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Dive into the research topics where Christopher S. Muratore is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher S. Muratore.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2014

Extracorporeal Life Support in Critically Ill Adults

Corey E. Ventetuolo; Christopher S. Muratore

Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) has become increasingly popular as a salvage strategy for critically ill adults. Major advances in technology and the severe acute respiratory distress syndrome that characterized the 2009 influenza A(H1N1) pandemic have stimulated renewed interest in the use of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal to support the respiratory system. Theoretical advantages of ECLS for respiratory failure include the ability to rest the lungs by avoiding injurious mechanical ventilator settings and the potential to facilitate early mobilization, which may be advantageous for bridging to recovery or to lung transplantation. The use of venoarterial ECMO has been expanded and applied to critically ill adults with hemodynamic compromise from a variety of etiologies, beyond postcardiotomy failure. Although technology and general care of the ECLS patient have evolved, ECLS is not without potentially serious complications and remains unproven as a treatment modality. The therapy is now being tested in clinical trials, although numerous questions remain about the application of ECLS and its impact on outcomes in critically ill adults.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2016

Nonoperative treatment of acute appendicitis in children: A feasibility study

Joseph Hartwich; Francois I. Luks; Debra Watson-Smith; Arlet G. Kurkchubasche; Christopher S. Muratore; Hale Wills; Thomas F. Tracy

PURPOSE Nonoperative treatment of acute appendicitis appears to be feasible in adults. It is unclear whether the same is true for children. METHODS Children 5-18 years with <48 h symptoms of acute appendicitis were offered nonoperative treatment: 2 doses of piperacillin IV, then ampicillin/clavulanate ×1 week. Treatment failure (worsening on therapy) and recurrence (after completion of therapy) were noted. Patients who declined enrollment were asked to participate as controls. Cost-utility analysis was performed using Pediatric Quality of Life Scale (PedsQL®) to calculate quality-adjusted life month (QALM) for study and control patients. RESULTS Twenty-four patients agreed to undergo nonoperative management, and 50 acted as controls. At a mean follow-up of 14 months, three of the 24 failed on therapy, and 2/21 returned with recurrent appendicitis at 43 and 52 days, respectively. Two patients elected to undergo an interval appendectomy despite absence of symptoms. Appendectomy-free rate at one year was therefore 71% (C.I. 50-87%). No patient developed perforation or other complications. Cost-utility analysis shows a 0.007-0.03 QALM increase and a


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2010

Influence of experience, case load, and stage distribution on outcome of endoscopic laser surgery for TTTS—a review

Shair Ahmed; Francois I. Luks; Barbara O'Brien; Christopher S. Muratore; Stephen R. Carr

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Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2009

The use of intraabdominal tissue expanders as a primary strategy for closure of giant omphaloceles.

Abigail E. Martin; Adeel Khan; Daniel S. Kim; Christopher S. Muratore; Francois I. Luks

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American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Neutrophil Depletion Blocks Early Collagen Degradation in Repairing Cholestatic Rat Livers

Mark W. Harty; Christopher S. Muratore; Elaine Papa; Michael S. Gart; Grant A. Ramm; Stephen H. Gregory; Thomas F. Tracy

2771 per nonoperatively treated patient. CONCLUSION Despite occasional late recurrences, antibiotic-only treatment of early appendicitis in children is feasible, safe, cost-effective and is experienced more favorably by patients and parents.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2009

Survival after laser surgery for twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome: when are they out of the woods?

Christopher S. Muratore; Stephen R. Carr; Liesbeth Lewi; Roland Delieger; Marshall Carpenter; Jacques Jani; Jan Deprest; Francois I. Luks

Survival (≥1 twin) after laser surgery for patients with twin‐to‐twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) ranges from 65 to 93%. However, most studies are noncontrolled and retrospective, and have included a limited number of patients. The aim of this study was to perform a systematic review of outcomes after laser surgery in patients with TTTS.


Annals of Surgery | 2009

The Pediatric Surgeonsʼ Contribution to In Utero Treatment of Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome

Francois I. Luks; Stephen R. Carr; Christopher S. Muratore; Barbara M. OʼBrien; Thomas F. Tracy

BACKGROUND Giant omphaloceles present a unique challenge to pediatric surgeons because of the difficulty in obtaining timely, tension-free closure of tissues over the defect. Reports of the use of tissue expanders in the subcutaneous space, intramuscular space, or intraabdominal cavity have illustrated the usefulness of this technique to provide biologic closure of abdominal wall defects. However, these reports have focused on use of tissue expanders as a second-line treatment after other options, such as silastic silos or attempted primary closure, have failed. METHODS We report 2 cases in which intraabdominal tissue expanders were used as a primary strategy to obtain closure of giant omphalocele defects. CASE REPORTS The first patient was a baby boy born at 36 weeks by date who was prenatally diagnosed with a giant omphalocele. An intraabdominal tissue expander was placed at 2 weeks of age. The tissue expander was removed and his abdomen was primarily closed at 8 weeks of age. The second patient was born at 25 weeks gestation as part of a twin gestation with severe intrauterine growth retardation (600 g birth weight). Bedside reduction was not attempted because of severe pulmonary hypertension and significant loss of abdominal domain because of herniated liver and bowel. At 8 months of age, she underwent laparoscopically assisted placement of an intraabdominal tissue expander. At 9 months of age, the tissue expander was removed, all abdominal viscera were reduced, and the defect was closed using only an 8 x 8-cm piece of AlloDerm (LifeCell, Branchburg, NJ). Both children are currently at home and doing well. CONCLUSIONS We believe that early use of intraabdominal tissue expanders provides a more expedient method of obtaining closure of the defect in giant omphaloceles.


Journal of The Society for Information Display | 2007

Image display in endoscopic surgery

Christopher S. Muratore; Beth A. Ryder; Francois I. Luks

Biliary obstruction results in a well-characterized cholestatic inflammatory and fibrogenic process; however, the mechanisms and potential for liver repair remain unclear. We previously demonstrated that Kupffer cell depletion reduces polymorphonuclear cell (neutrophil) (PMN) and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)8 levels in repairing liver. We therefore hypothesized that PMN-dependent MMP activity is essential for successful repair. Male Sprague-Dawley rats received reversible biliary obstruction for 7 days, and the rat PMN-specific antibody RP3 was administered 2 days before biliary decompression (repair) and continued daily until necropsy, when liver underwent morphometric analysis, immunohistochemistry, quantitative RT-PCR, and in situ zymography. We found that RP3 treatment did not reduce Kupffer cell or monocyte number but significantly reduced PMN number at the time of decompression and 2 days after repair. RP3 treatment also blocked resorption of type I collagen. In addition, biliary obstruction resulted in increased expression of MMP3, MMP8, and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1. Two days after biliary decompression, both MMP3 and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 expression declined toward sham levels, whereas MMP8 expression remained elevated and was identified in bile duct epithelial cells by immunohistochemistry. PMN depletion did not alter the hepatic expression of these genes. Conversely, collagen-based in situ zymography demonstrated markedly diminished collagenase activity following PMN depletion. We conclude that PMNs are essential for collagenase activity and collagen resorption during liver repair, and speculate that PMN-derived MMP8 or PMN-mediated activation of intrinsic hepatic MMPs are responsible for successful liver repair.


Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy | 2014

Iatrogenic Preterm Premature Rupture of Membranes after Fetoscopic Laser Ablative Surgery

Lindsay Maggio; Stephen R. Carr; Debra Watson-Smith; Barbara M. OʼBrien; Vrishali Lopes; Christopher S. Muratore; Francois I. Luks

PURPOSE Severe, progressive twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) is associated with near-100% mortality if left untreated. Endoscopic laser ablation of placental vessels (ELA) is associated with 75% to 80% survival of at least one twin. The actuarial risk of fetal demise after ELA has not yet been described. STUDY DESIGN A retrospective cohort study from 2 centers on a consecutive series of 163 sets of monochorionic twins with severe TTTS (18 Quintero stage I, 55 stage II, 71 stage III, 19 stage IV) who underwent ELA. Actuarial survival was calculated and stratified for donor vs recipient and according to stage. RESULTS Median gestational age at diagnosis was 20.1 weeks; median operative time was 60 minutes. Overall survival was 63%, and survival of at least one twin was seen in 76% of pregnancies. Of fetal demises, 10% occurred within 48 hours after ELA, and 90% of all fetal demises occurred within 1 month. There was a 10% survival advantage of recipients over donors. Survival was similar for stages I, II, and IV (75%-80%), compared with 55% for stage III. CONCLUSIONS Actuarial survival curves for TTTS confirms a greater burden on donor than on recipient but not at a previously reported 2:1 ratio. The current staging system does not accurately reflect post-ELA mortality risk. The unexpected higher mortality in stage III may reflect a more acute progression of the disorder in this group, an adverse effect of LA on an as yet unknown subgroup with stage III or, alternatively, preoperative demise of fulminant stage IV patients, leaving a stage IV subgroup with a more benign course and better outcome.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2015

Quantitative measurement of heparin in comparison with conventional anticoagulation monitoring and the risk of thrombotic events in adults on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.

David C. Chu; Abdel Ghanie Abu-Samra; Grayson L. Baird; Cynthia Devers; Joseph D. Sweeney; Mitchell M. Levy; Christopher S. Muratore; Corey E. Ventetuolo

Objective:To evaluate the outcome of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) treated using a combination of endoscopic fetal surgery-specific techniques and surgical restraint. Summary Background Data:TTTS is a condition of identical twins that, if progressive and left untreated, leads to 100% mortality. The best treatment option is obliteration of the intertwin placental anastomoses, but fetal surgery carries significant maternal and fetal risks. Even if successful, percutaneous endoscopic laser ablation of placental vessels (LASER) causes premature rupture of membranes (PROM) in 10% to 20% of pregnancies. Patient selection is particularly critical because the progression of the disease is unpredictable. This has prompted many to intervene early, yielding survival rates of ≥1 twin of 75% to 80%. Methods:We developed a minimally invasive approach to fetal surgery, a unique membrane sealing technique and a conservative algorithm that reserves intervention for severe TTTS. Pregnancies with TTTS (stages I–IV) managed in the last 8 years were reviewed. LASER was offered in stage III/IV only. Results:Ninety-eight cases of TTTS were managed in a pediatric surgery/maternal-fetal medicine collaborative Fetal Treatment Program—39 were observed (40%) and 59 underwent LASER (60%). Survival of ≥ twin was seen in 82.7%, and overall survival was 69.4%. These survival rates are similar to, or better than, other comparable series with similar stage distribution (low:high stage ratio 1:1) in which all patients underwent LASER. PROM rate was 4%. Conclusions:Reserving LASER treatment for severe TTTS results in outcomes similar to, or better than, LASER for all stages. Applying fetal surgery-specific endoscopic techniques, including port-site sealing, reduces postoperative complications.

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Jay M. Wilson

Boston Children's Hospital

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