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Molds, mushrooms, and medicines : our lifelong relationship with fungi / Nicholas P. Money.

By: Money, Nicholas P [author.].
Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press, ©2024Description: 229 pages cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780691236308.Subject(s): Fungi | Materia medica, Vegetable | Molds (Fungi) | SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Mycology | NATURE / Plants / MushroomsGenre/Form: Print books.Also available online.
Contents:
Interacting: encounters with fungi from birth to death -- Touching: fungi on the skin -- Breathing: spores in the lungs -- Spreading: opportunists in the brain -- Digestion: yeasts in the gut -- Nourishing: molds and mushrooms in our diets -- Treating: medicines from fungi -- Poisoning: toxins in mushrooms and molds -- Dreaming: using mushrooms to treat depression -- Recycling: the global mycobiome.
Summary: "From beneficial fungi that keep bacteria under control and consume dead cells to toxic molds that cause disease, our bodies are constantly navigating a fungus-filled world. And our interactions with fungi are not limited to what happens in our bodies as we interact with these microbes via our diet and as a source of medicines. In short, there exists an incredible range of interactions between humans and fungi. In this book, Nicolas Money describes this relationship between fungi and humans in the context of our health. Readers learn how the field of mycology has been advancing, from studies that reveal the diversity of yeasts that grow on the skin to research on the use of psychedelic mushrooms in the treatment of depression. The book is divided into two parts. The first part focuses on how fungi operate in our bodies from spores in the lungs to the yeasts and filaments that can infect our internal organs. In particular, Money focuses on the mycobiome, which is the fungal part of the larger microbiome, and explains what is and isn't known about the significance of fungi in the health of the gut. In the second half of the book, Money shifts his focus to our relationship with fungi outside the body, including in food, medicine, and agriculture -- and he pulls no punches when it comes to countering misguided notions when it comes to the medicinal powers of mushrooms. Throughout the book, Money explains how the human-fungi relationship is symbiotic, meaning that it is sometimes beneficial and sometimes harmful. Ultimately, the reader comes away with a broad understanding of what scientists are learning about the fascinating role of fungi inside and outside of our bodies"--
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Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
On Shelf QK603 .M58 2024 (Browse shelf) Available AU00000000020265
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. -- Interacting: encounters with fungi from birth to death -- 2. -- Touching: fungi on the skin -- 3. -- Breathing: spores in the lungs -- 4. -- Spreading: opportunists in the brain -- 5. -- Digestion: yeasts in the gut -- 6. -- Nourishing: molds and mushrooms in our diets -- 7. -- Treating: medicines from fungi -- 8. -- Poisoning: toxins in mushrooms and molds -- 9. -- Dreaming: using mushrooms to treat depression -- 10. -- Recycling: the global mycobiome.

"From beneficial fungi that keep bacteria under control and consume dead cells to toxic molds that cause disease, our bodies are constantly navigating a fungus-filled world. And our interactions with fungi are not limited to what happens in our bodies as we interact with these microbes via our diet and as a source of medicines. In short, there exists an incredible range of interactions between humans and fungi. In this book, Nicolas Money describes this relationship between fungi and humans in the context of our health. Readers learn how the field of mycology has been advancing, from studies that reveal the diversity of yeasts that grow on the skin to research on the use of psychedelic mushrooms in the treatment of depression. The book is divided into two parts. The first part focuses on how fungi operate in our bodies from spores in the lungs to the yeasts and filaments that can infect our internal organs. In particular, Money focuses on the mycobiome, which is the fungal part of the larger microbiome, and explains what is and isn't known about the significance of fungi in the health of the gut. In the second half of the book, Money shifts his focus to our relationship with fungi outside the body, including in food, medicine, and agriculture -- and he pulls no punches when it comes to countering misguided notions when it comes to the medicinal powers of mushrooms. Throughout the book, Money explains how the human-fungi relationship is symbiotic, meaning that it is sometimes beneficial and sometimes harmful. Ultimately, the reader comes away with a broad understanding of what scientists are learning about the fascinating role of fungi inside and outside of our bodies"--

Also available online.

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