Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ingolf Türk is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ingolf Türk.


The Journal of Urology | 2001

LAPAROSCOPIC RADICAL CYSTECTOMY WITH CONTINENT URINARY DIVERSION (RECTAL SIGMOID POUCH) PERFORMED COMPLETELY INTRACORPOREALLY: THE INITIAL 5 CASES

Ingolf Türk; Serdar Deger; Björn Winkelmann; Bernd Schönberger; Stefan A. Loening

PURPOSE We present our experience with the first 5 patients who underwent radical cystectomy with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy and continent urinary diversion (rectal sigmoid pouch) performed with an intracorporeal laparoscopic technique at our center. MATERIALS AND METHODS There were 3 males and 2 females 59 to 65 years old with organ confined, muscle invasive transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder who underwent surgery. The procedure included pelvic lymph node dissection, radical cystectomy with prostate or uterus and tubal structures, creation of the rectal sigmoid pouch and bilateral stented antireflux implantation of the ureters into the pouch. Freehand laparoscopic suturing and in situ knot tying techniques were used exclusively. The mobilized specimens were removed in an endoscopy bag via the rectum or vagina. Laparotomy was not required. RESULTS Operating time was 6.9 to 7.9 hours (median 7.4) and blood loss was 190 to 300 ml. (median 245). None of the 5 patients none needed blood transfusion. Oral intake was started on hospital day 3, ureteral stents were removed on day 8 and the pouch catheter was removed on day 9. The hospital stay was 10 days for all cases. Histopathological examination of the specimens revealed stage pT1 G3 urothelial carcinoma in case 1, pT2b G2 in cases 2 and 3, pT3a G2 in case 4 and pT3aG3 in case 5. The lymph nodes and resection margins were tumor-free. No intraoperative or postoperative complications were observed. CONCLUSIONS To our knowledge, this is the first series of laparoscopic radical cystectomy with intracorporeal continent urinary diversion (rectal sigmoid pouch), and our results are promising. With more experience and improvement of the surgical technique, laparoscopic radical cystectomy with continent urinary diversion may become an alternative surgical method for treating select patients with localized muscle invasive bladder cancer.


European Urology | 2001

Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy

Ingolf Türk; Serdar Deger; Björn Winkelmann; Bernd Schönberger; Stefan A. Loening

Purpose: The laparoscopic access for radical prostatectomy offeres an alternative to the open surgical procedure with less morbidity. We report on our experience with 125 laparoscopic prostatectomies, especially with respect to making the laparoscopic approach a routine procedure and with a view to the oncological and functional results. Material and Methods: From June 1999 to September 2000, we performed 125 laparoscopic prostatectomies. These included only patients with cancer stages T1 or T2. The mean PSA concentration was 10.5 ng/ml. Forty–four percent of the patients had undergone previous abdominal and 19% previous transurethral surgery. For our laparoscopic prostatectomies we used the descending technique. Free–hand laparoscopic suturing and in situ knot–tying technique were used for the urethrovesical anastomosis. The mobilized specimens were removed in an endobag via a muscle splitting incision. Results: All 125 procedures could be completed successfully. No case required conversion to open surgery. The average operating time was 255 min, the last 40 procedures taking 200 min only. Mean blood loss was 185 ml. Two patients (2%) required postoperative blood transfusion. After an initial learning curve, catheter remained in place for an average of 5.5 days, and the average postoperative stay in hospital was 8 days. Intraoperative complications were seen in 5 patients (4%). In 13 patients (10.4%) postoperative complications were observed. 86% of the patients are continent 6 months postoperatively. Preservation of the neurovascular bundle and sexual potency is possible. Conclusion: Laparoscopic radical prostatectomy is an ambitious procedure with a steep learning curve, especially for the laparoscopic dissecting and suturing technique. The excellent sight for dissection results in a reduced blood loss and faster convalescence with an overall lower morbidity. Also with regard to oncological and functional (continence) results the minimally invasive access is at least equivalent to the open procedure. In our opinion, laparoscopic prostatectomy will be the future method of choice for radical prostatectomy.


The Journal of Urology | 2010

The Learning Curve for Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy: An International Multicenter Study

Fernando P. Secin; Caroline Savage; Claude C. Abbou; Alexandre de la Taille; Laurent Salomon; Jens Rassweiler; Marcel Hruza; Franois Rozet; Xavier Cathelineau; G. Janetschek; Faissal Nassar; Ingolf Türk; Alex J. Vanni; Inderbir S. Gill; Philippe Koenig; Jihad H. Kaouk; Luis Martinez Piñeiro; Paolo Emiliozzi; Anders Bjartell; Thomas Jiborn; Christopher Eden; Andrew J. Richards; Roland van Velthoven; J.-U. Stolzenburg; Robert Rabenalt; Li Ming Su; Christian P. Pavlovich; Adam W. Levinson; Karim Touijer; Andrew J. Vickers

PURPOSE It is not yet possible to estimate the number of cases required for a beginner to become expert in laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. We estimated the learning curve of laparoscopic radical prostatectomy for positive surgical margins compared to a published learning curve for open radical prostatectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS We reviewed records from 8,544 consecutive patients with prostate cancer treated laparoscopically by 51 surgeons at 14 academic institutions in Europe and the United States. The probability of a positive surgical margin was calculated as a function of surgeon experience with adjustment for pathological stage, Gleason score and prostate specific antigen. A second model incorporated prior experience with open radical prostatectomy and surgeon generation. RESULTS Positive surgical margins occurred in 1,862 patients (22%). There was an apparent improvement in surgical margin rates up to a plateau at 200 to 250 surgeries. Changes in margin rates once this plateau was reached were relatively minimal relative to the CIs. The absolute risk difference for 10 vs 250 prior surgeries was 4.8% (95% CI 1.5, 8.5). Neither surgeon generation nor prior open radical prostatectomy experience was statistically significant when added to the model. The rate of decrease in positive surgical margins was more rapid in the open vs laparoscopic learning curve. CONCLUSIONS The learning curve for surgical margins after laparoscopic radical prostatectomy plateaus at approximately 200 to 250 cases. Prior open experience and surgeon generation do not improve the margin rate, suggesting that the rate is primarily a function of specifically laparoscopic training and experience.


European Journal of Cancer | 1999

Cathepsins B, H, L and cysteine protease inhibitors in malignant prostate cell lines, primary cultured prostatic cells and prostatic tissue

B Friedrich; Klaus Jung; Michael Lein; Ingolf Türk; Birgit Rudolph; G Hampel; Dietmar Schnorr; S.A. Loening

Elevated activities of cysteine proteinases, the cathepsins B, H, L (CB, CH, CL) and diminished cysteine protease inhibitors (CPI) have been demonstrated in a variety of tumours and have been suggested to contribute to invasion and metastasis. The situation for prostate cancer is still unknown. In this study, using fluorimetric assays, the catalytic activities of CB, CH, CL were measured in prostatic tissue samples after radical prostatectomy, adenomectomy, transurethral resection of the prostate, in cell cultures grown from cancerous and non-cancerous parts of human prostate after prostatectomy and in the cell lines LNCaP, DU 145 and PC 3. CPIs were determined using heat activation before testing their inhibitory activity against purified CB. Comparing matched pairs of normal and cancerous tissue samples from the prostate, significantly decreased levels of CB, CL in malignant parts of the prostate were found. In contrast, primary cell cultures from cancerous samples showed elevated levels of CB, CH, CL and increased ratios of cathepsins to CPI compared with cell cultures from normal prostate. Established cell lines showed a similar distribution pattern of each cathepsin, DU 145 containing the highest levels, followed by LNCaP and PC 3. Our results suggest that elevated cathepsin levels and consequently increased ratios of cathepsins to CPI in primary cell cultures from cancerous versus non-cancerous parts of the prostate may be indicative of a cellular proteolytic imbalance in prostatic cancer cells. In this respect, primary cell culture experiments should be preferred to determinations in tissue samples.


European Urology | 2002

High Dose Rate Brachytherapy of Localized Prostate Cancer

Serdar Deger; Dirk Boehmer; Ingolf Türk; Jan Roigas; Klaus D. Wernecke; Thomas Wiegel; Wolfgang Hinkelbein; Stefan Dinges; V. Budach; Stefan A. Loening

Abstract Objective: We evaluated the safety and efficacy of high dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy using Iridium-192 (Ir 192) and 3D conformal external beam radiotherapy in patients with localized prostate cancer. Methods: A total of 444 patients with localized prostate cancer underwent combined radiotherapy with interstitial Ir 192 and 3D conformal external beam radiotherapy between December 1992 and March 2001. The 230 patients, treated between December 1992 and December 1997 were analyzed. All patients underwent laparoscopic pelvic lymph node dissection to exclude patients with lymphatic involvement. Ir 192 was delivered twice with a 1-week interval in HDR remote control technique. The interstitial dose from December 1992 to December 1993 was 10Gy, after December 1993 the dose was reduced to 9Gy per treatment session. The interstitial application was followed by external beam radiation of 45Gy for cT1–cT2 and 50.4Gy for cT3 tumor (40Gy from December 1992 to December 1993). Progression was defined as biochemical failure according to ASTRO criteria, e.g. three consecutive PSA rises following the PSA nadir. Results: The median PSA value decreased from 12.8 to 0.93ng/ml 12 months after treatment. Median PSA value was 0.47 after 24 months, 0.30ng/ml after 36 months and 0.18ng/ml after 60 months. 68% of the biopsies were negative 24 months after therapy. Progression-free rate was 100% for cT1 tumors, 75% for cT2 and 60% for stage-cT3 on 5-year follow-up. Five-year overall survival was 93%, 5-year disease-specific survival was 98%. Initial PSA value Conclusions: Combined HDR brachytherapy with Ir 192 is an alternative treatment option especially for patients with cT3 prostate cancer. Initial PSA value, stage and grade, are important prognostic factors.


Urologe A | 2001

Die laparoskopische radikale Prostatektomie Erfahrungen mit 145 Eingriffen

Ingolf Türk; I.S. Deger; Björn Winkelmann; Jan Roigas; Bernd Schönberger; S.A. Loening

ZusammenfassungErmutigt durch die ersten erfolgreichen Berichte über die laparoskopische radikale Prostatektomie haben wir diesen Eingriff im Juni 1999 in unser Operationsprogramm aufgenommen. Bis Ende November 2000 führten wir insgesamt 145 dieser Eingriffe durch. Die Indikation zur laparoskopischen Prostatektomie entsprach genau der, die wir für die offene Operation anwenden.Abdominelle Voroperationen, transurethrale Resektionen bzw. eine mäßige Adipositas sind keine Kontraindikationen. Eine Konversion zur offenen Operation war in keinem Fall erforderlich. Die postoperative Komplikationsrate betrug 11,7%, wobei es sich vorwiegend um Minorkomplikationen handelte. Auch hinsichtlich der Kontinenz und Potenz sind die Ergebnisse sehr gut.Unserer Meinung nach ist die laparoskopische radikale Prostatektomie eine echte Alternative zur offenen Operation, da sie eine Reihe von Vorteilen für den Patienten und den Operateur aufweist.AbstractEncouraged by the groups in Paris, we performed 145 laparoscopic radical prostatectomies between June 1999and the end of November 2000. The indication for laparoscopic prostatectomy is the same as for open surgery: an organ-confined cancer.Previous abdominal surgery, transurethral resection, and/or relative adiposity are not considered to be contraindications for this laparoscopic procedure. The mean operating time was 255 min; the last 60 procedures took an average of 200 min. In no case was it necessary to convert to open surgery. Worthy of note was the low blood loss of 185 ml on average so that in 98% of the patients no blood transfusion was required. After completing the learning curve, the average indwelling catheter time was only 5.5 days. The postoperative complication rate was 11.7%, consisting mainly of minor complications. Also with regard to continence and potency, the results were representative. Postoperatively, 75%, 86%, 92%, and 93% of the patients were continent after 3, 6, 9, and 12 months, respectively.In our opinion, laparoscopic radical prostatectomy is an alternative to open prostatectomy, offering a number of advantages for the patient and surgeon as well.


Transplantation | 2003

Gadolinium-enhanced three-dimensional magnetic resonance angiography versus conventional digital subtraction angiography: Which modality is superior in evaluating living kidney donors?

Markus Giessing; Thomas J. Kroencke; Matthias Taupitz; Claudia Feldmann; Serdar Deger; Ingolf Türk; Klemens Budde; V. Ebeling; Bernd Schoenberger; Stefan A. Loening

This study evaluates the correlation of magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and digital subtraction angiography (DSA) with the operative vessel findings in living kidney donors. The intraoperative vessel findings of 52 living renal donors were compared with the preoperative diagnoses of each imaging technique. Sixty-seven arteries were found during explantation. Forty kidneys showed a single arterial blood supply, and 12 kidneys showed a multiple arterial blood supply. No advantage of either imaging method was found for arterial imaging. There were 55 veins identified during organ harvesting. MRA could not determine the venous system in one donor (1.9%) and failed to detect one small pole vein in another. DSA did not yield a venous diagnosis in seven patients (13.5%) and yielded misdiagnoses in four patients. The correct diagnosis of renal donor veins differed significantly in favor of MRA (kappa 0.79 vs. 0.45; P=0.008). MRA is superior to DSA in assessing the renal vasculature in living kidney donors.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2003

Laparoscopic live donor right nephrectomy: A new technique with preservation of vascular length

Ingolf Türk; M. Giessing; S. Deger; John W. Davis; Michael D. Fabrizio; B. Schönberger; Gerald H. Jordan; Stefan A. Loening

Purpose: We report our initial experience with right laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy using a modified vascular clamp for achieving maximal length of the renal vein. Materials and Methods: Since 1999, 34 patients have undergone laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy at ChariteHospital in Berlin, including 30 on the left and 4 on the right side. The right technique involves a 4-port transperitoneal laparoscopic approach with a muscle splitting lumbar incision for kidney extraction. To duplicate completely the comparable open operation a modified Satinsky atraumatic vascular clamp (Aesculap, Inc., Center Valley, Pennsylvania) was introduced throug ha1c m.lateral incision and placed across the vena cava, enabling harvest of the full length of the renal vein flush with the vena cava. The vena cavotomy is closed with a running suture placed in intracorporeal fashion. Results: All procedures were successfully accomplished without technical or surgical compli- cations. Mean operative time was 170 minutes. Mean renal warm ischemia time from endoscopic cross clamping of the renal vessels to cold perfusion on the bench was 2.1 minutes. In all 4 kidneys it was possible to harvest the whole length of the renal vein, so that the recipient operation was performed under optimal vascular conditions. All 4 kidneys were transplanted successfully in the recipients and showed immediate function. Conclusions: Right laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy is technically feasible, safe and a viable option for minimally invasive organ donation when left kidney donation is not desired. The Satinsky atraumatic vascular clamp enabled harvest of the whole right renal vein. We believe that this laparoscopic technique effectively duplicates the open operation with less morbidity.


European Urology | 2002

Interstitial Hyperthermia using Self-Regulating Thermoseeds Combined with Conformal Radiation Therapy

Serdar Deger; Dirk Boehmer; Ingolf Türk; Jan Roigas; V. Budach; Stefan A. Loening

Abstract Objective: The combination of hyperthermia and radiation in the treatment of malignancies is based on a variety of experimental data which have proven the synergistic effects of these two treatment modalities. We planned a phase II trial in a special hyperthermia research group (SFB 273) of the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) to determine feasibility, acute toxicity and efficacy of this combination for prostate cancer. Methods: A total of 57 patients with localized prostate cancer were treated with interstitial hyperthermia using cobalt-palladium thermoseeds and conformal radiation between July 1997 and December 2000. Thermoseeds were placed into the prostate homogeneously. Hyperthermia was created using a magnetic field and was delivered in six sessions once weekly. 3D-conformal radiotherapy of 68.4Gy was given simultaneously in daily fractions of 1.8Gy. Results: Intra-prostatic temperatures were between 42 and 46°C. No major side effects were observed during hyperthermia. Median follow-up was 12 months (range: 3–26 months). Median prostate specific antigen (PSA) value decreased from 11.6 to 2.4ng/ml 3 months after treatment, to 1.3ng/ml 12 months after treatment and to 0.55ng/ml 2 years after the therapy. Conclusion: Interstitial hyperthermia is feasible, well tolerated and led to a steep decrease of PSA values. Our current follow-up is too short to comment about efficacy. Combining effective interstitial hyperthermia with conformal radiotherapy may be an exciting innovative treatment option for prostate cancer.


Urologic Oncology-seminars and Original Investigations | 2002

Sural nerve graft during laparoscopic radical prostatectomy: Initial experience

Ingolf Türk; Serdar Deger; William Ritchie Morgan; John W. Davis; Paul F. Schellhammer; Stefan A. Loening

OBJECTIVE To determine the technical feasibility of sural nerve grafting for restoration of cavernous nerve continuity after radical retropubic prostatectomy by the laparoscopic approach. MATERIALS AND METHODS 15 potent men (mean age: 56+/-4 years) underwent laparoscopic radical prostatectomy with deliberate wide uni- or bilateral neurovascular bundle resection. After prostatectomy, but before the vesicourethral anastomosis, an autologous sural nerve graft was interposed between the divided end of the cavernous nerves using a laparoscopic approach. RESULTS All 15 procedures could be completed laparoscopically. Visual cooptation between the nerve graft and the cut ends of the neurovascular bundles was possible in all 15 cases. Surgical time for the entire procedure ranged between 210 to 275 min with 30 to 60 min of this time required for the nerve harvest and graft. CONCLUSION This experience demonstrates that sural nerve graft replacement is technically feasible by the laparoscopic approach. The magnified optics, bloodless surgical field, and improved instrumentation create an optimal environment for sural nerve grafting to the cut ends of the neurovascular bundles. Quality of life survey data at 12 to 18 month follow-up will be needed to assess functional return.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ingolf Türk's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Serdar Deger

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jan Roigas

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dietmar Schnorr

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bernd Schönberger

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John W. Davis

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Björn Winkelmann

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge