Patient Experience
I was rushed to Medical Park Izmir with acute abdominal pain that local clinics couldn't diagnose. Dr. Cemal Kara took one look at my scans and calmly said, 'This is a rare mesenteric ischemia, we need to operate immediately.' His confidence was unnerving yet comforting. The 3-hour emergency surgery saved my life, he explained afterward how he had to resect a section of my small intestine with microsurgical precision. What struck me most was his follow-up: he personally called my wife twice during my ICU stay. A surgeon who operates with both hands and heart.
My 8-year-old daughter needed an appendectomy, and we were terrified. Dr. Kara didn't just talk to us, he knelt down to her eye level, showed her cartoon diagrams of 'the naughty appendix,' and let her hold the harmless laparoscopic camera. 'You'll be our assistant,' he told her. During the procedure, he sent us text updates: 'Appendix evicted successfully!' and 'Assistant sleeping peacefully.' His approach turned a traumatic event into an adventure. Two weeks later, she brought him a drawing of 'Dr. Kara the Super Surgeon.' He framed it in his office.
As a 72-year-old with multiple comorbidities, my complex incisional hernia repair was declined by three surgeons. Dr. Kara reviewed my file for an hour before accepting me, saying, 'The risk isn't in operating, it's in not operating.' His preoperative optimization was meticulous: coordinating with my cardiologist, adjusting my blood thinners, even consulting a nutritionist. The surgery used a novel component separation technique he modified himself. At my 6-month follow-up, he spent 40 minutes explaining why he chose each suture type. This isn't just surgery; it's surgical artistry backed by profound academic rigor.
What I thought was a routine gallbladder consultation turned into a masterclass in patient education. Dr. Kara used a 3D anatomical model to explain why my 'silent stones' could become problematic, then presented three treatment options with hand-drawn decision trees. When I chose surgery, he scheduled it around my daughter's wedding. The single-incision laparoscopic cholecystectomy left virtually no scar. But here's what's extraordinary: he noticed my elevated blood pressure during pre-op and referred me to a colleague, turns out I had undiagnosed hypertension. He treated the patient, not just the procedure.