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. 2017 Aug 24;4(9):75. doi: 10.3390/children4090075

Table 1.

Vasodilators in the management of pulmonary hypertension in infants.

Drug Dosage/Route of Administration Common Adverse Effects
Nitric Oxide Inhaled 5–20 ppm (OI > 20); Wean iNO—FiO2 < 60%; PaO2 > 60 mmHg; Keep SpO2 ≥ 91; Infants on chronic iNO therapy—wean last 5 ppm gradually to ↓ rebound PH Monitor methemoglobin during use
PDE5 Inhibitor—Sildenafil Oral—0.5 mg/kg q8–6 ↑ to 2 mg/kg q8–6 over 2 weeks IV (continuous infusion): 0.4 mg/kg over 3 h (LD); Infusion—0.07 mg/kg/h Systemic hypotension; watch for worsening oxygenation due to vasodilation of unventilated areas of the lung; flushing, diarrhea, nasal congestion, priapism
Prostanoids *—Epoprostenol IV/continuous Aerosolization—2 ng/kg/min ↑ to 20–50 ng/kg/min Systemic hypotension, nausea, vomiting, flushing, diarrhea, thrombocytopenia, bloodstream infection
Treprostinil Subcutaneous—1.5 ng/kg/min ↑ to 20–40 ng/kg/min; Inhaled—3–9 breaths (6 µg/breath) q6 Infusion site pain, site infection, flushing, diarrhea, nausea, jaw pain, bloodstream infection
Iloprost Inhalation: 1–2.5 µg/kg q2–4 h Cough, syncope, hypotension, flushing, headache, trismus
PDE3 Inhibitor—Milrinone IV—50 µg/kg (LD) over 1–2 h; Infusion—20–75 µg/kg/min Hypotension, tachycardia, arrhythmias, thrombocytopenia, low potassium, bronchospasm
Endothelial Receptor Antagonist—Bosentan Oral: 1 mg/kg q12 Hypotension, flushing, hepatotoxicity, anemia, thrombocytopenia, teratogenesis

IV: intravenous; SC: subcutaneous; LD: loading dose. Sildenafil is commonly administered per oral (PO) occasionally IV. * Second line drugs are not well studied in neonates and infants with PH.