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Books > Medicine > General
This is Volume 9 of the ninth International Symposium on Metal Ions
in Biology and Medicine that was held in Lisbon, Portugal in May
2006. It comprises a host of papers from internationally regarded
authorities in the field.
Spontaneous Pathology of the Laboratory Non-human Primate serves as
a "go to" resource for all pathologists working on primates in
safety assessment studies. In addition, it helps diagnostic
veterinary pathologists rule out spontaneous non-clinical disease
pathologies when assigning cause of death to species in zoological
collections. Primate species included are rhesus, cynomolgus
macaques and marmosets. Multi-authored chapters are arranged by
organ system, thus providing the necessary information for
continued research. Pathologists often face a lack of suitable
reference materials or historical data to determine if pathologic
changes they are observing in monkeys are spontaneous or a
consequence of other treatments or factors.
Authored by a veterinary specialist, this book provides a
comprehensive overview of diseases of veterinary importance,
including recent emerging diseases such as Bluetongue and
Schmallenberg. Diseases are presented at the level of the whole
organism and by individual organ, with illustrations for easy
identification. Preventative medicine is also extensively discussed
with practical tips for good husbandry techniques.Sheep and Goat
Diseases is adapted from the bestselling German book in its 4th
edition and will be beneficial to farmers at all levels, including
smallholders, hobbyists and commercial farmers. It is also a
valuable resource for agricultural and veterinary students.
From germ theory to plantation logic, this book charts the 528-year
legacy of global, colonial powers in the violent search for the
elusive Cinchona plant of South America, the only known natural
cure for malaria in the world. Stolen by the Jesuits in the 17th
century, smuggled abroad by Britain and Holland during the 18th
century, mapped by German explorer Alexander von Humboldt in the
19th century, and exploited by global pharma in the 20th century,
the Cinchona plant and the story of its powerful quinine extract
not only lie at the base of modern civilisation but trace the deep
roots of Indigenous, territorial resistance back to the Amazon and
the Andes. Using the unfamiliar format of an illustrated historical
timeline, the chronological organisation of images and stories
presented as unique spatial evidence offer counter-narratives to
the conventional bounded map of the nation state and the distancing
of the past that often overshadows and obscures realities of the
present-future.
In "Enlightenment and Pathology" Anne Vila surveys the various
understandings of sensibility that passed back and forth between
different professional modes of discourse in eighteenth-century
France. The thrills of the nervous system, the delectations of
taste, and the pangs of the heart mattered as much in the
laboratory as in literature. Vila shows that the multiple junctures
between the body and the mind promoted a steady commerce between
science and the salons.
Vila looks deeply into that commerce and its changing purposes
in the course of the eighteenth century. She examines key works by
influential authors--Diderot, Rousseau, de Laclos, Sade--to
determine the significance of the sentimentality which they both
absorbed and helped to define. But she also steps beyond belles
lettres and investigates the medical, biological, and philosophical
literature of the period to reveal deep and continuous
interrelations. If moods are as contagious as colds, and wickedness
is as debilitating as a bad diet, the inquiries of the eighteenth
century still have much to tell.
This book is a selective, revised and annotated compendium of the best presentations at the prestigious National Symposium on Healthcare Design. It includes a major introduction by Wayne Ruga, the guru of international healthcare facilities design, as well as chapters on medical offices, new technologies, healing environments, and acute, long-term, ambulatory, and pediatric facilities.
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