Publications by authors named "H S Panitch"

Introduction: Data on near- and long-term clinical outcomes are critical for the care of all maternal-fetal patients presenting to a fetal center. This is especially important since physiologic and neurodevelopmental attributes do not manifest until later childhood when multilevel (e.g.

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Introduction: Congenital pulmonary airway malformations (CPAM), intra- and extralobar bronchopulmonary sequestrations (iBPS/eBPS), CPAM-BPS hybrid lesions (HL), congenital lobar emphysema (CLE), bronchial atresia (BA), and foregut duplication cysts (FDC), collectively referred to as congenital thoracic lesions (CTL), are mostly solitary. Patients with multiple CTL are rare, and reports on such cases are scarce. To address this dearth, we analyzed a large multifocal CTL patient cohort.

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Objective: Initial surfactant studies demonstrated improvements in survival and need for respiratory support. However, as the use of non-invasive respiratory support has increased the use of surfactant has decreased. We examined in a contemporary cohort of BPD patients if surfactant use was associated with BPD severity.

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Rationale: Caring for children dependent upon continuous invasive ventilation in the home setting requires extensive expertise, coordination, and can result in impaired caregiver quality of life. Less is known regarding the experiences of caregivers with children requiring continuous noninvasive ventilation.

Objectives: To evaluate caregiver experiences with invasive and noninvasive home mechanical ventilation, and to compare parental quality of life based on the child's mode of ventilation.

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Infants with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) benefit from comprehensive multidisciplinary teams that have experience in caring for the unique and complex issues associated with CDH. Despite prenatal referral to specialized high-volume centers, advanced ventilation strategies and pulmonary hypertension management, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, mortality and morbidity remain high. These infants have unique and complex issues that begin in fetal and infant life, but persist through adulthood.

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