Objectives We aimed to investigate the effectiveness of physician-performed diagnostic clinical breast examination (DCBE) for the diagnosis of breast cancer in clinical practice and to determine the rates of breast cancer diagnosed with DCBE compared to the results of breast ultrasonography (US), mammography (MG), and histopathology. Methods In the retrospective cohort study, the files of female patients diagnosed with breast cancer and admitted to the general surgery outpatient clinics of a university hospital over a 10-year period (2011-2021) were examined. Patients with complete DCBE findings in their files were identified and analyzed (n = 1,091).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Despite improved success with solid-organ transplant procedures, recipients remain at risk for infections, including pneumonia, due to their immunosuppressive regimens. In solid-organ transplant patients, clinical findings of pneumonia can be nonspecific, and diagnosis of pneumonia may be difficult as several conditions (drug lung, hypervolemia, infections, hemorrhage) can led to pulmonary infiltrates, mimicking pneumonia in these patients. The role of mean platelet volume, a predictor of inflammatory disease, with elevated values inversely correlated with inflammatory problems, in the diagnosis of pneumonia has not yet been investigated in solid-organ transplant patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Clin Transplant
March 2018
Objectives: Smoking is an important risk factor for development of complications in heart transplant patients and plays an important role in the mortality of these patients. The aim of this study was to compare the survival of heart transplant patients after transplant versus their smoking status before transplant.
Materials And Methods: Patients who had heart transplant procedures at the Baskent University Hospital Cardiovascular Surgery Department between 2005 and 2016 were analyzed retrospectively with regard to their smoking status and survival after transplant.
Exp Clin Transplant
November 2016
Objectives: Smoking is the most important remediable risk factor for the progression of renal diseases. Smoking has serious adverse effects, such as cardiovascular disease, kidney function impairment, and cancer in kidney transplant recipients who are already at high risk for these diseases. In this study, our objective was to evaluate descriptive characteristics and smoking status of renal transplant recipients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF