IV Therapy 1
So You Think You Know IV Therapy
Complications of IV Therapy
IV Therapy 2
I'm Almost A Nurse
100

Name three possible complications of IV therapy.

What is:

Infiltration

Phlebitis

Extravasation

Thrombophlebitis

Speed Shock

Air Embolus

Infection

Catheter Embolus

Circulatory Overload

Allergic Reaction

100

Inflammation of a vein

  Phlebitis 

100

What are some nursing interventions for managing infiltration during IV therapy?

Stop the infusion

Remove the catheter

Restart the IV

100

True or false: You should never administer IV medications through tubing that is infusing blood, blood products, or parenteral nutrition solutions (TPN, PPN).

True

100

A patient receiving IV therapy complains of pain in his/her arm, chills, and "not feeling well."  The nurse notes edema, warmth, and red streaking on the patient's arm.  What should the nurse do first?

Discontinue the infusion

200

What is the primary nursing intervention for extravasation during peripheral IV therapy?

What is:

(1) Stop infusion

(2) Apply a cold compress

(3) Administer the appropriate antidote if available

200

What reaction can cause shortness of breath, elevated temperature, angioedema, rash, itching, chills, pain, and possible death?

Transfusion reaction

200

What are some nursing interventions for managing infiltration during IV therapy?

Discontinue the IV

Apply warm compress

Restart IV

200

What type of solution hydrates cells and reduces the fluid in the circulatory system?

Hypotonic

200

What is missing from this order: Azithromycin 250 mg IVPB?

What is the frequency.

300

What is the difference between infiltration and phlebitis in IV therapy.

What is:

-Infiltration involves the leakage of fluid into the surrounding tissue.

-Phlebitis is inflammation of the vein.

300

A 20-gauge catheter or larger is needed to administer what product

Blood products

300

What is extravasation related to IV therapy?

Leakage of vesicant medications or fluids into the surrounding tissue.

300

What is the ONLY fluid that can be administer with blood transfusions?

0.9% Sodium Chloride (Normal Saline or NS)

300

What is a nursing intervention when your patient is experiencing speed shock?

What is:

-Discontinue the infusion

-Notify the healthcare provider

-Monitor vital signs frequently

400

How often should the access site for peripheral IV therapy be replaced?

What is every 72 hours

400

What is changed every 72-96 hours to reduce complications?

What is IV tubing
400

Obstruction of vessel by air caused by disconnection between IV catheter and IV tubing, IV bag running dry, or infusion of air into the tubing.

What is air embolism

400

Which IV complication presents with increased blood pressure, dyspnea, crackles, edema, and shortness of breath?

What is circulatory overload

400

This complication is caused by rapid IV infusion of medication or solution.

What is speed shock

500

What is the first step in managing a suspected infection related to peripheral IV therapy?

Stop the infusion

500

Inflammation of the veins that includes edema, throbbing, burning, and warmth to the touch.  A red line can be visible up the arm and palpable cord is present.

What is phlebitis

500

IV solution or medication that leaks into the tissue.

What is infiltration

500

Where should the primary bag be when the secondary line is being used?

What is: lower than the secondary line

500

The nurse is caring for a patient on the med-surg unit.  Vital signs are: BP 90/52-R 28- HR 120- Temp 102.4.  The patient appears to be confused.  What complication is most-likely occurring with this patient?

Septic

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