Xiyanping injection
Specifically for Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease
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Why it works for Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease:
Antiviral + anti-inflammatory pharmacology. Xiyanping is a water-soluble sulfonated derivative of andrographolide (from Andrographis paniculata). Sulfonation improves solubility while largely retaining andrographolide’s reported antiviral and NF-κB–modulating anti-inflammatory activity, which could lessen fever and mucocutaneous inflammation in HFMD. MDPI
Activity against EV-A71 (a major HFMD pathogen). In an EV71-lethal mouse model, andrographolide sulfonate (trade name: Xiyanping) reduced mortality and explored mechanisms of action against the virus. (Preclinical—but pathogen-relevant.) ScienceDirect
Chinese expert consensus includes HFMD among indications. National expert guidance in China lists HFMD (particularly mild/moderate disease) as a setting where Xiyanping can be considered to improve clinical symptoms alongside standard care. Directory of Open Access Journals
How to use for Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease:
Route: Intravenous infusion is the recommended method for children (not mixed in the same container with other drugs). Dayi
Typical paediatric dose: 5–10 mg/kg/day (andrographolide sulfonates), diluted in 0.9% NaCl or 5% glucose, infused once daily; maximum daily dose generally ≤ 250 mg. Control the drip rate (often ~30–40 drops/min in children). Course is usually a few days based on response. Follow local protocols and a paediatrician’s order. Dayi
When to start / combine therapy: Expert consensus advises early initiation for acute infectious diseases with fever/symptoms and allows combination with conventional therapy, while avoiding mixing in-line and being cautious with multi-drug regimens. CMAB
Scientific Evidence for Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease:
Randomised controlled trial (mild HFMD). A 329-child RCT reported shorter time to defervescence, rash resolution, and oral ulcer healing with Xiyanping (alone or in combos) versus controls. (Chinese journal; abstract accessible.) ScienceDirect
Chinese multicentre RCT registration (HFMD). Registered trials specifically evaluating Xiyanping for paediatric HFMD (NCT01554930) outline multicentre, randomized designs to assess effectiveness/safety. (Registration details available; results reporting limited.) ClinicalTrials
Adjunctive therapy reports. Earlier clinical studies during the 2010 EV71 epidemic suggested that adding andrographolide sulfonate to conventional therapy improved outcomes in severe HFMD, though overall evidence quality was limited and called for better trials. Wiley Online Library
Mechanistic/preclinical support. EV71-infected mouse model work demonstrated mortality reduction and investigated antiviral mechanisms of the sulfonated andrographolide used in Xiyanping. ScienceDirect
Reviews & guidance. Reviews of andrographolide sulfonates summarise clinical use (including HFMD) and known adverse reactions; Chinese expert consensus documents provide evidence-graded recommendations for acute infections. MDPI
Specific Warnings for Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease:
Allergic / pseudo-allergic reactions (including serious). Large database and pharmacovigilance studies associate Xiyanping—especially when combined with other agents (e.g., ribavirin)—with increased risk of suspected allergic reactions (often cutaneous; rarely severe). Avoid unnecessary combinations and standardise protocols in children. Frontiers
Regulatory safety actions (China). The CFDA/NMPA issued alerts and batch recalls (2017) after clusters of severe reactions (e.g., chills, fever) with specific lots of Xiyanping injection; prior bulletins (2012) warned of anaphylaxis risk with Xiyanping and similar TCM injections, urging slow infusion, no mixing, careful screening for allergy history, and close monitoring—especially in children. ccm.dxy.cn
Contraindications/precautions from label & consensus:
- Contraindicated in known allergy to Andrographis / andrographolide-class drugs.
- Do not mix in the same container with other IV drugs; flush lines between drugs.
- Infuse slowly; monitor closely during the first 30 minutes.
- Use with caution in infants/elderly and those with hepatic/renal impairment; first-time recipients require enhanced monitoring. Dayi
Not a substitute for supportive care / escalation. HFMD is typically self-limited; ensure hydration, analgesia/antipyretics, and look for red-flags (neurologic, cardiopulmonary signs)—urgent care pathways per HFMD guidelines still apply. CDC
General Information (All Ailments)
What It Is
Xiyanping injection (喜炎平) is a traditional-Chinese-medicine–derived injectable preparation. Its principal active moiety is andrographolide sulfonate, a water-soluble semisynthetic derivative of andrographolide extracted from Andrographis paniculata. In clinical use (mainly in Mainland China), it is classified as a TCM injection with anti-infective and anti-inflammatory intent. It is supplied as a sterile solution for intravenous use, frequently co-administered with conventional antimicrobials for acute viral or bacterial respiratory infections, including bronchitis, pneumonia, pharyngitis, and influenza-like illnesses.
How It Works
Mechanistically, the pharmacology is “multi-target” and incompletely resolved. Available basic and translational work suggests:
— Antiviral effects via interference with viral replication and viral protein expression; in vitro data exist for influenza and other respiratory viruses, though translational strength to in-human efficacy is uncertain.
— Anti-inflammatory / immunomodulatory activity through down-regulation of NF-κB-driven cytokines (e.g., TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β) and reduction of oxidative stress markers, which may blunt the host inflammatory burst that contributes to symptom burden and tissue injury.
— Adjunct antibacterial effects have been reported, but direct antimicrobial potency in vivo is likely modest; clinical benefit in bacterial pneumonia may instead relate to immune-modulation when used with standard antibiotics.
Why It’s Important
Xiyanping is important in the context where it is used for several reasons:
— Adjunctive option for acute respiratory infections in settings with high infectious burden, where clinicians aim to reduce symptom severity and inflammatory damage, particularly when viral etiologies restrict antibiotic leverage.
— Integration into local practice norms: In health systems that routinely combine TCM injectables with Western therapy, Xiyanping is a widely used “bridge” between the two paradigms.
— Hypothesized role in immune-over-reaction states: Because it dampens inflammatory cytokine cascades, it is considered by some clinicians as a means to reduce inflammatory risk while the underlying pathogen is being cleared.
Considerations
— Evidence quality and generalizability: The bulk of supportive evidence comes from Chinese trials of variable methodological rigor; large, international, placebo-controlled trials are lacking. External generalization remains uncertain.
— Safety profile: Although often well tolerated, TCM injections carry a known class risk of immediate hypersensitivity or anaphylactoid reactions. Strict IV administration standards (test doses, monitoring, emergency readiness) are common in Chinese hospitals.
— Regulatory status: Xiyanping is not licensed as a drug in many countries and is primarily used within China; international guidelines for pneumonia or influenza do not include it.
— Use context and co-therapy: It is often used adjunctively, not as monotherapy for serious infections. It should not delay or replace established, indication-directed therapy (e.g., timely antibiotics for bacterial sepsis, antivirals when clearly indicated).
— Population-specific caution: Special caution in patients with prior drug-allergy history, unstable asthma, pregnancy, or severe organ dysfunction; and avoid casual outpatient self-administration due to injection risks.
— Medication quality and labeling standards vary across manufacturers; in jurisdictions without regulatory oversight, product integrity and sterility cannot be presumed.
Helps with these conditions
Xiyanping injection is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.
Detailed Information by Condition
Hand, Foot & Mouth Disease
Antiviral + anti-inflammatory pharmacology. Xiyanping is a water-soluble sulfonated derivative of andrographolide (from Andrographis paniculata). Sulf...
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