Patient Experience
The recovery process was smooth thanks to Dr. dr Faika Nur Erkol's expertise. Highly recommend for physiotherapy and rehabilitation treatment.
The recovery process was smooth thanks to Dr. dr Emir Çapkınoğlu's expertise. Highly recommend for general surgery treatment.
My family and I are grateful for the care we received from Dr. dr Faika Nur Erkol. The hospital staff was also very supportive.
As a neonatal nurse from Canada visiting Istanbul when I went into preterm labor at 31 weeks, I became both patient and colleague under Dr. Kazancı's care. She recognized my professional anxiety and involved me in daily rounds as a consulting partner in my own son's care for persistent pulmonary hypertension. This collaborative approach transformed my trauma into empowerment, and her hybrid parent-clinician model should be standard worldwide.
When our baby was diagnosed with congenital diaphragmatic hernia in utero, we consulted five specialists across Europe who gave grim statistics. Dr. Kazancı proposed a staged approach beginning with fetal tracheal occlusion simulation using a custom external device she designed, followed by delayed cord milking at birth to support pulmonary transition. Our daughter avoided ECMO and came home breathing independently after 28 days.
As parents of micro-preemie twins born at 25 weeks, we faced unimaginable odds. Dr. Kazancı didn't just treat our daughters' underdeveloped lungs and patent ductus arteriosus—she created a personalized developmental care plan that synchronized their feeding, breathing, and neurological stimulation. Her innovative 'twin synchronization protocol' helped them progress together, and today at 18 months corrected age, they're hitting milestones in perfect tandem.
Our newborn developed necrotizing enterocolitis during a family relocation from Dubai. Dr. Kazancı coordinated an emergency medical transport to Acıbadem Maslak, then performed a revolutionary bowel-preserving technique using targeted hypothermia alongside minimal resection. What amazed us was her post-operative gut microbiome restoration protocol using carefully screened donor milk—our son recovered without needing long-term parenteral nutrition.
My family and I are grateful for the care we received from Dr. dr Emir Çapkınoğlu. The hospital staff was also very supportive.
Our 92-year-old grandmother, who has complex cardiac issues, developed a severe and puzzling respiratory infection that baffled her usual doctors. As a pediatrician, Dr. Eda was an unconventional choice, but her approach was revolutionary. She didn't just treat the infection; she analyzed how Grandma's lifelong asthma, treated with outdated methods in her youth, had altered her lung physiology. Dr. Eda collaborated with geriatric specialists, using a pediatrician's growth-model perspective to 'reverse-engineer' Grandma's care. She identified that a common childhood vaccine from the 1930s had created an atypical immune response, which was now complicating treatment. Grandma recovered fully. Dr. Eda's ability to think in developmental timelines, even for the elderly, is nothing short of genius.
Our 8-day-old newborn, Leo, had a catastrophic post-birth event—a spontaneous pneumothorax that collapsed his lung during a routine feeding. The ER was chaotic, but Dr. Eda entered with a terrifying calm. She didn't just insert a chest tube; she performed what she called a 'whisper procedure.' She dimmed the lights, played a recording of my heartbeat from an earlier prenatal scan, and swaddled Leo tightly before the intervention, explaining that tactile and auditory memory from the womb would lower his stress and oxygen demand. Her technique was based on neonatal neuro-auditory research. The procedure was successful with minimal distress. She didn't save a patient; she honored an infant's entire sensory world to do it.
My 7-year-old son, a passionate but clumsy amateur mycologist, ingested a mushroom he foraged. It was a non-fatal but neurotoxic species causing terrifying hallucinations and myoclonic jerks. This wasn't in any standard toxicology protocol. Dr. Eda, upon hearing his hobby, engaged him mid-hallucination, asking him to 'describe the fungus's gill pattern.' Using his delirious but technically accurate descriptions, she cross-referenced regional fungal guides in real-time, confirming the species. Her treatment was a calculated mix of supportive care and sensory modulation—using specific weighted blankets and sound frequencies to counteract the neurotoxin's effects. She turned a poisoning into a bizarre botanical consultation, saving him by listening to his passion, even through the psychosis.
For three years, my daughter's 'routine' annual checkups were anything but. Dr. Eda conducts what she terms 'developmental archaeology.' Each visit, she investigates a forgotten milestone. One year, she spent 45 minutes analyzing how my daughter learned to climb stairs at 11 months, relating it to her current knee pain. Another visit, she correlated the age she stopped night-time breastfeeding with her present-day sleep architecture patterns. These aren't checkups; they are forensic reconstructions of her life story, where every past detail informs present health. She once diagnosed a subtle connective tissue tendency not by genetic test, but by asking about the specific way she held crayons at age 3. It's preventative medicine told as a biography.
A 57-year-old master perfumer developed excruciating olfactory-trigeminal pain (burning mouth syndrome triggered by scents) after a viral illness, destroying her livelihood. Dr. Akpek utilized capsaicin nasal rinses to desensitize trigeminal nerve endings and a stellate ganglion block to reset autonomic dysfunction. The patient gradually reintroduced scents via a structured hierarchy, eventually creating a new fragrance line inspired by her recovery journey.
A 72-year-old retired shipyard welder from a coastal village presented with debilitating phantom limb pain following a traumatic amputation 40 years prior. Traditional medications had failed. Dr. Akpek pioneered a novel combination of mirror therapy with targeted peripheral nerve stimulation, recalibrating his brain's pain map. The fisherman, who had not slept through the night in decades, reported an 80% reduction in pain intensity after six weeks, allowing him to finally teach his grandchildren to mend nets.
A 19-year-old elite e-sports athlete developed severe, focal hand dystonia and neuropathic pain from repetitive micro-trauma, threatening his professional career. Dr. Akpek designed a non-pharmacologic protocol involving sensory retraining games, thermal biofeedback, and strategic botulinum toxin injections to disrupt the maladaptive motor pattern. He returned to competition in three months with a customized ergonomic regimen, becoming an advocate for gamer health.
A 38-year-old refugee from a conflict zone presented with widespread, medically unexplained pain, a manifestation of complex PTSD. Dr. Akpek, collaborating with a trauma psychologist, employed a somatic experiencing framework alongside low-dose naltrexone to modulate glial cell inflammation. Treatment focused on restoring bodily safety rather than pain elimination. After eight months, the patient reported being able to hold her children without flinching, framing success as regained connection, not analgesia.
I was impressed by the professional approach at Acibadem Maslak Hospital. Dr. dr Ercan Karaarslan explained everything clearly and made me feel comfortable.
My 8-year-old son developed sudden, terrifying tics and vocalizations overnight. Our local doctor mentioned 'maybe Tourette's' and we were shattered. Dr. Elif Ilgaz Aydınlar was our beacon. She didn't just observe; she engaged him in conversation about his favorite video games, watching his movements subtly. She diagnosed Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS), triggered by a strep infection we didn't know he had. Her treatment plan—antibiotics and a specific anti-inflammatory protocol—was like watching a fog lift. She spoke to my son, not just to us. He now calls her 'the brain detective.' We traveled from Antalya for her, and every kilometer was worth it.
As a 72-year-old former engineer with essential tremor, I'd accepted my fate: spilled tea and illegible handwriting. My previous neurologist just adjusted my old medication. Dr. Aydınlar did something radical: she listened to the history of my tremor for 40 minutes, then asked about my woodworking hobby. 'Your tremor is action-specific, not at rest,' she noted. She proposed focused ultrasound thalamotomy, a non-invasive procedure I'd never heard of. At Acibadem Maslak, her team performed it. I felt nothing but a slight vibration. The next morning, I held a glass of water steady for the first time in a decade. She gave me back my precise hands. Her approach is not maintenance; it's restoration.
Dr. dr Onur Tunali provided exceptional care for my orthopedics condition. The treatment was personalized and effective.