WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14627/6
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Article Ramadan Fasting and Seizure Activity in Adults with Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis(Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, 2026) Ibrahim, Ismail A.; Shaaban, Sally; Elewa, Mandy; Rahman, Muhammad Samir Haziq Bin Abd; Mohamed, Lobna Ahmed; Talaia, Ahmed M.; Khoo, Ching Soong; Haziq bin Abd Rahman, Muhammad SamirPurpose: Ramadan fasting in Muslims entails abstaining from food and fluids from dawn to sunset, which can influence sleep patterns, medication timing, and food intake. Building on evidence that ketogenic diets and intermittent fasting may improve seizure control, we aim to analyze the link between intermittent Ramadan fasting in adults with epilepsy and seizure activity. Method: We systematically searched PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and Embase between 2000 and January 2025 for articles that appeared between these dates. The terms used for searching included fasting in Ramadan with epilepsy or seizures. The seizure frequency and seizure status of the participants are the outcomes that we analyzed. Two reviewers independently screened and extracted data, with a third resolving any differences that arose between them. Meta-analysis was done using the random-effects model with statistical heterogeneity using the I2 statistic. Results: Of the 1485 articles, only eight were found to be relevant, and 4 of these included 564 patients who met the inclusion criteria. The analysis of the pooled data demonstrated that 61.1% of patients remained seizure-free throughout Ramadan (95% CI: 38.8%-83.4%), with considerable heterogeneity (I2 = 87.7%). Seizure risk was higher in patients on polytherapy with poor baseline seizure control, increased fasting times, or high potassium levels. In contrast, extended seizure-free intervals and increased sleep duration pre-Ramadan were good predictors of safe fasting, and each seizure-free week increased the chance of remaining seizure-free by 10%, as did each extra hour of sleep by 30%. Seizure frequency increases were caused by interruption of daily rhythms, psychological tension, tiredness, and extended fasting. Conclusion: While many patients remained seizure-free during Ramadan, high study variability highlights the need for standardized research. With proper medical supervision, fasting may be safely practiced for selected epilepsy patients.Conference Object Comparison of the Effectiveness of Connective Tissue Massage and Classical Massage in Patients with Migraine(Elsevier, 2025) Ozdincler, Arzu Razak; Kaya, Begum Kara; Kahleogullari, ElifConference Object The Homeostasis-Enrichment (HEP®) Approach: A Novel Early Intervention Model for OT(Amer Occupational Therapy Assoc, Inc, 2025) Balikci, Aymen; Sirma, Gamze Cagla; May-Benson, Teresa A.Article Denta-Hybridonet: A Hybrid CNN-Transformer Architecture for Automated Detection of Developmental Dental Anomalies in Pediatric Panoramic Radiographs(Elsevier Sci Ltd, 2026) Eskibaglar, Busra Karaagac; Yavuz, Yelda Polat; Dogan, Gizem Karagoz; Algarni, Ali; Cakmak, Yigitcan; Pacal, IshakAccurate identification of developmental dental anomalies (DDAs) in children is clinically important; however, interpreting panoramic radiographs can still vary across readers because of mixed dentition, anatomical overlap, and variable image quality. This variability may delay recognition and complicate early interventional planning. In this study, we curated a pediatric panoramic dataset of 2,001 radiographs (ages 6-14 years) spanning five categories: Dilaceration, Ectopy, Hypodontia, Taurodontism, and Healthy. All images were independently labeled by three experienced pediatric dentists. To avoid patient-level leakage, the dataset was divided into training, validation, and held-out test sets using a patient-wise split. We propose Denta-HybridoNet, a hybrid convolution-transformer architecture designed to capture both fine-grained tooth morphology and broader, arch-wide contextual patterns. Its InceptionNeXt-gMLP block supports multi-scale local representation learning, which helps the model focus on subtle morphological cues, whereas the Swin-gMLP block provides efficient global context modeling across the dental arch. In addition, a gated multilayer perceptron (gMLP) module refines the feature transformation through context-dependent modulation, strengthening diagnostically relevant signals while reducing the influence of irrelevant variation and radiographic noise. To ensure a fair comparison, we benchmarked Denta-HybridoNet against 22 recent convolutional and transformer-based models under the same training protocol and evaluation conditions. On the held-out test set, the proposed method achieved 91.15% accuracy and 91.20% F1 score, representing the best overall performance among the compared architectures. Ablation studies quantified the contributions of hybrid design and gMLP, and Grad-CAM analyses supported interpretability by highlighting clinically meaningful regions.Article Effects of Left and Bilateral Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation on Pain, Mood, and Autonomic Nervous System in Female Patients With Fibromyalgia: a Randomized Controlled Trial(Taylor & Francis Inc, 2025) Akkurt, Mustafa Ferit; Ozden, Ali Veysel; Akkurt, Halil Ekrem; Akkurt, Burcu; Bildik, CelaleddinIntroduction: Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS) is a complex disease characterized by widespread pain, fatigue, emotional disturbances, and autonomic dysfunction. Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation (taVNS) has emerged as a potential noninvasive approach to modulate FMS-related symptoms. Purpose: To compare the effects of left and bilateral taVNS on pain, mood, functionality, and autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity in individuals with FMS. Methods: Forty female individuals with FMS were assigned to either a left (n = 20) or a bilateral (n = 20) taVNS group. Both received 11 sessions of taVNS targeting the tragus and concha regions (30 minutes each, 25 Hz, 300 mu s) over nonconsecutive days, excluding weekends and menstrual periods. Visual Analog Scale (VAS), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), and Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) were assessed. ANS activity was evaluated via heart rate variability (HRV). After 11 sessions of taVNS, a 2-week follow-up was performed. Results: No significant differences were observed between groups except for FIQ and BAI on day 28 (p = .002-0.008). Both groups showed significant within-group improvements in VAS (r = 0.87-0.94; p < .001), BDI (r = 0.46-0.71; p < .001), FIQ (r = 0.95-0.99; p < .001), and BAI (r = 0.69-0.94; p < .001) scores. Parasympathetic Nervous System (PNS) (p = .365-0.776) and Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS) (p = .598-0.880) indices, which are the subparameters of HRV, showed no significant between-group differences, with small effect sizes (r < 0.15). Conclusion: Both stimulation protocols effectively reduced pain and improved mood and functionality in fibromyalgia, indicating a safe, noninvasive adjunctive treatment option. Clinicaltrials.gov: (Identifier: NCT06871306).Article Citation - WoS: 1Post-Truth Populism as an Emerging Electoral Strategy: The Case of Turkey's 2023 Elections(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2025) Eldem, TubaThis article develops a new theoretical framework to explain how right-wing populist incumbents mobilise electoral support in competitive authoritarian regimes. It argues that post-truth populism, defined as the strategic fusion of securitised discourse and emotionally charged identity appeals with epistemic manipulation, enables populist leaders to shape the political battlefield through affective and symbolic narratives rather than policy content. Drawing on discourse analysis of President Recep Tayyip Erdo & gbreve;an's 2023 campaign in Turkey, the article shows how the ruling coalition reframed the elections as an existential struggle against internal and external enemies while simultaneously offering emotionally resonant promises of national revival. Rather than focus solely on institutional advantages or voter grievances, this study foregrounds the discursive agency of populist leaders and their ability to manufacture fear, pride and loyalty. By analysing how Erdo & gbreve;an's campaign displaced economic accountability with emotionally saturated, post-factual narratives, the article contributes to literatures on populism, post-truth politics and securitisation. It argues that the convergence of post-truth politics and populist securitisation forms a powerful mechanism for authoritarian endurance in hybrid regimes, transforming elections into moralised referenda on identity and national survival.Article New Diclofenac Hydrazones: Design, Synthesis, in Silico Studies and Anticancer Evaluation Against Breast Cancer(Elsevier, 2026) Birgul, Kaan; Oktay, Lalehan; Bekci, Hatice; Cikla-Suzgun, Pelin; Durdagi, Serdar; Kucukguzel, S. GunizBreast cancer remains one of the most prevalent and lethal malignancies among women, highlighting the urgent need for novel therapeutic strategies that can overcome resistance mechanisms. The p38 alpha mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK14) plays a key role in inflammation-associated oncogenic signaling, making it an attractive molecular target for drug development. In this study, a novel series of diclofenac-based hydrazone derivatives (4a-4o) were designed, synthesized, and characterized using FT-IR, 1H- and 13C-NMR spectroscopy, thin-layer chromatography, and elemental analysis. Computational target profiling using SwissTargetPrediction identified MAPK14 as the primary predicted target. Molecular docking against the MAPK14 crystal structure (PDB ID: 1WBS) revealed high binding affinities (-11.41 to -8.34 kcal/mol), supported by MM/GBSA free energy calculations and molecular dynamics simulations, which confirmed stable ligand-protein interactions through hydrogen bonding with Asp168 and Glu71. In vitro cytotoxicity assays on MCF-7 (luminal A) and MDA-MB-231 (triple-negative) breast cancer cell lines demonstrated low-micromolar IC50 values, with compounds 4c, 4d, and 4e showing the strongest activity (2.1-4.5 mu M), surpassing the reference drug Tamoxifen. Overall, the results indicate that diclofenac hydrazones represent promising candidates anticancer properties through MAPK14 inhibition, providing a foundation for the development of next-generation therapeutics against breast cancer.Article Ultrasound Measurements of Pelvic Floor and Diaphragm Muscles in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Patients With Urinary Incontinence(Springer London Ltd, 2025) Balaban, Mehtap; Dusgun, Elif Sena; Nur, Hifziye Pervin; Lalecan, Nida; Sertcelik, Umran Ozden; Celenay, Seyda Toprak; Ozden Sertcelik, Umran; Toprak Celenay, SeydaBackgroundThe precise manner in which morphological properties of pelvic floor muscles (PFMs) and diaphragm muscle in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients with Urinary Incontinence (UI) are affected remains unclear.AimThis study aimed to compare the ultrasound measurements of PFMs and diaphragm muscle in COPD patients with and without UI.MethodsThirty COPD patients with UI [UI group, age: 61.00 (42.00-70.00) years, body mass index: 27.86 (20.20-54.69) kg/m2] and thirty COPD patients without UI [N-UI group, age: 64.00 (47.00-70.00) years, body mass index: 27.11 (20.30-35.94) kg/m2] were included. The PFMs contaction assessment and diaphragm muscle morphological properties were evaluated using the Logiq S7/Expert ultrasound device. The percentage of change in thickness of diaphragm muscle, known as the diaphragm thickening fraction index (DTFI), was also calculated.ResultsIt was found that the PFMs contraction (p = 0.018) and DTFI (p = 0.016) values were significantly lower in the UI group compared to the N-UI group. No significant differences were observed in the diaphragm thickness score during the inspiration (p = 0.973) and expiration (p = 0.233) between the groups.ConclusionsPatients with COPD and UI exhibited diminished the PFMs contaction severity and DTFI compared to those with COPD but no UI. It should be considered that UI comorbidity in COPD may negatively affect PFMs contaction severity and diaphragm muscle morphological properties.Article Logistics Performance and Agricultural Exports: Evidence From Sub-Saharan Africa(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2025) Vardar, N. Baris; Cifter, Atilla; Delipinar, Gul Esin; Tekelioglu, Mehmet GurelThis paper investigates the relationship between logistics performance and agricultural exports in Sub-Saharan Africa. Using dynamic panel data from 2012 to 2022, we examine the impact of various components of logistics performance on aggregate agricultural exports. We also analyse how logistics performance affects exports in agricultural subsectors. Our results show that improvements in logistics infrastructure, customs procedures, and international shipping services significantly increase agricultural export performance. The food and live animals subsector benefits the most, followed by crude materials and animal and vegetable oils and fats subsectors. We also find that financial development, foreign direct investment, and world demand are important drivers of agricultural exports in Sub-Saharan Africa. We include institutional quality indicators in our analysis for robustness checks, showing that governance factors also play a significant role in boosting exports. These findings highlight the need for targeted investment in logistics and complementary economic policies, supported by good governance, to harness the region's agricultural export potential and promote sustainable economic development.Article Unraveling the Potential of Stem Cell Therapy in Motor Neuron Disease: A Narrative Review(Bentham Science Publ, 2025) Essa, Syed Muhammad; Khosa, Noor Ahmed; Kakar, Amanullah; Ozturk, Basar; Ibrahim, Ismail A.; Haq, NomanMotor neuron disorders (MNDs), including ALS, are deadly neurodegenerative conditions that cause progressive motor neuron degeneration. With neuroprotection and the potential for neuron regeneration employing MSCs, ESCs, iPSCs, and NSCs, stem cell treatment presents a viable alternative to current medicines, which only control a limited number of symptoms. Following PRISMA criteria, this narrative review methodically screened 1248 records from the Cochrane, Web of Science, PubMed, and Scopus databases. Following a thorough screening process, 22 studies, including preclinical models and 19 clinical trials, were analysed to assess the therapeutic mechanisms, safety, and efficacy of stem cell therapies for MNDs. Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) therapy has shown a promising safety profile and possible therapeutic efficacy in ALS, with no substantial transplant-related toxicity noted. ALS functional rating scale-revised (ALSFRS-R) scores and forced vital capacity (FVC) assessments from clinical trials, such as those evaluating autologous bone marrow-derived MSCs, demonstrated stabilisation in ALS development. Studies have also emphasised as to how immunomodulation and neurotrophic factors play a part in MSC-based therapies. Recent data indicate that repeated intrathecal MSC injection could extend the duration of therapeutic advantages. Clinical trials have shown safety and early efficacy signals for motor neurons produced from embryonic stem cells (ESCs), especially using AstroRx (R). This suggests that ESCs could be a viable option for regenerative medicine. Nonetheless, issues, like host integration and differentiation optimisation, still exist. Although clinical translation is still in its early stages, induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and their derivatives provide disease modelling and patient-specific therapeutic applications. Stem cell therapy holds promise for treating MND, with MSCs leading the way in current trials. It is necessary to enhance ESC- and iPSC-based techniques to tackle integration issues. To ensure long-term safety and efficacy, therapies must be developed using standardised protocols, patient stratification, optimised delivery, and large-scale studies.
