Effects of Yunanan Baiyao adjunct therapy on postoperative recovery and clinical prognosis of patients with traumatic brain injury: A randomized controlled trial

Phytomedicine. 2021 Aug:89:153593. doi: 10.1016/j.phymed.2021.153593. Epub 2021 May 14.

Abstract

Background: Effective therapies are needed to prevent the secondary injury and poor prognosis associated with emergency craniotomy of traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Hypothesis/purpose: The wound-healing medicine Yunnan Baiyao (YB) and Xingnaojing (XNJ) adjunct-therapy may improve the outcome of orthodox mono-therapy (OT).

Study design: Randomized controlled trial.

Methods: Eighty patients with moderate-to-severe TBI received emergency craniotomy (within 12 h after TBI) at the Chinese PLA General Hospital before being randomly assigned to 4 different treatments (n = 20) for 7 days: 1) OT; 2) OT+XNJ (i.v. 20 ml/daily); 3) OT+low dose-YB (oral, 1,000 mg/day); 4) OT+high dose-YB, 2,000 mg/day).

Results: GCS score was improved more quickly and became significantly higher in XNJ, l-YB, h-YB groups than in OT group (p<0.01). Serum S100B peaked higher but declined more slowly in OT group than in other groups (p<0.01). On postoperative Day 7, S100B was 20% below baseline in YB and XNJ groups but remained 19% above baseline in OT group which also lost 38% of superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity on Day 3 and recovered 69% of SOD on Day 7 whereas the YB and XNJ groups lost 16%∼23% of SOD activity on Day 3 and recovered 92%∼99% of SOD on Day 7 (p<0.01). Clinical prognosis (Glasgow Outcome Scale and Karnofsky Performance Scale) were significantly better (25%∼30%) in the XNJ, l-YB and h-YB groups than in OT group 3 months post-surgery and were correlated with serum S100B and SOD.

Conclusions: YB and XNJ adjunct therapies improved postoperative recovery and clinical prognosis in patients with moderate-to-severe TBI partly through divergent regulation of S100B and SOD pathways. (The trial was registered at Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR) trial registration number: ChiCTR2000030280).

Keywords: Clinical outcome; Emergency craniotomy; Serum S100B; Superoxide dismutase; Traumatic brain injury; Yunnan Baiyao.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Brain Injuries, Traumatic* / drug therapy
  • Brain Injuries, Traumatic* / surgery
  • China
  • Combined Modality Therapy
  • Craniotomy
  • Drugs, Chinese Herbal / therapeutic use*
  • Humans
  • Postoperative Care
  • Prognosis

Substances

  • Drugs, Chinese Herbal