zofran question

Nurses Medications

Published

Specializes in critical care.

I was thinking maybe onc nurses/someone else might know. I work in IICU and recently had a patient with a zofran gtt, on his MAR. Anyone else seen this? I am a relatively new nurse but was a pharm tech for six years, and have never seen this. This patient never even needed his push zofran for me..... I'm confused. CAT

i infuse zofran over 15 min, quite often.

many of my hospice pts use this route.

leslie

Specializes in ER, PACU, Med-Surg, Hospice, LTC.

HI!

It said: gtt, meaning drops? I though Zofran could only be administered IV or IM, but I could be wrong. IV/IM are the only two routes that I have ever administered it.

Did you get it figured out?

If it said "Zofran gtt" it would be likely talking about a zofran drip rather than zofran drops. A zofran drip would be totally worthless in my opinion (unless if the MAR reflects that it's given IVBP over 10-15 minutes).

I've seen it given as a continuous infusion.

Specializes in Neuro ICU and Med Surg.

I have only given it IVP. I learned in nursing school that it is NOT compatible with LR by the way. RN on the floor gave it through the same line and it precipitated.

Specializes in Anesthesia.

From Lexi-Comp's Drug Information Handbook: "24-hour continous infusions have been reported, but are rarely used".

I would ask the physician what the rationale is for the order. I have found when physicians come up with these strange orders it is usually based on some study they just read.

Specializes in critical care.

Thanks guys this was a continuous infusion-odd. Thanks again for the info CAT

Specializes in Women's Health, Oncology.

Used as a 15 minute premedication IVPB in chemo patients.

I have never seen it as continuous.....

Specializes in Gyn Onc, OB, L&D, HH/Hospice/Palliative.

I've worked onc forever,I've never seen it as a gtt

I've worked onc forever,I've never seen it as a gtt
This was back when it first came out. Premed, then a continuous infusion after the chemo. Our docs played with this for a while, but it didn't seem to be any more effective.

Pharmacokinetics: Pharmacokinetic studies in human volunteers showed peak plasma levels of 20 to 30 ng/mL at around 1 1/2 hours after an 8 mg oral dose of ondansetron. An 8 mg infusion of ondansetron reached peak plasma levels of 80 to 100 ng/mL. Repeat dosing of an 8 mg tablet every 8 hours for 6 days increased the peak plasma value to 40 ng/mL. A continuous i.v. infusion of 1 mg/hour after the initial 8 mg loading dose of ondansetron maintained plasma levels over 30 ng/mL during the following 24 hour period.

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Initial Dose: 8 mg infused i.v. over 15 minutes given 30 minutes prior to chemotherapy; or 8 mg infused i.v. over 15 minutes, given 30 minutes prior to chemotherapy, followed by 1 mg/h by continuous infusion for up to 24 hours; or 32 mg diluted in 50 to 100 mL of saline or other compatible infusion fluid and infused over not less than 15 minutes**, given 30 minutes prior to chemotherapy.

**No significant differences in terms of emesis control or grade of nausea have been demonstrated between the 32 mg single dose, the 8 mg single dose, or the 8 mg dose followed by the 24 hour 1 mg/hour continuous infusion.**

http://www.rxmed.com/b.main/b2.pharmaceutical/b2.1.monographs/CPS-%20Monographs/CPS-%20(General%20Monographs-%20Z)/ZOFRAN.html

Specializes in Burnout & Resiliency Coaching for Nurses.

I have given Zofran PO and Zofran IVP, but never IM. I have never heard of a drip, but guess it isn't impossible.

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