Publications by authors named "Antonio Manrique"

The aim of the Mexican Consensus on Portal Hypertension was to develop documented guidelines to facilitate clinical practice when dealing with key events of the patient presenting with portal hypertension and variceal bleeding. The panel of experts was made up of Mexican gastroenterologists, hepatologists, and endoscopists, all distinguished professionals. The document analyzes themes of interest in the following modules: preprimary and primary prophylaxis, acute variceal hemorrhage, and secondary prophylaxis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is recognized as a type 1 carcinogen for gastric cancer associated with pre-neoplastic lesions (atrophy and intestinal metaplasia [IM]). Its relation with p53, which intervenes in the cell cycle, has had contradictory results.

Aims: To analyze p53 expression in gastric mucosa and its relation with Hp infection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The build up of an equilibrium between mutation, selection, and drift in populations of moderate size is an important evolutionary issue, and can be critical in the conservation of endangered populations. We studied this process in two Drosophila melanogaster populations initially lacking genetic variability (C1 and C2) that were subsequently maintained during 431 or 165 generations with effective population size N(e) approximately 500 (estimated by lethal complementation analysis). Each population originated synchronously to a companion set of full-sib mutation accumulation (MA) lines, C1 and MA1 were derived from an isogenic origin and C2 and MA2 from a single MA1 line at generation 265.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the impact of mutation accumulation (MA) over 255 generations on the viability of Drosophila melanogaster, using distinct MA lines and control groups.
  • After expanding an MA line to form new lines, the decline in viability in the new MA2 lines was found to be 2.5 times greater than in the original MA1 lines, indicating more severe mutational effects over time.
  • Additionally, the inbreeding depression and additive variance for certain traits in the control group from MA2 were significantly higher than the original group, suggesting a much higher mutation rate leading to a risk of mutational collapse in the new lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF