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- Educational Only: Not for clinical decision-making.
- Verify Information: Always consult protocols and authoritative sources.
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Bedside Snapshot
- Core dose: Not a medication with fixed "dose"; infusion rate depends on indication (e.g., hypernatremia correction: calculate free-water deficit and replace gradually; DKA: switch when glucose ~200–250 mg/dL)
- Onset/duration: Dextrose rapidly metabolized by cells; water distributes across total body water compartments; ongoing effects depend on fluid-electrolyte balance
- Key danger: Hyponatremia risk (provides free water without sodium); hyperglycemia in non-DKA patients; NOT for volume resuscitation (minimal sustained intravascular expansion); avoid in TBI/elevated ICP
- Special: Isotonic in bag (~252 mOsm/L) but becomes hypotonic after dextrose metabolism → free water; contains NO electrolytes; provides ~170 kcal/L; used for hypernatremia correction, medication carrier, or maintaining glucose in DKA
Medication Class
Carbohydrate solution / hypotonic free-water source (physiologically hypotonic after metabolism)
Pharmacology
Mechanism of Action (Pharmacodynamics):
- Provides free water after rapid cellular uptake and metabolism of dextrose to CO₂ and H₂O (insulin-mediated)
- Lowers serum tonicity and expands total body water with minimal sustained intravascular volume effect
- Supplies 170 kcal/L of carbohydrate energy
Disposition (Pharmacokinetics/Physiology):
- Dextrose is transported into cells (insulin-dependent in many tissues) and metabolized
- The administered water distributes across total body water compartments
- No discrete drug half-life; clinical effects depend on ongoing electrolyte/solute and water balance
Indications
- Hypernatremia: Free-water replacement when enteral water is not feasible or insufficient
- Over-correction of chronic hyponatremia: Re-lowering Na⁺ with D5W (often combined with desmopressin)
- Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) / HHS: Add dextrose to IV fluids once serum glucose reaches ~200–250 mg/dL to allow ongoing insulin while avoiding hypoglycemia (typically D5 in a sodium-containing solution)
- Medication carrier: For compatible drugs when a non-sodium diluent is desired; parenteral nutrition base component (not a complete PN)
Not for Resuscitation: D5W provides minimal sustained intravascular volume; treat shock with isotonic crystalloids first.
Contraindications
Contraindications:
- Acute symptomatic hyponatremia or high risk of hyponatremia (SIADH, postop pediatrics, CNS disease) — D5W can worsen hyponatremia
- Elevated intracranial pressure, acute ischemic stroke, or TBI — avoid hypotonic fluids; use isotonic or hypertonic solutions per protocol
- Uncontrolled hyperglycemia or hyperosmolar states prior to insulin initiation — dextrose can exacerbate hyperglycemia
Cautions:
- Fluid-sensitive states (HF, cirrhosis, renal failure) — risk of volume overload
Critical Warning: Avoid hypotonic fluids in TBI and acute ischemic stroke. Never use D5W for resuscitation boluses.
Adverse Effects
Metabolic:
- Hyperglycemia
- Hypokalemia (insulin-mediated intracellular shift)
- Hyponatremia (water gain)
- Hyperosmolarity if excessive
Volume:
- Peripheral/pulmonary edema in susceptible patients
Local IV:
- Phlebitis
- Infiltration
- Infection risk relates to IV access/device
Compatibility
Insulin:
- Facilitates dextrose uptake; anticipate K⁺ shifts and glucose reductions
- Monitor closely in DKA/HHS
Blood Products:
- Do NOT Y-site with PRBCs or blood components (hemolysis/pseudoagglutination risk)
Phenytoin (Parenteral):
- Incompatible with dextrose solutions (precipitation)
- Use 0.9% NaCl or LR as diluent when appropriate and per labeling
Parenteral Nutrition:
- Complex admixture — follow institutional compatibility policies
- Verify Y-site stability for any co-infused medication
Monitoring
Frequent Labs:
- Serum sodium every 2–6 h during active (re)correction
- Serum glucose at least hourly in insulin-treated patients
- Serum osmolality as indicated
Electrolytes:
- K⁺, Cl⁻, bicarbonate/base excess
- Renal function and urine output
Neurologic Exam:
- During dysnatremia therapy (headache, confusion, seizure)
- Watch for overly rapid Na⁺ shifts
Composition
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Contents | 50 g dextrose monohydrate per 1,000 mL (≈170 kcal/L) |
| Electrolytes | None (Na⁺ 0, Cl⁻ 0) |
| Calculated osmolarity | ≈250–252 mOsm/L (isotonic in bag; becomes hypotonic in vivo as dextrose is metabolized) |
| pH | ~4.3 (range ~3.2–6.5) |
| Container | Sterile, nonpyrogenic; no antimicrobial; single-dose containers |
Identification
- Generic/Official: Dextrose Injection, USP (5%)
- Common Names: D5W, D5, 5% dextrose in water
Administration
- May be given via peripheral IV (osmolarity ~250 mOsm/L)
- Use pumps for controlled correction in dysnatremias
- Do NOT administer simultaneously with blood products through the same tubing (hemolysis/pseudoagglutination)
- Avoid as diluent for phenytoin (precipitation) and other known incompatible drugs; confirm Y-site/admixture compatibility
Medication Forms & Dosing (IV)
Adults:
- Hypernatremia: Calculate free-water deficit and replace gradually with D5W (and/or enteral water). Typical safe correction limits: ≤10–12 mEq/L/24 h (≤8 mEq/L/24 h in high-risk)
- Hyponatremia over-correction: D5W infusion titrated with desmopressin to re-lower to a safe trajectory ("DDAVP clamp")
- DKA/HHS: Once glucose ≤200–250 mg/dL, add dextrose to fluids (e.g., D5-0.45% NaCl at 150–250 mL/h) to maintain glucose 150–200 mg/dL while continuing insulin
- Maintenance (select cases): Avoid as sole maintenance in most adults due to hyponatremia risk; prefer isotonic maintenance unless a specific free-water indication exists
Pediatrics:
- AAP guideline: Isotonic solutions with dextrose and K⁺ are preferred for maintenance; avoid hypotonic maintenance fluids in most children
- D5W is reserved for targeted free-water therapy (e.g., hypernatremia correction) with frequent sodium/glucose monitoring
- Bolus therapy for shock/dehydration: Should be isotonic (LR/0.9% NaCl); do NOT use D5W boluses
Clinical Pearls
Not for Resuscitation: D5W is NOT for resuscitation and provides minimal sustained intravascular volume; treat shock with isotonic crystalloids first.
Chronic Hypernatremia: For chronic hypernatremia, correct slowly and account for ongoing losses; consider combining enteral water with D5W to meet targets.
DKA Management: When DKA glucose falls to ~200–250 mg/dL, add dextrose with sodium (e.g., D5-0.45% NaCl) so you can continue insulin safely.
Critical Incompatibilities: Never run D5W through the same line as PRBCs; and do not use D5W to dilute IV phenytoin due to precipitation risk.
Dextrose Solutions — At-a-Glance:
| Property | D5W | D5-0.45% NaCl | D10W |
|---|---|---|---|
| Osmolarity (mOsm/L) | ≈250–252 | ≈405 | ≈505 |
| Effective tonicity in vivo | Hypotonic (free water) | Hypotonic (free water + Na⁺/Cl⁻) | Hypertonic (central line often preferred) |
| Typical uses | Hypernatremia; re-lower Na⁺; medication carrier | DKA after glucose ≤200–250 mg/dL; maintenance with sodium need | Severe hypoglycemia refractory to D50/D10 bolus (infusion) |
| Key cautions | Worsens hyponatremia; avoid with blood; phenytoin incompatible | Same + sodium content | Vein irritation; monitor closely |
References
- DailyMed. (2024–2025). Dextrose Injection, USP (5%) — Prescribing information: composition, pH, osmolarity. https://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/
- Umpierrez, G. E., et al. (2024). Hyperglycemic crises in adults with diabetes: A consensus report. Diabetes Care, 47(8), 1257–1283. https://doi.org/10.2337/dci24-0016
- American Diabetes Association. (2025). Diabetes care in the hospital (Standards of Care in Diabetes—2025). Diabetes Care, 48(Suppl 1), S321–S338.
- Feld, L. G., et al. (2018). Maintenance IV fluids in children (AAP guideline). Pediatrics, 142(6), e20183083.
- Medscape. (2024). Hypernatremia: Treatment & Management; DKA: Treatment & Management.
- FDA label. (2025). Dextrose Injection (5%) — Administration and transfusion precautions (no blood co-infusion).
- Keir, A. K., et al. (2014). Coinfusion of dextrose-containing fluids and RBCs: in-vitro effects. Transfusion, 54(9), 2386–2394.
- Suzuki, R., et al. (2023). Enteral free water vs. parenteral D5W for ICU hypernatremia. JPEN, 47(8), 1736–1744.