Unexpected dosing errors due to air bubbles in infusion lines with and without air filters

Biomed Tech (Berl). 2022 Dec 19;68(1):109-116. doi: 10.1515/bmt-2022-0056. Print 2023 Feb 23.

Abstract

The effect of the presence of an air bubble, inside an infusion line, on the time (Tnew) needed for a new medication to reach the patient after a syringe exchange was studied in this paper. If an air bubble escapes through an air filter, then a sudden drop in pressure occurs, causing a relaxation of the compressible part of the syringe, followed by a gradual restoration of the flow rate in the line. We modeled this phenomenon mathematically and measured it experimentally in vitro. In an example with a pump flow rate of 5 mL/h and an air bubble of 1 cm length inside an infusion line (diameter 1 mm) with an air filter, both theory and experiment yield an additional increase of at least 600% in delay time if a naive estimate (based on the size of the bubble alone) is replaced by a more realistic estimate incorporating compressibility. Furthermore, we show that an air bubble in a line without air filter may increase Tnew by a factor 2, depending on the initial position of the air bubble. We conclude that an air bubble in an infusion line causes delays that may not be expected by health care professionals.

Keywords: air bubble; catheter; delay time; dosing errors; infusion.

MeSH terms

  • Air
  • Air Filters
  • Equipment Failure
  • Humans
  • Infusion Pumps*
  • Medication Errors*