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  1. Enteral (Tube Feed) Nutrition Calculator - ClinCalc.com

    Calculator to estimate enteral nutrition (tube feeding) needs in adults patients.

  2. Nutrition - ClinCalc.com

    Enteral Nutrition Calculator Calculator to estimate enteral nutrition (tube feeding) needs in adults patients. Glucose Infusion Rate Calculator GIR (glucose infusion rate) calculator for total …

  3. Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition Summary Calculator - ClinCalc

    Calculator to analyze a patient's enteral and parenteral nutrition intake, including calories, dextrose, protein, and lipids.

  4. Should enteral feeds be held when giving oral ciprofloxacin?

    Because enteral nutrition often contains these cations, which can reduce bioavailability, there is controversy regarding whether enteral nutrition should be held in patients receiving crushed …

  5. Glucose Infusion Rate Calculator - ClinCalc.com

    About This Calculator Glucose infusion rate is a measure of how quickly the patient receives carbohydrates. Typically, this number should be less than 4 mg/kg/min in order to prevent …

  6. 2012 - ClinCalc.com

    Are there any recommendations regarding giving crushed ciprofloxacin via an enteral feeding tube, such as holding nutrition or increasing the dose? Continue reading →

  7. Search Results ter Page 3 - ClinCalc.com

    En ter al Nutrition Calculator Calculator to estimate en ter al nutrition (tube feeding) needs in adults patients.

  8. Aminoglycoside Calculator - ClinCalc.com

    Advanced aminoglycoside pharmacokinetic calculator. Includes a variety of dosing strategies and calulation methods to determine an optimal gentamicin, tobramycin, or amikacin dose.

  9. Vancomycin Calculator - ClinCalc.com

    Vancomycin pharmacokinetics calculator with Bayesian modeling. Includes a variety of dosing strategies and calculation methods to determine an optimal vancomycin maintenance dose.

  10. Opioid Conversion Calculator – Now Available - ClinCalc.com

    Jul 23, 2012 · Converting between equianalgesic opioid dosing isn’t exactly a hard science. Given the lack of blinded trials, bidirectional conversions, dose-dependent conversions, incomplete …