does epinephrine or vasopressin increase coronary perfusion pressure?
The American Heart Association does not recommend epinephrine for management of hypothermic cardiac arrest if body core temperature is below 30 degrees C. Furthermore, the effects of vasopressin administration during hypothermic cardiac arrest are totally unknown. This study was designed to assess the effects of vasopressin and epinephrine on coronary perfusion pressure in a porcine model during hypothermic cardiac arrest cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Pigs were surface-cooled until their body core temperature was 26 degrees C. After 30 min of untreated cardiac arrest, followed by 3 min of basic life support CPR, 15 animals were randomly assigned to receive, at 5-min intervals, either vasopressin (0.4, 0.4, and 0.8 U/kg; n = 5), epinephrine (45, 45, and 200 microg/kg; n = 5), or saline placebo (n = 5). Compared with epinephrine, mean +/- SEM coronary perfusion pressure was significantly higher (P < 0.05) 90 s and 5 min after the first (35+/-4 vs 22+/-3 mm Hg and 37+/-2 vs 16+/-2