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Sevda Diker

Researcher at Near East University

Publications -  21
Citations -  58

Sevda Diker is an academic researcher from Near East University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 14 publications receiving 41 citations. Previous affiliations of Sevda Diker include Hacettepe University.

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The association of cognitive impairment with gray matter atrophy and cortical lesion load in clinically isolated syndrome

TL;DR: It was shown that cognitive impairment was mainly related to cerebral white matter, cerebellar cortical and deep gray matter atrophy, but not with cortical inflammation, at least in the early stage of disease.
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Adult-onset glutaric aciduria type I: rare presentation of a treatable disorder.

TL;DR: 35-year-old presenting with headache and subjective memory problems was described, and genetic testing confirmed the presence of homozygous c.1204C > T (p.R402W) variant in the GCDH gene, inherited from heterozygous parents.
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Neuromyelitis Optica and Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder Patients in Turkish Cohort: Demographic, Clinical, and Laboratory Features.

TL;DR: The results revealed a lower rate of N MO IgG positivity, more severe disability in patients with NMO/neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders presenting with either transverse myelitis or late-onset NMO, and no correlation between disability and NMO IgG status.
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Assessment of the effect of cigarette smoking on regional brain volumes and lesion load in patients with clinically isolated syndrome

TL;DR: Clinically isolated syndrome related regional brain atrophy might vary in extent and severity with smoking, despite increased lesion load, less cortical and deep gray matter damage with a possible neuroprotective effect occurs in smoking.
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Influence of cigarette smoking on white matter in patients with clinically isolated syndrome as detected by diffusion tensor imaging.

TL;DR: Smoker patients showed a tendency towards having greater number of WM lesions and displayed significantly more extensive NAWM abnormalities, and there was no relationship between diffusion metrics and clinical disability scores, duration of the disease and degree of smoking exposure.