Ekrem Kaya
Uludağ University
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Featured researches published by Ekrem Kaya.
Tumori | 1995
Tuncay Yilmazlar; Abdullah Zorluoglu; Halil Özgüç; Nusret Korun; Hakan Duman; Ekrem Kaya; Ayhan Kızıl
The study was carried out to promote a greater awareness of the potential for colorectal cancer in young adults under 40 years of age. During the 8 years between 1986 and 1993, 237 patients with adenocarcinoma of the colon and rectum were operated at the Uludağ University Hospital. Of these 237 cases, 46 patients under 40 years old were reviewed retrospectively. They accounted for 19.4% of the total number of patients with carcinoma of the colon and rectum operated during the same period. Rectal bleeding was the most common presenting symptom. The mean duration of time from the onset of symptoms to diagnosis was 5.8 months. The rectosigmoid area was the most frequently involved site (80%). Seventy-six percent of the patients had Dukes’ stage C or D tumors. Forty-eight percent of the tumors were either poorly differentiated or mucinous. The cumulative survival rate at 5 years was 43.4%. Patients under 40 years old with carcinoma of the colon and rectum are usually symptomatic and have advanced disease at the time of presentation. Although colorectal cancer is usually a disease of older patients it is becoming more common in younger populations.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1999
Ekrem Kaya; Esma Sürmen Gür; Halil Özgüç; Ahmet Bayer; Tokyay R
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to investigate the role of I-glutamine, short chain fatty acid, prednisolone, and mesalazine (5-aminosalicylic acid) enemas on mucosal damage and inflammation in experimental colitis. METHODS: Colitis was induced in rats with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid in ethanol. Saline (n=14), prednisolone (n=13), 5-aminosalicylic acid (n=14), I-glutamine (n=14), and short chain fatty acid (n=13) enemas were applied twice daily to the rats for seven days after the induction of colitis. The sham group (n=9) received only saline enemas. Rats were killed at the seventh day and their colonic macroscopic inflammatory scores were determined. Colonic mucosal gamma glutamyl transpeptidase activity and colonic mucosal malondialdehyde levels were measured. The same measurements but no enemas were done in the control group (n=7). RESULTS: There were significant differences in macroscopic inflammatory scores between sham and colitis groups (P<0.001). The macroscopic inflammatory scores of the colitis group were higher than the short chain fatty acid and glutamine groups (P<0.05). Whereas the mucosal gamma glutamyl transpeptidase activity was diminished in prednisolone, 5-aminosalicylic acid, and short chain fatty acid groups when compared with the control group; in the colitis, sham, and glutamine groups the activity of this enzyme did not change. The mucosal malondialdehyde levels were significantly lower in the prednisolone and glutamine groups than in the colitis group. CONCLUSION: Only one of four agents tested, namely, I-glutamine enemas, could decrease the severity of colitis both morphologically and biochemically. Moreover, L-glutamine prevented the colitis-induced oxidant injury in the colonic mucosa. On the other hand, prednisolone and short chain fatty acids seemed to improve only the physiologic changes of colitis.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2002
Hakan Güven; Ramazan Amanvermez; Zafer Malazgirt; Ekrem Kaya; Zahide Doganay; Cemil Çelik; Kayhan Ozkan
BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of temperature on oxidative stress in brain stem tissue induced by hemorrhagic shock. We researched the hemorrhagic oxidative stress at various core temperatures using reduced glutathione (GSH) levels and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) as markers of lipid peroxidation in brain stem homogenate. METHODS Forty rats were divided into four groups, of which one constituted the nonbleeding normothermia control group. In all of the three study groups, 40% of estimated blood volume was removed while they were being held at normothermia, mild hypothermia (32 degrees C), or moderate hypothermia (28 degrees C). Parameters including mean arterial pressure, rectal temperature, and heart and breathing rates were monitored and recorded during the procedures. After an hour at shock state, tissue samples were removed by craniectomy. RESULTS The tissue levels of TBARS increased significantly in normothermic and mild hypothermic hemorrhagic shock groups (10.74 nmol/g and 8.26 nmol/g) as compared with the control group (3.50 nmol/g) (p < 0.001). However, the tissue TBARS level in the moderate hypothermia group was only minimally increased (4.53 nmol/g). GSH showed a slight decrease in normothermic and mild hypothermic bleeding rats, and were unchanged in the moderate hypothermic rats. CONCLUSION Moderate systemic hypothermia (28 degrees C) appears to protect brain stem tissue from oxidative stress during severe hemorrhagic shock in rats, as indicated by insignificant change in tissue TBARS and GSH concentrations. These results suggest antioxidant protective effects of moderate systemic hypothermia in metabolically active brain stem tissue during hemorrhagic shock. Similar effects in humans remain to be studied.
Surgery Today | 1995
Ekrem Kaya; Tuncay Yilmazlar; Zeki Emiroğlu; Abdullah Zorluoglu; Ahmet Bayer
Abdominal actinomycosis is a rare entity which presents some difficulty in establishing a correct preoperative diagnosis. We report herein the case of a 41-year-old woman who developed abdominal actinomycosis involving the left colon and the surrounding retroperitoneum. The patient, who had an intrauterine contraceptive device (IUCD) in situ, presented with left flank pain and the signs and symptoms of an intraabdominal mass, which was initially diagnosed as a neoplasm originating from the left colon or the retroperitoneal space. Thus, a left colectomy was performed, but the histopathological diagnosis revealed abdominal actinomycosis. We evaluated the diagnosis and treatment of this disease in light of the knowledge acquired from the available literature on this rare entity.
Surgery Today | 2007
Halil Özgüç; Şule Akköse; Gürol Şen; Mehtap Bulut; Ekrem Kaya
PurposeWe review our 11-year experience of treating diaphragmatic injury (DI), to identify the factors determining mortality and morbidity.MethodsWe analyzed the effects of demographic characteristics, type of injury (blunt or penetrating), number of injured organs, injury severity score (ISS), revised trauma score (RTS), Glasgow coma score, and intensive care unit and hospital stay, on complications and mortality, in 51 patients treated for DI between January 1995 and December 2005.ResultsTwenty-six (51%) patients suffered blunt injury and 25 (49%) suffered penetrating injury. The left diaphragm was injured in 40 (78%) patients, the right in 10 (19%), and both sides in 1 (2%). Only three (5.8%) patients had no concomitant injury. The diagnosis was made by the findings of laparotomy on 34 patients (65%), preoperative chest X-ray on 13 (25%), computed tomography on 2 (3.9%), and laparoscopy on 2 (3.9%). Complications developed in 23 (44%) patients and overall mortality was 19.6% (10/51). An ISS > 13 was found to be an independent prognostic factor for morbidity, whereas an RTS ≤ 11, age ≥ 48 years, and a major postoperative complication were independent prognostic factors for mortality.ConclusionEstablishing a preoperative diagnosis of DI is still problematic. Aggressive treatment and close monitoring of patients with an ISS > 13, an RTS ≤ 11, an age ≥ 48 years, or a postoperative complication may decrease morbidity and mortality.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2013
Gokhan Garip; Emre Sarandol; Ekrem Kaya
AIM To evaluate the effects of disease severity and necrosis on organ dysfunctions in acute pancreatitis (AP). METHODS One hundred and nine patients treated as AP between March 2003 and September 2007 with at least 6 mo follow-up were included. Patients were classified according to severity of the disease, necrosis ratio and localization. Subjective clinical evaluation and fecal pancreatic elastase-I (FPE-I) were used for exocrine dysfunction evaluation, and oral glucose tolerance test was completed for endocrine dysfunction. The correlation of disease severity, necrosis ratio and localization with exocrine and endocrine dysfunction were investigated. RESULTS There were 58 male and 51 female patients, and mean age was 56.5 ± 15.7. Of the patients, 35.8% had severe AP (SAP) and 27.5% had pancreatic necrosis. Exocrine dysfunction was identified in 13.7% of the patients [17.9% were in SAP, 11.4% were in mild AP (MAP)] and 34.7% of all of the patients had endocrine dysfunction (56.4% in SAP and 23.2% in MAP). In patients with SAP and necrotizing AP (NAP), FPE-Ilevels were lower than the others (P < 0.05 and 0.001 respectively) and in patients having pancreatic head necrosis or near total necrosis, FPE-1 levels were lower than 200 μg/g stool. Forty percent of the patients who had undergone necrosectomy developed exocrine dysfunction. Endocrine dysfunction was more significant in patients with SAP and NAP (P < 0.001). All of the patients in the necrosectomy group had endocrine dysfunction. CONCLUSION Patients with SAP, NAP, pancreatic head necrosis and necrosectomy should be followed for pancreatic functions.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1999
Ekrem Kaya; Ozguc H; Tokyay R; Yunuk O
BACKGROUND Trauma care is expensive and more so for the hospitals not subsidized by the government, as is the case in developing countries. In this study, the burden of trauma care on a typical Level I trauma center in Turkey was investigated. METHODS Medical, demographic, and financial records of trauma patients who were hospitalized in the calendar year of 1996 were analyzed. RESULTS A total of 347 patients had complete data available for analysis. The mean Injury Severity Score was 13.3+/-0.5. Total hospital charges and charges per patient were
Surgery Today | 1999
Tokyay R; Ekrem Kaya; Esma Sürmen Gür; Pınar Tuncel; Resul Özbek; Ercan Öztürk
547,391 and
Journal of The National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka | 2018
Deniz Sigirli; Ilker Ercan; Ozkan Balcin; Ekrem Kaya
1,577, respectively. There was a positive correlation between the Injury Severity Score and the hospital charges. Although 54.2% of the patients were self-payer and the rest (45.8%) had some form of a health insurance, 5.5% (
Transplantation | 2017
Ersin Elgin; Kerem Selimoğlu; Ekrem Kaya
30,496) of total hospital charges of these 347 trauma patients could not be collected by the hospital. CONCLUSION Trauma care is expensive and reimbursement is not always possible, but the hospitals nonreimbursed money was within tolerable limits, and the overall financial balance of the hospital from the trauma care was on the positive side, even in the absence of government subsidy.