Abstract

This study examined the hemodynamic and regional vascular profile of intravenous (i.v.) milrinone during increasing doses (3, 6, 12 micrograms/kg/min, n = 8) and by intraindividual comparison of milrinone and dobutamine (n = 10) in normal conscious rats. At 3 micrograms/kg/min, Milrinone increased coronary and cerebral blood flow (radioactive microspheres 15 +/- 5 microns) (7.7-9.8 and 1.05-1.27 ml/min/g respectively, both p less than 0.05) without significant changes in systemic hemodynamics. At 6 micrograms/kg/min milrinone increased skeletal muscle blood flow (0.19-0.24 ml/min/g, p less than 0.05) along with increases in cardiac output, stroke volume, and stroke work (all p less than 0.05), while systemic vascular resistance decreased (-51%, p less than 0.05). When compared with dobutamine, milrinone caused a greater increase in cardiac output (+26% vs. +17%) and a greater reduction in systemic vascular resistance. Milrinone and dobutamine increased renal, intestinal, cerebral, and coronary flow to a similar extent, but only milrinone enhanced hepatic arterial blood flow (+26%, p less than 0.05) and tended to increase flow to skeletal muscle (+35%, p = 0.07). We conclude that milrinone exerts significant regional vasodilating effects in a conscious rat model, being most prominent in the coronary and cerebral circulations at a dosage that does not alter central hemodynamics. At higher doses, milrinone causes a balanced increase in regional blood flow including enhanced flow to skeletal muscle. The hemodynamic (particularly as compared with dobutamine) and regional vascular profile of milrinone suggests a predominant vasodilating effect in the rat. Given a similar limited response of rat and diseased human myocardium to milrinone, these findings may have important clinical implications.

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