Güven Hospital
Güven Hospital

Güven Hospital

ankara

JCIPlanetreeGHA
Specialties
26
Departments
29

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About

Güven Hospital is a long-established private general hospital in the Çankaya district of Ankara, Turkey, part of the Güven Health Group with half a century of experience. A multidisciplinary team of more than 1,700 staff and over 200 physicians delivers comprehensive medical and surgical care across a full range of departments. Flagship units include an organ transplant centre for liver and kidney transplantation with living-donor evaluation, an adult bone-marrow transplant centre for conditions such as leukaemia and lymphoma, medical and radiation oncology, cardiology and cardiovascular surgery, and an assisted-reproduction (IVF) centre. Diagnosis and treatment are supported by advanced technology, including the da Vinci robotic surgical system, 3 Tesla MRI, artificial-intelligence-assisted imaging, MR fusion, FibroScan, micro-ultrasound and EBUS. The hospital holds Joint Commission International (JCI) accreditation, the Planetree Person-Centered Care certificate, and Global Healthcare Accreditation.

Specialties

Departments

  • Cardiology
  • Cardiovascular Surgery
  • Medical Oncology
  • Radiation Oncology
  • Hematology
  • Organ Transplant Center
  • Adult Bone Marrow Transplant Center
  • General Surgery
  • Gastroenterology
  • Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • IVF Center
  • Urology
  • Neurosurgery
  • Neurology
  • Orthopedics and Traumatology
  • Otorhinolaryngology
  • Ophthalmology
  • Dermatology
  • Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases
  • Nephrology
  • Pulmonology
  • Thoracic Surgery
  • Breast and Endocrine Surgery
  • Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery
  • Oral and Dental Health
  • Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
  • Pediatrics
  • Obesity Surgery Center
  • Check-up Center

Procedures

International patient services

  • International patient office
  • Interpreter and translation services
  • Visa and travel assistance
  • Airport transfer
  • Accommodation assistance

Technologies and equipment

Gait Training Robot (Adult)

A gait training robot is an advanced rehabilitation device that helps adults relearn to walk after the ability has been lost or impaired. It works on the principle of neuroplasticity: by guiding the legs through the correct walking pattern many times over, it helps the brain and muscles rebuild their connections and form new pathways, so walking becomes possible again. The patient is held safely in a support harness that takes much of the body weight, while the robot moves the legs and sensors track every step. Because it allows far more repetitions than a therapist could deliver by hand, it can speed up recovery and make early walking practice safe.

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PET-CT

PET-CT is an advanced hybrid imaging method that combines positron emission tomography with computed tomography in a single scan, mapping both the metabolic activity and the anatomical structure of the body at once. A small dose of a radioactive tracer, often a glucose analogue, is injected and gathers in cells that are working harder than normal, which is typical of many tumours. Because it can show where a disease is active before it changes the shape of an organ, PET-CT is one of the most valuable tools for detecting cancer, working out how far it has spread, and checking whether treatment is working.

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Prostate Fusion Biopsy (3D Imaging and Navigation)

Prostate fusion biopsy is an advanced way of taking tissue samples from the prostate to diagnose prostate cancer accurately. It blends two types of imaging, a detailed MRI scan taken in advance and live ultrasound during the procedure, into a single three-dimensional picture. This "fusion" lets the doctor see exactly where any suspicious areas lie and guide the biopsy needle straight to them, rather than sampling the gland at random. The result is a more precise, targeted biopsy that improves the detection of cancers that genuinely need treatment, while helping to avoid unnecessary findings.

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FibroScan

FibroScan is a non-invasive, ultrasound-based device that measures how stiff the liver is, which reflects the degree of scarring, or fibrosis, and at the same time estimates the amount of fat in the liver. It offers a fast, painless alternative to a liver biopsy, with no incision or needle, and it assesses a larger area of the organ than a tiny tissue sample would. A probe is simply placed on the skin over the liver while the patient lies down, and a numerical result is available within minutes. It is widely used to detect and follow liver conditions and to guide and monitor treatment.

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EBUS Endobronchial Ultrasound

Endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) is a minimally invasive method that combines bronchoscopy with ultrasound to examine the airways and the tissues and lymph nodes that surround them. A thin, flexible bronchoscope carrying a camera and a small ultrasound probe is passed through the mouth into the airways, where the probe creates real-time images of structures just beyond the airway wall, such as lymph nodes and masses that cannot be seen with a camera alone. Under this live ultrasound guidance, a fine needle can take samples for the laboratory in the same session, all without any surgical incision.

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TrueBeam STx

TrueBeam STx is an advanced linear accelerator, a machine that delivers external radiotherapy to treat cancer with very high precision. It shapes powerful radiation beams to match the exact size and shape of a tumour and aims them from many angles, so that a strong dose reaches the target while nearby healthy tissue and organs receive as little as possible. Because it tracks the target and can account for movement such as breathing, it is accurate to within millimetres. This makes it suitable both for conventional, daily radiotherapy and for advanced focused techniques that treat a tumour in only a few sessions. The treatment is non-invasive and painless, with nothing entering the body.

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Da Vinci Robotic Surgery

The da Vinci robotic surgical system lets a surgeon perform complex operations through a few small keyhole incisions instead of one large cut. Sitting at a nearby console, the surgeon controls tiny wristed instruments and a magnified high-definition three-dimensional camera, while the robotic arms translate every hand movement into precise, steady motion inside the body. The system never acts on its own: the surgeon is in full control at all times. For patients, this minimally invasive approach often means less pain, smaller scars, less blood loss and a quicker return to normal life.

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3 Tesla MRI

3 Tesla MRI is a high-field magnetic resonance imaging scanner that produces exceptionally detailed pictures of the inside of the body. The "3 Tesla" refers to the strength of its magnet, which is about twice that of a standard MRI scanner, and this extra power allows sharper, higher-resolution images, often in less time. Like all MRI, it uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves rather than X-rays, so there is no ionising radiation involved. It is especially valuable for examining the brain, the nervous system, joints and soft tissues, helping doctors detect and characterise problems that may be hard to see on other scans.

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Digital Mammography

Digital mammography is a low-dose X-ray method used to screen for and detect breast cancer at an early stage. It captures very high-resolution digital images of the breast that a radiologist can examine and enhance on screen, revealing small nodules, masses and tiny specks of calcium that may not be felt or seen on other tests. Because it can find changes long before they cause symptoms, it is the cornerstone of breast cancer screening and one of the most effective tools for catching the disease when it is most treatable.

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Endoscopic Ultrasound (EUS)

Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) combines endoscopy and ultrasound in a single thin instrument, allowing the deeper layers of the digestive tract and the organs and tissues around it to be examined in detail. By placing a tiny ultrasound probe at the tip of an endoscope and guiding it inside the body, very close to the area of interest, it produces highly detailed images of structures such as the pancreas, bile ducts and nearby lymph nodes that can be hard to see from the outside. When needed, a fine needle can take a sample for the laboratory during the same procedure, all without any surgical incision.

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Location

Şimşek Sokak No: 29, Kavaklıdere, Çankaya, Ankara

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Accreditations

  • JCI
  • Planetree
  • GHA

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