Fr. 116.00

Paleomicrobiology of Humans

English · Paperback / Softback

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Only recently was it determined that two of the world's most devastating plagues, the plague of Justinian and the medieval Black Death, were caused by distinct strains of the same pathogen. Use of paleomicrobiological techniques led to this discovery. This work is just one example of the historical mysteries that this emerging field has helped to clarify. Others, such as when tuberculosis began to afflict humans, the role of lice in plague pandemics, and the history of smallpox, are explored and further illuminated in Paleomicrobiology of Humans.
 
Led by editors Michel Drancourt and Didier Raoult, the book's expert contributors address larger issues using paleomicrobiology. These include the recognition of human remains associated with epidemic outbreaks, identification of the graves of disasters, and the discovery of demographic structures that reveal the presence of an epidemic moment. In addition, the book reviews the technical approaches and controversies associated with recovering and sequencing very old DNA and surveys modern human diseases that have ancient roots.
 
Essentially, paleomicrobiologists aim to identify past epidemics at the crossroads of different specialties, including anthropology, medicine, molecular biology, and microbiology. Thus, this book is of great interest not only to microbiologists but to medical historians and anthropologists as well.
 
Paleomicrobiology of Humans is the first comprehensive book to examine so many aspects of this new, multidisciplinary, scientific field.

List of contents

Contributors vii
 
Introduction xi
 
Acknowledgments xiii
 
1 Demographic Patterns Distinctive of Epidemic Cemeteries in Archaeological Samples 1
Dominique Castex and Sacha Kacki
 
2 Characterization of the Funeral Groups Associated with Plague Epidemics 13
Stéfan Tzortzis and Michel Signoli
 
3 Paleogenetics and Past Infections: the Two Faces of the Coin of Human Immune Evolution 21
Laurent Abi-Rached and Didier Raoult
 
4 A Personal View of How Paleomicrobiology Aids Our Understanding of the Role of Lice in Plague Pandemics 29
Didier Raoult
 
5 Sources of materials for Paleomicrobiology 39
Gérard Aboudharam
 
6 Paleomicrobiology Data: Authentification and Interpretation 51
Michel Drancourt
 
7 Human Coprolites as a Source for Paleomicrobiology 59
Sandra Appelt, Michel Drancourt, and Matthieu Le Bailly
 
8 Ancient Resistome 75
Abiola Olumuyiwa Olaitain and Jean-Marc Rolain
 
9 The History of Epidemic Typhus 81
Emmanouil Angelakis, Yassina Bechah, and Didier Raoult
 
10 Paleopathology of Human Infections: Old Bones, Antique Books, Ancient and Modern Molecules 93
Olivier Dutour
 
11 Past Bartonelloses 107
Pierre-Edouard Fournier
 
12 Paleomicrobiology Of Human Tuberculosis 113
Helen Donoghue
 
13 Paleomicrobiology of Leprosy 131
Mark Spigelman and Mauro Rubini
 
14 Past Intestinal Parasites 143
Matthieu Le Bailly and Adauto Araújo
 
15 Paleopathology and Paleomicrobiology of Malaria 155
Andreas Nerlich
 
16 History of Smallpox and Its Spread in Human Populations 161
Catherine Thèves, Eric Crubézy, and Philippe Biagini
 
17 Cholera 173
Donatella Lippi, Eduardo Gotuzzo, and Saverio Caini
 
18 Human Lice in Paleoentomology and Paleomicrobiology 181
Rezak Drali, Kosta Y. Mumcuoglu, and Didier Raoult
 
Index 191

Summary

Only recently was it determined that two of the world's most devastating plagues, the plague of Justinian and the medieval Black Death, were caused by distinct strains of the same pathogen. Use of paleomicrobiological techniques led to this discovery. This work is just one example of the historical mysteries that this emerging field has helped to clarify. Others, such as when tuberculosis began to afflict humans, the role of lice in plague pandemics, and the history of smallpox, are explored and further illuminated in Paleomicrobiology of Humans.

Led by editors Michel Drancourt and Didier Raoult, the book's expert contributors address larger issues using paleomicrobiology. These include the recognition of human remains associated with epidemic outbreaks, identification of the graves of disasters, and the discovery of demographic structures that reveal the presence of an epidemic moment. In addition, the book reviews the technical approaches and controversies associated with recovering and sequencing very old DNA and surveys modern human diseases that have ancient roots.

Essentially, paleomicrobiologists aim to identify past epidemics at the crossroads of different specialties, including anthropology, medicine, molecular biology, and microbiology. Thus, this book is of great interest not only to microbiologists but to medical historians and anthropologists as well.

Paleomicrobiology of Humans is the first comprehensive book to examine so many aspects of this new, multidisciplinary, scientific field.

Product details

Authors Michel Drancourt, Didier A. Raoult
Assisted by A Raoult (Editor), A Raoult (Editor), Miche Drancourt (Editor), Michel Drancourt (Editor), Michel (Aix Marseille Universite) Drancourt (Editor), Didier Raoult (Editor), Didier (Aix Marseille Universite) Raoult (Editor), Didier A. Raoult (Editor)
Publisher Wiley & Sons
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.09.2016
 
EAN 9781555819163
ISBN 978-1-55581-916-3
No. of pages 212
Dimensions 150 mm x 250 mm x 15 mm
Weight 666 g
Series ASM Books
ASM
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

Mikrobiologie, Medizin, Paläontologie, microbiology, Medical Science, Mikrobiologie u. Virologie, Paläomikrobiologie

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