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Dive into the research topics where Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu is active.

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Featured researches published by Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu.


SpringerPlus | 2016

The role of anterior segment optical coherence tomography in the management of an intra-corneal foreign body

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ugur Emrah Altiparmak; C. Banu Cosar; Abdullah Ozkiris

AbstractIntroductionCorneal foreign bodies are reported to be the second most common type of ocular injury. Anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) is a valuable tool for the early diagnosis and monitoring the progress of treatment in cases of ocular trauma. Herein we aimed to report on a patient with an intra-corneal foreign body and the role of AS-OCT in management.Case presentationA 34-year-old male presented with foreign body sensation in his left eye. Slit-lamp biomicroscopic examination revealed a peripherally located intrastromally embedded foreign body with a free anterior edge extending outwards from the cornea. It was not possible to visualize the foreign body’s entire route through the cornea because of localized corneal edema. AS-OCT showed shadowing of the corneal layers corresponding to the location of the corneal foreign body. A hyper-reflective lesion was observed close to the inside edge of the foreign body in the cornea, indicating that the foreign body had not completely penetrated the cornea. The foreign body was removed via the external route, as it had not completely penetrated the cornea. During the postoperative period the patient was asymptomatic, although the left eye’s cornea healed with scar tissue. Discussion and EvaluationAS-OCT facilitates non-invasive rapid imaging of ocular tissue at va rious depths, thereby providing accurate assessment of foreign body characteristics.The location of an intracorneal foreign body and the status of the surrounding ocular structure dictate the optimal surgical technique to be employed.ConclusionsAS-OCT in the present case facilitated localization and determination of the size of a corneal foreign body. In addition, AS-OCT findings assisted in selection of the appropriate surgical intervention.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Iris metastasis of gastric adenocarcinoma

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; U. Emrah Altiparmak; C. Banu Cosar; Abdullah Ozkiris

BackgroundIris metastasis in patients with gastric cancer is extremely rare. Herein, it is aimed to report on a patient with gastric adenocarcinoma and iris metastasis.Case presentationA 65-year-old patient with the history of gastric cancer was admitted for eye pain and eye redness on his left eye. There was ciliary injection, severe +4 cells with hypopyon in the anterior chamber and a solitary, friable, yellow-white, fleshy-creamy vascularized 2 mm × 4 mm mass on the upper nasal part of the iris within the left eye. The presented patient’s mass lesion in the iris fulfilled the criteria of the metastatic iris lesion’s appearance. The ocular metastasis occurred during chemotherapy.ConclusionsIris metastasis can masquerade as iridocyclitis with pseudohypopyon or glaucoma. In patients with a history of gastric cancer that present with an iris mass, uveitis, and high intraocular pressure, ocular metastasis of gastric cancer should be a consideration.


Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine | 2018

The effect of hemodialysis on intraocular pressure

Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Gurkan Yurteri; Nurgul Guven; Savas Marsap; Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Cemile Banu Cosar

BACKGROUND The effect of hemodialysis (HD) on intraocular pressure (IOP) has been investigated before, but there is a lack of consensus. Clinicians dealing with renal failure patients are interested in the potential negative effects of HD on IOP and the course of glaucoma. OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of HD on IOP in patients with end-stage renal disease. MATERIAL AND METHODS This prospective study included 106 patients who were receiving outpatient hemodialysis. Patient history of systemic and ophthalmologic conditions was recorded. Serum osmolality (mOsm), blood urea nitrogen (BUN), blood glucose (BG), bicarbonate (BC), and hematocrit (Hct) levels at the start of HD (pre-HD), at the end of HD (end-HD), and 30 min after HD (post-HD) were measured. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures (SBP and DBP) and IOP were measured at pre-HD, 1-hour intervals during HD, end-HD, and post-HD. RESULTS A significant decrease in mOsm and BUN and a significant increase in BG, BC, and Hct levels were observed at end-HD (p < 0.05). Mean IOP was 16.71 ±2.51 mm Hg at pre-HD, 15.52 ±3.18 mm Hg at endHD, and 15.23 ±2.73 mm Hg at post-HD (p = 0.001; F = 4.439). Post-HD SBP and DBP were significantly lower than at pre-HD (p < 0.001). There was a positive correlation between the change in IOP and the change in mOsm and the change in BUN at end-HD (r = 0.315, p = 0.004; and r = 0.279, p = 0.012, respectively). CONCLUSIONS IOP decreased significantly during HD in this study. Additional research on the effects of the change in blood parameters and ocular perfusion pressure on IOP and optic nerve perfusion during HD is recommended.


Eye & Contact Lens-science and Clinical Practice | 2017

An 11-year Review of Keratoplasty in a Tertiary Referral Center in Turkey: Changing Surgical Techniques for Similar Indications

Tahir Kansu Bozkurt; Banu Torun Acar; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Mehmet Orcun Akdemir; David Rex Hamilton; Cemile Banu Cosar Yurteri; Suphi Acar

Objectives: Study aims to evaluate the indications and surgical techniques for corneal transplantation and to report changes in trends for preferred keratoplasty surgical techniques. Methods: Clinical records of 815 consecutive corneal transplantations between January 1, 2004 and December 31, 2014 in Haydarpasa Numune Training and Research Hospital Eye Clinic were analyzed and classified into seven broad groups according to indications. Main outcome measures were change of leading indications and trends for surgical techniques. Results: Leading indications for keratoplasty were keratoconus (KCN) (27.7%), bullous keratopathy (BK) (23%), postinfectious corneal scars (13.5%), regrafts (13.1%), corneal dystrophies (12.1%), and noninfectious corneal scars (5.4%). Regrafts were the only indication with a significantly increasing trend (P<0.01). Since the introduction of lamellar keratoplasty (LK) techniques including deep anterior lamellar keratoplasty (DALK) and Descemet stripping automated endothelial keratoplasty (DSAEK), there was a significant increasing trend in number and percentage of both LK techniques (DALK; P=0.001 and P=0.007, and DSAEK; P<0.001 and P<0.001, respectively) and a significant corresponding decline in the percentage of penetrating keratoplasty (PK) (P<0.01). Similarly, DALK and DSAEK replaced PK as the preferred surgical technique for KCN and BK indications, (P=0.007 and P=0.01, respectively). Although PK was the most common surgical technique over the 11-year period (54.7%), both anterior and posterior LK techniques showed an emerging trend as the procedures of choice when indicated. Conclusions: No major shift was observed in the clinical indications for corneal transplantation over the previous 11 years, except for regrafts. Lamellar keratoplasty techniques largely overtook the PK technique, but PK was still the overall preferred technique in the era when both LK techniques were used.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2018

Age-related change in corneal biomechanical parameters in a healthy Caucasian population

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ugur E. Altiparmak; C. Banu Cosar Yurteri

ABSTRACT Purpose: To determine the effect of aging on corneal biomechanical parameters measured via ocular response analyzer in a homogenous healthy Caucasian population. Methods: A total of 2039 Caucasian adults were consecutively recruited and divided into seven groups according to decades of age. The difference in mean corneal hysteresis (CH), mean corneal resistance factor (CRF), mean Goldmann-correlated intraocular pressure (IOPg), and mean corneal-compensated IOP (IOPcc) between decades of age were investigated. The strength of the correlations between corneal biomechanical parameters, and between each biomechanical parameter and age were evaluated. The effect of age on each corneal biomechanical parameter was analyzed. Results: Mean age of the participants (1173 female and 866 male) was 43.30 ± 14.64 years. Mean CH, CRF, IOPcc, and IOPg were 11.49 ± 1.89 mmHg, 11.40 ± 2.30 mmHg, 15.01 ± 3.11 mmHg, and 15.72 ± 3.80 mmHg, respectively. There were significant differences in mean CH, CRF, IOPcc, and IOPg between groups (p < 0.001 for all parameters). There was a significant negative correlation between age and CH (r = –0.067 and p = 0.003), and a significant negative correlation between age and CRF (r = –0.053 and p = 0.017). There was a significant positive correlation between age and IOPg (r = 0.25 and p < 0.001), and between age and IOPcc (r = 0.20 and p < 0.001). Linear regression analysis showed that for every 1-year increase CH decreased 0.011 mmHg, CRF decreased 0.004 mmHg, IOPcc increased 0.053 mmHg, and IOPg increased 0.047 mmHg. Conclusions: Aging can cause significant changes in corneal biomechanical parameters. Corneal biomechanical parameters were correlated with each other, and each was correlated with aging.


Eye & Contact Lens-science and Clinical Practice | 2017

Estrogen- and Progesterone-induced Variation in Corneal Parameters According to Hormonal Status

Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Cemile Banu Cosar; Ibrahim Bildirici; Omer Cetin; Esra Ozbasli

Objectives: To determine the effects of estrogen and progesterone on corneal thickness, curvature, and biomechanics in healthy corneas according to hormonal status. Methods: The study included four groups of females: group A (menstruating, not pregnant, not lactating, and not menopausal; n=100), group B (pregnant; n=50), group C (lactating; n=50), and group D (menopausal; n=50). Group A was subdivided according to age, as subgroup A15–25 (age 15–25 years) and subgroup A>25 (age >25 years). Blood estradiol and progesterone levels were measured in each participant. All the participants underwent a full ophthalmologic examination, including corneal thickness and corneal topography measurement, and evaluation of corneal biomechanical properties. Results: The corneal resistance factor and anterior corneal flat keratometry values were significantly higher in group D (P=0.040 and P=0.026, respectively) than in the other three groups. Posterior corneal steep keratometry values were significantly higher in subgroup A>25 during the preovulatory phase than ovulatory and postovulatory phases (P=0.012). In group B, there was a significant negative correlation between gestational week and intraocular pressure (IOP) (r=−0.322, P=0.024). Corneal volume was significantly higher during the early postpartum period than the late postpartum period in group C (P=0.028). Intraocular pressure, Goldman-correlated IOP, and corneal-compensated IOP differed significantly between the groups (P<0.05). Conclusions: Blood levels of estrogen and progesterone were associated with variations in IOP, but estrogen and progesterone did not have a consistent effect on topographic parameters or biomechanical properties in healthy corneas.


Current Eye Research | 2017

The Effect of Smoking on Corneal Biomechanics

Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ugur Emrah Altiparmak; Cemile Banu Cosar

ABSTRACT Purpose: To determine the effect of smoking on corneal biomechanical behavior. Materials and Methods: The medical records of consecutive patients that presented to the ophthalmology department were reviewed. History of smoking and ophthalmological examination findings were recorded. The smoking group met the following criteria: a clear history of and present smoking habit, negative history of corneal disease and surgery, ocular response analyzer measurement at the time of examination, and a waveform score ≥3.7. Nonsmokers (never smoked or quit smoking ≥6 months earlier) that met the same criteria constituted the control group. Corneal biomechanical parameters were measured using ocular response analyzer. Data were analyzed using Pearson’s χ2 test, Mann–Whitney U test, and Spearman’s correlation coefficient. Results: The smoking group included 166 eyes of 166 patients with a mean age of 38.7 ± 11.95 years, and the control group consisted of 170 eyes of 170 patients with a mean age of 38.40 ± 12.2 years. Mean cumulative smoking dose in the smoking group was 9.59 ± 11.87 pack-years (0.04– 75.00). There was no significant correlation between cumulative smoking dose and corneal hysteresis and corneal resistance factor (P = 0.382 and 0.074, respectively). There were no significant differences in corneal hysteresis or the corneal resistance factor between the two groups (P > 0.05). There was no significant difference in corneal hysteresis between those in the smoking group aged 18–44 years and those aged 45–64 years (P = 0.258), whereas in the control group mean corneal hysteresis was significantly lower in the 45–64 year olds than in the 18–44 year olds (P = 0.034). Conclusions: Although there was no significant difference in corneal biomechanics between smoking and control groups, the decrease in corneal hysteresis with aging was less apparent in the smoking group, which may be due to the potential changes in the cornea’s microstructure induced by smoking during aging and the effect of smoking in aged corneal tissue viscosity.


Ophthalmic Research | 2016

Corneal Biomechanical Properties in Aspirin Users

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ugur E. Altiparmak; Cemile Banu Cosar

Purpose: To analyze corneal biomechanical properties in aspirin users using an ocular response analyzer. Methods: This study included 80 eyes of 40 aspirin users and 80 eyes of 40 individuals who did not use aspirin. Corneal hysteresis (CH), the corneal resistance factor (CRF), Goldman-correlated intraocular pressure (IOPg), and corneal compensated intraocular pressure (IOPcc) were measured in all participants. The independent samples t test was used to compare measurements in the aspirin users and nonusers in the total study population, and in the diabetic patient subgroup. Pearsons correlation analysis was used to examine the relationship between the measured variables in the aspirin users and nonusers. Results: Aspirin users (59.08 ± 11.83 years) were older than nonusers (39.82 ± 12.97 years; p < 0.001). The mean CH was significantly lower in the aspirin user group than in the nonuser group (p = 0.013). Mean IOPg and mean IOPcc were also significantly higher in the aspirin user group (p = 0.027 and p = 0.002, respectively). The mean CRF was lower in the aspirin user group, but not significantly (p = 0.70). There was a positive correlation between CH and CRF (r = 0.767, p < 0.001), and between CRF and IOPg (r = 0.680, p < 0.001), and a negative correlation between CH and IOPcc (r = -0.415, p < 0.001). Conclusions: Aspirin should be taken into account when interpreting the results of corneal biomechanical measurements.


Ophthalmic Research | 2016

Contents Vol. 55, 2016

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ugur E. Altiparmak; Cemile Banu Cosar; António F. Ambrósio; Ana Raquel Santiago; Raquel Boia; Yiqun Zhang; Mingjie Wang; Sunyi Zhang; Peiquan Zhao; Haiying Jin; Zhongmin Ou; Haike Guo; Gerd U. Auffarth; Toke Bek; Morten la Cour; Jan Ulrik Prause; Steffen Heegaard; Thuy Linh Tran; Steffen Hamann; Murat Gunay; Selim Sancak; Abdulhamit Tuten; Gokhan Celik; Handan Bardak; Emre Dincer; Güner Karatekin; Gurkan Erdogan; Yavuz Bardak

Basel • Freiburg • Paris • London • New York • Chennai • New Delhi • Bangkok • Beijing • Shanghai • Tokyo • Kuala Lumpur • Singapore • Sydney Journal for Translational and Clinical Research Founded 1970 by O. Hockwin, Bonn, G. Naumann, Hamburg and D.F. Cole, London Continued by O. Hockwin, Bonn (1981–1994); G.F.J.M. Vrensen, Zeist (1994–2003); Uwe Pleyer, Berlin (2003–2014); David E. Pelayes, Buenos Aires, Borja Corcόstegui, Barcelona (2012–2014)


Open Medicine | 2015

Retinal tear: an unusual complication of ocular toxoplasmosis

Ali Riza Cenk Celebi; Ayse Ebru Kilavuzoglu; Ugur Emrah Altiparmak; Cemile Banu Cosar; Abdullah Ozkiris

Abstract Purpose: It is aimed to report on a 16-year-old patient with acquired ocular toxoplasmosis complicated by a retinal tear. Methods: Retrospective medical chart review Results: A 16-year-old Caucasian female presented with vision loss in her right eye. In addition to a white active lesion between the fovea and the optic nerve head, marked vitreous opacification was noted. She was diagnosed with ocular toxoplasmosis. The patient was treated with oral azithromycin, clindamycin, and trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole. One month later, retinochoroiditis resolved and vitreous cleared. Three months after onset, patient presented with floaters in the right eye and a retinal tear was located at the temporal region of the retina. Prophylactic argon laser treatment that encircled the retinal tear was performed. No other abnormalities were noted during 6 months of follow-up. Conclusions: Retinal tear associated with ocular toxoplasmosis is rare; however, a retinal tear can occur due to vitreoretinal traction following post-inflammatory structural alteration of the vitreous. Retinal tears may be seen during the healing phase, when the inflammation turns into tightening of vitreous substance. Careful retinal examination in cases of ocular toxoplasmosis is warranted, especially in patients with severe vitreous inflammation.

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Mehmet Orcun Akdemir

Zonguldak Karaelmas University

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Selim Sancak

Abant Izzet Baysal University

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