Early administration of shenfu injection for the incidence of sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy in septic patients: a randomized controlled trial
Yaohui Liu, Yujie Fang, Shuliang Zhou, Yao Zhu, Jing Wang, Bo Hu

TL;DR
This study tested whether Shenfu Injection could prevent sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy in ICU patients but found no significant benefit.
Contribution
A randomized controlled trial evaluating Shenfu Injection's preventive effect on sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy in septic ICU patients.
Findings
Early administration of Shenfu Injection did not reduce the incidence of sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy.
NT-proBNP levels showed a significant interaction over time between the Shenfu Injection and control groups.
No significant differences were observed in mortality, organ function, or ICU outcomes between groups.
Abstract
Sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy (SIC) is a severe complication of sepsis that markedly increases mortality. Owing to its complex pathogenesis, no targeted drugs for SIC is currently available, highlighting the need for preventive interventions. This study aimed to evaluate whether early administration of Shenfu Injection (SFI) could prevent SIC. Patients diagnosed with sepsis 3.0 upon intensive care unit (ICU) admission but without SIC were randomly assigned to either the SFI group or control group via envelope randomization. The SFI group received intravenous SFI (200 mL/day) in addition to standard sepsis or septic shock management for 7 days (minimum 72 h if discontinued due to ICU transfer or death). The control group received an equivalent volume of saline alongside standard care. The primary outcome was the incidence of SIC within 7 days. A total of 152 patients (76 per group)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant-based Medicinal Research · Pharmacological Effects of Natural Compounds · Alkaloids: synthesis and pharmacology
