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  • For Educational Purposes Only: This content is intended for educational reference and should not be used for clinical decision-making.
  • Not a Substitute for Professional Judgment: Always consult your local protocols, institutional guidelines, and supervising physicians.
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The clinical content and references are curated and reviewed by myself; however, AI was used to assist in organizing, paraphrasing, and formatting the information presented.
Bedside Snapshot
Preferred Sites
  • Forearm (most stable)
  • Dorsum of hand
  • Antecubital fossa (large bore)
Catheter Selection
  • 18-16G: Trauma, surgery, rapid infusion
  • 20G: Most common, general use
  • 22-24G: Pediatrics, elderly, fragile veins
Insertion Angle
  • 10-30° angle for most veins
  • Lower angle for superficial veins
  • Flatten once flash obtained
Key Points
  • Start distal, move proximal
  • Anchor vein with traction
  • Advance catheter, not needle
Quick Reference
  • Tourniquet placement: 4-6 inches above intended site
  • Maximum attempts: 2 per provider (then escalate)
  • Dwell time: Replace per institutional policy (typically 72-96 hours)
  • Flow rates: Larger gauge = faster flow (18G can deliver ~100 mL/min)
  • Flush: Normal saline before and after use
Site Selection

Preferred Sites (in order)

  • Forearm: Cephalic and basilic veins — most stable, less movement, lower infiltration risk
  • Dorsum of hand: Good visibility, but more painful and prone to infiltration
  • Antecubital fossa (AC): Large veins (median cubital, cephalic, basilic) — ideal for large-bore access but limits arm movement
  • Upper arm: Basilic or brachial veins — deeper, may need ultrasound

Sites to Avoid

  • Affected extremity: Mastectomy side, AV fistula/graft, lymphedema, paralysis/paresis
  • Areas of infection: Cellulitis, burns, skin breakdown
  • Injured extremity: Fractures, trauma proximal to site
  • Lower extremities: Higher infection and DVT risk (use only if no other option)
  • Joint areas: Wrist, elbow flexion points (impairs movement, infiltration risk)
Pearl: Start distally and work proximally. If you blow a vein, you can still use sites above it. Going proximal first eliminates distal options.
Dialysis Patients: NEVER use the arm with an AV fistula or graft. Avoid blood pressure cuffs on that arm as well.
Catheter Selection
Swipe to see more
Gauge Color Flow Rate Common Uses
14G Orange ~200 mL/min Massive transfusion, major trauma
16G Gray ~150 mL/min Trauma, surgery, rapid infusion
18G Green ~100 mL/min Blood products, CT contrast, surgery
20G Pink ~60 mL/min Most common, general IV access
22G Blue ~35 mL/min Pediatrics, elderly, fragile veins
24G Yellow ~20 mL/min Neonates, very fragile veins
Catheter Length Matters: Flow rate is determined by both gauge AND length. Shorter catheters flow faster. For rapid resuscitation, short large-bore is ideal.
CT Contrast: Most facilities require 20G or larger for power injection. Check your radiology protocols.
Equipment & Preparation

Essential Equipment

  • IV catheter: Appropriate gauge for patient and indication
  • Tourniquet: Single-use preferred
  • Antiseptic: Chlorhexidine (preferred) or alcohol swab
  • Gloves: Non-sterile examination gloves
  • Transparent dressing: Tegaderm or equivalent
  • Extension set or saline lock: With needleless connector
  • Flush syringe: Pre-filled normal saline
  • Tape: For securing
  • Sharps container: Immediately accessible
  • Gauze: 2x2 or 4x4

Patient Preparation

  • Explain procedure: Reduces anxiety, increases cooperation
  • Position: Arm supported, extended, palm up
  • Select site: Palpate and visualize before applying tourniquet
  • Vein enhancement: Warm compress, have patient open/close fist, gravity (arm dependent)
Difficult Access Tips: Use a warm towel for 2-3 minutes to dilate veins. Consider ultrasound guidance for patients with history of difficult access, obesity, or IV drug use.
Step-by-Step Procedure

Step 1: Prepare Equipment

Gather all supplies. Prepare flush syringe and extension set. Prime tubing if connecting to IV fluids. Ensure sharps container is within reach.

Step 2: Position Patient & Select Site

Position arm comfortably with support. Apply tourniquet 4-6 inches above intended site. Identify vein by palpation — feel for bouncy, resilient vessel. Select straightest segment possible.

Step 3: Prepare Site

Don gloves. Clean site with chlorhexidine using back-and-forth friction for 30 seconds. Allow to dry completely (critical for antiseptic effect). Do not re-palpate after cleaning.

Critical: Allow antiseptic to dry completely. Wet antiseptic is ineffective and increases infection risk.

Step 4: Anchor the Vein

Use non-dominant hand to apply traction on skin distal to insertion site. This stabilizes the vein and prevents it from rolling. Maintain traction throughout insertion.

Step 5: Insert Catheter

Hold catheter with bevel up at 10-30° angle. Warn patient of stick. Puncture skin smoothly — watch for flash of blood in chamber. Once flash obtained, lower angle and advance 1-2mm to ensure catheter (not just needle) is in vein.

Step 6: Advance Catheter

While holding needle hub steady, advance the catheter over the needle into the vein using your index finger. The catheter should slide smoothly. Never re-advance the needle once it's been withdrawn.

Key Technique: After flash, drop your angle almost flat and advance the entire unit 1-2mm before threading the catheter. This ensures the plastic catheter tip is in the vein, not just the needle.

Step 7: Remove Needle & Secure

Release tourniquet. Apply pressure proximal to catheter tip to prevent blood loss. Withdraw needle completely and immediately dispose in sharps container. Connect extension set or saline lock.

Step 8: Confirm & Flush

Flush with normal saline. Observe for swelling, pain, or resistance. Good IV should flush easily without signs of infiltration. Secure with transparent dressing and tape. Document time, site, gauge, and number of attempts.

Clinical Pearls & Tips

Insertion Technique

  • Feel, don't just look: The best veins are palpable (bouncy, resilient) — visible veins may be superficial and fragile
  • Traction is everything: Proper skin traction prevents vein rolling and makes insertion much easier
  • Go slow after flash: The rush to advance often leads to through-and-through puncture
  • Float the catheter: For difficult veins, flush while advancing to "float" catheter into position

Difficult Access Strategies

  • Warm compress: Apply for 2-3 minutes to vasodilate
  • Gravity: Let arm hang dependent for 1-2 minutes
  • Multiple tourniquets: Double tourniquet technique for very difficult access
  • Blood pressure cuff: Inflate to just below diastolic for enhanced filling
  • Ultrasound: Consider early for known difficult access, obesity, or IVDU
The "Two-Tourniquet" Technique: Apply one tourniquet on upper arm and one on forearm. Wait 2 minutes. Remove lower tourniquet. Veins will be maximally distended.
Rolling Veins: For veins that roll, approach from the side rather than directly on top. The vein has nowhere to roll to.
Complications & Troubleshooting

Common Complications

  • Infiltration: Fluid leaking into surrounding tissue — swelling, coolness, pain at site. Remove IV immediately.
  • Hematoma: Blood collection under skin from through-and-through puncture or inadequate pressure. Apply pressure for 2-3 minutes.
  • Phlebitis: Vein inflammation — redness, warmth, pain along vein course. Remove IV, apply warm compress.
  • Infection: Redness, purulence, fever. Remove IV, culture tip if indicated, consider antibiotics.
  • Air embolism: Rare with peripheral IVs. Ensure lines are primed and connections secure.

Troubleshooting

  • No flash: May be too deep or too shallow. Withdraw to just under skin and redirect.
  • Flash but catheter won't advance: Catheter tip may not be in vein, or hit a valve. Try floating with flush or withdraw and start fresh.
  • Blood return but won't flush: Catheter may be against wall. Pull back slightly, reposition arm.
  • Positional IV: Works only in certain positions — often too short or against valve. May need replacement.
Never: Re-insert the needle into the catheter — risk of catheter shearing and embolism. If catheter won't advance, remove entire unit and start fresh.
Special Populations

Pediatrics

  • Use smaller gauges (22-24G typically)
  • Scalp veins in infants are acceptable
  • Consider EMLA/LMX cream for non-emergent access
  • Have assistance for immobilization
  • Transillumination device can help visualize veins

Elderly

  • Fragile, rolling veins — use smaller gauge, less tourniquet tension
  • Thin skin — secure carefully to prevent tears
  • May need shallower angle of insertion
  • Forearm often better than hand (more tissue support)

Obese Patients

  • Veins may be deep and difficult to palpate
  • Consider ultrasound guidance early
  • Longer catheters may be needed (1.75" vs standard 1.25")
  • Antecubital and upper arm sites often more successful

IV Drug Users

  • Scarred, thrombosed veins from repeated use
  • May have limited access sites
  • Ultrasound often essential
  • Consider alternative access early (IO, central line)
EJ (External Jugular) Access: For emergencies when peripheral access fails, EJ is a quick alternative before IO or central line. Requires specific technique and patient positioning.
Maintenance & Care
  • Assess regularly: Check site every shift for signs of complications
  • Flush protocol: Flush before and after each use, and every 8-12 hours if not in use
  • Dressing changes: Change if soiled, damp, or loose — otherwise per facility policy
  • Dwell time: Replace per institutional policy (CDC no longer mandates routine replacement at 72-96 hours for properly functioning IVs)
  • Documentation: Date, time, site, gauge, and any complications
When to Remove: Any signs of infiltration, phlebitis, infection, or if IV is no longer needed. Don't leave unused IVs in place — they're infection risks.
References
  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. (2021). Nancy Caroline's emergency care in the streets (8th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning.
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