Natural radiation is the major source of human exposure to ionising radiation, and its largest contributing component to effective dose arises from inhalation of (222)Rn and its radioactive progeny. However, despite extensive knowledge of radiation risks gained through epidemiologic investigations and mechanistic considerations, the health effects of chronic low-level radiation exposure are still poorly understood. The present paper reviews the possible contribution of studies of populations living in high natural background radiation (HNBR) areas (Guarapari, Brazil; Kerala, India; Ramsar, Iran; Yangjiang, China), including radon-prone areas, to low dose risk estimation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelected soil samples, collected in Kosovo locations where DU ammunition was expended during the 1999 Balkan conflict, have been investigated by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), X-ray fluorescence imaging using a micro-beam (micro-XRF) and scanning electron microscopy equipped with an energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence detector (SEM-EDXRF), with the objective to test the suitability of these techniques to identify the presence of small DU particles and measure their size distribution and the 235U/238U isotopic ratio (SIMS). Although the results do not permit any legitimate extrapolation to all the sites hit by the DU rounds used during the conflict, they indicated that there can be "spots ' where hundreds of thousands of particles may be present in a few milligrams of DU contaminated soil. The particle size distribution showed that most of the DU particles were <5 microm in diameter and more than 50% of the particles had a diameter <1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoil samples collected from locations in Kosovo where depleted uranium (DU) ammunition was expended during the 1999 Balkan conflict were analysed for uranium and plutonium isotopes content (234U, 235U, 236U, 238U, 238Pu, (239 + 240)Pu). The analyses were conducted using gamma spectrometry (235U, 238U), alpha spectrometry (238Pu, (239 + 240)Pu), inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) (234U, 235U, 236U, 238U) and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) (236U)). The results indicated that whenever the U concentration exceeded the normal environmental values (approximately 2 to 3 mg/kg) the increase was due to DU contamination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Radioact
April 2003
Depleted uranium (DU), a waste product of uranium enrichment, has several civilian and military applications. It was used as armor-piercing ammunition in international military conflicts and was claimed to contribute to health problems, known as the Gulf War Syndrome and recently as the Balkan Syndrome. This led to renewed efforts to assess the environmental consequences and the health impact of the use of DU.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Pathol Toxicol Oncol
March 2001
Most assessments of possible deleterious outcomes from environmental and occupational exposures concentrate on single agents and neglect the potential for combined effects--that is, synergisms or antagonisms. Biomechanistic considerations based on multistep processes, such as carcinogenesis, indicate the potential for highly detrimental interactions if two or more consecutive rate-limiting steps are specifically effected by different agents. However, low specificity toward molecular structure or DNA sequence--and, therefore, exchangeability--of many genotoxic agents indicate little functional specificity and, hence, little vulnerability toward synergism in most occupational and environmental exposure situations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
April 2000
Nature and living organisms are separated into compartments. The self-assembly of phospholipid micelles was as fundamental to the emergence of life and evolution as the formation of DNA precursors and their self-replication. Also, modern science owes much of its success to the study of single compartments, the dissection of complex structures and event chains into smaller study objects which can be manipulated with a set of more and more sophisticated equipment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Germany, the largest single cohort study on uranium miners to date is being conducted. The cohort includes about 64,000 workers of the former Wismut company in eastern Germany. Inclusion criteria were: a date of employment between 1946 and 1989, a minimum period of employment of 180 days, and complete information on working history.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA registry of the rural population in the Altai region exposed to fallout from nuclear tests at the Semipalatinsk test site (STS) was established more than four decades after the first Soviet nuclear explosion on August 29, 1949. Information about individuals living in an exposed and a control area was collected using all available local sources, such as kolkhoz documentation, school registries, medical treatment records and interviews with residents. As a result, a database comprising an exposed group of 39 179 individuals from 53 Altai region villages, 6769 external and 3303 internal controls was compiled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 1991, an increased rate of childhood leukaemia was reported from the small northern German community of Elbmarsch, which is located on the banks of the River Elbe opposite the Kruemmel nuclear power plant. Owing to the fact that the increase occurred six years after the start-up of the plant, radioactive discharges were suspected as being implicated in the development of the cases. Previous investigations have failed to identify any exposure which might be associated with the cluster.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn understanding of damage pattern in critical cellular structures such as DNA is an important prerequisite for a mechanistic assessment of primary radiation damage, its possible repair, and the propagation of residual changes in somatic and germ cells as potential contributors to disease or ageing. Important quantitative insights have been made recently on the distribution in time and space of critical lesions from direct and indirect action of ionizing radiation on mammalian cells. When compared to damage from chemicals or from spontaneous degradation, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiving organisms are exposed every day to a multitude of physical, chemical and biological agents. However, assessments of possible deleterious outcomes from these exposures concentrate on single agents and neglect the potential for combined effects, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIonizing radiation from natural or man-made sources may affect human health. The main consequence of low and moderate radiation doses is the induction of cancer. To quantify these effects both epidemiological studies and experimental radiobiological research are needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA temporary increase in the incidence of infant leukaemia in Greece was reported by Petridou et al., which was attributed to in utero exposure to ionising radiation resulting from the Chernobyl accident. We performed a similar analysis based on the data of the German Childhood Cancer Registry in order to check whether the observation could be confirmed by means of independent data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Environ Biophys
April 1998
A region between Chelyabinsk and Ekaterinburg in the Southern Urals has been heavily contaminated due to operational and accidental releases from the first Soviet plutonium production facility Mayak. In 1992 and 1993, the German Federal Office for Radiation Protection organized a measuring campaign involving two Russian institutes to assist with the validation of former Soviet measurement data. The results of this measuring campaign are reported here.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor 44 individuals living in areas of the Southern Urals with historical 90Sr contamination, whole-body activities of this radionuclide were investigated using a new mobile detection system. Beta-particles from 90Sr/90Y decay were measured in vivo via two proportional counters mounted in front of the forehead and above the head, respectively. In order to correct for absorption by the skin, scalp thickness was measured using ultrasonic techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZentralbl Gynakol
July 1998
319 Patients are retrospectively competed, which underwent an inpatient or outpatient gynecological laparoscopy in 1992. Equality exists for martial status, education degree, nationality, anesthesiological risk and social structure. Outpatients are older, more rarely private assured, more often abdominal preoperated, have more children and live closer to the providing clinic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the inhomogeneous radiation field surrounding small beta-particle sources, nonlethally and heavily damaged cells are in proximity, permitting interaction via extracellular signals. This situation is typical of hot particles such as those released during the accident at Chernobyl. Beta-particle-emitting yttrium-90 wires (average energy 934 keV) were employed to investigate radiation-induced neoplastic transformation under these conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEfforts to assess the quantify deleterious effects from toxicants are directed mainly towards single agents, whereas real world environmental and occupational exposures to natural and anthropogenic agents quite often entail the concomitant presence of several toxicants. These combined exposures may lead to health risks that differ from those expected from simple addition of the individual risks. For example, combined exposures to physical and chemical agents such as radon and smoking or asbestos and smoking produce over-additive effects at exposure levels typical for earlier workplaces.
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