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Yazar "Elsalti, Abdulrahman" seçeneğine göre listele

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    Artificial intelligence meets the world experts; updates and novel therapies in autoimmunity - the 14th international congress on autoimmunity 2024 (AUTO14), Ljubljana
    (2025) Mahroum, Naim; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Al Shawaf, Maisam; Darkhabani, Mohammad; Alwani, Abdulrahman; Seida, Ravend; Ertaş, Muhammet Tayfur; Şimşek, Ayşe Gülnihan; Awad, Mustafa; Habra, Mona; Alrifaai, Mohamad Aosama; Bogdanos, Dimitrios; Shoenfeld, Yehuda
    The bi-annual international congress on autoimmunity is a huge opportunity for the medical community to discuss the latest updates in the field. During the 14th congress 2024 (AUTO14) in Ljubljana, artificial intelligence (AI) occupied special attention due to its recent and ongoing unequivocal role in various medical fields including autoimmunity. For instance, through a challenging debate between world-experts and the most popular AI bot used (ChatGPT), several clinical cases including a case of vasculitis were discussed in the plenary sessions. ChatGPT agreed with the clinical decisions made by the experts nevertheless, the bot added additional aspects related to the specific case. In this regard, ChatGPT emphasized the need for osteoporosis prophylaxis in a patient planned to be treated with systemic steroids for a long time. Furthermore, AUTO14 included the newest updates on most autoimmune disorders, distributed among tens of sessions. Among others, infection and autoimmunity, the sequalae of the pandemic of COVID-19, as well as COVID-19 vaccines were discussed as well. Due to the high numbers of the works presented, and for ensuring that important updates are not missed; we divided our paper into sections. The subtitles throughout the paper correspond to different sessions of the congress, all presenting new updates in the field. A figure aiding in navigating throughout the paper was also provided.
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    Autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA): past, present, and future implications
    (NLM (Medline), 2023) Alrais, Mahmoud; Seida, Ravend; Alwani, Abdulkarim; Kiyak, Zeynep; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Esirgün, Şevval Nil; Abalı, Tunahan; Mahroum, Naim
    Adjuvants such as aluminum, mineral oils, and silicone are added to vaccines in order to trigger a stronger immune response. Autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA) was introduced in 2011 to address nonspecific symptoms and disorders appearing following vaccinations, which in fact were reported by many papers before the introduction of the syndrome. During the pandemic of COVID-19, a correlation between ASIA, COVID-19, and COVID-19 vaccines has been reported. Adjuvants, as the name indicates, are adjoined material aimed to assist in functioning as when added to vaccines they are meant to boost the effect and strongly stimulate the immune system. The response of the immune system can be unpredictable, and the autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA) was developed to address possible adverse reactions of an autoimmune and inflammatory type that may be caused by adjuvants. While ASIA, as a syndrome, was coined and defined in 2011; reports describing patients with vague and nonspecific clinical symptoms following vaccinations appeared much earlier. In other words, ASIA came to define, arrange, and unite the variety of symptoms, related to autoimmunity, caused not by the vaccine itself, rather by the adjuvant part of the vaccine such as aluminum, among others. Accordingly, the introduction of ASIA enabled better understanding, proper diagnosis, and early treatment of the disorder. Furthermore, ASIA was shown to be associated with almost all body systems and various rheumatic and autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus, antiphospholipid syndrome, and systemic sclerosis. In addition, the correlation between COVID-19 and ASIA was noticed during the pandemic. In this review, we summarized the reported effects of adjuvants and medical literature before and after ASIA was defined, the several ways ASIA can manifest and impact different systems of the body, and the incidences of ASIA during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is important to clarify, that vaccines are among, if not the, most effective means of fighting infectious diseases however, we believe that vaccines manufacturing is not above criticism, particularly when it comes to added substances possessing a risk of side effects.
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    Celebrities and medical awareness—The case of celine dion and stiff-person syndrome
    (MDPI, 2023) Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Darkhabani, Mohammad; Alrifaai, Mohamad Aosama; Mahroum, Naim
    The positive role of celebrities in spreading important medical information and contributing to increasing public awareness regarding the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of various medical conditions cannot be overemphasized. Interestingly and importantly at the same time, this impact is not related to the rarity of the disease, as very rare diseases are looked up by the public due to the fact that a celebrity suffers from this disorder. Therefore, if taken seriously and used to address the public in regard to critical medical conditions, such as screening for cancer or the importance of vaccines in fighting infections, celebrities could have a huge impact in this field. As previously shown in the medical literature, the recent announcement of the famous Canadian singer Celine Dion concerning her newly diagnosed stiff-person syndrome has influenced the public interest regarding the syndrome which manifested as an increased search volume related to the disorder as seen in Google Trends. In brief, in this short communication we aimed to address the phenomenon of celebrities’ impact on public apprehension, revise the syndrome for the medical community, and emphasize taking advantage of such involvement of celebrities for improving the spread of highly important medical information for the public.
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    ChatGPT and autoimmunity – A new weapon in the battlefield of knowledge
    (Elsevier B.V., 2023) Darkhabani, Mohammad; Alrifaai, Mohamad Aosama; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Dvir, Yoad M.; Mahroum, Naim
    The field of medical research has been always full of innovation and huge leaps revolutionizing the scientific world. In the recent years, we have witnessed this firsthand by the evolution of Artificial Intelligence (AI), with ChatGPT being the most recent example. ChatGPT is a language chat bot which generates human-like texts based on data from the internet. If viewed from a medical point view, ChatGPT has shown capabilities of composing medical texts similar to those depicted by experienced authors, to solve clinical cases, to provide medical solutions, among other fascinating performances. Nevertheless, the value of the results, limitations, and clinical implications still need to be carefully evaluated. In our current paper on the role of ChatGPT in clinical medicine, particularly in the field of autoimmunity, we aimed to illustrate the implication of this technology alongside the latest utilization and limitations. In addition, we included an expert opinion on the cyber-related aspects of the bot potentially contributing to the risks attributed to its use, alongside proposed defense mechanisms. All of that, while taking into consideration the rapidity of the continuous improvement AI experiences on a daily basis.
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    COVID-19 and SLE: Infection and autoimmunity at its best
    (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2023) Mahroum, Naim; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Özkan, Mehmet Fatih; Shoenfeld, Yehuda
    If one had any doubts before the pandemic regarding the correlation between infections and autoimmunity, COVID-19 left us fascinated on the strong bond between the two entities. The immune and autoimmune reactions seen in patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 have served as a base for this assumption. Later on, the use of immunosuppressants such as systemic glucocorticoids, among other biological agents, turned this assumption to a fact. This was no different when it comes to the vaccines against COVID-19. Through several postulated mechanisms these vaccines, although generally considered safe, are thought to have the potential to result in autoimmune reactions making them not more innocent than the infection itself. When systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) is viewed as a classical autoimmune multisystemic disorder, the connection with SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 vaccination is of extreme importance. This is because early reports during the pandemic have shown increased rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection among patients known previously to have SLE and much more interestingly, cases of new-onset SLE after COVID-19 have been documented in the literature. Subsequently vaccines against COVID-19, those mRNA-based and adenovirus-vector based, were reported to induce new SLE cases, trigger immune thrombocytopenia or lupus nephritis, two common presentations of SLE, or exacerbate flares. In our paper, we concluded various aspects of available and recent data regarding SLE and COVID-19 as both an infection and vaccination.
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    Herpes simplex virus and SLE: Though uncommon yet with significant implications
    (NLM (Medline), 2023) Mahroum, Naim; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Shoenfeld, Yehuda
    To the Editor,The relation between infectious agents, particularly viruses, withautoimmunity and autoimmune diseases, has been extensivelystudied during the last decades. Recently, the association was shownto be even stronger during the pandemic of COVID?19, as thecausative virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus2 (SARS?CoV?2) has been linked to severe autoimmune sequela ininfected individuals. The concerned consequences in patients withCOVID?19 were documented during the acute viral infection,throughout the long recovery phase (so?called post?COVID syn-drome), as well as secondary to the vaccines of COVID?19.1Actually,the autoimmune nature of SARS?CoV?2 has been vastly reported inthe medical literature and it is beyond the scope of our currentpaper.2However, it shows the strong bond between infection andautoimmunity. Subsequently, with a deep interest in the field, weanalyzed the article of Chang et al.3concluding that there is nocorrelation between herpes simplex viral infections and systemiclupus erythematosus (SLE) in terms of causality using Mendelian randomization.
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    The mosaic of autoimmunity – Finally discussing in person. The 13th international congress on autoimmunity 2022 (AUTO13) Athens
    (Elsevier B.V., 2022) Mahroum, Naim; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Alwani, Abdulkarim; Seida, İsa; Alrais, Mahmoud; Seida, Ravend; Esirgün, Şevval Nil; Abalı, Tunahan; Kıyak, Zeynep; Zoubi, Magdi; Shoenfeld, Yehuda
    While autoimmunity is a branch of medicine linked to every single organ system via direct and indirect pathways, meeting in person to discuss autoimmunity during the 13th international congress on autoimmunity (AUTO13) with participants from all over the world had a very good reason. The mechanisms involved in autoimmune diseases are of extreme importance and in fact critical in understanding the course of diseases as well as selecting proper therapies. COVID-19 has served as a great example of how autoimmunity is deeply involved in the disease and directly correlated to severity, morbidity, and mortality. For instance, initially the term cytokine storm dominated, then COVID-19 was addressed as the new member of the hyperferritinemic syndrome, and also the use of immunosuppressants in patients with COVID-19 throughout the pandemic, all shed light on the fundamental role of autoimmunity. Unsurprisingly, SARS-CoV-2 was called the “autoimmune virus” during AUTO13. Subsequently, the correlation between autoimmunity and COVID-19 vaccines and post-COVID, all were discussed from different autoimmune aspects during the congress. In addition, updates on the mechanisms of diseases, autoantibodies, novel diagnostics and therapies in regard to autoimmune diseases such as antiphospholipid syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis and others, were discussed in dedicated sessions. Due to the magnificence of the topics discussed, we aimed to bring in our article hereby, the pearls of AUTO13 in terms of updates, new aspects of autoimmunity, and interesting findings. While more than 500 abstract were presented, concluding all the topics was not in reach, hence major findings were summarized.
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    Vaccines and autoimmunity—From side effects to ASIA syndrome
    (MDPI, 2023) Seida, İsa; Seida, Ravend; Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Mahroum, Naim
    Since vaccines are in fact manufactured chemical compounds such as drugs, the appearance of side effects following their use is not surprising. Similarly, as the main goal of vaccines is to stimulate the immune system bringing out the production of protective antibodies, autoimmune-related side effects as a consequence of increased immune activity do not seem irrational. Fortunately, the rate of such side effects is low; however, the importance of reporting adverse events following vaccinations, understanding the mechanisms behind their appearance, making early diagnosis, and appropriate treatment cannot be overemphasized. In fact, autoimmune-related side effects of vaccines, particularly those based on adjuvants, were reported long before the introduction of the autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (ASIA). Nevertheless, ASIA gathered and united the side effects of vaccines under one title, a step which helped organize the research and call for better immune stimulators than adjuvants. New technologies and methods of making vaccines were clearly noticed during the pandemic of COVID-19 after the introduction of mRNA-based vaccines. In our current paper, we introduce the notion of side effects to vaccines, particularly those of autoimmune nature, the mechanisms of ASIA, and the main vaccines linked with the syndrome including the recent COVID-19 vaccines. The transition from side effects to ASIA is the main idea behind our work.
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    Viral infections and type 1 diabetes mellitus – guilty viruses in the court of autoimmunity
    (Academic Press, 2024) Elsalti, Abdulrahman; Mahroum, Naim
    Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D), previously known as insulin-dependent or juvenile diabetes, is a chronic disease characterized by an autoimmune-induced pancreatic damage resulting in the destruction of beta cells. Although less common than type 2 diabetes mellitus, acute and life-threatening complications such as diabetic ketoacidosis maybe fatal and mostly develop in children and teenagers. Prevention methods are not fully clear, but maintaining a healthy lifestyle is crucial as adjunctive to therapy. Treating type 1 DM is challenging particularly as the disease is not curable, and heavily depends on the individual patient, strict insulin regimens to maintain glucose levels under control. While T1D has a multifactorial background including several genes and environmental factors; various infections mainly viruses are a leading environmental trigger of the disease. The strong correlation between infections and T1D, is a vivid proof of a historical bond between infection and autoimmunity. This review focuses on viruses, a factor strongly associated with the development of T1D, including Group B Coxsackie Virus (CVB), Rubella, Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) and recently the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19). Two proposed mechanisms in which viruses might possibly trigger T1D is either through direct damage led by viral persistence or through excessive activation of cytokines aimed initially to stop viral replication nevertheless may cause cellular damage.

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