Vasopressors and inotropes

Surgical approach

  • Not an operation: pharmacological support used peri-operatively, in ICU, ED, cath lab, obstetrics, and during anaesthesia.
  • Typical clinical scenarios prompting use
    • Septic shock (vasoplegia ± myocardial depression)
    • Spinal/epidural sympathectomy, GA-induced vasodilation
    • Cardiogenic shock, post-cardiac surgery low output state
    • Anaphylaxis
    • Right ventricular (RV) failure / pulmonary hypertension crises

Anaesthetic management

  • Type of anaesthesia
    • Usually adjunct to GA; also common with neuraxial anaesthesia (e.g., obstetrics) and sedation (e.g., endoscopy, cath lab).
  • Airway
    • ETT often required in shock/ICU; SGA possible for short cases if haemodynamics stable and aspiration risk low.
  • Duration
    • Minutes (boluses for transient hypotension) to days (ICU infusions).
  • How painful
    • Pain relates to underlying pathology/surgery; vasopressor/inotrope therapy itself is not painful but requires invasive lines and close monitoring.
  • Core practical approach
    • Treat cause first: bleeding, anaesthetic depth, sepsis source control, tamponade, tension pneumothorax, anaphylaxis, arrhythmia.
    • Optimise preload/afterload/contractility/HR: fluid responsiveness assessment, echocardiography, lactate/ScvO2 trends, urine output.
    • Monitoring: arterial line early; central access for prolonged infusions; consider cardiac output monitoring/echo in shock.
    • Infusion safety: dedicated lumen, smart pumps, clear concentrations, frequent site checks if peripheral.

Definitions and haemodynamic concepts

  • Vasopressor: increases vascular tone (↑SVR) and usually ↑MAP; may have inotropic/chronotropic effects depending on receptor profile.
  • Inotrope: increases myocardial contractility (↑stroke volume/CO); may also affect HR and SVR.
  • MAP ≈ CO × SVR (CVP usually small); CO = HR × SV. Choose agent based on which variable is failing.
  • Oxygen delivery (DO2) = CO × CaO2; raising MAP alone does not guarantee improved DO2 or microcirculatory flow.
  • Shock phenotypes
    • Distributive (sepsis, anaphylaxis, neuraxial): low SVR ± high CO early; treat with vasopressor ± inotrope if myocardial depression.
    • Cardiogenic: low CO, high filling pressures; inotrope ± vasopressor to maintain coronary perfusion; avoid excessive tachycardia.
    • Obstructive (PE, tamponade, tension PTX): fix obstruction; temporise with vasopressor/inotrope as appropriate.
    • Hypovolaemic: volume first; vasopressor only as bridge if profound hypotension while controlling bleeding.

Receptor pharmacology (high-yield)

  • α1: vasoconstriction (arterial + venous) → ↑SVR, ↑venous return; adverse: ischaemia, ↑afterload, reflex bradycardia.
  • β1: ↑inotropy + ↑chronotropy + ↑dromotropy; adverse: tachyarrhythmias, ↑MVO2, myocardial ischaemia.
  • β2: vasodilation (skeletal muscle), bronchodilation; can ↓SVR and cause hypokalaemia, hyperglycaemia, tremor.
  • Dopamine receptors: D1 renal/mesenteric vasodilation (not reliably renal-protective); D2 presynaptic ↓NE release.
  • V1 (vasopressin): vascular smooth muscle constriction via IP3/Ca2+; works in acidosis/hypoxia; may reduce pulmonary vasoconstriction relative to catecholamines in some settings.
  • PDE3 inhibition (milrinone/enoximone): ↑cAMP in myocardium (inotropy) + vascular smooth muscle (vasodilation) → 'inodilator'.
  • Calcium sensitiser (levosimendan): increases troponin C sensitivity + KATP opening → inotropy + vasodilation; long-acting metabolite.
  • Angiotensin II: potent vasoconstrictor; stimulates aldosterone; used in refractory vasodilatory shock in some ICUs.

Common agents: key properties, dosing, and adverse effects

  • Noradrenaline (norepinephrine)
    • Receptors: strong α1, moderate β1.
    • Effects: ↑SVR and ↑MAP; modest ↑CO if preload responsive; may cause reflex bradycardia.
    • Indications: first-line vasopressor in septic shock; vasoplegia (incl. post-CPB); hypotension under GA when SVR low.
    • Dose (adult infusion): commonly 0.02–1 microgram/kg/min titrated to MAP/perfusion; local practice varies.
    • Adverse: peripheral/mesenteric ischaemia, extravasation necrosis, arrhythmias (less than adrenaline/dopamine).
  • Adrenaline (epinephrine)
    • Receptors: β1/β2 at lower doses; α1 increasingly at higher doses.
    • Effects: ↑CO (inotropy/chronotropy); ↓SVR at low dose (β2) then ↑SVR at higher dose (α1).
    • Indications: anaphylaxis (first-line), cardiac arrest, severe bronchospasm with shock, refractory septic shock (second-line), peri-arrest hypotension.
    • Dose: infusion often 0.02–1 microgram/kg/min; anaphylaxis IM 500 micrograms (adult) repeated; IV titrated boluses in anaesthesia (e.g., 10–100 micrograms) with extreme caution.
    • Adverse: tachyarrhythmias, myocardial ischaemia, hyperlactataemia (β2-driven), hyperglycaemia, splanchnic hypoperfusion at high dose.
  • Phenylephrine
    • Receptors: pure α1 agonist.
    • Effects: ↑SVR and venous return; often ↓HR and may ↓CO (especially if preload limited or RV failure).
    • Indications: anaesthesia-related vasodilation with tachycardia; obstetric spinal hypotension (common); short-term bolus therapy.
    • Dose: bolus 50–100 micrograms IV (titrate); infusion commonly 0.25–2 micrograms/kg/min or 10–100 micrograms/min depending on protocol.
    • Adverse: reflex bradycardia, reduced stroke volume/CO, tissue ischaemia at high doses.
  • Metaraminol
    • Mechanism: predominantly α1 agonist with some indirect sympathomimetic action (NE release).
    • Use: common UK theatre vasopressor for bolus/infusion to treat GA/neuraxial hypotension.
    • Dose: bolus often 0.25–1 mg IV; infusion concentration varies locally (e.g., 0.5–5 mg/h titrated).
    • Cautions: tachyphylaxis possible (indirect component); extravasation risk; may reduce CO if excessive afterload.
  • Ephedrine
    • Mechanism: mixed acting (indirect NE release + direct α/β).
    • Effects: ↑HR and ↑CO with some ↑SVR; useful when hypotension with bradycardia.
    • Dose: 3–6 mg IV boluses (up to 9–12 mg depending on context) titrated.
    • Limitations: tachyphylaxis with repeated dosing; less effective in catecholamine-depleted states (sepsis, chronic sympathetic activation).
  • Vasopressin
    • Mechanism: V1-mediated vasoconstriction; restores vascular tone in relative vasopressin deficiency (septic shock).
    • Indications: adjunct to noradrenaline in septic shock/vasoplegia; useful in acidosis where catecholamines less effective.
    • Dose: fixed-dose infusion commonly 0.03 units/min (range often 0.01–0.06 units/min per local policy).
    • Adverse: digital/mesenteric ischaemia (esp. with high catecholamine doses), hyponatraemia (V2), reduced CO in some patients; avoid bolus dosing in shock.
  • Dobutamine
    • Receptors: β1 predominant with β2 and some α effects; net often inotropy + vasodilation.
    • Effects: ↑CO, ↓SVR (may drop BP if vasodilated); can increase HR.
    • Indications: low cardiac output with adequate/raised SVR (cardiogenic shock with high afterload, septic myocardial depression with adequate MAP), stress echo.
    • Dose: 2.5–20 micrograms/kg/min titrated.
    • Adverse: tachyarrhythmias, hypotension (from β2), myocardial ischaemia; may worsen dynamic LVOT obstruction.
  • Dopamine
    • Dose-dependent receptor profile (conceptual): low dose D1; moderate β1; high α1—clinically variable and unpredictable.
    • Use: now uncommon due to arrhythmias and worse outcomes vs noradrenaline in shock; may have niche in selected bradycardic hypotension with low arrhythmia risk (rare).
    • Adverse: tachyarrhythmias, endocrine effects (↓pituitary hormones), immunosuppression; no renal-protective benefit.
  • Milrinone (PDE3 inhibitor)
    • Effects: inodilator; reduces PVR and SVR; useful in RV failure/pulmonary hypertension and post-cardiac surgery low output.
    • Dose: loading dose sometimes avoided due to hypotension; infusion commonly 0.25–0.75 micrograms/kg/min (adjust in renal impairment).
    • Adverse: hypotension, arrhythmias; prolonged effect in renal failure.
  • Levosimendan
    • Effects: inotropy with less increase in intracellular Ca2+; vasodilation; may improve RV function.
    • Use: selected cases of acute decompensated heart failure/post-cardiac surgery; practice varies in UK.
    • Adverse: hypotension, headache, arrhythmias; long duration due to active metabolite.
  • Isoprenaline (isoproterenol)
    • Receptors: β1 and β2 agonist (no α).
    • Effects: marked tachycardia + inotropy with vasodilation → can reduce MAP.
    • Use: bradyarrhythmias/overdrive pacing temporisation, post-transplant bradycardia; less common for shock.
    • Adverse: tachyarrhythmias, myocardial ischaemia, hypotension.

Choosing the right agent (pattern recognition)

  • Low SVR (warm peripheries, wide pulse pressure, low diastolic): choose noradrenaline first; add vasopressin if escalating; consider adrenaline if poor cardiac output too.
  • Low CO with high SVR (cold peripheries, narrow pulse pressure, high filling pressures): dobutamine or milrinone; add noradrenaline if MAP inadequate.
  • Hypotension with bradycardia (e.g., high spinal, vagal episodes): ephedrine or atropine; consider adrenaline infusion if severe; treat cause.
  • Anaphylaxis: adrenaline is first-line; large-volume crystalloid; add vasopressin/noradrenaline if refractory; consider glucagon if on beta-blocker.
  • RV failure / pulmonary hypertension: avoid excessive α-mediated rise in PVR/afterload; consider noradrenaline (to support coronary perfusion) + milrinone (reduce PVR) ± vasopressin; optimise oxygenation/ventilation and avoid acidosis.
  • Dynamic LVOT obstruction (HOCM, severe hypovolaemia, sepsis with hyperdynamic LV): avoid inotropes; give fluid, increase afterload (phenylephrine), reduce HR (beta-blocker) if appropriate.

Practicalities: access, preparation, and monitoring

  • Access
    • Central line preferred for prolonged/high-dose vasopressors; however, short-term peripheral noradrenaline via large-bore cannula in a proximal vein can be acceptable with strict protocols and frequent checks.
    • Avoid distal sites (hand/wrist) for vasopressors if possible; use dedicated line/lumen.
  • Extravasation management
    • Stop infusion, leave cannula in situ, aspirate, elevate limb, warm compress; infiltrate phentolamine if available (or topical nitroglycerin per local policy) and seek plastics advice if severe.
  • Monitoring endpoints
    • MAP target commonly ≥65 mmHg in septic shock, individualise (chronic hypertension, head injury, aortic stenosis).
    • Perfusion: mentation, capillary refill, skin temperature, urine output, lactate clearance, ScvO2/ SvO2, echo-derived stroke volume changes.
  • Acid–base and electrolytes
    • Acidosis reduces catecholamine responsiveness; correct hypoxia, hypercapnia, and severe metabolic derangements; consider vasopressin as adjunct in refractory vasoplegia.
    • β2 agonism may cause hypokalaemia and hyperglycaemia (adrenaline, dobutamine, salbutamol).

Special situations

  • Obstetric spinal hypotension
    • Phenylephrine infusion/bolus commonly first-line; ephedrine if associated bradycardia; maintain left uterine displacement and give fluid judiciously.
    • Fetal considerations: ephedrine associated with more fetal acidosis than phenylephrine (likely via increased maternal catecholamines and fetal metabolism).
  • Sepsis bundles (haemodynamic component)
    • Fluid resuscitation guided by responsiveness; noradrenaline first-line; add vasopressin to reduce noradrenaline dose; consider dobutamine if myocardial dysfunction with persistent hypoperfusion despite adequate MAP and volume.
  • Cardiogenic shock / acute MI
    • Aim to maintain coronary perfusion (diastolic pressure) while improving CO; noradrenaline often preferred vasopressor; add dobutamine for inotropy if needed.
    • Avoid excessive tachycardia; consider mechanical support (IABP/Impella/VA-ECMO) early in refractory cases (specialist decision).
  • Aortic stenosis
    • Maintain sinus rhythm, preload, and SVR; phenylephrine or noradrenaline commonly used; avoid vasodilatory inotropes that drop SVR.
Classify vasoactive drugs used in anaesthesia and critical care. Give examples.

A common Primary FRCA viva theme is classification + mechanism + clinical use.

  • Vasopressors (↑SVR/MAP): noradrenaline, phenylephrine, metaraminol, vasopressin, angiotensin II.
  • Inotropes (↑contractility/CO): dobutamine, adrenaline (also vasopressor), milrinone, levosimendan.
  • Inodilators: dobutamine (often), milrinone, levosimendan.
  • Chronotropes: isoprenaline, adrenaline, dopamine; (also antimuscarinics e.g., atropine).
You are called to theatre: post-induction hypotension. Talk through your approach and choice of vasopressor.
  • Immediate checks: confirm BP reading (cuff/arterial line), pulse/ECG rhythm, depth of anaesthesia, ventilation (high airway pressures), bleeding, anaphylaxis signs, surgical compression, positioning.
  • Treat likely physiology: if vasodilation with normal/high HR → phenylephrine/metaraminol bolus; if bradycardia → ephedrine ± atropine; if severe/profound → small adrenaline boluses and start infusion.
  • Volume: assess fluid responsiveness; give fluid bolus if indicated; consider echo if persistent.
  • Escalate monitoring: arterial line; consider central access if infusion required.
Compare noradrenaline and adrenaline as infusions in shock: receptors, haemodynamic effects, and adverse effects.
  • Noradrenaline: α1>>β1; ↑SVR/MAP with modest β1; less tachycardia; first-line in septic shock.
  • Adrenaline: β1/β2 then α1 at higher dose; ↑CO more; more tachyarrhythmias; causes hyperlactataemia and hyperglycaemia; key drug in anaphylaxis and cardiac arrest.
  • Both: risk of extravasation necrosis and peripheral ischaemia at high doses; increase myocardial oxygen demand.
Explain why vasopressin can be useful in septic shock and how it is typically used.
  • Sepsis may cause relative vasopressin deficiency; V1 agonism restores vascular tone via non-adrenergic pathway and may work better in acidosis.
  • Used as adjunct to noradrenaline to achieve MAP target and reduce catecholamine dose (fixed low-dose infusion).
  • Risks: digital/mesenteric ischaemia; hyponatraemia (V2); avoid high-dose boluses.
Describe dobutamine: mechanism, haemodynamic effects, indications, and contraindications/cautions.
  • Mechanism: predominantly β1 agonist with β2 activity → inotropy + some vasodilation.
  • Effects: ↑SV/CO; may ↓SVR and BP; ↑HR.
  • Indications: low output states with adequate SVR/MAP; septic myocardial depression with persistent hypoperfusion; cardiogenic shock (often with noradrenaline).
  • Cautions: tachyarrhythmias, myocardial ischaemia; can worsen LVOT obstruction; may cause hypotension in vasoplegia.
Phenylephrine vs ephedrine for spinal anaesthesia hypotension in obstetrics: compare maternal and fetal effects.
  • Phenylephrine (α1): restores SVR; may cause reflex bradycardia and reduced CO; associated with better fetal acid–base compared with ephedrine in many studies.
  • Ephedrine (mixed/indirect): increases HR and CO; tachyphylaxis; crosses placenta and associated with more fetal acidosis.
  • Practical: use phenylephrine infusion/bolus as first-line; use ephedrine when hypotension with bradycardia.
A patient with severe pulmonary hypertension becomes hypotensive after induction. Which vasoactive drugs are helpful and which may be harmful?
  • Goals: maintain RV perfusion (MAP/diastolic), avoid increases in PVR, maintain sinus rhythm, optimise oxygenation/ventilation and avoid acidosis/hypercapnia.
  • Helpful: noradrenaline (supports systemic pressure), vasopressin (may support SVR with less PVR effect), milrinone (reduces PVR and improves RV contractility—often needs concomitant vasopressor).
  • Potentially harmful: pure α agonists in excess (phenylephrine) may worsen RV afterload and reduce CO; tachycardic agents may reduce RV filling time and increase MVO2.
What are the complications of vasopressor therapy and how do you mitigate them?
  • Ischaemia: digits, gut, kidneys; mitigate by using lowest effective dose, correcting hypovolaemia, avoiding excessive SVR, monitoring lactate/perfusion and limb checks.
  • Arrhythmias/ischaemia: especially with β1 agents; mitigate by correcting electrolytes, avoiding unnecessary tachycardia, treating pain/hypoxia, using noradrenaline over dopamine where appropriate.
  • Extravasation necrosis: mitigate with appropriate cannula site, frequent checks, central access for prolonged therapy, and prompt extravasation protocol.
  • Metabolic: hyperlactataemia (adrenaline), hyperglycaemia, hypokalaemia; mitigate with monitoring and interpretation in context.
Why is dopamine no longer recommended as first-line vasopressor in septic shock?
  • Higher incidence of tachyarrhythmias compared with noradrenaline and no outcome advantage.
  • Dose-response is variable; 'renal-dose dopamine' does not prevent renal failure and may be harmful.
You start noradrenaline peripherally in ED/theatre. What conditions must be met to do this safely and what is your plan to convert to central access?
  • Use a large-bore cannula in a proximal vein (e.g., antecubital fossa), secure well, dedicated line, frequent site checks and documentation; avoid hand/wrist if possible.
  • Use lowest effective concentration/rate per protocol; ensure close monitoring (arterial line if possible).
  • Early plan for central venous access if ongoing requirement, escalating dose, or prolonged infusion anticipated; have extravasation treatment available.
Explain the concept of 'MAP target 65 mmHg' in septic shock and when you would individualise it.
  • 65 mmHg is a pragmatic population target associated with adequate organ perfusion in many adults; higher targets increase vasopressor exposure without clear universal benefit.
  • Individualise higher: chronic hypertension, raised ICP/CPP targets, severe aortic stenosis/coronary disease with low diastolic pressure, signs of ongoing hypoperfusion.
  • Individualise lower: young fit patients with good perfusion markers, risk of arrhythmia/ischaemia from high catecholamine doses.

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