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Dive into the research topics where Artur Salmaslioglu is active.

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Featured researches published by Artur Salmaslioglu.


World Journal of Surgery | 2006

Evaluation of the Cardiovascular Risk in Patients with Subclinical Cushing Syndrome Before and After Surgery

Yeşim Erbil; Evin Ademoglu; Nese Ozbey; Umut Barbaros; Burcu Tulumoğlu Yanık; Artur Salmaslioglu; Alp Bozbora; Selçuk Özarmağan

BackgroundThe widespread use of ultrasound, computerized tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging has led to an increase in the number of incidental adrenal masses identified. Asymptomatic incidentally discovered adrenal masses may indicate that subclinical Cushing syndrome (SCS) is not uncommon. We aimed to evaluate the cardiovascular risk of patients with SCS before and after surgery.MethodsAn autonomous cortisol-producing tumor was detected in 11 of 94 patients with adrenal incidentaloma between 1995 and 2005. Twenty-eight patients suffering from classical Cushing syndrome (CS) associated with unilateral adrenocortical adenoma, who were treated at our department in the same period, served as a control group. Cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure, body mass index, and lipid profile were evaluated before and 1 year after surgery.ResultsThe frequency of hypertension (61% versus 63%), obesity (46% versus 55%), diabetes mellitus (50% versus 36%), hypercholesterolemia (39% versus 36%), and low HDL cholesterol (28% versus 36%) were not significantly different between CS and SCS patients, respectively. Adverse cardiovascular risk profile improved 1 year after adrenalectomy in both groups, although the changes were not significant with respect to body mass index, frequency of diabetes, and hyperlipidemia in SCS patients. But frequency of systolic/diastolic hypertension decreased significantly in this group.ConclusionsThese findings indicate that the increased incidence of cardiovascular risk factors commonly observed in classical CS, is also present in SCS. Unilateral adrenalectomy does not always lead to significant improvements in cardiovascular risk profile in SCS.


Laryngoscope | 2006

Impact of Gland Morphology and Concomitant Thyroid Nodules on Preoperative Localization of Parathyroid Adenomas

Yeşim Erbil; Umut Barbaros; Burcu Tulumoğlu Yanık; Artur Salmaslioglu; Mehtap Tunaci; Isik Adalet; Alp Bozbora; Selçuk Özarmağan

Objectives: Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is a common endocrine disease. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of the presence of thyroid nodules, adenoma weight, and ectopic localization on the sensitivity of different imaging studies in patients with hyperparathyroidism.


Radiologia Medica | 2012

Multimodality imaging features of idiopathic granulomatous mastitis: outcome of 12 years of experience.

Memduh Dursun; S. Yilmaz; A. Yahyayev; Artur Salmaslioglu; Ekrem Yavuz; A. Igci; Gulden Acunas; Mehtap Tunaci

PurposeThis study was done to determine mammographic, sonographic and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) appearances of idiopathic granulomatous mastitis, an entity clinically and radiographically resembling breast carcinoma.Materials and methodsA total of 36 women (mean age 37 years, range 21–51 years) with histopathological diagnosis of idiopathic granulomatous mastitis were enrolled in the study. The Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) was used to categorise the levels of suspicion of malignancy on mammography. Mammography findings were classified also according to density, margin, architectural distortion and number of lesions. Lesions were classified according to number, heterogeneity and echogenic features on sonography. Dynamic MRI findings were categorised as enhancing mass lesion, nonmass lesion or both mass lesions and nonmass lesions together. Subclassification criteria for MRI included lesion shape, margin, border and internal enhancement pattern.ResultsThe most common mammographic finding was either focal or diffuse asymmetric density (n=15, 44%). The most common sonographic findings were solitary or multiple circumscribed heterogeneous hypoechoic masses (n=19, 52%). Among other sonographic findings were diffuse abscess formation with fistulae and massive parenchymal heterogeneity and hypoechogenicity in 12 (33%) and five (13%) women, respectively. On MRI, enhancing mass lesions were detected in 24 patients, whereas enhancing nonmass lesions were observed in 28. Sixteen patients had both enhancing mass lesions and nonmass lesions together.ConclusionsAlthough not characteristic for this entity, asymmetric density on mammography, solitary or multiple clustered heterogeneous hypoechogenicity with a tubular configuration on sonography and round, smooth-contoured masslike lesion with rim enhancement or segmental non-mass-like lesion on MRI are the most common features of the disease.RiassuntoObiettivoLo scopo del lavoro è determinare gli aspetti in mammografia, ecografia e risonanza magnetica della mastite granulomatosa idiopatica, un’entità clinicamente e radiologicamente simile al carcinoma mammario.Materiali e metodiSono state arruolate nello studio 36 donne (età media: 37 anni, range: 21–51 anni) con diagnosi isto-patologica di mastite granulomatosa idiopatica. è stato utilizzato il Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) per classificare il livello di sospetto e di malignità sulla base della mammografia. I rilievi mammografici sono stati classificati anche in base a densità, margini, distorsione strutturale e numero di lesioni. Le lesioni sono state classificate all’ecografia secondo il numero, l’eterogeneità e le caratteristiche di ecogenicità. I reperti sono stati classificati in risonanza magnetica come lesioni con aumentato enhancement di tipo masslike, non-masslike, o contestualmente masslike e non-masslike. Ulteriori criteri in risonanza magnetica hanno incluso forma, margini, bordi e pattern interno di enhancement della lesione.RisultatiIl rilievo mammografico più comune era caratterizzato da densità asimmetriche sia focali che diffuse (n=15, 44%). I reperti ecografici più comuni erano masse circoscritte, solitarie o multiple, eterogenee ed ipoecogene (n=19, 52%). Altri segni ecografici tipici erano diffuse formazioni ascessuali con fistole, caratterizzate da intensa eterogeneità in 12 (33%) donne ed ipoecogenicità parenchimale in 5 (13%) donne. Sulla base della risonanza magnetica, lesioni masslike sono state rilevate in 24 pazienti, mentre lesioni non-masslike sono state osservate in 28 donne. Sedici pazienti avevano contemporaneamente lesioni masslike e non-masslike.ConclusioniSebbene non specifiche di questa entità, le più comuni caratteristiche della mastite granulomatosa idiopatica sono risultate essere: lesioni con densità asimmetrica alla mammografia, lesioni eterogeneamente ipoecogne, solitarie o multiple, con configurazione tubulare, in ecografia, e lesioni masslike, rotondeggianti a margini lisci, con enhancement anulare, o lesioni segmentate non-masslike, in risonanza magnetica.


European Journal of Radiology | 2010

Diffusion weighted MR imaging of pancreatic islet cell tumors

Baris Bakir; Artur Salmaslioglu; Arzu Poyanli; Izzet Rozanes; Bulent Acunas

PURPOSE The aim of our study is to demonstrate the feasibility of body diffusion weighted (DW) MR imaging in the evaluation of pancreatic islet cell tumors (ICTs) and to define apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values for these tumors. MATERIALS AND METHODS 12 normal volunteers and 12 patients with histopathologically proven pancreatic ICT by surgery were included in the study. DW MR images were obtained by a body-phased array coil using a multisection single-shot echo planar sequence on the axial plane without breath holding. In addition, the routine abdominal imaging protocol for pancreas was applied in the patient group. We measured the ADC value within the normal pancreas in control group, pancreatic ICT, and surrounding pancreas parenchyma. Mann-Whitney U-test has been used to compare ADC values between tumoral tissues and normal pancreatic tissues of the volunteers. Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test was preferred to compare ADC values between tumoral tissues and surrounding pancreatic parenchyma of the patients. RESULTS In 11 patients out of 12, conventional MR sequences were able to demonstrate ICTs succesfully. In 1 patient an indistinct suspicious lesion was noted at the pancreatic tail. DW sequence was able to demonstrate the lesions in all of the 12 patients. On the DW images, all ICTs demonstrated high signal intensity relative to the surrounding pancreatic parenchyma. The mean and standard deviations of the ADC values (x10(-3)mm(2)/s) were as follows: ICT (n=12), 1.51+/-0.35 (0.91-2.11), surrounding parenchyma (n=11) 0.76+/-0.15 (0.51-1.01) and normal pancreas in normal volunteers (n=12), 0.80+/-0.06 (0.72-0.90). ADC values of the ICT were significantly higher compared with those of surrounding parenchyma (p<0.01) and normal pancreas (p<0.001). CONCLUSION DW MR imaging does not appear to provide significant contribution to routine MR imaging protocol in the evaluation of pancreatic islet cell tumors. But it can be added to MR imaging protocol to detect the lesion in a limited number of patients with clinical suspicion for pancreatic ICT with negative or suspicious imaging findings.


Archives of Surgery | 2008

Effect of Thyroid Gland Volume in Preoperative Detection of Suspected Malignant Thyroid Nodules in a Multinodular Goiter

Yeşim Erbil; Umut Barbaros; Artur Salmaslioglu; Ozgur Mete; Halim Issever; Selçuk Özarmağan; Dilek Yilmazbayhan; Serdar Tezelman

HYPOTHESIS The detection of suspected malignant thyroid nodules by ultrasonography is associated with thyroid gland volume and tumor size. DESIGN Prospective clinical trial. SETTING A tertiary referral center. PATIENTS Three hundred sixty-five patients with a multinodular goiter with coexistent dominant nodules. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The correlation between thyroid gland volume and tumor size and the detection of suspected malignant thyroid nodules by ultrasonography. The incidence of thyroid carcinoma inside and outside the dominant nodules and thyroid gland volume and tumor size in suspected or unsuspected malignant thyroid nodules by ultrasonography were determined. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to identify the cutoffs of the tumor size and thyroid gland volume. RESULTS One hundred thyroid carcinomas were found in 69 (18.9%) patients. Forty-one of these carcinomas were inside the dominant nodule, whereas 59 were outside the dominant nodule. Only 9 of the 59 thyroid carcinomas outside the dominant nodules were suspected of being malignant by ultrasonography. Thyroid gland volume less than 38 mL and tumor size larger than 7 mm had 48-fold (odds ratio, 48; P < .001) and 21.5-fold (odds ratio, 21.5; P < .001) increased rates, respectively, of detecting suspected malignant thyroid nodules by ultrasonography. CONCLUSIONS Thyroid gland volume and tumor size were significantly associated with detection of suspected malignant thyroid nodules by ultrasonography. Small thyroid gland volume was associated with detection of suspected malignant thyroid nodules in multinodular goiters.


Radiology | 2014

Role of Diffusion-weighted MR Imaging in the Differentiation of Benign Retroperitoneal Fibrosis from Malignant Neoplasm: Preliminary Study

Baris Bakir; Fatma Yilmaz; Rustu Turkay; Sevda Ozel; Bilge Bilgic; Arzu Velioglu; Bulent Saka; Artur Salmaslioglu

PURPOSE To evaluate diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) features and signal intensity values at T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for differential diagnosis of benign retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF) and plaque-like retroperitoneal malignant neoplasms. MATERIALS AND METHODS Institutional review board approval and informed consent were obtained for this retrospective study. Fifty-one patients with plaque-like confluent retroperitoneal soft-tissue masses were divided into three groups: group I, 25 patients with malignant RPF and retroperitoneal malignant neoplasm; group II, 16 patients with chronic RPF; and group III, 10 patients with active RPF. On T1-weighted (unenhanced and contrast material-enhanced), T2-weighted, and DWI (b = 1000 sec/mm(2)) images, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values and quotients of postcontrast signal intensities between lesions and psoas muscle were evaluated. The χ(2) test was used to compare categorical values; one-way analysis of variance and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to compare groups. RESULTS Overall sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of DWI findings were 92% (23 of 25 patients), 62% (16 of 26 patients), 70% (23 of 33 patients), and 89% (16 of 18 patients), respectively. Mean ADC values were 0.79 ± 0.19 in group I, 1.43 ± 0.16 in group II, and 0.91 ± 0.14 in group III. When comparing values, differences between groups I and II (ADC values, P < .0001; DWI quotients, P < .0001; postcontrast quotients, P = .001) and groups II and III (ADC values, P < .0001; DWI quotients, P = .016; postcontrast quotients, P = .04) were significant. There was no significant difference between groups I and III or between the three groups when T2-weighted values were compared. CONCLUSION ADC of chronic RPF was higher than that for active RPF or malignant RPF and retroperitoneal malignant neoplasm. DWI can contribute to differential diagnosis of chronic RPF and malignant neoplasms with RPF morphology. Lesions in the malignant group and active RPF group had similar enhancement patterns, while those in the chronic RPF group demonstrated less enhancement. Signal intensity values on T2-weighted images were not useful for differentiating these conditions.


Thyroid | 2010

Excision Efficiency of Radioguided Occult Lesion Localization in Reoperative Thyroid and Parathyroid Surgery

Tarik Terzioglu; Yasemin Giles Senyurek; Fatih Tunca; Cuneyt Turkmen; Ayse Mudun; Artur Salmaslioglu; Şükrü Şanlı; Hüseyin Bircan; Onur Demirkol; Serdar Tezelman

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficiency of a radioguided occult lesion localization technique in reoperative thyroid and parathyroid procedures in patients who had undergone previous neck exploration for thyroid or parathyroid disease. METHODS Twenty-one consecutive patients who were scheduled for reoperative thyroid or parathyroid surgery were studied. The indication for reoperation was recurrent papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) in eight patients, completion thyroidectomy for PTC in eight patients who had previously undergone a bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy, recurrent goiter in two patients, primary hyperparathyroidism in two patients, and recurrent parathyroid cancer in one patient. Ninety minutes before surgery, 0.1 mL of Technetium-99m (0.2 mCi)-labeled macroaggregated albumin was injected directly into the lesion under ultrasonographic guidance. During surgery, a handheld gamma probe was used to localize and excise the lesions. The background and postexcisional site radioactivities were compared to confirm the completeness of each procedure. The radiation dose in the operating room environment, duration of surgery, and postoperative complication rates were evaluated in all patients. In patients with PTC, the change in serum thyroglobulin (Tg) following surgery was noted. RESULTS Thirty lesions were marked and excised. The postexcisional bed gamma counts (610 ± 141) were markedly decreased compared with the pre-excisional site counts (21,415.8 ± 4993.4; p = 0.0001). The ratio of the postexcisional and background counts (4.6 ± 4.3) was significantly lower than the ratio of the pre-excisional and background counts (173.7 ± 156.4; p = 0.0001). The mean operation duration was 53.3 ± 7.5 minutes. The dose absorbed by the hands of the surgeon was estimated as 0.07 ± 0.02 and 0.15 ± 0.05 millisievert/h when one or three lesions were marked, respectively. One patient developed postoperative transient hypoparathyroidism. After surgery, serum Tg levels dropped to <2 ng/mL in 86% (6/7) of the patients with PTC whose preoperative serum Tg was elevated. CONCLUSIONS The radioguided occult lesion localization technique was efficient in the perioperative identification of thyroid and parathyroid tumors in patients who were undergoing reoperation for PTC and hyperparathyroidism.


International Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2011

The Use of the Bethesda Terminology in Thyroid Fine-Needle Aspiration Results in a Lower Rate of Surgery for Nonmalignant Nodules A Report From a Reference Center in Turkey

Yasemin Ozluk; Esmehan Pehlivan; Mine Gulluoglu; Arzu Poyanli; Artur Salmaslioglu; Nese Colak; Yersu Kapran; Dilek Yilmazbayhan

The Bethesda system (BS) for reporting thyroid fine-needle aspiration (FNA), which classifies nodules as nondiagnostic (ND), benign (B), atypia/follicular lesion of undetermined significance (AUS/FLUS), suspicious for follicular neoplasm (SFN/FN), suspicious for malignancy (SFM), or malignant (M), uses clinically valuable management guidelines. The authors employed a similar in-house classification system (IS) for thyroid FNAs, using the categories of ND, B, suspicious follicular cells (SFC), follicular lesion/neoplasm (FL/FN), SFM, and M. The authors compared IS and BS, and assessed the utility of BS in clinical practice. A total of 581 nodules with cytological/histological follow-up were examined and indeterminate lesions by BS were reclassified. The sensitivity and specificity for malignancy using IS were similar to that of BS (77% vs 99%). However, when SFN/FN and SFM were both considered positive, the results for IS and BS were as follows: sensitivity, 85% versus 85%; specificity, 87% versus 94%; and diagnostic accuracy, 86% versus 90%, respectively. Discrepancies between cytological and histological data were evident in 35 cases among all categories of BS except AUS/FLUS. The rate of surgery for nonmalignant nodules was lesser (20% vs 9%) by BS. Among 34 AUS/FLUS cases with follow-up data, hypocellularity was the case in 11 (46%) nonneoplastic and 10 (100%) neoplastic nodules. The use of BS results in a lower rate of surgery for nonmalignant nodules even though patients with borderline cytopathologic features are still encountered. AUS/FLUS category can be separated into subgroups according to the factors causing difficulties in the interpretation. There is a need of accumulation of AUS/FLUS cases to do further evaluations and studies.


Gynecological Endocrinology | 2006

Severe hyperthyroidism requiring therapeutic plasmapheresis in a patient with hydatidiform mole.

Yeşim Erbil; Deniz Tihan; Adil Azezli; Artur Salmaslioglu; Yasemin Ozluk; Ahmet Büyükören; Selçuk Özarmağan

A 38-year-old woman had a 4-week history of vaginal bleeding, heat intolerance and palpitations. Levels of β-human chorionic gonadotropin and thyroid hormones were abnormally high. After ultrasound diagnosis of a molar pregnancy, evacuation of the mole was planned with preoperative treatment involving the use of antithyroid drugs and plasmapheresis. Plasmapheresis was used to prepare for surgery in our patient who needed more rapid hormonal control. In conclusion, early diagnosis of molar pregnancy results in decreased incidence of significant complications related to hyperthyroidism.


British Journal of Surgery | 2007

Effects of thyroxine replacement on lipid profile and endothelial function after thyroidectomy.

Yeşim Erbil; Nese Ozbey; Murat Giriş; Artur Salmaslioglu; Selçuk Özarmağan; Serdar Tezelman

Hypothyroidism is a risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. This study investigated the effects of L‐thyroxine replacement therapy on lipid profile and endothelial function after thyroidectomy in patients with overt transient non‐autoimmune hypothyroidism.

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