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This book reaches out to a wide variety of professionals in the
biomedical field with an interest in inflammatory bowel disease
(IBD). Enormous progress has been made in the last few years since
the publication of the first edition in the study of complex
diseases and IBD, with hundreds of genomic regions identified that
are associated with increased risk. Authored by leading clinical
and research scientists in the field, the book includes
state-of-the art synopses of recent genetic findings, and their
interpretation for current and future exploitation in translational
approaches to personalized medicine in IBD. The book also covers
risk prediction, improved diagnostic and therapeutic precision,
dissection of disease phenotypes and subtypes, identification of
biomarkers, and host gene-microbiota interactions of clinical
relevance.
This book reaches out to a wide variety of professionals in the
biomedical field with an interest in inflammatory bowel disease
(IBD). Enormous progress has been made in the last few years since
the publication of the first edition in the study of complex
diseases and IBD, with hundreds of genomic regions identified that
are associated with increased risk. Authored by leading clinical
and research scientists in the field, the book includes
state-of-the art synopses of recent genetic findings, and their
interpretation for current and future exploitation in translational
approaches to personalized medicine in IBD. The book also covers
risk prediction, improved diagnostic and therapeutic precision,
dissection of disease phenotypes and subtypes, identification of
biomarkers, and host gene-microbiota interactions of clinical
relevance.
Research in Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC),
together known as the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), has truly
seen a revolution in the last 5-10 years. This book examines how
these genetic discoveries have led to the identification of
biological functions not previously associated with IBD
pathophysiology (e.g. autophagy), how multiple genetic risk factors
for IBD converge on given biological functions and that together
the identified variants in these genes have predisposing and
protective roles (e.g. the multiple variants in the receptor for
the IL23 cytokine and its signaling cascade), and how having such a
large number of known genetic risk factors has changed our
understanding not only about the genetic and molecular overlap
between CD and UC, but also between these diseases and other
chronic inflammatory diseases (e.g. psoriasis, multiple sclerosis,
type 1 diabetes and many others).
Research in Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC),
together known as the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), has truly
seen a revolution in the last 5-10 years. This book examines how
these genetic discoveries have led to the identification of
biological functions not previously associated with IBD
pathophysiology (e.g. autophagy), how multiple genetic risk factors
for IBD converge on given biological functions and that together
the identified variants in these genes have predisposing and
protective roles (e.g. the multiple variants in the receptor for
the IL23 cytokine and its signaling cascade), and how having such a
large number of known genetic risk factors has changed our
understanding not only about the genetic and molecular overlap
between CD and UC, but also between these diseases and other
chronic inflammatory diseases (e.g. psoriasis, multiple sclerosis,
type 1 diabetes and many others).
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