Epinephrine promotes resuscitation from ventricular fibrillation because of its peripheral vasoconstrictive effects. However, the beta-adrenergic effects of epinephrine may be detrimental because of the stimulation of myocardial oxygen demand. To test whether functional recovery from fibrillation in hearts treated with a selective alpha-adrenergic agent is greater than in hearts treated with epinephrine, ventricular fibrillation was induced in eight isolated dog hearts while coronary perfusion pressure was maintained at 30 mm Hg. In random order, epinephrine (5 micrograms/min), phenylephrine (50 micrograms/min) or no drug was infused for 5 min. The heart was then defibrillated, the drug infusion stopped and coronary perfusion pressure increased to 100 mm Hg. Coronary blood flow (ml/min per 100 g), arteriovenous oxygen difference (ml O2/dl) and myocardial oxygen consumption (ml O2/min per 100 g) measured after 4 min of ventricular fibrillation were greater with epinephrine (mean +/- SD 30.9 +/- 11.7, 17.5 +/- 1.6 and 5.4 +/- 1.9, respectively) than with phenylephrine (24.4 +/- 6.0, 15.7 +/- 2.6 and 3.8 +/- 1.1, respectively) or no drug (19.8 +/- 5.2, 12.8 +/- 1.8 and 2.6 +/- 0.7, respectively) (p less than 0.05, p less than 0.05 and p less than 0.05, respectively). The slope of the end-systolic pressure-volume relation 10 min after defibrillation and restoration of normal coronary perfusion pressure was depressed (percent of prefibrillation value) most by epinephrine infusion (72 +/- 17%, n = 6), less by no drug infusion (82 +/- 12%, n = 4) and was increased after phenylephrine infusion (143 +/- 17%, n = 6) (p less than 0.002).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0735-1097(90)90608-r | DOI Listing |
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