(To see other currencies, click on price)
MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Man has moved rapidly from the hunter-gatherer environment to the living conditions of industrialised countries. The hygiene hypothesis suggests that the resulting reduced exposure to micro-organisms has led to disordered regulation of the immune system, and hence to increases in certain chronic inflammatory disorders, like allergic disorders, autoimmunity, inflammatory bowel disease, atherosclerosis, depression, some cancers and perhaps Alzheimer and Parkinson. This book discusses the evidence for and against in the context of Darwinian medicine, which uses knowledge of evolution to cast light on human diseases. The approach is interdisciplinary, looking at man's microbiological history, at the biology of the effects of microorganisms on the immune system, and at the implications for chronic inflammatory disorders in multiple organ systems. Finally, the authors describe progress in the exploitation of microorganisms or their components as novel prophylactics and treatments.
Contents:
Introduction: The changing microbial environment, Darwinian medicine and the hygiene hypothesis.- The paleolithic disease-scape, the hygiene hypothesis, and the second epidemiological transition.- Immunoregulation by microbes and parasites in the control of allergy and autoimmunity.- Hepatitis A virus, TIM-1 and allergy.- Linking lifestyle with microbiota and risk of chronic inflammatory disorders.- Soil bacteria, nitrite and the skin.- The hygiene hypothesis and allergic disorders.- Multiple sclerosis.- Inflammatory bowel disease and the hygiene hypothesis: an argument for the role of helminths.- The hygiene hypothesis and Type 1 diabetes.- The hygiene hypothesis and affective and anxiety disorders.- Immune regulation in atherosclerosis and the hygiene hypothesis.- The 'delayed infection' (aka 'hygiene') hypothesis for childhood leukaemia.- Is there room for Darwinian medicine and the hygiene hypothesis in Alzheimer pathogenesis?.- Alternative and additional mechanisms to the hygiene hypothesis.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Birkhauser Verlag AG)
Publication date: August, 2009
Pages: 320
Weight: 742g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Immunology, Infectious Diseases, Microbiology
From the same series
Dieter Steinhilber
Michael Pugia
Catherine Greene
Isabelle Couillin
Nathalie Vergnolle
J. Kremer
Sebastian A. J. Zaat
Samuel N. Breit
Paul D. Robbins
P. Miossec
Jeremy D. Pearson
Timothy Billiar
Egilius L.H. Spierings
Slobodan Vukicevic
L.R. Watkins
Douglas W. Morgan
Brian Henderson
Carla A.F.M. Bruijnzeel-Koomen
Willem van Eden
Stephen T Holgate
Clive P. Page
Douglas L. Mann
Slobodan Vukicevic
Joseph Rogers
Wim B. van den Berg
Douglas W. Morgan
Johan Zaagsma
Raymond G Hill
Peter J. Barnes
Bengt Samuelsson
Satwant K. Narula
Cees G.M. Kallenberg
Alfred N. Fonteh
Annika B. Malmberg
Antonio Guglietta
Jay L. Mehta
James Winkler
Kownatzki
Giora Z. Feuerstein
Paul G. Winyard
Kevin M.K. Bottomley
S.D. Brain
Nathalie Vergnolle
Isabelle Couillin
Shauna Dauphinee
Heinz-Peter Schultheiss
Torben Sigsgaard
Paul-Peter Tak
Andreas Bosio
Vincent Lagente
Michael P. Seed
Slobodan Vukicevic
Adriano Rossi
Gordon L Letts
Gordon L Letts
Christopher S. Stevenson
Christopher S. Stevenson
Christopher S. Stevenson
Silvano Sozzani
Rikard Holmdahl






































































