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IV Therapy Hangman

 
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Term Description
IV Therapy Indications  fluid volume maintenance, fluid volume replacement, med administration, blood administration, TPN, emergency line,  
Advantages of IV Therapy  faster absorption, rapid distribution, emergency access, unconscious patient  
Infection Control in IV  70% isopropyl alcohol inhibits bacterial growth, apply with friction; Iodine, inhibits bacterial growth, penetrates cell wall  
IV and Dressing changes  PICC-every 6 weeks, IV inserted by paramedic w/in 24 hours, Peripheral site every 72 hours, Blood and TPN every 24 hours, CVC every 48-72 hours or 3xper week.  
Nursing responsibilities for IV sites  assess site whenever in room, document at least every 8 hours, site CDI (clean, dry, intact), sterile technique, changine tubing and solution, awareness of complications, awareness of fluid types, 5 rights  
Complications of IV therapy  Pain and irritation, infiltration and exravasion, occlusion, loss of patency, phlebitis, fluid overload  
Pain and irritation of IV-intervention  increase amt of dilutent, arm board  
Infliltration  seepage of IV fluids into tissue when IV cath penetrates vein  
Extravasion  escape of irritating agent into tissue  
Extravasion and Infiltration Assessment  swelling, pain, cool to touch, decreased flow, wet dressing, no back flow.  
Causes of Infiltration and Extravasion  catheter permeates vein, poor taping of site, over manipulation  
Intervention for Infiltration and Extravasion  Remove IV, cool compress  
Occlusion causes  kinked tubing, patient lying on tubing, infusion too slow  
Occlusion assessment  IV stops dripping  
Occlusion intervention  milk IV, aspirate, irrigate (if no resistance OK, if resistance may be clot>  
Occlusion Prevention  don't let IV run dry, flush periodically with 1-5 cc of NSS and before and after any intermittent IV therapy.  
Phlebitis Causes  bacterial, chemical, mechanical  
Phelebitis Intervention  remove IV, cool compress  
Phlebitis Assessment  erythemia, pain or burning, warmth, edema, cordlike vein.  
Bacterial Phlebitis possible cause  IV left in too long  
Chemical Phlebitis Cause  irritating fluids  
Mechanical Phlebitis  clot at tip of cannula, cath too large for vein.  
Crystalloids  clear fluids, dextrose of saline, can be Iso, Hypo or Hyper tonic  
Colloids  cloudy, yellowish, used to raise osmotic pressure, Dextran is clearish  
Isotonic IV  same tonicity as body 0.9% NSS  
Indications for Isotonic IV  Hypotension (increases BP), Hypovolemia  
Complications of Isotonic IV  fluid overload  
Examples of Isotonic Solutions  0,9% NSS, D5W(isotonic in bottle, hypotonic in body), Lactated Ringers  
Indications for Hypotonic IV  Will cause fluid to shift from intravascular to intracellular space.  
Indications for Hypotonic IV  dehydration  
Hypotonic Solutions  .45% sodium chloride, 5%dextrose water (becomes hypotonic in body)  
Complications of hypotonic solution  May cause edema  
Indications for hypertonic IV  low bp, slight edema but not w/CHF, pulls fluid from intracellular space to intravascular space  
Hypertonic IV Solution  Not as strong as Albumin, 10% Dextrose in Water D10W, 5% normal saline, D5 Ringers Lactate  
Complications of Hypertonic IV  more fluid in bloodstream can cause circulatory overload.  
PCA  Patient Controlled Analgesia  
3 settings of PCA  drug dosage, lockout period, basal rate  
Central Venous Therapy Indications  inadequate vascular access, complex treatment regimes, hyperosmolar infustions ie parenteral nutrition, irritating or vesicant druges, (ie. dopamine cancause necrosis) rapid absorption, long term therapy.  
Contraindications for Central venous therapy  altered skin integrity, anomalies of central vasculature, cancer in area, coagulopathies, fractured clavicle, septicemia, radiation to insertion site  
Common insertion pathways for Central Venous Therapy  subclavian, jugular, femoral vein, cephalic vein(is peripheral but the line runs to central area)  
Risks and Complications of Central Venous Therapy  Air embolism, pneumothorax, sepsis,chest pain, confusion, hypotension, dyspnea, pallor, tachycardia, tachypnea, unresponsiveness  
Components of Intravenous Nutritional Support  amino acids, carbohydrates, electrolytes, minerals, vitamins, lipids, other (ie insulin)  
Lipids in Intravenous Nutritional Support  lipids are administered via Piggy back. (white, thin liquid)  
Cautions for IV nutritional support  not refrigerated, observe for spoilage (fat on top, discoloration), expiration dateNo filter. , must be infused on IV pump, glucose monitored, gradual weaning. Daily weights,  
Complications for IV nutritional support  hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, dehydration, infection  
Indications for IV Nutritional Support  bowel surgery, chronic weight loss, bowel rest, coma, excess nitrogen loss, hepatic or renal failure, malnutrition, low serum albumin, hypermetabolic states