Systolic-dicrotic notch pressure difference can identify patients with septic shock at risk of cardiovascular decompensation in case of heart rate reduction.

2020 
Abstract Background During sepsis, HR reduction could be a therapeutic target, but identification of responders (non-compensatory tachycardia) and non-responders (compensatory for ‘fixed’ stroke volume [SV]) is challenging. We tested the ability of the difference between systolic and dicrotic pressure (SDPdifference), which reflects the coupling between myocardial contractility and a given afterload, in discriminating the origin of tachycardia. Methods In this post hoc analysis of 45 patients with septic shock with persistent tachycardia, we characterised features of haemodynamic response focusing on SDPdifference, classifying patients according to variations in arterial dP/dtmax after 4 h of esmolol administration to maintain HR Results After reducing HR, arterial dP/dtmax remained above the cut-off in 23 patients, whereas it decreased below the cut-off in 22 patients (from 0.99 [0.37] to 0.63 [0.16] mm Hg ms−1; mean [SD], P Conclusions A decrease in SDPdifference could discriminate between compensatory and non-compensatory tachycardia, revealing a covert loss of myocardial contractility not detected by conventional echocardiographic parameters and deteriorating after HR reduction with esmolol. Clinical trial registration NCT02188888 .
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