The Elusive Magic Bullet
|
| Price: |
26 new or used available from £2.50
Average customer review:Product Description
In his new book, John Mann describes the quest within medicine for the so called "magic bullet". These are drugs that can destroy cancer/infected cells, while leaving normal cells unharmed. The book provides a lively, and fascinating introduction for non-scientists to one of the most exciting fields of activity within modern medicine. This book is intended for popular science readership; medical specialists
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1133125 in Books
- Published on: 1999-03-04
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 209 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
How does a drug know what to cure, and what to leave alone? In a book which complements his earlier Murder, Magic and Medicine (1992), Mann tells the story of how drugs--from the earliest chemical preparations, to today's designer prodrugs and engineered viruses--have been developed to treat bacterial infections, viral infections and cancer. Curing disease, Mann argues, would be relatively easy if it weren't so necessary that the patient survive the treatment. Drugs that cure diseases but leave patients standing have come on leaps and bounds in recent years, but progress, while swift, can never be steady. Pathogens, for one thing, do not stand still so, to take the obvious example, naive or lazy over-use of antibiotics accelerates the evolution of antibiotic-resistant strains. We are certainly no longer living in a society in which, in Bacon's famous formulation, "you would call a physician, that is thought good for the cure of the disease you complain of but is unacquainted with your body ... and so cure the disease and kill the patient." But neither have we quite mastered the art of making drugs which target and eradicate pathogens and malignancies with the niceness of a "magic bullet". Mann's account achieves a nice balance of optimism and realism. It is more likely to inspire than to comfort: today's researchers are unlikely to come away contemplating early retirement, or, to give Mann's enthusiasm its due, even wanting to. --Simon Ings
TLS
"... an extremely up-to-date and readable account of the fight against bacteria"
From the Publisher
Information about this book
The Elusive Magic Bullet
John Mann, University of Reading
The search for a drug that can cure cancer, or AIDS, is the holy grail of our times. In this new book, John Mann, author of the highly successful Murder, Magic, and Medicine (now a Radio 4 series), describes the quest within medicine for the so called "magic bullet" - a pharmaceutical solution to the key diseases of the 20th Century such as cancer, AIDS and Ebola. The book provides a fascinating introduction for non-scientists to one of the most exciting fields of activity within modern medicine.
Customer Reviews
A fascinating insight
I bought this book when I was researching for an A level essay on HIV, for which the book was an excellent resource. Once this task was out of the way I found myself absorbed in the book, and enjoyed seeing the story of pharmacology and medicine unfold (fighting bacteria, antiviral treatments and anticancer drugs are the three main sections). It's always a fine balance in popular science between the scientific detail and the human story and process of discovery, and John Mann manages this with enough skill to leave me inspired by our progress since the early days of vaccination, and thankful I live in the modern world!
