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Vitamin K1 (Phylloquinone) Unit Converter
Medical Calculator

Vitamin K1 (Phylloquinone) Unit Converter

Vitamin K1 (Phylloquinone) is the primary dietary form of Vitamin K, essential for the synthesis of coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X. It is found in green leafy vegetables.

Monitoring Vitamin K status can be important for patients with bleeding disorders, malabsorption, or those on anticoagulant therapy like Warfarin. This converter facilitates switching between standard mass units (ng/mL, μg/L) and the international SI molar unit (nmol/L).

Mass Units

Standard

Nanograms per milliliter (Numerically equivalent to μg/L).

SI Units / Molar

Nanomoles per liter (International Standard).

Clinical Context

Reference Ranges (Plasma/Serum):
Fasting Adult: 0.2 – 3.2 ng/mL (0.44 – 7.1 nmol/L).
Note: Ranges depend heavily on recent dietary intake.

Clinical Significance:
Deficiency: Leads to impaired clotting (elevated PT/INR) and increased risk of bleeding.
Warfarin Interaction: Warfarin works by antagonizing Vitamin K. High dietary intake of K1 can reduce Warfarin efficacy.

Conversion Logic:
Molecular Weight of Phylloquinone: ~450.70 g/mol.
1 ng/mL ≈ 2.22 nmol/L.
1 nmol/L ≈ 0.45 ng/mL.

Clinical References

How to Use This Converter

Follow these steps to normalize Vitamin K1 values.

1

Enter Values

Input your laboratory result into the corresponding unit field (e.g., ng/mL).

2

Automatic Conversion

The calculator converts between mass units and the SI molar unit using the molecular weight of 450.70 g/mol.

3

Reset

Use the Clear button to reset all fields.

? Frequently Asked Questions
Is ng/mL the same as μg/L?

Yes. 1 nanogram per milliliter is numerically identical to 1 microgram per liter.

Does this measure Vitamin K2?

No. This calculator is specifically for Phylloquinone (Vitamin K1). Meningaquinones (Vitamin K2) have different molecular weights.

Disclaimer: This converter is for educational and reference purposes only. It uses the molecular weight of Phylloquinone (450.70 g/mol). Clinical decisions should be based on laboratory-specific reference ranges.