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1. Norepinephrine (Levophed) — FIRST-LINE for Septic Shock

Starting dose

  • 0.01–0.05 mcg/kg/min

Typical range

  • 0.05–1 mcg/kg/min
    (Common ICU range ~0.05–0.3)

Receptors

  • α1 (+++)

  • β1 (+)

Clinical Use

  • First-line for septic shock

  • Increases MAP via vasoconstriction

  • Minimal HR increase

Pearls

  • If dose > 0.1–0.2 mcg/kg/min → add vasopressin, don’t just escalate norepi indefinitely.


2. Vasopressin — Add-On Pressor

Dose

  • 0.03 units/min (fixed dose)

    • NOT weight-based

    • NOT titrated

Receptors

  • V1 (vasoconstriction)

  • No direct α or β activity

Clinical Use

  • Adjunct when norepi is 0.1–0.2 mcg/kg/min

  • Good for catecholamine-refractory shock

Pearls

  • More effective in acidotic states

  • Helps lower norepi requirement


3. Epinephrine — Add-On or Second-Line

Starting dose

  • 0.01–0.05 mcg/kg/min

Typical range

  • 0.02–0.3 mcg/kg/min

Receptors

  • β1 (++), β2 (++), α1 (+)

  • At higher doses → more α1

Clinical Use

  • Refractory septic shock

  • Anaphylaxis (IV drip in ICU, IM for initial tx)

  • Cardiogenic shock (if bradycardic)

Pearls

  • Increases lactate (β2 effect) → don’t confuse with worsening shock


4. Phenylephrine — Pure Alpha

Starting dose

  • 0.1–0.5 mcg/kg/min

Typical range

  • 0.5–3 mcg/kg/min

Receptors

  • α1 only

Clinical Use

  • Tachyarrhythmias (AFib RVR)

  • Vasoplegia after anesthesia

  • Avoid in cardiogenic shock

Pearls

  • Pure vasoconstriction → may worsen cardiac output


5. Dopamine — Rarely Used

Dose Ranges

  • Low (1–5 mcg/kg/min): dopamine (renal) receptors

  • Medium (5–10): β1

  • High (10–20): α1

Receptors

  • α, β, dopamine (dose-dependent)

Clinical Use

  • Limited use — arrhythmias common

Pearls

  • Avoid except for bradycardic shock when epinephrine unavailable


6. Dobutamine — Inotrope (NOT a pressor)

Starting dose

  • 2.5–5 mcg/kg/min

Typical range

  • 5–20 mcg/kg/min

Receptors

  • β1 (++), β2 (+)

Clinical Use

  • Cardiogenic shock with low cardiac output

  • Right heart failure

  • Sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy

Pearls

  • May decrease BP → use with norepi


7. Milrinone — Inodilator

Dose

  • 0.125–0.75 mcg/kg/min
    (Avoid bolus in shock)

Mechanism

  • PDE-3 inhibitor

  • Increases contractility

  • Vasodilation

Use

  • Right heart failure

  • Post-cardiac surgery

  • Low-output HF

Pearls

  • Renal clearance → avoid in AKI

  • Can worsen hypotension


8. Angiotensin II (Giapreza)

Starting dose

  • 20 ng/kg/min

Typical range

  • 10–80 ng/kg/min

Receptor

  • AT1 receptor

Use

  • Refractory vasodilatory shock (after high-dose norepi + vaso)

Pearls

  • Raises MAP fast

No. Subject Author Date Views
25 Cardiogenic shock in ICU Drhyo 2025.11.16 17
24 PE in ICU Drhyo 2025.11.16 16
23 ICU Hemodynamic Values Drhyo 2025.11.16 14
22 IVC Drhyo 2025.11.16 15
21 AKI in ICU Drhyo 2025.11.16 18
20 ICU steroid use Drhyo 2025.11.16 13
19 ICU EMPIRIC ANTIBIOTICS Drhyo 2025.11.16 17
18 ARDS Vent management Drhyo 2025.11.16 19
17 NIV Drhyo 2025.11.16 12
16 High Anion Gap Metabolic Acidosis MUDPILES Drhyo 2025.11.16 13
15 Quick ICU ABG cause and treatment Drhyo 2025.11.16 13
14 ABG Interpretation Drhyo 2025.11.16 14
13 ABG example Drhyo 2025.11.16 13
12 Paracentesis Drhyo 2025.11.16 16
11 Thoracentesis Drhyo 2025.11.16 14
10 Intubation Drhyo 2025.11.16 11
9 ICU sedative, analgesics, paralytics table Drhyo 2025.11.16 17
8 ICU Sedation Guide Drhyo 2025.11.16 17
7 ICU pressors table Drhyo 2025.11.16 9
» ICU Pressors: Types, Doses, Receptors, Clinical Use Drhyo 2025.11.16 13