
eBook - ePub
Reciprocal Translation Between Pathophysiology and Practice in Health and Disease
- 334 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Reciprocal Translation Between Pathophysiology and Practice in Health and Disease
About this book
Reciprocal Translation Between Pathophysiology and Practice in Health and Disease brings a novel perspective, closing the knowledge gap between normal/abnormal physiology. Chapters describe the basic mechanisms underlying a disease or trauma-related response, describe consequences in practice, and provide insights on how to use information to better understand disease outcomes. Other sections explore how these responses are beneficial and driven by similar hormones and inflammatory immune cell derived modulators. This is a must-have resource for those seeking an authoritative and comprehensive understanding on how to treat the basic mechanisms underlying disease or trauma-related responses.With contributions from Petronella L.M. Reijven.
- Provides an overview of fundamental/foundational content and then goes on to translate the information to more clinically-oriented perspectives
- Highlights the benefit of normal pathophysiological response to stress and the misunderstandings surrounding the treatment of this response
- Explains how treatment should be adapted to support the inflammatory response and how to treat its inflammatory cause
- Includes case studies and slides
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Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Reciprocal Translation Between Pathophysiology and Practice in Health and Disease by Peter B. Soeters,Peter W. de Leeuw in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Physiology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Front Matter
- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Chapter 1 : Reciprocal translation between pathophysiology and practice in health and disease
- Chapter 2 : General principles of the repair mechanism
- Chapter 3 : Cardiovascular responses to injury
- Chapter 4 : Insulin resistance as an adaptive mechanism
- Chapter 5 : Hypercholesterolemia, harm, or benefit?
- Chapter 6 : Macronutrient metabolism in starvation and stress
- Chapter 7 : The role of ectopic adipose tissue: Benefit or deleterious overflow?
- Chapter 8 : The gut/liver axis, inflammation, and the pathogenesis of metabolic syndrome
- Chapter 9 : Harm and benefit of the inflammatory response
- Chapter 10 : The beneficial role of inflammation and metabolic cycling (Warburg revisited)
- Chapter 11 : From hepatic encephalopathy to the quality of food protein and protein requirements: A serendipitous journey
- Chapter 12 : The underlying metabolism of hypoalbuminemia and its clinical effects
- Chapter 13 : Cardiovascular stress syndromes
- Chapter 14 : The benefit of moderate hyperglycemia and hyperlactatemia in critical illness or synthesis of biomass
- Chapter 15 : Anemia as an adaptive phenomenon
- Chapter 16 : Vitamin D in health and disease
- Chapter 17 : Decreases of plasma solutes in health and disease: Deficiency or resulting from changing binding proteins and distribution volume?
- Chapter 18 : Comparable metabolism in pregnancy and cancer: A universal role of the Warburg effect
- Chapter 19 : Nutritional assessment and the role of preexisting inflammation with a bearing on COVID-19
- Chapter 20 : The harm afflicted by NSAIDs, statins, and oral antidiabetics by blocking adaptive inflammatory metabolism
- Chapter 21 : Benefit and concern of ketogenic and vegan diets: A revisit to pathophysiology
- Chapter 22 : Pathophysiology in practice: How to manage gastrointestinal surgery in acute and elective disease conditions
- Chapter 23 : The pathophysiology underlying the obesity and plasma cholesterol paradoxes
- Chapter 24 : The final conclusion: Dogma, bias, and big data
- Index
- A