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Inflammatory Disorders - Part A

  • Book

  • January 2020
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 4844318

Inflammation is a biological response triggered by different stimuli that has in the body a potentially damaging effect. In certain conditions, such as injury or infection, inflammation is a normal, healthy response. However, inflammatory disorders that result in the immune system attacking the body's own cells or tissues may cause abnormal inflammation, which results in chronic pain, redness, swelling, stiffness, and damage to normal tissues. Mechanisms involved in promoting a number of different inflammatory disorders and their targeting for therapeutic benefit have been one of the hottest topics in last few decades. The two consecutive volumes (119 and 120) dedicated to this subject cover a wide spectrum of inflammatory disorders, mechanisms that are believed to cause them and different strategies for managing the inflammatory diseases.

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Table of Contents

1. Using evasins to target the chemokine network in inflammation Shoumo Bhattacharya and Akane Kawamura 2. Biological functions and clinical implications of interleukin-34 in inflammatory diseases Yun Ge, Man Huang, Xiao-mei Zhu, and Yong-ming Yao 3. Pattern recognition receptors as potential drug targets in inflammatory disorders Declan P. McKernan 4. Glycosylation changes in inflammatory diseases Sophie Groux-Degroote, Sumeyye Cavdarli, Kenji Uchimura, Fabrice Allain, and Philippe Delannoy 5. Inflammatory bowel disease and targeted oral anti-TNFa therapy Owen R. Griffiths, John Landon, Ruth E. Coxon, Keith Morris, Philip James, and Rachel Adams 6. Interplay between inflammation and cancer Rekha Khandia and Ashok Munjal 7. Microglial NLRP3 inflammasome activation in multiple sclerosis Melis Olcum, Bora Tastan, Cagla Kiser, Sermin Genc and Kursad Genc 8. Sleep deprivation, oxidative stress and inflammation Fatin Atrooz and Samina Salim

Authors

Rossen Donev Head of Research, MicroPharm Limited, UK. Rossen Donev received his PhD degree in 1999 from the Institute of Molecular Biology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. He did postdoctoral training at Imperial Cancer Research Fund, UK (renamed after the merger with Cancer Research Campaign to Cancer Research UK, London Research Institute) and Cardiff University. In 2007 he was awarded a New Investigator Grant Award from the Medical Research Council (UK) to establish himself as an independent Principle Investigator. In 2010 Dr. Donev was appointed Senior Lecturer at Swansea University. In 2016 Dr. Donev joined MicroPharm Ltd (UK) where currently he is Head of Research. He has published more than 60 research papers, chaired scientific meetings and given invited plenary talks. Rossen Donev has consulted on projects related to development of treatments for neurodevelopmental disorders and cancer therapies. He serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Advances in Protein Chemistry and Structural Biology and on editorial board of several other journals. His research interests include signaling pathways involved in neuropsychiatric disorders and tumor escape from the immune system, and development of therapeutic strategies for their treatment. More recently he has focused on development of immunotherapeutics for non-systemic applications.