Regulatory analyses, modeling the carcinogenic effect of ionizing radiations (IR) (e.g., alpha and beta particles, x-, and gamma rays, neutrons) and chemicals continue to use the linear no-threshold (LNT) model from zero to some low dose. The LNT is an omnibus causal default in regulatory occupational and health risk analysis. Its use raises four issues that make this default an open question. The first is that the LNT applied to study a single agent excludes co-exposure to other known risk factors: physical, dietary, socio-economic, and other. Causation is inappropriately specified because cancer incidence is imputed to the single agent's doses, although most cancers are multifactorial diseases. The second, linear interpolation from high to zero dose and response, is incorrect because biological and epidemiological evidence identify different mechanisms and modes of action at those doses. Third, additivity of exposure effect to background effect is questionable and certainly variable. Fourth, the default overestimates the probabilities and consequences at low doses, supplanting rational decision-making in which alternative models may be more or less likely to be correct. Recent converging scientific evidence against the LNT hypothesis answers the open question. The LNT use in regulation conflates science with administrative ease and risk aversion by policymakers. It should be replaced by models that are based on biologically motivated mechanistic understandings within an evolutionary biology framework that integrates adaptive strategies/processes in their formulation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153917 | DOI Listing |
Radiat Environ Biophys
November 2024
Institute of Radiology, Toxicology and Civil Protection, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, University of South Bohemia in Ceske Budejovice, Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic.
During the first half of the 20th century, it was commonly assumed that radiation-induced health effects occur only when the dose exceeds a certain threshold. This idea was discarded for stochastic effects when more knowledge was gained about the mechanisms of radiation-induced cancer. Currently, a key tenet of the international system of radiological protection is the linear no-threshold (LNT) model where the risk of radiation-induced cancer is believed to be directly proportional to the dose received, even at dose levels where the effects cannot be proven directly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Toxicol
June 2024
Retired from Oak Ridge National Laboratory at Oak Ridge, TN, 4088 Notting Hill Gate Road, Upper Arlington, OH, 43220, USA.
In 1931, Hermann J. Muller's postdoctoral student, George D. Snell (Nobel Prize recipient--1980) initiated research to replicate with mice Muller's X-ray-induced mutational findings with fruit flies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Phys
June 2024
2521 Cross Winds Lane, Chattanooga, TN 37421.
The linear no-threshold (LNT) model may be useful as a simple basis for developing radiation protection regulations and standards, but it bears little resemblance to scientific reality and is probably overly conservative at low doses and low dose rates. This paper is an appeal for a broader view of radiation protection that involves more than just optimization of radiation dose. It is suggested that the LNT model should be replaced with a risk-informed, targeted approach to limitation of overall risks, which include radiation and other types of risks and accidents/incidents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pediatr
June 2024
Faculty of Heath Social Care & Medicine, Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, UK.
Intravenous maintenance fluid therapy (IV-MFT) is probably the most prescribed drug in paediatric hospital care. Recently paediatric societies have produced evidence-based practice guidelines that recommend the use of balanced isotonic fluid when prescribing IV-MFT in both acute and critical paediatric care. Unfortunately, the applicability of these guidelines could be called into question when a ready-to-use glucose-containing balanced isotonic fluid is not available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials (Basel)
February 2024
Department of Mathematics/Informatics/Physics, Osnabrueck University, 49076 Osnabrueck, Germany.
The tuning of second (SHG) and third (THG) harmonic emission is studied in the model system LiNb 1-xTa xO 3 (0≤x≤1, LNT) between the established edge compositions lithium niobate (LiNbO 3, x=0, LN) and lithium tantalate (LiTaO 3, x=1, LT). Thus, the existence of optical nonlinearities of the second and third order is demonstrated in the ferroelectric solid solution system, and the question about the suitability of LNT in the field of nonlinear and quantum optics, in particular as a promising nonlinear optical material for frequency conversion with tunable composition, is addressed. For this purpose, harmonic generation is studied in nanosized crystallites of mechanochemically synthesized LNT using nonlinear diffuse reflectometry with wavelength-tunable fundamental femtosecond laser pulses from 1200 nm to 2000 nm.
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