6 results match your criteria: "Scientific Research Institute for Radiation Medicine and Ecology[Affiliation]"

The State Scientific Automated Medical Registry, Kazakhstan: an important resource for low-dose radiation health research.

Radiat Environ Biophys

March 2019

International Agency for Research on Cancer, 150 Cours Albert Thomas, 96372, Lyon Cedex 08, France.

Direct quantitative assessment of health risks following exposure to ionizing radiation is based on findings from epidemiological studies. Populations affected by nuclear bomb testing are among those that allow such assessment. The population living around the former Soviet Union's Semipalatinsk nuclear test site is one of the largest human cohorts exposed to radiation from nuclear weapons tests.

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The nuclear bomb testing conducted at the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site in Kazakhstan is of great importance for today's radiation protection research, particularly in the area of low dose exposures. This type of radiation is of particular interest due to the lack of research in this field and how it impacts population health. In order to understand the possible health effects of nuclear bomb testing, it is important to determine what studies have been conducted on the effects of low dose exposure and dosimetry, and evaluate new epidemiologic data and biological material collected from populations living in proximity to the test site.

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Introduction: Lengthy clinical and epidemiological studies at the Research Institute of Radiation Medicine and Ecology have discovered basic patterns of long-term effects from ionizing radiation in population groups exposed to radiation risk. Methodology for calculating injury from radiation risk factors has been developed and implemented to minimize the effects of the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site (SNTS).

Material And Methods: We analyzed materials from the database of the Scientific Medical Register that were exposed to radiation as a result of SNTS.

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Radiochemical results of U isotopes (U, U and U) and their activity ratios are reported for well waters as local sources of drinking waters collected from the ten settlements around the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site (SNTS), Kazakhstan. The results show that U varies widely from 3.6 to 356 mBq/L (0.

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Article Synopsis
  • This paper investigates the effects of radiation exposure on residents of two villages near the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing site, Chekoman and Dolon.
  • Chekoman is relatively less affected by radiation than Dolon, which is about 100 km away, but both communities have similar lifestyles.
  • Analysis of chromosome aberrations in lymphocytes using fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed that residents of Dolon had a significantly higher average frequency of stable translocations, indicating a radiation dose of approximately 180 mSv.
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Since 1956, cancer incidences have been analysed in several rayons of the Semipalatinsk oblast, with cross-sectional analyses being conducted every 5 years. Data on different tumor localizations were recorded within a heavily contaminated so-called main area of nine villages (estimated average effective equivalent dose about 2000 mSv) and a so-called control area (estimated average effective equivalent dose about 70 mSv), each including approximately 10000 persons. Up to 1970, the excess cancer incidence in the exposed villages was observed to have increased; after 1970, a decrease was noted, followed by a second increase in the late 1980s.

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