How do you know if you put an IV in an artery?

Specializes in cardiac.

I have three years of nursing experience. Over the past 6 months I have been doing IV insertion. I still get anxiety about it. My patient insisted that I put the IV into her antecubital area. I felt a nice fat vein that was superficial. She said that is where they draw blood. I was in without any resistance. I put my transfer device on to draw blood and the blood flowed out so easily and fast. I think I felt a pulsation when drawing blood. I had my fingers above the sight. I thought I was just feeling the bracial artery that was close to the site. The patient had been on plavix. I usually make a mess when I draw blood when I put in an IV like I did this time.

The patient did not complain of any pain. Blood did not squirt. It looked the same color as always. I flushed it once and blood went back into the tubing to the point where I clamped it. I flushed it again and it was fine.

I asked my charge nurse to look at it and she said that it fine. She said that she felt a pulse beside it so she doesn't think I hit an artery. After I put the IV in, I felt the pulse proximal and a tiny bit to the left. I ran in saline through a pump with no complications. I gave her morphine IV and she immediately felt the effects.

How will I know if I ever put an IV in artery. Will there be pain?

Will the IV pump beep constantly beep due to the pressure. (The patient's systolic B/P was 143) This really has me worried. :crying2:

I had the patient a couple of more hours and checked on her. The IV was fine with no pain. Good circulation and good radial artery.Please help!! I don't want to worry about this anymore.

17 Answers

One way to know you're in an artery is when you draw back blood with the syringe plunger let go...if the blood keeps filling the syringe and the plunger is moving back by itself you'll know it's an arterial line. Veins don't have enough pressure to push the syringe plunger back.

Specializes in Trauma/Critical Care.

Once inserted, Look for an oscillation/fluctuation in your saline lock tubing...there should be none. Ultimately, you can always send an ABG's (there would be a difference between arterial and venous blood).

Specializes in Maternal - Child Health.

You will see pulsation in the connecting piece of tubing.

Also, if you flush an arterial "IV" you will likely cause an arteriospasm, resulting in immediate blanching along the path of the artery and possible pain reported by the patient.

I've done it once (in a newborn) and it was very obvious.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

Especially with a systolic of 143.....it will SQUIRT out of the catheter and will actually form a little arch as it squirts all over the place.....bu if in doubt......the IV will NOT run by gravity but pulsate (quickly) up the tube to the bag. Simple but effective..

Specializes in OB, ER.

You will know. Don't stress about it at all and if it happens you will definitely know. If you accidently do it it's not dangerous other then you need to hold extra pressure when you remove it because it will bleed a lot and a long time.

I was an IV therapist for a number of years, sometimes starting up to 12 lines in an 8 hour shift. I hit an artery exactly once, and knew immediately.

Just be prepared to hold pressure on it for quite a while.

And try to NOT say "oh Sh!t" more than once!!!!

The color of the blood would be different, no? Arterial blood is bright, fire-engine red, whereas venous blood -- deoxygenated -- is more of a maroon.

Specializes in cardiac.

This blood might have been a little brighter, but it did not alarm me as being different. The patient had been on plavix, so her blood was thinner

Specializes in Trauma Surgery, Nursing Management.

If memory serves, I believe that the brachial artery is much deeper and would require a bit of serious digging to access. It is very painful for the patient, and you would observe obvious pulsating spurts if you did accidentally access it, along with an immediate hematoma formation.

You can also hook up some extension tubing, place a syringe on the end of it and draw back, then hold the tubing straight up in the air. If the blood flows back down, it's venous. :)

All helpful. Thank you.

In ICU, I just transduce the line in question . . . if there's an arterial waveform, you're in an artery. But, the other suggestions also work and are much simpler.

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