Reference — IV Therapy
Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) Reference
TPN feeds a patient entirely through a vein — which makes it simultaneously life-saving and one of the most infection- and glucose-hazardous infusions a nurse manages. The safety rules, monitoring schedule, and complications, in one place.
Educational use only. TPN composition, rates, weaning, and insulin coverage are individualized by the provider, pharmacist, and dietitian; follow current orders and facility protocol. 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.
When TPN is used: only when the gut cannot be used — prolonged ileus, bowel obstruction, short bowel syndrome, severe pancreatitis, high-output fistulas, GI ischemia. If the gut works, enteral feeding wins on infection risk, cost, and gut integrity.
Safety Rules
Central line for TPN
Full TPN is hypertonic (dextrose typically >10%) and destroys peripheral veins — it runs through a central line (PICC, CVC, port). Peripheral parenteral nutrition (PPN) is a dilute, short-term bridge only.
Dedicated lumen, nothing else in it
TPN gets its own lumen — no medications, no blood draws, no piggybacks through the same lumen. Lipids, when separate, infuse per pharmacy guidance.
Verify the bag like a high-alert drug
Two-nurse verification per policy against the order: each TPN bag is compounded for one specific patient's labs that day. Inspect for cracking or oily separation in 3-in-1 mixtures and never infuse a questionable bag.
Tubing and bag every 24 hours
TPN is bacterial growth medium. Change bag and tubing every 24 hours (lipid tubing more often per policy), use a filter per pharmacy, and treat every hub access as a sterile event.
Never stop TPN abruptly
The pancreas is matching a continuous glucose load with insulin — abrupt discontinuation causes rebound hypoglycemia. Wean per orders. If the next bag is unavailable, hang D10W at the same rate per protocol until it arrives.
If the rate falls behind, do not catch up
Never speed TPN to make up missed volume — the glucose load spikes wildly. Resume at the ordered rate and document.
Monitoring Schedule
| Parameter | Frequency | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Blood glucose | Per protocol (commonly q4–6h initially) | Hyperglycemia is the most common metabolic complication; sliding-scale insulin is often ordered |
| Daily weight | Daily, same scale and time | Tracks fluid status and nutrition response — gains >0.5–1 kg/day are fluid, not tissue |
| I&O | Every shift | Hyperosmolar load risks osmotic diuresis and dehydration |
| Electrolytes, BUN/Cr, phosphorus, magnesium | Per orders (often daily at first) | Formulas are adjusted to labs; refeeding syndrome shifts phosphate, potassium, and magnesium into cells |
| Liver function tests, triglycerides | Periodically per orders | Long-term TPN can cause cholestasis and fatty liver; lipids raise triglycerides |
| Temperature & site | Every shift | Fever in a TPN patient is a central line infection until proven otherwise (CLABSI) |
Complications & Responses
| Complication | What You See | Nursing Action |
|---|---|---|
| Hyperglycemia | Glucose trending up, polyuria, blurred vision | Insulin per orders; verify rate hasn't been increased to 'catch up' |
| Rebound hypoglycemia | Diaphoresis, shakiness, confusion after TPN stops or slows | Check glucose, treat per protocol, hang D10W if infusion interrupted |
| CLABSI | Fever, chills, rigors — often with flushing of the line | Notify provider, anticipate cultures (peripheral + line), do not assume another source |
| Fluid overload | Rapid weight gain, edema, crackles, dyspnea | Slow rate per orders, assess, daily weights honestly trended |
| Refeeding syndrome | Weakness, arrhythmias, falling phosphorus/potassium/magnesium in a malnourished patient | Anticipate slow initiation and aggressive electrolyte replacement; escalate early |
| Air embolism (line risk) | Sudden dyspnea, chest pain, hypoxia during tubing changes | Clamp line, left side + Trendelenburg per protocol, oxygen, call for help |
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦TPN runs through a central line; PPN through a peripheral line is dilute and short-term only.
- ✦Next bag not ready? Hang D10W at the same rate — never just stop TPN.
- ✦Never increase the rate to catch up missed volume.
- ✦Fever on TPN = suspect the line (CLABSI) first.
- ✦TPN bag and tubing change every 24 hours; the lumen is dedicated — no meds, no blood draws.
- ✦Hyperglycemia is the most common metabolic complication — expect scheduled glucose checks and insulin coverage.
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 →
