TR-Dizin Açık Erişimli Yayınlar

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/10759

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    Peripheral Lymphadenopathy in Childhood: Single Center Study
    (2015) Ozkale, Yasemin; Ozkale, Murat; Sipahi, Tansu
    Purpose: Lymphadenopathy is defined as an abnormality in the size and/or character of lymph node. In this study we aimed to describe the clinical and laboratory findings of benign and malignant causes of peripheral lymphadenopathy in childhood. Material and Methods: Two hundred and twenty four patients who were admitted to the clinic with peripheral LAP were evaluated. Age, gender, laboratory and radiologic findings, final diagnoses, and duration, localization, size, consistency, spread, and accompanying local and systemic symptoms of LAP were determined. Benign and malignant causes of peripheral lymphadenopathy were compared. Results: One hundred twenty-six patients (56.0%) were male and 98 patients (44.0%) were female. After the first evaluation the patients were divided into two groups. The first group included 186 patients with benign causes and the second group included 38 patients with malignant causes. One hundred and sixty four of 224 patients (73.2 %) had localized peripheral lymphadenopathy. The most frequent cause of localized lymphadenopathy in the benign group was acute lymphadenitis (34.8%). The most common cause of localized lymphadenopathy in the malignant group was Hodgkin's lymphoma (4.3%). Sixty of 224 (26.8%) patients had generalized peripheral lymphadenopathy. The most significant cause of generalized lymphadenopathy in the benign lymphadenopathy group was Epstein-Barr virus (10.0%), whereas Hodgkin's lymphoma (23.3%) was the most common cause in malign lymphadenopathy group. Localized and generalized lymph node enlargement was most frequently found in cervical region. The most frequent site of involvement among benign and malignant cases was the cervical area. The results revealed that findings such as chronic course, generalized LAP, supraclavicular, cervical and inguinal location, organomegaly, hilier LAP, abdominal LAP, and abnormal laboratory findings (thrombocytopenia and blasts on the peripheral blood smear) were associated with malignant diseases. Conclusion: Infections are the most common cause of peripheral LAP. The risk of malignany increases with the age of child and the duration of LAP. Older children with chronic LAP, generalized LAP associated with organomegaly, abnormal laboratory findings should be considered as malignant LAP.
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    Narcolepsy and cataplexy: a pediatric case report
    (2016) Erol, Ilknur; Savas, Tulin; Saygi, Semra; Habesoglu, Mehmet Ali; 0000-0002-3530-0463; 0000-0002-8522-5078; 0000-0001-9136-355X; 28123336; AAK-4825-2021; Q-2338-2019; AAB-1203-2021
    Narcolepsy is characterized by excessive sleepiness, cataplexy, hypnagogic hallucinations, and sleep paralysis during the rapid eye movement period of sleep. Herein, we present a boy aged eight years who was diagnosed as having narcolepsy and cataplexy about thirteen months after his first presentation. He was admitted with symptoms of daytime sleepiness. In the follow-up, cataplexy in the form of head dropping attacks developed seven months after the first admission. The patient was investigated for different prediagnoses and was eventually diagnosed as having narcolepsy and cataplexy through polysomnography and multiple sleep latency tests thirteen months after the first presentation. He is being followed up and is under drug therapy; his symptoms have improved substantially.
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    Post-traumatic Delayed Peripheral Facial Palsy
    (2018) Kansu, Leyla
    Peripheral facial palsy in children is very rare in comparison to adults. The most common cause is idiopathic. Another rare cause of peripheral facial palsy in children is trauma. It occurs after head trauma, mostly due to temporal bone fracture as an early onset paralysis after trauma. Early onset facial palsy is usually due to direct damage to the facial nerve whereas there is some controversy about the etiology of late onset facial palsy. In this article, a child patient whose peripheral facial palsy developed six days after a head injury is presented, and the etiopathogenesis and the treatment of delayed traumatic facial palsy after temporal bone fracture is discussed.