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In the last decade, remarkable advances have been made in bone
marrow transplantation (BMT), which is now becoming a powerful tool
in the treatment of diseases such as leukemia, aplastic anemia, and
congenital immunodeficiency. In animal experiments, it has been
found that BMT can be used to treat not only systemic autoimmune
diseases but also organ-specific autoimmune diseases. In humans, it
has recently been shown that rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative
colitis, and Crohn's disease can be successfully treated after BMT.
This volume contains new information on how to prevent graft
rejection, how T cell functions can be completely restored, and how
concomitant BMT can prevent the rejection of organ allografts
without the use of immunosuppressive agents. BMT will become an
increasingly useful and powerful treatment for various currently
intractable diseases, and this book will contribute by providing
details of the latest research in the field.
Cytokine involvement in the immune system's response to stress is
now very well documented. Cytokine activity has been implicated in
a variety of mental and physical diseases, and has been shown to
have a significant role in fueling the vicious circle of depression
and illness. The first edition of Cytokines: Stress and Immunity
pointed out that the immune system does not stand alone, but is
profoundly affected by other organ systems, especially the central
nervous and the neuroendocrine systems, with cytokines being the
common tool of communication. This edition continues on the
trailblazing path of the original to once again present current
research that informs our evolving understanding of how cytokines
function and the clinical implications of cytokine activity.
Completely rewritten by the top authorities in their fields, this
volume includes 16 entirely new chapters, which document dramatic
new developments. It provides a comprehensive overview of the role
of cytokines in the neuroendocrine and immune systems, while also
addressing the interactions between these systems. It examines
cytokine activity and clinical implications from a number of
perspectives, including those of immunology, pharmacology,
oncology, endocrinology, and psychiatry. Researchers involved with
the most specific aspects of cell signaling as well clinicians
dealing with the effects of immunosuppression-related diseases will
find a wealth of interesting and instantly applicable information.
This new edition begins with an extended dedication and tribute to
the late Robert A. Good, the father of modern immunology. It
documents the life and groundbreaking achievements of Dr. Good who
served as an editor for boththe former and current editions of this
work.
Cytokine involvement in the immune system's response to stress is
now very well documented. Cytokine activity has been implicated in
a variety of mental and physical diseases, and has been shown to
have a significant role in fueling the vicious circle of depression
and illness. The first edition of Cytokines: Stress and Immunity
pointed out that the immune system does not stand alone, but is
profoundly affected by other organ systems, especially the central
nervous and the neuroendocrine systems, with cytokines being the
common tool of communication. This edition continues on the
trailblazing path of the original to once again present current
research that informs our evolving understanding of how cytokines
function and the clinical implications of cytokine activity.
Completely rewritten by the top authorities in their fields, this
volume includes 16 entirely new chapters, which document dramatic
new developments. It provides a comprehensive overview of the role
of cytokines in the neuroendocrine and immune systems, while also
addressing the interactions between these systems. It examines
cytokine activity and clinical implications from a number of
perspectives, including those of immunology, pharmacology,
oncology, endocrinology, and psychiatry. Researchers involved with
the most specific aspects of cell signaling as well clinicians
dealing with the effects of immunosuppression-related diseases will
find a wealth of interesting and instantly applicable information.
This new edition begins with an extended dedication and tribute to
the late Robert A. Good, the father of modern immunology. It
documents the life and groundbreaking achievements of Dr. Good who
served as an editor for both the former and current editions of
this work.
By 1940, immunological mechanisms had been proved to have
fundamental influ ences on a great number and variety of skin
reactions, and skin diseases had brought to light a great number of
fundamental immunological mechanisms that were basic to a wide
range of different diseases, dermatological and nondermato logical.
The preeminence of dermatological research in the advancement of
immu nological knowledge should not astonish anyone. For the skin
is not only the most easily accessible tissue for producing and
studying immunological reactions, it is also the great organ of
protection that meets the first onslaughts of inimical
environmental forces and agents-potential enemies, both living and
dead. And protection is in essence what immunology is all about. To
get an idea of the long-established role that testing the skin and
the study of its many reactions has played in advancing general
immunology, one need recall only smallpox vaccination; tuberculin
testing; testing with fungal extracts; skin testing in hay fever,
asthma, and serum sickness; skin tests with toxins and toxoids; the
patch test; the passive transfer of skin-adhering antibodies
(reagins); skin sensitization by simple chemicals; and similar
dermatological procedures that have exerted their influence on
medical and scientific disciplines far beyond dermatology.
In the last decade, remarkable advances have been made in bone
marrow transplantation (BMT), which is now becoming a powerful tool
in the treatment of diseases such as leukemia, aplastic anemia, and
congenital immunodeficiency. In animal experiments, it has been
found that BMT can be used to treat not only systemic autoimmune
diseases but also organ-specific autoimmune diseases. In humans, it
has recently been shown that rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative
colitis, and Crohn's disease can be successfully treated after BMT.
This volume contains new information on how to prevent graft
rejection, how T cell functions can be completely restored, and how
concomitant BMT can prevent the rejection of organ allografts
without the use of immunosuppressive agents. BMT will become an
increasingly useful and powerful treatment for various currently
intractable diseases, and this book will contribute by providing
details of the latest research in the field.
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