What Is a Syringe and How Does It Work
, by Andrew Odgers, 10 min reading time
, by Andrew Odgers, 10 min reading time
A syringe is one of the most widely used medical devices in the world, yet its design, function, and clinical applications are rarely explained in full. Understanding how a syringe works, what its components do, and how the plunger mechanism creates the pressure needed to draw up and administer fluids gives both clinicians and patients a clearer foundation for using and choosing syringes correctly.
A standard syringe has three main components: the barrel, the plunger, and the nozzle. The barrel is a hollow cylinder, typically made from medical-grade polypropylene or glass, with graduation markings along its length indicating the volume of fluid contained at each level. The plunger is a rod that fits inside the barrel and moves along its length; the tip of the plunger forms a seal against the barrel wall using a rubber or silicone tip that prevents leakage. The nozzle is the tapered tip at the open end of the barrel through which fluid enters and exits, and to which a needle or other device is connected.
The syringe functions as a simple piston pump. When the plunger is pulled back inside the barrel, the volume inside the barrel increases, creating negative pressure that draws fluid into the barrel through the nozzle. When the plunger is pushed forward, the volume decreases, creating positive pressure that expels the fluid through the nozzle. The rubber seal at the plunger tip maintains the pressure differential by preventing fluid from bypassing the plunger into the open end of the barrel.
The nozzle of a standard injectable syringe is tapered to the ISO 594 luer standard. A luer slip needle hub pushes onto this taper and is held by friction. A luer lock needle hub adds a threaded collar that screws onto a matching thread on the luer lock syringe nozzle, creating a secure connection that resists axial pull. Oral syringes use a blunt or catheter tip rather than a luer nozzle, preventing needle attachment.
Clinical syringes are manufactured from medical-grade materials that are biocompatible, transparent for dose visualisation, and resistant to the medications they will contain. They are sterilised during manufacture, typically by ethylene oxide gas or gamma irradiation, and are supplied in sealed sterile packaging. The sterility guarantee extends only to intact, within-date packaging stored under the specified conditions. Once opened, a syringe is no longer sterile and must be used or discarded.
The most fundamental use of a syringe is to measure and contain a precise volume of medication for administration. The barrel graduation markings allow the practitioner to draw up and confirm an accurate dose. The plunger is drawn back to aspirate the medication from a vial, ampoule, or other vessel into the barrel, and the graduation is read at eye level to confirm the volume drawn.
Once filled, the syringe delivers the medication through a needle into the target tissue or vessel. The plunger is pressed forward at a controlled rate to express the medication. The injection route determines the angle of needle insertion, the depth, and the speed of delivery. The syringe provides controlled, measurable delivery that cannot be achieved with any other means of injection.
Syringes are used to aspirate fluid collections, obtain tissue or fluid samples, and draw blood for diagnostic testing in some settings. The plunger is drawn back with the needle tip in the target tissue or vessel, creating negative pressure that aspirates the fluid into the barrel. The barrel volume and graduation allow the aspirated volume to be measured.
Larger syringes, particularly catheter-tip designs, are used for wound irrigation, bladder irrigation, and enteral tube flushing. The positive pressure created by pressing the plunger forward drives irrigation fluid through the catheter tip into the target area at sufficient force to achieve effective cleaning or patency restoration.
Charles Medical supplies the full range of clinical syringes across all volumes, connection types, and specialist applications. No minimum order.
Now that you understand the fundamentals, Understanding the Different Types of Syringes and Their Uses maps the full range of syringe types to their applications.
This article is part of our complete syringe knowledge base, covering syringe types, sizes, connection systems, safe use, disposal, and applications across clinical, home, and specialist settings.
Understanding the Different Types of Syringes and Their Uses covers all syringe categories. The Difference Between Luer Lock and Slip Tip Syringes covers the nozzle connection system in depth. And Step-by-Step Guide to Filling and Using a Syringe Correctly applies the fundamentals to practical injection technique.