Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation

There is a serious need to develop effective mitigators against accidental radiation exposures. In radiation accidents, many people may receive nonuniform whole-body or partial-body irradiation. The lung is one of the more radiosensitive organs, demonstrating pneumonitis and fibrosis that are believ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Radiation Research
Main Author: Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-82955239897&doi=10.1667%2fRR2562.1&partnerID=40&md5=b3797f4f73f4ec9b661a24b8f7cb543a
id 2-s2.0-82955239897
spelling 2-s2.0-82955239897
Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
2011
Radiation Research
176
6
10.1667/RR2562.1
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-82955239897&doi=10.1667%2fRR2562.1&partnerID=40&md5=b3797f4f73f4ec9b661a24b8f7cb543a
There is a serious need to develop effective mitigators against accidental radiation exposures. In radiation accidents, many people may receive nonuniform whole-body or partial-body irradiation. The lung is one of the more radiosensitive organs, demonstrating pneumonitis and fibrosis that are believed to develop at least partially because of radiation-induced chronic inflammation. Here we addressed the crucial questions of how damage to the lung can be mitigated and whether the response is affected by irradiation to the rest of the body. We examined the widely used dietary supplement genistein given at two dietary levels (750 or 3750 mg/kg) to Fischer rats irradiated with 12 Gy to the lung or 8 Gy to the lung + 4 Gy to the whole body excluding the head and tail (whole torso). We found that genistein had promising mitigating effects on oxidative damage, pneumonitis and fibrosis even at late times (36 weeks) when drug treatment was initiated 1 week after irradiation and stopped at 28 weeks postirradiation. The higher dose of genistein showed no greater beneficial effect. Combined lung and whole-torso irradiation caused more lung-related severe morbidity resulting in euthanasia of the animals than lung irradiation alone. © 2011 by Radiation Research Society.

19385404
English
Article
All Open Access; Green Open Access
author Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
spellingShingle Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
author_facet Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
author_sort Mahmood J.; Jelveh S.; Calveley V.; Zaidi A.; Doctrow S.R.; Hill R.P.
title Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
title_short Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
title_full Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
title_fullStr Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
title_full_unstemmed Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
title_sort Mitigation of lung injury after accidental exposure to radiation
publishDate 2011
container_title Radiation Research
container_volume 176
container_issue 6
doi_str_mv 10.1667/RR2562.1
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-82955239897&doi=10.1667%2fRR2562.1&partnerID=40&md5=b3797f4f73f4ec9b661a24b8f7cb543a
description There is a serious need to develop effective mitigators against accidental radiation exposures. In radiation accidents, many people may receive nonuniform whole-body or partial-body irradiation. The lung is one of the more radiosensitive organs, demonstrating pneumonitis and fibrosis that are believed to develop at least partially because of radiation-induced chronic inflammation. Here we addressed the crucial questions of how damage to the lung can be mitigated and whether the response is affected by irradiation to the rest of the body. We examined the widely used dietary supplement genistein given at two dietary levels (750 or 3750 mg/kg) to Fischer rats irradiated with 12 Gy to the lung or 8 Gy to the lung + 4 Gy to the whole body excluding the head and tail (whole torso). We found that genistein had promising mitigating effects on oxidative damage, pneumonitis and fibrosis even at late times (36 weeks) when drug treatment was initiated 1 week after irradiation and stopped at 28 weeks postirradiation. The higher dose of genistein showed no greater beneficial effect. Combined lung and whole-torso irradiation caused more lung-related severe morbidity resulting in euthanasia of the animals than lung irradiation alone. © 2011 by Radiation Research Society.
publisher
issn 19385404
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Green Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809677612720586752