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Repair in Mouse Lung after Split Doses of X Rays
72
Citations
18
References
1981
Year
Acute Lung InjuryLung TransplantationLung InflammationRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureX RaysRadiation MedicineClinical InjuryToxicologyRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineClear DissociationRadiologyHealth SciencesEarly DamageDosimetryLung CancerX-ray InjuryBronchial NeoplasmMedicine
A lung function assay in situ has been used to investigate repair of X-ray injury in mice using two equal doses separated by 1, 7, or 28 days. Dose-response curves were obtained at 2-week intervals up to 28 weeks and at monthly intervals up to 48 weeks. The $D_{2}-D_{1}$ values for early damage (radiation pneumonitis), i.e., 28 weeks after the second dose of radiation, were 3.95 (0-1 day), 4.80 (0-7 days), and 5.50 (0-28 days) Gy. These data agree well with repair values obtained from LD50 data from the same mice. The $D_{2}-D_{1}$ between 1 and 28 days was not as large (1.49 to 1.79 Gy) as that reported previously (3.60 Gy) by S. B. Field, S. Hornsey, and Y. Kutsutani (Br. J. Radiol. 49, 700-707 (1976)), although it demonstrated significant slow repair. A clear dissociation of early pneumonitis and late fibrosis was observed in the mice, occurring only after the lowest total split dose given (19 Gy) and becoming more clearly dissociated as the time between the two doses was increased.
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