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Featured researches published by Ergun Erdem.


Journal of The American College of Nutrition | 2004

The Influence of Nutritional Status on Complications after Major Intraabdominal Surgery

Hülya Sungurtekin; Ugur Sungurtekin; Canan Balci; Mehmet Zencir; Ergun Erdem

Objective: Currently most nutritional assessment techniques are based on their ability to predict clinical outcomes. However, the validity of any of these techniques to truly measure “nutritional risk” has not been proved. We have therefore prospectively assessed the prognostic value of two nutritional assessment techniques and nonnutritional factors in determining outcome after major abdominal surgery. Methods: At admission and discharge, 100 patients undergoing major abdominal surgery were assessed on the following items: Subjective Global Assessment, Nutritional Risk Index, anthropometric measurements, serum total protein, serum albumin, lymphocyte count, total serum cholesterol. Patients were monitored for postoperative complications until death or discharge. Results: At admission, 44% of the patients were malnourished according to the Subjective Global Assessment, while 61% of the patients were malnourished according to the Nutritional Risk Index. At discharge, these numbers were 67% and 82%, respectively. Higher death rates were found in the malnourished groups. The risk of complication was increased in malnourished patients with both assessment techniques. The odds ratios for the association between malnutrition and complications varied between 1.926 and 9.854 with both assessments. The presence of cancer in the patient was predictive for complication. Conclusions: Malnutrition is a marker of bad outcomes. Both Subjective Global Assessment and Nutritional Risk Index nutrition tests are predictive for malnutrition and postoperative complications in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1998

Are postoperative drains necessary with the limberg flap for treatment of pilonidal sinus

Ergun Erdem; Ugur Sungurtekin; Mehmet Neşşar

PURPOSE: Different methods for managing pilonidal sinus have been described in the literature. Our purpose was to evaluate the influence of postoperative drainage in Limberg flaps. METHODS: Forty patients with pilonidal sinus undergoing radical excision and reconstruction with Limberg flap between 1994 and 1996 were evaluated prospectively. After patients were assigned randomly to the two groups, the effects of drains were studied statistically in terms of wound complications, hospital stay, and recurrence rate. RESULTS: Except for two minor transient wound dehiscences, in all cases primary healing was achieved. Early wound complication rate was 7.5 percent and recurrence rate was 2.5 percent for both groups. There was no significant difference between the groups in early wound complications (P>0.05). The length of hospital stay was significantly longer in the drainage group (P<0.001). CONCLUSION: We conclude that Limberg flaps with no drains in place will result in shorter hospital stays without deleteriously affecting the surgical results of wide excision and primary closure with well-vascularized tissue.


Journal of Clinical Anesthesia | 2003

Local anesthesia and midazolam versus spinal anesthesia in ambulatory pilonidal surgery.

Hülya Sungurtekin; Ugur Sungurtekin; Ergun Erdem

STUDY OBJECTIVE To evaluate two anesthetic techniques, namely, local anesthesia with sedation, and spinal anesthesia, with respect to recovery times, postoperative side effects, pain scores, patient satisfaction, and hospital costs for ambulatory pilonidal disease surgery. DESIGN Prospective, randomized study. SETTING University Hospital of Pamukkale. PATIENTS 60 consenting patients scheduled for pilonidal disease operation with Limberg flap technique. INTERVENTION Patients were randomly allocated into two groups: Group 1 (n = 30) received spinal anesthesia with hyperbaric bupivacaine 1.5 mL 0.5%, and Group 2 (n = 30) received local infiltration with a 50-mL mixture containing 10 mL bupivacaine 0.5%, 10 mL prilocaine HCl 2%, and 30 mL isotonic solution with 1:200,000 epinephrine in combination with intravenous (i.v.) midazolam sedation. MEASUREMENTS Perioperative and postoperative side effects, patient satisfaction, preoperative visual analog scale (VAS) pain scores, and VAS scores from the fourth hour postoperatively until the seventh day were assessed. Anesthesia, operation, surgery, and total hospital time, and costs (drug, resources, and labor) were recorded. MAIN RESULTS No difference was found between groups in the frequency of side effects. Urinary retention was diagnosed in two patients in the spinal anesthesia group. There was no statistical significant difference seen in satisfaction scores between groups. No statistical significance in VAS pain scores between groups was noted except for the fourth postoperative hour values. The average time spent in the operating room (OR) was greater in the spinal anesthesia group. All Group 2 patients achieved fast-tracking criteria in the OR and were able to bypass the postanesthesia care unit (PACU). Total hospital time and total cost were significantly higher in the spinal anesthesia group than local anesthesia-sedation group (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION The use of local anesthesia-sedation for ambulatory anorectal surgery resulted in a shorter hospital time, lower hospital costs, and no side effects compared with spinal anesthesia.


International Journal of Colorectal Disease | 2000

Magnetic resonance imaging with rectal Gd-DTPA: new tool for the diagnosis of perianal fistula.

Nuran Sabir; Ugur Sungurtekin; Ergun Erdem; Mehmet Neşşar

Abstract. This study investigated the effectiveness of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with rectal administration of the enteral contrast agent gadolinium diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA) in the diagnosis of recurrent perianal fistulae, assessing the number, anatomical extent, location, and signal intensities of various lesions. Fistulas were examined by MRI before and after rectal administration of Gd-DTPA in 50 patients (excluding fistulas due to inflammatory bowel disease). Surgical findings were compared with both pre- and postcontrast T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and short T1 inversion recovery (STIR) sequences. Of the 68 fistulous tracts detected surgically, precontrast imaging identified 16 by T1-weighted images (hypointense), 27 by T2-weighted images (hyperintense or iso- to weakly hyperintense), and 54 by STIR. Postcontrast imaging identified 29 by T1-weighted images, 58 by T2-weighted, and 54 by STIR. MRI with rectal administration of Gd-DTPA thus facilitates determination of fistula tracts, which are better resolved by precontrast STIR than by either precontrast T1- or T2-weighted images. Postcontrast T2-weighted images were substantially superior to T1-weighted. Both noncontrast STIR and postcontrast T2-weighted sequences were adequate for classifying fistulas in ano, but in complex recurrent anal fistula postcontrast T2-weighted images were more helpful.


Journal of Investigative Medicine | 2007

Insertion/deletion polymorphism of the angiotensin I-converting enzyme gene in patients with breast cancer and effects on prognostic factors.

Arzu Yaren; Sebahat Turgut; Raziye Kursunluoglu; Ilhan Oztop; Günfer Turgut; Serkan Degirmencioglu; Canan Kelten; Ergun Erdem

The aims of the present study were to investigate the distribution of the insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) gene in breast cancer patients and the association between ACE genotypes and clinicopathologic features, as well as their effects on prognosis. We assessed the I/D polymophism of the ACE gene by using polymerase chain reaction from peripheral blood in breast cancer and healthy age-matched women. The clinicopathologic parameters of breast cancer patients were obtained from medical records. Of the 57 patients, 31 (54.4%) had DD, 24 (42.1%) had ID, and 2 (3.5%) had II genotypes. In control subjects, 33 (63.5%) had DD, 12 (23.1%) had ID, and 7 (13.4%) had II genotypes. The ID genotype was seen more commonly in breast cancer patients (p = .03). When the combination of ID and II genotypes was used as a reference group, the DD genotype was associated with negative hormone receptor status (p = .003), tumor size (p = .054), and lymph node involvement (p = .07) but not histologic high grade and c-erb B2 overexpression. These results suggest that the DD genotype may accompany poor prognostic factors and influence the tumor course.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2004

Anocutaneous V-Y Advancement Flap for the Treatment of Complex Perianal Fistula

Ugur Sungurtekin; Hülya Sungurtekin; Burhan Kabay; Koray Tekin; Faruk Onder Aytekin; Ergun Erdem; Akin Ozden

PURPOSEThe treatment of intersphincteric and low transsphincteric fistula is well defined, but controversy remains around the management of complex perianal fistula. This study was designed to assess the utility of anocutaneous flap repair in complex types of perianal fistula.METHODSSixty-five perianal fistula in 65 patients treated with anocutaneous advancement flap for the complex fistula, between April 1998 and December 2002, are included this prospective study. Mean age was 34 ± 2.1 (range, 24–53) years. Magnetic resonance imaging was used for the diagnosis of fistula. Excision of the internal opening and the overlying anoderm, curettage of the fistula tract, closure of internal opening with absorbable polyglactin 3/0 suture, and drainage of the external opening(s) by insertion of penrose drain were common operational steps. Outcome was evaluated in terms of healing and incontinence.RESULTSSuccessful healing of 59 of 65 complex fistulas was achieved using this technique with no disturbance of continence and minimal complications. Mean follow-up and complete healing time were 32 ± 0.6 (range, 12–52) months and 5.4 ± 0.8 (range, 3–7) weeks respectively.CONCLUSIONSAlthough the study cases were relatively small in number, this report showed that clinical results of anocutaneous advancement flap are acceptable. However, large studies are needed to reach an ultimate conclusion for assessing the place of anocutaneous flap advancement in complex fistula.


American Journal of Surgery | 2002

Antithrombin III prevents deleterious effects of remote ischemia-reperfusion injury on healing of colonic anastomoses

Koray Tekin; Faruk Onder Aytekin; Akin Ozden; Ayse Bilgihan; Ergun Erdem; Ugur Sungurtekin; Yıldız Güney

BACKGROUND Antithrombin III is known as the most important natural inhibitor of thrombin activity and has been shown to attenuate local harmful effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury in many organs. In recent animal studies, delaying effect of remote organ ischemia-reperfusion injury on healing of intestinal anastomoses has been demonstrated. In this study, we investigated whether antithrombin III reduces deleterious systemic effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury on healing of colonic anastomoses in rats. METHODS Anastomosis of the left colon was performed in 24 rats that were divided into three groups: sham operated control (group I, n = 8), 30 minutes of intestinal ischemia-reperfusion by superior mesenteric artery occlusion (group II, n = 8), antithrombin III treated group (250 U/kg before and after the ischemia-reperfusion, group III, n = 8). On postoperative day 6, all animals were sacrificed, and bursting pressure and tissue hydroxyproline content of the anastomoses were assessed and compared. RESULTS On postoperative day 6 the mean bursting pressures were 149.6 +/- 4.8, 69.8 +/- 13.5, and 121.8 +/- 8.7 mm Hg for groups I, II, and III, respectively (P = 0.000). Mean tissue hydroxyproline concentration values were 389.5 +/- 29.6, 263.1 +/- 10.0, and 376.0 +/- 33.8 microg/mg for groups I, II, III respectively (P = 0.005). CONCLUSIONS This study showed that, antithrombin III treatment significantly prevented the delaying effect of remote organ ischemia-reperfusion injury on anastomotic healing in the colon. Further clinical studies are needed to clarify whether antithrombin may be a useful therapeutic agent to increase the safety of the anastomosis during particular operations where remote organ ischemia-reperfusion injury takes place.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2008

Effects of Tempol, a Membrane-Permeable Radical Scavenger, on Local and Remote Organ Injuries Caused by Intestinal Ischemia/Reperfusion in Rats

Zafer Teke; Burhan Kabay; Akin Ozden; Cigdem Yenisey; Ferda Bir; Neşe Çallı Demirkan; Tuncay Bicakci; Ergun Erdem

BACKGROUND Tempol is a stable piperidine nitroxide of low molecular weight that permeates biological membranes and scavenges superoxide anions in vitro. In a variety of animal models, deleterious effects of reperfusion injury on both local and remote organs have been demonstrated. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of a membrane-permeable radical scavenger, Tempol, on local and remote organ injuries caused by intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) in rats. MATERIALS AND METHODS Male Wistar-albino rats were randomized into three groups: (I) Sham-operated control group, laparotomy without I/R injury (n = 12); (II) Intestinal I/R group, 60 min of ischemia by superior mesenteric artery occlusion followed by 2-h of reperfusion (n = 12); and (III) I/R + Tempol-treated group, identical to I/R group except for Tempol administration, 30 mg/kg bolus injection 5 min before reperfusion, followed by an infusion of 30 mg/kg/h intravenously (n = 12). Histopathologically, intestinal mucosal lesions were assessed by Chius classification, and pulmonary parenchymal damage was appraised by pulmonary neutrophil infiltration and acute lung injury scaling. Biochemically, myeloperoxidase activity, malondialdehyde, glutathione, and nitrite/nitrate (NO(x)) levels were determined in both intestinal mucosa and lung parenchyma. Evans blue dye concentration and organ wet/dry weight ratios were used as a marker of organ edema. Animal survival was observed up to 1 week. RESULTS Intestinal mucosal lesions and pulmonary parenchymal damage were significantly attenuated with Tempol treatment, histopathologically (P < 0.05). Tempol administration significantly reduced myeloperoxidase activity and malondialdehyde levels, and also significantly increased glutathione and NO(x) levels of both intestinal and lung tissues, biochemically (P < 0.05). Evans blue dye extravasation and wet/dry weight ratios of organs were significantly reduced with Tempol injection (P < 0.05). The survival rates of rats in Tempol-treated group were significantly higher than that of I/R-treated group (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS The present study suggests that Tempol administration significantly reduces both local and remote organ injuries caused by intestinal I/R before and throughout the reperfusion period. Further clinical studies are needed to clarify whether Tempol may be a useful therapeutic agent to use in particular operations where the reperfusion injury occurs.


American Journal of Surgery | 2008

Activated protein C attenuates intestinal reperfusion-induced acute lung injury : an experimental study in a rat model

Zafer Teke; Mustafa Saçar; Cigdem Yenisey; A. Ozgur Atalay; Tuncay Bicakci; Ergun Erdem

BACKGROUND Activated protein C (APC) is a serine protease with anticoagulant and anti-inflammatory activities. APC has been shown to attenuate local deleterious effects of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in many organs. We aimed to investigate the effects of APC on lung reperfusion injury induced by superior mesenteric occlusion. METHODS Male Wistar-Albino rats were allocated into 4 groups: (1) sham-operated group, laparotomy without I/R injury (n = 12); (2) sham + APC group, identical to group 1 except for APC treatment (n = 12); (3) intestinal I/R group, 60 minutes of ischemia followed by 3 hours of reperfusion (n = 12); and (4) I/R + APC-treated group, 100 microg/kg injection of APC intravenously, 15 minutes before reperfusion (n = 12). Evans blue dye was injected into half of the rats in all groups. We assessed the degree of pulmonary tissue injury by measuring activities of oxidative and antioxidative enzymes, as well as nitrate (NO(3)(-))/nitrite (NO(2)(-)) levels, biochemically. We evaluated acute lung injury (ALI) by establishing pulmonary neutrophil sequestration and ALI scoring histopathologically. Pulmonary edema was estimated by using Evans blue dye extravasation and wet/dry ratios. The plasma levels of proinflammatory cytokines and D-dimer were measured. RESULTS APC treatment significantly reduced activities of oxidative enzymes and nitrate/nitrite levels in the lung tissues, and plasma levels of proinflammatory cytokines and D-dimer, and also significantly increased activities of antioxidative enzymes (P < .05). Pulmonary neutrophil sequestration and ALI scores were decreased significantly with APC administration (P < .05). In addition, APC treatment significantly alleviated pulmonary edema (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS This study clearly showed that APC treatment significantly attenuated the lung reperfusion injury. Further clinical studies are required to clarify whether APC has a useful role in the reperfusion injury during particular surgeries in which I/R-induced organ injury occurs.


Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2007

The effect of different temporary abdominal closure techniques on fascial wound healing and postoperative adhesions in experimental secondary peritonitis

Cagatay Aydin; Faruk Onder Aytekin; Cigdem Yenisey; Burhan Kabay; Ergun Erdem; Goksel Kocbil; Koray Tekin

BackgroundSecondary peritonitis causes considerable mortality and morbidity. New strategies have been introduced like relaparotomy and temporary abdominal closure in the management of such persistent intra-abdominal infections.Materials and methodsRats were divided into five groups each having ten animals. After induction of peritonitis, relaparotomies were done, and the abdomen was closed by different temporary abdominal closure techniques. After performing two relaparotomies during a 48-h period, all fascias closed primarily and incisional tensile strengths, hydroxyproline contents, and adhesions were measured on the following seventh day.ResultsThe median values of tensile strength and hydroxyproline concentrations were lowest in skin-only closure rats. Intraperitoneal adhesion scores were highest in Bogota bag closure group.ConclusionPrimary, Bogota bag, and polyprolene mesh closures seem to be safe in terms of early fascial wound healing. Although it is easy to perform, skin-only closure technique has deleterious effects on fascial wound healing probably due to fascial retraction. Interestingly, Bogota bag has caused increased intraperitoneal adhesion formation.

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Cigdem Yenisey

Adnan Menderes University

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