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Intravenous Fluid Administration

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Presentation on theme: "Intravenous Fluid Administration"— Presentation transcript:

1 Intravenous Fluid Administration
B260 Fundamentals of Nursing

2 IV Fluid Administration: Objectives
Discuss purposes and procedures for initiation, maintenance and discontinuing an infusion. Explain the importance of infection control in the management of intravenous solutions, tubing, and dressings. Discuss the complications of intravenous therapy. Discuss the procedure for initiating a blood transfusion and interventions to manage a transfusion reaction.

3 Intravenous Therapy Goal: Correct or prevent fluids and electrolyte disturbances Allow direct access to the vascular system Requires close monitoring Knowledge required: solutions, equipment, procedures, regulating flow, maintenance, identifying and correcting problems, and how to discontinue

4 Intravenous Therapy: Types of Solutions
Isotonic: same concentration as body fluids including Blood, most common use for volume replacement (eg. after prolonged vomiting); NaCl 0.9% normal saline, D5W 5% Dextrose in water Hypotonic: concentration lower than body fluids  Use to rehydrate the cells;  0.45% NaCl or ½ normal saline Hypertonic: concentration higher than body fluids  Used to increase vascular volume, use with caution due to risk for fluid overload  D5 0.45% NS  D10W  D5LR

5 Intravenous Therapy: Additives
IV Fluids may contain additives: Hyperalimentation or Total Parenteral Nutrition Lactated Ringers, D5LR Dextrose and saline combinations, with added KCL KCL is commonly added to IV solutions when patients are NPO; body cannot conserve K Never give KCL IV push directly as it may be fatal! KCL: administer slowly over several hours and diluted

6 Intravenous Therapy: Orders
Should contain: specific solution additives time schedule Example: D5½ NS with 20 meq KCL Follow 7 rights of medication administration, same as with all medications

7 Review: Seven Rights Right Person Right Drug Right Dose Right Route
Right Time Right Documentation Right to refuse

8 IV Therapy: Equipment

9 Intravenous Therapy: Equipment
Butterfly Angiocath Saline lock

10 IV Therapy: Peripheral

11 IV Therapy: Peripheral Sites
Feet not recommended for adults

12 IV Therapy: Starting an IV
Review order Get supplies Explain to patient Find best vein Start distally Perform venipuncture, secure, start fluids Document Dressing should be transparent Do not select sites on mastectomy side, dialysis, paralyzed. Caution with hard veins, valves, skin bruising or other abnormalities, do not go below previous IV sites.

13 IV Therapy: Angle of Entry

14 IV Therapy: Insertion with Flashback

15 IV Therapy: Dressing

16 Intravenous Therapy: Equipment
Bottles, Bags IVPB Tubing

17 IV Therapy: Administration Sets

18 IV Therapy: Administration Sets

19 Intravenous Therapy: Equipment
Central lines PICC lines Implanted ports

20 IV Therapy: Central Line

21 IV Therapy: Central Line

22 IV Therapy: Central Line Dressing

23 IV Therapy: PICC Line

24 IV Therapy: PICC Line

25 IV Therapy: Implanted Ports
Vascular access devices are designed for repeated access to the vascular system. Peripheral cannulas are for short term use. Central lines, PICCs are for long term use.

26 IV Therapy: Implanted Ports

27 IV Therapy: Implanted Ports

28 IV Therapy: Hyperalimentation

29 IV Therapy: Lipids

30 IV Therapy: Assessment
Important areas to assess: Daily wt I&0 Labs=Na+, K+, Cl, glucose, BUN Skin turgor Breath sounds Daily wts are the best way to assess fluid status. 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of fluid = 1 L of fluid Wts same time of day, same scale, same amt of clothes

31 IV Therapy: Assessment
Psychological responses Independence Condition of vein and surrounding tissues Infiltration Phlebitis Infection Bleeding Circulatory overload Severe untoward reactions Phlebitis: is inflammation of the vein. Sx include pain, edema, erythema, heat, redness may occur along the path of the vein Infiltration: fluid entering the subcu tissue; sx = swelling, pallor and coolness, pain possible

32 IV Therapy: Complications
Extravasation Infiltration of drugs into tissues surrounding the infusion site causing local tissue damage.

33 IV Therapy: Complications
Swelling-Edema from Infiltration

34 IV Therapy: Complications
Phlebitis This child's IV site was completely wrapped, preventing proper assessment.

35 IV Therapy: Complications
Redness and Swelling

36 IV Therapy: Complications
Phlebitis

37 IV Therapy: Complications
This child’s antibiotic infiltrate went untreated for a few days.

38 IV Therapy: Complications
Bruising

39 Intravenous Therapy: Discontinue IV
Review order Explain to patient Stop IV fluids, remove dressing Stabilize the cannula and clean site Cover with sterile gauze, gentle pressure and remove cannula Apply pressure 2-3 minutes and secure dressing

40 IV Therapy Blood Administration

41 IV Therapy: Blood Administration
Blood transfusion includes any of the following : Whole blood Packed RBC’s Plasma Platelets

42 IV Therapy: Blood Products

43 IV Therapy: Whole Blood

44 IV Therapy: Blood Administration
Purpose: Increase blood volume Treat anemia Replace blood components (clotting factors, platelets, albumin)

45 IV Therapy: Blood Administration
Blood Grouping “O” is universal donor AB is universal recipient A blood B blood Rh factor If mismatched, transfusion reaction may occur (mild  severe)

46 IV Therapy: Blood Transfusion
Guidelines for Safe Blood Administration Blood tubing has an in-line filter Prime with 0.9% normal saline Educate patient Assess patient for history of reaction Consent signed Checked by 2 RN’s Vital signs: baseline, 15 minutes after starting the infusion, when complete, and prn.

47 IV Therapy: Blood Transfusion
Guidelines for Safe Blood Administration Stay with patient during first 15 minutes IV gauge: preferred, 20g or less. Start blood within 30 minutes from blood bank Administer slowly in first 15 min, then increase rate as ordered or within hours. Not longer than 4 hours - risk bacterial contamination Use gloves to prepare and administer

48 IV Therapy: Transfusion Reactions
Acute Hemolytic: Incompatibility to antibodies causing RBC breakdown Signs & Sx: chills, fever, pain, flushing, tachycardia, tachypnea, etc. Febrile nonhemolytic: Sensitization to specific blood components Signs & Sx: chills, fever, headache, flushing, etc. Mild allergic: sensitivity to plasma proteins Signs and Sx: flushing, itching, hives

49 IV Therapy: Transfusion Reactions
Anaphylactic: reaction to blood proteins Signs & Sx: anxiety, itching, wheezing, cyanosis, shock, etc. Circulatory Overload: fluid administered faster than the circulation can accommodate Signs & Sx: cough, dyspnea, pulmonary congestion, headache, hypertension, tachycardia, distended neck veins Sepsis: contaminated blood Signs & Sx: chills, high fever, vomiting, diarrhea, hypotension, shock

50 IV Therapy: Transfusion Reactions
Management: stop transfusion! keep IV line open with 0.9% normal saline notify provider stay with patient and monitor (vitals, observe and treat)


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