1. Association Between Changes in Norepinephrine Infusion Rate and Urinary Oxygen Tension After Cardiac Surgery
- Author
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Johnny Vogiatjis, Khin M. Noe, Andrea Don, Andrew D. Cochrane, Michael Z.L. Zhu, Julian A. Smith, Jennifer P. Ngo, Andrew Martin, Amanda G. Thrift, Rinaldo Bellomo, and Roger G. Evans
- Subjects
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
To determine if the administration of norepinephrine to patients recovering from on-pump cardiac surgery is associated with changes in urinary oxygen tension (POSingle center, prospective observational study.Surgical intensive care unit (ICU).A nonconsecutive sample of 93 patients recovering from on-pump cardiac surgery.In the ICU, norepinephrine was the most commonly used vasopressor agent (90% of patients, 84/93), with fewer patients receiving epinephrine (48%, 45/93) or vasopressin (4%, 4/93). During the 30-to-60-minute period after increasing the infused dose of norepinephrine (n = 89 instances), urinary POIn patients recovering from on-pump cardiac surgery, changes in norepinephrine dose are associated with reciprocal changes in urinary PO
- Published
- 2023
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