yes
What is the difference between normal saline solution and ringer's lactate solution?
yap it looks possible to dilute with ringer lactate
I am doing a paper and need to know the difference between ringer's lactate and lactate ringers
No difference. Both are same. Actually question is wrong. question should be like this- what is the difference between Lactated Ringer's solution (also called as Ringer's Lactate solution) and Ringer's saline solution?
no
ringer lactate solution containing dextrose 5% while ringer solution not containing dextrose
It´s around 6.5, slightly acidic.
the solutions used in iv are the hypotonic , hypertonic, isotonic solutions .. :)
give them wateranswerif no vomitingORS(oral rehydration solution) is the bestif their is vomiting than simply put the patient on intravenous fluide like normal saline,ringer lactate and treat the underlaying cause
Salt in water is sodium. Ringer's lactate solution (sodium lactate solution and Hartmann's solution), is a mix of sodium chloride, sodium lactate, potassium chloride, and calcium chloride in water. Sodium Chloride is a mix of sodium and chloride.
Yes; the solution called "Ringer's Lactate" is a mixture containing water, essential salts and electrolytes, and glucose.
You give IV fluid to the patient. Generally there are two types of fluids. IV normal saline or Ringer's lactate and 5 % dextrose. All of them have same osmotic pressure as the body fluid has got. But the dextrose is rapidly used by body to give you plane water. So the normal saline and Ringer's lactate solution is distributed across the extracellular compartment. Dextrose, that means plane water is distributed across the whole body fluid. Normal adult has got 14 liters of extracellular fluid and 28 liters of fluid inside the cells. You have the fluid in the body till kidneys excrete the same. Respective fluid spreads across the respective cellular compartment. It gives you edema.