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Sunday, August 29, 2010

Medical Biochemistry: Human Metabolism in Health and Disease


Medical Biochemistry: Human Metabolism in Health and Disease

Human metabolism is a key component of the basic science knowledge that underlies the practice of medicine and allied health professions. It is fundamental to understanding how the body adapts to physiologic stress, how defects in metabolism
result in disease, and why data from the clinical chemistry laboratory are useful to diagnose disease and monitor the efficacy of treatment.

Medical Biochemistry: Human Metabolism in Health and Disease Over the more than three decades that each of the authors has been teaching biochemistry to medical students, we have found students increasingly overwhelmed with details that tend to obscure rather than elucidate principles of human metabolism.

The main aim of this book was to provide students in the health professions with a concise resource that will help them understand and appreciate the functions, constituent reactions, and regulatory aspects of the core pathways that constitute human metabolism and which are responsible for maintaining homeostasis and well-being in humans. Authors tried to accomplish this by emphasizing function, regulation, and disease processes, while minimizing discussion of reaction mechanisms and details of enzyme structure.

Each chapter is organized in a consistent manner beginning with an explanation of the main functions of the pathway under discussion. Next comes a brief accounting of the cells, tissues, and organs in which the pathway is expressed and the conditions under which the normal function of the pathway is especially important. The bulk of each chapter is devoted to the reactions that account for the function of the pathway, with emphasis on key steps in the pathway. The next section of each chapter discusses the ways in which the activity of the pathway is regulated by hormones, genetic factors, or changes in the intracellular concentration of key metabolites. Each chapter concludes with a discussion of the more common and illustrative diseases that result from defects in or derangements of regulation of the pathway.

This volume is deliberately modest in size. Instead of providing exhaustive coverage of all the reactions that human cells and tissues are capable of executing, we have chosen examples that illustrate the physiologic and pathophysiologic significance of the topic. The authors’ expectation is that each chapter will be read for comprehension rather than to provide abundant fact and detail. During their subsequent education and professional careers, the readers will undoubtedly have need for more information on many topics discussed in this book.


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