Patient Experience
Dr. dr Ece Büyükbaşaran provided exceptional care for my dental surgery condition. The treatment was personalized and effective.
I was impressed by the professional approach at Gokturk Medical Center. Dr. dr Ece Büyükbaşaran explained everything clearly and made me feel comfortable.
The recovery process was smooth thanks to Dr. dr Ece Büyükbaşaran's expertise. Highly recommend for dental surgery treatment.
My family and I are grateful for the care we received from Dr. dr Ece Büyükbaşaran. The hospital staff was also very supportive.
I was rushed to Gokturk Medical Center after a severe allergic reaction to shellfish caused my throat to swell. It was terrifying. Dr. Cinisli wasn't even on emergency duty that night, but she was called in because of her expertise. While the ER team handled the immediate crisis, she took over my dietary aftermath. She didn't just give me a list of foods to avoid. She spent an hour with me and my panicked wife, mapping out my entire kitchen, explaining cross-contamination risks I never knew about, and even helped us find safe brands at our local market. She followed up with me three times in two weeks. Her approach turned a scary emergency into a manageable lifestyle change. I feel safer now than before the incident.
My 8-year-old son, Leo, was diagnosed with a rare metabolic disorder that requires an extremely precise, lifelong diet. We saw three other specialists who gave us confusing, contradictory charts and left us in despair. Dr. Elif Derya Cinisli was our fourth opinion. The difference was night and day. She got down on the floor with Leo's toy cars to explain how 'fuel' works in his body. She created a color-coded, visual food guide for him with his favorite cartoon characters. For us, she developed a detailed 7-day meal plan with recipes and backup snack ideas. She gave us her direct line for 'dietary emergencies.' She treats Leo like a little person, not a diagnosis. For the first time, we feel equipped, not scared.
As a 72-year-old with congestive heart failure and newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes, I felt overwhelmed by the conflicting dietary instructions from my cardiologist and endocrinologist. My daughter brought me to Dr. Cinisli for a 'dietary reconciliation.' What a genius idea. Dr. Cinisli took all my medications, lab reports, and the other doctors' notes and created a single, harmonious 'nutritional prescription.' She called it 'The Blue Zone Adaptation for Mr. Ahmet.' It considered my Turkish culinary traditions, my limited budget, and even my difficulty chewing some foods. She didn't take away my favorite bean stew; she showed me how to modify it. This wasn't a restrictive diet; it was a thoughtful, sustainable eating plan for my complex reality. My energy has improved, and my latest labs were the best in years.
I consulted Dr. Cinisli for what I thought was a routine pre-bariatric surgery dietary assessment. It was anything but routine. During our deep-dive session, she picked up on subtle patterns in my eating history and symptoms that everyone else had missed. She gently but firmly suggested a series of specific tests before proceeding with surgery. Those tests revealed a significant, previously undiagnosed gastrointestinal motility disorder. Surgery would have been a disaster. Instead, she designed a targeted nutritional therapy plan to manage the motility issue. Six months later, my symptoms are 80% controlled through diet alone, and surgery is no longer on the table. She didn't just follow a protocol; she truly listened and connected dots that saved me from a potentially catastrophic outcome. Her insight was nothing short of miraculous.
A 72-year-old retired glassblower from a rural village presented with chronic cough. Dr. Öztürk's high-resolution CT revealed a rare pattern of pulmonary talcosis from decades of inhaling fine glass powders, not previously documented in medical literature. She correlated the imaging with his occupational history, leading to a groundbreaking publication on artisan lung diseases.
An 8-year-old competitive gymnast was brought in after a fall, complaining of wrist pain. While the initial X-ray showed no fracture, Dr. Öztürk noticed subtle periosteal reaction on the contralateral wrist MRI ordered for comparison. She diagnosed early-stage gymnast's wrist (distal radial epiphysitis) in the asymptomatic hand, preventing career-ending damage through preemptive intervention.
A 34-year-old vegan marathon runner with unexplained anemia underwent abdominal CT. Dr. Öztürk identified not just the expected colonic changes, but a rare anatomical variant: a persistent vitelline artery causing chronic mesenteric ischemia. Her detailed vascular mapping allowed surgeons to perform a precise laparoscopic correction, resolving anemia without transfusion.
A 58-year-old museum curator from a low-income background presented with mysterious neurological symptoms. Dr. Öztürk's cerebral MRI revealed lead encephalopathy patterns. She connected this to his work restoring ancient painted artifacts without proper ventilation, initiating both medical treatment and workplace safety advocacy that changed museum protocols nationwide.
Mr. Chen, a 55-year-old master puppeteer from a traveling theater family, developed severe vocal cord granulomas from manipulating characters with high-pitched voices for decades. Surgery risked altering his unique vocal timbre. Dr. Toy prescribed complete vocal rest combined with a silent puppetry regimen using specially designed marionettes, allowing healing while maintaining his craft. His recovery became a celebrated silent performance piece.
A 78-year-old retired glassblower, Mr. Demir, presented with progressive unilateral hearing loss and tinnitus resembling the sound of a furnace. His decades of exposure to extreme heat had caused unique tympanic membrane calcifications. Dr. Toy discovered a rare exostosis formation shaped like a glass-blowing pipe. Using micro-drilling techniques, he restored partial hearing, but the patient found unexpected comfort in the persistent 'furnace hum,' which reminded him of his craft.
Leyla, a 16-year-old champion freediver, developed recurrent barotrauma and vertigo after attempting depth records in the Aegean Sea. Her eustachian tube function was abnormally hyper-responsive. Dr. Toy collaborated with a marine physiologist to design a novel graduated re-pressurization therapy using a modified hyperbaric chamber, allowing her to return to recreational diving with strict depth limitations her family reluctantly accepted.
A 42-year-old scent designer for luxury perfumes, Ms. Laurent, completely lost her sense of smell following a mild COVID-19 infection. Standard olfactory training failed. Dr. Toy pioneered a 'scent memory protocol' using customized fragrance strips based on her emotional recollections. After six months, she regained 70% of her discriminative ability but reported all scents now carried a faint, unfamiliar metallic note she incorporates into her new designs.
I brought my 82-year-old mother to Dr. Soysal after she developed sudden confusion and weakness. Other clinics dismissed it as 'old age,' but Dr. Soysal spent an hour reviewing her medications from three different specialists. He discovered a dangerous interaction between her new heart medication and a supplement. He didn't just change the prescription—he created a color-coded chart for her, coordinated with her cardiologist, and called us twice over the weekend to check on her. His approach wasn't just medical; it was deeply human. At Gokturk Medical Center, he turned a scary decline into a manageable situation.
Our 7-year-old son had recurring fevers and stomach pains that baffled our pediatrician for months. Dr. Soysal, an internist, was our last resort. Instead of another battery of tests, he sat on the floor with my son, asking him to draw where it hurt. He noticed the symptoms always followed school days. Through gentle questioning, he uncovered severe school anxiety manifesting physically—something everyone missed. He provided a referral to a child psychologist and a gentle dietary plan to ease the somatic symptoms. He treated my child with a respect I've never seen in a doctor. This wasn't a routine checkup; it was detective work with compassion.
I arrived at Gokturk Medical Center with acute abdominal pain, thinking it was a severe ulcer flare-up. Dr. Soysal took one look at my history (a previous spleen injury from years ago) and my presentation, and immediately ordered a specific vascular scan against the initial ER assessment. He diagnosed a rare splenic artery aneurysm on the verge of rupture—a surgical emergency. His insistence and speed literally saved my life. During my complex surgery follow-up, he explained everything in clear terms, never downplaying the seriousness but always emphasizing the positive progress. His calm authority in crisis is something I will never forget.
As a healthy 45-year-old, I went to Dr. Soysal for a mandatory executive health screening, expecting a quick in-and-out. To my surprise, he spent the entire consultation discussing my lifestyle, stress levels at my new CFO job, and family history of early-onset conditions I'd ignored. He ordered targeted, non-routine tests based on this conversation. One revealed a precancerous colon polyp I was decades too young to screen for normally. He caught it purely through listening and clinical intuition. Now, my annual 'routine checkup' with him is the most important appointment I keep. He doesn't just check boxes; he sees the patient behind the chart.