Patient Experience
My 82-year-old father's biopsy results were a terrifying mystery until we met Dr. Seçkin Bayar. While other reports gave vague conclusions, Dr. Bayar spent forty minutes with our family, using his tablet to show us microscopic images from Ankara Hospital's system. He explained how he differentiated between atypical hyperplasia and early carcinoma with such clarity that even my father understood. His handwritten note on the report detailing his reasoning gave us confidence to proceed with minimal treatment. Months later, his prediction about the lesion's behavior proved exactly right. This wasn't just pathology—it was medical prophecy.
During my daughter's emergency appendectomy at Ankara Hospital, the surgeon found unexpected tissue. At 2 AM, Dr. Bayar was called in. What happened next changed everything. Instead of just processing the sample, he came to the surgical floor, reviewed the real-time images with the team, and suggested an immediate frozen section analysis for a rare pediatric condition none of us had considered. His calm insistence revealed a benign but complex inflammatory mimic of lymphoma, saving my 9-year-old from unnecessary chemotherapy. He followed up for weeks, checking on her recovery. We didn't meet him during a routine visit—he emerged from the lab in our darkest moment and became our guardian.
As a medical student observing in the pathology department, I witnessed Dr. Bayar's unique teaching approach. A routine gallbladder specimen arrived from what seemed like a standard cholecystectomy. While others would have signed it out quickly, he assembled three residents and demonstrated how the subtle wall thickening pattern suggested an underlying genetic syndrome. He contacted the surgeon, recommended specific genetic testing for the patient's family, and later proved correct—identifying a hereditary cancer risk in multiple relatives. He turned a simple specimen into a family's preventive healthcare map. His work doesn't just diagnose; it reverberates through generations.
After three inconclusive biopsies abroad for my persistent oral lesions, I came to Ankara Hospital desperate. Dr. Bayar didn't just examine my new biopsy—he requested my previous international slides be sent. He spent two days comparing them, creating a digital timeline of cellular changes. His report was a narrative: eight pages tracing the evolution from reactive changes to early malignant transformation, with photographic evidence at each stage. He then personally video-called my oncologist in Germany to explain his findings. The precision was breathtaking. He didn't see slides; he read a disease's autobiography written in cells.