Browsing by Author "Temiz, Hakan"
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Article Retrospective Observational Study of Computed Tomography-Based Vascular Risk Assessment During Needle Drainage of Peritonsillar Abscess(Journal of Visualized Experiments, 2026) Samanci, Serhat; Toprak, Serdar Ferit; Ayral, Muhammed; Dedeoglu, Serkan; Temiz, HakanPeritonsillar abscess (PTA) is a common deep neck infection in which bedside drainage is performed close to major cervical vessels. Although catastrophic vascular complications are rare, clinicians have limited quantitative information on how far the internal carotid artery (ICA), external carotid artery (ECA), and internal jugular vein (IJV) lie from the abscess in individual patients. This protocol describes a contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT)-based workflow to confirm unilateral PTA, acquire neck CT images under standard clinical settings, measure linear distances from the anterior and posterior abscess capsule to the ipsilateral ICA, ECA, and IJV, compare these distances with the contralateral healthy side as an internal control, and classify the theoretical risk of ICA injury during needle drainage using a modified Pfeiffer system. The procedure includes patient selection, safety screening for iodinated contrast, contrast-enhanced CT acquisition, standardized axial image review by a head and neck radiologist, and structured data recording and analysis. In a retrospective cohort of 94 adult patients, PTA consistently displaced the ICA, ECA, and IJV away from the tonsillar space, increasing both anterior and posterior distances compared with the healthy side. The mean posterior PTA-ICA distance was approximately 14 mm, whereas the contralateral tonsil-ICA distance was about 9 mm. ICA course anomalies (tortuosity or coiling) were detected in a minority of patients, and roughly one in seven cases met moderate-risk criteria because of shorter distances and/or aberrant ICA anatomy. Age, sex, and abscess volume did not significantly alter these relationships. This CT-based protocol provides a reproducible method to quantify PTA-vessel distances and identify patients with potentially higher vascular risk anatomy prior to drainage. It supports cautious, controlled-depth needle aspiration in most cases and highlights scenarios in which image-guided or operating-room drainage may be preferable.Article Role of vitamin D, folic acid, ferritin, inflammation and oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of COVID-19(Progress in Nutrition, 2022) Unsal, Velid; Ilhan Sabancilar, Erdal Ozbek, Cigdem Mermutluoglu, Hakan Temiz; Ozbek, Erdal; Mermutluoglu, Cigdem; Temiz, Hakan; Sabancilar, IlhanAbstract. The COVID-19 pandemic is one of the most devastating and significant events of recent times. COVID-19 has so far become one of the worst infectious disease outbreaks of recent times, with more than 635 million cases and more than 6.6 million deaths. Viruses cause an explosion of inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen types. Oxidative stress is thought to have a key role in COVID-19. vitamin D, folic acid, calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg) and ferritin levels are thought to be associated with COVID-19. This study aims to investigate the role of oxidative stress, inflammation, vitamin D and folic acid, ferritin, Ca and Mg in the pathogenesis of COVID-19. Materials and Methods: 45 patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and 45 healthy persons (control group) were included in the study. Vitamin D, ferritin, folic acid, CRP, Ca, Mg and Phosphorus were measured in an autoanalyzer, and SOD, GSH-Px and MDA were spectrophotometrically measured in the serum of the participants. TNF-α, IL-1β and IL6 levels were studied by the ELISA method. Results: The activity of SOD, GSH-px, antioxidant enzymes, Serum vitamin D, folic acid, Ca and Mg of the COVID-19 group was found to be significantly lower than the control group (p<0.05). Conclusion: Again, the levels of MDA, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, CRP and ferritin in the Covid-19 group were found to be significantly higher than in the control group (p<0.05).Antioxidant enzyme activities were low and oxidative stress was high in patients with COVID-19. At the same time, the levels of serum ferritin, CRP, TNF-α, IL-1β and IL6 were high, and levels of Ca and Mg were low in patients with COVID-19.According to these results, we hypothesize think that the level of oxidative stress, inflammation, vitamin D, and serum ferritin, Ca, and Mg levels play a role in the pathogenesis of COVID-19. Future clinical trials should be conducted to further clarify the pathogenesis in patients with COVID-19.

