| Literature DB >> 30630478 |
Hisanori Fukunaga1, Kevin M Prise2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The conventional concept of radiation protection is based on epidemiological studies of radiation that support a positive correlation between dose and response. However, there is a remarkable difference in biological responses at the tissue level, depending on whether radiation is delivered as a uniform or non-uniform spatiotemporal distribution due to tissue sparing effects (TSE). From the point of view of radiation micro-dosimetry, environmental radiation is delivered as a non-uniform distribution, and radiation-induced biological responses at the tissue level, such as TSE, would be implicated in individual risk following exposure to environmental radiation. HYPOTHESIS: We hypothesize that the health risks of non-uniform radiation exposure are lower than the same dose at a uniform exposure, due to TSE following irradiation. Testing the hypothesis requires both radiobiological studies using high-precision microbeams and the epidemiological data of environmental radiation-induced effects. The implications of the hypothesis will lead to more personalized approaches in the field of environmental radiation protection.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental radiation; Health risk assessment; Radiation-induced biological effects; Radiological protection; Tissue sparing effects
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30630478 PMCID: PMC6329136 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-018-0444-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Fig. 1Low-dose radiation dose distributions at micro-scale level. This is a simulated result of exposure to dose levels of approximately 1 mGy/year. The distribution of the dose is tempo-spatially heterogenous. The blue lines indicate radiation tracks in the irradiated tissue
Fig. 2Radiation-induced biological responses at the tissue level. When cell-level repair responses (e.g. DNA damage repair, and oxidative stress response) cannot completely repair the radiation-induced damages, the removal of damaged cells (e.g. apoptosis, and cell competition) and tissue structure repair/regeneration (e.g. stem cell migration and proliferation) minimize the influence for maintaining normal tissue functions. The removals of damaged cells prevent the tissue from carcinogenesis or senescence that are targets of immune system. The failures of tissue structure repair/regeneration induce wholly or partially the dysfunction