Circulating angiogenic progenitor cell apoptosis in Post-COVID-19 syndrome
Julia M. Kröpfl, Christoph Hauser, Luca Beugger, Henner Hanssen, Fabian Schwendinger, Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss

TL;DR
This study explores endothelial dysfunction in patients with persistent symptoms after recovering from COVID-19, focusing on changes in specific blood cells.
Contribution
The study investigates apoptosis in circulating angiogenic progenitor and endothelial cells in post-COVID-19 syndrome patients.
Findings
Apoptotic CAC concentrations and proportions were lower in PH-PCS patients compared to controls, though not statistically significant.
Live CAC and CEC proportions were somewhat higher in PH-PCS patients.
Reduced flow-mediated dilation correlated with elevated CEC concentrations and decreased apoptotic CAC proportions.
Abstract
Cellular endothelial dysfunction in patients recovering from Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remains poorly understood. This study examined circulating angiogenic progenitor cells (CAC) and mature endothelial cells (CEC) in individuals with persistent symptoms following hospitalization for COVID-19 (PH-PCS) at ≥ 18-months post-infection. We compared PH-PCS (n = 14) to matched controls without symptomatic COVID-19 (n = 7). Examinations included macro- and microvascular structure and function and the analysis of CAC and CEC using flow cytometry. Estimates indicated somewhat lower apoptotic CAC concentrations (mean difference[md] [95 %CI] = 0.050 cells/µl [0.003, 0.137], p = 0.084) and proportions (% total CAC, 7.7 percentage points (pp) [0.3, 12.9], p = 0.066) in patients compared to controls, though estimates were imprecise. Similar results were observed for apoptotic CEC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAngiogenesis and VEGF in Cancer · Bone and Joint Diseases · Inflammasome and immune disorders
