Skip to content. Skip to navigation
Personal tools
  Members Area  

ANZCA

Sections
You are here: Home JFICM Home Resources Critical Care and Resuscitation 2002 September The Physiology and Clinical Applications of Vasopressin in Critical Illness
Navigation
 
Document Actions

The Physiology and Clinical Applications of Vasopressin in Critical Illness

ABSTRACT

Objective
:

To present the physiology of vasopressin, and review published data on its use in critically ill patients.

Data sources
:

A review of articles on the clinical use of vasopressin in critical care medicine up to 2002 and identified through a MEDLINE search.

Summary of review:

Vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) acts via vasopressinergic receptors to maintain osmotic and baroreceptor homeostasis. It has complex and varying effects depending on serum levels, coexisting disease states and organs studied. Synthetic vasopressin is available for clinical use. In large doses (e.g. 40 U) it has vasoconstrictor effects comparable to epinephrine during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The use of much lower "replacement" doses (e.g. 0.04 U/min) may have a marked vasopressor effect in clinical states associated with vasopressin deficiency; for example sepsis, the organ donor and after cardiopulmonary bypass. These doses are much lower than those leading to cardiovascular effects in healthy patients and may avoid the adverse vasoconstrictor effects seen at "pharmacological" doses. The use of vasopressin to reduce portal pressure and bleeding in oesophageal varices is well established.

Conclusions:
Vasopressin has widespread effects throughout the body and has several important clinical applications in the critically ill patient. (Critical Care and Resuscitation 2002; 4: 181-191)


Key words:

Vasopressin, physiology, critical care, sepsis, shock, brain death, oesophageal varices

pdf icon Click here to get the file

Member Login
Having difficulties? Get your password here
Calendar
« November 2008 »
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30