Scopus Açık Erişimli Yayınlar
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11727/10760
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Item Luxatio erecta of the hip in a 64-year-old man: a case report(2022) Gokkus, Kemal; Sahin, Mehmet S.; 0000-0002-4916-3471; 35989436; A-4410-2016Item Inappropriate use of ivermectin during the COVID-19 pandemic: primum non nocere!(2022) Barac, Aleksandra; Bartoletti, Michele; Azap, Ozlem; Bussini, Linda; Ergonul, Onder; Krause, Robert; Ramon Pano-Pardo, Jose; Power, Nicholas R.; Rodriguez-Bano, Jesus; Sibani, Marcella; Szabo, Balint Gergely; Tsiodras, Sotirios; Verweij, Paul E.; Martin Quiros, Alejandro; Zollner-Schwetz, Ines; 35337977Item Editorial: Cell Death and Targeted Cancer Therapies(2022) Bagci-Onder, Tugba; Kutuk, Ozgur; Chonghaile, Triona Ni; Knippschild, Uwe; 000829492900001Item The Promise of Metastasis-Directed Therapy for Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer: Going Beneath the Surface with Molecular Imaging(2022) Sutera, Philip; Phillips, Ryan M.; Deek, Matthew; Ozyigit, Gokhan; Onal, Cem; Tran, Phuoc T.; 35058322Item Left Atrial Function: The Hba1c For The Cardiologist And Even More COMMENT(2022) Donal, Erwan; Sade, L. Elif; Thomas, Liza; 35060246This article refers to 'Measures of left atrial function predict incident heart failure in a low-risk general population: the Copenhagen City Heart Study' by D.M. Andersen et al., published in this issue on pages xxx.Item The Reality of Inadequate Patient Care and the Need for a Global Action Framework in Organ Donation and Transplantation(2022) Dominguez-Gil, Beatriz; Ascher, Nancy L.; Fadhil, Riadh A. S.; Muller, Elmi; Cantarovich, Marcelo; Ahn, Curie; Berenguer, Marina; Egawa, Hiroto; Gondolesi, Gabriel E.; Haberal, Mehmet; Harris, David; Hirose, Ryutaro; Ilbawi, Andre; Jha, Vivekanand; Lopez-Fraga, Marta; Madera, Sergio Andres; Najafizadeh, Katayoun; O'Connell, Philip J.; Rahmel, Axel; Shaheen, Faissal A. M.; Twahir, Ahmed; Van Assche, Kristof; Wang, Haibo; Haraldsson, Boerje; Chatzixiros, Efstratios; Delmonico, Francis L.; Busic, Mirela; 36279558Background. Transplant therapy is considered the best and often the only available treatment for thousands of patients with organ failure that results from communicable and noncommunicable diseases. The number of annual organ transplants is insufficient for the worldwide need. Methods. We elaborate the proceedings of the workshop entitled "The Role of Science in the Development of International Standards of Organ Donation and Transplantation," organized by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and cosponsored by the World Health Organization in June 2021. Results. We detail the urgency and importance of achieving national self-sufficiency in organ transplantation as a public health priority and an important contributor to reaching relevant targets of the United Nations Agenda for Sustainable Development. It details the elements of a global action framework intended for countries at every level of economic development to facilitate either the establishment or enhancement of transplant activity. It sets forth a proposed plan, by addressing the technical considerations for developing and optimizing organ transplantation from both deceased and living organ donors and the regulatory oversight of practices. Conclusions. This document can be used in governmental and policy circles as a call to action and as a checklist for actions needed to enable organ transplantation as treatment for organ failure.Item Comment on Hunt et al, "Feasibility of magnetic resonance guided radiotherapy for the treatment of bladder cancer"(2021) Yavas, Guler; Yavas, Cagdas; Arslan, Gungor; Onal, Cem; 33912694Item Introduction. Contemporary Literature in Times of Crisis and Vulnerability: Trauma, Demise of Sovereignty and Interconnectedness(2021) Pellicer Ortin, Silvia; Sarikaya Sen, Merve; 0000-0003-2091-2536The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries have been dominated by multifarious crises that have given way to individual and collective wounds resulting from environmental disasters, exile and migratory movements, war, terrorism, radicalism and other disturbing historical episodes. Our main contention is that trauma and/or excessive exposure to vulnerable situations can be relieved thanks to diverse narrative practices. Accordingly, we explore the field of Trauma Studies since its emergence to its current evolution towards the vulnerability paradigm, examining the different meanings of vulnerability not only from the perspective of the life sciences but also from the social sciences and its application to the humanities. Then, we move on to the notion of resilience and how it can help us articulate and/or move beyond trauma and vulnerability. In keeping with this, considering the ethical and political relationality between the self and other, we highlight one's tendency to be affected by the other's wounds and vulnerability as well as the inevitability of interdependency and interconnectedness between people and non-human entities. Thus, we explore the role of literature in giving voice to the voiceless and to unheard experiences of suffering as well as in representing the demise of the sovereign self and the rise of human and non-human interconnectedness after being exposed to traumatic or disastrous events, as represented in contemporary literatures in English.Item Rescue Vaginal Cerclage to Stop Funneling Following Laparoscopic Cerclage(2021) Cok, Tayfun; 0000-0003-1244-7419; 34784638Item Preventing transfusion-associated hyperkalemia in pediatric cardiac surgery: Measure the levels of potassium in packed red blood cells before using - Invited commentary(2021) Budak, Ali Baran; 0000-0002-9772-1765; 34811810; AAA-5730-2019The authors present a revolutionary study aiming to evaluate the effect of alterations in potassium concentrations in transfused packed red blood cells (PRBC) on the neonate and infant potassium levels after congenital cardiac surgery. By establishing a strict protocol that restricts the rate of transfusion, the age of the transfused PRBC, and not transfusing a PRBC with a potassium level above 15 mmol/L, they accomplished to suggest a safe and easy way for preventing transfusion-associated hyperkalemia.