Publications by authors named "Berkmen Y"

Foreign vocabulary has long been used widely in the community life, education, as well as scientific activities including national meetings and publications in Turkey. Intrusion of English into Turkish medical and radiological literature has been increasingly more prevalent in the recent decades. This challenge has to be dealt with on every platform and with a national concensus.

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Purpose: To assess for change in the 1990s in the failure of detection at chest radiography of potentially resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) lesions compared with experience in the previous decade.

Materials And Methods: From 1993 to 2001, an observational cohort was identified that consisted of 40 instances of NSCLC evident retrospectively at chest radiography but undetected by a radiologist at a time when the cancer was potentially resectable for cure. Sizes and locations of the tumors were assessed.

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Multiscale adaptive histogram equalization (MAHE), a wavelet-based algorithm, was investigated as a method of automatic simultaneous display of the full dynamic contrast range of a computed tomographic image. Interpretation times were significantly lower for MAHE-enhanced images compared with those for conventionally displayed images. Diagnostic accuracy, however, was insufficient in this pilot study to allow recommendation of MAHE as a replacement for conventional window display.

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Objective: In patients undergoing a combined CT angiographic and CT venographic protocol, the accuracy of helical CT venography for the detection of deep venous thrombosis was compared with that of lower extremity sonography.

Materials And Methods: Patients who had undergone a combined CT angiographic and CT venographic protocol and sonography of the lower extremities within 1 week were identified. The final reports were evaluated for the presence or absence of deep venous thrombosis.

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The volume and severity of pulmonary emphysema in individual lungs were measured by means of quantitative computed tomography (CT) studies in 28 patients (14 women, 14 men, median age 65 yr) who underwent either bilateral (n = 15) or unilateral (n = 13) lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS). Spirometric, total body plethysmographic, and CT data (at TLC and RV) were correlated before and after LVRS. Lung volumes determined by CT correlated well with volumes obtained by total body plethysmography (p < 0.

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Purpose: To assess clinical and radiographic findings in opportunistic bronchopulmonary infections after lung transplantation.

Materials And Methods: Forty-five episodes of opportunistic bronchopulmonary infection occurred in 27 (35%) of 77 lung transplant recipients during a 4-year period. Causative organisms, radiographic patterns, and mortality were reviewed.

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Behçet's disease is a rare form of vasculitis of obscure etiology. Any large or small artery, vein, or organ may be involved in an unpredictable combination. Intrathoracic manifestations of Behçet's disease consist mainly of thromboembolism of the superior vena cava and/or other mediastinal veins; aneurysms of the aorta and pulmonary arteries; pulmonary infarct and hemorrhage; pleural effusion; and, rarely, myocardial or pericardial involvement, cor pulmonale, and mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy.

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CT findings in pulmonary Gaucher's disease have not been previously reported. Chest radiograph of a patient with pulmonary involvement in type I Gaucher's disease proven by biopsy showed linear and reticulo-nodular opacities. High-resolution CT demonstrated thickening of the interlobular septa and between four and six small nodules within secondary lobules, probably each corresponding to an acinus.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess CT and chest radiographic features of accessory fissures of the upper lobe of the left lung.

Materials And Methods: Eighteen accessory fissures of the upper lobe of the left lung were identified on CT scans of 17 adult patients. The collimation was 10 mm in 12 patients and 8 mm in five patients.

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A thin horizontal linear area of hyperattenuation that extends laterally from the mediastinal surface of the lung within the area between the inferior pulmonary vein and the diaphragm is a common observation on computed tomographic (CT) scans of the chest. To determine the anatomic basis for this structure, the authors examined four normal human lungs (two right and two left lungs) fixed in an inflated state at pathologic and histologic examination and at CT. The structure in question was identified in one right and two left lungs.

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To evaluate the radiographic manifestations of the response of intrathoracic metastases to and the toxicity of interleukin-2 (IL-2) therapy, the chest radiographs and computed tomographic scans of 43 patients receiving 103 cycles of IL-2 treatment and lymphokine-activated killer cells for advanced renal cell carcinoma were reviewed. Among these 43 patients, 31 could be assessed for response of metastatic disease: Complete response was seen in one (3%), partial response in 11 (36%), mixed response in nine (29%), progressive disease in five (16%), and stable disease in five (16%). In 103 treatment cycles radiographic evidence of toxicity included pleural effusions (45.

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Primary malignant tumors of the pulmonary arteries occur infrequently and diagnosis is often delayed since symptoms are nonspecific. We present a case of pulmonary artery sarcoma and its interesting magnetic resonance findings.

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A rounded density is occasionally seen hanging down from the hilus in the presence of a large pneumothorax. To find an explanation for this appearance, the authors obtained a right-sided bronchogram on a baboon, after which they induced pneumothorax on the same side. This experiment demonstrated that the rounded density is formed by a twisted and atelectatic upper lobe.

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The pulmonary ligament appears on computed tomographic (CT) sections as a thin, high-attenuation line, frequently seen above or at the level of the diaphragm and usually extending from the region of the esophagus. However, another line coursing laterally from the midportion of the inferior vena cava has also been identified as the pulmonary ligament. The authors examined sections from eight cadavers and 80 chest CT examinations to more clearly delineate the pulmonary ligament from this second structure.

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The minor fissure was studied with thin computed tomographic (CT) sections in 40 patients. It was absent in eight (20%) and seen in 32 (80%) patients; of these 32 the fissure was complete in seven (22%), incomplete in 23 (72%), and of indeterminate completeness in two (6%). Appearance of the minor fissure on CT scans can be categorized into two major configurations, which are determined by variation in contour of the middle lobe upper surface.

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Epiphrenic diverticulum is typically demonstrated by computed tomography examination as a thin walled, air or air-fluid filled structure communicating with the esophagus. However, those not associated with a distal esophageal obstruction (stricture, achalasia) may remain contracted in resting state and thus may not be visible. Occasionally the diverticulum may have to be differentiated from mediastinal abscess or tumors and even hiatus hernia.

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