Effect of ulinastatin on perioperative glycocalyx and lung function in patients undergoing mitral valve replacement surgery
To explore the effect of ulinastatin on perioperative glycocalyx and lung function in patients undergoing mitral valve replacement surgery.
Methods: Fourty patients, undergoing mitral valve replacement, were randomly allocated into a control group and an ulinastatin group, which were administrated 50 mL normal saline or 2×104 U/kg ulinastatin at the beginning of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), respectively. The radical artery blood was collected at 4 time points: After induction of anesthesia (T0), at 10 min after the start of CPB (T1), 1 h after the end of CPB (T2), and 8 h after operation. The concentration of syndecan-1 and TNF-α in blood was measured. Moreover, the blood gas analysis was preformed and the oxygen index (OI) and difference in alveolar arterial oxygen partial pressure (PA-aO2) were calculated at T0, T2, and T3.
Results: There were no significant difference between the 2 groups in OI, PA-aO2, and the concentration of syndecan-1 and TNF-α at T0 (P>0.05). The concentration of syndecan-1 and TNF-α was significantly increased at T1 and T2 in the 2 groups, and reached peak at T2. Compared with the control group, the concentration of syndecan-1 and TNF-α was decreased in the ulinastatin group at T1, T2, and T3 (P<0.05). Compared with T0, OI was lower and PA-aO2 was higher at T2 and T3 in both groups, but the 2 indexes were improved in the ulinastatin group compared with those in the control group (P<0.05).
Conclusion: Ulinastatin can improve the post-operative pulmonary ventilation function in patients with mitral valve replacement. The mechanism may be associated with the inhibition of TNF-α release and the reduction of glycocalyx shedding induced by ulinastatin.