These past few years have witnessed a revolution in our
understanding of microglia, especially since their roles in the
healthy central nervous system (CNS) have started to unravel. These
cells were shown to actively maintain health, in concert with
neurons and other types of CNS cells, providing further insight
into their involvement with diseases. Edited by two pioneers in the
field, Marie-Eve Tremblay and Amanda Sierra, Microglia in health
and disease aims to share with the broader scientific community
some of the recent discoveries in microglia research, from a broad
perspective, with a collection of 19 chapters from 52 specialists
working in 11 countries across 5 continents.
To set microglia on the stage, the book begins by explaining
briefly who they are, what they do in the healthy and diseased CNS,
and how they can be studied. The first section describes in more
details their physiological roles in the maturation, function, and
plasticity of the CNS, across development, adolescence, adulthood,
neuropathic pain, addiction, and aging. The second section focuses
on their implication in pathological conditions impairing the
quality of life: neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders,
AIDS, and multiple sclerosis; and in leading causes of death:
ischemia and stroke, neurodegenerative diseases, as well as trauma
and injury."
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