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Dive into the research topics where Muhsin Saraçlar is active.

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Featured researches published by Muhsin Saraçlar.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1995

Double-chambered right ventricle: experience with 52 cases

Ergun Cil; Muhsin Saraçlar; Süheyla Özkutlu; Şencan Özme; Arman Bilgiç; Sema Özer; Alpay Çeliker; Kürşad Tokel; Metin Demircin

The presence of anomalous muscle bundles may produce a pressure gradient between the inflow and outflow portions of the right ventricle, thus resulting in double-chambered right ventricle bearing troublesome clinically in its diagnosis. The aim of the present study was to review the diagnostic criteria. Fifty-two patients with a double-chambered right ventricle were seen during an 8-year period. They ranged in age at the catheterization from 4 months to 17 years (mean 7.5 +/- 4.4 years). Diagnosis was confirmed in 51 patients at cardiac catheterization and in other one on operation. The majority of the patients had associated cardiac anomalies: there were 33 ventricular septal defect (63%), 21 pulmonary valve stenosis (40%), nine atrial septal defect (17%), and four double-outlet right ventricle. The electrocardiograms revealed upright T waves alone in right precordial leads suggesting right ventricular hypertrophy in 33% of the patients. At cardiac catheterization, there was a pressure gradient of 20-160 mmHg between the right ventricular inflow and outflow portions. Forty patients have had surgery and four have undergone balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty. Surgical treatment was planned for two patients and other six had no indication for treatment.


Cardiology in The Young | 2001

Can subclinical valvitis detected by echocardiography be accepted as evidence of carditis in the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever

Süheyla Özkutlu; Canan Ayabakan; Muhsin Saraçlar

AIM Subclinical valvar insufficiency, or valvitis, has recently been identified using Doppler echocardiography in cases of acute rheumatic fever with isolated arthritis or chorea. The prognosis of such patients with acute rheumatic fever and subclinical valvitis is critical when determining the duration of antibiotic prophylaxis. We aimed, therefore, prospectively to investigate the association of silent valvitis in patients having rheumatic fever in the absence of clinical evidence of cardiac involvement, and to evaluate its prognosis. METHODS AND RESULTS Between November 1998 and September 1999, we identified 26 consecutive patients with silent valvitis in presence of rheumatic fever but in the absence of clinical signs of carditis. The patients, eight female and 18 male, were aged from 6 to 16 years, with a mean of 9.9+/-2.7 years. Major findings were arthritis in 16, chorea in 7, and arthritis and erythema marginatum in 1 patient. Two cases had arthralgia with equivocal arthritic signs and Doppler echocardiographic findings of pathologic mitral regurgitation. Silent pathologic mitral regurgitation was found in 12 cases, and aortic regurgitation in 2 cases. All patients with arthritic findings were treated with acetylsalicylic acid with one exception, this patient receiving both prednisone and acetylsalicylic acid. No antiinflammatory treatment was given to patients with chorea. After a mean follow-up of 4.52 months, valvar regurgitation disappeared in 4 patients, including the one with migratory arthralgia and no other major criterions. All six patients with chorea and silent carditis still have mitral insufficiency. CONCLUSION Acute rheumatic fever without clinical carditis is not a benign entity. Doppler echocardiographic findings of subclinical valvar insufficiency, therefore, should be considered as carditis when seeking to establish the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever.


International Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Intracardiac thrombosis diagnosed by echocardiography in childhood: predisposing and etiological factors

Süheyla Özkutlu; Nazan Özbarlas; Şencan Özme; Muhsin Saraçlar; Safiye Göğüş; Metin Demircin

Eleven cases of intracardiac thrombi caused by different factors including protein-C deficiency are presented for discussion of the etiology and predisposing factors of intracardiac thrombi during infancy and childhood, and to stress the importance of protein-C deficiency as an etiological factor. Thrombi were localised in the left heart in five patients and right heart in five patients. One patient had both-sided thrombi. Four of our patients had dilated cardiomyopathy, one had mitral valve hypoplasia, and one had pulmonary valvar stenosis as the predisposing factors for thrombus formation. In three patients whose cardiac anatomies were completely normal, we determined protein-C deficiency as an etiological factor of thrombus formation. One of these had congenital protein-C deficiency and the other two had acquired temporary protein-C deficiency due to sepsis. In conclusion we recommend that protein-C deficiency should be investigated as an etiological factor in all cases of intracardiac thrombi irrespective of whether or not another predisposing factor is identified.


Human Heredity | 1973

Incidence of Congenital Malformations in a Sample of the Turkish Population

Burhan Say; Ergul Tuncbilek; Sevim Balci; Zehra Muluk; Talat Gögüs; Muhsin Saraçlar; Cevat Koçal

10,000 liveborn babies resulting from preg nancies of 28 of more weeks were examined by a team of 3 pediatricians, 1 orthopedic surgeon, 1 pediatric cardiologist, and 1 urologist in order to find the incidence of various congenital malformations. Relatively high incidence rates for imperforate anus and polydactyly were encountered (1.1 and 2.6/1,000 births, respectively). The rates for anencephaly and congenital heart disease were also found to be somewhat higher than those reported for most white populations.


Pediatric Dermatology | 2002

Autosomal Recessive Form of Congenital Cutis Laxa: More Than the Clinical Appearance

Nesibe Andiran; Fikriye Sarikayalar; Muhsin Saraçlar; Melda Çağlar

Abstract: Congenital cutis laxa is an uncommon disorder of generalized elastolysis. The clinical picture is characterized by inelastic, loose, hanging skin that gives the appearance of premature aging. The disease is inherited most commonly in a severe autosomal recessive form, or as a relatively benign, autosomal dominant form. There is often systemic organ involvement in patients with the autosomal recessive form. Cardiopulmonary abnormalities are common and mainly determine the prognosis and life expectancy. Pulmonary emphysema, cor pulmonale, and right‐sided heart failure generally caused by pulmonary disease are often seen in infancy. Various cardiovascular abnormalities including aortic aneurysm, pulmonary artery multiple branch stenosis have been reported in patients with this form of congenital cutis laxa. We report a 10‐month‐old boy with the autosomal recessive form of congenital cutis laxa who had pulmonary valve stenosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of this association to be reported in the English language literature. We also emphasize the systemic complications that may be associated with congenital cutis laxa.


Pediatric Cardiology | 1996

Parameters of iron deficiency in children with cyanotic congenital heart disease

L. Olcay; Sema Özer; A. Gürgey; Muhsin Saraçlar; Sencan Özme; Arman Bilgiç; Süheyla Özkutlu; Alpay Çeliker

A group of 67 children with cyanotic congenital heart disease (CCHD) were studied, and 35 were given iron treatment according to a regimen that gives iron to patients with a hematocrit (Hct) below 60%. The patients were categorized as iron-deficient and iron-sufficient according to their transferrin saturation and ferritin values. The pretreatment hemoglobin (Hb) and Hct values of the groups were similar. The mean Hct was nearly three times as much as the mean Hb in the iron-sufficient group and more than three times as much as the Hb in the iron-deficient group. Excessive erythrocytosis in the iron-deficient group was impressive. Mean corpuscular volume (MCV) values were below 72.7 fl in all of the iron-deficient patients. After treatment the Hb, Hct, transferrin saturation, and ferritin increased significantly in both groups, with the increments greater in the iron-deficient group. Increments in the erythrocyte (RBC) count were significant in the iron-sufficient group but insignificant in the iron-deficient one. Increments of MCV in the iron-deficient group were significant but insignificant in the iron-sufficient group. Our study demonstrated that prediction of Hb, RBC count, and MCV, measurements of which are easy and inexpensive and require little blood, can suffice for the diagnosis of iron deficiency in patients with CCHD without altering systemic perfusion.


Pediatric Cardiology | 1992

Gaucher's disease with mitral and aortic involvement: Echocardiographic findings

Muhsin Saraçlar; Semra Atalay; Nurten Koçak; Süheyla Özkutlu

SummaryCardiac involvement in Gauchers disease has been reported in only a few patients, mostly adults with pericardial changes. We describe findings in two siblings with Gauchers disease, aged 15 and 9 years respectively, in whom mitral and aortic valve lesions were evaluated by auscultation and echocardiography. In both cases the mitral and aortic valves were thick and restricted in motion. Continuous Doppler echocardiography revealed significant mitral regurgitation and mitral stenosis. At the aortic valve level there was a systolic pressure gradient. Echocardiographic investigation of patients with suspected cardiac involvement with Gauchers disease is recommended.


Pediatrics International | 1996

HEART DISEASE IN FRIEDREICH'S ATAXIA : A CLINICAL AND ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC STUDY

Nazlıhan Günal; Muhsin Saraçlar; Süheyla Özkutlu; Senocak F; Haluk Topaloglu; Karaaslan S

Twelve patients with Friedreichs ataxia (FA) were evaluated clinically and echocardiographically for evidence of heart disease. Electrocardiographic and echocardiographic abnormal findings were discovered in eight (67%) and seven (58%) children, respectively. A high incidence of cardiac involvement is well known in FA cases. Although the patient number in the present study is small, the findings are consistent with those in the literature. The most common pathology was asymmetric septal hypertrophy (ASH), followed by concentric left ventricular hypertrophy (CLVH) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DC).


Pediatric Cardiology | 1996

ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF CONGENITAL CARDIAC ANOMALIES WITH MULTIPLE LESIONS

Muhsin Saraçlar; Ergün Çil; Süheyla Özkutlu

The purpose of this study was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of echocardiography for the diagnosis of congenital cardiac abnormalities with multiple lesions. The study was carried out on 80 patients (ages 1 day to 14 years). After clinical evaluation all patients were studied by echocardiography. Cardiac catheterization and angiocardiography were performed, and echocardiographic findings were compared with those obtained by cardiac catheterization. The sensitivity and specificity of echocardiographic diagnosis were determined based on the false-negative and false-positive results. Of the 80 patients, 19 had double-outlet right ventricle, 17 transposition of the great arteries, 10 common atrium, 9 atrioventricular septal defect, 7 single ventricle, 7 corrected transposition, 6 tricuspid atresia, 3 Ebsteins anomaly, and 2 cor triatriatum. All of these entities were visualized correctly by echocardiography (sensitivity 100%, specificity 100%). There were also 12 instances of atrial isomerism with one false-negative diagnosis, 6 pulmonary atresia with two false-negative diagnoses, and 5 total anomalous pulmonary venous connections with one false-negative diagnosis. The total number of individual cardiac lesions was 291. Nineteen false-negative and four false-positive echocardiographic diagnoses were obtained (sensitivity 93%, specificity 99%). It is concluded that double-outlet right ventricle, transposition of the great arteries, atrioventricular septal defect, single ventricle, corrected transposition, and tricuspid atresia can be accurately diagnosed by echocardiography. However, the role of echocardiography is limited for evaluation of right ventricular outflow tract and small patent ductus arteriosus, especially when associated with pulmonary hypertension.


Pediatric Cardiology | 1996

Noonan syndrome with double-chambered right ventricle

Süheyla Özkutlu; Ergün Çil; Ilhan Pasaoglu; Muhsin Saraçlar

The association of Noonan syndrome and a double-chambered right ventricle has not been reported previously in the medical literature. We report two patients with Noonan syndrome associated with pulmonary valve stenosis and double-chambered right ventricle due to anomalous hypertrophied muscle bundles. Pulmonary valve stenosis was operated on. However, hypertrophied muscle bundles were not resected, as they caused no obstruction to blood passage. Postoperative follow-up examinations revealed no symptoms. In conclusion, in those with Noonan syndrome there may be anomalous muscle bundles in the right ventricular cavity. It may not be necessary to resect them if they do not obstruct the right ventricular outflow tract.

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