Literature DB >> 33361831

BRAIN AND EYE AS POTENTIAL TARGETS FOR IONIZING RADIATION IMPACT. Part І. THE CONSEQUENCES OF IRRADIATION OF THE PARTICIPANTS OF THE LIQUIDATION OF THE CHORNOBYL ACCIDENT.

K N Loganovsky1, P A Fedirko1, K V Kuts1, D Marazziti2, K Yu Antypchuk1, I V Perchuk1, T F Babenko1, T K Loganovska1, O O Kolosynska1, G Yu Kreinis1, M V Gresko1, S V Masiuk1, L L Zdorenko1, N A Zdanevich1, N A Garkava3, R Yu Dorichevska1, Z L Vasilenko1, V I Kravchenko1, N V Drosdova1, Yu V Yefimova1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Exposure to ionizing radiation could affect the brain and eyes leading to cognitive and vision impairment, behavior disorders and performance decrement during professional irradiation at medical radiology, includinginterventional radiological procedures, long-term space flights, and radiation accidents.
OBJECTIVE: The objective was to analyze the current experimental, epidemiological, and clinical data on the radiation cerebro-ophthalmic effects.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: In our analytical review peer-reviewed publications via the bibliographic and scientometric bases PubMed / MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, and selected papers from the library catalog of NRCRM - theleading institution in the field of studying the medical effects of ionizing radiation - were used.
RESULTS: The probable radiation-induced cerebro-ophthalmic effects in human adults comprise radiation cataracts,radiation glaucoma, radiation-induced optic neuropathy, retinopathies, angiopathies as well as specific neurocognitive deficit in the various neuropsychiatric pathology including cerebrovascular pathology and neurodegenerativediseases. Specific attention is paid to the likely stochastic nature of many of those effects. Those prenatally and inchildhood exposed are a particular target group with a higher risk for possible radiation effects and neurodegenerative diseases.
CONCLUSIONS: The experimental, clinical, epidemiological, anatomical and pathophysiological rationale for visualsystem and central nervous system (CNS) radiosensitivity is given. The necessity for further international studieswith adequate dosimetric support and the follow-up medical and biophysical monitoring of high radiation riskcohorts is justified. The first part of the study currently being published presents the results of the study of theeffects of irradiation in the participants of emergency works at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant (ChNPP). K.N. Loganovsky, P.A. Fedirko, K.V. Kuts, D. Marazziti, K.Yu. Antypchuk, I.V. Perchuk, T.F. Babenko, T.K. Loganovska, O.O. Kolosynska, G.Yu. Kreinis, M.V. Gresko, S.V. Masiuk, L.L. Zdorenko, N.A. Zdanevich, N.A. Garkava, R.Yu. Dorichevska, Z.L. Vasilenko, V.I. Kravchenko, N.V. Drosdova, Yu.V. Yefimova.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cerebroophthalmic effects; ionizing radiation; macular degeneration; neurocognitive deficit; radiation accident; radiation cataracts

Year:  2020        PMID: 33361831     DOI: 10.33145/2304-8336-2020-25-90-129

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Probl Radiac Med Radiobiol        ISSN: 2304-8336


  1 in total

1.  Mental Health and Neuropsychiatric Aftermath 35 Years After the Chernobyl Catastrophe: Current State and Future Perspectives.

Authors:  Konstantin Loganovsky; Donatella Marazziti
Journal:  Clin Neuropsychiatry       Date:  2021-04
  1 in total

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