Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

New trial therapy appears to rapidly reverse life-changing sepsis-induced brain injury

The Florey 3 mins read
Florey Professor Clive May and Professor Yugeesh Lankadeva.

Sodium ascorbate: A formulation developed by The Florey   

Florey researchers have shown that an extremely large ‘megadose’ of sodium ascorbate can turn around sepsis-induced low oxygen levels, low blood flow and high temperature within the brain’s frontal cortex. 

Sepsis is a deadly condition caused by the body’s excessive inflammatory response to infection that frequently causes damage to vital organs and can lead to death. There are currently no treatments. 

The researchers have shown that sepsis causes large falls in the blood flow and level of oxygen in the brain, and raises brain temperature. These changes may contribute to coma and delirium during sepsis and cognitive impairment in sepsis survivors. 

A study led by Professor Clive May and Professor Yugeesh Lankadeva, published in the British Journal of Anaesthesia, shows that a formulation of sodium ascorbate developed by The Florey reverses these insults to the brain that can lead to brain injuries. 

Professor May has been studying sepsis for over two decades. 

“I have never seen such a dramatic response to treatment as occurred after we intravenously administered a megadose of sodium ascorbate to our clinically-relevant large animal model of sepsis,” he said. 

“Before administering the sodium ascorbate, the test subjects were lethargic, unresponsive, lying down and not eating or drinking. Within one hour of receiving the intravenous formulation, they were more alert, and after four hours they had completely recovered their normal behavioural state. They stood up, responded to external stimuli and started eating and drinking. All of these changes suggest a beneficial effect of the treatment on the brain.” 

Professor Lankadeva said the exciting results were important given the lack of current treatments for brain injury in sepsis. He said measurements in the test subjects’ brains showed that the megadose of sodium ascorbate restored microcirculatory blood flow, oxygen levels and temperature in the frontal cortex. 

“Septic patients commonly suffer a range of brain-related complications from delirium to coma, and this can lead to ongoing cognitive impairment and disability in survivors,” Professor Lankadeva said.  

“Our work indicates sodium ascorbate may reverse these detrimental symptoms before any persisting damage is done to the brain.” 

The team has already completed a Phase Ia clinical trial of the treatment, and is moving to a larger nationwide trial of its efficacy in septic patients in intensive care units across Australia, with participants selected by treating clinicians. The treatment is not available to patients outside the trial.  

“We’ve previously shown that sodium ascorbate has beneficial effects on the kidneys and cardiovascular system in septic patients. This latest study shows it is also beneficial to the brain,” Professor Lankadeva said.  

This work was co-funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the National Heart Foundation of Australia, and the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund. 


Key Facts:
  • Sepsis is a deadly condition that currently has no treatments. 

  • Septic patients commonly suffer a range of complications that can cause cognitive impairment and disability.

  • Florey researchers have shown that an extremely large megadose of sodium ascorbate may reverse the harm sepsis causes to the brain.

 


About us:

The Florey is Australia’s leading brain research institute with a focus on improving the lives of people with neurological and psychiatric conditions. The Florey’s research missions are centred around dementia, epilepsy, mental health and developing ways to protect and repair the brain. These missions are strengthened by The Florey’s expertise in neurotherapeutics, neuroimaging, synaptic biology and systems neuroscience. With 600 researchers, The Florey is the largest research centre of its kind in the southern hemisphere. 

Find out more about us on our website: www.florey.edu.au  


Contact details:

Media contact: 

Kathryn Powley, Media and Communications Manager 

kathryn.powley@florey.edu.au | 0456 666 271 

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 08/07/2024
  • 17:28
The Queensland Nurses and Midwives' Union (QNMU)

Nurse-led clinics will provide free, quality care for Queenslanders

The Queensland Nurses and Midwives’ Union (QNMU) says the success of nurse-led clinics in the ACT shows that the roll-out of similar models of primary care clinics in Queensland, will allow more Queenslanders to receive free, quality care in the community, without the need to go to a hospital emergency department (ED) or to see a doctor. QNMU Secretary Sarah Beaman described the introduction of bulk-billed, nurse-led clinics as a ‘common-sense-solution’ in giving people access to primary healthcare at a time of chronic workforce shortages and the cost-of-living crisis. “As we’ve seen in the ACT, nurse-led walk-in clinics have become…

  • Disability, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 08/07/2024
  • 13:10
Mr River Night - National Disability Sector Advocate

Using the Sex Word to Push NDIS legislation again?

Available for Comment Radio – Live, Pre-recorded and Talk-back, TV,Print Mr River Night Leading National Disability Sector Advocate Co-founder at Developing Australian Communities Public…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 08/07/2024
  • 12:38
La Trobe University

Discovering a new way blood vessel growth is controlled

LaTrobe University and Phillipps-University of Marburg (Germany) scientists have discovered how a peptide called Apelin regulates blood vessel growth, opening new avenues of research for cancer treatment, organ regeneration, and tissue engineering. The study, published in Science Advances, revealed that when Apelin is produced by self-renewing stem cells in the nervous system called “neuro progenitor cells”, it regulated the signals to the body which coordinate how blood vessels grow. La Trobe University researcher Dr Kazuhide Shaun Okuda, whose zebrafish research and imaging expertise played key roles in this study, said this discovery could open the way to develop new therapeutics…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.