More IV dosage calculation problems: Please Help!

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I need to get 90% or higher in order to continue my last semester of nursing school..Please check and advice if these problems are correct..Thank you for you reply:

Determine the following in drops per minute using the drop factor provided.

1. 3000 ml D5W at 125 mL/hr

10 gtt/mL

125 x 10/60 = 20.83 = 21 gtt/min Is that the correct answer?

Here is another problem, please tell me if this is correct:

150 mL D5W infusing at 20 macro gtt/min. Drop factor: 15 gtt/mL. Calculate infusion time.

150 x 15/ 20 = 112.5 minutes...Is this correct and do I leave the problem like that?

Specializes in med/surg, telemetry, IV therapy, mgmt.
Determine the following in drops per minute using the drop factor provided.

1. 3000 ml D5W at 125 mL/hr

10 gtt/mL

125 x 10/60 = 20.83 = 21 gtt/min Is that the correct answer?

Yes, 21 gtts/min is correct! You did this using the short cut. Here is how to set it up by dimensional analysis. . .

125 mL/1 hr.
x
10 gtts/1 mL
x
1 hr/60 min. (
conversion factor from hours to minutes
)

By simplifying and cancelling out labels you get the following:

(125 x 10 gtts x 1)
/
(1 x 1 x 60 min.)
=
1250 gtts/60 min
=
20.8 gtts/min,
or
21 gtts/min
(
rounded off
)

Here is another problem, please tell me if this is correct:

150 mL D5W infusing at 20 macro gtt/min. Drop factor: 15 gtt/mL. Calculate infusion time.

150 x 15/ 20 = 112.5 minutes...Is this correct and do I leave the problem like that?

If I am understanding this problem correctly, it is asking how long it is going to take to give this 150 mL of D5W. Now, where I get confused here is that the drip factor on macro drop tubing is 10 gtts/mL. So, the infusion is going at 120 mL/hour at 20 macro gtts/min. It will take 75 minutes, or 1 hour and 15 minutes, to infuse the entire 150 mL. Now, changing to 15gtt/min tubing (if I am understanding this correctly) is not going to change the infusion time UNLESS you want to give 150 mL at 20 gtts/min with 15gtt/min tubing. Then, it will take you the 112.5 minutes. The math to do this is:

150 mL/
x
min.
x
15 gtts/1 mL
=
20 gtts/1 min

Simplfying and cancelling labels you get the follow ratio:

1150 gtts/
x
min
=
20 gtts/ 1 min.

Cross-multiply to get this equation:

20x
=
2250
-->
x
= 112.50 min.
, or
1.875 hours

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