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1.
Experimental data on the incidence of solid tumors from various long-term mouse studies performed at the Casaccia laboratories over several years were reconsidered, limiting the analysis to the results available for doses equal to or less than 17 cGy of neutrons and 32 cGy of X rays since these dose limits are reasonably close to the generally accepted low-dose levels for high- and low-LET radiation (i.e. D(high-LET) < 5 cGy and D(low-LET) < 20 cGy, respectively). The following long-term experiments with BC3F1 mice were reviewed: (a) females treated with single doses of 1.5 MeV neutrons or 250 kVp X rays, (b) males treated with fractionated doses of fission neutrons, and (c) mice of both sexes irradiated in utero 17.5 days post coitus with single doses of fission neutrons or X rays. An experiment with CBA mice of both sexes treated with single doses of fission neutrons was also included in this study. Analysis was done on animals at risk; thus all incidences of tumor-bearing animals were expressed as the percentage excess incidence with respect to the controls. Ovarian tumors and other solid neoplasms were considered. The percentage frequencies and mean survival times of tumor-free mice were also recalculated. The results indicate the existence of a region at low doses where the final incidence of solid neoplasms is indistinguishable from the background incidence. These data reinforce the idea that at low doses the effectiveness of ionizing radiation in inducing solid neoplasms in laboratory mice is very low.  相似文献   

2.
Experiments were designed to examine the effects of radiation quality on specific gene expression within the first 3 h following radiation exposure in Syrian hamster embryo (SHE) cells. Preliminary work demonstrated the induction of c-fos and alpha-interferon genes following exposure to low-linear-energy-transfer (low-LET) radiations (X rays or gamma rays). More detailed experiments revealed induction of c-fos mRNA within the first 3 h following exposure to either X rays (75 cGy) or gamma rays (90 cGy). We could not detect induction of c-fos following exposure of SHE cells to fission-spectrum neutrons (high-LET) from the JANUS reactor administered at either high (12 cGy/min) or low (0.5 cGy/min) dose rates. Expression of alpha-interferon mRNA was similarly induced by low-LET radiations but only modestly by JANUS neutrons. The induction by gamma rays was dose-dependent, while induction by neutrons was specific for low doses and low dose rates. These experiments demonstrate the differential gene inductive response of cells following exposure to high- and low-LET radiations. These experiments suggest that these different qualities of ionizing radiation may have different mechanisms for inducing many of the cellular consequences of radiation exposure, such as cell survival and cell transformation.  相似文献   

3.
Human peripheral blood lymphocytes from two donors were exposed to low doses (0.05 to 2.0 Gy) of gamma rays, X rays, or fast neutrons of different energies. Chromosome aberrations were analyzed in metaphase of first-division cells after a culture time of 45-46 hr. At this time, less than 5% of the cells were found in second division. Different dose-response relationships were fitted to the data by using a maximum likelihood method; best fits for radiation-induced dicentric aberrations were obtained with the linear-quadratic law for all radiations. The linear component of this equation predominated, however, for neutrons in the range of doses studied, and the frequency of dicentrics induced by d(16)+Be neutrons up to 1.0 Gy could also be described by a linear relationship. The relative biological efficiency (RBE) of X rays and d(16)+Be, d(33)+Be, and d(50)+Be neutrons compared to 60Co gamma rays in the low dose range was calculated from the dose-effect relationships for the dicentrics produced. The RBE increased with decreasing neutron dose and with decreasing neutron energy from d(50)+Be to d(16)-+Be neutrons. The limiting RBE at low doses (RBEo) was calculated to be about 1.5 for X rays and 14.0, 6.2, and 4.7 for the d(16)+Be, d(33)+Be, and d(50)+Be neutrons, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Life shortening was investigated in both sexes of the B6CF1 (C57BL/6 x BALB/c) mouse exposed to fission neutrons and 60Co gamma rays. Three basic exposure patterns for both neutrons and gamma rays were compared: single exposures, 24 equal once-weekly exposures, and 60 equal once-weekly exposures. Ten different dose-response models were fitted to the data for animals exposed to neutrons. The response variable used for all dose-response modeling was mean after-survival. A simple linear model adequately described the response to neutrons for females and males at doses less than or equal to 80 cGy. At higher neutron dose levels a linear-quadratic equation was required to describe the life-shortening response. An effect of exposure pattern was observed prior to the detection of curvature in the dose response for neutrons and emerged as a potentially significant factor at neutron doses in the range of 40-60 cGy. Augmentation of neutron injury with dose protraction was observed in both sexes and began at doses as low as 60 cGy. The life-shortening response for all animals exposed to gamma rays (22-1918 cGy) was linear and inversely dependent upon the protraction period (1 day, 24 weeks, 60 weeks). Depending on the exposure pattern used for the gamma-ray baseline, relative biological effectiveness (RBE) values ranged from 6 to 43. Augmentation, because it occurred only at higher levels of neutron exposure, had no influence on the estimation of RBEm.  相似文献   

5.
A dose-effect relationship has been established for high-energy neutrons (maximum energy 600 MeV) within a dose range of 0.2 to 80 cGy and for low-energy neutrons produced by a 252Cf source (mean energy 2.35 MeV) for doses between 0.2 and 5 cGy. The frequency of micronuclei was found to increase linearly with dose. The relative biological effectiveness (r.b.e) values calculated using 60Co radiation as a reference were, in the high-dose region, 4.7 +/- 0.4 and 11.8 +/- 1.3 for the high- and low-energy neutrons, respectively. At doses below 1 cGy constant values of 25.4 +/- 4.4 and 63.7 +/- 12 were reached for the respective neutron energies.  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated the effect of fission-spectrum neutron dose fractionation on neoplastic transformation of exponentially growing C3H 10T1/2 cells. Total doses of 10.8, 27, 54, and 108 cGy were given in single doses or in five equal fractions delivered at 24-h intervals in the biological channel of the RSV-TAPIRO reactor at CRE-Casaccia. Both cell inactivation and neoplastic transformation were more effectively induced by fission neutrons than by 250-kVp X rays. No significant effect on cell survival or neoplastic transformation was observed with split doses compared to single doses of fission-spectrum neutrons. Neutron RBE values relative to X rays determined from data for survival and neoplastic transformation were comparable.  相似文献   

7.
On Day 0, young adult female F344 rats were adrenalectomized and intrasplenically implanted with a pituitary gland and capsule containing estrone. All were thereafter given 2.5 mg deoxycorticosterone per week and the choice of saline or tap water. This treatment yields high prolactin levels and glucocorticoid deficiency (Prl+/Glc-). On Day +48, total recoverable mammary DNA was increased by more than sevenfold, tritiated thymidine uptake by nearly fourfold, and total mammary clonogens by about fivefold. Irradiation with 4, 40, and 80 cGy X rays on Day +48 increased total mammary carcinomas per rat day at risk linearly with dose, and 40 and 80 cGy significantly decreased first carcinoma latency. A dose of 40 cGy X rays on Day -1 yielded tumor latencies and frequencies insignificantly different from unirradiated controls and significantly different from the dose on Day +48. Total carcinomas per rat day at risk were better fit by a function of dose to the power 0.4 than by a linear function after exposure to 1, 10, and 20 cGy fission neutrons, and 10 and 20 cGy significantly shortened the time to appearance of the first cancer. In contrast to results with X rays, 10 cGy neutrons on Day -1 yielded tumor frequencies and latencies insignificantly different from 10 cGy neutrons on Day +48. The carcinogenic action of X rays was thus influenced by total clonogen numbers and/or proliferation rates; that of neutrons was not.  相似文献   

8.
The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of a range of neutron energies relative to 250-kVp X rays has been determined for oncogenic transformation and cell survival in the mouse C3H 10T 1/2 cell line. Monoenergetic neutrons at 0.23, 0.35, 0.45, 0.70, 0.96, 1.96, 5.90, and 13.7 MeV were generated at the Radiological Research Accelerator Facility of the Radiological Research Laboratories, Columbia University, and were used to irradiate asynchronous cells at low absorbed doses from 0.05 to 1.47 Gy. X irradiations covered the range 0.5 to 8 Gy. Over the more than 2-year period of this study, the 31 experiments provided comprehensive information, indicating minimal variability in control material, assuring the validity of comparisons over time. For both survival and transformation, a curvilinear dose response for X rays was contrasted with linear or nearly linear dose responses for the various neutron energies. RBE increased as dose decreased for both end points. Maximal RBE values for transformation ranged from 13 for cells exposed to 5.9-MeV neutrons to 35 for 0.35-MeV neutrons. This study clearly shows that over the range of neutron energies typically seen by nuclear power plant workers and individuals exposed to the atomic bombs in Japan, a wide range of RBE values needs to be considered when evaluating the neutron component of the effective dose. These results are in concordance with the recent proposals in ICRU 40 both to change upward and to vary the quality factor for neutron irradiations.  相似文献   

9.
A further study on the response of the mouse kidney to d(4)-Be neutrons (EN = 2.3 MeV) is described. The results confirm and augment the work published previously by Stewart et al. [Br. J. Radiol. 57, 1009-1021 (1984)]; the present paper includes the data from a "top-up" design of experiment which extends the measurements of neutron RBE (relative to 240 kVp X rays) down to X-ray doses of 0.75 Gy per fraction. The mean RBE for these neutrons increases from 5.8 to 7.3 as X-ray dose per fraction decreases from 3.0 to 1.5 Gy in the kidney. This agrees with the predictions from the linear quadratic (LQ) model, based on the renal response to X-ray doses above 4 Gy per fraction. The mean RBE estimate from a single dose group at 0.75 Gy per fraction of X rays is, however, 3.9. This is below the LQ prediction and may indicate increasing X-ray sensitivity at low doses. Data from this study and from those published previously have been used to determine more accurately the shape of the underlying response to d(4)-Be neutrons; an alpha/beta ratio of 20.5 +/- 3.7 Gy was found. The best value of alpha/beta for X rays determined from these experiments was 3.04 +/- 0.35 Gy, in agreement with previous values.  相似文献   

10.
Subpopulations of mouse lens epithelial cells, differing in proliferative status, were irradiated with either X rays or fission spectrum neutrons given singly or in four weekly fractions. After various times, epithelia were mitogenically stimulated by wounding and DNA synthesis responses were determined by incorporation of [3H]thymidine. At 1 h following both X and neutron irradiations, significant suppression of the wound response after single doses and a sparing effect of fractionation were evident in both the mitotically quiescent and the slowly proliferating subpopulations. At 1 week following single or fractionated doses of both radiations, recovery was evident in both subpopulations. By 4 weeks, the quiescent subpopulation showed significant recovery after both single and fractionated doses of X rays or neutrons. In contrast, a marked decreased ability to respond after neutron irradiation and, in addition, a significant enhancement effect of neutron fractionation were observed for the slowly proliferating subpopulation. Per gray, neutrons were about 7.5 times more effective than X rays as a single dose and 25 times more effective in four equal fractions. The shift from an initial sparing to a final enhancing effect of neutron fractionation for the slowly proliferating subpopulation has importance for understanding divergent early and late radiation responses following dose fractionation.  相似文献   

11.
Human melanoma cells that are resistant to gamma rays were irradiated with 14 MeV neutrons given at low doses ranging from 5 cGy to 1.12 Gy at a very low dose rate of 0.8 mGy min(-1) or a moderate dose rate of 40 mGy min(-1). The biological effects of neutrons were studied by two different methods: a cell survival assay after a 14-day incubation and an analysis of chromosomal aberrations in metaphases collected 20 h after irradiation. Unusual features of the survival curve at very low dose rate were a marked increase in cell killing at 5 cGy followed by a plateau for survival from 10 to 32.5 cGy. The levels of induced chromosomal aberrations showed a similar increase for both dose rates at 7.5 cGy and the existence of a plateau at the very low dose rate from 15 to 30 cGy. The existence of a plateau suggests that a repair process after low-dose neutrons might be induced after a threshold dose of 5-7.5 cGy which compensates for induced damage from doses as high as 32.5 cGy. These findings may be of interest for understanding the relative biological effectiveness of neutrons and the effects of environmental low-dose irradiation.  相似文献   

12.
The Comet assay (microgel electrophoresis) was used to study DNA damage in Raji cells, a B-lymphoblastoid cell line, after treatment with different doses of neutrons (0.5 to 16 Gy) or gamma rays (1.4 to 44.8 Gy). A better growth recovery was observed in cells after gamma-ray treatments compared with neutron treatments. The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of neutron in cell killing was determined to be 2.5. Initially, the number of damaged cells per unit dose was approximately the same after neutron and gamma-ray irradiation. One hour after treatment, however, the number of normal cells per unit dose was much lower for neutrons than for gamma rays, suggesting a more efficient initial repair for gamma rays. Twenty-four hours after treatment, the numbers of damaged cells per unit dose of neutrons or gamma rays were again at comparable level. Cell cycle kinetic studies showed a strong G2/M arrest at equivalent unit dose (neutrons up to 8 Gy; gamma rays up to 5.6 Gy), suggesting a period in cell cycle for DNA repair. However, only cells treated with low doses (up to 2 Gy) seemed to be capable of returning into normal cell cycle within 4 days. For the highest dose of neutrons, decline in the number of normal cells seen at already 3 days after treatment was deeper compared with equivalent unit doses of gamma rays. Our present results support different mechanisms of action by these two irradiations and suggest the generation of locally multiply damaged sites (LMDS) for high linear energy transfer (LET) radiation which are known to be repaired at lower efficiency.  相似文献   

13.
After exposure to various doses of 250 kVp X radiation, 0.85 Me V fission spectrum neutrons, or 600 MeV/A iron (Fe) particles, mitotically quiescent rat lens cells showed no visible evidence of radiation injury. However, following the mitogenic stimulus of wounding, mitotic abnormalities became evident when responding cells entered mitosis. Latent damage and recovery therefrom were monitored at 3, 7, 14, and 28 days after irradiation. Following doses of 1 to 10 Gy of X radiation, the recovery rate, indicated by a decrease in abnormalities with time, was proportional to dose, and the dose-effect slope decreased exponentially with time. Virtually no recovery occurred during the 28 days after 1.25 to 2.25 Gy of fission neutron radiation. After doses of 0.5 to 3.0 Gy of Fe particles, an increased expression of mitotic damage or recovery than recovery occurred. As a consequence of the differing patterns in time for expression of damage or recovery following X rays and the high-LET radiations, the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) increased from 3.6 to 16 for neutrons and from 2 to 10 for Fe particles over the 28-day observation period.  相似文献   

14.
A total of 6316 B6CF1 mice were exposed to 60 equal once-weekly doses of 0.85-MeV fission neutrons (0.033 to 0.67 cGy per weekly fraction) or 60Co gamma rays (1.67 to 10 cGy per weekly fraction) and were observed until they died. The mean aftersurvival times showed that the dose-response curves for both neutron and gamma-ray exposures were indistinguishable from linear over all doses except the highest neutron dose. The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) for neutrons, calculated as the ratio of the initial slopes of the dose-response curves, was about 20 for both males and females. Essentially the same value was obtained by a number of other analyses of the data. Virtually all of the radiation-specific excess mortality could be attributed to tumors; after decrementation of the population for nontumor deaths, the value of the RBE was not significantly changed.  相似文献   

15.
The induction of dicentric chromosomes in human lymphocytes from one individual irradiated in vitro with monoenergetic neutrons at 565 keV was examined to provide additional data for an improved evaluation of neutrons with respect to radiation risk in radioprotection. The resulting linear dose-response relationship obtained (0.813 +/- 0.052 dicentrics per cell per gray) over the dose range of 0.0213-0.167 Gy is consistent with published results obtained for irradiation with neutrons from different sources and with different spectra at energies lower than 1000 keV. Comparing this value to previously published "average" dose-response curves obtained by different laboratories for (60)Co gamma rays and orthovoltage X rays resulted in maximum RBEs (RBE(m)) of about 37 +/- 8 and 16 +/- 4, respectively. However, when our neutron data were matched to low-LET dose responses that were constructed several years earlier for lymphocytes from the same individual, higher values of RBE(m) resulted: 76.0 +/- 29.5 for (60)Co gamma rays and 54.2 +/- 18.4 for (137)Cs gamma rays; differentially filtered 220 kV X rays produced values of RBE(m) between 20.3 +/- 2.0 or 37.0 +/- 7. 1. The results highlight the dependence of RBE(m) on the choice of low-LET reference radiation and raise the possibility that differential individual response to low-LET radiations may need to be examined more fully in this context.  相似文献   

16.
A study was made of induction of mutations, resistant to 6-thioguanine (TGr), and reproductive death of Chinese hamster cells after irradiation by fission-spectrum fast neutrons (mean energy of 0.75 MeV) with doses of 10-130 cGy. A high relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of fast neutrons was shown. The maximum RBE values (13-16) were within the dose range inducing minimum mutagenic and lethal effects. RBE decreased with the dose increase. Inspite of high mutagenic effectiveness of neutrons, estimated according to TGr mutation frequency per cell per dose unit, their relative mutagenic effectiveness, estimated per cell per one lethal event, did not substantially differ from that of X-radiation.  相似文献   

17.
The present analysis of data on the induction of lymphoma and myeloid leukemia in BC3F1 mice has indicated some new and interesting aspects regarding the shapes of the dose-effect curves. The incidence data can be interpreted by radiobiological models of the induction process coupled with cell inactivation. In particular, for malignant lymphoma the dose-response curve after X rays can be described assuming a quadratic model corrected for cell inactivation, while the incidence data after fission neutrons are best fitted by a linear model which also allows for cell inactivation. Myeloid leukemia has also been induced in BC3F1 mice. The bell-shaped dose-response curves observed after irradiation with either X rays or neutrons are explained by assuming simultaneous initial transforming events and cell inactivation with the data for cell inactivation at higher doses being in agreement with data reported for other strains of mice. A value for relative biological effectiveness of 4 is obtained at the lowest neutron dose used. The value of the inactivation parameters can be compared with those of the cell inactivation probability per unit dose for the bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells, which are believed to be the target cells for these tumors.  相似文献   

18.
The relative biological effectiveness of 14 MeV neutrons in the low-dose range < or =1 Gy has been determined in differentiating and differentiated spermatogonia. Male NMRI mice were exposed to single doses of 2 cGy to 3 Gy of (60)Co gamma rays or neutrons. The ratios of testicular S-phase cells, 4c primary spermatocytes, and elongated spermatids were quantified by DNA flow cytometry 2 to 70 days after irradiation and were found to decrease. Histological samples and testis weight were analyzed in parallel. Doses of 2-5 cGy neutrons and 10-50 cGy gamma rays significantly (P<0.05) decreased the proportions of S-phase cells, spermatocytes and elongated spermatids at 4, 14 and 28 days postirradiation. For S-phase cells, the biphasic shape of the cell survival curves was described with a D(50) of 5 cGy neutrons. The D(50) for (60)Co gamma rays and the relative biological effectiveness could not be determined. The relative biological effectiveness of neutrons at 50% reductions of testis weight, primary spermatocytes, and elongated spermatids were 2.5, 10.0 and 6.1, respectively. This in vivo assay is interesting because of its sensitivity at dose ranges that are relevant for exposures in the environment, the workplace and radiotherapy.  相似文献   

19.
The relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of the 25-MeV (average energy) neutron beam at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory was measured using murine bone marrow (LD50/30) and gut (LD50/6) lethality and killing of hematopoietic colony forming units (CFU-S) or intestinal clonogenic cells (ICC). The reference radiation was 60Co gamma rays. The LD50/30 and LD50/6 for mice exposed to the Fermilab neutron beam were 6.6 and 8.7 Gy, respectively, intermediate between those of JANUS neutrons and 60Co gamma rays. The D0 values for CFU-S and ICC were 47 cGy and 1.05 Gy, respectively, also intermediate between the lowest values found for JANUS neutrons and the highest values found after 60Co gamma rays. The split-dose survival ratios for CFU-S at intervals of 1-6 hr between doses were essentially 1.0 for both neutron sources, while the corresponding split-dose survival ratio for 60Co gamma rays was consistantly above 1, reaching a maximum of 1.7 with a 1-hr interval between doses. The 3-hr split-dose survival ratios for ICC were 1.0 for JANUS neutrons, 1.85 for Fermilab neutrons, and 6.5 for 60Co gamma rays. The RBE estimates for LD50/30 were 1.5 and 2.3 for Fermilab and JANUS neutrons, respectively. Based on LD50/6, the RBEs were 1.9 (Fermilab) and 3.0 (JANUS). The RBEs for CFU-S D0 were 1.4 (Fermilab) and 1.9 (JANUS) and for jejunal microcolony D0 1.4 (Fermilab) and 2.8 (JANUS).  相似文献   

20.
The effectiveness of neutrons from a facsimile of the Hiroshima bomb was determined cytogenetically. The "Little-Boy" replica (LBR), assembled at Los Alamos as a controlled nuclear reactor for detailed physical dosimetry, was used. Of special interest, the neutron energy characteristics (including lineal energy) measured 0.74 m from the LBR were remarkably similar to those calculated for the 1945 Hiroshima bomb at 1 to 2 km from the hypocenter, as shown in a companion dosimetric paper (Straume, et al., Radiat. Res. 128, 133-142 (1991)). Thus we examine here the effectiveness of neutrons closely resembling those that the A-bomb survivors received at Hiroshima. Chromosome aberration frequencies were determined in human blood lymphocytes exposed in vitro to graded doses of LBR radiation (97% neutrons, 3% gamma rays). Vials of blood suspended in air at distances up to 2.10 m from the center of the LBR uranium core received doses ranging from 0.02 to 2.92 Gy. The LBR neutrons (E approximately 0.2 MeV) produced 1.18 dicentrics and rings per cell per Gy. They were more effective than the higher-energy fission neutrons (E approximately 1 MeV) commonly used in radiobiology. The maximum RBE (RBEM) of LBR neutrons at low doses is estimated to be 60 to 80 compared to 60Co gamma rays and 22 to 30 compared to 250-kVp X rays. These results provide a quantitative measurement of the biological effectiveness of Hiroshima-like neutrons.  相似文献   

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