A parenteral medication is any medication that is not given via the gastrointestinal tract. This can include any injected medication or IV infusion.
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A parenteral medication is any medication that is not given via the gastrointestinal tract. This can include any injected medication or IV infusion.
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Parenteral administration is used when the patient is unable to take the drug orally, rapid action of medication is needed, and medication is ineffective in the gastrointestinal tract. Parenteral administration is also used to avoid the gastrointestinal tract and its first pass effect and to delivery medication to specific organs or tissues.
Gary S. Carl has written: 'Guidelines for parenteral medication usage' -- subject(s): Administration, Drugs, Handbooks, manuals, Parenteral therapy
False -- Parenteral administration means taken into the body in a manner other than through the digestive tract.
It's actually the "parenteral" route. It means some other form of administration other than ingestion, such as injection, infusion, or implantation. This most likely means an injection with a syringe.
Parenteral refers to any route of administration that bypasses the gastrointestinal tract. These routes can include Intravenous therapy (IV therapy), intramuscular/ subcutaneous/intradermal injection, buccal, sublingual, or rectal administration, or transvaginal administration (as with the vaginal contraceptive or hormone-therapy ring). Medication patches are also parenteral.
Total parenteral nutrition uses a larger bag.
Parenteral Medication is a route other than that of ingestion. This could be routes such as, IV, IM, Sub-Q, or mucosal. Source: Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary. Edition 20. F. A. Davis Co. 2001.
complication of hypergycemia undergo parenteral nutrition
periphral parental nutrition total parenteral nutrition
J. M. Hackl has written: 'Guide to parenteral nutrition' -- subject(s): Parenteral Nutrition, Parenteral feeding