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PART C: ADMINISTRATION OF TOPICAL AND INHALANT MEDICATION

PART C: ADMINISTRATION OF TOPICAL AND INHALANT MEDICATION. Topical Medications. Topical agents commonly used for a local effect Dermal medications (lotions, creams) are applied to rashes, lesions or burns for their local anti-inflammatory, antiinfective or anesthetic effect

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PART C: ADMINISTRATION OF TOPICAL AND INHALANT MEDICATION

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  1. PART C: ADMINISTRATION OF TOPICAL AND INHALANT MEDICATION

  2. Topical Medications • Topical agents commonly used for a local effect • Dermal medications (lotions, creams) are applied to rashes, lesions or burns for their local anti-inflammatory, antiinfective or anesthetic effect • Inflamed, abraded or denuded skin will absorb drugs readily as will hydrated skin

  3. Most topical drugs act on the skin but are not absorbed through the skin • Some medications are specially formulated to be applied (via adhesive patch or disc) for slow absorption thru the skin (transdermally)>>>>>>>>>

  4. Topical/Transdermal • Transdermal preparations allow drugs to be delivered at constant rates over several days (nicotine, nitrodur, duragesic, estrogen) • Advantage of this system is much less of the drug is lost to metabolism in the GI tract or liver before it reaches the blood stream • Another benefit is to Home Clients on medication as allows for fewer administration times allowing clt more mobility

  5. Topical/ophthalmic medications • Most often administered for • Infections or inflammations of eye • Glaucoma • Diagnostic purposes • Topically applied eye meds used mostly for their local effects • Unwanted systemic effects are possible if the drops drain thru the tear duct & enter the systemic circulation via the nasal mucousa absorption

  6. Topical/Nasal Drops • Most administered for local effect (as in antihistamines), some can be given for a systemic effect • Since nasal mucous membranes absorb drugs readily, an intended local may sometimes result in systemic toxicity • it is essential you understand purpose for drug being administered as well as rationale for particular drug route of administration

  7. Topical/otic meds • Usually come in liquid form & administered to treat conditions of external ear. If not effective, systemic drugs used • eg. Chloromycetin otic gtts are antibiotic for external ear canal infections • Can also have systemic effects (chloromycetin gtts can cause bone marrow depression)

  8. Inhalant medications • Drug droplets, vapor or gas are administered through mucous membranes of respiratory tract via use of • Face mask • Nebulizer • Positive pressure machine • Metered dose inhalers • Some drugs administered by inhalation will be bronchodilator, mucolytic & some anti-inflammatory drugs. Primary effect will be local in the lungs

  9. Describe the procedure for: • Instilling eye drops • Applying ointment to the eye • Instilling nose drops • Administering ear drops and ear irrigation • Administering rectal and vaginal suppositories • Skin applications • Metered dose inhalants

  10. Instilling eye drops

  11. Applying ointment to the eye

  12. Instilling nose drops

  13. Administering ear drops

  14. Straightening the ear canal of a child by pullingthe pinna down and back.

  15. rectal suppositories

  16. vaginal suppositories

  17. Skin applications

  18. Transdermal patch = prepared medicated

  19. PART D: PREPARATION OF MEDICATION FROM AMPULES AND VIALS

  20. Identify parts of a needle and syringe • Syringe – has three parts: • tip, which connects with the needle; • barrel or outside part, on which the scales are printed; • plunger, which fits inside the barrel.

  21. Most commonly used types of syringes: • hypodermic, • the insulin, • the tuberculin syringe

  22. Size of needle, type and size of syringe Syringe • Hypodermic syringes come in • 2, • 2.5, • and 3ml or 5ml sizes.

  23. Hypodermic syringe marked in tenths of a ml & in minims • They usually have two scales marked on them: • the minim = used for very small dosages • the milliliter = the one normally used

  24. Size of needle, type and size of syringe … • Insulin syringes are similar to hypodermic syringes (not interchangeable!), but they have a scale specially designed for insulin: • 100-unit calibrated scale intended for use with U-100 insulin. • Several low-dose insulin syringes are also available and frequently have a nonremovable needle.

  25. Insulin syringe marked in 100 units

  26. Size of needle, type and size of syringe … • Tuberculin syringes (originally designed to administer tuberculin) are narrow, calibrated in tenths and hundredths of a milliliter (up to 1ml) on one scale and in sixteenths of a minim (up to 1 minim) on the other scale. • also useful in administering other drugs, particularly when small or precise measurement is indicated (peds).

  27. Tuberculin syringemarked in tenths & hundreds of cubic ml & in minims

  28. When handling a syringe the tip and inside of the barrel, the shaft of the plunger, and the shaft and tip of the needle must remain sterile.

  29. hypodermic insulin tuberculin

  30. Needle – has three parts: • the hub, which fits onto the syringe; • the cannula, or shaft, which is attached to the hub; • the bevel, which is the slanted part at the tip of the needle.

  31. Size of needle, type and size of syringe … Needle • The bevel of the needle may be short or long. • Longer bevels provide sharpest needles and cause less discomfort and are commonly used for subcutaneous and intramuscular injections. • Short bevels are used for intradermal and intravenous injections.

  32. Size of needle, type and size of syringe … • The shaft length of commonly used needles varies from ½ to 2 inches. • The appropriate needle length is chosen according to the • client’s muscle development, • client’s weight, • type of injection.

  33. Size of needle, type and size of syringe … • The gauge (or diameter) of the shaft varies from #18 to #28. • The larger the gauge number, the smaller the diameter of the shaft. • Smaller gauges produce less tissue trauma, but larger gauges are necessary for viscous medications, such as penicillin.

  34. Demonstrate the ability to assemble a needle and syringe, withdraw solutions from ampules and vials, mix medications from an ampule and vial, and prepare an injection from an ampule and a vial.

  35. Ampules versus Vial

  36. Drawing medication from an ampule. Break neck of amp Away from hands

  37. Draw up medication with ampule upright

  38. Medication can also be drawn upwards from ampule

  39. Drawing from a vial

  40. Mixing meds in 1 syringe P. 33-4

  41. Administering SC, ID & IM • All well covered in Perry & Potter pp.889-900 • Administering sc • Administering IM • For Labs, Know your • Land marking • Administration

  42. Intradermal

  43. Subcutaneous • Only small doses of meds via sc • 0.5 to 1ml • Use syringe appropriate to med • E.g. hypodermic, tuberculin or insulin • Usually a#25, 5/8 inch needle used for normal sized adult pt • Insert at 90 or 45 degree angle dependent upon size • Sites need to be rotated systematically

  44. Sites for subcutaneous injections

  45. Insertion for sc at 45 or 90 degree angle

  46. Intramuscular injections • Absorbed quicker than by sc (as more blood flow) • Can also tolerate more volume by IM than sc • Well developed muscles can tolerate up to 4ml (in gluteus medius & gluteus maximus). • If they have less developed muscles can tolerate 1 – 2 ml • Deltoid tolerates 0.5 to 1ml • Usually a 2 to 5 ml syringe used • Standard needle size is#21 or #22, 1½ inch

  47. To form the Z track at the injection site, use the ulnar side of your nondominant hand to pull the skin and subcutaneous tissue about 1 inch (2.5 cm) to the side. • Hold the skin in this position until you've administered the injection. • Quickly withdraw the needle and release the displaced tissue. Apply gentle pressure to the site with a dry sponge.

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