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Calculate your own osmolarity | Lab values and concentrations | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy

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    Now let's say that you
    have a vial of plasma.
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    And I'm actually going
    to label it as we go.
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    We've got some sodium
    floating in here
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    and you've got some anion
    in purple over here.
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    And this could be anything
    that really binds to sodium.
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    So if this is some negatively
    charged ion, maybe chloride,
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    or bicarb, those are
    the two most common.
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    And you've also got, let's
    say, some glucose in here.
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    And maybe some urea, or we
    call it urea nitrogen as well.
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    So you've got a few things
    floating around the plasma
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    and someone asks
    you, well, what is
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    the total osmolarity
    of the plasma?
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    And you know that
    this is in units
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    of osmoles per liter
    blood, Actually,
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    I should write liter
    plasma to be more accurate.
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    Since that's what we're
    talking about here.
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    So per one liter of plasma.
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    And these are the units
    that we have to think about
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    to answer this
    question, is, what
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    are the osmoles per
    liter of plasma?
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    So let's go through this.
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    And I'm going to give
    you some lab values
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    and we'll see how based on just
    a few lab values and really
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    just four of the most
    representative solutes,
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    or most important
    solutes, we can
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    get a pretty close
    guesstimate of the osmolarity.
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    So you don't actually need to
    know every single osmole that's
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    in your plasma.
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    You can figure it
    out based on four
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    of the most important ones.
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    So let's go with the
    first one, sodium.
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    And let's say the lab tells
    you, well, your sodium value--
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    and I'm going to write the labs
    in kind of this grey color,
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    somehow that reminds
    me of the lab--
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    let's say they say the sodium
    value is 140 milliequivalents
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    per liter.
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    So how do you take that and
    make it into osmoles per liter?
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    Well, our denominator
    is already OK.
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    But immediately, you can
    say, OK, well 140 millimoles
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    per liter is what that equals.
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    And you know that because
    sodium is a monovalent.
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    It's only got one charge.
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    If it's monovalent,
    then that means
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    that the equivalents
    equal the moles.
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    And now that you're
    in moles, you
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    can actually go
    across to osmoles.
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    You could say 140 osmoles
    or milliosmoles per liter.
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    And you know that because
    once sodium is in water,
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    it acts the same way that
    you would expect it to act.
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    It doesn't split
    up or anything like
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    that because it's one particle.
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    So it acts as a single particle.
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    One particle.
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    So if it's one
    particle, it's going
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    to have 140
    milliosmoles per liter.
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    And we've effectively gotten one
    quarter of this problem done.
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    Because all we need to do is
    take the four different solutes
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    that we've identified
    and add them up together.
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    So we've figured out sodium.
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    And now let's move
    on to the anion.
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    And the trick to the anion is
    just thinking of it as sodium.
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    It's almost the same as
    sodium, but just the reverse.
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    So we know that it's
    going to be 140.
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    We're going to use 140
    as the number here.
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    Because our assumption is that
    sodium is a positive charge
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    and for every one
    positive charge,
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    you need one negative charge.
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    So we're going to assume that
    all the negative charges are
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    coming from these anions.
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    And these would be
    things like we said,
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    things like chloride or
    bicarb, something like that.
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    So again, we don't
    actually get these numbers
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    or even need these
    numbers, we simply
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    take that 140 and
    we multiply by 2
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    and assume that the other half
    is going to be some anion.
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    Now we actually have
    to convert units still.
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    We have to get over to
    milliosmoles per liter.
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    And so we know that the anion
    is going to be monovalent
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    and that gets us to millimoles.
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    And we use the same
    logic as above.
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    We just say, OK, well
    if that was millimoles
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    and it's still one particle,
    meaning it's not splitting up
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    when it hits water and going
    in two different directions,
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    in a sense, having
    twice the effect,
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    we're going to end up with
    140 milliosmoles per liter,
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    just as before.
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    So this is our second
    part done, right?
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    So two parts are done.
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    We figured out the sodium
    and we figured out the anion.
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    Now let's go over to glucose.
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    So let's figure out how to
    get glucose as units from what
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    the lab gives us, which I'll
    tell you in just a second,
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    into something more usable.
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    So how do we actually get
    over to something usable?
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    Let me actually, switch over.
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    There we go.
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    Make some space on our canvas.
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    So let's say we have
    our glucose here.
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    And the lab calls us
    and says, hey, we just
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    got your lab result, it was
    90 milligrams per deciliter.
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    It's actually a very,
    very common lab value
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    or common range for
    a glucose lab value.
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    One thing we have
    to do right away
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    is figure out how to get
    from milligrams to moles.
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    And you know that this is
    what glucose looks like.
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    This is the formula for it.
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    So to get the overall
    weight, the atomic weight,
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    you could say,
    well, let's take 6,
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    because that's how
    many carbons we have,
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    times the weight of
    carbon, which is 12,
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    plus 12, because that's
    what we have here,
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    times the weight of
    hydrogen, which is 1,
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    plus 6, times the
    weight of oxygen.
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    And that's going to equal--
    this is 72, this is 12,
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    and this is 96, and add them all
    up together, and we get-- 180.
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    So we have 180 atomic mass
    units per glucose molecule.
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    Which means, if you
    think back, which
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    means that one mole of
    glucose equals 180 grams.
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    And since these
    are way, way bigger
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    than, I mean this is grams, and
    we're talking about milligrams
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    over here, so I'm going to
    just switch it down by 1,000.
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    So one millimole of glucose
    equals 180 milligrams.
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    All I did was divide by 1,000.
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    So now I can take this unit and
    actually use our conversions.
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    I could say, well, let's
    multiply that by 100
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    and-- let's say, one
    millimole rather,
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    one millimole per 180
    milligrams, that'll
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    cancel the milligrams out.
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    And I also have to get from
    deciliters to liters, right?
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    So I've got to go 10
    deciliters equals 1 liter.
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    And that'll cancel
    my deciliters out.
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    So I'm left with-- and this
    10 will get rid of that 0--
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    so I'm left with
    90 divided by 18,
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    which is 5 millimoles per liter.
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    And, just as above, I
    know that the glucose
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    will behave as one particle
    in water, in solution.
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    So it's going to be 5 osmoles,
    or milliosmoles, actually.
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    5 milliosmoles per liter.
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    And that's the
    right units, right?
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    So I figured out another
    part of my formula.
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    And I'll show you the actual
    formula at the end of this,
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    but I wanted to work
    through it piece by piece.
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    So we've done glucose now and
    we're ready for our last bit,
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    so let's do our last one,
    which is going to be urea.
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    Specifically, the lab is not
    going to call us about urea,
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    it's going to call us
    about blood urea nitrogen.
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    And actually, it
    matters what this means.
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    So what that exactly
    means is that they're
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    measuring the nitrogen
    component of urea.
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    And so they'll call you and
    say, well, we measured it
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    and the value came to 14
    milligrams per deciliter.
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    Something like
    that, so let's say
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    that's the amount
    of urea we find
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    in our little tube of plasma.
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    How do we convert that to moles
    per liter like we did before?
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    Well, again, it'll be helpful if
    I draw out a molecule of urea.
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    So we have something like this.
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    A couple nitrogens.
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    And this is what
    urea looks like.
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    It's a pretty small molecule.
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    A couple nitrogens,
    carbon, and oxygen.
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    And these nitrogens have an
    atomic mass unit of 14 apiece.
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    So that's 14.
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    And this is 14
    over here, as well.
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    So what the lab actually
    measures is just this part.
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    It's just measuring
    the two nitrogens.
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    It's not measuring the weight
    of the entire molecule.
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    So all it's going to give you
    is the weight of the nitrogens
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    that are in the molecule.
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    So what that means is that we
    say, OK, well, that tells us
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    that one molecule of urea is
    going to be 28 atomic mass
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    units of-- I'm going to put
    it in quotes-- urea nitrogen.
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    Because that's the part of
    urea that we're measuring
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    and that means that
    one mole of urea
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    is going to be 28
    grams of urea nitrogen.
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    And because, again,
    this is much, much more
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    than what we actually have,
    let me divide by 1,000.
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    So one millimole equals 28
    milligrams of urea nitrogen.
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    So that's how we figure
    out the conversion.
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    And I do the exact
    same thing as above.
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    I say, OK, well, let's
    times-- let's say,
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    I want to get rid of
    the milligrams, right?
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    So 1 millimole divided
    by 28 milligrams,
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    and that'll get rid
    of my milligrams.
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    And I'll take, let's say,
    10 deciliters over 1 liter
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    and that'll help me get
    rid of my deciliters.
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    And so then I'm left with
    14 over 28, which is 0.5.
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    And then times 10, so that's 5.
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    5 millimoles per liter.
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    And as I've done
    a couple times now
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    and we know that it's
    the urea nitrogen
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    or the urea is going to act and
    behave like one molecule or one
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    particle when it's
    in water, it's
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    not going to split up
    or anything like that,
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    so that means that
    it's going to basically
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    be 5 milliosmoles per liter.
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    And so I figured out the
    last part of my equation.
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    So going back to the
    top, we have sodium.
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    And this turned
    out to be a total
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    of 140 milliosmoles per liter.
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    And then for our anion, we had
    140 milliosmoles per liter.
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    And then for our glucose, we
    had 5 milliosmoles per liter.
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    And for our urea, we had
    5 milliosmoles per liter.
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    So adding it all up, our total
    comes to 140 times 2 plus 10.
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    So we get, if I do
    my math correctly,
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    I think that's 290
    milliosmoles per liter.
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    That's the answer
    to our osmolarity.
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    Our total osmolarity
    in the plasma
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    is 290 milliosmoles per liter.
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    Now that was kind of the
    long way of doing it.
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    Let me give you a very,
    very quick and dirty way
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    of doing it.
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    Let me actually make
    some space up here.
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    You could do the exact same
    problem, you could say,
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    well, this osmolarity
    equals, you could say,
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    sodium times 2, plus
    glucose, divided by 18,
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    plus BUN divided by 2.8.
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    And that takes all
    of those conversions
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    and simplifies it down.
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    So if you ever get your sodium
    value, your glucose value,
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    and your BUN, and you
    want to quickly calculate
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    your osmolarity, now you
    know the fast way to do it.
Title:
Calculate your own osmolarity | Lab values and concentrations | Health & Medicine | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
12:59

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