Abstract

In order to investigate the therapeutic effect of norepinephrine on patients with sepsis and the effect of echocardiography on the diagnosis of cardiac function in patients with sepsis, 86 patients with sepsis were selected as research objects and randomly divided into two groups. Patients in the control group (N = 43 cases) received conventional treatment (1~15 μg/kg∗min dopamine), and those in the experimental group (N = 43 cases) received conventional treatment+norepinephrine therapy (0.05~0.5 μg∗kg−1/min). The clinical efficacy, cardiac ultrasonography results, and hemodynamic indexes of patients between the two groups were analyzed and compared. The results showed that the total effective rate of treatment in the experimental group (97.7%) was significantly higher than that in the control group (81.4%) (P < 0.05). The maximum, minimum, and average values of mitral valve E peak flow velocity (VEpeak) and left ventricular outflow tract peak flow velocity (Vpeak), respiratory variability of mitral valve E peak flow velocity (ΔVEpeak), and respiratory variability of peak flow velocity (ΔVpeak) were all significantly greater than those of the control group (P < 0.05). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of ΔVEpeak and ΔVpeak for predicting positive volume response in patients with sepsis was 0.934 and 0.913, respectively; the sensitivity was 0.828 and 0.827; the specificity was 0.936 and 0.893; and the Youden indices were 0.765 and 0.712, respectively. In short, norepinephrine had a high total response rate in patients with sepsis, and echocardiography can well evaluate the effect of norepinephrine on cardiac function in patients with sepsis, which is worthy of further promotion.

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