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Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments
The present volume is the first in the advances in oncobiology series. It is meant to be useful not only to clinical and non-clinical oncologists but also to graduate students and medical students. The individual chapters are presented as self-contained summaries of current knowledge rather than as reviews. The last chapter deals with the subject of chemotherapy.
Hardbound. Volume 5 covers many ethical problems in bioethics from the relevance of the law in making medical decisions, to genetics, and to assisted reproduction. Authors apply ethical theory, meta-ethical theory and valuational perspectives to a variety of ethical issues.
The Liver in Biology and Disease was conceived as a sequel in the
series "Principles of Medical Biology," whose general aim continues
to be the integration of human biology and molecular cell biology
into modern molecular medicine. It is a volume molded by the
Information Revolution which few will deny has forced the teaching
faculties in our medical schools to curtail and prune the teaching
load and focus on fundamentals and principles. With this intention
in mind, a volume of this nature takes into account the close
dependence of progress in the medical sciences on bioinformatics
(gene and protein analysis) or more precisely, computational
biology and of course, the Internet. In general, it follows the
pattern of its predecessors.
It is apparent that the current literature fails to systematically describe and examine the diverse value and ethical issues that arise in relation to alcohol abuse. This volume attempts to fulfil this void by addressing the most basic scientific and philosophical questions about the causes of alcoholism, their implications for individual responsibility and the most basic public policy questions that stem from clinical medicine and public health.
It should not come as too much of a surprise that biological
membranes are considerably more complex than lipid bilayers. This
has been made quite clear by the fluid-mosaic model which considers
the cell membrane as a two-dimensional solution of a mosaic of
integral membrane proteins and glycoproteins firmly embedded in a
fluid lipid bilayer matrix. Such a model has several virtues, chief
among which is that it allows membrane components to diffuse in the
plane of the membrane and orient asymmetrically across the
membrane. The model is also remarkable since it provokes the right
sort of questions. Two such examples are: Does membrane fluidity
influence enzyme activity? Does cholesterol regulate fluidity?
However, it does not go far enough. As it turns out, there is now
another version of this model, the so-called post-fluid mosaic
model which incorporates two concepts, namely the existence in the
membrane of discrete domains in which specific lipid-lipid,
lipid-protein and protein-protein interactions occur and ordered
regions that are in motion but remain separate from less ordered
regions. We must admit that both are intriguing problems and of
importance in guiding our thinking as to what the next model might
be.
The seventh volume of a multi-volume work designed for medical students with rudimentary knowledge of cellular biology. It is the key discipline for the basic medical sciences and clinical medicine to be taught in an integrated curriculum. This text features developmental biology.
This volume is intended to complete the Cell Chemistry and
physiology module. It is about how the traditional boundaries of
cell chemistry and physiology are being erased by molecular
biology. We do not think it necessary to elaborate on this theme,
particularly since the body of core knowledge found in this volume
brings us a stage closer to answering the question, "what makes
cell biology into a new discipline?"
This volume illustrates the extent to which the traditional
distinction between biochemical and physiological processes is
being obliterated by molecular biology. It can hardly be doubted
that the revolution in cell and molecular biology is leading to
core knowledge that provides an outline of the integrative and
reductionist approach. We view this as the beginning of a new era,
that of the integration of learning.
This is the first of a 4-volume module that is an introduction to
the study of cell chemistry and physiology. It is not intended to
be encyclopedic in nature but rather a general survey of the
subject with an emphasis on those topics that are central to an
understanding of cell biology and those that are certain to become
of increasing importance in the teaching of modern medicine.
This volume is in two parts. The first contains the remaining
chapters on cellular organelles and several chapters relating to
organelle disorders. An account of mitochondriopathis is given in
the chapter on the mitochondrion rather than in a separate one. The
subject matter of this part of the volume shows quite clearly that
the interdisciplinary approach to the study of organelles has shed
considerable light on the nature of the mechanisms underlying the
etiology and pathobiology of many of these disorders. As an
example, mutations in the genes encoding integral membrane proteins
are found to lead to disturbances in peroxisome assembly. It is
also interesting and significant that mistargeting of protein is
now thought to be another cause. It will be revealing to see
whether mistargeting is the result of mutations in the genes
encoding chaperones.
Volume 1 of the series "Fundamentals of Medical Cell Biology" is
devoted to evolutionary biology. This is presented in two parts: in
the first, the structure and dynamics of RNA, DNA, and protein are
dealt with. The second part is concerned with the origins and
cellular basis of life.
The purpose of this volume is to provide a synopsis of present
knowledge of the structure, organisation, and function of cellular
organelles with an emphasis on the examination of important but
unsolved problems, and the directions in which molecular and cell
biology are moving. Though designed primarily to meet the needs of
the first-year medical student, particularly in schools where the
traditional curriculum has been partly or wholly replaced by a
multi-disciplinary core curriculum, the mass of information made
available here should prove useful to students of biochemistry,
physiology, biology, bioengineering, dentistry, and nursing.
Volume 1 of the series "Fundamentals of Medical Cell Biology" is
devoted to evolutionary biology. This is presented in two parts: in
the first, the structure and dynamics of RNA, DNA, and protein are
dealt with. The second part is concerned with the origins and
cellular basis of life.
Since the 1970s, we have witnessed astonishing scientific and technical progress in the field of organ transplantation. Patients who suffer organ failure can now often have their lives greatly improved both in terms of quality and quantity of years. The success of transplantation techniques has created an enormous demand for donor organs. Unfortunately, donor organs are in short supply, relative to the number of patients who could greatly benefit from them. Therefore, donor organs are a scarce and valuable resource that must be thoughtfully and fairly allocated among waiting patients. Not surprisingly, this situation raises many pressing ethical questions, each requiring careful consideration. This volume presents a systematic and balanced treatment of some of the most pressing ethical questions including: what is our ethical obligation to become organ donors and who should be allowed to donate?; to what extent can markets facilitate the fair allocation of organs and how should we most fairly determine who should be recipients?; how do we determine death when the donor is not brain dead?; should non-human donor organs be used to save human lives and should we use organs from anencephalic infants and tissue from embryos? ; and what is the role of the news media in covering stories about organ transplantation? Many of the leading authorities in medical ethics come together in this volume to develop extensive analyses and arguments. The reader is provided with a sound understanding of the ethical, as well as many of the broader issues in organ donation and transplantation.
In this work, Colleen Clements presents her case for the need to subject the field of bioethics to a critical external analysis apart from the current postmodern assumptions. Clements argues that, since the 1970s, bioethics has refuted human values in favour of political consensus building. This failure to recognize basic human values in the ethical critique of modern medicine has lead to a dehumanization of the medical system by the field. Clements proceeds to advocate a naturalistic theory of bioethics that reinstates primary human values.
Full-scale Bioethics research began in America around 1970, a
decade later America introduced it into Japan. More recently
Japanese researchers have realised the growing necessity to
evaluate Bioethics more objectively. The principles and policies
concerning Bioethics differ between countries. In particular,
considerable discrepancies have been occurring between Japanese
medical practices and the principles of Bioethics originally
imported from America. This has lead to the need for a close
investigation into the Japanese approach to Bioethics. Despite this however, there are currently only a few researchers
studying the Japanese approach to Bioethics. This interdisciplinary
anthology uniquely provides a significant examination of the
'Bioethics from Japan' by considering Japanese views from various
aspects, such as life and death, dignity, family and care. The
authors of this volume believe that in establishing their own
approach to Bioethics each country will increase the practicality
of this discipline and, by doing so, will aid the search for the
universal elements in Bioethics. The members of the Kumamoto University Bioethics Research Group have published a number of books on Bioethics in Japan over the past decade and in doing so have been preparing for the production of this anthology. The contributors of this volume are both current and former faculty members at Kumamoto University; a well-known institute for Minamata Disease and the volume contains essays written specifically in relation to this area of research.
Anthologies on abortion and general medical ethics texts often seem to recycle the same old, but good, arguments. Can anything new be said about this sensitive and contentious topic? Contributors to this volume were invited to say something original, as well as something old, but essential about the factual, valuational, religious and metaphysical issues relevant to abortion, all of which are woven together so intricately into our diverse and seemingly irreconcilable world-views. Essays in this volume consider the conceptual links between views on abortion and foetal development, abortion procedures, religion, laws and public funding (or no funding) policies. Authors also defend well-defined and differentiated positions on abortion that can broadly be described as the Roman Catholic, the Conservative, the Moderate and the Liberal positions. New Essays on Abortion and Bioethics will provide readers with useful models of critical and rational thinking for addressing the topic of abortion. The essays will help to illuminate a subject about which there is often too much heat and too little light.
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