Christopher S. Stevenson
Lisa A. Marshall
Douglas W. Morgan
Editors
2006
Since our first edition of “In Vivo Models of Inflammation” published in 1999, there has been amazing progress, and an abundance of exciting new information in inflammation research: new technologies, new therapeutics, new understanding of inflammatory processes, … and on and on, have emerged in the past 6 years. Supporting all of this are the fundamentals of inflammation research, i.e., the animal models, known mechanisms, and therapeutic standards, that have continued to provide the basis for generating these advances.