Publication | Open Access
Assessment of simulated high-dose partial-body irradiation by PCC-R assay
23
Citations
24
References
2013
Year
Radiation PhysicsRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureRadiation BiologyPcc-r AssayTreatment VerificationPartial Body IrradiationsRadiation TestingRadiation MedicineHematologyPediatric DosimetryPartial-body IrradiationsRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineRadiologyHealth SciencesMedical ImagingRadiological SciencesRadiation MonitoringRadiation SafetyRadiation EffectsPeripheral Whole BloodDosimetryRadiation DoseMedicine
The estimation of the dose and the irradiated fraction of the body is important information in the primary medical response in case of a radiological accident. The PCC-R assay has been developed for high-dose estimations, but little attention has been given to its applicability for partial-body irradiations. In the present work we estimated the doses and the percentage of the irradiated fraction in simulated partial-body radiation exposures at high doses using the PCC-R assay. Peripheral whole blood of three healthy donors was exposed to doses from 0-20 Gy, with ⁶⁰Co gamma radiation. To simulate partial body irradiations, irradiated and non-irradiated blood was mixed to obtain proportions of irradiated blood from 10-90%. Lymphocyte cultures were treated with Colcemid and Calyculin-A before harvest. Conventional and triage scores were performed for each dose, proportion of irradiated blood and donor. The Papworth's u test was used to evaluate the PCC-R distribution per cell. A dose-response relationship was fitted according to the maximum likelihood method using the frequencies of PCC-R obtained from 100% irradiated blood. The dose to the partially irradiated blood was estimated using the Contaminated Poisson method. A new D₀ value of 10.9 Gy was calculated and used to estimate the initial fraction of irradiated cells. The results presented here indicate that by PCC-R it is possible to distinguish between simulated partial- and whole-body irradiations by the u-test, and to accurately estimate the dose from 10-20 Gy, and the initial fraction of irradiated cells in the interval from 10-90%.
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