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EXCLUSIVE: The family were forced to fly their dad 1,700 miles to Turkey for a liver transplant after UK doctors said he was too unwell to have the surgery here

Zahid Anwar, 61, had begun suffering problems last year and was diagnosed in February with the hepatitis B virus.

By April he was so ill that doctors began to consider a transplant. But his condition worsened in June.

Son Hamza said: “We were told he was not fit for transplant. By July they said he had little time left. Then he went into a coma and they were talking just a week.”

Hamza, 32, and wife Zubera, 30, had already begun a search to get his dad a transplant with him as his donor. He said: “We looked at places like India and China. Then we contacted the hospital in Istanbul.

“They wanted to see his records and treatments. They came back and told us Dad didn’t have much time. It was a small window of opportunity, we very nearly didn’t get him out in time.”

Clothes shop owner Zahid, of Lytham St Annes, Lancs, was in the coma for six days. When he came out of it, Hamza says doctors at Blackpool Victoria Hospital said he was too ill to leave.

So on August 11 Zahid discharged himself and was taken by private ambulance to Manchester Airport, where a private jet with a doctor and nurse on board was waiting to fly him to Turkey.

Three days later father and son were going under the knife at Florence Nightingale Hospital in Istanbul. Hamza said: “In the UK they try to find a deceased donor first but in Turkey nearly every transplant is from a living donor.

“Families are larger and more close-knit. I’d do anything for Dad – I was his only lifeline. We rushed through the tests and hardly had time to pause before we were in surgery.”

In parallel 12-hour ops on August 14, Hamza gave his father 70 per cent of his liver, which will grow back to normal size. He said: “Dad’s liver had been almost destroyed so they took a bit more than normal.”

The flight to Istanbul cost £22,000, and surgery £60,000. It is feared the total will top £100,000. From hospital in Turkey, Zahid, who also has a daughter, Annum, 28, said: “I’m grateful for my family refusing to give up on me. I’d have been a dead man if I stayed any longer. They were brave to resist.”

Estate agent Hamza added: “We think the NHS is great, and the nurses and a lot of the doctors who cared for dad were wonderful. But we feel something went wrong with the management of his care.”

A spokesman for Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS trust said individual cases could not be discussed.

Dr Phil Wood, chief medical officer for Leeds Teaching Hospitals, said: “Our specialist team follows nationally-set criteria to determine which patients may be eligible.”

Source: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/family-fly-dad-turkey-liver-22824325


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To the management of Group Florence Nightingale,

We, the Bahraini liver transplant patients, express our sincerest thanks and appreciation to the management of GROUP FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE and its medical staff, headed by the team leader PROF.N.YILDIRAY YÜZER, for all the care, attention and high level of care and successful treatment they provided to Bahraini patients, which demonstrates the hospital management’s interest in the improvement of the medical services for the good of all people.

On behalf of liver patients in Bahrain,

M. A. Nabi AlSaikh
Chairman
Friends of Liver Patients Society Bahrain


By clicking the Contact Us button, you can easily get medical second opinion and ask your questions (medical procedures, quotation, assistance services etc.). Your queries will be responded within 48 hours at most.




Baby Ensar who was said to “live not more than an hour after birth”, held on to life again with invasive cardiologic intervention.

Life is full of miracles… The doctors were hopeless… They said “He won’t live, not even for an hour” to the mother about her baby in her womb. However, his mother didn’t lose faith and gave birth. Muhammed Ensar Çıtır was one oftens of babies that were born with tis severe heart disorder… The baby born in Malatya was missing the right side of his heart. After birth, the baby remaind in an incubator for 12 days and day after day, the vessel that needs to be open for him to survive was narrowed. Muhammed was immediately brought to Florence Nightingale Hospital and taken to cardiac catheterization by . Prof. Yalçın Yalım, M.D. and his team. This vessel called ‘PDA’ was successfully dilated with a atent implantaion. Prof. Yalçın Yalım, M.D. informed, “The treatment plan has two phases. When Muhammed is 2,5-3 years old, he will have another surgery.” Muhammed held on to life again with the right intervention.



Doctors said that the Imanov couple’s baby Renat who was born with half a heart, had ‘no chance of survival’.

Doctors said that theImanov couple’s baby Renat who was born with half a heart, had ‘no chance of survival’. Moreover, the baby’s problems did not end there. The pulmonary artery hadn’t been formed. Arteries from the lung to the heart had complications and blockages. There was a defect in the heart valve too. And that’s when the Imanov’s voyage of hope begun. They have gone through many hospitals, consulted doctors. Just when they were losing hope, they have contacted a foundation that helps sick children.Thus Renat came to Istanbul Florence Nightingale Hospital. When the baby was brought to the hospital, She had some severe cyanosis and was breathing with diffivulty.

8-Hour Fight For Life

Heart Surgeon Bülent Polat, M.D. and his team have responded to baby Renat whose heart had stopped beating the day he arrived at the hospital. The baby has gotten a grip on life after an 8-hour long successful operation. Surgeon Bülent Polat, M.D. has then given the good news to the family. Then a week later… Baby Renat considered to have “No chance of survival” has been discharged with a smile on his face.

How Did The Treatment Take Place

“When we took baby Renat to intensive care, he had intense coughing and advanced breathing difficulty His color had become a blackish purple. He couldn’t be fed, food was being administered via a tube inserted in his stomach. The lung infection was making matters even worse. On the first day, his heart stopped. We immediately attached him to a breathing machine and with an hour long effort, brought him back to life. Attached to the breathing machine, he was kept in sleep and treated for infection for 3 days. A soon as blood tests and other findings turned out to be favourable, we took him to open heart surgery. First we have corrected the problems and narrowings in the vessels arteries from the lungs to the heart. Using both the membrane of the heart and artificial artery; we have made a new artery going from the heart to the lung. We have repaired the cardiac valves. In this way we have established a totally normal circulatory system. After an 8-hour long surgery, we gave the family the good news. From now on blood oxygenation will be normal, baby’s difficulty in breathing and cyanosis will get better, he will grow up like a normal baby. After staying 3 days in intensive care, baby Renat was taken to his mother totally pink with no breathing problems; he was full of smiles. The mother was having difficulty in believing that she was seeing him this healthy. Her happiness and joy were worth seeing. After a week we saw them off as a normal baby to their countries.”


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Did you know that urinary tract stones are one of the most common diseases in the whole Middle East region and in our country?

It usually manifests itself with severe pain. Kidney stones are formed approximately in 10% of males and 3% of females in a period of their lives.

How do the urinary tract stones form?

Kidney stones are usually formed due to precipitation of the minerals that we take into the body with food and beverages as small particles in the kidney. Normally, the formation of those stones are prevented through the protective substances of the body in the urine. However, in some cases this protective mechanism loses its effect. If the resulting particles are small, they are excreted from the urine without causing any symptoms. Larger stones may be trapped somewhere and cause obstruction in the kidney or urinary tract.

Who are at risk for kidney stone formation?

Kidney stone may be observed in kidney stone family history, with the use of high dose calcium and vitamin D, overweight, in patients with urinary tract infection, high blood pressure, metabolic diseases such as gout disease, inflammatory bowel diseases, thyroid and parathyroid diseases and some types of cancer, as well as with some foods and beverages consumed.

What is renal calculi?

Burning sensation may be felt during voiding in patients who pass a high volume of renal calculi. No association between passing kidney stone and sexual life was found.

Is passing renal calculi and stone formation seasonal?

It is known that passing renal calculi increases in the summer month. Increased fluid loss due to sweating in the summer month causes insufficient fluid intake leading to increased mineral density in urine. Therefore, the risk of stone formation is higher. When a comparison is made between day and night, the effect of sweating during the night when there is no fluid intake, stone formation is more likely to occur at night than in the daytime.

For which stone size is surgery required?

It is known that the stones 5 mm or less in size do not require any process since they pass spontaneously. However, based on the extensive studies and disease management guidelines, it is suggested that recently detected stones below 10 mm in size will also pass spontaneously. Stones over 10 mm in size should be treated with surgery or non-surgical treatment (lithotripsy). More important than stone size in stone disease is the severity of the complaints that the patient has experienced and the degree of damage to the kidney and urinary tract.

What comes to mind when it is said surgery?

When the surgery is said, open surgery occurs to people’s mind immediately. However, most of the kindey stone operations in today’s technology are performed endoscopically without an incision is made on the body which is called “minimally invasive”. In this way, patients may rapidly recover and return to daily life.


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WVU- Heart and Vascular Instıtute Department of Thoracic Surgery

Group Florence Nightingale Thoracic Oncology Program
This conference has been designed for physicians who have interest in the new concepts in the treatment of Esophageal and Lung Cancers and related diseases and treatments.
During the two-day event there will be keynote presentations followed by case presentations and panel discussions. The focus will be on integrating multidisciplinary teams for optimizing patient-centered therapies.
The schedule provides opportunities to meet with physicians who are helping provide improved treatment options.

The course also features networking opportunities where the latest diagnostic and therapies will be discussed.

Conference Details:
 
Date: January 31st, 2020
Location: Istanbul Florence Nightingale Hospital
Merkez, Abide-i Hürriyet Cd No:166, 34381 Şişli/İstanbul TURKEY

08:50 – 09:00 Opening

09:00 – 10:45 Esophageal cancer and contemporary treatments

  Moderator: Coşkun Tecimer, MD – Fatih Tunca, MD

09:15 – 09:45 New trends in esophageal cancer treatment.
  Neoadjuvant, adjuvant therapies and robotic esophageal cancer surgery

  Ghulam Abbas, MD (Director of Thoracic Oncology)

09:45 – 10:05 Place of radiotherapy in the treatment of esophageal cancer

  Şefik İğdem, MD

10:05 – 10:25 Esophageal cancer, new trends in medical oncology

  Nur Dinç, MD

10:25 – 10:45 Discussion

10:45 – 11:15 Coffee Break

11:15 – 13:00 Lung cancer and contemporary treatments

  Moderator: Adalet Demir, MD and Adnan Aydıner, MD

11:15 – 11:35 New trends in surgery for lung cancer
 SBRT vs Robotic segmentectomy

 Ghulam Abbas, MD (Director of Thoracic Oncology)

11:35 – 11:55 Early stage lung cancer and adjuvant chemotherapies

  Adnan Aydıner, MD

11:55 – 12:15 Reevaluation of mediastinum before surgery after neoadjuvant treatment

  Levent Dalar, MD

12:15 – 12:35 Local advance lung cancer surgery and multimodality therapies. Risks and benefits. Does it worth?

  Alper Toker, MD

12:35 – 13:00 SBRT results in early stage lung cancer

  Şefik İğdem, MD

14:00 – 17:00 A) Robotic live surgery
  B) Video session for surgeons, videos from library



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