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Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.

The types of injury attributable to ionizing radiation are subdivided, for purposes of risk assessment and radiological protection, into two broad categories: stochastic effects and nonstochastic effects. Stochastic effects are viewed as probablistic phenomena, varying in frequency but not severity...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Upton, A C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1983
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1569362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6653536
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author Upton, A C
author_facet Upton, A C
author_sort Upton, A C
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description The types of injury attributable to ionizing radiation are subdivided, for purposes of risk assessment and radiological protection, into two broad categories: stochastic effects and nonstochastic effects. Stochastic effects are viewed as probablistic phenomena, varying in frequency but not severity as a function of the dose, without any threshold; nonstochastic effects are viewed as deterministic phenomena, varying in both frequency and severity as a function of the dose, with clinical thresholds. Included among stochastic effects are heritable effects (mutations and chromosome aberrations) and carcinogenic effects. Both types of effects are envisioned as unicellular phenomena which can result from nonlethal injury of individual cells, without the necessity of damage to other cells. For the induction of mutations and chromosome aberrations in the low-to-intermediate dose range, the dose-response curve with high-linear energy transfer (LET) radiation generally conforms to a linear nonthreshold relationship and varies relatively little with the dose rate. In contrast, the curve with low-LET radiation generally conforms to a linear-quadratic relationship, rising less steeply than the curve with high-LET radiation and increasing in slope with increasing dose and dose rate. The dose-response curve for carcinogenic effects varies widely from one type of neoplasm to another in the intermediate-to-high dose range, in part because of differences in the way large doses of radiation can affect the promotion and progression of different neoplasms. Information about dose-response relations for low-level irradiation is fragmentary but consistent, in general, with the hypothesis that the neoplastic transformation may result from mutation, chromosome aberration or genetic recombination in a single susceptible cell.
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spelling pubmed-15693622006-09-18 Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves. Upton, A C Environ Health Perspect Research Article The types of injury attributable to ionizing radiation are subdivided, for purposes of risk assessment and radiological protection, into two broad categories: stochastic effects and nonstochastic effects. Stochastic effects are viewed as probablistic phenomena, varying in frequency but not severity as a function of the dose, without any threshold; nonstochastic effects are viewed as deterministic phenomena, varying in both frequency and severity as a function of the dose, with clinical thresholds. Included among stochastic effects are heritable effects (mutations and chromosome aberrations) and carcinogenic effects. Both types of effects are envisioned as unicellular phenomena which can result from nonlethal injury of individual cells, without the necessity of damage to other cells. For the induction of mutations and chromosome aberrations in the low-to-intermediate dose range, the dose-response curve with high-linear energy transfer (LET) radiation generally conforms to a linear nonthreshold relationship and varies relatively little with the dose rate. In contrast, the curve with low-LET radiation generally conforms to a linear-quadratic relationship, rising less steeply than the curve with high-LET radiation and increasing in slope with increasing dose and dose rate. The dose-response curve for carcinogenic effects varies widely from one type of neoplasm to another in the intermediate-to-high dose range, in part because of differences in the way large doses of radiation can affect the promotion and progression of different neoplasms. Information about dose-response relations for low-level irradiation is fragmentary but consistent, in general, with the hypothesis that the neoplastic transformation may result from mutation, chromosome aberration or genetic recombination in a single susceptible cell. 1983-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1569362/ /pubmed/6653536 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Upton, A C
Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title_full Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title_fullStr Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title_full_unstemmed Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title_short Environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
title_sort environmental standards for ionizing radiation: theoretical basis for dose-response curves.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1569362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6653536
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