Anyone have some common rules of thumb to select for pressors to use?
From MAP standpoint, seems like norepinephrine is 1st line for most cases. If that doesn't do job, then u'd add penylephrine. After that, you might add dopamine, or you might add vasopressin if they're in shock.
Any particular situation when u mjight use epinephrine or phenylephrine, or dobutamine as a first line tx?
I'm going to throw out my 2 cents, for what it is worth.
First off, I'm going to assume that you aren't using any pressors on a patient who isn't in shock. My guess is that you mean septic shock when talking about vasopressin.
Secondly, no pressor is going to be effective if the patient is volume depleted. So some assessment of volume status is critical.
Now, lets think about how they all work.
Norepi - peripherial alpha agonist and some beta1
Phenylephrine - peripheral alpha, probably less potent than norepi
Epi - peripheral alpha and beta (I'll ignore the central effects for a moment)
Dopamine - "dopamine receptors at low doses (questionable)" then it is taken up into the nerve terminals and released as norepi and epi
Vaso - peripheral V1 receptor
Basically, the scheme you outline smacks the alpha receptors as the main mechanism of action. When one alpha doens't work, you add more. Given how potent most of these agents are, if you are "maxing" out one, I'm not sure why adding more of the same is really going to be effective (unless there is competative inhibition). Adding vasopressin may make some sense once everything is maxed as it works via completely different mechanism. By the same token you may get some benefit from dopamine, however most of what it does is get turned into epi and norepi.
Instead of just piling on more, that is when I'd start searching for problems beyond arteriolar vasodilation. Cardiac suppression? pH too acid for pressors to work? Adrenal insufficiency? Drug effect? This is when I really start looking for cardiac output measurements, do SVRs and more.
Personally, I like directing acting pressors, such as norepi, over indirect, such as dopmaine. However, the "best" choice is often related to the patient's heart rate. If it low, dopmaine may be more effective as it will likely cause a larger increase in the heart rate. If it is very high, phenyleprine will have the least effect.
In some overdoses, such as TCA or central alpha2 agonist, direct acting pressors are going to be more effect since dopamine may be blocked from working. By the same token, people who have sudden sniffer's death or arrest from chloral hydrate may benefit from a non-adrenergic pressor, since the catecholamines are what touched off the arrest in the first place.
I'm sure people will have other arguments for and against certain schema, but my thinking is this: If a lot of alpha isn't doing it, more won't help (generally). Find something else.