you will be given glucose you will be given glucose
glucose drip is given when a person is very week
Propanolol's usually not given intravenously unless it's a surgery or an emergency
Glucose drip should be given to the patient till normal blood glucose level is restored, the patient is able to do movement properly and he or she should be encouraged to eat food which give instant energy. Even after taking glucose intravenously, glucose level may go down if proper diet is not maintained
Osteomyelitis is in fact treatable. Most of the time surgery is required to remove the dead bone. Then they will be given strong antibiotics intravenously for at least 6 weeks.
Yes, you could give the haloperidol solution orally, but the onset of action will not be as rapid as if you give it parenterally (intravenously or intramuscularly) and at typical parenteral doses, the efficacy may not be as complete.
NPH is a suspension. Only solutions should be given intravenously.
Regular insulin is the only insulin that can be given by IV
When given intravenously, lidocaine is also an antiarrythmic agent, capable of correcting some ventricular arrythmias of the heart
by mouth or intravenously
It is usually given intravenously. I believe it can be given by other routes e.g. intra-muscular.
NPH is a suspension. Only solutions should be given intravenously.
No, ultralente should not be given IV, as it will block capillaries due to its particle size.
yes, status epilepticus is a medical emergency, and you can treat it either by:drug of choice - diazepam, or lorazepam (given intravenously)phenytoin / fosphenytoin (given intravenously)phenobarbitone (given intravenously)these treatments are given as urgent, vigorous, IV and in-patient treatment.But, in severe refractory state, you might also have to give general anesthesia and neuromuscular blockers (curarine derivatives: tubocurarine, succinylcholine)