Sepsis is a syndrome of acute organ dysfunction resulting from dysregulated host responses to infection, often leading to severe complications such as acute lung injury and ARDS. ICU patients on mechanical ventilation face multiple noxious stimuli and require effective analgesic and sedative treatments to improve prognosis. The limitations of existing analgesic and sedative drugs are as follows:Opioids (such as remifentanil) have strong analgesic effects but can easily cause adverse reactions such as respiratory depression, hypotension, and gastrointestinal dysfunction.Sedative drugs like midazolam may lead to delirium and gastrointestinal dysfunction.Esketamine exerts its analgesic and sedative effects by non-competitively inhibiting the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. It has sympathomimetic activity, which can reduce hemodynamic fluctuations. It also has immunomodulatory effects, which may improve the prognosis of sepsis patients. Currently, esketamine is only used for anesthesia induction in surgery, postoperative analgesia, painless procedures, and as an adjunctive treatment for depression, with limited sample sizes and few reports. There are no large-scale clinical studies on the use of esketamine in sepsis patients undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation, and further verification of its efficacy and safety is needed.
Age range
18 Years – 80 Years
Sex
ALL
See this in plain English?
AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Bring these to your next appointment. They're a starting point for a shared conversation — not a sign you qualify or a recommendation to enrol.
Generated to help you prepare — always confirm anything about your own eligibility and care with the study team and your doctor.
The trial coordinator is the person who runs the study day to day. These cover the practical side — logistics, costs, and what taking part would actually mean for your life. The study team confirms whether you meet the criteria; these are questions to ask, not a sign you qualify.
A starting point for the conversation — always confirm anything about your own eligibility, costs, and care with the study team and your doctor.
Duration of mechanical ventilation
Timeframe: From intubation to the first successful extubation sustained for ≥48 hours, death, or Day 28, whichever occurs first