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- BookFrédérique Van Gijsegem, Jan M. van der Wolf, Ian K. Toth, editors.Summary: This book provides a detailed review of many different aspects of pathogens, from the effects of single base pair mutations to large-scale control options, bringing into a single volume over 100 years of findings from thousands of researchers worldwide. Diseases caused by soft rot Pectobacteriaceae (SRP) are a major cause of loss to crop, vegetables and ornamental plants worldwide, and have been found on all continents except Antarctica. While different aspects of the SRP have appeared in other books on plant disease, no book, until now, has been dedicated solely to them.
Contents:
Chapter 1. General characteristics and history
Chapter 2. Taxonomy and Evolution. I Toth, John Elphinstone
Chapter 3 Environment to disease development. I Toth, Jacquie van der Walls, Kristyna Hromodova
Chapter 4 Molecular plant pathogen interactions
Chapter 5. Detection and diagnostics
Chapter 6. Economic impact in potato cultures
Chapter 7 Disease management
Chapter 8. Soft rot diseases around the world
Chapter 9. Outlook
Chapter 10. Methodology section. - ArticlePalmer PE, Wolfe HJ, Dayal Y, Gang DL.Am J Surg Pathol. 1978 Sep;2(3):275-81.Eight cases of liver disease associated with alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency are described. Six of the cases, including the only childhood case, showed no evidence of lung disease. An occult but variable clinical course is defined in this disorder. A spectrum in the severity of tissue change was noted, and in some instances, extensive liver disease was correlated with relatively minor derangement in liver function. While this form of liver disease is uncommon, it should be included in the differential diagnosis of adult liver disease. Screening for alpha-1-antitrypsin globules in periodic acid-Schiff stained liver tissue sections should be considered in certain cases of cryptogenic liver disease in adults, particularly when advanced disease presents suddenly, where micronodular (portal) cirrhosis is unrelated to excessive alcohol use, or where tissue changes exceed those anticipated from serum biochemical abnormalities. In most of these cases, tissue findings from liver biopsy or autopsy, rather than clinical suspicion, led to the diagnosis. The availability of a simple and reliable immunoperoxidase technique, applicable to routinely processed tissue samples, allowed for rapid and specific diagnosis in all cases. This immunocytochemical method has proven its usefulness in the prospective and retrospective tissue diagnosis of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency and associated liver disease.