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- Fundamentals of Evolution and Medicine
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1. Evolutionary medicine
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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2. Evolution and medicine: from the perspective of an evolutionary biologist
- Prof. Stephen C. Stearns
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3. Developmental plasticity, evolution and the origins of disease
- Dr. Mary Jane West-Eberhard
- Evolutionary Genetics
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4. Genetic variation and human disease
- Dr. David Houle
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6. Ecogenetics, evolutionary biology and human disease
- Prof. Gilbert Omenn
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7. Race in genetics and medicine
- Prof. Jeffrey Long
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8. Health disparities in common complex diseases: a role for genetics?
- Dr. Kathleen Barnes
- Infectious Disease
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10. Evolutionary arms races
- Prof. Mark Pagel
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11. Antibiotic resistance and hospital-acquired infection
- Dr. Carl Bergstrom
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12. Evolution of drug resistance
- Dr. Pleuni Pennings
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13. Evolution of virulence: malaria, a case study
- Prof. Andrew Read
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14. Infection and chronic disease
- Prof. Paul Ewald
- Defenses
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15. Fever and related defenses
- Prof. Matthew Kluger
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16. The evolutionary ecology of immunity
- Prof. Paul Schmid-Hempel
- Novel Environmental Factors
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17. What did humans evolve to eat? evolutionary perspectives on human nutritional health
- Prof. William R. Leonard
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19. The paleolithic lifestyle and prevention of chronic disease
- Prof. S. Boyd Eaton
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22. Diseases of civilization: an evolutionary legacy
- Prof. Alan Weder
- Problems Arising From Constraints and Trade-Offs
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23. Aging and evolutionary medicine
- Prof. Linda Partridge
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24. Human aging and menopause
- Prof. Kristen Hawkes
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25. Why we cook with spices: preventative darwinian medicine
- Prof. Paul Sherman
- Sex and Reproduction
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26. Setting the second stage: the evolution of menopause & post-reproductive life
- Prof. Lynnette Sievert
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27. Evolutionary obstetrics
- Prof. Wenda Trevathan
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28. Sex differences in mortality
- Dr. Daniel Kruger
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29. The endocrinology of human life history transitions
- Prof. Peter Ellison
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30. Genetic conflicts in human pregnancy
- Prof. David Haig
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31. Environmental effects on human reproduction
- Prof. Gillian Bentley
- Cancer
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32. A darwinian eye view of cancer
- Prof. Mel Greaves
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33. Viruses and cancer
- Prof. Robin Weiss
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34. Connecting aging and cancer through the lens of evolution
- Prof. James DeGregori
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35. Evolutionary dynamics in cancer control and cure
- Dr. Bob Gatenby
- Specific Body Systems
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36. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: enamel biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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37. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: bone biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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38. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: craniofacial biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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39. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: life history and chronobiology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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40. Lung biology and lung disease
- Prof. John S. Torday
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41. The evolutionary web of life
- Prof. John S. Torday
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42. Evolutionary considerations and the endothelium
- Dr. William Aird
- Mental Disorders
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43. Evolutionary psychiatry
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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44. Evolutionary behavioural genetics and mental disorders
- Dr. Matthew Keller
- Questions and Answers
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45. Audience questions about evolution and medicine
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
- Paediatrics
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46. Evolutionary pediatrics
- Dr. Paul Turke
- Microbiome
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47. Evolution, the microbiome, and human health
- Dr. Joe Alcock
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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48. The hygiene hypothesis
- Prof. Graham Rook
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49. Mapping motivations: evolutionary health promotion
- Dr. Valerie Curtis
- Dr. Robert Aunger
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50. Evolutionary biology of depression
- Prof. Lewis Wolpert
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51. Evolutionary genetic epidemiology
- Prof. Nicholas Schork
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52. Mental disorders in the light of evolutionary biology
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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53. Evolution: medicine's missing basic science
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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54. Environmental effects on human reproduction
- Prof. Gillian Bentley
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Great advances in the control of disease
- Chronic diseases
- Diseases of uncertain cause (1)
- Why identifying chronic disease causes is difficult
- Risk factor
- Primary causes versus secondary causes
- Categories of disease causation
- Categories of disease causation: cystic fibrosis
- Categories of disease causation: tuberculosis
- Diseases of uncertain cause (2)
- Risk factor and disease cause: atherosclerosis (1)
- Atherosclerosis - definition
- Atherosclerosis - early pathology
- Atherosclerosis - late pathology
- Atherosclerosis and heart attack
- Risk factor and disease cause: atherosclerosis (2)
- Why epsilon 4 is not just a bad allele (1)
- Why epsilon 4 is not just a bad allele (2)
- Hunter/gatherer group survival table
- Why epsilon 4 is not just a bad allele (3)
- The thrifty genotype hypothesis
- Geographical variation in epsilon 4 frequencies (1)
- Molecular phylogeny of the epsilon alleles
- Unrealistic implications for epsilon 4 diseases
- Pathogen vulnerability hypothesis (1)
- Pathogen vulnerability hypothesis (2)
- C. pneumoniae infection and epsilon 4
- C. pneumoniae DNA in Alzheimer's patients brain
- Pathogen can cause different bad effects
- Geographical variation in epsilon 4 frequencies (2)
- Risk factor and disease cause: atherosclerosis (3)
- Environmental caustaion: smoking (1)
- Schemataic overview smoking and atherosclerosis
- Environmental caustaion: smoking (2)
- Environmental caustaion: high fat diet (1)
- Environmental caustaion: high fat diet (2)
- Environmental amelioration: alcohol
- Environmental amelioration: garlic
- Environmental causation: iron
- Inflammation and C-reactive protein
- Drug treatment and atherosclerosis: aspirin
- Drug treatment and atherosclerosis: statins
- Risk factor and disease cause: atherosclerosis (4)
- Acceptance of infection causation in the future
Topics Covered
- Chronic diseases (cystic fibrosis, atherosclerosis, tuberculosis)
- Risk factors
- Primary and secondary causes
- Categories of disease causation
- Risk factors and disease causation
- The e4 allele and the thrifty genotype hypothesis
- Geographical variations in allele frequencies
- Pathogen vulnerability hypothesis
- Environmental causations (smoking, high fat diet, alcohol, garlic, iron)
- Drug treatment and atherosclerosis
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Ewald, P. (2007, October 1). Infection and chronic disease [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved January 15, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/TPCF9253.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Paul Ewald has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Immunology & Inflammation
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Infection and chronic disease.
0:04
The health sciences have generated great advancements over the past two centuries.
The prevention of waterborne transmission of diarrhoeal diseases alone saved
the lives of at least 10 percent of the residents of prosperous countries.
The invention of antibiotics has allowed physicians to cure rather than
console patients with lethal bacterial diseases such as ammonia.
The widespread use of vaccines has blocked
the circulation of deadly bacteria and viruses.
The deadliest virus of all the agent of
smallpox has been eradicated from the human population.
The discovery of essential dietary components vitamins has prevented
tremendous amounts of suffering and disfigurement
from diseases such as scurvy and rickets.
All of these accomplishments depended on an understanding of
disease causation or at least in insightful guess about what causes disease,
most of these accomplishments resulted from application of the germ theory.
The idea that diseases can be caused by parasites too small to be seen with a naked eye.
It makes sense that an understanding of
disease causation would be central to the advancement of medicine.
Once the cause of a disease is understood,
it may be blocked or eliminated,
and the disease may be prevented or cured.
Considering the tremendous importance of understanding disease causation
the great technological sophistication that has
been applied to medical problems in recent decades,
one would think the causes of virtually all human diseases would now be well understood,
but this is not the case.
Modern medicine has a good understanding of
disease causation for only about half of all human diseases.
1:28
Nearly all of these diseases of uncertain cause are chronic,
it develops slowly in a person and persist over long periods of time.
These chronic diseases of uncertain cause
include the big killers of prosperous countries.