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Background: Left ventriculo-arterial coupling (VAC) integrates the interaction between left ventricular contractility and the arterial system, representing a key determinant of cardiovascular efficiency. In rapidly changing hemodynamic states such as septic or cardiogenic shock, conventional indices of pressure or flow alone may be misleading. VAC provides a unified physiological framework to assess global cardiovascular performance and guide therapy. Objective: To review the physiological foundations, bedside assessment, and therapeutic applications of VAC in critically ill patients with rapidly fluctuating circulatory conditions. Methods and Content: The article revisits the underlying principles of VAC, expressed as the ratio between arterial elastance (Ea) and end-systolic elastance (Ees), and discusses their derivation from the pressure–volume relationship. Practical echocardiographic methods for bedside estimation, including the non-invasive single-beat approach, are outlined with illustrative figures. The review further examines how VAC patterns evolve in sepsis, cardiogenic shock, and heart failure and how this integrative index clarifies paradoxical responses to vasoactive and inotropic therapies. Specific therapeutic phenotypes are proposed according to Ea/Ees profiles, providing a structured approach to optimise coupling and restore circulatory efficiency. Summary: VAC offers a physiology-based perspective on cardiovascular performance, enabling clinicians to interpret complex hemodynamic changes beyond traditional measures of ejection fraction or mean arterial pressure. Its dynamic tracking may refine the assessment of therapeutic trajectories and improve bedside decision-making. Conclusions: By integrating ventricular and arterial function into a single measure, VAC bridges cardiovascular physiology and clinical practice. Its incorporation into routine critical care monitoring could enhance individualised hemodynamic management and serve as a foundation for future outcome-driven studies. Methodology: This narrative review was conducted using a structured literature search to ensure comprehensive coverage of contemporary evidence regarding ventriculo-arterial coupling (VAC) in critical care and shock states. A systematic search of PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and Scopus databases was performed from database inception through October 2025. The following key search terms were used: “ventriculo-arterial coupling”; “arterial elastance”; “end-systolic elastance”; “Ea/Ees”; “pressure–volume loops”; “septic shock”; “cardiogenic shock”; “critical care echocardiography”; “point-of-care ultrasound”; “mechanical circulatory support”. Reference lists of relevant articles, review papers, and consensus documents were also manually screened to identify additional pertinent studies. Only English-language publications were included. Both seminal foundational studies and recent contemporary investigations were reviewed to provide historical context and up-to-date clinical applicability.