Browsing by Author "Akbas, Yilmaz"
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Article A New Marker for the Evaluation of Nutrition in Pediatric Critical Care Patients: Zonulin(Galenos Publ House, 2023) Koker, Alper; Coban, Yasemin; Aydin, Sultan; Tuncer, Gokcen Oz; Akbas, Yilmaz; Kara, Tugce Tural; Komuroglu, Ahmet UfukObjective: Zonulin is a biomarker of increased intestinal permeability. Malnutrition is strongly associated with prolonged length of stay, increased infection, and mortality. This study aimed to determine how the serum zonulin level is affected in patients in PICU, and evaluate the relationship between pre -albumin and Vitamin D. Method: 35 critically ill pediatric patients were included in the study. The control group was formed of 25 healthy children. The albumin, pre -albumin, Vitamin D, and zonulin levels were examined in patients with findings of infection that regressed during ICU follow-up. The differences between prealbumin levels, Vitamin D, and zonulin were analyzed with the Mann -Whitney -U Test. Results: The most common reason for admission to the PICU was respiratory failure in 12 patients. The Vitamin D level was determined to have a mean of 28.8 +/- 12.3ng/mL and <29ng/mL in 9 patients. The albumin level was determined to be mean 3.3 +/- 0.6 mg/dL, and the pre -albumin level was mean 17.8 +/- 7.4mg/dL. The serum zonulin levels in critically ill patients were statistically significantly higher than in the control group. The difference between the zonulin levels of patients with pre -albumin values was statistically significant. The zonulin levels of patients with a Vitamin D value <20 were found to be statistically significantly higher than the zonulin levels of patients with a Vitamin D value >20 Conclusion: The higher zonulin level in critically ill pediatric patients may be associated with prolonged catabolic processes, exposure to oxidative and hypoxic stress, and bacterial translocation development associated with all of these. The results of the current study showed a statistically significant negative correlation between Vitamin D and zonulin levels. Therefore, the relationship between low Vitamin D values and a high zonulin level may be useful in evaluating chronic malnutrition. The serum zonulin level selected as a biomarker for the surveillance and management of nutrition in critically ill pediatric patients is not an appropriate marker.Article Serum Zonulin Levels in Pediatric Migraine(Elsevier Science inc, 2023) Tuncer, Gokcen Oz; Akbas, Yilmaz; Koker, Alper; Koker, Sultan Aydin; Kara, Tugce Tural; Coban, Yasemin; Komuroglu, Ahmet UfukBackground: Migraine is a complex neurogenic inflammatory disorder. There are strong neuronal, endocrine, and immunologic connections between the brain and gastrointestinal system. Damage to the intestinal barrier is thought to cause systemic immune dysregulation. Zonulin is a protein produced by the small intestine epithelium in humans that regulates intestinal permeability through intracellular tight junctions and is a potential marker for inflammation. Zonulin increases in positive correlation with permeability. In our study, we aimed to research the correlation between serum zonulin levels in the period between attacks in pediatric patients with migraine.Methods: The study included 30 patients with migraine and 24 healthy controls, matched in terms of sex and age. Demographic and clinical characteristics were recorded. Serum zonulin levels were studied with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method. Results: Patients had a mean of 5.6 +/- 3.5 attacks per month. The mean serum zonulin was 5.68 +/- 1.21 ng/ mL in the migraine group and 5.72 +/- 2.1 ng/mL in the control group with no significant difference found (P 1/4 0.084). In the migraine group, no correlations were identified between serum zonulin levels and age, body mass index, pain frequency, pain duration, onset time, visual analog scale score, and presence of gastrointestinal systems apart from nausea-vomiting.Conclusions: More than 50 proteins were identified to affect the intestinal permeability apart from zonulin. There is a need for prospective studies encompassing the time of attack, but our study is important as it is the first study about zonulin levels in pediatric migraine.(c) 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.