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Öğe A Rare Finding in COVID-19 Pneumonia: Reverse Halo Sign - A Case Report(Tokat Gaziosmanpaşa Üniversitesi, 2022) Akça, Anıl; Önder, Taylan; Kayta, Safiye Bilge Güçlü; Yüksel, Cihan; Vurucu, Servan; Doğan, Ebru; Şener, AlperCOVID-19 can cause very different clinical and radiological involvements. As the number of COVID-19 infected patients increases, the knowledge about the disease is also expanding. The highest level of radiological finding is between the bilateral and peripheral glaciers, and these events are mentioned. We aimed to contribute to the literature by presenting a case with an 'reverse halo sign' on thorax CT examination followed up with COVID-19 infection.Öğe An adult ulceroglandular tularemia case in Çanakkale province(Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart Üniversitesi, 2022) Kayta, Safiye Bilge Güçlü; Alkan, Sevil; Önder, Taylan; Akça, Anıl; Yüksel, Cihan; Vurucu, Servan; Doğan, EbruAlthough tularemia is known as the disease of the northern hemisphere, it is a zoonotic disease known to cause epidemics or sporadic cases in our country. Although tularemia is primarily a cause of febrile disease that causes lymphadenopathy in the neck, it can also have different involvements. This disease is seen in childhood as well as adults. The first cases of tularemia in our country were reported in 1936 as a result of an epidemic in Thrace in which 150 people were affected. With the increase in awareness of the disease in our country, the number of cases reported together from different geographical regions has increased. In fact, cases have begun to be reported from outside the regions where the disease was first known. It still causes occasional epidemics in the Marmara Region. In 2019, it caused a water-borne epidemic that was rapidly prevented in Çan district of Çanakkale, where our hospital is located. In this case report, we wanted to report a case of ulceroglandular tularemia encountered during this epidemic. The presented case is a case with ulceroglandular involvement from the epidemic region. This form was previously often associated with tick attachment. However, the presented case did not have a history of tick attachment.












