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Dive into the research topics where Sergio Solorio is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergio Solorio.


Archives of Medical Research | 2003

Intraluminal aortoplasty vs. surgical aortic resection in congenitalaortic coarctation

Martha Hernández-González; Sergio Solorio; Ignacio Conde-Carmona; Alberto Rangel-Abundis; Mariano Ledesma; Jaime Munayer; Felipe David; José Ortegón; Santiago Jiménez; Agustı́n Sánchez-Soberanis; Carlos Meléndez; Sergio Claire; Juan Gomez; Raúl Teniente-Valente; Carlos Alva

BACKGROUND Our objective was to compare results of two therapeutic modalities to treat congenital aortic coarctation: intraluminal aortoplasty without endoluminal stent installation (patients in group A) vs. surgical aortic resection (patients in group B). Trans-coarctation gradient pressure was evaluated prior to and immediately after treatment. Re-coarctation, aneurysm formation, in-hospital morbidity and mortality, and complications related to treatment were also evaluated. METHODS A clinical, randomized, multicenter study was performed in pediatric patients with congenital aortic coarctation. Immediate and mid- to late therapeutic results were evaluated. With regard to statistics, we evaluated event variations by Kaplan-Meier model, nonparametric Wilcoxon test, Mann-Whitney U test, two-tailed Student t and chi-square tests, and Fisher analysis. Significance was considered relevant when p<0.05. RESULTS There were no differences in demographic variables, procedure failure, complications, mortality, or aortic aneurysm between groups A and B, respectively. Intraluminal angioplasty and surgical aortic resection were similarly effective in reducing trans-coarctation pressure gradient, as well as arterial systemic pressure. However, differences were found between groups A and B at follow-up. Group A showed higher re-coarctation (50 vs. 21%). Absence of peripheral arterial pulses in limbs was higher in group A (50 vs. 21%), as well as persistence of arterial hypertension (49 vs. 19%); these differences were significant (p<0.05). On the other hand, complications observed after surgical aortic resection were more serious than post-angioplasty complications, but these differences were not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS Although re-coarctation and persistency of arterial hypertension were less frequent after surgical aortic resection, complications observed with this procedure are more serious than complications related to angioplasty, although these differences are not statistically significant.


The Aging Male | 2012

Telomere length and type 2 diabetes in males, a premature aging syndrome

Blanca Murillo-Ortiz; Froylán Albarrán-Tamayo; Diego Arenas-Aranda; Luis Benítez-Bribiesca; Juan M. Malacara-Hernández; Sandra Martínez-Garza; Martha Hernández-González; Sergio Solorio; Ma. Eugenia Garay-Sevilla; Carmen Mora-Villalpando

Background: Increased telomere shortening has been demonstrated in several diseases including type 2 diabetes. However, it is not known whether telomere length changes during the course of type 2 diabetes. Objective: To determine telomere length at different stages of type 2 diabetes, including early and late stages. Methods: A total of 93 males with type 2 diabetes and 10 years or more since original diagnosis; 96 males with less than one year of diagnosis; 98 age matched healthy males. Telomere length was estimated by means of real-time polymerase chain reaction. Fasting venous blood samples were obtained for measurement of lipid peroxidation and inflammation markers.Results: We found a greater telomere shortening in group (A) with type 2 diabetes of 10 years or more since original diagnosis, compared with the control group (C) of healthy males (5.4 vs 9.6 Kb) (p = 0.04) and with group B (5.4 vs 8.7kb) (p = 0.05). With regard to inflammatory markers TNF-α, malondialdehyde peroxidation and adiponectin we found significant differences. Conclusion: Telomere shortening increases with the duration of diabetes. The time of exhibition suggests in parallel that the progressive increase of inflammation and/or oxidative stress plays a direct role in telomere shortening.


Angiology | 1995

Silent Giant Left Atrium A Case Report

Elías Baduí; Concepcion Delgado; Roberto Enciso; Alicia Graef; Sergio Solorio; Rosalba Madrid; Humberto Cruz

A sixty-two-year-old white woman with a 14.5 cm (145 mm) silent giant left atrial enlargement secondary probably to rheumatic heart disease is presented. Aside from mild progressive shortness of breath during the past year, the patient had been asymptomatic all her life. Her clinical picture was manifested for the first time by syncope secondary to slow atrial fibrillation, for which a permanent pacemaker was required. The correct diagnosis of the enlarged chamber was not possible through the routine chest roentgenogram. In this case, the echocardiogram, nuclear angiogram, and computed tomography were the pertinent studies needed to reach the diagnosis.


Angiology | 2002

Angiographic concurrence of coronary artery disease and aortoiliac lesions.

Alberto Rangel; Héctor Albarrán; Sergio Solorio; Martha Hernández-González

The importance of recognizing the association between aortoiliac disease and coronary artery disease includes the following: (1) Long-term morbidity is higher and survival ratio poorer in patients with coronary heart disease compared with isolated lower extremity revascularization surgery. (2) Coronary artery bypass grafting is a relatively high-risk procedure in patients with severe vascular disease. (3) There is the prospect that the patient will eventually face simul taneous coronary artery and vascular surgery, or coronary artery angioplasty previous to aortoiliac surgery. The aim of this investigation is to know the frequency of the association of coronary artery disease with aortoiliac lesions and to stratify the risk factors related to such an association. In total, 65 men and 19 women (30 to 76 years of age) with a history of coronary heart disease underwent abdominal aortography after selective coronary artery and left ventricle angiography. Aortoiliac lesions were identified at angiograms. Relevant coronary artery disease was diagnosed when at least 1 coronary artery was obstructed > 50%. The frequency of association between aortoiliac and coronary artery lesions was established, as well as the relationship of these lesions to the following clinical variables: age, weight, height, smoking habit, history of coronary heart disease, systemic arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, intermittent claudication, glycemia, uricemia, and triglyceridemia. There were 36 patients (42.9%) with aortoiliac lesions. In 34 patients (40.5%) coronary artery disease was associated with aortoiliac lesions. Abdominal aortic dilations were found in 10 instances, abdominal aortic stenosis in 13 patients, and stenosis of the iliac arteries or their branches on 28 occasions. The variables statistically related to the presence of aortoiliac lesions were smoking habit and a history of intermittent claudication. The number of affected coronary arteries was directly related to the frequency of aortoiliac lesions. In the entire sample, 11 patients (13%) had no coronary artery disease, and 15 (17.9%) had 1-vessel, 24 (28.6%) 2- vessel, and 34 (40.5%) 3-vessel disease. The extent of coronary disease was directly related to the frequency and extent of aortoiliac lesions. Frequencies of aortoiliac lesions were strongly related to a history of smoking habit and intermittent claudication and directly related to the extent of coronary artery disease.


Angiology | 2011

Association between telomere length and C-reactive protein and the development of coronary collateral circulation in patients with coronary artery disease.

Sergio Solorio; Blanca Murillo-Ortiz; Martha Hernández-González; José Guillén-Contreras; Diego Arenas-Aranda; Francisco J. Solorzano-Zepeda; Rene Ruiz-Avila; Carmen Mora-Villalpando; José Ma. De la Roca-Chiapas; Juan M. Malacara-Hernández

Background: Coronary collateral circulation is a stabilizer factor in myocardial ischemia. We attempted to establish a link between collateral circulation, C-reactive protein (CRP), and telomere shortening. Patients and Methods: A case-control study was performed in patients with (group A) and without (group B) coronary collaterals using coronariography. The patients were males, CRP levels and telomere length in circulating leucocytes were measured; Student t test and logistic regression were used to analyze the data. Results: The study included 40 patients aged 53.9 ± 7.0 years (20 per group). Group A exhibited lower CRP levels (2.76 ± 3.34 vs 4.04 ± 3.38; P = .004); whereas telomere length was shorter in group B (2.3 ± 6.9 kb vs 6.1 ± 5.9 kb; P < .0001). Conclusions: Collateral circulation was associated with telomere shortening and elevation of CRP levels.


Physiological Measurement | 2007

Magnetogastrography (MGG) reproducibility assessments of gastric emptying on healthy subjects

J. M. de la Roca‐Chiapas; T. Córdova; E. Hernández; Sergio Solorio; S Solis; M. Sosa

The aim of this study was to evaluate the half-time gastric emptying reproducibility measured by magnetogastrography (MGG). Seven healthy subjects were subjected to a magnetic pulse of 32 mT for 17 ms, seven times in 90 min. The procedure was repeated one and two weeks later. Assessments of the gastric emptying were carried out for each one of the measurements and statistical analyses of ANOVA and Bland-Altman were performed for every group of data. A mean of 21.7 +/- 3.3 min was measured for the half-time of gastric emptying for yoghurt. Reproducibility estimation was above 85%. Therefore, magnetogastrography seems to be a reliable technique to be implemented in routine clinical trials.


Angiology | 1995

Heart Block in Dextrocardia with Situs Inversus A Case Report

Elías Baduí; Luis Lepe; Sergio Solorio; Héctor Sánchez; Roberto Enciso; Paula García

The authors report a case of a forty-one-year-old white woman with dextrocardia with situs inversus who presented episodes of prolonged sinus arrest and syncopal episodes secondary to possible idiopathic degeneration of the conduction system, managed successfully with a permanent bicameral pacemaker. In their literature review they found that this case represents a very rare association.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2007

Resonancia magnética cardiovascular en la cuantificación de los cortocircuitos de izquierda a derecha en los defectos septales cardiacos con hipertensión arterial pulmonar

Martha Hernández-González; Nilda Espinola-Zavaleta; Sergio Solorio; Juan M. Malacara-Hernández; Víctor M. Jarquin; Verónica Díaz de León

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES As cardiac septal defects are frequently associated with pulmonary arterial hypertension, hemodynamic assessment is essential before deciding on surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging for assessing cardiac shunts and for quantifying pulmonary artery systolic pressure in patients with cardiac septal defects. METHODS This cross-sectional study involved patients with cardiac septal defects and clinically suspected severe pulmonary arterial hypertension who had an indication for cardiac catheterization and in whom magnetic resonance imaging was not contraindicated. Each tests results were evaluated independently by two expert radiologists and interventional cardiologists who were blinded to the results of the other test. The procedures were compared using confidence limits and intraclass correlation coefficients. RESULTS The study involved 29 patients (18 female and 11 male) aged from 30 days to 18 years; seven had an atrial septal defect, 14 had a ventricular septal defect, and eight had an atrioventricular septal defect. The correlation coefficients for measurements made using the two procedures were 0.80, 0.75, 0.81 and 0.58 for pulmonary output, systemic output, flow ratio, and systolic pressure in the pulmonary artery, respectively. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance tended to underestimate systemic output by 0.80 L/min, pulmonary output by 1.35 L/min, left-to-right shunt flow by 0.12 L/min, and systolic pressure in the pulmonary artery by 16.5 mmHg. The complication rate with cardiac catheterization was 31% compared with 3.4% with cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. CONCLUSIONS The evaluation of patients with cardiac septal defects and pulmonary arterial hypertension should initially be performed using noninvasive diagnostic techniques.


Angiology | 1996

Pulmonary Valvular Stenosis Associated with Takayasu's Disease. Favorable Response to Corticosteroids A Case Report:

Alberto Rangel; Elías Baduí; Luis J. Jara; Eduardo Chávez; Sergio Solorio; Roberto Enciso; Raúl Verdín; Guadalupe Marín

The authors describe the first reported case of type IV Takayasus arteritis with pulmonary valve stenosis. After thirty months under corticosteroid therapy the disappearance of the pulmonary valve stenosis signs was observed in the patient. In the same patient coarcta tion of the aorta, aortic insufficiency, stenosis of both pulmonary arteries, and left coronary artery stenosis were observed. This case illustrates the extensive cardiovascular involvement that can occur in Takayasus arteritis and suggests that pulmonary valvular stenosis could be secondary to the same inflammatory process.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2016

Image of an extensive aneurysm in a young patient

Tatiana Chantal Castro-De la Torre; Leticia Rodríguez-Mariscal; Martha Hernández-González; Sergio Solorio

The acute aortic syndrome refers to a spectrum of lifethreatening aortic emergencies. Acute aortic syndromes include non-traumatic entities as aortic dissection with an incidence of 80--90% of the cases, affecting 5--30 personyears, penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer with a incidence of 2.8% and intramural hematoma with incidence of 5--25%. Nowadays there are several imaging modalities for diagnosis, such as echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging

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Elías Baduí

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Martha Hernández-González

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Alberto Rangel

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Luis Lepe

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Rosalba Madrid

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Fernando Ayala

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Roberto Enciso

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Héctor Murillo

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Arturo Almazán

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Blanca Murillo-Ortiz

Mexican Social Security Institute

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