How do our veins handle extra liquid from shots or IV

612 views

I was in surgery earlier and remember when the nurse put injected anesthesia and something else through the IV and I could feel the liquid push itself into my vein and it felt like my vein in my hand to elbow would explode.

That got me thinking, how does my body intake so much liquid like the full IV bag without exploding or peeing on the operating table while I’m knocked out.

In: Biology

8 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

good answers here. also:

1. the average adult has a plasma volume of probably 3.5-4 liters. shots (i’m assuming you mean immunizations or IM antibiotics etc) are orders of magnitude smaller in volume… on the order of mL. so it’s like drops in a bucket. (and technically, those don’t usually go directly into the blood stream… they’re placed in muscle tissue where the can be absorbed and they end up in the blood stream that way).
2. sometimes fluids are put directly into the bloodstream (always veins not arteries). Almost all medications (from antibiotics to blood pressure medicine to painkillers) have IV formulations. If having direct access to the blood stream is advantageous for healthcare workers (like in hospitalized patients with multiple prescriptions, patients undergoing surgery, chemo patients and many others) an IV is put in. though they’re usually less concentrated and come diluted in saline, the answer for medications is the “drops in the bucket” answer from above.
3. even if the “drops in the bucket analogy wasn’t true, we have “volume reservoirs” in our body. the biggest one is the venous system. like people have said here, veins aren’t like rigid plumbing piping. they have highly elastic walls that have enormous potential to stretch to handle more fluid while keeping the internal pressure of the fluid inside within a tightly regulated range. thats why if you chug a liter of water in like 10 minutes your blood pressure doesn’t just spike to dangerous levels. after the water goes through your stomach to your intestines, it’s absorbed and taken into the blood stream. the veins can relax to accomodate the increased fluid. eventually the kidneys take the excess and you’ll pee it out. (the kidneys are p damn cool, they are amazing at keeping the fluid and electrolyte balance in the blood in a tightrange, that’s why you can drink a TON of water without “watering down your blood” your kidneys will just make watery pee… and if you’re dehydrated, your kidneys will hold on to as much water as possible and make really concentrated pee).
4. the situation in which a large volume of liquid IS put directly into the blood stream is if you are getting hydrating fluids like saline. in that circumstance saline IS put directly into your blood stream usually it doesn’t create an excess that needs to be handled because you’re getting the fluids you need… usually it’s run slowly into your IV and your body handles it exactly the same way it would handle you drinking that much water (it just cuts out your mouth and guts). In circumstances when you are extremely dehydrated or you have lost large amount of blood the IV is run more quickly, but again, here you’re just getting the fluids you need so there isn’t really an excess to handle.

You are viewing 1 out of 8 answers, click here to view all answers.