How to determine what IV to give and how does it work in your body?

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I'm a second semester nursing student and we are learning fluids and electrolytes which is really hard for me to understand. So I bought this book that is supposed to explain it really easy and in some things it helped and in some it didn't, like the IV part. So I know that there are crystalloids and colloids. So from the crystalloids which are either isotonic, hypotonic, or hypertonic how does each act in your body. I know an isotonic solution does not shift fluid to cause any change in cells or interstitial fluid. Hypotonic will cause the cells to swell and hypertonic will cause the cells to shrink. My thing is that I'm a visual learner and I can't visualize how this would work with an IV. So when you put a hypotonic solution in your vein I know that it will make your cells swell. But I'm confused as to how, because if you are putting fluid and solutes into the intravascular space that have a lesser amount of solutes than the ones in your veins wouldn't you still technically be adding solutes and additional fluid to your blood? so why would it cause the fluid to shift into the cells. Will it only cause the cells in your intravascular space to swell? Like I'm so confused about this whole thing and it is stressing me out because I cannot find a visual picture or video that can help me understand it. Thank you in advance.

Specializes in Neuro, Telemetry.

Go to khan academy. There is a great explanation with visuals there. As for why cells can possibly swell with hypotonic is actually simple if you think about why you would give that fluid. If too much hypotonic solution is given, then the ECF will be diluted. To compensate, the blood cells will absorb the fluid, but leave the electrolytes in order to balance the levels. When they take to much fluid they swell and can burst. Not good. When you give a hypertonic solution, you are making the blood more concentrated. When too much hypertonic solution is infusion the bodies osmolality increases. The cell will then spill it's fluid out to dilute the ECF to compensate this causes the cell to shrivel and die. Also not good. Hyper and hypo solutions are only used for certain things that will be explained in your book. Many time and isotonic solution is given unless there is need for higher or lower concentration

It's easier for me to remember this in terms of fluid movement rather than solute movement. Water always wants to go from an area of lower concentration of solutes to an area of higher concentration of solutes. It essentially wants to make everything equal.

Hypotonic means less solutes but more water. Hypertonic means more solutes but less water.

When you put a hypotonic solution in the veins, the water will leave the vasuclar system in order to dilute the extravascular cells into the same concentration as the blood. This results in the swelling of the extravascular space.

A hypertonic solution results in an opposite effect, by attracting water back into the vascular system.

For a real word example, think about a pt who has edema all over their body, for whatever reason. You infuse albumin (hypertonic) into the veins in order to draw the extravascular fluid into the vascular system.

When thinking about hypo vs hypertonic, remember to define in terms of solutes AND water, because the water is the part of the solution that moves back and forth.

Specializes in geriatrics, dementia, ortho.
Specializes in geriatrics, dementia, ortho.

Not 100% sure if that's the type of visial

you meant (we haven't gotten to fluids & electrolytes yet in my program) but it looked helpful to me. I find a lot of things like that on Pinterest, actually!

Thank you everyone for your responses!! They are all very helpful. [COLOR=#003366]mrsboots87[/COLOR] I will definitely check out Khan academy.

ThatBigGuy I understand the osmosis part. The part that I get caught up on is if when you put a hypotonic solution does it dilute your blood? and does the hypertonic solution increase your blood's osmolarity? because in the book they explain it in a way were they set up 2 different solution, one next to the other. So if one solution has more particles compared to its fluid, then fluid from the one with less particles will move to the solution that is more concentrated. But I'm assuming that when the solution goes into your body it will not be 2 separate solutions (IV solution and your blood). The IV solution will mix with your blood. I am correct? Then the other thing I get confused about it that when you add a colloid (hypertonic) why is the fluid coming from the interstitial space and not from inside the cells?

LaterAlligator, I really like visuals like that. Thanks. I will look on pinterest and hopefully I can find some more.

http://www.mhprofessional.com/downloads/products/007148986X/hurst_pathophysiology-ch01_986x.pdf (also see)

Na+ and Water Balance, or why you have to remember that serum sodium doesn't tell you anything at all about sodium , and that saline is not water and salt.

OK, thought experiment time: Draw pictures with little molecules or such if you like, it will help. You have a beaker full of salt water, with a Na+ level of, say, 140 (hmmmm, what a coincidence). You pour half of it out. What is the Na+ level in the remainder? Right, 140, because that measurement is a measurement of CONCENTRATION, not a count of the absolute number of sodium molecules. Got that? If not, work on it, because you have to "get" it.

Now you refill the beaker to its previous level, full up, with plain water... or, say, D5W, which is the same thing, physiologically. Now what's your sodium level? Right, 70, because you have twice as much water per amt of sodium.

Go back to the half-full beaker again, the one with a serum (oooh, a Freudian slip! I think I'll leave it. Serum counts as saline.) sodium of 140. Fill it up with an equal volume of....normal saline, which for purposes of this discussion has a sodium level about the same as blood serum. What's the serum sodium now? Right, still 140. As a matter of fact, you can pour quite a bit of NS into a body and not really influence the serum sodium that much at all. The way you change the serum sodium is by changing the amt of WATER.

Repeat to yourself: "Serum sodium tells you about water balance." and "Saline is not sodium and water." (I used to have a poster of this and have my classes chant it three times before going on J I wanted to be sure they would remember it for later)

OK, deep breath. Now we look at water balance from the other side.

Saline pretty much stays in its vascular place (unless you cut a blood vessel and spill some out). But water....ah, water travels. As a matter of fact, that's the other poster. Repeat three times: "Saline stays, water travels." (think: rivers flow from place to place, but the ocean pretty much stays where it is.) What the heck importance is that?

Back to your original beaker.... the one full of stuff with a serum Na+ of 140. Evaporate half of the water. What is the serum sodium now? Right, 280 (whooee, bigtime dehydration) As a matter of fact, if you lose enough water from your body to get your serum sodium up to 170 or so (("Serum sodium tells you about water balance")), you'll probably die, especially if you do it rapidly. Why? Because water travels in and out of all your cells. If you lose water from your intravascular space, sweat it out, or pee it out because your kidneys are unable to concentrate urine for some reason, thus making your bloodstream more concentrated, water molecules on the other side of the cell walls all over town say, "Whoops! Gotta go!"...because water travels across cell membranes from an area of more water per volume (lower salt concentration) to the area of less water per volume (higher salt concentration). So if you are de-hydrated, meaning water-poor, all your cells shrink. Most importantly, if your brain cells shrink enough from water loss, they pull away from your pia mater/meninges and you have an intracerebral bleed. Bummer.

(Interestingly, this is why you have a headache with your hangover after an alcohol binge. Alcohol temporarily disables your kidneys from retaining water, so they let too much out. You pee a lot, and your brain shrinks just enough to put a little tension on your pia mater/meninges. Bingo, headache.) (Ahhh, digressed again....)

OK, now put this all together and tell me why your hematocrit is a lousy indicator of water balance (as a matter of fact, a nigh-on USELESS indicator of dehydration), but a good indication of saline balance.

OK. You are walking down the street with a perfectly good crit of 40 and a serum sodium of 140 (and normal other lytes). You are accosted by someone with a sharp thing and before you know it, a whole lot of your circulating volume is running into the storm drain. Fortunately, you are whisked into a nearby ER immediately, having had your bleeding stopped by a nearby Boy Scout with good First Aid Merit Badge training (ummmm, I teach that too). The ER nurse draws a baseline crit and lytes. What are they?

OK, crit is still 40...because hct is a *percentage of the blood that is red cells*, not a count of the absolute number of red cells you have. So even if you lose a lot of your blood, your crit is unchanged. Until they start fluid-resuscitating you with.... normal (not half-normal) saline (or RL, which acts like it for purposes of this discussion).

Na+ is still 140, because you have lost saline (serum counts as saline) but not water.

Thought experiment time again. Take two tubes of whole blood, that is, serum and red cells. They both have a Hct ( which is often spoken as crit”) of 40, that is, 40% of the volume of each tube is taken up solely by RBC's. We already know what happens if you add saline to one of them: the crit drops, right? But what happens to the crit of a tube of blood if you add water-- like D5W? Answer: Nothing. Why? Because the crit is a % of volume....and when you add water, the water travels into the cells too. So they swell up, and their %age size change means no change in the crit of the tube. They still take up (in this example) 40% of the volume. What happens if, instead of adding water to your original tube of hct=40 blood, you evaporate half of the water out of it? (The answer is NOT, "Make gravy." Shame on you.) No, the hct stays the same, because the cells lose water too, and they shrink as much as the liquidy part did. Same percentage of red cells in the resulting volume = no change in hematocrit.

So. When you have someone dehyrated (as evidenced by their elevated serum Na+), you give him water (or D5W). This dilutes his serum Na+ back towards normal and allows his shrunken dehydrated cells to regain their girlish plumpness. Normal saline will not help, as it will not change the serum sodium level ("Saline is not sodium and water") and will not move into cells to restore their lost water content ("Saline stays, water travels.")

If you have someone who is hypovolemic, as evidenced by (hmmm? what? how do you assess hypovolemia? How about BP, CVP, JVD, PAd, LVEDP, etc? You pick 'em), you give him saline, which goes into his vascular space where you want it for circulating volume but doesn't go anywhere else. D5W will not do the job, as it will travel into cells (not just RBC's, but all cells, and most of it will thus not be available in the vascular space to make blood pressure).

So why do dehydrated old ladies have high crits AND high serum Na+'s? Well, as I was fond of telling my students, it's perfectly possible to have two things wrong at once.

Let's look at a couple of people and see if that helps.

1) Serum Na+ 140, Hct 25, BP 110/60. OK, so this guy is relatively anemic, but his circulating volume is OK (as evidenced by an adequate BP) and his water balance is fine (as evidenced by his normal Na+). Who does this? Well, anemia can have many causes, but if he comes in with a hx of a recent bleed with fluid resuscitation, you could guess that he had a perfectly good crit until he lost some red cells out his GI bleed or stab wound or bloody ortho surgery or something, and we were stingy and just gave him NS back. His crit is called "dilutional," as in, "His red cells are floating in saline."

2) Serum Na+ 118, Hct 40, BP 110/60. This guy has 'way too much water on board, as evidenced by his Na+ that's 'way low ("dilutional" too). We call him hyponatremic, but it's not that he has lost sodium (in most cases), it's that he retained too much water. He hasn't lost saline, as evidenced by his decent BP ("Saline is not sodium and water"). Who does this? Well, remember the dread "SIADH"? "Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone"? Lessee.... inappropriate, ummm, too much. Antidiuretic, ummmm, doesn't allow diuresis, holds onto water.... Bingo. He's retaining water, and his Na+ is called "dilutional" because all those little Na+s are floating around in too much water. Some degree of SIAHD is actually pretty common--- you can do it with anesthesia, mechanical ventilation (there's stretch receptors in the lungs, see, and....oh, later), and a host of common meds. Of course, you can also get a low serum sodium in a hurry if some fool tanks you rapidly with a liter or two of D5W, or , like that poor woman in a SoCal radio contest, you drink a ton of plain water over a short period of time. She died of acute cerebral edema when her brain swelled up faster than her skull would stretch to accommodate it.

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