의학서적전문 "성보의학서적"의 신간의학도서입니다.
Microbial transmission, the processes by which microbes transit to new environments, is a significant and broad-reaching concept with applications throughout the biological sciences. This collection of reviews, edited by an international team of experts studying and working across a range of disciplines, explores transmission not just as an idea in disease but as a fundamental biological process that acts in all domains of nature and exerts its force on disparate size scales, from the micro to the macro, and across units of time as divergent as a single bacterial replication cycle and the entire course of evolution.
In five sections, this overview
•Defines the concept of transmission and covers basic processes of transmission, including causality, control strategies, fitness costs, virulence, and selection
•Presents numerous combinations of transmission scenarios across the bacterial, animal, and human interface
•Examines transmission as the defining characteristic of infectious disease
•Presents methods for experimentally verifying and quantifying transmission episodes
•Concludes with important theoretical and modeling approaches
Anyone studying or working in microbial colonization, evolution, pathogenicity, antimicrobial resistance, or public health will benefit from a deeper understanding of Microbial Transmission.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Introduction
1) About the meanings of the Word “transmission” in natural sciences.
Fernando Navarro, Joaquín Villalba, Francisco Cortés
Dictionary of Medical Terms, Royal Academy of Medicine of Spain; Department for Latin Philology, Extremadura University, and Greek Philology, Salamanca University, Spain
Edited by Fernando Baquero
2. The Basic Process of Transmission
2) Transmission, Introgression, Spinning, and Evolution
Fernando Baquero
Department of Microbiology, Ramón y Cajal University Hospital, Ramón y Cajal Institute for Health Research (IRYCIS), Madrid, Spain
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
3) Genetic transmission from bacteria-to-bacteria
Fernando de la Cruz
Cantabrian Institute for Biomedicine and Biotechnology, Cantabria University, Santander, Spain
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
4) Basic processes in bacteria-host-interactions: within host evolution and the transmission of the virulent genotype
Wolf-Dietrich Hardt
Institute of Microbiology (D-BIOL), ETH Zürich. Zürich, Switzerland
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
5) The extracelular-intracellular transition and the transmission of Salmonella
Francisco García del Portillo
Department of Microbial Biotechnology, National Center for Biotechnology (CNB-CSIC), Madrid, Spain
Edited by Fernando Baquero
6) Drivers of plasmid mediated transmission of resistance: what we think we know!
Tim Walsh
Cardiff Institute of Infection & Immunity, Cardiff University School of Medicine
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
7) Transmission of high-risk bacterial clones
Teresa M. Coque
Department of Microbiology, Ramón y Cajal University Hospital, Ramón y Cajal Institute for Health Research (IRYCIS), Madrid, Spain
Edited by Fernando Baquero
8) Antimicrobial Selection and Transmission
Dan A. Andersson
Department of Biochesmistry and Molecular Cell Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Edited by Fernando Baquero
3. The Scenarios of Transmission
9) Ecology and evolution of chromosomal gene transfer between environmental microorganisms and pathogens
José Luis Martínez
Department of Molecular Microbiology, National Center for Biotechnology, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Fernando Baquero
4:00UNCH
10) Animal-to-human bacterial transmission
Bruno González-Zorn
Unit for Food Zoonosis and Antibiotic Resistance. Center for Veterinarian Health Surveillance (VISAVET), Complutensis University, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
11) Food-to-humans bacterial transmission
Luisa Peixe, Patricia Antunes, Carla Novais
National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
12) Transmission from hosts to the environment
Elizabeth Wellington
School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick. Warwick, UK
Edited by Fernando Baquero
13) Sewage-to-water and food bacterial transmission
Kornellia Smalla
Julius Kuhn Institute. Institute of Epidemiology and Pathogen Diagnostics
Braunschweig, Germany
Edited by Fernando Baquero
14) Inter-hospital transmission of bacterial pathogens: biogeographical surveillance
Hajo Grundmann
Department of Medical Microbiology. University of Groningen. The Netherlands
Edited by Jose Antonio Gutiérrez-Fuentes
15) Microbial transmission in wild life
Peter Daszak
Consortium for Conservation Medicine, Wildlife Trust, New York, USA
Edited by Teresa M. Coque4. Patient-to-Patient Transmission
16) Hospital vehicles for transmission: who and what to blame?
Andreas F. Widmer
Division of Infectious Diseases and Hospital Epidemiology, University Hospital Basel. Basel, Switzerland
Edited by Emilio Bouza
17) Transmission of antibiotic resistance: from outbreaks to endemicity
Rafael Cantón
Department of Microbiology, Ramón y Cajal University Hospital, IRYCIS, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
18) Fecal transplantation: when transmission is healthy. The case of Clostridium difficile infection
Mark Wilcox.
Leeds Institute of Biomedical & Clinical Sciences. Old Medical School, LGI. Leeds, UK
Edited by Emilio Bouza
19) Biology of hands transmission of microorganisms
Rosa del Campo
Department of Microbiology, Ramón y Cajal University Hospital, IRYCIS, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Jose Antonio Gutiérrez-Fuentes
20) Transmission surveillance in the Health System
Johann Pitout
Dept of Pathology and Lab Medicine University of Calgary, Canada
Edited by Emilio Bouza
21) The evolution of genotyping strategies to detect, analyze and control tuberculosis transmission
Darío García de Viedma
Department of de Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, IISGM, Gregorio Marañon General University Hospital, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Emilio Bouza
22) The environment as a vehicle of fungal disease transmission in hospitals: the Aspergillus and Candida models
Jesús V. Guinea
Department of de Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, IISGM, Gregorio Marañon General University Hospital, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Emilio Bouza
23) Breaking transmission with vaccines: the case of tuberculosis
Carlos Martín
Department of Microbiology, Preventive Medicine, and Public Health, Unit for Bacterial Genetics, Zaragoza University, Zaragoza, Spain
Edited by Emilio Bouza
24) Transmission, human population, and pathogenicity: the EBOLA case-in-point
Rafael Delgado, Fernando Simón
Department of Microbiology, 12 de Octubre University Hospital, and Center for Health Alerts and Emergencies Coordination, Ministry of Health, Madrid, Spain
Edited by Jse Antonio Gutiérrez-Fuentes
5. Experimental and Theoretical Modes of Transmission
25) Infectious transmission and the evolution and epidemiology of antibiotic resistance
Bruce Levin
Department of Biology, Emory University. Atlanta, USA
Edited by Fernando Baquero
26) Approaches to quantify and analyze microbial transmission
Mark Woolhouse
Epidemiology Group, Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, UK
Edited by Jose Antonio Gutiérrez-Fuentes
27) Experimental epidemiology of antibiotic resistance: looking for an appropriate animal model system
Amparo Latorre, Andres Moya
Cavanilles Institute for Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology (ICBiBE), Valencia University, Valencia, Spain
Edited by Fernando Baquero
28) The units of biodiversity and the units of transmission
Frederick M. Cohan
Department of Biology, Wesleyan University. Middletown, Connecticut, USA
Edited by Teresa M. Coque
29) Tracking the rules of transmission and introgression with networks
Eric Bapteste
Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine. UMR 7138 CNRS-UPMC Evolution. Paris, France
Edited by Fernando Baquero
30) New tools for characterizing transmission in complex populations
Willem van Shaik
University of Utrecht. Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Edited by Fernando Baquero
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