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2nd year sudent who needs med. calc. help!!



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  #1  
Old Sep 19, 2007, 02:23 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2006
Cool 2nd year sudent who needs med. calc. help!!

I have a crazy instructor who gave us these off the wall med calc. problems on our test. The one goes like this...

You have a pump that's programmed at 50gtts/ml. It's running at 45 gtts/min. How many hours would it take to infuse a 1 liter (1000 ml) bag of solution?

I set mine up how you would to figure out the gtts/min and worked backwards, but i had to play around with it a little to get the answer. My set up looked like this: 1000/x times 50=45

I divided 1000 by 50 and got 20, which would give me 1200min. That didn't work when i put it in for x so I played around with it and got 1100 for x and that worked, i jsut wanted to make sure my concept was right..and the i divided 1100 by 60 and got 18.3 hours...which is what the majority of people got but I just wanted to make sure I did it right..


The other one went like this...

You have an IVPB of Erythromycin 250 ml that needs to infuse in an hour. Your tubing is 60 gtts/ml. How many ml/hr will it run at? what is the gtts/min?

I got 250 for both answers...I just didn't know if I would've done it right for the gtts/min.

Thank you!!!


Last edited by HeavenBound0530 : Sep 19, 2007 at 02:28 PM.
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  #2  
Old Sep 19, 2007, 03:37 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Re: 2nd year sudent who needs med. calc. help!!

1000 ml divided by ((45gtts per min/50 gtts per ml)x60 minutes in an hour)

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  #3  
Old Sep 19, 2007, 04:23 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Cool Re: 2nd year sudent who needs med. calc. help!!

Morte summed it up easily. Dimensional Analysis is much better then the X method, however it is easier at times to see the process you are doing to feel comfortable with it.

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  #4  
Old Sep 19, 2007, 04:31 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Re: 2nd year sudent who needs med. calc. help!!

To me, #1 is a little easier to see this way:
45 gtt/min x (1 ml/50 gtt) = 0.9 ml/min
1000 ml x (1 min/0.9 ml) = 1111.1 min
1111.1 min x (1 hr/60 min) = 18.5 hr
Problem #2:
Given 250 ml in one hour
250 ml / 1 hr = 250 ml/hr
250 ml/hr x (60 gtt/ml) = 15000 gtt/hr
15000 gtt/hr x (1 hr/60 min) = 250 gtt/min

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  #5  
Old Sep 19, 2007, 08:57 PM
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Join Date: May 2005

You have a pump that's programmed at 50gtts/ml. It's running at 45 gtts/min. How many hours would it take to infuse a 1 liter (1000 ml) bag of solution?
1000 mL (dose to give) x 50 gtts/mL (drop factor) x 1 minute/45 gtts (infusion rate) x 1 hour/60 minutes (conversion factor) = 18.518518 hours = 18.5 hours (rounded off)
You have an IVPB of Erythromycin 250 ml that needs to infuse in an hour. Your tubing is 60 gtts/ml. How many ml/hr will it run at? what is the gtts/min?
How many ml/hr will it run at?
The answer is information given in the question itself. It has to run at 250mL/hour.
Drops per minute will be:
250 mL/1 hour (dose desired) x 60 gtts/1 mL (drop factor of tubing) x 1 hour/60 minutes (conversion factor) = 250 gtts/minute

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