Iv And Fluid Administration Flashcards

1
Q

What is the measurement for electrolytes?

A

Millimole (mmol)

1 mmol of any cation is able to react completely with 1 mmol of any anion

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2
Q

Dehydration

A

Inadequate total systemic fluid volume

Dehydration happens over a period of time, so must be corrected slowly (Ie., don’t use too much fluid)

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3
Q

Overhydration

A

Total systemic fluid volume increases

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4
Q

Colloids

A

Expands plasma volume by drawing fluid from interstitial space into vascular compartments (eg., Albumin, pentaspan)
Used for hypovolemic states
Forms a suspension (does not dissolve)
Water crosses the membrane through osmosis to equalize concentrations
* use of colloids drastically reducing because of unexplained renal failure/mortality

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5
Q

Crystalloid

A

A solution that dissolves. Molecules or atoms separate and disperse completely and equally through the solvent
- dissolved molecules cross the membrane through osmosis to equalize unequal concentrations

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6
Q

What are crystalloid solutions used for?

A
  • Isotonic, hypotonic, and hypertonic
  • Electrolyte replacement
  • As a route for medication
  • Short-term intravascular volume expansion
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7
Q

What does an isotonic solution do?

A

Increases volume in the intravascular compartment without moving fluid to or from other compartments (eg., normal saline 0.9%, Ringer’s Lactate)

  • fluids that have equal osmotic pressure with the body under normal conditions
  • same concentration of sodium concentration as body water

Do not overload fluids; causes heart failure, renal impairment, hypertension

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8
Q

What is the 3 to 1 rule for isotonic solutions?

A

3 mL of isotonic crystalloid solution is needed to replace 1 mL of a patient’s blood

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9
Q

How much IV fluid is lost in one hour?

A

2/3 of infused IV fluid will leave the vascular space in 1 hour

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10
Q

How does a crystalloid replace patient’s blood?

A

Crystalloid solution cannot carry oxygen, but works by diluting remaining blood volume and proportional hemoglobin

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11
Q

Electrolytes

A

Salts dissolved in water with the potential to conduct electricity

  • sodium most prominent in blood and interstitial fluid
  • potassium is most prominent in body cells
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12
Q

How much of a crystalloid is required to compensate for loss of blood?

A

At least three times the amount of blood lost

- because of large volume of IV fluid distribution, fluids shift or leak out of the vascular space

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13
Q

Autoresuscitate

A

Body responds to blood loss by shifting fluid from the intracelluar and interstitial space into the vascular system
- Cells can become dehydrated, causing malfunction and organ failure

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14
Q

Hypotonic

A

Fluids have LESS osmotic pressure than the body

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15
Q

Hypertonic

A

Fluids have GREATER than normal osmotic pressure than the body

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16
Q

How much fluid is in a typical fluid bolus for adults?

A

Typical fluid bolus is 1000 mL (1 L)

- usually given through a 14 or 16 gauge IV

17
Q

Hyperkalemia

A

Elevated levels of potassium that can be life-threatening. Patient presents with:
- renal failure
- nausea
- abdo pain
- diarrhea
- leads to cardiac arrest if not treated
Caused by burns, crush injuries, diabetic ketoacidosis, severe infection

18
Q

Hypokalemia

A

Low serum concentrations of potassium (rarely diagnosable without lab tests)
Patient presents with:
- muscle weakness
- abdo distension
- constipation
Caused by low dietary intake of K+, diuretic therapy, diarrhea, vomiting, burns

19
Q

Hypocalcemia

A

Low levels of calcium in the blood

Signs and symptoms: irritability, twitching and tetany, convulsions, parenthesis, abdo and muscle cramps, neural excitability

Causes: sepsis, inadequate vitamin D, pancreatitis, parathyroid disease

20
Q

Hypercalemia

A

High levels of calcium in the blood

Signs/symptoms: weakness, irritability, dehydration, headache, hypertension, renal stones

Causes: cancer, parathyroid disease, overactivity

21
Q

Drop factor

A

The number of drops in the chamber required to administer 1 mL of fluid

  • microdrip = 60 gtt/mL
  • macrodrip = 10, 12, 15, 20 gtt/mL
22
Q

To keep vein open (TKO)

A

IV to keep vein open, usually run with a microdrip set at 30-50 gtt/mL

23
Q

IV piggyback

A

Infusions that are secondary infusions attached the primary infusion line

Rather than directly injecting the medication into the line as an IV push, the medication is added to a smaller bag of IV fluid and slowly infused through the medication port of the main IV line

24
Q

Infiltration (complication of IV)

A

When the tip of the catheter dislodges from the lumen of the vein. Fluid or medication goes into soft tissues surrounding vein and can cause tissue destruction/necrosis

25
Q

Catheter shear (IV complication)

A

When a segment of the catheter breaks off and is regained in the vein or embolizes through the venous system

26
Q

Phlebitis (IV complication)

A

Inflammation of the vein

- pain, redness, edema

27
Q

Thrombophlebitis (IV complication)

A

Inflammation of vein causes blood inside the lumen to clot

Suppurative thrombophlebitis occurs when clot becomes infected. Can be fatal