Title: Practical Problems in Pediatric Parenteral Drug Administration
1Practical Problems in Pediatric Parenteral Drug
Administration
- Pediatric needs vary from adults due to
- smaller dose volumes (smaller doses based on body
wt. or body surface area) - reduced fluid requirements (as per organ function
excretion rates)
2Subcutaneous Injections
- Use intermittent insulin, heparin,MMR vac.
- continuous morphine, deferoxamine
- 5\8 inch, lt 25 gauge needle
- 1.5 mL max volume
- into the thigh of infants or deltoid area of
older children beneath skin and fat but above
muscle
3Intramuscular Injections
- Use
- medications that are irritating if given sc
- faster absorption and larger volume than sc
- if IV route not available for some meds
- compliance if patient not taking oral meds
- administration of vaccines (i.e..DPT polio)
4Intramuscular Injections
- 23 gauge, 1 inch needle
- 3 mL maximum volume (5mL in adults)
- 0.5 mL max. volume for deltoid area
- infants - anterolateral thigh provides largest
muscle mass or the rectus femoris (more painful)
- avoid medial thigh due to major blood vessels
and nerves
5Intramuscular Injections
- 2-3yr - the ventrogluteal area (not into buttock
due to sciatic nerve) or deltoid area - older children - the deltoid muscle or the
posterolateral aspect of the gluteal area - (not into buttock)
6Injecting Subcutaneous Medication Via An Insuflon
- Use
- Many sc medications i.e. heparin, low molecular
weight heparin, DDAVP, filgrastim (G-CSF), and
interferon - Used in adults for insulin administration
- Not appropriate for all drugs i.e. growth
hormone as induration around insuflon will occur
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8Advantages of SC Administration via an Insuflon
- Catheter dead space is very small 0.0075mL
- Flush medication into patient with small amount
of compatible solution if necessary - 7 days max. indwelling time(3 days for insulin in
adults) - rotate insertion sites to avoid tissue damage
- allows daily sc administration into canula
without daily needle poke
9Advantages of Intravenous Injections
- Complete and rapid drug absorption with rapid
onset of action - Immediate access to cardiovascular system
- Useful in neonates with little muscle mass
- Less painful route for frequent injections
- Administer drugs which cannot be given by another
route
10Disadvantages of IV Route
- Rapid drug/fluid delivery means immediate onset
of adverse reactions and inability to withdraw
infused solutions - Risk infusion of air, microorganisms, pyrogens
and particulate matter - Risk sepsis (infection), phlebitis (venous
irritation), extravasation/infiltration (leaking
outside of the vein)
11IV Access Sites
- Peripheral Sites
- -vein in hand or forearm
- -scalp vein or foot vein in infant (possible
but central IV site preferred in neonates) - Central IV Sites subclavian vein into superior
vena cava - -central line inserted peripherally
- -umbilical vein in neonates
12www_geocities_com-lambda_med-medical_art_previews-
4_gif.htmCentral Venous IV Line
Central Venous IV Line
13Factors Influencing IV Drug Delivery
- small dose volume
- slow infusion rate
- dead space volume
- drug specific gravity
- infusion device used
14Small Dose Volumes
- many pharmaceutical manufacturers do not provide
suitable concentrations of meds for pediatric
administration - require prior dilution in order for dose to be
measurable (ie. Dose volume lt 0.5 mL) - potential for dosing errors secondary to
unsuitable drug formulations and dilution
procedures
15 Drug Available Diluent
Final Conc. Conc.
16Small Dose Volumes
- accurate dose measurement (i.e. with appropriate
syringe) - small syringe with integral hubless needle for
volumes lt 0.5mL - provide 0.05 mL drug overfill in syringe to fill
needle hub if needle must be attached - (include overfill information on label)
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20When Dose Volume is Less Than Fluid Volume in IV
Tubing
- Provide medication device with 24hr drug volume
extra volume equal to tubing loss - change tubing and prime with fresh supply of drug
Q24h - after 24h - tubing is discarded for infection
control and because the drug in the tubing has
reached its expiry time - drug must be stable in selected diluent for 24h
at room temperature
21Slow IV Infusion Rates
- cause an increase in the time required to deliver
the dose - Slow/low flow rates (1-10ml\hr) commonly used
with neonates and fluid restricted patients - potential for drug to disperse or layer out
within macrobore IV tubing when IV flow rate is
slow (use microbore tubing instead) - use of microbore (low volume) tubing (diameter
0.06 - 0.14 cm) will minimize this effect
22Residual Volume (Dead Space)
- gt 0.05 mL of volume found in hub of needle,
stopcocks, Y-type or T-type injection ports or
in-line filters - overdosing by 0.05 mL may occur if syringe is
milked - under dosing by 0.05 mL may occur if needle is
changed after the exact dose is measured (dosing
error 5 for a 1 mL dose volume)
23Dead Space
24Drug Specific Gravity
- in slow moving fluid, the specific gravity can
cause the drug to settle, float or pool in a bend
of IV tubing and not be administered on schedule
25IV Infusion Devices
- large volume (e.g. Gemini) or small volume
(e.g. CADD) infusion pumps - syringe pumps are accurate for small volume
delivery - volumetric infusion devices (Buretrol) used for
small total fluid requirements and slow rates of
administration - choice of device also depends on frequency of
dose (ie.intermittent vs continuous infusion),
whether the drug or its vehicle requires special
containers and administration sets,and the latex
allergy status of the patient.
26Health Risks Caused By DEHP
- Affects developing reproductive tract (testes) of
male fetus, male infants and potentially of
pre-pubertal males - infants especially premature infants more
susceptible to toxic effects - cardiac toxicity - may affect cardiac transplant
patients of all ages - patients receiving multiple transfusions for
trauma, hemodialysis patients also at risk
27LEACHING OF PLASTICIZER (DEHP)
- Medications which are lipophilic or are in
vehicles containing lipophilic surfactants (e.g.
soy oil emulsion, polysorbate 80) leach
significant amounts of DEHP from PVC containers
administration sets - Use glass bottles, polyolefin IV bags (P.A.B. IV
bags-B Braun Mc Gaw), ethyl vinyl acetate
(EVA) IV bags, polyethylene lined PVC
administration sets, or polypropylene syringes.
28Drug Incompatibility with Infusion Device
- adsorption of drug onto plastic or glass infusion
device - a significant portion of the dose may be lost to
adsorption if very dilute solutions of the drug
are infused - flush device and tubing first with drug infusion
solution to saturate binding sites prior to
starting infusion - choose low sorbing administration set tubing ,
titrate the dose to clinical response
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30Volume Control Set (Buretrol)
- Disadvantages
- dose may have to flow through up to 20 mL of
tubing - small volume doses given at slow infusion rates
will have delayed delivery
- Advantages
- dilute drug to specific volume appropriate for
the dose (maximum volume 150mL in the mixing
chamber) - Y-in the dose close to patient and/or use
microbore tubing
31Minibags or Bottles
- Advantages
- convenient to dilute the dose in a prefilled IV
bag - available in standard sizes 25 mL, 50 mL, 100 mL
of D5W or Normal saline
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34Disadvantages of Minibags or Bottles
- may contain more fluid than pt. can tolerate
- fixed dilution may provide inappropriate final
drug concentration - inaccurate dose delivery due to manufacturers
overfill unless entire bag is given (25mL bag
contains 27-33mL or a 24 volume difference)
35Disadvantages of Minibags or Bottles
- IV set used to administer the dose may retain up
to 7mL of fluid (23 of dose in 25mL bag). This
could be flushed into the patient using
additional fluid or discarded with a set change
or given at the start of the next dose after
possible drug degradation. - if attached to primary infusion line, the extra
fluid volume causes additional delay in drug
reaching the patient
36Syringes forManual IV Injection
- Advantage
- can inject very small volumes into tubing at
injection site near pt. - administration rate controlled by primary IV
solution flow rate.
37Syringes Manual IV Injection Disadvantages
- time for drug delivery depends on drug volume and
flow rate of primary IV solution - amount of drug delivered depends on amount lost
to dead space at the injection site - requires microbore tubing to decrease delays in
delivery - more labour intensive requires flush
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39Syringe PumpsAdvantages
- prepare drug in syringe at required dilution and
give via microbore tubing at connection close to
patient (reduced fluid volume) - dose given accurately at a rate independent of
primary IV solution - used for both intermittent and continuous therapy
40Syringe PumpsDisadvantages
- only for small volumes lt 50mL
- tubing will retain part of the dose
- initial capital investment required
41TDM Implications of Factors Influencing IV Drug
Delivery
- Actual time for dose delivery may be longer than
the predicted time due to increases in the
distance between the drug injection site and the
patient, the total volume to be infused, the
specific gravity of the drug, or a slow IV flow
rate. - Dose and dose timing errors may occur due to dead
space volume errors.
42Total Volume Infused and Injection Site
- Volume Dose Fluid in tubing Flush
(Y-site closest to patient smallest volume,
Y-site above Buretrol largest volume) - Injection site to ensure 30 minute drug delivery
in pediatric patients, inject IV manually or
infuse IV using a syringe pump with microbore
tubing at Y-site of IV set closest to patient
43Time for Delivery of Chloramphenicol Using
Buretrol IV Set with TubingVolume 18 mL
44Predicted time of chloramphenicol delivery with a
Buretrol set
- Predicted time to delivery of drug dose
(minutes) - Med. volume volume of set x 60min
- IV Rate (mL\hour)
- i.e.. 10 mL 18 mL x 60min 336 minutes
- 5 mL/hr
45Time for Drug Delivery Via Buretrol IV Set
- Delivery of a drug added to a Buretrol is
affected by slow IV flow rates and too small IV
flush volumes. - Medication does not flow toward the patient like
a plug, pushing the maintenance IV fluid into the
patient without mixing. - Viscosity and specific gravity of medications and
maintenance IV fluids vary so mixing will occur
within the IV tubing
46- The amount of mixing depends on the diameter of
the IV tubing and IV flow rate - When using a Buretrol set, increase IV flow rate
and flush volume to compensate for the mixing
occurring within the IV tubing - Use a flush volume equal to approximately 1.5 to
2 times the volume of the IV set from the bottom
of the Buretrol to the patient - Administer dose plus flushes over required dose
administration time
47- QUESTION A 2 kg, 1 month old, neonate is
receiving Digoxin 1.5mcg/kg/dose IV q12h. The
physician wishes to increase the dose by 10. - Is the commercial preparation available in a
suitable concentration to allow accurate
measurement of a 10 change in the dose? - Which drug delivery devices may be used?
- What are sources of error in dose delivery
what effect may this have on the reported Digoxin
level?
48Solution
- Digoxin dose and proposed dose change are
appropriate - Digoxin is available as 50mcg/mL Inj
- Cannot measure a 10 dose change with the
commercially available product - Dilute Digoxin with NS to 10mcg/mL so 10 dose
change is measurable - Device - 1cc syringe, manual IV injection into
Y-site nearest to patient
49- Sources of error syringe dead space volume
(0.05mL) and low IV flow rate (1-10ml\hr in
neonate) - 3.3mcg dose 0.33 mL of 10 mcg/mL
- 0.05mL x 10 mcg/mL 0.5mcg (dead space volume is
15 of dose ) - Digoxin level either 15 higher or lower than
predicted if measuring inaccurate. Inappropriate
timing of Digoxin levels and uninterpretable
results if drug delivery delayed.
50References
- 1. Comprehensive Pediatric Nursing. New York
McGraw-Hill 1986 Appendix 1. - 2. Leff RD, Roberts RJ.Principles and techniques
of IV administration. In Practical aspects of
intravenous drug administration.ASHP
1992(2)4-41. - 3. Nahata M. Methods of intravenous drug
infusion in pediatric patients. The Am J
Intravenous Therapy Clin N 1984 May 6-7.
51- 4. Hunt, Max L. Training Manual for Intravenous
Admixture Personnel Fifth Edition.Baxter
Healthcare Corporation Precept Press, USA,
1995. - 5. Roberts RJ. Intravenous administration of
medication in pediatric patients problems and
solutions. Ped Clin N Amer 1981 2823-34. - 6. The Hospital for Sick Children. Policies and
Drug Information for Nurses Manual. Parenteral
therapy - not intravenous. Toronto
20004.01-4.03.
52- 7. Rice, Stephen P., A Review of Parenteral
Admixtures Requiring Select Containers and
Administration Sets, International Journal of
Pharmaceutical Compounding, Vol 6, No 2,
March\April 2002. - 8. Turco, Salvatore J. , Editor. The Sourcebook
for IV Therapy IVAC Corporation, San Diego, Ca,
1985.
53- 9. http//www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hpb-dgps/therapeut/zfil
es/english/advcomm/eap/dehp/eap-dehp-final-report-
2002-jan-11_e.html Health Canada Expert
Advisory Panel On DEHP In Medical Devices, Final
Report 220 January 11, Health Canada, 2002. - 10. http//www.fda.gov/cdrh/ost/dehp-pvc.pdf
Safety Assessment of Di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate
(DEHP) Released from PVC Medical Devices Centre
for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food
and Drug Administration, Rockville, MD, 2001.