Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado
Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León
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Publication
Featured researches published by Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado.
Turkish Journal of Hematology | 2017
Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Yahveth Cantero Fortiz; Mariana A. Mendez Huerta; Mónica Leon Gonzalez; Ana karen Nuñez Cortes; Andrés A. Leon Peña; Juan Carlos Olivares Gazca; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles
Objective: Sticky platelet syndrome (SPS) is an inherited condition that leads to arterial and venous thrombosis. There is scant information about the association between SPS and obstetric complications. This study aimed to assess the relationship between SPS and fetal loss at a single institution. Materials and Methods: The obstetric histories of all consecutive female patients prospectively studied in a 324-month period at a single institution with a history of thrombosis and a clinical marker of primary thrombophilia were reviewed. Results: Between 1989 and 2016, 268 consecutive patients with a clinical marker of primary thrombophilia and a history of arterial or venous thrombosis were studied; of these, 108 were female patients. Within this subset of thrombophilic females, 77 (71%) had been pregnant at some point. Twenty-eight of these 77 patients (37%) had had a spontaneous abortion and 24 of those (86%) were found to have SPS. On the other hand, in a subset of 73 female patients with SPS who had been pregnant, 32% had miscarriages. These figures are significantly higher than the prevalence of spontaneous abortions in the general Mexican population of pregnant women, which is 12%-13% (chi-square: 7.47; p=0.0063). Accordingly, the relative risk of having a miscarriage is 2.66 times higher in female patients with SPS than in the general population (p=0.0014). Conclusion: In Mexico, female patients with SPS experience significantly more spontaneous abortions than the general population. Since the treatment of SPS is simple and effective and could in turn prevent adverse obstetric outcomes, its investigation in women treated for obstetric complications may be useful and deserves further research.
Salud Mental | 2015
Anaclara Michel-Chávez; Bruno Estañol-Vidal; Horacio Sentíes-Madrid; Erwin Chiquete; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Guillermina Castillo-Maya
Introduction. It is increasingly important to recognize the reward and aversion systems of the brain as a functional unit. A fundamental task of the mammalian brain is to assign an emotional/motivational valence to any stimuli by determining whether they are rewarding and should be approached or are aversive and should be avoided. Internal stimuli are also assigned an emotional/motivational valence in a similar fashion. Objective. To understand the basic mechanisms and functions of the reward and aversion system of the brain. Method. A bibliographical search was conducted in the Pubmed database using different key words. Documents on relevant aspects of the topic were selected. Results. In the ventral tegmental area, dopaminergic (VTA-DA) neurons play a role in reward-dependent behaviors. It is also known that the inhibition of the VTA-DA neurons by GABAergic neurons contributes to a reward prediction error calculation that promotes behaviors associated with aversion. The ventral dopaminergic mesolimbic system and the nucleus accumbens are activated during reward and inhibited during aversions. The amygdala is activated during aversive behavior. Discussion and conclusion. The reward/aversion system is highly relevant for survival, which is most likely its primary function. It is involved in important pathologies such as addiction, depression and autonomic and endocrine disturbances. Therefore, its knowledge has become of clinical importance. Although great advances have been made in the knowledge of the basic mechanisms of the reward/aversion system, the detailed circuits within the VTA that mediate reward and aversion and the anatomical substrates are not completely clear.
Jornal Brasileiro De Nefrologia | 2014
Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Michel Fernando Martínez-Reséndez; Adrián Camacho-Ortiz
INTRODUCTION When faced with violet, purple or purplish-blue urine, clinicians should consider urinary tract infection in their differential diagnosis. CASE REPORT A 60-year-old woman with end-stage kidney disease and non-adherence to renal replacement therapy was admitted to our hospital for placement of hemodialysis catheter. During her hospitalization she had purple urine, and purple urine bag syndrome (PUBS) was diagnosed. She was effectively treated with antibiotics and her urine returned to a dark yellow color. DISCUSSION Although this condition is often easily treated, diagnosing PUBS in chronic renal patients probably means an increased serum concentration of indoxyl sulfate, metabolite that is involved in the progression of both CKD and cardiovascular disease. CONCLUSION Hence, in the context of our renal patients, perhaps PUBS is not as benign as supposed.
Medicina Universitaria | 2008
Avril López Otero; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles
Revista De Neurologia | 2014
Adriana Robles-Cabrera; Anaclara Michel-Chávez; Rodolfo C. Callejas-Rojas; Caroline Malamud-Kessler; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Bruno Estañol-Vidal
Gaceta Medica De Mexico | 2015
Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Jesús A. Hernández Reyes; Mónica Patricia González Ramírez; Nora Ángela Martagón Herrera; Javier Garcés Eisele; Alejandro Ruiz Argüelles; Angélica González Cortés; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles
Revista De Investigacion Clinica | 2014
Gabriela Zamora Ortiz; Sara Velázquez Sánchez de Cima; Jesús A. Hernández Reyes; Nora Ángela Martagón Herrera; Alejandro Ruiz Argüelles; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles
Revista De Investigacion Clinica | 2014
Jesús A. Hernández Reyes; Mónica Patricia González Ramírez; Nora Ángela Martagón Herrera; Alan Daniel Rosales Durón; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles
Archive | 2014
Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado
Revista De Investigacion Clinica | 2012
Jesús A. Hernández Reyes; Evelyn Galo Hooker; Guillermo José Ruiz Delgado; Guillermo J Ruiz Argüelles