A Mathematical Model for Simulation of Vasoplegic Shock and Vasopressor Therapy

IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2023 May;70(5):1565-1574. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2022.3222745. Epub 2023 Apr 20.

Abstract

Objective: To develop a high-fidelity mathematical model intended to replicate the cardiovascular (CV) responses of a critically ill patient to vasoplegic shock-induced hypotension and vasopressor therapy.

Methods: The mathematical model consists of a lumped-parameter CV physiology model with baroreflex modulation feedback and a phenomenological dynamic dose-response model of a vasopressor. The adequacy of the proposed mathematical model was investigated using an experimental dataset acquired from 10 pigs receiving phenylephrine (PHP) therapy after vasoplegic shock induced via sodium nitroprusside (SNP).

Results: Upon calibration, the mathematical model could (i) faithfully replicate the effects of PHP on dynamic changes in blood pressure (BP), cardiac output (CO), and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) (root-mean-squared errors between measured and calibrated mathematical responses: mean arterial BP 2.5+/-1.0 mmHg, CO 0.2+/-0.1 lpm, SVR 2.4+/-1.5 mmHg/lpm; r value: mean arterial BP 0.96+/-0.01, CO 0.65+/-0.45, TPR 0.92+/-0.10) and (ii) predict physiologically plausible behaviors of unmeasured internal CV variables as well as secondary baroreflex modulation effects.

Conclusion: This mathematical model is perhaps the first of its kind that can comprehensively replicate both primary (i.e., direct) and secondary (i.e., baroreflex modulation) effects of a vasopressor drug on an array of CV variables, rendering it ideally suited to pre-clinical virtual evaluation of the safety and efficacy of closed-loop control algorithms for autonomous vasopressor administration once it is extensively validated.

Significance: This mathematical model architecture incorporating both direct and baroreflex modulation effects may generalize to serve as part of an effective platform for high-fidelity in silico simulation of CV responses to vasopressors during vasoplegic shock.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Baroreflex* / physiology
  • Blood Pressure / physiology
  • Computer Simulation
  • Models, Cardiovascular
  • Swine
  • Vasoconstrictor Agents* / pharmacology

Substances

  • Vasoconstrictor Agents