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  1. Vasopressors: Types, Purpose and Side Effects - Cleveland Clinic

    Jun 10, 2022 · Vasopressors are drugs used to raise blood pressure in people whose blood pressure is very low. This helps your body get blood to your organs.

  2. List of Vasopressors - Drugs.com

    Vasopressors are medicines that constrict (narrow) blood vessels, increasing blood pressure. They are used in the treatment of extremely low blood pressure, especially in critically ill patients.

  3. Vasopressors — ICU One Pager

    Shock comes in many flavors and so do vasopressors. Here’s a #OnePager summarizing my approach to pressors including when to start, which ones to use, how to administer them, and when to increase …

  4. Use of vasopressors and inotropes - UpToDate

    Apr 9, 2025 · Vasopressors are a powerful class of drugs that induce vasoconstriction and thereby elevate mean arterial pressure (MAP). Vasopressors differ from inotropes, which increase cardiac …

  5. Shock & vasoactive medications - EMCrit Project

    Jun 17, 2024 · Vasopressors may be administered via a peripheral vein. Norepinephrine may be given peripherally with careful monitoring of the IV site for limited periods of time.

  6. Vasopressors: What Are They Used For? - Verywell Health

    Jan 6, 2026 · Vasopressors are used to increase blood pressure during life-threatening conditions like shock and sepsis. These medications work by constricting blood vessels, raising blood pressure, and …

  7. Pharmacology 101: Vasopressors — tl;dr pharmacy

    Apr 26, 2022 · But if you know the pathophysiology behind each receptor, then understanding vasopressors is a breeze. Speaking of vasopressors, the ones we’re going to focus on today are …

  8. Inotropes, vasopressors and other vasoactive agents

    vasopressors are agents that cause vasoconstriction leading to increased systemic and/or pulmonary vascular resistance (SVR, PVR) — e.g. noradrenaline, vasopressin, metaraminol, vasopressin, …

  9. Common vasopressors and inotropes The table outlines clinical indications, associated receptors, physiology, dosing, titration rates, and adverse effects of various vasopressors and inotropes.*

  10. Antihypotensive - Wikipedia

    An antihypotensive, also known as a vasopressor, is an agent that raises blood pressure by constricting blood vessels, thereby increasing systemic vascular resistance. This is different from inotropes which …