HELP.Giving magnesium sulfate T.I.M

Nurses Medications

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I am a a junior at a hospital and was designated to give magnesium sulfate through the buttocks and I did make sure to palpate the hipbone to properly locate the right part to stick the needle. Now the part where I stuck the needle was a bit bruised from previous medication with the same medicine and the needle mark is still visible. So I decided to put it in between the two needle marks and I was sure that my location is correct. I did aspirate and when I saw there is no backflow I slowly administered the second dose without taking out the needle, my concern is when I removed the needle there was blood flowing out and I asked my senior about it and she asked me if I did Aspirate and I said yes there wasn't blood before and when i replaced the syrige there was blood. She checked on the patient and there is no sign that I hit the sciatic nerve. So she told me to go continue. I Did and after that I monitored the patient and she seemed fine and walking. Could someone explain Why was there blood? Because when i did administer it before other patients I didn't encounter this incident. Does it have something to do with the bruise?

Specializes in Infusion Nursing, Home Health Infusion.

If there was a small amount of blood oozing out from the puncture site when you pulled the needle out you need not worry, just dab it away and apply a band-aid. If you pulled back blood into the syringe at any point you were probably in a blood vessel.

Specializes in Emergency/ICU.

Just curious, are new nurses are being taught to give IM injections in the buttock area? I thought this practice had been rejected because of potentially hitting the sciatic nerve? We were taught to use the ventralgluteal and it's what I mostly use (although it can be difficult to find in really large patients), but I never use the buttock. I do know many nurses, however, who do still use the buttock, I just find it risky.

But no, a small drop of blood isn't a big deal, and you probably wouldn't see blood if you hit the sciatic nerve anyway. Sometimes, when you pull the needle out a patient bleeds, and sometimes, you can't even see where you stuck them.

Specializes in Critical Care.

We were taught that is the last place you should choose. Sciatic issues and all.

Specializes in OR/PACU/med surg/LTC.

When I was in school 5 years ago, they never taught us to landmark on the hip or buttock. We always did thigh and deltoid.

Specializes in MICU, SICU, CICU.

IM mag is given deep im in ventrogluteal and it works A drop of blood is not significant. You gave a med to treat hypomagnesia and it may have saved her from developing a life threatening arrythmia called torsades so.... good job.

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