Intraosseous IO Insertion Guide

Posted on: April 8, 2025, by :

✅ When to Use an IO 

Indications (Emergent situations when IV access is delayed or impossible): 

  • Cardiac arrest 
  • Shock or severe hypovolemia 
  • Status epilepticus needing immediate IV medications 
  • Severe dehydration 
  • Trauma with difficult vascular access 
  • Any critical condition requiring rapid vascular access within 60–90 seconds 

Consider IO when

  • <2 IV attempts or >90 seconds without access 

✅ Equipment Needed: 

  • IO device (battery-powered drill, manual driver, or spring-loaded device)  
  • Examples: EZ-IO®, BIG®, manual Jamshidi needle 
  • Appropriately sized IO needle (based on patient size/weight):  
  • Pink (15 mm) – Infants/small children 
  • Blue (25 mm) – Children/adults 
  • Yellow (45 mm) – Large adolescents/obese patients 
  • Antiseptic wipes (chlorhexidine or alcohol) 
  • Extension tubing/primed IV line 
  • 10 mL saline flush 
  • Pressure bag or syringe for infusion 
  • Local anesthetic (Lidocaine) if patient is conscious 

✅ Common IO Insertion Sites: 

Site Landmark & Notes 
Proximal Tibia (Most Common) 2 cm below the tibial tuberosity, medial flat surface 
Distal Femur (Infants) 2–3 cm above the patella, midline 
Distal Tibia Proximal to the medial malleolus 
Proximal Humerus Older children/adolescents—lateral aspect near the greater tubercle (consider in CPR) 

💡 Tip: Avoid sites with fractures, infection, or prior attempts. 

✅ Insertion Steps: 

  1. Position patient securely and expose the chosen site. 
  1. Prep the skin with antiseptic in a circular motion—allow to dry. 
  1. Stabilize the limb and identify the correct landmark. 
  1. Insert the IO needle:  
  • Power driver or manual twist 
  • Stop advancing when a “pop” or loss of resistance is felt (entry into the marrow space) 
  1. Remove the stylet and secure the needle hub. 
  1. Confirm placement:  
  • Aspirate marrow (may or may not succeed) 
  • Flush with 10 mL saline—should flush easily without resistance or extravasation 
  1. Secure the IO site with stabilizer or tape. 
  1. Begin infusions—may require a pressure bag or syringe push. 

✅ Contraindications: 

  • Fracture of the target bone 
  • Overlying infection or burn at the site 
  • Previous IO attempt in the same bone 
  • Bone disease (osteogenesis imperfecta) 

🔗 Optional Video Demo for Simulation: 

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