Vasopressin Combined With Epinephrine Decreases Cerebral Perfusion Compared With Vasopressin Alone During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Pigs

Abstract
Background and Purpose —It is unknown whether a combination of vasopressin and epinephrine may be superior to vasopressin alone by targeting both nonadrenergic and adrenergic receptors. Methods —After 15 minutes of cardiac arrest (13 minutes of ventricular fibrillation and 2 minutes of pulseless electrical activity) and 3 minutes of chest compressions, 16 animals were randomly treated with either 0.8 U/kg vasopressin (n=8) or 0.8 U/kg vasopressin combined with 200 μg/kg epinephrine (n=8). Results —Comparison of vasopressin with vasopressin and epinephrine at 90 seconds and 5 minutes after drug administration resulted in comparable mean (±SEM) coronary perfusion pressure (54±3 versus 57±5 and 36±4 versus 35±4 mm Hg, respectively), cerebral perfusion pressure (59±6 versus 65±8 and 40±6 versus 39±6 mm Hg, respectively), and median (25th to 75th percentiles) left ventricular myocardial blood flow [116 (81 to 143) versus 108 (97 to 125) and 44 (35 to 81) versus 62 (42 to 74) mL · min −1 · 100 g −1 , respectively], but significantly increased ( P −1 · 100 g −1 , respectively]. Return of spontaneous circulation rates in both groups were comparable (vasopressin, 7 of 8; vasopressin and epinephrine, 6 of 8). Conclusions —Comparison of vasopressin with vasopressin and epinephrine resulted in comparable left ventricular myocardial blood flow but significantly increased cerebral perfusion.