It must have been too much air, but I’ve never had one explode. It usually gets hard to push in any more air before that. I’ll put on some safety gloves and see what I can do.
Thanks for your reply. Yeah I have heard its unusual for that to happen. I will make sure next time that i am not putting too much air in. I will get there in the end lol.
@@benji18111 Was it an expired medication by any chance? I saw medication burst out when someone put a needle into a vial while we where disposing of expired meds. Or did the glass itself break?
I almost never give it air if the dose is that small or just half of what the dose is. Make sure you equalize the pressure of the syringe before withdrawing it. Perfect example is drawing up the Pfizer vaccine, if u give it air, your risk having it explode and losing doses.
Thank u man I’m trying to help my doggo she’s a bootiful we’ll actually booty-less 😂German shepherd. I love her since we adopted her and we have no experience with needles or injections or anything of the sort lol. So when our dog got bit by something on her ear so we had to give her 1.5 lines in a needle and give her a shot of penicillin in the ass
Man you wasted a shit load of oil when you squirted it out to get rid of the air bubble😂 You should’ve done that whilst the needle was still in the vial.
@@ToddOyen I took it out of the fridge and thought some of the bubbles would dissipate. The injectable substance is like a light gel. I am supposed to be getting 5 doses from each vial, but sometimes if there are too many bubbles I will only be able to get 4 doses and lose some of the medicine. I’m not sure how bubbles are forming inside the vials
@@phlebgrl6064 to be honest, without seeing it I’m not sure how the bubbles are forming either. You may be able to get a couple of doses out without first injecting air. There may be more room to inject the air then. My experience is that I can’t get all the med out without replacing it with some air. It’s just too much of a vacuum.
Okay so my question here is if you inject the vaccine out of vial when air bubbles form, kindly answer me that the amount of vaccine to be administred for the patient who comes at last won't be less? (From the same vial) Please reply. I was the last patient to be administered the vaccine from the vial. Last 10th dose. I wonder if they had given me the required amount of vaccine or not. I had seen her hitting at the syringe again and again. I wonder why did she do that. Was there not enough medications or?
I wasn’t there to witness what she was trying to do. If I had to guess I think she was just trying to remove every last air bubble before injecting you. Sometimes the bubbles can be sticky.
This needs to be re-done with the proper measurements. It defeats the purpose of educating people to leave it is milligrams when what you’re talking about is milliliters!
@@mintbutterfly10 Actually no, being specific is of vital importance. for example one vial might be 1mg/1ml whereas a different one might be 10mg/1ml.
That's right. Milliliters is always right, since the concentration differs (sorry for poor English). In this video we don't even know if this man's fluid is 1mg/ ml, so possibly this good man did make a mistake by saying 'mg'. Cut the false advise in the comments. Just call them ml, if you mean air or fluid in your syringe@@chaiguevara2267
Thank you so much. This helped my son and our pup! Best wishes!
Life saver, great content mate. thanks a lot!
Thank you! So glad you like the videos
best one i have seen👍
Thank you!
Thanks for the demo. When i injected air into my vial it exploded. Do you know what I could have done wrong?
It must have been too much air, but I’ve never had one explode. It usually gets hard to push in any more air before that. I’ll put on some safety gloves and see what I can do.
Thanks for your reply. Yeah I have heard its unusual for that to happen. I will make sure next time that i am not putting too much air in. I will get there in the end lol.
@@benji18111 Was it an expired medication by any chance? I saw medication burst out when someone put a needle into a vial while we where disposing of expired meds. Or did the glass itself break?
I almost never give it air if the dose is that small or just half of what the dose is. Make sure you equalize the pressure of the syringe before withdrawing it. Perfect example is drawing up the Pfizer vaccine, if u give it air, your risk having it explode and losing doses.
thanks i didnt know hot to draw my steroids lool
So glad it helped!
Thank u man I’m trying to help my doggo she’s a bootiful we’ll actually booty-less 😂German shepherd. I love her since we adopted her and we have no experience with needles or injections or anything of the sort lol. So when our dog got bit by something on her ear so we had to give her 1.5 lines in a needle and give her a shot of penicillin in the ass
I don't get liquid from vial..many times it sucks...into medication ..y?
Milliliters 😭
Man you wasted a shit load of oil when you squirted it out to get rid of the air bubble😂 You should’ve done that whilst the needle was still in the vial.
The medicine inside the vial gets bubbles that affect my dosage. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!!
Try to not inject the air into the liquid. Sometimes tapping the vial will cause the bubbles to come to the top of the liquid and return to the air
@@ToddOyen I took it out of the fridge and thought some of the bubbles would dissipate. The injectable substance is like a light gel. I am supposed to be getting 5 doses from each vial, but sometimes if there are too many bubbles I will only be able to get 4 doses and lose some of the medicine. I’m not sure how bubbles are forming inside the vials
@@ToddOyen By the way, thank you for responding!
@@phlebgrl6064 to be honest, without seeing it I’m not sure how the bubbles are forming either. You may be able to get a couple of doses out without first injecting air. There may be more room to inject the air then. My experience is that I can’t get all the med out without replacing it with some air. It’s just too much of a vacuum.
@@ToddOyen Thanks a lot. Makes me feel better for the next time I need to order.
another half video
Okay so my question here is if you inject the vaccine out of vial when air bubbles form, kindly answer me that the amount of vaccine to be administred for the patient who comes at last won't be less? (From the same vial)
Please reply. I was the last patient to be administered the vaccine from the vial. Last 10th dose. I wonder if they had given me the required amount of vaccine or not. I had seen her hitting at the syringe again and again. I wonder why did she do that. Was there not enough medications or?
I wasn’t there to witness what she was trying to do. If I had to guess I think she was just trying to remove every last air bubble before injecting you. Sometimes the bubbles can be sticky.
This needs to be re-done with the proper measurements. It defeats the purpose of educating people to leave it is milligrams when what you’re talking about is milliliters!
Sure thing. Go for it! I made a mistake. I just haven’t taken the time to correct it. We’ll go over it in class.
Milliliter not milligram ....
It's milliliter, not milligram.
It can be measured either way. It does have weight.
@@mintbutterfly10 Actually no, being specific is of vital importance. for example one vial might be 1mg/1ml whereas a different one might be 10mg/1ml.
That's right. Milliliters is always right, since the concentration differs (sorry for poor English). In this video we don't even know if this man's fluid is 1mg/ ml, so possibly this good man did make a mistake by saying 'mg'. Cut the false advise in the comments. Just call them ml, if you mean air or fluid in your syringe@@chaiguevara2267