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It is now 17 years since the junior author's book Parasitic
protozoa was first published, and 13 years since it received
limited revision. The study of symbiotic protozoa has meanwhile
progressed, and much of the content of the earlier book has been
superseded if not displaced by recent knowledge. We believe that
there is still a place for an introductory textbook, conventionally
arranged on a taxonomic frame work, on this most fascinating group
of organisms. It should supplement (certainly not supplant) more
modern treatments from different angles. A mountain looks very
different if one approaches it from different sides, though a true
picture of that mountain can be built up only by the laborious
summation of the views provided by all approaches. The immunology
and the chemotherapy of protozoal infections are subjects so
complex that we do not propose to try to encompass them in this
book. We mention briefly the more commonly used therapeutic
compounds in the various chapters that follow, without giving
details of dosage schedules. Further information on immunology and
chemo therapy can be obtained from the books listed at the end of
the Introduction; the information we give on chemotherapy is
largely drawn from that of James & Gilles. This book can be
regarded as an evolutionary descendant of the earlier "Parasitic
protozoa," referred to above, extensively revised and much more
fully illustrated. We hope that it will prove as useful as its
predecessor appears to have been."
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