Guide — Critical Care
Vasopressors and Inotropes Explained
How vasoactive medications work, which drug fits which shock state, MAP targets, and what ICU nurses monitor when these infusions are running.
14 min read · Critical Care
Educational use only. Vasoactive medications are high-alert drugs requiring intensive clinical monitoring. This content is for learning purposes and does not constitute prescribing guidance. Follow your institution's protocols for all patient care decisions. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Vasopressor vs. Inotrope
Vasopressors work by constricting blood vessels, increasing systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and raising mean arterial pressure. They are used when the primary problem is vasodilation — distributive shock states such as septic, anaphylactic, or neurogenic shock.
Inotropes work by increasing myocardial contractility and cardiac output (CO). They are used when the heart itself is failing — cardiogenic shock — and the problem is pump function rather than vascular tone.
In practice, most vasoactive drugs have overlapping effects. Understanding receptor profiles is the key to matching the right drug to the hemodynamic problem.
Receptor Basics
| Receptor | Location | Effect When Stimulated |
|---|---|---|
| Alpha-1 (α1) | Vascular smooth muscle | Vasoconstriction → ↑SVR, ↑BP |
| Beta-1 (β1) | Heart (SA node, myocardium) | ↑Heart rate (chronotropy), ↑Contractility (inotropy) |
| Beta-2 (β2) | Bronchi, peripheral vasculature | Bronchodilation, mild peripheral vasodilation |
| Dopaminergic (DA) | Renal and mesenteric vasculature | Local vasodilation of renal and splanchnic beds |
| V1 (Vasopressin) | Vascular smooth muscle | Vasoconstriction via non-adrenergic pathway |
Drug-by-Drug Breakdown
Norepinephrine (Levophed)
Epinephrine (Adrenalin)
Dopamine
Dobutamine
Vasopressin (ADH)
Phenylephrine (Neo-Synephrine)
MAP Goals in Critical Care
Mean arterial pressure (MAP) is calculated as: MAP = (SBP + 2 × DBP) ÷ 3. It represents the average driving pressure for organ perfusion throughout the cardiac cycle.
| Clinical Context | MAP Target | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Septic shock (standard) | ≥65 mmHg | Surviving Sepsis Campaign minimum; adequate for most organ perfusion |
| Chronic hypertension history | ≥70–80 mmHg | Autoregulatory curve is shifted right; organs need higher baseline pressure |
| Traumatic brain injury (TBI) | ≥80 mmHg | Cerebral perfusion pressure = MAP − ICP; adequate MAP protects injured brain |
| Post-cardiac arrest (ROSC) | 65–100 mmHg | Avoid both hypotension and severe hypertension during cerebral reperfusion |
| Cardiogenic shock | ≥65 mmHg | Balance organ perfusion against the added myocardial oxygen demand of higher pressure |
Matching the Drug to the Shock State
| Shock State | Core Problem | First-Line Agent | Escalation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Septic | ↓SVR, distributive vasodilation | Norepinephrine | Add vasopressin 0.03 units/min, then epinephrine if refractory |
| Anaphylactic | ↓SVR, histamine-mediated | Epinephrine IM (0.3–0.5 mg) | Norepinephrine infusion if hypotension persists |
| Cardiogenic | ↓CO, pump failure, ↑SVR | Dobutamine (↑CO) | Norepinephrine if MAP inadequate; avoid if tachycardia present |
| Neurogenic | ↓SVR + bradycardia (loss of sympathetic tone) | Phenylephrine or norepinephrine | Atropine or pacing if bradycardia is dominant |
| Hypovolemic | ↓Preload, ↓CO from volume loss | Fluid resuscitation (primary treatment) | Norepinephrine as bridge only if MAP critically low during resuscitation |
Nursing Monitoring Priorities
NCLEX / CCRN Pearls
- ›Norepinephrine is the first-line vasopressor for septic shock — not dopamine.
- ›Dobutamine is an inotrope that increases CO but may drop BP — monitor closely in cardiogenic shock.
- ›Vasopressin is run at a fixed rate (0.03–0.04 units/min) and is never titrated like catecholamines.
- ›Phenylephrine is the only pure alpha-1 agent — it raises MAP without increasing heart rate.
- ›Epinephrine directly raises serum lactate through glycogenolysis — this is not equivalent to worsening perfusion.
- ›All vasopressors should infuse through central access whenever possible; peripheral extravasation causes tissue necrosis.
- ›MAP ≥65 mmHg is the standard septic shock target; patients with chronic hypertension or TBI may need higher targets.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026This page is written to align with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) · Surviving Sepsis Campaign · American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
