Cover image for At War Within : The Double-Edged Sword of Immunity.
At War Within : The Double-Edged Sword of Immunity.
Title:
At War Within : The Double-Edged Sword of Immunity.
Author:
Clark, William R.
ISBN:
9780198025306
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (289 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Overture to a Science Unborn: Smallpox and the Origins of Immunology -- Vaccination: The End of a Plague -- Beyond Vaccination: Pasteur, Koch, and the Germ Theory of Disease -- 2 The Anatomy of an Immune Response -- A Gift of Life -- The Antibody Response -- T Cells: The Second Arm of the Immune Response -- The Lymphatic System -- The Bone Marrow and the Thymus -- 3 Living in the Bubble: Primary Immune Deficiency Diseases -- A Light Goes On -- Going Naked in the World: SCID -- Gene Therapy: The New Hope -- 4 Hypersensitivity and Allergy -- The Discovery of Hypersensitivity -- Allergy in Humans: The Tip of the Iceberg -- Specific Forms of Human Allergy -- A Dream Gone Wrong: Immune Complex Diseases -- Why Hypersensitivity? -- 5 Horror Autotoxicus: The Immunology of Self-Destruction -- Tuberculosis and DTH Reactions -- Tuberculosis as an Autoaggressive Disease -- Viral Hepatitis -- Immunological Tolerance -- Autoimmune Disease in Humans -- Autoimmune Hepatitis -- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus -- Myasthenia Gravis -- Why Are We So Self-Destructive? -- 6 When the Wall Comes Tumbling Down: AIDS -- AIDS as a Clinical Problem -- Opportunistic Infections -- AIDS-Associated Cancers -- AIDS-Associated Neurological Disorders -- AIDS as a Problem in Virology -- The Immunology of AIDS -- Preventing and Treating AIDS -- What Lies Ahead? -- A Solution to the Dormancy Problem -- A Vaccine -- Drugs -- Gene Therapy -- "The Worst Possible Nightmare" -- 7 Organ Transplantation: Exploring the Boundary Between Technology and Ethics -- The Immunological Basis of Organ Transplantation -- From Pastime to Prime Time: The Advent of Immunosuppressive Drugs -- The Ethics of Organ Procurement: A Modern Moral Dilemma -- Living Donors -- Cadaver Donors -- Alternatives to Human Organ Transplantation -- Xenotransplantation.

Modern Moral Dilemmas: Part II -- Molecular Biology to the Rescue (Again!) -- Artificial Organs -- 8 Minding the Immune System's Business: The Dialogue Between the Brain and the Immune System -- The Mind and Disease -- Lines of Communication -- Talking It Out -- Appendix: Diversity, Tolerance, and Memory: The Politically Correct Immune System -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Z.
Abstract:
In the seventeenth century, smallpox reigned as the world's worst killer. Luck, more than anything else, decided who would live and who would die. That is, until Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, an English aristocrat, moved to Constantinople and noticed the Turkish practice of "ingrafting" or inoculation, which, she wrote, made "the small- pox...entirely harmless." Convinced by what she witnessed, she allowed her six-year-old son to be ingrafted, and the treatment was a complete success--the young Montagu enjoyed lifelong immunity from smallpox. Lady Montagu's discovery would, however, remain a quiet one; it would be almost 150 years before inoculation (in the more modern form of vaccination) would become widely accepted while the medical community struggled to understand the way our bodies defend themselves against disease. William Clark's At War Within takes us on a fascinating tour through the immune system, examining the history of its discovery, the ways in which it protects us, and how it may bring its full force to bear at the wrong time or in the wrong place. Scientists have only gradually come to realize that this elegant defense system not only has the potential to help, as in the case of smallpox, but also the potential to do profound harm in health problems ranging from allergies to AIDS, and from organ transplants to cancer. Dr. Clark discusses the myriad of medical problems involving the immune system, and he systematically explains each one. For example, in both tuberculosis and AIDS, the underlying pathogens take up residence within the immune system itself, something Clark compares to having a prowler take up residence in your house, crawling around through the walls and ceilings while waiting to do you in. He discusses organ transplants, showing how the immune system can work far too well, and touching on the heated ethical debate

over the use of both primate and human organs. He explores the mind's powerful ability to influence the performance of the immune system; and the speculation that women, because they have developed more powerful immune systems in connection with childbearing, are more prone than men to contract certain diseases such as lupus. In a fascinating chapter on AIDS, arguably the most deadly epidemic seen on Earth since the smallpox, Clark explains how the disease originated and the ways in which it operates. And, in each section, we learn about the most recent medical breakthroughs. At first glance, it may appear that our immune system faces daunting odds; it must learn to successfully fend off, not thousands, but millions of different types of microbes. Fortunately, according to Clark, it would be almost impossible to imagine a more elegant strategy for our protection than the one chosen by our immune system, and his At War Within provides a thorough and engaging explanation of this most complex and delicately balanced mechanism.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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