Tsuneyoshi Isao, Onomoto Masanori, Yonetani Arata, Kanmura Yuichi
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Kagoshima University School of Medicine, 8-35-1 Sakuragaoka, Kagoshima 890-8520, Japan.
J Anesth. 2005;19(2):170-3. doi: 10.1007/s00540-004-0299-4.
We report the successful use of a low-dose vasopressin (VP) infusion to recover a hypotensive crisis in patients who suffered persistent hypotension after prolonged hemorrhage during general anesthesia. VP was infused in two posthemorrhagic vasodilatory shock patients when they remained persistently hypotensive despite adequate fluid resuscitation and infusions of pharmacological doses of catecholamines. On administration of VP at 0.04 U x min(-1), systemic vascular resistance, systolic arterial pressure, and urine output were immediately increased (as compared with the values obtained just before VP), and infusion of catecholamine could be decreased. No adverse cardiac effects were observed during VP infusions in these patients. During vasodilatory shock after prolonged and severe hemorrhage, VP seems to be effective in reversing hypotension and decreasing the need for exogenous cathecholamines while preserving cardiac function and critical organ blood flow.
我们报告了成功使用低剂量血管加压素(VP)输注来挽救在全身麻醉期间长时间出血后持续低血压的患者的低血压危象。两名出血后血管舒张性休克患者在充分液体复苏和输注药理剂量的儿茶酚胺后仍持续低血压时,输注了VP。在以0.04 U×min⁻¹的速度输注VP时,全身血管阻力、收缩动脉压和尿量立即增加(与输注VP前的值相比),并且可以减少儿茶酚胺的输注量。在这些患者输注VP期间未观察到不良心脏影响。在长时间严重出血后的血管舒张性休克期间,VP似乎可有效逆转低血压并减少对外源性儿茶酚胺的需求,同时保留心脏功能和重要器官的血流。