Because the normal saline solution is 0,9 %.
A solution with a concentration of NaCl higher than 9 g/L is hypertonic.
This is a hypertonic solution.
That depends entirely on what solution it is in. Hypotonic and hypertonic are relative terms to compare to solutions usually serperated by a seme-permeable membrane.
A 2.5% dextrose in normal saline solution is hypertonic. Normal saline (0.9% NaCl) is isotonic, but adding dextrose increases the osmolarity, making the solution hypertonic.
Yes, a 10 percent glucose solution is hypertonic because it has a higher solute concentration than the surrounding environment, leading to a net flow of water molecules into the solution, causing cells to shrink or crenate when exposed to it.
It is hypertonic.
A toxicity equivalent in 0.2 solution is hyper-tonic.
No,5percent glucose is an isotonic solution. 0.9 percent is for NaCl.
A 10% NaCl solution is hypertonic to red blood cells. This means that the concentration of salt outside the cells is higher than inside, causing water to move out of the cells through osmosis, potentially leading to cell shrinkage.
"hypertonic"
hypertonic solution