TR Dizin İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / TR Dizin Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14365/4
Browse
7 results
Search Results
Article Citation - Scopus: 1Course of Treatment of Chronic Bleeding and Anemia with Systemic Bevacizumab Treatment in Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia: A Retrospective Cohort(Türkiye Klinikleri, 2023) Durak, Emine; Ugur, Mehmet Can; Gediz, FusunAmaç: Kalıtsal hemorajik telenjiyektazi (HHT), anormal anjiyo- geneze neden olan otozomal dominant bir hastal ıktır. Son y ıllarda, özel- likle şiddetli HHT formlarının tedavisi için hedefe yönelik tedavilere olan ilgi artmaktadır. Bu tedavi seçeneklerinden biri de vasküler endotelyal bü- yüme faktörü inhibitörü bevasizumabtır. Bu çalışmanın amacı, HHT tanısı alan hastalarda sistemik bevasizumab kullanımının kronik kanama seyri ve anemi tedavisindeki etkisini ara ştırmaktır. Gereç ve Yöntemler: Bevasi- zumab kullanan hastaların tedavi yanıtı ve yan etkileri retrospektif olarak değerlendirildi. Bulgular: Hastaların yaş ortalaması 51,5 yıl idi. Ortalama tedavi süresi 15,4 (4-25 ay) aydı. Tüm hastalara 2 hafta arayla ilk 4 doz 5 mg/kg intravenöz bevasizumab uygulandı. Bevasizumab idamesi 5 mg/kg dozunda aylık periyotlarla devam etti. Bevasizumab tedavisi ile hemoglo- bin değerlerinde artış, epistaksis şiddet skorunda parenteral demir ve erit- rosit transfüzyon gereksiniminde azalma sağlandı. Gözlenen yan etkiler, 1 hastada alerjik döküntü ve 1 hastada artralji idi. Yan etkiler nedeniyle hiç- bir hastada tedavinin kesilmesi gerekmedi. Sonuç: Bevasizumab, kontrol edilmediği takdirde ölümcül olabilen HHT’de umut verici bir tedavi seçe- neğidir. Bununla birlikte, tedavi protokolleri ve advers olayların yönetimi konusunda global konsensus sağlamak için daha kapsamlı çalışmalara ih- tiyaç vardır.Article Knowledge, Attitudes, and Opinions of Hepatitis B Virus Carrier Male Patients About the Disease(Doc Design Informatics Co Ltd, 2022-09-28) Digrak, Ebru; Tezel, AyferObjectives: The study was conducted to evaluate the knowledge, attitudes, and opinions of male patients infected with the hepatitis B virus about their disease. Methods: This descriptive study was conducted in a military hospital in Ankara between July 2016 - July 2017. The study population consisted of 244 male patients admitted to the Infectious Diseases Clinic of the hospital within one year. No sample selection was made, and 208 patients accepted to participate were included in the study. The research data were collected by a questionnaire form consisting of 28 questions prepared by the researchers in line with the literature. For statistical analysis, IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows. Version 22.0 program was used. Results: Of the patients, 86.5% were single, 50% were primary school graduates, 65.4% were self-employed, and their mean age was 22.67 +/- 2.9. According to the data, 53.4% of the patients were HBeAg-negative, and 46.6% were HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B patients. Healthcare personnel was the information source for 51.9% of the patients, and 80.8% felt the need to get more information about their disease. 88.4% of the patients stated that hepatitis B disease could be transmitted through the bloodstream, and 80.7% of them stated that being vaccinated prevented them from being sick. 86.5% of the patients stated that the purpose of the treatment of hepatitis B disease was to prevent the progression of the disease. Conclusions: According to the study's results, we determined that the patients' knowledge and attitudes about their diseases were insufficient.Article Citation - Scopus: 3Clinical Impact of Hepatitis C Virus Genomic Variations(Ankara Microbiology Society, 2015-10-08) Ergünay K.; Abacioglu H.; Ergünay, Koray; Abacioglu, HakanHepatitis C virus (HCV) is a globally-dispersed agent of chronic hepatitis with a significant public health threat, affecting over 110 million individuals throughout the world. The increased risk for chronicity after exposure and the lack of a protective vaccine make HCV is a leading infectious cause of cirrhosis, liver failure requiring transplantation and hepatocellular carcinoma. The replicative process and infection dynamics in the host enable HCV to generate an array of closely-related but non-identical genetic variants known as quasispecies in the infected individuals. Pathogenesis and outcome in HCV infections are directly affected by the virus genetic heterogeneity, reflected as the emergence of quasispecies in infected individuals. The evolution of these highly-diverse viral populations in the host directly influences the disease course, via providing a pool of variants capable of resuming viral replication under extrinsic and/or intrinsic selective pressures. Viral quasispecies go through several alterations during the course of the infection, and provide a background for the selection of escape mutants from the host humoral and cell-mediated immune responses and antiviral treatment. Supported by the robust next generation sequencing techniques, recent studies have provided significant insights on the genomic diversity and progression as well as on the origin and the epidemiology of HCV. This review provides an overview of the mechanisms of HCV genetic variability, and the interactions with the host, that affects clinical disease, covering viral and host determinants of humoral and cell-mediated immune responses, alterations during the early and late stages of the infection and disease progression leading to chronicity. In addition, current findings in virus evolution and epidemiology were briefly interpreted from the inter-species and population perspectives. The impact of viral genomic heterogeneity on antiviral treatment in the era of direct-acting agents is also discussed, along with an overview of current methods employed for the characterization of viral diversity.Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 14Changes on Hepatitis C Virus Genotype Distribution in Western Turkey: Evaluation of Twelve-Year Data(Aves, 2020-02-15) Duran, Alev Cetin; Cetinkaya, Ozgul Kaya; Sayiner, Ayca Arzu; Seydaoglu, Gulsah; Ozkaratas, Emre; Abacioglu, HakanBackground/Aims: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) prevalence is 1% in Turkey with genotype 1 being the predominant type traditionally. However unique geographical location of Turkey and increasing human migration in the region influences the epidemiology of the infection. The aim of this study was to determine the changes in distribution of HCV genotypes and risk factors. Materials and Methods: In this retrospective single-center study, HCV genotyping results of 558 patients were evaluated in between 2005 and 2016.Three different HCV genotyping assays were used during the 12-year study period;restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), Abbott Real Time HCV Genotype II and Bosphore HCV genotyping kit. Results: The most prevalent HCV genotype was genotype 1 detected in 88.4% of the patients followed by genotype 3 (5.2%),genotype 4 (2.9%),genotype 2 (2.1%), mixed genotypes (1.1%) and genotype 5 (0.3%). Genotype 1a showed an increasing prevalence. There were 19 patients (3.4%) either of foreign nationalities or Turkish citizens living abroad. Genotype 3 was the most common type among these patients which 10.3% had intravenous drug use history. Syrian migrant population differed in terms of HCV genotypes. Genotype 5 detected in two Syrian patients, which is the first report of HCV type 5 in Western Turkey. Among the HCV genotype 4 infected patients, 31.3% were Syrians. Conclusion: Our study showed that although genotype 1b dominance continues, the distribution and prevalence of HCV genotypes are changing in our region mainly due to migration and increase in the frequency of patients with non-traditional risk factors such as intravenous drug use. Monitoring the epidemiology of HCV genotypes may provide guidance in treatment decisions.Article Citation - WoS: 32Citation - Scopus: 32Covid-19 Anxiety in People Living With Hiv: an Online Cross-Sectional Study(Tubitak Scientific & Technical Research Council Turkey, 2020-12-17) Kuman Tuncel, Ozlem; Pullukcu, Husnu; Erdem, Huseyin Aytac; Kurtaran, Behice; Tasbakan, Selin Ece; Isikgoz Tasbakan, Meltem; Tuncel, Ozlem KumanBackground/aim: The emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak has had an enormous emotional impact on sonic vulnerable groups, such as people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (PLHIV). This study was planned with the aim of assessing the anxiety levels of PLHIV and the sources of their anxiety. Materials and methods: A web-based questionnaire was sent to PLHIV using the virtual snowball sampling method. The questionnaire included questions about sociodemographic status, information about HIV infection, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI). Additionally, some opinions of the participants about COVID-19 were asked. Results: A total of 307 respondents, with a median age of 33 years, from 32 different cities, participated in the study. More than half of the respondents reported the belief that COVID-19 was not sufficiently well-known by the medical community and nearly 45% believed that they would have snore complications if they contracted COVID-19. One-fourth of the participants had anxiety. Having a preexisting psychiatric disorder, perceiving that they were practicing insufficient preventive measures, not being sure about the presence of any individuals with COVID-19 in their environment, and living with a household member with a chronic disease were found to be the risk factors of PLHIV for having anxiety during this pandemic. The BAI scores were correlated with the patient-reported anxiety levels about the spread of COVID-19 in Turkey, acquiring COVID-19, transmitting COVID-19 to another person, and transmitting HIV to another person. Among the stated conditions, the most common concern was the spread of COVID-19 all over the country, while the least common was transmitting HIV to someone else. Conclusion: The results revealed that a significant proportion of the sample had anxiety, and the findings were essential for developing evidence-based strategies for decreasing the anxiety of PLHIV, especially for those who had risk factors and to provide them with better health care during this pandemic or other pandemic-like crises.Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 17Identification of the Nucleotide Substitutions in 62 Sars-Cov Sequences From Turkey(Tubitak Scientific & Technical Research Council Turkey, 2020-06-21) Demir, Ayse Banu; Benvenuto, Domenico; Abacioglu, Hakan; Angeletti, Silvia; Ciccozzi, MassimoA previously unknown coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has been shown to cause coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. The first case of COVID-19 in Turkey has been declared in March 11th, 2020 and from there on, more than 150,000 people in the country have been diagnosed with the disease. In this study, 62 viral sequences from Turkey, which have been uploaded to GISAID database, were analyzed by means of their nucleotide substitutions in comparison to the reference SARS-CoV-2 genome from Wuhan. Our results indicate that the viral isolates from Turkey harbor some common mutations with the viral strains from Europe, Oceania, North America and Asia. When the mutations were evaluated, C3037T, C14408T and A23403G were found to be the most common nucleotide substitutions among the viral isolates in Turkey, which are mostly seen as linked mutations and are part of a haplotype observed high in Europe.Article Citation - WoS: 5Developing Aids Knowledge and Aids Attitude Scales and Assessing Their Reliability and Validity(Istanbul Univ, Fac Letters, Dept Psychology, 2018-06-01) Aydemir, Nuran; Yakin, Ibrahim; Arslan, Hatice Sevgi; Çaylı, Nuran AydemırThe present study aims to develop de novo scales to assess the level of knowledge of and attitude toward acquired immunodeficiency virus (AIDS) among the Turkish population. For this purpose, a 37-item knowledge scale and a 23-item attitude scale were developed and tested by using convenience sampling of undergraduate students (N = 1025) aged >= 17 years from five universities in Izmir. After evaluating item difficulty and item discrimination, 12 items were excluded, and during factor analyses, four additional items were omitted from the knowledge scale. Oblique rotation resulted in three underlying factors that explain 34% of the variance. As a reliability assessment, the Kuder-Richardson-20 coefficient was found to be .76. For the attitude scale, six items were omitted after factor analyses. Oblique rotation showed two underlying components that explained 42.43% of the variance. For internal reliability, Cronbach's alpha was found as. 90. Additionally, to test the relation between the scales, correlation analyses were performed, and it was found that the more knowledge of AIDS people have, the more positive their attitudes are toward it. As a conclusion, both a 21-item AIDS Knowledge scale and a 17-item AIDS Attitude scale have acceptable psychometric values and both can be used in future research.
