Alias Adrenaline: Epinephrine is commonly known as adrenaline.
Physiological Effects: It narrows blood vessels, opens airways in the lungs, and can reverse severely low blood pressure.
Source and Function: Mainly secreted by the adrenal glands in the medulla, it primarily increases cardiac output and raises blood glucose levels.
Stress Response: Normally released during acute stress, preparing an individual for "fight or flight," making it a primary medication for nonprofusing cardiac arrests.
Sympathomimetic Properties: Epinephrine is a sympathomimetic agent that stimulates alpha and beta-adrenergic receptors.
Medical Uses of Epinephrine
When and How Epinephrine Is Administered
Enhanced Blood Flow: Improves myocardial and cerebral blood flow during CPR, increasing peripheral resistance and profusion pressures.
Allergic Manifestations: Used to reverse acute anaphylaxis's allergic manifestations.
Bronchospasm Relief: Administered to relieve acute and severe asthma-related bronchospasms despite nebulization therapy.
Epinephrine Dosage and Administration
Forms, Dosage, and Contraindications
Available Forms: Epinephrine is available in prefilled syringes or ampules with various concentrations (1:1000 or 1:10,000).
Contraindications: Avoid repeated doses in hypothermic patients; caution in non-cardioselective beta-blocker users like Propranolol.
CPR Administration: Given with shockable rhythms after the third shock and alternately (third, fifth, seventh shocks); with non-shockable rhythms, administered after achieving IV access and following alternative cycles.
Age and Concentration Variations: Dosage depends on the patient's age and the concentration used; administered intravenously or intraosseously.
Anaphylaxis and Asthma: Administered in the anterior lateral aspect of the thigh for anaphylaxis and life-threatening asthma.