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Deltoid Intramuscular Injections: A Systematic Review of Underlying . . . The deltoid is the preferred site for intramuscular injection (IMI) because of its easy accessibility for drug and vaccine administration Government immunization advisories, standard anatomy textbooks, and researchers have proposed various
Upper limb nerve injuries caused by intramuscular injection or routine . . . As the axillary nerve courses beneath the deltoid muscle and supplies the muscle, it is clearly vulnerable to needle injury Subdeltoid bursa and circumflex humeral arteries are other at-risk structures from a deltoid injection (Fig 1) [10,11]
Nursing guidelines : Intramuscular Injections Choosing a muscle is dependent on the medication volume and the age or size of the patient Poor technique and incorrect landmarking of the injection site can lead to site reactions, sub-optimal medication absorption and adverse events
The Pharmaceutics and Compounding Laboratory - University of North . . . When administering intramuscular injections into the gluteus maximus, the size of the needle must be chosen based on the patient's deposits of fat If a needle is used that is too short to pass all the way through the fat into the muscle, then the injection will be made into the fat
Avoid Shoulder Injuries When Receiving Intramuscular Vaccinations SIRVA is a shoulder injury triggered by the incorrect injection of a vaccine into the shoulder joint rather than the deltoid muscle It happens when healthcare workers do not properly locate the deltoid muscle in the upper arm and instead inject the vaccine into and around the shoulder joint
The Recommended Deltoid Intramuscular Injection Sites in the Adult . . . The deltoid intramuscular injection (IMI) must be given at or below the level of the midpoint of the deltoid muscle, but never in the upper half We recommend a site, 4 fingerbreadths 9 cm below the mid-acromion point as the safest site to avoid injury to any underlying neurovascular structures
Deltoid Intramuscular Injections: A Systematic Review of . . . - Cureus Government immunization advisories, standard anatomy textbooks, and researchers have proposed various injection techniques and sites, but specific guidelines are lacking for the administration of IMIs in the increasingly used deltoid site