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Adaptive Dynamics of Infectious Diseases: In Pursuit of Virulence Management (Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Dynamics)

Adaptive Dynamics of Infectious Diseases: In Pursuit of Virulence Management (Cambridge Studies in Adaptive Dynamics)

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Karl Sigmund Edited by Ulf Dieckmann
Cambridge University Press, 4/11/2002
EAN 9780521781657, ISBN10: 0521781655

Hardcover, 552 pages, 23.7 x 15.7 x 3 cm
Language: English

Emerging diseases pose a continual threat to public health. Short multiplication time and high variability allow pathogens to evolve very rapidly. It is therefore imperative to incorporate evolutionary considerations into longer-term health management plans. The evolution of infectious disease is also an ideal test-bed for theories of evolutionary dynamics. This book combines both threads, taking stock of our current knowledge on the evolutionary ecology of infectious diseases, and setting out the goals for the management of virulent pathogens. Throughout the book, the fundamental concepts and techniques underlying the modelling are carefully explained in a unique series of integrated boxes. The book ends with an overview of novel options for virulence management in humans, farm animals, plants, wildlife populations and biological control schemes. Written for graduate students and researchers, Adaptive Dynamics of Infectious Diseases provides an integrated treatment of mathematical evolutionary modelling and disease management.

1. Introduction Karl Sigmund, Maurice W. Sabelis, Ulf Dieckmann and J. A. J. Metz
Part I. Setting the Stage
2. Alternative transmission modes and the evolution of virulence Paul W. Ewald and Guilio De Leo
3. Wildlife perspectives on the evolution of virulence Guilio De Leo, Andy Dobson and Andy Goodman
4. Adaptive dynamics of pathogen-host interactions Ulf Dieckmann
5. Dilemmas in virulence management Minus van Baalen
Part II. Host Population Structure
6. Variation in susceptibility
lessons from an insect virus Greg Dwyer, Jonathan Dushoff, Joseph S. Elkinton, John P. Burand and Simon A. Levin
7. Contact networks and the evolution of virulence Minus van Baalen
8. Virulence on the edge
a source-sink perspective Robert D. Holt and Michael E. Hochberg
Part III. Within-Host Interactions
9. Super- and coinfection
the two extremes Martin Nowak and Karl Sigmund
10. Super- and coinfection
filling the range Frederick Adler and Julio Mosquero Losada
11. Multiple infection and its consequences for virulence management Sylvain Gandon and Yannis Michalakis
12. Kin selection models as evolutionary explanations of malaria Andrew F. Read, Margaret J. Mackinnon, M. Ali Anwar and Louise H. Taylor
Part IV. Pathogen-Host Coevolution
13. Coevolution of virus and host cell death signals David C. Krakauer
14. Biogeographical perspectives on arms races Michael E. Hochberg and Robert D. Holt
15. Major histocompatability complex
polymorphism from coevolution Joost B. Beltman, José A. M. Borghans and Rob J. de Boer
16. Virulence management and disease resistance in diploid hosts Viggo Andreasen
17. Coevolution in gene-for-gene systems Akira Sasaki
18. Implications of sexual selection for virulence management Claus Wedekind
19. Molecular phylogenies and virulence evolution Bruce Rannala
Part V. Multilevel Selection
20. Weakened from within
intragenomic conflict and virulence Rolf F. Hoekstra and Alfons J. M. Debets
21. Ecology and evolution of chestnut blight fungus Douglas R. Taylor
22. Evolution of exploitation and defense in tritrophic interactions Maurice W. Sabelis, Minus van Baalen, Bas Pels, Martijn Egas and Arne Janssen
Part VI. Vaccines and Drugs
23. Managing antibiotic resistance Sebastian Bonhoeffer
24. Evolution of vaccine-resistant strains of infectious agents Angela McLean
25. Pathogen evolution
the case of malaria Sunetra Gupta
26. Vaccination and serotype replacement Marc Lipsitch
Part VII. Perspectives for Virulence Management
27. Taking stock
relating theory to experiment Maurice W. Sabelis and Johan A. J. Metz
28. Virulence management in humans Paul W. Ewald
29. Virulence management in wildlife populations Guilio De Leo and Andy Dobson
30. Virulence management in veterinary epidemiology Mart C. M. de Jong and Luc L. G. Janss
31. Virulence management in plant-pathogen interactions Andrew M. Jarosz
32. Management of virulence in biocontrol agents Sam L. Elliot, Maurice W. Sabelis and Frederick R. Adler
33. Epilogue Ulf Dieckmann, Karl Sigmund, Maurice W. Sabelis and Johan A. J. Metz.

'... anyone with an interest in evolutionary dynamics will find several chapters that they wish to read (or ought to read).' TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution 'Outstanding, intellectually stimulating, this is a meticulously researched book. It merits a prominent place on the bookshelves of researchers, teachers, and students who are concerned with the complex dynamics of infectious diseases.' Conservation Ecology '... a starting point for further study ... comprehensive references introduce a very extensive literature to facilitate this ... the volume achieves its aims of being an introductory text for researchers to expand their range of knowledge and stimulate new enquiry.' Journal of Epidemiology & Infection