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Home > Intravenous therapy


 

Intravenous therapy or IV therapy is the administration of liquid substances directly into a vein. It can be intermittent or continuous; continuous administration is called an intravenous drip. The word intravenous simply means "within a vein", but is most commonly used to refer to IV therapy.

Compared with other routes of administration, the intravenous route is the fastest way to deliver fluids and medications throughout the body. Some medications, as well as blood transfusions, can only be given intravenously.

1 Intravenous access devices

1.1 Needle and syringe

The simplest form of intravenous access is a syringe with an attached hollow needle. The needle is inserted through the skin into a vein, and the contents of the syringe are injected through the needle into the bloodstream. This is most easily done with an arm vein, especially the antecubital vein . Usually it is necessary to use a tourniquet first to make the vein bulge; once the needle is in place, it is common to draw back slightly on the syringe to see a blood return, thus verifying that the needle is really in a vein; then the tourniquet is removed before injecting.

This is the most common method of intravenous drug use for illegal substances such as heroin, or in any case where a person must self-administer intravenous medication at home. It is also a convenient way to deliver life-saving medications in an emergency. However, in a controlled health-care setting, direct injection is rarely used since it only allows delivery of a single dose of medication.

1.2 Peripheral IV lines

This is the commonest intravenous access method in both hospitals and paramedic services. A peripheral IV line consists of a short catheter (a few centimeters long) inserted through the skin into a peripheral vein. A peripheral vein is any vein that is not in the chest or abdomen. Arm and hand veins are typically used although legs and feet veins are occasionally used. Pediatricians sometimes use the scalpThe scalp is the skin on your head from which hair grows. Scalping is the act of removing that skin, usually along with the hair, usually as a trophy of war. It is belived to have been a tradition in Plains Native Americans who may have been isolated from veins of infantThe word Infant derives from the Latin in-fans meaning unable to speak''. It is commonly used as a slightly more formal word for baby (the youngest category of child). A newborn baby is known as a neonate (neonatal after the final stage of gestation.s. Part of the catheter remains outside the skin, with a hub that can be connected to a syringe or an intravenous infusion line , or capped with a bung between treatments.

Blood can be drawn from a peripheral IV if necessary, but only if it is in a relatively large vein and only if the IV is newly inserted.

Originally, a peripheral IV was simply a needle that was taped in place and connected to tubing rather than to a syringe. Today, hospitals use a safer system in which the catheter is a flexible plastic tube that originally contains a needle to allow it to pierce the skin; the needle is then removed and discarded, while the soft catheter stays in the vein.

A peripheral IV cannot be left in the vein indefinitely, because of the risk of insertion-site infection leading to bacteremiaBacteremia is the presence of bacteria in the blood, and is the means by which local infections spread hematogenously to distant organs. It is typically transient rather than continuous, which is why blood cultures must be repeated at intervals to determi. Hospital policies usually dictate that every peripheral IV be replaced (at a different location) every three days to avoid this complication.



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