Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales
Autonomous University of Sinaloa
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales.
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2017
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña; Felipe de Jesús Peraza-Garay
BACKGROUNDnEvidence shows the negative impact of irritable bowel syndrome on the quality of life of patients who suffer from the condition as compared to the general population.nnnOBJECTIVEnThe objective of this study was to determine the health-related quality of life in adults with irritable bowel syndrome who are receiving treatment at a specialist hospital.nnnMATERIAL AND METHODSnThe study had a cross-sectional prospective design. The study included consecutive patients diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome under the Rome III criteria and attending outpatient appointments. The SF-36 questionnaire was applied in its standard Spanish version and the results were compared with population reference scores in Mexico. Statistical analysis was performed with the Students t test, analysis of variance and the Chi-squared test, considering a significance of 0.05%.nnnRESULTSnOne hundred and fifty-four patients were included in the study, 137 (89%) women and 17 (11%) men, with an average age of 52.8 (SD 12.6). The constipation, diarrhea and mixed subtypes comprised 85 (55.2%), 27 (17.5%) and 42 (27.3%) patients, respectively. The quality of life of patients with irritable bowel syndrome vs the population reference scores in Mexico were 50 vs 79 for the physical health sub-scale and 59.1 vs 76.7 for the mental health sub-scale, respectively (p = 0.000). No significant difference was found in quality of life among the irritable bowel syndrome subtypes (p > 0.05).nnnCONCLUSIONSnHealth-related quality of life is lower in patients with irritable bowel syndrome in a population in the North East of Mexico compared to the data taken from a population reference study undertaken in the same country, enabling an inference in the female population and a cautious one from the results found in the small male sample studied. There was no significant difference found in the quality of life according to the clinical subtype of irritable bowel syndrome.
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2017
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña; Felipe de Jesús Peraza-Garay
BACKGROUNDnEvidence shows the negative impact of irritable bowel syndrome on the quality of life of patients who suffer from the condition as compared to the general population.nnnOBJECTIVEnThe objective of this study was to determine the health-related quality of life in adults with irritable bowel syndrome who are receiving treatment at a specialist hospital.nnnMATERIAL AND METHODSnThe study had a cross-sectional prospective design. The study included consecutive patients diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome under the Rome III criteria and attending outpatient appointments. The SF-36 questionnaire was applied in its standard Spanish version and the results were compared with population reference scores in Mexico. Statistical analysis was performed with the Students t test, analysis of variance and the Chi-squared test, considering a significance of 0.05%.nnnRESULTSnOne hundred and fifty-four patients were included in the study, 137 (89%) women and 17 (11%) men, with an average age of 52.8 (SD 12.6). The constipation, diarrhea and mixed subtypes comprised 85 (55.2%), 27 (17.5%) and 42 (27.3%) patients, respectively. The quality of life of patients with irritable bowel syndrome vs the population reference scores in Mexico were 50 vs 79 for the physical health sub-scale and 59.1 vs 76.7 for the mental health sub-scale, respectively (p = 0.000). No significant difference was found in quality of life among the irritable bowel syndrome subtypes (p > 0.05).nnnCONCLUSIONSnHealth-related quality of life is lower in patients with irritable bowel syndrome in a population in the North East of Mexico compared to the data taken from a population reference study undertaken in the same country, enabling an inference in the female population and a cautious one from the results found in the small male sample studied. There was no significant difference found in the quality of life according to the clinical subtype of irritable bowel syndrome.
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2017
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Nidia León-Sicairos; Loranda Calderón-Zamora; Luis Monroy-Higuera; Vicente Adrián Canizalez-Román
BACKGROUNDnAfter eradication treatment for Helicobacter pylori, infection could recur due to recrudescence or re-infection. The objective of this study was to determine the recurrence of Helicobacter pylori infection and identify virulent Helicobacter pylori strains one year after eradication with standard triple therapy.nnnMATERIAL AND METHODSnA quasi-experimental study was performed that included a patient population with digestive diseases associated with Helicobacter pylori who had received standard triple therapy. Cultures and Polymerase Chain Reaction was performed on gastric biopsies for strain identification in all patients prior to eradication treatment and those with a positive carbon 14 breath test one year after eradication treatment. Statistical analysis was performed using the student T test and Fishers exact test, statistical significance was set at 0.05.nnnRESULTSn128 patients were studied, 51 (39.8%) were male and 77 (60.2%) were female with an average age of 54.8 years (DE 13.8). There was an annual recurrence of Helicobacter pylori infection in 12 (9.3%) patients. An annual re-infection and recrudescence occurred in 9 (7 %) and 3 (2.3%) patients respectively. The recrudescence rate for cagA was 1/30 (3.3%) patients and 2/112 (1.8%) patients for vacA. The re-infection rate for cagA was 3/30 (10%) patients and 6/112 (5.3%) patients for vacA.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe recurrence of infection in this study was higher than that recorded in developed countries with a low prevalence of H. pylori and lower than that recorded in developing countries with a higher prevalence of H. pylori. The cagA or vacA s2/m2 strains were isolated after re-infection and recrudescence.
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2017
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Nidia León-Sicairos; Loranda Calderón-Zamora; Luis Monroy-Higuera; Vicente Adrián Canizalez-Román
BACKGROUNDnAfter eradication treatment for Helicobacter pylori, infection could recur due to recrudescence or re-infection. The objective of this study was to determine the recurrence of Helicobacter pylori infection and identify virulent Helicobacter pylori strains one year after eradication with standard triple therapy.nnnMATERIAL AND METHODSnA quasi-experimental study was performed that included a patient population with digestive diseases associated with Helicobacter pylori who had received standard triple therapy. Cultures and Polymerase Chain Reaction was performed on gastric biopsies for strain identification in all patients prior to eradication treatment and those with a positive carbon 14 breath test one year after eradication treatment. Statistical analysis was performed using the student T test and Fishers exact test, statistical significance was set at 0.05.nnnRESULTSn128 patients were studied, 51 (39.8%) were male and 77 (60.2%) were female with an average age of 54.8 years (DE 13.8). There was an annual recurrence of Helicobacter pylori infection in 12 (9.3%) patients. An annual re-infection and recrudescence occurred in 9 (7 %) and 3 (2.3%) patients respectively. The recrudescence rate for cagA was 1/30 (3.3%) patients and 2/112 (1.8%) patients for vacA. The re-infection rate for cagA was 3/30 (10%) patients and 6/112 (5.3%) patients for vacA.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe recurrence of infection in this study was higher than that recorded in developed countries with a low prevalence of H. pylori and lower than that recorded in developing countries with a higher prevalence of H. pylori. The cagA or vacA s2/m2 strains were isolated after re-infection and recrudescence.
International Journal of Ophthalmology | 2017
Francisco Gomez-Salazar; Abraham Campos-Romero; Humberto Gomez-Campaña; Cinthia K. Cruz-Zamudio; Mariano Chaidez-Felix; Nidia León-Sicairos; Jorge Velazquez-Roman; Héctor Flores-Villaseñor; Secundino Muro-Amador; Alma Marlene Guadron-Llanos; Javier Martínez-Garcia; Joel Murillo‐Llanes; Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Alejando Llausas-Vargas; Gerardo Alapizco-Castro; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Enrique O Graue-Hernandez; Tito Ramirez-Luquin; Adrian Canizalez-Roman
Salud Publica De Mexico | 2015
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Vicente Adrián Canizalez-Román; Nidia León-Sicairos; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2016
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña; Felipe de Jesús Peraza-Garay
Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2016
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña; Felipe de Jesús Peraza-Garay
Toe Boots Round Low Top Closed Heels Gray Pull Mid Womens Solid On AllhqFashion HYP8a8--serviciotranspcarga.com | 2015
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Vicente Adrián Canizalez-Román; Nidia León-Sicairos; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña
Tedinho Womens Waterproof Chaco Womens Tedinho Boot Chaco Waterproof Tarvia qwcAX6Iw--serviciotranspcarga.com | 2015
Jaime Alberto Sánchez-Cuén; Vicente Adrián Canizalez-Román; Nidia León-Sicairos; Ana Bertha Irineo-Cabrales; Gregorio Bernal-Magaña