ClarkKent
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I am taking an online class for dosage calculations for nursing. I am done reading the book and all of the homework. On the last chapter called Advanced Adult Intravenous Calculations, she added in a question I have never seen before. I worked it out but she is say I am wrong. Once you turn in the homework online, she sends you the answers via e-mail. She is “out of the office during the summer time”, and good luck getting ahold of here. So here is the question
A patient’s IV order for lidocaine states that he should receive an IV bolus of 100 mg over 2 minutes using a supply of 2% lidocaine.
What is the supply dosage of the lidocaine in mg/mL? __________ mg/mL
2% = 2g / 100mL = 2000mg / 100mL
Answer is 20 mg/mL (This part I have done)
How many milliliters will you administer for this order using the available supply? __________mL
20mg / mL = 100 mg / X (I used a different way, but this is her answer, not mine)
20X=50
X=2.5
(This is the part I do not understand, going from 100 to 50 [units not listed on her answer page, remember this is her answer not mine])
Formula I have been using since the start of the class is
(Dosage Ordered / Supplied Dosage) X Quantity = Amount to Administer
Lets plug in the numbers:
(100 mg / 20 mg) X 1 mL= 5mL NOT 2.5mL
If you read both question carefully, it does not ask anything about time. So the “over 2 minutes” statement is extra information that she likes to add into problems. She loves to give you too much information.
Any help getting this answered before I loss all of my hair would be great. Tell me that I am not getting and I need to retake the class or the professor is off her rocker. If you want to see her answer page, please let me know and I will be more then happy to send it to you. But its going to show you the same thing.
A patient’s IV order for lidocaine states that he should receive an IV bolus of 100 mg over 2 minutes using a supply of 2% lidocaine.
What is the supply dosage of the lidocaine in mg/mL? __________ mg/mL
2% = 2g / 100mL = 2000mg / 100mL
Answer is 20 mg/mL (This part I have done)
How many milliliters will you administer for this order using the available supply? __________mL
20mg / mL = 100 mg / X (I used a different way, but this is her answer, not mine)
20X=50
X=2.5
(This is the part I do not understand, going from 100 to 50 [units not listed on her answer page, remember this is her answer not mine])
Formula I have been using since the start of the class is
(Dosage Ordered / Supplied Dosage) X Quantity = Amount to Administer
Lets plug in the numbers:
(100 mg / 20 mg) X 1 mL= 5mL NOT 2.5mL
If you read both question carefully, it does not ask anything about time. So the “over 2 minutes” statement is extra information that she likes to add into problems. She loves to give you too much information.
Any help getting this answered before I loss all of my hair would be great. Tell me that I am not getting and I need to retake the class or the professor is off her rocker. If you want to see her answer page, please let me know and I will be more then happy to send it to you. But its going to show you the same thing.