EFFECT OF VASOPRESSIN ON OXYGEN AVAILABILITY
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 189 (4) , 439-441
Abstract
Vasopressin has been used with increasing frequency to control gastrointestinal bleeding, the beneficial effect being attributed to marked splanchnic vasoconstriction. Because vasopressin may result in impaired cardiac function and because other potent vasoconstrictive substances have been shown to increase the pulmonary shunt and decrease arterial oxygenation, this study was undertaken to determine the effect of vasopressin on O2 availability. Ten healthy anesthetized mechanically ventilated dogs received a 5 h i.v. vasopressin infusion, 0.005 units/kg per min. The heart rate decreased moderately and briefly. The mean systemic arterial pressure increased and then decreased, both minimally. The pulmonary shunt and the arterial O2 content decreased slightly. The total systemic resistance increased and the stroke volume decreased, both substantially. The pulmonary artery wedge pressure gradually increased. The O2 availability decreased markedly. This study demonstrated that a vasopressin infusion causes a marked decreased in O2 availability due primarily to a decreased stroke volume and, to a lesser extent during the 1st hour, to a decreased heart rate. The pulmonary shunt did not increase. Increased systemic resistance followed by a gradual increase in the pulmonary wedge pressure suggests that the decreased stroke volume resulted, at least in part, from an increased afterload and left ventricular failure. It is suggested that until the effect of vasopressin on the cardiopulmonary systems and hence O2 availability is fully studied in critically ill patients, that it be used with caution and with appropriate hemodynamic monitoring.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- ROLE OF ADRENERGIC-STIMULATION IN PATHOGENESIS OF PULMONARY INSUFFICIENCY1977
- Pulmonary Insufficiency Caused by EpinephrineAnnals of Surgery, 1973
- Systemic and Coronary Hemodynamic Effects of VasopressinThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1968