10 results match your criteria: "National Institute of Radiation Hygiene[Affiliation]"

In the evaluation of a film used as a personal dosemeter it may be necessary to mark the dosemeters when possible error-conditions are recognised, such as errors that have an influence on the ability to make a correct evaluation of the dose value. In this project a comparison has been carried out to examine how two individual monitoring services, IMS [National Institute of Radiation Hygiene, Denmark (NIRH) and National Research Centre for Environment and Health, Germany (GSF)], from two different EU countries mark their dosemeters. The IMS are different in size, type of customers and issuing period, but both use films as their primary dosemeters.

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The aim of this study was to test the applicability of the guidance levels for patient doses cooperatively set by the radiation protection authorities in the five Nordic countries. The kerma-area product (KAP) for five conventional radiological examination types was obtained from several hospitals in each of the Nordic countries. The number of radiographic images and fluoroscopy time were also registered, and the mean values for each examination type and hospital were established based on a representative number of patients (40-100 kg).

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Cancer and ionizing radiation.

Pharmacol Toxicol

May 1993

National Institute of Radiation Hygiene, Brønshøj, Denmark.

The carcinogenic effects of ionizing radiation are well documented at high doses and high dose rates. The Danish population has always been exposed to ionizing radiation from natural sources. In this century exposures from man-made sources especially in the medical field have added to the overall exposure of the population.

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Cultured cells from one human and one murine cell line were incubated with bilirubin by different methods that allowed bilirubin to be bound to cells. The cells were irradiated with visible light of different wavelengths. Bilirubin bound to human serum albumin was also irradiated with light.

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Dietary studies and whole-body measurements were used to estimate the intake of radiocesium and the radiation dose received by different groups of people in Norway after the Chernobyl accident. Freshwater fish, milk, and reindeer meat were the major sources for radiocesium intake. Dietary advice, together with agricultural decontamination measures, resulted in a considerable reduction in the exposure level of the population.

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Population doses from external radiation and internal food-based radioactivity were calculated each month for each municipality for 3 y immediately following the Chernobyl contamination in Norway. The main polluted regions are sparsely populated but comprise important food production areas. The external dose data base was calculated based on fallout deposition and measurements in dwellings, whereas the totally independent internal dose data base was calculated on a large number of food measurements and knowledge of both the food distribution system and the countermeasures taken.

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We have tried to estimate the toxic potential of waste from nuclear power plants and from power plants burning fossil fuels. The potential risks have been expressed as 'risk potentials' or 'person equivalents.' These are purely theoretical units and represent only an attempt to quantify the potential impact of different sources and substances on human health.

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In order to compare the transfer factors of 137Cs deposited after the fallout from the Chernobyl accident with 137Cs from nuclear weapons testing, soil and vegetation samples have been collected from a semi-natural ecosystem in western Norway. For the 137Cs from Chernobyl, 85% is found in the upper 5 cm of soil, whereas most of the nuclear weapons test 137Cs is found between 3 and 12 cm in the soil profile. The transfer factors from soil to vegetation are calculated to be 0.

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Clinical evidence indicates that phototherapy of hyperbilirubinaemia in newborn infants is a safe and efficient form of therapy. The short-term side effects are not serious and seem to be well controlled. There are few long-term follow-up studies of phototherapy-treated infants.

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By use of morphometry the number of urothelial nuclei per mouse bladder on days 1 and 7 after electron irradiation with 0, 10, 20 and 30 Gy was calculated. The results indicate only limited cell loss.

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