Description
Viral Pathogenesis in Diagrams
Author: Ackermann Hans-Wolfgang
Language: EnglishSubjects for Viral Pathogenesis in Diagrams:
Keywords
Plant Viruses; herpes; Granulosis Viruses; simplex; Viral Pathogenesis; virus; VERTEBRATE VIRUSES; vertebrate; Blackwell Scientific Publications; viruses; MHC Class; major; Herpes Simplex Virus; histocompatibility; HBV Infection; complex; Copyright CRC Press; plant; TYMV; dsdna; TMV; Insect Viruses; Host Defense; ICAM-1 Protein; African Swine Fever Virus; VIRUS CLASSIFICATION; HBV DNA; CPMV; DNA Tumor Virus; Spinal Cord; Cerebro Spinal Fluid; Wasp Egg; Plant Virology; Kluwer Academic Publishers; NK Cell
Publication date: 07-2017
· 21x28 cm · Hardback
Approximative price 96.92 €
Subject to availability at the publisher.
Add to cart the book of Ackermann Hans-WolfgangPublication date: 11-2000
264 p. · 21x28 cm
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Readership
/li>Biography
/li>
Viral Pathogenesis in Diagrams is the first book of its kind to illustrate viral pathogenesis on a comparative basis. The text covers the pathogenesis of viral diseases, including vertebrates, invertebrates, plants, and protists. The diagrams summarize and integrate large numbers of observations, from electron microscopy to clinical data, into a single picture or a few related drawings.
Organized alphabetically by virus family or groups, this book covers the complete domain of virology. Transcending photographs and experimental data, the diagrams are ideally suited to illustrate the pathogenesis of viral diseases, from infection to host defenses and cell death.
Included are two chapters describing general pathogenesis in vertebrate virus infections and illustrating the spread of viruses through the body, as well as cytopathology and host defenses. One chapter illustrates the pathogenic behavior of 19 vertebrate virus families, especially herpesviruses and retroviruses.
The 268 diagrams in Viral Pathogenesis in Diagrams were selected from over 800 diagrams of English and French virological literature, including one derived from a famous drawing by Leonardo da Vinci. This up-to-date reference will promote understanding and future research.