Wos İndeksli Açık & Kapalı Erişimli Yayınlar
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Item Identifying Clinical Characteristics of Hypoparathyroidism in Turkey: HIPOPARATURK-NET Study(2021) Degertekin, Ceyla Konca; Yavuz, Dilek Gogas; Pekkolay, Zafer; Saygili, Emre; Ugur, Kader; Koca, Arzu Or; Unubol, Mustafa; Topaloglu, Omercan; Aydogan, Berna Imge; Kutbay, Nilufer Ozdemir; Hekimsoy, Zeliha; Yilmaz, Nusret; Balci, Mustafa Kemal; Tanrikulu, Seher; Unsal, Yasemin Aydogan; Ersoy, Canan; Omma, Tulay; Keskin, Muge; Yalcin, Mehmet Muhittin; Yetkin, Ilhan; Soylu, Hikmet; Karakose, Melia; Yilmaz, Merve; Karakilic, Ersen; Piskinpasa, Hamide; Batman, Adnan; Akbaba, Gulhan; Elbuken, Gulsah; Bahadir, Cigdem Tura; Kilinc, Faruk; Bilginer, Muhammet Cuneyt; Iyidir, Ozlem Turhan; Canturk, Zeynep; Yilmaz, Banu Aktas; Sayiner, Zeynel Abidin; Eroglu, Mustafa; 34495356Hypoparathyroidism is an orphan disease with ill-defined epidemiology that is subject to geographic variability. We conducted this study to assess the demographics, etiologic distribution, treatment patterns and complication frequency of patients with chronic hypoparathyroidism in Turkey. This is a retrospective, cross-sectional database study, with collaboration of 30 endocrinology centers located in 20 cities across seven geographical regions of Turkey. A total of 830 adults (mean age 49.6 +/- 13.5 years; female 81.2%) with hypoparathyroidism (mean duration 9.7 +/- 9.0 years) were included in the final analysis. Hypoparathyroidism was predominantly surgery-induced (n = 686, 82.6%). The insulting surgeries was carried out mostly due to benign causes in postsurgical group (SG) (n = 504, 73.5%) while patients in nonsurgical group (NSG) was most frequently classified as idiopathic (n = 103, 71.5%). The treatment was highly dependent on calcium salts (n = 771, 92.9%), calcitriol (n = 786, 94.7%) and to a lower extent cholecalciferol use (n = 635, 76.5%) while the rate of parathyroid hormone (n = 2, 0.2%) use was low. Serum calcium levels were most frequently kept in the normal range (sCa 8.5-10.5 mg/dL, n = 383, 46.1%) which might be higher than desired for this patient group. NSG had a lower mean plasma PTH concentration (6.42 +/- 5.53 vs. 9.09 +/- 7.08 ng/l, p < 0.0001), higher daily intake of elementary calcium (2038 +/- 1214 vs. 1846 +/- 1355 mg/day, p = 0.0193) and calcitriol (0.78 +/- 0.39 vs. 0.69 +/- 0.38 mcg/day, p = 0.0057), a higher rate of chronic renal disease (9.7% vs. 3.6%, p = 0.0017), epilepsy (6.3% vs. 1.6%, p = 0.0009), intracranial calcifications (11.8% vs. 7.3%, p < 0.0001) and cataracts (22.2% vs. 13.7%, p = 0.0096) compared to SG. In conclusion, postsurgical hypoparathyroidism is the dominant etiology of hypoparathyroidism in Turkey while the nonsurgical patients have a higher disease burden with greater need for medications and increased risk of complications than the postsurgical patients.Item A Bibliometric Analysis of Turkey's Contribution to Bone Health Literature from an Endocrinologist Perspective(2019) Degertekin, Ceyla Konca; İyidir, Ozlem Turhan; Yavuz, Dilek Gogas; 0000-0001-5305-6807; K-7904-2019Objective: To analyze the trend of Turkish publications related to bone health with respect to global publications and to determine the relative contribution of endocrinologists to metabolic bone disease literature. Material and Methods: Publications related to bone health up to and including the year 2017 were retrieved from the "Web of Science" (WoS) and "TUrkiye Atif Dizini" (TAD) database using metabolic bone disease related MeSH terms. Excel (v15.30) and Endnote X8 were used to summarize the bibliometric features, including the number of publications, authors, their affiliations, and contributing countries. Keywords were divided, for a detailed analysis, into three clusters: osteoporosis, parathyroid, and vitamin D-related. Results: A total of 1.880.666 papers were retrieved from WoS globally and, of those, 21.165 (1.13%) were published from Turkey. Of the papers published from Turkey, 3.0% were primarily contributed by endocrinologists. The relative contribution of endocrinology to osteoporosis-related (4.6% vs. 1.5%), parathyroid-related (23.7% vs. 5.3%), and vitamin D-related (23.7% vs. 5.3%) publications was higher for articles originating from Turkey compared to the global data. Endocrinology was among the top five specialties contributing to Turkish metabolic bone disease literature indexed in WoS and TAD. Conclusion: Turkey has a less than expected rate of research output in terms of metabolic bone disease. The relatively higher contribution of endocrinology to that effort is promising. Supporting bone research might accelerate the efforts of Turkish researchers in the field of metabolic bone health.