Magic Molecules: How Drugs Work
by: Susan Aldridge
en | Cambridge University Press
0521584140 9780521584142 9780511001307

Magic Molecules: How Drugs Work
By Susan Aldridge
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Number Of Pages: 284
Publication Date: 1998-09-28
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0521584140
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780521584142
Product Description:
We have all been drug users at one time or another. Drugs can be used as medicines, as food additives, for pleasure, and to protect our long-term health. With so many new drugs on the market and an ever-widening definition of what exactly makes a drug a drug, we should all be well informed about the drugs we use–how they work, their benefits, and their risks. This book is a unique guide for the general reader to the drugs of everyday life–from commonly prescribed medicines to recreational drugs (including illicit ones) and food supplements. The author examines how drugs interact with their targets in the body, where drugs come from, how they are developed, and what new kinds of drugs are on the horizon. She reviews all the major pharmaceutical medicines–painkillers, antibiotics, anti-cancer drugs, anti-depressants, heart drugs, tranquilizers, and hormones. Much more than a consumer handbook, this volume conveys the fascinating science behind drugs in an easily accessible way.
Amazon.com Review:
Almost all of us have used medical drugs at some point to help make us well, or at least to help us feel better while we endure our illnesses. Yet most of them are mysterious to us, even those that are thoroughly understood by scientists. Susan Aldridge wrote Magic Molecules: How Drugs Work as a guide for scientifically literate consumers to help us understand these chemicals and their effects on our bodies. Looking at painkillers, antibiotics, cancer therapies, "smart drugs," and many others, she uses clear, plain language and illustrations to describe the mechanisms of these medications.
But Magic Molecules is no encyclopedia. Aldridge includes fascinating discussions of related topics such as viral diseases, clinical trials, and the history of drug use, interwoven with her descriptions of the drugs we use each day. How does ibuprofen differ from aspirin? Why does chemotherapy make us sick? How come pregnant women have to be so careful with their medications? These questions and more are answered in this book that combines the usefulness of a reference text with the delightful charm of the best scientific works. –Rob Lightner
Summary: A review of Magic Molecules
Rating: 4
This book is to be commended for its, clarity of thought ,and flowing prose in its treatment of a subject both broad in scope ,and complex in nature. The Author is able to give the reader an accessible overview of the of the most common diseases affecting mankind, and the of the pharmacological approaches used to combat these illnesses in a manner that deftly maneuvers in level from the molecular to the practical. The only reason that I didn’t give this book 5 stars is because that I reserve such a rating in this genre for a masterpiece such as "Creating Mind:How the Brain Works"
Please Login or Register to read the rest of this content.
Random Posts
- Psychoneuroimmunology, Two-Volume Set, Volume 1-2, Fourth Edition (0)
- Phycology (0)
- Case Files: Biochemistry: Second Edition (Lange Case Files) (0)
- Advances in Vasopressin and Oxytocin - From Genes to Behaviour to Disease, Volume 170 (0)
- Handbook of Prebiotics (0)
- 美欧GMP物料规范解读与实施 (0)
