Patient Experience
Dr. Spec. MD. Yesim Ruhat Kutlu provided exceptional care for my psychology condition. The treatment was personalized and effective.
My 33-year-old wife, a wheelchair user with spinal cord injury, needed specialized gynecological care that considered her neurogenic bladder and bowel. Dr. Cimen modified examination techniques, adapted surgical positioning, and collaborated with her urologist to create an integrated care plan that addressed her unique anatomy without compromising her independence.
During a humanitarian mission in Syria, I sustained pelvic shrapnel injuries that caused chronic pain and fertility concerns. Dr. Cimen partnered with a conflict medicine specialist to address both the physical damage and psychological trauma, using 3D-printed models of my pelvis to plan reconstruction. Her holistic approach treated me as a whole person, not just a set of injuries.
As a 42-year-old archaeologist working on a remote dig in Anatolia, I developed severe endometriosis symptoms that threatened my fieldwork. Dr. Cimen coordinated a complex laparoscopic surgery around my brief return to Istanbul, explaining the procedure using geological metaphors I understood perfectly. Her post-op care included a tailored recovery plan I could follow at the dig site with limited medical access. Six months later, I'm pain-free and just completed a full excavation season.
My 17-year-old daughter, a competitive rhythmic gymnast, was diagnosed with a complex ovarian cyst during European championship preparations. Dr. Cimen performed a minimally invasive surgery preserving all ovarian tissue, then collaborated with her sports physician on a phased return-to-sport protocol. What impressed us most was how she spoke directly to my daughter about anatomy and recovery, empowering her with knowledge rather than just addressing us parents.
After five miscarriages across three countries, my wife and I (a same-sex couple using donor sperm) came to Dr. Cimen as our last hope. She discovered and corrected a previously undiagnosed uterine septum through hysteroscopic surgery, then provided emotional support through our subsequent IVF cycle. Our twins just turned one, and Dr. Cimen attended their birthday via video call from her conference in Berlin.
As a 55-year-old transgender man who had been on testosterone for decades, I needed a total hysterectomy but feared medical discrimination. Dr. Cimen not only used my correct name and pronouns from the first consultation, but she researched specific considerations for my surgery and connected me with a support group. Her respect was as healing as her surgical skill.
During a routine checkup at 28 weeks pregnant with triplets, Dr. Cimen detected early signs of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome in our monochorionic twins. She performed an emergency fetoscopic laser ablation at 2 AM, saving all three babies. Her calm explanation to my panicked husband in Turkish (his native language) while prepping me for surgery demonstrated extraordinary presence of mind.
My 68-year-old mother, a retired Byzantine art restorer, developed severe pelvic organ prolapse but refused surgery due to trauma from a previous bad medical experience. Dr. Cimen spent three consultations just building trust, showing her surgical videos and introducing her to former patients. The robotic-assisted surgery was successful, and mom now leads museum tours again without discomfort.
As a 31-year-old cancer survivor who had pelvic radiation, I was told I could never carry a pregnancy. Dr. Cimen pioneered a modified uterine transplant evaluation protocol for me, managing complex multidisciplinary care across oncology, transplant, and fertility teams. While I ultimately used a gestational carrier, her advocacy expanded treatment options for radiation survivors nationwide.
When my teenage daughter with Down syndrome needed urgent surgery for hematocolpos, most doctors spoke only to me. Dr. Cimen communicated directly with her using picture boards and simple language, allowed her favorite stuffed animal in pre-op, and scheduled procedures during her optimal daily functioning hours. This personalized approach reduced her postoperative behavioral regression dramatically.
After relocating from Dubai, my 39-year-old wife suffered a ruptured ectopic pregnancy at midnight. Dr. Cimen performed emergency laparoscopic surgery via Medical Park's telemedicine-assisted system while coordinating with our previous physician for medical history. Her seamless international collaboration during crisis saved my wife's fertility and possibly her life.
As a 47-year-old professional freediver, my large uterine fibroids were affecting my breath-hold capacity. Dr. Cimen designed a myomectomy approach that preserved my uterine integrity for depth pressure adaptation, then created a dive-specific recovery timeline with my coach. I returned to competition and broke my personal depth record nine months post-op.
Our surrogate, carrying our genetically related embryo, developed acute appendicitis at 22 weeks. Dr. Cimen performed a groundbreaking combined appendectomy and cerclage placement while maintaining pregnancy viability, then managed the surrogate's care with extraordinary sensitivity to both her wellbeing and our parental anxiety. Our daughter was born healthy at 38 weeks.
As a 60-year-old nun living in a rural convent, I needed surgery for complex pelvic floor issues but had no family support. Dr. Cimen arranged temporary housing with a retired nurse from her parish, coordinated with our convent's schedule for my recovery duties, and even consulted with our Mother Superior about postoperative care in our communal living environment.
As parents of a 14-year-old with Turner syndrome, we struggled to find a doctor who could address both her immediate needs and future fertility preservation. Dr. Cimen established a longitudinal care plan spanning adolescence to adulthood, including ovarian tissue cryopreservation during a necessary cardiac procedure. She became our daughter's medical advocate across multiple specialties.
I'm a 22-year-old competitive freediver who suddenly developed debilitating joint pain and fever after a training trip to the Aegean coast. Multiple doctors dismissed it as overexertion. Dr. Gokturk, however, recognized the geographic clue and diagnosed brucellosis from unpasteurized dairy. Her targeted treatment plan had me back in the water in weeks, understanding the athletic pressure to recover.
I came to Dr. Yasemin Aydin Cam for what I thought was just persistent menopausal discomfort at 68. Other doctors dismissed it as 'normal aging,' but she listened differently. During a routine pelvic exam at Medical Park Bahçelievler, her hands paused, a subtle hesitation I almost missed. She ordered a specific ultrasound others hadn't considered. It revealed a complex ovarian cyst with worrying morphology. Her approach wasn't alarmist but meticulously careful. She explained the laparoscopic surgery using anatomical models, showing how she'd preserve surrounding tissue. Post-op, she visited me twice daily, adjusting pain management personally. Six months later, follow-up scans show all clear. She didn't just treat a cyst; she preserved my quality of life when others wouldn't have looked deeper.
A 67-year-old retired mathematics professor with recurrent atrial fibrillation and failed ablations had an unusual anatomical variant: a myocardial sleeve extending far into his pulmonary veins. Dr. Ozay used advanced electroanatomical mapping to create a mathematical model of the arrhythmia's propagation. He performed a surgical ablation with precisely calculated lesion sets based on this model, resulting in permanent sinus rhythm. The professor later collaborated on a research paper about the mathematics of cardiac conduction.
Our 14-year-old daughter developed severe pelvic pain that pediatricians couldn't diagnose. We were terrified, emergency rooms suggested everything from appendicitis to 'teenage drama.' Dr. Cam created a safe space where our daughter finally whispered about her symptoms. With gentle professionalism, she diagnosed a complex case of endometriosis in adolescents, rarely caught this early. She coordinated with a pediatric endocrinologist and a therapist specializing in chronic pain in teens. Her surgery used minimally invasive techniques tailored for adolescent anatomy. What moved us most was how she spoke directly to our daughter about autonomy and body awareness. At our last follow-up, she remembered our daughter's upcoming piano recital. She treats the whole person, not just the pathology.