Patient Experience
As a 72-year-old retired archaeologist with chronic knee pain from decades of fieldwork, I'd resigned myself to a sedentary life. Dr. Muzaffer Ağır didn't just see a worn joint; he saw my passion for excavation sites. His custom partial knee replacement at Acibadem Maslak allowed me to kneel comfortably for the first time in 15 years. Six months post-surgery, I was carefully documenting artifacts at an Ephesus dig.
My 8-year-old daughter, a competitive rhythmic gymnast, developed a mysterious wrist instability that seven doctors dismissed as 'growing pains.' Dr. Ağır identified a rare congenital ligament anomaly. His micro-surgical reconstruction was so precise she returned to ribbon routines within five months, now winning regional competitions with stronger technique than before her injury.
During a humanitarian aid mission in earthquake-stricken Hatay, I sustained a complex open tibia fracture. Evacuated to Acibadem Maslak, Dr. Ağır managed the severe contamination risk with an innovative two-stage procedure involving antibiotic cement spacers. His approach saved my leg from amputation, and I walked back into the refugee camp eight months later to continue my work.
As a 41-year-old professional cellist, a benign bone tumor in my left humerus threatened my career. Dr. Ağır collaborated with oncologists to perform a limb-sparing resection, then reconstructed the bone using a vascularized fibular graft. The surgery preserved my arm's rotational mechanics perfectly—I performed Tchaikovsky's Rococo Variations at Istanbul Music Festival eleven months later.