Literature DB >> 3872854

Multifraction radiation response of mouse lung.

V Vegesna, H R Withers, H D Thames, K Mason.   

Abstract

The response of mouse lung to repeated doses of 60Co gamma-rays of as low as 115 cGy per fraction was measured using death from pneumonitis between 80 and 120 days after irradiation as the endpoint. A fractionation interval of 3 h was maintained for most regimens but in the longer experiments some 12 h intervals were introduced for logistic reasons. The longest overall duration (for a 43 fraction regimen) was 8 days. The total doses required to produce 50 per cent mortality increased continuously as dose/fraction was decreased, even from 160 to 115 cGy per fraction. Of clinical relevance, the steepness of the isoeffect curve over the dose range 115-500 cGy indicates that the lung shows greater sparing from dose fractionation than is characteristic of more rapidly-responding normal tissues, resembling, in this respect, other more slowly-responding tissues such as spinal cord. The plot of the reciprocal of the LD50 values as a function of dose per fraction was non-linear, suggesting that a linear quadratic dose response model may not be appropriate or that repair of cellular injury in lung is not complete in 3 h, or both.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3872854

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Biol Relat Stud Phys Chem Med        ISSN: 0020-7616


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  4 in total

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