Peripheral IV Insertion
Peripheral venous access technique including site selection, insertion steps, troubleshooting, and special considerations for difficult access.
Peripheral venous access technique including site selection, insertion steps, troubleshooting, and special considerations for difficult access.
| 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 |
Gather all supplies. Prepare flush syringe and extension set. Prime tubing if connecting to IV fluids. Ensure sharps container is within reach.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 Never re-advance the needle once it's been withdrawn.
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.
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.