|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The first edition of Human Genome Epidemiology, published in 2004,
discussed how the epidemiologic approach provides an important
scientific foundation for studying the continuum from gene
discovery to the development, applications and evaluation of human
genome information in improving health and preventing disease.
Since that time, advances in human genomics have continued to occur
at a breathtaking pace.
With contributions from leaders in the field from around the world,
this new edition is a fully updated look at the ways in which
genetic factors in common diseases are studied. Methodologic
developments in collection, analysis and synthesis of data, as well
as issues surrounding specific applications of human genomic
information for medicine and public health are all discussed. In
addition, the book focuses on practical applications of human
genome variation in clinical practice and disease prevention.
Students, clinicians, public health professionals and policy makers
will find the book a useful tool for understanding the rapidly
evolving methods of the discovery and use of genetic information in
medicine and public health in the 21st century.
Neural tube defects, spina bifida, anencephalus, and
encephalocoele, are among the commonest severe congenital
abnormalities in most countries. The last decade has seen many
advances, including the use of antenatal diagnosis by chemical and
ultrasound methods, population screening, and many new findings in
epidemiology, culminating in the demonstration of the protective
effect of folic acid on recurrences. The progress in both antenatal
diagnosis and in aetiological research on neural tube defects has
been particularly dramatic, and may well anticipate developments in
regard to other congenital abnormalities. Primary prevention now
appears as an attainable goal. This book presents a critical review
of the extensive findings of epidemiological studies, discusses
several methodological issues of wider relevance such as
ascertainment, seasonal variation, ethical and legal issues. As
well as providing a unique resource in regard to neural tube
defects, much of the material is relevant to those with wider
interests in the prevention, antenatal diagnosis, and control of
major diseases.
Written primarily for 16-19 year old students, this primer aims to
extend students' knowledge and inspire them to take their
school-level learning further. It explores topics that are familiar
from the curriculum and also introduces new ideas, giving students
a first taste of the study of biology beyond school-level and
demonstrating how concepts frequently encountered at school are
relevant to and applied in current research. This is the ideal text
to support students who are considering making the transition from
studying biology at school to university. For many years, much of
the human population has lived in ignorance of plant disease - yet
the presence or absence of disease in a crop, or a forest, can mean
the difference between economic success or disaster, and - even in
the 21st century - the difference between life and death for
millions of people. This primer raises the profile of plant
infectious diseases, highlighting the scale of the problem, the
risks to biosecurity, and the advances in science which are
impacting on surveillance, diagnosis and prevention of disease.
This text opens with an overview of the importance of plant disease
in human history, before reviewing the structure and function of
the main types of pathogens involved in plant infectious diseases
(bacteria, viruses, fungi and fungi-like pathogens), focusing on
unusual and interesting examples. It then explores how plant
diseases can be accurately diagnosed, explaining a variety of ways
in which specific pathogens can be identified including the most
recent developments in molecular analysis as well as cultural and
serological techniques. The primer then moves on to consider
disease surveillance, which still relies heavily on traditional
techniques based on human observation. It also considers emerging
techniques involving epidemiological models, remote monitoring, the
monitoring of air and water, satellite tracking and genetic
modification of crops. Disease management - ways in which plant
diseases can be controlled and their spread halted - is then
discussed. This area encompasses techniques spanning chemical
control of insect, fungal and bacterial pests to genetic
modification of crops to introduce disease resistance. The final
section of the primer explores plant biosecurity and how it can be
maintained - an ever-more important issue given the continued
globalisation of trade - and the impact of global warming on where
both plants and plant pathogens can grow and thrive.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|