Category: Critical Care
Keywords: Shock, procedures, arterial line, blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, MAP (PubMed Search)
Posted: 12/2/2025 by Kami Windsor, MD
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We have all been there – an ED patient with circulatory shock requiring vasoactive medications and, therefore, an arterial line for accurate and close monitoring of the MAP and appropriate titration of the infusions. But does it save lives?
The recently published NEJM article by Muller et al. takes a look at noninvasive BP monitoring (NIBP) by cuff versus early arterial catheterization in patients with hypotension and evidence of tissue hypoperfusion:
Bottom Line: This trial indicates that in appropriately-selected patients with shock, such as those not on high doses of vasopressors, with BMI < 40 and an ability to consistently obtain NIBP measurements, early arterial line placement in the ED for vasopressor titration is unlikely to improve outcomes. It is important to note other potential indications for arterial line placement (severe hypoxia, inability to obtain reliable SpO2 with need for ABG monitoring, cardiac arrest, pain related to NIBP cuff monitoring, intracranial hemorrhage, etcetera) may still make arterial line placement in the ED prudent and better for overall patient care.
*France refers to norepi by the tartrate formulation dose, US refers to the base norepi dose (ratio is 2:1 tartrate: base).
Muller G, Contou D, Ehrmann S, et al.; CRICS-TRIGGERSEP F-CRIN Network and the EVERDAC Trial Group. Deferring Arterial Catheterization in Critically Ill Patients with Shock. N Engl J Med. 2025;393(19):1875-1888. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2502136.