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Recently I had a patient that needed both iv k and iv mag. The patient had one patent iv site. I hung the potassium 1 st because it would take the less time. Then get the mag started. When handing off my patient the RN told me that the mag should go first because it is what the k will stick to. I had not heard this before and am unable to find any information on this. Has anyone else?
~*Stargazer*~ said:There is no inhibition of potassium uptake. Potassium is flowing into the cells just fine. The problem is that magnesium blocks potassium secretion back OUT of the cell, and with low intracellular mag levels, potassium is allowed to freely exit the cell. So, potassium uptake is not affected, and secretion is increased.
Net uptake refers to the amount that remains in the cell, when you scoop up water with a colander the amount that comes back out immediately isn't counted as net uptake since it comes back out as fast as it goes in. You aren't infusing potassium directly into the cells, you're infusing it into the serum and then depending on uptake to get it into the cells, without sufficient magnesium much of it able to leak right back out, reducing net uptake. If the potassium stayed in the cell for any significant amount of time and then leaked out I might agree with you.
JenniferG RN said:Recently I had a patient that needed both iv k and iv mag. The patient had one patent iv site. I hung the potassium 1 st because it would take the less time. Then get the mag started. When handing off my patient the RN told me that the mag should go first because it is what the k will stick to. I had not heard this before and am unable to find any information on this. Has anyone else?
If this is a peripheral IV, (not to mention the correlation between potassium and arrhythmias), potassium in my experiences at work, will more than likely run longer than magnesium. K+-riders burn like the dickens. Of course, the amount of time will depend on the amount of potassium and its diluent.
Yes it was a peripheral iv NS @125/' then a 40MeQ mixed In a 250ml bag of NS bag was piggy backed in. W a 2 gram in 50ml NS bag of mag to also run at the same time. The patient was a tough stick and Was only going to the observation unit I didn't see a need to start a second site. Our pharmacists did not recommend running them at the same time d/t possible overload. On a side note ; I'm so thankful I joined this site- there is so much insite, knowledge and comedy. I wish I would of known about this years ago.
Larry77, RN
1,158 Posts
I was merely being facetious. This is an interesting topic and I was pointing out that it is not a typical discussion that is had in ED's, but rather one that my ICU friends would spend time looking up.
I'm wondering if those ACTUAL ED nurses were offended by my sense of humor, if so, I apologize to YOU. If you have never worked in the ED you may not understand the normal ED mindset...life is too short to be so serious!
Cheers...