Re: help with IV's!
If the pump says "occlusion," check to make sure there aren't any sharp bends in the line, leading up to the patient. Normally, that means the patient moved and kinked the lines, somehow. Ask them to straighten their arm, if it's bent, and see if the occlusion fixes; especially in heavier patients, with bigger arms. It could be that the IV spine, itself is bent, within the arm. Sometimes, the roller controller is in closed position or the sliding clamp is still fastened.
If the pump says "air," open the pump box, unclamp the tubing and turn the lines upside down (so the patient's end is toward the ceiling) and strum it like a guitar string. That moves the air bubbles away from the pump mechinism part of the line. When there are no air bubbles in the section of tubing that snakes through the box, kink the line to keep the bubbles from going back and snake the lines back through the machine. Lock the box and press START.
There are different flush protocols, depending on your particular facility. In our facility, we flush with 5cc's NS and then 5cc's of Heparin, per shift or before and after hanging a bag. Normally, PICC lines don't need Heparin. NEVER use a 12cc syringe, for flushing, on a peripheral IV. The pressure might cause infiltration. Always flush slowly, with ANY syringe. Q shift flushes aren't necessary if it's a continuous flow. Always check for blood return before flushing an IV. Check your facility protocol regarding flushing (ie: what to flush with, amt. to flush with, what kind of IV needs which fluids, how often flushes are required).
When priming IV lines, make sure you have the little roller controller tight, so you have control of when to stop the priming, so you don't bleed too much of the med.
When you're hanging a med piggy back, spike the PB bag and hold it BELOW the larger bag so the larger bag's fluid will go down, toward the PB bag, and prime the lines. No bleeding necessary and no air bubbles! =)
Tops of hands are good for peripheral IV's, if forearm veins are hiding. The vein just over the ring finger is REALLY good....pretty straight. The distal part of the wrist (the dip just above the thumb where the wrist bone is) is good, too. That's a BIG vein. After placing the tournaquette, if you can't find a vein, make the patient pump their hand. Bevel up, poke, when you get the flash, pop the angio release button, and MAKE SURE you untie the tournaquette or when you try to aspirate for blood return, you'll get nothing and think you didn't get it.
Hope this is helpful. I LOVE IV's! Sure beats vital signs and charting. A little adrenaline rush always wakes me up. = D GOOD LUCK!
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