1st Edition

Brucellosis Clinical and Laboratory Aspects

By Edward J. Young, Michael J. Corbel Copyright 1989

    Fourteen brucellosis experts from seven countries discuss the history, epidemiology, microbiology, immunology, diagnosis, treatment, and control of brucellosis in animals and man. Edited by members of the World Health Organization's Expert Committee on Brucellosis, this text is the first comprehensive treatment of the disease since The Nature of Brucellosis by Wesley W. Spink in 1956. Topics reviewed with current references include infection caused by newer species of Brucella, such as B. canis, newer diagnostic techniques, such as radioimmunoassay and ELISA, and newer treatments, such as rifampin and the quinolones. The pathogenesis and pathophysiology of brucellosis is reviewed in depth, correlating the disease in animals with the illness in humans. This volume is extremely useful for clinicians, researchers, and students in medicine, veterinary science, microbiology, immunology, epidemiology, public health, and international health.

    History of Brucella as a Human Pathogen. The Mediterranean Fever Commission: Its Origin and Achievements. Brucellosis: Epidemiology and Prevalence Worldwide. Relationship Between Animal and Human Disease. Microbiology of the Genus Brucella. Laboratory Techniques in the Diagnosis of Human Brucellosis. Immunology and Pathophysiology of Human Brucellosis. Clinical Manifestations of Human Brucellosis. Treatment of Brucellosis in Humans. Brucellosis in Rural Practice. Brucellosis in Latin America. Brucellosis in Eastern European Countries. Brucellosis in China. Index. 200 pp., 7x10, 1989, ISBN 0-8493-6661-5.

    * The first comprehensive treatment of Brucellosis since The Nature of Brucellosis by Wesley W. Spink in 1956.

    Features:

    Biography

    E.J. Young and M.J. Corbel