Inflammation and Angiogenesis 1st
by Domenico Ribatti (Author)
This book is focused on the analysis of the role played by immune cell components in the angiogenic process associated with inflammation and tumor growth. Both innate and adaptive immune cells are involved in the mechanisms of endothelial cell proliferation, migration and activation, through the production and release of a large spectrum of pro-angiogenic mediators. These may create the specific microenvironment that favors an increased rate of tissue vascularization. The link between chronic inflammation and tumorigenesis was first proposed by Rudolf Virchow in 1863 after the observation that infiltrating leukocytes are a hallmark of tumors and first established a causative connection between the lymph reticular infiltrate at sites of chronic inflammation and the development of cancer. Tumors were described as wounds that never heal and surgeons have long described the tendency of tumors to recur in healing resection margin and it has been reported that wound healing environment provides an opportunistic matrix for tumor growth. As angiogenesis is the result of a net balance between the activities exerted by positive and negative regulators, this book will also provide information on some anti-angiogenic properties of immune cells that may be utilized for a potential pharmacological use as anti-angiogenic agents in inflammation as well as in cancer. The work is written for researchers in the field and also for graduate students which approach this matter.
Product Details
|

Diagnostic Electron Microscopy: A Practical Guide to Interpretation and Technique 1st Edition
Insall & Scott Cirurgia do Joelho
Core Concepts in Pharmacology (5th Edition)
Atlas de Técnicas Avançadas em Cirurgia
Atlas of Early Zebrafish Brain Development: A Tool for Molecular Neurogenetics
Textbook of Endocrine Physiology 6th
First Aid Step 1 Express Videos 2015 (USMLE-Rx)
Translational Medicine: Tools And Techniques
Anatomy of Neuropsychiatry: The New Anatomy of the Basal Forebrain and Its Implications for Neuropsychiatric Illness 1st Edition 

