Clinical Efficacy of Creatine Phosphate Sodium and/or Vitamin C in the Treatment of Children with Viral Myocarditis: A Meta-Analysis
Clinical Efficacy of Creatine Phosphate Sodium and/or Vitamin C in the Treatment of Children with Viral Myocarditis: A Meta-Analysis
Li et al., 2022 | Comput Math Methods Med | Meta Analysis
Citation
Li Qiyu, Liu Siyuan, ... Yu Jiaping. Clinical Efficacy of Creatine Phosphate Sodium and/or Vitamin C in the Treatment of Children with Viral Myocarditis: A Meta-Analysis. Comput Math Methods Med. 2022;2022:3840891. doi:10.1155/2022/3840891
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study performed a meta-analysis to explore the clinical efficacy of creatine phosphate sodium (CPS) and/or vitamin C for viral myocarditis (VMC) in children, to provide guidance for its clinical treatment. METHODS: A literature search was performed on PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and Wanfang databases to obtain published clinical randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on CPS and/or vitamin C for VMC in children, with a time span from 2013 to 2022. Relevant data was extracted and meta-analysis was performed using the statistical software Stata 16.0. RESULTS: A total of 723 studies were retrieved and 19 studies were finally included for meta-analysis, with a total of 1,957 patients. The meta-analysis results showed that the observation group (conventional treatment + CPS and/or vitamin C) was superior to the control group (conventional treatment alone) in treatment effective rate (OR = 3.60, 95% CI (2.55, 5.07), and P < 0.001). Additionally, the observation group had lower levels of cardiac troponin-I (SMD = - 2.63, 95% CI (- 3.51, - 1.76), and P < 0.001), creatine kinase isoenzyme (SMD = -2.78, 95% CI (- 3.53, - 2.03), and P < 0.001), lactate dehydrogenase (SMD = -1.95, 95% CI (- 2.49, - 1.42), and P < 0.001), aspartate aminotransferase (SMD = -0.87, 95% CI (- 1.84, 0.09), and P = 0.076), tumor necrosis factor-α (SMD = -3.90, 95% CI (- 4.47, - 3.06), and P < 0.001), and higher superoxide dismutase levels (SMD = 2.48, 95% CI (1.64, 3.33), and P < 0.001). Except aspartate aminotransferase, there were significant differences between the two groups in the other parameters. CONCLUSION: CPS and/or vitamin C treatment could greatly improve the treatment, protect myocardial function, and relieve inflammatory response in children with VMC.
Key Findings
A total of 723 studies were retrieved and 19 studies were finally included for meta-analysis, with a total of 1,957 patients. The meta-analysis results showed that the observation group (conventional treatment + CPS and/or vitamin C) was superior to the control group (conventional treatment alone) in treatment effective rate (OR = 3.60, 95% CI (2.55, 5.07), and P < 0.001). Additionally, the observation group had lower levels of cardiac troponin-I (SMD = - 2.63, 95% CI (- 3.51, - 1.76), and P < 0
Outcomes Measured
- inflammatory markers
Population
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Population | See abstract |
| Sample Size | 1957 |
| Age Range | See abstract |
| Condition | See abstract |
MeSH Terms
- Ascorbic Acid
- Aspartate Aminotransferases
- Child
- Humans
- Myocarditis
- Phosphocreatine
- Sodium
- Treatment Outcome
- Virus Diseases
Evidence Classification
- Level: Meta Analysis
- Publication Types: Journal Article, Meta-Analysis, Retracted Publication
- Vertical: vitamin-c
Provenance
- PMID: 35991139
- DOI: 10.1155/2022/3840891
- PMCID: PMC9385374
- Verified: 2026-04-09 via PubMed E-utilities API
Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09