Disease
Evolution
By Zhilan Feng, Ulf Dieckmann
and Simon Levin
American Mathematical Society (2006).
From the Back Cover
Infectious diseases are continuing to threaten humankind. While
some diseases have been controlled, new diseases are constantly
appearing. Others are now reappearing in forms that are resistant
to drug treatments. A capacity for continual re-adaptation furnishes
pathogens with the power to escape our control efforts through
evolution. This makes it imperative to understand the complex selection
pressures that are shaping and reshaping diseases. Modern models
of evolutionary epidemiology provide powerful tools for creating,
expressing, and testing such understanding.
Bringing together international leaders in the field, this volume
offers a panoramic tour of topical developments in understanding
the mechanisms of disease evolution. The volume’s first part
elucidates the general concepts underlying models of disease evolution.
Methodological challenges addressed include those posed by spatial
structure, stochastic dynamics, disease phases and classes, single-
and multi-drug resistance, the heterogeneity of host populations
and tissues, and the intricate coupling of disease evolution with
between-host and within-host dynamics. The book’s second part
shows how these methods are utilized for investigating the dynamics
and evolution of specific diseases, including HIV/AIDS., tuberculosis,
SARS, malaria, and human rhinovirus infections.
This volume is particularly suited for introducing young scientists
and established researchers with backgrounds in mathematics, computer
science, or biology to the current techniques and challenges of
mathematical evolutionary epidemiology. |