Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The cestodes: general considerations
- 2 The adult cestode: special structural features relevant to its physiology
- 3 The adult cestode in its environment
- 4 The adult: general metabolism and chemical composition; lipid metabolism
- 5 The adult: carbohydrate metabolism
- 6 The adult: proteins and nucleic acids
- 7 The biology of the egg
- 8 Developmental biology of larvae
- 9 Development within definitive host
- 10 Cultivation of cestodes in vitro
- 11 Immunobiology of cestodes
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The cestodes: general considerations
- 2 The adult cestode: special structural features relevant to its physiology
- 3 The adult cestode in its environment
- 4 The adult: general metabolism and chemical composition; lipid metabolism
- 5 The adult: carbohydrate metabolism
- 6 The adult: proteins and nucleic acids
- 7 The biology of the egg
- 8 Developmental biology of larvae
- 9 Development within definitive host
- 10 Cultivation of cestodes in vitro
- 11 Immunobiology of cestodes
- References
- Index
Summary
The text of this book is based essentially on The Physiology of Cestodes (J. D. S. Smyth; W. H. Freeman/Oliver & Boyd, 1969) with an extended content and title to take into account the impact of biochemistry and molecular biology on the field. In addition, other new investigative techniques, such as transmission and scanning electron microscopy, cytochemistry, immunochemistry, population dynamics, immunobiology, and in vitro culture has greatly extended our understanding of cestode physiology and in this text we have attempted to review progress made up to 1986/87. Within the permissible space restrictions, it has not always been possible to quote work prior to 1970 and the reader is referred to the earlier volume for these data. Reference to early work of major fundamental importance, however, has been retained.
As well as being the causative organisms of a number of major human and animal diseases (e.g. cysticercosis, hydatidosis), cestodes serve as elegant experimental models for the study of fundamental biological phenomena. These include not only problems of specific parasitological interest, such as host-specificity, but also more basic problems such as enzyme dynamics, membrane transport and cell and tissue differentiation (especially asexual/sexual differentiation), common to many other biological fields.
An attempt has been made to give a representative worldwide coverage of the literature with major reviews being quoted where possible. Even with vigorous selection, the number of references has increased from 492 in the earlier volume to nearly 1000 in this version.
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- The Physiology and Biochemistry of Cestodes , pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989