re: Grms/ccs conversion
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
Loading