Commentary


Heart rate reduction may be a major determinant of vascular tone in esmolol-treated septic shock patients—although still remains to be confirmed!

Antoine Kimmoun, Chaoije Wei, Bruno Levy, Djillali Annane

Abstract

Over the last decade, the regulation of the autonomic nervous system by β1-adrenoreceptor antagonists in septic shock patients has been the subject of growing literature. In 2013, Morelli et al. published a randomized, controlled, open-label, single-center phase 2 trial investigating the efficacy of intravenous esmolol, a short acting β1-blocker titrated to lower heart rate (HR) in septic shock patients with severe tachycardia. This study found that esmolol was associated with a reduction in HR to the specified target range (80–94 bpm), maintained cardiac output, increased systemic vascular resistances along with a subsequent reduction in norepinephrine dose requirements (1).

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