Pathology of radiation damage to the normal brain of the monkey.

Natl Cancer Inst Monogr

Published: December 1977

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study on monkey brains investigated the effects of varying radiation doses on different brain regions, revealing significant damage and changes over time.
  • In Model I, exposing the right occipital lobe to 3,500 rads led to serious damage 4-5 months later, with a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier and functional impairments.
  • Model II showed that lower doses (1,000 rads) had no effect, while higher doses (1,500 and 2,000 rads) caused widespread necrosis and ultimately, survival issues, particularly with the 2,000 rads exposure.

Article Abstract

Model I: A portion of the monkey brain, the right occipital lobe, was exposed to 3,500 rads of orthovoltage radiation in a single dose. This demonstrated a) the delayed, 4 to 5 months, massive break in blood-brain barrier with extravasation of plasmatic fluid throughout the right hemisphere causing gross brain distortion, and b) after a protracted course, a remaining impairment in function extending beyond the irradiation lesion. Model II: The whole brain was exposed to supervoltage radiation in single doses of 1,000, 1,500, and 2,000 rads, respectively. This demonstrated a) the lack of effect from 1,000 rads; b) the wide scatter of necrotic lesions in the forebrain white matter from 1,500 rads at 6 months, followed by confluent necrosis in the cerebral hemispheres at 12 months; and c) the numerous focal lesions throughout the brain from 2,000 rads, with the lesions in the brain stem precluding survival beyond 6 months. Model III: The whole brain was exposed to fractionated doses of 4,000, 6,000 and 8,000 rads in 4, 6, and 8 weeks, respectively. This demonstrated a) the lack of effect from 4,000 rads; b) the wide scatter of small focal lesions at different stages of breakdown and repair accompanied by focal edema from 6,000 rads at 6 months, followed by more of the reparative processes including mineralization of focal lesions, and widespread telangiectasia, at 12 months; and c) with 8,000 rads, at 6 months, focal lesions similar to those from 6,000 rads, but at 12 months, gross brain loss from coalescing necrosis.

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