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Markell and Voge's Medical Parasitology

  • 9th Edition - January 27, 2006
  • Latest edition
  • Authors: David T. John, William A. Petri
  • Editor: Greg Martin
  • Language: English

With a new two-color design, Markell and Voge's Medical Parasitology has an updated and fresh look that highlights the comprehensive material students have trusted for over 40… Read more

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Description

With a new two-color design, Markell and Voge's Medical Parasitology has an updated and fresh look that highlights the comprehensive material students have trusted for over 40 years. Completely redrawn line drawings and improved halftones provide visual examples related directly to the textual material. The content explores the etiologic agents of human disease belonging to the animal kingdom: protozoa, helminths (worms), and arthropods (insects and spiders), all of which are a significant cause of, or link to illness encountered both in tropical and temperate environments. In addition to providing detailed descriptions of these agents, this text deals with the clinical diseases they cause, their modes of acquisition, transmission and epidemiology, and their pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment and prevention.

Key features

  • Ten-page insert with full color plates of various parasites, eggs, and life cycles provides students with real-life examples of how parasites and their associated material appear in order to facilitate their identification in the laboratory.
  • Summary Tables appear at the ends of the parasite/disease chapters to summarize the main features of the chapter and to present the salient information from the chapter to allow students better comprehension of the material.
  • Life cycle drawings show progression of parasites from infancy to adult so students can recognize parasites at each stage of life.
  • Disease distribution maps depict the global distribution of key parasites to help students see the global impact that various parasites have.
  • The text explores arthropods both as parasites in their own right and as vectors or intermediate hosts for other parasites so students can understand the direct and indirect impact that they have on health.

Table of contents

1. Introduction


2. Parasites, Parasitism, and Host Relations


3. Lumen-Dwelling Protozoa


4. Malaria


5. Other Blood- and Tissue-Dwelling Protozoa


6. The Trematodes


7. The Cestodes


8. The Intestinal Nematodes


9. The Blood- and Tissue-Dwelling Nematodes


10. Arthropods and Human Disease


11. Parasitic Infections in Immunocompromised Hosts


12. Signs and Symptoms of Parasitic Disease


13. Pseudoparasites and Pitfalls


14. Examination of Stool Specimens


15. Examination of Blood, Other Body Fluids and Tissues, Sputum, and Urine


16. Immunodiagnostic Techniques

Product details

  • Edition: 9
  • Latest edition
  • Published: January 27, 2006
  • Language: English

About the editor

GM

Greg Martin

Affiliations and expertise
Grady Memorial Hospital, Room 2C-007, Emory University School of Medicine

About the authors

DJ

David T. John

Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Microbiology/Parasitology, Associate Dean for Basic Sciences and Graduate Studies, Oklahoma State University, College of Osteopathic Medicine, Tulsa, OK

WP

William A. Petri

Affiliations and expertise
Wade Hampton Frost Professor of Medicine, Microbiology and Pathology, Chief, Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA, USA 1