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Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure

Most human exposures to ionising radiation are partial body exposures. However, to date only limited tools are available for rapid and accurate estimation of the dose distribution and the extent of the body spared from the exposure. These parameters are of great importance for emergency triage and c...

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Autores principales: Horn, Simon, Barnard, Stephen, Rothkamm, Kai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3179476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21966430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025113
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author Horn, Simon
Barnard, Stephen
Rothkamm, Kai
author_facet Horn, Simon
Barnard, Stephen
Rothkamm, Kai
author_sort Horn, Simon
collection PubMed
description Most human exposures to ionising radiation are partial body exposures. However, to date only limited tools are available for rapid and accurate estimation of the dose distribution and the extent of the body spared from the exposure. These parameters are of great importance for emergency triage and clinical management of exposed individuals. Here, measurements of γ-H2AX immunofluorescence by microscopy and flow cytometry were compared as rapid biodosimetric tools for whole and partial body exposures. Ex vivo uniformly X-irradiated blood lymphocytes from one donor were used to generate a universal biexponential calibration function for γ-H2AX foci/intensity yields per unit dose for time points up to 96 hours post exposure. Foci – but not intensity – levels remained significantly above background for 96 hours for doses of 0.5 Gy or more. Foci-based dose estimates for ex vivo X-irradiated blood samples from 13 volunteers were in excellent agreement with the actual dose delivered to the targeted samples. Flow cytometric dose estimates for X-irradiated blood samples from 8 volunteers were in excellent agreement with the actual dose delivered at 1 hour post exposure but less so at 24 hours post exposure. In partial body exposures, simulated by mixing ex vivo irradiated and unirradiated lymphocytes, foci/intensity distributions were significantly over-dispersed compared to uniformly irradiated lymphocytes. For both methods and in all cases the estimated fraction of irradiated lymphocytes and dose to that fraction, calculated using the zero contaminated Poisson test and γ-H2AX calibration function, were in good agreement with the actual mixing ratios and doses delivered to the samples. In conclusion, γ-H2AX analysis of irradiated lymphocytes enables rapid and accurate assessment of whole body doses while dispersion analysis of foci or intensity distributions helps determine partial body doses and the irradiated fraction size in cases of partial body exposures.
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spelling pubmed-31794762011-09-30 Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure Horn, Simon Barnard, Stephen Rothkamm, Kai PLoS One Research Article Most human exposures to ionising radiation are partial body exposures. However, to date only limited tools are available for rapid and accurate estimation of the dose distribution and the extent of the body spared from the exposure. These parameters are of great importance for emergency triage and clinical management of exposed individuals. Here, measurements of γ-H2AX immunofluorescence by microscopy and flow cytometry were compared as rapid biodosimetric tools for whole and partial body exposures. Ex vivo uniformly X-irradiated blood lymphocytes from one donor were used to generate a universal biexponential calibration function for γ-H2AX foci/intensity yields per unit dose for time points up to 96 hours post exposure. Foci – but not intensity – levels remained significantly above background for 96 hours for doses of 0.5 Gy or more. Foci-based dose estimates for ex vivo X-irradiated blood samples from 13 volunteers were in excellent agreement with the actual dose delivered to the targeted samples. Flow cytometric dose estimates for X-irradiated blood samples from 8 volunteers were in excellent agreement with the actual dose delivered at 1 hour post exposure but less so at 24 hours post exposure. In partial body exposures, simulated by mixing ex vivo irradiated and unirradiated lymphocytes, foci/intensity distributions were significantly over-dispersed compared to uniformly irradiated lymphocytes. For both methods and in all cases the estimated fraction of irradiated lymphocytes and dose to that fraction, calculated using the zero contaminated Poisson test and γ-H2AX calibration function, were in good agreement with the actual mixing ratios and doses delivered to the samples. In conclusion, γ-H2AX analysis of irradiated lymphocytes enables rapid and accurate assessment of whole body doses while dispersion analysis of foci or intensity distributions helps determine partial body doses and the irradiated fraction size in cases of partial body exposures. Public Library of Science 2011-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3179476/ /pubmed/21966430 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025113 Text en Horn et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Horn, Simon
Barnard, Stephen
Rothkamm, Kai
Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title_full Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title_fullStr Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title_full_unstemmed Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title_short Gamma-H2AX-Based Dose Estimation for Whole and Partial Body Radiation Exposure
title_sort gamma-h2ax-based dose estimation for whole and partial body radiation exposure
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3179476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21966430
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025113
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