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The Forgotten Cure

by Kuchment, Anna.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Physical details: XVI, 132 p. online resource. ISBN: 1461402514 Subject(s): Medicine. | Immunology. | Medical laboratories. | Microbiology. | Biomedicine. | Medical Microbiology. | Laboratory Medicine. | Immunology.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 616.9041 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Prologue -- Helpful Little Bodies -- Inside Stalin's Empire -- The Fading of Phage Therapy -- Naked Genes -- They're Not a Panacea -- In Poland: Phages for Diabetes? -- The Renaissance of Phage Therapy -- The Startups -- Four Companies, Four Strategies -- Cows and Chickens -- Approval, At Last -- In Treatment -- Epilogue -- Index.

“Bacteriophages have the potential to stop many if not most life threatening, drug resistant bacterial infections.  The Forgotten Cure is a non-stop, cover to cover read.” James D. Watson, Nobel Laureate     “A lively tale of killer viruses, superbugs and a magical cure that has all the twists of a cold-war spy novel.” – George Hackett, Newsweek magazine      “A marvelous, jargon-free historical account of the genesis, the ups-and-downs, and the current renaissance of phage therapy. The Forgotten Cure ranks at the level of Judson’s Eighth Day of Creation.” Sankar Adhya National Institutes of Health The Forgotten Cure: How a Long Lost Treatment Can Save Lives in the 21st Century     Before the arrival of penicillin in the 1940s, phage therapy was one of the few weapons doctors had against bacterial infections. It saved the life of Hollywood legends Tom Mix and Elizabeth Taylor before being abandoned by Western science. Now, researchers and physicians are rediscovering the treatment, which pits phage viruses against their natural bacterial hosts, as a potential weapon against antibiotic-resistant infections. “The Forgotten Cure” traces the story of phages from Paris, where they were discovered in 1917; to Tbilisi, Georgia, where one of phage therapy’s earliest proponents died at the hands of Stalin; to the Nobel podium, where prominent scientists have been recognized for breakthroughs stemming from phage research. Today, a crop of biotech startups and dedicated physicians is racing to win regulatory approval for phage therapy before superbugs exhaust the last drug in the medical arsenal. Will they clear the hurdles in time? 

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