Yazar "Tuncer, Murat" seçeneğine göre listele
Listeleniyor 1 - 2 / 2
Sayfa Başına Sonuç
Sıralama seçenekleri
Öğe An investigation of post-traumatic growth experiences among living kidney donors(Elsevier Science Inc, 2015) Yücetin, Levent; Bozoklar, C. A.; Yanık, O.; Tekin, S.; Tuncer, Murat; Demirbaş, A.More than 1 million patients are estimated to have undergone transplantation in the past years. In recent years, living-donor kidney transplantation accounted for more than 50% of all transplantations. Kidney transplantation from living donors is regarded as a contradictory case to the "do no harm" principle as a major surgical intervention is performed on a normal and healthy person at the expense of recovery of the organ recipient. The purpose of this study was to investigate positive psychological experiences, specifically post-traumatic growth (PTG), among living kidney donors. The sample consisted of a total of 184 kidney donors. The age of donors ranged between 21-76 (mean, 50.76; SD, 10.93). In this study 67.9% of donors were female. The recipients on dialysis group had higher scores than the recipients who did not have dialysis; the mean difference was significant on the subscales of change in life philosophy, change in relationships, change in self-perception, and in the PTGI score. The donors with higher education levels received higher scores on the subscale of change in relationships in comparison with donors with low education. The donors who were married and older than 51 years had higher scores than donors who were not married or younger on the subscale of change in self-perception. This is a single-center study; this center performs more than 500 kidney transplantations per year. There is a good system and experience at each step before and after transplantation for donor and recipient and relatives. It is a really big potential trauma to donate a kidney to your relative; you can change this negative effect to a positive effect with a good system. The present study also showed that when compared with the scale's absolute midpoint, kidney donors in the study sample experienced moderate-to-high levels of PTG.Öğe Donors with hepatitis B surface antigen positivity: Contraindication for renal transplantation or not?(Oxford Univ Press, 2015) Yavuz, Asuman; Tekin, Sabri; Yüksel, Yücel; Yücetin, Levent; Tuncer, Murat; Demirbaş, AlperBecause of the organ shortage, the number of patients awaiting kidney transplantation has increased rapidly requiring physicians to implement new methods to increase the number of grafts. In this study, we compared clinical and biochemical parameters of patients who received kidneys from hepatitis B surface antigen-positive (group 1) versus other living related kidney donors (group 2). The study included 414 female (15 group 1 and 399 group 2) and 816 male (20 group 1 and 796 group 2) donors for 1195 living related kidney transplantations performed between April 21, 2008 and March 1, 2011. Group 1 kidney transplantations were undertaken only if the recipient displayed a hepatitis B antibody titer >10 mIU/mL and donor hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA was negative. Demographic characteristics, 1- and 2-year serum creatinine levels, glomerular filtration rates (GFR), and liver function test results were similar between the 2 groups. There were no new HBV infections throughout the study period. Acute rejection rates (7/35 in group 1 vs 232/1195 in group 2; P = .988), graft loss (1/35 in group 1 vs 55/1195 in group 2; P = .624), and patient loss (0/35 in group 1 vs 34/1195; P = .311) were similar between the 2 groups. Our study showed that hepatitis B surface antigen positivity was not a contraindication to living kidney donation.