Reference — IV Therapy
IV Therapy Complications Reference
Infiltration, extravasation, phlebitis, CLABSI, catheter occlusion, air embolism, and fluid overload — causes, clinical signs and symptoms, nursing interventions, grading, and prevention.
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), and Air Embolism. Recognize early — act immediately.
Quick Reference by Urgency
| 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 as ordered |
| Extravasation | Local | CRITICAL | Stop infusion; aspirate; notify provider; antidote if ordered |
| Fluid Overload | Systemic | Moderate–Severe | Slow/stop IV; elevate HOB; oxygen if needed; notify provider |
| Phlebitis | Local | Moderate | Remove catheter; warm compress; resite; notify provider if grade ≥3 |
| Infiltration | Local | Moderate | Stop infusion; aspirate; remove catheter; elevate; warm compress |
| Catheter Occlusion | Mechanical | Moderate | Assess for kinking; reposition; do not force flush; notify provider |
Complication Details
Infiltration
LocalNon-vesicant fluid or medication leaks from the vein into surrounding interstitial tissue
Causes
- Catheter displaced from vein
- Vein wall punctured during insertion
- Venous fragility (elderly, edematous patients)
- IV site over a joint
- Catheter poorly secured
- Excessive infusion pressure
Signs & Symptoms
- Swelling at or around IV site
- Pallor and blanching of skin
- Cool, tight skin at site
- Slowed or absent infusion rate
- No blood return
- Mild discomfort or pressure at site
Nursing Interventions
- Stop infusion immediately
- Do NOT remove catheter until residual fluid aspirated
- Remove catheter after aspirating
- Elevate extremity above heart level
- Apply warm compress (promotes reabsorption)
- Outline swelling extent with marker and document
- Notify provider if large volume or persistent swelling
- Resite IV proximal to or in opposite arm
Prevention
- Avoid inserting over joints
- Use smallest appropriate gauge for infusion type
- Assess site every 1–4 hours
- Secure catheter and tubing well
- Educate patient to report pain, swelling, or burning
Grading: Grade 1: Skin blanching, edema <1 inch. Grade 2: Edema 1–6 inches. Grade 3: Edema >6 inches, cool skin, decreased capillary refill. Grade 4: Tight/leathery skin, bruising, gross edema, circulatory impairment.
Urgency: Moderate
Extravasation
Local — HIGH PRIORITYVesicant (tissue-damaging) medication leaks from the vein into surrounding tissue — can cause progressive, permanent tissue damage
Causes
- Vesicant infusion through peripheral IV site
- Displaced catheter during infusion
- Needle dislodgement in implanted port
- Fragile or small veins
- High-rate vesicant infusion
- Undetected catheter tip migration
Signs & Symptoms
- All infiltration signs PLUS:
- Burning, stinging, or intense pain at site
- Blisters forming around insertion site (early vesicant sign)
- Progressive erythema or necrosis over hours to days
- Induration (firm tissue around site)
Nursing Interventions
- STOP infusion immediately — do not delay
- Leave catheter in place — aspirate residual medication before removal
- Outline extent of swelling and document time, size, appearance
- Remove catheter after aspiration attempt
- Elevate extremity
- Apply compress: cold for most medications; warm for vinca alkaloids
- Notify provider and pharmacy STAT
- Administer antidote if ordered (phentolamine for vasopressors, dexrazoxane for anthracyclines, hyaluronidase for vinca alkaloids)
- Surgical consultation for large-volume vesicant extravasation
Prevention
- Use central access for all vesicant medications when possible
- Assess site every 1–2 hours during vesicant infusions
- Verify blood return before initiating vesicant infusion
- Use only power-injectable PICC/port for contrast
- Educate patient to report any burning or stinging immediately
Grading: Grade 1: Erythema <1 inch. Grade 2: Erythema 1–6 inches, blistering. Grade 3: Erythema >6 inches, blistering, ulceration, numbness. Grade 4: Necrosis, tissue loss, life-threatening consequences.
Urgency: CRITICAL — immediate action required
Phlebitis
LocalInflammation of the vein wall at or near the IV site — may involve blood clot formation (thrombophlebitis)
Causes
- Chemical: irritating or vesicant medications, pH extremes, hyperosmolar solutions
- Mechanical: catheter movement, poor stabilization, catheter too large for vein
- Bacterial: poor aseptic technique during insertion or access, prolonged dwell time
- Post-infusion phlebitis: develops 24–96 hours after catheter removal
Signs & Symptoms
- Redness, warmth, tenderness along vein tract
- Induration (palpable hard cord)
- Swelling at or above insertion site
- Warmth and erythema extending proximal to site
- Purulent drainage (if bacterial phlebitis)
Nursing Interventions
- Remove peripheral catheter immediately
- Apply warm compress to affected area
- Elevate extremity
- Document phlebitis grade
- Notify provider for severe or spreading phlebitis
- Culture site if purulent drainage present
- Administer anti-inflammatory medication if ordered
- Resite IV in opposite extremity when needed
Prevention
- Use smallest gauge catheter compatible with therapy
- Replace peripheral catheters based on clinical indication (signs of complication or no longer needed) with frequent site assessment, rather than on a routine 72–96 hour schedule (2024 INS Standards)
- Dilute irritating medications; use piggyback rather than direct push when possible
- Select stable site away from joints
- Use proper aseptic technique during insertion and access
- Assess site every 1–4 hours
Grading: Grade 1: Erythema +/- pain. Grade 2: Erythema + pain + induration. Grade 3: Erythema, pain, induration + palpable cord. Grade 4: Palpable cord >1 inch, purulent drainage.
Urgency: Moderate — remove catheter and resite
CLABSI (Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infection)
SystemicA primary bloodstream infection in a patient with a central venous catheter (CVC, PICC, or port) present when infection is identified and for ≥2 days before, with no other identifiable source
Causes
- Skin organisms migrating along catheter tract (most common)
- Intraluminal contamination during catheter hub access
- Hematogenous seeding from another source
- Contaminated infusate (rare)
- Risk factors: femoral site, prolonged dwell, TPN, immunocompromised host, poor insertion technique
Signs & Symptoms
- Fever >38°C (100.4°F) or hypothermia <36°C
- Chills/rigors
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Site redness, purulence, or tenderness
- No other source of bacteremia identified
Nursing Interventions
- Notify provider immediately
- Draw blood cultures (×2 sets: one from catheter lumen and one peripheral)
- Initiate broad-spectrum antibiotics as ordered
- Assess for sepsis/septic shock — begin sepsis protocol if indicated
- Remove catheter per provider order (may not be removed if no alternative access)
- Antibiotic lock therapy for salvageable catheters (per policy)
- Monitor vital signs and labs closely
Prevention
- Use CLABSI prevention bundle: hand hygiene, maximum sterile barrier precautions, CHG skin antisepsis, optimal site selection, daily reassessment of need
- Avoid femoral site when possible
- Strict aseptic technique for all catheter access (scrub the hub)
- Remove catheter as soon as no longer clinically indicated
- Use CHG-impregnated dressings and catheter
- Limit number of catheter lumens to those needed
Grading: CDC/NHSN definition — meets criteria or does not; no grading scale
Urgency: CRITICAL — sepsis risk; notify provider immediately
Catheter Occlusion
Local/MechanicalPartial or complete blockage of catheter lumen preventing fluid infusion or blood aspiration
Causes
- Fibrin sheath or clot formation
- Drug precipitation (incompatible medications mixed in line)
- Catheter kinking or positional occlusion
- Lipid deposits (TPN)
- Mechanical valve failure
Signs & Symptoms
- Sluggish or absent infusion rate despite no infiltration
- Unable to aspirate blood return
- Resistance when flushing
- Pump alarms for occlusion
- Positional — flow improves or worsens with arm movement or position change
Nursing Interventions
- Assess for kinking — straighten catheter
- Reposition patient's arm or body
- Attempt gentle aspiration with syringe
- Notify provider if unable to clear
- tPA (alteplase) instillation for thrombotic occlusion per order
- Do NOT forcefully flush an occluded catheter — risk of catheter rupture or embolism
- Catheter exchange over guidewire or replacement if unresolvable
Prevention
- Flush with 10 mL NS using push-pause technique before and after each use
- Flush between incompatible medications
- Maintain positive pressure on catheter when disconnecting flush
- Change TPN tubing per facility policy (lipid-containing solutions every 24 hours)
- Use positive-displacement connectors per policy
Grading: Partial occlusion: can infuse but not aspirate. Complete occlusion: cannot infuse or aspirate.
Urgency: Moderate — do not force; notify provider if unable to clear
Air Embolism
Systemic — LIFE-THREATENINGAir enters the venous system through an IV line, catheter hub, or needle tract — can cause cardiovascular obstruction and death if large volume
Causes
- IV tubing disconnection or hub cap off
- Catheter change or insertion without patient positioned correctly
- Cracked or damaged IV tubing
- Large central line catheter left open to air
- Port needle removal before clamping line
Signs & Symptoms
- Sudden onset of dyspnea, tachypnea
- Chest pain or tightness
- Mill-wheel murmur (churning heart sound on auscultation)
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Altered LOC, cyanosis, or sudden deterioration
- Patient reports 'air sucking' sensation during CVC change
Nursing Interventions
- Clamp the IV line immediately
- Position patient in left lateral Trendelenburg (Durant's maneuver) — keeps air in right ventricle, prevents air lock in pulmonary outflow
- Call for emergency assistance
- Administer 100% oxygen
- Provider may aspirate air via catheter (emergent)
- CPR if patient arrests
- Document event and notify provider/risk management
Prevention
- Prime IV tubing completely before connecting
- Use Luer-lock connections — check all connections before infusion
- Clamp catheter before disconnecting tubing
- Position patient supine or Trendelenburg during CVC insertion/removal
- Ask patient to hum or hold breath (Valsalva) during catheter changes when not on ventilator
- Use occlusive dressing over insertion site after PICC/CVC removal
Grading: Volume-dependent: small volumes often asymptomatic; >50 mL may be fatal
Urgency: CRITICAL — emergency response required
Fluid Overload
SystemicExcess intravascular volume exceeding cardiac and renal compensatory capacity — results in pulmonary and/or peripheral edema
Causes
- IV fluid rate too high
- Incorrect fluid type (hypotonic fluids in fluid-restricted patients)
- Renal insufficiency or failure reducing fluid excretion
- Heart failure — reduced cardiac output causes fluid accumulation
- Rapid administration of colloids or blood products
- SIADH — water retention without solute
Signs & Symptoms
- Crackles/rales on auscultation (pulmonary edema)
- Peripheral edema (pitting — bilateral)
- Weight gain (1 kg = approximately 1 L fluid)
- Elevated blood pressure, bounding pulse
- Jugular venous distension (JVD)
- Dyspnea, orthopnea, decreased SpO₂
- Increased CVP if monitored
- Foamy, pink-tinged sputum (severe pulmonary edema)
Nursing Interventions
- Slow or stop IV infusion — notify provider
- Elevate HOB 30–45°
- Administer diuretics as ordered (furosemide most common)
- Restrict IV and oral fluid intake as ordered
- Monitor I&O, daily weights, serum electrolytes, BUN/creatinine
- Apply oxygen if SpO₂ decreased
- For severe pulmonary edema: position patient upright legs dangling, continuous monitoring, prepare for invasive interventions
Prevention
- Accurate I&O documentation including all IV fluids
- Daily weights — 1 kg gain in 24 hours warrants assessment
- Use smart pumps for infusion rate control
- Assess for fluid overload risk factors before and during infusion (CHF, CKD, elderly)
- Reassess need for IV fluids at every shift and each assessment
Grading: Mild: weight gain, trace edema. Moderate: significant edema, crackles. Severe: frank pulmonary edema, hypoxia.
Urgency: Moderate to severe — escalate based on SpO₂ and respiratory status
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with Infusion Nurses Society (INS) Standards of Practice · CDC (CLABSI prevention) · Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). 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 →
