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Featured researches published by Senem Senturk.


Environmental Health | 2010

MDCT Findings of Denim-Sandblasting-Induced Silicosis: a cross-sectional study

Cihan Akgul Ozmen; Hasan Nazaroglu; Tekin Yildiz; Aylin Hasanefendioglu Bayrak; Senem Senturk; Gungor Ates; Levent Akyildiz

BackgroundDenim sandblasting is as a novel cause of silicosis in Turkey, with reports of a recent increase in cases and fatal outcomes. We aimed to describe the radiological features of patients exposed to silica during denim sandblasting and define factors related to the development of silicosis.MethodsSixty consecutive men with a history of exposure to silica during denim sandblasting were recruited. All CT examinations were performed using a 64-row multi-detector CT (MDCT). The nodules were qualitatively and semi-quantitatively analyzed by grading nodular profusion (NP) on CT images.ResultsSilicosis was diagnosed radiologically in 73.3% of patients (44 of 60). The latency period (the time between initial exposure and radiological imaging) and duration of silica exposure was longer in patients diagnosed with silicosis than in those without silicosis (p < 0.05). Nodules were present in all cases with centrilobular type as the commonest (63.6%). All cases of silicosis were clinically classified as accelerated and 11.4% had progressive massive fibrosis (PMF). Mild NP lesions were the most prevalent in all six zones of the lung. The NP score was significantly correlated with the duration of silica exposure, the latency period, presence of PMF, and pleural thickening. Enlarged lymphadenopathy was present in 45.5% of patients.ConclusionsThe duration of exposure and the latency period are important for development of silicosis in denim sandblasters. MDCT is a useful tool in detecting findings of silicosis in workers who has silica exposure.


European Journal of Radiology | 2012

Diameters of the common bile duct in adults and postcholecystectomy patients: A study with 64-slice CT

Senem Senturk; Tugba Cezlan Miroglu; Aslan Bilici; Hatice Gümüş; Rojbin Ceylan Tekin; Faysal Ekici; Guven Tekbas

This study aims to collect data by multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) on the diameter of the normal common bile duct (CBD) and the diameter of CBD after cholecystectomy. In this retrospective study, CBD measurements were performed on axial oblique images, perpendicular to the long axis of the distal CBD. The mean diameter of the normal CBD was measured in 604 patients without cholecystectomy. The patients were divided into 6 groups according to their age. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare data obtained from the six age groups. The mean diameter of the CBD of 46 patients who had cholecystectomy was calculated. The results were compared with age matched control group by Students t test. The largest diameter of CBD ranged from 1.8 to 11.8mm. The mean of the largest diameter of 604 subjects was 4.77 ± 1.81. The diameter of the CBD significantly increased with age. Mean largest CBD diameters of postcholecystectomy subjects (7.28 ± 2.37) were significantly greater than age matched control group. In conclusion the diameter of CBD shows a considerable increase with age. The largest diameter of the CBD is up to 6mm in most of the subjects. An upper limit of 8mm appears reasonable after the age of 50; and an upper limit of 10mm seems appropriate for cholescystectomized subjects.


European Journal of Radiology | 2011

The frequency of intracranial arterial fenestrations: A study with 64-detector CT-angiography

Aylin Hasanefendioglu Bayrak; Senem Senturk; Hatice Akay; Cihan Akgul Ozmen; Yaşar Bükte; Hasan Nazaroglu

Fenestration is a vascular variation that begins with a common origin, then splits into two parallel luminal channels and rejoins distally. Potential association between anomalies of cerebral circulation and increased occurrence of aneurysm makes intracranial arterial fenestrations important. The planning of intracranial arterial interventions may be complicated if a fenestration occurs proximal to the site of intended treatment. This study is planned to determine the frequency of fenestrations on CT angiography and to search whether there is relationship between aneurysms and fenestrations. CT angiographies of 395 consecutive patients, performed by 64-detector CT, were retrospectively reviewed for aneurysms and fenestrations. Overall fenestration frequency, fenestration frequency in patients with and without aneurysm, and aneurysm frequency in patients with and without fenestration were searched. Demographic characteristics of patients were also compared. Overall fenestration frequency was 12.9%. Vertebrobasilar system (5.56%) and anterior communicating region (5.32%) were the two most frequent sites of fenestration. The rate of fenestrations was not significantly different between patients who had and did not have aneurysms. Mean age was significantly higher, and females were predominant in patients with aneurysms. However our results did not show significant difference in age and sex of patients with fenestrations. The frequency of fenestrations in this study is higher than in previously published radiological studies, suggesting that fenestrations are relatively common. There is no significant relationship between the frequency of aneurysms and fenestrations.


Surgery Today | 2011

Nonoperative Management of Pancreatic Injuries in Pediatric Patients

Murat Kemal Cigdem; Senem Senturk; Abdurrahman Onen; Mesut Siga; Hatice Akay; Selcuk Otcu

PurposeNonoperative management of minor pancreatic injury is the generally accepted approach. However, the management of major pancreatic injury remains controversial in pediatric patients. The aim of the present study was to determine the safety and efficacy of nonoperative management of pancreatic injury in pediatric patients.MethodsBetween 2003 and 2009, 31 patients, 28 male and 3 female, with pancreatic injury due to blunt abdominal trauma were treated in our clinic. All patients were evaluated by ultrasonography, computed tomography (CT), and evaluation of serum amylase levels. Patients with ongoing hemodynamic instability after resuscitation or signs of bowel perforation underwent immediate laparotomy, and the remaining patients were conservatively treated. Conservative treatment consisted of nasogastric tube replacement, total parenteral nutrition, monitoring of amylase levels, and serial clinical examination.ResultsThe most common mechanism of injury was a fall (35.4%). Ten patients (32.2%) had associated extraabdominal injuries, and 18 patients (58.1%) had associated abdominal injuries. The spleen was the most common site of intra-abdominal injury that was associated with pancreatic trauma. Initial amylase levels were normal in 5 patients, whose CT scans revealed pancreatic injury. Twenty-five patients (80.6%) were conservatively treated. Six patients (19.4%) required surgical intervention because of a hollow viscus or diaphragmatic injury and hemodynamic instability. A pseudocyst developed in 11 of the 25 patients who were nonoperatively treated; 6 patients required intervention for the pseudocyst (percutaneous drainage and cystogastrostomy). No patient succumbed to injury.ConclusionsThe majority of the pancreatic injuries in pediatric patients can be successfully treated conservatively, unless there is hemodynamic instability and a hollow viscus injury. The most common complication is a pseudocyst.


Clinical Anatomy | 2010

Evaluation of interlobar and accessory pulmonary fissures on 64-row MDCT

Cihan Akgul Ozmen; Hasan Nazaroglu; Aylin Hasanefendioglu Bayrak; Senem Senturk; Hatice Akay

We aimed to describe the prevalence, morphology, and completeness of the oblique, horizontal, and accessory fissures on 64‐row multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) scans. Three hundred and eighty‐seven patients were included in this study. The lungs were scanned from apex to diaphragm using 1‐mm collimation. Images were evaluated on a Philips workstation using the PACS system. Prevalence of the interlobar and accessory fissures and also incompleteness of the interlobar fissures was evaluated on axial, coronal, and sagittal planes. The frequencies of right oblique fissures, right horizontal fissures, and left oblique fissures were 99.7%, 94.8%, and 100%, and the percentage of incompleteness was 69.7%, 86.9%, and 48.3%, respectively. Accessory fissures were detected in 164 of the 387 patients (42.4%). Pulmonary fissures are well visualized on MDCT because of its capacity in evaluating the whole thorax with thin sections and at various planes. Fast‐image acquisition in MDCT also accounts for less motion artifacts and high‐image quality. Clin. Anat. 23:552–558, 2010.


Korean Journal of Parasitology | 2011

A Case of Biliary Fascioliasis by Fasciola gigantica in Turkey

Vedat Göral; Senem Senturk; Omer Mete; Mutallib Cicek; Berat Ebik; Beşir Kaya

A case of Fasciola gigantica-induced biliary obstruction and cholestasis is reported in Turkey. The patient was a 37- year-old woman, and suffered from icterus, ascites, and pain in her right upper abdominal region. A total of 7 living adult flukes were recovered during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP). A single dose of triclabendazole was administered to treat possible remaining worms. She was living in a village of southeast of Anatolia region and had sheeps and cows. She had the history of eating lettuce, mallow, dill, and parsley without washing. This is the first case of fascioliasis which was treated via endoscopic biliary extraction during ERCP in Turkey.


Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | 2009

Diameters of normal thoracic vascular structures in pediatric patients

Hatice Akay; Cihan Akgul Ozmen; Aylin Hasanefendioglu Bayrak; Senem Senturk; Selahattin Katar; Hasan Nazaroglu; Mustafa Taşkesen

PurposeTo determine the normal range of aortic and pulmonary artery diameters on chest CT, and to search a constant ratio when the diameters of thoracic vascular structures are compared with an internal reference.MethodsContrast-enhanced chest CT scans of 133 pediatric patients were retrospectively evaluated. Diameters of ascending and descending aorta, main pulmonary artery, right and left pulmonary arteries and a constant thoracic vertebra were measured. The mean ratios of thoracic vascular diameters to the diameter of the thoracic vertebra were calculated.ResultsThere was a positive correlation between the age of the patients and vascular diameters. The mean ratios of vascular diameters to the diameter of thoracic vertebra, ranged from 1.1 for the ascending aorta to 0.70 for the right and left pulmonary arteries, were consistent.ConclusionsDiameters of thoracic vascular structures increase with age. The consistent vertebral to vessel ratios can be useful in evaluation of chest CT of pediatric patients.


Spine | 2008

Atypical clinical presentation of idiophatic thoracic spinal cord herniation.

Senem Senturk; Aslan Guzel; Ebru Guzel

Study Design. Case report. Objective. To report an adult female patient with idiopathic spinal cord herniation presenting with pain without symptoms of myelopathy. Summary of Background Data. Idiopathic spinal cord herniation is a rare but increasingly recognized cause of myelopathy that can be successfully diagnosed with the almost pathognomonic findings on magnetic resonance imaging. There are over 90 cases that were treated surgically reported in the literature. Methods. A 38-year-old woman presented with a 6-month history of chest pain radiating through to the back in bilateral T4 dermatome. Her neurologic examination was normal. Magnetic resonance study revealing ventral displacement and adherence of spinal cord at T4 level led to the diagnosis of idiopathic spinal cord herniation. Mild spinal cord atrophy with the dilatation of dorsal subarachnoid space was determined. Results. The patient is observed-up on conservative treatment for pain. Conclusion. Idiopathic spinal cord herniation is 1 of the causes of unexplained atypical thoracic pain with or without signs and symptoms of myelopathy. Magnetic resonance imaging is recommended to establish the diagnosis in patients, particularly age ranged from 36 to 59, whose clinical and laboratory findings are inconclusive.


Pediatric Radiology | 2008

Horseshoe lung associated with rare bilateral variant of scimitar syndrome: demonstration by 64-slice MDCT angiography

Hatice Akay; Mehmet Kervancioglu; Hasan Nazaroglu; Selahattin Katar; Cihan Akgul Ozmen; İlhan Kılınç; Senem Senturk

Scimitar syndrome with bilateral abnormal venous drainage and horseshoe lung is extremely rare. These rare complex anomalies were diagnosed in a 5-year-old boy by 64-slice multidetector CT (MDCT). This technique provides high-quality visualization of vascular, bronchial and parenchymal structures in a single session, such that no further invasive techniques are required. One obvious disadvantage of MDCT is the radiation exposure, especially in paediatric patients. The use of a single phase of contrast material administration reduces radiation exposure. The workstation platforms of MDCT systems allow multiplanar 2-D and 3-D postprocessing. As a result, various complex pathologies, such as that discussed here, can be diagnosed following a single imaging session with a certain precision.


Pediatric Neurology | 2014

Brain Malformations Associated With Knobloch Syndrome—Review of Literature, Expanding Clinical Spectrum, and Identification of Novel Mutations

Ahmet Okay Caglayan; Jacob F. Baranoski; Fesih Aktar; Wengi Han; Beyhan Tüysüz; Aslan Guzel; Bulent Guclu; Hande Kaymakçalan; Berrin Aktekin; Gozde Tugce Akgumus; Phillip B. Murray; Emine Z. Erson-Omay; Caner Caglar; Mehmet Bakırcıoğlu; Yildirim Bayezit Sakalar; Ebru Guzel; Nihat Demir; Oğuz Tuncer; Senem Senturk; Barış Ekici; Frank J. Minja; Nenad Sestan; Katsuhito Yasuno; Kaya Bilguvar; Hüseyin Çaksen; Murat Gunel

BACKGROUND Knobloch syndrome is a rare, autosomal recessive, developmental disorder characterized by stereotyped ocular abnormalities with or without occipital skull deformities (encephalocele, bone defects, and cutis aplasia). Although there is clear heterogeneity in clinical presentation, central nervous system malformations, aside from the characteristic encephalocele, have not typically been considered a component of the disease phenotype. METHODS Four patients originally presented for genetic evaluation of symptomatic structural brain malformations. Whole-genome genotyping, whole-exome sequencing, and confirmatory Sanger sequencing were performed. Using immunohistochemical analysis, we investigated the protein expression pattern of COL18A1 in the mid-fetal and adult human cerebral cortex and then analyzed the spatial and temporal changes in the expression pattern of COL18A1 during human cortical development using the Human Brain Transcriptome database. RESULTS We identified two novel homozygous deleterious frame-shift mutations in the COL18A1 gene. On further investigation of these patients and their families, we found that many exhibited certain characteristics of Knobloch syndrome, including pronounced ocular defects. Our data strongly support an important role for COL18A1 in brain development, and this report contributes to an enhanced characterization of the brain malformations that can result from deficiencies of collagen XVIII. CONCLUSIONS This case series highlights the diagnostic power and clinical utility of whole-exome sequencing technology-allowing clinicians and physician scientists to better understand the pathophysiology and presentations of rare diseases. We suggest that patients who are clinically diagnosed with Knobloch syndrome and/or found to have COL18A1 mutations via genetic screening should be investigated for potential structural brain abnormalities even in the absence of an encephalocele.

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