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Carol Gardner, Ph.D.
Associate Research Professor Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Toxicology Division Pharmacy Building
Research Interests:| Immunotoxicology; Immunology; Cell Culture; Radiation Biology; and Image Analysis. |
Publications:L. Fakhrzadeh, J.D. Laskin, C.R. Gardner, and D.L. Laskin. 2004. Superoxide dismutase-overexpressing mice are resistant to ozone-induced tissue injury and increases in nitric oxide and tumor necrosis factor-α. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 30:280-287.
D.L. Laskin, C.R. Gardner, D.R. Gerecke, and J.D. Laskin. 2004. Ozone-induced lung injury: role of macrophages and inflammatory mediators. Reactive Oxygen/Nitrogen Species: Lung Injury and Disease, V. Vallyathan, X. Shi, and V. Castranova, eds., Marcel Dekker, NY. pp. 289-316.
D.L. Laskin and C.R. Gardner. 2003. Role of sinusoidal cells and inflammatory macrophages in hepatotoxicity. Drug-Induced Liver Disease, N. Kaplowitz and L. DeLeve, eds., Marcel Dekker, NY. pp. 183-211.
H. Chiu, C.R. Gardner, D.M. Dambach, S.K. Durham, J.A. Brittingham, J.D. Laskin, and D.L. Laskin. 2003. Role of tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (p55) in hepatocyte proliferation during acetaminophen-induced toxicity in mice. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 193:218-227.
C.R. Gardner, J.D. Laskin, D.M. Dambach, H. Chiu, S.K Durham, P. Zhou, M. Bruno, D.R. Gerecke, M.K. Gordon, and D.L. Laskin. 2003. Exaggerated hepatotoxicity of acetaminophen in mice lacking tumor necrosis factor receptor-1. Potential role of inflammatory mediators. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 192:119-130.
Awards and Honors:Graduated Cum Laude, Sate University College at Potsdam, New York, May 1978
Sigma Xi - Scientific Research Society
Iota Sigma Pi - Woman's Chemistry Honor Society
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