Literature DB >> 2974596

Promotion of pulmonary carcinogenesis by plutonium particle aggregation following inhalation of 239PuO2.

C L Sanders1, K E McDonald, K E Lauhala.   

Abstract

Promotion of lung tumor formation from inhaled 239PuO2 in rats may be associated with aggregation of plutonium particles near bronchioles. The relationship of plutonium particle aggregation in the lung and the development of lung tumors after inhalation of 239PuO2 was studied in 664 life span rats with mean lung doses ranging from 0.35 to 20 Gy. Plutonium particle concentration and aggregation were determined from autoradiographic sections of the left lung lobe. The increase in particles/cm2 and mean number of particles per aggregate up to 20 Gy were directly proportional to lung dose. Aggregates with greater than 25 particles increased linearly with dose from 0.2% at 1.4 Gy to 8.2% at 20 Gy, in a pattern similar to increasing severity of pulmonary fibrosis and incidence of lung tumors. Lung tumor incidence increased from about 6% at 1.4 Gy to 83% at 8 Gy; no further increase in lung tumors was seen at doses greater than 8 Gy. Maximum lung tumor incidence at 8 Gy corresponded to a particle concentration of 130/cm2 and four particles/aggregate with 4% of aggregates having greater than 25 particles. Aggregation of inhaled plutonium particles in clusters of greater than 25 particles resulted in daily doses of only a few centigray to focal tissue regions containing clustered particles, yet these doses appeared sufficient to cause pulmonary fibrosis and promotion of pulmonary carcinogenesis.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2974596

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  2 in total

1.  Microdistribution and long-term retention of 239Pu (NO3)4 in the respiratory tracts of an acutely exposed plutonium worker and experimental beagle dogs.

Authors:  Christopher E Nielsen; Dulaney A Wilson; Antone L Brooks; Stacey L McCord; Gerald E Dagle; Anthony C James; Sergei Y Tolmachev; Brian D Thrall; William F Morgan
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2012-09-07       Impact factor: 12.701

2.  Actinide bioimaging in tissues: Comparison of emulsion and solid track autoradiography techniques with the iQID camera.

Authors:  Stephanie Lamart; Brian W Miller; Anne Van der Meeren; Anissa Tazrart; Jaime F Angulo; Nina M Griffiths
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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