1 / 21

Chapter 4: Delivery Systems Equipment

Chapter 4: Delivery Systems Equipment. Delivery Systems. Definition Pieces of equipment that allow a drug to follow its designated route of administration Syringes Uses Injection Irrigation Withdrawal of fluids. Delivery Systems (cont’d). Parts of a Syringe. Delivery Systems (cont’d).

keona
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 4: Delivery Systems Equipment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 4: Delivery Systems Equipment

  2. Delivery Systems • Definition • Pieces of equipment that allow a drug to follow its designated route of administration • Syringes • Uses • Injection • Irrigation • Withdrawal of fluids

  3. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Parts of a Syringe

  4. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Kinds of Syringes • Vary in size from 1 mL (1 cc) to 60 mL (60 cc) • Hypodermic syringes are marked with calibrations in mm • Two special types • Tuberculin • Insulin

  5. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Kinds of Syringes • Tuberculin • Narrow, with total capacity of 1 mL • Used for: • Newborn doses • Pediatric doses • Intradermal skin tests • Small doses in adults • Injections just beneath the skin

  6. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Kinds of Syringes • Insulin • Used only for administering insulin to diabetic patients • Has total capacity of 1 mL • Calibrated in units (U), representing strength of insulin per mL • Most insulin used today is U-100 (100 units of insulin per mL)

  7. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Types of Syringe Tips • Luer-lock • Screw-on fitting for needle that minimizes leaks • Slip-tip • Allows needle to be easily slipped on; more prone to leaks • Catheter tip • Long tip for cleaning out tissue, filling body cavities, attaching a feeding tube • Eccentric tip • Wide syringe tip usually used for oral applications

  8. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Critical Surfaces of Syringes • Any surface that comes into contact with a sterile product, container, or closure • Examples: tip & plunger • Hold syringe by barrel • Syringe Calibrations • 3-mL syringe: each tenth • 5- & 10-mL syringes: every two tenths • 20-, 30-, 50-, & 60-mL syringes: 1-mL increments

  9. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Needles • Hypodermic needle • Fits onto end of syringe • Used to inject or withdraw a specific amount of fluid • Parts of hypodermic needle • Hub: base that attaches to syringe • Shaft: longest section • Bevel: slanted, portion of needle • Heel: edge of bevel closest to hub • Tip: end of needle furthest from hub

  10. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Needles • Gauge • Diameter of the opening, or lumen • Usually ranges from 28 to 16 • The larger the gauge, the smaller the opening • Length • Varies depending on route of administration & body part • Ranges from 3/8 of an inch to 3 1/2 inches

  11. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Filters • Used in combination with needles or other CSP equipment to help prevent or remove contamination • Sizes • 0.22-micron: removes bacteria & particulates • 0.45-micron: removes general particulates • 1.2-micron: removes fungi & particulates • 5-micron: coarse filter; removes glass shards

  12. Delivery Systems (cont’d) • Filters • Filter needle • Molded into hub of needle & designed for one-time use • Removes glass shards from glass ampules • Filter straw • A thin, flexible, sterile straw with a filter in hub • Used to withdraw a single dose of fluid from glass ampule • Vented needles • Used primarily for reconstituting a powdered medication

  13. Needleless Systems • Allow for mixing of drug & base solution without use of needle & syringe • Examples: • Vial attached directly to IV bag for mixing • Drug & base solution in one bag with a barrier between them

  14. Intravenous Supplies • IV Administration Set • Parts of an IV system that determine flow rate of fluid or drug • Two types • Vented: for containers that have no venting system (IV bottles) • Unvented: for containers that have their own venting system or do not require it (IV bags) • Large-volume IV bag: 500 mL or 1 L • IV piggyback: smaller volume bag piggybacked onto larger-volume bag (250 mL, 100 mL, 50 mL)

  15. Intravenous Supplies (cont’d) • IV Bags and Bottles • Sizes: 50 mL, 100 mL, 250 mL, 500 mL, 1000 mL • Advantages of plastic bags over glass bottles: • Lighter • Less expensive • Easy to see through • Non-breakable • Take up less volume • Glass bottles used to avoid absorption of drug by plastic bag or adsorption of drug to bag

  16. Dosage Containers • Ampule • A sealed, all-glass container containing a single dose of drug • Must be discarded after use • May shed tiny shards of glass, which mix with contents & must be extracted using a filter needle or straw • Break open neck in laminar airflow workbench toward side

  17. Dosage Containers (cont’d) • Single-Dose Vials • Contain one dose of medicine • Are discarded after one use • No preservatives are added, as they are not needed • Top of vial has a rubber stopper, which is pierced by needle • Multiple-Dose Vials • Allow you to use contents more than once • Rubber stopper is punctured several times, exposing CSP to air • Preservatives are included to keep contents stable

  18. Special Equipment for Sterile Compounding • High-Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) Filtration • HEPA filters are used in all aseptic processing areas • Required to satisfy USP’s guidelines for Class 5 environments • Can extract any particles larger than 0.5 microns • Filters must be tested & certified every 6 months

  19. Special Equipment for Sterile Compounding (cont’d) • Laminar Airflow Workbench (LAFW) • A work area that prefilters large contaminants from workspace • Uses HEPA-filtered air in horizontal flow to extract smaller particles • Process • Regular room air is pulled through vent by standard filter • Air is pushed toward back of LAFW • Air passes through HEPA filter • HEPA-filtered air is then forced over work area at 90 ft/min • This sweeps particulate matter away from product being compounded

  20. Special Equipment for Sterile Compounding (cont’d) • Biological Safety Cabinet • HEPA-filtered air is blown vertically downward through top hood • Required for compounding hazardous compounds • Has clear glass or plastic shield that extends partially down hood • Shield & vertical airflow protect you from hazardous drugs

  21. Special Equipment for Sterile Compounding (cont’d) • Compounding Aseptic Isolator • A LAFW that is completely enclosed • Work surface can only be accessed through glove box openings • Materials & supplies for aseptic processing enter through special air-lock boxes attached to the unit • Uses a HEPA filter system

More Related