dc.contributor.author | Tekiner, Halil and Yale, Steven Howard and Yale, Eileen Scott and
Doganay, Mehmet | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2020-10-14T08:46:24Z | |
dc.date.available | 2020-10-14T08:46:24Z | |
dc.identifier | 10.1177/0967772020958966 | |
dc.identifier.issn | 0967-7720 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12591/199 | |
dc.description.abstract | Born in 1884 in Balikesir, Turkey, omer Seyfettin was a leading figure
among modern Turkish short story writers whose death in 1920 at the age
of 36 led to long-term speculations about his fatal illness. In order to
pay homage to his memory in the centennial of his death and to shed
light on his later medical condition, this paper seeks to reexamine his
last days from a medico-historical perspective. Our findings indicate
that there was a notable decline in his health occurring after 1917 when
he was confined to social isolation. A carbuncle was diagnosed in his
posterior neck when he was 35-years of age and not satisfactorily
treated. In late February 1920, he developed progressive symptoms over
two weeks consisting initially of a headache, followed by fever,
delirium, hallucinations, and diplopia. These clinical signs and
symptoms are clinically suggestive of a septic encephalopathy presumably
caused bystaphylococcus aureusinfection secondary to the carbuncle, or
perhaps by one of the myriad causes of viral meningoencephalitis. | |
dc.source | JOURNAL OF MEDICAL BIOGRAPHY | |
dc.title | Medical conditions of Omer Seyfettin (1884-1920), the father of Turkish
short stories, enshrined as a mystery | |