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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The medical treatment of portal hypertension has experienced a marked progress in the past decade due to the introduction of effective portal hypotensive therapy. This has been possible because of the better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms leading to portal hypertension. A major step forward was the introduction of beta-blockers for the prevention of bleeding and rebleeding from gastroesophageal varices. Effective therapy requires the reduction of the hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) to 12 mmHg or below, or at least by 20% of baseline values. Unfortunately, this is only achieved in 1/3 to 1/2 of patients. Combination therapy, associating isosorbide-5-mononitrate and propranolol or nadolol administration enhances the reduction in portal pressure and increases the number of patients in whom HVPG decreases by more than 20% of baseline values and below 12 mmHg. Randomized clinical trials (RCT's) do support the concept that combination therapy is more effective than propranolol or nadolol alone, significantly better than sclerotherapy, and probably than endoscopic banding ligation. Therapy may be complemented by the association of spironolactone. The main inconvenience of pharmacological therapy is that there is no non-invasive method available to detect non-responders to treatment. Failures of drug therapy should be managed endoscopically. Failures of endoscopic treatment require 'rescue' by means of TIPS or shunt surgery. Patients with advanced liver failure should be considered for orthotopic liver transplantation, and put into a waiting list if eligible. In the treatment of acute variceal bleeding pharmacological therapy offer the unique advantage of allowing to provide specific therapy immediately after arrival to hospital, or even during transferral to hospital by ambulance, since it does not require sophisticated equipment and highly qualified medical staff. Vasopressin has been abandoned because of its toxicity, although this can be reduced by the combined administration of transdermal nitroglycerin.
Terlipressin
has longer effects and is more effective and safer than
vasopressin
alone or in combination with nitroglycerin. It has proved to be effective and to decrease mortality from bleeding in double-blind studies. RCT's have shown that this drug is as effective and safer than emergency sclerotherapy. Therapy should be maintained for five days to prevent early rebleeding. Somatostatin is probably as effective as terlipressin. Octreotide is probably useful after endoscopic therapy but can not be recommended as first line treatment. Endoscopic injection sclerotherapy and endoscopic banding ligation are very effective, but require well trained medical staff. There is an increasing trend for initiating therapy with a pharmacological agent, followed by semi-emergency endoscopic therapy as soon as a well trained endoscopist is available (within 12-24 hours), while maintaining drug therapy for 5 days. Failures of medical therapy may be treated by a second session of endoscopic treatment, but if this fails TIPS of emergency surgery should be done. In high-risk situations, such as bleeding from gastric varices or in patients with advanced liver failure, the decision for TIPS or surgery should be done earlier, after failure of the initial treatment.
...
PMID:The sixth Carlos E. Rubio Memorial Lecture. Prevention and treatment of variceal hemorrhage. 1076 Dec 6
Norepinephrine-resistant hypotension when associated with septic shock has a high rate of mortality, which might possibly be reduced by infusion of low-dose
vasopressin
. However, rebound hypotension often arises after treatment is stopped, and the drug usually has to be administered for several days. We report use of terlipressin, a long-acting
vasopressin
analogue, in eight patients with septic shock who did not respond to corticosteroids and methylene blue. A significant rise in blood pressure that lasted for at least 5 h was seen in all patients after a single bolus, allowing reduction or cessation of norepinephrine administration in seven patients. We were able to discharge four patients from intensive care subsequently.
Terlipressin
seems to be an effective rescue therapy, which is able to restore blood pressure in patients with catecholamine-resistant septic shock, without obvious complication.
...
PMID:Terlipressin for norepinephrine-resistant septic shock. 1240 Dec 76
In cirrhosis, lipopolysaccharide (LPS, a product of Gram-negative bacteria) in the blood may cause septic shock. LPS-elicited induction of arterial inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) results in nitric oxide (NO)-induced vasodilation, which causes arterial hypotension and hyporeactivity to alpha(1)-adrenergic constrictors. In vitro studies have suggested that
vasopressin
inhibits iNOS expression in cultured vascular smooth muscle cells exposed to LPS. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of terlipressin administration (a
vasopressin
analog) on in vivo LPS-induced aortic iNOS in rats with cirrhosis. LPS (1 mg/kg, intravenously) was administered followed by the intravenous administration of terlipressin (0.05 mg/kg, intravenously) or placebo 1 hour later. Arterial pressure was measured, and contractions to phenylephrine (an alpha(1)-adrenoceptor agonist), iNOS activity, and iNOS expressions (mRNA and protein) were investigated in isolated aortas. LPS-induced arterial hypotension and aortic hyporeactivity to phenylephrine were abolished in rats that received terlipressin. LPS-induced aortic iNOS activity and expression were suppressed in terlipressin-treated rats. In conclusion, in LPS-challenged rats with cirrhosis, terlipressin administration inhibits in vivo LPS-induced aortic iNOS expression.
Terlipressin
administration may be a novel approach for the treatment of arterial hypotension and hyporeactivity to alpha(1)-adrenergic constrictors in patients with cirrhosis and septic shock.
...
PMID:Terlipressin inhibits in vivo aortic iNOS expression induced by lipopolysaccharide in rats with biliary cirrhosis. 1239 16
In recent years, the use of
vasopressin
analogues in the treatment of hepatorenal syndrome has become an effective therapeutic strategy leading to improved survival and often allowing the completion of liver transplantation.
Terlipressin
, in particular, has proven to be safe and effective. Due to the limited number of patients treated so far, it is, however, difficult to draw any definite conclusions on the optimal dosage and on the occurrence of side-effects in these patients. The case is reported of an ascitic cirrhotic patient who developed spontaneous bacterial peritonitis followed by a type-I hepatorenal syndrome. Treatment with terlipressin boluses (0.5 mg/4 h) associated with albumin infusion was then started. The course of the disease was monitored by clinical and laboratory means. After 10 boluses of terlipressin, rectorrhagia and severe ischaemic complications involving the skin of the abdomen, lower limbs, scrotus, and penis, occurred. These ischaemic complications improved after terlipressin withdrawal, while renal failure evolved leading to the patient's death. This case report shows that, in patients with type-I hepatorenal syndrome, the use of terlipressin, even at low dosages, may induce life-threatening ischaemic complications and, moreover, suggests that the recent occurrence of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, even if properly treated, may significantly increase the risk of major ischaemic complications.
...
PMID:Is spontaneous bacterial peritonitis an inducer of vasopressin analogue side-effects? A case report. 1287 Jul 38
Bleeding from gastroesophageal varices is a frequent and often deadly complication of cirrhosis. The key factor in the natural history of esophageal varices is increased portal pressure, which in cirrhosis is due to the combination of increased hepatic vascular resistance and increased portal collateral blood flow. The maintenance and aggravation of this situation leads to the progressive dilation of the varices and thinning of the variceal wall, until the tension exerted by the variceal wall exceeds the elastic limit of the vessel, leading to variceal hemorrhage. Mortality from a variceal bleeding episode has decreased in the last two decades from 40% to 20% due to the implementation of effective treatments and improvement in the general medical care. Initial treatment should include adequate fluid resuscitation and transfusion to maintain the hematocrit at 25% to 30%, and prophylactic antibiotics (norfloxacin or amoxicillin-clavulanic acid). It is currently recommended that a vasoactive drug be started at the time of admission. Drug therapy may be started during transferal to hospital by medical or paramedical personnel and maintained for up to five days to prevent early rebleeding.
Terlipressin
, a
vasopressin
derivative, is the preferred agent because of its safety profile and proven efficacy in improving survival. Somatostatin is as effective as terlipressin, but may require higher than the usually recommended dosage. Octreotide is effective in conjunction with endoscopic therapy, but is the second choice because it has not been shown to reduce mortality. Vasopressin may be used where terlipressin is not available, but should be given in combination with transdermal nitroglycerin. Endoscopic elastic band ligation is the recommended endoscopic treatment, but injection sclerotherapy is still employed in many centres for active variceal bleeding. Failures of medical therapy (drugs plus endoscopic therapy) should undergo a second course of endoscopic therapy before proceeding to transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt or, in rare occasions, to portosystemic shunt surgery. Administration of recombinant activated factor VII may decrease the number of treatment failures among patients with advanced liver failure (Child-Pugh class B and C).
...
PMID:Medical management of variceal bleeding in patients with cirrhosis. 1499 22
Hemodynamic support during the circulatory failure with vasodilation, most frequently during the septic shock, is based on volume recovery and administration of inotropic drugs. If such therapy is not sufficient, vasoconstriction drugs are subsequently or parallel added to maintain the perfusion pressure. As a standard therapy, norepinephrine or other catecholamines with alpha-adrenergic effect are used in rising doses. Some patients do not respond to such therapy with desired hemodynamic changes--they develop catecholamine resistant shock. Because of serious side effects of high doses of catecholamines, alternative vasopressors are necessary. Vasopressin,
antidiuretic hormone
, has in physiological conditions only minimal effect of the vascular tone. During hypovolemia its concentration rises and it may significantly contribute to the maintenance of arterial pressure by vasoconstriction. Contrary to it, during septic shock the levels of vasopressine are very low and vasodilation clinically dominates. At the same time, the septic shock is accompanied by an increased sensitivity to
vasopressin
administration. In a critical shock a serious deficit of endogenous
vasopressin
is expected. At present several pilot studies with vasopressine administration in septic shock exist in literature describing beneficial effect of
vasopressin
on hemodynamic parameters. Such comparatively low doses have no side effects on perfusion and function of body organs.
Terlipressin
, which is available in Czech Republic, is a synthetic analogue of
vasopressin
with extended effect. Its intermittent administration is used for the treatment of portal hypertension complications.
Terlipressin
in animal model of septic shock has similarly beneficial effects as
vasopressin
. High doses of
Terlipressin
have, similarly to
vasopressin
, adverse effects on pulmonary circulation and other systems. Till present, only casuistic experience has been published with low doses of
Terlipressin
in the treatment of septic shock resistant to catecholamines, which has shown similar effects to
vasopressin
. In shock states with the deficit of endogenous
vasopressin
, which are resistant to high doses of catecholamines, administration of
vasopressin
analogues represents a new perspective therapy. The treatment should be studied from the point of morbidity and mortality. A careful approach has to be used in septic patients with pre-existing obliterative vassal disease.
...
PMID:[Vasopressin and its analogues in the therapy of shock]. 1530 65
Terlipressin
--a long-acting analogue of
vasopressin
--has been described to restore blood pressure in patients with catecholamine-resistant septic shock without obvious complications. We administered low-dose terlipressin (a single i.v.-bolus of 0.5 mg) to a patient with severe, hyperdynamic septic shock requiring high dosage of noradrenalin. After terlipressin the dose of noradrenalin could be reduced by 2/3 to obtain the same blood pressure. Two hours after terlipressin, the cardiac index had decreased from 6.2 to 3.3 l min(-1) m(-2) and the concentration of L-lactate in the rectal lumen, as assessed by equilibrium dialysis, increased from 3.6 to 7.2 mmol l(-1). In contrast, the systemic concentration of L-lactate was unaffected around 2.8 mmol l(-1). After 8 h the effect of terlipressin started to decline, and after an additional 12 h the systemic haemodynamics, dose of noradrenalin and concentrations of rectal and systemic L-lactate were the same as prior to the administration of terlipressin. As a strong vasopressor, terlipressin may have further impaired the metabolic dysfunction in the rectal mucosa either directly via vasoconstriction of mucosal vessels or through decreased cardiac output in this patient with noradrenalin-treated septic shock.
...
PMID:Terlipressin increased the concentration of L-lactate in the rectal lumen in a patient with septic shock. 1531 26
Vasopressin (
antidiuretic hormone
) is emerging as a potentially major advance in the treatment of septic shock.
Terlipressin
(tricyl-lysine-
vasopressin
) is the synthetic, long-acting analogue of
vasopressin
, and has comparable pharmacodynamic but different pharmacokinetic properties. Vasopressin mediates vasoconstriction via V1 receptor activation on vascular smooth muscle. Septic shock first causes a transient early increase in blood
vasopressin
concentrations; these concentrations subsequently decrease to very low levels as compared with those observed with other causes of hypotension. Infusions of 0.01-0.04 U/min
vasopressin
in septic shock patients increase plasma
vasopressin
concentrations. This increase is associated with reduced need for other vasopressors. Vasopressin has been shown to result in greater blood flow diversion from nonvital to vital organ beds compared with adrenaline (epinephrine). Of concern is a constant decrease in cardiac output and oxygen delivery, the consequences of which in terms of development of multiple organ failure are not yet known.
Terlipressin
(one or two boluses of 1 mg) has similar effects, but this drug has been used in far fewer patients. Large randomized clinical trials should be conducted to establish the utility of these drugs as therapeutic agents in patients with septic shock.
...
PMID:Clinical review: Vasopressin and terlipressin in septic shock patients. 1577 80
Intractable hypotension due to septic shock is associated with high mortality rates in critically ill children worldwide. The use of terlipressin (triglycyl-lysine-
vasopressin
), an analog of
vasopressin
with a longer duration of action, recently emerged as a treatment of hypotension not responsive to vasopressors and inotropes. This was a retrospective study set in an 18-bed pediatric critical care department in a tertiary care children's hospital. We reviewed the files of all children with septic shock who were treated with terlipressin between January 2003 and February 2004. Fourteen children (mean age, 5.6 years; range, 4 days to 17.7 years) were treated with terlipressin in 16 septic shock episodes. Significant improvements in respiratory and hemodynamic indices were noted shortly after treatment. Mean arterial blood pressure increased significantly from 54 +/- 3 to 72 +/- 5 mmHg 10 min after terlipressin administration (P = 0.001). Heart rate decreased from 153.0 +/- 6.5 beats/min to 138.0 +/- 7.5 beats/min 12 h after treatment onset (P = 0.003). Epinephrine infusion was decreased or stopped in eight patients after terlipressin administration. Urine output increased from 1.6 +/- 0.5 mL/kg/h to 4.3 +/- 1.2 mL/kg/h 1 h after treatment onset (P = 0.011). PaO2 increased from 95.1 +/- 12.3 mmHg to 110.1 +/- 20.5 mmHg, and the oxygenation index decreased from 10.2 +/- 2.2 to 9.2 +/- 1.7.
Terlipressin
treatment of hypotension due to septic shock was successful in eight out of 16 episodes. Six of the 14 patients with poor prognosis for survival recovered. We conclude that terlipressin improves hemodynamic indices and renal function in critically ill children.
Terlipressin
should be considered as a rescue therapy in intractable shock not responsive to catecholamines in children.
...
PMID:Terlipressin as rescue therapy for intractable hypotension due to septic shock in children. 1580 52
Hepato-renal syndrome (HRS) is a functional renal failure complicating end-stage liver disease. HRS is characterized by marked arterial vasodilation (mainly of the splanchnic bed) and severe renal vasoconstriction. HRS is classified into 2 types: type I HRS shows a rapid and progressive decline in renal function with a very poor prognosis (median survival of about 2 weeks); HRS type 2 has a more stable renal failure, with a median survival of about 6 months. The management of HRS is still a big challenge. The definitive therapy for HRS is liver transplantation (LT); however, the survival rate of HRS patients is poor, and important organ shortage exists. Various approaches have been used for HRS treatment including vasoconstrictor therapy. Recent evidence has shown that vasoconstrictor agents are effective and serve as a bridge to LT; the rationale for vasoconstrictors is to counteract the splanchnic arterial vasodilation and increase the effective arterial blood volume. Thus, renal perfusion and glomerular filtration rates improve.
Terlipressin
, a V1
vasopressin
agonist, has been used frequently. A recent meta-analysis of clinical trials showed that the pooled rate of patients who reversed HRS after terlipressin therapy was 0.52 (95% CI, 0.42; 0.61; P = 0.0001, /2 = 24.6%). The pooled Odds Ratio (OR) for mortality rate in HRS patients who were not responders to terlipressin versus responders was 5.746 (95% CI, 1.5; 21.9; P = 0.0005). Prospective, controlled clinical trials are in progress to address the impact of vasoconstrictor use on survival in HRS patients. Alternative therapies such as transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (TIPS) and extracorporeal albumin dialysis (ECAD) have given encouraging results but experience is extremely limited.
...
PMID:Recent advances in the management of hepato-renal syndrome (HRS). 1828 7
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