Published Aug 13, 2013
exsassy
1 Post
Problem: Give magnesium sulfate5 grams deep IM in each buttocks. The stock is 10ml ampule at 250 mg/ml. How much will you prepare for each buttocks?
emtb2rn, BSN, RN, EMT-B
2,942 Posts
What do YOU think the answer is? We are more than happy to help you understand but the folks on this board will not do your homework.
NRSKarenRN, BSN, RN
10 Articles; 18,926 Posts
Moved to our Nursing Student Assistance forum
Determine
1. Dose 5 grams = how many mg
2. What is maximum amount drug to give via IM injection.
nurseprnRN, BSN, RN
1 Article; 5,116 Posts
This can't be right. The volume is too big for IM even in divided doses. Can you check your dose?
NICU Guy, BSN, RN
4,161 Posts
That would be an awfully large syringe. It must be one of those orders that you see in cartoons with the huge syringe and 4 inch needle.
MendedHeart
663 Posts
Eclampsia; Treatment and Prophylaxis: initial, 4 to 5 g in 250 mL of D5W or NS given IV AND simultaneous IM doses of up to 10 g of undiluted 50% magnesium sulfate solution (5 g in each buttock)
From micromedex...just an example of dosing for Adults
This would have to be given in several injections I think.
You would have to give at least 4 injections
KelRN215, BSN, RN
1 Article; 7,349 Posts
I feel bad for the patient on the receiving end of these injections. Um... WOW.
Me too, It looks like eclampsia is the main reason to give IM Mag. Its probably situational as there is no increase in efficacy depending on route.
ClearBlueOctoberSky
370 Posts
I'm not gonna help here but say that when I had these types of questions in school, part two would be critical and ethical thinking in regards to the answer you came up with, I.e is it appropriate and what are you going to do about it?
dansamy
672 Posts
Thank goodness for iv mag! (Spent >24hrs after my first on a mag drip. Still wasn't fun.)
Sent from my HTC One X using allnurses.com
Esme12, ASN, BSN, RN
20,908 Posts
This is what drives me NUTS!!!!!!!!
Nursing programs have every opportunity to teach proper pharmacology in the dosages class by emphasizing the proper dosing of meds instead of these bizarre math questions. It shows me a few things
1) The nursing instructors are too lazy to ensure correct dosage is applied to the problem
AND
2) The nursing instructors despite their advanced degrees lack the clinical expertise to know the correct/real life dosage themselves
which is sad......
OR MAYBE
3) They are trying to teach you critical thinking skills to know when to say,,,this isn't right.
OP .........
Show us your work and we will be happy to help.
FineAgain
372 Posts
It drove me crazy all the way through Esme, both because they stressed giving the correct dose, AND gave us these crazy questions where we had no way to actually learn what the correct dose was. I look everything up now but it would have been nice to at least have an idea of what average doses were for meds.
OP, this is a really basic med math question...you sure you need help?