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As a Nurse, part of your daily duties is to mix medications in the proper proportions for your patients. For one of your regular patients, you always mix Medication A with Medication B in the same proportion. Last week, your patients doctor indicated that you should mix 130 milligrams of Medication A with 117 milligrams of Medication B. How many milligrams of Medication A should be mixed this week?

As a Nurse, part of your daily duties is to mix medications in the proper proportions-example-1

1 Answer

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Answer:

60 milligrams of medication A should be used this week

Step-by-step explanation:

Given:

Last week, 130 milligrams of Medication A was mixed with 117 milligrams of Medication B

This week, 54 milligrams of medication B was used

To find:

the milligrams for medication A used this week

To determine the milligrams of medication A used, we will apply the ratio of medication A to B

Last week:

A : B = 130 : 117

This week:

A : B = A : 54


\begin{gathered} eqating\text{ both ratios:} \\ A:B\text{ = A : }B \\ 130:\text{ 117 = A :}54 \\ \\ (130)/(117)=\text{ }(A)/(54) \\ cross\text{ multiply:} \\ 130(54)\text{ = 117\lparen A\rparen} \end{gathered}
\begin{gathered} A=\text{ }(130*54)/(117) \\ A=\text{ 60} \end{gathered}

Hence, 60 milligrams of medication A should be used this week

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