Systems medicine

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Systems medicine is an interdisciplinary field of study that looks at the systems of the human body as part of an integrated whole, incorporating biochemical, physiological, and environment interactions. Systems medicine draws on systems science and systems biology, and considers complex interactions within the human body in light of a patient's genomics, behavior and environment.[1]

The earliest uses of the term systems medicine appeared in 1992, in an article on systems medicine and pharmacology by B.J. Zeng [2] and in a paper on systems biomedicine by T. Kamada.[3]

An important topic in systems medicine and systems biomedicine is the development of computational models that describe disease progression and the effect of therapeutic interventions. [4] [5]

List of systems (bio)medicine research groups

Country University / Institute Department / Center / Program / Network Participants
 Ireland Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Medical Systems Biology[6]
 Luxembourg Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine Computational Biology group[7]
 Netherlands Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) Department of Biomedical Engineering, Computational Biology Group (CBio)[8] Natal van Riel, Peter Hilbers
 United States Institute for Systems Biology (ISB) Leroy Hood, Alan Aderem, Ruedi Aebersold
 Germany Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres Department of Systems Immunology[9] Esteban Hernandez-Vargas
 Netherlands Utrecht University Utrecht Center for Quantitative Immunology[10] Aridaman Pandit

References

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  2. Zeng (B.) J., On the holographic model of human body, 1st National Conference of Comparative Studies Traditional Chinese Medicine and West Medicine, Medicine and Philosophy, April, 1992 ( termed "systems medicine and pharmacology").
  3. Kamada T. ,System biomedicine: a new paradigm in biomedical engineering. Front Med Biol Eng. 1992;4(1):1-2.
  4. de Winter W, DeJongh J, Post T, Ploeger B, Urquhart R, Moules I, Eckland D, Danhof M. A mechanism-based disease progression model for comparison of long-term effects of pioglitazone, metformin and gliclazide on disease processes underlying Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn. 2006 Jun;33(3):313-43.
  5. Tiemann CA, Vanlier J, Oosterveer MH, Groen AK, Hilbers PA, van Riel NA. Parameter trajectory analysis to identify treatment effects of pharmacological interventions. PLoS Comput Biol. 2013 Aug;9(8):e1003166
  6. Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Medical Systems Biology
  7. Computational Biology group, LCSB
  8. Computational Biology Group, Eindhoven University of Technology
  9. http://www.helmholtz-hzi.de/en/research/research_topics/immune_response/systems_immunology/team/personal/infos/esteban_vargas/
  10. http://theory.bio.uu.nl/ucqi/