Melih Hulusi Us
Trakya University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Melih Hulusi Us.
Annals of Saudi Medicine | 2010
Bengi Yaymaci; Murat Ugurlucan; Murat Basaran; Ozer Selimoglu; Ali Kocailik; Senay Akyildiz; Orhan Coskun; Melih Hulusi Us
Coronary artery anomalies are being more frequently diagnosed these days both because increasing numbers of patients are undergoing diagnostic studies and because advanced radiographic imaging methods are now commonly available. An isolated single coronary artery giving rise to the main coronary branches is a rare congenital anomaly. In this report we present a patient with a solitary coronary ostium, with both the left and right coronary artery systems arising from it, and then following their usual courses. This case was diagnosed incidentally during conventional angiography.
Heart Surgery Forum | 2008
Onur S. Goksel; Kaan Inan; Tolga Tatar; Alper Ucak; Gokhan Arslan; Melih Hulusi Us; Ahmet Turan Yilmaz
Extensive calcification of mitral apparatus may preclude optimal valve repair, thus requiring debridement. We performed mitral valve replacement in a 55-year-old woman with a modified bileaflet preservation technique to avoid complications related to extensive debridement. Posterior transposition of the anterior leaflet as a buttress over the posterior ventricular wall provided extra support for the weakened tissues and covered the decalcified areas, which protected against debris embolism. This technique is safe and reproducible, especially for elderly patients who have complex calcification that requires extensive debridement, enables better preservation of ventricular function, and avoids disruption of the mechanical left ventricular wall.
Vascular | 2008
Melih Hulusi Us; Fürüzan Numan; Onur S. Goksel; Murat Basaran; Ahmet Turan Yilmaz
Takayasu arteritis is a chronic granulomatous vasculitis with multivessel involvement, causing significant mortality and morbidity in affected individuals. A 32-year-old patient with severe right common carotid stenosis underwent expanded polytetrafluoroethylene graft interposition to the carotid artery. A bare Wallstent endoprosthesis (Boston Scientific Medi-Tech, Natick, MA) was implanted for the abdominal aortic stenosis incidentally diagnosed during follow-up 1 year after the carotid operation while the disease was inactive. Close follow-up of the activity of the vasculitic process is warranted owing to the progression of the vascular lesions or formation of de novo lesions in Takayasu disease.
Heart Surgery Forum | 2008
Murat Basaran; Ali Kocailik; Cihan Ozbek; Alper Ucak; Eylul Kafali; Melih Hulusi Us
BACKGROUND Surgical closure of atrial-septal defects is now associated with low morbidity and mortality rates. We assessed surgical, cosmetic, and psychological results of 3 different surgical approaches to atrial-septal defect repair. METHODS Study participants were 82 patients who underwent surgery for atrial-septal defect. Mean age was 21 +/- 8 years, and the female:male ratio was 23:59. Patients were divided into 3 groups according to the incision used; group 1 (n = 26), partial lower sternotomy; group 2 (n = 34), right anterolateral thoracotomy via a submammary incision, and group 3 (n = 22), conventional median sternotomy. RESULTS There was no operative or late mortality. No significant differences between groups were associated with the surgical technique used. Direct closure was the procedure of choice performed in 53 patients (64.6%). In the remaining patients the repair was performed with a pericardial patch (29 patients, 35.4%). One patient in group 1 required conversion to median sternotomy because transoesophageal echocardiography performed at the operating theater revealed a partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection of right pulmonary veins to the inferior vena cava. This patient was excluded from the study group. All patients were symptom free postoperatively, and control echocardiography revealed a trivial shunt in only 1 patient, with a Qp:Qs ratio of 1.3. Rhythm abnormalities, including atrioventricular block, atrial fibrillation, and flutter, were observed in 7 patients but were found to be unrelated to the surgical incision (P = .3). Cardiopulmonary bypass, cross-clamp, and operative times were longer with minimally invasive approaches; but these differences were not statistically significant. Intensive care unit and hospital stay periods were significantly shorter in groups 1 and 2. During the postoperative follow-up period, patients in groups 1 and 2 showed superior results in satisfaction with their cosmetic outcomes. CONCLUSIONS With the development of minimally invasive techniques that yield surgical results comparable to those of standard techniques, surgeons have changed their focus from survival to cosmetic and psychological outcomes, especially in the repair of simple cardiac defects. Operations performed via limited skin incisions are surgically safe and provide superior cosmetic and psychological results.
Heart Surgery Forum | 2006
Mutasım Süngün; Melih Hulusi Us; Rifat Eralp Ulusoy; Ozcan Keskin; Sibel Pocan; Kaan Inan; Ahmet Turan Yilmaz
BACKGROUND Our aim was to investigate the effects of lipid-lowering treatment (LLT) on graft patency in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) patients. METHODS A total of 209 CABG patients (95 men, 45%) with a total cholesterol level above 200 mg/dL and a low-density lipoprotein level above 100 mg/dL were included. Patients were divided into 2 groups on the basis of administration of LLT after CABG: group 1 received LLT after the operation (those patients undergoing operations after 1998, n = 102, 49% male) and group 2 did not receive LLT after the operation (those patients undergoing operations between 1992 and 1998, n = 107, 42% male). Median duration of follow-up was 5.2 years. Follow-up angiography could be obtained in 108 (52%) patients (56 in group 1, 52 in group 2). RESULTS There was a 42% reduction in ischemic events and deaths in group 1, and 60% of these patients had a symptom-free or event-free period for 6 years. The 5-year graft patency for left internal mammary artery-to-left anterior descending artery grafts in group 1 was 95%, and the corresponding figure was 90% in group 2. Right coronary artery-to-saphenous vein graft patency was 66% for group 1 and 30% for group 2. Circumflex artery-to-saphenous vein patency rate was 59% for group 1 and 53% for group 2. A higher graft patency was found in group 1 as a whole. CONCLUSION Results of this retrospective study support the fact that LLT provides a higher graft patency for CABG patients.
International Journal of Angiology | 2000
Ahmet Baltalarli; Erdal Coskun; Melih Hulusi Us; Oya Rendeci; Ortaç R; Bekir Hayrettin Şirin
The neuroprotective effect of trimetazidine (TMZ) on ischemic-reperfusion injury was tested by randomized, controlled, prospective study in a rat model of transient global cerebral ischemia. Thirty wistar albino rats were used for study. Animals in TMZ group (n=10) received trimetazidine (3 mg/kg IV bolus) before the occlusion of carotid arteries. A similar volume of saline solution was used in the control group (n=10). The sham group (n=10) were anaesthetized and subjected to operative dissections without vascular occlusion. Physiological parameters, somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were monitored. The neurological outcomes had been clinically evaluated and scored up to 4 days post ischemia. The intergroup differences were compared. Histological observations were clearly correlated with the neurological findings. The percentage of damaged neurons in CA1 and CA3 in subfield of hypochampus 34±6% and 16±6% in the TMZ group, whereas it was 44±5% and 24±5% in the control group (p<0.05). The average neurologic score was significantly better in animals which received TMZ than in the controls at postoperative 24 hours (17.9±1.4 in the TMZ group and 14.9±1.6 in the control group, p<0.05). The results suggest that trimetazidine reduces cerebral injury and preserves neurological function in transient global ischemia in rats.
Case Reports in Medicine | 2010
Melih Hulusi Us; Murat Ugurlucan; Murat Basaran; Ozer Selimoglu; Ali Kocailik
The pulmonary status is a vital factor for patients undergoing open heart surgery. The cardiac surgery itself deteriorates the actual pulmonary functions. Today, patients are no longer living with a cardiac disease due to compromised respiratory functions secondary to various pathologies, patients with lung disorders more often seek solutions for their cardiac disease and they are commonly operated. However, the resection of a lobe or a whole lung is a major challenge for the patients planned for cardiac surgery. In this report, we present a 65-year-old patient, who had left pnemonectomy which had been performed 8 years ago and was admitted for mitral valve replacement and subaortic membrane resection.
Heart Surgery Forum | 2007
Kaan Inan; Onur S. Goksel; Ibrahim Alp; Tuncay Erden; Melih Hulusi Us; Ahmet Turan Yilmaz
Aneurysm of the left subclavian artery (LSA) in association with coarctation of the aorta (CoAo) is a rare phenomenon, especially in the younger population. A 19-year-old male patient was admitted for lower extremity varices and diagnosed to have severe CoAo and a 45-mm LSA aneurysm after digital subtraction angiography following detection of nonpalpable lower extremity pulses on physical examination. Corrective surgery was performed from a left posterolateral thoracotomy through the 4th intercostal space, and a discrete ring-like coarctation tissue was observed in the aorta just below the level of the LSA orifice. Complete excision of the coarctation tissue was followed by aortoplasty with a Dacron patch. Additionally, the subclavian aneurysm was completely excised and a 10-mm Dacron tube graft interposition was performed. Prompt diagnosis and surgical treatment in particularly hypertensive patients precludes significant mortality and morbidity following a possible rupture.
Journal of Clinical and Analytical Medicine | 2015
Ahmet Kırbaş; Nursen Tanrıkulu; Melih Hulusi Us; Omer Isik
DOI: 10.4328/JCAM.944 Received: 12.03.2012 Accepted: 23.03.2012 Printed: 01.03.2015 J Clin Anal Med 2015;6(2): 242-4 Corresponding Author: Ahmet Kirbas, Medicana Camlica Hastanesi Uskudar, Istanbul GSM: +905053480151 F.: +9
Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 2008
Onur S. Goksel; Alper Ucak; Kaan Inan; Melih Hulusi Us; Ahmet Turan Yilmaz
Abstract A patient with native valve endocarditis and vegetation on anterior mitral leaflet underwent aortic valve replacement with preservation of aortic noncoronary leaflet as a patch over the inflammated intervalvular fibrous body. This technique may minimize prosthetic material use, which is the most important risk factor for reinfection.