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Applied Sciences Lecture Course. Inotropes & Vasopressors. Dr Cathy Armstrong SpR In Anaesthesia & Clinical Fellow in Undergraduate Medical Education Manchester Royal Infirmary March 2011. Objectives. Define the terms Inotrope & vasopressor Discuss basic physiological principles
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Applied Sciences Lecture Course Inotropes & Vasopressors Dr Cathy Armstrong SpR In Anaesthesia & Clinical Fellow in Undergraduate Medical Education Manchester Royal Infirmary March 2011
Objectives • Define the terms Inotrope & vasopressor • Discuss basic physiological principles • Discuss drug classification • Sympathomimetics • Other • Describe some clinical uses
Inotropes • Drugs that affect the force of contraction of myocardial muscle • Positive or negative • Term “inotrope” generally used to describe positive effect
Vasopressor • Drugs that stimulates smooth muscle contraction of the capillaries & arteries • Cause vasoconstriction & a consequent rise in blood pressure
Which of these drugs does NOT cause a positive inotropic effect? • Adrenaline • Calcium • Digoxin • Enoximone • Nifedipine • Glucagon
Main Goal Tissue perfusion & oxygenation
~ 1 r4 Physiological Principles MAP = CO x SVR CO = HR x SV Preload Contractility Afterload
Basic principles - Vasopressors MAP = CO x SVR CO = HR x SV Preload Contractility Afterload ~ 1 r4
Basic principles - Inotropes MAP = CO x SVR CO = HR x SV Preload Contractility Afterload
Drug Classification • Sympathomimetics • Naturally occurring • Synthetic • Other inotropes • cAMP dependent • cAMP independent • Other vasopressors
Sympathomimetics • Sympathetic nervous system
Activation of intermediate messenger G - Protein Sympathomimetics • Drugs that stimulate adrenergic receptors • G-protein coupled receptors
Which adrenoceptor mediates cardiac muscle contraction? • 1 • 2 • 1 • 2
Which adrenoceptor mediates vascular smooth muscle contraction? • 1 • 2 • 1 • 2
Main classes of Adrenoceptor • receptors • 1 • Located in vascular smooth muscle • Mediate vasoconstriction • 2 • Located throughout the CNS, platelets • Mediate sedation, analgesia & platelet aggregation
Main classes of Adrenoceptor • receptors • 1 • Located in vascular smooth muscle • Mediate vasoconstriction • 2 • Located throughout the CNS, platelets • Mediate sedation, analgesia & platelet aggregation
Main classes of Adrenoceptor • receptors • 1 • Located in the heart • Mediate increased contractility & HR • 2 • Located mainly in the smooth muscle of bronchi • Mediate bronchodilatation
Main classes of Adrenoceptor • receptors • 1 • Located in the heart • Mediate increased contractility & HR • 2 • Located mainly in the smooth muscle of bronchi • Mediate bronchodilatation • Located in blood vessels • Dilatation of coronary vessels • Dilatation of arteries supplying skeletal muscle
β1 Adrenoceptor Adrenaline Adenyl cyclase G - Protein Increased heart muscle contractility cAMP ATP
Naturally occuring Epinephrine Norepinephrine Dopamine Synthetic Dobutamine Dopexamine Phenylephrine Metaraminol Ephedrine Sympathomimetics
Naturally occuring Epinephrine Norepinephrine Dopamine Synthetic Dobutamine Dopexamine Phenylephrine Metaraminol Ephedrine Sympathomimetics
Epinephrine • Stimulates & receptors • Predominantly effects at low doses and effects at high doses • Clinical uses • Cardiac arrest • Anaphylaxis • Low cardiac output states • Upper airway obstruction • Combination with local anaesthetics
Epinephrine • Side effects • Dysrhythmias • Increase in myocardial oxygen consumption
What is the dose of epinephrine administered during cardiac arrest? • 100mcg • 1mg • 10mg • 100mg • 1g
What is the IM dose of epinephrine in anaphylaxis • 100mcg • 1mg • 10mg • 100mg • 1g
1mg of epinephrine • 1ml of 1:1000 • 10ml of 1:10,000
Norepinephrine • Predominantly stimulates 1 receptors • Most commonly used vasopressor in critical care • Very potent • Administered by infusion into a central vein • Uses • Hypotension due to vasodilatation • Septic shock
Dopamine • Effect dose dependent • Direct • Low dose - 1 • High dose - 1 • Indirect • Stimulates norepinephrine release • D1 receptors • Vasodilatation of mesenteric & renal circulation
Dobutamine • Synthetic • Predominantly 1 • Small effect at 2 • Uses • Low cardiac output states • Cardiogenic shock
Naturally occuring Epinephrine Norepinephrine Dopamine Synthetic Dobutamine Dopexamine Phenylephrine Metaraminol Ephedrine Sympathomimetics
Adrenoceptor dynamics • Desensitisation / down-regulation • Chronic heart failure • Prolonged use of inotrope / vasopressor • Sespis / acidosis
Other inotropes • cAMP dependent • Phosphodiesterase inhibitors • Glucagon • cAMP independent • Digoxin • Calcium • levosimendan
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors • Non-selective • Aminophylline • Selective • Phosphodiesterase 3 • Enoximone • milrinone
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors Adrenaline Adenyl cyclase G - Protein Increased heart muscle contractility cAMP ATP X PDE 3 AMP
Digoxin Inhibits (slows) NA/K ATPase K K Na NaK ATPase Na Na Reduced Na gradient slows Ca removal Na/Ca X-ch Ca
Other vasopressors • Vasopressin • Exogenous form of ADH • Acts on kidney to retain water & on peripheral blood vessels to cause intense vasoconstriction • V1 receptors • Used in severe shock • Used in cardiac arrest in USA
Summary Concept of inotropes & vasopressors Physiological principles Categories Sympathomimetics cAMP dependent / independent inotropes Vasopressin Discussed clinical uses All Figures were produced using Servier Medical Art - www.servier.com