Relative importance of α and β adrenergic receptors during resuscitation

Successful resuscitation from cardiac arrest in the asphyxiated dog model has been ascribed to the use of artificial ventilation, closed chest cardiac massage, and administration of a vasopressor. Controversy remains over whether the most commonly employed vasopressor, epinephrine, exerts its effect...

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Veröffentlicht in:Critical care medicine 1979-07, Vol.7 (7), p.293-296
Hauptverfasser: YAKAITIS, RONALD W, OTTO, CHARLES W, BLITT, CASEY D
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container_title Critical care medicine
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creator YAKAITIS, RONALD W
OTTO, CHARLES W
BLITT, CASEY D
description Successful resuscitation from cardiac arrest in the asphyxiated dog model has been ascribed to the use of artificial ventilation, closed chest cardiac massage, and administration of a vasopressor. Controversy remains over whether the most commonly employed vasopressor, epinephrine, exerts its effects primarily by elevating diastolic pressure and reestablishing coronary flow, or by exciting cardiac pacemaker cells and enhancing myocardial contractility. To observe pure α and β adrenergic receptor influences during resuscitation, three groups (α-blocked, β-blocked, unblocked) of dogs were studied. β-blocked dogs resuscitated with phenylephrine and unblocked dogs resuscitated with epinephrine experienced 100% successful resumption of spontaneous circulation after 5 min of asphyxia-induced arrest. Only 27% of α-blocked animals resuscitated with isoproterenol were successfully revived. The appearance of the ECG during cardiac arrest and resuscitation could in no way be used to predict the outcome of resuscitation attempts.Results suggest that, initially, a receptor stimulation with concomitant diastolic pressure elevation is more important to the success of resuscitation than β receptor stimulation.
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subjects Animals
Blood Circulation - drug effects
Dogs
Epinephrine - therapeutic use
Heart Arrest - drug therapy
Heart Arrest - therapy
Heart Massage
Isoproterenol - therapeutic use
Phenylephrine - therapeutic use
Receptors, Adrenergic - drug effects
Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha - drug effects
Receptors, Adrenergic, beta - drug effects
Respiration, Artificial
Resuscitation
title Relative importance of α and β adrenergic receptors during resuscitation
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