1. Suppression of carcinogenic processes in mice by chronic low dose rate gamma-irradiation
- Author
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Takeshi Yamada, Hiroshi Tanooka, Yuko Hoshi, Kazuo Sakai, Toshiyasu Iwasaki, Takaharu Nomura, Takeshi Oda, and Kazuko Fujita
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Low dose rate irradiation ,Tumour incidence ,Endocrinology ,Low dose rate radiation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Low dose rate ,Irradiation ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Dose rate ,Carcinogen ,Gamma irradiation - Abstract
Effects of low dose rate radiation on the process of carcinogenesis induced by a chemical carcinogen were examined. ICR female mice, 35 or 36 mice for each group, were kept and exposed to 137 Cs gamma-rays in the long- term low dose rate irradiation facility at the Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry at a dose rate of 0.3, 0.96, or 2.5 mGy/h. Thirty-five days later, the mice were injected in the groin with 0.5 mg of 20-methylcholanthrene (MC) dissolved in olive oil, and irradiation was continued. Tumours started to appear 2 months after MC injection. Cumulative tumour incidences after 216 days following MC injection were 94% in the mice irradiated at 0.3 mGy/h, 76% at 0.95 mGy/h, 89% at 0.30 mGy/h, and 94% in non-irradiated control mice. The difference between the tumour incidence in the control mice and that in the mice irradiated at 0.95 mGy/h was statistically significant. These results indicate the suppressive effect of low dose rate irradiation on the process of tumour induction initiated by MC with an optimum dose rate of approximately 1 mGy/h.
- Published
- 2003
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