Tıp Fakültesi / Faculty of Medicine
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/1403
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Item Papanicolaou Smear Findings in Solid-Organ Transplant Recipients Compared With Normal Subjects According to the Bethesda 2001 System(2015) Atilgan, Alev Ok; Tepeoglu, Merih; Haberal, A. Nihan; Durukan, Elif; Kuscu, Esra; Haberal, Mehmet; 0000-0002-9894-8005; 0000-0002-3462-7632; 0000-0001-9852-9911; 0000-0001-8595-8880; 0000-0002-0992-6980; 0000-0002-8579-5564; 25894158; AAK-5222-2021; AAJ-8097-2021; AAK-4587-2021; AAK-3333-2021; AAI-8792-2021; AAJ-8621-2021Objectives: Solid-organ transplant recipients are at increased risk of developing cancer including cervical cancer compared with woman in the general population, mostly due to long-term immunosuppressive therapy. The Papanicolaou smear remains the primary method of screening cervical pathology including preinvasive and invasive lesions. The objective of this study was to evaluate Pap smear findings in solid-organ transplant recipients, determine the prevalence of abnormal smears, and compare these patients with the general population. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively examined 111 women patients who received liver or kidney transplant between January 1990 to December 2012 at Baskent University Ankara Hospital. Pap smear findings were compared with normal control patients matched for same age and technical procedure of cervical cytology. To selection of control patients, propensity score matching program was performed. All Pap smears were re-examined according to Bethesda 2001 criteria. Results: In 111 transplant patients, 2 patients (1.8%) had atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance, 8 patients (7.2%) had low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion, 15 patients (13.5%) had Candida infection, 2 patients (1.8%) had Trichomonas vaginalis, 1 patient (0.9%) had herpes simplex infection, 13 patients (11.7%) had bacterial vaginosis, 15 patients (13.5%) had reactive changes due to inflammation, and 18 patients (16.2%) had atrophy. When we compared our results with the control group, there were statistically significant differences (P <= .05) between the 2 groups in epithelial cell abnormalities (low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion), Candida infection, bacterial vaginosis, and atrophy. Conclusions: Pap smear screening potentially may help recognize cervical preinvasive and invasive lesions. The risk of developing cervical intraepithelial neoplasia is greater in transplant recipients because of immunosuppressive therapy. The incidence of low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion was significantly greater in transplant recipients than the general population. Intensive follow-up with Pap smear in transplant recipients is important in the early detection of these lesions.Item Effect of Adipose-Derived Stem Cells on Colonic Anastomosis in Rats Immunosuppressed With Everolimus: An Experimental Study(2021) Karakaya, Emre; Akdur, Aydincan; Atilgan, Alev Ok; Uysal, Ahmet Cagri; Ozer, Huriye Eda Ozturan; Yildirim, Sedat; Haberal, Mehmet; 0000-0002-3462-7632; 0000-0002-8726-3369; 34269651; AAJ-8097-2021; AAA-3068-2021Objectives: Immunosuppressed patients sometimes require colorectal surgery. We investigated whether adipose tissue-derived stem cells contributed to anastomosis healing in rats immunosuppressed with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus. Materials and Methods: Sixty male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into 4 groups of 14 each, with all groups undergoing descending colon anastomosis; the 4 remaining rats were used for stem cell retrieval. Group 1 (control) underwent surgery only, group 2 received stem cell injection, group 3 received everolimus only, and group 4 received everolimus plus stem cell injection. After treatment, each group was randomly divided into 2 equal subgroups according to the day of euthanasia (posttreatment day 4 or day 7). We measured anastomosis bursting pressure and tissue hydroxyproline level and performed histopathological evaluation. Results: At both posttreatment days 4 and 7, median weight loss in group 3 was higher than in group 1, group 3 had higher severity of intraabdominal adhesion than group 4, and group 2 had mean hydroxyproline level higher than the other groups. At posttreatment day 4, mean bursting pressure was significantly different in group 1 versus groups 2 and 4 (P = .002) and group 2 versus groups 3 and 4 (P < .001). No significant differences were shown in pathological analysis except for vascular proliferation on day 7 (P = .003). Conclusions: Injection of adipose tissue-derived stem cells in the anastomosis site prevented anastomosis leakage by contributing to healing. Injection of adipose tissue-derived stem cells in the anastomosis region, especially in the early period after solid-organ transplant in recipients and after gastrointestinal surgery in immunosuppressed patients, may help reduce mortality and morbidity.