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Evolution in Health and Disease

Evolution in Health and Disease

9780199207466
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Description
In this fully revised and updated edition, the editors have integrated a completely new set of contributions from the leading researchers in the field to describe the latest research in evolutionary medicine, providing a fresh summary of this rapidly expanding field 10 years after its predecessor was first compiled. It continues to adopt a broad approach to the subject, drawing on medically relevant research from evolutionary genetics, human behavioural ecology, evolutionarymicrobiology (especially experimental evolution of virulence and resistance), the evolution of aging and degenerative disease, and other aspects of biology or medicine where evolutionary approaches make important contributions. Evolution in Health and Disease describes how evolutionary thinking gives valuable insights and fresh perspectives into human health and disease, establishing evolutionary biology as an essential complementary science for medicine. Integrating evolutionary thought into medical research and practice helps to explain the origins of many medical conditions, including diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, asthma, allergies, other autoimmune diseases, and aging. It also provideslife-saving insights into the evolutionary responses of pathogens to antibiotics, vaccinations, and other human interventions. Why are we vulnerable to disease? Why are our bodies not better designed? Are unpleasant surprises in store as we use more antibiotics and vaccines? Why do we respond to inappropriatelyto so many modern conditions? How do cancers evolve? Why must we grow old? The book discusses answers to these and many other questions while suggesting new approaches to treatment and research. This research-level text is suitable for graduate-level students and researchers in the fields of evolutionary (Darwinian) medicine, evolutionary biology, anthropology, developmental biology, and genetics. It will also be of relevance and use to medical researchers and doctors.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
86111
9780199207466
9780199207466

Data sheet

Publication date
2007
Issue number
2
Cover
paperback
Pages count
398
Dimensions (mm)
188 x 246
Weight (g)
883
  • Preface; Part I. Introduction; Introducing evolutionary thinking for medicine; Part II. The history and variation of human genes; Global spatial patterns of infectious diseases and human evolution; Medically relevant variation in the human genome; Health consequences of ecogenetic variation; Human genetic variation of medical significance; Part III. Natural selection and evolutionary conflicts; Intimate relations: evolutionary conflicts of pregnancy and childhood; How hormones mediate tradeoffs in human health and disease; Functional significance of MHC variation in mate choice, reproductive outcome, and disease risk; Perspectives on human health and disease from evolutionary and behavioral ecology; Part IV. Pathogens: resistance, virulence, variation, and emergence; The ecology and evolution of antibiotic resistant bacteria; Pathogen evolution in a vaccinated world; The evolution and expression of virulence; Evolutionary origins of diversity in human viruses; The population structure of pathogenic bacteria; Whole-genome analysis of pathogen evolution; Emergence of new infectious diseases; Evolution of parasites; Part V. Noninfectious and degenerative disease; Evolutionary biology as a foundation for studying aging and aging-related disease; Evolution, developmental plasticity, and metabolic disease; Lifestyle, diet, and disease: comparative perspectives on the determinants of chronic health risks; Cancer: evolutionary origins of vulnerability; Cancer as a microevolutionary process; The evolutionary context of human aging and degenerative disease; References; Index;
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