terms
terms
terms
terms
terms
100

Air exchanges

new air replacements

100

Aseptic hand washing

a more aggressive soap and water hand washing procedure, followed by use of an antiseptic agent before donning sterile attire

100

Auxiliary Clamp

slide clamp used to completely stop the IV solution from flowing

100

Compounded Sterile Preparation

a medication prepared with aseptic technique in a sterile, cleanroom facility 

100

Epidemic

a regional widespread contagious disease

200

Anteroom

an ISO Class 8 room or area immediately before the buffer room in which hand washing, hygiene, and garbing are done and supplies and ingredients are gathered between the pharmacy department and the cleanroom or buffer area.  

200

Autoclave

a device that generates heat and pressure to sterilize objects instruments, and measure vessels

200

Buffer room

an ISO Class 7 or cleaner area where and PECs are physically located; also called the IV or cleanroom

200

Critical Site

the part of the syringe and/or needle that is at risk for contamination by touch or airflow interruption

200

Phlebitis

an inflammation of the vein from the administration of drugs

300

Asepsis

the absence of pathogenic microorganisms

300

Bactrim

a small, single-celled microorganism that can exist in three main forms, depending on type: spherical, rod-shaped, and spiral

300

Clean room

an ISO-classified room in which the concentration of airborne particles is controlled to meet a specified air-borne-particulate cleanliness class to prevent particle and microbial contamination of CSPs; also called the IV Room or buffer room 

300

Disinfectant

a chemical agent such as sterile 70% IPA used on inanimate surfaces and objects to destroy fungi, viruses, and bacteria, but not necessarily their spores

300

Positive Pressure

air is being blown into a room and therefore it has higher pressure than the adjacent spaces so the net airflow is out of the area 

400

Aseptic technique

the manipulation of sterile products and devices to avoid contamination by disease-causing organisms; includes cleanroom protocols and hand-washing and gowning procedures

400

Distillation

process of boiling a liquid and capturing the condensed gases or vapor back into a purified liquid form

400

Drip chamber

the small, open space just below the spike adaptor where the drops of fluid from the IV bag into the tubing are counted by the nurse to determine the flow rate of the iV solution 

400

Drop factor

the number of drops that an IV tubing delivers to provide 1 ml; this number may be used by nurses to calculate the IV flow rate when using certain types of primary IV tubing, also called drop set or drip set

400

Primary Tubing

IV tubing that is attached to the primary IV bag of solution

500

Filtration

funneling of a liquid or gas through filters, or mesh screens with minute holes too small of biological and chemical contaminants to pass through 

500

In-Line Filter

a device used in the IV line to remove contaminants such as glass, fibers, bits of rubber, and bacteria from IV fluids 

500

Protozoan

a single-celled organism that inhabits water and soil

500

Secondary Tubing

IV tubing for another medication that is attached to the primary tubing at a Y-site injection port

500

Sepsis

when an infection is so threatening to the body that the immune system begins to attack the body’s own blood vessels and organs causing inflammation, leaky vessels, organ failure, and septic shock

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