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Engineering health : how biotechnology changed medicine / edited by Lara Marks.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: London : The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2018.Description: xii, 267 p. : ill. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781782620846
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 610.28 MAR
Contents:
Introduction: Biotechnology-An Ever Expanding Toolbox for Medicine Biopharmaceutical Proteins: The Manufacturing Challenge Vaccines: The Recombinant Revolution Monoclonal Antibodies: A Revolution in the Transformation of Healthcare The Changing Fortune of Cancer Immunotherapy Gene Therapy: An Evolving Story Stem Cells: An Emerging Field for Medicine Protein Therapeutics and Blinding Diseases Synthetic Biology: A Game Changer? Synthetic Biology-Engineering Tomorrow's Medicines
Summary: Biotechnology harnesses cellular and biochemical systems to advance knowledge of the molecular cause of disease and to provide new diagnostic tools and more precisely targeted drugs. Within a decade, global investment in medical biotechnology has increased more than ten-fold, resulting in therapies for previously untreatable conditions. But what exactly is biotechnology and what are its origins? What further benefits to human health could it offer in the future? In an accessible style, this book examines how biotechnology tools came to be discovered, how they are being used, and what the future of medicine could look like. Experts trace the development of biotechnologies such as DNA sequencing, gene therapy and monocolonal antibodies explaining how they are applied in medicine to combat disease. Find out about the science behind diagnostic technologies, such as cancer screening and pregnancy tests. Explore how genetic engineering has produced new vaccines. Applying new biotechnologies in medicine is not without great challenges. As medicines shift from small organic molecules to large, complex structures, such as therapeutic proteins, drugs become difficult to make, administer and regulate. This book will intrigue anyone who is interested in medicine and how we have been, and may continue to, engineer better health for ourselves.
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Reference Reference Kalaignar Centenary Library Madurai ENGLISH-REFERENCE BOOKS ஆறாம் தளம் / Sixth floor 610.28 MAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 193103

Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction: Biotechnology-An Ever Expanding Toolbox for Medicine
Biopharmaceutical Proteins: The Manufacturing Challenge
Vaccines: The Recombinant Revolution
Monoclonal Antibodies: A Revolution in the Transformation of Healthcare
The Changing Fortune of Cancer Immunotherapy
Gene Therapy: An Evolving Story
Stem Cells: An Emerging Field for Medicine
Protein Therapeutics and Blinding Diseases
Synthetic Biology: A Game Changer?
Synthetic Biology-Engineering Tomorrow's Medicines

Biotechnology harnesses cellular and biochemical systems to advance knowledge of the molecular cause of disease and to provide new diagnostic tools and more precisely targeted drugs. Within a decade, global investment in medical biotechnology has increased more than ten-fold, resulting in therapies for previously untreatable conditions. But what exactly is biotechnology and what are its origins? What further benefits to human health could it offer in the future? In an accessible style, this book examines how biotechnology tools came to be discovered, how they are being used, and what the future of medicine could look like. Experts trace the development of biotechnologies such as DNA sequencing, gene therapy and monocolonal antibodies explaining how they are applied in medicine to combat disease. Find out about the science behind diagnostic technologies, such as cancer screening and pregnancy tests. Explore how genetic engineering has produced new vaccines. Applying new biotechnologies in medicine is not without great challenges. As medicines shift from small organic molecules to large, complex structures, such as therapeutic proteins, drugs become difficult to make, administer and regulate. This book will intrigue anyone who is interested in medicine and how we have been, and may continue to, engineer better health for ourselves.

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