Publication | Open Access
Temporal Changes in Sparing and Enhancing Dose Protraction Effects of Ionizing Irradiation for Aortic Damage in Wild-Type Mice
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Citations
22
References
2022
Year
Wild-type MiceRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureIonizing IrradiationCardiovascular ToxicityRadiation ProtectionTemporal ChangesPost-irradiation TimeRadiation OncologyAtherosclerosisNuclear MedicineCardiologyRadiologyHealth SciencesIrradiation RegimensIonizing RadiationVascular BiologyChronic ExposureRadiation EffectsDosimetryCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionMedicine
In medical and occupational settings, ionizing irradiation of the circulatory system occurs at various dose rates. We previously found sparing and enhancing dose protraction effects for aortic changes in wild-type mice at 6 months after starting irradiation with 5 Gy of photons. Here, we further analyzed changes at 12 months after stating irradiation. Irrespective of irradiation regimens, irradiation little affected left ventricular function, heart weight, and kidney weight. Irradiation caused structural disorganizations and intima-media thickening in the aorta, along with concurrent elevations of markers for proinflammation, macrophage, profibrosis, and fibrosis, and reductions in markers for vascular functionality and cell adhesion in the aortic endothelium. These changes were qualitatively similar but quantitatively less at 12 months than at 6 months. The magnitude of such changes at 12 months was not smaller in 25 fractions (Frs) but was smaller in 100 Frs and chronic exposure than acute exposure. The magnitude at 6 and 12 months was greater in 25 Frs, smaller in 100 Frs, and much smaller in chronic exposure than acute exposure. These findings suggest that dose protraction changes aortic damage, in a fashion that depends on post-irradiation time and is not a simple function of dose rate.
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