Yazar "Soysal Ö." seçeneğine göre listele
Listeleniyor 1 - 3 / 3
Sayfa Başına Sonuç
Sıralama seçenekleri
Öğe Postintubation tracheal rupture(2001) Kutlu R.; Kuzucu A.; Soysal Ö.; Baysal T.; Karaman I.; Akbulut A.Tracheal rupture following endotracheal intubation is an extremely rare emergency that needs expedient diagnosis and treatment. The clinical and radiological features of postintubation tracheal rupture in a 45-year-old woman who underwent vertebral stabilization are described. Primary suture closure was performed successfully via a cervical approach. © 2001 SAGE Publications.Öğe The role of surgery in chest wall tuberculosis(2004) Kuzucu A.; Soysal Ö.; Günen H.Chest wall tuberculosis is a rare entity and its clinical presentation may resemble a pyogenic abscess or chest wall tumor. The role of surgery in the diagnosis and treatment of chest wall tuberculosis is still controversial. During a 6-year period (1997-2002), six cases with cold abscesses of chest wall were managed in our clinic. Clinical presentation, diagnostic workup, treatment strategies, and results of medical and surgical treatment were retrospectively reviewed. There were four male and two female patients. All but one had a fluctuating and abscess-like chest wall mass. Pleura and mediastinal or chest wall lymph nodes were also involved in three patients. Before the debridement and abscess drainage, the diagnosis was not confirmed in any of our patients except one. All received a four-drug antituberculous regimen for 6-12 months postoperatively and improved clinically and radiologically. Surgical intervention and histological examination are usually necessary for the treatment and to confirm the diagnosis in chest wall tuberculosis. Antituberculous medical treatment and adjunctive surgery are quite effective in this process. © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Öğe Teratoma presenting as a cystic lesion on the chest wall(2000) Soysal Ö.; Kutlu R.; Saraç K.; Aydin A.; Özen S.A 28-year-old woman presented with a rare case of chest-wall teratoma. Computed tomography of a cystic lesion located in the anterior chest wall revealed a hyperdense object with the appearance of a tooth. The cystic mass was totally excised via a chest-wall incision without thoracotomy. Pathologic examination showed a benign teratoma containing an immature tooth.