Overview
- Editors:
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Franco Dammacco
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, Department of Internal Medicine and Clin, University of Bari, Bari, Italy
Comprehensive review of cryoglobulinemia, for scientists and specialists involved in several disciplines, including internal medicine, hepatology, hematology, oncology, infectious diseases, rheumatology, nephrology and dermatology
Immediacy of style, striking illustrations, and color plates
Irreplaceable source of update for general practitioners, graduate and post-graduate students
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Table of contents (45 chapters)
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Structural and Genetic Features, Cytokines and Chemokines in Cryoglobulinemia
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- Sabino Russi, Silvia Sansonno, Gianfranco Lauletta, Domenico E. Sansonno, Franco Dammacco
Pages 127-135
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- Alessandro Antonelli, Clodoveo Ferri, Silvia Martina Ferrari, Michele Colaci, Ilaria Ruffilli, Caterina Mancusi et al.
Pages 137-141
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Clinical Manifestations of Cryoglobulinemia
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Front Matter
Pages 143-143
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- Charles E. Alpers, Tomasz A. Wietecha, Kelly L. Hudkins
Pages 145-153
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- Clodoveo Ferri, Alessandro Antonelli, Marco Sebastiani, Michele Colaci, Anna Linda Zignego
Pages 155-162
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- Salvatore De Vita, Luca Quartuccio
Pages 163-167
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- Giuseppe Monti, Francesco Saccardo, Laura Castelnovo
Pages 169-173
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- Christos P. Argyropoulos, Sheldon Bastacky, John Prentiss Johnson
Pages 175-183
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- Gianfranco Ferraccioli, Francesca Faustini, Elisa Gremese
Pages 185-190
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- Alessandro Antonelli, Clodoveo Ferri, Silvia Martina Ferrari, Michele Colaci, Alda Corrado, Andrea Di Domenicantonio et al.
Pages 191-194
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- Konstantinos Linos, Bernard Cribier, J. Andrew Carlson
Pages 195-207
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- Salvatore Monaco, Sara Mariotto, Sergio Ferrari
Pages 209-217
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- Damien Sene, Patrice P. Cacoub
Pages 219-226
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- Massimo Galli, Salvatore Sollima
Pages 227-231
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- David Saadoun, Patrice P. Cacoub
Pages 233-237
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- Massimo Galli, Salvatore Sollima, Giuseppe Monti
Pages 239-243
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- Lionel Rostaing, Hugo Weclawiak, Nassim Kamar
Pages 245-250
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HCV Infection, Cryoglobulinemia and Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas
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Front Matter
Pages 251-251
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- Cristina Mecucci, Gianluca Barba, Caterina Matteucci
Pages 253-257
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- Valli De Re, Maria Paola Simula
Pages 259-265
About this book
The first observation of cold-induced precipitation of serum proteins dates back to 1933, when Wintrobe and Buell first described an unusual case of multiple myeloma in a woman whose serum reversibly precipitated at cold temperatures. In 1947 Lerner and Watson showed cold-precipitable proteins to be gammaglobulins and called them ‘cryoglobulins’ and the corresponding clinical condition ‘cryoglobulinemia’. Meltzer and Franklin in 1966 provided an accurate description of the typical clinical symptoms associated with cryoglobulinemia, showed that they consisted of two different globulin components and, because of the ignorance on its etiology, called this clinical condition ‘essential mixed cryoglobulinemia’. For almost 20 years progress has been rather slow in this field, but when at the end of the ‘80s it finally became possible to detect the occurrence in the serum of antibodies to the hepatitis C virus (HCV), many groups in Europe and the United States almost simultaneously reported that a high proportion of ‘essential’ cryoglobulinemias are in fact associated with HCV infection. This hallmark has resulted in a new impetus and great enthusiasm in carrying out new researches made possible by the awareness that cryoglobulinemia is to be considered an undisputable extrahepatic manifestation of HCV infection. In addition, the evidence that HCV has tropism for hepatocytes and lymphocytes has stimulated new approaches to the autoimmune phenomena and the potential transformation in non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas which not infrequently can be discovered in these patients. The same applies to the obvious therapeutic implications, once the association between HCV infection and mixed cryoglobulinemia has been firmly established. It was thus felt that times were ripe to produce a state-of-the-art survey of the multi-faceted picture of cryoglobulinemia. This book is indeed unique in the detail of its presentation, its completeness and its fundamental approach to the subject. The most qualified authors have been invited to contribute critical articles reviewing significant developments related to each of the eight sections in which the whole treatment has been divided: from basic mechanisms governing interactions between HCV and the immune system to the immunochemical characterization of cryoglobulins and the frequently concomitant serological abnormalities; from genetic features and the role of certain cytokines and chemokines to the cellular compartments of HCV infection and replication; from the clinical manifestations of cryoglobulinemic patients and their potential susceptibility to develop non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma to conventional treatment of the syndrome and the newer, promising therapeutic advances. The reader will appreciate the immediacy of style, the striking illustrations, and the color plates. In addition, the comprehensive review of a systemic disease such as cryoglobulinemia will interest basic scientists and specialists involved in several disciplines, including internal medicine, hepatology, hematology, oncology, infectious diseases, rheumatology, nephrology and dermatology. General practitioners, graduate and post-graduate students will also find in this book an irreplaceable source of update in this fascinating field.
Editors and Affiliations
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, Department of Internal Medicine and Clin, University of Bari, Bari, Italy
Franco Dammacco