Publications by authors named "A Heimers"

The influence of high doses of sparsely and densely ionising radiation on the yield of aberrant human peripheral lymphocytes in simulated partial-body exposures was studied by investigating radiation-induced chromosome aberration frequencies, namely dicentric and centric ring chromosomes. Peripheral blood samples from two volunteers were irradiated with high doses of 200 kV X-rays or neutrons with a mean energy of or =2.1 MeV and partial-body exposure was simulated by mixing irradiated and non-irradiated blood from the same two donors in proportions of 25, 50, and 75%.

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The purpose of this study was to systematically investigate how high doses of sparsely and densely ionizing radiations influence the proliferation time of lymphocytes in short-term cultures and, consequently, the observed frequencies of dicentric and centric ring chromosomes. Peripheral blood samples from five volunteers were irradiated with high doses of 200 kV X-rays and with neutrons with a mean energy of or=2.1 MeV.

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Chromosome aberrations and sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) were determined in standard peripheral lymphocyte metaphase preparations of 13 British Gulf War veterans, two veterans of the recent war in the Balkans and one veteran of both wars. All 16 volunteers suspect exposures to depleted uranium (DU) while deployed at the two different theatres of war in 1990 and later on. The Bremen laboratory control served as a reference in this study.

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A dose-effect curve is presented obtained by analysis of dicentric chromosomes and centric ring chromosomes in lymphocyte metaphase spreads of three healthy volunteers after in vitro 100 kV X-ray-irradiation of peripheral blood samples. This calibration curve follows a linear quadratic equation, y=c+alpha D+beta D(2), with the coefficients: y=(0.0005+/-0.

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Only multiple X ray diagnostics could be identified as a common risk factor in a leukaemia cluster that appeared between 1985-1989 in the municipality of Sittensen in northern Germany. In order to judge if the effect could be explained by irradiation dose, estimates were done in two of the leukaemia cases and seven former patients of a practice where some of the leukaemia cases had been treated for orthopaedic reasons. The methods used for the reconstruction of doses were physical simulation and biological dosimetry by dicentric chromosomes in peripheral lymphocytes.

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