Intensive Care Network Podcasts

Inotrope therapy: Which one and when?

Informações:

Sinopse

Inotropic agents are commonly used in critically ill patients to support myocardia contractility either in the setting of cardiac surgery or ischemia or in the setting of sepsis associated myocardial dysfunction. The most commonly used agents are beta-agonist drugs (dobutamine), mixed beta and alpha agents (adrenaline and dopamine), phosphodiesterase inhibitors (inodilators) such as milrinone or enoximone or calcium sensitizers (levosimendan). Such agents are currently used according to clinician and/or unit preference based on tradition, mentorship, belief, inductive physiological reasoning, familiarity, understanding of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics properties, side effects, and cost. No randomized controlled trials exist to support the notion that treatment targeted to similar physiological outcomes (ie cardiac index or MVO2) with one drug versus another would yield a different clinical outcome. More recently, however, two double-blind RCTs have compared adjunctive inotropic therapy with levosimenda