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Abstract
Inflammation is a local, protective response to microbial invasion or injury. It must
be fine-tuned and regulated precisely, because deficiencies or excesses of the inflammatory
response cause morbidity and shorten lifespan. The discovery that cholinergic neurons
inhibit acute inflammation has qualitatively expanded our understanding of how the
nervous system modulates immune responses. The nervous system reflexively regulates
the inflammatory response in real time, just as it controls heart rate and other vital
functions. The opportunity now exists to apply this insight to the treatment of inflammation
through selective and reversible 'hard-wired' neural systems.