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Chapter 34 Parenteral Medications

Chapter 34 Parenteral Medications. Parts of a Syringe. Parenteral Administration Equipment. Syringes: all syringes contain a barrel, a plunger, and a tip or hub Calibrated in milliliters (mL), cubic centimeters (cc), units (U), and in some cases minims (m).

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Chapter 34 Parenteral Medications

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  1. Chapter 34 Parenteral Medications

  2. Parts of a Syringe

  3. Parenteral Administration Equipment • Syringes: all syringes contain a barrel, a plunger, and a tip or hub • Calibrated in milliliters (mL), cubic centimeters (cc), units (U), and in some cases minims (m)

  4. Parenteral Administration Equipment (cont’d) • Needles are supplied in various lengths and gauges • Shaft: length of the needle • Gauge: diameter of the needle • Lengths vary from approximately 0.5 to 2.5 inches • Filter needles are used when withdrawing medication from a glass ampule

  5. Parenteral Administration Equipment (cont’d) • Needle gauge refers to width • For most injections, 18- to 27-gauge needles are used; the smaller the number, the larger the diameter

  6. Common Sizes of Syringes and Needles

  7. Parenteral Administration Equipment (cont’d) • Modified safety injection equipment: • Avoids needlestick injuries to reduce the risk for acquiring a blood-borne viral disease such as hepatitis or AIDS • Plastic shields that cover the needle after use, needles that retract into the syringe, and gas-pressured devices that inject medications without needles

  8. Parenteral Administration Equipment (cont’d) • Two techniques with standard equipment to prevent needlestick injuries: • Before administering an injection, the protective cap covering a needle is replaced by using the scoop method • After administering an injection, the needle is left uncapped and deposited in the nearest biohazard container

  9. Safety Injection Devices

  10. Ampule, Vial, and Prefilled Cartridge

  11. Question • What is the function of a syringe barrel? a. Holds the medication b. Withdraws the medication c. Instills the medication d. Attaches the needle

  12. Drug Preparation • Ampule: sealed glass drug container • Vial: glass or plastic container of parenteral medication with a self-sealing rubber stopper • Reconstitution: process of adding liquid, known as diluent, to a powdered substance

  13. Withdrawing Medication From the Ampule

  14. Withdrawing Medication From the Vial

  15. Drug Preparation (cont’d) • Prefilled cartridges: sealed glass cylinder of parenteral medication • Cartridge comes with an attached needle and the cylinder is made so that it fits in a specially designed syringe • Combining medications in one syringe: exact amounts must be withdrawn from each drug container; once the drugs are in the barrel of the syringe there is no way to expel one without expelling some of the other

  16. أرقي أنواع الاناقة .. أن تكون بعيدا عن القيل والقال نظيف القلب ؛ ناصع التفكير ؛ طيب الأخلاق!

  17. Injection Routes • Intradermal injections: between the layers of the skin • Diagnostic purposes • Examples: tuberculin tests and allergy testing • Injection sites: inner aspect of the forearm

  18. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Injection equipment: tuberculin syringe • 25- to 27-gauge needle measuring one- half inch in length is commonly used • Injection technique: nurse instills the medication shallowly at a 10° to 15° angle of entry

  19. Question • Which angle is used by the nurse to administer a subcutaneous injection to a thin client? a. 90° b. 15° c. 10° d. 45°

  20. Answer d. 45° The nurse inserts the needle at a 45° angle for thin clients. For obese clients, and when administering intramuscular injections, the nurse inserts the needle at a 90° angle. When giving an intradermal injection, the nurse instills the medication shallowly at a 10° to 15° angle of entry.

  21. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Subcutaneous injections: beneath the skin but above the muscle • Medication is instilled between the skin and muscle and absorbed fairly rapidly • Commonly used to administer insulin and heparin • Injection sites: insulin and heparin are administered in the abdomen

  22. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Injection equipment used for a subcutaneous injection depends on the type of medication prescribed • Example: insulin is prepared in an insulin syringe and heparin is prepared in a tuberculin syringe

  23. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Injection technique • For obese clients, the nurse inserts the needle at a 90° angle • For thin clients, the nurse inserts the needle at a 45° angle

  24. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Administering insulin: hormone required by some clients with diabetes • Common route for administration: subcutaneous or intravenous injection • Inhaled form of insulin: Exubera • Insulin syringe: calibrated in units

  25. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Administering insulin (cont’d): injection site for insulin is rotated each time the injection is administered to avoid • Lipoatrophy: breakdown of subcutaneous fat at the site of repeated insulin injections • Lipohypertrophy: buildup of subcutaneous fat at the site of repeated insulin injections

  26. Low-Dose and Standard Insulin Syringes

  27. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Preparing insulin: when preparing other than rapid-acting and short-acting insulin or the long-acting insulin, glargine (Lantus), the nurse rotates the vial between the palms to redistribute the additive and insulin before filling the syringe • Mixing insulins: insulins tend to bind and become equilibrated • Should be injected within 15 minutes of being combined

  28. Mixing Insulins

  29. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Administering heparin: an anticoagulant drug administered subcutaneously as well as intravenously, heparin prolongs the time it takes for blood to clot • Nurse removes needle after withdrawal of the drug from a multidose vial and replaces it with another before administration

  30. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Administering heparin (cont’d): • To prevent bruising in the area of the injection, the nurse changes the needle before injecting the client • The nurse rotates the sites with each injection to avoid a previous area where there has been local bleeding • The nurse does not aspirate the plunger once the needle is in place

  31. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Intramuscular injections: in muscle tissue • Absorption from an intramuscular injection occurs more rapidly than from the other parenteral routes • Injection sites • Dorsogluteal site: upper outer quadrant of the buttocks

  32. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Ventrogluteal site: gluteus medius and gluteus minimus muscles in the hip for injection • Vastus lateralis site: vastus lateralis muscle, one of the muscles in the quadriceps group of the outer thigh

  33. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Rectus femoris site: anterior aspect of the thigh • Deltoid site: lateral aspect of the upper arm • Injection equipment: 3- to 5-mL syringes are used to administer medications by the intramuscular route

  34. Injection Routes (cont’d) • Injection technique: nurses use a 90° angle for piercing the skin • Z-track technique: technique for manipulating the tissue to seal medication, especially an irritant, in the muscle

  35. Giving Injection by Z-Track Technique

  36. Reducing Injection Discomfort • Nurses use these alternative techniques to reduce discomfort associated with injections: • Use the Z-track method for intramuscular injections • Apply pressure to the site during needle withdrawal • Massage the site afterward, if appropriate

  37. Reducing Injection Comfort (cont’d)

  38. Question • Which intramuscular injection site is used for clients with debilitated and poorly developed gluteal muscles? a. Deltoid b. Vastus lateralis c. Rectus femoris d. Ventrogluteal

  39. Answer b. Vastus lateralis The vastus lateralis site is used for clients with debilitated and poorly developed gluteal muscles. The deltoid site is used for adults. The rectus femoris site is used for infants. The ventrogluteal site is used for children.

  40. Nursing Implications • Nurses who administer parenteral medications may identify nursing diagnoses such as: • Acute pain • Anxiety • Fear • Risk for trauma

  41. General Gerontologic Considerations • Clients with diabetes often have visual problems interfering with their ability to self-administer insulin • Clients who can administer insulin injections but cannot fill their own syringes may choose to use prefilled syringes or an insulin pen

  42. General Gerontologic Considerations (cont’d) • Age-related changes and possible chronic diseases impair the older person’s ability to absorb and metabolize medications • Injections should not be administered into limbs that are paralyzed, inactive, or affected by poor circulation • For clients with mastectomy or with a vascular site for hemodialysis, avoid arm on the affected side

  43. General Gerontologic Considerations (cont’d) • Deltoid or ventrogluteal muscles may be the preferred intramuscular sites for older adults experiencing impaired mobility • Dorsogluteal site should be avoided because of the risk of damage to the sciatic nerve with diminished musculature • Selection and identification of injection site may be difficult when working with clients experiencing dementia or musculoskeletal deformities such as contractures

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