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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Kurt, F"

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    Bladder Function Recovery in Rats With Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury After Transplantation of Neuronal-Glial Restricted Precursors or Bone Marrow Stromal Cells
    Temeltas, G; Dagci, T; Kurt, F; Evren, V; Tuglu, I
    Purpose: We investigated functional recovery of the lower urinary system in rats with spinal cord injury after transplanting neuronal restricted precursors/glial restricted precursors or neural cells derived from bone marrow stromal cells into the injured area of the spinal cord. Materials and Methods: A total of 30 rats underwent experimentation in 4 groups, including group 1-sham operation, group 2-spinal cord injury plus neuronal restricted precursor/glial restricted precursor transplantation, group 3-spinal cord injury plus bone marrow stromal cell transplantation and group 4-spinal cord injury control. All rats in the 4 groups were investigated urodynamically and sacrificed on day 28 after transplantation. The cells transplanted into the injured spinal cord underwent histological investigation. Results: Transplanted cells (neuronal and glial restricted precursors, and bone marrow stromal cells) were found to maintain a presence in the injured spinal cord area. Baseline pressure, maximum capacity, mean uninhibited contraction amplitude, mean voiding pressure, voided volume and post-void residual volume were significantly better in groups 2 and 3 than in group 4, while baseline pressure in group 2 was better than that in group 3. We found no significant difference among the groups according to mean uninhibited contraction frequency. Conclusions: Although neuronal/glial restricted precursor transplanted rats seemed to have more improvement, all rats in groups 2 and 3 showed some significant improvement in lower urinary system function. On the other hand, the level of this improvement was far from complete functional recovery.
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    COVID-19 disease in children presenting to the pediatric emergency department: A multicenter study with 8886 cases from Turkey
    Duman, M; Sik, N; Teksam, O; Akca, H; Kurt, F; Caglar, AA; Yildiz, LA; Tasar, MA; Fidanci, I; Yayla, BCC; Yilmaz, D; Gungor, E; Demir, S; Cokugras, H; Cebeci, SO; Onal, P; Saz, EU; Yurtseven, A; Uysalol, M; Yildiz, R; Gumus, S; Bal, A; Sen Bayturan, S; Zengin, N; Atik, S; Ciftdogan, DY; Berksoy, E; Cicek, A; Sahin, S; Kizil, MC; Kara, Y; Apa, H; Ulusoy, E; Kara, AA; Yesil, E; Erdem, M; Turan, C; Arslanoglu, S; Duyu, M; Besli, GE; Arslan, G; Oflu, AT; Celegen, M; Buldu, E; Piskin, IE; Kardes, H; Yilmaz, HL; Yildizdas, D; Gokulu, G; Cay, P; Ozer, U; Guleryuz, OD; Colak, O; Guneysu, ST
    Background: The aim was to evaluate the epidemiological, clinical, laboratory, and radiologic data of children with SARS-CoV-2 positivity by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) together with treatment strategies and clinical out-comes and to evaluate cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) in this population.Methods: This was a multicenter retrospective observational cohort study performed in the pediatric emergency departments of 19 tertiary hospitals. From March 11, 2020, to May 31, 2021, children who were diagnosed with confirmed nasopharyngeal/tracheal specimen SARS-CoV-2 PCR positivity or positivity for serum-specific anti-bodies against SARS-CoV-2 were included. Demographics, presence of chronic illness, symptoms, history of con-tact with SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive individuals, laboratory and radiologic investigations, clinical severity, hospital admissions, and prognosis were recorded.Results: A total of 8886 cases were included. While 8799 (99.0%) cases resulted in a diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 with PCR positivity, 87 (1.0%) patients were diagnosed with MIS-C. Among SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive patients, 51.0% were male and 8.5% had chronic illnesses. The median age was 11.6 years (IQR: 5.0-15.4) and 737 (8.4%) patients were aged <1 year. Of the patients, 15.5% were asymptomatic. The most common symptoms were fever (48.5%) and cough (30.7%) for all age groups. There was a decrease in the rate of fever as age increased (p < 0.001); the most common age group for this symptom was <1 year with the rate of 69.6%. There was known contact with a SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive individual in 67.3% of the cases, with household contacts in 71.3% of those cases. In terms of clinical severity, 83 (0.9%) patients were in the severe-critical group. There was hospital admission in 1269 (14.4%) cases, with 106 (1.2%) of those patients being admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Among patients with MIS-C, 60.9% were male and the median age was 6.4 years (IQR: 3.9-10.4). Twelve (13.7%) patients presented with shock. There was hospital admission in 89.7% of these cases, with 29.9% of the patients with MIS-C being admitted to the PICU.Conclusion: Most SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive patients presented with a mild clinical course. Although rare, MIS-C emerges as a serious consequence with frequent PICU admission. Further understanding of the characteristics of COVID-19 disease could provide insights and guide the development of therapeutic strategies for target groups.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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    The skills of defibrillation practice and certified life-support training in the healthcare providers in Turkey
    Derinoz-Guleryuz, O; Uysal-Yazici, M; Udurgucu, M; Karacan, C; Akça, H; Ongun, EA; Ekinci, F; Duman, M; Akça-Çaglar, A; Vatansever, G; Bilen, S; Uysalol, M; Akcan-Yildiz, L; Saz, EU; Bal, A; Piskin, E; Sahin, S; Kurt, F; Anil, M; Besli, E; Alakaya, M; Gültekingil, A; Yilmaz, R; Temel-Koksoy, O; Kesici, S; Akcay, N; Cebisli, E; Emeksiz, S; Kilinc, MA; Köker, A; Çoban, Y; Erkek, N; Gurlu, R; Eksi-Alp, E; Apa, H
    Aim of the study Successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation and early defibrillation are critical in survival after in- or out-of-hospital cardiopulmonary arrest. The scope of this multi-centre study is to (a) assess skills of paediatric healthcare providers (HCPs) concerning two domains: (1) recognising rhythm abnormalities and (2) the use of defibrillator devices, and (b) to evaluate the impact of certified basic-life-support (BLS) and advanced-life-support (ALS) training to offer solutions for quality of improvement in several paediatric emergency cares and intensive care settings of Turkey. Methods This cross-sectional and multi-centre survey study included several paediatric emergency care and intensive care settings from different regions of Turkey. Results A total of 716 HCPs participated in the study (physicians: 69.4%, healthcare staff: 30.6%). The median age was 29 (27-33) years. Certified BLS-ALS training was received in 61% (n = 303/497) of the physicians and 45.2% (n = 99/219) of the non-physician healthcare staff (P < .001). The length of professional experience had favourable outcome towards an increased self-confidence in the physicians (P < .01, P < .001). Both physicians and non-physician healthcare staff improved their theoretical knowledge in the practice of synchronised cardioversion defibrillation (P < .001, P < .001). Non-certified healthcare providers were less likely to manage the initial doses of synchronised cardioversion and defibrillation: the correct responses remained at 32.5% and 9.2% for synchronised cardioversion and 44.8% and 16.7% for defibrillation in the physicians and healthcare staff, respectively. The indications for defibrillation were correctly answered in the physicians who had acquired a certificate of BLS-ALS training (P = .047, P = .003). Conclusions The professional experience is significant in the correct use of a defibrillator and related procedures. Given the importance of early defibrillation in survival, the importance and proper use of defibrillators should be emphasised in Certified BLS-ALS programmes. Certified BLS-ALS programmes increase the level of knowledge and self-confidence towards synchronised cardioversion-defibrillation procedures.

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