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[Cancer Research 20, 1-60, September 1, 1960]
© 1960 American Association for Cancer Research

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Some Delayed Effects of Atom-Bomb Radiations in Mice

A. C. Upton, A. W. Kimball*, J. Furth{dagger}, K. W. Christenberry and W. H. Benedict

( Biology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory,{ddagger} Oak Ridge, Tenn.)

1. Male and female (C57L x A/He)F1 mice surviving instantaneous exposure to ionizing radiation from an experimental nuclear detonation were observed until natural death for delayed effects of irradiation.
2. Among the effects observed was shortening of the lifespan, which varied with the radiation dose.
3. The shortening of life was not attributable to increased mortality from any specific cause but was correlated with premature onset of all diseases associated with natural senescence.
4. Although the effects of radiation on the incidence and severity of diseases of old age varied markedly from one disease to another, all diseases were advanced in onset to essentially the same extent by any one dose of radiation, with the exception of thymic lymphoma.
5. The onset of thymic lymphoma was hastened considerably more than that of any other disease, particularly in heavily irradiated mice, which also had an elevated incidence of this neoplasm.
6. There was no consistent over-all relation between the frequency of neoplasia and the radiation dose. The incidence of certain neoplasms (thymic lymphoma, adenocarcinoma of mammary gland, pituitary adenoma, adrenal adenoma, Harderian gland adenoma, hepatoma, ovarian tumor, and granulocytic leukemia) was increased by irradiation, whereas the incidence of others (pulmonary adenoma, mammary gland sarcoma, nonthymic lymphoma) was decreased. In no instance was there a linear relation between tumor incidence and dose. Most neoplasms were less common after large doses of radiation than after intermediate doses, suggesting that neoplasia was inhibited by excessive radiation injury.
7. Depigmentation of the hair, which was detected as early as 3 months after irradiation, progressed at a rate and to an extent that varied with the dose, but it was not observed in lightly irradiated mice or in the controls.
8. Cataract of the optic lens, which was also noted within 90 days after irradiation, progressed at a rate and to an extent that varied with dose. The radiation cataracts differed in location from the opacities occurring spontaneously in senile controls.
9. Atrophy of the iris, which developed spontaneously in senescent controls, occurred prematurely in irradiated mice and progressed in severity with the dose.
10. Radiation nephritis, or nephrosclerosis, was common in mice receiving more than 400 rad but was rare below this dose level. In a few mice with advanced nephrosclerosis, polyarteritis was noted in the kidney and elsewhere.
11. Miscellaneous infectious and inflammatory lesions, which were relatively rare in controls, were not increased in frequency by irradiation.
12. Subcapsular ovarian cysts and hydrometra, which were relatively common in aging controls, were reduced in incidence in irradiated females, possibly through sterilization of the ovary.
13. Loss of incisor teeth occurred in a relatively high proportion of aging males and was nearly 10 times as common in males as in females. Its frequency was not significantly affected by irradiation.
14. For most of the effects observed, neutrons were more effective than gamma rays. Because, however, of uncertainties in dosimetry and the relatively small numbers of neutron-exposed animals, precise estimation of the relative effectiveness cannot be made from the results of this experiment.

* Dept. of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Univ., 615 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore 5, Md.

{dagger} Present address: Roswell Park Memorial Institute, Buffalo, N.Y.

{ddagger} Operated by Union Carbide Corporation for the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.




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Copyright © 1960 by the American Association for Cancer Research.