Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico

The study of parasites and their interactions with hosts continues to represent a challenging area of modern biology. The availability of new techniques and instrumentation, coupled with the development of daring new hypotheses and concepts, has paved the way for the dramatic evolution of parasitology from a static descriptive endeavor to a dynamic one based on biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology, and modern cell biology. Studies of this nature obviously fall within the domain of pathobiology. Consequently, when the contributions included in this volume of Comparative PathobioZogy were offered to this series. after critical review, we welcomed the opportunity to make them available to the scientific community. The contributions included herein represent presentations delivered before enthusiastic audiences at three different symposia, all held in 1983. The first, entitled "Some Aspects of Modern Parasitology", was organized by Dr. Gary E. Rodrick of the University of South Florida and myself on behalf of the American Society of Zoologists. The chapters by C. E. Carter and B. M. Wickwire. B. J. Bogitsh, and W. M. Kemp were originally presented at that symposium. The second symposium. organized by Dr. G. Balouet of the Faculte de Medecine, Brest, France, and myself on behalf,of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology, was entitled "Cellular Reactions in Invertebrates." The chapters by G. Balouet and M. Poder and M. Brehelin were originally presented at this symposium.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cheng, Thomas C. editor
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: New York, New York, United States Plenum Press c198
Subjects:Parasitology, Parasitic diseases, Invertebrates, Physiology, Pathological,
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/openurl?genre=book&isbn=978-1-4684-5029-3
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:55496
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Parasitology
Parasitic diseases
Invertebrates
Physiology, Pathological
Parasitology
Parasitic diseases
Invertebrates
Physiology, Pathological
spellingShingle Parasitology
Parasitic diseases
Invertebrates
Physiology, Pathological
Parasitology
Parasitic diseases
Invertebrates
Physiology, Pathological
Cheng, Thomas C. editor
Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
description The study of parasites and their interactions with hosts continues to represent a challenging area of modern biology. The availability of new techniques and instrumentation, coupled with the development of daring new hypotheses and concepts, has paved the way for the dramatic evolution of parasitology from a static descriptive endeavor to a dynamic one based on biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology, and modern cell biology. Studies of this nature obviously fall within the domain of pathobiology. Consequently, when the contributions included in this volume of Comparative PathobioZogy were offered to this series. after critical review, we welcomed the opportunity to make them available to the scientific community. The contributions included herein represent presentations delivered before enthusiastic audiences at three different symposia, all held in 1983. The first, entitled "Some Aspects of Modern Parasitology", was organized by Dr. Gary E. Rodrick of the University of South Florida and myself on behalf of the American Society of Zoologists. The chapters by C. E. Carter and B. M. Wickwire. B. J. Bogitsh, and W. M. Kemp were originally presented at that symposium. The second symposium. organized by Dr. G. Balouet of the Faculte de Medecine, Brest, France, and myself on behalf,of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology, was entitled "Cellular Reactions in Invertebrates." The chapters by G. Balouet and M. Poder and M. Brehelin were originally presented at this symposium.
format Texto
topic_facet Parasitology
Parasitic diseases
Invertebrates
Physiology, Pathological
author Cheng, Thomas C. editor
author_facet Cheng, Thomas C. editor
author_sort Cheng, Thomas C. editor
title Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
title_short Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
title_full Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
title_fullStr Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
title_full_unstemmed Parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico
title_sort parasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control libro electrónico
publisher New York, New York, United States Plenum Press
publishDate c198
url http://link.springer.com/openurl?genre=book&isbn=978-1-4684-5029-3
work_keys_str_mv AT chengthomasceditor parasiticandrelateddiseasesbasicmechanismsmanifestationsandcontrollibroelectronico
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:554962021-01-11T21:59:32ZParasitic and related diseases basic mechanisms, manifestations, and control Libro electrónico Cheng, Thomas C. editor textNew York, New York, United States Plenum Pressc1985engThe study of parasites and their interactions with hosts continues to represent a challenging area of modern biology. The availability of new techniques and instrumentation, coupled with the development of daring new hypotheses and concepts, has paved the way for the dramatic evolution of parasitology from a static descriptive endeavor to a dynamic one based on biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology, and modern cell biology. Studies of this nature obviously fall within the domain of pathobiology. Consequently, when the contributions included in this volume of Comparative PathobioZogy were offered to this series. after critical review, we welcomed the opportunity to make them available to the scientific community. The contributions included herein represent presentations delivered before enthusiastic audiences at three different symposia, all held in 1983. The first, entitled "Some Aspects of Modern Parasitology", was organized by Dr. Gary E. Rodrick of the University of South Florida and myself on behalf of the American Society of Zoologists. The chapters by C. E. Carter and B. M. Wickwire. B. J. Bogitsh, and W. M. Kemp were originally presented at that symposium. The second symposium. organized by Dr. G. Balouet of the Faculte de Medecine, Brest, France, and myself on behalf,of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology, was entitled "Cellular Reactions in Invertebrates." The chapters by G. Balouet and M. Poder and M. Brehelin were originally presented at this symposium.Incluye bibliografía e índice: páginas 163-1681. Selected aspects of enzyme regulation in parasites.. 2. Morphological and histochemical adaptations of trematode digestion, with particular emphasis on schistosoma mansoni.. 3. Parasite immune escape mechanisms.. 4. Genetic control of schistosomiasis: a technique based on the genetic manipulation of intermediate host snail populations.. 5. Genetic control of schistosomiasis: a mathematical model.. 6. Reaction of blood cells in ostrea edulis and crassostrea gigas: a nonspecific response of differentiated cells.. 7. Phagocytosis of inert particles: a comparative study in insects and marine crustaceans.. 8. Evidences for molecular specificities involved in molluscan inflammation.. 9. An electron microscope study of endocytosis mechanisms and subsequent events in mercenaria mercenaria granulocytes.. IndexThe study of parasites and their interactions with hosts continues to represent a challenging area of modern biology. The availability of new techniques and instrumentation, coupled with the development of daring new hypotheses and concepts, has paved the way for the dramatic evolution of parasitology from a static descriptive endeavor to a dynamic one based on biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology, and modern cell biology. Studies of this nature obviously fall within the domain of pathobiology. Consequently, when the contributions included in this volume of Comparative PathobioZogy were offered to this series. after critical review, we welcomed the opportunity to make them available to the scientific community. The contributions included herein represent presentations delivered before enthusiastic audiences at three different symposia, all held in 1983. The first, entitled "Some Aspects of Modern Parasitology", was organized by Dr. Gary E. Rodrick of the University of South Florida and myself on behalf of the American Society of Zoologists. The chapters by C. E. Carter and B. M. Wickwire. B. J. Bogitsh, and W. M. Kemp were originally presented at that symposium. The second symposium. organized by Dr. G. Balouet of the Faculte de Medecine, Brest, France, and myself on behalf,of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology, was entitled "Cellular Reactions in Invertebrates." The chapters by G. Balouet and M. Poder and M. Brehelin were originally presented at this symposium.Disponible en formato PDFSubscripción a ELSEVIERParasitologyParasitic diseasesInvertebratesPhysiology, PathologicalDisponible en líneahttp://link.springer.com/openurl?genre=book&isbn=978-1-4684-5029-3URN:ISBN:0306421194URN:ISBN:9781468450293 (Print)URN:ISBN:9781468450279 (Online)Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso