| Literature DB >> 19578466 |
Ilenia Foffa1, Monica Cresci, Maria Grazia Andreassi.
Abstract
Cardiac diagnostic or therapeutic testing is an essential tool for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular disease, but it also involves considerable exposure to ionizing radiation. Every exposure produces a corresponding increase in cancer risk, and risks are highest for radiation exposure during infancy and adolescence. Recent studies on chromosomal biomarkers corroborate the current radioprotection assumption showing that even modest radiation load due to cardiac catheter-based fluoroscopic procedures can damage the DNA of the cell. In this article, we review the biological and clinical risks of cardiac imaging employing ionizing radiation. We also discuss the perspectives offered by the use of molecular biomarkers in order to better assess the long-term development of health effects.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; biomarkers; cancer risk; genetic polymorphisms; ionizing radiation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19578466 PMCID: PMC2705223 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph6061882
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Biological effects of ionizing radiation.
| Medium-High | Low | |
| Short | Long | |
| Yes | No | |
| Cell Death | DNA damage | |
| Skin lesions, erythema, ulcers, epilation, cataracts, permanent sterility | Cancer, genetic effects | |
Figure 1.Chemical and biological effects by ionizing radiation. On the left side: from physical interaction (a few milliseconds) to clinical effects (decades later). On the right side: the corresponding molecular (DNA damage), cellular (cell damage or proliferation), and clinical events (such as cancer). Redrawn and modified from ref. [10].
Figure 2.Graphical representation the cumulative exposure of doses in multiples of dose from a simple chest x ray (y axis, left) and corresponding cancer risk (y axis, right) cancer risk and radiation dose (in multiples of dose from a simple chest x ray) for a typical cardiological patients undergoing to five radiological examinations. Redrawn and modified from ref. [4].
Figure 3.Radiation- Induced Risk of Cancer on Age and Gender by using the BEIR VII estimates.
Figure 4.Biomarkers are the key elements of molecular epidemiology and may open the “black box” from exposure to disease.
Figure 5.Chromosomal aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes: biomarkers of early effect and cancer risk assessment. Redrawn and modified from ref. [26].