1st Edition

Recent Advancements in the Diagnosis of Human Disease

Edited By Irshad M. Sulaiman Copyright 2024
    302 Pages 10 Color & 29 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    302 Pages 10 Color & 29 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites are known to cause the most common human disease. It frequently spreads through direct contact (from human to human, animal to human), and through contaminated food or water. With the advancement of diagnostic techniques, it is now possible to rapidly identify microorganisms causing human disease and correlate with the corresponding clinical infection. Therefore, there is a need to develop robust and high-throughput diagnostic methods to prevent and control human disease of public health importance. This book entitled “Recent Advancements in the Diagnosis of Human Disease” will help the scientific community to better understand the transmission dynamics of some human diseases.

    Preface

     

    AI-Powered Laboratory Diagnostics Technology

    James Lara

     

    Detection of Gastrointestinal Protists

    Monica Santin, Josephine S.Y. Ng-Hublin and Jenny G. Maloney

     

    Methods Used for Diagnosis of Malaria and their Strengths and Limitations

    Samaly Souza Svigel, Venkatachalam Udhayakumar, Michael Aidoo, Gireesh Subramaniam and Naomi W. Lucchi

     

    Advances in the Diagnosis of Filarial Nematodes

    Arwa Elaagip and Tarig Higazi

     

    Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Lung Injury: Understanding the Molecular Mechanisms

    Kaiser M. Bijli

     

    MALDI-TOF MS Fingerprinting for the Diagnosis of Infectious Diseases

    Hercules Moura, Glauber Wagner, Renato Simões, Yulanda Williamson and John R. Barr

     

    Proteomics Fundamentals and Applications in Microbiology

    Glauber Wagner, Guilherme Augusto Maia, John Robert Barr and Hercules Moura

     

    Methods for Multiplex Real-Time PCR Melting Curve Assays for Pathogen Detection

    Prashant Singh and Frank J. Velez

     

    Persistence and Biofilm Formation of Foodborne Bacterial Pathogens on Fresh Produce and Equipment Surfaces

    Hsin-Bai Yin and Jitendra Patel

     

    Index

    Biography

    Dr. Irshad M. Sulaiman has been involved in the area of biomedical research focusing on the control and prevention of human-pathogenic microorganisms of public health importance, for over three decades. He obtained his PhD from Delhi University. Dr. Sulaiman joined the U.S. CDC in 1997, and worked until 2008. Since 2008, he is with the U.S. FDA. Dr. Sulaiman has characterized a large number of emerging infectious microbial pathogens isolated from various sources. He has developed several novel molecular diagnostic methods, described several new species and genotypes, and published over 96 peer-reviewed manuscripts.