1 mg/dL to mg/L (CRP (C-Reactive Protein))
The answer, the conversion math, and a table of nearby CRP values. Unit conversion only; this page does not interpret the value clinically.
How 1 mg/dL of CRP (C-reactive protein) converts to mg/L
C-reactive protein is an acute-phase protein produced by the liver; it rises with inflammation. CRP is most often reported in mg/L; some U.S. labs report it in mg/dL. High-sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) is always reported in mg/L. The conversion here is mg/dL to mg/L (a factor of 10), not the separate mg/L to nmol/L molar conversion.
The conversion factor used here is 10. The mg/dL to mg/L conversion for CRP is a pure unit rescaling, not a molar conversion: 1 deciliter is one tenth of a liter, so 1 mg/dL = 10 mg/L. No molecular weight is involved. Applied here: 1 mg/dL × 10 = 10 mg/L.
Source: Unit-of-measure definition: 1 dL = 0.1 L.
Nearby CRP values
If your report showed a value close to 1 mg/dL, the table below covers the surrounding range.
| mg/dL | mg/L |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 5 |
| 0.8 | 8 |
| 0.9 | 9 |
| 1 | 10 |
| 1.1 | 11 |
| 1.3 | 13 |
| 1.5 | 15 |
| 2 | 20 |
Common questions
What is 1 mg/dL CRP (C-reactive protein) in mg/L?
1 mg/dL of CRP (C-reactive protein) equals 10 mg/L. The conversion factor used here is 10.
How is 1 mg/dL CRP (C-reactive protein) converted to mg/L?
1 mg/dL × 10 = 10 mg/L.
← Back to the full CRP (C-Reactive Protein) unit converter, with the two-way calculator, the factor source, and published reference intervals.