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David L.S. Morales

Researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Publications -  408
Citations -  9275

David L.S. Morales is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 333 publications receiving 7739 citations. Previous affiliations of David L.S. Morales include Yale University & Boston Children's Hospital.

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SynCardia Temporary Total Artificial Heart: Single-Center Experience at a Children’s Hospital

TL;DR: The SynCardia temporary total artificial heart (TAH-t) is a pneumatically driven pulsatile device that replaces a patient's ventricles and all four valves as mentioned in this paper .
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Single-Stage Repair of an Unusual Association: Congenital Gerbode Defect, Hypoplastic Aortic Arch, and Partially Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return in an Infant.

TL;DR: The patient underwent single-stage surgical repair, which consisted of aortic arch advancement with resection of the coarctation segment, pulmonary vein repair, and primary closure of the Gerbode defect, and there was unobstructed flow pattern across the aorta and the affected pulmonary vein.
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Atrial arrhythmias following lung transplant: a single pediatric center experience

TL;DR: A retrospective analysis of LTx recipients at a pediatric LTx program from 2014 to 2022 was performed in this article , where the authors investigated timing of occurrence and management of atrial arrhythmia following LTx, and its effect on post-LTx outcome.
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High risk congenital heart surgery and mechanical circulatory support as an alternative to heart transplantation in patients with end-stage adult congenital heart disease

TL;DR: The use of virtual surgery software has improved the ability to offer a variety of mechanical devices to small adults with congenital heart disease and those with complex congenital anatomy for whom in the past certain devices were thought not to be an option.
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Overly selective offer acceptance is associated with high waitlist mortality for the most ill lung transplant candidates.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors used UNOS to identify all LTx candidates, donors, and offers from 2005-2019, and they grouped candidates by Lung Allocation Score (LAS; applicable post-2005, ages ≥ 12 years): LAS<40, 40-60, 61-80, and >80.