Ümit Özgür Akdemir
Gazi University
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Featured researches published by Ümit Özgür Akdemir.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2012
John Dickson; Livia Tossici-Bolt; Terez Sera; Robin de Nijs; Jan Booij; Maria Claudia Bagnara; Anita Seese; Pierre Malick Koulibaly; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Cathrine Jonsson; Michel Koole; Maria Raith; Markus Nowak Lonsdale; J. George; Felicia Zito; Klaus Tatsch
PurposeMulti-centre trials are an important part of proving the efficacy of procedures, drugs and interventions. Imaging components in such trials are becoming increasingly common; however, without sufficient control measures the usefulness of these data can be compromised. This paper describes a framework for performing high-quality multi-centre trials with single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), using a pan-European initiative to acquire a normal control dopamine transporter brain scan database as an example.MethodsA framework to produce high-quality and consistent SPECT imaging data was based on three key areas: quality assurance, the imaging protocol and system characterisation. Quality assurance was important to ensure that the quality of the equipment and local techniques was good and consistently high; system characterisation helped understand and where possible match the performance of the systems involved, whereas the imaging protocol was designed to allow a degree of flexibility to best match the characteristics of each imaging device.ResultsA total of 24 cameras on 15 sites from 8 different manufacturers were evaluated for inclusion in our multi-centre initiative. All results matched the required level of specification and each had their performance characterised. Differences in performance were found between different system types and cameras of the same type. Imaging protocols for each site were modified to match their individual characteristics to produce comparable high-quality SPECT images.ConclusionA framework has been designed to produce high-quality data for multi-centre SPECT studies. This framework has been successfully applied to a pan-European initiative to acquire a healthy control dopamine transporter image database.
NeuroImage | 2013
Elsmarieke van de Giessen; Swen Hesse; Matthan W. A. Caan; Franziska Zientek; John Dickson; Livia Tossici-Bolt; Terez Sera; Susanne Asenbaum; Renaud Guignard; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Gitte M. Knudsen; Flavio Nobili; Marco Pagani; Thierry Vander Borght; Koen Van Laere; Andrea Varrone; Klaus Tatsch; Jan Booij; Osama Sabri
INTRODUCTION Dopamine is one among several neurotransmitters that regulate food intake and overeating. Thus, it has been linked to the pathophysiology of obesity and high body mass index (BMI). Striatal dopamine D(2) receptor availability is lower in obesity and there are indications that striatal dopamine transporter (DAT) availability is also decreased. In this study, we tested whether BMI and striatal DAT availability are associated. METHODS The study included 123 healthy individuals from a large European multi-center database. They had a BMI range of 18.2-41.1 kg/m(2) and were scanned using [(123)I]FP-CIT SPECT imaging. Scans were analyzed with both region-of-interest and voxel-based analysis to determine the binding potential for DAT availability in the caudate nucleus and putamen. A direct relation between BMI and DAT availability was assessed and groups with high and low BMI were compared for DAT availability. RESULTS No association between BMI and striatal DAT availability was found. CONCLUSION The lack of an association between BMI and striatal DAT availability suggests that the regulation of striatal synaptic dopamine levels by DAT plays no or a limited role in the pathophysiology of overweight and obesity.
European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014
Swen Hesse; Elsmarieke van de Giessen; Franziska Zientek; David Petroff; Karsten Winter; John Dickson; Livia Tossici-Bolt; Terez Sera; Susanne Asenbaum; Jacques Darcourt; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Gitte M. Knudsen; Flavio Nobili; Marco Pagani; Thierry Vander Borght; Koen Van Laere; Andrea Varrone; Klaus Tatsch; Osama Sabri; Jan Booij
UNLABELLED Serotonin-mediated mechanisms, in particular via the serotonin transporter (SERT), are thought to have an effect on food intake and play an important role in the pathophysiology of obesity. However, imaging studies that examined the correlation between body mass index (BMI) and SERT are sparse and provided contradictory results. The aim of this study was to further test the association between SERT and BMI in a large cohort of healthy subjects. METHODS 127 subjects of the ENC DAT database (58 females, age 52 ± 18 years, range 20-83, BMI 25.2 ± 3.8 kg/m(2), range 18.2-41.1) were analysed using region-of-interest (ROI) and voxel-based approaches to calculate [(123)I]FP-CIT specific-to-nonspecific binding ratios (SBR) in the hypothalamus/thalamus and midbrain/brainstem as SERT-specific target regions. RESULTS In the voxel-based analysis, SERT availability and BMI were positively associated in the thalamus, but not in the midbrain. In the ROI-analysis, the interaction between gender and BMI showed a trend with higher correlation coefficient for men in the midbrain albeit not significant (0.033SBRm(2)/kg, p=0.1). CONCLUSIONS The data are in agreement with previous PET findings of an altered central serotonergic tone depending on BMI, as a probable pathophysiologic mechanism in obesity, and should encourage further clinical studies in obesity targeting the serotonergic system.
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2014
Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Ayşe Bora Tokçaer; Asl Karakuş; Lütfiye Özlem Kapucu
Aim The aims in this study were to evaluate the role of brain 18F-FDG PET imaging in differential diagnosis of parkinsonism and to correlate brain metabolism findings with patients’ clinical findings. Methods Brain 18F-FDG PET images were evaluated both visually and quantitatively using the NeuroQ software in 21 parkinsonism patients in whom final clinical diagnoses were established. Results Final clinical diagnoses were idiopathic Parkinson disease in 7, multisystem atrophy (MSA) in 7, progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) in 4, corticobasal degeneration in 2, and Lewy body disease in 1 patient. Asymmetrical cortical hypometabolism was observed in most of the patients in frontal and parietotemporal regions. Fifteen of 21 patients had basal ganglia involvement, which was bilateral in patients with MSA and more frequently unilateral in patients with idiopathic Parkinson disease and PSP. Four patients with PSP and 1 patient with corticobasal degeneration had thalamic hypometabolism. Cerebellar hypometabolism was observed in 4 patients with MSA. The Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale motor and bradykinesia scores were higher in patients with basal ganglia involvement. Conclusions Brain 18F-FDG PET findings in subcortical nuclei and cerebellum were found to be useful in differential diagnosis of patients with parkinsonism. The extent of cerebral cortical and basal ganglia hypometabolism showed correlation with the presentation and severity of clinical findings.
Urology | 2013
Kibriya Fidan; Yasar Kandur; Bahar Büyükkaragöz; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Oguz Soylemezoglu
OBJECTIVE To examine the reflux nephropathy rate and severity as well as the hypertension rate in pediatric patients with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). METHODS The study included 240 patients with VUR. Renal scarring (RS) was demonstrated by renal parenchymal examination using technetium-99m-labeled dimercaptosuccinic acid (99mTc-DMSA) scintigraphy. Office measurements of arterial blood pressure and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) of VUR patients were done during the follow-up period. RESULTS Follow-up was a mean duration of 24 months. Rates of RS and hypertension increased parallel to increases in the degree of VUR. A gradual elevation in hypertension rates was evident during the follow-up period. All patients with hypertension had RS. Severe RS in 56 patients was associated with increasing blood pressure readings by 24-hour ABPM or office measurements in 19 patients (33.9%). ABPM measurements enabled us to detect additional patients compared with office measurements alone. CONCLUSION Hypertension is a serious complication in children with reflux nephropathy and is associated with the severity of RS and VUR grade. ABPM seems to be superior over office measurements of blood pressure in identifying patients with hypertension.
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2008
Veli Berk; Ramazan Yildiz; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Nalan Akyürek; Neşe İlgin Karabacak; Ugur Coskun; Mustafa Benekli
A 49-year-old man presented with a left nasal cavity mass, biopsy of which revealed extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma. A PET-CT scan showed increased F-18 FDG uptake in the nasal mass, anterior mediastinal lymph nodes, and multiple subcutaneous nodular deposits in the chest wall, gluteal region, and right femoral areas. The patient achieved complete remission with salvage l-asparaginase therapy after failing first-line standard anthracycline-based chemotherapy. PET-CT was very useful in detecting subcutaneous nodules consistent with widespread dissemination. There is limited literature data on the use of the PET scan in the diagnosis and staging of extranodal nasal NK/T-cell lymphomas. Our case highlights the important role of F-18 FDG PET in the staging of these patients.
Annals of Nuclear Medicine | 2004
Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Tamer Atasever; Serkan Sipahioglu; Şeyda Türkölmez; Cemal Kazimoğlu; Ertuğrul Şener
ObjectiveWe planned this study to evaluate the role of bone scintigraphy in patients with suspected carpal fracture and normal or suspicious radiographs following carpal injury.MethodsThree-phase bone scintigraphy using Tc-99m-MDP was performed on 32 patients with negative radiographs but clinically suspected fracture at two weeks after the trauma. Focally increased radiophar-maceutical uptake was interpreted as a fracture. The final diagnosis was established with clinical follow-up.ResultsTwelve (38%) patients had a normal scan excluding fracture. Twelve patients had a single fracture. Multifocal fracture was present in 8 (25%) patients. Eight patients showed scaphoid fractures; of these three showed single scaphoid fracture, and the other five patients revealed accompanying fractures. Distal radius fractures and carpal bone fractures other than scaphoid were both observed in 12 patients. These were eleven fractures of distal radius; three fractures of pisiform; two fractures of hamate; and single fractures of lunate, trapezium and triquetrum. In one patient there was fracture of a first metacarpal bone.ConclusionIn patients with suspected carpal bone fracture and normal or suspicious radiographs, bone scintigraphy can be used as a reliable method to confirm or exclude the presence of a scaphoid fracture and to detect clinically unsuspected fractures of distal radius and other carpal bones.
EJNMMI Physics | 2017
Livia Tossici-Bolt; John Dickson; Terez Sera; Jan Booij; Susanne Asenbaun-Nan; Maria Claudia Bagnara; Thierry Vander Borght; Cathrine Jonsson; Robin de Nijs; Swen Hesse; Pierre Malick Koulibaly; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Michel Koole; Klaus Tatsch; Andrea Varrone
Background[123I]FP-CIT is a well-established radiotracer for the diagnosis of dopaminergic degenerative disorders. The European Normal Control Database of DaTSCAN (ENC-DAT) of healthy controls has provided age and gender-specific reference values for the [123I]FP-CIT specific binding ratio (SBR) under optimised protocols for image acquisition and processing. Simpler reconstruction methods, however, are in use in many hospitals, often without implementation of attenuation and scatter corrections. This study investigates the impact on the reference values of simpler approaches using two quantifications methods, BRASS and Southampton, and explores the performance of the striatal phantom calibration in their harmonisation.ResultsBRASS and Southampton databases comprising 123 ENC-DAT subjects, from gamma cameras with parallel collimators, were reconstructed using filtered back projection (FBP) and iterative reconstruction OSEM without corrections (IRNC) and compared against the recommended OSEM with corrections for attenuation and scatter and septal penetration (ACSC), before and after applying phantom calibration. Differences between databases were quantified using the percentage difference of their SBR in the dopamine transporter-rich striatum, with their significance determined by the paired t test with Bonferroni correction.Attenuation and scatter losses, measured from the percentage difference between IRNC and ACSC databases, were of the order of 47% for both BRASS and Southampton quantifications. Phantom corrections were able to recover most of these losses, but the SBRs remained significantly lower than the “true” values (p < 0.001). Calibration provided, in fact, “first order” camera-dependent corrections, but could not include “second order” subject-dependent effects, such as septal penetration from extra-cranial activity. As for the ACSC databases, phantom calibration was instrumental in compensating for partial volume losses in BRASS (~67%, p < 0.001), while for the Southampton method, inherently free from them, it brought no significant changes and solely corrected for residual inter-camera variability (−0.2%, p = 0.44).ConclusionsThe ENC-DAT reference values are significantly dependent on the reconstruction and quantification methods and phantom calibration, while reducing the major part of their differences, is unable to fully harmonize them. Clinical use of any normal database, therefore, requires consistency with the processing methodology. Caution must be exercised when comparing data from different centres, recognising that the SBR may represent an “index” rather than a “true” value.
Revista Espanola De Medicina Nuclear | 2013
Ilgin Sahiner; Tamer Atasever; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Can Öztürk; Leyla Memis
OBJECTIVES The relation of PET-derived parameters as maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax), total lesion glycolysis (TLG), metabolic tumor volume (MTV) with clinical stage in lung cancer and correlation of SUVmax of primary tumor and that of metastatic lesion was studied in lung cancer patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS Patients with lung cancer who were referred for FDG PET/CT were included in the study. RESULTS PET/CT scans and pathology reports of 168 patients were assessed. A total of 146 (86.9%) of these patients had a diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and 22 (13.1%) had small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Metabolic parameters such as SUVmax, TLG and MTV showed significant differences in all the stages in NSCLC patients (p<0.001). However, after tumors sizes <25 mm were excluded, no significant differences in SUVmax between stages were observed. No significant differences were found between these metabolic parameters and limited or extended disease SCLC. Tumor diameter correlated with primary tumor SUVmax and significant correlations between primary lesion SUVmax and metastatic lesion SUVmax were found. CONCLUSIONS Although differences were found regarding indices between stages of NSCLC cases, SUVmax differences between stages seem to be caused by underestimation of SUVmax in small lesions. Other glucose metabolism indexes such as MTV and TLG show promising results in terms of prognostic stratification. Future studies are needed for better understanding of their contribution to clinical cases.
Clinical Respiratory Journal | 2017
Fatma Yildirim; Ahmet Selim Yurdakul; Sevket Ozkaya; Ümit Özgür Akdemir; Can Öztürk
To determine whether the primary tumor SUVmax and total lesion glycolysis (TLG) measured on 18F‐FDG PET/CT have prognostic significance in patients with non–small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC).