lovebuzzer
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2011
- Messages
- 55
Can anyone tell how to find veins not on the surface like trained nurses can. I can never find them like they can in a second. Is there a diagram or directions on how to find them?
HR to BDD
what does this mean?
lovebuzzer said:Today I had to go to the dock and get an IV. They found it very hard to find a vein. They said that you can go to a hospital and get a vein map that shows you exactly where all of your veins are. Has anybody heard of this or done it. That would be the ultimate.

Thanks for the replies. I have been shooting for a while, hence the lack of ease of finding them. I have always used tornequets.
I have heard of plugging but does is give you the rush that IV does and do you need to use more?
The vein in the calf, how hard is that to find? is it in the back of the calf near the knee.
I have also heard of people injecting under their finger nails, is this to hide the marks or are their veins there? Or would this just be a type of IM injection?

One last ? has anyone noticed that when injectinginthe foot that the rush seems to come on slower and it is less intense?
Quick word on alcohol swabbing - most people don't realise you need to swab the area for 30 seconds (lot longer than it feels at the time, time yourself and see!) and let it airdry completely otherwise it just wipes the bacteria about and doesn't kill them. I know this is a faff, but you might as well not bother otherwise... and once you have swabbed, don't touch the site again if you can possibly help it - hands are covered in lovely bacteria! You can make an indentation using a penlip where the vein is if you are worried about losing it, or put gloves on to give yourself the shot.
I've never done IV drugs, must be a pain in the ass because even though my forearm vascularity is great I have had nurses fuck it up and have to attempt it multiple times...![]()
When I was training for my EMT-B cert we were always discouraged to not use alcohol after an injection, as it inhibits clotting. Just putting that out there, but during the prep before the shot and alcohol pad and friction from rubbing it will raise the veins to the surface somewhat. And as someone mentioned earlier, yes there are vein and artery anatomy charts, we have one on the wall in the back of our bus which goes to show that even trained EMTs and paramedics can use a quick reference sometimes, it's definitely nothing to feel inferior about. Good luck lovebuzzer