Objective:
Angiotensin II is an endogenous hormone with vasopressor and
endocrine activities. This is a systematic review of the safety of IV
angiotensin II.
Data Sources:
PubMed, Medline, Scopus, and Cochrane.
Study Selection:
Studies in which human subjects received IV angiotensin II were
selected whether or not safety was discussed.
Data Extraction: In
total, 18,468 studies were screened by two reviewers and one arbiter.
One thousand one hundred twenty-four studies, in which 31,281
participants received angiotensin II (0.5–3,780 ng/kg/min), were
selected. Data recorded included number of subjects, comorbidities,
angiotensin II dose and duration, pressor effects, other physiologic
and side effects, and adverse events.
Data Synthesis: The
most common nonpressor effects included changes in plasma
aldosterone, renal function, cardiac variables, and electrolytes.
Adverse events were infrequent and included headache, chest pressure,
and orthostatic symptoms. The most serious side effects were
exacerbation of left ventricular failure in patients with congestive
heart failure and bronchoconstriction. One patient with congestive
heart failure died from refractory left ventricular failure.
Refractory hypotensive shock was fatal in 55 of 115 patients treated
with angiotensin II in case studies, cohort studies, and one
placebo-controlled study. One healthy subject died after a pressor
dose of angiotensin II was infused continuously for 6 days. No other
serious adverse events attributable to angiotensin II were reported.
Heterogeneity in study design prevented meta-analysis.
Conclusion: Adverse
events associated with angiotensin II were infrequent; however,
exacerbation of asthma and congestive heart failure and one fatal
cerebral hemorrhage were reported. This systematic review supports
the notion that angiotensin II has an acceptable safety profile for
use in humans.
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