Chart — IV Therapy
IV Solution Comparison
Normal Saline, Lactated Ringer's, D5W, Half Normal Saline, D5½NS, 3% NaCl, and D10W compared by classification, osmolarity, mechanism, clinical uses, and key nursing considerations.
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.
Classification Quick Reference
| Solution | Classification | Osmolarity | Water Movement | Volume Resuscitation? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.9% NaCl (NS) | Isotonic | 308 mOsm/L | No net shift | Yes — 1st choice |
| LR | Isotonic | 273 mOsm/L | No net shift | Yes (no blood products) |
| D5W | Isotonic → Hypotonic | 252 mOsm/L | INTO cells (after metabolism) | No |
| 0.45% NaCl (½NS) | Hypotonic | 154 mOsm/L | INTO cells | No |
| D5½NS | Hypertonic → Hypotonic | 406 mOsm/L | INTO cells (after metabolism) | No |
| 3% NaCl | Hypertonic | 1026 mOsm/L | OUT of cells | No (cerebral edema use) |
| D10W | Hypertonic | 505 mOsm/L | OUT of cells | No |
Normal serum osmolarity: 275–295 mOsm/L
Solution Detail Cards
Normal Saline
0.9% NaCl (NS)
Osmolarity: 308 mOsm/L
Electrolytes: Na⁺ 154, Cl⁻ 154 mEq/L
Mechanism: No net osmotic shift — stays in extracellular space
Common Uses
- Volume replacement (1st choice)
- Blood transfusion compatible flush
- Medication dilution
- Na⁺ replacement
- Pre/post-procedure hydration
Key Considerations
- ⚠ Large volumes → hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis (high Cl⁻)
- Avoid in hypernatremia
- May worsen fluid overload in CHF/CKD/cirrhosis
NCLEX: Most common crystalloid in acute care — first-line for resuscitation
Lactated Ringer's
LR
Osmolarity: 273 mOsm/L
Electrolytes: Na⁺ 130, K⁺ 4, Ca²⁺ 3, Cl⁻ 109, Lactate 28 mEq/L
Mechanism: Stays in extracellular space; lactate metabolized to bicarbonate in liver
Common Uses
- Volume replacement
- Burns (Parkland formula)
- Trauma/surgical resuscitation
- Mild acidosis
Key Considerations
- 🚫 INCOMPATIBLE with blood — calcium causes clotting
- 🚫 Avoid in severe liver failure (cannot metabolize lactate)
- 🚫 Avoid in hyperkalemia (contains 4 mEq/L K⁺)
NCLEX: Do NOT use with blood transfusions — calcium in LR clots blood
D5W
5% Dextrose in Water
Osmolarity: 252 mOsm/L (functionally hypotonic after glucose metabolism)
Electrolytes: None (dextrose only)
Mechanism: After glucose metabolized → free water distributed equally intra/extracellularly
Common Uses
- Medication delivery / dilution
- Free water supplement in hypernatremia
- Mild hypoglycemia
- Caloric supplementation (170 kcal/L)
Key Considerations
- 🚫 NEVER for volume resuscitation — does not expand vascular space after metabolism
- 🚫 Avoid in head injury or cerebral edema
- ⚠ Monitor blood glucose — raises BG
- ⚠ Large volumes → hyponatremia
NCLEX: D5W = free water after glucose metabolism. Never use for shock or volume replacement.
Half Normal Saline
0.45% NaCl (½NS)
Osmolarity: 154 mOsm/L
Electrolytes: Na⁺ 77, Cl⁻ 77 mEq/L
Mechanism: Water moves from vascular space INTO cells — rehydrates intracellular compartment
Common Uses
- Cellular dehydration (DKA after initial isotonic phase)
- Hypernatremia — gentle correction
- Maintenance hydration in some patients
Key Considerations
- 🚫 Contraindicated in head injury, SIADH, existing hyponatremia
- 🚫 Never for fluid resuscitation — does not expand intravascular volume
- ⚠ Risk of cerebral edema if infused too rapidly
NCLEX: Hypotonic = water moves INTO cells. Avoid in neuro/cerebral edema patients.
D5½NS
5% Dextrose in 0.45% NaCl
Osmolarity: 406 mOsm/L (in bag)
Electrolytes: Na⁺ 77, Cl⁻ 77 mEq/L + 5% dextrose
Mechanism: Hypertonic until glucose metabolized → behaves as ½NS (hypotonic)
Common Uses
- Maintenance IV fluids (common inpatient maintenance)
- Provides hydration + glucose supplementation
- Post-operative maintenance (often + KCl 20 mEq/L)
Key Considerations
- ⚠ Monitor blood glucose
- ⚠ Not for volume resuscitation
- ⚠ After glucose metabolism: hypotonic effects — monitor Na⁺ with prolonged use
NCLEX: Most common maintenance IV fluid in hospitalized patients
3% NaCl
Hypertonic Saline
Osmolarity: 1026 mOsm/L
Electrolytes: Na⁺ 513, Cl⁻ 513 mEq/L
Mechanism: Pulls water OUT of cells into vascular space — rapidly raises serum Na⁺; reduces cerebral edema
Common Uses
- Symptomatic severe hyponatremia (seizures, coma, respiratory distress)
- Cerebral edema / elevated ICP
- SIADH refractory to restriction
Key Considerations
- 🚫 MUST use central line — severe phlebitis if peripheral infusion
- 🚫 Never bolus — controlled pump infusion only
- ⚠ Correct Na⁺ no faster than 8–12 mEq/L in 24 hrs — risk of osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS)
- ⚠ Monitor serum Na⁺ every 2–4 hours during infusion
NCLEX: Hypertonic saline = central access required. Rapid Na⁺ correction → osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS).
D10W
10% Dextrose in Water
Osmolarity: 505 mOsm/L
Electrolytes: None (dextrose only)
Mechanism: Pulls water from extravascular space; provides concentrated caloric source
Common Uses
- Neonatal hypoglycemia
- Interim glucose support (TPN bridge)
- Prevention of rebound hypoglycemia after insulin infusion
Key Considerations
- ⚠ Central access preferred for prolonged infusion
- ⚠ Monitor BG closely — 10× dextrose concentration vs D5W
- Not for general resuscitation
NCLEX: D10W is hypertonic — used in neonatal settings and hypoglycemia rescue; monitor BG.
Critical Safety Rules
| Situation | Risk / Rule |
|---|---|
| LR + blood | Calcium in LR binds citrate anticoagulant → clot formation. Only NS is compatible with blood products. |
| D5W for shock | After glucose metabolism, D5W = free water. Does NOT expand intravascular volume. Never use for resuscitation. |
| 3% NaCl peripheral infusion | Causes severe phlebitis/tissue necrosis. Central venous access is REQUIRED. |
| Rapid Na⁺ correction | Na⁺ must not rise faster than 8–12 mEq/L in 24 hours. Risk: osmotic demyelination syndrome (central pontine myelinolysis). |
| ½NS in head injury | Hypotonic fluid moves water INTO brain cells → worsens cerebral edema. |
| LR in liver failure | Liver cannot metabolize lactate → accumulation → worsens metabolic acidosis. |
Related Resources
Data source: Intravenous Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice / Evidence-Based IV Fluid Therapy Guidelines
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with INS Standards of Practice for Infusion Nursing / Evidence-Based IV Fluid Therapy 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 →
