Advances in Antiviral Research

Shailly Tomar (Hrsg.), Sayeh Ezzikouri (Hrsg.), Yashpal Singh Malik (Hrsg.), Naveen Kumar (Hrsg.)

PDF
ca. 181,89
Amazon iTunes Thalia.de Weltbild.de Hugendubel Bücher.de ebook.de kobo Osiander Google Books Barnes&Noble bol.com Legimi yourbook.shop Kulturkaufhaus ebooks-center.de
* Affiliate Links
Hint: Affiliate Links
Links on findyourbook.com are so-called affiliate links. If you click on such an affiliate link and buy via this link, findyourbook.com receives a commission from the respective online shop or provider. For you, the price doesn't change.

Springer Nature Singapore img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Mikrobiologie

Description

This book illustrates advancements in the sophisticated tools and techniques for discovering and designing new antiviral drugs, identifying approved drugs against new and emerging viruses through large-scale computational virtual screening or drug repurposing approaches, and their evaluation in various in vitro and in vivo models. The chapters also cover the challenges associated with the emergence of antiviral drug resistance and possible ways to counter them. It discusses bioinformatics tools and software and computational approaches for the discovery of antivirals. The books also outline approaches for designing broad-spectrum antivirals effective against viruses by epigenetic- and epitranscriptomic-targeted reprogramming. Further, it provides vital details on the procedures for drug applications, clinical trials, and their regulations. Finally, the book provides a comprehensive yet representative description of advances in antiviral research protocols and methodologies suitablefor antiviral researchers at all career stages, including graduate and postgraduate students and policy-makers.

More E-books At The Same Price
Cover Ion Channels
Novartis Foundation
Cover The New Organon
Francis Bacon

customer reviews

Keywords

Antivirals discovery, Drug-repurposing, Drug regulation and laws, Clinical trials, Emerging and re-emerging viruses