Glycocalyx Degradation in Pediatric Patients with Cyanotic and Acyanotic Congenital Heart Disease Undergoing Cardiac Repair Surgery
Judith Schiefer, Paul Lichtenegger, Eva Base, Pierre Raeven, Akos Tiboldi, Daniel Zimpfer, Erhan Urganci, Peter Faybik

TL;DR
This study found that heart surgery causes significant damage to the protective layer of blood vessels in children with heart defects, but this damage is similar in both cyanotic and acyanotic patients.
Contribution
The study shows that glycocalyx degradation occurs similarly in cyanotic and acyanotic pediatric heart surgery patients.
Findings
Syndecan-1 concentrations increased significantly after surgery in both cyanotic and acyanotic groups.
No significant difference in syndecan-1 levels was found between cyanotic and acyanotic patients.
CPB and aortic clamping times were not correlated with syndecan-1 concentrations.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: In the present study, we hypothesized that cardiac surgery in pediatric patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) leads to profound endothelial glycocalyx degradation, measured as the increase in plasma syndecan-1 concentration, and that this endothelial damage is more pronounced in patients with cyanotic CHD. Methods: A total of 40 infants (24 with acyanotic and 16 with cyanotic CHD) were enrolled in this prospective study. A total of 39 cardiac surgeries were performed with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), 38 with CPB and aortic clamping, and 3 with CPB, aortic clamping, and deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. Results: Syndecan-1 concentrations increased significantly post-surgery compared to the baseline in both groups (cyanotic: 24.4 to 48.0 ng/mL, p < 0.0001; acyanotic: 28.8 to 59.8 ng/mL, p < 0.0001). However, there was no significant difference in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, Resuscitation · Blood transfusion and management · Hyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients
