Free Radicals in Biology and Medicine has become a classic text in the field of free radical and antioxidant research since its first publication in 1985.
This latest edition has been comprehensively rewritten and updated (over 80% of the text is new), whilst maintaining the clarity of its predecessor. There is expanded coverage of isoprostanes and related compounds, mechanisms of oxidative damage to DNA and proteins (and the repair of such damage), the free radical theory of ageing and the roles played by reactive species in signal transduction, cell death, human reproduction, and other important biological events. Greater emphasis has also been placed on the methods available to measure reactive species and oxidative damage (and their potential pitfalls), as well as the importance of antioxidants in the human diet.
Free Radicals in Biology and Medicine is recommended as a comprehensive introduction to the field for students, clinicians and researchers, and an invaluable companion to all those interested in the role of free radicals in the life and biomedical sciences.
New to this edition:
- This latest edition has undergone a comprehensive rewriting and updating, whilst maintaining the clarity of the text.
- Over 75% of the text is new.
- Areas to which greater attention have been given include isoprostanes and related compounds, mechanisms of oxidative damage to DNA and proteins and the repair of such damage, the free radical theory of ageing, reactive species in signal transduction, cell death and human reproduction, and reactive nitrogen, chlorine and sulphur species.
- Greater emphasis is also placed on the methods available to measure reactive species and oxidative damage, and their potential pitfalls.
1. Oxygen is a toxic gas - an introductionto oxygen toxicity and reactive species
2. The chemistry of free radicals and related 'reactive species'
3. Antioxidant defences; Endogenous and Diet Derived
4. Cellular responses to oxidative stress: adaptation, damage, repair, senescence and death
5. Measurement of reactive species
6. Reactive species can pose special problems needing special solutions. Some examples
7. Reactive species can be useful; some more examples
8. Reactive species can be poisonous: their role in toxicology
9. Reactive species and disease: fact, fiction or filibuster?
10. Ageing, nutrition, disease, and therapy: A role for antioxidants?
"Since the first edition published in 1985, this 4th edition contains essential improvements because of fast progress in "radical biology". This excellent book presents, by very readable manner, complex introduction to chemistry of free radicals in general, not only oxygen radicals."
– Jozef Kovacik, Thaiszia Journal of Botany