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The European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry (ECMI) was
founded, largely due to the driving energy of Michiel Hazewinkel on
the 14th April, 1986 in Neustadt-Mussbach in West Germany. The
founder signatories were A. Bensoussan (INRIA, Paris), A. Fasano
(University of Florence), M. Hazewinkel (CWI, Amsterdam), M. Heilio
(Lappeenranta University, Finland), F. Hodnett (University of
Limerick, Ireland), H. Martens (Norwegian Institute of Technology,
Trondheim), S. McKee (University of Strathclyde, Scotland), H.
NeURzert (University of Kaiserslautern, Germany), D. Sundstrom (The
Swedish Institute of Applied Mathematics, Stockholm), A. Tayler
(University of Oxford, England) and Hj. Wacker (University of Linz,
Austria). The European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry is
dedicated to: (a) promote the use of mathematical models in
Industry (b) educate industrial mathematicians to meet the growing
demand for such experts (c) operate on a European scale. ECMI is
still a young organisation but its membership is growing fast.
Although it has still to persuade more industrialists to join, ECMI
certainly operates on a European scale and a flourishing
postgraduate programme with student exchange has been underway for
some time. It is perhaps fitting that the first open meeting of
ECMI was held at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. Glasgow
is and was the industrial capital of Scotland and was, and arguably
still is, Britain's second city after London; when this volume
appears it will have rightly donned the mantle of the cultural
capital of Europe.
Research in the past thirty years on the foundations of
thermodynamics has led not only to a better understanding of the
early developments of the subject but also to formulations of the
First and Second Laws that permit both a rigorous analysis of the
consequences of these laws and a substantial broadening of the
class of systems to which the laws can fruitfully be applied.
Moreover, modem formulations of the laws of thermodynamics have now
achieved logically parallel forms at a level accessible to under
graduate students in science and engineering who have completed the
standard calculus sequence and who wish to understand the role
which mathematics can play in scientific inquiry. My goal in
writing this book is to make some of the modem develop ments in
thermodyamics available to readers with the background and
orientation just mentioned and to present this material in the form
of a text suitable for a one-semester junior-level course. Most of
this presentation is taken from notes that I assembled while
teaching such a course on two occasions. I found that, aside from a
brief review of line integrals and exact differentials in two
dimensions and a short discussion of infima and suprema of sets of
real numbers, juniors (and even some mature sophomores) had
sufficient mathematical background to handle the subject matter.
Many of the students whom I taught had very limited experience with
formal and rigorous mathematical exposition."
Since insulin became available for the treatment of diabetes in
1922 a number of major advances have been made, which include the
modification of insulin to vary its timing of action, its
purification, and latterly, the production of human insulin. Human
insulin in quantities sufficiently large for therapy has been made
available by two techniques developed in parallel during the late
1970s. These involve either (i) formulation in E. coli bacteria
suitably encoded by DNA recombinant methods of the A- and B-chains
of human insulin followed by a chain combination reaction
('biosynthetic' human insulin) or (ii) enzymatic conversion
(transpeptidation) of porcine insulin brought to react with a
threonine ester by porcine trypsin in a mixture of water and
organic solvents, yielding human insulin ('semi-synthetic' human
insulin). This book includes the first clinical-pharmacological
studies of each of the highly purified 'semi-synthetic' human
insulin preparations: Actrapid (R) HM; Monotard (R) HM; Protaphane
(R) HM; Actraphane (R) HM; and Ultratard (R) HM (Novo Industri A/S,
Copenhagen). The preliminary studies established their safety and
efficacy relative to their porcine and bovine counterparts
emphasising the relevance of species and formulation on the
pharmacokinetics and biological responses to insulin. Additional
investigations with human insulin demonstrated the influence of
insulin concentration, site of administration, the addition of
aprotinin to insulin and the mixing of 'short-' and
'intermediate-acting' formulations on insulin 'bioavailability'.
Examination of the 'within' and 'between' subject day-to-day
variation in absorption and the effect of subcutaneous insulin also
demonstrates the dominating influence of insulin responsiveness.
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