Chart — IV Therapy
IV Complication Recognition
Infiltration, extravasation, phlebitis, CLABSI, catheter occlusion, air embolism, and fluid overload — signs and symptoms, nursing interventions, and prevention side-by-side for rapid clinical reference.
Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Critical complications requiring emergency response: Extravasation (vesicant), CLABSI (sepsis risk), Air Embolism. Recognize early — act immediately.
Quick Reference — Urgency and First Action
| Complication | Type | Urgency | First Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air Embolism | Systemic | CRITICAL | Clamp line; left lateral Trendelenburg; O₂; call for help |
| CLABSI | Systemic | CRITICAL | Blood cultures ×2; notify provider; antibiotics |
| Extravasation | Local (vesicant) | CRITICAL | Stop infusion; aspirate; notify provider; antidote if ordered |
| Fluid Overload | Systemic | Moderate–Severe | Slow/stop IV; HOB up; O₂; diuretics per order |
| Phlebitis | Local | Moderate | Remove catheter; warm compress; resite |
| Infiltration | Local | Moderate | Stop infusion; aspirate; remove catheter; elevate; warm compress |
| Catheter Occlusion | Mechanical | Moderate | Check kinking; reposition; gentle aspiration; do NOT force flush |
Complication Detail Cards
Infiltration
Non-vesicant fluid leaks into interstitial tissue
Signs & Symptoms
- Swelling at site
- Pallor / blanching
- Cool, tight skin
- Slow/absent flow
- No blood return
- Mild discomfort
Nursing Interventions
- STOP infusion
- Aspirate residual, then remove catheter
- Elevate extremity
- Warm compress
- Document extent (mark swelling border)
- Resite IV in opposite extremity
Prevention
- Avoid inserting over joints
- Assess site every 1–4 hrs
- Secure catheter well
- Educate patient to report pain/swelling
Extravasation
Vesicant medication leaks into tissue — can cause necrosis
Signs & Symptoms
- All infiltration signs PLUS:
- Burning, stinging, intense pain
- Blistering (early vesicant sign)
- Progressive erythema/necrosis
- Induration (firm tissue)
Nursing Interventions
- STOP infusion IMMEDIATELY
- Do NOT remove catheter — aspirate first
- Outline/document swelling
- Remove catheter after aspiration
- Elevate; apply compress (cold most drugs, warm for vinca alkaloids)
- Notify provider and pharmacy STAT
- Administer antidote if ordered
Prevention
- Use central access for ALL vesicants
- Assess every 1–2 hrs during vesicant infusion
- Verify blood return before starting vesicant
- Educate patient to report burning immediately
Phlebitis
Vein wall inflammation — chemical, mechanical, or bacterial
Signs & Symptoms
- Redness, warmth along vein tract
- Tenderness at site
- Palpable firm cord
- Swelling proximal to site
- Purulent drainage (bacterial)
Nursing Interventions
- Remove PIV immediately
- Warm compress to affected area
- Elevate extremity
- Document phlebitis grade
- Culture site if purulent drainage
- Resite in opposite extremity
Prevention
- Replace PIV based on clinical indication (not a fixed interval)
- Smallest gauge for infusion type
- Dilute irritating medications
- Avoid joints and small veins
- Aseptic technique at insertion and access
CLABSI
Central line-associated bloodstream infection
Signs & Symptoms
- Fever >38°C or hypothermia <36°C
- Chills / rigors
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Site erythema or purulence
- No other source of bacteremia
Nursing Interventions
- Notify provider STAT
- Blood cultures ×2 (catheter lumen + peripheral)
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics as ordered
- Initiate sepsis protocol if indicated
- Assess for catheter removal per order
- Monitor VS, labs closely
Prevention
- CLABSI bundle: HH + max sterile barrier + CHG prep + optimal site + daily necessity review
- Scrub hub ≥15 sec before each access
- Remove catheter when no longer needed
- Use CHG-impregnated dressings
- Minimize catheter lumens
Catheter Occlusion
Partial or complete blockage of catheter lumen
Signs & Symptoms
- Sluggish or absent infusion
- Unable to aspirate blood return
- Resistance when flushing
- Pump occlusion alarm
- Positional — changes with arm movement
Nursing Interventions
- Check for kinking — straighten catheter
- Reposition arm/patient
- Gently aspirate with syringe
- Notify provider if unable to clear
- Alteplase (tPA) per order for clot
- Do NOT force flush — risk of catheter rupture
Prevention
- Push-pause flush technique with 10 mL NS
- Flush between incompatible medications
- Positive pressure disconnect from catheter
- Change TPN tubing every 24 hrs
- Use positive-displacement connectors
Air Embolism
Air enters venous system through IV line or catheter tract
Signs & Symptoms
- Sudden dyspnea, tachypnea
- Chest pain or tightness
- Mill-wheel murmur
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Cyanosis, altered LOC
- Rapid deterioration
Nursing Interventions
- Clamp IV line immediately
- Left lateral Trendelenburg position (Durant's maneuver)
- Call for emergency assistance
- 100% oxygen
- Provider may aspirate air via catheter (emergent)
- CPR if cardiac arrest
- Document and notify risk management
Prevention
- Prime tubing completely before connecting
- Use Luer-lock connections throughout
- Clamp catheter before disconnecting tubing
- Supine/Trendelenburg positioning during CVC changes
- Valsalva or breath-hold during catheter removal
- Occlusive dressing over PICC/CVC site after removal
Fluid Overload
Excess intravascular volume beyond cardiac/renal compensatory capacity
Signs & Symptoms
- Crackles / rales on auscultation
- Peripheral pitting edema (bilateral)
- Weight gain (1 kg ≈ 1 L)
- Elevated BP, bounding pulse
- JVD, dyspnea, orthopnea
- Decreased SpO₂
- Foamy pink sputum (severe)
Nursing Interventions
- Slow or stop IV infusion
- Notify provider
- Elevate HOB 30–45°
- Diuretics as ordered (furosemide)
- Restrict fluids as ordered
- Apply O₂ if SpO₂ decreased
- Monitor I&O, daily weights, electrolytes
Prevention
- Accurate I&O every shift
- Daily weight at same time/scale/clothing
- Smart pumps for rate control
- Assess fluid overload risk (CHF, CKD, elderly) before hanging IV
- Reassess IV necessity at each assessment
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦First action for any IV complication: STOP the infusion immediately. Always.
- ✦Do NOT remove the catheter before aspirating residual medication during extravasation — reducing the volume in tissue matters.
- ✦Vasopressor extravasation antidote: phentolamine (alpha-blocker). Vinca alkaloid: hyaluronidase + warm compress. Anthracycline: dexrazoxane + cold compress.
- ✦Air embolism position: left lateral Trendelenburg (Durant's maneuver) — traps air in right ventricle away from pulmonary outflow tract.
- ✦CLABSI blood cultures: draw one from catheter lumen and one peripheral — both sets needed for NHSN definition.
- ✦Midline catheters are NOT central lines — cannot be used for TPN or vesicant medications.
- ✦Daily weight is the most sensitive indicator of fluid balance — 1 kg gain ≈ 1 L retained fluid.
Related Resources
Data source: INS Standards of Practice for Infusion Nursing / CDC HAI and CLABSI Prevention Guidelines
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with INS Standards of Practice for Infusion Nursing / CDC HAI and CLABSI Prevention Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
