Litcius/Paper detail

Intraoperative Use of Angiotensin II for Severe Vasodilatory Shock During Liver Transplantation: A Case Report

Kati Running, Devin Weinberg, William Trudo, Cinnamon L Sullivan, Gaurav Patel

2021A&A Practice14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Refractory hypotension is a known entity in liver transplantation. Catecholamine and vasopressin infusions are first-line therapies. There has been recent interest in angiotensin II (Ang-2) as an alternative vasopressor; however, liver failure patients were excluded from the original trials. Ang-2 has potential in this patient population. This case discusses a patient who received an infusion of Ang-2 during a liver transplant for combined liver failure-induced distributive shock and septic shock. It is the first known successful use of intraoperative Ang-2 in this situation, and it shows that Ang-2 may be safe in liver transplantation when traditional therapies fail.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLiver transplantationAngiotensin IISeptic shockVasopressinRefractory (planetary science)Shock (circulatory)TransplantationVasodilationIntensive care medicineAnesthesiaInternal medicineBlood pressureSepsisPhysicsAstrobiologyLiver Disease and TransplantationOrgan Transplantation Techniques and OutcomesElectrolyte and hormonal disorders
Intraoperative Use of Angiotensin II for Severe Vasodilatory Shock During Liver Transplantation: A Case Report | Litcius