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Dive into the research topics where Kemal Balci is active.

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Featured researches published by Kemal Balci.


BMC Surgery | 2004

Electrophysiological evaluation of phrenic nerve injury during cardiac surgery--a prospective, controlled, clinical study.

Suat Canbaz; Nilda Turgut; Ümit Halici; Kemal Balci; Turan Ege; Enver Duran

BackgroundAccording to some reports, left hemidiaphragmatic paralysis due to phrenic nerve injury may occur following cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to document the effects on phrenic nerve injury of whole body hypothermia, use of ice-slush around the heart and mammary artery harvesting.MethodsElectrophysiology of phrenic nerves was studied bilaterally in 78 subjects before and three weeks after cardiac or peripheral vascular surgery. In 49 patients, coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and heart valve replacement with moderate hypothermic (mean 28°C) cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) were performed. In the other 29, CABG with beating heart was performed, or, in several cases, peripheral vascular surgery with normothermia.ResultsIn all patients, measurements of bilateral phrenic nerve function were within normal limits before surgery. Three weeks after surgery, left phrenic nerve function was absent in five patients in the CPB and hypothermia group (3 in CABG and 2 in valve replacement). No phrenic nerve dysfunction was observed after surgery in the CABG with beating heart (no CPB) or the peripheral vascular groups. Except in the five patients with left phrenic nerve paralysis, mean phrenic nerve conduction latency time (ms) and amplitude (mV) did not differ statistically before and after surgery in either group (p > 0.05).ConclusionsOur results indicate that CPB with hypothermia and local ice-slush application around the heart play a role in phrenic nerve injury following cardiac surgery. Furthermore, phrenic nerve injury during cardiac surgery occurred in 10.2 % of our patients (CABG with CPB plus valve surgery).


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2004

Clinical utility of dorsal sural nerve conduction studies in healthy and diabetic children

Nilda Turgut; Serap Karasalihoğlu; Yasemin Küçükuğurluoğlu; Kemal Balci; Galip Ekuklu; Filiz Tutunculer

OBJECTIVE Monitoring of the dorsal sural sensory nerve action potential (SNAP) is a sensitive method for detection of peripheral neuropathies. We tried to determine the normal dorsal sural nerve conduction values of the childhood population and assessed the clinical utility of this method in diabetic children who have no clinical sign of peripheral neuropathy. METHODS In the study, 36 healthy and 27 diabetic children were included. In all subjects peripheral motor and sensory nerve studies were performed on the upper and lower limbs including dorsal sural nerve conduction studies. RESULTS The dorsal sural SNAP mean amplitude was 8.24+/-3.08 microV, mean latency was 2.47+/-0.48 ms, mean sensory conduction velocity was 41.63+/-5.43 m/s in healthy children. Dorsal sural SNAPs were absent bilaterally in one diabetic patient. In the other 26 diabetic patients, the mean dorsal sural nerve distal latency was longer (2.93+/-0.63 ms, P = 0.004), mean SCV was slower than in healthy subjects (36.68+/-7.66 m/s, P = 0.005). However, dorsal sural nerve amplitude was not different between the groups. A dorsal sural nerve latency of more than 2.9 ms had a sensitivity of 50% and a specificity of 75%. A dorsal sural nerve velocity of less than 36 m/s had a sensitivity of 54% and a specificity of 92%. CONCLUSIONS We designated the reference values of the dorsal sural nerve in healthy children. In addition, our findings suggest that dorsal sural nerve conduction studies may have value to determine neuropathy in the early stages in children with diabetes. SIGNIFICANCE The dorsal sural nerve conduction studies in diabetic children may have value to determine the neuropathy in its early stages.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2007

Deep cerebral vein thrombosis associated with iron deficiency anaemia in adults

Kemal Balci; Ufuk Utku; Talip Asil; Nilüfer Büyükkoyuncu

Cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is rare and has a wide spectrum of symptoms, therefore it is difficult to diagnose. Thrombosis of the deep cerebral veins occurs very rarely: it has been reported that approximately 6% of patients with CVT have deep CVT, and the prognosis for patients with this condition is poor. CVT has been reported in association with dehydration, a hypercoagulable state, mastoiditis, tumour invasion of a venous sinus, use of oral contraceptives, pregnancy, puerperium, head trauma, vasculitis, and intracranial and systemic infections. However, in the literature, there are few reported cases of CVT in association with iron deficiency anaemia, especially in adults. We present here two patients with bilateral thalamic and basal ganglionic lesions due to thrombosis of the deep cerebral veins. Both of our patients had severe hypochromic microcytic anaemia due to iron deficiency, and both had a good prognosis after 2 months.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2005

Hepatic myelopathy with spastic paraparesis

Ufuk Utku; Talip Asil; Kemal Balci; Ilkay Uzunca; Yahya Çelik

Progressive myelopathy is a rare neurological complication of chronic liver disease with portal hypertension and there is no special diagnostic tool for hepatic myelopathy. Neuropathological studies of the patients with hepatic myelopathy have demonstrated demyelination of the lateral corticospinal tracts with various degree of axonal loss. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is widely utilized as an indicator of changes in excitability and conductivity of the motor pathways. TMS studies are also used for the diagnosis of hereditary spastic paraparesis in the literature. In this study, we described two patients who presented with spastic paraparesis; TMS studies suggested that they had myelopathy and diagnosed as hepatic myelopathy when all the other possible diagnoses were ruled out.


The Neurologist | 2011

Ischemic stroke in young adults: risk factors, subtypes, and prognosis.

Kemal Balci; Ufuk Utku; Talip Asil; Yahya Çelik

BackgroundIschemic strokes occurring in patients younger than 47 years is a relatively rare event and accounts for less than 5% of all ischemic strokes in western countries. ObjectiveThe etiologic spectrum in younger patients and older patients differs considerably. MethodsIn this hospital case series study, we enrolled 192 patients with ischemic stroke, aged 18 to 47 years, all of whom were submitted to a diagnostic protocol. The risk factors for stroke and the distribution of stroke subtype and prognosis were studied. Modified diagnostic criteria adopted from the Trial of ORG 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment and the Baltimore-Washington Cooperative Young Stroke Study, were used for etiologic classification. ResultsHypertension was found to be the main risk factor (45%) followed by cigarette smoking (37%), hyperlipidemia (35.4%), diabetes mellitus (17%), and family history of stroke (18%). Hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, and smoking were present either alone or in combination in the majority of our patients. Oral contraceptives were being taken by 25% of the women. The etiology of stroke was as follows: atherothrombosis 26.5%, cardioembolism 20%, nonatherosclerotic vasculopathies 13%, other determined causes 10%, lacunar stroke 6%, migraine 3.6%, and undetermined causes 21%. ConclusionsHypertension, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, and smoking were the most common risk factors in our ischemic stroke patients between 18-47 years of age. Health care programs targeting the prevention and treatment of these factors will reduce the associated morbidity and mortality of stroke among this socioeconomically active age group.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2005

Clinical and neuroradiological predictors of mortality in patients with primary pontine hemorrhage

Kemal Balci; Talip Asil; Mahmut Kerimoglu; Yahya Çelik; Ufuk Utku

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Primary pontine hemorrhage (PPH) accounts approximately for about 5-10% of intracranial hemorrhages, and PPHs are known to have a much less uniform prognosis. We aimed to evaluate the clinical and radiological predictors affecting the mortality in 32 patients with PPH. MATERIAL AND METHODS We retrospectively evaluated the data of 32 patients with PPH admitted to our clinic between 1994 and 2004. We divided the patients into two groups: (1) patients who survived (14 patients), and (2) patients who died (18 patients). The two groups were compared for age, gender, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, initial clinical status, initial GCS, pupillary abnormalities, ophthalmoparesis, volume and localisation of hemorrhage, intraventricular and extrapontine extension, necessity of mechanical ventilation and hydrocephalus. The hematoma volumes were measured with the formulation described by Broderick. RESULTS Eighteen patients (56%) died and 14 patients (44%) survived. The patients who died (61.3 +/- 8.8) were older than the survivors (56.4 +/- 11.0), but the difference was not statistically significant. The mean GCS was 4.4 +/- 0.2, the mean hematoma volume was 9.9 +/- 3.3 ml for patients who died and the mean GCS was 10.1 +/- 3.3, the mean hematoma volume was 3.3 +/- 1.2 ml for survivors (p < 0.001). Coma on admission (p = 0.001), extrapontine extension (p = 0.001), intraventricular extension (p = 0.019), necessity of mechanical ventilation (p = 0.007), hydrocephalus (p = 0.024), massive and bilateral tegmental localisation (p = 0.006) were found statistically significant predictors for mortality with univariate comparison, and coma on admission (p = 0.038) was the only significant predictor with multivariate regression analysis. CONCLUSION In patients with PPH, it is important to know the prognostic factors for mortality for planning the treatment protocol, and coma and bad clinical status on admission was found the only significant prognostic predictor for mortality with multivariate regression analysis.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2011

Cost of acute ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke in Turkey

Talip Asil; Yahya Çelik; Necdet Sut; Aygul Dogan Celik; Kemal Balci; Arif Yilmaz; Fatih Karaduman

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to examine the direct medical costs and outcomes of patients with stroke. MATERIAL AND METHODS The records of the patients admitted with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke to the University of Trakya, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology were reviewed retrospectively in year 2007. Direct medical costs (total costs, radiological, laboratory, medicine, and other) were calculated, additionally cost per life saved and per life-year saved were calculated for stroke patients. RESULTS The study group consisted of 328 patients (169 male/159 female) and mean age was 66.5 ± 12.4 years. Length of hospital stay was 10.7 ± 7.5 days. Mortality rate was 20.4% and the mRS score of the patients was 3.2 ± 2.1. The average cost of stroke was US


Journal of The Peripheral Nervous System | 2005

Utility of dorsal sural nerve in early determination of diabetic polyneuropathy

Kemal Balci; Semra Şengün Karaçayır; Gamze Varol; Ufuk Utku

1677 ± 2964 (29.9% medicine, 19.9% laboratory, 12.8% neuroimaging, and 38% beds and staff). Cost per life saved and per life-year saved were US


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2002

A case of acquired stuttering resulting from left parietal infarction

Nilda Turgut; Ufuk Utku; Kemal Balci

2108 and US


The Neurologist | 2009

Stroke due to Bee Sting

Osman Temizöz; Yahya Çelik; Talip Asil; Kemal Balci; Ercüment Ünlü; Arif Yilmaz

1070, respectively. CONCLUSION This is the first study in order to determine direct medical cost of stroke in Turkey, therefore, it may be guideline for disease-cost management of stroke.

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