Introduction to vasopressors

What are vasopressors (and why do we use them)?

  • Vasopressors are drugs that raise arterial blood pressure, mainly by tightening blood vessels (increasing vascular tone).
  • They are used when blood pressure is too low and this risks poor blood flow to vital organs (brain, heart, kidneys).
  • Blood pressure depends on: cardiac output (pump) × systemic vascular resistance (vessel tone). Vasopressors mostly increase vessel tone; some also increase heart contractility and heart rate.
  • They treat the symptom (hypotension) while you identify and treat the cause (e.g., bleeding, sepsis, anaesthetic depth).
  • They are not a substitute for fluids when the patient is volume-depleted.

First principles: assess before you press

  • Confirm the reading: check cuff size/position, repeat BP, look at waveform if arterial line present.
  • Look at the patient and the context: recent induction? neuraxial block? bleeding? sepsis? anaphylaxis? arrhythmia?
  • Check basics quickly: airway/ventilation/oxygenation, anaesthetic depth, ECG rhythm, capnography, temperature.
  • Think in patterns: vasodilation (warm, low SVR) vs low preload (bleeding/relative hypovolaemia) vs pump failure (poor contractility/arrhythmia).
  • Aim for organ perfusion, not a single number: mental state (if awake), urine output trend, lactate trend, capillary refill, skin temperature, ECG ischaemia.

Common vasopressors you will meet (UK practice)

  • Metaraminol: commonly used in theatre for anaesthesia-related hypotension; mainly vasoconstriction (alpha-1). Often given as small IV boluses; can be infused if ongoing need.
  • Phenylephrine: pure vasoconstrictor (alpha-1). Useful when hypotension is due to vasodilation and heart rate is adequate/high; can slow the heart rate (reflex bradycardia).
  • Ephedrine: increases heart rate and contractility and also causes some vasoconstriction (mixed action). Useful when hypotension is associated with bradycardia (e.g., after induction).
  • Noradrenaline (norepinephrine): first-line vasopressor for septic/vasodilatory shock and often used for persistent hypotension requiring infusion; strong vasoconstrictor with some beta effect.
  • Adrenaline (epinephrine): strong beta and alpha effects; used in anaphylaxis, cardiac arrest, and severe shock with poor cardiac output; higher risk of tachyarrhythmias and lactate rise.
  • Vasopressin/terlipressin: non-adrenergic vasoconstrictors; specialist use (e.g., catecholamine-resistant vasodilatory shock) under senior guidance.

Choosing a vasopressor: simple approach for new starters

  • If hypotension soon after induction with vasodilation: consider metaraminol or phenylephrine; reduce anaesthetic depth if appropriate; give fluid if indicated.
  • If hypotension with bradycardia: consider ephedrine (and treat causes of bradycardia).
  • If ongoing vasodilatory shock (e.g., sepsis) needing repeated boluses: escalate early to an infusion (often noradrenaline) and call for senior help/critical care support.
  • If anaphylaxis suspected: adrenaline is the key drug (plus airway/oxygen, fluids, and follow anaphylaxis guidance).
  • If cardiogenic picture (poor contractility, pulmonary oedema, ischaemia): avoid reflex bradycardia and excessive afterload; seek senior help early—may need inotrope rather than pure vasoconstrictor.

Bolus vs infusion: when to switch

  • Boluses are useful for short, predictable drops in BP (e.g., after induction, position change).
  • Repeated boluses suggest an ongoing problem: consider starting an infusion and treating the underlying cause.
  • Infusions provide steadier control and reduce peaks/troughs in BP, but require close monitoring and clear prescribing.
  • Escalate early if you are giving frequent boluses, the patient is unstable, or there is suspected major pathology (bleeding, sepsis, anaphylaxis, cardiogenic shock).

Practical safety: administration and monitoring

  • Use the lowest effective dose and reassess frequently; avoid chasing the cuff without addressing cause.
  • Monitoring: frequent non-invasive BP cycling (e.g., every 1–2 min during instability) and consider arterial line for ongoing vasopressor requirement or high-risk patients.
  • IV access: ensure a reliable cannula; check for patency before giving boluses. Vasopressors can cause tissue injury if they leak into tissues (extravasation).
  • Peripheral vs central: short-term dilute infusions may be acceptable per local policy with a good cannula in a large vein and close checks; central access is preferred for ongoing/high-dose infusions.
  • Label syringes/lines clearly; use infusion pumps; document drug, concentration, rate, and target BP.

Extravasation: what to look for and what to do

  • Watch for pain, swelling, blanching, cool skin, or poor flow around the cannula site during/after vasopressor administration.
  • Stop the infusion/bolus immediately but leave the cannula in place initially (so it can be used to aspirate if appropriate).
  • Call for senior help and follow local extravasation policy promptly.
  • Elevate the limb and mark/photograph the area if required by local policy; consider surgical/plastics input if severe.

Common first-time scenarios in theatre

  • Post-induction hypotension: check depth, give oxygen, confirm BP, consider fluid bolus if appropriate; treat with metaraminol/phenylephrine (or ephedrine if bradycardic).
  • Spinal anaesthesia hypotension: left uterine displacement in pregnancy, fluid as appropriate, vasopressor early (often phenylephrine; ephedrine if bradycardic) and treat nausea as a sign of hypotension.
  • Positioning-related hypotension (head-up, prone): reassess venous return, ventilation pressures, and surgical factors; treat with vasopressor while correcting cause.
  • Bleeding: vasopressors may temporise but do not replace volume/blood; activate haemorrhage pathway early and communicate with surgeons.
  • Sepsis/vasoplegia: early antibiotics/fluids, consider noradrenaline infusion, arterial line, and critical care involvement.
What is the main goal when giving a vasopressor?

Restore adequate organ perfusion. – Improve MAP/BP enough for perfusion – While treating the underlying cause (e.g., bleeding, sepsis, anaesthetic depth)

What MAP should I aim for?

Often MAP ≥ 65 mmHg in adults is a common starting target, but individualise. – Higher may be needed in chronic hypertension, head injury, or severe coronary disease – Use clinical context and senior guidance

How do I decide between phenylephrine and ephedrine?

Use heart rate and likely mechanism. – Bradycardia + hypotension: ephedrine often helpful – Normal/high HR + vasodilation: phenylephrine often helpful – Reassess response and underlying cause

Why can phenylephrine cause bradycardia?

It tightens vessels, BP rises, and the body reflexly slows the heart (baroreceptor reflex).

When should I escalate to a noradrenaline infusion?

If hypotension is persistent or you need repeated boluses. – Suspected vasodilatory shock (e.g., sepsis) – High-risk patient or unstable physiology – Get senior/ICU support early

Do vasopressors replace fluids?

No. – If the patient is hypovolaemic (bleeding/dehydration), give appropriate fluid/blood – Vasopressors can be used as a bridge while volume is restored

What are common side effects to watch for?

Depends on agent, but include: – Tachycardia/arrhythmias (more with ephedrine/adrenaline) – Bradycardia (phenylephrine) – Hypertension if overdosed – Peripheral ischaemia with high doses/prolonged use – Extravasation injury

Is it safe to run vasopressors peripherally?

Sometimes, short-term and dilute, following local policy. – Use a large-bore cannula in a large proximal vein – Check the site frequently – Prefer central access for ongoing/high-dose infusions

What is the single most important drug in anaphylaxis?

Adrenaline. – Give promptly and follow local/national anaphylaxis guidance – Also: high-flow oxygen, fluids, call for help, stop the trigger

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