These rabbit models closely approximate a variety of aspects of human atherosclerosis and are commonly used to study atherogenesis, plaque instability and rupture, and myocardial infarction. Relative to rodent models, rabbits are much more clinically relevant as many aspects of rabbit lipoprotein metabolism are very similar to humans. Perhaps the most notable differences are that rabbit vascular lesions are more fatty and more inflammatory (as measured by numbers of macrophages present) and rabbit circulating cholesterol levels are higher. An additional advantage to rabbits over rodents is that human transgenes expressed in rabbits produce the expected human-like symptoms while the same transgenes expressed in rodents fail to do so. Further, rabbits are capable of tolerating longer experimental protocols that require monitoring and/or sampling over a period of time whereas individual rodents often can only contribute to a single time point in a study.