Browsing by Author "Sonmez M."
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Item A subset of patients with acquired partial lipodystrophy developing severe metabolic abnormalities(Taylor and Francis Ltd, 2019) Ozgen Saydam B.; Sonmez M.; Simsir I.Y.; Erturk M.S.; Kulaksizoglu M.; Arkan T.; Hekimsoy Z.; Cavdar U.; Akinci G.; Demir T.; Altay C.T.; Mihci E.; Secil M.; Akinci B.Purpose/Aim of the study: Acquired partial lipodystrophy (APL) is a rare disease characterized by selective loss of adipose tissue. In this study, we aimed to present a subset of patients with APL, who developed severe metabolic abnormalities, from our national lipodystrophy registry. Materials and Methods: Severe metabolic abnormalities were defined as: poorly controlled diabetes (HbA1c above 7% despite treatment with insulin more than 1 unit/kg/day combined with oral antidiabetics), severe hypertriglyceridemia (triglycerides above 500 mg/dL despite treatment with lipid-lowering drugs), episodes of acute pancreatitis, or severe hepatic involvement (biopsy-proven non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)). Results: Among 140 patients with all forms of lipodystrophy (28 with APL), we identified 6 APL patients with severe metabolic abnormalities. The geometric mean for age was 37 years (range: 27–50 years; 4 females and 2 males). Five patients had poorly controlled diabetes despite treatment with high-dose insulin combined with oral antidiabetics. Severe hypertriglyceridemia developed in five patients, of those three experienced episodes of acute pancreatitis. Although all six patients had hepatic steatosis at various levels on imaging studies, NASH was proven in two patients on liver biopsy. Our data suggested that APL patients with severe metabolic abnormalities had a more advanced fat loss and longer disease duration. Conclusions: We suggest that these patients represent a potential subgroup of APL who may benefit from metreleptin or investigational therapies as standard treatment strategies fail to achieve a good metabolic control. © 2018, © 2018 Taylor & Francis.Item International Forum: The Turkish perspective on apheresis activity: The Turkish apheresis registry report(Elsevier Ltd, 2023) Ozatli D.; Giden A.O.; Erkurt M.A.; Korkmaz S.; Basci S.; Ulas T.; Turgut B.; Yigenoglu T.N.; Hacibekiroglu T.; Basturk A.; Dal M.S.; Namdaroglu S.; Hindilerden F.; Hacioglu S.K.; Cagliyan G.A.; Ilhan G.; Kacmaz M.; Uysal A.; Merter M.; Ekinci O.; Dursun F.E.; Tekinalp A.; Demircioglu S.; Sincan G.; Acik D.Y.; Akdeniz A.; Ucar M.A.; Yeral M.; Ciftciler R.; Teke H.U.; Umit E.G.; Karakus A.; Bilen Y.; Yokus O.; Albayrak M.; Demir C.; Okan V.; Serefhanoglu S.; Kartı S.; Ozkurt Z.N.; Eser B.; Aydogdu I.; Kuku I.; Cagirgan S.; Sonmez M.; Ozet G.; Altuntas F.Therapeutic apheresis is an extracorporeal treatment that selectively removes abnormal cells or harmful substances in the blood that are associated with or cause certain diseases. During the last decades the application of therapeutic apheresis has expanded to a broad spectrum of hematological and non-hematological diseases due to various studies on the clinical efficacy of this procedure. In this context there are more than 30 centers performing therapeutic apheresis and registered in the apheresis database in Turkey. Herein, we, The Turkish Apheresis Registry, aimed to analyze some key articles published so far from Turkey regarding the use of apheresis for various indications. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd