Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
100

Air Exchanges

The number of times per hour that filtered, clean air replaces the air in a room to reduce contamination

100

Anteroom

An ISO Class 8 area that serves as the transition space between the pharmacy and the cleanroom where hand washing, garbing, and supply staging occur.



100

Asepsis

The absence of pathogenic (disease-causing) microorganisms

100

Aseptic Hand Washing

A thorough hand-washing process using soap and water followed by an antiseptic agent before donning sterile garb

100

Aseptic Technique

Methods used to prevent contamination of sterile products, including proper hand hygiene, garbing, cleaning, and manipulation of supplies

200

Autoclave

A device that uses heat and pressure (steam) to sterilize equipment, instruments, and materials.

200

Auxiliary Clamp

A slide clamp used to completely stop the flow of IV solution

200

Bacterium

 A single-celled microorganism that may be spherical (cocci), rod-shaped (bacilli), or spiral (spirochetes

200

Buffer Room

An ISO Class 7 (or cleaner) room where primary engineering controls (PECs) are located and sterile compounding occurs

200

Cleanroom

– A controlled ISO-classified environment designed to limit airborne particles and microorganisms during sterile compounding.

300

Compounded Sterile Preparation (CSP)

 A medication prepared using aseptic technique in a sterile environment.



300

Critical Site

Any part of a sterile product (e.g., needle tip, syringe tip) that can be contaminated by touch or airflow disruption.

300

Disinfectant

A chemical agent (such as sterile 70% IPA) used to destroy microorganisms on nonliving surfaces.



300

Distillation

 A purification process that involves boiling a liquid and condensing the vapor back into a purified liquid.

300

Drip Chamber

The portion of IV tubing below the spike adaptor where IV fluid drops are counted to regulate flow rate.

400

Drop Factor

The number of drops per milliliter (gtts/mL) delivered by IV tubing, used to calculate infusion rates.

400

Epidemic

A widespread outbreak of a contagious disease within a specific region or population.



400

Filtration

The process of passing air or liquid through filters to remove particles and contaminants.



400

HEPA (High-Efficiency Particulate Air) Filter

A filter that removes at least 99.97% of airborne particles ≥0.3 microns.

400

Horizontal Laminar Airflow Workbench (H-LAFW)

A PEC that provides ISO Class 5 air quality using horizontal unidirectional airflow for sterile compounding.



500

Injection Port

A self-sealing port on IV tubing that allows medications to be added to an IV line.

500

In-Line Filter

A filter placed in IV tubing to remove contaminants such as glass, fibers, rubber particles, and bacteria.

500

ISO (International Organization for Standardization)

A system that classifies air cleanliness; lower ISO numbers indicate cleaner air.



500

IV Administration Set

A sterile, disposable system of tubing and components used to deliver IV fluids to patients.



500

IVPB (IV Piggyback)

A small-volume parenteral medication infused through a primary IV line.



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