Murat Kologlu
Hacettepe University
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Featured researches published by Murat Kologlu.
American Journal of Surgery | 2001
Nuri Aydin Kama; Murat Kologlu; Mutlu Doganay; Erhan Reis; Mesut Atli; Mete Dolapci
BACKGROUND Laparoscopic cholecystectomy has become the standard operative procedure for cholelithiasis, but there are still some patients requiring conversion to open cholecystectomy mainly because of technical difficulty. Our aim was to develop a risk score for prediction of conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy. METHODS Preoperative clinical, laboratory, and radiologic parameters of 1,000 patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy were analyzed for their effect on conversion rates. Six parameters (male sex, abdominal tenderness, previous upper abdominal operation, sonographically thickened gallbladder wall, age over 60 years, preoperative diagnosis of acute cholecystitis) were found to have significant effect in multivariate analysis. A constant and coefficients for these variables were calculated and formed the risk score. RESULTS Overall 48 patients required conversion to open cholecystectomy (4.8%). These patients had significantly higher scores (mean 6.9 versus -7.2, P <0.001). Increasing scores resulted with significant increases in conversion rates and probabilities (P <0.001). Ideal cut-off point for this score was -3; conversion rate was 1.6% under -3, but 11.4% over this value (P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS Conversion risk can be predicted easily by this score. Patients having high risk may be informed and scheduled appropriately. An experienced surgeon has to operate on these patients, and he or she has to make an early decision to convert in case of difficulty.
American Journal of Surgery | 1999
Murat Kologlu; Iskender Sayek; L.Bilkay Kologlu; Demirali Onat
BACKGROUND The adverse effects of elevated intraabdominal pressure (IAP) on abdominal organs are realized, but its influence on anastomotic healing has not been studied. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of elevated IAP on healing of colonic anastomoses. METHODS Thirty rats, which all had right colonic anastomoses, were divided into five groups. Group 1 was the control group, and group 2 had fecal peritonitis. IAP was maintained between 4 to 6 mm Hg in group 3, 8 to 12 mm Hg in group 4, and 14 to 18 mm Hg in group 5 until all rats were sacrificed on day 4. Bursting pressures and tissue hydroxyproline concentrations of anastomoses were then analyzed and compared. RESULTS Mean +/- SEM of bursting pressures were 143+/-2.9 mm Hg in group 1, 72+/-14.4 mm Hg in group 2, 77.3+/-7.9 mm Hg in group 3, 57.5+/-11.2 mm Hg in group 4, and 40.1+/-9.6 mm Hg in group 5 (P<0.0001, one-way analysis of variance [ANOVA]). Mean +/- SEM of tissue hydroxyproline concentrations were 5.3+/-0.3 microg/mg in group 1, 4.7+/-0.5 microg/mg in group 2, 4.6+/-0.6 microg/mg in group 3, 3.6+/-0.5 microg/mg in group 4, and 2.4+/-0.2 microg/mg in group 5 (P = 0.0026, one-way ANOVA). The bursting pressure and hydroxyproline concentrations had good correlation (P<0.001, r = 0.76). CONCLUSIONS Elevated IAP delays healing of colonic anastomoses and 4 to 6 mm Hg IAP delays healing as much as fecal peritonitis. More elevated IAP delays healing more than fecal peritonitis. These events may be clinically important and may result from local-systemic effects of IAP.
Surgery | 2004
Murat Kologlu; Tanju Tutuncu; Yunus Nadi Yuksek; Ugur Gozalan; Gul Daglar; Nuri Aydin Kama
BACKGROUND We previously developed a risk score for conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy (RSCLO). The aim of this study is to validate this scoring system in a new patient population and test its use in case selection for resident training. METHODS The data of 1,000 laparoscopic cholecystectomies (LC) that had been performed in our clinic between 1992 and 1999 were analyzed retrospectively, and RSCLO was developed. Scores take values between -20 and 41; values below -3 represent low risk, and values over -3 represent high risk. Analyses in this group of patients showed that at least 15 cases have to be performed for adequate LC training. The current study is a clinical prospective study based on data of the previous study and evaluates RSCLO in a new patient population of 400 LCs. All patients were scored preoperatively; surgeons who had performed 15 or fewer LCs previously operated only patients with a score below -3. Patients with high scores (>values of -3) were operated only by surgeons who had performed at least 16 LCs. Results of the first 1,000 cases and later 400 cases (new patient population of the current study) were compared in terms of conversion to open cholecystectomy, complications, and operation times. RESULTS Both in the first 1,000 patients and later in 400 patients, increasing scores resulted with higher conversion rates and complication rates and longer operation times (P<.05). In the later 400 patients, conversion rate (4.8% vs 3.0%, P=.08), complication rate (5.5% vs 3.5%, P=.07), and mean operation time (56.8 min vs 52.5 min, P=.004) were decreased when compared with the first 1,000 patients. In resident training cases, conversion and complication rates decreased to 0%, and mean operation time was shortened by nearly 10 minutes. In high-score difficult cases, conversion and complication rates decreased, and mean operation time was shortened by nearly 20 minutes. CONCLUSIONS This risk score can predict the difficulty of LC cases reliably. Scoring patients preoperatively can decrease the problems in training cases, and management of difficult cases may be left to experienced surgeons.
American Journal of Surgery | 2000
Murat Kologlu; Nuri Aydin Kama; Erhan Reis; Mutlu Doganay; Mesut Atli; Mete Dolapci
BACKGROUND Scoring systems are generally used for predicting prognosis in the intensive care unit, but there is no score being used frequently for predicting prognosis in gastric cancer. The aim of this study was to develop a prognostic score for gastric cancer patients. METHODS Demographic, clinical, laboratory, radiologic, histopathologic data, and operative findings for 128 patients who had curative or palliative resection for gastric cancer were analyzed for their effect on overall and disease-free survival. Ten variables-invasion depth of tumor, node status (American Joint Committed on Cancer, 1992), metastasis, node status (Union Internationale Contre le Cancer, 1997), metastatic lymph node ratio, resectability, tumor location, extent of lymphadenectomy, Borrmann type, Lauren type-that have independent significant effect or borderline significance on both overall and disease-free survival according to multivariate analysis were chosen. Coefficients were calculated for these variables by using Cox regression analysis, and thus the Prognostic Score for Gastric Cancer (PSGC) was designed. All patients were scored using the PSGC and also staged clinically (AJCC 1992) and histopathologically (AJCC 1992 and UICC 1997). RESULTS Patients were grouped according to their scores: group 1, patients with scores 20 to 50 (probability of 5-year overall survival 50% to 95%); group 2, patients with scores 51 to 80 (probability of 5-year overall survival 10% to 50%); and group 3, patients with scores 81 and higher (probability of 5-year overall survival <10%). Overall survival and disease-free survival decreased significantly with increasing scores. The association of PSGC and staging systems with survival was analyzed by stepwise logistic regression and Cox regression analyses. PSGC was proved to have the most significant association with overall and disease-free survival. CONCLUSIONS Inclusion of more variables in PSGC seems to make it superior than staging. It is easy to adapt PSGC to different patient populations, which may make it accepted as a practical and useful scoring system in clinical practice.
Journal of Investigative Surgery | 2004
Kaya Yorganci; Atac Baykal; Murat Kologlu; Zeynep Saribas; Gulsen Hascelik; Iskender Sayek
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the obstructive jaundice-induced cellular immune suppression and endotoxin challenge with respect to the levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin-10 (IL-10), and interleukin-2 (IL-2). Rats underwent either bile duct ligation or sham operation. At 21 days, all rats were challenged either with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or saline. In the sham-operated group LPS injection significantly increased TNF levels at 90 min. The common bile duct ligated group showed a significant increase in TNF levels compared with all other groups, including the sham-operated, LPS-injected group, at 90 min. At 180 min following LPS challenge, TNF levels decreased, and there was no difference between any of the LPS-challenged groups at 180 min and any of the saline groups at either 90 or 180 min. In the sham-operated group, LPS injection significantly increased IL-10 levels at both 90 and 180 min. In the bile duct ligated group, LPS injection significantly increased IL-10 levels compared with saline injection at both 90 and 180 min. On the other hand, bile duct ligated animals had significantly less increase in IL-10 levels following LPS challenge at 90 min but not at 180 min. In common bile duct ligated rats, LPS challenge induced a significantly greater increase in IL-2 levels compared with all other groups. In conclusion, in the presence of obstructive jaundice, endotoxemia primes a more vigorous inflammatory response despite cellular immune depression.
Surgery | 2000
Murat Kologlu; Kaya Yorganci; Nurten Renda; Iskender Sayek
Archives of Surgery | 2001
Mesut Atli; Nuri Aydin Kama; Yunus Nadi Yuksek; Mutlu Doganay; Ugur Gozalan; Murat Kologlu; Gul Daglar
Hepato-gastroenterology | 2001
Murat Kologlu; Doruk Elker; Hasan Altun; Iskender Sayek
Journal of Surgical Research | 2001
Gul Daglar; Nuri Aydin Kama; Mesut Atli; Yunus Nadi Yuksek; Erhan Reis; Mutlu Doganay; Mete Dolapci; Murat Kologlu
Hepato-gastroenterology | 2004
Yunus Nadi Yuksek; Murat Kologlu; Gul Daglar; Mutlu Doganay; Istar Dolapci; Ayse Bilgihan; Mete Dolapci; Nuri Aydin Kama