Publications by authors named "Ilknur Aytekin"

Background/aim: For the early stage of nonsmall-cell lung cancer, surgical resection provides the best survival, but the surgical risk generally increases with age because of the increased prevalence of comorbidities, especially cardiovascular disorders. The aim of this study was to compare survival and mortality rates of two groups with different ages, younger and older than 70 years, who went curative resection for nonsmall-cell lung cancer.

Materials And Methods: We analyzed the patients who underwent curative lung cancer surgery in the Department of Thoracic Surgery of Gaziantep University Research Hospital between January 1997 and November 2014.

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Background And Aim: In patients with pulmonary embolism (PE), a pulmonary radiograph may reveal oligemic fields (the Westermark sign) associated with sites of occlusion of the pulmonary arteries, interruption or loss of the artery line (the knuckle sign), and even unilateral hyperlucency attributable to reduced overall lung vascularity. In Swyer-James-Macleod syndrome (SJMS), which develops as a result of bronchiolitis obliterans, unilateral hyperlucency is evident because of emphysema and hypoplasia of the pulmonary artery and its branches. Therefore, SJMS cases with clinical and laboratory data compatible with PE may in fact be confused with PE.

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Aortic injury caused by the penetration of a fractured rib is rare, but aortic graft penetration is even less common. This is a case report describing perforation of a Dacron aortic graft by the sharp margin of a displaced rib, which occurred after a thoracotomy. This case illustrates the importance of fixing fractured ribs.

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A 51-year-old man with adenoid cystic carcinoma in the main stem bronchus was treated by a left lower lobectomy. A 44-year-old man with adenoid cystic carcinoma in the peripheral small bronchi underwent a right sleeve upper lobectomy with tracheobronchoplasty and neo-carina reconstruction; because of positive tumor margins, radiotherapy was administered postoperatively. Both patients were alive without any signs of tumor after 30 and 24 months of follow-up, respectively.

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