Milrinone increased cardiac output (P<0.0001) and stroke volume (P=0.03) and decreased vascular resistance (P<0.0001) and systolic blood pressure (P=0.008) more potently than dobutamine.
Observational (n=11)
Does milrinone improve physiological parameters compared to dobutamine in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage requiring a pulmonary artery catheter?
Milrinone is more effective at increasing cardiac output but decreases vascular resistance and blood pressure compared to dobutamine in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage.
p-value: p=<0.0001
OBJECTIVE: Neurogenic stunned myocardium is a well-recognized complication of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Dobutamine and milrinone are both used for neurogenic stunned myocardium, but there are few data comparing them after subarachnoid hemorrhage. METHODS: We compared the physiological dose response of dobutamine and milrinone in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage requiring a pulmonary artery catheter. We located 11 patients who received either inotrope. Physiological data were fitted to a mixed model accounting for drug, dose, and between-patient variation. RESULTS: There were 11 patients who had 152 pulmonary artery catheter measurements. Two received both inotropes (but not within 4 h of each other), 2 only milrinone, and 7 only dobutamine. The groups had similar clinical and physiological characteristics. After adjustment for vasopressin, milrinone was significantly more potent in increasing cardiac output (P <0.0001) and stroke volume (P=0.03), while decreasing vascular resistance (P <0.0001) and systolic blood pressure (P=0.008), than dobutamine. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that milrinone and dobutamine should be used in different clinical situations. Milrinone may be more effective in patients with severely depressed systolic function but who have at least normal vascular resistance and blood pressure and in whom raising cardiac output is the primary goal. Dobutamine may be superior when vascular resistance or blood pressure is low.
Naidech et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in Subarachnoid hemorrhage (n=11). Milrinone vs. Dobutamine was evaluated on Physiological dose response (cardiac output, stroke volume, vascular resistance, systolic blood pressure) (p=<0.0001). Milrinone increased cardiac output (P<0.0001) and stroke volume (P=0.03) and decreased vascular resistance (P<0.0001) and systolic blood pressure (P=0.008) more potently than dobutamine.
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