Patient Experience
I was rushed to Acibadem Atakent after a motorcycle accident with what I thought was a shattered knee. Dr. Ziroğlu had this unsettling calmness about him—like he'd seen worse before breakfast. He didn't just look at the X-rays; he made me describe the exact angle of impact, then showed me a 3D reconstruction of the damage on his tablet. The surgery was supposed to take three hours; he finished in two. What stuck with me was his post-op visit: he brought a miniature model of a knee joint to explain which ligaments he'd reconstructed using hamstring grafts. Six months later, I'm not just walking—I'm hiking again. The man treats trauma like a puzzle he's determined to solve.
My 8-year-old daughter, Elif, developed a bizarre limp overnight. Pediatricians were baffled. Dr. Ziroğlu spent her entire consultation on the floor with her, asking her to draw how her leg felt. She scribbled 'spiky rain' around her hip. He immediately ordered a specific MRI, suspecting a rare transient synovitis. He was right. No surgery needed, just rest. But here's the thing: he called us personally two days later to check on her, and when she was better, he sent a postcard with a cartoon bone saying 'Stay Strong!' signed by him. He treated her fear, not just her joint. We've never experienced such thoughtful care.
At 74, my osteoarthritis had me convinced I'd be in a wheelchair. My previous doctor kept recommending injections as a 'temporary solution.' Dr. Ziroğlu reviewed my file and said, 'Why are we putting patches on a worn-out tire?' He proposed a custom partial knee replacement, explaining it would preserve my healthy tissue. The man is a sculptor in the OR. He used some computer-guided technique I didn't fully understand, but the incision is half the size I expected. His follow-up protocol was military-precise: specific exercises at specific weeks. He even warned me, 'You'll feel great at week three and want to overdo it. Don't.' He was right. I'm gardening again, pain-free. He gave me back my independence.
I'm a professional volleyball player with a recurring shoulder dislocation—my third in two years. Every surgeon wanted to do a standard Latarjet procedure. Dr. Ziroğlu refused. He analyzed my throwing biomechanics using high-speed cameras in his clinic, then said, 'Your problem isn't just anatomical; it's how you load the joint.' He designed a hybrid surgery: an arthroscopic Bankart repair combined with a rare remplissage procedure tailored for overhead athletes. The rehabilitation wasn't generic; it was co-designed with my physio. He monitored my progress through a secure app where I uploaded weekly mobility videos. Nine months post-op, my serve velocity is back to 98%. He doesn't just fix bones; he engineers returns to peak performance.