


Ask a doctor about a prescription for GLUCOSE 5% & SODIUM CHLORIDE 0.33% BAXTER SOLUTION FOR INFUSION
Package Leaflet: Information for the User
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter Solution for Infusion
Active ingredients: sodium chloride, glucose
Read all of this leaflet carefully before you start using this medicine because it contains important information for you.
This medicine is called Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter Solution for Infusion, but will be referred to as “Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter” throughout this leaflet.
Contents of the pack:
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter is a solution containing the following substances in water:
Glucose is one of the body's sources of energy. This solution provides 200 kilocalories per liter. Sodium and chloride are chemical substances found in the blood.
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter is used:
for treatment if the blood volume in the blood vessels is low (hypovolemia).
Tell your doctor if you have or have had any of the following conditions:
This may increase the risk of low sodium levels in the blood and can cause headache, nausea, seizures, lethargy, coma, brain inflammation, and death. Brain inflammation increases the risk of death and brain damage. People at higher risk of brain inflammation are:
When you are being given this solution, your doctor will take blood and urine samples to monitor:
Since Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter contains sugar (glucose), it can increase blood sugar levels (hyperglycemia). If this happens, your doctor may:
This is particularly important:
Children
Special care should be taken when giving this solution to children, babies, and newborns (especially premature babies and those with low birth weight). Children, babies, and newborns may not have a good ability to handle the chemicals in the solution.
Younger children are at higher risk of developing low or high blood sugar levels and therefore need careful monitoring during treatment to ensure proper control of blood sugar levels. Low blood sugar levels in newborns can cause prolonged seizures, coma, and brain damage. High blood sugar levels have been associated with brain hemorrhages, bacterial or fungal infections, eye damage (retinopathy of prematurity), intestinal infections, lung problems, prolonged hospital stay, and death.
Children are at higher risk of developing low sodium levels in the blood (hyponatremia). Hyponatremia can cause headache, nausea, seizures, lethargy, coma, brain inflammation (cerebral edema), and death. Acute hyponatremic encephalopathy is a serious complication, especially in children.
Your doctor is aware of all of the above and will carefully monitor the levels of chemicals such as glucose (sugar), sodium, and chloride in your child's blood (plasma electrolytes).
Tell your doctor or nurse if you are using, or have recently used, any other medicines.
It is particularly important that you tell your doctor if you are taking:
These medicines can cause the body to retain sodium and water, leading to swelling of tissues due to fluid accumulation under the skin (edema) or high blood pressure (hypertension).
Some medicines affect the hormone vasopressin. These may include:
Other medicines that may be affected by or affect Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter are:
Ask your doctor about what you can eat or drink.
If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, think you may be pregnant, or plan to become pregnant, consult your doctor or nurse before using this medicine.
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter can be used safely during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
However, if another medicine is added to the infusion solution during pregnancy or breastfeeding, you should:
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter does not affect your ability to drive or use machines.
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter will be given to you by a doctor or nurse. Your doctor will decide how much you need and when it should be given. This will depend on your age, weight, physical condition, and the reason for treatment. The amount you receive may also be influenced by other treatments you are receiving.
You should not receive Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter if there are particles floating in the solution or if the container is damaged in any way.
Before and during the infusion, your doctor will monitor:
Any unused solution should be discarded. You should not receive Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter from a started bag.
If you receive too much Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter or if it is given too quickly, you may experience the following symptoms:
If you notice these symptoms, tell your doctor immediately. The infusion will be stopped and you will receive treatment based on the symptoms.
If a medicine has been added to Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter before the excessive administration, this medicine may also cause symptoms. You should read the list of possible symptoms in the package leaflet of the added medicine.
If you have any further questions about the use of this product, ask your doctor or nurse.
Like all medicines, Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter can cause side effects, although not everybody gets them.
Side effects may be related to Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter. These include:
Side effects may be due to the administration technique. These include:
If a medicine has been added to the infusion solution, it may also cause side effects. These side effects will depend on the added medicine. You should read the list of possible symptoms in the package leaflet of the added medicine.
Reporting of side effects:
If you experience any side effects, talk to your doctor or nurse, even if they are not listed in this leaflet. If any of these occur, the infusion should be stopped. You can also report side effects directly through the Spanish Medicines and Healthcare Products Agency's website: https://www.notificaram.es. By reporting side effects, you can help provide more information on the safety of this medicine.
Keep out of sight and reach of children.
Do not store above 25°C.
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter should not be administered after the expiry date stated on the bag after EXP. The expiry date is the last day of the month indicated.
You should not receive Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter if there are particles floating in the solution or if the container is damaged in any way.
The other ingredient is water for injections.
Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter is a clear solution, free from visible particles. It is presented in polyolefin/polyamide (Viaflo) plastic bags. Each bag is packaged in a protective overwrap.
The bag sizes are:
The bags are packaged in cardboard boxes. Each cardboard box contains one of the following quantities:
Not all pack sizes may be marketed.
Baxter S.L.
Pouet de Camilo 2, 46394 Ribarroja del Turia (Valencia)
Manufacturer | |
Bieffe Medital S.A. Ctra. Biescas-Senegüé s/n, 22666 Sabiñánigo (Huesca), Spain |
Date of last revision of this leaflet:October 2023
Detailed and up-to-date information on this medicine is available on the website of the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Healthcare Products (AEMPS) http://www.aemps.gob.es/
Use only if the solution is transparent, without visible particles, and if the container is not damaged. Administer immediately after connecting the infusion equipment.
Do not remove the bag from its overbag until it is ready for use.
The inner bag maintains the sterility of the product.
Do not connect plastic containers in series. This type of use can produce gas embolisms due to residual air dragged from the primary container before the administration of the liquid contained in the secondary container is completed.
The pressurization of solutions in flexible plastic containers to increase flow rates can lead to a gas embolism if the residual air is not fully evacuated before administration.
The use of an intravenous administration device with a ventilation filter in the open position could cause a gas embolism. This type of intravenous administration device with the ventilation filter in the open position should not be used with flexible plastic containers.
The solution must be administered with sterile equipment using an aseptic technique. The equipment must be primed with the solution in order to prevent air from entering the system.
Added medications can be introduced before or during infusion through the injection point. When adding medications, isotonicity should be checked before parenteral administration.
From a physico-chemical point of view, the solution containing added medications should be used immediately unless chemical and physical stability has been established for use.
From a microbiological point of view, solutions with added medication should be used immediately. If not used immediately, the conditions and storage period before use are the responsibility of the user and normally should not exceed 24 hours at 2-8°C, unless the reconstitution has been carried out in controlled and validated aseptic conditions.
Discard after a single use.
Discard partially used containers.
Do not reconnect partially used bags.
Use sterile material for preparation and administration.
Warning: Added medications may be incompatible. (See section 5 "Incompatibilities of Added Medications" below)
Precaution: Do not store bags with added medication.
Before use, the physical and chemical stability of any added medication at the pH of the Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter solution in the Viaflo container must be established.
From a physico-chemical point of view, the solution containing added medications should be used immediately unless chemical and physical stability has been established for use.
From a microbiological point of view, the diluted product should be used immediately. If not used immediately, the storage time and conditions before use are the responsibility of the user and normally should not exceed 24 hours at 2-8°C, unless the addition of medications has been carried out in controlled and validated aseptic conditions.
As with all parenteral solutions, the compatibility of added medications with the Viaflo bag solution must be verified before addition.
It is the responsibility of the physician to judge the incompatibility of the added medication with Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter by examining any change in color and/or precipitation, insoluble complexes, or the appearance of crystals. The medication's package insert should be consulted.
Before adding a medication, verify that it is soluble and stable in water at the pH of Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter (pH 3.5-6.5).
When adding compatible medication to Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter, the solution should be administered immediately unless chemical and physical stability has been established for use. As a guide, the following medications are incompatible with Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter (this is not an exhaustive list):
Since Glucose 5% and Sodium Chloride 0.33% Baxter contains glucose, it should not be administered with whole blood through the same infusion equipment due to the possibility of hemolysis and agglutination.
Medications whose incompatibility is known should not be used.
The best alternatives with the same active ingredient and therapeutic effect.
Discuss dosage, side effects, interactions, contraindications, and prescription renewal for GLUCOSE 5% & SODIUM CHLORIDE 0.33% BAXTER SOLUTION FOR INFUSION – subject to medical assessment and local rules.